! n c o n o . - j t • o J ■5 9:'-; q 4 n 0 c W £ ~ j y - 7 ■* f. e Da il y T e x a n Vol. 87, No. 192 3 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Monday, August 1,1988 25c Residents asked to OK cuts By GARRY LEAVELL Daily Texan Staff Addressing the city's citizens as "members of Austin's fam ily," Mayor Lee Cooke Sunday night asked for the public's support in cutting the city budget during his "state of the city" message. Speaking from his office at City Hall, Cooke said reducing city ex­ penditures was the clear choice to balance the city budget that Acting City Manager John Ware will pres­ ent to the council Monday. Cooke outlined several areas of fi­ nancial worry for the city, including Austin's disputed settlement in the South Texas Nuclear Project. "I have found the Nuke settle­ ment to be in serious jeopardy," Cooke said. "While I am not satis­ fied with the terms, its success re­ mains critical to lowering our utility bills." "W e must deal firmly and con­ clude this financial albatross," he said. The mayor also earmarked a $35 million debt at Brackenridge Hospi­ tal and middle and upper manage­ ment costs in city government for streamlining. "Borrowing more money, increas­ ing debt, making our children pay — these are not the solutions," Cooke said. "W e already owe too much. "In fact we have one of the high­ est per capita debts in the country," he said. "This simply can't go on ." The mayor said consolidations and out placement and early retire­ ment programs would be used to lessen the burden of the budget shortfall on city employees. But Cooke said some employees and services would have to go. "W e will have to cut a number of city employees," he said. "Many of the cuts will come in positions that are now vacant and thev won't be filled," Cooke said. "Others will come through retire­ ment and attrition. But they must be made." He said some facilities would be closed, using libraries as an exam­ ple, but said "adequate levels" of li­ braries, parks and emergency pro­ tection would be maintained. He pointed out the council's in­ struction to the city manager to de­ velop a budget that would not in­ crease taxes or electric and water rates as steps the council has al­ ready taken to cut spending. "You have already tightened your belts and you expect your city to do the sam e," Cooke said. The council will begin budget work sessions Wednesday. University gives TKE probation in hazing case By JUNDA WOO Daily Texan Staff The University placed the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity on proba­ tion Friday after a national TKE adviser reported a hazing incident to UT administrators earlier this year. Jay Bohner, the fraternity's dis­ trict president for Texas and Okla­ homa, said he discovered in April that members had led pledges to think they would have to drink a distasteful concoction and teased them with questions that had no correct answers. Bohner alerted UT administrators to the incident, in which no one was injured physically. The ensuing UT investigation re­ sulted in the one-year probation. Dean of Students Sharon Justice was unavailable for comment, but the probation apparently involves no loss of campus privileges. However, any further violation is likely to bring tangible punishment. Bohneris action was praised by TKE chapter officials on campus and marks the first time a fraternity adviser has initiated a UT hazing in­ vestigation. "It speaks really well of our frater­ nity and shows how hard we're trying to fight it [hazing]," said chapter Vice President Darryn Finn. "W hat we're trying to do is get thing stopped," said the whole Finn, a business junior. "Every­ thing that we can do to help, we will." Bohner said he reported the inci­ dent, which he characterized as "m ild ," to set an example. "It's a cyclical thing, it gets worse every year," Bohner said. "Hazing undoes all the good sororities and fraternities d o ." TKE chapter President Mike Piz- inger could not be reached for com­ ment. Bohner said the chapter will sub­ mit details of its fall rush plans to the University and institute a new, workshop-oriented program for pledges. He said many state TKE chapters already have adopted an eight-week series of workshops dealing with sexual responsibility and alcohol as well as parliamentary procedures and other "life skills." "The T chapter at UT hasn't yet, and that's been one of the prob­ lems. But it is my understanding that the chapter this fall will switch over," Bohner said, citing the April incident as a catalyst for the change. Also in April, the TKE chapter fired its pledge trainer — partly be­ cause of the hazing, Finn and Bohner said. Bohner called the firing "appro­ priate." Bohner also expressed concern that fraternities would become less frank with him, but defended his actions. "You need to do what is right and not worry about the consequences," he said. The Sandman Frank Ordonez Daily Texan Staff Jesse Ybarra puts the finishing touches on his sand castle while participating in the Aquafest Beach Week- end sand-building contest. The young architect took almost two hours Sunday to build his creation. Hussein divorces Jordan from West Bank Associated Press AMMAN, Jordan — King Hussein Sunday called for an independent Palestinian state in the Israeli-occupied territories and appeared to rule out the idea of Jordan representing Palestinians in any peace talks. "Jordan is not Palestine," the king said in a speech. "The independent Palestinian state will be established on occupied Palestinian land after its liberation, God willing." It was not the first time Hussein had called for an independent Palestinian state, but it was the first time he categorically separated himself from Palestinians in the occupied lands and told them to take affairs into their own hands. Hussein them Jordan's "ham per the Palestinian struggle to gain in­ ternational support for the Palestinian cause, as the national cause of a people struggling against foreign occupation." links said to Jordan is not Palestine. The independent Palestinian state will be established on occupied Palestinian land after its liber­ ation, God willing.’ — King Hussein Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said Sunday that Jordan would remain a key part­ ner in the peace process, despite Hussein's vow to relinquish any control over the Israeli- occupied West Bank. M eanw hile, * Prim e M inister Yitzhak Shamir, Peres' main political rival, suggested that Hussein's move was beneficial for Israel because it removed the West Bank as a poten­ tial issue of contention between Israel and Jordan. Israel seized the West Bank from Jordan and the Gaza Strip from Egypt in the 1967 Middle East War. Hussein's move could leave the Palestine Liberation Organization, which claims to be the sole representative of Palestinians, Israel's only negotiating partner in talks to resolve the issue. Israel refuses to talk to the PLO, calling it a terrorist organization. Under a recent U.S. peace initiative by Sec­ retary of State George Shultz, Jordan would be partially responsible for representing the Palestinians in peace talks. Israeli leaders had called for negotiations with a joint Jordanian- Palestinian delegation and said the Palestini­ ans must not be members of the PLO. Shultz, speaking on CBS-TV's Face the Na­ tion, denied the move would pressure the United States and Israel to find a way to talk to the PLO. "W e will stay right where we are. We're ready to talk to them [PLO] when they take certain steps, which are very clear, and as far as I can see, not too onerous. After all, Israel is there. Israel is going to stay theye. We're going to continue to support them ,""he said. The speech followed moves by Hussein to give greater responsibility for Palestinian af­ fairs to the PLO. Saturday, he dissolved the lower house of Parliament. Half the house's members were from the West Bank. On Thursday, he can­ celed a $1.3 billion development project plan for the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Hussein described the measures as aimed at "enhancing the Palestinian national orien­ tation and highlighting the Palestinian identi­ t y " Hussein said that "in addition to the PLO's ambition to embody the Palestinian identity on Palestinian national soil, [there should be] a separation of the West Bank from the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan." Jordan’s medical condition upgraded to serious, stable I f GREG PERUSKI Daily Texan Staff UT professor Barbara Jordan, a former U.S. representative, has not suffered any mental or physical damage after a cardiac arrest Satur­ day in her backyard swimming pool, doctors said Sunday. Doctors at Brackenridge Hospital upgraded the 52-year-old states- woman's medical status Sunday from critical to serious but stable condition. Although fluid remains in her lungs, she has regained the ability to breathe without the help of a breathing machine, said Dr. William Deaton, a pulmonary specialist and member of the team of doctors treat­ ing Jordan. Deaton said he took Jordan off the machine Sunday about 1:30 p.m. "She is now breathing on her own. She requires supplemental ox­ ygen, but she can talk, complain ‘ and boss us around now on her own," Deaton said. A breathing tube in her mouth had prevented Jordan from speak­ ing earlier, a hospital spokewoman said. Dr. James Little, a neurologist with the Austin Diagnostic Clinic, said he has not had time to do a full evaluation of Jordan but expects her to recover her mental capacity. "She is not fully back to normal, but the way she has been progress­ ing over the last 24 hours, I have every reason to expect that she will continue to improve," Little said. "And right now I think things look very good that she will get totally back to normal." Deaton said she continues to im­ prove, but Jordan is expected to re­ main in the intensive care unit dur­ ing the next few days. "She will be in the intensive care unit at least through today," he said. "I would be surprised if she is not in an intensive care unit for at E“1 least 48 more hou rs." Jordan's cardi­ ac arrest was brought on by a lack of oxygen, said C a ro ly n Hinckley Boyle, a h o s p ita l spokeswoman. Jordan Jo rd a n lo s t c o n s c io u s n e s s while in her pool and was found by her roommate facedown in the water, Hinckley Boyle said. The cause of unconsciousness has Deaton not been determined, Deaton said. said he the paramedics' quick response both at the scene and at Brackenridge for Jordan's recovery. credits "I would say within four or five minutes, 10 minutes at the most ... if it had been much longer she would not have likely survived, with her mental function anyw ay," Deaton said. Jordan's greatest concern Sunday morning was canceling a dentist ap­ pointment, he said. "Prior to working getting her off the breathing machine, she knew she had an appointment, and she kep t th e w ord 'cancel,' " he said. sp ellin g ou t Jordan was a Texas senator from Houston from 1966 until 1972. She was congresswoman from Houston from 1972 until 1977, when she re­ tired to accept a professorship at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs. Jordan gave the keynote address at the 1976 Democratic National Convention, and was the first black and first woman to give a major par­ ty's keynote speech. Moving up? — Many economists see inflation on the economy's horizon A d ­ 3 ministration sources disagree No stoppinfl him — David Wear doesn’t have the use of his legs, but he likes to scuba dive and he’s a top- ranked table tennis player aiming for the 8 Paralympics WMe, Wayton and the boys — Aus­ tin's outlaw country musicians remem­ ber when, live and sing now, and keep Images looking to the future WEATHER Angry Tirade weather — And just where have you been? Don't play inno­ cent with me, dartin’. You know full well we had a date — had a date — tonight Nothing about the rain, sweetcakes I know there's only a 30 percent chance as well as you do Storms? Maybe so. Your redhead playing mean Mr Thun­ dercloud with you? Was she blowing those vicious 10 mph winds at you from the southeast? I feel real sorry for you I hate to tell you this, loverboy, but she's short and dumpy and all your friends laugh at you for even looking at her. Your kids would be ugly little nerdballs that lumpy mashed potatoes You think that’s funny, do you? It’s true You think she’s hot H a1 On a scale of one to 100, she's about a negative mid-70 And you know I'm in the mid-90s on bad days Fine Leave then You’ll regret it and you’ll come crawling back. And if you don’t realize your mistake now, I’ll be the first to offer my condolences when the wench bears you a little lump of a kid Don't let the doorknob catch you on the way out like clumps of looked INDEX 15 Around Campus Classifieds 11 Comics................................................15 4 Editorials 8 Feature 9 Sports State & L o c a l.................................. 7 University.............................................. 6 3 World & Nation . . . . . . Candidates war over child care Associated Press WASHINGTON — Behind the ar­ guments about various child-care the real winners are proposals, working mothers whose problems are getting unprecedented attention on the presidential campaign trail and on Capitol Hill. Families need child care. They’ve waited a long time to turn any attention to this issue.’ — Helen Blank, Children’s Defense Fund child care director Although there's no certainty that Congress will enact such legislation this year, given the little time left on the election-year legislative calendar, both Democrat Michael Dukakis and Republican George Bush have latched onto the issue. Passage of legislation more comprehensive than the current patchwork of federal child-care policies, there­ fore, seems inevitable. Helen Blank, director of child care at the Children's Defense Fund, says she couldn't be more pleased. "The landscape is changing, both demographically and politically," she said. "Families need child care. They've waited a long time to turn any attention to this issue. Clearly both candidates have an interest ... and both candidates understand [the need for] new, signifi­ cant resources." In fact, both Bush and Dukakis visited day-care cen­ ters last week. Dukakis, the Democratic presidential nominee, and Bush, his certain Republican opponent, favor rival child-care approaches, so the issue is sure to remain in public view as the general election campaign unfolds. The day-care visits seemed tacit recognition by the two men of a new American social norm documented recently by the Census Bureau: More than half of new mothers go back to work before their children are a year old. . Bush is proposing a $2.2 billion pfogram of tax cred­ its for working parents, while Dukakis is backing a $2.5 billion child-care bill in Congress. The obvious concern displayed by Bush and Du­ kakis, plus the surprisingly high dollar commitment in Bush's proposal, are fueling optimism that a compre­ hensive child-care bill may be enacted this year. "Apparently we're not arguing money anymore," an ebullient Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., said after Bush made his proposal. "We're all agreed we've got to do something about child care. We're all agreed that it's going to cost a lot of money," Dodd said. The Connecticut Democrat is chief sponsor of the $2.5 billion Act for Better Child Care Services. Dukakis has endorsed the Democratic initiative in principle. The legislation won Senate committee ap­ proval last week and is tentatively scheduled for action this week in the House Education and Labor Commit­ tee. The bill reserves 75 percent of its money to help low- and middle-income parents pay for day care at homes and centers that meet minimum federal safety and staffing standards. States could use the rest of the mon­ ey for capital improvements, day-care staff training and salaries and administrative costs. The approach differs substantially from the one that Bush has proposed. The vice president's day-care pro­ gram would be built around a tax credit of up to $1,000 for low-income families for each child under 4 — even if one parent in the family was staying home to take care of the child. The largest existing government program is the de- pendent-care tax credit for dual-earner families who pay for child care. It costs the Department of the Treas­ ury about $4 billion a year in lost revenue. According to Blank, other government child-care programs include a $2.7 billion social services block grant to states, of which less than 20 percent is used for day care, and a $600 million food program that helps day-care homes and centers provide nutritious meals. Welfare parents in job training programs or jobs that don't pay enough for them to leave the rolls are also entitled to some help with child-care expenses. The Bush bill, endorsed in general terms by Presi­ dent Reagan, would depart from current policy by giv­ ing tax breaks to families with a spouse at home — families not eligible for the existing dependent care tax credit. At least four Republican-sponsored bills pending in Congress take the same approach. Conservatives sup­ port it as a way to eliminate what they see as tax dis­ crimination against mothers who decide to stay home with their children. But Citizens for Tax Justice, a labor-backed tax study group, said the bills are unfair and unlikely to help those most in need, since low-income families can least afford to have one parent stay at home. Page 2/THE DAILY TEXAN/Monday, August 1,1988 Industrial vacancies decrease Increase in occupancy heralds improvements in city economy By ANDRES EGUIGUREN Daily Texan Staff Austin's industrial lease space market showed a posi­ tive net absorption of 135,568 square feet in the first six months of 1988, which an analyst said Friday could mean good economic news for the city's future. A recently issued study showed that citywide vacan­ cy in all industrial space dropped from 25 percent in December 1987 to 24 percent this June. Austin's all-time high vacancy rate was 27 percent in June 1987. Net absorption means that space went from being vacant to being occupied. The study was released by Commercial Industrial Properties Company, an Austin-based commercial and industrial real estate brokerage firm that has produced a semiannual industrial market report for the last 10 years. Industrial space includes warehouses, office and showroom warehouses, and service, research and de­ velopment centers — meaning everything from IBM to a carpet distributor. The strongest activity was recorded in the service center research and development market in the north sector of the city, where 94,000 square feet was ab­ sorbed. Frank Niendorff, CIP president, said that for the past 10 months there has been an increasing rate of activity in the industrial market and he thinks that could be good news. "I would not call it a turnaround, but a substantial increase in activity which, if sustained in the next year or two, could create a turnaround in the industrial mar­ ket." The Daily Texan Other markets should see stabilization and improve­ ment in the next two years, Niendorff said. He said both the office market and the apartment market — for which his company also does studies — will be improving in 1989. "I think that the only sector that will not improve in 1988, possibly not 1989, will be the land m arket," he said. Niendorff attributed the land market problems to 7,000 acres of land in the Austin metropolitan area that is available for various types of industrial development. According to Niendorff, that translates into a 15-year supply of land, which he said is bad news for owners but a real bargain for developers and industries looking at Austin for expansion. But although the study indicates positive signs, Niendorff warned that "none of this is going to turn around fast." "It's going to be slow." Gail O'Conner, a CIP industrial broker, said the 1 percent decrease could be a step toward the 6 percent industrial lease space vacancy rate that existed in De­ cember 1984. Niendorff said UT students might benefit in some way from the decrease. "From the student standpoint, if there's not any eco­ nomic growth, they can't get out of UT and get jobs in Austin," he said. CIP, which holds an 85 percent share of the commer­ cial and industrial consulting and leasing market, has been involved in the selection of many major plant lo­ cations in the city — including Lockheed, Data General Corporation, Advanced Micro Devices, Motorola and Tandem Computers. Heart of glory The U.S. Marine Corps commandant, Gen. Alfred Gray, talks to service­ men before San Antonio’s Vietnam Memorial during a rededication cere­ mony. Associated Press Study: Count of Hispanics on rise Population growing faster than other ethnic groups, A&M professor says By KEVIN HARGIS Daily Texan Staff The Hispanic population is ex­ panding more rapidly than other ethnic groups in Texas and should constitute about 25 percent of the state's population by the year 20CX), a Texas A&M University professor said Friday. Other trends the A&M center noted were that Texas' population growth rate is slowing overall and the num ber of people 65 and older is increasing, said Steve Murdock, an A&M professor of rural sociology who helped conduct the study. The Real Estate Center at A&M studied population patterns in Tex­ as to help the state decide which services might be needed in the fu­ ture, Murdock said. The study "points out the emerg­ ing importance of the Hispanic pop­ ulation in Texas," Murdock said. Figures from the 1980 census showed a 21 percent Hispanic pop­ ulation in Texas, compared with a 65 percent Anglo population, he said. Center officials are projecting a 33 percent Hispanic population by 2025, he said. Murdock said the rapid growth is primarily the result of a substantial­ ly higher birth rate in the Hispanic population. The projections do not include immigrate Hispanics who might illegally into Texas, he said. "We take into account normal im­ migration but not illegal immigra­ tion. The actual figures could be higher or lower," Murdock said. Murdock did not have projections for Austin because the study did not break down the figures into specific areas. Martha Cotera — who has pub­ lished the Austin Hispanic Directo­ ry for 13 years — said that based on the listings her directory has taken for the last five years, Austin's Hispanic population grows at a 25 percent rate each year. She added that these numbers re­ flect only those people with a phone connection. Cotera said the Hispanic popula­ tion is increasing mainly because Hispanics are less likely to leave the state during hard economic times than Anglos because of family ties here in the state. "Bad times in Texas have in­ creased the Austin population be­ cause it is much worse in other cit­ ies, and Hispanics tend to move to Austin, Houston and Dallas," Cot­ era said. Murdock said the center's projec­ tions in 1982 using the 1980 census figures showed that Texas would have a population of 22 to 25 million by the year 2000. The center has done new projec­ tions using current population fig­ ures that suggest the population of Texas will be only 20.5 million by 2000. Murdock also said that by the first part of the 21st century, 21 percent of the nation's population will be 65 or older. In Texas, people who are 65 or older will constitute only 17 or 18 percent of the population, he said. "Texas' population is aging like the population of the U.S. will age, but will age less because we have a younger population base," Mur­ dock said. SUN HING C h in ese R estaurant BEER • WINE • SAKt Lunch Specials at $2.99 Combination Dinners at 4.95 2801 Guadalupe, Suite A 478-6504 -2:30 p.m. Lunch *MF 11:00 Dinner • Sun-Thur 2:30 p.m.-10 p.m. Frt-Sat 2:30 p.m.-10:30 p.m. Waldng Distance from UT • FREE Parking Cmll in & cany out avaiiabée 29th 1 ; Sun Hing Chinese Kestaurant Guadalupe IMMIGRATION H-l Work Visas for professionals Labor Certifications for Past-doctoral Research Associates and Faculty PAUL PARSONS p c Attorney at Law Board Certified Immigration A Nationality Law Texas Board of Legs! Specialisation 704 Rio Grande 477-7887 Permanent Staff Editor............................................................................................................................................. Mike Godwin Managing Editor......................................................................................................................... Kevin McHargue Associate Managing E d it o r s .................................. Karen Adams, Steve Dobbins, Mike Fannin, Tanya Voss News Editor........................................................................................................................ Siva Vaidhyanathan Associate News E d it o r s ....................................................................................Cheryl Laird, Dennis McCarthy General Reporters...............................................................................John Council, Mike Erickson, Jim Greer, Garry Leavell, Greg Pertiski, Junda Woo Jeanne Acton Special Pages Editor................................................................... Associate E d it o r s ............................................................................................... Mark Grayson, Tom Philpott Entertainment Editor.................................................................................................................... Steve Crawford Associate Entertainment E ditor.........................................................................................................Rob Walker General Entertainment R e p o r t e r ...................................................................................................... Joe Sims Sports E d it o r .................................................................................................................................... Steve Davis Associate Sports E d i t o r ........................................................................................................... Jerry Gernander General Sports R eporter............................................................................................................. Clarence Hill Photo Editor Allen Brook Associate Photo Editor................................................................................................................. John Fox worth Images E d ito r.............................................................................................................................. Bret Bloomquist Associate Images E d i t o r s ...........................................................................................Ben Cohen, Lee Nichols University Editor................................................................................................................................... Joe Yonan Art D ire cto r...................................................................................................................................... Ashley Bogle Issue Staff Associate Art D ire c to r.....................................................................................................................Chris Ware News Assistants................................ Julie Blase, Susan Boren, Andres Eguiguren, Kevin Hargis, Lydia Lum Sports Assistant............................................................................................................................. Wayne Hardin Special Pages Writer......................................................................................................................... M'ke Fannin Editorial Columnist............................................................................................................... Editorial A ssista n t............................................................................................................................ John Stokes Editorial C a r t o o n is t ..................................................................................................................... Martin Wagner Makeup Editor......................................................................................................................... Anand Pardhanani Wire E d it o r .................................................................................................................................... Craig Branson Copy E d it o r s ................................................ April Eubanks, Stephen Merelman, Fred Stanton, Rob Wheeler Photographer................................................................................................................................Frank Ordoftez Graphics Assistant..........................................................................................................................Hank Demond Comic Strip C a rto o n is ts ..................................... Susan Boren, Tom King, Robert Rodriguez, Martin Wagner Michael Davis Advertising Local D is p la y ...................................................... Deborah Bannworth, Tony Colvin, Ann del Llano, Betty Ellis John Farris, David Hamlin, Denise Johnson, David Lutz Beth Mitchell, Natalie Niesner. Gina Padilla, Susan Stripling. Chris Wilson Classified D is p la y .................................................Leslie Kuykendall, Ricardo R. Fernandez, Shameem Patel Classified Telephone S a les .............................................................. Pam Banks, Alan Fineman, Melanie Neel, Martin Pellinat, Juanda Powell, Victoria Woo Classified Telephone S ervice................................................................... Melinda Dellerson, Melanie McCall, Susan Fleishaker. Una McGeehan The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitts, Austin, TX 78705 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session. Second class postage paid at Austin. TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2.122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 136). For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865. For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471 -8900. For classified word advertising, call 471 -5244 Entire contents copyright 1988 Texas Student Publications. The Daly Texwi M el Subscription Ratos One Semester (Fall or Spring) 530 59 Two Semesters (Fall and Spring)............................................................................................................... 55.00 Summer S e s s io n ...................................................................................................................................... 20 00 One Year (Fad, Spring and S um m er)......................................................................................................... 75 0C 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 to TSP Building C3.200. or call 471 -5083. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to TSP, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209. ONE GROUP OF OUR BEST SUMMER SANDALS Farabee’s memorial to be held By ANDRES EGUIGUREN Daily Texan Staff A public memorial service will be held at 12:30 p.m. Monday for Hel­ en Farabee — a longtime advocate for the poor and disabled — at the Covenant Presbyterian Church, at 3003 Northland Drive. Farabee died Thursday at Seton Medical Center from respiratory failure after a long bout with lung cancer and phlebitis. Farabee changed social care in Texas by lobbying for more than 25 years for statewide reforms in the care for the poor, the sick and the needy. ( 1 here are people who could not afford to pro­ vide for their children... who now can bee use of Helen.’ — State Treasurer Ann Richards Her efforts resulted in the 1965 creation of the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retarda­ tion. In addition, Farabee headed nu­ merous panels and state commit­ tees, including the Mental Health Code Task Force and the Indigent Health Care panel. The latter helped to secure the passing of legislation in 1985 that expanded medical care for the poor in Texas. State Treasurer Ann Richards praised Farabee's unselfish devo­ tion to helping the less fortunate. "Helen Farabee was one of those selfless people who truly changed life for the underprivileged," Rich­ ards said Sunday. "There are many people in this state receiving mental health care, who had none before, because of Helen," she said. "There are many people in this state receiving other types of health care, that had none before, because of Helen. "There are people who could not afford to provide for their children ... who now can because of Helen. "She dramatically affected the public policy and the life of Texas, and for that she will be sorely missed," Richards said. Farabee was inducted into the Texas Women's Hall of Fame in 1985. ROSES *6" one dozen cash h carry ... FI ESTA F L O W E R S 453-7619 3830 N. Lamar Regularly to $45.25 By many famous makers. 476-7457 YOUR Term papers copied while you wait. Bound with your choice of covers. Priced low. Dobie Mall. 7 days a week. Monday through Thursday til midnight. 476-9171. g/nny$ Printing-CopyMg g DORM ROOM DELIVERY MEDIUM THIN PIZZA ONE TOPPING *5.50 TWO SODAS NEW! a FREE DELIVERY > Umáteé DeUvery Ana ■NEW! [f r o z e n YOGURT Now available at: (eyecqre) m w m M W A H Friday’s Dow Jones Industrial Avenge: UP 46.40 to 2,128.73 Volume: 192.34 million shares W orld & N ation Monday, August 1,1988 Page 3 Iran recaptures embattled towns Associated Press NICOSIA, Cyprus — Iran an­ nounced its forces recaptured three towns on the western war front Sunday and repelled two Iraqi at­ tacks. And Iraq declared it would "maintain our finger on the trigger" until peace was assured in the Per­ sian Gulf. An Iranian envoy said his country would do its best to cease attacks on shipping in the gulf, and he said he expected U.S. flags to be removed soon from Kuwaiti tankers opera­ ting in the gulf. Iraqi-backed Iranian rebels dis­ missed as "absurd" a claim made Friday by Hashemi Rafsanjani, the speaker of Iran's Parliament and commander of the armed forces, that the rebels killed 30 patients at a hospital in the town of Eslamabad in western Iran. The rebels said some residents of Eslamabad had joined their forces and Iran bombed and shelled the town in reprisal. Tehran radio said Iranian forces "liberated" the towns of Qasr-e Shirin, Sar-e Pol-e Zahab and Sumar and repulsed what it described as a "feeble enemy offensive" farther north, killing or wounding hun­ dreds of Iraqis. On Saturday, Iraq announced its forces had w ithdraw n the three tow ns in a planned w ithdraw ­ al after achieving their objectives of disrupting Iranian supply lines and capturing prisoners. from The tow ns are not far from the border and have changed hands several times over the past 10 days, according to both Iranian and Iraqi accounts. An Iraqi night offensive against the Iranian border town of M ehran farther south was repulsed with heavy losses, Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency reported. The agency said Iranian forces, assisted by local tribesmen, forced the Iraqis to retreat, liberating 15 square miles of Iranian territory. The official Iraqi News Agency re­ ported a woman was killed and eight other people wounded in Ira­ nian shelling of the northern border township of Qal'at Dizah. Iran de­ nied shelling the town. In Baghdad, the Iraqi capital, the army newspaper Al-Qadissiyah said that until "genuine peace" was as­ sured, "we will maintain our finger on the trigger." The newspaper repeated Iraq's contention that Iran's acceptance of a U.N. cease-fire resolution seemed designed to let the country catch its breath after a series of losses on the battlefield. "We are not so foolish as to be bluffed by this game and let the dead body [Iran] rise again and re­ launch aggression against our coun­ try," the newspaper said. Similar articles appeared in two other government-run newspapers, Al-Jumhuriyah and Al-Thawra. The editorials appeared aimed at damp­ ening public expectations for peace soon. Iran and Iraq have been locked in dispute at the United Nations over Iraq's dem and for face-to-face talks before a truce. Iran has rejected di­ rect is achieved. talks until a cease-fire Iranian D eputy Foreign M inister Ali M oham m ad Besharati, asked w hether his country would contin­ ue to attack neutral ships in the Per­ sian Gulf, said, "W e will try to do our best not to violate anything ... so that Resolution 598 will come into reality." Until last week, Iranian vessels had been attacking neutral shipping in the southern Persian Gulf in re­ taliation for Iraqi attacks on oil tank­ ers. He said he expected "the Ameri­ can flag to come dow n from Kuwaiti tankers soon" against the back­ ground of cease-fire talks. Inflation may be awakening again Associated Press WASHINGTON — New govern­ ment statistics have revived the de­ bate over whether the evil inflation monster, which terrorized America during the 1970s, is starting to awaken after having slept for most of this decade. The Reagan adm inistration, mindful of how voters' perceptions will affect the presidential race, in­ sists there are no signs that inflation is becoming a problem. But many private economists disagree. These economists contend that the 68-month economic expansion, now the second longest of the post- World War II period, has used up all of the economy's slack capacity. Tight labor markets and high fac­ tory operating rates are beginning ♦o be translated into accelerating wage demands and higher prices, they say. th is P rop on en ts o f th eory received more ammunition last week with two new government re­ ports, one on wage increases and the other on overall economic growth and inflation. The wage report showed that compensation for American work­ ers, wages and'fringe benefits such as health insurance and pensions, was rising this year at the highest rate since the summer of 1985. Wages and benefits, which repre­ sent about two-thirds of all business costs, climbed by 4.5 percent in the 12-month period ending in June, compared to an increase of just 3 percent in the prior 12 months. In a second report, the govern­ ment said an inflation index tied to the gross national product shot up at an annual rate of 4.7 percent from April through June, the fastest pace These economists con­ tend that the 68-month economic expansion, now the second longest of the post-Worid War II period, has used up all of the economy’s slack ca­ pacity. The big in almost six years. jump blamed on higher for food, clothing and energy. in pnces was consumer costs To the administration, these ports were not cause for concern. re- Beryl Sprinkel, the president's chief economic adviser, blamed the inflation spurt on temporary fac­ including the drought and tors, higher import costs because of the weaker dollar. Sprinkel insisted there was no ev­ idence that the economy was being overtaken by a new wage-price spi­ ral. "We remain convinced that in­ flation will continue under re­ straint," he told reporters during a briefing. Some private economists agree, contending that inflationary pres­ sures from the drought and tight la­ bor markets are being offset by weakness in oil prices and a re­ bound in the dollar, which reduces the costs of imports. index, after They note that the consumer price showing big jumps in the early spring, calmed down in May and June only 0.3 per­ cent. EHiring the first six months of the year, consumer prices rose 4.4 per­ cent. Up in smoke Associated Press An aerial view shows the wreckage after a head-on crash of two Iowa Interstate freight trains in which two crew members were killed and two others injured. The Saturday crash left two tank cars of denatured alcohol ablaze. After evacuating the area, officials decided to let the fuel burn out, a process that could take until late Monday. An investigation by the Na­ tional Transportation Safety Board could take up to nine months. Dukakis gains ‘typical’ leap in polls Associated Press NEW YORK — O ne hundred days before the presidential election, Gov. Michael Dukakis has ridden a post-convention surge to his greatest advantage of the campaign. But barring a George Bush disaster, it proba­ bly w on't last. That is the prognosis of national political poll­ sters — w ho had anticipated Dukakis' leap in the polls and now predict it will subside, at least to some extent — as the harm ony of the Democrat­ ic National Convention fades. 'T h e polls are accurate. The question is, are they predictive of w hat will happen on Election Day," said Harrison Hickman, a Democratic pollster. "There is no question that the race will tighten u p ." For the m om ent, Dukakis has a com m anding lead. He was ahead by 17 points in two polls last week, 18 points in two others. Survey results just before the July 18-22 con­ vention had ranged from a dead heat to a slim Dukakis lead. But w hat would have been a remarkable surge any other week was routine by post-convention standards. Conventions traditionally boost the nom inee by 10 or m ore points, mainly because of the intense positive exposure they provide. "The bounce Dukakis got seems to be pretty typical of w hat w e've seen in the past three elec­ tions," said Larry Hugick, political poll chief for the Gallup Organization. "It would be rem ark­ able if he didn't get a bounce." If getting the bounce is easy, keeping it is not. Gallup polls in recent elections showed conven­ tion surges settling as the campaigns progressed and voters began paying attention to the issues: ■ Jimmy Carter w ent from a 17-point lead over President Ford before the 1976 Democratic con­ vention to a 33-point lead after it. But w ithin a m onth his lead was dow n to 13 points, and he won in November by just 2.1 points. ■ In 1980, Ronald Reagan w ent from a three- point lead over Carter before the Republican convention to a 16-point lead after it. A m onth later it was a tie, though Reagan w ent on to win by 9.7 points. ■ In 1984, Walter M óndale moved up from a 14-point deficit before the convention to a 2- point deficit just after it. But Ronald Reagan soon m ade it back, and w on the election by a landslide 18.2 points. With that history in m ind, Dukakis pollster Irwin "Tubby" Harrison said he viewed the bounce as an opportunity, not an accomplish­ ment. "It's very nice to have it, but I've been around long enough to know you d o n 't let it turn your head," he said. "The idea is to work as hard as you can to solidify w hat you got from the con­ vention." Conversely, the bounce puts pressure on the Bush campaign to counterpunch effectively at the Republican National Convention this m onth. If Bush cannot match Dukakis' post-conven­ tion poll bounce, "it certainly does not augur well for an election success," said Lance Tar- rance, a Republican pollster based in Houston. Kremlin plans to show secret defense budget Associated Press WASHINGTON — Soviet officials are prom ising to reveal one of their deepest military secrets — one that Defense Minister Dmitri Yazoz says is a m ystery even to him: the size of the defense budget. That military budget will again be near the top of the agenda as De­ fense Secretary Frank Carlucci opens his third round of talks with Yazov in Moscow on M onday. Soviet defense officials in the past said their annual spending was about 20 billion rubles, or $33 bil­ lion, just over one-tenth of the Pen­ tagon budget. But analysts at the Central Intelli­ gence Agency and Pentagon say So­ viet defense spending is close to that of the United States, account­ ing for 15 percent to 17 percent of the Soviet gross national product. And Yazov, during his two previ­ ous m eetings w ith Carlucci, has pegged Soviet defense spending at about 16 percent of GNP, very close to the U.S. estimate. "We welcome that kind of truth n ow ," a senior Pentagon official said on the eve of Carlucci's depar­ ture for Moscow. "But that new candor doesn't substitute for the fact that they still d o n 't present a detailed public, ac­ curate accounting of w hat their mili­ tary budget really is and w hat it goes for," said the U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonym i­ ty- The United States, which has an economy estim ated at double that of the Soviet Union, spent 6.6 percent of GNP on defense in 1986, accord­ ing to U.S. governm ent statistics. The Soviets say they don't know exactly what they are spending on defense because their data does not account for w eapons research, de­ velopm ent and production, which consum e more than half the Penta­ gon budget. Nowhere are the Soviet num bers pulled together. And in a country w here the gov­ ernm ent ow ns all industry, the So­ viet military pays artificially low prices for goods that in m any cases are not even available to civilian fac­ tories — such as special steel alloys. "It is kind of hard for us to believe that they d o n 't know how m uch in detail they spend on military m at­ ters, but maybe it's tru e,” said the senior Pentagon official. Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev has called for reforms throughout society, including the military, and w ants the Defense M inistry to pro­ duce a complete and reliable budg­ et. Ultimately, he w ants to im prove the international climate enough to allow him to divert resources into the civilian sector. Vadim Kuznetsov, deputy direc­ tor of the U.S.A. desk at the Soviet Foreign Ministry, said in a recent in­ terview in Moscow that his nation would make good on its pledge to publish a detailed defense budget bv the early 1990s. Associated Press Paraguayan church claims persecution ASUNCION, Paraguay — The P araguayan R om an C atholic church, in a statem ent read Sun­ day at churches throughout the country, said it is being persecut­ ed by the governm ent of Presi­ dent Alfredo Stroessner. It called on the governm ent to "respect the fundam ental rights of hum an dignity." On Saturday, the church an ­ nounced the suspension of a Te D eum M ass, se rv ic e of thanksgiving, th at had been scheduled for Aug. 15. a Both actions w ere taken in re­ sponse to the expulsion last M on­ day of a Spanish-born Jesuit priest, Juan A ntonio de la Vega, who was accused of advocating rebellion. Shultz willing to talk to Iran WASHINGTON — Secretary of State George Shultz said Sunday he would be willing to m eet with Iran's foreign m inister if a m eet­ ing were requested. Shultz, in an interview on CBS- TV's Face the Nation, indicated di­ rect U.S.-Iranian talks could in­ clude discussions about an end to the Iran-Iraq w ar, terrorism and hostage-taking but not the return of Iranian assets, which is being handled by an international court. Shultz said U.S. officials are trying to find "an authoritative channel" for direct talks with Iran but he has not sought a m eet­ ing w ith Irani­ a n F o re ig n M in iste r Ali Akbar Velayati during the Ira­ nian official's v isit th e to U n ite d N a ­ tions for peace talks. H e Shultz Iran will stop the war, stop being involved in terrorism and stop prom oting the taking of hostages, then "there is a prospect of more normal relations with us." Alaskan eagles go south said if ABOARD THE MV SURFBIRD, Alaska — Tennessee eagle No. 3 looked glum. The bird was one of more than 300 bald eagles captured in Alaska and relocated in other states in an effort by the U.S. Fish and Wild­ life Service to replenish the threat­ ened national syirtbol. Bald eagles, an endangered species in every other state be­ cause of lead poisoning, pollution and other m an-m ade dangers, are abundant in southeast Alaska, num bering about 12,000 at biolo1 gists' last count — about the num ­ ber in all the other states com­ bined. The region has become the stocking ground for eagle-recov- ery programs in five states. Fires ebb in Yellowstone Yellowstone National Park offi­ cials reopened areas of the park Sunday that had been closed be­ cause of forest fires, and fire­ fighters used hand tools to choke the last embers of a fire that de­ stroyed 15 homes at Rapid City, S.D. a w ilderness Crews battled at least four new blazes in two national forests in W yom ing, fire forced evacuation of a ranger sta­ tion in Montana, and firefighters also were at work in the forests of Idaho and Washington. Fire activity in Yellowstone de­ clined Sunday, said Costa Dillon, fire information officer. That al­ lowed officials the park's south entrance north of Jackson, Wyo., closed one week ago by the 10,100-acre Shoshone fire and the 10,600-acre Red fire. to re-open Writers’ talks deadlock LOS A N G E LE S — T he scriptwriters' threatened strike Sunday to become the longest in entertainm ent history as talks and m anagem ent deadlocked vowed resum e production to "any way we can," including lur­ ing writers back to work. Talks with the W riters Guild of America broke dow n Saturday af­ ter a week of intense negotiations television over paym ent show s and movies sold to foreign m arkets and from dom estic televi­ sion show reruns. for Nicholas Counter, chief negoti­ ator for the 217-member alliance representing the major Holly­ wood movie and television stu­ dios, said the union's leaders had "mistaken our effort at resolution as an invitation to demand more." The nearly 22-week-old strike is surpassed only by the union's 1960 walkout, the longest strike in Hollywood history. Scientists hope to fly AIDS enzyme on next shuttle Associated Press SPACE CENTER, Houston — Astronauts on the first post-Challenger shuttle flight may grow crystals of a protein taken from the AIDS virus in an experiment researchers hope will lead to drugs to fight the fatal disease. The protein, reverse transcriptase, is an en­ zyme the AIDS virus uses to replicate its genetic material in order to reproduce and spread through the body, said Charles Bugg, a Univer­ sity of Alabama-Birmingham researcher. "AIDS would never infect human cells with­ out using this enzym e," said Bugg, coordinator for NASA of protein experiments that are to be conducted aboard Discovery. The shuttle is scheduled to fly later this year. Researchers want to grow the crystals of re­ verse transcriptase to decipher its structure. Crystals grown in space are not distorted by It’s still very much an experimen­ tal program, but one that we feel is ful of promise.’ — Researcher Tom Krenitsky gravity while they form. Scientists hope to learn how the AIDS virus takes over the genetic machinery inside a cell and use that knowledge to develop a drug to conquer AIDS. Tern Krenitsky at Burroughs Wellcome in Re­ search Triangle Park, N.C., developed the exper­ iment. NASA is making sure it meets safety guidelines. "We want to make sure there is no danger of infection to the crew with just this protein," Bugg said. Jim Ball, a NASA spokesm an in W ashington, said the review would take several weeks. that if the shuttle in Septem ber and Krenitsky predicted is the experim ent launched works well, researchers could have a m odel of the protein's structure by the end of the year. But he cautioned it could take 10 years to m ake a new AIDS drug. "It's still very much an experimental program, but one that we feel is full of promise," he said. Discovery is in the middle of a simulated countdown leading up to a crucial test-firing of its main engines to test modifications. The countdown was interrupted Friday because of problems with ground fueling equipment, and the firing was postponed from Monday until Thursday. NASA officials so far have found no evidence to suggest the experiment could cause any of the astronauts to become infected with AIDS. Media coverage of Jackson patronizing T hat Jesse Jackson has made an indelible impact on the 1988 presidential race is obvious. That Jackson has presently em­ erged as an intelligent and able political leader Page 4/THE DAILY TEXAN/Monday, August 1,1988 E ditorials Viewpoint opinions expre sse d in The Daily Texan are those ot the editor and the w riter ot the article They are not necessarily the opinions of the U niversity adm inistration the Board of Regents or the Texas Student P ublications Board of O perating Trustees O pinions expressed in Second Opinion and staff or guest colum ns are those of the w riter -L. - . I . . » ■ ■— i f I S 11111111 ■ -......... A Fine Line Anti-coke tactics not the real thing T he Austin Police Department's "reverse-sting" operations last week constitute strong evidence that the APD should rethink its anti-drug tactics. Austin police officers posing as cocaine dealers set up a "sting” operation Wednesday that led to the arrests of 18 people for possession of cocaine. Here's how the setup worked: Two officers, pretending to be coke dealers, were positioned at the 2300 block of Coronado Street, which is known for its heavy drug traffic. Buyers drove or walked to the site and bought quarter-grams of cocaine from the disguised officers, who then signaled other officers waiting in unmarked cars. The officers in the cars then chased the buyers and arrested them for possession of cocaine. The ostensible purpose of the operation is to reduce drug trafficking by cracking down on the "demand side" of drug transactions. That is, by arresting buyers, the police hope to provide a deterrent to other potential buyers' seeking out drug deals. "The idea behind it,” says APD spokeswoman Kellye Norris, is to show the drug user that he's doing something illegal." It's pretty clear, however, that those who are shaping Austin Police Department policy have an incomplete understanding of the mind of a cocaine user. Cocaine is a profoundly addictive drug, and regular cocaine users are known to go to great lengths to maintain their supply. Thus, if a heavy cocaine user hears that another user has been arrest­ ed, the reaction will not be, "Well, then, perhaps I shouldn t buy coke anymore." Instead, he'll seek out another, "safer" dealer. For that reason, it seems unlikely that the APD's operation, well- intended though it may have been, will result in any significant de­ crease in the city's cocaine traffic. It's also worth noting how close the operation comes to entrapment. The Texas Penal Code calls it "entrapment" when "the actor engaged in the conduct charged because he was induced to do so by a law enforcement agent using persuasion or other means to commit the offense." Of course, the code adds, "Conduct merely affording a person an opportunity to commit an offense does not constitute entrapment. Still, it's arguable that when police officers disguise themselves as dealers and offer real cocaine to buyers, that's something very near "inducement." And it should be remembered that the cocaine the buyers were charged with possessing came from Austin's police department. This is not to say that APD shouldn't do its best to crack down on cocaine traffic by pursuing dealers. After all, dealers have already com­ mitted a crime by purchasing the drug wholesale. Bringing the full weight of the law against coke users, however, is not the most appropriate tactic. What makes more sense is to expand treat­ ment programs for cocaine addicts, whose addiction is already punish­ ment enough for their crimes. — Mike Godwin not only of blacks, but of many disenchanted Americans is a foregone conclusion. The real issue about the Jackson phenome­ non doesn't even revolve around Jesse himself, but more importantly around the media's treat­ ment of him — or rather mistreatment. The me­ dia's treatment of Jackson has been inequitable at its best, and racist at its worst. First, Jackson and the American public were incessantly bombarded with the now-famous question: "What does Jesse want?" Jackson, however, continually and succinctly respond­ ed: "I want to be president of the United States of America." As a man who had amassed some 28 percent of the Democratic electorate, his statement was definitely reasonable. Nevertheless, the press was as consistent about ignoring this reply as Jackson was consistent in making it. As judge and jury, the media simply denied the plausibility of this answer and decided that the presidential office was not a realistic goal for Jackson. He was, after all, well ... uh ... Jackson was ... black. The mere fact that they used this question so frequently belies certain racial undertones be­ cause it is a question that was never directed to the other candidates. For instance, why weren't reporters asking, "What does Bob Dole want?" This question was considerably more warranted in light of Dole's constant thrashing by George Bush in the primaries. In building up the Democratic Convention hype, the press slighted Jesse again. The princi­ pal media-generated issue of the upcoming convention seemed to be: "Would Jesse cause trouble at or be the spoiler of the convention?" Would Jesse acquiesce to Dukakis, give up his concerns, and work toward the aims of the probable nominee? These questions characterize Jesse as some sort of John McEnroe-like figure who, like a spoiled child, can't wait to disrupt an otherwise serene proceeding. In addition, by asking only Jackson if he would negotiate with Dukakis and not vice-ver­ sa, they in effect denied the old axiom that negotiation is a two-way street. The media ig­ nored the political mandate that Jackson had earned at the voting booths and assumed that, as a child must submit to the authority of a parent, so should Jesse submit to the front- runner. Jackson, however, had earned the right to negotiate not as a meek child begging, but as a determined man demanding. Such flaws in the media reveal an otherwise latent paternalism and racial segmentation that has been inflicted upon blacks, not only in the political arena but also in the sports arena. Consider Kevin Murray, the former Texas A&M quarterback and two-time All-Southwest Conference player. He was not drafted by any NFL team because of what was reported as an "attitude" or "ego" problem. M ic h a el D a v is TEXAN COLUMNIST However, this "ego" problem mumbo-jumbo doesn't hold water when one realizes that Brian Bosworth, the Seattle Seahawk linebacker with an ego the size of Seattle itself, has succeeded in acquiring one of the highest salaries in the NFL. Similarly, Jackson receives the "ego" label from the media. They make the myopic conclu­ sion that Jesse is only working for personal at­ tention. It is, however, quite obvious that the movement is much greater than the man, and that Jesse has continually reflected the spotlight on the people he represents. Finally, like the description of the black ath­ lete, Jackson is seldomly referred to as being "smart" or as an "intelligent politician." Such inconspicuous adjectives are conspicuously with Jackson. For example, the press always described Super Bowl-winning quarterback Doug Williams as having "a good view of the field" or "a strong arm," rather than describing him as "intelligent." With Jackson, the media are likewise hesis- tant to apply the "intelligent" label. Instead, he is called a "charismatic man with good oratori­ cal ability." The media have created, for blacks, some sort of zero-sum proposition between ability and intelligence — as if the two terms are mu­ tually exclusive. In this respect, they have re­ duced Jackson to their version of a black politi­ cal athlete, devoid of mission and of purpose. Despite the media though, one thing must be acknowledged: The contributions of the politi­ cal athlete Jesse Jackson, like those of the sports athlete Doug Williams, speak for themselves and cannot be ignored. Davis is a business/psychology senior. Conservatives' manipulation of AIDS epidemic defeats their goals I n the tragedy of AIDS, some conserv­ atives believe they have found a shiny weapon with which to restore tradi­ tional sexual morality. But in order to do AIDS is not being transmitted between third-graders. When engaged in properly, both condom use and monogamy can re­ duce what is for most heterosexuals virtu­ ally no risk to absolutely no risk. paring for marriage, for instance, are in an extremely low risk group for HIV infec­ tion. In Illinois, by the end of May, of an estimated 60,000 tested marriage appli­ cants, only six were HIV-positive. M ic h a e l J. F u m e n to THE NEW REPUBLIC virus is being spread by evil practices of perverted sodomites. so, they have been forced to distort the true nature of the epidemic. They will find, however, that the epi­ demic will not change to fit their wishes. Whatever short-term gains they make through disinformation will eventually disappear and leave their causes worse off than before. There are essentially three theories of AIDS transmissibility. Theory One as­ sumes that HIV (the AIDS virus) can be passed through mere close proximity as well as sexual intercourse. Theory Two as­ sumes that it is transmitted efficiently through both homosexual and heterosexu­ al sex. Theory Three suggests that because HIV is blood-bome, it will continue to pla­ gue those who exchange fluids through anal sex and needles, but will pose far less of a threat to the general population. As a matter of logic, all three of these theories can't be right. Yet conservatives frequently combine all three models de­ pending on their state of confusion — and depending on their agenda. Theory Three is correct. Ten years after the first heterosexual AIDS cases began showing up in New York City, AIDS re­ mains confined almost exclusively to homosexuals, intravenous drug abusers, recipients of blood products prior to 1986, and their sexual partners. Only 2 percent of all diagnosed AIDS cases in this country have been attributed to heterosexual trans­ mission in native-born Americans. Most conservative leaders and writers have remained impervious to this fact. These conservatives have used Theory Two to push programs from mandatory premarital testing to chastity-based sex ed­ ucation in schools. We now have some evidence of how poorly these strategies work. Couples pre­ Secretary of Education William Bennett, the Reagan administration member most active in promoting monogamy and absti­ nence as a method of preventing AIDS, has also predictably taken the lead in criti­ cizing the use of condoms. Studies have been dragged out demonstrating condom use failure rates. The only truly "safe" be­ havior is described as chastity until mar­ riage, and then monogamy. Because heterosexual transmission of AIDS is so rare, emphasizing chastity and monogamy as AIDS preventatives is clear­ ly misfocused. Rep. Jack Kemp has point­ ed out that there's no need, moral con­ cerns aside, for condom education for third-graders. But there's also no need, moral concerns aside, for impressing upon third-graders the importance of chastity, at least in order to prevent AIDS, for the same reason: The director of a company that produces chastity-urging videos for schools (which don't mention homosexuality but do warn of the terrors of deep kissing) is undaunt­ ed by the astronomical odds of acquiring HIV through intercourse with other drug- free heterosexuals: "If there is one chance in 10 million that a kid will catch AIDS, he shouldn't take it." Of course to avoid such odds with ev­ erything that could kill us would end life as we know it. This year, more than one in 5,000 Americans will die in automobile ac­ cidents. Are we thus to conclude that there is no such thing as "safe driving"? The Rev. Jerry Falwell has employed all three AIDS transmission theories, calling for "immediate action (or) AIDS will prove Jo be the final epidemic — with millions dying each year — including your loved ones." Falwell makes no bones that the Comedy not bome out by Dren OK, Susan Boren (Sexlife) has been trodding merri­ ly through the summer trying to do her part for the comically deprived citizens of the University. How­ ever, after giving her plenty of time to develop her style, I have decided that she is not doing her part. Susan, I recommend you change your approach to this project of yours if you are the least bit interested in what the readers want. If there is anyone out there who feels otherwise, please, speak up. I would love to be enlightened, even though it is a sad time when one must be en­ lightened about a comic strip. Meredith Wheeler Zoology Reagan's tax policies more fair As various liberal Daily Texan columnists have been complaining for years of the unfairness of the Reagan Administration's taxation policies, I thought the following facts, appearing in the July 25th edition of Insight magazine, might be of interest. According to the Tax Foundation of Washington D.C., Internal Revenue Service figures show the top 10 percent of taxpayers paid 55 percent of individual taxes in 1986. Also, the top half of income earners paid 93.8 percent of federal tax revenues in 1986, up from 93.2 in 1979. You will remember that 1986 was die last year before the tax reform act dropped six million poor families from the tax rolls. Maybe economic growth, lower tax rates and elimi­ nation of various deductions and credits have result­ ed in a fairer system of federal taxation, after all. Kevin Gutzman LawfPwMic Affmrs SHC evades AIDS-testing issue The hudw t Health Center (SHC) director, Dr. J. Robert W ing, has issued a typical administrative jus­ tification for the SHCs decision to not offer anony­ mous testing tor AIDS ("Health Center Leads UTs AIDS Fight," The Daily Texan, July 28). Of course testing should not be funded at the ex­ pense of education. However, as Wirag admits, in­ creased awareness will result in increased demand t o testing. The challenge to Wirag and the SHC is to encourage and meet this demand. Is it not a coward­ ly response to offer testing, but only on terms that can victimize the very students that turn to the SHC t o help? If lack of funds is the problem, Wirag should use his public position to push t o more funding. Qn* approach to cutting costs, taken by Columbia Univer­ sity Health Service (which does offer anonymous testing), is to use trained student volunteers t o test pre-counseiifig. So is he saying that our loved ones are homosexuals? Or is he adopting Theory Two, in which case he must be saying our loved ones are as promiscuous as bunnies — not a very nice thing to* say to someone on the Moral Majority direct mail list. Or is he saying the virus is casually transmitted, in which case why is the solution absti­ nence and monogamous marriages? The AIDS crisis called for what used to be thought of as conservative virtues: cau: tion before all the evidence is in and dispassion when weighing public policy. Instead, conservatives have reacted as hysterically as their radical adversaries. After the long run of AIDS, the vast ma­ jority of us will still be alive. What short­ term victories could the conservatives gain that, come the morning after, could possi­ bly be worth what they will lose? Fumento is the author of The Myth of Het­ erosexual AIDS. This article first appeared in The New Republic. Wirag defends the SHC decision by claiming that it is "a basic tenet of public health ... not to duplicate services," yet six paragraphs later he says that the People's Community Clinic has a different service population. Obviously, the Clinic and the SHC du­ plicate many services, including testing for AIDS, be­ cause they serve difference populations; die issue is providing anonymous AIDS testing. The SHC's response is reminiscent of the attitudes of most public health bodies in the early days of the AIDS epidemic, when it was dismissed as a "gay disease." A far-sighted approach would have alerted health officials to the need for vigorous public educa­ tion, hence saving countless lives. The need t o test­ ing is a "second-generation" effect of the epidemic, yet once again many health officials are trying to avoid this problem, rather than solving it. Wirag's article evades the central argument: publi­ cizing and providing anonymous testing will encour­ age many more students to get tested. Michael Barnett, Ravi Jain Graduate students in computer sciences Bealls: uncouth in advertising The Austin Amerkan-Statesman of July 29 contains an insert advertising Bealls' ''Back-to-School Sale." Apparently Bealls thinks only whites go to school. Of the 40 drawings of young people wearing Bealls' products, not one is non-white. I ¡alls seems to be unaware that blacks, Hispanice and Asians exist. Perhaps Austinites of all races should forget about Bealls. Or better yet, you can call their h idquarters at (214) 586-9823 and register your complaint. They told me it is OK to call collect. MBoc Sutlwtn Yam Communist League THE D a il y TEXAN/Mónday, August 1.1988/Paoe 5 Home building companies return to Houston Associated Press HOUSTON — A number of home builders are moving into the Houston market, seek­ ing to buy lots and establish themselves be­ fore business rebounds, according to indus­ try observers. The Lokey Cos., a firm ranked among the top 400 builders by Professional Builder maga­ zine, will start building houses in two to four Houston subdivisions in the next two or three months, said Ken Lokey, president of the Houston firm. Lokey has built homes and apartments throughout the country, but this will be the company's first entry into its hometown mar­ ket. "The opportunities are always best at the start of the trend," Lokey said. I he firm is so pleased with the results that it hop s other build­ ers around the country do not find out about Houston, said Randal BirdweH, vice president and general manager of Emer­ ald’s Texas division. Analysts expect a number of other builders to join Lokey. "We're working with three or four compa­ nies that are taking semiserious looks at the market," said Houston housing analyst Mike Inselmann of American Metro Study. "But they are still skittish." Inselmann declined to say which firms are considering coming to Houston, but sources in the real estate community say those con­ sidering a major presence include Lokey Cos., McKinney Homes, Ray Ellison Homes, Trendmaker, Fox & Jacobs, MDC Holdings, Doyle Wilson & Co. and a new company started by a former Nash Phillips/Copus ex­ ecutive. The Houston building market is uncrowd­ ed with excess builders because the recent hard times for the local industry took their toll. Houston housing starts dropped from a high of about 31,000 in 1982 to about about 9,300 in 1985, 8,300 in 1986 and 7,700 last year, said Pam Minich of CI^PResearch. "The decline in sales was devastating for home builders. About 150 companies operate in Houston today, compared to more than 1,000 five years ago." Most of the new builders entering die mar­ ket plan to build houses costing more than $80,000 — the upscale market that has not been devastated by competition from die resale of foreclosed homes. Emerald Homes of Phoenix, Ariz., began selling houses in Houston in January. The firm is so pleased with the results that it hopes other builders around the country do not find out about Houston, said Randall Birdwell, vice president and general mana­ ger of Emerald's Texas division. Emerald, which builds homes the $90,000 to $150,000 range, expects to sell 100 houses in Houston this year — twice as many as the company projected at the first of the year, Birdwell said. in The beginningd; cause The Travelers red umbrella is something I feel good about. But those things aren’t what matters most. Our doctor is what matters most. And knowing he’ll be there for my baby when we need him. And when Christina needs him. I can’t tell you how much that means to me. A NETWORK OF COVERAGE. Travelers Health Network, a health maintenance organ­ ization, is our commitment to offer you quality health care and comprehensive coverage at an affordable price. There is no deductible. And virtually no paperwork. Hospitalization is covered. Each visit to your personal Travelers Health Network physician costs only a few dol­ lars. And your physician is backed by a complete network of hospitals and specialists. We believe Travelers Health Network represents an important step forward in health care. To find out more, simply ask about it where you work. Nice to meet you. Hello, Christina. , That’s what he said that first day at the hospital. She was just a few hours old. But I’d swear she smiled at him. He’s more than just a doctor for my little girl. He’s been her friend since the very beginning. He’s measured her progress at each well-baby check­ up. He’s helped her get over sniffles and diaper rashes. He’s answered phone calls at 2 A.M. He even met us at his office that night she had an earache and cried so hard. He was just as wor­ ried about Christina as we were. A relationship like that is pretty special. I guess it’s what I like best about being a part of the Travelers Health Network. Oh, sure, it’s nice that there’s no deductible and practically no paperwork, and doctor visits are only a few dollars. And it’s nice knowing that it’s all from The Travelers. Be- Railroads, council end legal fight By JUNDA WOO Daily Texan Staff The City Council has settled a lengthy antitrust lawsuit against two cdal transporters by agreeing to a mutual contract that officials said will save Austin at least $58 million over the next decade. Mayor Lee Cooke said Friday the agreement — the outcome of litiga­ tion by the city and the Lower Colo­ rado River Authority against the Union Pacific and Chicago North Western railroads — will reduce res­ idential utility bills by 50 cents to $1 monthly. The lawsuit, which Cooke said Austin is "poised to proceed with as a worst-case scenario," alleges that the railroads tried to illegally block construction of a Wyoming-to-Texas coal slurry pipeline. Councilmember George Hum­ phrey, who helped negotiate the pending agreement, said coal ship­ ments cost more than $36 million annually and called the expense "the largest single factor in our fuel bill." The 10-year contract "is not some­ thing to rejoice about, but it's a step in the right direction to get Austin back on track," Humphrey said. Officials would not release details of the agreement. But they said that under the con­ tract the railroads, whose one-year transportation agreement with the city expires next March, would con­ tinue shipping coal from Wyoming to the Fayette Power Project near LaGrange. The city and LCRA jointly own the Fayette project, which supplies about one-third of Austin's electrici­ ty- The city also would receive two cash payments totaling $3.4 million in January and April 1989, officials said. Humphrey and Cooke predicted roughly $58 million in total savings under the contract. Cooke said the agreement also could help the council "delay indefi­ nitely" a much-debated, $38 million project to extend the railroad in Fay­ ette. If Union Pacific succeeds in buy­ ing the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Rail­ road — the only company with tracks into the Fayette project — the contract would allow Austin to let other railroads to use those tracks, he said. Should a merger take place, offi­ cials hope these "trackage rights" will boost competition and lower rail rates. Texas Basin makes ready for oil show Associated Press ODESSA — Municipal and busi­ ness leaders have started gearing up for a massive oil show that is ex­ pected to triple the city's size for four days, drawing 200,000 visitors and infusing the local economy with nearly $16 million. More than 500 companies will participate in the four-day Permian Basin Oil Show, which begins Oct. 19. "Any time you have that many visitors at one time, it's a boon financially for the city," said Russell Autry, chief executive officer and head of economic development at the Odessa Chamber of Commerce. Holiday Inn Centre General Man­ ager Don Walts said all the motel's rooms are booked for the event, which visits Odessa every other year. Jay Alvey, the show's executive director, said lodging accommoda­ tions were filled as far away as Monahans and Crane during previ­ ous oil shows. "They'll go wherever they can get a room in the Permian Basin," he said. Visitors and exhibitors come to the oil and gas production show from around the world, and Alvey said the 912 exhibit booths are 99 percent sold out. For first-time visitors, the show offers a chance to get a close look at rigs and engines used in oil fields, while veteran oil industry workers can see new equipment, techniques and services. The show's roots in Odessa date to 1940 when it was called the Little International Oil Show. It was dis­ continued from 1941 to 1949 during World War II, but was started again in 1950 as the Permian Basin Oil Show. Only inland oil and gas products are displayed at the Odessa show, unlike a show in Lafayette, La., which includes offshore equipment. There is no connection between die two exhibitions, but organizers have agreed that the Odessa and Lafayette shows would alternate years in order to avoid conflicting schedules, Alvey said. TheBavelersT" Health Network A s u b 'i d u r y of The Iw v e ie r s C o rp o ratio n TRAVELERS HEALTH NETWORK OF AUSTIN, INC., Arboretum Plaza 2,9442 Capital of Texas Highway North, Suite 600, Austin, TX 78759,(512) 338-6800 Monday, August 1,1988 Page 6 U n iv er sity The Daily Texan Nurse: Health care ‘moral imperative’ By JULIE BLASE Daily Texan Staff An expert on nursing ethics told an audience of about 70 in the UT School of N ursing Friday that rigid, inflexible em ployers and an in­ creased num ber of patients pose problems to effective nursing. "We are in the business of chang­ ing people's lives, and we change them for the better," said Leah C ur­ tin, a nurse and an editor of Nursing Management magazine. "This is a serious com m itm ent. If kept, we change the nature of soci­ ety," C urtin said. "N urses have prom ised to help those w ho are ill to regain their health, those who are healthy to maintain their health, those who cannot be cured to maximize their potential and those w ho are dying to live as fully as possible until their deaths," she said. "This is the moral im perative of nursing practice," Curtin said. She said the differing policies of doctors and institutions put nurses in difficult situations and can con­ flict with patients' interests. Problems can accumulate to give the nurse little time for giving pa­ tients extra care, which can make a large difference in the quality of a patient's life, she said. "There is no time for holding a hand, to help w ith a crossw ord puz­ zle," C urtin said. "There is no time left for caring, and the patients no longer have reasons f o r c i n g ." C urtin stressed that coriflicts do not lessen the n urse's accountability — legally and ethically — for deci­ sions made. After her speech, C urtin said m any problem s existed w ith an American Medical Association pro­ posal to create a new position of bedside technician to help combat a national nursing shortage. Curtin said she recognized the need for "an appropriate assistant for nurses today" but said the m any levels of care adm inistration — tech­ nicians, aides and nurses — need to be critically examined. The dem and for nurses and health care w orkers will only in­ crease as the population ages, she said. Valerie Cox, director of nursing services at the Student H ealth C en­ ter, said the center is "beginning to feel the nursing shortage." She said the main difference is that it now takes a long tim e to fill a position. Curtin was in Austin as guest speaker for the La Verne Gallman D istinguished Lecture in Nursing. wmmM mm; A man was arrested Saturday at the Texas Student Union Building and charged with trespassing after he refused to leave the building, a UT Police Department report states. Police booked Mark Cunning­ ham, 37, into the city jail on a charge of trespassing, a class B mis­ demeanor. spent "Cunningham had the night at the Union," the report states. The building was closed to the public at the time of Cunning­ ham's arrest. ■ ■ ■ Friday, theft: A woman reported the theft of her leased violin equipment from the fifth floor women's restroom of the Music Building East. Police investigators have no sus­ pects in the theft of the violin, which has an estimated value of $500. Friday, theft: A UT staff m em ber reported the theft of an IBM typew riter from Sut­ ton Hall, Room 3.130C. The typewriter, w orth an estim at­ ed $200, was taken between 7:30 a.m . W ednesday and 7:45 a.m . Fri­ day. ■ ■ ■ Friday, theft: A UT staff m em ber reported the theft of six alum inum plates from the Robert Lee Moore Hall loading docks. The plates, valued about $300, were stolen betw een 2:30 p.m . W ednesday and 7 a.m . Thursday. Tuesday, assault by contact: A w om an was jogging Tuesday night on the Memorial Stadium track w hen a 14-year-old Reagan High School student "grabbed her by the arms and m ade some state­ m ents which frightened and offend­ ed her," a UT police report states. Charges will be filed in juvenile court against the 14-year-old, w ho the woman had been following while she jogged. “I chose it because we get quality carel’ ... And a fo o tb a ll to boot Frank Ordoflez/Daily Texan Staff David Hodgens, a senior at Lanier High School, is set to let the old pigskin fly from the 50-yard line at Memo­ rial Stadium. Hodgens, who kicks for the Lanier foot­ ball team, hopes to get a football scholarship at any school that will offer one. He would like to kick for UT, but said the competition would be hard to beat. I P É lig IÜ1 ------------------- * ü 1 St ‘ '• ■■ ■ ill! The dean of the School of Archi­ tecture has agreed to serve another year while the University continues to search for his replacem ent. Harold Box had announced last year he would step dow n this Sep­ tem ber so he could teach while con­ tinuing his research on Latin Ameri­ can architecture. President William C unningham , w ho called Box "an excellent dean," said he was pleased Box was willing to postpone his plans so UT officials could have more time to find "the right person" to replace him. Box has overseen several changes at the School of Architecture, in­ cluding the $11 million renovation and expansion of the original archi­ tecture building, G oldsm ith Hall. The building is scheduled to re­ open this fall. Box has been a UT faculty m em ­ ber since 1976. He was dean of the UT Arlington School of Architecture before teaching at the University. was appointed chairm an of Ocean Studies Board. the Two faculty m em bers of the De­ partm ent of Geological Sciences have been appointed to chair major boards of the National Research Council — the main operating agen­ cy of the National Academy of Sci­ ences. William Fisher, departm ent chair­ man, was nam ed chairm an of the Board on Mineral and Energy Re­ sources, which conducts studies and advises federal agencies about mineral and energy resources. Fisher has been a board member since 1982. He has chaired several board comm ittees, m ost recently a com m ittee analyzing hydrocarbon research drilling for the U.S. De­ partm ent of Energy. John Sclater, deputy director of the UT Institute for Geophysics, The board, on which Sclater has served before, advises federal agen­ cies about oceanographic policy. Four UT researchers set sail July 24 w ith 60 other scientists in the third joint Soviet-American Bering Sea Expedition. The four UT scientists are of Terry W hitledge, a senior research scien­ tist at the University's M arine Sci­ ence Institute at Port Aransas; A n­ tho n y A m os, research scientist at the Institute; Denise Veidt, a research science associate at the Institute and Earl Behrens, an associate professor in the Depart­ m ent of M arine Studies. also a The six-week cruise m arks the first time American scientists have traveled Russian w aters since the 1960s, W hitledge said. The expedition will focus on the biological and chemical distribution of toxins in the Bering Sea, begin­ ning at the bottom of the food chain w ith microscopic plants and ani­ mals and progressing up through fish and m arine birds. in "We think those toxics are being carried there through atm ospheric transport since there isn't any in­ d ustry that general area," W hitledge said. "But we hope to find out for sure." The American researchers are being sponsored by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the N ation­ al Science Foundation. The Barker Texas History C enter has received a $33,000 federal grant to process its Robert Runyon Photo­ graph Collection. The collection features develop­ m ent of the Rio G rande Valley, U.S. military presence at Fort Brown and revolutionary activity in northern Mexico during this century's early decades. The negatives and prints were do­ nated by the family of the late Rob­ ert Runyon. In processing the collection, C en­ ter officials plan to: ■ Produce a general description of the collection and its microfiche reproduction. ■ Publish a detailed inventory. ■ Make microfiche reproductions of more than 8,000 one-of-a-kind images to allow rearchers to copy prints w ithout having to handle an original negative or print. ■ Put photographs in enclosures to preserve them. The Barker C enter plans to exhibit the collection after the project is completed. Compiled by Lydia Lum, Daily Tex­ Compiled by Jim Greer, Daily Texan an Staff. 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Fbr more information about PaciBCare, see your BeneBts Manager, or call us with any questions at (512) 459-1638. PacifiCare l&Austmi nagnosticl■ Health System * T h e D a il y T e x a n State & L ocal Monday, August 1,1988 Page 7 County man charged with ranch death By JIM GREER Daily Texan Staff Authorities investigators said charged a Travis County man Fri­ day with the murder of an Austin woman who had been missing for more than two weeks. Police found the body of Sarita "Sam" Lee, 45, Thursday night at a ranch east of Brownwood in the Brown County community of Zeph­ yr, said Kellye Norris, an Austin Po­ lice Department spokeswoman. Terry Wayne White, 33, of 16805 Hurst Creek Circle in southwestern Travis County was held in Travis County Jail on $100,000 bond after he told investigators the body was at the ranch 140 miles from Austin, Norris said. Lee, who lived at 60 Rainey St. Apt. 103, was last seen July 16 about 1:30 a.m. at the Poodle Dog Lounge at 6507 Burnet Road, Norris said. Lee went to the bar with a friend and White, whom she did not know, and Lee and White later left the lounge together, Norris said. "They ... stayed there about an hour," Norris said. "They left the other man there." Lee and White apparently began to argue as they drove to White's trailer, which is about 30 minutes outside Austin, Norris said. White choked Lee to death during a physical fight, Norris said. "Last Saturday night or early Sunday morning, he moved the body back to Zephyr," Norris said. White, who owns an air condition­ ing repair service, was familiar with the area, she said. Lee had worked as a hostess at Abbey Inn, a bar at 2100 Riverside Drive, said C.F. Adams, an Austin police spokesman. Dr. Robert Bayardo, the Travis County medical examiner, said his office was not able to determine the cause of death. Police investigators had suspect­ ed foul play in connection with Lee's disappearance, Adams said. Contractor sentenced to 90 days By MIKE ERICKSON Daily Texan Staff One of three men who tried to cheat Travis County out of more than $220,000 was sentenced Friday to 90 days in jail and given a $1,000 fíne by a state district judge. Edward Tijerina, a Pflugerville contractor, also was sentenced to eight years' probation by state District judge jon Wisser. Tijerina pleaded guilty July 21 to charges of bribery and theft after reaching a,plea bargain agreement with the Travis County district attorney's office. He and the other two men admitted they conspired to submit fabricated payment vouchers and inflated bills for work on a county park in Webberville. Assistant District Attorney Ashton Cumberbatch originally recommended Tijerina receive 60 days in jail and a $1,000 fine for the theft charge and eight years' probation for the bribery charge. But after Tijerina failed a standard pre-sentencing ur­ ine test, Cumberbatch asked Wisser to increase the jail sentence to 120 days. Wisser instead sentenced Tijerina to 60 days in jail and the $1,000 fine for the theft charge and gave Tijeri­ na another 30 days in jail as a condition of the eight years' probation for the bribery charge. Cumberbatch said Wisser could give only a maxi­ mum of 30 days in jail as a condition of probation. Wisser did not add the extra jail time to the theft sentence because it would have given Tijerina the right to appeal his sentence for the theft charge. Under state law, if a defendant reaches a plea bargain with a district attorney's office and is sentenced accord­ ing to that agreement, the defendant may not appeal the sentence. If a judge changes the agreed sentence, the defend­ ant may appeal the sentence and seek a new trial. Tijerina's attorney, Robert Kuhn, said he believed Ti­ jerina had the right to appeal but said he would not. Tijerina could have received two years in jail and a $2,000 fine for the theft charge and two to 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000 for the bribery charge. Two former county employees also charged in the fraud attempt are serving time in the Travis County jail for their roles in the scheme. Carl Davis received six months in jail while George Gary was sentenced to one year. The two Austin men received 10 years probation and must pay a combined restitution amount of $29,000 to the county. Richards reaches out to teachers Former educator sympathizes with growing difficulties of profession with an audience, you just walk out there, you look at them and pretend they have no clothes on,' " Richards said. By JOHN COUNCIL Daily Texan Staff Now that Richards' teaching days are behind her, she says that no job ahead of her will ever be as hard as the one she had 30 years ago. And for those who think that teachers are being paid quite enough for the job they do, Rich­ ards said she has a way to correct that thinking. "I've often thought that one of the surest ways to improve the pub­ lic school system and to increase the pay level for teachers would be to require every adult in the United States to spend one month working in a public school," Richards said. "After that, I think there would be a public outcry demanding that your salaries be doubled and that we would still feel like you were un­ derpayed — I know that our grati­ tude would overwhelm us just to know that we didn't have to go back." There was no huge crowd, no dis­ cussion of political strategy, no ex­ tensive media coverage and no George Bush slams. But a week after her keynote ad­ dress at the Democratic National Convention in Atlanta, Treasurer Ann Richards' speech to the Texas Classroom Teachers Association was received just as well as her key­ note at the convention. When Richards told the teacher organization that she was "one of them," she wasn't lying. Thirty years ago, Richards taught government at Austin's Fulmore Junior High School to students "at the age a friend of mine character­ ized as a time of raging hormonal imbalance," she said. Since her days as a teacher, Rich­ ards told the teachers she realized their jobs were not getting any easi­ er. M l t e r y OPEN LATE TILL 8.-00! Rotea $8.96 doten Casa Verde Florist 451-0691 Mm t M M h M TO M y « p H W i "It's begun to seem like every time society confronts a problem that resists a solution, either in the community or at home, we include it in the curriculum — by law," Richards said. "And we expect you to work it into your lesson plan." So much is expected of teachers that the system has in effect "robo­ tized" the process of teaching, Rich­ ards said. "We've squelched creativity with administrators who hit a checklist trying to evaluate your skills," Rich­ ards said. Never teachers who influenced her most, she said the things they taught her always seemed to come back at the strang­ est times. forgetting the "When I was standing nervously backstage waiting to go out and give that keynote address in Atlanta, Mattie Bess Coffield, my 10th grade speech teacher, suddenly intruded into my head and I could hear her say, 'You never have to be nervous INSTANT CASH you om mtúh W W d W e I p i — 4 cm th to mm 4 m m Mini p k m ? WMi triri mi ynl w c O w a 12 bo aM a s | a v fent v U L S o h t^ odiava lv ^ h i| yow- « f t M m bmm «akd K> and proof o í A m U b raatfavea. Dtaar- «0 ImM oaca a w a k to* nao S2S boavaaa. CaM 474-7941 M a o .- F r i.t4 «*iy DOMINO'S PIZZA DELIVERS< I ¡ THE BEST PIZZA DEALS! Any medium (12”) pizza with your favorite topping $5.51 . only $5.51 plus tax. * Please mention coupon when ordering. One coupon per order. Expires 8/31/88 476-7181 447-6681 404 W. 26th St. 474-7676 458-9101 913 N. Lamar 4115 Guadalupe 1931 E. Oltorf DT Ad 6.88 Emergency test prep help for the imminent ISAT, GMAT, and GRE. As you see below, the exam s will be here before you know it. And if your vital signs include sweaty palms, a somersaulting stomach, and shaky legs, you need help—fast. Check into a Kaplan center. Our test-taking techniques and educational programs have helped lower the pressure and boost the scoring power and confidence of over one million students. Vfe even have compact classes so you can be ready for this fells exam s. So if you’re getting ill thinking about the LSAT, GMAT, or GRE, call Kaplan. \AfelI give you all the “mental medicine” you need. And a lot of intensive care. SUMUY N. MAHAN fDtfUIlOIIAL QNTil U0. 10/ 1/88 10/8/88 10/15/88 C aB 4*1-8085 LSAT GRE GMAT * Frank Ordoñez/Daily Texan Staff Monster Frisbee Russ Doshier spins a kiddie pool prior to competing in the Aqua Festival Beach Weekend Freestyle Frisbee Contest. Doshier is a five-time state champion from Forth Worth and came to Austin Sunday to compete. STUDENT’S SPECIAL Prcced yocdfrvi itotv and fan Riverpark 444*3917 London Square 445*5122 vfantiM Q a t $239 ¿on, • Basketball Gym, Saunas & 2 Tennis Courts • 6 UT Shuttles • Gas & Water Paid • Indoor Mailboxes • 20 Laundry Rooms o Large Lounge — Big Screen TV e Oversized Swimming Pool e On Town Lake C*K IM 35 Town t oko R ive rsid e NR SHUTTLE Soot* LokeM iore ‘V t Monday, August 1,1988 Page 8 T h e Da ily T exan F ea t u r e 4 . 1 ' ,*■ J i t ; ‘¡M i V f i •'-w Paraplegic player Wear sharpens skills for Paralympic Games H is 19-inch biceps flexed beneath a dark blue T- shirt, David Wear cruises into the tiny gymnasium that has down. It's never going to slow me down. If I feel weak, that makes me just push harder. the javelin, and on a recent trip to Vienna, Austria, he finished with a third place in table tennis as a member of the U.S. disabled sports team. But those times have not been the norm. If anything, Wear suffers from spreading himself too thin. there for him." w u n í i í w v w become a makeshift haven for a table tennis practice session. The room is filled, it seems, with only the most steadfast players. And in that respect, Wear is cer­ tainly in his element. But the dissimilarities are obvi­ ous. The 235-pound Wear benches 405 pounds, suits up with a size 58 coat and sports forearms that, at 18 inches, are just slightly smaller than the massive biceps. He likes to chase challenges such as scuba diving, the throw, javelin discus and the Capitol 10,000. the Not exactly the average week­ end table tennis guru. Then again, Wear has dealt with mediocrity — make that, dealt it a crushing blow — in his 31 years. The last 12 of those years have been the hardest and, strangely, the most successful. On an afternoon in Lampasas in 1976, Wear lost the use of his legs in an automobile accident. The bodily damage proved extensive. Wear was driving home from work when a driver swerved 8 feet into his lane, causing the head-on collision that cost him 13 breaks to the left leg, including three com­ pound ruptured spleen, a punctured left lung and a ruptured aorta. fractures, a The last injury, however, was the most costly. Physicians clipped the aorta, the main artery of the body that car­ ries Mood from the heart's left ventricle to other organs' arteries, and Wear lost the oxygen supply to his lower spinal cord. AH of a sudden, welcome to a world of confinement. Right? WeH... not really. "It was just two weeks after that 1 popped rigjht out of it," Wear said. "As fu r as being in a wheel­ chair, I've never let it slow me "I've got a minor setback," he said. "There's going to be set­ backs, but you can always learn lessons from that." In fact, Wear's biggest current obstacle concerns an international event for disabled athletes. The 1988 Paralympics Games begin Oct. 13 in Seoul, South Korea, but Wear and his coach, 21-year-old UT electrical engineering junior Quyen Ha, face a pressing finan­ cial problem. Wear and Ha must come up with $2,000 each by Monday to pay for the two-week trip. They have each raised about $500, but credit cards will probably be used to make up the difference while Wear and Ha heighten donation efforts. "At one point, he wanted to give it up," Ha said of Wear's reac­ tion to the discouraging fiscal situ­ ation. "I said, 'Look, we'll raise the money. Don't worry.' " After all, missing the Games is out of the question. Ha, president of the UT Table Tennis Club, has known that since his first encounter with Wear a year and a half ago; known it since Wear turned heads on a routine night at the club. "1 saw the way he played and it impressed m e," Ha said. "I told him he had the potential to be number one." Wear liked what he heard and the same night accepted Ha's offer to coach him. The table tennis team went on to become close friends and eventu­ ally roommates Wear has since married and moved out, making his garage the training facility for the Games, but the two — with 21 years of combined table tennis ex­ perience — dll spend at least 15 to 20 hours a week together. There are the hours of practice, a robot in Wear's garage that re­ Out of seven divisions, Wear is classified as a Class 3 wheelchair competitor. AtKletes in the lower classes approach quadriplegic sta­ tus and players in the higher divi­ sions have either musde forma­ tion in the lower half of their body or use of their legs. Competitors are ranked on a system of 3,000 points, with the ratings based on number of wins and quality of opponents. Ha believes Wear is ready to transcend divisions and classes, adding the Class 4 champion, Mike Dempsey, may be a good na­ tional target for his star. "I've seen him play, and I think Dave has the potential to over­ come him," he said. Wear is a little more modest. "Dempsey's a 2,000-rated play­ er. Right now, I'm probably a 1,500 player," he said. "To be in contention for medals, you need tobe right at 1,700." Despite Wear's lack of self-con­ gratulations, Ha is fully aware of the kind of talent he is working with. He has watched the rever­ ence for Wear's ability grow, even among the campus club's able-bo­ died table tennis players. "In this dub now, everybody has respect for him," Ha said. "He's got an awesome backhand. He can rank as number three or four in the nation right now." The admiration is mutual, and Wear enjoys praising his coach, who picked up the sport as an 8- year-old in his native My Tho, Vietnam. "I think Quyen's oriental back­ ground is a big help," Wear said. "He says, This is America. This is the land of oi$ortunity/ " Added Ha, "I think he's gone through a lot. There was a time when he was down, and I was Sometimes, the activity is self- imposed. As if wife Becky, a full-time job with Castleberry Instruments & Avionics Inc. and just ordinary day-to-day aren 't enough to keep him on the move, Wear hones his skill as an inven­ tor, coming up with such innova­ tions as a motorcycle with a side­ car accessible to wheelchair users. situations "I'm always staying busy," he said. "If I sit down and watch TV, I feel like I need to be doing some­ thing." Wear qualified for the Games in table tennis and field events, but his hectic schedule has prevented him from training with intensity for the latter sports. "I haven't lifted weights all year. Just table tennis. Table ten­ nis is my primary. If things don't overlap, I'll throw [discus and javelin] also," he said. That's eight weeks ahead, how­ ever, and Wear knows planning can be dangerous. He need only flash back to his senior year, when he played fullback for Lampasas High School. When he thought football might be a career option. For now, Wear's life resembles his scuba-diving excursions. No restrictions. Free. Close to effort­ less. "The water," he said, "there's no limit other than depth." Wear, after all, cannot forget the reality of limitations. So his grip on table tennis and other Paralym­ pic Games sports, almost like his hold on everything else around him, is not too tight. Put simply, nothing is certain. "Life's just too short," he said. "It's just going to pass you by." But for Wear, that's hardly been the case. Coach Quyen Ha thinks Wiser has the potentM to be on* of the baal wheelchair tabla iannla clavera in tha muwIiv turns serves, videotapes of the world championship to review and some finer points, courtesy of Ha, to go over. "He's learned a lot. 1 say some­ thing and he catches it like this," Ha said with a snap of his fingers. "It makes me fed motivated when I can do that." Educating Wear has been a snap as well, and the results bade that up. In June, he captured gold medals in both singles and dou­ bles events at the national Wheel­ chair Table Tennis Tournament. Wear has also taken medals in weightlifting, the discus throw, Story by M M Fannin Photon by Frank OrdoAoz T h e Da i l y T e x a n Monday, August 1,1988 Page 9 Horns receive lift in football, downer in basketball Fighting Irish running back H H H H H H Longhorn recruit Williams casualty of Proposition 48 decides to transfer to Texas By CLARENCE E. HILL JR. Daily Texan Staff No, it's not Christmas. But when it comes to the Texas Longhorns, Saint Nick works year-round. Because of NCAA sanctions, the Longhorn coaches only signed 20 recruits for this season and can sign no more than 20 again next spring. But Texas is continuing to receive belated "Christmas presents," ac­ quiring players via the voluntary transfer. the Within last month, Texas Coach David McWilliams received his second gift of the year when Notre Dame running back Lincoln Coleman — citing homesickness — notified him of his decision to trans­ fer to the University. Coleman's de­ cision, following a similar one last spring by UCLA blue-chip lineback­ er Brian Jones, couldn't have come at a better time. Coleman, who picked Notre Dame over Texas in a close recruit­ ing war in 1987, did not return to the South Bend, Ind., school for the spring semester after lettering his freshman year. "I found out that I didn't like the place, the weather or the people," said Coleman, who was considered one of the top 30 recruits in Texas when he was a high school senior. "Basically, I just wanted to leave and come closer home. It was too far away from my parents. Now they can see me play." Another factor that entered into his decision, according to Coleman, is he realized that "U T is really a better school." Stanford offers post to Quick By CLARENCE E, HILL JR. Daily Texan Staff Texás women's swimming coach Richard Quick — who has led the Lady Longhorns to five consecutive national championships — is con­ sidering an offer to the leave the University for a similar position at Stanford, said Patti Spnng, Texas women's sports information assist­ ant. job to succeed Spring said Quick was offered the the the retiring George Haines as Cardinal wom­ en's swim coach, and said the Texas coach is serious about the offer. "H e likes Texas and says he doesn't want to be anywhere else," Spring said. "But he also said that Stanford would be the only place he would consider leaving Texas for. He thinks it will present him with new challenges." Quick was unavailable for com­ ment because he was in Pasadena, Calif., talking to Stanford officials about the position Sunday, Spring said. He left Friday and returns Mon­ day. Spring said Quick plans to make a decision on the position be­ fore Wednesday. Quick is the U.S. Olympic wom­ en's swimming coach, and Spring said Quick wants to make his deci­ sion before the U.S. Olympic Swim­ ming Trials begin Monday at the Texas Swim Center. The situation caught Texas wom­ en's athletic director Donna Lopi- ano off guard, but she feels confi­ dent something can be worked out to keep the successful coach. "W e are discussing some changes in the program," Lopiano said. "There are some little things he is concerned with, none of which are insurmountable." Spring said Lopiano didn't mind Quick considering the Stanford po­ sition as long as Texas gets a shot to counter the offer. "Donna said that it was not a problem," Spring said. "All she wants is a chance to present another offer. She said we want last dibs." Quick, who earns a base salary of $46,384, has been with the Lady Longhorns for six years after com­ ing from Auburn in 1982. He coached the Texas women to a third place finish at the 1983 Nation­ al Championships in his first season and has since directed them to five consecutive national tides. The SMU graduate spent four years at Auburn after beginning his coaching career at Iowa State in 1977. Quick has produced several Olympians. Among them are Tiffany Cohen, Betsy Mitchell, Kim Rhodenbaugh, Carrie Stein eifer and Torri Trees. Former Auburn star Rowdy Gaines, winner of three gold medals at the 1984 Olympics in Los Ange­ les, also was coached by Quick. "Education-wise, Texas is second "And to n on e," Coleman said. overall I is tops think that UT among all the universities. And if you combine that with it geographic location, it's definitely the place for m e." Coleman said he really wanted to attend Texas in the first place but had already committed to Notre Dame, having made his decision af­ ter visiting the school early in the recruiting season. Yet after visiting Austin a few weeks later, he wanted to change his mind and come to Texas. It may have taken a year, but Coleman did change his mind. The Dallas Adams product contacted McWilliams a couple of weeks ago about the transfer and said the Longhorn coach told him he would try to find a way to put Coleman on scholarship. "Coach McWilliams told me that he had given all of his scholarships ou t," Coleman said. "But he did say he would see what he could do about getting me a scholarship." McWilliams, who was unavailable for comment Sunday, found a scholarship for Jones earlier this summer and it is fairly certain that he will do likewise for Coleman. Several athletes are in academic trouble and McWilliams said Friday at the Southw est C on feren ce Kickoff Luncheon in Dallas that he expected to lose some to academic dismissal. Coleman saw action at running back, wide receiver and defensive back for the Fighting Irish last sea- See Transfer, page 16 WMams, shown in an afi-star game, win not see action for a year. Associated Press By CLARENCE E. HILL Jr. Daily Texan Staff Many basketball experts have called him one of best pure shooters the nation. Texas basketball in coach Tom Penders has predicted he will be the best player Penders has coached. Some even projected him as the catalyst in the Longhorn resurgence. Now, Benford Williams is simply gone. Williams, Texas' lone basketball recruit last spring, has been de­ clared ineligible for his freshman season at the University for failing to meet requirements of NCAA Proposition 48. coach Texas assistant Jaimie Ciampaglio told the Austin Ameri- can-Statesman Friday that Williams failed to meet the NCAA require­ ments for freshman athletes on the Scholastic Aptitude Test. Ciampa­ glio said Williams scored 680 points, 20 shy of the minimum score as mandated by the NCAA in Proposi­ tion 48. The 6-foot-5 Williams, who was unavailable for comment, won't be able to play for the Longhorns until the 1989-90 season and will have three years of eligibility left. to The blue-chipper averaged more than 20 points a game in leading Sweeney the Class 3A state championship the last two seasons. The highly touted small forward was supposed to repeat some of that magic during his freshman sea­ son at Texas. Some even expected Williams to earn a starting spot in his first year. "Tom says he's going to be the best player he ever coached," Ciam­ paglio told the American-Statesman. "Losing him is a blow, but we'll be happy to have him next season." Williams, who has been to Austin this summer, has already won the respect of some of his future team­ mates. "H e is a good player," sopho­ more center Thomas Gipson said. "I played with him in Gregory [Gym], and he is impressive. He can really shoot the ball. He would have helped us this season." Without Williams, Texas has only 11 players on scholarship. That in­ cludes center Jose Nassar, a native of Brazil who may opt to play for a club team in his country and not re­ turn for his senior season. The loss of Williams also leaves Penders with only one true small forward on scholarship in Russell Green, also a Proposition 48 casualty as a fresh­ man. Yet Penders is not without alter­ natives. Winn Shepard can play the forward position because he has outstanding leaping ability despite his 6-3 height. Shepard, who is in his second season at Texas, did not play last season because of discipli­ nary reasons. Also, an abundance of versatile guards gives Penders several op­ tions he can use in his fast-break style of play. Penders will have the transfer services of guards, Joey Wright of Drake and Lance Blanks of Virginia, to add to an already steady group that in­ cludes Travis Mays, Courtney Jeans See Williams, page 16 two eligible Late Dolphin score beats 49ers in American Bowl Associated Press WEMBLEY, England — Reserve quarter­ back Dave Archer sped into the end zone with 1:28 remaining for the touchdown that gave the Miami Dolphins a 27-21 victory over the San Francisco 49ers in an NFL preseason game at London's Wembley Stadium Sunday. Archer, taking advantage of a personal foul against the 49ers, faked a handoff and ran the other way around left end to cap the Dol­ phins' second rally of the second half. Miami, which earlier gave up a 10-point lead, struck back from a 14-13 halftime deficit to move in front again. But late in the third quarter, the Dolphins fell behind 21-20 and San Francisco held on to its slender advantage until Archer's game- winning score. A capacity crowd of 70,500 turned Eng­ land's national soccer shrine into a football carnival as they cheered on both teams in the third NFL-sponsored "American Bowl." Some of the loudest applause was reserved for the cheerleaders who added authenticity to the occasion, braving the driving rain that has plagued the English summer to perform a series of spectacular dance routines. Although the action on the field was full of penalties and incomplete passes, it was no different from other preseason games. Star quarterbacks Dan Marino of the Dol­ phins and Joe Montana of the 49ers each played the first quarter before being replaced. Marino had the better of the early plays as the San Francisco defense started edgily. The first time Marino touched the ball, he found running back Troy Stradford with a 14-yard pass. Then Marino saw an 11-yard pass to Mark Clayton in the end zone slip out of the normally reliable wide receiver's hands. As the skies darkened and rain began to lash down on the Wembley field, Miami's early pressure finally earned it a touchdown. Running back Lorenzo Hampton dived over from the 3 with 9:58 of the quarter gone. Fuad Reveiz kicked the extra point to give the Dolphins a 7-0 lead. possession in the first quarter, continued to lose yardage, Reveiz kicked a 45-yard field goal to extend the Dolphins' lead. Montana, whose wide receivers had given him little help, left the field for Steve Young and Marino gave way to Ron Jaworski in the second period. Young's appearance sparked the 49ers to life. His combination of accurate, left-handed throwing and powerful, imaginative running cut holes through the Miami defense. On his second play, Young carried for 11 yards, then picked up a first down with a scorching 41-yard pass to star wide receiver Jerry Rice. With Miami's defense mesmerized, Young threw a 2-yard touchdown pass to running back Tom Rathman. Ray Wersching kicked the extra point and the 49ers, last year's NFL leaders in yardage, were back in the game, trailing 10-7. On the next play, a neat 49ers move ended with Terence Flagler carrying six yards into the comer of the end zone. Wersching again kicked successfully. A nine-play Miami drive ended with a Reveiz field goal with two seconds remaining in the half, lifting the Dolphins within 14- 13. Although the second half had fewer high- class plays than the first as more reserves en­ tered the game, it always was interesting. After a turnover-free first half, Miami took the lead again when Harry Sydney slipped on the wet grass, fumbled a Young pass, and Miami's Jackie Shipp picked it up and ran 11 yards to score. Young continued to spray around accurate passes but could not find the same coordina­ tion as before with his receivers. He left the field to be replaced by third-string quarter­ back John Paye. At the same time, 26-year-old Archer, a fifth-year NFL pro, replaced Jaworski and im­ proved his chances of making the Dolphins' roster as he won the game in the dying min­ utes. "Archer did an outstanding job by moving the young players down the field in the last quarter," Miami Coach Don Shula said. San Francisco’s Roger Craig (fives during the American Bowl played in England. As San Francisco, which had only 3:46 of Los Angeles pitching silences Houston offense Associated Press ■- LOS ANGELES — Orel Hershiser pitched a five-hitter to become the National League's second 15-game winner and John Shelby had a two- run single as Los Angeles beat Houston 6-1 Sunday. The Dodgers ended a three-game losing streak and moved 4Vi games in front of the Astros and the San Francisco Giants in the NL West. Hershiser, 15-5, has beaten Hous­ ton three times without a loss this season, but lost his bid for a shutout when Buddy Bell hit an RBI single with two outs in the ninth. The Dodgers scored three times in die third against Jim Deshaies, 7- 8. ■ Mets 2, Pirales 1 — In New York, Darryl Strawberry hit a two- run homer and Ron Darling pitched a six-hitter as New York lengthened its lead in die National League East. The Mets won their fifth straight overall and moved five games T * - ® U T iiiT lil h h i - ' ’M p f * , 4 t « ahead of Pittsburgh. Darling, 11-7, improved to 9-2 lifetime versus Pittsburgh and helped the Mets win for the seventh time in nine games against the Pi­ rates this season. With two outs in the bottom of die first, Dave Magadan drew a two-out walk from Bob Walk, 11-6, and Strawberry followed with his league-leading 27th home run. in seven-plus ■ Phillies 6, Cubs 3 — In Phila­ delphia, Mike Maddux allowed six hits innings and drove in a run while defeating his brother Greg as the Phillies beat the Cubs. Mike Maddux, 3-1, struck out four and walked one, but needed relief help from former Longhorn Bruce Ruffin after allowing a pair of singles to start die eighth. Ruffin al­ lowed Rafael Palmeiro's RBI single but finished up to earn his third save. It was the second time the broth­ ers had faced each other. On Sept. 29, 1986, Greg Maddux, 22, was an 8-3 winner over his 26-year-old brother. Greg Maddux, 15-5, has beaten every team in the National League except Philadelphia. The Phillies scored three times in the fourth to take a 4-2 lead. Ricky Jordan and Jackie Gutierrez singled and moved up on Maddux's sacri­ fice bunt. Phil Bradley hit a two-run single and later scored on Milt Thompson's single. ■ Giants 4-3, Braves 2-2 — In San Francisco, Will Clark beat out an in­ field hit with the bases loaded and two outs in the 10th inning as the Giants defeated the Braves to win their fifth straight game and sweep a doubleheader. In the first game, Kevin Mitchell hit a tie-breakinj homer in the sev­ enth inning for his third game-win­ ning RBI in four games and Butler added a run-scoring double as San Francisco won 4-2. The Giants rallied with two outs in the 10th inning of the nightcap against Paul Assenmacher, 5-6, the Braves' third pitcher. Robbie Thompson singled, stole second and went to third when But­ ler lined a single off Assenmacher's glove. Butler went to second on catch­ er's indifference and Chris Speier was walked intentionally to bring up Clark. Clark bounced a 3-2 pitch off the chest of first baseman Gerald Perry and beat Perry to the bag for his league-leading 79th RBI of the sea­ son. ■ Expos 2, Cardinals 0 — In Mon­ treal, Dennis Martinez pitched a three-hitter for his fifth victory with­ out a loss in the month of July as Montreal defeated St. Louis. Martinez, 12-7, struck out three, walked one and did not allow a hit after Terry Pendleton's infield sin­ gle with one out in the fourth. The Cardinals have been shut out 12 times this season, the most in the National League, The right-hander, who pitched his fifth complete game and second shutout, has won eight times in his last nine decisions and had an earned run average of 1.63 in July. Danny Cox, 3-7, gave up seven hits in seven innings as he lost for the fourth time in his last five deci­ sions. ■ Padres 8, Reds 5 — In San Di­ ego, Dennis Rasmussen won for the seventh time in eight decisions for the Padres and former Longhorn Keith Moreland, Carmelo Martinez and Roberto Alomar each drove in two runs. Rasmussen, 9-7, was_ acquired from Cincinnati June 8. He allowed eight hits and five runs before being relieved by Lance McCullers with two outs and the bases loaded in die seventh inning. ) Page 10/THE DAILY TEXAN/Mondav. August 1 Stargell has induction to himself Associated Press COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. r - Willie Stargell, the epitome of a team player, had the stage to him­ self Sunday as he became the 200th player ensh­ rined in baseball's Hall of Fame. Surrounded by family, friends and fans, Star- gell's golden plaque was unveiled on the steps of the National Baseball Library. This was a day, however, for reading emo­ tions instead of baseball history. For Stargell and his family, it was all smiles and a few tears in the celebration of a gentleman who hit monster home runs. Also taking part in the ceremonies were Com­ missioner Peter Ueberroth and several members of the Hall of Fame, including Ted Williams, Stan Musial, Ernie Banks and Willie McCovey. Prior to Stargell's induction, sportscaster Lindsey Nelson and sports columnist Jim Mur­ ray of the Los Angeles Times were given awards for their contributions to baseball. "You are looking at one very proud individu­ al," Stargell said. "I don't think anyone can ac­ curately describe what a feeling I'm having to­ day. "I did not get to Cooperstown without a net­ work of family, coaches, teammates and teach­ ers, you name it. I accept this for all the people at the stadiums. The batboys, the groundcrew, an­ nouncers and the media." In 21 years with Pittsburgh, Stargell hit 475 home runs, had 1,540 runs batted in, hit .282 and helped the Pirates win the World Series title in 1971 and '79. In the '79 Series, Stargell hit .400 with three homers and was the MVP. Last January, Stargell became the 17th player Associated! WWe Stargefl has an emotional moment. to be elected in the first year of eligibility. He was named on 352 of the 427 ballots returned to the Baseball Writers' Association. In order to be elected, a player must be named on 75 percent of the ballots, which this year was 321. Jim Bunning, a U.S. congressman from Ken­ tucky who won 100 games in each league and pitched a perfect game, fell four votes short with 317. For the first time since 1956, the Veterans Committee failed to elect any of its candidates, passing up such names as Phil Rizzuto, Leo Du- rocher and Gil Hodges last March. Next January, Johnny Bench and Carl Yas- trzemski seem certain to follow Stargell into the Hall. It will be their first year of eligibility, too. This year, nine members of the BBWAA re­ turned signed but blank ballots. Several of the nine felt none of the candidates — including Stargell — had numbers worthy of the Hall of Fame. But it seems Stargell's induction had to do with more than homers, runs batted in and bat­ ting average. He was equally regarded for his qualities as a leader on the field and off, and was affectionately known as "Pops" to his younger Pirate teammates in the 1970s and early '80s. As a player, the powerful 6-foot-3 Stargell had a big bat and a big heart. He is the only player to hit a ball out of Dodger Stadium, and he did it twice. Stargell cleared the right-field roof at the old, cavernous Forbes Field seven times and hit four balls into the upper deck in right field at Pittsburgh's Three Rivers Stadium. Stargell, who is the Pirates' all-time leader in extra-base hits with 953, had 2,232 hits, twice led the National League in homers, and was the co- MVP in 1979 and a member of the All-Star team seven times. Throughout his career, Stargell was active in many charities and helped raise hundreds of thousands of dollars to research sickle cell anem­ ia. Stargell, who had five 100-RBI seasons, credits much of his success to Hall of Famer Roberto Clemente, who was a teammate for 11 years. Clemente was killed in a plane crash on Dec. 31, 1972, while on a mission of mercy to earth­ quake-shattered Nicaragua. "One teammate who stood out a little more than the rest was Roberto Clemente," Stargell said. "He taught me to command respect rather than demand it. He has a special place in my heart." NFL Result D e tro if (A le xa nd er 10-5) at K a n s a s C ity (G u b ic z a 12-6), 7:35 p m C a liforn ia (T C la rk 3-0) at S eattle (Swift 6-8). 9 0 5 p m O n ly g a m e s s c h e d u le d Red Sox 5, Brewers 0 IMLWAUKEE BOSTON San Franctoco 0 14 7 6 0 -2 1 7— 27 M ia— H am pton 3 run (R eveiz Kick), 9 58 Rrat Qua ar Sacond Quartar M ia— F G R e v e iz 45. 10 S F — Rathm an 2 p a s s from Y ou ng (W e rsch m g kick), 2 29 S F— Fla g le r 6 run (W ersch ing kick), 12:07 M ia— F G R e v e iz 43. 14 58 third Quartar M ia— S h ip p 11 fu m ble return (R e veiz kick), 9 58 S F — D u b o s e 1 run (S p a n g ler kick), 11 37 Fourth Quartar M ia— A rch e r 4 run (R e veiz kick), 13 32 A — 70.505 N ew York Pittsburgh M ontreal C h ic a g o P h ilade lph ia St Louis L os A n g e le s H ouston S an F ra n c is c o C in cinn a ti S an D ieg o Atlanta NATIONAL LEAGUE EastDMdon W L Pet. 08 WaatOMdon 40 45 4 8 53 59 59 63 .6 1 2 — 5 8 5 563 55 8 534 50 4 85 13 4 5 4 33 18VS 4 5 4 33 18VS W L Pot 08 6 0 5 6 5 6 51 48 35 Sunday's Gamas 583 — 538 5 38 4 90 4 57 13 337 25VS 43 48 48 53 57 69 4VS 4VS 9 VS M olitor dh G an tn r 2 b Yount cf B ro ck 1 b L e o n a rd If D ee r rl S urhoff 3 b C O B rie n c S veu m s s a b r h b i 4 0 1 0 4 0 2 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 J o R e e d ss Barrett 2b B o g g s 3b G re e n w i If B e n z n g r rf R ic e d h G e d m a n c Pa rrish 1b B u rk s cf R om in e cf abrhbi 3 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 4 1 1 n 3 1 0 0 3 1 1 0 1 4 t 1 1 2 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 29 5 7 8 000 000 000-0 010 202 00s—8 Totals 32 0 8 0 Totals Cam m it 3 b A g o sto p M e a d s p C R n id s ph Flamirz ss Trevino c D e s h a ie s p C a n d a e i 3 b Totola Houston S h e lb y cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W o o d sn 3 b 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 D e m p sy c A n d e sn ss H ershtsr p 31 1 8 1 Tototo 32 8 8 8 000 000 301 11a-8 G a m e W inning RBI — S h e lb y (8) E -Puhl. Trevino D P Los A n g e le s 1 L O B -Hou*ton 5 L o s A n g e le s 6 2 B - S a x D em p se y 3 B G Y o u n g S B S h e lb y (14) W oo dson (1) SF D e m p se y P N R B I 8 8 SO G a m e W inning RBI E - G a n t n e r D P —M ilw au k e e 1 Parrish (6) Boston 1 L O B M ilw au ke e 6 B osto n 4 H R G e d m a n (3) SF G e d m a n f> H REN 88 SO D e s h a ie s L 7 -8 A g o sto M e a d s i #if Angeles H ersh ise r W 15-5 6 1-3 7 2-3 0 5 A u g u st L 5-5 Ptesac 5 3 0 0 W P M e a d s B K D e sh a ie s T 2 29 A 44 811 M ontreal 2 St L o u is 0 N ew York 2. Pittsbu rgh 1 P h ila d e lp h ia 6 C h ic a g o 3 S an F ra n c is c o 4 Atlanta 2 1 st ga m e S an F ra n c is c o 3 Atlanta 2 10 inn , 2nd gam e L os A n g e le s 6 H ou ston 1 San D ie g o 8 C in cm n a t1 5 SF Ma 23 3 4-83 2 53 8 23-39-1 2-14 5-40 2-1 5-55 35 25 19 31-207 190 14 12-24-0 2-14 6-35 4-3 15-78 24 35 Monday's Gamas C in cin n a ti (J a c k s o n 13-5) at L o s A n g e le s (B e lch e r 7-4) Pittsburgh (D ra b e k 9-5) at N ew York (G o o d e n 13-5) W P P ie sa c T 2 26 A 33 527 B od diC kr W 7-12 Stanley 7 1 - 3 8 1 2 - 3 0 0 0 H ouston (R ya n 8-7) at S a n F ra n c is c o (H am m aker 4-3) Atlanta (G iavm e 3-11) at S an D ie g o (W hitson 9-6). 9 05 O nly g a m e s s c h e d u le d Yankees 6, Blue Jays 3 NEWYORK TORONTO 7 1 0 p m 7 1 0 p m 7 10 p m p m First dow n s R u sh e s-y a rd s P a ss in g Return Y a rd s Com p-Att-Int S a c k e d -Y a rd s Lost punts F u m bie s-Lo st P e n altie s-Y a rd s Time of P o s s e s s io n MOIVDUAL STATISTICS R U S H IN G — S a n Fra n c is co , F lag ler 7-58. Y ou ng 4-27 C ra ig 4-23. R ic e 1-21. D u b o se 6-16 Rath m an 3-12. S y d ­ ney 2-9 M iam i S tra dto rd 9-25 B ennett 3-21, M id d le to n 6- 16, D ave n port 5-7. H am pton 5-5, A rch e r 3-3, C o o p e r 1 -0 P A S S IN G — S a n F ra n c is c o M on tan a 2-5-0-35 Y o u n g 6- 13-0-116, P a y e 4 -6-0-53 M iam i, M arin o 7-12-0-78. Jaw or- ski 10-19-1-115, A rch e r 6-8-0 74 R E C E IV IN G — S a n F ra n c isco , Rathm an 2-7. S y d n e y 2-6, R ice 1-41, H elle r 1-38. Taylor 1-36, C ra ig 1-22, D u b o s e 1- 14 C h a n d le r 1-13 M iam i. Stradtord 3-33 J e n s e n 3-16 E d m u n d s 2-28. D ave n port 2-20, C lay ton 1-11 M IS S E D FIE LD G O A L S — N on e Major League Standings Detroit N ew York Boston C le ve la n d M ilw au kee Toronto Baltim ore O aklan d M innesota Californ ia K a n sa s C ity T exas C h ic a g o Seattle AMEMCAN LEAGUE East Division W 61 60 6 0 52 52 51 32 Pet. 08 598 — 1 588 5 83 1 VS 4 95 10 VS 491 486 11 VS 311 29VS 11 Pet. 08 6 10 — 5 59 5 VS 5 10 10VS 5 00 11 VS 4 47 17 4 42 17 VS 385 23VS 41 42 43 53 54 54 71 41 45 51 52 57 58 64 W MtDMdon W L 64 57 53 52 46 4 6 4 0 Sunday's Gamas B oston 5. M ilw au k e e 0 K a n s a s C ity 4, B altim ore 1 M in ne sota 12. C le v e la n d 4 Detroit 5, T e x a s 1 N ew Y ork 6, Toronto 3 C a liforn ia 7. C h ic a g o 5 O a k la n d 6, Seattle 2 Box Scores Tigers 5, Rangers 1 DETROIT TEXAS M cD w e i ct Fietchr s s O B rien l b Sierra rf Incvgha It B u e ch le 3 b Steels dh S u n d b rg c W ilkrsn 2 b Tolala Texas Detroft a brhbi 4 1 1 0 3 0 2 1 3 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 S h e rid a n It S a la za r H W hitakr 2 b B e rg m n 1b K n ig ht 1b T ramml ss D E v n s dh H ern dn dh Lem o n rf M u rp h y ct N o k e s c B ro k n s 3b 33 1 7 1 Tototo abrhbi 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 2 0 4 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 2 1 0 1 3 0 1 0 3 1 2 1 3 0 1 2 3 0 2 0 30 5 8 4 001 000 0 00-1 100 001 30*—6 G am e W in n in g RBI — N o k e s (5) E -B u e ch efe DP— T e x a s 4 L O B - T e x as 7. Detroit 12 2 B — B roo ke n s. N o k e s S B — M cD o w e ll (19) *> H R ER BB SO G u zm an V a n d B e rg L.0-1 M o h o rcic W illiam s 4 4 1 1-3 2 2-3 2 0 0 1 0 1 1 2 1 2 1 2 5 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 batter in the 9th W P - S h ie ld s , D W ard T— 3 20 A — 41.401 R H d sn dh R n d lp h 2b M tngly 1b W infield rf J C la rk if G W a rd cf W sh gtn cf A g u a y o 3 b S kirw er c S an ta n a ss V e la rd e ss New York Toronto d r h b i 5 1 3 0 4 2 1 0 2 1 2 1 3 1 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 1 0 0 F e m n d Z SS M lln ks d h G B e ii if Whitt c B utera c M cG riff 1b G ru b e r 3b L e a c h rf C m p s n ph B arfie ld cf L e e 2b 38 6 11 6 Total* drhM 5 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 2 0 0 Ü 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 2 1 0 3 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 2 0 3 0 1 3 32 3 7 3 000 410 001-8 000 010 200-3 G a m e W inning RBI M attin gly (9) E — G ru b e r A g u a y o D P — N ew York 2 Toronto 2 L O B N ew York 7 Toronto 7 2 B — M a ttin g ly 3 B B arfield S B — Fe rn an d e z (9) S S k m n e r S F — L e e ■* H RER 8 8 SO New York R h o d e n W 7-6 S h ie ld s Righetti S 16 K e y L 6-2 W ills D W ard Cerutti B air 6 1 1-3 1 2 - 5 1 3 1 3 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 1 2 2 0 4 2-3 9 2 1-3 1 1 2-3 0 1 0 1-3 0 R h ode n p itch e d to 2 batters in the 7th Cerutti p itch e d to Dodgers 6, Astros 1 HOUSTON G Y o u n g cf Doran 2b Pu h l If B a s s rf B ell 1b * r h b i 2 1 1 0 4 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 2 1 Sax 2 b MHtchr tb Stubbs lb Gibson It Marshal rf d b r h b i 4 1 1 0 4 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 3 1 0 0 M in ne sota (Viola 16-3) at Toronto (S tie b 10-7). 12 35 Monday's Gamas p.m. O a k la n d (B u m s 3-0) at C h ic a g o (P e re z 10-5). 7 30 p m G u zm a n p itc h e d to 3 batters in the 5th M o h o rc ic p itch e d to 2 batters in 7th W illiam s pitch e d to 4 barters in the 7th H B P — S h e rid a n by G u zm a n M u rph y by W illiam s N o k e s by W illiam s W P — W illiam s T— 2 51 A — 35,977 Associated Press Scott Fletcher tags Tom Brookens during the Tigers’ 5-1 victory. Tigers maul Rangers 5-1 as Morris leads the way Associated Press DETROIT — Jack Morris won for the first time in five starts since June 27 and Dwayne Murphy had two hits and scored the winning run on his first day with the Tigers as De­ troit beat the Texas Rangers 5-1, winning for the sixth time in seven games. Morris, 8-11, allowed seven hits, struck out eight and walked two in his sixth complete game. Matt Nokes snapped a 1-1 tie with an RBI double off Ed Vande Berg, 0- 1, that scored Murphy, who had singled. Murphy earlier got his 1,000th major-league hit. ■ Red Sox 5, Brewers 0 — In Bos­ ton, Mike Boddicker, traded from Baltimore Friday, allowed eight hits over 7% innings to win his first gamp with the Red Sox as Boston stretched its Fenway Park winning streak to 20 games with a victory over Milwaukee. Boston swept its fifth consecutive home series and improved to 17-1 since Joe Morgan was named mana­ ger after the All-Star break. Milwaukee, which has lost nine of its last 10, did not get a runner past second. Boddicker, 7-12, acquired for mi­ nor leaguers Brady Anderson and Curt Schilling, threw 113 pitches, struck out six and walked one be­ fore Bob Stanley threw l lA innings of perfect relief. ■ Yankees 6, Blue Jays 3 — In To­ ronto, Rickey Henderson led off with a single to reach base in the first inning for the 13th consecutive game and had two other hits as New York beat Toronto. Rick Rhoden, 7-6, defeated the Blue Jays for the first time in five career starts, allowing five hits in six innings. New York scored four runs in the fourth on Don Mattingly's RBI dou­ ble, run-scoring singles by Dave Winfield and Jack Clark and Joel Skinner's squeeze bunt. Clark made it 5-0 with another RBI single in the fifth. ■ Twins 12, Indians 4 — In Cleveland, Tim Laudner hit a two- run homer in the fifth and drove in the first run of a nine-run sixth, the Twins' biggest inning of the year. Cleveland made two errors that accounted for five of the Twins' runs in the sixth, when Minnesota sent 13 batters to the plate against four Indians pitchers. Fred Toliver, 2-1, gave up two runs on six hits in 5% innings, gain­ ing the Twins' 28th road victory this year. ■ Royals 4, Orioles 1 — In Balti­ more, Charlie Leibrandt pitched a four-hitter and struck out a career- high 11 and Bo Jackson hit a three- run homer as the Royals improved to 9-0 this season against the Ori­ oles. ■ Angels 7, White Sox 5 — In Chicago, Wally Joyner's two-run inning seventh homer snapped a 5-5 tie and the Angels stretched their winning streak to five games. the in Joyner's homer run, his eighth, scored Devon White, who reached on his third single. White had four hits Saturday. ■ Athletics 6, Mariners 2 — In Jose Canseco homered Seattle, twice, becoming the first player to hit 30 this season, and Dave Hen­ derson also homered. Storm Davis, 10-4, won his fifth straight start. He allowed four hits in six innings before Greg Cadaret got the final four outs for his first career save. call t h e T E X A N c l a s s i f i e d H O T LINE 471-5244 R U N Y O U R C A R o r T R U C K C L A S S I F I E D A D UNTIL IT SELLS! f o r n l y 5 1 < j i 5 0 * T£YANcmssiFi€D I “ A l l P I HOTLINE! j Mets 2, Pirates 1 PITTSBURGH B o n d s if Lm d 2 b V anStyk cf B on illa 3 b G W iiso n rf B re am 1b LV ilre c RRytds ph Befitard s s G re g g ph D G o n z iz ss W alk p D estrd p h K ip p e r p Tototo Pittsburgh New York e b r h M 4 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 3 1 1 t 4 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 a b r h b i 4 0 1 4 i 2 3 0 1 4 0 0 4 0 1 3 0 1 3 0 1 0 2 0 0 D ykstra cf 0 B c k m o 2 b 0 M a g a d n 1b 1 Strw bry rt 0 M c R y id s H 0 H Jo h s n 3 b 0 S a s s e r c 0 Eister ss 0 D arting p 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 ’ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 32 1 8 1 To 30 2 8 t 100 000 000-1 200 000 OOP ■ G a m e W inning RBI E D a rlin g L O B P ittsbu rgh 6 N ew Y ork 8 H R — S traw berry (27) S B B re am (5) S traw berry (21). M cR e y - n o ld s (15) S traw berry (10) P N RER 8 8 8 0 6 2 9 5 2 1 0 2 3 0 1 1 6 1 1 2 1 8 PW PlMp W a f k L . n - 6 K ip p e r New Yoffc D arting W ,11-7 W P - W alk T - 2 2 5 A — 46.917 Transactions C HICAGO WHITE SO X— Placed Nan Calderón outfiatd- er on the 21 -day disabled list Purchased the contracta 0» Ketly Pans third baseman and Dorm Pall pitcher from Vancouver of the Pacific Coast League Sent John Dev», pitcher to Vancouver __ C LEVELAND INDIANS— Catted up Ron Tmgiey. catcher from Colorado Springs of the Pacific Coast League Ser* Den Firova catcher outright to Williamsport of the Eastern L*D€TROIT TIGERS— Pieced Gary Pettis, outfielder on the 15-day disabled list Purchased the contract of Owayna from Toledo of the k*emational Murphy, outfielder League S i iiait , S i m 1 95 CITS 95 PERMS 12 29 j 7 \ ’ ( , n j A [ ; A ( * ¡ ; T | C O U P O N 1 X P I B Í S 7 30 68 I Macintosh Add-On Boards Bestsellers 1MB Simms Ra teiOj §104 R atoOpslOO Dovi 524E DoveS24S Dove SCSI Orion Dove M adill SE DotibleTimelS 512K Upgrade YowCaU 45000 2899.00 1299.00 17500 269.00 11500 795JOO 73980 31980 19980 MacProducts AUSTIN Doble MoU 2021 Guodolupo 46frS0Q0| T h e D a il y T e x a n C la ssified A dvertising VISA/MasteiCard Accepted For Word Ads, call 471 -5244/For Dii olay ads, call 471 -8900/8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitis Avenue VISA/MasterCard Accepted Monday, August 1,1988 Page 11 THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS RIAL ISTATI SALIS RINTAL tSNTAL RINTAL RINTAL RENTAL 120— Housws 3S0— Rental Servke* 360— Fum. Apis. 360— Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. CLASSIFICATIONS TRANSPORTATION 1 — M Io c A w l > ^4^ee^F6^DiB*69(f9Baf4o^ 2 0 — T r v d u - V a n o B S l 4 0 — V a M d M lo T ra d * ^5^9 uegn_ 0 0 - B k y d o o 0 0 - V o M d a H i 100— V pM daa HAu n N d RIAL ISTATi SALIS 1 1 0 - l i d i i i 1 2 0 — N o w 120— Condoo Tomrwho u— 140— M o M o Noanoo-LoM 190— A n u o p i lo t» . 140- - 1 1 0 0 — L o u n s MIRCHANMSI 190— AppNoiM M 2 0 0 — Fu m W vr a H o n a h o M 210— H u n TV 220— Comg iHorc- • n t t u 2 2 0 - 2 4 0 — B o o ts 2 9 0 — H o ilW l Iw m i m e n t» r n 27 0— • b w ry - 2 0 0 — Op o i d n a C — p i n t 20 0— PumWuru Aps As n n 2 N - f l s r s | i tu a a n w g o ANNOUNCIMINTS S I I - M n M i m i i H B Is lS f 32 0— F iw o n a b 53B— Trw vat- WM 9 4 0 — M l A P o u n d M M 9 9 0 — U o H M o d C M M C a ra 9 7 9 - M m k M u o ld a n a IDUCATIONAL 9 0 0 — T u le H n f M BaiB 4 0 0 — In M ru c lM M i H I 4 1 0 — W s c . h M A rw H e n SIRVICBS 4 2 — L o f d te rv tc M I 4 7 0 - M d S i SIRVKIS f ii 7 0 0 — P u m M w e B a p a lr ü 7 1 0 - A pp M s w ii la p d r 7 2 0 — 9lo r » o T V S a p d r 7 2 0 — Moaam 7 4 0 — Iq to 7 S 0 — T y p to p 7 4 0 — m e l u d a n IM PtO VffilN T 7 7 0 — Im p lu y in a n t A g a n d o a M r p< o*i H o t W a m le d Im p to y H N f* TOO— P a rt K m * 0 0 0 — O lO - O m in C toi f u d > 2 0 — A c t a wa ilin g |O o k k 5 5 M M 0 2 0 — A d m M d m » - 3 0 — W n tu d to O w y MIRCHANMSI 0 9 0 — A m i 200— Pum . D u p is n a 200— U n i. Ougdams 40 0— Condoc -T o w nh o ira » 4 1 0 — Ft k» wo 4 2 0 — U nf. Ho u m a 429 — Rooaaao 4 2 9 — Co-ago 47 0 — Oaoarts rw o n m n o m n io g ASA A „ -»ol..i» ▼ 02 0— W ork «Samad RUSINBSS 0 2 0 — Owd n s s s O p p iriw n W a a 0 4 0 — O g aaafua d lla A T5P Buddmg, Room 3.200 2500 WhMa iLaau meeSn CgúLau Hnonooy m rougn rnooy 8om -430pm w t P A w n s * Otorgad by Am w o rd 15 word 10W- nwm. Salta pttypuonly R m oto for eonaacaAwa da^k, Eoch word lA m a ...................S 3 1 Eodtword 3 M maa................$ .87 Eoch «word S N m ra................S 1.30 Eodtword 10 U rn ra ................... $2.20 Eodtword 15 A m a a ................... $2.55 Eodtword 20 A o taa...................$2.50 $1.00 dtotga to change copy. Fw# two wot may bo a l capital tañar c for «*■ I A- to o l OwPWW AMU 51 W ,'* M o M w d ondVoq occnpOsd. « U | ^ ‘ u N iA m m •Qtorgad by Am (no. Ona column in di minimum. A 1 ceL x 1Inch 1 Tim a................... $4.00 in 5 lo 14 pi. typo. t W OOD AM O U N I A D I .F rid o y llo m T u o a d a y....................M o n d o y lla m W odnoadey..................Tuoadoy Horn T h u n d o y.............. W adnoadoy 11am Fr id a y ....................... Thumdoy Horn T O P 1 A C IA W O O O O O U N I A O C A LL) 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 ________________ C lA W P M P 0 M W L A T *A 0 Q A m ____________ * Chragad by « • cdkxnn M l Q w col­ umn inch minimum. A «oriely of typo iocoa and oaaa and bordan ouolabla. Sonanor Sota» Juna 1-Aogual 31 1 to 49 column M io a Far MonAt ..................$4.00 Far Coiuntn M i O rar 50 coL in. par month, c o l lo r rota*. C L A S S * M A O U N IS O M O U U TO P LA C I A C LA S M P ltD DM ALAY AO , C A U .I 4 7 1 - 5 9 0 0 ________________ In Am oront of arron moda in on od- laritaamonL noAca muat bo giran by 11 a m Am Ana doy, aa Am poblaban ato roapontdda lo r only ONE mcorrod inaortion. A l doana (or ud|udntanai dtould ba moda not talar Atan 30 doya idtar pubtcolon. Ftp poto U b racarra a e d O A p t roquoriad o l Ama d concat- loion. and I amauro a aadt $200. Sip mual ba ptoiantod lo r o reorder wdMn 90 doya to bo ra id . C rodi Apa 'odnaadoy, 4 pji*. Thuradoy. 4 pjn. . Friday, 4 pm. Ihurtdoy.......................Monday, 4 p m Friday......................Tuoadoy, 4 pm RENTAL «■m m nvTlraN 9 V T rl« B I ■— 2 4 0 — P u m . A p is . B— U n i ip TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 10 —Misc. Autos 10 —Misc. Autos __ 20 — Sports-Foreign ALFHAAUTO TINTINO * 2 5 o r r w h e n y o u m e n tio n a d 3M B raid Scratch Reststont F*n Gmramaao # 1 2 1 H iH c r o f t ( # M 1 ) M e u e t o e (713)270-0460 41 8LNCK Century, AT, PS/P8 A M /fM coaMfto. now twoa, 60.000 mi lea. $2350. Ca> 323-2 797 8-12__________ 1975 FORD TORINO G ood iludan» cor M fh mdooga Runa good. $525 447- 9491 lo ovo Maaaoga 8-12___________ 1981 OLDS OMEGA. 57,000 m»loa. ax co lo n l condition $2.100 452 -75 36 8- 12________________________________ *86 REGAL Umttod. lo o d e d Ex ca la n» condAon Utdim io d milaoga W arranty ovadabia 17.000 mdaa Muat ta ll 250- 8205 8-12_________________________ LIN C O IN TOWNCARS M itra r «tortor, m oonroof. aignotura tones, 1984- $7500; 1983-$6750 A fte r 6 p m 343- 0454 8-12 | | TICKET DISMISSaH ^DEFENSIVE DRIVING] ■ $15 1st Ticket I ¡ H 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 1 E a a t t a f T a t a r s 1 M >■> d 'n 1 " A -s ' . amp S ■ 1978 FORD MUSTANG MochontcaRy m good rhape $1995 o r bad o ffer 444- 0947 8 -3 _________________________ 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 79 SCIROCCO 4-apoad, o», low mdea. Pio neer ayatom. m oonroof, fo g lighta. 478-4034 otter 6. 8-12______________ ‘67 8UG G reat condition, high perform ­ ance engme, $90 0 o r bear o ffe r 443- 7895.8-12_________________________ FOR SALE 1986 Hondo CRX. axcakant condition, 34,000 mile s. AC, outomobc Luaaatto player, $65 00 Dick. 388-1366. 8-12______________________________ 86 RX7 TINTED gtasA excellent condn Hon, low mdeage. $9,700 244-0760, i and weebendi 8-12 1973 VOLVO 142 Rebabie Bed o ffer 322-0358, Jerry. 8-12________________ groat, (oaks 1957 CHEVY 2-door, rant 192 3573 rito rp , $5,000 negotiable. 4-12______________________________ 1983 VOLVO DL wagon. A C AM /FM , 5 m a d , crane. 82K m te i. tinted glata, $7,800 C o l 1-285-4238 8-12________ 1976 CAMARO V8 M m* tire*, AC A M / FM «toreo, great condibon. Beet o ffe r $1500, c o l Amy 4 79 -69 58 8-12 1979 CUTLASS SUPREME Excellent run­ ning condibon. M utt «el Boat o ffer over $1,700 C oll Lyto, 328-5131 doya 8-12 r 1983 Oottun 200 SX H atchback G roat colega cor SG I pockoge. loaded AL able M ud te l 280-3154 8- ______________________________________ MUST SELLI 85 Muetong convertible now •to t, doon, $89 00 o r o ffo r 331-4607 8-12______________________________ 1980 MERCURY CAPRI 2-door. 4-apood A C A M 'FM tapo, 70K. ram good $2,000 nogorioblo 472 -94 84, Randy 8-12______________________________ 1984 SUBARU G l W agon W futo, excel­ lent plush m tonor, pow er w indow */ mu­ ran, now M tcheiira. WW nagobato. 472- 9911.8-12__________________________ 1976 ALFA ROMEO Spydor owner Robuib engme N ow top, teats, bakery, records. $3,500 331-4860 8-12 Ivory, 1 1983 M AZDA RX-7, 5-tpaod, A /C sun- roaf, great cort $5950. A trio Trends, 6724 lu m a t Rd. 450-0128. 8-12N 1974 DATSUN 2602, 4-spaad. A/C Super dean, super condition. $2450. Auto Trends, 6724 Burnet Rd 450-0128. 8-12N_____________________________ 1985 NISSAN SENTRA Deluxe, red, 4- door, looded. M ud see. $48 00 448- 2661 8-12________________________ 1979 FORD Fairmont. Runt good, low mioa, AT, PB. PS. C o l 346-5051 Any- •m ot 8-12 ____________________ 1973 SUPER8EATLE. dependable trans- portabon, ipm tod perform ance $995. 926-8977 8-12 1957 PLYMOUTH Looks G roat $1500 0 4 0 C o l to too. Rabort 477-1854. 8 ____ 12 86 SUBARU XT A M /FM i beaubfui. 58,500 negotiable C c* Lou, 328-7744 o r 385 -36 08.8 -12 _________ ■87 NEW Yorker Turbo, tlvor/faiua. kw d- ad. la aé n r seats Lika now. mud te l O nly $11,500 328 -27 58. 8-12 1966 VW convertible, fu lly restored Red in color, mog wheels, exce ie n i condi­ tion. 1-295-2075 , M onchoco am a. 8-12 RE0 HOT borgam tl Draa daolars' con, boato, pionas ropo'd. Surplu*. Your oreo Btryon G uido. 0 ) 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext S 9413.9-19_________________________ FOR SALE: 1941 antique Chevro le t-ip e . 75JOQO m m . b la ck 2-door. $3500. 327-4920; 9 2 8 -6 5 9 0 8 1 2 ASSUME LO AN on 1987 Escort W agon. EriceBent condition. 280 -38 42.8 -12 1946 DOOGE 600 C onvertible Beoukful «r id e exterior A l extroa, muat tee to ap- ■ $85 00 .1 -2 9 5 -2 0 5 6 8-12 7 4 VOLVO W agon, $800. 68 Kharman Gbto, $1200 63 Ramblar O o m k do •o n wagon, $700. A l in goad condibon 371-3243 8-12 1941 FORD ESCORT N ew tire», ran* a, 474- SlóO O/naaokabU >344, 346-9812*before 5pm 7-29 1907 NISSAN SENTRA XE 4 door, 5- p a id, C larion data, A C 15,000 m les. Shaw room condtoon. $ 6 5 0 0 /o ffe r 437-1910.8-2 *•2 PONTIAC Phoenix. 4 -tp e e d ,| ram very w e l. Loaded. $2w )0 . Koran, 452 -68 33 8-1______________________ f ; > ] • 4 PONTIAC Sunbed G old. Standard. M leag e 23,000. AC. C a ll 448 -40 85 $3408.4-8_____________________ CLASSIC 1965 M udang coupe. CoNoc- to r'i car, 249 autom atic, orean, good nam ing condbion. Reliable . $3,000. 444 -97 25.4 -12_____________________ FOR SALE. VW Superbeede, 1974. O ne asmar, good conabion $ 40 0 o r bed aSer. 0 *4 4 1 -0 2 3 4 .4 -1 2 ____________ 1945 CHEVROLET C avalier, 4-door. W eek A C Sony A M /FM catteke. 64K, ekselont condbion. $3400. 454-8535. t-1 2 ______________________________ 7 3 CADILLAC Loaded, leather m tonor, now tees, bakery, ubem elor. $959. 449-1979, lo o m m enage to M ichael 8 10________________________________ A ll O RIGINAL 1962 Chevy picbup. N ow b e d dutch, mtonor, be rod ends. Rabudt cerb. $1200 4 7 6 -2 4 4 9 8-12_________ 1981 CAMARO. N ow t m , A C CBNÉftsii. $24 00 Hmm, 33$*4453, Ibnwb mbibbmb. 8-31 Sent C # | 4 3 RAMRLER. $50 0; good cowdWon, 371-3343-9-6______________________ 1970 FORD MUSTANG. 302 V t, P $ AT, UT «range, etegnum 3 0 0 wheetj good C kkdM m U lR O a 4 4 3 -4 4 2 9 .9 -6 4 # uu $1150/ ^ ^ M 4 4 7 - 4 3 1 7 .449-9402.4-1 M U $ T « a L e r take ewer pmmexto 1944 hbdWegOtemwerRMk. VAbk TOJOOO ■ *» 5 meed Dwsd. 441-1450.8-1 1972 F0ÉQ htowerick 79K e d h » ÍM ^ 1984 SUBARU HATCHBACK. 4-tpoed, A C dereo. Excelent. 80,000 m ile^ new togs, new irapeclion $2,365. 454 -70 37. 8-12______________________________ 1977 280Z, ram good. M ud tocriRce. Bad offer. Come and sea. 445-6176 8- 12 _ 1972 M G M idget. G roat condbion, new brakes, recent paint pib, go a t hm t, w ool «eat covers. A lpine dorec $ 2 0 0 0 0 *4 7 8 -5 0 6 3 .8 -1 2 __________ 7 9 CAPRI d e a n car, V-6. A M /FM , AC, 4-tpeod $1595. Rabin, 343 -05 57 8- 12________________________________ 77 CONVERTIBLE FIAT Spider. G reat diape. C o l now, 444-1449. A b o rta . 8- 5_________________________________ 84 RX-7 M AZDA D IS, q ro rtt car W orth $7,400 w ant 6,500. S u n ro o f m oon- ra o f 442 -93 32. M ud te». 8-2_________ 1972 BM W 2002. A C «unroof w ith da- tmOe 0#raeW#tBv | NBUgNL Q uick dean, dopondablo. $ 2 3 0 0 . Scott, 8 3 7 -2 6 8 8 .8 -3 _____________________ mmÍ m Íx 1984 VW SCIROCCO. A C A M /FM cae- •eke, 2 way «unroof, toolbar interior. G reat condition $45 00 Scott 482-0252. 7-13 ____________________________ -85 TRANS A M Very dean, T-tops, load- ad $8,500. Leave maaekge a t 263- 2908 1-5_________________________ 1972 Porsche 914 Beautiful and rata ble. C o l Jell, 479-8616.8-12 75 TOYOTA COROLLA 4-m eed, na» a l eober S6S0 ORO. ram Jim ^ ■ 5 5 6 ,3 8 6 -1 7 0 0 .4 -5 ^■VOLKSWAGEN JETTA GL. 5- «unroof, AM /FM , camake, a l $11,500. Suten, 4 4 2 -9 6 0 3 8-13 I 1974 M R C EO fS 240 . 4 doo r, w tom at-1 < to r cewdblewed l o ole end ram g m t $ 4 0 0 0 .2 8 2 -5 4 7 0 m ranmgt Day», 443- 2001 a d i fo r te m ie . 8-12_____________ 1944 KARMAN G hia Coupe M edia n»-j Ip d v^vW n o r o a iy aound $2200.3 20-8061.8-12 J B B E E B 7 3 M A Z0A RX2 4 ipeed, ram gm aL $ 7 0 0 Joe 4 44 -44 72, evenings 4 -9 19R1 CAMARO Z28 Enee*«nt condM oa U m M . need to «ee to epm ocM lk. $4, 7 9 5 .4 4 4 -1 4 4 3 ,4 4 4 -9 3 R Í-1 2 1943 ALEA ROMEO GTV6 5 3 5 BBBÍÜBBf taw ik8ba 66meE aid- $4$300- 4 49 -92 51 eeeniegs H 2 t r m \ 4 2 6 A C AT, derao. 74K e * m $ 3 3 0 0 eegettobto. 6 o l Jo. 334- 4 4 » > 4 1________________ 1993 DATSUN 24QP L h t o b j ^ B •9to2SS-4390i 7 5 VW'•u p A M F F H 4S44BZ1.8-3B-3TV 7 5 VWV W to ra C 4 S 4 4 0 L H IT O » t f KA4MAN 0MML AM/FM. tape, tim em Autos 81 FIAT BRAVA plaid inte rio r, «tero, 5 to *e d $1995 o r make an offer. 320 0422 9-1__________________________ ’82 VW Jallo 5-t pead, tintad window», nudntght blue, good condibon, $2500 nagotiobla. 453-6300 9-1 BEAUTIFUL 7 9 M G 6 N ow angma, dutch, top, «toreo, more. G reat body $ 3,500 nagoboble. 458 -58 57 9-2 1980 TOYOTA C ó rala, 2 door tedan, 5 «peed, AC, AA4/FM coiaetto, excellent condkion $23 00 251-2938 8-12 1979 CELICA AC, AM /FM cossotto, blue book, $1875. Run* great. $1500 firm . 835-4762. 8-3 68 KARM ANN-GHIA. $1000, G ood condition, 371-3243 9-6_____________ 1984 VW JETT A «betel 48 im let/gaNon. 5-speed, «unroof dark tint, great condi- bon $4800 258-3491 8-1____________ HELLO PLAYPEN G ood-bye tp o rt* cor Luxury F ondo Accord '8 5 Looded 63K nelea, $5500. 837-6197 8-1__________ 1983 RENAULT A lionce. 4-door, 5- apeed. PS, PB, A ir M icrop rocessor $2000 Ekrem, 476-8260. 8-2________ 1977 DATSUN 280Z Completely ra- ito re d AM /FM , dereo coi aetto. new mog wheeb and tires, A C 5-speed, C o l 892 -10 06.8 -2______________________ 1980 BMW 320i. 5 «peed, beige, tmtod Windows, A C «unroof, mmt condition. 8 5 4 0 0 .4 4 8 -2 9 8 2 8-3______________ 1983 DATSUN 280ZX Low m4eoge 8 7 8 0 0 .4 5 9 -8 6 5 2 8-5______________ '6 7 VW BUS, $750, good condition. 990-1756, oftor 5pm. 8-5____________ 30— Trucks-Vans 68 CHEVROLET C-10 pkk-up A ir and autom atic. Extra clean 454-0321. 8- 31V 70 — Motorcycles H O N D A 459-3311 FuH Selection of Motorcycles A Scooters Check on Our '87 WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER « 5 0 9 N . L A M M TJ's SALES & SERVICE *B U Y + S E L L *T R A D E * USED BIKES i SCOOTERS COMPLETE SERVICE SHOP------- FtO M FLATS TO TUNE-UPS TO OVEtHAULS REGISTERED TECHNICIAN SUPER PRICES ON PARTS t ACCESSORIES 6721 NORTH LAMAS: 7 block» south of Air­ port Turn on Raymond. 453-6255 8-38 FREE TIRE BALANCE! Wrth This Ad & Tire Purchase MOTORCYCLE PARTS SALES & SERVICE (N ew & Used) AUSTIN CYCLE SALVAGE 4 5 3 -9 8 0 9 4 i2 6 f c jn W « d . . 8-4H YAM AHA DT 175. Jud oum houtod. N ew ptotok. Jud tuned. Dependable Rum g re e t $395. John 477 -7 1 3 4 .4 -4 1971 YAM AHA XS 400. 11,000 nula». lo e ie e k d ra m g re e k k k w to g A ib to b a t- to ry 475 -20 54, Ron_________________ H p S fik SPT f 1 5 P m icñe iy brand te e . O nfy 15 mile». $ 40 0 F ira tC a l a lto r 3pm 8 34 -06 32 8-4 _________________ EBiCUMOMI ■ y e m b u c k s x 4 (P 4 j9 ^ 9 ■ £ £ £ « 5 5 3 CUIUS $ U W M I‘»1Lkm h4A fW 9M | era. 444 - ACWkwra 42K ralm 9 k 442-4421 $23501 s 5 [ « I K W X A C ifc k . A * . A M I9 H » » ra d k k k fli 454 -0M 1.4-31V torafeC krara 4 < » M to t * • - « * * » $150.441- Free Service fipt. Hunting F r e e G i f t s C a l l C r y s t a l 4 7 7 - f i P T S 715 W. 6th FREE Leasing Service t ffivenide/Ohorf • S Austin • Campus • N. Austin 9-8 4434141 1931 E. O korf 137-7194 124 W Anderson J B G oodw in S g p f k t y u »» Hunfing? n e t e -4 l - ^ u— IR R O T ilW V R n R R fH n i . $81 etoWHB * I .A B F -S S M * J THE AP ARTMCNT OCTOR 495-9059— b m - ! ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a FREE! LOCATOR SERVICE TFS REALTY 4 5 1 -5 0 6 6 NEED TO FIND AN APARTMENT? L e t us do th e looking for you! Capitol City Locators 339-7368 Phono answ er fo r 7 om-11 pm 8-5V 9-16V 360 — Fum. Apts. Chaparosa Apartments 3 1 1 0 R e d R iv e r C L O S E T O U .T . S m a ll, quiet, q u a lity complex 2 blocks from Law , on sh u ttle; a ttr a c ­ tively furnished, with pool, laun dry, and all bills paid. E f f i c i e n c y t o 3 B R 4 7 4 - 1 9 0 2 3BR/2BA. 2 m ioa univom ty. By btchon, mony d o a fartcod, abodod Dockyard. $88,000. C a l coito 512-286-3382 8- 8____________________________________ HOUSE FOR aala by ow ner 2-1, CA/CH, doao to UT sK 5102 Avo. G. 454- 0289. $40,000.8-12 140 — Mobile Homos- Lots 10 minutes to UT Hurry! Call about our move in incentives. Own very large lot, swimming pool, laundry room. 2 minutes from CenTex. 385-5883, 385-4410. 60'*12 ', 2-1 V j, good condition, CA/CH, fridae, range. Come tee Call 480- 0052, m orntngi/ovoningi. 8-5 150—Acreage-Lots 1 Ac. FREE Colo. Mtns. w ith C o n d o /P o o l n o a r UT. C am per O K on lo t 150 d a y s /y r. a t Forest Lakes w ith fishing la ke, ski a re a , clu b house noa r D urango. M oke o ffe r. Chas. 1239 M ain A v., D urango, C O 81301 o r cod mo 3 0 3 -2 4 7 -8 5 1 5 8-6 MIRCHANMSI 190 — Appliances A/C , 5000 BTU Soars Ken m ore Excellent condition. Energy efficient $250 negoti­ able Stove or Tarry 327-1342 8-1 SANYO REFRIGERATOR fo r sole Good condition, $100. 452 -52 33 night*. 8-3 200 — Fumiture- Household BUY OR SELL good used furniture L & E Furniture. O pen 10om-6pm Closed M ondays. 11423 N orth Lamar (in the co- op) 836-6647 8-4N ________________ OFFICE DESK $50 Large, redongubr, heavy desk w ith 4 small and one large drawers. 451-3024, David 8-1 M O V IN G ! NEED o bed o r sofa fo r your now place? Cod us Pom o r Coro 480- 9580 8-3_________________________ SOLID OAK pedestal table $80 Double bed fram e, box spnng $60 Sewing ma­ chine $80 Corroctom otK typew riting $40 Tow new bar stools $20 B & W w niorger$40 Ration chair cushion, stool $60 Cash. 339-8581 8-4 230 — Photo- Comoras FOR SALE: Nikon FE, w ith 50mm lens. C ate and strop SB • 15 speed light flash. $280 478-9294.8-1________________ FOR SALE Canon AE-I. Hardly used. C o i Pam o r Cora, 480 -95 80. 8-3 240 — Boats WINDSURFER. MARLIN 12 W ith 6 0 meter N e il Pryde sail and cor rock $350/nogotioble. C horiet 459-3884(h), 482-5834310 faB M u# ik ^ ^ M illi Serw ce458-1213 « 1 A ] M M ★ BEAUTIFUL CHEAPEST ★ 1802 W . A ve. The complex is one o f Ib» nicert aparto* to in W e il Campus given to inexpensive rento. G reat atmosphere, walk to UT. Surrounded by beautiful houses. Pool with fountain. Free parking. Laundry room. New fixnitore. A kitchen. Fully carpeted. Goa, w irier ond wotor heaters paid. Now Praia Ming. Summer/Fa* rotes: Few Left. 1- 1 .......................... S295/S365 2-2* (S entrances) . Í4 2 S /S 5 6 5 3-2» (5 entrances) . .S62S/S765 OFFICE HRS. Evenings only, 5 -8 p.m v M -F o r by app. 478-7519 Pool area just like in Borton Springs. 9-12 N STUDENT SUMMER LEASING * Special ★ a Large E fficiency k N e vriy rem odeled e A ll A p pliance* w /m in i blinds e O n RR Shuttle e Q u ie t com plex e Laundry fa c ilitie s W ater W heel A p t. 921 E. 4 6 th M g t. # 2 0 4 371-0160 v 8 -9 V 2 Bedroom Townhouse Near Hancock Center & Shuttle $375. CA/CH. No pets. Call 926-1219 after 5 pmVij ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ SU CASA Apartments Student Special Now Leasing for Fall & Spring On Shuttle, Wall to Wall carpet, walk in closet*, dishwasher & disposal, swimming pool, 2 laundry rooms, plenty parking, outside gas grills, basic cable paid. Fall & Spring Rates 1 BR — $295 2 BR — $415 3 BR — $575 Furnished Come by and see us! 203 W. 39th or call 4 5 1 -2 2 6 8 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ONE-HALF BLOCK UT LAW SCHOOL ALL BILLS PAID Two bedroom/two bath small quiet property. Tree shaded balconies on courtyard. New carpet, appliances, and paint. Huge bedrooms with built-in desks and bookshelves. Mod­ erate prices. Now preleasing for fall. 5 Blocks West UT Large, quiet immaculate one bedroom *emi-efficiences. Kitch­ en, walk in closets, laundry, gas fur­ heat cooking, water/gas nished. O n site manager. Sum­ mer— $ 2 2 5 . Fall— $ 2 4 9 . Red O ak Apartments, 2104 Son G a ­ briel. 47 6-7916. 8-31A CENTRALIZED! GREAT Hyde Pork loco lion. W alk-in closets, ceiling fo n t, pool, soaie covered parking. Spacious 1-1, fu r­ nished o r unfurnished Start $300. Apartm ent Finders Service 458-1213. 8- 1A___________________________________ IBR, $185-$225. CLOSE TO UT north. Efficiencies, $165- 2BR, $250- $185 $390 404 E 31st 477 2214, 453-8812, 452 -45 16.8-2L_____________________ NEWLY REFURBISHED IBR apartments m quiet com plex m Hyde Park. W ofc/n shuttle to campus. $175 summer, $240 toN /ipnng. N ow preteormg 4 7 4 -7 8 5 3 .8 -8 fo r fa l. rates REDUCED FALL fo r qualifying tenants. 1 B 2 bedroom tom ahad apa rt­ ment». Small, quiet complex, perfect fo r graduate students Free cable. Pool, C A / CH. laundry, Shanti Apto. 3304 Rad River, 476 -84 74.8 -10______________ CLEAN, QUIET efficiency apartm ent on UT riw kle rauta. Futty furnehed «vid» on­ site m anoger, laundry fn cBke i and aaid cable C a l 255-6786, 450-1147.8-1 FURNISHH) EFFICIENCY in elegant highrtoe near Unwerariy/C apriol 24 hr. secsxity, m door porfana. $395 ABP. 474- 15RS, 4 4 3 -8 7 9 2 .8 -3 0 ___________ TELUNHDE APARTMENTS, 4100 Asm. C dea n, quiet 1 BR, 1 1R « B l o k B I H o r move in todoyf 453-0461. 8-31^ ^ W 9-13N 476-5631 8-31A ROOMMATE WANTED Non smoking student for ’Vm,sr 4-2. Clean, quiet and spacious. On $150 per month. Call 444-753710-6 pm 9-19 5175/SUMMER, $220/foll, ABP 2 blocks UT. Newly remodeled dorm-style effi­ ciency. Parking, CA/CH, laundry 2502 Nueces, 474-2365, 476-1957. 9-6L BLOCK TO UT. Lorae I or 2 bedroom apartments. Ceiling tons, storage closet, built-in bookshelves. Quiet mature indi­ vidual. No pets. 422-1212. 9-13 RENTAL 360 — Fum. Apts. NORTH C A M P U S STUDENTS ^ W E L C O M E !^ MARK XX APTS. 3815 G uadalupe 1 & 2 BRs M o v e In T oday 1 459-1664 Villa Solno A ertacits 51 st A Guadalupe Alov# In Today 1 451-6682 Continental Apartments Large 2 BRs M o ve In T oday 1 454-5934 9 1 0 1.40th Aspenwood Apartments Near Intramural Fields—2 Pools 4524447 Villa North Apartments Quiet Lhring 459-9131 4520 Duval Tuflew ooil North A /C , Eloc. P a id 2 Pools 1 0 2 0 1 . 4 5 t h 452-0060 • Super Summer Rate e Keep Cool in the Pool e Maintenance Provided • P re-lease for Fall • Beat High Electric Rates • M a n ag er on Site 8-12A f >roft'ssioniilI\ \1nnngt‘d by Davis & Associato WEST CAMPUS STUDENTS J V WELCOME! ^ 3 Timberwood Apartments Larga if f . From $250 1000 W. 26th 478-1623 La Canada Apartments All Bills Fold Walk to Campus 477-3619 Office 1302 W. 24th ChezJacfwes 24th A L a m a r Tennis Courts Near 4774619 Office 1302 W.24«h GARDEXGAT1 AFARTMDITS • HotTvbt • Fed 476-4992 2222 He Oroide Diplomat Apartments Walk to Campus 469-0224 Mgr. Apt. 205 SaRoca Apartment* ‘‘Student Ready” Move In Today 477-3619 Office 1302 W. 34th Chimneys Apts. 4764992 Office at Garden Gate 2222 Rio G rand# • Super Sweeter Sele • Pre lean terfel • *8eHB*l»Hertrtrle>M • tnfeyHwFeeli • nNNRNNHWi n w f w e RggkgAdtod • MeneaerenSae Page 12/THE D AILY TEXAN/Monday, August 1,1988 M N T A L ^ ^ ■ R K N T A L i RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL ' -I RENTAL I 3 6 0 — Fum. Apts. 3 7 0 — Unf. Apt*. 3 7 0 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 3 7 0 — Unf. Apts. 3 7 0 — ltn f. Apt». 3 7 0 — Unf. Apis. RENTAL ESBBRRB 1 7 0 — Unf. Apt*. R E N T A L ___ B 9E 9 9 E 9 B R M E 1 7 0 — Uw f.Apfi. ALL BILLS PAID Fall Rates Eft 1BR Sm. 2BR Uirgg3-2Mt $295 $395 $440 $890 Walk or shuttle to campus, CA/CH, remodeled, convenient to everything. 2212 San Gabriel 474-7732 ★ WEST CAMPUS ★ Furnished Efficiencies on W /C shuttle 910 W. 26th St. $250-275/monfh - Fad/Spring Borbequa grid - laundry room • Coke machine - seme* r parties. ★ Call 478-1350 ★ 9-1N CLEA N CARPETED one bedroom. Quiet mature individuals, CA/CH. Near RR shuttle. N o pels. 422-1212 9-6 W A LK TO C A M P U S - SHUTTLE BUS. LARGE EFFICIENCY $195. SMALL, $150 2-2 EFFICIENCY $275. LARGE I BED­ R O O M F U R N IS H E D / $ 2 7 5 UNFURNISHED. 322-0374. 9-10N FURNISH ED 1 BEdRO O M : Attractive Hyde Pari neighborhood. Spacious & neat. Swimming pool - piad gas, heat & hot water. M a r i V apartments. 3914 Ave D 3 2 3 -0 7 4 0 9-13N 370 — Unf. Apts. LOCATION LOCATION AM fc* paid downtown, near U and Capitol. Older building, renovated with large rooms and plenty of ambiance. 1 more reason to live there? W e have the best residents anywhere. Call owner at 4 7 4 -4 8 4 8 for a chance to experience convenient living at an affordable price. CoM us on weeiends, too, we will be glad to help you. 9-16A QUIET REFURBISHED C O M PLEX IN C lA RKESV IllE. 1-1. ALL APPLIANCES, W ATER/GAS PAID, LA U N D RY R O O M $27 5 SUM M ER. $ 2 9 5 FALL. 1503 W. 9TH. C EN T U RIO N PROPERTIES, 345- 6 5 9 9 8 -9 N 1115 W. 10th Street Quiet, huge efficien­ cy. New point, CA/CH, gas/water paid, no pets. $225. 476-3121. 8 -30_________ 1303 EXPOSITION, 6 units, quiet, trees, dose to shuttle, large 2-1, $325. 458- 6415 weeiends, 474-8987. 8-31L k A R A R T N I N T I UMBvrton Orlvt Í NOW LEASING! J PRE-LEASE FOR FALL • FURNISHED UNITS AVAIL. # • Efficiencies. On* Bedroom* end 0 Two Bedrooms «veil. 0 • Ltrge Pool/Pttio 0 • Micro 0 * 2 Shuttle Routes m * • Clubhouse • Ask About Our Bonus! * • a 4 4 4 - 7 8 8 0 2 1 2 4 B u r t o n D r . The A ttic Furnished efficiencies • Close to LIT Shuttle • FR EE utility hook-up • 10% discount for students • EFF-2Br starting at $ 199 • Near Highland M ai & Capital Plaza 926-6664 NOW PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER! * 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Starting at $295 • ALL BILLS PAID » Locoted on UT shuttle & City Bus Lines • W a lkin g Distance to Ma|or S h o p p in g Center • Ideal for Students CAMERON GREENS APARTMENTS 5700 Cameron Rd. 454-70 0 7 606 Elmwood Walking distance to Campus. O n e block North of Law School. Across from Eastwood Pork. 2-1 - 2 stories with balcony. $495/m o + bills 458-8153 9-16 N Perfect Location Very nice 1920's complex w/lorge pool located half way between UT and ACC. 5 blocks to both. 2 minutes from downtown. Quiet and well maintained. 1-1's available 7-15-88. Prices range from S 2 8 5 -S 3 3 5 plus electricity. Hot water paid. Call Rio House Apartments 472-1238. 9-2 N E W EFFICIENCY IBR/IBA neor UT on RR shuttle, ceiling ton. covered parking. Call now 444-1012.8-12 LARGE EFFICIENCY 38th & Ave B. Sep- erate kitchen, large closet, coin laundry. $175/mo. + elec till Sept. then $225/ mo. + elec. Ann Miller, manager-bro- ker, 452-4212. 7-29 $ 2 0 0 S U M M E R RATE wSh tal vacancies 3 dean quiet complex»» dose to campus. e 2703 HIO GHANDI: efficiencies «ummer/S225 fol e 2800 MO GRANDE: 1-H S $150 summer/S200 tal. Month to month, e 2506 SAN GABRIEL: 1-1/pool $150 summer/S200 tot Month to month. 331-4019 Only 2 left eftriencies 2304 Leon - $200.00. 8-10C $49 TOTAL MOVE-IN Convenient Hyde Park Area. Large 1-1. 458-2990 8-31V LIMITED OFFERI Preleose 2-2 for foil - $295. $ 5 0 deposit. Close to shuttle. Cottonwood Apartments. 928-2581. 8-5 CENTRALIZED! GREAT Hyde Park loca- tion. Walk-in closets, ceiling fans, pool, some covered parking. Spacious 1-1, fur­ nished or unfurnished. Start $ 3 0 0 Apartment Finders Service 458-1213. 8- 1A The Briars A pts. $Q Q rent 183 5 Burton Dr. 442-6789 Hyde Park - IF Shuttle LARGE efficiencies with walk-in d o ­ téis LAUN DRY VERY Quiet GREAT Rates! Call M IKE 2-6 p.m. or leave message: ★ 3 2 3 -6 5 2 6 ★ Sequoia Apartments - 301 W. 31 St. 8-12N Northwest Hills First month free. Newly remodeled. Tennis, pool, dubhouse. Preleasing summer fall. On Shuttle Advantage Properties 452-0103 9-7L LARGE O N E bedrooms availabl. Clarksville. Walk-in dosets, CA/CH, dishwasher, disposal. Near City bus/shut- tie. Storting from $27 5 w/V? month free. 469-0925; 476-2803. 8-2 in fumished/unfumished. All SPA C IO U S EFFICIENCY Hyde Pork shut- He, appli­ ances, miniblinds, pool. $210, gas/water paid. 1 week free. Pre-lease or move-in today. 459-4977. 3 0 5 W. 35th St. 8-8 C A M E R O N R O A D area shuttle. 2-1, AC, carpet, appliances, carport, $295. West World Real Estate. 451-8122. 9 -7 A RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. ENGLISH AIRE APARTMENTS Now Leasing for Summer Preleasing for Fall! Rent specials* Efficiencies 1-1’s 2-2’s Townhouses starting at: $199 $229 $299 $329 / * w ith a 9 mo. lease. Shorter leases also 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 If STUDENTS SPEC IA LSf ♦ ♦I ONE AND TWO BEDROOMS ♦ ♦ Starting at $199 ♦ ♦ ★ on M S Shuttle ★ ♦ ♦ W alking Distance to: ♦ ♦ • Fabulous 6th Street activities ♦ ♦ • Zilker Park/Dow ntow n ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ★ 2 Pools * On-Site M gm t ★ $99 Security Deposit | CLASS I ACTS! HOUSTON 2801 HemphRI Park — 472-8398 BRANDYWINE 2804 Whitts Ave — 472-7049 DALLAS 2803 Hemphill Park — 472-8398 WILSHIRE 301 W.291h — 472-7049 Low Summer Rates! From $195-$250 E D P A D G E T T CO . y 454-4621 Hillside Apts. 1 & 2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished, dean & Quiet AN Utilities Paid. 4 7 8 - 2 8 1 9 514 Dawson Road Just Off Barton Springs Rd. 8-12N ZILKER AREA Efficiency, $175; 1 BR $250, 2 BR $275, Pool & Laundry on site. 447-7525 or 440-0944 9-2L John B atkle y C om pany U .T. A R EA Q U A R T ER S Unique, affordable bouses, duplexes, and apartments; Most with wood floors, fans, lots of windows, many trees. Historic charm, attractively re­ done, responsibly managed 1908N u m e 1/1 o n ' i n h iB t o r k h o u a e . B f l T O S W . W t f c L n r * e Oa-l/2,| upstairs bedrooms, wood floors, v e r y moe. $ 66 0 .0 0 9 0 6 W . S B n d : E fficie n cy, lots o f w in d o w s. $ 2 9 6 .0 0 a m T f t i d b h r a o d : N ic e 2/1 in p r e t ty A re a e a st o f H y d e P a r k . W o o d floors. 9 3 9 0 .0 0 9 0 6 W . 9 8: 2/1, ju a t redone, beaudftd. 9 46 0 .0 0 C A L L F O R m i X B 472-2123 Perfect Location Very nice 19 2 0 's complex w/lorge pool located half w ay between UT and A C C 5 blocks to both. 2 minutes from downtown. Quiet and well maintained. 1-1's available 7-15-88. Prices rage from $ 2 8 5 -9 3 3 5 plus electricity. Hot water paid. C a l Rio House Apartm ents 472-1238. ^ LARGE 1 Bedroom $275 • h Block to IF Shuttle/Metro 10 min. Bikeride to Campus e Dishwasher/Disposal CA/CH; Go* + Water Paid SPECIAL 1st Month Rent only $175! Call Michele after 4 pm 338-1323 Rent Special 195.0011 LARGE elRdenaes in Hyde Poik oreo e A l appConce*1 Pool • Drape* e Laundry e Gas 8 Water paid Hyde Park Place 4400 Ave. B Manager #113 452-3590 9 -6 N One Month Free WITH YEAR'S LEASE * 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartment* • Carpmt • Central Air/Hoot • lotmdry room • Pod • Gas I. wafer pad $250-1285 Carlton Properties 328-8700 8-2V A C R O S S F R O M campus, large one bed­ room apartment. $275. Water/got paid. 5 0 0 Elmwood Place. 345-1552. 9-8V________________________________ O N L Y 2 LEFT - im o l but charming 1-1 near campuv For more information call 4 8 0 -0 9 7 6 9 -9 N $ 9 9 M O V E -IN ipeciai. Large 1 and 2 bedrooms, pool and laundry. Cfoiet neighborhood. 711 W. 32nd St. 453- 4991._______________________________ THE QUIET convenience of Hyde Park. O ne and two bedroom apartments in smoBer, caring community. O n IF and dtv bus. Beautiful p ool C o l now. Richard, 452-3314 9-7 RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. Yes, we h a v e special rates o n furn ish e d & u n furnished apts. C e n tu r y S q u a r e 3401 Red Rrv^ 478*9775 42ioRedRrvc- 452-4366 Century Plaza Granada 453-8652 940 e 40th st 91s e 4 is* 4 5 2 - 6 5 1 8 Park Plaza & Plaza Co art 4 7 6 - 0 3 6 3 V I P 101 e 3 3rd st B est Apartments, Best Prices, Best Locations WALKING DISTANCE CAMPUS T O 1 bedroom. Affordable for fa>. $225. Ghiiit ntighbofhood m Nnwl 2 bedroom Tower view. $350. 304 E. 33rd. CcN 320-0331. 8-31A 0 9 9 0 $ 2 0 0 L u xu ry 1 b e d ro o m in sm all, q uiet co m p le x e ast o f UT. E n e rg y efficient C e n tra l air/heat, c e ilin g fan s, re frig e ra to r, sto ve , d ish w a sh e r, d isp o sa l. L a u n d ry secu rity gate. P riv a te room , 3 4 3 - P ro p e rtie s 4 6 7 - 7 1 8 2 , 8-4 DOGGONE G00DSAVMGS! • ON UT SHUTTLE • FREE phone hook-up ■ rn ccW C au iy • Not 088, but TWO t M * C M * • Fum MedCMm om *umm ^ , , , Ml ■ aptnong poom *-ee K 385-2044 f \ V * Tired of driving around? Now you eon M e tomato e l opt», on o 10 It aereen. Computerised Suetem F A « 447-8787 V b io n I d s ★ LOFT ★ Spiral dONTQM, iNCfOwovti fuofkiud k f* pbci, cdhtQ fcNNy W/D cotvudioftL pool jocussi» unk Dotting from $210. ADVANTAGE 443-3000 Tropkana Apartment Super big 1 & 2 bedroom. Quiet ana convenient, pool, laundry, ER Shuttle. 2606 Enfield Rd. #6 474-6354 or 474-1100 9-14V V IP E x c l u s i v e 3 - 2 's & 1- 1' s v e r y c l o s e to U f 101 E. 33rd St. 4 7 6 -0 3 6 3 In Four-Plex. 614 W. North Loop. Very attractive, almost new, 2 Bt Irooms, 2 baths. Private patio. Quiet. Ample parting. Convenient loca­ tion. Quality neighbors. $350 + electric 472-7617. Downtowners and UT students ®-4 2 mites or 5 minutes by car or bike. 2 Bedroom apart- 1 bedroom garage of irt- ment - $295. 50 ft. pool, hat ments. $150, $175. Locate tub, security building, on dty near IH 35/381/2 St. Lots of |¡ne and near shuttle. windows. Gas/heat, cooking 476-5875 and hot water. N o pets. Pri­ vate Properties 467-7182, 343-0990 evenings. njoooDOüooooooaocnoaü K IN G SG A T E A PAR T M EN T S •-2 S-4N O Vonabfy soed Apt from efSaencee lo 2-2's D FeoSunng • Ofympu sized pool • Roipitbolcoufl • CWb room • only $50 depoist • on Stsdti Roosonabfy pncod $195- $310 2005 Widow Creek Or 447-6696 □ □ a X l X O X O D C i X I X I D ^ ^ • $50 M O V E-IN • NO DEPOSIT (OH STUDENTS New complex, dewgner urab, from $240. 660 *q. ft 1-1 - $299, 918 ra * 2-1 - $400. Near ShuMe Voperties One ^ w 836-0727 W 84C ★ Wert Gimpus Apis ★ Free cable, rent 1-1,2-116,3- 1 $225-325/mo. Water & gas paid/Pool. 1907 Robbins Ptoce 459-0156 346-0410 9-13N South Shuttle Luxury 2-2V2 .tat2S-S499 V/6 Crrm dtoq hito ir a*. P. ,1 n eiSie* ^ --- r r o p g n m u n v e 447-7368 • 9-9N SPACIOUS EFFICIENCY Hyde Park thri- 4e. UnfumaheWFumahoa- A l appfr- anca» mirablnd» p ool $225. Ga^wtoer paid. P n lewe or move m today. 459- 4977.305 W 35th St. 9-13N ★ STUDENTS ★ # 1-1, 750 iquoro feet, $260 Ians# qnough tor roommoto • 7-2.102$ iq • *350. 1# month'* rant $70 Lowe Extra large Aeartmera Prompt MaMqnence, very ctqan NR Shuttle Bu* Swimming Fool Newly Decorated A mca imad qual community. B R O O K H O L L O W A P A R T M E N T S 1414 Arena Dr. ★ 445-5655 ★ 8-11N $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ FREE SERVICE SAVE MONEY Donl driu or w al al over toon. b diod me 2 5 8 - 4 1 6 7 TIMESAVERS $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ ( $ $ one SHOAL CREEK Apatonenta, 2504 Uorv quiet U nique almoephere. Giae* waN front, .tone rvocy patio*. Affordable elu- 480-8305 9-7A bedroom , 2 BEDROO M garage uporhnanL 3 block. Weet C ampm Quiet, hardwood floor» private. $430/month 478-8905, 450-0242.8-12 RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. L E A S IN G FO R SU M M ER P R E-LEA SIN G FO R FALL 3 2 2 -9 8 8 7 EFF. & 1-2-3-4 BDRM APARTMENTS Starting at $255 H i ALL BILLS P A ID (or + Oeavk) Leasing for Summer and Fall • Fum7 Unf. • Shuttle Bus • 5 Min. To Downtown • M odem • Microwaves • Lofts W/Fans e Spacious • 11 Floorplans Riverside O lt o r f 4 4 4 -7 5 3 6 POINT SOUTH—‘BRIDGEHOLLOW Rental Office: 1910 Willowcreek i i i i Í i f i STA RT AT $230 CaK for Specials L A R G E 1 and 2 Bedrooms Apartments and Town homes e Fireplaces • Pool e Hot Tub • On C R Shuttle PRE-LEASING FOR FALL!! Irongate Apartments 454-2636 C L O S E TO SHUTTLE s [AFFORD HOUSE THE GREAT ESCAPE STONEY RIDGE QUIET, PARK-LIKE SETTING MINUTES FROM UT WASHER/DRYER CONNECTIONS 4 4 4 - 2 4 7 5 3200 SOUTH FIRST CALL NOW ! a H 1 , comommm omurrutmAi 2 5 0 5 L o n g i Id w THE ADDRESS IN WEST CAMRUS e Effidendes • 1 BdTl Bo. e 2 Bd72 Ba. WALK TO CAMPUS APARTMENTS e 1 ML wMna»:.->, frank deer» togs U A e t SdSOmgtoehl» e foto» d i e h * wSmtm * h » e f l S ^ M a n d iSSFSrageltol» Tenant, 499-8321 Owner, 453-1370/327-796^ UT Area Walk/Shuttb n* * iK X c b e n i MI-1 * atk * CA/CH * w k u doaef gmce * poop S225 phe eled ndty 1801 Manor Rd. 4 9 9 -0 6 3 9 ,3 3 9 -7 8 9 3 ' 8 4 V Hearn Apartments Ju st r e n o ¥ n iid a n d I I -1 — * NBR-t— «— I v # I o e o n i o w o e n g E ^ 1- 1 1> | S o v e $ b y J ’ ^■495-92711 84 1 V ACRO SS F R O M ^ ^ H H . dency $18Q/morriv 'Waforjlp f p l l end ees (52. «H^W . 500 Efrnwood ■ H É 1 ÍK H B Í CUTE EFFIdOdCieS. $215/mo. Haven Eori, 834.1031.8-5N RO O M Y 3-2 in Oltorf area CA/CH, gc% i n k WOUT pOKL TOUNUa c u m i b l wucipgpii^ » On shuMl» $550/mondi. 4 4 2 ^ ^ J HARDW O O O FLOOR - W d k UT. SegL Id. EfRaency *3 2 5 . 2-1 *3 9 5 . 2514 FeoH, 4 7 7 4 8 2 1 ,3 4 6 -1 9 1 4 . S-12 W ALK UT - FeM loauing. Nkce VI, ceNnf m 77- fan, forty new. * 3 8 5 8821,346-1984.8-12_________________ NORTHWEST E F F IO E N C Y ^ ^ ^ H O EN C Y in jprinle MM, AC, W M M S A . - nOflN. rrww® be trae» geraun. *195. " 4-2, EXTRA large. 1800 eqJl W » deAonre to campm . 2811 Sabdo. *895. 837-5368.258-717.8-11___________ SA N A N T O N IO Street. Vintage efRdan- ey. One of W h * CompuK eriginak W ood Soon, funky feature» mack Rre- place» eaning board» phy bad» $265/ AAoel bdb paid. Jock, 4744897; 454-4031.8-2_____________________ SOUTHCREEK APARTMENTS. Lame I bodroom, *215/monRi. Naar Z Sm ra il. C o l Fatty, 442-5957.9-12V_________ OLTORF AREA - 2-2. ana block from SR | dtulllo. >99 rent igedaL S295 T9 k e- ing, 441-4500 SUPER SUM M ER rae cid » 1-4 ream» h r- radteWwnfrrmehea on dwHta, v S me- leaee From $175. Larry, 462-3300 9 12 3 8 0 — Pom . DupUxe Vi BLOCK law School parch W earing parking 926-7243.8-101 2-1. «raptor., chan/ « ning leaee, *4 0 0 NUECES STREET. 2RR, tefid brick, tog ttOOr. 99000 UDOflfr W iU PO l 4 CA/CH bio, yard, raaintoinad $500. ga» water paid. Jack Janning» 474- 6897; 454-4031 S-2 W r a g O A L S | B B E ^ B * S i ^ ^ i p 5 o e u » i ^ H H ItnCM fwu, RlrDI (JOIPk ■ ■ M O M Larry, 462-3300. 9- dwtSe. from « C ‘ 12 3 9 0 — linf. Dupl«x«* CEN TRAL A U ST IN ; W o * Cam peg ipociom 2 -lH , luxury canda. 1 4 ^ 2 9 0 6 W . A m # 7 . N e o n Park, b r g e 2 - 2 c a n d a » $ 6 0 0 , 4 2 0 2 S a a a d i«av . H y d e Park 1-1, d o c k caftng ton» $190 tunanar $ 2 9 0 M L 4 6 0 8 Btotnak l e w S ch o o l uniq ue eU d e n d e » $ 2 9 0 M L w d k to cantgu» 9 0 4 B m m í M A T T H E W S P R O P E R T IE S , 4 5 4 - 0 0 9 9 , 8 3 9 - 9 9 2 8 . _________________ 9.m Near UT. Quiet secluded. Seek* ing mature student or proles stood to rent 2 BR luxury du­ plex. CA/CH, foray beautiful trees, carport firepioc% autora drapes. W/D avafabie $425. CalColect 817-540-0001; 817- 698-6520. 6005-8 CAMERON. 28R thrid » apgS- CA/CH , W /0 K L ^ a C d lo ñ » Borao» On rage, potto, gto drape., ^ H $ 3 6 0 .459-0723.8 ^ V _______ GOW EST1 2-lm W eO(| W 9 dWanca to UT. Water m » ced nq fan» anca» W/D lowwertton» ceOng fan» large porcN $ 6 5 0 Aperfreent Hndetl Sarrice 458-1213.8 -M 5606 JOE Sayan «M North Loop. H carport, $325. Kriaay-Lavy W X ittS S i', 451-0072 8-31 ■ 1940'. 2-2 an qdat Weet O ak h e » ceding fan» wadrar/dryar, bedrunna ugdae» yard wRb knge eak» 703 W. 35dv $525.472-2123.8-11N . Gargeaue 2-atote 44d« a n d C A S v n u . m m m S m l. Of, W/D/ a g a f 4-3. Hregtoc» CA/C K ■ W MM (I17S. Ondy, n l - anca» lawn térrica ST175. G n d y T ^ H I 6138.8-IN _____________ _ 2828-A SA N GAMHEL 2-1. CA/CH t S f ing fen» apgtnnre» led of charm. $ 4 5 0 328-6138.8-IN A u la b ii Augud L Gndy. w a it I I I III Inenl 3 d j t B S B p b a it *9 9 0 for lady. 474-7899. 343-1387.W mMm 8 -2 v c I 4 - i Luwx mm GREAT 1 IR 2 Wmmm BCflOOli nDFWWDDD «w q Brarara fm central A C W/D. t490/am 499404. Ni m im o 3-2. co M P icm v rem oo- Mi ELED. CA/CH, *790. CAU TAM MY « I ll PMT. 476-2673.9-2A EE 707V} GRAHAM Place. M Mode wad of M ctoitoud. 2-1 HtodriaeA GdSea fra» M S45Ó Cat Pto 494-1711 |kraber$Vl2 1 NEAR UT. dot*» dtoHfog anchdw Iu Ptofc I M , very forae M R q i h t t o m induing <— hor/dryer, bsndMfo ra- ntcdde» hradmoaJ» gsragi. *660 M H 479-6193.9-2 ■ CLARKSVR1E: LUXURIOUS 2-1 raded- « ad eaigbbarbaod, ctow to UT. fm Oowtoaxnt $629. I rai /Oggteud 467- H 6 8 9 7 .8 -2 _________________________ H ONE HALF ndfo north of tRridend MldL 2-L no diarad wdfo Fen cad b a d y n i WM W/D Bwtnqdton. Leave eMtoog» 470 H 4 0 0 — C o n d o o - 8EAU1VUL WEST/NORTH CONOOS. START AT t f t O / H H W U S H U / DRYER, M O O M M CE. CAU AOENT DAVE ONLY. 474-4800.8-R. s p e c ia l : Cfo« to TL knairyK bar, decraarad M at $410 y 2 - IV liM M » teto- toon. M t r a m i Q h 9 U R L I - f 3 : ^ p p m t t y 2 - * m In n a fic h a » gob obey. e R n r a S o I Fratn $ 3 9 0 Utty. 4 6 2 -3 3 0 0 8-9 G 0 N 0 O FO R tde/reto. Geeto hoy- $ 3 0 9 0 0 Parity funrábiá Reto $ 3 0 0 >y UT. CoS 346-1447.8-8__________ j W 79 M S m GabrieL 2-1 5 S B 3 j M M * # ^ L m §esL I r a d a r a bdnrara Icgai $ 2 9 0 W i graham «£S3 33B-9977.8-8L 4 4 0 1 V U D W A Y . V I cand» n . sdeto UT flradÉD M á o m m Rm m u MHHHF V I WEST CAA4PU9 an A a d r a g U M enhnridtaW $400 h # t o Oafeto M M C d i agent e é g M tol 47 4 -4 8 0 0 O W L SeUgeetraraB h * WE'LL RESORT TO ANYTH ING ... TANNING BED POOL ★ JACUZZI WEIGHT ROOM SAND VOLLEYBALL SAUNA TO GET YOU TO LIVE AT BRISTOL SQUARE 4 4 5 - 0 4 4 5 2336 DOUGLAS STREET - OFF L OLTORF H y d e P a r k A p a rtm e n ts Call For Low Fall Rates! Loc a f d N ext to C ity Park. Td m i i C ourts & Pool e UT SHUTTLE e Q itee 0 84 Hour maintoMMM 4 5 8 - 2 0 9 6 4311 Speedway R a i n M g m t . C o . One Bedroom For Two People 710 Square Feet Huge Bedroom 2-Walk In Closets Microwaves Mini-Blinds Shuttie-Stop at door Ceiling Fans i W W I M P I V V b d p A E E E E E F l # r H U R » l I I I i l i f i 1911 WMow Creek S I O O D e p o s i t PRE L E A S E S U M M E R / F A I L t í 1 M NTAL 400— Condos T o w i i I i o u s m M NTAL B B 400 — C o n o Townheuati 100 fondo» Townhowaat ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ a M N T A L M NTAL M NTAL M NTAL M NTAL B T SM VIC ff S t S f f l 400— Condos 400— Condoc 425— Rooms Tsam m m m 750— Typing 790— Port tima T H E D A I L Y n [A] W n d a y , A u g u s t 1 , 1 9 6 l/ P a g 11 3 3000 G t t a d a fa p e 1*1 /Ceiling Fans and Patio rim y rummnma Starting at $225 Summer $275 F t I 454-4621 RO O M M ATE(S) iUI. h i) ikatanfM o W • caring tans • Hres a vnrim/4qnr a a la ¡tenca» a —cuHfy a ham* a p • ptsti »mi*a4 • pafcokay Summer $225 F a l$ 3 0 0 leave memege (817)548*8566 LUXURY NORTHWEST HILLS Convanmnt Mopocttv WaP Bouiavord 1-1 — 2-2 a ak Ian a %» r/Dryw a Peal a Covered earring $475-1575 ARCH PROPERTIES 467-2390 9-7 8-12A _ ★ ba*) * • CA/CH Chelsea Condo Sharp 2-2VÍ, Two Story, • ¡¡¡fit*1" firepioca, fans, all appli- anees, huge walk-in closet, and reserved parking! Johnson and Company 452-4300 * S-31 LAI E MC Neor ftuDto - No Pals $70C/mo $4O0/dep. Step One Proper* i • 482-8925-331-0117 ★ 5-12N VERY LARGE TOWNHOME tssstssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss WEST & NORTH CAMPUS ENFIELD & FAR WEST Spar fway Condos 2-2's & 3-2's r i__ rnpoci Caingfons $1--- *----- m tp n n a i Mkwvrave W/D Connadiora On riwnte Several a z « starting ot $600.00 Shamrock Properties 478-5588 9-13H 3-2 and 2-lta, aN appKonc®», cailing Ions, firepioca. fancad polio, pool, pat O K. $375-$475. Naor Wttom Can­ non and IH-35. • SECURITY • COVERED PARKING • SMUTTIE • • W/D 94 UNIT AC EO North Hills Spodous, modem 2-116 iwinutaa from UT. Shuttle slope at front door. Solid construction, wel in- wmiva. t yír inuiiiuRtfQ. n g w pomr, carpet, tie, blinds 6 coifing fans Fire- pioce, deck, SLA Rent reduced $150. Now $445.272-5783,272-4076. 9-13N 4411 Guadalupe O n bedroom, fruW y potfitod, coiling fora in toch room, patio, doto to A .A d . A ■wm. ^YyRooig J- - « mjsmy. :1—i-l- •. $275 Pot Hakes 320-8600 dertime, 454-18741 $-2 SSSSSSSStI SSSSSSJ IS! IS SSSSSSSSS W B Tft NORTH CAMPUS ENFKIO STAR WEST vr.M SC 3 7.15JO • SKUBTY • COVEIEO ’ AMONG • SMUTTU • « X X JACUZZI • W/OMUMT CAU AGENT SOOOMY1 474-4600 SSSSUSSSSSSSSSSSSStSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS Ü 8 L 914 E. 32nd Largo onrocRvi h i. nrapiocR, noro- wood floor» balcony, coAng forts, pod, (ocuzzi, covered reserved park- eg appfionce» lied kitchen and baRvuum, washer and dryer, waking i to UT low school $495/mo. Day, 443-2046; evening, 327-3060. 7-29 ^ SCTON AVENUE CONDOS FULLY FURNISHED 750 iq A 1550 CALL JOHN or PMT 476-2673 9 2A VWST CAMPUS 2-1 2 STOREY, $550 C A U GLENN ol PMT 476-2673 9-2A 346-4392 C A U AGENT ROD ONLYI 474-4800 s $ < $ m m m m sssss» » s$ $ sss« s$ $ s 9-14L $-301 T O W N H O M E 2 bedroom IV2 bath, fire­ place, 2 decks, close-in, off Riverside, $385. Call Greal location, great rental. H AM ILTON at: Loaded 2-2. replace, ceSng fans, microwave, trust! compactor, frost- free refrigerator, W/D connections, 9 f ^ j f i n g ^ j e a i ^ t M ^ e j j L^nn. ^ Cali Susan, 451-8412 (days). 328- 5452 (evenings). Wl show by ap- 8-301 poimmortt only ItwrsdaysL Sunday 4 7 9 - 6 1 0 8 RIVERWALK CONDOMINIUMS 2 bedroom 1 bath, $335/mo. 3 bedroom 2Vi bath $550. 2 pooh, on Town Lake. Call HAMILTON at: 479-6108 $-301 □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ r x x i i x n x o x j LU XU RY C O N D O a LARGE 2-2 a Coveted Fariong a Sac w#, a Pool Mama 6 rac iocfttai a W/D Comackona AvoSofata FoS S545 1510 W North Loop 453 7560 £ 3 V PRESERVATION SQUARE 2-2 HARD­ W OO D FLOORS MEXICAN TILE $795 CALL ZACH AT PMT, 476-2673. 8-12A CENTENNtAl 2-2 PROFESSIONALLY DECORATED AN D FURNISHED $1000 CALL PMT 476-2673 8-12A CHELSEA 2-1 PROFESSIONALLY DEC ORATED ANO FURNISHED $550 C A U JOHN AT PMT, 476-2673 8-12A RIO GRANOE CO NDOS 600 SO. FT NEW PAINT, NEW CARPET, FIREPLACE $400 CALL JOHN AT PMT. 476-2673. S-12A ENFIELD I BEDROOM WITH LARGE STUDY 2 STOREY. LARGE DESK, $450 C A U ZACH AT PMT, 476-2673 8-12A SAN PEDRO OAKS 2-2 FUUY FUR­ NISHED GAS PAID $595. C A U ZACH AT PMT, 476-2673. 6-12A 31ST STREET CO N D O 2-2, POOL, HOT-TUS, COVERED PARKING $650 CALL TAMMY AT PMT. 476-2673 8- 12A SR SHUTTLE 3-2 TOWNHOME. W/D, 2 CAR GARAGE, SPLIT LEVEL $600 CALL TAMMY, PMT, 476-2673. 8-12A WEST CAMPUS I $ 2 $450/mo. Naor compus from $475/ mo SfxAtto oraos from $250/mo HR Monogoment, 329-5011. 8-12N ORANGE TREE EFFICIENCY 600 SO/ FT FUUY FURNISHED. SECURED PARK (NG $450 CA U ZACH AT PMT, 476- 2673 8-12A______________________ NUECES PLACE luxury l- \ 800 sq.fl 2- story, wall fumrihod. W/D Fireploce. $595 Available Aug. 25 214-980- 8052. $-31_______________________ SPLIT LEVEL 2/2 FULLY FURNISHED, $595 CALL PMT. 476-2673 8-12A SUNCHASE 2-2 SECURITY COVERED PARKING, LARGE POOL AND HOT TUB $650 CALL PMT 476-2673 8- 12A SUNCHASE CONDO. 2-2, oil ancas, pool, hoi tub, security two people, $750 - Itiraa. 472- 'iS fr. 1114.8-3 HANCOCK PLACE 2/1. HARDWOOD FLOORS VERY NICE CALL AGENT JER­ RY OAKES AT PMT, 476-2673 8 -3 U i i i Word Ad A word ad is a baste want ad". First two words of the ad appear in capital letters The rest ot the ad appears in plain sentence form with capital letters only where proper. Addi­ tional capitals are 25 cents extra, per word Size and style of type in a word ad is not variable. Minimum: 15 words 15 Words MAPLE FRAME Ann bad Feather mattress, $75 EnlerSammant cantor. $100 Honour CD ptoyor. $150 000-0000 7-14___________ FOR SALE VW Suporto Mo. 1974 Ono ovmor. good cond*on. $1750 or boat offer Coi 0000000 8-12 11 a .m . d s ly lo r th e n ext s v a ls h fs is s u e I . I s ! For A Word Ad, Call 471-5244 Line Ad Also called ‘ inch ads” and “1x1 s", a line ad is charged by the column Inch, the physical size of the space. The style of type in a line ad is not variable. It may contain variable type sizes, certain symbols, ale. Borders, artwork, logos, photos, are not allowed. A line ad may be no wider than one column. Copy can be set in all capitals, use extra white space, centering etc. Minimum: 1 col­ umn wide by 1 inch deep it iiilÉ É a iiH m m m 1x1 Line Ad One Month Free WITH YEAR'S LEASE 1 1 2 • CorfMt a Conaal Ao/Hoat a Laundry room a Pool • Go» 6 i atar pwd $ I0-$2S5 XYZ Properties 000-0000 8-2V D s s d fc is 11 a .m . d s iy fo r th s n sx t s v sl s h ls is s u s For A Line Ad, Cat 471-5244 mm y-4: Display Ad A display ad m also charged by the column inch. A variety of type styles «id sizes may be used. A display ad includes a border around the advertising message. Artwork, lo­ gos, photographs, gray or black back­ grounds, etc. may be used. A display ad may be up to 9 columns wide in the classified section. Minimum: 1 column wide by 1 inch 1x1 Display Ad •Typifa Service’ t Theses* Copies a Pad • Accurate a e e e 0 0 0 - 0 0 0 0 e e a e a e e e e e e e e e e e e e 4 p .m . 3 d a y s p rio r to d a te o f p u b ic H o o 0 CIRCLE APARTMENTS 0 0000 Circle Drive 0 0 0 - 0 0 0 0 1-1 $30Omonfr 2-2$350/monlh • ShutfiBi • Pool • WMhofrftyr St. Thomas #306 2 - 2 Tha Com arrtona Ploca Condominiums B o C mwdae) Tamely Fourth • G rsa tC o m p lsx • G raat Unit • GraatFumHura Owner (214) 526-4517 • • *» wl • NtaaFeatCaftg» • Wmhnrs/Drywi ^ M o w m I m « nfm aCaftmFwe a Dhhwwhen VTi mmSték * M » ) i f - M H Contad Grog for on appointment 4804065 1 8-12H Clarksville 1-1 Mnw locafloiv&ing fora mMbbdk nytfift anew. $285 wih yean loase. Clarksville Efficiency lama wdk-in desata daw la UT riwMa $225 Westploce Condos 2-2 Cowaad potting and wrl HWaWta omanPm. $625, Spsdd $585 Wyoor Easley Property Services 335-6083 e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e fcvptoca, aa- For Sale/Lease Large 3-2 NW Hills Condo near UT Shut­ tle. Assumable Loan. 343-7614 8-12 MAKE THIS CALL your first and last. West Compus; Enfield Condos. C o l TREY, 478-6565, CRy Properties. 9-12N 8-8V WEST CAMPUS condos tor loose. CaN BRENDA for bast price and quality. 478-6565. Gty Properties. 9-12N PRIVATE BATH, privóle room. Shore bichen, CA/CH. Quiet non ewofiina pedes» 408 W. 17th S i 1250 • lease. ABP. 472-2222.8-3N______________ NEAR UT Law School an RR shuttle. Fur­ nished rooms $150 to $225 A8P1 CA/ CH-share bath. 3310 Red River, 476- 3634.8-3N______________________ GARAGE APARTMENT, ce*ng nuiuwoooL r^agPeNrj entrance. N o brichon. Quiet mdhriduol. No peta 422-1212.8-8N____________ fan. Diair MATURE NON-SMOKER. Private room, ym re bichen. Quiet poSos» htdf black UT. S120-S240/mo. Lease. Share Mb. 472-5646.8-12N__________________ L!» NEAR ENGINEERING school, 2809 u -L . j A M M m r ngmpnai ro rL four, mmavaQ^ a d » coobng fodfifie» carpeted, SISO/mo. lease, 926-7243.8-30Í S175/SUMMER, S220/M , ABP. 2 blocks u i . ritwry r tin- ciency. Parbna CA/CH, laundry. 2502 Nuece» 474-2365, 476-1957.9-6L a nr 3 BLOCKS campu» Redone, share bath/ kitchen with one other room. ABP. $195 251-2016.8-12____________________ WEST CAMPUS - effidende» Very con­ venient. M b paid. $225. Private room, off Enfield. $250. 478-1078, 477-8172. 9-12 435 — Co-ops P r e - L e a s i n < 2 bedroom, 2 bath condos J9-1000 square fata, oR omantaes mdudmg se­ curity system ond covered portring. tn Hyde Pork from $600. New Carpet. Small Project, great deal. CaH Royce 327-4029 453-5237 9-12N Pre-Leasing Doe Rios Condos 1 ladro am 1 tadt. Fufar tumishad add) m- crowova, catRag t a s buHMn dark and draw­ er, baécony. er/dryer. Waal Compus - 2 Moda from «ompu» 9 me. loow - $39 S/mo. 1 yr. loaao • $35Q/mo ColReyee 327-4029 453-5237 9-12N 1-1 WEST CAMPUS. NEW CARPET, W/D, 3 BLOCKS TO CAMPUS. $375. CALL ZACH AT PMT, 476-2673.8-12A ORANGE TREE 1/Vs. LARGEI FUR- NISHED AN D UNFURNISHED. CALL JERRY OAKES, AGENT AT PMT, 476- 2673.8-31A______________________ IF SHUTTLE. SmoN, at complax 1 and 2 bedrooms. Gas & heal paid. Coding tons 4401 Spoodwoy. 459-0889 9-1N WALK TO UT Greenwood Tower ABP, 1-1 condos, security, pool, $450. C ol Betsy, 474-7859; 343-1267 evenings. 8- 2V______________________________ 3101 LoFayolle 3-2, CA/CH, ceiling font, hardwood Boon. W/D connections, ap- piioncas. Block from campus. 472-4818. 8-2V FALL PRE-LEASE LUXURIOUS 2-2'S 4 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS SECURITY, W/D, MICROWAVE, COVERED PARK­ ING 4 DIFFERENT FLOOR PLANS TO CHOOSE FROM S625/MO C A U AGENT MITCH ONLY 476-2673. 9-1A UNIQUE 2-2 in west campus. AN amoni- hes mdudmg security system, $650. Cod ogam KaRy, 474-4800 9-13L_________ HYDE PARK AREA Large luxury con­ dominium. 2-2, opptkmcos, micro s, firepioca, ton, W/D connections, $600. ARCH Propodios, 467-2390. 8-12A 2605 ENFIELD 2BR, W/D connections, firepioca, pool, sauna covered security poriáng, on UT shuttle. $650/mo For more information col 835-7624.9-2 2/2 CENTENNIAL - FUUY FURNISHED FOR 4 $1000 mo. C o l JOHN at PMT 476-2673.9-2A LARGE WEST CAMPUS 1-1. FURNISHED FOR 2. SECURITY, POOL, W/D, MICROWAVE. $550 CALL TAMMY - PMT, 476-2673 9-2A______________ 1200 sql G O O D FOR 4 PEOPLE 2 BLOCKS TO SCHOOL W/D $1000/mo. CALL TAMMY - PMT. 476-2673.9-2A SOPHISTICATED 2-2 NORTH CAMPUS, INTERIOR, ALL FINELY DETAILED AMENITIES $650. CALL TAMMY at PMT. 476-2673.9-2A______________ AWESOME MULTI LEVEL I BEDROOM TOWNHOME WITH STUDY. WET-BAR. I BLOCK FROM CAM- 2 CAR GARAGE PMT, 476- PUS. $750. C A U JOHN 2673.9-2A SUNCHASE I BEDROOM I BATH, W/D, SECURITY SYSTEM, PO O L HOT TUB, $400 CALL JOHN PMT 476-2673 9- 2A FIRST MONTH froo on beoutiful 2-1 V} condo with oH appfioncas , firapioca, m wnoU, qurot complax with iocuzzi Groat dudan! plan, on RR thuHla. CaH Sharon, 926-0898 9-2L___________________ TREEHOUSE CO NDO 202 E 45th Straat Large 1 8R ISA condo acroM from Ship# Parta 1 block to thuHla. $350 + EAvotl- oblaAug 20 458-8153 8-12________ 2815 RIO GRANDE. Gazabo Condonun- u m . Beautiful 1SR - furnished/ unfur ntthed. $350 faH Mony feature». Dan Jo- leph, 479-8727. S-5N______________ 2100 SAN GABRIEL Condo». 2-1 Vi, 1000 iq ft, fireplace, microwave, beauti­ fully decorated, $600/mo 329-4203 or 327-5767 8-12___________________ SUMMER FUNI 2 bedroom condo on Town Lake. Picnic area, togging and boat dock - aM ot your door $375. Apartment Finden Service. 45f 1213. 9-8A_______________________ H 2 0 PAID! like new 2-2 with microwave and ceding fon», mrmblind». W/D con­ nection», water paid. 4 blocks from ihut- fie. Great for roommate». $425 Apart­ ment Finders Service. 458-1213.9-8A NORHTWEST HILLS 2-lVi. Luxury town- home, icenrc view», 1080 Spadous rooms Cable TV*Delt ous meals'Sundeck-Funfunfun $235 doubles • $330 singles A/so pre-teasing for fall! L P O NEAT HOUSE A LL B IL L S A L L M EA LS O S U N D E C K S C O - E D N F U ! all from $230/mo. Pre-leasing for fall, too! ICC CO-OPS 510 W. 23rd 476-1957 2W S t Co-op 707 W. 21st Great student bousing tor Fail! 3 blocks from U.T. Fum. singles and doubles 17 nutritious meals/week Swimming pool, darkroom, etc. $310 for Double (incl. food * bills) $399 for Single (inel. food A bills) C a ll 476-1857 Now! Pearl Street Co-op 2000 Pearl — swim m ing pool & darkroom — Fum. singles & doubles — 17 nutritious meals/week — Newly renovated $302 for double flood S bibs md) $389 for single (food A bibs Ind.) C all 476-9478 Now! S * — 2612 Guadalupe Great student housing for fa il — Right on the drag — Fum. singles & — 17 nutritious meals/ doubles week — Swimming pool, darkroom, etc. $320 for double $420 for single (food» bib» ind.) (Foods bibs ind.) Cal 474-6905 Now! FRENCH HOUSE! $250 doubles $314 singles All bills Gr e a t m e a l s 4 b lo c k s U T I 478-6586 MATURE NON-SMOKER. Private roam. Share kitchen. Quiet, petlesi. half block UT. |120-$240/mo Lease. Share Mb. 472-5646 8-12N TOFU HEADS! Dalidous Veggie cuisine, pool, great housemate» $236/do»4>le, $280/single. Summer, House of Common» 2610 Rio Grande, 476-7905 9-6L___________________ faH openings. ECLECTIC, CREATIVE, fun, 3 blocks from UT! Delicious Veggie cuisine, pool great housemates. Double» from $285, singles from $357. AH food and M b included. House of Common» 2610 Rio Grande, 476-7905.9-8L___________________ BEAUTIFUL, HISTORIC home 2 blocks UT. Quiet, studious, relaxed. Doubles $293 - $300 Singles $325 - $354. In­ dudes ALL food, Mb. CaH soon! Hefiot Co-op, 478-6763, 1909 Nuece» or caH I Co-ops: 476-1957, 510 W. 23rd. 9- 81 440— Roommates NOW/FALL Female* for spoaou» beau- kful 2-2. Security. Pool Hot tub. RR.Cal 482-0521,348-1947 after 6pm. 8-12 ROOMMATE(S) It *emtawry 1-2 cande Wrik to UT. e partly fim*he4 e «sambas a poiakay a covsmd paitaig a m u*y a hot»* e pool Summer $200 FeH$250 Leave msssagi (817) 548-8566 CALL COLLECT 9-15 T a r r y t o w n / E n f i e l d A r e a Quiat non-smoking female wonted to share 3 BR 2 BA house $350/mo. + Vi bills. W/ D, huge back yard. Call 480-0770 8-2 MATURE NON-SMOKER. Private room. Share küchgn. Quiet, pedesi* half btoch UT. $120-$240/mo. Lease. Share tits. 472-5646.8-12N ESTABLISHED HOUSE. Co-ed, spaoou» ' | ■■ pel» Available August and UT (RR) shuttles. 4521 Red 15. Gty c ,iW,.#^Hntment. $225/month pfi River. By bid» CaH Rad 459-7199.8-12 NEED A ROOMMATE OR A PLACE? CALL ROOMMATE BROKERS! 1304 WEST AVENUE. 477-5569, FEE. 8-12N FEMALE PROFESSIONAL needs female roommate. 2-1 apt on Far West Blvd. $146/mo plus Vi elec. On FW shuttle. Laurie 472-5426 home. 8-12 DEPENDABLE NEAT nonsmoking aport- montmate needed for downtown apart­ ment on MS route. $150 plus Vi Mb. Leave message. 472-2288.8-2 FEMALE ROOMMATE needed. 1 BR, newly decorated, 1 block , quiet, sluaiou» Centonniol Condos. N eat,^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ non-smoking. . CaH for inter- view. Gndy, 345-1833. 8-5PSÍ5'^¿'« t compu» ROOMMATE NEEDED. 28R 2BA. 928 sq ft. S250/mo. 15 min. CR shuttle. David 617-648-9125; 214-661-5667.9-12 FEMALE ROOMMATE to shore 2-1 con­ do in west campus for FaH. W/D, mi­ crowave, on WC shuttle. $325 -t- Vs Mb. CoH Kim 473-8828 leove message. 8-5 ROOMAAATE NEEDED, Terrytown house, 1 mile from campus off 24th St, W/ D, $200-5350.320-8858.8-12N ANNOUNCEMENTS 510— Entertainmont- Tlckat»_______ ROD STEWART - HaH and Oates - Iron Maiden - AC/DC - Dirty Dancing - Tracy Chapman. Showtime Tickets - 478-9999. 7-29____________________________ PARTY SPACEI Plan your social event in beautiful surroundings. Horseshoe» vol- k bo washers, cheop rates, no has- sles. 441-0932,443-1583. 8-12 WANTED BRUCE Spriruteen posters. Will poy S25 eoch. John 452-9796 SOUTHWEST AIRLINES 2 roundtrip tick­ ets onywhere good thru October 31st. $200 eoch or best offer. 459-1007.8-2 WANTED; TICKETS, Swimming Olympic Triab. Parents of swimmers desperate. CaH collect 317-848-8950 or 317-283- 8522.8-5 530 — Travel Transportation AIRLINE TICKET. RT Austin - Denver 11- 24 Aug. >150. CoH Bob 454-6158.8-1 ONE ROUND trip ticket. Austin to Al­ buquerque . Leaves Austin 7/29 10:05 am. Back by 10:40 om 8/1. $60 neg. Donno, 339-8389.8-2______________ 540 — Lost & Found LOST N o q u e stio n s a ske d . $1000 cash reward. return Please liver/w hite Brittany Spaniel - m ale. C h ild's life long pet. Lost neor Town Lake and Austin High 6/23. C ollar, logs. C a ll 480-5617 ^ day; 4 76 -9 78 5 night. MEN'S SUNGLASSES found 7-26-88 on 21st Street neor the PCL 452-7185. 8-1 EDUCATIONAL 580 — Musical Instruction GUITAR LESSONS: R & B, rock, ¡azi, country, things in between. 9 yean teoching experience. Andy Buttngton, 452-6181.8-81 590— Tutoring M A T H T U T O R 504 W. 24th S i Office 477-7003 O ver 10 years o f profeeesonal eervice helping students m ake T H E IDE. S trugg lin g?? Frustrated on tests?? C a ll o r f o r e p p o i n t m e n t MATH M301302 M303F XX M318K1 M306G M407 MB06A/8 M318K M427K/L ) PHV301 PHY327KV DATAPriC DP A310 DPA333/K CO 2 ECO303 .1 GNQM. EM306 w T D X rit. CS304P/F EM311 EM306S CS206 EM314 315 EM319 CS410 EE316 CS410 EE411 CS328 EE318 CS336 EE212 CS345 EE323 CS3S2 CS372 m m jm CHEMMTRV ENG603 CHE M301302 ENG307 CHEM610A/B ENG 306 JIiÜ ■ UMCBC 0iU ASTnON. . ACC311^12 AST301 ACC326/327 AST302 AST309 ACC364 AST307 STAT306 F K B tC H PSY317 GERMAN SOC317 EC0324 Don’t put M s ott una the night be­ fore snaxam. k’s too lots than... » laocktoUT * onstas • Ins mi « t a t o l e e m ss you can Nsxt door to Mad Dog & Baens West240>8tB I 810MR «0*10 HR. BLOCK ■T O I SERVICE 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 T U T O R S - . PRO FESSIONAL TU TO RING ALL SUBJECTS OPEN 7 DAYS/WK SUN THUSS TIL MIDNIGHT 8 1 3 W. 2 4 th ( T ri-T o w a rs ) SIRVICIS 650 — M oving- Hauling ABC Apt. Moving 10% Discount to all Students 339-1IOVK SM-MCS Z IV L E Y ’ S THECOMPLin PROFESSIONAL FULLTIME TYMN0 SERVICE PRINTING, BINDING Z I V L E Y S«xe,WeType FRESHMAN THEMES Why Nat Mart Out wttti Good Oradas? Law Briefs RKSUMIS 2707HEMPHILLPARK At 27th A Guadalupe Plenty of Parkinf 472-3210 472-7677 ACADEMIC TYPING SERVICE 504W. 24tt (St. 1 477-814 te» Term Paper» Ratw ra Brief» Distertalio mHcb 82/pp. w/34 hr». weatMtae. ■ i " Alear rieer to Atari Dot Open Rea» to AH todrup A fletae ry A LONGHORN COPIES SALE! 4c COPIES Aug . 1-12 • Resumes • Theses » Term Papers • Word Processing • Binding • Laminating • Laser Printing • Kodak ' Copies 2518 Guadalupe 476-4498 NETWORK ENT. RESUMES e Resume aid & construction e Loser Printing e All UT standards complied e General word processing 2813 Rio Grande 479-8027 • 469-5653 n a m e M a e f * # PMDeeri WOODS TYPING W O R D PR O C E S S IN G 472-6302 2 2 0 0 G U A D A L U P E (side entrance) When You Want It Done Right A + T Y P IN G S E R V IC E 407 W. 24th R B I Professional Proofreading Spelling. Punctuation. Usage Guaranteed Correct Special Discount Rate for your revised Theses/Dtssettadons 4 72 -7 1 » 3 2 5 -7 * 0 3 THE STUDENT'S TYPIST Expart Word Ptocauwg for gHyournaatb Fraa ConsuHoHort For Dtaarialinr orThaasFrspaRrion Quota, Guomstssd Wort or masonokb Alcas Call Ann at 232-6944 or Karen at 282-6253 UNIVERSITY TYPING 473-2948 $2/pg. KUSH JOBS WELCOME days a week. Resumes $9. 6 1 0 W . 3 0 th St. # 1 0 2 9-1 ASAP TYPING/Word processing, lhasa» dissertation, mailout» with a per­ sonal touch. $1.6Q/paga. Candace 451- 4885.8-3_________ typing sarvico. moonlighting pro THE STENO PAD: A sarvico. W ord fassional processing. 459-7710; 837-3212. 8- 12N___________________ _ TYPING THESES, manuscript» resumes, ole Vary professional, reasonable. WiH pick up and deliver Susan, 388-1968. 8- 5 $ 1 1 0 I pay cash for old high school rings. Paying up to $110 (men's), up to $35 (lady's). Abo buy 10k, 14k & 18k gold jewelry. Any condition. James Lewis 458- 2639, (Mon-Fri). ^ SSS CASH FOR S$S » $ THE NEW YEAR $ » S$$ WE PAY T0t D0UAR SSS D onl giw yeur voluokés» erayt W s pay mote tar coin» ysJry.gafa, « t a laen Itaamirional Gata 320-0191 Inc 30* 8 N. I 30th & N. Lamar 320-0191 NOW Accepting Apf ¡cations for CLASSIFIED AD SALES REPRESENTATIVES for THE DAILY TEXAN ON THE JOB TRAINING STARTS IMMEDIATELY! Dufies include solicitation of classified ads by telephone, pri­ marily to business people. M # be detad-onenled and depend­ able. Must have pleasant phone personality and excellent cus­ tomer service siaNs. Straight commission — averaging $10/ hour. Spelling test requii ed. Shifts Available for Fad 9-11 am e 1-3 pm Apply in person: Student Employment Referral Service Room 135 Student Financial A id O ffice 2608 WhMs ■ Telephone Inquiries not accepted. A p­ plicants must be a University of Texas student or the spouse o f o student. The University o f Texas at Austin is an Equal O pportunity/Affirm ative Action Employer. 8-1 BUSINESS SCHOOL STUDENTS ONLY 15 Telemarketing Positions available beginning this fall. W ork 3 hour shift» 6 4 0 pm to 9:00 pm, 2 -3 evenings/ w eek. Requires the ability to toft com­ fortably and dearly over the phone. Data entry experience preferred. O p ­ portunity for advancement. Beginning salary: $5.12/hour. To apply, contact STUDENT FINANCIAL AID OFFICE 2608 WHITTS Th* Umvarwty of Texas at Austin i» an Equal 9-9 Wanted Part-time help. $5/hr. excellent opportunity for college student. Afternoons, some Satur­ days, typing, some filing. Must have good phone etiquette. General knowledge of video o big plus. No techno phobes. CaH for appointment 473-8618. AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHERS Phototech is accepting a p p lica tio n s fo r part-tim e party ph otograp hers. W orking m ostly nights an d w eek­ ends. Successful a p p lica n ts w ill be neat in ap p earan ce an d person ­ able, have q u a lity 35m m SLR cam ­ era and dep en d a b le car. C a ll M - TH, 4 7 4 -4 8 9 7 . 8-9 $5/HR. $5/HR. S5/HR. SUMMER J0BS-STUDENTS 6-9:30 pm M-Th. CONCERT 6-9 pm Fri. TICKET SALES 9-12 Sat. mom. Apply: 5555 N . Lam ar # 0 0 7 450-0187 450-0187 9-81 Academic Consulting firm needs outgoing junior/senior or gradu­ ate school co-ed at UT to distrib­ ute advertising literature to stu­ dents; student organizations, make presentations, & assist in preparing mailings, etc 345-6308 8-1 Extend-a-care needs people who have experience working with groups of elementary age children. Must be 18 or older. Have G ED or high school diploma. Hours 2-6 pm. School holi­ days off. Hourly wage begins at $5.40. 33 location» Some positions require supervisory skills. Apply 5555 N. Lamar D#113 459-908» $10 plus/hour!!! As overall head to toe im age consultant. H appy educating others FLEXIBLE hours 345-9851 7-25 TELEMARKETING POSITIONS available naor compu» Evaning shifh only. $5- 510 hour. CoH PBC Morkohng. 477- _ 3808 8-9 GUITAR AN D Piano Mochan needed for oil laveb at new Marcia Lynna Studio» 467-8150.8-1____________________ NEAR CAMPUS. Ful/port timo. BOOK­ KEEPER (Wo Train). TYPIST (45 + wpm). RUNNER (Your Cor). ODD JOBS. Appli­ cation 9am-4pm, 408 W. 17th St.— 9- 8N_____________________________ HELP NEEDED ot Loka Tavb. 20-25 hr/ wk. Must bo obla to lift 75 pound» Schadula flaxibta 266-9710.8-2 5 FULL or porl-fimo positions Groat back 7674.8-11 to school jobsl C a l 467- _ CATERING SERVICE needs part-time help morning 8:15-10:30om. Food salea experience preferred. Own tnoruporto- fion. 476-2578.8-2________________ PART TIME credit dark,. Night and Sun­ day houn available. Prefer Busmen stu­ dent. CaH Sharon Grout or Monnetta McDonald 476-6511. Yonngs down­ town 506 Congress 3rd floor 8-3_____ 800 — Ganaral Halp Wonted M l SPEGAUS1 MHmaM-IK 4 ptn-U pm Sunday 12-5 pm Wg * " teodung «wbpandent rasKiaMo program. MUM* Alt EU Fr. kma a» naadad »*an calad $4.77/hot»ty. Ap­ ply in patson. AiaÉm Trox» County AAMAM 611 S. Congmat Srila 440. ^ ■on vrith 2 yeen axparisnca daed com end high tchod diploma Wtai w m oetaga coutMworit to fucMtata long Sane MH dtaa* wi* vocational mdapandance Houn 3 pm • midnight M-F, $995 monthly to bo ino eonad altar 6 month». Appty in parson. AUSTIN, TRAVIS CO U N TY 611 S. Cortgr—« Sto. 440 ^ NEED OFEN mmdod guys wrih no mhftt- fiom. Good looking and wffing to leant money making phioiophy. MigfiAdub an- Iptotivtent. N o oxpononco m c m m w * C o l before 6 petToovid 474-6481.8-5 AftUNES N O W HWNG. I- onto, Travel Agenta, l i l l l i n i i Cuatamar Sermca. Uriing» SetariM to $50K. ta ta level poaftom. C e l 105- 687-6000 ExlA-9413 9-23 Ceriinginfa. fl) 8 05^ 87-600le t 113.9-19 TV-9413.9-1 OVERSEAS JOBS Akii— StoOOO-SIOSXXXVyrt 320 -t Uftngri (1) 805-687-6000 O J - 9 4 1 3 . W H rim l '0 St. 760 — Misc. Sarvkas Imng rift in a community F o r A D is p I iy A d , C d l 4 7 1 -8 9 0 0 \ CaMsoon! 476-1957 510W.23rd RESPONSIBLE NON-SM O KING male to rilare lo e 48R/48A Waft to campus B W t a ♦ V) Mb. Avalafale now 477- 7390.7-5 PRIVATE BATH, private room. Share Ukeben, CA/CH. Quiet, now — ofaae petes» 408 W. 17th St. $250 - lease. 7 5 0 — T y p l f t g ASF 472-2222 8-3C “ MN.UTS WORD Froceaang. Popen, CALL 471 -5 2 4 4 ^ ^ B TO PLACE A «¿¡JUS CLASSIFIED AD WANT ADS... P a g e 14/ i ti* , h a i l , ¥ iE A A N /M on aay, August i, latid Second round begins for E. Texas lawmen Associated Press , TYLER — The second round of le­ gal battles for three white Sabine County lawmen accused of murder­ ing a black jail inmate is scheduled for this week as civil rights activists prepare for a rally. in Tyler An appeals court is scheduled to hear argum ents Thurs­ day on the d efend ants' contention that the m urder trials they face violate state and federal constitu­ tional protection against being tried twice for the sam e offense. The defendants — form er H em ­ phill Police C hief Thom as Ladner, 41, and form er Sabine C ounty sh er­ iff's deputies Jam es "B o ” H yden, 34, and Billy Ray H orton, 58 — w ere acquitted July 15 in H em phill of vio­ lating rights of Loyal G am er Jr., a black Louisiana truck driver. the civil They are scheduled to stand trial next M onday on m urder charges stem m ing from G am er's death. com panions w ere G am er, 34, of Florien, La., and two arrested Christm as night. G arner died two days later at a Tyler hospital after allegedly being beaten in the Sabine C ounty Jail. L adner striking G arner on the head once with a stick but said he only used force necessary to subdue G arner after G am er struck him in the head and neck. ad m itted to State District Judge Joe Tunnell of Tyler dismissed the defendants' claims last month that the murder trials amount to double jeopardy and ordered them to stand trial for murder. Although the three were tried to­ gether in Hemphill on the civil rights violation charges, they will face separate trials, with Ladner's scheduled first. Frank Henderson, an assistant district attorney for Smith County, said the trials could be consolidated at a later date. He said he doubts the trial will start next Monday. Defense attorney John Seale of Jasper, who represents Ladner, said he's prepared to take the matter to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, if Tunnell's ruling that prosecution under state civil rights statute does not preclude prosecu­ tion under any other criminal stat­ ute is upheld. While attorneys are preparing for the legal battle in the courts, Sabine County residents are bracing them­ selves for a NAACP-sponsored rally Saturday in Hemphill. Vollie Grace, president of the Sa­ bine County chapter of the civil rights organization, said he is ex­ pecting 300 to 500 people at the ral­ ly, called to protest "the brand and type of justice we're getting in this a re a ." EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 800 — General Help Wanted 800 — General Help Wanted 810 — Office- Clerical SECURITY OFFICERS Full an d part tima positions now a va il­ able fo r fall an d/or sp rin g sem esters. P e op le -o rie n te d officers needed for o ur cam pus are a lo ca­ tions. Uniform s provided. Excellent opportunity for students. C a ll security Z IM C O Security Consultants 3 pm -6 pm, M o n d a y-F rid o y 3 4 3 -7 2 1 0 -uH/porl KEEPER (W e Train). TYPIST (45 + wpm). R U N N ER (Your Car). O D D JOBS. Appli­ cation 9am -4pm, 4 0 8 W . 17th St 9- 8 N _____________________________________ LO C AL M O V IN G com pany needs part- time driven with fu l size pick-ups. Fiaxi- ble hours. Coll 8 34 -0 0 0 0. 8-1__________ FIG HT PO LLU TIO N and get paid for it. Cleon W ater Action, 4 74-0605. 8-1 8-12 RESID EN T M A N A G E R . SomK complex near campus! Must be real estate major. Prefer graduate student. 4 78 -7 3 5 5.8-31 Need Sharp Individual wMi protM oonal altitud* and appearance to fa* o n -vt* m onoger at small W e Austin apartment community Com pensation pact age «dudes: efficiency apartment, utilities, plus sm al salary and commissions. Bring or 810 — Office- Clerical MJ 11940 Joltyville Rd 12017 Austin, Texas 78750 Eanes Independent School District welcomes applications for Food Ser­ vice Workers - No Experience Neces­ sary - W e Train - Regular (Full Fringe Benefits Provided) and Substitute Posi­ tions - Minimum 4 hours - Join Us To Make Our Food Program Better - Call 328-2420 for Information. 8-4 Bethany Lutheran Infant Program now hiring for careteochers. Infant care experience necessary. Must be mature, < pendoble and able to lift children up to 35 lbs. Day and after­ noon hours available. Please apply at 6315 Manchaca Rd. between 12:30- 2 pm, Monday-Friday. _________ 8-3 G O V E R N M E N T $ 1 6 ,0 4 0 - $59,230/yr. N ow Hiring. Your Area. 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext. R-9413 for current J O B S I List 9 -23 EA SY W O R K! Excellent payl Assem ble information. products at home. Call for 312-741-8400 Ext. A -479. 8-1__________ BE O N TV. M ony needed for commer­ cials. Casting info., (1) 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 00 0 , ext. TV-9413.9-6_____________________ EA R N EXTRA money, weekend work available. Need strong, able-bodied for m oving jobs. Call Austin people Temporary Services, 4 54 -5 5 5 5. 9-8 V CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD WORK ON CAMPUS N O W Accepting Applications for CLASSIFIED AD SALES SUPPORT for THE DAILY TEXAN O N THE JOB TRAINING STARTS IMMEDIATELY! Duties include data entry, filing, typing, miscellaneous clerical tasks. Assist sales staff with mail­ ings, correspondence, phone answering, etc. Apply in person: Student Employment Referral Service Room 135 Student Financial Aid Office 2608 White Telephone Inquiries not accepted. Ap­ plicants must be a University of Texas student or the spouse of a student. The University of Texas at Austin is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ 8-10 EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part time NEEDED: Potting Cleft. Mutt type 50-55 wpm. Know ledge of IB M CRT preferred but not necewory. Som e fifing and light tele­ phone w o rt Position in part-time M-E and tom * Saturday» A lto needed: telephone representative. M utt type 4 0 -4 5 wpm. CRT experience Dec­ enary. Heavy telephone w o rt Som e fifing. Position it part-time M -F and every other Sat­ urday. Apply in person only: 10600 N. Lamar. E E O C 8 -3 N N EA R C A M P U S Full/port time. B O O K - KEEPER (W e Train). TYPIST (45 + wpm). R U N N ER (Your Car). O D D JO BS. Appli­ cation 9am -4pm , 4 0 8 W . 17th St 9- 6 N _________________________________ EA R N EXTRA money! Temporary assign­ ment» available for receptionist, typist, data entry and w ord processor. Call Aus­ tin Temporary Services, 454-5555. 9- 8V 820 — Accounting- Bookk toping N EA R C A M PU S, uH/part-time Gorn bookeeping experience. TYPIST (45 + wpm). R U N N ER (your cari. O D D JOBS. Applications 9am -4pm ...408 W. 17th. 8- 2 N _________________________________ 900— Domestic- Hous hold BABYSITTER - M ATURE responsible per­ son to core for small infant. M orning» 15-20 hours/w eet References, experi­ ence required. Hyde Park. 4 5 8 -8 9 9 7 8-2 R ESPO N SIBLE N O N S M O K IN G , live-in attendant for disabled male. South East, bus routes, room/board, $475/m o. 443- 3811. 8-2 930— Business Opportunities M A K E Y O U R fortune) W rite for free de­ tails on 101 enorm ously profitable yet am azingly easy businesses any student con start! W rite to; Business Enterprises, Box 1365, Bryn M aw r, Penn- sytvonio 19010.8-8___________________ he CALL 471-5244 TO PLACEA CLASSIFIED AD NCNB plays new version of old bank Associated Press DALLAS — NCNB Corp. began rebuilding public confidence in the largest bank holding company in Texas Sunday, taking out full-page newspaper ads proclaiming: "The newest bank in Texas is one of the oldest banks in Texas." The Charlotte, N.C.-based NCNB took over First RepublicBank Corp. Friday in what may be the largest federal rescue in banking history, with some $4 billion in federal as­ sistance. The new banks opened Saturday as NCNB Texas National Bank. "The biggest change is there's going to be money available at NCNB Texas National Bank," said NCNB Chairman Hugh McColl Jr. "The first thing [TexansJ are going to notice is we're back on offense. People who are quite capable bank­ ers are going to be out there lending money again and not collecting bad loans." In the advertisements, the corpo­ ration points out it now ranks among the top 10 banking compa­ nies in the nation. "What we're bringing to Texas is an outstanding reputation for lend­ ing money and doing business," the ad reads. "And you'll be happy to know most things will be staying the same at the new bank. Your new bank will be operated by Texans — for Texans. Not only that, you'll be doing business with the same peo­ ple you've been doing business with all along, who are now backed by one of the largest banks in the country." The ad says NCNB now will be serving more than two million cus­ tomers in 700 branches across the South and managing more than $50 billion in assets. Previously, the cor­ poration was ranked as the coun­ try's 18th largest banking system. "The bank customers and bank employees of Texas deserve better cards than the ones they were dealt by a series of economic events,” said Francis "Buddy" Kemp, chair­ man of the new NCNB Texas Na­ tional Bank. "This is a game we know we can play," said Kemp. "We have been successful running statewide banks in highly competitive markets in the Southeast and we will be suc­ cessful again here in Texas." in First RepublicBank had been struggling since a downturn in the state's economy. The holding com­ pany posted a loss of nearly $2.3 bil­ lion in the first six months of 1988. The federally approved takeover deal calls for NCNB to contribute about $220 million for all of the vot­ ing stock of the Dallas-based First RepublicBank system and a 20 per­ cent equity stake in the new compa­ ny. The funds may be raised through a debt offering or, if necessary, a persona] loan from Dallas billionaire H. Ross Perot, a friend and support­ er of McColl. In addition, NCNB will have the option to purchase the remaining 80 percent equity over the next five years. The bank will be split into two di­ visions to separate operating bank assets, valued at an estimated $20 billion, and a special asset pool of troubled assets of about $5 billion, to Timothy Hartman, according NCNB chief financial officer. The Federal Deposit Insurance Company will absorb costs in re­ solving the bad assets, Hartman said. But the FDIC will not dictate how NCNB operates — a provision that already has stirred controversy. "Anyone owning 80 percent should have a substantial say in the operations of a corporation," said Rep. Fernand St. Germain, D-R.I., who Saturday called for a congres­ sional investigation into the deal. "That's standard in the business world, and the FDIC should make sure it is in there protecting the public's investment in Texas bank­ ing." Congressional hearings scheduled to begin Wednesday. are St. Germain also said the House banking committee will look into the regulatory decisions that led to the approval of a merger last year between RepublicBank Corp. and InterFirst Corp., which were then Texas' two largest bank companies. BU SIN ESS Associated Press W orkers of the w o rld ... A worker at the Superdome in New Orleans puts an­ other coat of paint around the platform for the Republl- can National Convention. The sign is meant motivate workers setting up for the convention. to Assoctated Press Tarrant federal funds top nation Per capita rate in ’86-’87 reached $9,511 in Wright’s home county FORT WORTH — Tarrant County, home of House Speaker Jim Wright, in 1986 collected the most federal money, on a per capita basis, spent in any large urban area in the nation, a newspaper's analysis found. The Dallas Morning News, which tracked federal spending for fiscal years 1986 and 1987 through 50 states and 3,041 counties, reported in a copyright story Sunday that Tarrant County achieved its top ranking primarily through the awarding of multibillion-dollar defense contracts. The federal government spent more than $5.5 billion, or $5,481 per person, in Tarrant County in 1986. The next year, during a steep decline in defense spending, the county dropped to the No. 4 per capita position with $4.4 billion, or $4,030 per person, according to the News' analysis. No other county in Texas came close to Tarrant County's total of $9.9 billion, or $9,511 per capita rate, during 1986-87. Bexar County, home to six military ins­ tallations, was second with $5,160 during the period. The per capita rate is even greater within the city limits of Fort Worth, where the government spent $19,337 per capita during 1986-87. The average U.S. county studied received a two-year total of $3,577 per person for 1986 and 1987. Wright, a Democrat, has represented Tarrant County residents for more than three decades, and the county's high ranking in part is a reflection of Wright's increas­ ing influence in how tax dollars are spent. Wright, who two weeks ago presided over the Dem­ ocratic National Convention in Atlanta, faces an un­ precedented investigation by the House ethics commit­ tee into allegations that he improperly interceded on behalf of troubled savings and loan executives in Texas and that he wrongly profited from royalties on a book. Wright's supporters said the ranking demonstrates his ability to "get things done" in Washington for his Fort Worth constituents. "What's the point in having the speaker of the House come from Texas if he doesn't do the people any good?" asked Boston University President John Silber, a longtime Wright friend. But detractors said the ranking only reinforces Wright's image as a provincial, pork-barrel politician. "Jim Wright generates more pork than is hanging in a Kansas slaughterhouse," said Don McNiel, the Al­ varado Republican who tried to unseat Wright in 1986. "It's the pork barrel capital of America." "Pork barrel is an abused and grotesquely overused word," Wright said. "I think it's a sloppy word used indiscriminately to belittle projects that one doesn't un­ derstand and from which one doesn't benefit." Webster's New World Dictionary defines pork barrel as "government appropriations for political patronage, as for local improvements to please legislators' constitu­ ents." Tarrant County projects funded by the federal treas­ ury could have sold themselves, Wright says. Military spending makes up the greatest slice of Tar­ rant County s federal pie, with 83 percent of the $9.9 billion in funds received coming from defense con­ tracts. The bulk of Tarrant County's $8.2 billion in defense contracts went to General Dynamics, maker of the F-16 jet fighter and the county's largest employer with 28,OCX) workers. General Dynamics, the nation's sec­ ond-largest defense contractor, reported $5.8 billion in military aircraft sales from its Fort Worth Division in 1986-87. Wright has drawn the most criticism for using his power to help out on smaller, non-defense related proj­ ects. Wright recently arranged for $25 million in Federal Aviation Administration funds to build Fort Worth Alli­ ance Airport, the centerpiece of a development of the H. Ross Perot family. Wright, who received a standing ovation from the crowd of 300 who attended the airport groundbreak­ ing, said at the ceremony that he "doesn't know of a better example of cooperation" among government and business. As House majority leader in the early '80s, Wright also persuaded federal officials to provide tens of mil­ lions in Economic Development Administration funds and Urban Development Action Grants to spur devel­ opment in downtown, the Fort Worth Stockyards and other areas. Now Accepting Applications for The Daily Texan Classified Ad Department Several Position* Available AD SALES REPRESENTATIVE D utiee include eoiicitation o f Heeeifted ads by telephone, p rim a rily to b u M M M people M in t be detail oriented end dependable. Pleeeent p h a se pe rson ality and excellent cuetosner sa r­ r ia ) h ills requisad. S h ift available: 8:30 s a . - 11:30 a-ai. M o n d a y-F rid a y S tra ig h t com m is- É M a v a ra g sin f IK V h o u r. T ele m arke tin g or SALES SUPPORT IXatsae ia rh sd s S h a g , t if ia * , coe rd in ating prqf- Officials rush to interview newly legalized aliens Associated Press HOUSTON — Thousands of illegal aliens are being called in early to have their amnesty appli­ cations considered as immigration officials rush to finish legalization before embarking on the second phase of the permanent residency pro­ gram. A deluge of applicants during the last month of the one-year amnesty offer, which ended May 4, swamped the Houston legalization office and forced officials to postpone about 50,000 appli­ cant interviews. More than 118,000 aliens applied for amnesty in the Houston area. The postponed interviews were scheduled through the end of the year at a rate of about 450 a day, and about 34,000 remain to be done, said Richard Rios, legalization director for the Hous­ ton district of the Immigration and Naturaliza­ tion Service. But now, immigratM i officials are burdened A deluge of applcants during tha l ot month of the ont -year amnes­ ty offer... swamped the Houston le jaization office and forced offi­ cial* to postpone about 50,000 ap- picant interviews. with getting the second phase of the amnesty program under way. To make a dean break between rite first and second phases, Houston immigration officials have decided to work overtime and rush thou­ sands of interviews so that all applicants for am­ nesty will be processed before Nov. 7,Vhen im­ migration workers wül shift their attention to permanent residency. Rios said the legalization office will be getting additional staff and will begin opening on Satur­ days as of Aug. 13, processing as many as 700 applications a day — a pace that comes dose to the frenzy of the last weeks of the amnesty peri­ od. In the second phase, legalized aliens must ap­ ply and be approved for permanent residency or face losing their legal status. To be approved for permanent residency, an alien must learn English and U.S. history, or have completed at least half a 60-hour course of study. The Immigration Reform and Control Act re­ quires that an amnesty-approved alien wait 18 months before applying for permanent residen- cy. They are then given one year to apply. WWB day of the offer, May 5, 1987, then the first day he can apply for permanent residency is Nov. applied for amnesty the mst If an alien In the second phase, immigration officials ex­ pect to find die same pattern that emerged dur­ ing the first phase: a busy summer, a slow win- nHP# I n Q I e s % i ( m% u n f CI1Q< s L u m s m m a i m - » T H E D A IL Y TEXAN/M onday , August 1 , 1988/P ag e 15 ACR088 PREVIOUS PUZZLI SOLVIO 1 Maidservant 5 Draw or stud 10 Thick piece 14 Indonesian island 15 Extant 16 Soft drink 17 Premed subj. 18 Quoted 19 Acidity 20 Knight 21 Busy place 22 Trifles 24 Soup base 26 Linen item 27 Chair part 28 Erect 31 Instances 34 Bridges 35 Petroleum 36 Kind of car 37 Large bird 38 In the past 39 After zeta 40 Ridicule 41 Krupp works site Together” 42 S-sounding 44 Accomplice 45 46 Lab vessels 50 Named 52 Damsel 53 Cereal 54 Ferrara name 55 Command 57 Bumpkin 58 "... and — well” 59 Celebration 60 At the peak 61 Collide 62 Scandinavian 63 Pronoun □ □ D O O H S S s i n a o a n s a a c o r a rmmu □□□0 DDQ O00 □ 0 0 G 3 Q □ □ □ s D O S 0 mm □ □ □ □ E l Í ! □ D O 0 Q o a □ 0 0 0 1 3 0 □ □ □ □ 0 0 C 3 0 0 0 0 O H O C3 0 0 0 □ □ □ 0 0 0 0 H O 0 0 □ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ( 9 0 0 0 0 0 000 □ □ □ □ a o n a s 000 Q 000 0 m a a 0 0 0 0 Q 0 0 0 0 0 Q O 0 DOWN 1 Discomfit 2 Lunacy 3 Affright 4 Line drive 5 Stepping off 6 Fruit 7 Hawk 8 Dusk 9 Old World sandpiper 10 Frightened 11 Places 12 Beneath 13 Keeps out 21 Garden tools 23 Sawbucks 25 Lost sap 26 Origin 28 Pitcher part 29 Agreeable 30 Dingle 31 Pool sticks 32 Wine city 33 Trafalgar, e.g. 34 Pelt 37 Vilifies 38 European capital 40 Ice mass 41 Etches 43 Sickest 44 Mortar and — 46 Went quickly 47 Highway 48 Drum 49 Processes .50 Athletic group 51 Atoll 52 Reside 56 Moisture 57 Stadium yell 8- 1-88 © 19 8 8 U nite d Feature S y n d ic a t e GOOD EVENING, /B IL L Y ! OH, GOOD EVENING, MR. TRUMP! UJHERB'S our new CAPTAIN* HB ÍÁJBNT BELOUJ, SIR. 10 ENTERTAIN SOME 0F1HE HIGH ROUBRS FROM YOUR CASINO. State’s super collider chances improve Officials: Texans on presidential ballot might win $4.4 billion project DALLAS — The state's chance at landing the $4.4 billion supercon­ ducting super collider may be get­ ting a boost because Texans are on the presidential tickets of both par­ ties, officials aj tepi Texas Republicans have long said Vice President George Bush would enhance the state's chance to win the super collider, but with Sen. Lloyd Bentsen on the Democratic ticket, the Ellis County super collid­ er site may have an even stronger proponent in the presidential race. "We've got aces back-to-back," said Bill Bankowsky, president of the Texas Superconducting Super Collider Authority. "It seems to me the Department of Energy will be strongly interested in placing this thing in the state of whoever's on the winning ticket." Seven states are competing to be the home of the super collider, a 53- mile underground, oval-shaped tunnel where subatomic particles will be made to collide and break apart. The U.S. Department of En­ ergy will select a site for the super collider in November. The edge Texas may have gained with contenders on both major presidential tickets has not been lost on officials in the six other states. "We're paying our lobbyists a lot to ferret out that question," said Ian Macpherson, Arizona's Super Col­ lider project manager. "But I contin­ ue to subscribe to the naive theory that the decision will reflect ... the larger interests of our nation, not politics." "I don't think we're in a better position," said U.S. Rep. Joe Bar­ ton, R-Ennis, whose district in­ cludes the state's proposed super collider site. "Let's assume the Democrats win — and I don't want to see this hap­ pen — you could assume Bentsen would be able to influence [Michael] Dukakis to support the project," Barton said. "But he can also do that as chairman of the [Senate] Finance Committee." The super collider project, expect­ ed to create thousands of jobs, faces a funding battle on Capitol Hill. Some analysts say if the project is to continue, Energy Secretary John Harrington's best selection would be a state the future administration would support. Bush mentions the project in speeches on energy policy and basic research, campaign aides say. Bentsen has always strongly backed the Texas site, but says he will support the project wherever it is located. Trainer says stress related to mistreatment Associated Press SAN ANTONIO — The Air Force training in­ structor convicted last week of mistreating near­ ly a dozen recruits said he was twice turned down for reassignment he sought because of job stress. Staff Sgt. David O'Neal said Friday that his Lackland Air Force Base supervisors refused to allow him to leave his job. O'Neal was sentenced to four months in jail after being convicted in a two-day court martial last week of mistreating recruits. Several months after his attempts to leave, he was charged with bloodying a recruit's nose, making trainees eat paper and other unauthor­ ized behavior. O'Neal did not raise the mental health issue at his court-martial because his attorney's strategy I actually took off my hat and threw it on the table. I said i can’t take it anymore.’ — Staff Sgt. David O’Neal was to challenge the regulations governing train­ ing instructors as too vague. "I couldn't take it anymore," O'Neal said of the stress. "I actually took off my hat and threw it on the table," he said, describing his encounter with his commanding officers. "I said 1 can't take it any­ more." But O'Neal said two different commanders warned him that his career in the Air Force would be over if he left his job as a military train­ ing instructor. "If we turn our hat and badge in, we're cruci­ fied," O'Neal told the San Antonio Light. O'Neal said he also went to the Mental Health Clinic at Lackland and was diagnosed as suffer­ ing from depression and severe stress well be­ fore the mistreatment incidents took place. Again, his commanders put him back to work, he said. Lackland spokeswoman Dolores Schroeder said instructors are required to take a mental health evaluation every year and procedures ex­ ist for the reassignment of instructors who can­ not handle the stress. "They can't just quit [the job]," Schroeder said. "They do have a three-year commitment." One other Lackland training instructor has been charged with mistreating recruits and faces court-martial next month. Around Campus is a daily column listing University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and registered stu­ dent organizations. To appear in Around Campus, organizations must be registered with the Office of Stu­ dent Activities. Announcements must be submitted on the correct form, available in The D aily Texan office, by 11 a.m. the day before publica­ tion. The D aily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions to conform to style rules, although no significant changes will be made. MEETINGS Smoke-free Alcoholics Anonymous meetings are held at noon Mondays and Fridays in Paulist Hall of St. Aus­ tin's Catholic Church, 2010 Gua­ dalupe St. Students, staff and mem­ bers of the community are welcome. Traditionally, Fridays feature guest speakers with a year or more of con­ tinuous sobreity. Overeaten Anonymous will meet at noon Monday in Burdine Hall 228. UTSEDS will hold a steering meet­ ing at 5 p.m. Monday in Hogg Memo­ rial Auditorium 201. The Univeroity Group of Alcohol­ ics Anonymous will meet from noon to 1 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday in Burdine Hall 128. The Univenity Alanon Group will meet at noon every Monday through Friday, and at 5:30 p.m. Wednesdays, in Student Health center 429. I® SHORT COURSES Computation Center User Services will offer two short courses this week in Computation Center 8. They are: Introduction to the CFT FORTRAN Compiler, from 10 a.m. to noon Mon­ day and Wednesday; and DEC-20 Mi­ gration Issues, from 3 to 5 p.m. Tues­ day. Courses are fre to anyone with a valid UT ID. Register at W.C. Hogg Building 8 (471-3241 ext. 253). LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS The Institute of Latin American Studies will sponsor a lecture by from Douglas Rafael Tamawiecki Lima, Peru, on "Peruvian Folk Music and Its Relation to New Peruvian Mu­ sic" at noon Monday in Sid Richard- son Hall 1.313. OTHER Armadillo Folk Dancers will spon­ sor free folk dancing at 8 p.m. Mon­ day on the West Mall. Student Volunteer Services has volunteer opportunities for people in­ terested in helping with a pledge walk to benefit AIDS care and education in Austin. The walk is scheduled for Sat­ urday, Sept. 10, but help is needed now! You can volunteer in one of the following areas: planning and organ­ izing, registering participants, collect­ ing pledges and contacting sponsors. Volunteers should be at least 18 years old and willing to donate at least two hours a week. For more information, call 471-3065. Around Austin is a column appear­ ing Mondays in The D aily Texan for activities, lectures and seminars going on in higher education and the community outside of the University. Please turn in submissions to the Tex­ an office, P.O. Drawer D, Austin, TX 78713. LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS The Jung Society of Austin will present a slide show and lecture by Metis Policano on "Seed to Harvest: Images of the I Ching" at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 12, at the South Austin Medical Center, 901 W. Ben White Blvd. Policano will present a collection of photographies images especially re­ lated to the I Ching — its symbols and its connection to sacred cycles. Tickets are $6 at the door. For more informa­ tion, call 474-2911. OTHER Learning to express yourself and sexlife enhance your communication with others can help build your self-esteem and confidence. The Women's Coun­ seling and Resource Center is offering a four-week session, "Assertiveness: The Power Within," to help you. The group will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesdays, Aug. 10 through 31. Fee is $40 and payment is due by Aug. 3. For more information, call 472-3053 or 472-2064. Are you interested in improving how you think and feel about your­ self? The Women's Counselng and Resource Center can teach you how to increase the positive in your life with a four-week session, "Building Self- Esteem." The group will meet from 5:30 tp 7 p.m. Mondays, Aug. 8 through 29. Fee is $40 and due by Aug. 2. For more information, call 472-3053 or 472-2064. Ever feel manipulated, exploited or involved in unnecessary conflict? Join us for one-on-one communication ex­ ercises to explore, with other individ­ uals, the mechanisms of societal ma­ nipulation. For more information, call Austin's Communication Freedom Movement, 454-2060. The City of Austin Parks and Rec­ reation Department will sponsor a Neighborhood Garage Sale at the Alamo Recreation Center, 2100 Alamo St., from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 6. Spaces are available to indi­ viduals and groups at $5 per booth. Vendors welcome. Two tables and two chairs provided. Are you tired of paying high prices for softball league fees? Can't afford to rent fields to host a tournament? The Travis County Parks Department will now host softball league play. Regis­ tration for the Summer II league sea­ son will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays through Aug. 3. Summer II will begin Aug. 15 at the Del Valle and Richard Moya complexes, with league play from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays. League fees are $205 for slow pitch (men, women, co­ ed, and church co-ed) and $265 for fast pitch (adult and youth). For more information, call 320-5766. The YOW! Comic Book Convention will happen from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 27, at the Chariot Inn Motor Hotel, 7300 N. IH-35. Admis­ sion is $1. Free comics for everyone! Free posters for everyone! Grand door prize: X-Men #1 given away! Featured guests: comic artist Scott Bieser of Rovers, Gambit and Solo Ex-Mutants and Sci-fi artists A.C. Fisher and Mark Steele. The convention will also fea­ ture original comic book from various comics and toy, baseball card and comic dealers from across the South­ west. I 2 i " f LVnon. wee mppltfcsc, **+ kips., i me*, is no OFF- sm st" MKPIA cyt- m u * n tt 'l WfASN C£ Ü M J itH Ml tnwe yqyA CO-STARR TOPtNOM i B B T rH iS Na 6ifFr.enA I H.% you see VW STRlP U&T I W C tk? WKcn I vmxs DLAb I Ivirm TAC taftt»i IN AV SACK t \ I IlAouOHT L Looktt> J X SAW JtA V T V iE tK S 1s t * * >t | V 4A S S O O O \|> WHtN I you p o t SHOT/ T W E P T - y£A? )€.*? U0V sWooM V\*ve fcLLN V\o v j V h t y ...VO, I VNPLA*T8W& TUA1 you IftW V O H l ^0 0 * To r * \ i iH FEA R O f GETTIN C, I s t a f f e d a w t > s o a > A t a ft o R O tA ItfewNXVk>OSO" 5*00. 00 y o u tbit iAt- rrvAs GRP I I All t h e TO U RISTS Tvgrt HAVE ItOUfcMT the fR\EWT>iTHKT |vJF*t*'T At» LOt>y Av you*7 P6yt»V C 'fok| evejRx >u ftA . J»iISM* KAKK0S4 Tb MAMKM4PD / I HopeXoa W r kf> HEli * u ~ pim M s Qfcffe- «6TQO«4CrTOO| |fe8yU»V fOR I>AgTH f l \ A N A N l H V n o u s U S C JH T f A L K E I O f M k .R tt* %N K « * i£ r fm>To&gftpHs M B T H E -T fe tA t- U A S S f W O T - T me- -TvooriE Tvi«.e*4 The 8 ook AFf H»M by tom king H E . w A > s e w t e A i c c p t c TVUtGC V tM s or S¡U-t-Ml4| « ' f c A c X A N O U W L ' B U T T O N S T O UNMASiWCb • g a s m p its e*> S*k sr. Page 16/THE DAILY TEXAN/Monday, August 1,1988 ——— SB5P53 S H I Associated Press Agassi captures Volvo International STRATTON MOUNTAIN, Vt. — Second-seeded An- dre Agassi won his fifth Nabisco Grand Prix singles title of the year Sunday, defeating Paul Annacone 6-2, 6-4 at the Volvo International tennis tournament. The 18-year-old sensation used a powerful forehand passing shot and a backhand lob to capture his first title at the tournament where he first rocketed to attention two years ago. He earned $114,000, his second biggest paycheck. Annacone took home $57,000. "I feel this was the best I played all week," Agassi said after picking up his check and a trophy that he dedicated to his father. "I could have done a few things better. I could have broken him early on in the second set. ... "But you can't complain. In general, I was playing good tennis," said the Las Vegas, Nev., resident, who is ranked fifth in the world. Annacone, seeded 13th, said he had problems with his serve and misjudgment of Agassi's return. Anna­ cone double-faulted four times in the first three games, the last time at break point. "I was trying to serve too big, and I think that's one of my problems because that's my weapon," said the 25-year-old from Knoxville, Tenn., who is ranked 48th in the world. Annacone was broken in the third game of the first set and again in the fifth when Agassi blasted a fore­ hand passing shot. Both players held serve until the ninth game of the second set, when Agassi struck once more with a pass­ ing shot on a service return. Down 30-40 in the next and final game, Annacone was long on a service return, and Agassi threw up his racket in elation. Ballesteros gets 4th victory of year STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Steady Seve Ballesteros seized an early lead when his rivals failed to get going and made it a runaway, record-breaking five-stroke vic­ tory Sunday in the $450,000 Scandinavian Enterprise Open golf tournament. "I played very relaxed today and my concentration was very good," said Ballesteros, the gallery favorite among the record 29,650 fans who packed the course. "It was a good tuneup for the [U.S.] PGA Champion­ ship. Now I need to go home to rest a little bit and practice for a week before I go to America." The PGA Championship, the last major event of the season, is scheduled Aug. 11-14 at Oak Tree in Tulsa, Okla. It was the fourth victory of the year for the 31-year- old Spanish ace, who captured the British Open a fort­ night ago after earlier wins in the Majorca Open in Spain and the Westchester Classic on the U.S. tour. But he has yet to win the PGA Championship. Verplank captures first pro victory GRAND BLANC, Mich. — Scott Verplank, breaking the stranglehold that hampered his game for three years, shot a final-round 66 Sunday to win the $700,000 Buick Open by two strokes over Doug Tewell. Verplank, 24, finished at 20-under-par 268 to earn $126,000 for his first professional victory. Although it was Verplank's first pro victory, it was his second on the PGA Tour. He won the 1985 Western Open as an amateur. American 18-year-old Andre Agassi reaches for a return in his victory in the finals of the Volvo International. TAs.AI’s (and others, too) How about a Health Plan that saves $48 a month just for starters? With no loss of accustomed benefits and no physical INDIVIDUAL E X A M P L E S i n g l e $ S a v e s :ÁQ12A Mo A Month $57744 1 U *577 Male 25 A Year ---------------1 E X A M P L E C o u p l e $ Í " Y 1 ^ S a v e s ) \ _ \ Female 28 Male 30 0 Month ,101*° Year A E X A M P L E Fam ily $ 54 S a v e s 111 A Month *1,338* A Year Male 26 Female 28 2 Children FEATURES OF THE PLAN See for yourself. What are your premium costs now? And next year? HOW ARE SUCH SAVINGS POSSIBLE? SEPARATE DENTAL PLAN 1. Choice of 4 deductibles: $250, $500, $1,000, $2,500. 2. Pays 80% of the next $5,000 of medical expenses in or out of the hospital, then 100% for the balance of the calendar year. 3. Pays 100% of pre-admission testing and second surgical opinion. 4. 1st and only “Dual Choice” prescription drug card. You choose either a generic or brand name prescription, paying a $3 deductible for any generic drug and a $5 deductible for any brand name drug. The remainder of the prescription cost is billed directly to the insurance company. You have no hassle with receipts or filing claims. 5. Pays you up to $2,000 for errors you discover in your medical bills. 6. If you experience no illness or accident until the last quarter of the year (October-December) and your medical expenses are less than your deductible, your costs will be applied to the next year’s deductible requirement. 7. Your choice of two maternity options. Unlike group plans, you do not pay for maternity coverage if you do not choose it. 8. Optional Supplemental Accident Benefit is available. Pays you the first $250 for accidental injury, in or out of the hospital. This benefit is not subject to the deductible or the coin­ surance amount. 9 The carrier is an A.M. Best rated company: “B+, very good.” OFTEN ASKED QUESTIONS 1. When will my Individual Care Plus coverage become effective? For most people September I, 1988, even those not enrolled until September 15, 1988. But enrollment in Individual Care Plus is continuous. There is no cut-off date. 2. With Individual Care Hus do I pay the deductible with each illness and accident? No. You pay your deductible only once per calendar year. 3. With my Individual Care Plus plan can I choose my own physician and hospital? Yes. 4. Will my Individual Care Plus plan cover my medical expenses in or out of the hospital? Yes. POR INFORMATION AND POLICIES COMETO UMVERSfTY MEIHODIST CHURCH 25th SIREET ENIHANCE acras from CoanraicaBoiis Center Mon-Fri 7:30 am - 6 pm Sri 9 w - 1 2 p.m. Because Individual Care Plus is an individual plan. Your premium is based on your age. Any group plan predicts an average age for the group and then prudently adds a cushion. You as a member of the group pay for the average age and the cushion. With the Individual Care Plus plan you must be insurable. You give your medi­ cal history on your application and no physical is required. A group plan takes no medical histories and insures everyone in the group, adding an­ other cushion to protect against all the unknown medical risks in the group. Whatever your pre­ mium costs are now for your group plan, you can be reasonably sure they will be less with Indi­ vidual Care Plus. Complete premium schedules are available at our Campus Information Center, University Methodist Church, 25th Street entrance, across from Communications Center. MWtCMPTK» C*WC *,.*« t» CMMUJK MNWMNCE CrtOUf 1*1 MtUftAftCf COWMNV *«<■'- ■ -’MtMMr'i ••••• *K THE 1ST AND ONLY “DUAL CHOICE" DEDUCTIBLE PRESCRIPTION DRUG CARD THE $OURCE T M Marketing Financial S aties to Busin» and Individuals 102 Vofche Drive, P.O. Boa 165295 512-527-9131 800-557-7486 M ia , T op 78716 C CffjRtf* I9H, 1be Savor Insured Insured and spouse Insured and child Family $ 8.90 $1590 $15.90 $1990 □ Pre-existing conditions covered □ No maximum benefit □ No deductible □ No claim forms PAY PREMIUMS WTTH PRE-TAX DOLLARS IRS rules allow you to pay your health insurance costs before withholding is deducted. Your Individual Care Plus plan includes a proper form for you to list your premium costs for your payroll office. THIS IS NOT FOR PAYROLL DEDUCTION. You pay your own Individual Care Plus premiums with an automatic bank draft or another method of your choice. The following is a partial quote from a University memorandum to graduate student employees dated June 7, 1988: “ (3) The cost of insurance premiums (either the University group insurance, University student health insurance or any plan of your choice) may be paid with pre-tax dollars through the University’s new' flexible benefit program. This simply means that you will not have income tax withheld on die funds used to pay die premiums.” THE POUCY BELONGS TO YOU and is yours to continue re$ dless of employment You may modify your coverage as your circumstances c to g e ENROLLMENT IS CONTINUOUS. There is no ad-off dale for Individual Care Plus; however if your present coverage ends August 31, you should act now. POUCY APPROVAL is usually within 72 hours. A complica d medical history can delay approval, if a statement from the attending physidan is necessary. EMERGENCY FUND FOR GRADUUTC STUDENTS Mori jpadurie tandera lire on die edge, condnaBy short of money, and cash aaay ecte» I ppen to everybody— a n break down, tic. To hdp ease such crim, The Source has created a m imddedtattd to nfrtoeratkmi to gpadu- rie riudera. The cowporiBon of the bold and Mt fora of inciomflg h c ys d k rrhm B rl w ko h i m h r m reached Me dtirib w i he rammoed in ids aewgpaper. Associated Pms Transfer Continued from page 9 son and could conceivably have his pick at which one he'd like to play for the Longhorns. Yet the versatile athlete says he has already talked about that with Coach McWilliams, and the two re­ solved that he would play his natu­ ral position. "I will be playing tailback at Tex­ as," Coleman said. "I started a cou­ ple of games at defensive back, run­ ning back and wide receiver at [Notre] Dame but my natural posi­ tion is tailback." Williams Continued from page 9 and Wayne Thomas. Mays (6-3) and Blanks (6-4) are big enough to play the small for­ ward position, or they can combine with Wright and Jeans in a three- guard lineup. Penders' proposed 94-foot game lends itself well to a three-guard attack and Wright, Jeans and Thomas are good enough ball handlers to direct the attack. coupon ROFFLER SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN SHAMPOO* _ CUT §C BLOW DRY W W'W. p»r1orm*«V NM MMIvM itoofUg* K* /St'S Awts 24th & San Antonio O p e n E v e r y N i g h t U n t i l I 3 0 O p e n I ! 00 a m M o n - S a t O p e n Sun 4 pm H a p p y H o u r M o n - S a t 5• ? T IC K E T D I S M I S S A L O N L Y $ 1 5 . 0 0 NIAI CAMPUS NOTISTS MQOTHBYPNONC (Don't (btytf la hmg Afc «Mpi* «i* *•*) Budget Driving School 4 5 4 - 5 0 7 7 #014 mMICOi rOrlwUy ggfig No C hroori No C ontracts door to Ams5 i1 5 W Opsn Gray Doy Ce Next L mm EVENTS Aquafest Aug. 5-13, Town Lake Go Dog Go! Too., Steamboat <■ - Two Hoots and aHo or W M ., Cactus Cate Dead Mftmen F r l., Liberty Lunch Pol Dog Pondering Sat., CbÉ Cairo Reckless Eystaling The Terrible Twos N me Hell Club Iguana Paperbacks Plus Aquafest BatURK Chris W are Jeh u Keen 2 IMAGES August 1,1988 Books Offensiveness and undercurrents of racism overshadow Ismael Reed’s im­ pressive literary talent in Reckless Eyeballingwd The Terrible Twos. Page 3 _________________ Their worst nightmare. Mime hell Page 4 Club Iguana In 1984, Club Iguana opened with the intention of providing “just a place to dance” for progressive music fans. Now it’s back, and remaining true to its original concept. _______ Page 5 Paperbacks Plus With the Beach dead and gone, Austin has been lacking a club that will take a chance and book anybody. Fortunately Paperbacks Plus has come to the rescue. ___________ Page 6 Comix A whole page of the magic of Chris Ware, John Keen, Miles McManus and Page 7 __________ ____________ Joe Robertson. Listings Diversions Page 8 ON THE COVER The “ outlaw country” movement of the early 70s has long since passed. Many of the guitar pickin’, booze-drinkin’ and cocaine-snortin leaders of the era are still around, although things have changed consider­ ably. Two of them, Rusty Wier and Steve Fromholz, tell what it was all about. Aquafest Guide The complete guide to Aquafest. This three-page package includes a calen­ dar of events, rundowns on many of the bands and the story of hou Batman saved Aquafest. Pages 9,10,11 K Z I ~ ~ t 21st «Id G u a d a lu p e 477-1334 Tim » s ' H» *rr shot» •** ttvilit- *,p«otK m S «SM iM WHITE ' >F THE EYE < lSSL A R I A ESENFANIS w ! 1 AO lEVI | I HAWSPRJiY 1 a* a s STREET ■ 1 11i4S BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... 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Riverside 8 & Northcross 6 IT m * WESTGATE 8 I UVFSTCATE MALL S LAMA & BEN WHITE | WHO FRAMED RC F I I I I I I | urn emi/m e eejn-mmje COMMQTOAMERICA IB iSSSSfca « EEJW7:»1ft1E BULLDURHAM B l«M*” -tíil 7:4*^*S 14 - 04* # 6 ’ I R IVER SID E 8 COCKTAL B R»l 1 ttJN COMBO TO AMBVCA B IS WII ER»«U ■EE il t 0 K* M ttJ 1 *M NEWWOI^IK TOCKMQ B MONKEYSHMES B •< wo THE DEAD POOL B lmjsjums » hJhwb mm. ■AMM a RJ»7;1fr*f ttfM* :ii! :3: northcross mall anoerson * burnet 454-5147] BttVOMMCA B uMommwemmrm-wm mumanMa .MftggjiL COCKTAIL ■ ONI WO ROW— f£fM ® LMU4M40 1 ■ I 1 DIE HARD • " J S 8 S “ W " 1 A t t l A M U R 4 va lley t o ' ~ ........ 4 4 4 .3 2 2 2 JSSSSJL ■ s s s s s w ■ Q j | ■SSESUi - 1 A d H J I M R u U V S 1 1423 W. BEMVMTE 442 2333 RHEBBLP 1 *3388SLP STAFF Images Editor Bret Bloomquist Associate Images Editors Ben Cohen Lee Nichols Images Assistants Gilbert Garcia John Keen Writers Carol Huneke Robert Lucey Camille Tipton Rob Walker Sean Walsh Dean Webb Contributors Karen Adams Steve Crawford Kevin Hargis Miles McManus Joe Robertson Martin Wagner Chris Ware Texas Union Films Woody Altea in T a k e d i e M o s e y a a l l u TonlgMal7iaiM>* UwlnlW—Nw_________ __ B l a c k O r p h o m o MM Ferfvpwa* w/swkJWIee TontgNalMSM** ItwiN* I ■ Uw NoWay Out RBTKATO mjtmnmpM. Hank at* M C w M l M N l ■ G e n e r a l i ■ C i n e m a | E s n a v M n r Í — l a w o w i B A R T O N CRE E K tO M HARD ★CARDVMUOyi MBktSMIViMMBW iiMM Mira liWMIMIMIMIW ■ a m m í i m r n m c m -ii H I G H L A N D M A L L SsslSa. M ^SRA RR IT Reckless writing Reed’s excesses ruin re-releases Reddest Eycbaliing and The Terrible Twos Ishmael Reed Atheneum New York, 1988 $7.95, $8.95 respectively By Rob Walker and Seal Walsk “What's the American dream? A million blacks swimming back to Africa with a Jew under each arm. " — Blanche Knott, Truly Tasteless Jokes So begins Reckless Eycbaliing, the most recent novel from Ishmael Reed. The abrasiveness of the quote is undeniably intentional, setting a satiric, shocking tone that the au­ thor has no trouble m a in tain in g Regarded by many academicians as the premier contemporary black post-modernist writer, and perhaps one of the most important American writers to emerge from the ’60s, Reed has long provided the literary world with one of its most signifi­ cant voices. In addition to having taught and lectured at both Harvard University and the University of California at Berkeley, the prolific writer has al­ ready produced 7 novels, 4 poetry collections, 3 books of essays and 2 plays. Recently, the Atheneum division of the Macmillan Publishing Com­ pany decided to re-release Reed’s novelistic fiction in paperback, be­ ginning with his two most recent ef­ forts, Reckless Eycbaliing and The Terrible Twos. Reed’s freewheeling, often experi­ mental, postmodern style preceded the novels of literary wunderkinds Jay Mclnemey and Bret Easton Ellis, works that won wide acclaim for using precisely the same tech­ niques. Reed manipulates the tense and point of view, and pcrmestes the narrative with his wicked humor ■«d intelligence. Unfortunately, these comments amount to little more than after- thou hts, footnotes to the inevitable conclusion that the final product of Ishmael Reed’s last two efforts are less than extraordinary. “They were nor as carefully done as his previous works, like Mumbo Jumbo and Flight to Canada agreed Dr. Wahneema Lubiano, as­ sistant profe* or of English, citing Afro-American modernist and post­ modernist writing as her fields of ex­ pertise. Reckless Eyebslling in par­ ticular “wasn't well thought out. The organization was very sloppy.” In. 1986’s Reckless Eyebslling, Reed sacrifices his innovative writ­ ing skills by resorting to distracting and unoriginal hterary mediums, such as rambling letters and awk­ ward monologues, which draw at­ tention to the* «bes and yield little moie than isaBsj^saitsesjhBHg/hts. BOOKS Reed writes within the perimeter of a triangle of themes — racism, feminism and fascism — and Eye- balling comes across as a forum for each, the plot structure a hastily shellacked obliption for Reed's thematic idulgences. Protagoi ist Ian Ball struggles through the novel as a black play­ wright who fails to win the respect of his writer and producer peers and must settle for the production of wa­ tered-down versions of his plays due to the “feminists” who run the pro­ duction company. The slighting feminists, however, do not go unpunished. A raping and murdering “ Flower Phantom” leaves chrysanthemums pinned to his female victims’ chests as a trade­ mark of death. And with a twist more acrid than a lemon wedge, the peer-repressed Ball is the Phantom: a man who endures bigotry and in­ sults by day ultimately resorts to ex­ terminating those who defame his black manhood by night. All Reed’s black male characters, unable to break the bondage of neo­ slavery, resort to ranting about fem­ inists, Nazis and fundamentalists, fi­ nally concluding that reality is in ideological conspiracy against them. Blacks are no longer enslaved by manacles and whips, but by their pigmentation and others’ inexplica­ ble hatred. Reed never explores any solution to escaping the chains of neo-slavery other than revolt by murder. traditional Lubiano argues that Reed “delib­ erately jars expectations and inter­ rupts literary style,” which she described as “satirically unco if ruble, stilting and outra­ geous.” Many,” she added, “are frightened by Reed's knee-jerk style.” Althou h Reed writes in an Afro- American, postmodernist context, his satire is redundant and exagger­ ated to the point where the message becomes irksome absurdity. While slightly more effective than its counterpart in re-release, 1982's The Terrible Twos brings to light perhaps the most disturbing aspect of Reed's writing — the potential it still so undeniably she rs. Once moie, Reed bombards us with his dark sarcasm and never- endii i flow of satiric ideas. He cleverly bhidgei is American tradi­ tions from actors for president. Underlying all this is a skewering of good old n u n to CONTINUED ON PAGE 4 Independent Study AUSTIN COMMUNITY COLLEGE DEUVERP l COLLEGE COURSES TO YOUR DOORSTEP N your scheduto will not allow you to attend classes, or if you would like to add another class to your schedule but simply cannot make it to campus, there is another option, independent Study courses oiler students an alternative to on-campus dassee. You will use a variety of instructional components to worit independently. There are two types of independent study courses. Courses la­ beled ITV are offered by instructional television and utilize text­ books, study guides, testing, and a series of video programs. Self- paced textoook courses utilize textbooks, study guides and periorflc testing. Attendance at an orientation session is required toral courses. VEWMG OPTIONS FOR ITV COURSES Students enrolling in ITV courses have the option of viewing pro­ grams at home on television or in local libraries. WHh the excep­ tion of B I0 1613 a l ITV Courses are cabiecast on Austin Cable Vi­ sion Channel 19. In addWon, BMQ 1013, HUM 1613, GOV 2613, S O C 1613, C IS 1003, E C 0 1623 and E C 0 1633 are broadcast on KLRU-TV Broadcast Channel 18. ON SITE REGBTRATION Fal 1966 regntratton wM be held in the City Coliseum (Bouidin & West Riverside) during the following times: Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Aug. 22 Aug. 23 Aug. 24 Aug. 25 1pm to 7 pm 10am to 7pm 10am to 6pm 10am to 6pm Late Registration 6 Schedule Changes (adds/drops) in the City Coliseum during the following times (no time permits required): Tuesday Wednesday Aug. 30 Aug. 31 10am to 6pm 1pm to 6pm MAL-M REGISTRATION If registering for Independent Study classes only, registration may be done by man. Mail-in registration deadline is Aug. 12, 1988. For Information about mail-in registration Call 495-7583. «ss I f Course Title ACC ACC AHS AHS ANT BIO BIO BMG BMG BMG CDP CIS CIS ECO ECO ELN ELN ELN GOV GOV HOP HIS ms HIS HIS HIS HIS HIS HIS ms HPE MKT MKT PAR PAR PHL PSC PSY PSY SOC SOC SOC SOC SOC SOC SOC TCM 1623 1633 1303 1403 2403 1603 1613 1013 1023 2063 1613 1023 1003 1623 1633 1148 1148 1148 2613 2623 1613 1683 1613 1613 1613 1613 1623 1623 1623 1623 1673 1013 1063 1323 1333 1613 1603 1613 1653 1613 1623 2613 2633 2673 2643 2653 1603 Principles of Accounting I (ITV) Principles of Accounting □ (ITV) Medical Terminology Pharmacology Physical Anthropology Life on Earth (ITV) Living Planet (ITV) Introduction to Business (ITV) Principles of Management (ITV) How to Manage a Small Business (ITV) Parenting Skills (ITV) Programming with BASIC (ITV) Introduction to Computers (ITV) Principles of Microeconomics (ITV) Principles of Macroeconomics (ITV) DC and AC Circuits (ITV) (must also register for lab) S at, 8:00am-11:00am RTH 234 (LAB) F ri, 4:50pm-9:50pm RTH 234 (LAB) U.S. Government (ITV) Texas State and Local Government Career Development (ITV) History of Texas U S. History I (ITV) U.S. History I (ITV) U S. History I (ITV) U S. History I (ITV) U.S. History D U.S. History O U.S. History O U.S. History 0 Personal Health (ITV) Principles of Marketing (ITV) Personal Finance (ITV) Speed Reading Vocabulary Introduction to Philosophy (ITV) Science ft Environment (ITV) Introduction to Psychology (ITV) Human Growth and Development Introduction to Sociology (ITV) Social Problems Marriage and the Family (ITV) American Minorities (ITV) Criminology Intro, to Social Work Social Field Experience Technical Writing WHY ^ REGISTER I WITH SELECTIVE SERVICE? SIMPLE. IT'S THE LAW. 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PAT PAINTER’S h ^ t y l o t g w e h o n o r 1011 E .41S T CALL TO D AY 454-3676 M U ' v > d is c o v e r RAYBANS CARRERA Dickinson Optical An Austin Tradition for Professional Eyecare Since 1938 TURA YOUR HOME AWAY FROM HOME FOR EYECARE NORTH 1301W. 38th St. 452-4866 SOUTH 4203 J i b m Casey S t. 441-0883 New Hours: M-F 8:30 £. -1-5:30 p.m. SAT. 8:30 a.m .-i2.30 iSouth only)Fm LIZ CLAIBORNE POLO LOGO ^ J lie c jC a d ie S (C e n te r o f - s d u f i t i n , 3 n H L MfrYTt a CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3 American greed and materialism, and Reed equates our nation’s col­ lective wants with those of a never- satisfied 2-year-old. But, again, however brilliant Reed’s myriad themes, they prove completely unconvincing when de­ livered in such painfully and unbe­ lievably convenient ways. The writ­ ing is so strained at times the reader can’t help but see it as a rough draft, a manuscript not fully thought out. Lubiano contended that a distaste for Reed’s style amounts to a dis­ taste for postmodernist writing. “He is not trying to present smooth and swmilgss writing,” Lubiano said. The most annoying manifesta­ tions of his approach to postmodern­ ism invariably occur when Reed ad­ dresses prejudice, both racial and religious. Much of the understruc- ture of The Terrible Twos reads like an exercise in paranoia: plots with Nazis, the observance of Hitler’s birthday as a national holiday and an international Anglo plan to nuke New York City and blame it on Ni­ geria. He seems more interested in blaming or alienating his audience than in informing them. Obviously Reed cannot put aside his blackness, but the militancy of his ideas tends to overshadow and trivialize his other themes. And while this all works toward achiev­ ing his satiric effect, the laughter leaves a bad taste in one's mouth. After all, the story of Little Black Sambo had a form of humor at its heart, too. Each of Reed's two most recent novels is so saturated with offensive satire and tiring symbolism that a mere page-flipping might yield a character saying, “Rapists ought to be castrated. ... Half the white boys in the country would be walking around with no dicks if it came to that. They the champs at date rapes and trains. Look at these white boys knocking over these nursery schools left and right — fucking little chil­ dren in the butt — how sick can you get, fucking pineapples and dead people.” As literary critic Brent Staples so eloquently summarized in The New York Tim es Book Review , “[Reed's] symbolism is heavy-hand­ ed, and the spell suspending disbel­ ief is often broken.” Whatever the merits of Reed’s previous works, both Reckless Eye- balling and The Terrible Twos are more to likely leave his readers wincing in frustration than lifting their eyebrows in enlightenment. 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S .« * • tar*. ? f K % 5 ] « l s f S iO C M M M O N N M L " f r * * 8 -8 * 0 1736N .la m a (Ik ■<» It of ft* tt| J g g j X T g » 6222Manch soRoad |MM*aaMr8tt*G«M"l 76766 (HdtoWalltwlia * * ™ 7 » A 3314013 24 Hour Emergency Call Service Austin ($12) 459-3119 On RR Shuttle Route Suite 13 Medical Arts Square Toll Fret (806) 327-9880 August-1 1988 IMAGES 5 By Camille Tiptoi As the dance chib patrons ap­ proach the entrance to Club Iguana — an opening in the back of Mar­ tini’s covered by a graffiti-sprayed black curtain — the rhythms of pro­ gressive music capture their atten­ tion and they dance instinctively, even before entering the club. Final­ ly, the over-21 bands are secured around each clubber’s wrist and they enter another world — a world of night owls and dance maniacs. “Club Iguana is a place where you can escape reality,” said Tracey sophomore Overbeck, education and Iguana fan for over four years. “The people you see here you never see during the day.” Unlike most clubs, Iguana — now in its fourth week of an indefinite stay at Martini's (formerly West End) — exists as an organization, not a building. Its atmosphere is cre­ ated by those who visit it, rather than by a typical club management. “It’s a traveling dance club,” Club Iguana originator Jennifer Ja- qua said. “By that I mean we pro­ vide the decorations, the disc joc­ key, the music, the publicity and the atmosphere that people want. The rest is up to those who visit the dub.” The concept of Club Iguana be­ gan in 1984 when Club Foot, the only club that played progressive dance music in Austin, closed. Ja- qua and several friends dedded to open their own dub so they could dance to the music they liked. In the past, the dub featured an interesting combination of go-go dancers and fashion shows that gave those dubbers who didn't fed like dane ig some entertainment. Al­ though times have changed, the ori­ ginators and their ideas haven’t. The DJ, the go-go dancers, the fashion show models and the woman behind the concept have remained the same. “When I started Gub Iguana back in 1984, I had no idea how much of a success it would be­ come,” Jaqua said. “It started in an artists' loft on Sixth Street and the focus was on music. Everyone who came wanted to hear a certain kind of music that wasn’t offered in any other dub. People, all kinds, seemed to like the combination of progressive and funk music that was and is our trademark.” The crowd ranges from preppies to transvestites to the “black-and- white” trendy types. “I've noticed that this new crowd is really into dancing,” Jaqua said. “But of course that’s the whole pur­ pose to Gub Iguana.” Unfortunatdy, the old Gub Igua­ na degenerated into a forum for pco- ple-watchers and scammers. The original concept of “just a place to dance” disappeared. “I stopped Gub Iguana several years ago because it didn’t offer what I wanted it to offer,” Jaqua said. “I stopped it while the good memories were still there.” The return of Gub Iguana also encountered some difficulties. “When Martini’s asked me to bring Gub Iguana to their club, my first response was ‘no,’ ” Jaqua said. “I finally decided to bring it back only after Martini’s said they would take care of promotions and ad sales. I knew I wouldn’t have time to do all the things I had done for the club in the past. “Back then, the club had spread to four nights a week, road trips to various cities in Texas and booking big name concerts like New Order.” Jaqua remains in charge of the ad­ vertising designs, models, fashion shows, dancers, the DJ and the overall supervision of the club, but now she's free to work at her promo­ tion company, which started as an offshoot of Club Iguana. Although several clubs in Austin offer progressive dance music, none combine the go-go dancers, fashion shows and variety of dance music that Gub Iguana offers. “The most important difference is in our music. It’s a combination of progressive hits that usually aren’t heard over the air, current progres­ sive or the more popular dance mu­ sic and funk, which is a combination of the old James Brown, the old Prince, the Jackson Five, Diana Ross and others,” said Brad First, Gub Iguana’s DJ. With its return, Club Iguana has grown more avant-garde in other ways as well. “I try to change the decorations each week,” Jaqua said. “Some­ times I hang chiffon screen from the ceiling onto the dance floor. Some­ times I put some of my go-go danc­ ers behind Japanese screens, which provide a shadow effect, and I al­ ways try to change the location or design of the entrance.” The name Gub Iguana still impresses club-goers even though it has been gone for over a year and a half. An average of 200-250 people have visited Martini’s each Monday since Club Iguana’s return. That’s a pretty good turnout for a Monday night in the summer,” Ja­ qua said. At certain points in the night, the dance floor thins out. According to Jaqua, that’s because Club Iguana often plays music never heard on the radio or in most other clubs. “When people hear a new song they’re not used to, they’ll sit out and listen, but the next time they hear that song they’ll be out there on the floor dancing.” Currently, Club Iguana only takes place on Monday nights at Mar­ tini’s, and it no longer travels to other cities. “In the past, clubs such as Halls, Uncle Charlie’s, Cave and Oz called me to bring my club to them,” Ja­ qua said. “I don’t expect it to travel to other clubs unless in the fall it becomes as big as it used to be. Mar­ tini’s, however, has Club Iguana on its original night. I sold a license to them to use the name one night a week and they pay me to manage it for them. They can’t do anything with the name Club Iguana without my approval.” Although the crowds suggest a promising future, Martini’s manager Martin Lueke doesn’t hold set ex­ pectations. “I’ve learned not to expect any­ thing in the club business because that makes whatever does happen so much better,” Lueke said. Club Iguana means different things to different people. Whether they come to dance, listen to music, watch the fashion show or just to so­ cialize, this club allows the “night owls” to express their creativity. The people who come to Club Iguana have some statement to make — whether it’s in the way they dance, talk or sit,” Lueke said. ¡ ” c ÍT O $ 5.” K R lir $ o ” % Professional Consultation—ALWAYS!■ ” 3 A GIFT OF CLASSIC BEAUT VMKITVrSggSS KMT «lis omv VMVMM B A B E T T E * 0 F K A S T foe*vfMs«tae«*isupsMas WINGSof DESIRE loaav (MgjMysa** University Market Facts... Students of the university spent $3,785.907 last month for groceries, meat and mMk at Austin grocery stores. Somos: “The University Mwkst' Beider Am o cm ém , 1967 18 Karat Gold .51 carat diamond Princess cut center .84 carat total weight *2590 also available w ith M arquise, Pear Shape. O val and Round BriKant center diam ond. ‘O tar flood MM M o o iean O T * . Pat tab. Cun #*• S long Mb «fta bpbet S4W C o m a n d f STYLING SALONS eoaDONLMT 2 2 0 0 G u a d al ip e (Lower Level) Mon-Frl 11-7, SaMO-4 322-0641 NoAppoMm ent NecoMovy T H E S H E F T A L L C O J E W E L E R S G E M O L O G IS T S Mm chm f m Ammtem Sino» 1733 , 1 0 ^ r a rl— t — H iohtaidltoll J i K l f S L RIMIiibMh m S G iw d ilu p e - «U K • P 6 IMAGES August 1,1988 Paperbacks Plus offers new venue for Austin’s alternative musicians DEALSonWHEELS check the classified ads everyday i n ... T h e Da i l y T e x a n ivfinn 6509 N. Lamar between Airport & Kc tnig Sales 459-8944 459-3311 WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER k g '88 Elite 50 $798 '87 Elite 150 Reg 1800 ¡da£ i I 19861 Rebel 450] '88 I N X 650 $38981 ’*K| lfft " ♦ m i H i B] Robert Luccy When you step in the door, it ap­ pears to be just like any other used book store. It has that used book­ store smell. There’s the same old as­ sortment of books, mac zines, and records that you can never find at a new bookstore, and here they are selling for half of the original price. It is a bit bigger than most others — the shelves seem to sprawl out like cacti in the desert — plenty of room between them to avoid bumping into one. But the real oasis is hidden away above all of this. It is something you won’t find in any other book store. The first clue is a small table in the front room with an assortment of lo­ cal bands’ tapes on consignment. Most are found only in Austin’s finer record stores — such gems as Coz the Shroom, Psychic Lawn- mower, the Weeds and a compila­ tion called the Polyp Explodes. But rather than just providing an outlet for the recorded works of local bands, Paperbacks Plus, located at 710 W. Fifth St., has become an outlet for live music as well. Come back after the store closes at 9 p.m. and wander up the stairs. At the top you will find a pair of rooms that appear to be a cross between a warehouse and an artist’s studio: concrete flow, sheets of black plas­ tic covering the walls, well-worn couches in the comers, 10 cafe-style tables scattered around the second room with an assortment of m ism atch ed chairs, holes in the ceil­ ing from rain leakage, fluorescent lights and a two-level platform in the comer that serves as a stage. The first room upstairs boasts an art exhibit reminiscent of Dallas’ Theatre Gallery. Paintings hang on the walls and various sculptures sit on a shelf. The highlight of the cur­ rent display is a computer terminal which has undergone some kind of meltdown. Where the video tube had been, a pair of animal skulls now reside nestled among at least a million dollars worth of play money. In front of this menagerie is a nude barbie doll mm hands mounted in a crucifix pose. Maybe it has some­ thing to do with the way in which modem society destroys nature and man is helpless to stop it. Maybe not. Whatever it is, it is i iterestii \ to look at. The platform in the second room erves as a stage. Since it began bookii j shows at its new ’ Test Fifth Street location about four months ago, Paperbacks Plus has presented one of the most eclectic parades of Austin performers ever — and for about half of the regular dub cover charge. For two or three bucks (often in­ cluding free beer) yot c a catch the cream — as well as the hnburger cheese — of Austin's underground Off-the-wall bands like the Hickoids have played recently at Paperbacks Plus. rock scene. But that’s not all. Paper­ backs Plus also features jazz musi­ cians, readings by poets (many of whom sell their small press books and literary magazines in the store), experimental music, performance artists and perhaps — in the future — theater productions. “We’re trying to keep open to ev­ erything,” said manager Morris Gui­ dry. “We don’t want to be just an­ other underground music club.” At first people were slow to equ­ ate a bookstore with a performing arts venue. The crowds were dismal. In fact, you couldn’t call them crowds. After all, who would go see an obscure band playing upstairs at a dusty old book store when there is all of Sixth Street to be enjoyed? Four months ago, before a crowd of only eight people, the Leadbelly Legacy Band played a most bizarre set of music. The show was offered as an alternative to the South By Southwest festival of more main­ stream bands which ran concurrent­ ly You won’t find bands making whale noises with their tubas on Sixth Street, and rarely do they in­ corporate bird whistles and clari­ nets. They gave the feeling of being in this band's living room. Altbouj k the attendance has in­ creased since then, that feeling of in­ timacy prevails. At the Church of the SubOenius show an July 5, the bands were laid back — meaning long breaks between sets — and in­ teracted freely with the audience of over 58 people, mostly garbed in the requisite Mack attire. Before the show, one band member was overheard saying, “We're supposed to make a total chaotic wreck of the whole thing, so we*ie going to do the best we can." The show started with a four- piece ensemble featuring three guys playing low floor tom tom drums and a fourth guy playing snare. Af­ ter their set, which was of a high school bond's drum line phyii cadences, a bass player took the stage to play a sote vcRtan of The Beat Goes On. Before he began he said, “They told me I’m sup­ posed to play songs I don’t know.” After his semi-set, a member of the audience took the stage and “ranted.” This extemporaneous ex­ perience was repeated throughout the night by various SubGeniuses who would speak about their en­ counters with their deity, a presence known as Bob (a middle-aged Dick Van Dyke look-alike with a pipe d a n gling between his perfect rows of gleeming teeth). This ranting con­ cluded with a girl lifting her T-shirt to reveal Bob's visage stamped re­ peatedly across her torso. Apparently, members of the Church give their money to Bob and in return, they get something known as “slack." This seems to be an im­ portant element in their day-to-day lives. The cult was founded by a ra­ dio show in Dallas. The show also featured a decent hardcore band called Two Minute Hate followed by a man known as Buck Naked who performed a few of the Church’s sacred hymns which several audience members sang along to. Next up was a local group known as the Sinister Sisters of Sa­ tan, after which I decided I had enough slack, so I left. This show is just one example of the alternative weirdness which takes place at Paperbacks Plus. The wide variety in performances at the club stem from a very liberal book­ ing policy. At the SubGcnius show, a long-haired patron walked up to Guidry while he was filling plastic cups with some of die worst beer in history — although with the word “free" in front of it, can it be all bad?. “Are you the guy who books bands?" “Yeah. You in a band?” The long-haired guy mentions the name of some obscure new band. Guidry nods his head. “I’ve seen your graffiti around town. Who do you think you would go well with? Maybe the Drug Zom­ bies ...** They discuss the possibilities of a CONTINUED ON PAGE 8 August 1,1988 IMAGES 7 f 4 / V w t — C o f , f p * * * * * ® m s k y p , > , y F t i t u r t s / T * K ' t o U l . w i r ^ U U C K Y W H i M E R S f t j L e u c a r e M y s e l e c t e d { * , « « a * w m g ^ M r | ü u T V W A H f t • f t t f m c i . C a c i , B y m a** o » t r , C S f t O l V C i * W HONO r g f S t k ^ V > t g g : W FomfMWGEKtt^tS W e ^K >N ftp o*pr<>HfcNT SHOVLD BE MTufcP To T H E * P<^eP ON m e iR SfATlAC AEtATfrNSajfiHjE?El!K ■ B ? W g I «r1Kc% «A id shew U c^Ueme «Ur*. ‘ r k J U n < * « * W i V ^ * > C . P . t M x © M * IM W * [ t o o 0IS T Ü R 6IN 6 TO [ w A Y TOO D IS Tu R B )N 6 BE SHOWN] TO BE s h o w n ] 1 3 5 k d r d i k l V o u r I R a p e a G r a p e T ° < 5 II S B o ¿ W / i f c i l k e 4 i t j c f . . / N O T S A C K B U T B A O D E R 5 T I L L I f J V L Y it) r « o M T M C QüfcY T f i A U Officts, YO^M a f o o T WO t'o UKt I T BAtK, AtASt & U © Ü > J N W W W E N T * 1 6 Ñ U * N W 1S E T K fW fr C J ff NNAJL *\mine o rase o r f c i o i w * . m next mm \t W f r W E N S U t y & T M H S W E H T V t O J B e N H T V C W t < * A so 1 m fc W T NT BEKfllWL l N T I T f t l ATVJS9C V fe INDTO fC NT TO SCHOOL ft* 9m W L P N O T U J L . H s H C M / i o m 8 V # 6 I K 1 V V E N t t N N , I i s r * k t i q m n v a n V A t n L N N O S t w m " n ...................................... \ r J } ......— y J y • * ~ N f r i ^ ^ ■ft. I 0 * A 4 : T ^ I ^ - - - j l . . ✓ i .............................. . ) . . . . . . 8 IMAGES August 1,1988 DIVERSIONS Saad all lln h ji to Images, P.O. D, Austin, TX 78713, «V call 471-45*1. Deadline for ‘Diversions’ is the Wednesday before pnMkatioxi. BREEZY’S. RR 620,1 Mile N. of Lakeway, 266-1979 LIVE M USIC ACAPULCO RESTAURANTE Y CANTINA 7101 Texas 71 West, 288-5393 Tish Hinojosa Wed Thu Kathy Kidd Fri,Sat Tish Hinojosa A CLUB In Paperbacks Plus 710 W. Fifth St., 474-5488 Thu Sat Ex Pistols, Sinister Sisters of Satan Prince's Black Album Party AMIGO'S 1523 T innin Ford Road, 441-3813 Sun,Tue Live Tejano music (8pm) ANCHOVIES 503-AE. Sixth St., 474-6602 Tue.Wed Hot Cakes Thu Duck Soup Fri,Sat Hot Cakes ANTONE’S 2915 Guadalupe St., 474-5314 Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Lou Ann Barton The Tycoons, Jesse Taylor & Tornado Aliev Alan Haynes Band Teddy & the Tall Tops, the LeRoi Brothers Buckwheat Zydeco, I Is Soot Partis Band Marcia Ball, Carey Bell Blues Band APOLLO’S 300E. Sixth St., 474-7027 AUSTIN CREST 111 E. First St. AUSTIN OUTHOUSE 3510 Guadalupe St., 451-2266 Mon Chris Huff, Dan Harrell, Still Water, Bechtol & McBride Bruce Newman Nasty Brothers Primitive Moderns Lillian Standfield Band Cody Hubach & John Casner Tue Thu Fri Sat Sun BACK FORTY (O.HENRY'S) 407 Neches St., 478-0411 Tue-Fn Bobby Doyle BACKROOM 2015 E. Riverside Drive, 441-4677 Moo Maakerade, Latest Flame, the Rain, As Is Tue The Crank, Marshall Law, the Difference Wed A.S.K., David Spann, the Tremors, Ali& the Thu Fri Sat Alnighters Alamo Choir, Ty Gavin, Inquiring Minds, No One Safe Gypsy Rogue, Rockin’ Horse, XYZ Rwmf Saint, Satyre, Young Thunder, Ner­ vous Wrek BARB’S WATERING HOLE 8619 Burnet Road, 467-9547 BASIN ST. WEST 1112 W. Sixth St., 4694)552 Fri,Sat Johnnie Bachemin Trio BEAR CREEK SALOON 10542 Manchaca Road, 280-0267 Thu Fri Jam Session with Norm Allen George Williams & the Sundowners BIG EASY 517 E. Sixth St. BIG MAMOU 2008 S. Congress Ave., 445-2080 Tue Hoot Nile with Steve Chaney BLACK CAT LOUNGE 313V4 E. Sixth St., no phone BOARDWALK BEACH CLUB 215 E. Sixth St., 479-8601 BRANDING IRON RESTAURANT RR 620 at Texas 71,263-2827 Nick & Hilary Fri Red Hot & Ready Sat Wed Fri Sat The Grey Ghost (12-2pm) (thumpin’ jazz pi­ ano like it was played in the 20’s ... see the teal thing before it’s all gooe away ...) Erbie Bowser, T. D. Bell, Zuzu Bollin (5- 8pm) The Grey Ghost (see above) (2-6pm) LITTLE WHEEL 12013 U.S. 290 West, 288-4268 Musk stans at 9.30pm Fri Sat Haywire Country Road LUMBERYARD 16511 Bratuss Lane, 255-9622 Thu Fri,Sat Country Roads Jimmy Mack Band BROKEN SPOKE 3201 S. Lamar Blvd., 442-6189 Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Michelle Murphy People’s Choice Jimmie Mack Band Alvin Crow Ai Dressen CACTUS CAFE Texas Union, 471-8228, (music starts at 9pm unless oth­ erwise noted) Tue Wed Thu,Fri Shawn Phillips Sat George Ensle Two Hoots and a Holler Eric Taylor, Hudson a Franke DONN’S DEPOT 1600 W. Fifth St., 478-0336 Larry Boyd Mon Donn Adehnan Tue Loy Blanton Wed Larry Boyd Thu Donn Addman Fri Loy Blanton Sat DRI-DOCPUB 4919 Hudson Bend Road, 266-1044 DRISKILL 117 E. Seventh St., 474-5911 EGO’S 510 S. Congress Ave., 474-7091 Fri Buddy Wilson & John Staton ESTHER’S POOL 501E. Sixth St. Wed David Perkoff and The Little Big Band featur ing the Waterloo Wallers NORTON’S ALL NIGHT 407 E. Sixth St., 472-8851 „ „ CAFE ORLEANS 1112 W. Sixth St., 473-2047 Sun Jazz Brunch (llam-2pm) CAFE ST. CHARLES 333 Guadalupe St. Music every Friday CAP’N TOM’S BAR-B-Q 11800N. Lamar Blvd., 834-1858 Sat Sun Bhiegrass open mike (7pm) Bhiegrass jam (2pm) CAROUSEL LOUNGE 1110E. 52nd St., 453-9091 Tue-Sat Jay dark CARSON'S BAR 5420 Airport Blvd., 453-8733 Fri,Sat Tangent CHANCES 900Red River St., 472-8273 Thu Sun Lizettc Rtquenazi Softee Godee Testce CHELSEA STREET PUB Barton Creek Square, 327-7794 Fri,Sat Billy Pritchard CHEZ FRED 9070 Research Blvd., 451-6494 CHICAGO HOUSE 607 Trinity St., 473-2542 Thu Women Our Age Fri Sat Sun Tom Solomon Therapy Sistert Debbie Garris, Alex A bra vane! (8pm) CLUB CAIRO 306 E. Sixth St., 320-8357 Soul Nitc Tue Kaizy, Mystery Theatre, Gravity Jacket Thu The WayOuts, Hundredth Monkey, Siddbar- Fri tha Suns Poi Dog Pondering, Air*Head Sat CLUB BLAS 217 Congress Ave., 473-0798 Wed Quizumba Thu Fri Sat Sun Seventh Scnae Quizumba Orkestra La Clave Reggae Disco Night (BeeGees in dread­ locks?...) COLORADO ST. CAFE 705 Colorado St., 479-6346 Tue Thu Fri Toqui Amaru Champ Hood Suzie Stern & friends Tom Griffith Tom Miller Tom Griffith Sandy Allen Tom Griffith Sandy Allen COMMON INTEREST 8440 Burnet Rood, 453-6796 Musk starts at 8pm Moo Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat COMPADREN NORTH 9025 Research Blvd. at Burnet Road, 3394)805 Wed Trik Trax Thu Multiple Choice Fri,Sat Wynnd CONTINENTAL CLUB 1315 S. Congress Ave., 441-2444 Mon Tue I-Tcx, DJ Jah Fred Freddie Steady’s Wild Country f il l in g s t a t io n 801 Barton Sprit i Road, 477-1022 Tue-Sat Toby Anderson FLASHBACK 7601 N. Lamar Blvd., 451-2590 Tue Daddios GREEN MESQUITE BBQ k BEER GARDEN 1400 Barton Springs Rood, 479-0485 Musk 8pm Thu Fri Sat Sun Julie Burtell Alamo Choir Primitive Moderns Shadowcasters GRUENE HALL 1281 Gruene Road, New Braunfels, 1-625-0142 Sat Sun Billy Joe Shaver Champ Hood Trio HEADLINERS EAST 406 E. Sixth St., 476-3488 Thu-Sat Bill Foater(9pm) HENRY’S BAR 6317 Burnet Road, 453-9594 Charlie Day Fri HOLE IN THE WALL 2528 Guadalupe St., 472-5599 Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sun The Acoustic Volcánica The Roosters Kaizy Roman Candles Blue Mist Alex Coke HUTS 807 W. Sixth St., 472-0693 Sun Tex Thomas and the Danghn’ Wranglers HYATT REGENCY 208 Barton Springs Road, 477-1234 ILPADRINO’S 1517-B W. i den Lane, 454-2278 Musk at 7pm JAMBALAYA 6801 Burnet Road, 453-8574 Fri,Sat Jamas Pdk, Roben Skiks JOE’S GENERIC BAR k BEACH CLUB 315 E. Sixth St., 480-0171 Moo Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun TheCharacten The Collection David Hammond Band Bad Boy Benny k the Jaguars Hcrachd Berry* the Big Ones Jump Start Too P LAS MANITAS 211 S. Coi reas Ave., 472-9357 UBBRTY LUNCH 405 W. Second St., 477-0861 Wed Fri Sat The Back Doom The Dead M jR w n, Tyrant Swing Bad MuthaGooae A the Brothers Griams MAGGIE MAE’S LIME STREET STATION 323 & 325 E. Sixth St., 478-8541 Musk stmts at 9:30pm Moo,Tue Mad House The Pictures Wed The Bizneas, Double Take Thu Firefox. Bob Popular Fri The Bizneas, Bob Popular, Preacher Keen Sat Hot Chexx Sun MERCADO CARIBE 508 Trinity St. Wed-Sat Live reggae, moo, with Steel Power, Dnver, DeCarib Shopping Center, 9003 Research Blvd , 339- PAPERBACKS PLUS 710 W. Fifth St., 474-5488 Musk k Poetry(9pm) PEARL’S OYSTER BAR 7444 Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Set Sun Jimmy Lee Huff Bromptoo'a Cocktail Mike Kindred Bend Bhte Plate Special The Rhythm King» Solid Senders Angeto Strehh RADISSON HOTEL LOBBY LOUNGE 700 San Jacinto Blvd., 476-3700 Toe Intermezzo Wed McCoil k Tracey Thu Fri^at Enue Mae Miller Jeff HeUmer Duo Sun Inttrmezao ■ iV I N t 603 Red River St., 482 9272 Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sal Sun Dakota with Buddy k John Shane Decker k the Vibrolux Cowboy, Tony Perez Ttah Hmojoea, Solid Sender» Traa Lamar k Texan* Damea Welcome party for W. C. Clerk Kent Finley'» Songwriter Showcate SCHOLZ GARTEN 1607 San Jacmm Blvd., 477-4171 Wad Thu Want Band (1:30pm) Sat Swiaghmii Wortahop (7:30pm) Chrie O'Connell, Mary Ann Price (BBQ k dance 8pm) SHUCK FINN’S 906 Congrem Ave., 477-1244 The Mammh Boy* Wed Bobhy Mack k Night Tram Thu The Btcw Fri Junior Medlow k the Bad Boya Sat SIXTH STBEET COUNTRY CLUB 501E. Sixth St., 469-9234 Fri^at Hot Chexx Sun SOUTHERN PALMS RESTAURANT 607 Sen Jacinto Blvd., 477-4531 STEAMBOAT 4 IE. 1 Mon Tne Wed Thu Fri Sat Son i .,478-2912 Van Wafc’aC nml mgrn Go Dog Go!, Inquiring Minch, DoUfocc 1-Tex Ro-Td k the Hot Tomamm MithaH Johaann k Ac KiBer Bern TheBhmeas GmaFohm Band, Patti David Band STUM’S A! - 4001N. 1-35,465-9177 Fri Sur Smahey Joe M iler jam jam (4:30pm) Sunday Jam with (6pm) emoac Dm STUMM RftlN 6148 U.S. 290 W en, 892-9885 M M rldhar Fri TheWaahtndew Sat SYMPHONY SQUARB 1101 Rad River St., 4764064 Fri Rtmnorrian Community Choir, VaiotefChfM (8:30pm) Aagria Strnhk (8:30pm) Amim Aim Ilwptow (8:30pm) Sat Sun CONTINUED FROM PAGE 6 triple bill with various bands. The conversation ends with Guidry tell­ ing the guy to br lg a tape by so he can figure out with whom they would best fit. “If anybody wants to get me a tape, then I can book them up.” Guidry also said that he rents the club out to those who wish to book their own shows. With a totally open attitude like that, Paperbacks Plus just might Re­ come the venue for new Austin tal­ ent which people have been longing for since die Cave Qub collapsed. “There aren't many dubs for the bands I'm book ig,” admitted Gui­ dry. One of the reasons he can be so liberal his booking policy — or lack of one — is the book store, which has become sometí ing of an Austin tradition. “The books help support the club, and the club supports the book store,” said Guidry. “We’re just trying to fill space. With the Ritz closed, the Loft gone disco, and Big Mamou pretty much closed for the summer as far as mu­ sic, this is the place to be right now.” Guidry adds that the place is air onditioned. “I'm just really interested in sup­ porting the arts.” Perhaps other businesses will reach a hind out to help Austin's arts as well. The rest of the restau­ rants who don't yet feature bands on their bill de faire can add them. Aus­ tin’s other book stores can make room between their shelves. Kinko’s could copy the idea — they have lots of extra floor space. After all of the private buitness have booked th ir share of Austin's overflowing talent, we can start fill­ ing empty rooms in those govern­ ment buildings aroui d town. There's a big empty space in that granite building in die middle of Congress Avenue... TEXAS TAVERN Tema Union, 471-9231 Sat 6416 N. Lmnw Blvd., 451-5440 T H U N D R H C LO U D M ^ H m E. Rmxnde Drive, 447-7696 ^ ^ ■ r t t « 9 p m Fri In David ■ I,ria l n r 412 B. M b St., 478-0744 ManJheLaPmaa Mad Heme THE VICTORY GRILL 1102 E. 11th St., 477-0257 THE WORLD 505 E. Fifth St., 4794)034 WYLIE’S 400 E. Sixth St., 472-3712 Fri Sat Sled Power jimmy Lee THEATER CAPITOL CITY PLAYHOUSE 214 W Fourth St., 472-1855 HYDE PARK THEATRE 511 W. 43rd St , 452-6688 D ncuk, the Vampire Play Produced end directed by Ken Johnson. Thu-Sun through Sept 4 SAM RASS THEATRE ASSOCIATION 600 N. Lee St., Round Rock, 255-8511 He Lured Her to the Pnmroae Path (But He Waa Hipped in the Bud) Wed-Sat WEETZAH PLAYERS Calhoun 100,459-4363 The Memorandum The Weeoab Playera preacnt Czechoslovakian Vedev hevd't The Memorandum on campus Havel, a leader of the Czech “theater of the absurd" movement in the 1960a, u a miter wheat work has been banned aince the Soviet occupation of 1968. 8pm Thu-Set Through Aug. 6 ZACHARY SCOTT THEATRE CENTER 1421 WRiverride Drive, 476-0541 The Light» Are Ob A comedy written by Cmdi Williams, directed by David Jones. Through Aug. 7 VISUAL ARTS ARCHER M. HUNTINGTON ART GALLERY San Jadnte louleverd at 2lat Street Exploring Me S a n a Selected American Patatmgt from the M khtner Goútcáon Through Sunday Monotypes finm the Gamer TuBm Workshop Through Sunday Recent Latía American Dratmgt bam the Barban uacm Goflectmo Through Aug. 14 AUSTIN HISTORY CENTER SIOGuadriupt St., 473-4183 Capital Vinca Thie exhibit contama an array of photographs as weS aa large phougnphk múrala depicting unique momenta at the Toma capital over the pmt 100 years. Origind mate- nata dedicated in I9g8 each aa rivet muric, dance canda and programs arid abo be on dnpby. TueThu from 9 am to 1:45 pm Fn-Sat from 9 n to 5:45 pm Through Aag 31 BARKER TEXAS HISTORY CENTER Srd Racherdaoo Hall, 471-5961 Feature plums mch aa that of a Democratic politician ■iking into the ear of a donkey and an dderiy woman accused of rimming her hmbm d and daughter’s lower we m e of tke 40 photographs on exhibition. The ex- Wbit ie a am pie of the thoumoda of raid subjects photo­ graphed over the last few decades by the tore James V ace, who sock the Mack and white photos between 1952 a d the early 1970k. The various photos portray d ttm a t mpects of Texm agriculture. Through Auguat RAUHAUS PICTURE FRAMING 610 E. Seventh St., 478-1239 D raninp by Pad Rum ri; banka, adk paintings and amehtod wmta by Cowtte Rm irll ThrouM Ang. 1 LAGUNA GLORIA ART MUSEUM 3109 W. 35tk St., 458-8191 Pays tribute to umriy 50 yuan of i rhirvrmtui by m ity Uhc many arriata when they math maturity, Bour- groia hm mttnrifisd the aipaeariva pm nr of her an t e a # mme dúea m d mpfecx me of hot ripnm m farms and aymhoto. The houae md wemnu’s tdarioaahip an it hm bmn a mhiect in hw an fw 50 yuan. Through Aug- 28 MOVIE HIGHLIGHTS AnhmJOnOaBmcha M re, Lim Minuete The jobea keep pace with the tapd Bow of alcohol and money m Arthur 2 Oto the Rock», making the aaqud at toaat at impeaarivc aa the original, Arthur. — S t . Shmriug at Aihar 4,10000 Rmmech Mvd.; Capitel Pla­ in , N. 1-35 and Craw— Road; Y eugue 8,4608 Wan- Tom Hanks, Ehmhath M a n s WaR, mm, it’a net the town hum Ingmnr In g rain , but what the hdU This to mmmer in Amane», tg ú Bwfar- mancm m 1 * we atf good, and Tern Hanka as Mg-Mtttom— Jmh Rmkin to nothing Mon af m p M . my w hmg and Anrnoglly anwnawmg ffim. pmple we jmrifiadm <*Hni * paractriw And fw a MnwMa“fwlgaadmnvw eftheyew-’ 8 w n - S .C Mown* at Me Aihw 4 ,100M Rmwech ^ i Bwam C»wkT, Laap I and Laop MR, Rivwnrit 8 ,2410-E E. mvwridrDafve. AQUAFEST STAGE Center Stage West Stage East Stage Dinner Stage Austin Stage AUG. 6 Extreme Heat Kenny Loggins Chris Holzhaus Bill Carter & The Blame Teddy and the Talltops Johnny Bush Brown-Kindred Band Austin Lounge Lizards Montego Band Johnny DeGollado Aug. 5 Artist Shuwiag Through Aug. I 1501W Fifth St. ChBAraa’s Art Shaw Through Aug. 14 Highland Mall food court 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Water S M E iftttaa Auditorium Shores 7 p.m. Aug. 6 Load and Rat Parade Downtown 9:30a.m. SofehaB Qaaasc Men’s and women’s slow pitch 8 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Eatry fee: $100 per team Senior Activity Center 29th Street and Lamar Boulevard 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Eatry fee: $2.50. Includes lunch. Dawnsawn Regatta Town Lake 9 a.m.-4 p.m Entry fee: $20 Auditorium Shores 11 a.m.-3 p.m. $4 HM Country Bond Rrtfe Sunken Gardens at Zdker Park 10 a.m. Entry fee: $20 E iR tk Eric’s, 4631 Airport Blvd. ram i E at^fee: $10 JudaCtaaafe Concordia Lutheran College 10:30 a.m.-5 p.m Entry fee: $12 to $15 Indoor Spoets Center 9914 U.S. 290 Weat 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Maa’a ■aehUMI T e n m e n t Roaewood Recreation Center 2300 Roaewood Ave. Givens Recr eation Center Water Sparta Entmvngaaaa Barefoot ski tourney, knerboard ski tourney and freestyle water ski iump 8 M M AUG. 10 AUG. 12 ■ 4 J Í = „ ■ ■.... .vi. - M The Neptunes Johnny Dee & the Rocket 88’s ? r S “ s j s i Holly Dunn Hot Tomatoes Ü É Ro-Tel & the Solid Senders Mel Brown -C % - . U o i • §1 2 »- August 1, 1988 IMAGES 9 ¡1 i Geezinslaws riiwijiriCiuwfflit Texas Gunslingers & Van Wilks Wagoneers Tex Thomas Jimmie Dale Court ■ AtenoGhoir ’ Zydeco Ranch Wyndd I 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Entry fee: $28 per team deadline: Aug. 8 Small Fry Fishing Derby Festival Beach 8:30-11 a.m. Multi-Hull Regatta Windy Point, Lake Travis 9 a.m I p.m. Entry fee: $20 Aqua Springs Rowing Regatta Auditorium Shores 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Art Feat Highland Mall noon-3 p.m. Water Ski Exibition Auditorium Shores 7:30 p.m. Hot Air Balloon Race ZilkerPark 7 a.m. Bock to School musical Live Oak Theater 8 p.m. $6 Light Up Austin Laser-light show Auditorium Shores 9:30 p.m. Festival admission fee Aug. 14 Bicycle Tour Begins at Williams Elementary School 6:30a.m.-7 p.m. Entry fee: $¿-$10 Hot Air BaBooa Race ZilkerPark 7 a.m. Novice Ski Tournament Auditorium Shores 8 a.m.-dusk Entry fee: $15 First 125 accepted Texas Spokes Sport Car Chib Day Autocroea Palmer Auditorium Parking Lot 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Entry fee: $15 Wild Seeds Roy Orbison Zulu Time Eric Johnson Sherri Bar ; ' 1 • 1 Esther’s Follies/ Little Big Band 4826 Switch Willo Drive 5:30 p.m. $5 Aerofest Bergstrom Air Force Base 8 a.m. -4 p.m. Corporate Jet Ski Tournament Auditorium Shores 9a.m.-5 p.m. Entry fee: $100 per team Trap Shoot Capitol City Trap and Skeet Club 8707 Lindel Lane 9:15 a.m. Entry fee: $20 BMX Race Capitol Gty BMX 15500 Ranch Road 620 noon Entry fee: $8 Aug. 10 BMX Race Capitol Gty BMX 15500 Ranch Road 620 noon Entry fee: $8 Shuffleboard Tournament Through Aug. 14 Howard Johnson’s South Plaza 8a.m.-2 a.m. Entry fee: $300 singles, $500 partners Aug. 12 MooaGtow Hot-air ballooning ZilkerPark 7 p.m. Waiar Ski EmMUoa Auditorium Shores 7:30 p.m. Buck to School musical Live Oak Theater 8 p.m. $6 Night-lightad water | Town Lake 8:15-10:30 p.m. Festival admiason fee Aug. 13 3111E. 12th Sc. 9a.m .-ll p.m. Estay fee: $100 per team Great Hoire Show Switch WiUo Riding Stable* 4126 Switch Willo Drive Mien Aaatia Aqua Fsatival a fe Little M ia Pageant N m c r Auditorium 6-10 p.m. $5 I w f e l u r a a t i i a i l Fafe P a c t Wnrinhnp Haaoock Recrcatioa Center SU E. 41¡ St. I p.m.-midnight Taxaa Spahaa Sport Car Clah Night Aatacroaa 1-35 at Rathcrfatd and U.S. 183 p.m .-2 1 Eatry fee: $15 Water SU E sM ho Auditorium Shorea 7 p jn . Aug. 7 SsfifcaS Glamfe M at’s end women's alow pitch 8a.m.-10:30p.m. Entry fee: $100 per team Whaafehafe BaahMhal Towm Indoor Sparta Center 9914 U.S. 290 Weat 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Maa’a Eaahathel T n aaaa.a Raaeaaod Kacnauon Center 2300 Rosewood A it. Givens Recrcatioa Center 3*11 E. 12th St. 9a.rn.-llp.rn. Entry fee: $100 per team Gram ct Shaw Switch Willo Riding Stables Maa'a Triplea Volleyball Tournament Austin Recreation Crater Northwest Recreation Center West Austin Youth Complex BMX Race Capitol City BMX 15500 Ranch Road 620 noon Entry fee: $8 AQUAFEST Festival draws upon quarter-century tradition of fan By Carol Huneke i was never meant just to be fun. In the early 1960s, Texas had a bad rep around the country. According to a national poll, the top four things things that entered people’s minds when the word “Texas” was mentioned were rattlesnakes, deserts, cow­ boys and oil. If tourists and Big Business would ever come to Texas, this perception would obviously have to change. But up until the ’60s the carpetbagger pro­ vision of the Texas Constitution kept Texans from advertising to improve that unage. Es­ sentially, the provision forbade Texans from advertising for immigrants — judges inter­ preted this to mean tourists also. Finally, the provision was voted out of the constitution and the fun could begin. The newly formed Texas Tourist and De­ velopment Agency decided that some kind of celebration could be the tool to change the bad image. And what better way to tell people that Texas isn’t a desert than to have a water festi­ val — hence, Aquafest. The first annual Aquafest debuted Aug. 3, 1962, with bouffant bathing beauties, Art Linkletter (who surprisingly lost the fest mon­ ey), a $33,800 budget ($10,000 of which went to the crowning of the Aqua Queen) and the big star Lassie. Celebrities such as Bob Keeshan (Captain Kangaroo), Ken Curtis (Festus Haggen on Gunsmoke), Batman and the Budweiser Clydesdales appeared during the first decade, and by ’64 the music had started. Interestingly enough, it was Batman who saved Aquafest from going to lake celebration oblivion. From ’61 to ’64 the festival had run at a deficit and things weren’t looking too good for the festival. But because an Austin boat company had designed Batman’s boat, and because the festival organizer knew the movie’s director, Aquafest managed to lure the 1966 world premier of Batman to Austin as a bfcnefit to the Aqua Festival. Congress Avenue was temporarily renamed Batman Av­ enue, fans went wild and, ZOWIE! for the first time Aquafest netted a profit. Aquafest will include more tkaa just ■ «««. Amon* tkt «omero*. »kow. lit fret wlteMÜ «dU jow each Friday aad S*t»nJ«y A»*. 13. ‘This year Aquafest will feature a Beach Party Weekend held at Zilker Park.’ In the last quarter of a century, Aquafest’s budget has grown from a modest $33,800 to the $2.5 million that will be spent this year. Contrary to popular belief, the festival re­ ceives no funds from the city — all money is generated from sponsors, donations, entry fees and ticket revenues. Last year, it even made a surplus of $400,000, which went di­ rectly into this year’s production. Plans to move Aquafest to Lake Walter E. Long Park, because of the limited size of Au­ ditorium Shores, are still tenuous. Although voters approved a plan to move the festival by a 4-to-l margin, Aquafest has a commitment to the city to stay at Auditorium shores until after the ’89 festival. “We’ll just have to see what happens after that,” said Cathy Bennet, marketing director of the Austin Aqua Festi­ val. According to Bennet, the fest directors interpret the vote as an indication that Austin­ ites want to keep Aquafest — not that they necessarily want to have it moved. One of the biggest Aquafest events over the years has been the selection and coronation of an Aquafc«t queen and dúcheseos as well as a Miss Austin Aquafest. In more archaic times, the contestants were judged on “poise, per sonality, figure and facial features,” but are now considered for their “stage presence [in other words: poise, figure and facial features] and ability to communicate thoughtfully [per­ sonality].” A beauty pageant by any other name is still a beauty pagetat. Despite outdat­ edness, however, the pageants continue in their full glory. Many of the events planned for this year’s festival are designed to lure tourists (and their money) to Austin via tournaments, races and exhibitions. A wheelchair basketball tourna­ ment will bring in 15 wheelchair basketball reams from as far away as Canada, Scotland and possibly even Germany. A shuffleboard tournament, purported to be 9 9 9 1 9 SPECIAL PROGRAMMING 9 **V h MOVIE FOR HEAVEN’S SAKE (1950) Clifton Webb, Joan Bennett. Two angels ae dispatched to oversee the «rival of a heavenly bundle to a producer and his expectant wife. NR 9 DONNA REEO M a y ’s Double Date M ay s manipulation of two perspective prom dates leaves her almost dateless. 9 M V E ST M E N T ADVISORY 9 * * * M OVK UTTER RICE (1948) Silvana Mangano, Vittorio Gassman. A hot blooded toborar falls in love with h a friend’s hoodlum sweetheart and lets h a passion f a turn lead h a to ruin ‘NR’ C M N THE HEART OF THE CITY A look at Santa Monica 9 * * * M OVK PMAEORA (1962) Meima Mercouri. Anthony Perkins. The wife of a shipping magrwte has a perverse love affair with h a stepson which consumes the perfectly hamonius work! around them. 9 UMITEO HYDROPLANE RACMG OMC Cobra of Burley from Burley, 10 (T) 9 OR. YES: THE HYANNtt AFFAIR Britt Ektend Armd the wealthy set of Now England, a motha and daughta are pitted against each otha f a the love of a young Italian physician. •NR 9 MONT TRACKS 12s0S am 12:30 am 9 9 WORLDVISION 9 9 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN 99 LATE SHOW 9 MOVIE RIM OF THE CANYON (1949) Gene Autry, Nan Leslie. Localed in ghost town, the story has Gene in dual role, appearing also as his father in a flashback sequence He pursues three outlaws. NR 9 LAUGH IN 9 * * * MOVIE JOCKS (1987) Scott Strader. Perry Lang When a major college tennis tournament is held in high living Las Vegas, the fun loving team from L A competes with arrogant Dallas super jocks. R 9 NATIONAL TRACTOR PULLING ASSOC. From Allentown, PA (R) 9 FARMERS' DAUGHTERS Jackie Lorenz. Colleen Donovan. You loved them in their Playboy magazine pictorial! Now you can see these voluptuous beauties in an uncut special with their natural resources! NR 12:45 am 9 * * MOVK REVENGE OF THE NERDS (1984) Robert Carradme, Anthony Edwards Two socially inept college misfits lead a pack of their fellow nerds in an assault on their socialite oppressors R Q 1:00 am 9 (Z) NEWS 9 CAR 54 WHERE ARE YOU? Love Finds Muldoon. Lucille plays matchmaker between a high school girlfriend and Muldoon Alice Ghostley stars 9 INVESTMENT ADVISORY 9 CHALLENGE America's Cup, Part 2. The America s Cup yachting race. 9 SPORTSLOOK (R) 9 RUMOROSAMENTE Raul Astor. Un programa comico musical lleno de diversion, bellas muieres y muchas sorpresas. 1:05 am 9 NIGHT TRACKS 1:20 am 9 MOTOWN ON SHOWTIME: TEMPTATIONS ANO THE FOUR TOPS It's a salute to the inimitable Motown sound, with interviews, recent concert footage and vintage performance clips of Motown s brightest stars. NR’ 1:30 am 9 (Z) 9 9 SIGN OFF 99 NEWS (R) 99 CNN 9 MONKEEf Monkees Blow Their Minds The Monkees turn the table on a hypnotist, who thinks they ae under his spell. 9 KEYS TO SUCCESS 9 SPORTSCENTER (L) 9 M OVK CHERRY CHEESECAKE (1984) Tish Ambrose. Melanie Scott. As a photographer for a popula men's magazine seaches for the world's sexiest woman, he grows frustrated until his assistant helps out. NR' 9 * * * * * M OVK THE KARATE K » (1984) Ralph Macchio, Nonyuki (Pat) Morita. The new kid in town runs up against the local high school toughs, so he takes up kaate from a Japanese handyman to defend himself. PG 1:45 am 9 * Vfc M OVK ROSE OF WASHINGTON SQUARE (1939) Alice Faye. Tyrone Power. Story of young woman s rise to stardom and her unfortunate love and marriage to a good for nothing cad. NR ES 7:00 pm 9 “Equalizer 2000" (1986) Richard Norton. In the barren world of the future, mighty warriors battle for control of an amazing new deadly weapon. 9 * V i “The Mam Event" (1979) Barbra Streisand, Ryan O'Neal. The head of a perfume manufacturing company loses her business but retains one asset, a prizefighter, for whom she becomes manager. PG 9 * W ‘Revenge of the Nerds II: Nerds in Paradise" (1987) Robert Carradine, Curtis Armstrong. Encouraged by their previous victory over their dreaded adversaries,the nerds are back to do battle, this time on the beaches of Ft Lauderdale PG13' g 8:00 pm 9 ® *V k “Perfect" (1985) John Travolta, Jamie Lee Curtis. A Rolling Stone reporter pursues two hot stories, an interview with a big shot businessman in trouble and an expose of the health club scene. R' Q 9 9 **V fc "Valdez Is Coming" (1971) Burt Lancaster, Susan Clark. Mexican American deputy kills a black who is mistakenly thought to be a murderer. Trying to collect money for pregnant widow, he runs into trouble. PG' 9 ★ ★ “The Lost Boys" (1987) Kiefer Sutherland, Jason Patrie. Teenage vampires haunt picturesque Santa Carla, California. Only a few young boys know about it and they alone set out to save the town R □ 9 * ★ * /1 ‘For Heaven s Sake (1950) Clifton Webb, Joan Bennett. Two angels are dispatched to oversee the arrival of a heavenly bundle to a producer and his expectant wife. NR 9 ‘Going for the Gold" (1985) Sarah Jessica Parka, Deborah Van Valkenbergh. Story of Bill Johnson, a streetwise punk who battles his way to the top of the skiing world to win the Olympic gold in the downhill competition 9 * * * “Phaedra" (1962) Melina Mercouri, Anthony Perkins. The wife of a shipping magnate has a perverse love affair with her stepson which consumes the perfectly harnomus world around them 9 * * “Death Before Dishonor" (1987) Fred Dryer, Brian Keith. Hardnosed gunnery sergeant singlehandedly takes on fanatical terrorists when they stage a brutal massacre and savagely kidnap his superior. R 9 to ‘Going Ape!" (1981) Tony Danza, Danny DeVito. Young man inherits money, only if he can take care of three orangutans PG 8:30 pm 9 ‘Cherry Cheesecake’ (1984) Tish Ambrose, Melanie Scott. As a photographer for a popular men's magazine searches for the world's sexiest woman, he grows frustrated until his assistant helps out. NR' 9 ‘El Heredero" Jean Paul Belmondo, Carla Gravina. Un hombre decide averigua si su padre murió por un accidente o de un asesinado. ‘PG M O pm 9:30 pm 9 *V 4 “Cobra" (1966) Sylvester Stallone. Brigitte Nielsen. A tough cop, known for his violent methods, braves the odds to rescue a model kidnapped by a ruthless maniac. R Q 9 * * ‘Dolls’ (1967) Ian Patrick Williams. 1090 pm 7 AM 1 -M ft M • M Q AM * Ü Smurfs Teddv Ruxom Incredible Hulk 10 J Charlie's Angels Geraido 1 1 5 1 2 3 4 PM 1 :3S o PM L M 9 PM 0 M A PM 4 : » c PM 5 M ft PM ® M 7 PM 1 M News Alice 1 Dav Kotter Ld-Off Man Baseball Bamey Benson Movie Main Event It Figures Mom Works Nurse Kay O'Brien Attitudes Mom Day Baby Knows Wok with Hllvwd Eve Regis Philbin Attitudes Movie White Dog Cover Up Foley Sq Easv St. Cagney and Lacey Movie Going for the Gold . 8 * Q PM :3B 3 News T Zone Traooer John, Cagney and Lacey 1» 5 1 1 " M D 1 2 * Movie Curse of the Fly Or Ruth Hllywd Eye Invest Advisory • NIGHT TRACKS: POWER PLAY OANCIN' 10 :05 pm 10:30 pm 9 ® CHEERS •arm 9 TONIGHT SHOW HERN Touch of Larceny Katy 9 0 * * * * * MOVIE THE MROS (1963) Rod Taylor, Tippr Medren A small town in California is attacked by thousands of birds in this Alfred Hitchcock classic NR 9 9 MADE IN TEXAS 9 VIOlO IP Featuring Brownmark 9 AMERICAN MAGAZINE 9 ANN meets her match when a charming but larcenous promoter is hired to run the hotel s cigar stand 9 TRAPPER JOHN. M.O. All the King s Horses 9 ALONG NATURE S ROUTES The North American Bison The bison during mating season 9 AN EVENING AT THE IMPROV Comedy s nsing stars are captured live at Hollywood's famed comedy venue. The Improvisation. Shelley Winters hosts with guest Ntcolette Larson 9 SPORTSCENTER (L) 9 MOVIE BOGY GAMES (1987) Randy Paul. Nina Hartley This is the story of Jeff «id Woody, two college guys who'll never make the deans list, but who could teach graduate courses m sex education NR 9 THE FLAME TREES OF THNtA: HYENAS WN1 EAT ANYTHING (1982) Hayley Mills. David Robb The Grants meet their new neighbors, freshly arrived from England They seem so out of place that Tilly suspects they've run away to escape scandal. NR 11:00 pm 9® * * * * MOVIE 'Alamo Bay' C M LATE MOVIE (1985) Ed Hvns. Amy Madtgan Lovers relationship is str«ned when a small Texas fishing community protests the arrival of Vietnamese refugees. R 99 9 9 AUSTIN CITY LIMITS (1987) The guitar skills and baritone voice of Steve Wanner, and the harmonic sounds of Restless Heart highlight this episode 9 MNMNGHT LOVE JJ NOW I 9 MAKE ROOM FOR OAOOYRock n Roll Show. Danny helps a school principal overcome his prejudicss. ■ M N N L RUTH 9 ORPHANS OF THE WILD Drought. Effects of douoht on wMMe. 9 T N E TWENTIETH CENTURY Walter Cronkite, host. A look at World War U s most colorful ganaral and the American ww machine he 9 VKTNAM WAR STORY: THE FRAGGNM Q ■ PM MUCH VOLLEYIALL Women's from 9 P R 0 K A C N VOI San Diego, CA (R) 9 Ml dfitJMAlA 9 MONT TRACKS 11 AS pm 11 AO pm 9 M OVK LOVES OF A FRENCH PUSSYCAT Sytxl Darning- A sexologist is pursued by a host of young M a s . but he is nuts oyer his sexy but chaste maid who does only wwdows. R 11 AO pm AÉ9 OR P J á k . 9 9 LATE M IN T WITH DAWD LfTTERMAN | Wm. 9 to ini WKCnffttMp. ini H6na0t to u gh * of go Poet s new migihbori gals WMur and Cawl Involved to bar romantic ■ i Tkw fc-------------- August 1,1988 IMAGES 19 Carolyn Purdy-Gordon. When a little girl, her father and her wicked stepmother take refuge from a storm in the home of some quirky dollmakers. the stage is set for horror. R’ 9 * * V k ‘Buffalo Bill' (1944) Joel McCrea, Linda Darnell. This film looks at the career of William F. Cody, a guide who worked to create peace between the Indians and the U.S. government. NR' 9 * * ‘Back to the Beach* (1987) Frankie Avalon, Annette Funicello. Hang ten! Dust off that polka dot bikini! Surf's up and America's favorite beach blanket sweethearts are back for more fun in the sun. PG' 10:30 pm 9 9 * * * M ‘The Birds' (1963) Rod Taylor, Tippi Hedren. A small town in California is attacked by thousands of birds in this Alfred Hitchcock classic. NR' 9 ‘ B o d y G a m e s" (1987) Rand y Paul, Nina Hartley. This is the story of Jeff and W oody, two college g u y s w ho'll never make the d e a n 's list, but w ho could teach graduate co u rse s in sex education. N R 11:00 pm 9 ® ★ * * / i “Alam o B a y ” (1985) Ed Harris, A m y M adigan. L o v e rs' relationship is strained when a sm all T exas fishing com m unity protests the arrival of Vietnam ese refugees. R ' 11:20 pm 9 “L o v e s of a French P u ssyc a t" Syb il Danning. A sexologist is pursued by a host of young ladies, but he is nuts over his se xy but chaste maid w ho d oes only windows. R ' 11:30 pm 9 * * * / i “Curse of the Fly" (1 96 5) Brian Donlevy, Carole Gray. An escaped mental patient m arries and find s that her husband and his father are afflicted with a strange malady. N R ★ ★ */1 “Golden Girl" (1951) Mitzi Gaynor, 9 Dale Robertson. A teenager who only w ants to dance falls in love with a Confederate captain doing undercover work. 11:45 pm 9 * ★ * / * “Fighting M a d " (1976) Peter Fonda, Lyn n Lowry. A young man returns to his fa m ily's ranch and d iscove rs his father and brother are being pressured into selling the hom estead. R 12:00 am 9 * * * A "F o r H e ave n 's Sa ke " (1 95 0) Clifton W ebb, Joan Bennett. Tw o angels are dispatched to oversee the arrival of a heavenly bundle to a producer and his expectant wife N R 9 ★ * * “Phaedra" (1962) M elina Mercouri, Anthony Perkins. The wife of a shipping m agnate has a perverse love affair with her stepson which co n su m e s the perfectly harnom us world around them. 12:30 am 9 “Rim of the C a n yo n " (1949) Gene Autry, Nan Leslie. Localed in gh o st town, the story has Gene in dual role, appearing also as his father in a flashback sequence. He p ursues three outlaws. 'N R ' 9 * V k “J o c k s " (1987) Scott Strader, Perry Lang. W hen a major college tennis tournam ent is held in high living L a s Vegas, the fun loving team from L.A. com petes with arrogant D allas superiocks. R 12:45 am 9 ★ * “Revenge of the N e rd s" (1 98 4) Robert Carradine, Anthony Edwards. Tw o socially inept college m isfits lead a pack of their fellow nerds in an assault on their socialite o pp re sso rs. R g 1:30 am B “Cherry Cheesecake" (1984) Tish Am brose, M elanie Scott. A s a photographer for a popular m e n 's m agazine searches for the w o rld 's sexiest wom an, he gro w s frustrated until his assistant helps out. N R 9 * * * * / k “The Karate K id ” (1984) Ralph M acchio, Noriyuki (Pat) Morita. The new kid in town runs up against the local high school toughs, so he takes up karate from a Japanese handym an to defend himself. PG 1:45 am 9 ★ * * * “R o se of W ashington Sq u are ” (1939) Alice Faye, Tyrone Power. Story of young w o m a n 's rise to stardom and her unfortunate love and marriage to a good for nothing cad. 'N R ' 2:15 am 9 ** / t “Revenge of the Nerds II: Nerds in Paradise " (1 9 8 7 ) Robert Carradine, Curtis Arm strong. Encouraged by their p revious victory over their dreaded adversaries,the nerds are back to d o battle, this time on the beaches of Ft. Lauderdale. PG13 Q 2:20 am 9 * V i ‘Invaders from Mars’ (1986) Karen Black, Hunter Carson. A small boy in a rural town is the only earthling to realize the Martians are invading. Even some of the townspeople are walking aound glassy eyed PG 2:55 am 9 ‘Pretty Smart" Trisha Leigh Fisher. Brad Zutaut. The headmaster of a bawdy girls' school secretly video tapes his more libidinous charges activities. 'R' 3:00 am 9 ★ * * * "The Stars Look Down” (1939) Michael Redgrave, Margaret Lockwood Gripping account of Welsh coal miners struggling aganst dangerous working conditions and a collier's son who intends to run for office NR 9 ★ * ‘Not Guilty’ (1974) Chnstopher George, Richard Todd. The American financial wizard of a merger bound British real estate firm is framed for the murder of his wealthy wife. NR' 20 IMAGES August 1,1988 KTBC KVUE KBVO KLRU KXAN o ® AMC m NASH Movie Russians Are (05) Arsenic and Special Programmin • * CountryClips Movie Movie Tough Enough Movie Viva Zapata1 TBS IB (05) Bonanza (05) National Geographic Explorer 005) Wrestling 005) Grizzly BET IB (6:00) Spc. Program Video Soul " Video LP Spc Proqra Sports Report Pro Boxing MAX CD (6 00) Kidco Movie: Playing for Keeps Movie Secret of My Success 7 AM ...........J 30 o AM o ;30 Q AM :3Q 73 Kitty Muooet Babies Pee Wee Mtv Mouse Popeye Dennis Teen Wolf Wizards Pound Pup Monster F stones Real Ghostbusters Austin Aqua Festival Gummi Smurfs ■ ALF Alvin Fraggle Parade Health Galaxy Soviet Union Wknd Spc Out of Worl U.S. Senior Open Golf Victor Awards Sport Legend Archies T and T I'm Telling Supercharge Baseball Wk (15) NBC Baseball ■ Game of the Week Com'g 10 AM , u 30 11 AM 30 1 1 12 m30 4 PM 1 30 o PM L 30 Q PM . 30 0 PM H 30 C PM 5 30 ft PM 6 30 7 PM 1 ;» 0 PM ® -30 Q PM 9 30 Bus. File Bus. File Bus File Gov't Surve Gov t Surve Govt Surve Philosphy Philosphy Philosphy Society Society Society Victory Gdn Yan Can Coo Great Chefs Gourmet Joy of Pain W. Alexande Michael Degrassi Woodwriaht Austin City Limits Outdrs Fish'g Texa Great Weekend Lifestyles of Rich Matt Houston Rockford Files Hawaii 5-0 Movie: A Distant Scream Star Trek: Next G. Movie: Beyond the " Twilite Zon Movie: Miracle At the Movi Knight Rider Mtrwk NFL Films St Jude Classic Bob Uecker CBS News News Wheel K. & Allie Frank's PI. NFL Pre-Season Wide World of Sports - Muppets ABC News News Eves of TX Supercarrier Ohara Football Hotel " Magnum, P I NBC News News Cowbovs Fact of Lif 227 Gold Girls Amen Hunter Old Lace 035) Gome ( 05) Hbil 035) Hoaa 005) Wrestling 035) Maior League Baseball * g g Movie House on 92nd St Movie Dangerous Special Programmin Movie Peggy /Marn ed Special Programmin g News Video Soul (15) Allmghter * Movie Secret of Corner Movie Racket Movie Mad Miss Mantón Movie: Takes a Wife * My Success Movie Viva i o 3 1 1 2 w o AM I L :30 News Taxi Movie: Nightmare News News Saturday Night Live Friday the 13th Movie: Dragonslayer Movie: Goodbye Mr CNN Poseidon Adventure Anne of Green Gables -The Sequel, Part Summer Night Music Comrades Sign Off 20) Hbil 50) Stoo ( 05) Tracks Sports Report Pro Boxing (:05) Tracks Midnight Love (:05) Tracks Spc Program (15) Blood Zapata! . Movie Dangerous Corner Movie Racket Movie End 45) Rolling Vengeance Diner X T h t r o W t F c n I p u o r G Q n i t s U V T « h T 0 6 9 I © USA m Financial Freedom Kitchen Discovers TBA Keys to Diet Deal/Meal Dance Party USA Insider C Story Bloodbath House Cartoon Express Trouble Check It Airwolf Mike Hammer NICK Elephant Wizard Dennis Turkey TV Monkees Bad News Can t on TV Nick Rocks Double Dare Gadget Lassie Zoo Family Oliver and the Artful Dodger Alice s Adv Rated K Keepers Monkees Dennis Wizard Star Trek Gadget Movie Dream No Evil Laugh In * My 3 Sons Hitchcock Mr Ed Bradbury Night Flight Lancelot Monkees Movie: Marty B ing Drum S m • Gardener Jov Gdn Builder Kitchen Wish You Side Outdoors Cntry Wk Merle Haggard Builder Kitchen Wish You Side Outdoors Cntry Wk Merle Haggard Kitchen Rock Opry Opry Live Merte Haggard Kitchen Wish You Cntry Wk Rock Opry Opry Live Country Clips TUNE IN Close Encounters of the Third Kind HBO, (Cable 42) 2:30 p.m. If for some reason you haven’t seen this wonderful, hopeful movie, by all means watch it today. There’s no reason not to. It features Good Actor Richard Dreyfiiss, Fabulous Babe Teri Garr, aliens, Dead Direc­ tor Francois Truffaut, more aliens, cool special effects and a genuinely touching story. So see it already. — Steve Crawford PRIME TIME 7:00 pm 0 ( D KATE & ALLIE Terror stalks Kate, Ailie, Ted and Bob's camping trip when they hear news of a local prison break, and Allie encounters a man with an axe. (R) g O ® SUPERCARRIER When Georgetown is on a China Sea mission to evacuate island tribesmen who have lost their homes, Willoughby is given a pregnant girl as property. ( R ) P O <8 FACTS OF LIFE When Blair comes to visit Jo in Malibu, Jo tries to impress Blair by convincing her that the house she's sitting for Richard Moll is hers. (R) □ O s i ★ MOVIE BEYOND THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE (1979) Michael Caine, Sally Field. A group of fortune hunters encounter a medical team looking for survivors on the sinking Poseidon. 'PG' O ® AUSTIN CITY LIMITS (1987) Country music's Little Miss Dynamite, Brenda Lee, performs her most popular songs. Sweethearts GRAND OPENING! 0401 N. LAMAR OUR NEWEST H QUICK LUDE! ■ _ "Austin’s 10 Mnufe Professionals' $3°° OFF! OUR 15-POINT FULL SERVICE OIL CHANGE t All Fluid Levels Checked 6 Filled • Windshield Washed • Car Vacuumed • 5 Qfs. Premium Oil • New Filter Intalled • Chassis 6 Hinges Lubricated NotVolidwilh Any Other Offer *7°° OFF! TRANSMISSION SERVICE t LABOR INCLUDED t Reg. $04.95 t New Fluid • New Filter & Gasket Not Vatdifth Any Other Offer Expires 6/6/06 ‘6“ OFF! RADIATOR POWER FLUSH • Leak Check Included § Reg. $26.95 • Flush Cooling System • 50/50 Anti Freeze Solution inc. Not VakfVm Any Other OSet Q u ic k t u b # 3401 N. LAMAR E * * m 6/6/M 4524773 of thhe Rodeo perform Since I Found You 0 VIDEO SOUL Host Donnie Simpson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars. 0 * i MOVIE THE SECRET OF MY SUCCESS (1987) Michael J. Fox, Helen Slater. A young kid from Kansas is determined to take the New York business world by storm and quickly takes advantage of his position in the mailroom PG13 g 0 GRANO OLE OPRY UVE BACKSTAGE 0 MOVIE DREAM NO EVIL (1984) Edmund O'Brien, Marc Lawrence. A disturbed young woman, unable to distinguish between reality and fantasy, begins to commit brutal murders 0 LAUGH IN 0 + * * MOVIE MOTHER. JUGS AND SPEED (1976) Bill Cosby, Raquel Welch. Hair raising events and the kooky employees of a nearly bankrupt ambulance service turn an outlying area of Los Angeles county upside down. PG' 0 MASTER HAROLD ANO THE BOYS (1984) Matthew Broderick, Zakes Mokae During the course of an afternoon of reminiscences, a young South African boy realizes his racial barrier and turns against his longtime black friend. NR' 0 CHALLENGE America s Cup. Part 2. The America s Cup yachting race 0 LIVING DANGEROUSLY Courageous conservationists of the Greenpeace movement valiantly work to stop the ritualistic slaughter of the whales of the Faroe Islands. 0 MOVIE NO WAY OUT (1987) Kevin Costner. Gene Hackman. A handsome young Naval officer becomes involved with Pentagon intrigue and the Naval Secretary s beautiful mistress. R' g 0 EROTIC IMA6ES: CHAPTER I Britt Ekland. Attractive high school psychologist writes a thesis describing the intimate sex lives of her friends and neighbors. It becomes best seller and movie. NR' 0 MOVIE YO. PECADOR Pedro Geraldo. Libertad Lamarque. La historia del famoso cantante Jose Mojica. Su desilucion por la vida lo hace volverse sacerdote dominico. G' 0 * * t t MOVIE PIRATES (1966) Walter Matthau, Damien Thomas. Captain Red is the greediest and most dreaded of all Caribbean pirates He leads an attack on the Neptune, a heavy-laden Spanish Galleon. PG13' 0 ® FRANK’S PLACE Life at Tlfe Chez is disrupted when Frank hires a restaurant consultant to help improve business and all of the suggested improvements backfire. (R) 0 0 217 Arrogant, conniving Oeacon Fisk is an unwelcome guest in Mary and Lester's apartment when his church choir opposes Mary’s m a singing competition.(R) 0GRAI I OLE OPRY LIVE 0 MAKE ROOM FOR DAOOY Terry's Crush. Terry develops a crush on singer-actor Dean Martin and Danny decides to straighten her out 0 E A S Y STREET 0 AMATEUR BASEBALL USA vs Cuba from Millington, TN (L) •4 0 pm 0 ® NFL PRE-SEASON FOOTBALL Los Angeles Raiders at San Francisco 49ers (L) g 0 0 ONARA Shaver fails for an attractive artist; Ohara calls on mysterious investigative powers when the pair is drawn into a murderous art fraud scheme. (R) □ 0 0 0 0 0 BM U Dorothy's 34 yevoJd son plans to many a 44 year old Mack woman. The bride's mother worries about the racial difference; Dorothy about age. (R) Q O 0 ANNE OF GREEN GABLES -THE SEQUEL. PART 1 (1985) Megan Follows. Colleen Dewhurst. When an opportunity arises for Anne to teach at an exclusive girls school, she must break away from Gilbert who is now desperately in love with her NR' g 0 w * w * MOVIE VIVA ZAPATAI (1952) Marlon Brando, Anthony Quinn. A biographical drama of the famous Mexican leader and his people, who tried to create a democracy with bullets NR 0 MERLE HAGGARD; AN INSIDE LOOK 0 MY THREE SONS Steve Gets an A Robbie s in a dilemma with a big date scheduled the same weekend he is supposed to be writing a history theme. 0 PARTNERS IN CRIME 0 KNOCKING ON ARMEGEDOON’S DOOR Prepanngfor Armegeddon 0 SHORTSTORIES Tales of Stalin's terror send a young boy's imagination into overdrive and a look into the world of cloak and dagger 0 WWW MOVIE THE GLASS BOTTOM BOAT (1966) Dons Day, Rod Taylor. A public relations worker at a space laboratory becomes caught up in an international espionage scheme as well as a romance with her boss. NR 8:30 pm 0 0 AMEN When Reverend Gregory attempts to reconcile the first couple he ever married, the battling twosome sues him for negligent marriage counseling. (R) g 0 DONNA REED Jeff's Double Life. Jeff hurts his arm in an auto accident and takes on an assumed name to save his family name. 0 EYE ON HOUYWOOO 0 SPARTACUS (1984) Enk Moukhamedov, Natalia Bessmertnova. The legendary tale of the powerful Thracian slave becomes a spectacular ballet performed by the Bolshoi Ballet NR' 0 GAP-TOOTHED WOMEN Light-hearted look at gap teeth 0 EVERYTHING GOES: TRUCK DRIVER ANO THE WAITRESS Contestants costumed as a big rig pilot and a truckstop hash slinger try to keep their clothes on and outsmart the celebrity panel NR M O p m 0 f i HOTEL A lady fashion executive will stop at nothing to persuade a plumber at the St. Gregory to model for her ad campaign (R) g 0 0 HUNTER Hunter and McCall investigate the death of a multi-millionaire, whose four heirs become prime suspects. Efrem ZimbaHst, Jr. guest stars. (R) 0 SPORTS REPORT 0 WWW MOVK THE END (1978) Burt Reynolds. Sally Field. A shady operator learns he is about to die and hustles to find an easy way out R 0 COUNTRY KITCHEN 0 HITCHCOCK PRES0TS 0 MR. EO Clint Eastwood Meets Mr. Ed. A temporary party line on the phone allows Ed to court Clint Eastwood's horse. However his antics raise havoc between Eastwood and Wilbur. 0NEW S 0 CAGNEY ANO LACEY 0 M THE VRLD VHTH HARRY BUTLER Tamed Wildernes s . Wilderness of the Tasmanian Mountains 0 Andrews. Caroline Langnsha. Summer gats a crack at the scnpt of Hie next caper when ha helps solve a Nt and run accident 0 COMEDY HOUR UVE: WHOOPI GOLDBERG (IB M ) Through her zanyaRareoo, Fontaine. Goldberg offers unique parepactnrea on W . THE TV BETECTRfE David everything from politics to sex. 'NR' g 0 PLAYBOY'S CANON) CAMERA Anything goes when Allen Funt, America's premier practical loker. takes his hidden camera and catches people in very sexy scenarios NR 0 ESTRELLAS DE LOS M S La formula perfecta para descubrir hoy a las estrellas de la canción de manana G 9:05 pm 0 SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING Showtime continues to feature rising boxing stars in exciting bouts NR 9:20 pm 0 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES The Brewsters Return 9:30 pm 0 WISH YOU WERE HERE 0 RAY BRADBURY THEATER 0 MAO MOVIES Night of the Living Dead A party is about to begin, but there are no refreshments for the guests! Eventually it becomes a free-for-all with finger food 0 WILDLIFE CINEMA Land of the Outback. Australia s unique species 0 ELECTRIC BLUE; NUOEUGHTING (1986) A dynamic duo of intrepid investigators takes on white collar crooks and criminal passions in their latest caper, The Case of the Lost Virginity NR 0 THREE STOOGES 9:50 pm 1 0 6 0 pm ht) 0 0 0 0 NEWS 0 0 TWILIGHT ZONE 0 0 SUMMER NIGHT MUSIC (1988) Examine the rich and endunng expressions of a neglected American minority - the people of the Hawaiian Islands 0 PROFESSIONAL BOXING Henry Tillman vs Unah Grant (Heavywieght) and Frank Tate vs Mike Pucciargilli (Middlev 0 * % MOVIE OANGEROUS CORNER (1934) Mehryn Douglas, Conrad Nagel A series of inconsequential events prompts a group of people to bare their hidden secrets and tell of their confidential loves NR 0 THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY MUSIC 0MGHT FLIGHT 0 LANCELOT LINK 0 HOGAN’S HEROES Axis Annie 0LAOY BLUE 0 PROFRES OF NATURE The Hooded Seal Rare footage of the shy hooded seal 0 GALLANT BREED The US fighting machine tackle one of their hardest assignments in the jungles of Vietnam. NR' 0 % NOME B MRJJON WAVS TO OM (19M) Jeff Bridges, Rosanna Arqueos. In ve stigu e the murder of a hooker, an alcoholic ex cop end a hard edged prostitute are drawn into e deadly game of survival in the L A underworld. R' D 0 *+ % MOVK RUNNM8 BRAVE (19B3) Robby Benson, Pat Hngle. The early life of Indian BiHy Mil made history with his gold medal win at the 4 AO A A|IMnnj„a *Of*' 1W 4 mympcs na the sensational runner who 0 MGNT TRACKS: TBUSTI I 1065 pm •1040 pm AY TNI 0 0 0 0 SATURDAY «RUT UVE H ost Charion Heston; Mueical Guest Wynton M ia b a 0 0 * * U MOVK U K MMACti (1959) Carroll Baker, Roger Moore. Young postulant tom by hsr love w a man and love for religion struggles to find hereeff NR’ RSLL PAUL! 0 MOMO I Too Many Girts. The owner of a Expires 6/6/M 7:30 pm , - - . - ^ b í - s'> ^ ^fe * * * /v ■ « t i fefe felfefefefefe ' ■■•■:' fe ■ ■; . fe-fe-:; ¡M afe ssa a^í-"' $ . ; W O N U F E F N N B R A V X H S C O V E I A R T S H B O E S P N P U T G A L A S H O W Ourselves Survival Wld Australia Movie: 3 Worlds of Gulliver Movie: Bamum Mnstr Truck _ J B _ (5:00) Sign Off f f i — (6:00) Escalera C Fin de „ Semana' _ J B _ (6:00) Grand Prix DISNEY s Mickey! Wuzzles Donald Raccoon 7 A M 1 JB f t ® ■ JB A AM 5 JB 10 m 11 m 1 2 3 4 PM 1 JB 9 PM L JB o PM 0 JB A PM ’ JB r PM * JB C PM D M 7 PM 1 JB Q PM ® JB Q PM 51 JB 10 3 i i - 1 2 “ Fmn Rprt ,j Charlando Minority D ! Hist Hits Jeffersons Soul Train Movie: Holmes Brother Bustin Chas Choe Baseball Living Mom Fam Movie: Mother. Jugs and Speed News Hogan Movie Battle of Britain • Invast. Advisory Invest Advisory Creative W Watch Mom Day Baby Knows Mom Works Folev So Caonev A Lac Professional Tennis MacGruder and Loud Movie Watch & Everyth’g „ Movie Lost Kingdom Wizrd Easv Street Partners in Hllvwd Cagney and Lacey Lady Blue Dr Ruth Previews Invest. Advisory B Dance Sortsman Fishin' Outdoor Trivia SpoAm SortsCntr Auto R acing Pro Te n n is L P G A Golf : . Sp rtsC n tr Cvclinq Grand Prix Am ateur B aseball Movie: Summer of '42 Warning Movie: White Water S u m m e r M ovie: C lo se Encounters of the Third Movie: N o Way Out » C o m e d y Hour Live Movie 8 Million W a y s to Die Odyssey Survive World Alive Nature Rt Secrets This Land Animal Crackers Hong Kong Rendezvous Eye in the Sky Factory Wolff Three in the Wild Kontu Sharkcallers Challenge Armegeddon Gap-Toothed In the Wild Wildlife Prof Nature T B A Safari Royal Family China Journey Photo World Spyship Movie: Phaedra . Shortstories Movie Insurance Man Preview Variety Travel All Creatures Secrets Live Oangerously Shortstories Pulaski Gallant Live Dangerously Shortstories Team Tennis Kind Auto R acing Sporting Life Survival Wld Proiect Movie: Manhattan H a rn e ss * • * * Master Harold and the Boys Soartacus Movie: Faces of Women Movie: S h o w Boat Movie: Boatniks M ovie: Pirates G rim m ’s Zorro M ovie: Archer » - - - De M uier a M uier M ovie: Santo en la Frontera de Terror 2 4 H oras M ovie: La Edad M ovie: La Oveja Negra M ovie: Beat Street M ovie: Back to Scho o l M ovie: Airplane II Erotic Im a ge s M ovie: Yo, Pecador M o vie Pirates Chapter 1 E thing G oes Can Camera Electric Blue E strellas de los 9 0 s ( 0 5 ) Show tim e ■ * - - - - . - - ■ Fam ily R ob in so n M ovie, Freaky Friday Ozzie B oom er M ovie: Ollie H opnoodle s Haven of B liss M o vie G la ss B ottom Boat S p rtsC n tr W restling M ovie: Every W o m a n II Fútbol Movie Nightmare on A u ssie Football Erotic Im a ge s Boxeo Flashdance Cham p ionship Bo xin g M ovie: R un n ing Brave ( 0 5 ) Candy Stripe N u rse s Movie Archer gypsy t u room decides that Davy is the answer to her daughter s success. • * * * M O V K BATTLE OF BRITAIN (1969) Laurence Olivier. Michael Came British airmen courageously defend their country against the sustained, massive air assault of the Nazis in 1940 G 0 T B A • 0 MOVH EVERY WOMAN HAS A FANTASY II (1986) John Leslie, Lois Ayers An author and v i actor live out their erotic and often funny fantasies m a senes of offbeat encounters NR 0 FUTBOL Sábados por la tarde, directamente desde Mexico, presentando los mejores partidos en vivo vía satélite G' ITSCENTER (L) 10:45 pm 0 MOVIE ROLLING VENGEANCE Ned Beatty When a peace-loving boy s family is murdered, he builds the ultimate death truck and comes seeking revenge R’ 11:00 pm S O D NEWS 0 MIDNIGHT LOVE 0 GRANO OLE OPRY UVE BACKSTAGE 0 * * * * * MOVIE MARTY (1955) Ernest Borgmne, Betsy Blair A shy bachelor butcher from the Bronx resigns himself to an unmarried life until he meets a (pet girl m the same situation NR 0 NEW OR. RUTH 0 MOVIE FACES OF WOMEN (1987) Eugenie Ctsse Roland. Albertina N Guessan Explore the link between feminism and economics in modern Africa. NR 0 SAFARI Wild Nation, Part 1 A llokatthe world's wild animals 0 LIVING DANGEROUSLY Courageous conservationists of the Greenpeace movement valiantly work to stop the ritualistic slaughter of the whales of the Faroe Islands 0 AWA CHAMPIONSHIP WRESTLING 11:06 pm MOVE CANOY STRIPE NURSES (1974) 0 NIGHT TRACKS: PART I 0 Candice Rialson. Kimberly Hyde. Thru Menage beauties volunteer their services after school at the local hospital, and learn a lot about anatomy in their patients' rooms. R' 11 JO pm ( Id )T A X I 0 0 * * * NOME ORAMNSLAYEA (1981) Petar MacMico!, Ralph Richardson. Follow the adventures ol an apprentice sorcerer as he tries to save a viNage from a terrifying dragon no one has ths courage to kill. 'PG' 0 0 COMRADES (1986) Explore the daHy life of a Russian farming family, who has discovered its own kind of Communism • Leninism with lowfwft» Q 0 * w * W IR E THE RACKET (1951) Robert Mitchum, Robert Ryan. When a gangster has a pobbcal candidate stool pigeon killed, he is double crossed by his own men. NR 0 DRAW OLE OPRY UVE 0 SNEAK PREVKWS 13 0 ( 2 ) ♦ * NOME NIGHTMARE (1974) Rfclwd Crenna. Patty Duke Astm. Whan a man in a Manhattan wrnlnwrt w dM eeat a kükm In M M R 0 U I I ^ 0 H V 0 R W lw lV iB G B R R N M ^ i H P reluctantly begins to investigate when he realizes he may be the sniper s next target. NR 0 0 * * * V k MOVIE GOOOSYE MR. CHIPS (1939) Robert Donat, Greer Garson. Story chronicles an English schoolteacher's rise to headmaster, and the tragedies and joys that touched hts life. NR 0 0 SIGN OFF 0 SPECIAL PROGRAMMING 0 COUNTRY CUPS 0 INVESTMENT ADVISORY 0 ROYAL FANHLY Royal Food Dishes favored by royalty 0 SHORTSTORIES Tales of Stalin's terror send a young boy s imagination into overdrive and a look mto the world of cloak and dagger 0 * * MOVIE A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 2: FREDDY'S REVENGE (1985) Robert Englund. Mark Patton Dead murderer invades the sleep of a teenage boy, then begins to control his waking, physical life in order to perpetuate his hideous trail of death. R □ 0 AUSTRALIAN RULES FOOTBALL (T) 0 EROTIC IMAGES: CHAPTER 1 Britt Ekland Attractive high school psychologist writes a thesis describing the intimate sex lives of her friends and neighbors It becomes best seller and movie. NR 0 MOVIE ARCHER (1987) Brett Cimmo. Robert Colby. A young man has a series of adventures when he rides a race horse across the outback of Australia to enter him in the famous Melbourne Cup. NR 0 NIGHT TRACKS: PART II 12:05 am 12:15 am 0 MOVIE BLOOD DINER Directed by the resurrected brain of their uncle, two bumbling restaurant workers begin to gather body parts to incarnate an evil goddess NR 12:30 am 0 0 CNN 0 * * * * * MOVIE BANG THE DRUM SLOWLY (1973) Robert DeNtro, Michael Monarty. A New York baseball team is affected when one of its players is struck with a fatal disease NR' 0 TASTE OF CHINA The Family Table. Comparison of family meals 0 BOXEO Los sábados por la noche, desde Meneo, via satélite. Grandes encuentros con los mejores púgiles de las divisiones livianas. G' 0 * * V fc MOVIE CE (1983) Jennifer Beals, Michael Noun. Welder by day and dancer by night, a lovely young girl dreams of beet ling a ballerina with a little help from her friends. R' 1:00 am Ml I OFF 0 VIDEO SOUL Host Donnie Simpson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars. 0 **V h MOVIE THE MAD M S I MANTON (1938) Barbara Stanwyck, Henry Fonda. Society Chas a detective complex and no one believes story of a murder due to her many fK anedff NR' 0 T IM WEEK M COUNTRY MUSIC 0 TALES FROM THE OARKSNIE 0 DIVESTMENT ADVISORY 0 MASTER HAROLD ANO THE BOYS (1984) Matthew Broderick. Zakes Mokae During the course of an afternoon of reminiscences, a young South African boy realizes his racial barrier and turns against his longtime black friend. NR' 0 BEYOND 2BBB V devices for the future 0PU U SU THE TV OETECTIVE David Andrews. Caroline Langrtshe. Summer gets a crack at the script of the next caper when he helps solve a hit and run accident TSCENTER (L) 0 1:05 am 0 NIGHT TRACKS: PART III 1:30 am 0 (Z) SOUO GOLD 0 0 ABC NEWS □ 0 WISH YOU WERE HERE 0 AT THE MOVIES 0 MOVIE 9 DEATHS OF THE NINJA Sho Kosugi, Brent Huff. It's a battle to the death when an anti terrorist team goes to the rescue of a busload of tourists held hostage by drug dealing villains. R 0 NFL YEARBOOK 1987 New England Patriots O EVERYTHING GOES: TRUCK DRIVER AND THE WAITRESS Contestants costumed as a big rig pilot and a truckstop hash slinger try to keep their clothes on and outsmart the celebrity panel NR 1:45 am 0 * * » * MOVIE STREETS OF GOLD (1 98 6) Klaus Maria Brandauer, Adrian Pasdar. When a Russian Jew's successful boxing career is cut short by an anti Semitic coach, he emigrates to the U S where he coaches two street kids R MOVIES 7:00 pm ' 0 0 * * * ‘Beyond the Poseidon A d ve n tu re ' (1979) Michael Came, Sally Field. A group of fortune hunters encounter a medical team looking for survivors on the sinking Poseidon PG' 0 ★ ★ * * "The Secret of My Success" (1987) Michael J. Fox, Helen Slater A young kid from Kansas is determined to take the New York business world by storm and quickly takes advantage of his position in the mailroom PG13 g 0 ‘Dream No Evil* (1984) Edmund O'Brien, Marc Lawrence. A disturbed young woman, unable to distinguish between reality and fantasy, begins to commit brutal murders 0 * * * ‘Mother, Jugs and Speed’ (1976) Bill Cosby, Raquel Welch. Hair raising events and the kooky employees of a nearly bankrupt ambulance service turn an outlying area of Los Angeles county upside down. PG 0 No Way Out’ (1987) Kevin Costner, Gene Hackman. A handsome young Naval officer becomes involved with Pentagon intrigue and the Naval Secretary s beautiful mistress R' □ 0 *Yo, Pecador’ Pedro Geraldo, Libertad Lamarque La historia del famoso cantante Jose Mojica. Su desilucion por la vida lo hace volverse sacerdote dominico G’ 0 * * * * ’Pirates* (1986) Walter Matthau, Damien Thomas. Captain Red is the greediest and most dreaded of all Caribbean pirates He leads an attack on the Neptune, a heavy-laden Spanish Galleon. PG13' B J O pm 0 * * * * ’Viva Zapata!’ (1952) Marlon Brando, Anthony Quinn A biographical drama of the famous Mexican leader and his people, who tried to create a democracy with bullets. NR 0 * * * ‘The Glass Bottom Boat’ (1966) Doris Day. Rod Taylor. A public relations worker at a space laboratory becomes caught up in an international espionage scheme as well as a romance with her boss. NR' 9:00 pm 0 * ★ * “The End" (1978) Burt Reynolds, Sally Field. A shady operator learns he is about to die and hustles to find an easy way out. R' 10:00 pm 0 ★ * * ‘Dangerous Corner’ (1934) Melvyn Douglas, Conrad Nagel A series of inconsequential events prompts a group of people to bare their hidden secrets and tell of their confidential loves. NR 0 * * “8 Million Ways to Die" (1 98 6) Jeff Bridges. Rosanna Arquette Investigating the murder of a hooker, an alcoholic ex cop and a hard edged prostitute are drawn into a deadly game of survival in the L.A. underworld. R ' Q 0 ★ ★ * * “Running Brave" (1 98 3) R ob by Benson, Pat Hingle The early life of Indian Billy Mills, the sensational runner who made history with his gold medal win at the 196 4 O lym pics PG 0 10:30 pm * * '/ » “The M iracle" (1 95 9) Carroll 0 Baker, Roger M oore. Yo u n g postulant torn by her love for a m an and love for religion stru ggles to find herself. N R ' 0 ★ * * “Battle of Britain" (1 96 9) Laurence Olivier, M ichael Cam e British airmen cou rage ou sly defend their country against the sustained, m a ssive air assault of the Nazis in 1940 G 0 “Every W om an H as a Fantasy II" (1986) J oh n Leslie, L ois Ayers. An author and an actor live out their erotic and often funny fantasies in a series of offbeat encounters N R ' 10:45 pm 0 “Rolling Ve n ge an ce" Ned Beatty. W hen a peace-loving b o y’s fam ily is murdered, he builds the ultimate death truck and c o m e s seeking revenge R 11:00 pm 0 * * * * * "M a rty " (1955) Ernest Borgm ne, B e tsy Blair. A sh y bachelor butcher from the B ro n x re sign s him self to an unmarried life until he m eets a quiet girl in the sa m e situation N R 11:05 pm 0 * * * “Candy Stripe Nurses* (1974) Candice Rialson, Kimberly Hyde Three teenage beauties volunteer their services after school at the local hospital, and learn a lot about anatomy in their patients rooms. R' 11:30 pm 0 0 * * * “Dragonslayer" (1981) Peter MacNicol, Ralph Richardson. Follow the adventures of an apprentice sorcerer as he tries to save a village from a terrifying dragon no one has the courage to kill. PG 0 * * * “The Racket" (1951) Robert Mitchum, Robert Ryan. When a gangster has a political candidate stool pigeon killed, he is double crossed by his own men. NR 12:00 am 0 ® * * “Nightmare’ (1974) Richard Crenna, Patty Duke Astin. When a man in a Manhattan apartment witnesses a killing, he reluctantly begins to investigate when he realizes he may be the sniper's next target. NR' 0 0 * * * V f c “Goodbye Mr. Chips’ (1939) Robert Donat. Greer Garson Story chronicles an English schoolteacher’s rise to headmaster, and the tragedies and toys that touched his life. NR' 0 * * ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge" (1985) Robert Englund, Mark Patton Oead murderer invades the sleep of a teenage boy, then begins to control his waking, physical Me in order to perpetuate his hideous trail of death. R ’ Q t ' i! August 1,1988 IMAGES 21 ; •; > \ k> 1 0 ‘Archer' (1987) Brett Cimino, Robert Colby. A young man has a series of adventures when he rides a race horse across the outback of Australia to enter him in the famous Melbourne Cup. ‘NR’ 12:15 am 0 ‘Blood Diner’ Directed by the resurrected brain of their uncle, two bumbling restaurant workers begin to gather body parts to incarnate an evil goddess. NR' 12:30 am 0 * * * * * ‘Bang the Drum Slowly" (1973) Robert DeNiro, Michael Moriarty. A New York baseball team is affected when one of its players is struck with a fatal disease. NR' 0 * * * * “Flashdance" (1983) Jennifer Beals, Michael Nouri. Welder by day and dancer by night, a lovely young girl dreams of becoming a ballerina with a little help from her friends. R' 1:00 am 0 * * * * “The Mad Miss Mantón" (1938) Barbara Stanwyck, Henry Fonda. Society girl has a detective complex and no one believes her story of a murder due to her many escapades. NR' 1:30 am 0 "9 Deaths of the Ninja" Sho Kosugi, Brent Huff. It's a battle to the death when an anti terrorist team goes to the rescue of a busload of tourists held hostage by drug dealing villains. R 1:45 am 0 * * ' * “Streets of Gold" (1986) Klaus Maria Brandauer, Adrian Pasdar. When a Russian Jew's successful boxing career is cut short by an anti Semitic coach, he emigrates to the U.S. where he coaches two street kids. R' 2:00 am 1 j * * * “Sleeping Tiger’ (1954) Alexis Smith, Dirk Bogarde. When a psychiatrist tries to reform a young criminal by taking him into his home, a volatile love triangle develops. NR' 0 * ★ * “The Glass Bottom Boat” (1966) Doris Day, Rod Taylor. A public relations worker at a space laboratory becomes caught up in an international espionage scheme as well as a romance with her boss. NR 2:05 am 0 * * * * ‘Beat Street’ (1984) Rae Dawn Chong, Guy Davis. City kids with big dreams break dance their way to the top on Beat Street If they don't get the breaks they need, they make their own. PG' 2:30 am 0 * * » * “Father Takes a Wife" (1 94 1) Gloria Swanson, Adolph Menjou. An elderly widower falls in love with a reigning actress and finds it difficult to tell his overly conservative son about the romance. NR' 0 “Tapame Contigo" M auricio Garces. La histeria de un señor que ha festejado bastantes cum pleaños y no puede dejar de pensar en las m uieres jovenes y herem osas. R ' 3:00 am 0 "O nce the Killing Sta rts” (1974) Patrick O'Neal, Patricia Donahue. A brilliant married college professor, in love with another wom an, devises an elaborate and su p p o sed ly foolproof plan to d isp ose of his wife. 0 ★ * * * “Cyrano de Bergerac" (1 95 0) Jose Ferrer, M ala Powers. Love and adventure reign m 17th century Paris as Cyrano, the poet cavalier with the big nose, becom es a secret accom plice of a friend in love. N R ' 3:10 am B “Night of the C ree p s" Ax maniacs, frat house zom bies and even killer slu g s from outer space make for frightening fun. R 3:15 am 0 * ★ “Tough E n o u gh " (1983) D e nn is Quaid, W arren Oates. A country and western songwriter tries to launch his sin gin g career by brawling in amateur boxing matches. P G ' Q 3:30 am 0 * * * * “The Stork Club" (1945) Betty Hutton, Robert Bencheley. A hat check girl at the glamorous Stork Club in Manhattan saves the life of an elderly tramp, who turns out to be a very grateful millionaire. NR 0 “Every Woman Has a Fantasy II" (1986) John Leslie, Lois Ayers. An author and an actor live out their erotic and often funny fantasies in a series of offbeat encounters. NR 4:00 am 0 * * * * ‘Viva Zapata!’ (1952) Marlon Brando, Anthony Quinn. A biographical drama of the famous Mexican leader and his people, who tried to create a democracy with bullets. NR 4:30 am 0 ‘La Colmena" Ana Belen, Jose Sacristan Sesenta personajes tratan de sobrevivir al frío de las calles de Madrid y al hambre y miserias que quedaron como epilogo de la Guerra Civil Española. R' SPO RTS 0 AMATEUR BASEBALL 0 (D NFL PRE-SEASON FOOTBALL Q 0 SPORTS REPORT 7:30 pm 8:00 pm 9:00 pm 9:05 pm 0 SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING Showtime continues to feature rising boxing stars in exciting bouts. 22 IM A G E S August 1,1988 TUNE IN Jimmy Buffett: Live by the Bay ARTS (Cable 36) 9 p.m. Jimmy Buffett. What can you say about the man, except that he’s a god. And there’s nothing better than a god in concert. Okay, maybe it’s not exactly live, but it was recorded dur­ ing one of his shows, so that’s close enough. Really, Sundays are so underrated as party nights. So, get out the grill for the cheeseburgers and make some of those famous margaritas. Or if you can’t fmd the salt, mix some boat drinks instead. It doesn’t mat­ ter. Come Monday, every thing will be all right. — Karen Adams 7:00 pm G ® MURDER, SHE WROTE Jessica is swept into the world of politics when a close friend faces a devastating scandal that could ruin her political career. (R) Q O ® MACGYVER MacGyver heads South to rescue Wild Jack Dalton from one of his money-making schemes gone awry, but for his trouble, MacGyver winds up in prison. (R) Q O ® FAMILY TIES A grief-stricken mother tries to replace her late daughter with the kindhearted Mallory, who insists she can handle the situation. (R) Q g AMERICA’S MOST WANTED Q ® EVENING AT POPS Trumpet vituoso Wynton Marsalis, jazz singer Sarah Vaughan, vocalists Tony Bennett and Nell Carter, and guitarists Toots Thielemans share the stage. G EVER INCREASING FAITH G NEW MIKE HAMMER G LAUGH IN G FOR KIDS’ SAKE When I Was Your Age i PHYSICIANS’ JOURNAL UPDATE ( i EL ROCIO A colorful Spanish festival G IAC0CCA: AN AMERICAN PROFILE This is a candid portrait of the successful Chrysler executive and best selling author. Ad executives, family, and fellow workers talk about him. NR' G NFL FOOTBALL Pre Season: New Orleans Saints at Minnesota Vikings (L) CAVITIES GROW Q. If you can feel a very small cavity or irregularity on the back of a tooth, with no pain, should you ignore it until there's some other, more urgent need for dental work? < Q CO 7 AM 1 :30 KTBC a m Austin Fait River Bend CBS Sunday Morning 9 “ Movie 10 * . 1 1 ; Face Nation TBA Bus. Wld IROC Interatct World J. Robison R. Schuller Kenneth Copeland Bpst. Churc D. Brinkley Olympic Trials " - U S. Senior Open Golf Austin Ans. News 60 Minutes Murder. She Wrote Movie: A Case of ABC News News Movie: Sunday MacGyver Hollywood Wives, Part Deadly Force 1 12 3 1 PM 1 :3Q o PM ‘ . 30 3 £ 4 2 5 2 ft PM ® 30 7 PM 30 1 a PM ® 38 Q PM 3 :30 * . Soc. Proqram Movie: Stalag 17 KVUE KXAN KBVO KLRb Hyde Park Hour Sunday Today Jimmy Oral Robert Larrv Jones BET I B MAX m Increasing Faith Bobby Jones (6:30) Splash AMC ■ (6:30) Sign Off The Press Sybervision GT Armstron Ebony Jet Wild Kinodo NFL Pre-Season Football ‘ NBC Sports Special NBC Sports Special News NBC News Rags to Riches Family Ties Mv Two Movie: Blood Vows: Mafia Sesame Street Mr. Rogers Read Rainbo Survival Wl Survival Wl Wild Am. T Brown D C Week Wall St Firing Line Michael Song of Survival Young Storytellers Universe Changed TBA Front Row Center Evening at Pops Masterpiece Thtr. Solo Don’t Wait Gorgeous Ge Sign Off Swaggart Movie Night of the Grizzly First Methodist TX Cnty Rpt Close-Up Movie: Star Countdown Incredible 9 to 5 Natl Geographic 21 Jump Street Am Wanted Married Shandling T Ultman Duet CNN Star Trek: Next G. Mama's Its a Livm CNN Sign Off T B ii ID ( 05) Flin ( 35) T & (:05) Flin (35) Andy (:05) News (:35) Home from the Hill " ( 50) Stoo ( 05) Major League Baseball ( 55) Stoo (.05) Hbil (.35) Wrestling Beaver Movie: Ator • Explorer All Fam Jerry Falwell World Child Fund J Robison X T . h t r o W Ft . c n I . p u o r G g n i t s i L TV * h T 8 8 9 1 © NASH USA NICK Sunday Cartoon Express " Wrestling Aerobics Champs Movie: Operation Pacific Trouble Check It Wired Elephant Wizard Dennis Turkey TV Monkees Bad News Can t on TV Nick Rocks Duckula Gadoet Lassie Zoo Family Dad s New Wife Trouble River Rated K Keepers Who Am 1? Airwolf Gold Monkey Tales Wizard Star Trek Gadget Duckula Laugh In Make Rm My 3 Sons C Story Insider D Reed Robert Klein Mr Ed Mike Hammer TBA Keys to Soloflex Kitchen TBA Discovers Mad Movies Lancelot Monkees Stock Marke Keys to Self Improvemen Winston Cup Outdoors Performnce Hidden Winston Cup Motowrld Mesquite Rodeo Prudhomme Story Sports Cavalcade Winston Cup Performnce Auto Mao Motowrld Hidden American Sports Cavalcade Winston Cup Motowrld Hidden Outdoors Am Horse Mesquite Rodeo American Sports Cavalcade (15) Superman IV Movie. Morning Outdr News Glory Motowrld Movie: That Night in Rto American Movie: Rvnoe of Nerds 2 Movie: Superman II - - - • - Movie: To Sir with Love Movie: Splash Pleas. Grov Don Stuart Breathe Lif Special Programmin 9 Special Programmin 0 Catch Spin Victory Temple Heaven Eart Breathe Lif L style Mag Gosoel Mao. Increasing Faith Victory Temple Victory Temple Special Programmin 9 Movie: Stanley and Livingstone Movie: Chance at Heaven Movie Forever Amber » Movie: Morning Movie: Lost Boys Glory Movie That Night in Rio Performnce (:10) Gothic Movie Livingstone Arme, Green Gables National Geographic Bobby Jones Movie Karate Kid News Solid Gold 10 2 115 (:45) Newh 1 9 AM :30 (15) News (:45) Quer News Movie. Niaht of the Generals News Movie: Murphy’s Law News G FANTASIES: ENTICEMENTS They enter a crowded room. Their eyes meet, and lock. They are drawn to each other An elegant, sensuous fantasy emerges. NR' ( MOVIE DOS TIPOS OE CUIDADO Pedro Infante, Jorge Negrete. Dos hombres son rivales en amor, pero leales el uno para el otro, ante el peligro. G' G * * * * * MOVIE THE KARATE KID (1984) Ralph Macchio, Noriyuki (Pat) Monta. The new kid in town runs up against the local high school toughs and must take lessons in karate and self confidence from an unlikely mentor. 'PG' Q 7:30 pm Q G MY TWO DADS Cory is pressured by his older brother to kiss Nicole, to prove his manhood and uphold the family lady killer image. (R) O 2) MARRIED ...WITH CHILDREN Q G INSIDE WINSTON CUP RACING G MAKE ROOM FOR DADOY Uncle Tonoose Met Mr. Daly. The normal hubbub reaches an unnatural pitch when relatives in the Williams house clash. Guest stars: William Demarest and Hans Conreid. G * * * MOVIE PRIEST OF LOVE (1981) Ian McKellen, Janet Suzman. The last years of the life of D.H. Lawrence and his wife, Frieda, are recounted. R' G PLAYBOY PRESENTS: SWING IT AGAIN! (1986) Tony Bennett, Elvis Costello. A trip back to the 40s with the incomparable Count Basie and his orchestra recorded live at the Red Parrot in New York City. NR' G BUD GREENSPAN’S SUMMER OLYMPIC A . No. Cavities should be treat­ ed as soon as they are detect­ ed. For one thing, they are easier and less costly to treat when they are small. More important: Cavities keep growing. Delay in obtaining dental treatment can lead to serious problems and possi­ ble loss of the tooth. Bear in mind that a cavity doesn't appear overnight. The process of decay is going on before a person becomes aware of a cavity. Tooth dete­ rioration continues until the dentist cleans out the decay and seals the cavity with a restoration filling. GREATS (1988) Hosted by Olympics historian Bud Greenspan , this special features swimmer Kornelia Ender and judo champ Yasuhiro Yamashita. NR' 8:00 pm G CD MOVIE "A Case of Deadly Force" CBS SUNDAY MOVIE (1986) Richard Crenna. John Shea. Follow the three year legal investigation of a lawyer and his family firm into the shooting death of a hospital worker by police officers □ G 9$ ‘Hollywood Wives, Part 1* ABC SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE (1985) Candice Bergen, Frances Bergen. Hollywood low life and high society are exemplified in the lives of the women who stand beside the saints and sinners of Hollywood's rich and famous. Q O ® MOVIE “Blood Vows: The Story of a Mafia Wife” NBC SUNDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES (1987) Melissa Gilbert, Joe Penny. A young woman falls in love with and marries a lawyer, only to discover her husband and his family are high ranking members of the Mafia IT S GARRY SHANDLING’S SHOW | 0 ® ANNE OF GREEN GABLES -THE SEQUEL, PART 2 (1985) Megan Follows, Colleen Dewhurst. Through the course of the school year, Anne succeeds in winning over the Kingsport establishment, gams respect of her students, and finds romance. NR □ G NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EXPLORER African Drumming G BOBBY JONES 60SPEL Grammy Award Winner Bobby Jones present the best in urban contemporary gospel. G * * * MOVIE THE KARATE KID (1984) Ralph Macchio, Noriyuki (Pat) Monta. The new kid in town runs up against the local high school toughs and must take lessons in karate and self confidence from an unlikely mentor. PG' Q QMOTOWORLD G COVER STORY G MY THRU SONS Heat Wave. Chip and his friend encounter heat-frayed tempers while collecting for a paper drive. G CARWOLOOY UPOATE G ROOSEVELT, NJ: VISIONS OE UTOPIA A government-sponsored, cooperative community. G ALL CREATURES GREAT ANO SMALL Dogs with heart problems, wildcats at the door and a forlorn cow are this week’s patients. G * * MOVIE JAWS IV: THE REVENGE (1987) Lorraine Gary, Michael Caine. A heartbroken Ellen Brody goes to stay with her son in the Bahamas, where the warm waters are supposedly shark free. But are they? PG13' □ G MOVIE HONEYMOON IN PARADISE (1967) I challe Leska, Marilyn Jess. A pair of eager newlyweds can't consummate their marriage because it's one interruption after another. NR' G THE ElAME TREES OF THMA: HAPPY NEW YEAR (1982) Hayley Mills. David Robb. A normally subdued New Year celebration turns into a boisterously memorable evening because of the antics of Mrs. Nrmmo's guests. NR G O TRACEY ULLMAN JE*SNOW 9 4 0 G NOU.YWOOO M S ttH G OONNA REEO Nothing But the Truth. Donna plans a birthday party for a boy whose parents are Mr from home, only it isn't his birthday. G * * * MOVIE MORNING GLORY (1933) Katharine Hepburn, Douglas Fairbanks. Jr.. A young and ambitious girl narrjed Eva Lovelace comes to New York City determined to become an actress. NR' G CELEBRITY OUTDOORS G ROBERT KLEIN TIME With George Wallace. Yogi Berra G MR. EO Lie Detector Addison asks Wilbur to help him finance a new lie detector machine and causes chaos m the Post’s home. M MEUM G 08/6YN UPOATE G THE REO BARON G JIMMY BUFFETT: LIVE BY THE BAY Rock star Jimmy Buffett is recorded live in concert performing such big hits cs Changes in Attitudes, Changes in Latitudes, and Marguerttaville. NR G MOVIE TIEMPO DE REVANCHA Federico Luppi, Haydee Padilla. Un hombre pierda a su meior amigo en un accidente de trabajo por culpa de una ilegalidad y decide vengar su muerte a cualquier precio PG G MOVIE BRIOGE TO TERIBETHIA (1986) Annette 0 Talle. An unlikely friendship between a young girl from a wealthy family and a poor farm boy ends suddenly when one of them dies in a tragic accident NR' 9:15 pm G * * MOVIE JAWS IV: THE REVENGE (1987) Lorraine Gary, Michael Came. A heartbroken Ellen Brody goes to stay with her son in the Bahamas, where the warm waters are supposedly shark free. But are they? PG13' 9:30 pm G O CNN G O MASTERPIECE THEATRE (1987) The young, inexperienced Mr. Chippings comes to Brookfield School and settles down to academic life. He is captivated by a woman he meets on holiday. □ m AMHOCA’S H Ü Ü G MAO MOVMS Nothing Sacred. Oorothy from The Wizard of Oz decides to have a reunion with her friends from the over the rainbow G FAMN.Y MEDIOME UPOATE G WORLD STAGE: OLIVIA NEWTON-JOHN IN AUSTRALIA Amid the natural beauty and Bicentennial excitement of Australia. Olivia Newton-John acts as gu i and performs many new songs and favorite nits. NR G 1 Janet Lever and Theresa Crenshaw talk with Dr. Lonnie Barback, editor of Pleasures, a treasure of erotic stories written by women. NR' Sen ON SEX: WOMEN'S EROTICA Dr 1 9 4 0 pm G ( D G « G ® * W S G G STAR TRBL THE NEXT GENERATION ‘NR’ G AU. M THE FAMILY The Elevator Story G VICTORY TEMPLE G MftfltlITT CNAMPIONSINP ROOM G T IA G LANCELOT UNK G TALES FROM THE DARKSKME Djirm Ho Chaser G ORTHOPGIC SURGERY UPOATE G S G G E A N T EARLY’S DREAM (19BB) Catherine Bscqus, Lucy Osthuns. Chnstophsr Bruce’s, bellet uses Irish, BrtBeh, and Amaricen talk songa to re-enact the Nves, loves and w i Q i O i i i o i i m i i u M i d m t o t o v f o n u . o n V v /.-v -’'V ^ ' ' 1(1998)Nina Hartley. Siobhan Hunter Two tales, Fortune Smiles and The Tunnel, told from the couples point of view, capture the aspects of contemporary sexual relationships NR G * * MOVIE MY FRIEND IRMA (1949) Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis Laughs galore as the lovable but dimwitted Irma meets up with a pair of funnymen NR' 10:30 pm GOD SOL 60L0 G G * * MOVIE THE NIGHT OF THE GENERALS (1967) Peter 0 Toole, Omar Shard. A Nazi intelligence officer trails a general who is feared to be a psychopathic killer NR G ® * * * MOVIE MURPHY’S LAW (1986) Charles Bronson. Kathleen Wilhoite A cop, accused of murdering his ex wife, is stalked by a psychopathic killer R' G ® SOLO Gemma starts to backslide into Danny's arms m this comedy senes about a young woman going it alone in a man's world G JERRY FALWELL G * * MOVIE THE LOST BOYS (1987) Kiefer Sutherland. Jason Patnc Teenage vampires haunt picturesque Santa Carla, California Only a few young boys know about it and they alone set out to save the town R □ G * * Y MOVIE THAT MGNT IN RIO (1941) Alice Faye. Don Ameche. An American entertainer is lured to impersonate a Brazilian baron to whom he bears a striking resemblance NR g k e y s to s u c c e s s G MONKEES The Monkees. At an audition to play at a Sweet Sixteen party Davy falls m love with the guest of honor. G DEMPSEY ANO MAKEPEACE Guardian Angel G INTERNAL MEDICINE UPOATE G VIETNAM WAR STORY: THE FRAGGING Q 10:46 pm G Vk MOVIE WISOOM (1986) Emilio Estevez. Demi Moore. Young man with a felony record becomes a modem day Robin Hood to save farmers and homeowners until he and fus girlfriend become fugitives R' 1 1 4 0 pm JP W HUMMING G O MAMA’S FAMUT O G O O N T W A IT U P G perform ance ruis O80L0FLEX O STOCK MARKET WOEO G PHYSICIANS* JOURNAL UPOATE G MOVE THE CRAZY FAMILY (1984) Katsuya Kobayashi, Miteuko Baisho. A bizarre middle class Japanese family takas possession of a flimsy suburban home and domestic chaos takes hold. NR' G ALCATRAZ REMPO tRED Part 2. History of the rock.' G IAC0CCA: AN AMERICAN PROFILE This is a candid portrait of the successful Chrysler executive and best selling author. Ad executives, family, and fellow workers talk about him. NR G * * * NOME STANO BY ME (1908) River Phoenix, WH Wheaton. What starts out as an eacibng adventure becomes a ioumey of seN discovery ter a sensitive boy and his three colorful friends. *RfcC I G POO T B H R Ü US NMkmal Hard Court unppMnpi vnvn rarapon, p . m B I ^ h 1 1 4 0 p m GOD C O M M GGITtAUVM O G G I l 4 7 2 -5 6 3 3 2907 Duval Em ergency B 443-1861 : UPOATE • d O g m G G P U I T O U m m n n M U Ralph J. Branch D.D.S. WGN UFE FNNBRAV DISCOVE ARTS HBO GALA SHOW ESPN L - (:20) Auto Racing PLAY __ Q __ (500) Sign Off Movie: Jaws IV: Revenge for All Seasons - SoortsWk SortsCntr Horseshow Jumping Olivia Under! LPGA Golf \ (6:30) Ustedes Los Ricos Corre. G.C., - (Cont) Movie. Hot Shot Mickey! Wuzzles Donald Raccoon Corre Cepillin Fin de Semana - Lucha Libre * M ovie: El Nino y el Movie: Karate Kid Movie: Asterix, the - Movie: Odd Couple Movie: Jaws IV: Revenge Gaul Grimm's Flicka Zorro Movie. Father’s Dividend Ozzie Living Seas S how tim e C h a m p ion sh ip M ovie: Going Ape! Lob o Bo xin g M o vie Ahora S o y Rico M ovie: North S h o re Lorax D anger Anim als M ovie: Belles on Their T o e s O lym pic Grt. Flam e Trees Thika M o vie Bridge Teribethi * M o vie Karate Kid ■ ( 1 5 ) Jaw s IV: The R evenge ( 4 5 ) W isd o m M ovie: M y Friend Irma - ( 40) Vende M ovie: Father s Fantasies S w in a Aaam! M ovie Paradise H on eym o o n W om e n on M ovie: Se n su a l Escape Duelmq Fantasies Sw in g Again! - M ovie: D o s T ip o s de Cuidado M o vie Tiem po de R evancha Sera Anunciado Teatro de Gala - » - " * . SprtsCntr Ktckoff N F L Football Sp rtsCntr P ro Tennis investigation of a lawyer and his fam ily firm into the sh ooting death of a hospital worker by police officers □ O 0 "B lo o d V o w s The Story of a M afia W ife" (1 98 7) M e lissa Gilbert, Joe Penny A young w om an falls in love with and m arries a lawyer, only to discover her h usband and his family are high ranking m e m b e rs of the Mafia. □ 0 wwwvfc “The Karate Kid" (1984) Ralph Macchio, Noriyuki (Pat) Monta. The new kid in town runs up against the local high school toughs and must take lessons in karate and self confidence from an unlikely mentor PG Q 0 ww "Jaw s IV: The Revenge" (1987) Lorraine Gary, Michael Came A heartbroken Ellen Brody goes to stay with her son in the Bahamas, where the warm waters are supposedly shark free But are they7 PG 13' Q 0 "Honeym oon in Paradise" (1987) Michelle Leska, Marilyn Jess A pair of eager newlyweds can't consummate their marriage because it's one interruption after another NR 9:00 pm 0 www “Morning Glory" (1933) Katharine Hepburn, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr A young and ambitious girl named Eva Lovelace comes to New York City determined to become an actress NR 0 "Tiempo de Revancha" Federico Luppi, Haydee Padilla. Un hombre pierda a su mejor amigo en un accidente de trabajo por culpa de una ilegalidad y decide vengar su muerte a cualquier precio PG 0 "Bridge to Tenbethia’ (1986) Annette O'Talle An unlikely friendship between a young girl from a wealthy family and a poor farm boy ends suddenly when one of them dies in a tragic accident N R ' 9:15 pm 0 ww "J a w s IV: The R eve n ge " (1 98 7) Lorraine Gary, M ichael Came A heartbroken Ellen Brody g o e s to stay with her so n in the Baham as, where the warm waters are su p p o sed ly shark free. But are th e y? PG13 10:00 pm 0 “Se n sua l E sca p e " (1988) Nina Hartley, Siob h an Hunter. Tw o tales, Fortune Sm ile s and The Tunnel, told from the co u p les' point of view, capture the aspects of contem porary sexual relationships. N R ' 0 ww “My Friend Irma" (1949) Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis. Laughs galore as the lovable but dimwitted Irma meets up with a pair of funnymen. NR' 10:90 pm 0 ® ww "The Night of the Generals" (1967) Peter O'Toole, Omar Sharif. A Nazi intelligence officer trails a general who is feared to be a psychopathic killer. NR' 0 ® wvk “Murphy's Law" (1986) Charles Bronson, Kathleen Wilhoite. A cop, accused of murdering his ex wife, is stalked by a psychopathic killer. R 0 ww “The Lost Boys" (1987) Kiefer Sutherland, Jason Patrie. Teenage vampires haunt picturesque Santa Carla. California Only a few young boys know about it and they alone set out to save the town R Q 0 ww»A “That Night in Rio" (1941) Alice Faye, Don Ameche. An American entertainer is hired to impersonate a Brazilian baron to whom he bears August 1,1988 IMAGES 49 < a striking resemblance. NR' 10:45 pm 0 M i "Wisdom" (1986) Emilio Estevez, Demi Moore. Young man with a felony record becomes a modern day Robin Hood to save farmers and homeowners until he and his girlfriend become fugitives. R' 11:00 pm 0 www “Stand by Me" (1986) River Phoenix, Wil Wheaton. What starts out as an exciting adventure becomes a journey of self discovery for a sensitive boy and his three colorful friends. R’ P 11:30 pm 0 w w w 'A “All the President's Men" (1976) Robert Redford, Dustin Hoffman. Extensive work by two Washington Post reporters exposes the Watergate scandal, and the two are undaunted by the high powered officials involved. PG' 12:00 am 0 www “Stanley and Livingstone" (1939) Spencer Tracy, Cedric Hardwicke. English newspaperman goes to Africa to search for a m issionary whom he believes is still alive. 'N R ' 0 www “Father's Little Dividend” (1951) Spencer Tracy, Joan Bennett. A m an's peace and quiet is shattered when he learns he's about to become a grandfather in this sequel to Father of the Bride. 'N R ' 12:10 am 0 “Gothic" (1986) Gabriel Byrne, Julian Sands. One stormy night Lord Byron plays overnight host to Percy Byshe Shelley & his fiancee, Mary which results in colorful dreams & gruesome nightmares. 'R ' 12:35 am ® wv* "Arm ed and D an ge rou s" (1986) John Candy, Eugene Levy. Tw o bum bling, but honest, security guards are fired and fall into the corrupt world of guard dog security. PG13 Q 12:40 am ® “Vendetta" W om an intentionally gets herself locked up at a w o m e n 's prison to avenge the m urder of her sister at the hands of a gang of inm ates. R ' 1:00 am ® w w w “Annie Oakley" (1935) Barbara Stanw yck, Preston Foster. A storybook rom ance of Annie and Toby, sharpshooters in the early w est NR 0 “H oneym oon in Paradise" (1987) Michelle Leska, M arilyn J e ss A pair of eager newlyweds can 't consum m ate their marriage because it's one interruption after another NR 1:40 am ® “Om ega Syn d ro m e ” Ken Wahl, Doug M cClure. A downtrodden, hard drinking new spaperm an w hips back into action when his teenage daughter is kidnapped by power and white suprem acists R 2:00 am 0 ww “Chance at Heaven" (1933) Ginger Rogers, Joel McCrea. Three young people search for happiness in this touching story of loves enticements and betrayals. NR 0 “El Secreto" (1975) Jean-Louis Trintignant, Marlene Jobert. Un hombre acepta la amistad de una pareja rara y se encuentre perseguido como un ratón. PG 0 www “Belles on Their Toes" (1952) Myrna Loy, Jeanne Crain. Further adventures of the sweet and unpredictable Cheaper by the Dozen Gilbreth family. NR 2:15 am 0 “North Shore” (1987) Matt Adler, Nia Peeples. Rick Kane is an 18-year-old surfer from Arizona whose ultimate dream is to ride the waves of Hawaii s legendary North Shore. PG Plaza Suite Movie: Project X Auto Racing Team Tennis World About Century Wars James at 15 Sawyer Survival FutureScan Factory Bill Moyers Wolff New Pacific Gallant Challenge Movie: Coney Island Ark on Move Outdoors Kontu Sharkcallers Sporting Life Odyssey Us Animal Crackers Wines TBA El R ocío • : Fashion Our Century: World War II, Part 2 Dangerous lacocca Movie: Armed, Dangerous Movie Quarterback Princess Movie: Back to Sch o o l - - All Creatures V isio n s of Utopia The Red Baron Jim m y M o vie Jaw s IV R evenge Buffett Live Olivia U nd er' Global Village Alcatraz R em em ber H o n g K o n g R en d e zvo u s by the Bay lacocca All Creatures Vietnam M o vie Stand by M e ( 3 5 ) Arm ed (1986) Joh n Candy, Eugene Levy Two bumbitng, but honest, security gu ard s are fired and fall into the corrupt world of guard dog security P G 1 3 Q 12:40 am 0 MOVIE VENDETTA W om an intentionally gets herself locked up at a w om en s prison to avenge the m urder of her sister at the h an d s of a gang of inm ates R 0 CD AUSTIN PUEBLO QUERIDO 12:45 am 1:00 am 0 0 SIGN OFF 0 FLETCHER BROTHERS 0 SPECIAL PROGRAMMING 0 MESQUITE CHAMPIONSHIP RODEO 0 CREDIT TIME BOMB 0 www MOVIE ANNIE OAKLEY (1935) Barbara Stanwyck, Preston Foster A storybook romance of Annie and Toby, sharpshooters in the early west NR 0 INVESTMENT ADVISORY 0 www MOVIE PRIEST OF LOVE (1961) Ian McKellen, Janet Suzman. The last years of the life of O H. Lawrence and his wife, Frieda, are recounted R 0 NANO ANO EYE Touch Wood. The versatility of wood 0 JIMMY BUFFETT UVE BY THE BAY Rock star Jimmy Buffett is recorded live in concert performing such big hits as Changes m Attitudes. Changes m Latitudes, and Marguentaville. NR 0 SPORTSCENTER (L) 0 MOVIE HONEYMOON IN PARADISE (1987) Michelle leska, Marilyn Jess A pair of eager- newlyweds can t consummate their marriage because it's one interruption after another. NR 0 MINI SERIES 0 0 A B C NEW SQ 1:15 am 1:90 am 0 0 AUSTIN ANSWERS 0 U R R Y JONES 0 FINANCIAL FREEDOM 0 LPGA GOLF Pat Bradley International from High Point, NC: Final Round (R) 0 THE BEST OF OZHE AND HARRIET Oavid Loses His Poise 1:40 am 0 MOVIE OMEGA SYNOROME Ken Wahl, Doug McClure A downtrodden, hard drinking newspaperman whips back into action when his teenage daughter is kidnapped by power and white supremacists R' 0 0 SIGN OFF 1:45 am 7 AM :39 ' : 1 5 ) f f L Shut Ins Written Invest. Advisory Investment Cardio Familv Med. Visionaries A AM 3 01 Cot 10 i Movie: Banjo 1 1 * Roamin' Free Physicians Journal Ranger Baseball Wk (15) Baseball - * Internal Orthopedic Ob/Gyn Cardio Physicians Journal Internal 1 2 " 4 PM * 05 o PM * 30 3 * 4 * t PM & 0i T 4 T Movie War of the Worlds 6 " 7 PM • 0B For Kids Sake 8 " 9 * At the Movie News 1 0 * D arkside D e m p se y 1 1 * 1 1 1 9 AM 30 M o vie President s M e n 30 Convention Ob/Gvn Internal Hvoertension Family Med Milestones Physicians Journal Cardiology Internal Ob/Gyn F am ily M ed Orthopedic Internal P h ysicia n s Journal Invest A d viso ry * * . * Movie Priest of Love Sgt Early M ovie Crazy Fam ily (1986) Explore m yth s and truths that m ake p rofessional w restling popular and profitable go into the locker room and into the lives of flam boyant perform ers Q • WORLD TOMORROW 0 AMERICAN SPORTS CAVALCAOE 0 ALL AMERICAN KITCHEN 0 KEYS TO SUCCESS 0 * + * » MOVIE ALL THE PRESIDENTS MEN (1976) Robert Redford. Dustin Hoffman Extensive work by two W ashington Post reporters exposes the W atergate scandal, and the two are undaunted by the high powered officials involved PG O DUELING FOR PLAYMATES Contestants match wits and bodies as they compete for a date with a Playmate by answering sexy questions and performing their best strip tease 0 ( 2 ) BOS NEWMART 11:45 pm LATE NIGHT 1240 am MOVIE STANLEY ANO LIVINGSTONE t O CNN 0 0 SIGNOFF 0 CHRISTIAN CHILDREN S FUNO 0 (1939) Spencer Tracy, Cedric Hardwicke English newspaperman goes to Africa to search for a missionary whom he believes is still alive NR 0 T B A 0 SELF IMPROVEMENT 0 INVESTMENT ADVISORY • IMPRESSIONS Of HONG KONG ANO A scenic look at Hong Kong and Macau CREATURES GREAT ANO SMALL Dogs with heart problems, wildcats at the door and a forlorn cow are this week s patients 0 FANTASIES: ENTICEMENTS They enter a crowded room. Their eyes meet, and lock. They are drawn to each other An elegant, sensuous fantasy emerges. NR 0 TEATRO OE GALA Drama, comedia y aventura presentada en las meiores producciones del teleteatro moderno 0 W W W MOVIE FATHER’S LITTLE DMOENO (1951) Spencer Tracy, Joan Bennett A man's peace and quiet is shattered when he learns he's about to become a grandfather in this sequel to Father of the Bride 'NR' 12:10 am 0 MOVIE GOTHIC (1986) Gabriel Byme, Julian Sands. One stormy night Lord Byron plays overnight host to Percy Byshe Shelley & his fiancee. Mary which results in colorful dreams A gruesome nightmares R' 12:15 am 12:90 am 0 0 NEWS | 0 NEW m m I JAMES Belize/ Hawaii/ Grand Canyon. KNTS: 8NNNG IT A8ANN Travel to intonating pieces. 0 PLAYBOY (1966) Tony Bennett. Elvis CostoNo. A trip back to the ’40s wilii the incomparable Count Basie and his orchestra recorded live at the Red Parrot in New York City. HR' ____________ IS IT TIME FOR: 0 CheckUp 0 Cleaning 0 Crown 0 Filling 0 Etc.... 700 pm 0 ‘Dos Tipos de Cuidado' Pedro Infante, Jorge Negrete. Dos hombres son rivales en amor, pero leales el uno para el otro, ante el pebgro. G 0 wwwtt 'The Karate Kid" (1964) Ralph Macchto. Noriyuki (Pat) Morita. The new kid in town runs up against the local high school toughs and must take lessons in karate and self confidence from an unlikely mentor. PG' Q 000 pm 0 ( Z ) *A Case of Deadly Force’ (1965) Richard Crema. John Shea. FoNow the three year legal “YOUR DENTIST 4794364 ON THE DRAG” Paul Lounsbem. D DS. Ray Scott. D D.S. Joe Murphy, D D.S Richard Jurek. D.D.S. Walter Weaver. D.D.S. James Cordera, DD.S. University of Texas System Employees Your Body Is A Wonderful Thing. Cover It With Texas Health Plans. During August, 1988, you can choose Texas Health Plans as a health benefit option for 1988-1989. Enjoy: 9 The largest selection of Primary Care Physicians in private practice offered by an Austin-area Health Maintenance Or­ ganization. 9 Our extensive service area, including Travis, Hays, Wil­ liamson, Caldwell, Bastrop, Lee and Burnet counties; New Benefits Coverage o f services im portant in keeping you welL $5.00 co-payment Doctor's office visits.......................... No charge Well child care______ ....... X-rays and lab tests........»» ....__ ......................No charge; Medically necessary hospitalization.................. No charge Prescription drugs....................$4.00 co-payment for each prescription or refill ... Up to $80.00 at Texas State Optical or Pearle Vision locations Glasses or contacts.................. Access to health education programs................ Call Texas Health Plans for more info. Rates* .... ...... $89.87 Employee. .................__........................ $ 184.23 Employee and Spouse Employee and ChÜdren.»».»».».»»...»».»».».»».»»»..»»»»$ 179.74 .........$278.60 Employee and Family.......»». .............................. Meeting Times University United Methodist Church 2409 Guadalupe..............................................10a.rn.-2p.rn.,Wed., Aug 17 University United Methodist Church 2409 Guadalupe 10 am i.-2p.m ., Thur. Aug. 18 Enrollment ends August 31,1988 h 1 For more information, contact your Institutional Personnel Office o r call lexas tieaitn nans today at: Jfocas1 (512) 454-6771 H C c lith (800)234-7912 Ilana Inc. or ^ «, r *ThJsyear the University of Texas System w il contribute $115.00 toward your employee benefits.