More than 3, attend AIDS walkathon, page 7 / V “ V íJf. b/ X ! ' O b t v - -1 - 1 M s i q n o j • I I c » p U 8 / j t y ' r - 4 n o <\ ily Texan | q <4 ( -• Vol. 89, No. 36 3 Sections 31V IS HU i nt; b i u u c . newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Monday, October 23,1989 25C Asbestos law does not apply to routine maintenance encounters Eva Uorens Daily Texan Staff A lthough federal law requires strict safe­ ty m easures for w orkers w h o rem ove as­ bestos, th o se w h o en c o u n te r th e carcino­ gen alm ost daily w hile d o in g ro u tin e m aintenance w ork are n o t pro tected , a UT electrician said Friday. Richard K ronke; an em ployee w ith the UT D ivision of Physical Plant, said w h e n a w orker m oves a light fixture m o u n te d on an asbestos ceiling, a "significant a m o u n t" of airborne fibers are released. "T h ere is no w ay you are going to o p en one of tho se fixtures w ith o u t d istu rb in g th e su b sta n c e ," K ronke said. He said a large a m o u n t of force is n e e d e d to rem ove th e fixtures from the ceiling. A sbestos is a su b stance th a t w’as once used for fire-proofing an d insu lation , b ut its use w as b a n n e d in the 1970s by th e Envi­ ro n m en tal Protection A gency, if inh aled , the sub stan ce can lung cancer, scarring of th e lu n g s or the d e v e lo p m en t of m esotheliom a — a m alig n an t tu m o r in the lining of th e lu n g s an d ab d o m en . lead to Todd W ingler, a Texas D ep a rtm e n t of H ealth en g in eer, said th e substan ce is not d a n g ero u s if it is n o t d istu rb ed . "T he d a n ­ ger is w h en you inhale asb estos particles th at are in th e a ir," W ingler said. K ronke said h e w as info rm ed this m o n th th at he h a d been expo sed to asbestos in A pril w hile fixing light fixtures in the W est Mall Office B uilding. Tom C hisholm , UT safety co o rd in ato r — th ro u g h a m em o released this m o n th — w arn ed em ployees w h o do m ainten ance w ork in th e lobby of L. T heo Bellm ont Hall, W .R. W oolrich L aboratories and th e W est Mall building not to to uch or d istu rb the m aterial s u rro u n d in g the fixtures because the ceiling co ntains asbestos. The Texas H azard C om m u nicatio n Act requires em ploy ers to inform em ployees abo ut d a n g e ro u s chem icals they m ay be ex­ po sed to d u rin g th eir em p loym ent. Also, the UT H ealth a n d Safety m anual states th a t "em p lo y ees w h o w ork, or m ay at som e tim e w o rk w ith h a z a rd o u s m ateri­ als are requ ired by law to a tte n d at least o ne training session a n n u a lly .” The training session is d e sig n ed to ex­ plain the po ten tial d a n g ers of h a z a rd o u s m aterials an d how take p recau tio n s w hen dealing w ith the substances. to W ingler said th e U niversity did not violate any law because the h azard act re­ gulates safety m e a su re s for w o rk ers w ho rem ove asbestos or are involved in a sb es­ tos-related w ork, b u t not "w o rk ers w h o h ap p en ed to be accidentally expo sed to it." "It is a gray area of the la w ," he said. "B ut, if he [Kronke] is en c o u n te rin g a sb es­ tos w hile w o rk in g an d not rem oving it, he is not protected by law ." W ingler said the risk of high-level expo­ sure to asbestos in the situ ation w h ere a w orker accidentally e n c o u n te rs the su b ­ stance is m inim al. "U n less the ceiling is falling, a n d g e n ­ erates m ore th a n the perm issible level, it is a m inim al risk, ' he said. Federal law re­ quires asbestos w o rkers to w ear a m ask w h en the level of asb esto s is .02 fibers p er cubic centim eter or higher. W ingler said, h o w ever, th a t ex p o su re to levels of asbestos below the .02 level do es not m ean w orkers are not at risk of in haling asbestos fibers. C hisholm said th ere is no w ay of know - Please see Asbestos, page 2 un niA.a. ■■»■■■■>■ ■■■■■ Peace offer receives OK Some Syrian troops to exit; Lebanese civil war may end Associated Press TAIF, Saudi Arabia — C hristian m em bers of L e b an o n 's P arliam ent on S u n d ay a p p ro v e d an A rab-m ed i­ ated plan to en d L eb an o n 's 14-year- old civil w ar after Saudi A rabia g u aran teed its im p lem entation. The plan includes Syrian p ro p o s­ als for at least a partial p u llo u t of its it from L eb an o n , tro o p s gu aran tees an equal n u m b er of seats for M oslem s an d C h ristians in the Parliam ent. a n d It m u st be a p p ro v e d by a full ses­ sion of L e b a n o n 's P arliam en t, w hich has n ot m et since Oct. 5. A m eeting w as expected in Taif S u n ­ day night, but no tim e w as set. The plan also n ee d s ap p ro v al from L eba­ n o n 's C hristian leader, G en. M ichel A oun, an d from L eb an o n 's sectari­ an w arlords. An A rab L eague envoy flew to Beirut on S u n d ay to seek th eir a p ­ proval. G eorge S aadeh, h ead of Leba­ n o n 's C hristian P h alan g e Party, said envoy L ak h d ar Ibrahim i w ould m eet w ith A oun a n d Salim H oss, w h o h e ad s the M oslem C abinet that is a rival to A o u n 's C hristian C abi­ net. S aadeh said the d e p u tie s c o n su lt­ ed w ith A oun by telep h o n e before ag reem en t on the plan w as a n ­ no u n ced . The P arliam ent session w as sch ed u led after the C hristian s said they had no reserv atio ns. "W e'v e reached final an d com ­ preh en siv e Saadeh a g re e m e n t," told The A ssociated Press. Kazem Khalil, a Shiite M oslem d e p u ty , said the d e p u tie s "achieved a historic m ission to day for Lebanon an d the A rab w o rld ." C onference sources said the Syr­ ian p ro posals fall sh o rt of C hristian d e m a n d s th at th e 40,000 Syrian sol­ diers be o u t of L ebano n w ithin three years. Please see Lebanon, page 2 Richards seeks out-of-state cash Associated Press H O U STO N — W hen the n ew s first broke last w eek th a t D em ocrat­ can d id ate A nn ic g u b ernatorial R ichards h ad b een c au g h t in th e San Francisco ea rth q u a k e w hile raising m oney for h e r cam paign, o ne q u e s­ tion quickly p o p p e d into m any in ­ qu irin g m inds: W hat w as a c a n d id ate for th e Tex­ as g o v ern o r's office d o ing raising m oney in California? R ichards w as d o in g w h at all the gubernatorial c a n d id a te s are d o in g — trying to finance a highly ex p e n ­ sive cam paign. By som e estim ates, this y ea r's race will cost all can d i­ dates a com bined $45 to $50 m illion. T hat w o u ld be th e eq u iv alen t of a $3 co ntribution from every m an, w om an, child a n d the state. in fan t in R ichards, the state tre a su re r, is likely to lead ca n d id a te s in th e chase for out-of-state co n trib u tio n s, the Houston Chronicle re p o rte d S u n d ay . " It's a little d ifferen t for h e r," said D an M cC lung, a D em ocratic politi­ cal con su ltan t. "S h e has so m eth in g of a national follow ing th at m akes it possible for peo p le in Los A ngeles or C hicago or N ew York to pull 15 Please see Richards, page 2 John Moor» Daily Texan Staff Razor stubble Longhorn teammates carry Coach David McWilliams high on their shoul­ ders in celebration of their victory over the Arkansas Razorbacks. Satur­ day’s 24-20 win over the Razorbacks places the Horns, who are undefeat­ ed in conference play, in sole possession of first place in the Southwest Conference. Please see story, page 9. POLICE LINE DO NOT CROSS jpgp wm-vmmnnjn ifo u iw w ip w f t m n y t m sr mm mvvwiuiks. rr:‘;Wm Marc R ■ ■ H AFTERSHOCKS í^^M N ^C alifo m ia students in school daze mUSfim !— a fMbigaurvfeor buoys hop*, page ; jNather said she did not realize the mag- the tremor until she drove to a || friend's house in another part of town and saw I the destruction. Most of the chimneys on hous- ■ yaa on the street had collapsed during the S t i l l s when it really hit me that this was a H tajor disaster," she said. ¡¡I Realising it would be safer outside if an after- Mshock hit, area residents went out to sit on their I S B A * * * 1 listen to battery-operated radios for iSM m ip j RB. Nather said. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ b y little we started to get news of happened in downtown Santa Cruz," she iÉ lfSfeir^ l of it had bam wiped out. All of it just ■ ■ to the ground." ^pK #^W »wn Santa Cruz is the main business 9'dhrtrict of the city, with numerous shops and P restaurants, Nather said. b y Despite the fact that there were no deaths or I serious injuries on her campus, students' prior- v . , ^ ftW sh *v« been redefined, she said, explaining I l l i M everyone at the campus is dazed and mo- 1 1 f l j j -Wluw. ■ quake also has drawn students closer together. "You walk around and you see peo­ ple hugging each other," she said. "People you wouldn't normally talk to before are saying, 'Are you OK?' " "Rap sessions" and "brainless comedy" movie nights have been held to increase mo­ rale, but continued aftershocks and rumors about another "big one" are tempting many students to visit friends and relatives who live outside the quake area, Nather said. "Nothing is normal here — everything is chaotic/' she said. But Parker — who lives in Palo Alto, farther from the quake's epicenter — said while cam­ pus life has been disrupted there, it is gradual­ ly getting back to normal. He said some stu­ dents who live on campus have been placed in temporary housing pending repairs or exami­ nations of their normal rooms. Similarly, classes in buildings that have not been checked out have not met since the quake, but other classes have resumed, he said. Because his Tuesday and Friday classes are in structures that have not been tested, Par­ ker has not attended class since the quake. "But for everyone else, it's pretty much busi­ ness as ususal," he said. Dnnifli Dacfcnun DsüyTexan Staff Some students at HI sities are finding itfj school books w hüejj lives -after Tuesday7® which left almost rcjj Laura Nather, a ■ California at Santas Stanford U niversity! studying has taken ajj with ftfudentyat m IMWf B are people out Nather said. "ItM seem s irrelevant .k- , | cause of th is/' * #1 a, »» m n Nather said she was the first floor of a j quake struck. 'It was H k e | I and was shaking it ¡8§ though herll The art of the screenplay Symposium celebrates importance of the film writer’s contributions Bobby Ruggiero Daily Texan Staff The leg en d ary actor G regory Peck once said, "T h e m agic of H olly­ w ood beg in s w ith th e w rite r," e m ­ phasizing an often overlooked cog in the huge e n te rta in m e n t m achine know n as the film in d u stry . W ithout the w o rd s an d ideas of the screenw riter, actors w ould have n o th in g to say, d irectors w ould have no m o v em en ts to block and film goers w ould have no celluloid w o n d ers to see. In an effort to both celebrate the c on trib utio ns of screen w riters an d educate po .n tia l scribes, the Liz C arp en ter V isiting L ectureship on M onday p re se n ts "W o rd , Script, Image: The A rt of S creenw riting" — a sy m po sium of lectures and panel discussions. "I felt that this would be a good topic for this year's symposium be­ cause there's been a flowering of all kinds of writing in Texas recently," Carpenter said. "There's more interest in making films in Texas and a big desire to filmwriting. know more about Many of the guests are also native “Unlike a novelist or play­ wright, the screenwriter doesn’t have complete control over the materi­ al.” — Jay Presson A llen , screenwriter Texans, so thev know the state, she said. G uests for the d a y 's activities in elude Jack V alenti, p resid en t of the M otion Picture A ssociation, actress Carol C h a n n in g , w riter Liz C ar­ p en te r a n d screen w riter M arty Ka­ plan of D isney S tudios. F eatured sp eak ers also include screenw riters E rnest L ehm an (North by Northwest, West Side Story), H or­ ton Foote (Tender Mercies, to Kill a Mockingbird) a n d Jay P resson Allen (The Prim e of M iss Jean Brodie, C abaret). P ro d u cer'w riter K aplan said the the kind of ex p o su re offered by sy m p o siu m is long o v erd ue. "S creenw riters receive e n o u g h credit for th eir w ork. The tru th is that they are the beginning n ev e r of any p ro ject," he said from his o f­ fice at D isney Studios. "T h e y 're the m ost essential com ­ p o n e n t of any m ovie, and it's a real an d lasting sham e th at thev d o n 't get said. reco g n ito n ," "T hings are m oving in a b etter d i­ rection today th o u g h — audience*- are m ore a p t to notice the scrip t." any he M any screenw riters begin as jo u r­ nalists an d novelists, b u t gravitate tow ard screenw riting for a variety of reasons. M any tim es, screen w rit­ som eone ing else's idea o r a piece of w ork p u b ­ lished in an o th e r m edium . ad a p tin g involves Allen said th e latter road is w hat led h er to the field. for certain "A lot of m y w ork w as w riten specifically actresses [Barbra S treisand, Liza Minelli] or feature w om en. Alfred H itchcock asked m e to w n te Marnie because he had seen so m eth in g else I'd d one. A nd unlike a novelist or play w rig ht, the screen w riter d o e sn 't have com ­ plete control over the m aterial," she said. A llen, a form er actress, said the screen w ritin g held to break into th an acting. "It's diffi- is h ard er Ptease see Screenwriter», page 2 Maybe Big D s two fine football teams — the Dallas Slowboys and the SMU Pintos — should get together and play each other; it s about time each faced some real competition. To say both teams were just pitiful would be like say­ ing Treaty Oak was just another 9 tree. Also inside: Bush's abortion veto unlikely to be 3 overridden. Renaissance fest1 Speed metai1 Images Head shops! Huzzah! Weather: Partly cloudy. Highs Monday in the mid-80s with lows in mid-60s. Wind out of the south at 10 mph. . Index: Around Campus Classifieds.............. Comics Editorials.................. Im ages................. S p o rts ..................... State & Local University.................. World & Nation . . . . . 15 13 . . . . . . 15 . . . . 4 Supplement 9 7 6 3 . . . . . . Page 2 Monday, October 23,1989 THE DAILY TEXAN U t m o st C ity M o g a i i n a o f UT, To x o b I OPEN ’TIL 8:00! I i ROSES ROSES ROSES I S Cash & Carry N aarM R aaC a S j Casa Verde Florist \ R o s e s - $ 9 .9 5 ¡ ¡ 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 Daily Specials s facing 4 1 st St. i FTD ñ i i i i i i i i i H i i i i H i i i i i i i H i i i H i m i M i i i i i i i i i i i i t i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i t r : : MISS MOM’S COOKING? ! * E e g l* M ost C a t* • Across from U.T. upstairs in • J the back of Yarings Were serving delicious * * soups, entrees, and desserts Mon.-Fri 11 a m -3 9 * p.m. plus our regular selection of sandwiches and • * salads 2405 San Antonio across from Whole • 0 Earth Provision Co 474*7812 J BRRRRRRRRRRRRRR! Asbestos: Maintenance workers not protected Continued from page 1 ing w h e th e r w o rk ers are in d an g er unless an air m o nitorin g test is con­ ducted to d eterm in e th e a m o u n t of asbestos fibers p re se n t in the air w hile they are w orking. "D isturbing or rem oving the su b ­ stance raises th e n u m b er of airborne fibers," he said. C hisholm said he w arn ed w ork­ ers not to touch th e su b stance after finding scratches on th e asbestos su rro u n d in g the air conditio nin g system in the UT Post Office this sum m er. But he said he believes w orkers in K ronke's situ ation are not at risk. The asbestos level in th e lobby of Bellmont or in W oolrich classroom s falls below the .02 cutoff an d does not pose stu d e n ts, risk a C hisholm said. for Air sam ple repo rts for O ctober found th e asbestos level b etw een the second an d third floor stairw ells in the W oolrich labs at a level of .002 fibers per cubic centimeter. Another air test conducted in Woolrich 217C — w here renova­ tions are currently underway — show ed a level of .0001 fibers per cubic centimeter. The sample was taken at a time w h en em ployees were not doing renovation work. A bulk test of the substance found on the ceiling in Bellmont's lobby discovered it to consist of 20 percent chrysotile — a less dangerous form of asbestos. Lebanon Richards Continued from page 1 Continued from page 1 IPANEMA ‘82.25 BLACK LEA. B R O W N LEA. N A V Y LEA. RED LEA. IVO RY LEA. GREEN SUEDE PURPLE SUEDE RED SUEDE BLACK SUEDE ALL OVER T O W N Instead, the proposal calls for Syria to pull its soldiers out of a .6- mile radius a ro u n d Parliam ent in Beirut before the legislative body m eets in form al sessio ns to ratify political changes and elect a new president. Lebanon has been w ith o u t a p re s­ ident since S ep tem ber 1988, w hen Am in G em ayel's term e n d e d and legislators w ere unable to decide on a successor. The plan, brokered by th e Saudi foreign m inister, Prince S aud al- Faisal, calls for the Syrians to be re­ placed inside the "secu rity zo n e " by Lebanese police backed by A lgerian an d M oroccan observers, the so u rc­ es said, speaking on cond ition of anonym ity. The plan does not set a date for a final w ithdraw al of Syrian troops from East L eban on's Bekaa Valley — a persisten t C hristian d em an d . Instead of a fixed d ead lin e for the Bekaa w ithdraw al, Syria agreed that the issue be h an d le d by a Syrian- Lebanese m ilitary com m ittee after political reform s are ratified, a p resi­ d e n t is elected and a unified g o v e rn ­ m ent form ed. M oslem s have arg u ed th at the Syrian presence is their only g u a r­ an tee political reform s will occur. Three dozen L ebanese d e p u tie s, m ostly C hristians b u t including som e M oslem s from C h ristian-con­ trolled areas in L ebanon, m et to d is­ cuss the plan. University Market Facts... During the past 30 days, students of the university spent $2,445,136 for clothing and shoes at Austin stores. Source: "The University M arket" Belden Associates, 1987 T H E C L I N I Q U E G I F T or 20 people to g eth er (for a fu n d ­ raiser) because sh e 's an in terestin g p e rso n ." Richards gained national a tte n ­ tion as keynote sp eaker at last y ear's D em ocratic N ational C onv ention in A tlanta a n d currently has h er a u to ­ b io graphy on the m arket n a tio n ­ w ide. O n the nig ht before h e r San F ran­ cisco fu n d-raiser w as to p p led by the earth q u ak e, Richards g ath ered 50 people at a private hom e in Los A n­ for a $500-a-person affair. geles in T u esd ay 's R ichards, u n in ju re d tem blor, retu rn ed to Dallas for an in-state fund-raiser. D uring the first half of this year, in cash Richards raised $391,142 contributions for h e r cam paign. A bout one-sixth of th a t total was from ou t-of-state contributors. By com parison, h e r ann o u n ced o p p o n e n t in th e D em ocratic prim a­ ry, A ttorney G eneral Jim M attox, raised $644,645 d u rin g the period, including $28,300 from out of state. A lm ost half of M attox's out-of-state contributions cam e from labor u n ­ ions. Screenwriters Continued from page 1 cult, if n ot m ore so. Because n o t ev ­ eryon e thin ks th ey can act, b ut ev ­ eryone th in k s they can w rite ." like Screenw riting, any o th e r gen re of H ollyw ood, also has its tren ds. But, K aplan said, th e y are constantly chang ing an d alm ost im ­ possible to predict. H e n o ted the rise, fall an d resu rrectio n of in d e ­ p e n d e n t film m akers a n d stud ios. "B ut w h a t's m ost en co u rag in g is th at m ore tickets are being sold an d there are m ore successful pictures n o w ," he said of this su m m e r's box office pro ceeds — th e m ost p ro fita­ ble in H olly w o o d 's history. C arp en ter, w hose p reviou s sy m ­ posiu m s hav e covered a w ide range of topics, p o in ted o u t th at "th is event is set u p to in sp ire all types of w riters, w h e th e r th ey are into films, novels or th e th e a te r." A correlating screen w riters' ex­ includin g m any of th e fea­ hibit, tured g u ests' original m anuscripts, will be on d isplay at the H arry Ran­ som C en ter th ro u g h Feb. 15, 1990. "I'm going to knock m yself o u t to m ake the screen w ritin g lectures and the fu tu re o n e s to be th e b est that can be w hile I'm still a ro u n d ," C ar­ p e n te r said. The lectures will begin at 2 p.m . in the Bass C oncert Hall and will in­ clude a panel of local film experts. A dm ission is free to th e public. T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff . Editor . M anaging Editor Associate Managing Editors . News Editor Associate News Editors News Assignments Editor General Reporters Associate Editors Entertainment Editor Associate Entertainment Editor Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporters Photo Editor Associate Photo Editor Images Editor Associate Images Editors.. Graphics Editor Around Campus Editor Karen Adams Robert Wilonsky Jeanne Acton, Bruce McDougall, Rob Walker, Janet Webb Randy Kennedy Alan Hines, Ron Lubke Mindy Brown Susan Boren, Dan Dworin, Gerard Farrell, Eva Llorens, Dane Schiller, Diana Williams Steve Crawford, Greg Weiner Jeff Turrentine Bobby Ruggiero Dave Winter Gilbert Garcia Jaime Aron, Ray Dise, Craig Douglas, Paul Hammons ................................................... John Foxworth Marc Fort . Lee Nichols Mike Clark, Greg May Tom King Jenny John ................................. Issue Staff News Assistants Sports A ssistant......................... Sports Writers Entertainment Assistant Editorial Columnist Editorial Assistant Editorial Cartoonist Makeup Editor Wire Editor Copy Editors Photographers Graphics Assistant Comic Strip Cartoonists Daniel Dadmun, Dave Harmon, Larry Rowe, Miguel Salmas, Leslie Wimberly, Steve Higginbotham Wayne Hardin David Hansen, John Siniff , Jen Howze Alexis Dalianias, Lisa McDonald Kim Homer Greg Hervey Jen Howze ..................................................................Jennifer Kowalik April Eubanks, Laura McCarty, Andrea Reece, Andy Thomas Joey Lin, Tom Stevens Jeanette Moreno Tom King, Robert Rodriguez . Advertising Local Display Classified Display Classified Telephone Sales Deborah Bannworth, Cary B. Cook, Sam Hefton, David Lawrence, David Lutz, Kelly McLean, Beth Mitchell, Michael Oh, Gina Padilla, Cindy Pels, Jody Ruhberg, Charles Wickman, Chris Wilson Noel Hwang, Charles Hyman, Matt Kumin, Shawn McMinn Robert Acosta, Art Carrillo, Melanie Neel, Juanda Powell, Steve Davidson Classified Telephone S e r v ic e ............................................. Sonya Kirkham, Michelle Dapra, Paula Barrett Jena Kim, Becky Pokluda The Daily Texan (U S P S 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, Wednesday. Thursday and Fnday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session. Second class postage paid at Austin. TX 78710 250 0 Whitis, Austin. TX 78705 The Daily Texan is published Monday. Tuesday, News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editonal office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 101) For local and national display advertising, call 471 -1 86 5 For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 4 71-8900. For classified word advertising, call 471 -5244 Entire contents copyright 1989 Texas Student Publications The M y Texan Mai Subscription Ratea O ne Sem ester (Fall or Spnng) Two Sem esters (Fall and Spnng) Summer Session O ne Y ear (Fall. Spring and Summer) ................................................................................... To charge by V IS A or MasterCard, call 471 -5083 $30 qo 55 00 2o'oo 75 00 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P O Box D. Austin, TX 78713-7209, or to TS P Building C 3 200. or call 471 -5083 P0STRASTER: Send address changes to TSP, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209. THE THIRTEENTH ANNUAL U T L E A D E R S H I P I N S T I T U T E A L E A D E R S H I P S K I L L B U I L D I N G AND T R A I N I N G E X P E R I E N C E O P E N TO AL L S T U D E N T S SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1989 10:00 A.M. ■ 4:30 P.M. IN THE FLAWN ACADEMIC CENTER REGISTRATION MATERIALS AVAILABLE: CAMPUS ACTIVTnES OFFICE - TEXAS UNION 4.304,471-3065 REGISTRATION DEADLINE - OCTOBER 27 SPONSORED BY THE ITT LEADERSHIP BOARD AND THE O m C E OF THE DEAN OF STUDENTS "EXTRA BEST" YOUR BONUS GIFT W ITH A 12.00 OR MORE CLINIQUE PURCHASE Six beauty makers in all. And all at no extra charge. Y ou'll receive Porcelain Beige Balanced Makeup base, Dram atically Different M oisturizing Lotion, Advanced Care Moisture Lock Body Formula, Peach Silk Soft-Pressed Eye Shadow, Super Berry Superlipstick and a lip brush. One gift to a customer please. Come in to check your Fall skin on the Clinique Computer. Everything C linique is allergy tested and 100% fragrance free. (Cosmetics not available at Highland M all.) WRING'S F RI DA Y ' S D O W J O N E S 2 , 68 9 14 UP 5.94 Volume 164 , 83 0 , 00 0 s har es WORLD & NATION V V V n L U ( X M M I U M T i n D a i l y IT \ w Monday, October 23, 1989 Pa ge 3 Finding survivor brings new hope Damage estimate climbs to near $7 billion Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — Rescuers e uphoric over finding a survivor in a collapsed freeway re su m e d w ork at a frustratinglv cautious pace Sund ay , a n d earthquake- shaken N o rth e rn Californians m a p p e d strategy for M o nday's c o m m u te th ro u g h "gridlock." L ong sh orem an Buck Helm, w h o sp ent four days in a tomb of Interstate 880 concrete a n d steel, w as in critical- stable condition at Highland General H ospital in O ak­ land with som e slight im provem ent, hospital officials said. Engineer Steven W hipple, hailed as a hero of the rescue, said he was checking the fallen double-deck freewav for stability on Saturdav w h e n he spotted the back of H elm 's head w ith his flashlight, a n d then saw a han d w ave at him. "It sto p p ed m v heart. I th o u g h t m avbe the w ind was blow ing and th a t's w h a t caused it. 1 th o u g h t 1 might be losing it,” said W hipple, 29. The n u m b e r of d ead pulled from the 1-880 disaster rose to 38, including a 4-vear-old boy, bringing the e a rthq uake's toll to 59, w ith th o u s a n d s injured and homeless an d doz e n s still missing. Dam age estimates topp ed $7 billion, m aking the quake the costliest n a tu ­ ral disaster in U.S. history. Baseball com m issioner Fay Vincent a n n o u n c e d S u n ­ day that the World Series w o uld not resum e until Fri­ day night, three davs later th a n originally h op e d. The cha m p io n sh ip betw een the O akland As and the San Francisco Giants was s u s p e n d e d the night of the quake. Sun d a y w as a day for both m o u rn in g the dead and giv ing th a n k s for the living at chu rch es across the Bav area. Special services were set because som e da m a ge d churches rem ain too dang erou s, and congregants prav- ing for peace with the Earth were encouraged to share their quake experiences. "Bv the u ncertainties of this hour, w e pray to be fu rther suffering," A rchbishop John spared Q u in n told 700 people at St. M a n 's C athedral here. from "W e prav that we may be spared further e a rth ­ q uakes," Q u in n said. "W e pray for all those w h o have suffered heavv losses. 1 w eep for the paren ts, for the elderlv, for the children. I prav for the relief of suffering and anxiety. 1 cann ot forget to prav for the dead an d the b ere a v ed ." In O akland, parishioners of the St. Francis d e Salles Cathedral h a d to move services to a Baptist church be­ cause the cathedral's tow er w a s filled with cracks an d leaning precariously. "S om etim es in life, God shakes us and says, 'P ay attention, there is s om e thing more im portant th a n the Marina-area residents sort through donated clothing. Marc Fort Daily Texan Staff ordinary things in y o u r life,"' Father Joseph Pow ers said. "It w a s n 't just the gro u n d that shook Tuesday, the earth qu ake shook a lot of things that we do — the ordinary things on o ur a g e n d a ," Pow ers said. Helm regained som e function in his kidneys, d a m ­ aged by severe dehyd ratio n, an d his lung condition im proved slightly, Dr. Will Fry said. He was still in the intensive care unit, a n d still was having difficulty m ov­ ing his left leg. "H e is not out ot the w o od s vet," Fry said. A non-sm oker, Helm had high blood p ressu re a n d mild diabetes that did not require insulin before the earthquake. "I think it's more am azin g that he has been able to come through as well as he has d espite those medical pro blem s," Fry said. " H e 's prov en that he has a strong will to live." Crew s sawed the fallen five-lane section of the u p p e r deck of the Bay Bridge in half and lifted on e section d o w n to a barge for repairs Sunday. Marc Fort Daily Texan Oakland firefighters still probe the rubble of the collapsed section of Interstate 880 in search of survivors Bush’s abortion veto unlikely to be overridden Associated Press W A SH IN G T O N — Abortion rights a d v o ­ little cates conceded S u nd ay chance of overriding President Bush's veto of a bill allowing Medicaid to pay for abor­ tions for victims of rape or incest. they have But pro-choice law m akers a n d lobbyists said they still will p u t u p a fight to override Bush's veto on the $157 billion Labor- Health a n d H u m a n Services ap prop riatio ns bill. "T he outlook for an override is not g o o d ," said Marcv Wilder, a staff attorney for the National Abortion Rights Action League, a main pro-choice lobbying group. While the Senate a p p ro v e d the sp e n d in g bill, including relaxation of the Medicaid abortion restrictions, last T h u rsd a y by a 67- 31 vote, the H o use vote a w eek earlier w as 216-206, far short of the two-thirds that would be n e e d e d to override the veto. Bush is also threatening to veto two other p e n d in g pieces of legislation over abortion- related issues: a District of Columbia a p p r o ­ priations bill allowing Medicaid to pav for all abortions for p oo r w o m e n in the n a ­ tion's capital, and a foreign operation s bill that w ould lift restrictions on fu nd in g U nit­ ed N ations' family p la n n in g programs. Sen. Bob Packw ood, R-Ore., a longtime leader of pro-choice forces in C ongress, ac­ kn ow ledged the prospects for an override in the H ouse no w are slim, but he su g g e st­ ed that C ongress keep passing the sam e ap- “Clearly, we’ll try to override. Clearly, that’s probably not going to happen, so he wins.” — Rep. Pat Schroeder, D -C olo. propriations bill. If Republicans lose next m o n th 's g u b e r­ natorial races to pro-choice D em ocrats in Virginia and N ew Jersey, Packwood p re ­ dicted, "you m ay see a chance the H o u se " to override a Bush abortion veto the second or third time a rou nd. in Packwood, in terv iew ed on Cable N ew s N e tw o rk 's Evans & Novak sho w , said Re­ publican law m akers are shifting u n d e r pressu re from c o nstituents tow ard a more pro-choice stance. "The people in mv party are talking about this issue a nd are frightened to d eath of it, a n d they s u d d e n ly see that the tide has tu r n e d ,” Packwood said. Bush vetoed the m easure Saturdav at C am p David, in M aryland w h ere he sp e n t the w eekend af­ ter returning from Friday's tour of e a rth ­ quake d am ag e in n o rth e rn California. the presidential retreat Bush said he w as unwilling to permit federal fun d in g of abortions "o th e r than those in which the life of the m o th er w ould be en d a n g e re d if the fetus w ere carried to te rm ." That is how the Medicaid law has stood since 1981, he noted. Bush personally believes rape a n d incest victims should have a legal right to obtain an abortion, but he is unwilling to pav for the p ro ced ure for poor w o m e n . D ouglas Johnson, legislative director of the National Right to Life C om m ittee, praised Bush for keeping his cam paign com m itm ent on abortion. H e said his group, the leading anti-abortion lobby, is urging its m em bers to contact m em bers ot the H ou se to up ho ld the veto. Rep. Pat Schroeder, D-Colo., a pro- choice law m aker, said, "Clearlv, we'll try to override. Clearlv, t h a t ' s probably not going to h a p p e n , so he wins " She said that vetoing the Labor-HHS bill threatens fu nding for essential health and h u m a n services program s. "His veto is sto p p in g the g o v e rn m e n t," she said. Anti-tank weapon helps Cambodia Associated Press BANGKOK, Thailand — Sophisticated anti­ tank w e a p o n s have helped C a m b o d ian guerrillas score u n p re c e d e n ted victories against the Viet­ nam -backed go vernm ent, according to W estern diplom ats a n d senior resistance officials. "This is the m ost im p ortant w e a p o n we have ever received," said Gen Dien Del, d e p u ty com ­ m a n d e r of the K hm er People's National Liber­ ation Front. "W e can n ow d efe n d ourselves against ta n k s." The Liberation Front a n d a n o th e r guerrilla fac­ tion reportedlv have received several h u n d r e d armor-piercing, anti-tank rockets in the past few m onths. The w e a p o n s w ere used in the recent offen­ sive in n o rth w e s te rn Cam bodia, in which g u e r­ rillas seized several key to w ns a n d a n u m b e r of go ve rnm e n t military positions, according to W estern diplom ats a n d guerrilla sources inter­ view ed last week. The Liberation Front and a gro u p loyal to Prince N orod om Sihan ou k are loosely allied with the C o m m u n ist K hm er Rouge in a w ar against C am bodia's V ietn am -sup po rted g overnm ent, which was installed after Vietnam invaded C a m ­ bodia in late 1978 a n d ou ste d the K hm er Rouge from power. The newly acquired w e a p o n s are the West G erm an 67mm A rm brust, the 84mm Swedish Carl G ustav a n d the 89mm French LRAC, sav the diplom ats a n d resistance sources. Both the A rm b rust a n d the G ustav came to the th ro u g h Singa­ tw o n on -C o m m u n ist factions pore, while the French w e a p o n s prov id ed only to the Sihano uk g ro u p came as part of a larger package of w ea p o n s from France earlier this year, according to the sources. France has d en ied sh ip p in g w e a p o n s to the resistance. "W e receive m any w e a p o n s ... we d o n 't know w h ere they come from or w h o pays for them. I d o n 't know an d I d o n 't w a n t to k n o w ," said Dr. Abdul Gaffar, the Liberation Front's senior mili­ tary analyst. Senior resistance sources, w h o requested a n o ­ nymity, said they p r e ssu re d the United States and key Asian s u p p o rte r s to help them acquire the w eapon s. More recently the resistance ar­ gued the w e a p o n s w o u ld be vital to an offensive plan ned to begin im m ediately after last m o n th 's pullout of V ietnam ese forces from Cambodia. Details of Honduran crash begin to surface Associated Press TEGUCIGALPA, H o n d u r a s — A Boeing 727 shook violently a n d seem ed to plung e just be­ fore it crashed in flames into a hillside, killing 131 people, a badly b u rn e d survivor said S u n ­ day. "They told us to p u t on o u r seat belts for land ­ to ing, and shake, like air turbulen ce," said Evenor Lopez, a H o n d u r a n b usinessm an. the plane began th e n s u d d e n ly "But it w en t on for a long time, a n d we seem ed to be d escen ding too rapidly. Some peo­ ple w ere scream ing," Lopez said in an inter­ view. Investigators from the N ational Air T ran spo r­ tation Safety Board arrived S u n d a y from the U nited States aboard a Coast G u a rd plane and w e n t directly to the site of S a tu rd a y 's crash. The p lan e was operated bv the H o n d u ra n air­ line TAN-SAHSA. A uthorities said J31 of th e 146 people aboard w ere killed. U.S. Embassy sp o kesm an Terry Kneebone said there w ere 15 Am ericans aboard. “They told us to put on our seat belts for landing, and then sud­ denly the plane began to shake, like air turbulence.” — Evenor L opez, survivor o f Honduran air crash Airline officials said three of the 15 survivors w ere American. U.S. officials in W ashington a n d H o n d u ra s is­ sued partial lists of fatalities with no ho m e to w ns or ages for m a n y of th e victims. They included: G regory Paglia, a U.S. Marine stationed in Nicaragua; Daniel Yurista, 37, Prai­ rie Farms, Wis.; E d u a rd o A podaca, 49, San Luis Obispo, Calif.; Maria Esther A podaca, 50, San Luis Obispo, Calif.; Charles Friederich, W a sh ­ ington, D.C.; Robert Hebb, 42, U.S. Agency for International D evelo pm ent em ployee; Connie Montealegre, 68; C harles Kendall xMorrow, G randview , Mo.; Michael O 'S hea, Costa Rica; a n d Marv Weaver. U.S. em b a ssy sp o k e sm a n Mark Jacobs said he could not identifv o th e r U.S. citizens until rela­ tives w ere notified. The plane's "black box” recorder w as flown to W ashington for analysis, said Barry Trotter, leader of the Safety Board team. TAN-SAHSA Flight 414 crashed Saturday morning on a hill 20 miles south of Tegucigalpa while on a flight from San Jose, Costa Rica, with a stop in M anagua, Nicaragua. Maj. A lejandro Arguello, director of Nicara­ gua's civil aeronautics, q uoted regional air con­ trollers as saying the roof of the plane tore away before the crash. It was the w orst air crash in Central American history. A m ong the d e a d were the H o n d u ra n Minister of Labor, A rm a n d o Blanco Paniagua; and Mario Rodriguez Cubero, an aide tv) Costa Rican president O scar Arias. Two Americans, Kurt Shaeffer a nd Eugene Van Dvke, were evacuated to U.S. hospitals. Jacobs identified Van Dyke as an e m p lo yee of the U.S. Agency for International D e velopm ent in Tegucigalpa a n d said he w as taken to a bu rn center at Brooks Air Force Base in Texas. Associated Press Ecuadorean fighter crashes during stunt GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador — An air force fighter plane that was perform ing air s tu n ts crashed into a residential neig h b o rh o o d on the outskirts of this port city S unday, killing nine people, officials said. The plane de stroyed four h o u s ­ es as it hurtled d o w n into the s u b ­ urb of La Atarazana, n ear the air force base of Guayaquil, a bout 170 miles so u th w e st of Q uito, Red Cross official E du a rd o Estrada said. A m ong the d ea d w as th e pilot, Capt. E duardo Arias, Estrada said. The other victims, including two children, w ere area residents, police said. No injuries w ere reported. The plane, a jet fighter, was an Israeli-made Kfir, according to air force sources. Such a plane u su a l­ the ly carries only one pilot, sources said on condition of a n o ­ nymity. ‘Hijab’ debated in France girls PARIS — The decision bv three Northf African to wear Moslem head coverings to junior high school has exploded into an intense national debate over relig­ ion in public schools. At issue is the secularitv of e d u ­ cation e n sh rin e d in French law since th e official separation of the church a n d the state in this largely Rom an Catholic country' in 1905. Some argue that w earing the "hija b ," a scarf that covers the hair, ears a n d neck, is ta n ta m o u n t to proselytism. About 400 people shou ting "G o d is great!" in Arabic d e m o n ­ strated in Paris on S un d a y to s u p ­ port the teen-agers. W om en w e a r­ ing M osle m carried ban n e rs that said: "T he hijab is ou r h o n o r." sc a rv e s the The dem o nstration w as called bv Islamic Association of France a n d the Voice of Islam, which organized d em o n stra tio n s a few m o n th s ago against the Sal­ man Rushdie novel The Satanic Verses. The tw o g rou ps, how ever, a minority ot rep resent only Moslems in France. Vietnam ties questioned W A SH IN G TO N — The Bush to reluctan ce a d m in is tr a tio n 's grant diplomatic recognition to V ietnam stems from the bitter leg­ acy of military defeat, say a h a n d ­ ful of c on gressm en w h o argue that Vietnam has met U.S. re­ qu ire m e nts for im proving ties. "We're p u n ish in g Vietnam tor inflicting a verv em barrassing fail­ ure on the U.S." 14 years ago, said Rep. Robert Mrazek. D-N.Y. the administration Sen. Robert Kerrev, D-Neb., w h o lost part of a leg in Vietnam, said "isn 't thinking through its Asian policy very well. It is driven bv the same lack of u n d e rsta n d in g that led us to the bum bling mistakes of Viet­ n a m ." That arg u m e n t, how ever, is re­ jected bv administration officials and w hat a p pears to be a majority in Congress. "O bviously there's a bitter lega- cv but it d o e sn 't dictate o u r poli­ cy," said a senior a dm inistration official, w h o spoke only on c o n d i­ tion of anonvm itv. EDITORIALS T i n D a i l y T l x \ \ Page 4 M onday, October 2 3 . 1989 T H E D A ILY TEXAN Editorial Board Karen Adams Steve Crawford Associate Editor Editor A ssociate Editor Greg W einer Viewpoint opinions expressed in The DaUy Texan are those of the editor and writer of the article They are not necessarily those of the University adm inistra­ tion. the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of O perating Trustees Opinions expressed in Dissenting Opinions and staff or guest co l­ umns are those of the writer Letters subm itted to Firing Line should be fewer than 250 words, and guest columns should be no more than 800 words Bring subm issions to The Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, or mail them to The D aily Texan, P.O. Box D Austin Tx 78713 Letters may be edited for length, libel and Texan grammar, punctuation style F ightin' W ords Banning speech won't stop racism Ge o r g e C a rlin m u s t b e b e a m in g . 1 h e U n i v e r s i ty o f C a lif o r n ia , in a g a lla n t e ffo rt to p r o ­ m o te a w a r e n e s s , h a s is s u e d a list o f M o r e th a n S e v e n D irty W o r d s Y o u C a n ' t U s e o n U C C a m p u s e s . T h e u s e of w o r d s u n a c c e p ta b l e to U C P r e s i d e n t D av id G a r d n e r 's a d m in i s tr a t io n is n o w p u n is h a b l e , a c c o r d in g to th e s t u d e n t - c o n d u c t c o d e , b y a re p rim a n d , or in p a rtic u la rly h a r s h c a s e s , d ism issa l. T h e p o licy m i g h t n o t s e e m so, u h , o ffen siv e, w h e n y o u c o n s i d e r th e list of o b je c t io n a b l e w o r d s — n a m e l y , " f i g h t i n g w o r d s . " N o t to be r a v a g e d b y v a g u e n e s s , U C d e f in e s " f i g h t i n g w o r d s " as " t h o s e p e r s o n a lly a b u s iv e e p it h e t s w h ic h , w h e n d ire ctly a d ­ d r e s s e d to a n y o r d in a r y p e r s o n , a re ... likely to p r o v o k e a v io len t r e a ctio n w h e t h e r o r n o t th e y a c tu a lly d o so. " S u c h w o rd s in c lu d e , b u t are n o t lim ited to, t h o s e te rm s w id e ­ ly re c o g n iz e d to b e d e r o g a t o r y r e f e r e n c e s to race, e th n ic ity , relig ­ ion, sex, sex u al o r ie n ta t io n , d isa b ility a n d o t h e r p e rs o n a l c h a r a c ­ t e r i s tic s ." W ell, s h u t m y m o u t h . Y o u 'd th in k a d e c e n t in s t it u t io n , like th e U n iv e rsity o f C a lif o r ­ nia or th e U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s , w o u ld b e a b le to e d u c a t e its s t u ­ d e n ts o u t o f u s in g s e n s e l e s s rh e to r ic for big o te d p u r p o s e s . B ut U C c a n 't or w o n 't , so it h a s c h o s e n to g a g s t u d e n t s in stea d . C h a lk o n e u p for s e n s e l e s s rh e to ric . W e r e U C really i n t e r e s te d in s n u ff in g o u t rac ism , se x is m , h o m o p h o b ia a n d o t h e r f o r m s o f b ig o try , it w o u ld c o n c e n t r a t e o n o p e n n e s s a n d a w a r e n e s s , n o t p o lic e -e n fo rc e d sile n c e . W o r s e y e t, th e p o lic y c o n c e i v a b ly e x t e n d s — or at le ast co u ld s n o w b a ll in to e x t e n d i n g — to n o n -p r e ju d ic ia l o f f e n s i v e n e s s . In n a y - s a y in g s p e e c h o b j e c t i o n a b l e to " a n y o rd in a ry p e r s o n , " U C e ffe c tiv e ly p r e - e m p t s a n y real a tt e m p t at e d u c a t io n . E n g lish p r o f e s s o r s , th e o re tic a lly , ca n no lo n g e r c ritiq u e lite rary w o rk s th e ir s t u d e n t s e n j o y — s t u d e n t s m ig h t be o ff e n d e d . N o r c a n political s c ie n c e p r o f e s s o r s criticize G e o r g e B u sh in th e p r e s ­ e n c e o f s t u d e n t R e p u b li c a n s . W h ic h re e k s, c o n s i d e r i n g th at e d u c a t io n n e c e ssa r ily in v o lv e s p ro v o c a t io n . U C 's n e w b ra n d o f in o f fe n s iv e le a r n in g e x c lu d e s a n y t h o u g h t s t u d e n t s a r e n 't c o m f o r t a b l e w ith. D o n 't th in k , U C s a y s, u n l e s s th e t h o u g h t k e e p s y o u c o m p la c e n t. F o r g e t U C 's fla g ra n t d is r e g a r d for th e First A m e n d m e n t — th a t's o b v io u s . If y o u 'r e g o i n g to m a n d a t e sile n c e in th e n a m e o f o p e n n e s s , at le a st d o it e f f e c tiv e ly . If y o u w a n t to e lim in a te b i g o ­ try, try to e lim i n a t e b ig o te d id e a s , n o t ju st th e ir e x p r e s s i o n . A n d d o n 't d o it a t th e e x p e n s e o f o t h e r o f f e n s i v e s t a t e m e n t s . O f f e n d ­ ing p e o p le 's th o u g h t s y s t e m s is t h e o n ly w a y to e x p o s e th e m to d iffe re n t o n e s . The U T ad h o c C o m m i t t e e o n R acial H a r a s s m e n t , w h ic h is c u rre n tly f o r m in g a p o licy for th e U n iv e rs ity , o u g h t to learn from I C 's m is ta k e . T h e U C p o licy is m o r e o b je c t io n a b l e th a n th e w o rd s it p r o h ib its. N o o f f e n s e , P r e s i d e n t G a r d n e r . — Grey W ei tier For years A m erican leaders have im plored rulers of the Sov iet Union to grant more freedom to Soviet citizens. Now, President Bush is applaud­ ing Mikhail G orbachev for his re­ forms, while sim ultaneously pro­ posing legislation that will erode the civil rights of Am ericans. Bush is right to praise G orba­ chev, for under his reign a freer climate within the Soviet Union is beginning to em erge. G orbachev has instigated som e new policies in favor of civil rights, including the newly established C ongress of People's Deputies. In fact, G orba­ in chev recently held a which he conferred with hum an- rights activist Andrei Sakharov. I hus, not only is Soviet society gradually becom ing more tolerant of dissent, G orbachev is also at­ tempting to deal with the demand by the people for reform. forum Dissent is nothing new for Am ericans, though. We live in a country where the right to disa- Lisa McDonald TEXAN COLUMNIST gree with the governm ent is taken though, for granted. Recently, many of our cou ntry's leaders have proposed various legislation that would in effect limit the civil rights of Am ericans. though For exam ple, P resident Bush fa­ vors a "m o m en t of silen ce" for in public prayer or m editation schools, even the Su ­ prem e Court ruled this unconsti­ tutional. Many would argue that since a m om ent of silence is not prom oting a particular faith, it is not unconstitutional. H ow ever, in the Bill of Rights Am ericans are guaranteed of church and state, which m eans not only freedom of religion, but freedom from religion. separation the Bush also wants to make the G. TTT ■ * V ' LBJ School not place for condom ads Condom ads in the hallw ays? O nly at the Alexis Dalianis Kevin Gutzman TEXAN COLUMNISTS ed) and then tells the reader to worry about how he can get AIDS. The m ethods of trans­ mission it lists are: having sexual intercourse with an infected partner, sharing an infected person's needle and being born to an infected mother. LBJ School. If you haven't had the good fortune to stroll through Sid Richardson Hall of late, you've missed the opportunity to be bom bard­ ed with the condom ind u stry's AIDS m essage. I he sources are the glossy ads for condom s on every flat surface in the building. In fact, in the lounge, the lovely posters touting the virtues of condom s are arrayed on contiguous walls, thus approximating a 3-D effect. Perhaps the nicest one of all reads: "W an t him to use a condom ? Just ask. 'Can I help you with that?' " The first two sentences appear in a white fram e, and the second is attributed to som eone unseen operating in the dark. It's a truly lovely, edifying im age to confront on the way to class. For those with sensitive stom achs, the poster reading, "W hat have you got against a con­ dom ?" might be more popular. I he im petus behind these posters is provid­ ed by the W om en's Issues Netw ork (WIN). The m em bers have decided that each month the group will take on a different issue. O ctober is "A ID S A w areness M o n th " at WIN, although it's dubious that anyone at the LBJ School lacks AIDS aw areness. After all, i s the place where the proceeds from last year's blood drive were earm arked for AIDS patients. t h i s Two questions are brought to mind by the W IN 's tasteful, thoughtful poster cam paign: Is AIDS a "w om en's issu e " (it there is such a thing)? Are condom ads the most effective way to prom ote AIDS aw areness? I he answ er to each of these questions is ob­ viously no. l he posters do less to educate than to shock those subjected to them . The city of New York is notorious for using these tactics in its subw ays. An advertizing agency there will volunteer its services for the "public-service an­ n o u ncem ents" and since the city is the recipi­ ent of the services, the ads go unregulated. This allows ad agencies to win aw ards and get recognition for ads that would never be accept­ ed by m ajor television stations or new spapers. AIDS aw areness ads are the most notable type of shock ad. A com m on one in the New York subways show s a w om an's sequined ev e­ ning bag on a bed. Spread around the bag, as if having been spilled out of it, are a lipstick, a com pact, a few dollars, a key ring, a purse-size atom izer and a condom . The ad says som ething like, "D o n 't leave hom e w ithout it." The idea is that you may be having sex with anyone at any time, so you should alw ays carry a condom . For those who d on't care to travel all the way to the east side of cam pus to view these lovely posters, they are also on display at the Student Health Center. They are posted next to signs that explain the difference betw een a cold and the flu, signs that ask for blood donations and signs that warn of the dangers of drugs and alcohol. Isn't this w here they belong? In fact, of all the posters relating to AIDS- aw areness plastered on the walls of Sid R ich­ ardson Hall, only one actually attem pts to ed u ­ cate. lists many w ays AIDS cannot be transm itted (or at least activities with w hich no reported cases o f AIDS have yet been associat­ It Again one m ight ask: Are any of these m eth­ ods of contracting AIDS exclusive to w om en? No. The m essage of the posters is not about sharing needles or about family planning for women with AIDS. The posters are nothing more than a m eans to advertise condom s and promiscuity. The posters fail to m ention the most obvious way to avoid contracting AIDS. The posters should read: "A void AIDS. Keep your pants o n ." If such posters w ere to appear next to the condom ads on the walls, the left (of which there is no shortage at th 1 LBJ School) would to im pose our own predictably cry: "D o n 't t morality on m e!" Isn't a condom ad an ad­ vertisem ent for sexual prom iscuity? Isn't that an im position of m orality (or in thi-> case, im ­ morality)? While the W om en's Issues N etw ork is con­ cerned with converting the rest of the world to its way of thinking, one can 't help but w onder to what we can look forward in the m onths to come. For the sake of those of us w ho have to walk to class through the halls of the LBJ School on a daily basis, let's hope next m onth it's not "P rop er Use o f the National O rganization for W om en's At-H om e Abortion Kits M o n th ." Dalianis is a second-year public affairs student. Gutzman is a fourth-year law/public affairs student. am endm ent banning flag desecra­ tion was proposed. The bill was defeated, but it had been support­ ed by many A m ericans who ar­ gued that the values em bodied in the flag must be protected. But these ideals which the flag sym ­ bolizes are the very principles that allow for free expression. Surprisingly, support for these types of bills is not limited by par­ ty. This is because many politi­ cians are afraid that by opposing a m andatory Pledge or by support­ ing the right to burn a flag, they will be labeled "u n -A m erican ." But what could be more un- American than sitting back silent­ ly as the very foundations of this country are chipped away? Politicians are not the only ones to advocate legislation that would limit civil rights. There have al­ ways been groups w ho attem pt to ban books w hich they consider objectionable. H ow ever, one per­ son does not have the right to de­ cide w hat is proper reading or view ing material for another. W hat many people don't realize is that by limiting the rights of in­ dividuals by w hat the m ajority considers acceptable, decent or patriotic, they put them selves at the mercy of this sam e control should they ever find them selves in the minority. The governm ent of the United States was designed to protect the rights of every indi­ vidual, even w hen that individu­ al's beliefs differ from the opinion of the m ajority. is irony The sad that many Am ericans are applauding the So­ viet Union for its steps forward in the area of civil liberties, while they are allow ing Am erica to be dragged backw ards. W e cannot al­ low ourselves to grow com placent about our rights. If w e Am ericans don't actively strive to protect our own civil rights, we take the risk of com ing just a little closer to the type of repression w e have urged the Soviet Union to abolish. McDonald is a Plan 11 freshm an. ^ f H Z 2 ? r 4 1 ■■■OF cjdukse rm r's COMPLETELY W ffF E U T j V of course ^ i l i ' Pledge of Allegiance m andatory. Yet, for the last 45 years nearly every state and federal court has upheld only laws which make the Pledge voluntary. The reason be- hind making the Pledge voluntary is that pledging allegiance to a symbol violates the beliefs of som e religious groups. Most recently, a constitutional Bush — stop preaching and start practicing human rights W hat is going on here? Affirmative action no threat C olum nists Dalianis and G u t/m an are very lucky ("D iscrim ination institutional­ ized, accepted on UT cam p u s," The Dady Texan, Thursday). If they are like the vast majority of their white friends, they were right' side of the railroad raised on the tracks, in a sate, clean neighborhood I heir parents and friends spoke the same English they had to learn in school and probably had enough education to help them with their schoolw ork or enough money to hire a tutor. Dalianis and G u t/m a n fit nicely into so­ ciety, seeing w hite people on television, reading about w hite people in books. In schcxil they are surrounded by their white friends and read books by fam ous white men w hose ideas are part of the culture which has nourished and supported them. Dalianis and G u t/m an are not likely to have been screwed by the unconstitutional school financing system in Texas. If they want to get a job to help them through their school, em ployees may look at resum es instead of their skin color or last names. Perhaps som eday they'll realize that the one black student in their European histo­ ry' class, even if he/she did score 100 few er points on the SAT, has probably overcom e more obstacles and accom plished more than they ever will. If, given all their cultural advantages, they feel threatened by a relatively small and ineffective affirm ative action program, they are truly pathetic. Bill Saphir Physics Article shows racist fear We live in a time w hen the few inroads that have been made by m inorities in the United States (regardless of their ethnic background) are questioned on the basis of how they affect non-m inorities. W hile this is a legitim ate concern (insofar as af­ firmative action degenerates into an anar­ chic quota system ), the essen ce of the ar­ gum ent of those opposed to affirm ative institutionalized, action ("D iscrim ination accepted on UT cam p u s," The Daily Texan, Ihursday) is that m inorities do not d e­ serve to reach the social and econom ic lev­ els that a large proportion of non-m inori­ ties have already achieved. This is so because increased access by m inorities to the bastions of econom ic and political power threatens the m onopoly held by non-m inorities in governm ent, business and other walks of life. As a son of im m igrants w ho have strug­ gled mightily to raise me, I am deeply of­ fended by the statem ents m ade by Dali­ from an anis and G utzm an. 1 com e econom ically disadvantaged family, and I, too, am accum ulating debt to com plete my graduate education. I am not a m em ber of "favored ca ste" who receives "race- a based h a n d o u ts." Th e "h a n d o u ts" that I have received are based solely on my achievem ents — on my ability to deliver what I prom ise. Perhaps Dalianis and G ut/m an are very aw are of the potential of m inorities, otherw ise, they would not be arguing against our advancem ent in so­ ciety. (An aside: Since my surnam e is not Spanish, even though I am of a Latin American background, I resent being clas­ "w h ite with Spanish sur­ sified as a n am e.") jaim e E. Li zar raga Second-year public affairs Melton's mud smears Mattox After reading Jennifer M elton's editorial "M attox m ud-slinging tactics hinder gu­ bernatorial h o p es" (The Daily Texan, T u es­ day), my colleague and I felt as if Jim M at­ taken an unfair beating from tox had M elton's pro-Richards stance. M elton's opinion on how "all the mud is ju st hurting his [M attox'sJ im age" is total crap! M ost of Richards' popularity is due to her m udslinging attack of G eorge Bush at the 1988 D em ocratic C onvention. C on­ trary to M elton's opinion, Richards "th e mud q u een " and President Bush are living proof that Am ericans love the best mud­ slingers. In m entioning Barney Frank, the hom o­ sexual congressm an, she said that the peo­ ple of M assachusetts "fo rg a v e " him and elected him to another term. M aybe (at the risk of sounding far-fetched) he had better cam paign platform s. She said, "T h o se [candidates] w ho did not confess their vices or m istakes, such as M ichael Dukakis, Gary Hart and John Tower, w ere convicted by the press and sentenced to political exile by their parties and the Am erican p e o p le ." So are you saying that if Hart had confessed to sleep­ ing with D onna Rice he would have been the D em ocratic candidate for president? Tower prom ised never to drink again and the Am erican people still w ouldn't sup­ port a "re co v erin g " alcoholic. Your editorial was actually, as you would put it, a "sm ear cam p aign " against Mattox. I would like to let you know that we and several of our friends will take great pride in negating and reversing your vote. Tobi Padwick Pre-med Britt Sadler Liberal arts A a • • . . • Austinites trying to nd city of pornography during awareness week T h e D a i l y TEXAN Monday, October 23,1989 Page A strator and ow ner of Long's Vaccu- um Cleaner C om pany, located at 2118 S. Congress — adjacent to the theater — said he w ould like to see the building turned into a dollar m ovie house. "I've lived in this neighborhood all my life, and prostitution was never a problem until the theater came along. N ow there are about five to seven w ho work this street every night," said Long, pointing across the street to a wom an he claimed w as a prostitute. Long also said the theater exposes unsuitable material to 13- and 14- year-old children w ho walk from the residential area behind the the­ ater to the junior high school across the street. "The m anagem ent is pretty good about running kids off w hen they try to look inside and checking for IDs, but I see kids looking in the w indow s at the pornographic tapes in the lobby,” he said. the Em ployees theater inside w ould not com m ent on the protest­ ers except to say "business usually slow s dow n w hen those people are outside." the Both Derrick and Long said pa­ trons of theater som etim es trespass over fences in the nearby residential neighborhood and per­ form sexual acts in people's yards. "One of the theater's customers came into a couple's back yard, ex­ posed him self to their children and in front of began masturbating them ," Derrick said. Long m entioned incidents in which he found half-naked m en in his back yard. "I even chased one to a car parked in the theater's parking lot once," he said. Peggy O w en, w ho also lives near Cinema West, said she has never had problems with the theater's pa­ trons. "I'd rather the theater wasn't there, but I think they have the right to be there," O w en said. Jim and Ruby Cowan, w ho said they have lived in the neighborhood theater began since before the show ing pornographic 10 films years ago, said the theater s busi­ ness has been gradually fading away. "They used to take every parking place around our hom e every day," Jim said. "N ow , except for w hen they get a new m ovie in once a m onth, hardly anybody park s around here." Steve Higginbotham Daily T e x a n Staff Displaying signs that read "Porn = rape," "Porn enslaves" and "Our com m unity deserves better," m em ­ bers of the American Family A ssoci­ ation picketed a South Austin por­ nographic theater Friday to bring attention to the upcom ing Pornog­ raphy Awareness Week. Rory Derrick, assistant director of the family association, said the or­ ganization regularly pickets a select­ ed pornographic shop every month. On Friday, the protesters chose the Cinema W est A dult Theatre, at 2130 S. Congress Ave. — one of the oldest pornographic theaters in the city — to kick off Pornography A w areness W eek, w hich runs through the last w eek of October. "Pornography, according to city ordinances, is illegal," Derrick said, but explained that a grandfather clause in the city law allow s busi­ nesses that operated before the law passed to keep their doors open. W eldon Long, another dem on- Ex-deputy shoots desk, not himself Diana Williams Daily T exa n Staff A former Travis County sheriff's deputy barricaded him self for three hours Friday in a portable building after concerned relatives called A us­ tin Police Department headquarters to report his suicide threats. Sgt. Fred Rodriguez said Dana Bingham, 37, of 6302 Látigo Pass, barricaded him self with a handgun and a box of am m unition in a porta­ ble building adjacent to Quick Flix Movie/VCR Rentals at 5814 U.S. 290 West. Because Bingham w as armed and the building was situated along a busy h ig h w a y , p olice officers blocked traffic on the road for al­ most an hour as negotiators tried to approach the man. Additionally, police officers told people standing in the possible line of fire in the area to hide behind cars, trees and other buildings. Rodriguez said officers attem pted to talk to Bingham through a tele­ phone system set up at the location. But police did not apprehend him until negotiators persuaded him to open the building door and talk face-to-face with officers, he said. Lt. Gary Barrington of the depart­ m ent's Special M issions Team said w hen Bingham opened the door, tw o that team members noticed Bingham's handgun was not within his reach. After a short struggle, members handcuffed the man — escorting him to a police car parked behind the video store. Barrington said although Bing­ ham fired the gun into a desk before team members arrived, no one was injured in the incident. Curtis W eeks, Travis County Sheriff's Department spokesm an, said Bingham worked with the force from 1979 to 1983 and held a job briefly in the departm ent's internal affairs department. Bingham left the departm ent to begin a com puter business, he said. BJ6TW TD0G S unglasses SAVE 20-50% H o n Entire Stock of Su ng lass j j I SUNGt A S ifiM llIl SUNGLASSES by BAUSCH & LOMB WAYFARERS® CATS CLUBM ASTER OUTOOORSMAN The University Co-op's 3rd Annual Addison-W esley Fall Book Fair 20% off Through October 28th Featuring publications by A ddison W esley Publishing Com pany, including The Apple® T echnical Library, Lotus Books™, and the Benjam in/C um m ings P ublishing Com pany. Now is the perfect time to purchase titles for your personal reference library, office, or school. Take advantage of these savings on titles to fill your holiday gift list. We will sp ecial order titles that we do not currently have in stock and you w ill receive 20% o ff each title ordered. All of the titles included in this fair are located in the General Book department located on the second floor. ▲ ▼▼ dBASE IV \ 1 * == Z ~ ' - liiciiamcMiuiim ■ f » ; * r ¡ i | « T * " The e Book EUCTRBMIC MATfilAIS S O U R C E I I I TI C 1 1 1 1 • S ! General Books Second Floor WE WILL BEAT ANY RETAIL PRICE IN AUSTIN! 2021 Guadalupe Dobla Mall 2nd Laval 4 7 6 -0 1 7 1 UNIVERSITY CO OP 2 »(> G u a d a lu p e • -I T v " 1 1 I • Mon Fri 8:30 T 3 0 . Sat 9:30-6:00, Sun 12-5 Y m D a i l y T i w n Page 6 Monday, October 23, 1989 UNIVERSITY Report says women underrepresented in major magazines Larry Rowe Daily Texan Staff Austin leaders of a national w o m en 's m e ­ dia organization said Fridav that a recent report — sho w ing that three major new s magazines give little coverage to w o m e n — could indicate a d a n ge rou s trend in Am eri­ can society. W om en in C om m unications Inc. released the survey Tuesday exam ining the total specific references to w om en, the n u m b e r of ph o to g ra p h s featuring w o m e n and the num ber of articles w ritten by w om en in the September 1989 issues of Newsweek, Time and U S. News and World Report. . i v i i i . M i ' w r v u / i u i x t p u n a n u Li the to the to j According According survey, Newsweek survey, Newsweek three magazines. three magazines. ranked highest of ranked highest of the the W omen a pp eared in 17 percent of its refer­ ences, were featured in 33 percent of its photos and were attributed in 32 percent of its bylines. W omen were in 13 percent of Time's ref­ erences, 25 percent of its photos a n d 28 p e r­ cent of its bylines. U.S. Neivs ranked low­ est, featuring w o m e n in only 7 percent of its references, 21 percent of its pho to s and 23 percent of its bylines. Christine Richey, p resident of the UT chapter of W om en in C om m unications, called the results of the survey "really sa d ," especially because m uch of the magazines' material is no t related to gender. "W e're not just talking about w om en w ho have high positions," Richey said i M L i i e y b c u u . w n u u c i v t u i g n p u s i u u n s , "M any of the articles are about just people "M any of the articles are about just people in general. M ore than 50 percent of the in general. More than 50 percent of the population is w o m en, an d yet th ey're not being covered. "It's not just ridiculous. It's really sa d ," she said. Richey said the lack of coverage could be attributed to a shortage of female journal­ ists nationw ide, but this is less prevalent in UT publications than in national n e w s p a ­ pers and m agazines. "I think on the Uni­ versity level, it [the press] is m ore geared toward ability and style than g e n d e r ," she said. Laura Tuma, p resid en t of the Austin in C om m unications, chapter of W om en said the inadequate coverage of w o m e n is "probably more unintentional this point," but she stressed that it has "very v t i y u u i a n t - s u c s b t ' u u i c u u p u j i u , serious" implications for American society. serious" implications for American society. " O n e is that it simply p e rp e tu a te s the "O n e is that it simply p e rp e tu a te s the at i i a s idea that men belong in positions of power and w om en belong in subservient posi­ tions," Tuma said. "The w ay things are presented through the media give us a framework for the w ay w e think things should be." She said the results of the survey show that the struggle for equal rights is far from over, adding that younger w om en might find the situation discouraging. "I think there's a danger that younger wom en will not have that sam e leve! of am ­ bition because they see that not everything has been accom plished," she added. But Richey said she believes this drop in ambition am ong females can be prevented if the w om en's m ovem ent adopts a new u i n e w o m e n s m o v e m e n t a d o p t s a n e w strategy. strategy. "There are so m an y different w o m e n 's "There are so many different w om en's organizations, it just seem s like people are tired of it now ... it's almost becom e kind of like a cliche," said Richey, a broadcast jour­ nalism junior. "A new plan or strategy needs to be d e­ veloped ... a new w ay to present the facts that w ould make people want to listen," she said. The study was conducted bv junior Bridge, president of Unabridged C om m u­ nications — a consulting firm based in Al­ exandria, Va. Diana Pearson, director of com m unica­ tions at Newsweek, said Sunday that m aga­ zine officials will not com m ent on the sur­ vey's findings until editors have exam ined the actual study. t n e a c t u a l s t u a y . Officials at Time an d U.S. Neivs coulc Officials at Time and U.S. Neivs could not be reached for com m ent. be reached for com m ent. New company makes reaching out by phone cheaper for students L e s lie W i m b e r l e y Daily Texan Staff 'n' ' . ................. —....... ■ first week of business, a In its new telephone service that could save UT stu d e n ts a n d their parents h u n d re d s of dollars in m onthly p h o n e bi l l s has signed on 3 0 c u s ­ a n d has capacity for about t o m e r s 50,000 more, te lephone officials said last week. The service, o ffe re d bv A u stin - based (.'all H o m e A m eric a, allow s s tu d e n ts to call h o m e from anv- vhere in th e c o u n t r y tor m u c h less than usual long-distance costs using t^ fin usuai long-distance costs using a personal 800 n u m b e r to their p a r­ a personal 800 n u m b e r to their par- ents' house. ents' house. .inda Valdez, public relations di­ rector tor the service, said besides the convenience of the in-bound service for family m em bers and friends, the savings are also s u b ­ stantial. "You give o u t y o u r n u m b e r and you pay for them to call you, and you save m oney by having an in­ long-distance service a n d bound rate," Valdez said. She said the service, offered in conjunction with Call H om e's "sis­ dorm but the library or the stadium ter c o m p a n y " T ravis T elecom a n d ter c o m p a n y " Travis Telecom an d d orm but the library or the stad iu m bv th e UT E x -S tu d e n ts' A ssoc iation, it w orks a n y w h e re ," Schlesinger by the UT E x -Students'A ssociation, — it w orks a n y w h e re ," Schlesinger said. He a d d e d that 30 people al is b ein g m a r k e te d p rim a rily to the said. He a d d e d that 30 people al- is being m arketed primarily to the UT c o m m u n ity . ready have bough t the service after hearing about it from friends an d, d e p e n d in g on interest, Call H om e "h a s capacity for the entire U niver­ sity. "Call H o m e A m eric a h a s c h o s e n th e college m a rk e t as a m a in o n e , b u t it is g o o d for a n y b o d y w h o is a w a y from h o m e , " V alde z said Jeff S chlesinger, p r e s i d e n t of th e long d ista n c e c o m p a n y , said w hich installs an 800 existing h o m e a n y th e c o n tin e n ta l U nite d ca n be u s e d from a n y te le­ n e w th e service n u m b e r on p h o n e States p h o n e . in "Y ou can call n ot just fro m y o u r Kevin Tuerff, public relations di­ rector of the UT Ex-Students' A sso­ ciation, said the exes got involved because of the substantial benefits for alumni. H e said the association will receive a percentage from the p h o n e service m em bersh ip s yearly, but the a m o u n t will d e p e n d on how m any a m o u n t will d e p e n d on how m an y lines are sold. lines are sold. "As long as people are utilizing "A s long as people are utilizing the service, we will continue to get a d o n a tio n c o m p a n y ," Tuerff said, a d d in g that the p ercen t­ age will "directly or indirectly b e n e ­ fit scholarship p ro g ra m s." from the Diane Schwilling, AT&T media relations m an a g e r in Dallas, said d e ­ m a n d for AT&T's 800 n u m b e r se r­ vice is increasing within the h o u s e ­ hold market. "W e offer a 1-800 Readyline you can put on a regular p h o n e n u m ­ ber," Schwilling said. "W e are sell­ ing a lot of it to people to ul ing a lot of it to people to use in homes. It will do a n y th in g you hom es. It will do a n y th in g yo ur lo­ cal line will d o ." cal line will d o ." She said the basic fee for hoo k-up on AT&T's service is $97.50, and the basic m o nthly charge for the service is $20. Valdez said the service offered by Call H om e America d o es not charge a hook-up fee, a n d the m on th ly ser­ vice is only $3.75, plus usage. Schlesinger said unlike other companies, Call H o m e America ta­ bulates its c u stom ers' calls in six- second the first increm ents after m inute of calling time. ABLE R e p r in ts & D o t’s T y p in g 472-5353 C olor T oner a t t h e Touch o f a Button!! O ctober S p ecia l - 7 5 0 S piral B ind in gs! -22nd -20th M.L.K- a n a 2002-A G u ad alu p e St. We also Type: •Term P ap ers •T h esis • D isse rta tio n s •R esu m es M -F 8am - 10pm Sat 12-6, Sun 12-8 472-5353 Freshman Students Academic Preadvising I___________________________________________________i in the a re a s of business, com m unication, e ngineering, liberal arts, a n d n a t u r a l sciences. Friday, October 20,1989- Wednesday, November 1,1989 By appointm ent from 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. at FIRST Base, Student Services Building room 1.106 Call 471-LINK for m ore information oran appointment 'This service is highly recommended for freshm en students prior to m e e tin g with a faculty advisor. You can receive advice on courses to ta k e tins spring a nd learn more about your degree plan. If you are c o n te m p la tin g a c h a n g e of major, this is a good chance for you to -peak with preadvisors from both a r e a s sim ultaneously. 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Contact Lenses 1 pr. of each 89°° • Doctor:» Prescription Requ.red • E c a m s a v a ila b le at Our o ffic e • B & L Solsp.n or Soft m a le 8 Contact L e a s e s • Selected Frames OFFER V A L O W ITH COUPON THRU 10-31 U 9 OFFER VALID W ITH COUPON THRU 1 0 -3 1 -8 9 I | OFFER VALID W ITH COUPON THRU 1 0 -3 1 -8 9 STATE & LOCAL Austin walkathon raises thousands for AIDS patients I III I> \ 11 \ I I \ \ N Monday, October 23. 1989 Page 7 expect an overwhelming amount of support from fraternities and sorori­ ties, and I am really glad that I'm wrong.” Daniel Stuart, who represented Austin Affirmation, a Methodist support group for gay and lesbian concerns, said one group that surprised walkers with its absence was Mark Weaver and the Am eri­ can Family Association, which showed up at last vear's fund-raiser to demonstrate against gay men and lesbians. "W e were expecting [Weaver] to be here,” Stuart said. "W e think that as opposed like (Weaver], we think this is a really loving way to stop the spread of A ID S and help those who already are afflicted.” to people Some walkers Sundav sold paper masks of Weaver's face with the in­ scription "Bigot on a Stick." Clif Taylor, assistant director for the Austin Immune Health Clinic, said funding from the walkathon will help the clinic educate the com­ munity about A ID S and pay for treatments that complement A ID S drugs. Larry Rowe Daily T ex a n Staff M ore than 3,000 Austinites trekked an extra mile Sunday for people with A ID S in a 5-kilometer walkathon to raise money for Aus­ tin's battle against the deadly syn­ drome. The second annual walkathon — titled ''From All Walks of Life” — raised more than $91,000 in pledged funds as of 5 p.m. Sunday, with more money expected to filter in as participants turned in their dona­ tions. Last year's walkathon drew 2,000 people and raised $92,000. At the blow of a whistle at 3 p.m., about 150 speed walkers left their starting point at 11th Street near the south steps of the Capitol and were followed by a buoyant crowd of people who came representing themselves, businesses, churches and various organizations. Walkathon coordinator Dara Gray said 75 percent of the funds raised will go to A ID S Services of Austin, the agency the event. that sponsored Gray said the agency will use the money for services such as nursing care, food delivery and emergency financial assistance for A ID S pa­ tients and the expansion of A ID S educational programs. The other 25 percent of the funds will be divided between 10 commu- “We’re increasing our outreach efforts into a variety of different com­ munity groups.” — Dara Gray, walkathon coordinator nitv organizations for their AIDS-re- lated services. Gray, who called the walk ''the largest community effort addressing A ID S issues of the year,” said this year's work to recruit walkers was more successful than last year's. "W e 're increasing our outreach efforts into a variety of different communitv groups,” said. "Also, I think people's awareness about A ID S has increased since last year.” she Butch Meyer, representing the hair salon As You Like It Agnes, at 2300 Lake Austin Blvd., won the award for raising the most pledges. Two round-trip airline tickets to San Diego — donated by Tramex Travel at 9020 Capital of Texas Highway — were awarded to Meyer. Meyer, who raised $2,170, said his motivation was personal experi­ ence with the A ID S tragedy. "I'v e had a lot of friends die from this, so it kind of gave me the drive to help out as much as I can,” he said. " A lot of people were willing More than 3,000 participants begin the 5-kilometer walk to raise money for AIDS patients Sunday afternoon. J o e y Lin D aily T e x a n Staff to give — more than last vear.” Cammi Weller, one of many rep­ resentatives from UT Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority, said members of her group chose the walkathon over other options for their communitv service requirement. "Personally, I chose [this commu­ nity service] because the cause, I think, important,” said Weller, a UT journalism senior. is more W alkathon producer Barbara Ayres, who blew the whistle to start the walk, said it was "really great" that some UT sororities were there for the fund-raiser. "For me, that signals just addi­ tional awareness of the need for ev­ eryone to become involved in find­ ing solutions that dreaded for disease,” Avres said. " I would not "A lot of our clients can't pay for anything,” said Taylor. "I'm really proud of the fact that here in Austin so many organizations and busi­ nesses are showing they can pull this off. It's really very heartwarm­ ing.” Mattox accuses insurance executives of creating false crises Dan Dworin Daily Texa n Staff As insurance issues continue to dominate business at the state Capi­ tol, a state official accused the huge industry Friday of manufacturing a bogus crisis to jack up premiums and emasculate anti-trust regula­ tions. Attorney General Jim Mattox said insurance executives are conspiring to keep rates high by price-fixing and criticized state leaders for not taking a more active role in reform proceedings. "They leaders] have al­ lowed the insurance industry to buy its way through most of this process and to bully people into believing [state they are in the dire straits they've attempted to claim they're in,” Mat­ tox said. The industry has claimed that an excess of litigation has crippled its ability to write policies in Texas, where they say trial lawyers have dominated public policy regulating insurance. On Thursday, a group of insur­ ance companies listed as defendants in an anti-trust suit filed by Mattox asked a Texas district judge to dismiss the state's case, claiming that the attorney general is ignoring federal and state law. Under the federal McCarran-Fer- guson Act, insurance executives are allowed to jointly discuss and set common premium rates, provided their activities are monitored by a state regulating agency, such as Texas' State Board of Insurance. predict future losses based only on their own past losses,” he said. A representative of Insurance Ser­ vices Office Inc. — a N ew York City-based umbrella group that rep­ resents insurance companies — said Mattox is acting outside of legal re­ straints in a state that he said has some of the tightest insurance regu­ lations in the nation. "This environment has been un­ stable for some insurance compa­ nies,” said David Ostwald, the com­ pany's vice president for corporate communications. Ostwald said the joint meetings are essential for the companies be­ cause the market is so unpredictable and competition is so fierce. "N o company has a large enough share of the market to accurately Texas has some of the nation's most stringent insurance regulation from state agencies and legislation, Ostwald added. He said some rates have climbed, but attributed the hikes to an in­ creased appetite for litigation. "Some rates, auto insurance in particular, have gotten admittedly high,” Ostwald said. "Bu t not rela­ tive to the cost of w’riting the poli­ cies.” Mattox — who has argued for the repeal of the McCarron-Ferguson Act — asserted that the industry could take steps to combat the in­ creases, but has chosen not to do so out of self-interest. "Som e of the problems they've got is they're not acting as competi­ tive companies,” he said. "The in­ dustry’ itself is just settling cases for whatever they can settle for and passing the expenses right on to the consumers through the rates — not because they can't keep their ex­ penses down, because they could.” The attornev general also said the governor should have a more active role in the debate, instead of wield­ ing veto power. "The governor has the bully pul­ pit,” Mattox said. "H e has a differ­ ent view, but if he were to come to the table, he might understand some of the realities of what's going on at that table.” Clements, who was delivering a speech to a group of business own­ ers in San Antonio Friday, repeated his position that trial lawyers are re­ sponsible for high workers' com­ pensation insurance rates. The governor blasted Mattox's complaints, telling The Dallas M orn­ ing News that "Jim Mattox should stop engaging in wishful thinking because he'll never be governor anyw ay." 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Erl. P 5 0 a.m. - 4 OO p.m. Sat. - Sun. CLOSED (gourmet Cookies : White Chocolate Chunk Delicious Desserts Chocolate fudge Haystack Peanut butter Chocolate Chip Chocolate Chunk Oatmeal M u ffin s Donuts Assorted Pastries Delicious Coffees, f xpresso Cafe Au Lad Cappuccino Columbian O f fee Coco Loco Strawberry Amaretto Porte Chocolate Truffle Cafe french Chocolate Cham bo rd Carrot Cafe P/jurbon if t ra t Pecan Pie Lemm Mousse Pie Ha strut Cappuccino Torte irrlucky Lwrbiy Pie ;:1; • ' / ' 0 :t Ckrry I orte Pa carian Chocolate Chip Cake Road warriors muddle SWC picture Longshot Longhorns upset another Big Red Machine T i n D a i l y T l x \ \ Monday. October 23. 1989 Page 9 Craig Douglas Daily Texan Staff $ FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Believe it. They've done it again. Horns The oddsm ak- ers, along with m ost of the m e­ dia and every­ body else who the cares, gave fallen giants of the Southw est Con­ ference, the Texas Longhorns, 171/2 points to cover against then-N o.15 Oklahoma last week in Dallas. Texas 28, OU 24. Fluke, right? Just to be on the safe side, they cut the edge and gave them 131/2 this week against the u n ­ defeated No. 7 Razorbacks in Fay­ etteville. Same stuff, different week: Texas 24, Arkansas 20. Texas was predicted to finish no higher than fourth in the Southw est Conference. Now, the Longhorns find them selves the front-runner in w hat was thought to be a two-team race betw een Arkansas and Texas A&M. The Longshot Longhorns are in sole posession of first place in the Southw est Conference. is in "They have to go at us now ," senior flanker Tony Jones said. "We aren't the ones doing the chasing anym ore." "Texas the driver's seat now ," Arkansas Coach Ken H at­ field said. "Everybody else has at least one loss, but this conference is such that everyone is likely to have at least one loss, so we aren 't out of the race yet." Texas record against the Hogs in Razorback Stadium, a notoriously heinous arena for opposing teams, is now an inexplicable 15-3. "It's really hard to u n d erstan d ," Texas Coach David McWilliams said. "Usually, you're just glad to get out of here with your skin." The H orns' 28-24 u pset win over Oklahom a last week was deem ed the kind of victory that could serve as a turning point in a season. For that win to mean m uch, how ever, Texas knew that they had to follow up with a strong show ing against a higher-ranked Arkansas team. to be "We knew that we had to win this game, and we knew that it was going tough," McWilliams said. "Last week we got some breaks and scored som e points in some odd ways, but this week we just played good, hard football and took it from them ." The Longshots ran their record to 3-0 under starting quarterback Peter ■ No-name defense keys win, page 14 ■ Longhorn notes, page 16 Gardere, w ho for for the first time, d idn't have to engineer a scoring drive in the w aning m om ents of the fourth quarter to win the game. G ardere saved himself the trouble by com pleting 16 of 20 passes for 247 yards and a touchdow n. "W e had a really good game plan coming into the game and it was just a m atter of going out there, exe­ cuting and getting the job done," Gardere said. "We came in here knowing that we could do it." The H orns game plan was simple: use the paranoia surrounding the Tony Jones deep threat to exploit the short openings underneath the Razorback secondary. Three of Tex­ as' scoring drives were ball-control affairs of over five m inutes apiece. Johnny Walker finished with six catches for 81 yards, none of them longer than 18 yards. Kerry Cash also snared key passes in ball-con- trol drives, five no longer than 16 yards. Texas, who was aided by three more W ayne Clem ents field goals, was also able to establish the ru n ­ ning game. The H orns' 247 yards through the air was supplem ented by 147 yards on the ground that kept the Razorback defensive front off balance. The real story of the game, how ­ ever, was the courageous play of w hat turned out to be a patchw ork Longhorn defense. By the end of the fourth quarter, the Texas secondary was missing not only starting cornerback Stanley Richard, who was sidelined last week w ith an ankle injury, but start­ ing safety Lance G unn, and backup safety Todd Ringo. The defensive line was in a simi­ lar spot as they found them selves w ithout Ken Hackemack and Rocky Allen, their two leading tacklers, who had also left the contest by the latter half of the fourth quarter. Arkansas assum ed posession for the last time on their own 20 yard line with 4:00 left to play trailing by four points. All the tackles in the H orns last stand were m ade by Bub- ba Jacques, Boone Powell, Shane Dronett, and Jay Jones. Before the A rkansas game, the four of them had a combined 36 tackles. At the time, they were playing beside Bri­ an Jones, w ho had 50 on the season heading in, and A nthony Curl, who had 39. "W e had some guys that h ad n 't had m uch playing time that came in Please see Longhorns, page 16 Freshman Shane Dronett draws a bead on Arkansas quarterback Quinn Grovey. Dronett was one of several freshman who played big Saturday. Jo h n M o o re/D aily T e xa n Staff Cougars obliterate Mustangs, 95-21, break every record in their collection Jaime Aron Daily Texan Staff Í a jjk fantasy HOUSTON — Statis- football tical, leagues w ere created for A ndre Ware and the ex- Cougars. p lo s iv e C onsider the follow­ swc a n d n u m b e r s in g records Ware and the C ougars posted in their 95-21 win over the SMU M ustangs in H ous­ ton Saturday: ■ The 1,021-yards total offense Houston accum ulated shattered the NCAA (883) and SMU record for total yardage. Their 95 points were the m ost ever in a SWC game. ■ In only two quarters of play, Andre Ware com pleted 25 of 41 pass attem pts, good for 517 yards, six touchdow ns and one interception. ■ The ugly details, page 16 ■ In the second quarter, Ware was 15 of 19 passing and set NCAA records for most yards in a quarter (340), m ost yards in a half (517) and m ost touchdow ns in a quarter (5). In addition, this was W are's 12th consecu­ tive 200-yard gam e tying an NCAA mark. ■ The six touchdow n tosses give Ware 27 this season, breaking his ow n SWC mark of H o u s to n 25 set last year. He even broke his own SWC record for yards passing in a game, tallied three yards m ore only against Baylor two weeks ago. than he ■ W are obliterated SMU defensive records also. His 517 yards alone were the most passing yards ever allowed by an SMU defense. Add in Klinger's 254, and the M ustangs allowed 771 yards through the air on the day. ■ Paul Smith set a conference mark for yards receiving. O n only six catches, he touchdow ns. had 255 yards and Roman A nderson also set a SWC record bv three converting 12 PAT's. For Ware, it w as just another day at the office. "Those things are secondary to me, I'm just concerned w ith w inning football gam es," Ware said. "W hen it's all over, I may sit back and look then, but right now, I'll start getting ready for A rkansas [next w eek's opponent) " But this week w as som ething out of the ordinary. "I w asn't very sharp in the first quarter, but I just got the feel as the gam e w ent along," he said. "Things started happening for us. It felt pretty good." Pretty good? SMU w ould hate to see things go well. "It doesn't am aze me because I've seen him do that in practice about every day against our freshm an," Pardee said. "H e's a breed of his own. A ndre's hard to beat." The day was not a total loss for the M us­ tangs. They did show some signs of ability, they were just completely outm atched by the Cougars. Houston is in its third year with the run and shoot, while SMU only its sixth game. "It is hard to look at any positives from this gam e," said quarterback Mike Romo, who threw for 286 yards and two touch­ downs on 27 of 54 passing. "It is really em barassing. We can still say we are freshm an and young, but I d o n 't want to make any excuses. Going into eve­ ry game, we try to play our game and elimi­ nate mistakes, but that d id n 't seem to m at­ ter tonight." Mitchell Glieber, who caught five passes for 81 yards, had a better attitude tow ards the defeat. "We have to put this one behind u s," he said. "It is terribly frustrating to me. I've never been in a position w here you had to cheer for the other team not to score 100 points." Although they've been friends for a long time, Pardee may be left off of SMU Coach Forrest Gregg's Christmas list this year. "For som eone to try to build their stats and build their reputation against a bunch of freshman. ... I hope they really feel proud of their accom plishm ent," Gregg said. Pardee argues that he did not run up the to em barrass try score or intenitionallv Gregg or the M ustang "Those num bers happen. They played hard and th at's w hat h appened,' Pardee said. "It m eans they figured out w hat death penalty is, but they don't know how to un­ die yet. I've been dreading this game all year long because I didn't know how to get it over w ith." The fans provided many interesting side­ lights as well. In the upper deck of the As­ trodome, renam ed the Ware house or the House of Gain w hen H ouston moves in on Saturdays, a few fans w ere taking after baseball faithful. W hereas baseball fans post "K 's" after strikeouts, this group hung "T's" after touchdow ns over the railing. Baylor’s luck runs out as Pavlas leads A&M rally Ray Dise Daily Texan Staff £ WACO — For more than three quarters the Bay­ lor Bears had their way with Texas A&M, but th ey co u ld n 't complete what SWC they had started. __________ in ­ ability to score a touchdown was ul­ timately its undoing as the Aggies took advantage of a Bear miscue to score one of their two fourth-quar­ ter touchdowns and capture a 14-11 victory Saturday in Floyd Casey Sta­ dium. B aylor's The Aggies raised their record to 3-1 in the Southwest Conference and 5-2 overall. The Bears fell to 3-4 and 2-2 in the SWC, all but eliminat­ ing them from the conference race, since they must play the Longhorns and the Razorbacks on the road. Neither offense was sparkling in the first half as both defenses dictat­ ed the tempo. A&M was limited to only 105 yards of total offense and SWC standings OvanS SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE C onfanm oa W If? 3 ASM 3 x*UH 2 Afk ' 2 TfcCtt f . TCÓ 2 Baylor 2 1 Ac* SMU £ MnMigHOto 174 F R O M V acation Packages th a t include A ir Travel, H otel, FunB ook and more Register at Reed Travel and win two Free roundtrip tickets on Southwest Airlines [drawing to be held Thursday, November 16, 1989. No purchase required. Packages available from 2 to 7 nights. All packages are priced per person, double o ccu pan cy , a n d surch arg es app le for w eekend an d h o lid ay tra v e l. 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G u adalu pe ( 5 1 2 ) 4 5 3 - 8 7 4 7 6029 N o r t h 1H 35 ( 5 1 2 ) 4 5 2 -0 1 4 5 Texas Texas Union Video Store . - . - union Monday-Friday, 10 am-6 pm Visa/MC Accepted ‘ TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS W ORK — FOR YO U RS CALL 471 -5244 E k U m i N o S P i l a a Associated Press O A K LA N D , Calif. — T he h ard e st p art for th e San Francisco G iants an d O a k lan d A thletics rig h t no w is the w aiting. C om m issioner Fay V incent and San Francisco M ayor A rt A gnos a n ­ no u n ced S u n d ay at a joint newrs conference th a t the W orld Series w o u ld resu m e on Friday at C a n d le­ stick Park, nin e days after a d e v a s­ tating earth q u ak e hit th e Bay area ju st before the sta rt of G am e 3 on Oct. 17. T he te n ta tiv e plan last w eek called for the Series to resu m e on Tuesday- But the m ay ­ or said th a t w ould not be possible because of traffic and security co n ­ siderations. c o m m issio n e r's The A 's an d G iants have sp e n t the w eek taking b atting practice and playing sim u lated gam es. Som e citi­ zens, city officials a n d m em b ers of the the m edia have W orld Series be canceled. su g g ested "I h a v e n 't ru n into o n e p erso n w h o said n o t to p la v ," A 's m anager Tony La R ussa said. "In fact, I m et a m an w h o h ad som e dam ag e to his ho u se a n d he asked w h e n are w e going to p lay ." La R ussa p o in ted o ut th a t tw o col­ lege football gam es w ere played in the area on S atu rd ay a n d the San Francisco 49ers played N ew E ng­ land at S tanford S tadium on S u n ­ day. "Life goes on, th e o th e r sp o rts go on, w h y sh o u ld baseball be differ­ en t?" La Russa said at th e A 's w o rk ­ o u t on S u nday. U F E Daily Blackboard Specials HOT HAM AND SWISS SANDWICH A heap of broiled country smoked ham w ith a slab of big-eye Swiss Cheese Slices of sweet red onion and red ripe tomato garnished with crisp green lettuce Served on our homemade whole w heat bun with á heap of crispy potato chips and large pickle slice leaf 25 im ported beers 624 W 34th St 451-9665 M-Sat 11 30-11 30 Sun 11:00-10 00 Game Three Who: OaK¡and al San Francisco When: Friday 7 28 p m Where: Cand estick Park TV/radio: KVUE-TV Ch 24 K LBJ-A M 590 Pitchers: Da.e Stewart (21 -9) vs Scott Garrets (14-5) m an ag er Sandy A ld erso n "T h e players recognize difficult tim es." said. these are The players, w hile realizing the trag ed y of the situation, are anxious to start playing baseball. "T he sim ulated g am es are one w ay of staying read y, b u t it's hard to keep your c o n c e n tra tio n ," La Russa said. A lderson said th e re 's a possibility th e A 's w ould go to Phoenix to practice if th e re 's b ad w eath er. Before S u n d a y 's n ew s confer­ ence, the A 's and G iants h a d vet a n ­ o th e r w orkout. La Russa w as talking ab o ut how M ark M cGwire m ig h t w in a Gold G love som e day w h e n a g ro u n d e r rolled th ro u g h th e first b a se m a n 's legs. "N ice plav, M ark ," La Russa yelled. "T here are 26 o th er m an ag ers I can play for," M cG w ire joked. "A n d I m ake 27," La R ussa shot FOR LESS KEGS LOGAN’S 1004 W. 24TH 478-7911 "W e're pleased we no w have a d a te to re su m e ," O akland general back. "U SC m ath ." The dep ressio n th at existed at E L i t TÍ * *„• W e make education loans GSL, SLS, PLUS dbpTe repeated UNS&NCTIONED USE OF THE RED PHONt. in Nobody can resist a pizza from Domino’s Pizza T Especially when it’s so easy to get. Just pick up the phone and call us. Well deliver a hot, fresh, made-to-order pizza to your door in 30 minutes or less. Guaranteed. Call Domino s Pizza. Nobodv Delivers Better. ' S e r v in g t h e 1 . 1 c a m p u s : 476-7181 404 West 26th St. Serving the surrounding area: Enfield 474-7676 913 North Lamar Kherside 447-6681 1931 Kast Oltorf llvde Park 458-9101 4115 Guadalupe Mesa 346-2494 8105 I) Mesa Dr. 1989 Domino s I ’lzza Ini 0 □O) z <5 S N O N 0 a C H E C K O C T O C R N E Y Y D O C B L E D E A L S ! Small Pizzai $4 w h““ Get a sin gla-serving 10" original stvle cheese pi/,/; for only 54 99 plus tax Additional toppings are 50C each OR Two Small Pizzas! W ' Get two sm all 10” o riginal slvle cheese pizzas for only 55 99 plus lax Additional loppings are 50C each per pizza hxpir,*'. 1/ 27vV9 Not v a n ) vuih «!> ,»u»rr n flrr i „ BMj j | M»rtn ipolin* k« .ib c ri. ,,n h D H h r o m r t M*Mr4 H rrnmmrr %alr tfrfeta* < Mir dm > u r n l e v Hun S20 00 VjJld im <>n«m,«l vivir onlv 1 I I I I t I I I I I I B eat The Clock Tl,e lime you order lalh eprlee y»» pay! Order a U r c e 1 pizza b*“U t ‘ “ C a l i l l e Clock K x jS r r ^ I Z '/ V H M vh vano ,,nl' r..hi 7ll ^i-o Tr^TTihdn MIBI d r i v e r * i . o r \ ' o r ig in .* ! ' O *0 ' i*ip 0 ,1, , * I I I I I I I I í Two Pan Pizzas.» $999 I I S £ s s w r j 5 - « « - « 1 ,a' V’'"' a I I ■ P l i V* %»hd *nh any ,djv r ji gy.n-'jMinz «or**** - ■ • • a to —i n n IMir T ) P r lh 'T> mrré 1 " r * lev. lh,jn i s o u f * * * * «Hif ilrn erv SHr ,«,1, - e 75c eaelTf*r jrtua fcMNrr» IZ /VBs *W W 'r t l l o « P a " Report to the Cactus studio according to the schedule below to be photographed for the 1990 yearbook. SSNMMKS A OftAD STUDENTS Come any time during studio hours. We won't turn you away! JU N IO R S A S O M O M O R U Last names begin A-L: Oct. 23-25 Last names begin M-Z: Oct. 25-27 m S N M K N Last names begin A-L: Oct. 30-31 Last names begin M-Z: Nov. 1-2 I M A I W N i TSP 4.122, 25th and Whit» H OMM i 8 30 a m - noon, 1-4:30 p.m. graduating seniors and grad students - $3.50, others - $2 00 CACTUS YEARBOOK It's YO U R Book Page 12 Monday, October 23,1989 THE DAILY TEXAN Oilers’ defense shuts down Steelers Associated Press £ NFL three threw H O U S T O N — W arren Moon touch­ down passes in the first half, two to Alonzo Highsmith, and Houston's defense held Pittsburgh to 132 total yards en route to a 27-0 victory Sunday and the Oilers' first shutout since 1980. — — Moon completed his first “ eight passes and finished with 17 completions in 29 attempts for 229 vards as Houston moved into a first-place tie with Cincinnati in the A FC Cen­ tral. The Oilers' last shutout came on Dec. 20, 1980 when they beat Pittsburgh 6-0. The Steelers (3-4) had won three of their last four. Quarterback Todd Blackledge, replacing in­ jured Bubbv Brister, was able to guide the Steelers to 22 first-half vards, and Pittsburgh had 42 total yards at the start of the fourth quarter. Pittsburgh didn't cross midfield in the first haif until the final seconds when Larry Griffin returned a short kickoff 21 vards to the Houston 49. 1 he Oilers (4-3) scored on four of their five first halt possessions and took a 24-0 lead. Moon's three first half touchdown passes went to Highsmith for 3 and 5 yards and 51 yards to C u r t i s Duncan. Tony Zende|as also kicked a 41-vard field goal. ■ Vikings 20, Lions 7 — In Detroit, Mike Mer- riweather led a Minnesota defense, ranked No. 1 in the N FL, that had eight sacks and helped the Vikings take a half-game lead over Chicago in the N FC Central with a victory over the Lions. The Vikings' eight sacks, for 42 yards in loss­ es, gave them 16 in the last two weeks. I hey also intercepted two passes and recovered three fum­ bles. Merriweather had one sack, an intercep­ tion, caused two fumbles and recovered one. ■ Colts 23, Bengals 12 — In Cincinnati, Indi­ anapolis turned a pair of Bengal turnovers into a 12-vard touchdown pass by Jack Trudeau and a 21-yard scoring run by Eric Dickerson in the final 2:07. Cincinnati (4-3) led 12-9 before fumbling, then giving the ball up on an interception on consecutive possessions. The touchdowns by Indianapolis (4-3) came just 45 seconds apart. James Brooks' fumble set up Trudeau's scoring pass to Albert Bentley with 2:07 to plav, putting the Colts ahead 16-12. Keith Taylor intercepted Boomer Esiason, and Dickerson scored with 1:22 left. ■ Eagles 10, Raiders 7 — In Philadelphia, the Eagles (5-2) converted two interceptions into a 1- vard touchdown run by Randall Cunningham and a 34-vard field goal by Luis Zendejas, giving Raiders Coach Art Shell his first loss. The Eagles' defense, which allowed its first touchdown in three games, also had four sacks, making up for a 64-yard passing day for Cun­ ningham. ■ Redskins 32, Buccaneers 28 — In Washing­ ton, Mark Rypien threw two touchdown passes to Garv Clark and the Redskins held off Tampa Bay. Washington scored on all three of its third- quarter possessions to take the win. Tampa Bay got touchdowns 22 seconds apart in the fourth quarter, cutting the lead to 29-21 with 14:10 left, but the Redskins went ahead 32- 21 when Chip Lohmilller kicked a 32-vard field goal with 3:04 to play. ■ Chiefs 36, Cowboys 28 — In Kansas City, Mo., Christian Okoye bulled through the N FL's worst rushing defense for 170 yards and two touchdowns as Kansas City dropped Dallas to 0- 7. The Chiefs (3-4) scored four rushing touch­ downs for the first time since Dec. 12, 1976. The last was a 5-yard run by quarterback Steve Pel- luer, who was traded by the Cowboys to Kansas City on Oct. 17. ■ Saints 40, Rams 21 — In Anaheim, Calif., Bobby Hebert struck like lightning with touch­ down passes of 54 yards to Floyd Turner and 37 yards to Eric Martin on consecutive plays early in the third quarter, and N ew Orleans blew past Los Angeles. Dalton Hilliard scored three touchdowns, in­ cluding a 20-vard pass from Hebert on the Saints' second play of the game, as the Saints won their second consecutive after losing their first four. ■ Giants 20, Chargers 13 — In San Diego, Ottis Anderson ran for a pair of second-half touchdowns and N ew York held on for a victory over the Chargers. Trailing by 14 points and facing a fourth-and- 10 at their 33, the Chargers faked a punt. But Jamie Holland was tackled for a 1-yard loss. Five plavs later, with New' York at the Charg­ ers' 17, Maurice Carthon fumbled when hit by Billy Ray Smith. Vencie Glenn picked up the ball and raced untouched 81 yards for a Charger touchdown. ■ Broncos 24, Seahawks 21 — In Seattle, Da­ vid Treadwell missed a 27-yard field goal with 16 seconds left in regulation, then made a 27-yarder in overtime as the Denver edged the Seahawks. The A FC West-leading Broncos (6-1) got a chance to win the game in overtime when Norm Johnson missed a 40-yard field goal with 9:48 left. Treadwell's game-winning kick was set up by Seattle's fourth turnover. Dennis Smith inter­ cepted Dave Krieg's pass over the middle for tight end Robert Tvler and ran it back 28 yards to the Seahawks' 10. Jerry GlanvHle was snakebit on Saturday, and Pittsburgh was on Sunday. Associated Press F ootball NFL AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T 2 0 3 0 3 0 5 0 6 0 5 4 4 2 1 Pet. PF PA 714 190 163 571 134 120 571 144 159 286 108 169 143 122 192 Sunday's games Kansas City 36 Dallas 28 Miami 23. Green Bay 20 Indianapolis 23, Cincinnati 12 Philadelphia 10. Los Angeles Raiders 7 Minnesota 20 Detroit 7 Buffalo 34 New York Jets 3 Houston 27 Pittsburgh 0 Washington 32 Tampa Bay 28 San Francisco 37 New Fngiand 20 Phoenix 34 Atlanta 20 Denver 24 Seattle 21 OT New Oheans 40, Los Angeles Rams 21 New York G ants 20 San Diego 1 3 Monday 's game Chicago at Cleveland. 8 p m Oilers 27, Steelers 0 0 0 0 0— 0 7 17 3 0—27 Pit 10 17-32 100 0 11-27-2 1-5 6-38 2-2 8 70 20 28 Hou 22 41-132 229 39 17-30-0 0-0 3-45 6-1 9-70 39 32 Chiefs 36, Cowboys 28 Dallas Kansas City 7 7 0 14—28 14 13 9 0 —36 NATIONAL CONFERENCE Central 3 4 3 4 3 3 4 3 West 6 3 3 3 .2 East 6 5 4 3 0 Central 2 5 571 148 117 571 194 170 500 136 88 429 93 169 857 160 105 429 137 159 429 141 124 429 133 148 286 125 146 857 175 109 714 162 140 571 186 166 429 137 163 000 96 213 714 146 113 667 192 136 429 182 181 429 148 152 143 98 170 857 192 135 714 183 165 429 175 130 286 128 163 Pittsburgh Houston First downs Rushes-yards Passing Return Yards Comp-Att-Int Sacked Yards Lost Punts Fumbtes-Lost Penalties-Yards Time of Possession First downs Rushes yards Passing Return Yards Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Los! Penalties-Yards Time of Possession San Francisco L A Rams New Orleans Atlanta West 6 5 3 2 1 2 4 5 INTERNATIONAL STUDIES ABROAD E A R N A C A D E M IC C R ED IT S Fali, Spr.ng ana S^n"hner Prog’C’’’1' SPAIN «FRANCE «MEXICO S p rin g d e a d l i n e N o v e m b e r 301 h 480-8522 811 w 24th, Suite 201, Austin, 7 8 7 0 5 PROFESSIONAL STUDIO h h i n s t a n t h H - i r w i J T s m - ■- APPLICATIONS • IMMIGRATION COLOR • B&W VHmSresumIs • PASSPORTS ftmUHe 2532 GUADALUPE. 477-5555 f MAKING IN K U REPAIR • Boots • Shoes • Leather Goods • Luggage CUSTOM MADE • Boots • Belts • Chaps • Etc. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca • Austin • 478-9309 e s H m s 24th & San Antonio Open Monday-Saturday 11 am - until 1:30 at night HAIRCUT ALWAYS I $5°° OFF EVERY PERM OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK = | 9 0 0 8 0 0 M-F S SAT 9:00-6:00 % SUN 10:00-5:00 | DobieMaH i UT CAMPUS 474-4191 | _ Nexxus Products i Please Present this Coupon Ü S ü Fraa Parking In DoMa Qaraga 35 IlllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIUIG CAPTAIN ((UACKENBIISH’S CAFE, BAKEKY A GALLERY 2120 GUADALUPE ST. (th aD rag ) EVERY WOMAN’S CONCERN C o n fid e n tia l, P r o f e s s io n a l R e p r o d u c tiv e C are • Adoption S ervice s • Free Pregn ancy Testing s Problem Preg n an cy Counseling • Abortion S ervice s y „ ■aMMMaaw • B irth Control • Pa p Test ll REPRO D UC TIV E SER VICES • B 6 Civ th-* o l o g t s t » • I h m a e d N u r* u > q S t a f f • I x p r’TM'rv» t i l I o u n v e l o i s a ( Hi H R v>huttU' 4 5 8 - 8 2 7 4 1009 t 40th SAVE $11.40! H aven't ordered y e u r1990 Cactus Yearbook yet? Select Yearbook/Magazine Package as an optional fee when you register for spring classes. Youll receive 1990 Cactus Yearbook Utmost M agazine (spring & summer) for just $28.25 (tax included). That's a total savings of $11.40 off what you'd pay after publication. Don't miss this opportunity to save big with a great package deal! CACTUS It's YOUR Book UtmesT YEARBOOK City Magazine of UT, Texas THE D a il y T e x a n Monday, October 23,1989 Page 13 TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS 8:00-5:00 p.m./Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 TO PLACI A WORD OR LINE AD CALL: 471-5244___________ CLASSIFIED WORD AD*RATES___________ ' C harged by the w o rd 15 w o rd mini mum Set m 5 ot tvoe only Rotes ore ♦or consecutive days Eoch w o rd 1 time Each w o rd 3 times Eoch w o rd 5 times Eoch w o rd 10 times Each w o rd 15 times Eoch w o rd 20 times S 34 S 9 0 S 1 35 52 3 0 $2 70 53 20 per insertion SI 0 0 charge to change copy First tw o w ords may tie all capítol letters 25c for eoch a d d itio na l w o rd in capital le t­ ters M astercard ond Visa accepted CLASSIFIED - - - - - - - - - LINE A D ’ RATES 'C h a rge d by the line O ne column inch mimmum A vailab le in 5 to 14 pt *ype 1 col • 1 mch 1 Time S7 8 0 WORD AND LINE AD DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d a y Tuesday W ednesdoy Thursday Fndoy Fndoy Ham M o n d a y llo m Tuesday llo m W ednesday Horn Thursday 11am TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED DISPLAY AD, CALL: 471-8900___________ CLASSIFIED DISPLAY’ AD RATES________ * C harged by The column inch O ne colum n nch minim um A variety o* type foces and sizes o nd borders ovailabte Fall Rotes Sept l.M a y 30 1 to 49 column inches Pe»- M onth $7 8 0 Per Co'umn Inch O ver 5 0 coi m per month coil for rates CLASSIFIED DISPLAY K A O L IN ! SCHEDULE M o n d a y Tuesday W ednesday Thursday Fndoy W ednesday 4 p rr Thursday 4 p m Fndoy 4 p m M o n d a y 4 p m Tuesday 4 p m fo r only O N E In the event a t errors m ode in on a d ­ vertisement. notice must be given by 11 a m the first d ay as the publishers ore respons'bie in correct fo r adjustments insertion All claims should be made not later than 3 0 days after publication P re-po'd kills rece-ve credit slip if reauested ot hme o f ccn ceHa*on, and if am ount exceeds $2 0 0 Slip must be presented for o reorder withm 9 0 days to be valid Credit slips are noo-transferoble In consideration o f The D cily Texan s acceptance of advertising copy for publication the agency and the ad vertiser will indemnify and save h arm ­ less Texas Student Publications and its officers employees and agents aga«nst oil loss liability dam age and expense of w hatsoever natum anstng out o f the copying pnntrng or publishing o f *ts odvertisment including w ithout lim ita ­ ro n reasonable attorney s fees result­ ing from claims of Suits for hbei vic/a tion of right of privacy plagiarism ond co pyrigh t a nd trodem ark infríngem e''1* DEADLINE: 11:00 a.m. prior to publication MASTERCARD V IS A ACCEPTED M asterC ard VISA B H B B I ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ D E A L 20 WORDS 5 DAYS * Items priced $1,000 or less. * Privóte Party ads only. * Some classifications excluded CALL FOR INFO 471-5244 CLASSIFICATIONS TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. A u to s 20 — S p o rt» -F o re ig n A utos 3 0 - T r u c k s - V a n s < 0 — V eh ic le » to T r a d . SO — S s r v k .- R s p o ii 6 0 — P o rt»-A c c e *s o rte » 7 0 — M o to rcycle» • 0 — Bicycles 9 0 — V a h i d . Loosing 1 0 0 — V s h i d a s W o n t e d REAL ESTATE SALES 1 1 0 - S ervices 120 — H o usas 1 3 0 — C o n d o s -T o w n h o u s e * 140 — M o b il# H o m o s -L o ts 150 — A c re o g e -lo ts 1 * 0 — D u p le x e s - 1 7 0 - 1 I S O - L o o n s MERCHANDISE 190 — A p p lto n cas 2 0 0 — f u m it u r .- H o u s e h o ld 2 1 0 — S to ro o -T V 2 2 0 — C o m p u t u s - E q u ip m s n t 2 3 0 — P h o to -C o m oro s 2 4 0 - B o o t s 25 0 — M u s ic a l In s tru m e n ts 2 6 0 — H o b b ia s 2 7 0 — M o c h in e ry - ( q u ip t n .n l 2 S 0 — S p o rtln g -C o m p in g (q u ip m a n t 2 9 0 — F u rn itu re -A p p iio n c e I a n ta l 3 0 0 — G a ra q e -B u m m a g e Soles 3 1 0 - T r o d . 3 2 0 - W o n te d to B u y o r Bant MERCHANDISE 3 3 0 - B a t s 3 4 0 — M is t. RENTAL 3 5 0 — B a n to l Services 3 6 0 — F u rn Apts. 3 7 0 - U n i. Apts. 3 6 0 — F u rn D u p le x e s 3 9 0 — U n i. D u p le x e s 4 0 0 — C csn d os-Tow nhouse* 4 1 0 — T u rn . H o usas 4 3 0 — U n f . H o u sas 4 2 5 — Boom s 4 3 0 — B o o m - B o a rd 4 3 5 — C o -o p s 4 4 0 — R o o m m a te s 4 5 0 — M o b ile H o m e s -L o ts 4 6 0 — Business Bentols 4 7 0 — B .s o rts 4 B 0 — S to ra g e Space 4 9 0 — W a n te d to B e n t-L e a s e 5 0 0 - M i s c . ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 1 0 — ( n t e r t a in m e n !-T ic k e ts 5 2 0 — P erso n als 5 3 0 — T ra v e l* T ro n s p o rto tio n 5 4 0 - Lost 6 F ound 5 5 0 — Licensed C h ild C ore 5 6 0 — Public N o tic e 5 7 0 — M u s k -M u s ic ia n s EDUCATIONAL 5 6 0 — M u s k a l In stru c tio n 5 9 0 — T u ta rin g 6 0 0 — In stru c tio n W a n te d 6 1 0 — Misc. 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S e rv ic e * EMPLOYMENT 7 7 0 — e m p lo y m e n t A g e n d a s 760 — e m p lo y m e n t S e rv k e s 7 9 0 — P o rt fim o 8 0 0 — G e n e r a l H e lp W a n te d 6 10 — O ffic e -C terse ol ■ 3 0 — A cco u n tin g B o o k k e e p in g 6 3 0 — A d m in is tra tiv e - 6 4 0 - S a l e s 6 5 0 — B etail 6 6 0 — e n g in e e rin g - Technical 8 7 0 — M e d ic a l 8 6 0 — P ro fe s s io n a l 8 9 0 — C lu b s -B e s fo u ro n ts 9 0 0 — D o m o s tk -H o u s e h o ld 9 10 — Po sitio n s W o n te d 9 3 0 - W o r k W a n te d BUSINESS 9 3 0 — Business O p p o rtu n itie s 9 4 0 — O p p o rtu n itie s W o n te d 471-5244 RUN YOUR CAR OR TRUCK UNTIL IT SELLS!! 15 WORDS! * Private Party Ads Only. TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION RIAL ESTATE SALES MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 10 — Misc. Autos 20 — Sports-Foreign 130 — Condos - 340 — Misc. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 440 — Roommates M A C 5 12 K SYSTEMS! 360 — Furn. Apts. Autos Townhouses tires, battery, loo d e d leather intenor, 73 CADILLAC new alternator, $ 9 5 9 4 5 9 -1 9 7 9 Leave messoge to Michael 12-19_________________________________ 1988 CHRYSLER LEBARON convertible, automatic transmission, a7c premium package, tilt wheel, cruise control, p seats, 7 to choose windows/locks, p from 4 4 3 -4 4 3 5 4 -1 2-5 N C G O VE R N M E N T SEIZED Vehicles from $100. Fords M ercedes Corvettes Chevys. Surplus Buyers Guide (1) 8 0 5 - 6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext. S-9413 1 0 -6 -2 0 6 1982 MERCURY LN7 sport coup two- door hatch bock. G rey color, 8 6 ,7 8 7 miles, no pow er steenng. $1000. 3 2 7 - 3 7 3 4 . 1 0-8-1 5 N C_____________________ '52 INTERNATIO NAL pick-up 65K miles, new candy apple point, engine clutch, battery, tires. Perfect! $ 4 5 0 0 , 4 4 7 - 6 4 5 5 1 0 -4 -2 0 N C ____________________ 1984 CHEVY Cavalier, 2-door Auto, ac, ps, pb, am /fm cassette tires, $ 2 7 5 0 4 6 9 -9 6 2 0 10-12-15NC N ew ’7 7 CUTLASS SUPREME, AC, PB, PS, ex­ cellent condition inside a nd out. Needs minor body work Asking $1300. 4 7 3 - 2 3 1 7 .10-12-15N C_____________________ '8 8 M U S TA N G LX. Red, power lock, power windows, tinted windows Real nice $ 7 9 9 5 , 4 7 7 -4 2 1 8 .10-9-15N C CONVERTIBLE ’8 7 M U S TA N G GT 5.0, white/red, stereo, tape equalizer, tilt/ cruise, all extras. $13 ,49 5 2 80-2801, 476-1515 10-14-56____________________ 1985 PLYMOUTH RELIANT 4 door, AC, 89k miles, clean, new ttres, brakes, $ 2 2 0 0 4 4 7 -8 9 4 2 . evenings. 10-18- 15NC_________________________________ M G B CONVERTIBLE '79 . Fire engine red. Runs good. Luggage rack, new Hres. $1900, negotiable. 4 5 3 -4 8 1 7 10- 18-15N C______________________________ 1982 FORD ESCORT 4-door, apple red G reat condition $ 1 2 5 0 O B O 4 99 - 0126. 10-11-20NC____________________ '8 4 W A G O N E E R , 4W D , 4 cylinder, 4- door, 5 speed. AC, Michelin's, $ 5 3 0 0 , 3 2 7 -0 9 9 8 . 9 -18-15N C _________________ 1982 BLUE FORD Escort. Standard trans­ mission, new tires, A M /F M stereo 4 5 9 - 0 8 8 9 10-21-15NC_____________________ 1984 FORD ESCORT LX. A M /F M cas­ sette with AC. 4-door hatchback, $ 2 8 5 0 / neg Coll Scott 3 8 5 -1 4 6 4 10-18-5B-E '7 9 DO DG E COLT Blue, two-door, 4- speed, new muffler, no AC. $ 6 5 0 negotiable Leave message, 4 7 2 -4 3 7 7 10-18-58 ____________________________ 1982 FORD M U S T A N G GL, automatic, 6 cylinder, cold AC, PS/PB, stereo, great condition, $ 1650. 2 5 8 -1 2 8 7 .10-18-5B 1984 TO YOTA COROLLA SR-5 - great condition, $ 2 7 0 0 neg., coll Joseph 4 5 3 - 1 3 0 8 .10-19-5 B_________________ _ _ _ 1987 H Y U N D A I GLS 4 door AT, PS, A M / FM cassette, sunroof, 12,000 miles. $ 4 6 5 0 /o ffe r 4 4 4 -2 3 0 4 /4 6 2 - 6 5 0 8 10- __________________________ 19-5B '8 7 G R A N D A M . 20k mileoge, 2 door, great condition, must sell $ 7 7 0 0 Hon 4 6 9 -0 2 2 3 , coll before 9am . 10-19-20N C '81 FORD ESCORT station wagon. N ew head. new tronnv; looded. dean. $ 1550 2 6 4 - 2 8 7 2 .10-19-5B___________________ 1978 FORD T-BIRD Excellent mechanical condition, good body ond interior. 351 M /4 0 0 engine, $10 00 Coll 459 -5 09 1 . 10-19-5 B______________________________ '8 6 CHEVY N O V A 5-speed, PS, AC, ster­ eo, 4-door, 3 3K $ 4 5 0 0 , 4 5 2 -0 7 5 3 evenings 1 0 -2 0 -5 8 '7 9 OLDS CUTLASS, runs but needs work. Best cash offer Coll Scott 441- 6 3 7 2 .1 0 - 2 0 -5 8_______________________ 1988 D O D G E S H A D O W block 2 dr.. doth mtenor, AC, PS, PB, $ 7 , 1 0 0 / 0 8 0 Chirs ot work 4 7 7 -5 0 7 8 1 0 -23 -5 8 1988 TO YOTA PICKUP low mileage AC A M /F M cassette 4 -s p e e d , w h ite itondord cab & bed. Call Steve at 3 4 3 - 7 0 8 8 10-23-5B _______________________ 1 980 V O L K S W A G O N Dasher $ 9 5 0 . CoH 2 8 8 -3 3 0 9 1 0-23-5B ______________ 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 1984 H O N D A LX 4 -dr AT AC low miles, stereo/cassette, momtenence records, lu ^ a g e rock, $ 5 9 9 5 3 35 -0 7 1 6 . 9 -2 3 - V O L K S W A G O N RABBIT '7 8 Needs work. A M /F M stereo cassette, new ports. $ 4 5 0 4 7 2 -8 2 8 0 9 -2 6 -2 0 N C ________ V W V A N '7 3 O ran g e ond white. Runs Great, new tires. Two barrel corborotor $ 10 50 Home 3 2 3 -6 5 2 3 9 -7 -15 N C 1987 M U STA N G CONVERTIBLE. 5 0 L GT Low m ileoge Fully lo oded Cherry condition $ 13,900 O B O 3 4 5 -2 6 2 7 10-18-15NC___________ 1980 TO YOTA Tercel for sale with AC, new dutch, new tires S I2 0 0 Call Dilip 4 6 7 -9 5 2 0 10-19-15NC BEAUTIFUL VIR G IN white 77 Converh- ble superbeette N e w pam t/stereo cas­ sette/seat covers/tires $ 4 0 0 0 . 8 3 5 - 9 6 3 5 10-20-5B H O N D A CRX 87 FM stereo sunroof, a l­ 2 3 ,0 0 0 m iles G o o d lo y w heels, condition AC, Si 4 4 0 -0 1 4 6 10-21- 15NC.________________________________ RED HOT 1986 M a zd a 3 2 3 LXI H atch­ back, automatic, A M /F M tape, no on 3 0 ,0 0 0 $ 4 5 0 0 3 2 8 -8 2 1 9 10 23-158 1981 V O L K S W A G O N SCIROCCO 5- speed, A M /F M cassette Running but needs some w o rk $1800 4 9 5 -3 3 6 6 10-18-5P 1975 V W SUPERBEETLE with sunroof mint condition!! Also new eng in e/ paint, $19 95 .28 2 -5 31 1 ______________________ 85 M U S TA N G GT 5 0 A uto sunroof, fully loeded. m aroon, grey tint, excellent condition $ 6 2 0 0 , 4 95 -2 1 9 4 10-18 5B 1982 V O L K S W A G O N RABBIT g o o d condition Runs g re at but must sell $ 1000 firm 3 7 1 -0 2 3 6 leave message 10-18- 5B 1967 M U S TA N G fully restored in side/ out 2 8 9 engine, autom atic transmission Perfect body W h ite / block to p 2 5 5 - 3133 10-18-5B________________________ B M W 3201 1980 Silver-tan excellent condition, new hres, have oil records S 4 9 0 0 Coll 3 2 8 -3 9 3 2 10-18 5B 1983 TO YOTA Supra mint c o n d itio n 1 Bnght red 5-sp miles $ 5 6 0 0 . 4 4 4 -9 9 1 3 M 4 7 -8 1 8 1 10- 18-5B l oaded-sunroof, 98K 1986 RX-7 white, 19.500 miles. $ 9 0 0 0 ' 5 speed 8 3 7 -2 0 5 7 10-18-5B__________ 1987 SUBARU JUSTY GL, 5sp A /C , A M / FM. Silver/ g ra y in terior O nly 2 2 ,0 0 0 miles Excellent First $ 4 5 0 0 takes it 4 47 - 5413 10-19-5B________________________ 1988 Y U G O , red, 4-sp, looks and runs greot $ 1950 8 3 4 -9 7 1 3 10-19-5B 30 — Trucks-Vans FORD B R O N C O XLT 8 0 V -8 351 W indsor, blue and white $ 3 0 0 0 4 7 7 - 8 7 7 9 11-1-15NC______________________ 1973 FORD one ton cam per special West campus traveling, air conditioning G re at truck deal $90C, 4 7 6 -1 0 4 7 10 12-15NC 1977 G M C JIM M Y 3 0 5 V-8 2 wd. PS PS. AC, A M /F M cassette, 4 -s p , Hunters Special, $1800 A fte r 6 pm, Patnck, 2 5 8 - 2 4 7 3 10-13-15NC____________________ 50 — Service-Repair W INDSHIELD REPAIR! D on't wait! W e can stop crack extension o nd restore visability to rock d am aged windshields M ost insurance waives deductobles no cost to you! Gloss D octor 8 3 2 -9 2 4 0 9- 2 8 -2 2 B 70 — Motorcycles 1987 B M W K100RS (lOOOcc) 7 0 0 0 miles im m aculate w ith 2 8 8 - 3 8 7 5 $ 5 3 0 0 n egotiable 10-17-5P accessones FUN ' FU N ' FUN l Yom aho Scooter 1985 R.va 125 $ 6 0 0 4 7 9 -6 7 0 8 10-17-58 '8 8 H O N D A SPREE red and in great shape $ 4 0 0 , Call mornings 4 5 8 -6 6 3 5 10-19-58_____________________________ '8 6 H O N D A A ero 5 0 Excellent c o n d i­ tion $ 5 0 0 with helmet, neg 4 7 4 -4 3 5 0 leave messoge 10-20-5B 80 — Bicycles 75 Bikes $ 2 5 end up 3 AitfMn Location* U T-29tti A O e d H u p e ( A l t Formei Wear) South-2025 W . Ben W M e (Appletreel North-64Bi St. 6 Airport (A ppM ree) Every Saturday 9-8 Austin Mcyck Salvage 244-7444 MOUNTAIN MKE 1LQW0UT e DIAM OND BACK~ ' -J ’ f - -T 1 1982 S C IR O C C O -A M /F M , equalizer, A Q new clutch, CV joint, runs great. $ 2 5 0 0 0 8 0 4 7 3 -2 1 9 7 10-10-17NC e N SH 80 e JAMB ' ' ■ ' ‘ . A U C T IO N ! A U C TIO N ! A U C T IO N ' THIS IS THE A U C TIO N OF THE YEAR! THIS IS N C N B ! CALL JERRY HALE OAKES OR A N Y AG E NT AT PMT 4 7 6 2 6 7 3 10-13- 20B-C MERCHANDISE 190 — Appliances KENMO RE WASHER ond dryer A p a rt­ ment sized Both run on regular house current (no ro o m ' Must sell) $150, 4 53 - 4 9 9 0 10-20-5B _______________________ REFRIGERATOR W ITH beer tap ond keg $125 4 4 3 -0 9 7 0 10-23-5______________ 200 — Furnlture- Household FIVE PIECE BRASS and gloss o ctagon shaped dinette set Still boxed, never used $147 8 9 2 -7 0 8 0 10-17-5B_______ EXTRA FIRM inner spnng mattress ond boxspnng N e ve r used, still packaged Q ueen $185, king $217. includes d e liv­ e ry Home 8 9 2 -7 0 8 0 CO U C H A N D choir fo r sale Durable $ 6 0 4 4 1 -7 4 7 0 10-18-58______________ FOR SALE soto and loveseat N eutral colors. $ 3 5 0 Call 4 4 1 -0 5 5 6 evenings Keep trying. 10-18-5P PO O L TABLE regulation size, 1" slate tap w ith accesories $ 4 5 0 , 4 7 7 -4 9 0 2 , afte r _________________ 5pm. 10-18 5B CHILDREN'S CRIB dresser/ch an g e, nightstond $150 Girls ploy center ages 3-5 $ 5 0 4 48 1779 O n SR route 10- 23-5B ________________________________ 220 — Computers- Equipment $ 5 4 5 , w / 6 m o. w a rra n ty N e w , used, computers, h ardw a re , soft­ w a re . Consignments w anted A udio-visu­ al o nd com puter repairs A C R C O M P U TE R S 4 9 2 2 B u rn e t Rd. 4 5 2 - 6 8 5 2 10-19-20B-D HILL COUNTRY COMPUTERS XT, AT, and 3 8 6 Systems 1 yr. w a rra n ty . Free set-up. Free D e liv ­ e ry. M a s te rC a rd & V isa a c c e p te d . O p e n e v e n in g s o n d w e e k e n d s . C a ll f o r a FREE p ric e list! 244-1028 10-18-206-D dBase III Format inch disks, manuals, disk tutonol M ake o ffe r! 4 7 8 -8 3 0 5 10-13-6P_____________ IBM PC 3*2 and 5 '4 APPLE M A C 8 0 0 k e xternal disc drive 3 5 $185 4 5 4 4 9 8 2 10-17-56___________ BLACK LACQUER entertainm ent center carved oak bar. and stools Sotos, tables and m ore Consignment Connection. 7 9 5 0 Anderson Square, 4 5 2 -4 8 0 0 10- 20-1BK 230 — Photo- Cameras C A N O N A1 with 50m m 1 4 lens $ 3 5 0 4 5 9 -0 8 8 9 10-16-5B__________________ M IN O L T A 35m m CAMERA w ith lens cose fo r cam era and accessories $175 n egotiable 2 8 2 -3 9 3 7 10-16-58 ZEISS 180mm 2 8 lens M int condition $ 6 0 0 Yashica FR1 cam ora w ith 50m m I 4 lens $125 4 7 6 -9 3 9 7 10 2 0 -5 8 250 — Musical Instruments FOR SALE Roland Juno 106 synthesizer $ 5 0 0 4 8 0 -9 7 5 8 10-17-5B____________ 280 — Sporting- Camping Equip. WHITE WATER canoe 17ft. polyethylene hull, saddle seat, double blode oar, car rym g rack, and extras $ 3 2 5 David 4 4 7 -8 0 7 1 ,8 3 5 -0 3 3 0 10-16-58________ 'i V I , , 1978 MERCEDES 2 8 0 SE burnt orange, four door, 100K miles, looded $ 8 7 0 0 4 5 2 -2 3 0 3 .1 0 -9 -1 5 N C ________________ 1974 TR6. N e w top, brakes, muffler, hres N o dents or rust. Yellow Excellent con­ dition $ 3 5 0 0 3 4 6 -8 8 5 5 1 0 -3-2 0 N C '8 2 TO YOTA SUPRA AT AC 74K origi­ no! mies AH pow er Sunroof. N ever wrecked. Extra d e an 31 engine Fast ond smooth. $ 5 0 0 0 4 5 3 -2 9 7 6 10-11-15NC 1981 DATSUN 2 8 0 ZX GL pockoge 2X2 5-speed, stereo cassette Block/red Ex­ cellent condition $ 2 4 0 0 4 7 7 -2 1 7 5 10- __________________________ 11-15NC 8 3 V O L K S W A G O N CONVERTIBLE white Rabbit 4 0 ,0 0 0 , 1st d o » , A M /F M cosMtte 4 7 4 -4 2 1 2 .1Í-1-15NC 1985 H O N D A Civic Hotchbock, 4 ipd, ac, om/fm. WeH maintained, good con­ dition $ 3 5 0 0 Coll 2 8 2 -4 2 4 0 10-12- 15NC_________________________________ 1971 V W T H IN G 3 2 ,0 0 0 miles, dork green, $ 3 0 0 0 Cod 4 7 3 -6 5 5 2 10-12- 15 N C_________________________________ 1987 H Y U N D A I GL. 2 d r, hatchback, AC, A M /F M cassette, low mileoge, ex­ cellent condition, $ 5 5 0 0 O B O 3 8 5 - 6 6 5 9 1 0-5-5 6 ________________________ 8 S u d t n t D K a /A New i l / i e a Bikes W BUCK'S BIKES 928-2810 VBA MC. Am. t« > . Ottcovei Wetcome ■ 290 — Furniture- Appliance Rental TRAIL BIKE SALE Nm eFNTke T u f 10-121 O N L Y S I M •L itetim e W a rra n ty • 1 ve e r F>ee S ervice •S tud en t die cou nt E xp e n rep airs South Austin Bicycles 2210 S 1st 444 0 00 5 VISA M L AM Exp 1985 MIYATA 310 Q uick lelease hubs Shimano com ponents great condition $ 2 5 0 3 2 0 -0 4 1 7 (between 4 ond 10pm) 10-18-5B_____________________________ fram e 27 wheels RALEIGH 10 SP 21 S horp Low miles Blue fram e $ 7 5 O B O 4 5 4 -6 5 9 3 10-18 5B_____________ 1985 Nishtki 15sp lourin g bike 25 fram e heodlight, w ith extros $ 1 /5 David 4 4 7 - 8071, 8 3 5 -0 3 3 0 10-23 3 N C __________ FINGER FURNITURE RENTAL • Com plete Living Room, Din­ ing Room & Bedroom from $ 4 9 9 5 /m o • TV Rental from $ 2 9 9 5 /m o 7801 N. lomar 459-4125 D 9 FOR SALE King size w o te i bed heatei pads 10 liner $100 O B O 2 5 5 3 7 9 5 17 5P________________________________ 300 — G arag e- Rummage Sales '8 2 H O N D A ACC O R D LX--5 sp, great stereo, runs perfectly $ 3 0 0 0 N e g CaH, • leave message 4 7 4 - 9 9 2 5 10-6-2O NC LIKE N F W D iam ondbock Ascent some customizing $ 2 5 0 4 4 4 -8 0 4 6 10-23-5B ’8 5 V W S CIRO CCO G o o d condition Runs great $ 5 5 0 0 O B O M any options N e w brakes and hres. 8 3 5 -7 1 8 3 .1 0 -9 - 15NC ____________________________ 7 8 TRANS A M 4 5 5 , T-tap, 4-spd, 4 0 0 + hp Foster thon 8 8 Corvette Handle* better thon Iroc Z. Driven doily Over 13,000 invested First $ 4 5 0 0 kikes it 3 4 6 - 3 5 5 4 ,8 3 8 - 7 4 0 6 10-11-2 0 N C 8 4 SUBARU G l-1 0 Sports model, sun­ roof, o# power, fully looded A M /F M , AC, excellent condition 4 4 2 -3 9 5 7 10- 10-20N C ___________________________ 1987 RENAULT ALLIANCE DC 5 sp sunroof, Becker stereo, low mileoge perfect condition Best offer 4 5 4 -3 1 5 8 X X 10-20N C __________________________ '8 6 M A ZD A RX7 - silver, 21.000 miles, extended worronty aH service «co rd s 4 5 8 8 3 0 9 , leave messoge 1Q-18-15NC '7 9 CAM ERO BLACK, new engine, new osttomalic transmission, new stereo. PW / PI, A C $ 2 0 0 0 O B O co* Ench. 4 58 - 2 4 0 8 10-18 15NC REAL ESTATE SALES 120 — Housas Comer lot, huge trees, brick, hardwood floors, tile baths, CA/ CH. Hunter fans, fireploce, solar water heater, dorm windows, sprinkler system, double garage. Brykerwoods near Pemberton. 1600 sq. feet. $165,000. 328-7319 1 0-2 0 -5 » CALL 471 -5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD fro m 8am BIG MULTI-FAMILY g arag e sale Satur­ day 911 San to A m onto Clothes, household item* bikes a nd mac 1 0-20 IB l? p m 330 — Pets ¿ O O KEEPER REPTILES Aostms only rephles only' store Snakes, Iguanas. Turtles, Trantulas, m onitor m ore Buy Sek Trade $5 $ 2 5 0 2 88 HCRP 10-16-2 0 B E ____________________ lizards,much 340 — Misc. FOR SALE M u toh dra ftin g machine m o d ­ el A V Excellent condition $ 2 0 0 Cod _______ 8 3 4 -0 1 9 7 10-19 5 B DRAFTING CHAIR odtu tta ble height with costero Sit/kneel p o v h o n i $135 Cod 8 3 4 -0 1 9 7 10-19-5B __ ______________ N O R O O M 1 Fall uze couch $10 tw o piece coach w*1h ottom an $15. Crate CR 160 guitar omphher (12 ip e o k e r)$ 9 0 4 5 3 -4 9 9 0 1 0 -2 0 -5B ^ Ivonhoe ^ Village ? ) MESQUITE TREE APARTMENTS One bedroom furnished oportments. Close to campus, near shuttle Dishwash­ er, A/C, Ceiling fan, loundry facilities ond hot tub Water and basic T V cable paid No pets 2410 Longview Resident mona- ger#301 For info 478-2357 UNIT AVAILABLE NOW! 10-13-20B C T a s a d e salado APARTMENTS 1 bed roo m furnished apartments, w a ­ ter, gos and basic TV cable paid N o pets Swim m ing pool, AC, ond ceiling fans. Laundry facilities Close to cam ­ pus. near shuttle Resident m anager #112, 2610 Salado Street For info 4 7 7 -2 5 3 4 . Unit ovaiolble now ____ 10-9 2 0 8 -C BLOCK WEST UT Very large apartm ent Yard, built-in bookshelves walk in stor­ age closet Q uiet individuals no pets, h oid w oods 4 5 3 -5 4 1 7 9-2V 20B G tastefully O N E B ED RO O M furnished Hyde Park o rea Pool, loundry gas ond w ater paid $ 2 8 5 4 5 0 -0 9 5 5 or 4 58 5831 9 2 9 -2 0 6 A WEST CAMPUS Tim berwood A p a rt­ loft, pool, fireplace ments, effictences huge trees w olk to campus $ 2 7 0 -3 0 0 , 1000 W 26th St 4 78 1 6 2 3 ,4 7 8 -4 8 8 6 1 0 - 5 - 2 0 B - D ________ _ ACROSS FROM campus la rg e one bed room a partm ent w ater/g a s paid $ 2 8 0 5 0 0 Elm wood Place 3 45-1552 or 3 4 5 -5 4 2 3 10-23-10B_________________ NORTH UNIVERSITY on shuttle Unique 1-1 Large w indow s overlooking court yard p o o l Ceiling (an laundry $ 2 9 5 4 2 0 9 Speedway. 3 71 -7 77 7 10-17 9B E W ALK TO UT 1 br opt water gas paid $ 2 6 0 2108 San G abriel 3 45-1552 or 3 45 5 4 2 3 10 23 10 370 — Unf. Apts. A p t s Kc:.’ to Pofk . 0 l ^ ; Ms j h t x Ideol for G r e d Student Recrect'On (Trees Aool/lcuodrv 6 xcellent ftc v 1 S00 €ast Side Dr 441-4375 Pro/wss/onoify MotTogod tv Dovs 6» flsscx y Eastaire Apartments M ove-in Today! 1 Bdr. Starting at*225°° By appointment Call Amy at 4 5 2 0 0 6 0 900 E. 51st St. (rt Airport Blvd. ProfamtonMlly Mannped by Davis & Asm * G O RG EO US LARGE 2-11? Central lo cahon Eveiyfb»ng new $ 3 3 0 STEP SAVERS 4 7 6 -3 0 2 8 10 3 20B f RENTAL 425 — Rooms GET YOUR OWN PLACE! LARGE EFFICIENCIES Starting at $210 a UT Intramural Fields a Newly Remodeled a Excellent Location * IF Shuttle * Preleasing tot Spring/Summer a Door-to-door trash service a Celling Fans 4558 Avenue A 454-8903 Creekside Apartments L i v e b y TOWN LAKE! • UT shuttle city bus • jogging frails • quiet • all efficiencies - Bargain Rates - 499-0491 615 Upson Profess* >na//v Managed frv I At Vis .V AsSiX M OVE IN N O W A N D GET A $ 5 0 GRANT M o ve into Courttand Apts and w e 'll pay up to $ 5 0 of your utilities eoch ond every m onth Keep the $ 5 0 in yo ur pocket ond en|oy our wetboro, m icrowaves, volley- bolt/swim m m g pool, p a rty cabana, ond o ur on-site health club Come in and visit gui 1 8. 2 BDR suites starting at $ 3 5 9 Courtland Apartments 4 5 4 -2 5 3 7 ★ $225 ★ HUGE 1-1'S! Great neighborhood! RIDGETOP APTS. ★ 320-0331 ★ 10-13-20B-C WEST CAMPUS TIMBERWOOD APARTMENTS Efficiencies, fireplace, loft, pool, huge to campus. $ 2 7 0 -$ 3 0 0 1000 West 26th. trees, walk 4 7 8 -1 6 2 3 ,4 7 8 -4 8 8 6 ___________________________1 0-5-2 0 6-D BRYKERWOODS Near Seton Hospital and UT 1 BDR/1 BA. All new heating and AC. Old English archi­ tecture in a trendy neigh­ borhood. $280. Don't lease until you call about this one! 453-4991, 452-1121. 10-18-20B-K # 7 SHUTTLE, FOR mature student*, small complex, large pool, tennis cable se eurrty and on site m anager 1 and 2 BR/ $ 2 3 5 8 3 6 4 6 8 6 9-21 10B-A NORTH OF UT efficiences one bedroom , tw o bed ro om $155 $ 2 8 5 4 77-2214, 454 -4 44 1 9 2 6 -8 6 2 9 9 -2 7-2 0 B L O C ATIO N ' LO C ATIO N !- And all bills paid D ow ntow n near UT ond Capitol O ld e r building rooms ond plenty o f ambiance Call ow ner at 4 7 4 -4 8 4 8 9-2 7-2 0 B -C renovoted w ith large 51st A N D I H -35 $ 2 2 5 Large 1-1 on shuttle N e w carpet heat and w ater paid pool, near shopping center 4 77 - 5 7 5 7 9-2 8-2 0 B -C ____________________ 51st and IH -3 5 $ 3 2 5 Large 2-1 '9 on shuttle N e w carpet, heat and w ater paid, pool, near shopping center 477 - 5 7 5 7 9 -2 8 -20B-C HYDE PARK oreo Small quiet communi­ ty C A /C H Gas and w ater paid 1-1, $ 2 4 0 2-1, $ 3 5 0 Call 4 7 2 -4 8 9 3 10-12- 7B-D________________________________ LEASE N O W Large o ne b e d ro o m shuttle la undry 4 5 4 -6 6 9 6 8 om -3p m 10-18-8B deposit 46 Avenue A pool, $ 2 5 0 to $ 2 7 5 plus electnc GARAGE APARTMENT fo r rent ABP En­ field and M o p ac. convenient to shuttle $ 2 8 5 /m o 4 7 8 -0 7 0 8 A vailable now 10- 19-3 B________________________________ HYDE PARK, small efficiency in stately neig h bo rh oo d north of Law School, $ 2 2 5 ABP. 3 3 0 3 Duval 4 72 -2 12 3 10 2 3 -2 0 _______________________________ 390 — Unf. Duplexes BEAUTIFUL 2-2 Fenced yard 100 yards from UT shuttle, $ 2 9 9 Q uiet cul-de-sac Riverside area 4 5 4 -7 9 0 0 , 837 -2 18 5 10 5-10»_____________________________ NEAR UT Law School Large 2 BDR du- pex, corpet, AC, upstairs, 3 2 0 2 Beon- na 4 5 9 -0 2 2 6 $ 3 9 5 10-!7 5B CHOICE AREA W a lk UT Unique, sunny basement efficiency, 2 oppli anees bills paid $ 2 9 5 4 7 2 9019 10 2 0 10B tooms 5 MINUTES UT on shuttle, east o f 1-35 quiet a rea appli anees, carpeted $ 2 7 5 4 72 -9 01 9 10 20-10B redecorated 2-2, 400 — Condos- Townhouses Guadalupe Square Condos 3 3 1 6 G u a d a lu p e * Fully Furnished * Walk, Jog or Ride to Campus * Covered Parking * Cetling Fans * Central AirHeat \ 477-6661 Call Pronto! Ed Padgett Co « ♦ ♦ j ♦ ♦ ♦ 2 BLOCKS from UT 2 -2 penthouse, par quet floors, breathtaking view $ 8 5 0 ABP Stepvovero4?6 3 0 2 8 10-17-20B HUGE 2 2, W /D , fp. Sunchóse 6 0 0 Also 2-1 W est Compus. loaded O ld M oin $ 6 2 5 furnished Sfepsavero 4 7 6 -3 0 2 8 10-17-20B____________________________ 4 2 0 — Unf. Houses 4-2 WITH TW O living areas N e w W /D L arge y o rd w ith a nd a p p lia n ce s parking for students, Ideol Shuttle $ 8 7 5 4 6 7 -0 0 5 8 261 5108 10-10-10B W ALK TO UT N e w 4 -3 oil appliances, W /D , wetbar, great 4 74 4 7 5 5 858-7511 10-18-5B roommates fo r HOUSE 3 BDR w ith appliances 1 block from bus 1112 S 5th St 4 4 4 -5 3 3 5 $ 3 5 0 10-18-3B ___________ TRAVIS HEIGHTS area, 2-1 near shuttle route $ 3 9 5 /m o n th plus deposit 4 47 - 9419 10-20-5B 425 — Rooms VERY LARGE cleon, private room /en tra n ce /b a th /re fn g e ra to r N o kitchen 38th St Q uiet individual N o pets bills po id 4 5 3 -5 41 7 1 0-6-20B the Castilian M ove MALE A C C O M O D A T IO N now ovotloble m to guarantee a Spring accom odation Call 4 78 9811 d unng business hro or come by 2 3 2 3 San A n to nio 10-12-7B in now WEST CAMPUS single rooms available or entire fraternity house to lease to group 4 5 8 -4 6 0 0 10-16-5B ALL BILLS paid! W alk to compus shore both and kitchen $190 Call Don at 472 4 2 0 5 10-18-58 C________________ ROOMS WEST CAMPUS' 9 0 9 W 22nd hordw o o d floors 10 ft ceiling wolk to compus, S 190-S 235 3 4 3 -6 41 6 10 20- 10B C 10-23-1B TW O BEDROOM, in West Compus W D fireplace, parking $ 6 5 0 STEP SAVERS 4 7 6 -3 0 2 8 10-10-10B A tw o bath TWO BEDROOM TWO BATH ROOMMATE NEEDED, NON-SMOKING UT STUDENT. $199/MO. 444-7536 SPRING. SUMMER Short wolk UT Q uiet nonsmoking p e tle » Shared kitchen For pnvcrte bath ABP S 2 5 0 -S 29 5 4 95 9 3 4 6 /(4 7 4 2 4 0 8 messoge' To shore bills, both - $120 $ 2 0 0 Coll 4 7 2 -5 6 4 o 10-3 20B -A FEMALE RO O M M A TE month free N e a r UT many ommemhe*. private, $ 2 1 5 / mo 3 45 -1 86 5 10-12 TOP for 2-2 First TW O BED RO O M A partm ent Tennis near UT, hike/bike AC N o meo* tobocco $150 ABP, 3 2 0 8 6 3 3 10 '8 3P tw o bed room large tw o bathrooms near cam '9 utilities R O O M M ATE NEEDED house pus. nonsmoker $ 2 5 0 mo 4 7 7 -5 3 4 9 10-20-1P__________________ - BLOCK WEST UT fem ale for duplex fur mshed study 2 BDR-2 BA w ith hardw o o d floors, $ 2 7 5 mo plus house bills. 4 4 3 -4 5 8 0 10-20-5BK RO O M M ATE W A N TE D 5-10 mm from campus $ 7 6 5 rm o utilities Co! Todd 4 7 2 -9 2 0 8 w ork 4 7 2 -3 2 7 8 10 • 23-3B _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ STUDENT FEMALE roommate needed (21 22) Let's together ($215 $ 2 3 0 ) M ove ASAP 3 43 8 4 4 0 10-23-2 fo i 2 2 look 470 — Resorts WEEKEND GET-AWAY LAKE TRAVIS $ 2 5 a n ig h t o r 3 m g h b o n d 2 d a y s f o r $ 4 9 COUNTRY CLUB GOLF PRIVILEGES Id e a l f o r fra te m r ty /s o ro n ty re tre a t Logo Vista Lodges 512-267-1196 10-17 5B-E ANNOUNCEMENTS 510 — Entertainment- Tickets RO LLING STONES-REM (taith Timbuk 3- N e w Kids on the Block Ptl- Rodney C row ell-Stevie Ray Vaughr- Jeff Beck-W W F- Showtim e Tickets 706 W . M IK , 4 7 8 -9 9 9 9 R O IL IN G STONES Six arena seen to ­ gether fo r S aturday N ov 11 show in D al­ $ 4 0 0 fo r o il 4 5 2 -9 5 3 9 10-23 5 las $ 4 0 0 fo r a ll 4 5 RO LLING STONES N ov 11 Two tickets $ 6 5 eoch C all 3 38 -1 6 7 2 Dolías 10-23- 5P SOUTHWEST AIRLINE hekety RT Austin DoNas N o v 3 leave 3 35 p m N o v 5 return 6 p.m. $ 3 8 4 4 8 -8 9 2 8 10-23 -2B 530 — Travel Transportation CRESTED BUTJE NOVEMBER 22-26 NIGHTS — ^ 4 S T E A M B O j£ t JANUARY 2 12 * 5 Ofl 6 MGHT5 — BRECKENR1D/*fc JANUARY 2 7 * 5 NIGHTS W I N T E R P A P K JANUARY 2-7 * 5 NIGHTS — I B MNML COUfBfflE W M T B IH M M t mi ne mMum » a m » 1-80 0 -3 21 -5 9 11 BEAT THE RUSH O n e W a y ticket to Boh, more W ash ing ton Int'l A irp o rt on Dec 21 fe m a le only $125 CAH 4 8 2 -9 7 71 10 10 5B NEED A week »n CA? Buy my aiHim* ♦ k e til RT Austin O ra n g e County, CA <• p ort 11/1, retom 11/8 Best after Da> 463 9 5 4 0 , evening 3 4 5 -4 3 3 3 10-19-5B 550 — Licensed Child D O N ’T W A IT ... A pply now for spring sem ester at: 440 — Roommates Care VEGETARIAN N O N SMOKER needed targe 3-1 Hyde Pork house to share $197 50 • bills 4 47-0221 leave mes sage 10-19 5P LAKE AUS TIN M ontessoo Full u gram ages 2 5 yro 7 15 5 45 school p ro g ra m CaH 4 7 7 -7 7 5 3 58 8 RENTAL 470 — Resorts 'J A M E S LEWIS GOLD A SILVER EXCHANGE WE ARE AUSTIN’S #1 GOLD & SILVER BUYERS BECAUSE WE GUARANTEE THE HIGHEST CASH BUY PRICES FOR YOUR USED GOLD JEWELRY MAMONOS W E00MG BANDS HIGH SCHOOL RINGS DENTAL GOLD STERUNG SILVERWARE ANYTHING GOLD or SILVER IN ANY CONDITION! 4801 BURNET 458-2639 - furniture 4 47 - \ I WILL D O any kind of hauling locol moving, etc I hove a truck 2 5 3 7 10-10-10B-C_____________ _ I W A N T JUNK batteries and alum inum cons 4 4 7 -2 5 3 7 10-10-10B-C__________ THE AUSTIN G O LD A N D SILVER EX C H A N G E Call us first fo r best pnces 4 62 -2 1 5 5 10 18-186 RENTAL Tanglewood West 1-1's Cr 2-2's t 0 POOLS • 3 Laundry Rooms • GosWorerPoid • Shuttle or front door • Furnished or Unfur­ nished IDEAL FOR STUDENTS! 1 4 0 3 N o r w a l k L n 472-9614 P ro fe & o n o ih Mo/iotpekd t>v 350 — Rental Services if Salado^ © FREE LOCATORS Rest and ♦neodfce*t lemce m town Col today THOMAS G. THOMPSON JH. REALTOR 452-8625 Tanglewood North Con you say 2 Pools? • RR shuttle at front d o o r • Remo'deled laundry rooms • Ceiling fans/ m icrow aves LEASE NOW! 452-0060 1020 E. 45th P rofessionally M a n a g e d b y D avis & A ssoc Spanish Trails Apartments 4520 Bennett Dr. 452-0060 H U R R Y ! 1 BR & 2 BR Mice Pool Common Area & Courtyard Fenced with Iron Gates Shuttle at Comer Only a Few Left Will Mot Last Much Longer Profeai l oo t t y Managed by Devi* C Associates Student S p e c ia l1 $225 ABP EFFICIENCIES 2 BLOCKS UT HOLLOW A Y APTS 2502 N ueces 4 7 4 - 2 3 6 5 Apts. 2704 Salado • Walk to school • Fireplace • Study • Tastefully furnished • C eiling fans • M icrow aves • D/W . 472-8551 V 4 7 4 - 7 4 2 6 ^ R i o Nueces 1 B R A 2 B R * 2 Blocks From Campus1 * Ceiling Fans * Mini Blinds * Pool * Private Parking * Laundry Rooms 600 W. 26th L£ 474-0971 y ALL BILLS PAID Fall Rates Eff. 1 BR Sm. 2 BR $ 3 6 0 -$ 3 9 5 $ 3 0 0 $3 9 5 j I / I W alk o r shuttle to campus. CA/CH, remodeled, convenient to everything. 2212 San Gabriel 4 7 4 -7 7 3 2 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ■ f t 10-6 20B-K Hillside Apts. 1 & 2 B e d ro o m s F u rn ishe d o r U n fu rn is h e d C le a n & Q u ie t A ll U tilities Paid 478-2819 514 D a w s o n Rd Just O f f B a rto n S pring s Rd 10-5-20B-C ★ EAST CAMPUS ★ SPECIAL 3 2 N D AT IH 35 A V A L O N APTS. 2 BR -2 BA $ 3 6 5 1 BR 1 BA $ 2 6 5 C eil­ ing tons - w olk-m closets e xtra lorae units - o n site m onoger, laundry, squeaky fo r b w /e n g m e e n n g stu clean G re a t dents/LBJ School 476-3629 1 0 -2 0 -20B-E * Quiet • Spacious • T w o B e d ro o m s S ta rtin g $ 3 8 0 / m o W a lk to ca m p us, RR shuttle Free c a b le , p o o l la u n d ry , o n -s ite m a n a g e ­ m ent, trees, & m o re SHANTI APARTMENTS • 4 7 6 -8 4 7 4 • 4 5 3 -2 3 6 3 9 27 20B K 4 5 3 3 AVENUE A, LARGE one b edroom furnished, newly rem odelled 45 channel Cable Vision $ 3 2 5 plus electnc ceilmg tons p o o l 8am 3pm 10 18 8B la undry shuttle 4 5 4 -6 6 9 6 ADORABLE 2 2 IN beautiful Hyde Pari orea g ig a n tii ond fireplace O n shuttle Coll 459-1711, 452 112! 10 18 20B E trees covered parking Calm Down! In the Heart of West Campus. Relax in an efficiency, 1 -1 , or 2-1. Prices starting at $300.00/mo. All Bills Paid! San Gabriel Square Apts. 2212 San Gabriel 474-7732 Male accommodation available now at: C^UtííCCLK 2323 San A ntonio (512)-478-9811 I l f i t t K i l T l i M l f t R I V E R S I D E Q U A R T E R ' S • Co ed a P riv a te B a th • Fisritng Dock • A m p le F re e P a rtu n g a la k e s id e P o o l J a c u z z i a C o lo t TV in e v e r y t o o m a L O k e v ie w D m tn g S tuden t Living wrffi a Prverpde P on t o t View M jrting at *1881"° School year z (512) 444-3411 1001 S. IN-35 ond Riverside Dr. i l M r t W f t r t M ! Y A K O D A A H W A H N E E 2 2 bicycle m mint condition w ith lock extro tubes fo r $ 3 0 0 , 4 4 4 -8 5 2 4 Coll anytim e 1 0 -20 -5 »_____________________________ too l kit BIG GARAGE sole furniture appliance*, rugs, everything we ow n Don ! mis* fht$ one Sat and Sun 913 West Lynn 10 2 0 IB _________ ____ __ _ I A R G f Q l.t fT efficiency 38th and Ave nue B f ee batic cable com w a *he r and drye i ga* and w ater po d $ 2 0 0 • elect'icity Anne M .l'e i 4 5 / 4 /1 2 10 18 2 06 K 2323 San Antonio 478-9811 RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. i • / r ■ ■ ■ T ' i - T T T ' i T i ' T V T ' n - r r r r r r n Page 14 Monday, October 23,1989 THE DAILY TEXAN SERVICES EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 750 — Typing 790 — Part time 790 — Part Time Young Horns play old ANNO UN CEM EN TS SERVICES 560 — Public Notice 630 — Computer Services WRITE RSI Expression M oqozm e needs stones, poems, essoys, ana illustrations. Send SA S E to Box 2429, M eso, Arizona 35214.10-11-206___________________ _ LO ST P E R M A N E N T A 2 6 9 0 6 0 5 2 Sept. 12,1989___________ residence card, EDUCATIONAL 580 — Musical Instruction IE S S O N S - R & B, rock. |ozz. G U 'T A R country 10 years teaching experience A n d y Builmgton 45 2-6181 10 11-208-D 590 — Tutoring W O R D P R O C E SSIN G -re aso n o W e rotes, term papers, resumes, monuscripts, etc. Call 331 4719 anytime. Ask lor Cyndy. 10-4-20BK_______________________ ___ 740 — Bicycle Repair e - e - ,-e . -a-.- ;#• •.•#•. TUNE-UP SPECIAL!! — True wheels, adjust brakes, gears, bottom bracket, headset, hubs, an d lube — ALL FOR 18.501 THE BIKE C O N N E C T IO N 3709 N. IH35 AT 3872 ST 469-9025 • R E S U M E S • TER M P A P E R S • R U SH S E R V IC E • L A S E R PRINTING O P E N 7 D A Y S W E E K til M id n ig h t S u n d a y to T h u r s d a y H o u se o f | % \ T U T O R S U V 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 8 1 3 W 2 4 th M arket R esearch ers N eeded Interview Executives and consum ers by telephone from our downtown office. Flexible, part-time hours, interesting work. No Sell­ ing. Hourly w age to $5 hr. First Market Research Corporation 1111 West 6th Street Suite 220 Treaty O a k Square 3 9 7 -1 7 0 0 G R A D U A T E STU D E N TS- to b« * Paradigm'* D irectoiyof Tuton cdW 472- 7986. *1 0 par eemester 9-29-208-K PART TIM E *ea*onal help to work week­ ends a* ho*t/hostel* at mo,or center for hokdoy - « « . « 1 3 » 4 4 3 7 for more information. 10-16-3P SA LES P W S O N for K fl J ¿ c* clothing store. Allen, 452 -14 /V toe L A W F IR M desires d e p e n daWe person with a g o o d dnving record and nrtobM vehicle tor 1-5:30. Runner/genera' office position 478-1075.10-16-5B. iu _ M O N D A Y T H R O U G H FRID AY 9 4 , $4 50/hr light typing filing, phone dut-es. Property m anager expen- Includes p a r t TIM E se c r e t ^ /b o o k k w ^ t r Call 3 2 7 -3 3 9 7 after 1 0 0pm. 10-18-5B TU TORS W A N T E D I Math, phys.es, data 750 — Typing Z IV L E Y ’S ★ Word Processing ★ Top Quality Laser Printing ★ Applications ★ Themes ★ Law Briefs ★ Resumes at 27th & Guadalupe 2707 Hemphill Park 472-3210 472-7677 ACADEMIC TYPING SERVICE 504 W. 24th St. 477-8141 Term P o p e n Resumes, Bnefs Dissertations 5 2 /p p . w /2 4 h r*, notice Watl 24th St. ■ C a m p u s ■ O --------- z • i | N e x t d o o r to M o d D o g < 8 B o o n 's ______________tnlght O p en 8 a.m. to M id n igh t P icku p 8 O ollvary Avotloble 'ollt LONGHORN COPIES a Resumes a Theses a Term papers a Word Processing • Binding a Laminating • Laser Printing • Kodak Copies 2518 Guadalupe 4 7 6 -4 4 9 8 M A T H T U T O R 504 W. 24th S L Office 477-7003 O v e r 10 y e a r s o f p r o f e s s io n a l s e r v ic e h e l p i n g s t u d e n t s m a k e T H E G R A D E . S t r u g g l i n g ? ? F r u s t r a t e d o n t e s t s ''? C a l l o r c o m e bv fo r a p p o in t m e n t . C O M P EN G IN S C IE N C E M A T H E M 306 v* T E R M S M30 102 E M 3 M C S 3 0 4 P F M303F f M 3 0 6 S C S20 6 M 403K i E M 3 14 C S 3 1 S M 3 16 x L E M 3 I9 C S 4 '0 M 305G E E 3 16 C S-U C M 4 0 ' EE411 M 8 0 6 A B C S3 2 8 EE3 10 M608E A B C S3 J 6 EE 2- 2 C S3 4 5 M 3 ' 8K EE3 23 C S 3 S 2 M 4 ? ? * t C S3 7 2 M 3 H E N G L IS H C H F M IS T R Y ENC.603 P H Y S IC S C H E M 3 0 I 3 02 EN G 307 OHY 4 • ; h E M 6 ’0 A B EN G 3O 0 P H Y 3 0 2 M : h E M 6 - « A B E N G 310 PH Y3 C3 * PH Y327K t B U S IN E S S A S T R O N O A T A P R O A C C 3 ” 312 AST 3C " 4 C 326 327 AST 302 AST 303 AST307 FRENCH G E R M A N SPANISH 0PA13.) < ACCJE4 ECO ST A T 309 P S Y 3 ’ 7 E C 0 3 0 2 E C 0 30 3 S ~ C 3 '7 f C 0 3 2 0 K t EC 0324 Don't put tins oft until the night be­ fore an exam it » too late then. • tB kxk totJT * Very reasonable * Lots of patience • Ir a language you can understand he > ■ door to Mad Dog & Beans rales I j I We»' 24th St i S i a x o u » SERV ICE • TUTORING- All Subjects • TEST & EXAM REVIEWS • CLASS NOTES OPEN 7 DAYS/WEEK ’til Midnight Sunday to Thursday H o u se of T U T O R S l W 472-6666 813 W. 24th GRADUATE STUDENT TUTORS AVAILABLE Free listing of g ra d u a te student tutors a v a ila b le to all u n d e r­ g ra d u a te s at: P a r a d i g m 407 West 24th 9 7 9 2 0 B -K ★ W O W $1.25/pg.!^ D a y Ru sh $ 2 25 , N ig h t Rush $3, T ra n s c n b m g $ 2 , R e su m e s $1 0 E xp e rie n c e d , p ro fe ss io n a l typing UNIVERSITY TYPING 495-9541 ★ 10-16-20B-C W O R D P R O C E S S IN G transcnption (stan­ dard or microcassette ) Resumes, theses, papers Laser pnntmg. W o rd Period Reasonable! Expenencedl 4 7 2 - W O R D 10 -10-20B -D __________________ __ PRIVATE C O N F ID E N T IA L in Business M o t 1' Calculus Physics, Pascal, Statistics, and Econom ics Call 2 5 1 -8 6 2 6 ’.0-5 -2 0 B K ___________________ tutoring ★ ■ 600 — Instruction Wanted S P A N IS H SP L A K E R Tutor 2 children Ele mentary South Austin Prefer female ed ucahon major Leave message 1-858- 7714 10-19 5 B & 2 N C C O L L E G E E N G L IS H composition teacher and editor with PhD: proofreading, word processing, 8 9 0 9 10-10-20B-C laser printing 47 9- ___________________________ 10-18-20B -C Im m ed iate o p e n in g s W e c a n put y o u TELEPHONE O P ERAT O RS Earn Up to $10/hr. Full/Parttime I need 20 happy enthusiastic people who are motivated by making money. O u r office has a cheerful, comfortable atmos­ phere with casual dress. A M / P M SHIFTS AVAIALBLE Apply in Person 12-12:30 or 6- 6:30 p.m. at 3701 Guadalupe, Suite 105. HIRING NOW!!! 10-23-36 ATTENTION STUDENTS! W e h a v e port time p osition s a v a ila b le m o rn in g s, afte rno o ns, a n d w e e k e n d s to w o r k w h e n e v e r y o u a re not in class. C all D u n hill T e m p o r a r y system s 4 5 8 - 5 2 7 1 to m a k e a n a p p t N e v e r a fe e 5 0 5 E H u n tta nd 7 8 7 5 2 10-20-2B-E 4 8 3 -55 00 $5.00 HR ★ STUDENTS ★ Concert ticket sales. Phone Rep Positions Part hme evening hours M o n d a y-T h u rv d a y 5 :3 0 -9 :0 0 p m Fn d ay 5 3 0 -8 3 0 p.m Saturday 9:00-12 0 0 a m 5555 N. Lamar C-107 1-4 p.m ★ C H R IST M A S E A R N IN G ★ POW ER! is getting O u r m arketing office ready for Christmas! Y o u should be also! Earn that M e rry Christm as now! Part-time a m /p m shifts a v a il­ able Sa la rie s a n d ge n e ro u s bonus schedule. Call Bunny from 9 3 0 - 12 3 0 a m o r 6 -9 pm at ★ 255-0249 ★ 10-9-20B-K KEVIN'S COOKIES & CREAM L o o k in g for d e p e n d a b le m o rn ­ ing help. M - W - F 8-12, o r M - F 8- 12, if requested A fun p lace to work. C all 4 7 8 - 5 6 2 3 , o r co m e b y betw een 9 3 0 -1 2 am M -F . 8 1 6 C o n g r e s s A ve . 1st floor, First City Centre 7 10-23-2B H o w w ould you like to work at a private softball com plex? W e are looking for w om en & men with a neat a p p e a ran c e & an o utgo ing an d talkative personality. C all 4 4 5 -7 5 9 5 between 10 am & 2 pm for Lonnie or Peter to a rra n ge an interview. 10-23-4B-K ! PLEASE! A llo w m e to p e rs o n a lly tend to y o u r typ in g n e e d s o n m y I B M W o r d P r o ­ c e sso r Fast a n d a cc u ra te to sa v e y o u time a n d m o ne y. McCALL OFFICE SERVICES 346-6150 10-18-20B -C ★ TYPE-RITE Typing Service College papers storting at $1.50/pagel laser pnnter available. Resumes $10; ★ Prompt service, pick-up and delivery available. H ours 7 3 0 a.m.-6 p m or af­ ter hours by appointment. O u r new lo c a ­ tion is 1301 W 38th # 1 0 5 ★ 453-7504 ★ University o rea W O R D P R O C E S S IN G Expenenced e di­ a n d tor English reasonable Coll Robert for rates 4 7 7 - 9 5 2 3 . 9 - 2 7 - 2 0 B - A __________ Sp an ish THE S T E N O P A D $1.75 and up/double spaced p age W o r d processing with laser pnnting. 4 5 9-77 10 . 9 -2 8 - 2 0 B - C A S A P W O R D Processing All papers typed with personal touch. $1 6 5 p oge Fast turnaround C an d ace 4 5 1 -4 8 8 5 10- 3-2 0 P _________________________ STARR Q U A L IT Y w ord processing and graphics Ail student papers 4 4 4 -0 8 0 1 _________________________ 10 -5 -2 0 8 -C A V A IL A B L E T O students or business. R e ­ search proofreading. Call 4 7 8 - 5 0 5 3 mornings only. Easy access for M S shut­ tle 10-13-20B.__________________________ Q U A L IT Y W O R D Processing- Affordable, Dependable, E xpenenced $1.50 /p a ge and up Pickup a nd delivery available Diane 3 3 5 - 7 0 4 0 . 10-16-5P_____________ TYPE-IT T Y P IN G Service Professional, re­ liable service Font selection, pnnted on LaserJet pnnter B J at 3 3 5 - 5 4 3 2 10 18 2 0 P _____________________ J E A N N E 'S T Y P IN G service. N orth Austin home. W o r d processing, tronsenbing, generol typing Fast, reasonable, a ccu­ rate 8 am - 9 pm 8 3 6 - 4 3 0 3 10-19-18P 760 — Misc. Services $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ STUDENT LOANS & SCHOLARSHIPS N O W AVAILABLE! Call to reserve your funds. 4 5 9 - 7 0 1 9 10 5 2 0 B D EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part Time ___ l/par (45 t wpmj B O O K K E E P E R (we from) Runner (your car). O D D JO B S 408 W 17th St Applications 9am -4pm (9-27- 20B-A) O C C A S IO N A L C O N T R A C T help needed and painting cleaning apartments $5 50/hr Rio House Apartments, 17th and Rio Grande. 4 7 2 -12 38 .10-18-10B-K. DIETARY A ID E - P M shift, immediate opening, excellent port-time |ob for stu­ dent Buckner Villas, 1101 E Broker Lane, Austin, TX, 836-1515. 10-18-5»________ BRIGHT, H IG H energy phone person with excellent verbal skills, detail- orient­ ed g o o d handwriting, nonsmoker. $4 50/hr 1 30-5:30 Mon-Fn. O n e Sot a month M onkey Business Balloons and Entertainment 4 45 -5 9 4 4 10-18-3B-D PART TIME administrative assistant posi­ tion available Hours 12-5, flexible. $5/ hour G o o d communication ond writing skills, type 55wpm Send resume: 8716 N M o p o c # 2 0 0 , Austin, Tx. 78759. 10- 1 9 - 5 B - D ______________________ W A N T E D PART time kitchen help M o n - day-Eridoy, 3:30-7 30pm and Saturday when work is scheduled. Apply in per­ son on the Thompson Conference Center kitchen, basement level, weekdays 2-3pm 10-19-2B-C campus al P A V A S (LAD IES boutique) at Borton Creek M oll has immediate part-time sales positions. Ap ply in person. 328- 836 3 10-20-38_____________________ PART TIME employment for insurance pf- fice. Marketing, some clerical work. Pre­ fer previous sales experience Coll for in- terview 454-4524. 10-20-38 PART TIME cashier needed at Le Fun g o m e 2 2 0 0 G uadalupe 10-20-2B 3 p m -5 p m . ro o m PART TIME morning and evening posi­ tions available Austin Shoe Hospital Coll Rondy 453-1961 10-20-5B________ TYPIST BO O K K EEPER, handyman, car­ penter, mechanic Minimum 3 hr block time W U K A S C H Architects 2 00 0 G u a ­ dalupe. 4 7 6 -3 3 0 0 .10-20-5B If you’re only looking for a JOB don’t read on. Yte re looking lor the rare person A h,j can recognize the opportuni y ior a head start in one ol the most rewarding professions A c o e g e internship w th Northwest em Mutual L ite cou!d be the break you vp been hoping lot You'll be your own boss gel paid tor yout productivity and gam practical business experience Potential tor luti time career alter graduation It you re an achieve men! oriented ¡r, sr or grad student can Steve Muro 327-3868 STUDENT JOBS Earn m o n e y w hile g o in g to school. o rg an iza tio n Statew ide co nsum er w in n in g fair & a ffo rd a b le insurance rates N o w h a s full a n d part time staff positions a v a ila b le for en ergetic & e n ­ thusiastic w o m e n & men. H o u rs 2-10 p m. C a ll Texas Citizen A ctio n 4 7 8 - 7 2 2 7 10-20 20B K Austin church W ednesday & Sunday C H IL D C A R E workers Needed for North evenings $4 00/hr Coll 834-1100 10- 20 5B 800 — General Help Wanted 800 — General Help Wanted ★ TOM THUMB PAGE N O W H IRING ALL POSITIONS Various Shifts Contact K. Modden Come by and apply In person at 3300 Bee Cove Rd. ____________ 10-18-5B-E ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A * BARTENDING Learn How In 2 Weeks! Morning, Afternoon, & Evening Classes Learn how to free-pour, like in the movie Cocktail! Job Placement Assistance Texas School of Bartenders 440-0791 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A p p ro ve d b y Texas Education A ge n cy 10-19-208-E Behavioral Science Consulting Firm needs part-time research assistant to identify/obtain articles/books on various behavioral science topics. Past library research experience required. Send resume to: Research Assistant 8539 Thunderbird Rd. Austin, TX 78736 10-23-5B Would you like to offer Dis­ cover Credit Cards? Are you available for only a few hours/week? If so, call T 800-932-0528 ext. 4. We'll pay you as much as $10.00/ ten positions hour. Only available. 10-23-2 N E A R C A M P U S - Full/port time. TYPIST (45 + wpm). B O O K K E E P E R (we tram) Runner (your car). O D D JO BS. 408 W 17th St Applications 9am-4pm. 9-28- 2 0 B -A ______________________________ A IR L IN E S N O W H IR IN G . Flight Attend­ ant*, Travel A g e nts, M e ch a n ic» , Customer Service Listings. Solones to $105K. Entry level positions. Call (1) 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext. A-9413.10-12-20P J O B S $ 1 6 ,04 0 G O V E R N M E N T - $59,230/yr N o w hmng Coll (1) 805- 6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext. R-9413 for current fed­ eral list. 10-12-20P E A R N M O N E Y R e a d in g b o o k s ! $30,000/yr income potential Details. (1) 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext. Y-9413 10-13-17P A T T E N T IO N for EXCELLENT home assembly work. Info. Call 504- 6 46-1700 Dept PÓ253 10-16-5P income O V E R S E A S JO B S $ 9 0 0 -2 0 0 0 mo Sum ­ mer, Yr round, All countnes, all fields Free info Write UC, P.O. Box 52-TX02 Co ro n a Del M o r C A 9 26 25 10-12-21P V ID E O P R O D U C T IO N com pany seeks port time runner/miscetloneous help a f­ ternoons Must have car ond insurance $4.50 plus mileage, 4 7 2 -3 8 9 9 10-19- 5B________________________________ A T T E N T IO N — H IR IN G ! Government lobs — your orea $17,840-$69,485 Call 1-602-838-8885 Ext R4008 10- 2 3-4 P _____________________ _ E A SY W O R K ! Excellent p a y! Assemble products at home. Call for information 504 -64 1-8 00 3 Ext. 479 10-23-1P 810 — Office- Clerical N E A R C A M P U S - Full/port time TYPtST (4 5 + wpm). B O O K K E E P E R (we train) Runner (your car). O D D JOBS. 408 W. 17th. St. Applications 9am-4pm. (9-27- 2 0B-A)_____________________________ 10 20-2B-E 820 — Accounting- Bookkeeping C r a i g D o u g l a s Daily Texan Staff ★ Í g JL g jV FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Hogs' ball. Down by four four with and Barry Foster couldn't wait to get the ball. m inutes to go “We didn’t even know who most of those guys were.” — Quinn Grovey, Arkansas quarterback Boone Powell, Bubba Jacques, Van Malone and Bo Robinson. Powell, the eldest of the group, is a sopho­ more. "W e didn't even know who most of those guys w ere," Grovey said. O n the Razorbacks' last drive, all but one of the tackles w ere m ade by players who have yet to start a game. Between them , they had just under 100 less tackles than the play­ ers that were missing on the final drive. "W e knew that our chances of going to the Cotton Bowl could be on the line here," M alone, who started for the injured Richard, said. "Everybody on the w hole team was so well prepared; there w asn't any­ thing that everybody h ad n 't seen in practice." The last drive w asn't the only time w hen the younger replace­ m ents came through. O n first and goal from the Texas 6-yard line, just before the half, Bubba Jacques knocked dow n a Grovey pass that was intended for a w ide open Billy W inston in the end zone. "That was one of the plays of the gam e," Texas Coach David McWilli­ am s said. "If he scores there, we go into the half dow n at least seven and that changes our whole outlook on things." The secondary was definitely the most affected by the injuries. Two of the four starters w ere gone by the fourth quarter and Ringo, w ho had replaced a starter, w as out as well. The makeshift group of mostly freshm en and sophom ores held to­ gether, though, as Grovey netted minus-3 vards passing on three at­ tem pts in the Hogs final drive. "Being young doesn't m ean that you can't play. Those guys aren't freshm en anym ore," junior corner- back Paul Behrman said. H orns _________________ Just m inutes e a rlie r, F o ste r had plowed through an injury-rid­ dled m akeshift Texas defense on his way to a touchdow n that brought the Hogs to w ithin four of the upstart Longhorns. ''Time to end their d re a m /' he thought as he trotted to the Razor- back huddle. Why shouldn't he look forward to running against a defense that had five of its key players on the sideline with injuries w hen the game was on the line? ■ Starting cornerback Stanley Richard had been lost the previous week due to an ankle injury that he sustained in the Oklahom a game. ■ Starting strong safety Lance Gunn was ejected from the game in the first quarter for fighting. ■ By the m iddle of the fourth quarter, defensive back Todd Ringo and both starring defensive tackles — Ken Hackemack and Rocky Allen — were gone with injuries. All considered, the players lost represented a little under one third of Texas tackling load heading into the game. They had a total of 130 tackles. "We certainly w eren't overconfi­ dent, but the prospect of facing that defense without all those guys with the game on the line w asn't exactly as bad as facing that defense with Hackemack, Richard, Allen and th e m ," A rk a n sas q u a rte rb a c k Q uinn Grovey said. To make a long story short, the Razorbacks' last drive, the attem pt to "end their dream ," failed. The Hogs got a mere 18 yards w hen they needed 80. Instead of falling to Hackemack, Allen and victim to Shane Dronett, Co., they fell EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 880 — Professional 880 — Professional ACCOUNTING MANAGER • Prime Cable has an immediate opening for an accounting m anager in it's corporate of­ fice in Austin. Under the gen­ eral direction of the divisional controller. The incumbent in this position will handle all as­ pects of accounting for multi­ including ple cable systems preparation of monthly oper­ ating statements and drafting annual reports. • Skills and qualifications: bach­ elor's degree in accounting or its equivalent plus a minimum of 3 years experience in pub­ lic or private accounting. C PA or progress toward C PA pre­ ferred. Computer skills w /PC spread sheet or main frame accounting system. • Please send resume and sal­ ary history to: Patricia Hrabi- na, Human Resource Director, Prime Cable, 6 0 0 Congress Ave., Suite 3000, Austin, TX 78701. e Minorities and females are en­ couraged to apply, e N o telephone calls, e E O E M /F/V /H FINANCIAL ANALYST e Prime Cable has an opening for a financial analyst. This po­ sition reports to the Vice Presi­ dent of Finance and is respon­ sible interest, hedging, investor releations, reviewing capital structures and partici­ pation in short and long term corproate planning, for e Skills and qualificaitons: M a s ­ ters of Business Administration and C P A with tax experience, strong analytical skills, and knowledge of Lotus 1-2-3, 3 years experience in account­ ing with some finance experi­ ence helpful, e Please send resume and sal­ ary history to: Patricia Hrabi- na, Human Resource Direc- tror, Prime C able, 6 0 0 Congress Avenue, Suite 3000, Austin, TX, 78701. e Minorities and females are en­ couraged to apply e N o telephone calls 10-17-56-E EO E M /F/V /H __________________________ 10-17-56-E 890 — Clubs- Restaura nts COUNTER HELP With Assistant M a n age r potential $3.50-$4.50/hr. The Bagel Manufactory on the D rag Apply m person after 2 p.m 10-20-5 900 — Domestic- Household EDUCATION MAJORS D o you love children? Looking for a loving, trustworthy individ­ ual to do part-time babysitting and in ex­ change for free apartment with ABP. Enfield area. References required. C A II 482-8742. light housework 10-17-56 6ABYSITTER FO R 20-montti old girl Lake Trovis oreo. .Preferred child psychology or education major. Som e overnights, 261-6041. 10- transportation provided 1Ó-5B-C M A ID SERVICE needs expenenced su­ pervisors and housekeepers. Top pay. Must have transportation/phone 288- 3 4 4 0 leave m essage 10-16-58 H O M E M A K IN G STU D E N T Jo cook and freeze special diet meals 3-4/hrs every week ond d e a n up. $25/wk. O ff M o p o c near Barton Creek Mall. 3 2 7 -9 6 2 9 10- 17-48 H O U S EK E E P E R W A N T E D 3 to 5 m om- ings/week. to clean, do laundry, ond to iron. Nonsmoker. Also looking for b ab y­ sitter on weekends. 328-7810.10-18-106 W A N T E D M A T U R E responsible girl with reliable transportation to core for small children 3-9 M-F. Coll for interview even­ ings 328-3716 10-18-3B STAFF ACCOUNTANT e Prime Cable has an immedi­ ate need for a staff accoun­ tant in its corporate office in Austin. Under the general di­ rection of the divisional con­ troller the incumbent in this position will handle all aspects of subscriber reporting and administration of program ­ ming contracts for multiple cable television systems, e Skills and qualifications: Bach­ elor's Degree in Accounting or equivalent plus a minimum of 3 yrs. accounting experi­ ence Lotus 1-2-3. Affinity for detail work with strong or­ ganizational skills. Ability to analyze and administer con­ tracts or legal documents. G o o d written and oral com ­ munication skills. Supervisory experience a plus, e Please send a resume and sal­ ary history to: Patricia Hrobi- na, Human Resource Director, Prime Cable, 6 0 0 Congress Ave., Suite 3000, Austin, TX 78701. e Minorities and Females are encouraged to apply- e N o telephone calls 10-17-56-E Residential Treatment Center near Oakhill hiring the following positions: Full-time weekend su­ pervisor and part-time overnight weekend supervisor. Excellent references a MUST. Call 288- 2687. M onday, Tuesday, Thurs­ day & Friday between 11:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. O N LY. lO -23 -lO e -K PLACE A CLASSIFIED C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 EDUCATIONAL 610— Misc. Instruction JA P A N AMERICA SO CIETY OF A USTIN Now offers la n gu a ge classes th rou gh M u rch iso n C o m m u n ity P ro gra m For adulta S ix week courses B u sin e ss class M o n & W ed 6:30-8 00 P M , sta rts Oct 30 $45 C u ltu re class T u e s 6:30-8:30 P M . starts Oct 31 $25 For C h ild re n C la s se s scheduled Sep-Dee an d J a n J u n C h il­ dren 5-12 N o prior know ledge Japanese required S a tu rd a y s 8:30 A M -noon. T u itio n $40 mo plu s registratio n and m ate­ rial fees For more inform ation, phone MURCHISON COMMUNITY SCHOOL JASA EDUCATION COMMITTEE (512)346-8830 <5I2)346-»40 The RAND Graduate School (RGS) Invites applications for its doctoral degree program in policy analysis. Deadline for 1990-1991 is February 1, 1990. RGS, which is fully accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, is an integral part of The RAND Corporation. Its curriculum consists of rigorous multidisciplinary course work including quantitative methods, economics, social science, technology and policy workshops, combined with on-the-job training (CXJT), leading to the dissertation and award of the Frti.D. in Policy Analysis. Subfields of specializa­ tion include health policy, national security policy, and Soviet studies Students typically receive OJT support equivalent to doctoral fellowships. Fellowships are also available for applicants with special interests in health policy or Soviet international behavior. A master's degree, or equivalent post-bachelor s de­ gree training and experience, is required for admission. A representative of The RAND Graduate School will be at the Career Center in Jester Center Halls on Tuesday, October 24,1989. T h * RAN D Corporation 1700 MOn Street P.O. Boat 2138 Santa Monica, CA 90406-2138 N E A R C A M P U S Full/port time G a in bookkeeping experience TYPIST (45 w.p.m.) R U N N E R (your car) O D D JO B S 4 08 W 17th St: Applications 9am-4pm. (10-3-20B-A) ___________ 840 — Sales ADVERTISING SALESPERSON NEEDED O u r lead in g Advertising Sale s Representative a v e ra g e d over $1 200 a month during this past year. W oricing part-time. Duties include servicing a n established account list as well a s soliciting ne w business. S a le s ex p e n e n ce preferred but not required. M u st h a ve a car. M u st ha ve g o o d o rg a n iza tio n a l skills, b e a fast learner, a h a rd worker, a n d h a ve the desire to earn se nous m o n ­ ey. M ust be ab le to w o rk 2 0 hours o r m ore each week. C o m e by T S.P. 4.124 to fill out on a p ­ plication. If yo u qualify, w e'll call yo u for an interview THE DAILY TEXAN TSP Room 4.124 25th & Whitis Ave. EOE _________________________ 10-16-10NC ~NEED PART-TIME WORK? Earn $200.00 per month working 15 hours per week as a Sales Trainee. duties include assisting in all a s ­ pects of advertising sales. Sale s experience preferred but not re­ quired. M u st have a car. If you are a fast learner, hard w orker an d have g o o d o rgan izatio nal skills, there m ay b e a place for you on our advertising staff. C o m e by TSP 4.124 to fill out an application. If you qualify, we'll coll you for an interview. THE DAILY TEXAN TSP Room 4.124 25th & Whitis Ave. 850 — Retail JEWELRY SALES- »xp«n«nced perv>n naadad Day, fuJI-tim«, port-tim# 451- 0521, o»k for Gtono 10-20-206 870 — Medical DIETARY AID N U R S IN G H O M E EXPERIENCE PREFERRED FULL-TIME A N D PART TIME APPLY IN PERSON 6909 Burnet Lane ____________________ 1016-76-E NURSING STUDENTS needed for nune atdt and home care. Flexible w#t» school Hour*. NorreN Corporation, 459- 8716 tO-20-56_________________ 880 — Professional LAW SCHOOL Gradúale employment m El Pom Send return# to 615E. Sdtuaer K d g l O , El Paw, TX 79907 IGKTTOe Immediale EOE 10-16 1 0N C EMPLOYMENT 860 — Engineering-Technical M ORGAN STANLEY & CO Incorporated invites students o f all majors to a presentation on Opportunities in Investment Banking Tuesday, October 24,1989 7:00 P.M. Texas Union Tea House Lounge Representatives of Morgan Stanley will be present to discuss: The Investment Banking Industry. Opportunities in the Financial Analyst Program. Contact the Career Planning & Placement Office in your college for additional information Refreshments will be served AROUND CAM A rou n d C a m p u s is a d a ily c o lu m n lis t ­ in g U n iv ersity -rela ted a c tiv itie s sp o n so red b y acad em ic d ep a rtm en ts, stu d en t se rv ices an d registered stu d e n t o rg a n iza tio n s. To appear in A rou n d C a m p u s, o rg a n iza tio n s m u st b e reg istered w ith th e O ffic e o f C am ­ p u s A c tiv itie s. A n n o u n c e m e n ts m u st b e su b m itted o n th e correct form , a v a ila b le in The D aily Texan o ffic e , 25th Street and W h itis A v e n u e , b y 11 a .m . th e d ay b efo re p u b lic a tio n . The D a ily Texan reserv es the right to ed it s u b m is s io n s to co n form to s ty le s ig n if ic a n t a lth o u g h n o r u le s , ch a n g es w ill b e m ad e. ____________MEETINGS____________ T h e U n iv e rs ity G r o u p o f A lc o h o lic s A n o n y m o u s w ill m e e t fro m n o o n to 1 p .m . M o n d a y th r o u g h T h u rs d a y in B atts H all 106 a n d o n F rid a y in B a tts H all 107. A lc o h o lic s A n o n y m o u s w ill h ave a c lo sed m e e tin g from n o o n to 1 p .m . M o n ­ d a y , W e d n e s d a y a n d F rid a y a t St. A u s tin 's C h u rc h , P a u list H all, 2010 G u a d a lu p e St. a n d o n T u e s d a y a n d T h u rs d a y a t All S a in ts' E p isco p al C h u r c h , G re g g H o u s e 313, 27th S tre e t a n d U n iv e rsity A v e n u e . T h e U n iv ersity M u sic ia n s' O rg an ization w ill m e e t a t 8 p .m . M o n d a y in P arlin H all 101. T h e U n iv eristy G rou p o f A lc o h o lic s A n o n y m o u s w ill h a v e e a riy -b ird m e e tin g s from 8 to 9 a .m . M o n d a y th r o u g h F rid a y in B atts H all 107. T h e UT S a ilin g T eam w ill m eet at 7 p .m . M o n d a y in R o b e rt L ee M o o re H all 5.104 N e w m e m b e rs w e lco m e. T h e T exas S tu d en t TV T ask Force w ill m e e t a t 5 p .m . M o n d a y in R o b e rt A. W elch H all 2.312. T h e UT S p a n ish C lu b w ill m eet at 4 p .m . T u e s d a y in B atts H all 201. T h e m e e t­ in g w ill be fo llo w e d b y a f a c u lty -s tu d e n t m ix er w ith p ro fe s s o rs a n d in s tu c to r s of S p a n is h a n d P o rtu g u e s e . R e fre s h m n e ts w ill b e s e r v e d . O vereaters A n o n y m o u s w ill h a v e a b ro w n b a g o p e n d is c u s s io n m e e tin g from n o o n to 1 p .m . M o n d a y in B u rd in e H all 232. A lp h a C hi w ill h a v e an o fficer s' m e e tin g a t 6:30 p .m . M o n d a y in th e T ex as U n io n B u ild in g B oard o f D ire c to rs R o om . T h e L on gh orn G reen s w ill m eet at 7:30 p .m . M o n d a y o n th e p a tio of th e T ex as U n ­ ion B u ild in g . T h e M exican A m erican S tu d en t Leader­ sh ip C o u n c il w ill m e e t fro m 6 to 7 p .m . M o n d a y in th e T ex as U n io n B u ild in g C hi- ca n o C u ltu re R o om . T h e re w ill b e a n Is s u e s A w a re n e s s m e e tin g fro m 7:30 to 9 p .m . in th e E a stw o o d s R o o m . R e fre s h m e n ts w ill b e s e rv e d . T h e UT T u k o n g M o o s u l C lu b w ill m eet fro m 5 to 7:30 p .m . M o n d a y , W e d n e s d a y a n d F rid a y in A n n a H iss G y m n a s iu m 136 for tra d itio n a l m a rtia l a r ts tra in in g . T h e U n iv ersity Y oga C lu b w ill h a v e class from 5:30 to 7 p .m . M o n d a y in th e T ex as U n io n B u ild in g E a s tw o o d s R o om . P lease w e a r lo o se c lo th in g a n d b r in g a to w el o r b la n k e t. ECH O 1 w ill m eet at 7 p .m . M o n d a y in th e T exas U n io n B u ild in g C h ic a n o C u ltu r e R oom . C ircle K In tern ation al w ill m eet at 7 p .m . M o n d a y in U n iv e rs ity T e a c h in g C e n ­ te r 3.102. N e w m e m b e rs w e lco m e. LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS T h e C enter for In tercu ltu ral S tu d ie s in F olklo re a n d E th n o m u s ic o lo g v w ill p r e s e n t a le c tu re by S te v e n Field title d " N a r r a tiv e a n d A lleg ory in P a p u a N e w G u in e a : a .k .a . D o g s A re N o t A n im a ls " a t n o o n M o n d a y in th e F olklo re L ib rary , D o ro th y G e b a u e r S tu ­ d e n t Serv ices B u ild in g 3.106. T h e Black S tu d en t A llia n c e w ill sp o n so r a fo ru m title d "A frican A m e ric a n S tu d e n t: a n E n d a n g e re d S p e c ie s " w ith Jo h n W a r­ field a t 7 p .m . M o n d a y . T h e UT S ch o o l o f A rch itectu re w ill s p o n s o r a le c tu re b y D o u g la s C a rd in a l, a r ­ c h ite c t, titled " T h e A rc h ite c tu re of D o u g la s C a rd in a l" at 4:30 p .m . M o n d a y in th e Jes- se n A u d ito riu m . T h e D ep a rtm en t o f P etro leu m E n g in eer­ in g w ill s p o n s o r a s e m in a r w ith S h eila Y eh of C h e v ro n , title d "M isc ib le G as F lo o d I n ­ d u c e d W e tta b ility A lte r a tio n " fro m 3 to 4 p .m . M o n d a y in th e C h e m ic a l a n d P e tr o le ­ u m E n g in e e rin g B u ild in g 2.208. SHORT COURSES/WORKSHOPS Project Literacy at U T w ill h ave its first w o r k s h o p for b e c o m in g a tu to r to illite ra te a d u lts from 7 to 10 p .m . M o n d a y in B e n e ­ d ict H all 422. T h is w ill b e th e first o f fo u r w o r k s h o p s . T h e H ealth E d u cation D ep artm en t o f the S tu d e n t H e a lth C e n te r is o ffe rin g a c h o le s ­ te ro l re d u c tio n c o u n s e lin g w o r k s h o p from 1 to 2:30 p .m . T h u rs d a y . F or m o re in f o rm a ­ tio n , call 471-6252. T h e S tu d en t H ealth C enter is sp o n so r ­ in g a m e th o d s of c o n tra c e p tio n class for w o m e n o n ly fro m 3 to 4:30 p .m . T u e sd a y in S tu d e n t H e a lth C e n te r 448. T h e Joe C. T h o m p so n C on feren ce C en ­ te r a n d th e D iv isio n o f C o n tin u in g E d u c a ­ tio n w ill o ffer th e fo llo w in g c o u rse s: ■ S h a r p e n in g S kills fo r B u sin ess W ritin g , 8:30 a .m . to 5 p .m . T u e s d a y a n d V yednes- d ay . ■ A n In tro d u c tio n to S u ccessfu l F u n d R aising , 9 a .m . to 1 p .m . T u e sd a y . ■ In tro d u c tio n to W ritin g F iction, 10 a .m . to 5 p .m . S a tu rd a y . ■ T h e F re e-L an ce W riter, 7 to 9:30 p .m . T u e s d a y a n d T h u rs d a y . Call 471-3121 for re g istra tio n in fo rm a tio n . T h e C o m p u ta tio n C enter, In form ation fo llo w in g s h o rt th e S erv ices w ill o ffe r c o u rse s in C O M 8: ■ In tro d u c tio n to D O S , 10 a .m . to n o o n T u e sd a y a n d T h u rs d a y . UT co st $30. ■ U N IX S y ste m A d m in is tra tio n 5 to 7 p .m . M o n d a y a n d W e d n e s d a y . UT co st is $8 A d v a n c e re g is tra tio n is re q u ire d for all c o u rse s . R e g ister from 9 a .m . to 2 p .m . at C o m p u ta tio n C e n te r 12 a n d from 2 to 4:45 p .m . at W ill C . H o g g B u ild in g 9. C a sh will n o t be a c c e p te d a fte r 2 p .m . For m o re in fo r­ m a tio n , call th e sh o rt-c o u rs e re g istra r at 471-3241. T h e C o m p u ta tio n C enter and Joe C. T h o m p s o n C o n fe re n c e C e n te r w ill o ffer th e fo llo w in g c o u rs e s at th e T h o m p s o n C o n fe r­ e n c e C e n te r 3.108: ■ Excel for M a c in to sh : F irst C o u rs e , 8:30 a .m . to 4 p .m . M o n d a y . U T co st $30. ■ A n a ly s is of V a rian ce w ith PC SA S, 8 a .m . to 4:30 p .m . S a tu rd a y . UT co st $30. ■ D O S: First C o u rs e , 8:30 a .m . to 4 p .m . F rid ay . UT c o st is $20. C all 471-3121 for re g ista tio n in fo rm a tio n . _____________ OTHER_____________ U tm ost is a ccep tin g a p p lica tio n s for w rite rs , in te r n s , p h o to g r a p h e r s a n d illu s­ tra to rs. F or m o re in fo rm a tio n , call 471-4111 th e T ex as S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s o r v isit B u ild in g C 4.102. S tu d y in A u stralia on a UT E xchange P ro g ra m . S tu d y a t th e U n iv e rsity o f S y d ­ n e y , p a y UT tu itio n a n d receiv e g r a d e s in r e s id e n c e to w a r d v o u r UT G P A . F or d e ­ tails, visit th e S tu d y A b ro ad O ffice a t 100 W . 26th St. A p p lic a tio n d e a d lin e for 1990 a c a d e m ic v e a r is N o v . 1. is n o w T h e C a m p u s A lco h o l and D ru g A b u se E d u c a tio n P ro g ra m in te rv ie w in g s tu d e n ts to b e a c c e p te d a s su b s ta n c e a b u s e p re v e n tio n p e e r in s tru c to rs . U p p e r d iv isio n c o u rs e c re d it a v a ila b le for tra in in g in full a n d for te a c h in g p e rfo rm a n c e in th e s p rin g o f 1990. T w o -s e m e s te r c o m m itm e n t r e ­ q u ire d ; lo w e r d iv isio n s tu d e n ts c o n s id e re d . C all M itzi H e n ry at 471-6252 for m o re in fo r­ m a tio n o r to set u p a n in te rv ie w . T h e S tu d en t H ealth C enter is lo o k in g for s tu d e n ts in te r e s te d in v o lu n te e r in g for th e G re a t A m erican S m o k e o u t N o v. 16. For m o re in fo rm a tio n , call Lisa K essler a t 471- 6252. T he S tu d en t In v o lv e m e n t C o m m ittee w ill h a v e C o lle g e B ow l '89. F or m o re in fo r­ m a tio n , g o to th e E x -S tu d e n ts ' A s so c ia tio n in th e Lila B. E tte r A lu m n i C e n te r, o r call 471-8839. S ign u p fo r th e S h o w d o w n o f th e M in d s. T h e T exas M em orial M u seu m h as the o rig in a l G o d d e s s o f L ib e rty o n d isp la y . M u s e u m h o u r s a re 9 a .m . to 5 p .m . M o n ­ d a y th r o u g h F rid a y , 10 a .m . to 5 p .m . S a t­ u r d a y a n d 1 to 5 p .m . S u n d a y . F ree a n d o p e n to th e p u b lic. T he In stitu te for Latin A m erican S tu d ie s w ill s p o n s o r a b r o w n b a g lu n c h m e e tin g of th e C e n tra l A m e ric a n W o rk in g G r o u p A l­ m u e r z o " at 12:30 p .m . M o n d a y in S id R ich­ a r d s o n H all 1.320. R a n d o lp h R yan, e d ito ri­ al w rite r a n d c o lu m n is t for th e Boston Globe, w ill th e m e d ia a n d C e n tra l A m erica. talk a b o u t T h e Liberal A rts C o u n cil w ill h ave an in fo rm a l s e s s io n q u e s tio n - a n d - a n s w e r a b o u t s p r in g re g is tra tio n from 10 a .m . to 2 p .m . in th e P e te r T. F law n A cad e m ic C e n ­ te r L obbv. Free. T h e M easu rem en t and E valuation C en ­ te r w ill a d m in s te r th e fo llo w in g te s ts for c re d it a n d p la c e m e n t T u e sd a y : R u ssia n ($28) a t 4:30 p .m .; C h in e s e , F re n c h , G e r­ m a n a n d S p a n is h te s ts ($28 each ) at 6:15 p .m . a n d th e W o rd P ro c e ss in g T est ($23). T e sts o ffe re d o n W e d n e s d a y w ill be: M 408C ($37), PSY 301 ($37), E C O 302 ($37), E C O 303 ($370 E C O 302 a n d 303 ($37), S O C 302 ($37) a n d E 306 ($28) a t 4 p .m . a n d th e G ra m m a r, S p e llin g a n d P u n c tu a tio n T e st ($23) at 6:15 p .m . T h e te s t fees can b e p a id from 2 to 6 p .m . o n te st d a y at th e B e au fo rd H . Je ster C e n te r tic k e t office. For m o re in ­ fo rm a tio n , call 471-3032. D O S /S erv ices for S tu d e n ts w ith D is a b il­ ities n e e d s : ■ A tu to r w ith b a c k g ro u n d in so c io lo g y / social w o rk to re a d for b lin d P h .D . s tu d e n t in social w o rk . ■ A v o lu n te e r tu to r for P h ilo s o p h y 313 K. E x p e rie n c e w ith le a rn in g d isa b ilitie s d e ­ sired . ■ A re a d e r fo r b lin d a s tro n o m y s tu d e n t. A s tro n o m y o r p h y s ic s b a c k g ro u n d d e s ire d . F or m o re in fo rm a tio n , call 471-6259. K TSB in v ite s all ca m p u s o rg a n iza tio n s to p a rtic ip a te in th e Campus Voices show 's. T h e s h o w s in fo rm A u s tin o f th e c u ltu ra l in fo rm a tiv e p r o g ra m s o f c a m p u s a n d g r o u p s . For m o re in fo rm a tio n , call 471- 5106. T H E D a i l y T e x a n M o n d a y , O c t o b e r 2 3 , 1 9 8 9 P a g e 1 5 ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 1 Decked out 5 Fruit 10 Niche's kin 14 Theater box 15 Branch 16 Dross 17 Not at home 18 Broker 19 Bristle 20 Assembled 21 Attachment 22 Unfolded 24 Feign 26 Pastime 27 Animal food 28 Assistants 31 More secure 34 Casanova 35 Fleshy 36 Small bird 37 Kind of nut 38 Fijian city 39 Gas: pref. 40 Harbor 41 Track star 42 Was vital 44 Sickness: Fr. 45 Choleric 46 Likeness 50 Taste 52 Evergreen product 53 Dickens boy 54 Viking navigator 55 Excite 57 Jazz music 58 Bulk 59 Invade 60 " Can’t I?” 61 Poems 62 Exploits Dream, 63 Naked DOWN 1 Vise 2 Farther down 3 5 Vi-point type 4 African ruler 5 Granular 6 Stormed 7 Truly 8 Witty remark 9 Prohibition 10 Maintain 11 Abundant 12 Satisfy 13 Mild oath 21 “King — ” 23 Man the urn 25 Formerly 26 Reno number 28 Was overly fond 29 Roof adjunct 30 Nova, e.g. 31 Bathed 32 District 33 Pollinate 34 River bank 37 “The — Bride" 38 River deposit 40 Passion 41 Spice 43 Tiny amounts 44 UMW members 46 Propounded 47 N.Y. city 48 Emulator 49 Correct 50 100 centavos 51 Unproductive 52 Shrewd 56 Individual 57 Sail A rou n d A u stin is a co lu m n a p p ea rin g M o n d a y s in The D a ily Texan for a c tiv itie s, lectu res and se m in a rs g o in g on in h ig h er e d u ca tio n an d th e c o m m u n ity o u ts id e of the U n iv ersity . P lease turn in su b m is s io n s to th e Texan o ffic e , P .O . D raw er D , A u s­ tin , TX 78713. ____________ MEETINGS____________ fro m 11:45 a .m . T h e E n trep ren eu rs A sso cia tio n w ill s p o n s o r S m all B u s in e ss M a rk e tin g m e e t­ to 1 p .m . e v e ry in g s W e d n e s d a y a t th e A u s tin C r e s t H o te l, 111 E. F irst St. Jeffrey G io g a o f JMJ A s so c ia te s w ill s p e a k o n " M o n ito r in g T o u r M a rk e tin g P ro g r a m s ." M e e tin g co st is $5. L u n c h is o p ­ tio n al fro m th e m e n u o r th e s a la d /s o u p b ar. M ark etin g m e e tin g s sp o n so r e d b y th e E n tr e p r e n e u r s A s so c ia tio n w ill b e h e ld fro m n o o n to 1 p .m . e v e ry W e d n e s d a y a t th e A u s tin C re s t H o te l. M e m b e rs w ill fo r­ m u la te c o m p r e h e n s iv e a d v e r tis in g a n d m a rk e tin g p la n s for sm a ll b u s in e s s o w n e r s . T h e m e e tin g is free. L u n c h is o p tio n a l. For m o re in fo rm a tio n , call 338-4233. OTHER T h e E n trep ren eu rs A sso cia tio n w ill h a v e a n O p e n H o u s e fro m 6 to 7 p .m . W e d n e s ­ d a y a t th e A u s tin C re s t H o te l. R e s e rv a tio n s n o t r e q u ire d . F or m o re in fo rm a tio n , call 338-4233. T h e C entral C iv il L ib erties F ou n d a tion H a llo w e e n P a rty a n d F u n d -R a ise r w ill b e fro m 8 to 11 p .m . F rid a y a t th e K ilgarli C a s ­ tle, 1415 W o o ld rid g e D riv e. F or m o re in f o r ­ m a tio n , call 477-4335. T a x -d e d u c tib le d o n a ­ tio n s of a n y a m o u n t a c c e p te d a t th e d o o r. T h e A u stin W o m en 's C en ter w ill s p o n ­ so r th e A u s tin W o m e n 's C e n te r S in g le P a r­ e n ts S u p p o rt G r o u p w h ic h m e e ts fro m 7 to 8:30 p .m . o n th e s e c o n d a n d fo u rth T u e s ­ d a y s ea c h m o n th . C h ild ca re w ill b e p r o v id ­ ed if re s e r v a tio n s a re m a d e in a d v a n c e . F or m o re in fo rm a tio n , call 447-9666. T h e A u stin W o m en 's C en ter w ill s p o n ­ s o r a w o r k s h o p title d "Jo b S h a r in g a n d O th e r F lexible W o rk O p tio n s ," e x p lo rin g th e a lte r n a tiv e s fu ll-tim e s c h e d u le , at 1:30 p .m . M o n d a v . F or m o re to w o rk in g a in fo rm a tio n , call 447-9666. m o re in fo rm a tio n , call 467-1544. T h e L u a t e r s t e in - C o n w a y M a s s a g e S ch ool a n d C lin ic w ill s p o n s o r a M a ss a g e for B e g in n e rs w o r k s h o p from 9:30 a .m . to 5:30 p .m . S u n d a y . T h e c o st is $65. F or m o re in fo rm a tio n , call 474-1852. T h e A m erican C ancer S o ciety , A u stin A rea U n it w ill h a v e " D ia lo g u e ," a s u p p o r t p ro g ra m for c a n c e r p a tie n ts a n d th e ir fam i­ ly m e m b e rs , fro m 7 to 8 p .m . T u e s d a y at th e A m e r ic a n C a n c e r S o c ie ty , 2433 R id g e p o in t D riv e-B . T h e A sso cia tio n for R etarded C itizen s- A u s tin w ill h o ld its last v o lu n te e r o r ie n ta ­ tio n a n d tr a in in g se ss io n of 1489 fro m 6 to 9 p .m . W e d n e s d a y at 2818 S an G ab riel St. N o e x p e rie n c e n e c e s sa ry . For m o re in f o rm a ­ tio n , call 476-7044. T h e T exas E m p lo y m en t C o m m issio n w ill o ffer a job se a rc h s e m in a r e a c h w e e k d e s ig n e d to a s s is t job s e e k e rs lo o k in g for w o rk in p r o fe s s io n a l o c c u p a tio n s . T o p ic s in te rv ie w in g c o v e re d skills, re la te d sk ills. T h e w e e k lo n g c la ss s ta rts e a c h M o n d a v . F or r e s o u rc e s a n d re s u m e s , in c lu d e P ion eer Farm w ill sp o n so r a fa m ily day from 1 to 5 p .m S u n d a y . T h e Jo u rd a n -B a c h - m a n F arm , 11418 S p rin k le C u t-o ff R o a d , is a sp e cial p lace w h e r e p e o p le can le a rn h o w p io n e e rs se ttle d a n d fa rm e d th e la n d . V isi­ to rs can se e th e fa rm a n im a ls, ta k e p a r t in th e d aily c h o re s a n d th e h isto ric h o m e s a n d b a rn s . C o st o n S u n d a y is $2 for a d u lts a n d $1 for c h ild re n 3 to 12. C h ild re n y o u n g e r th a n 3 a re a d m itte d free. F or m o re in fo rm a tio n , call 837-1215. to u r T h e 15th an n u al T exas R en a issa n ce Fes­ tival w ill be fro m 9 a .m . to d a rk every' S a t­ u rd a y a n d S u n d a y th r o u g h N o v . 12. T he F estiv al is 50 m iles n o rth of 1 lo u s to n o n FM 1774 b e tw e e n M a g n o lia a n d P la n te rsv ille . T ickets a t th e g a te a re $12.95 for a d u lts a n d $6.95 for c h ild re n 5 th r o u g h 12. C h ild re n y o u n g e r th a n 5 a re free. D isc o u n t tick ets are av ailab le fro m th e office th r o u g h th e m ail a n d a t a re a K ro g e r s to re s . F ree p a r k ­ in g a n d c a m p in g . For m o re in fo rm a tio n , call 1 -800-458-3435 o r (713) 356-2178 o r w rite th e T ex as R e n a iss a n c e F estiv al, R o u te 2, Box 650, P la n te rsv ille , T exas 77.363. = > < LU Q D 0C H > - 0C GC < O > - CD 10-23-89 © 1989 United Feature Syndicate BOOP5 /B ? S IP ! WHERE YOU BEEN, BAB B 11 1 6 0 T A 3 1 6 M S B ! FOR. YOU ON A MOV IB' OF-THE-WEEK THAT ROGER A lLE S IS P 0 /N6 A T A 3 C ! YOU'RB KJPPIN6 1 IS IT A L E A P * IS IT A LEAP? OF COURSE IT'S A LEAP1 YOU PLAY BARBARA 0 USH IN "POPPY: THE UJAR YE AR S"! / K. Kat [A N)C£ OLD OfeMTAJAM 'T2> A l t ¿ A Y feC y Y x r y o u W & N ^A IO H M A ',' : GOILLV r I R E 0Lt> ftfcP T lL fe v / \ r / v i i n Y - " >, it i$ T A R A N T U L A - .* „ i. „ I A lU fcl" A W f e NU*\ \N\TU A kfelUr - M A TfeS AMCfe. A bVBLIMfc HWrfe ONE HUAWI0 pfck. 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NGW ^ Bossy \ \N T fV w i n £ £ , UVR, * W A ( 2 I S P £ A C € r - -- TREIÍ* t f A W f PXIG ■ p(2V/v\#\E0 INTo ou(2 /v \e D IA - SOAKED s k u l l s ceAteif&LV, °Ay *■ ^ p I F f l T V f - MO S00N€(2 AftVF W6 LB AGNED To ppo N oo N C e O U € THAMÍ rr<; c e - "wt t r o u t t r i s C o n s t a n t iw (2 AY€ o u T W e " e u e m iG ? , I g e PoRCGV T O F o C u f ►oN oo(2 AC P(2°8- I i e m S a s T G u i y 6 h t _— p i d m 'T * 4€ O R U / e C U A h J N V j u S T TMpEATtN S T IL L STINGING F R o m A NASTV s e r ie s OF RETECTI0NS, RL DECIDES TO T A K E THE CAUTIOUS APPROACH | Í t Í FOR fl FEU YEARS.... | ; T o o t h a n d J u s t i c e by Shannon Wheeler P ? Y ! 4 S A S S V T O M M A H INCREDIBLY LAME COMICS o n l y t u k l l F 'A N U - S L L F T b j | | \ z . i t v By Tom King V I O O L A Y ' / / \ i / o ;C b 0 © t t a s e c a r d s & W L , ™ T h n k j M W a l l © Q - f o lk s o u t t k e r e l i n T a J e v i s i o n , E a n c t j f © © © % © o l o g y P w i t h . r_ t s o f ittori, ________________ith t*i« push of a computer—generated straps are telcfaxed to newspapers every where. The better strips are dlone ^ bv cartoonists who have the best computers. Mr. Rodngvsz .1 ” . A U U I « v a a ecently grot ,adio Shack:! A s be the JO.-.You j u d o f t . , . Page 16 Monday, October 2 3 ,1 9 8 9 T h e D a i l y T e x a n F M A T C C Sm» I » V r I Smn^m) Texas 24, Arkansas 20 FAYETTEVILLE? HO PROBLEM: Some call it Fayettehell, others have referred to it as Fay- ettenam Razorback Stadium in Fayetteville has been rated by opponents as one of the toughest places to play in the United States For Texas, however, the only thing that Fay­ etteville has done is given them the opportunity to frustrate more Razorback fans in person Texas record in the Hog Pen is now a whopp­ ing 15-3 Texas boss David McWilliams is now 3-0 inside the state of Arkansas as a head coach in addition to his 1989 Horns. McWilli­ ams's Texas Tech squad in 1986 dealt the Hogs a loss in Fayetville while his 1987 Texas team toppled the Razorbacks in Little Rock The Horns also have a 9-6 mark in Little Rock s War Memorial Stadium JONES BECOMES ALL-TIME LEADER: Senior flanker Tony Jones became the all-time Longhorn leader in pass reception yardage when he hauled down a 61-yard bomb from Peter Gardere for a touchdown m the second quarter Jones broke the record of 1 603 yards set by Johnny Lam' Jones {no re g io n ) from 1976 through 1979 T Jones now has 1,712 receiving yards THEY SAID IT: "Even if Texas wins, it's OK they have to put up with Jerry Jones He lives Anonymous member of the Ar­ there now kansas press SHOOT-OUT ANNIVERSARY: The 1989 meeting of Texas and Arkansas has been sur­ rounded by the hype of the 20th anniversary of the "The Shoot-Out What has been buried in all of this hype is an anniversary of almost equal importance 1989 marks the 50th anniversary of a Longhorn-Ra- zorback game that legendary UT Coach Dana X Bible called "the game that turned things around for Texas fo o tb a ll" Bible s Longhorns had gone 2-6-1 in 1937 and 1-8 id 1938 but the 14-13 win over a pow- erfui Arkansas team in 1939 propelled them to a 5-4 season that was a prelude to a 55-13-1 record and three conference titles in the next seven seasons under Bible Houston 95, SMU 21 At ¡east Mike Tyson s opponents can hit the C raig D ouglas canvass quickly SMU wasn't so lucky A blow- by-blow account of Houston's scoring drives in Saturday's 95-21 win suggests the referees should have stopped this fight early The Cougars took the opening kickoff 60 yards in nine plays elapsing only one minute 46 seconds The Mustangs held the Cougars at the 11-yard line, resulting in a 28-yard Roman Anderson field goal UH 3, SMU 0. Ware directed a ball-controlled drive 53 yards to the Mustang two-yard line in five plays After two errant passes. Chuck Weatherspoon bowled up the middle UH 10, SMU 0. Three plays into Houston's next posession, Weatherspoon broke off a 58-yard run for an­ other touchdown The play represented the longest run from scrimmage in the SWC this season UH 17, SMU 0. This with only four minutes 52 seconds, expired on the game clock A one minute, 28 second drive was sealed on third down and 20 when Ware hit Patrick Brown for a 62-yard scoring pass UH 24, SMU 6. The second quarter opened with the culmi­ and another nation of a first quarter drive touchdown. This one a six yard Ware-Patrick Cooper^ob UH31, SMU 6. Houston hit paydirt once again when Brian Williams caught a 46-yard touchdown pass from Ware UH 38, SMU 14. The Cougars' most time-consuming drive of the day, a whopping three minutes, covered eight plays and 87 yards Manny Hazard got in the touchdown reception act by scoring on a three-yarder UH45, SMU 14. Zack Chatman intercepted a Romo pass in the end zone and brought it out to the 13-yard line The next play, Ware connected with Wil­ liams for an 87-yard touchdown pass The drive was one play, 12 seconds and set the SWC record for touchdown passes in a season - 26 —- breaking Ware’s mark from last year UH 52, SMU 14. Taking possession with 1:33 left in the half, Ware combined a 30-yard strike to Cooper, an 15-yard run by Weatherspoon, and a 28-yard touchdown pass to Hazard Four plays, 73 yards. 38 seconds, and another NCAA mark falls as Ware throws his fifth touchdown pass of the quarter UH 59, SMU 14. David Klinger took over the reins from Ware and picked up where Andre left off He moved Houston 61 yards on three plays in one minute capped by a 46-yard pass to Hazard UH 66, SMU 14. Weatherspoon used the ground game to put the Cougars back in the end zone On the fourth play of a 34 yard drive, he scored on a 22 yard run UH 73, SMU 21. Klinger let the ball fly and the scoreboard light up again He capped a three-play, 70- yard drive by hitting Paul Smith with a 53-yard pass A bad snap on the extra point led to two- point conversion when holder Kenny Perry ran the ball in Two points for the run, but none for the subsequent complete flip in the air and per­ fect landing in the end zone UH 81, SMU 21. Smith caught a 74-yard Klinger pass on the second play of Houston's next posession after blocking a SMU field goal attempt UH 88, SMU 21. Klinger and Cooper hooked up from 16 yards out to end a five play, 47-yard drive UH 95, SMU 21. — Jaim e A ron “The people at Merrill Lynch make all the difference. They place a lot of confidence in you so you chance to do well. I was surprised by my own abilities Kathryn Wasiak, University of Texas, 1988 Partnership Finance Merrill Lynch Capital Markets invites University of Texas seniors to attend an informal meeting and reception to discuss opportunities in our Corporate Financial Analyst Program Monday, October 23,1989 Santa Rita Room Texas Union 6 p.m.-8 p.m. Merrill Lynch A tradition of trust. 1 Longhorns Continued from page 9 and played like they had a lot of ex­ perience for us late in the g am e," defensive coordinator Leon Fuller said. "It's a good thing that every­ body on this team was com m itted and prepared to play today because w e had to have them and they all cam e through for u s ." Texas assum ed com m and of the gam e at the outset of the third quar­ ter on m om entum that carried over from the last series of the first half. With Arkansas up 14-13, the Hogs had the ball first and goal from the Texas 6-yard line w ith ju st over a minute to play. A rkansas quarterback Q uinn G rovey scored on an option run but the touch­ down was called back due to a pro­ cedure penalty that moved the ball back to the Texas 11. The Razorbacks had expended all of their tim eouts and had time for one more play. Instead of kicking the field goal, C oach Hatfield elect­ ed to go for the end zone and G ro­ vey was buried in a Texas blitz as time ran out in the half. Texas w ent into the locker room down by one. 'It was really im portant for us to stop them w ithout any points there at the end of the first half, that was a big m om entum sw in g ," M cW illi­ ams said. "T h in gs looked a lot bet­ ter for us down by one than dow n by eight or nine at that p o in t." On the opening drive of the sec­ ond half, Texas rum bled 80 yards behind two G ardere com pletions to Johnny W alker, a Tony Jones re­ verse and the legs of C hris Sam uels. W infred Tubbs capped off the 14- play drive with a one-yard dive for the score. "T h a t drive to start the third quar­ ter against the wind really hurt u s ," Hatfield said. "A fter that, we knew that it was going to go down to the wire — that they w ere for re a l." After Clem ents third field goal on Texas' first posession of the fourth quarter made the score 24-14, the Hogs responded to the pleas of the boisterous Fayetteville faithful and cruised 80 yards for w hat w as to be their final score of the gam e. Barry Foster's 10-yard scam per through the heart of the Texas defense capped off a drive spurred by a 30- yard G rovey pass to split end Tim H orton on second and 18. I exas stuffed A rkansas' attem pt at a two point conversion and m ain­ tained the four-point m argin they would own at gam e's end. For those that thought that the O klahom a gam e could not be topped, the wild first half in Fay­ etteville Saturday cam e close. The Longhorn's opening drive stalled when Tony Jones slipped on a reverse for an 11-yard loss. The Horns first of the for settled C lem ents three field goals With Texas pinned on its ow n 7- yard line with ju st over 30 seconds to play in the first quarter, Bobby Lilljedahl, the 1988 SW C punting leader, shanked a punt into a stiff wind. The ball hit the Texas 20-yard line before bouncing back to the Texas 6, for a net loss of a yard. E.D . Jackson 's touchdow n run on the next play put the Hogs up 7-3. The drive took three seconds. Jackson returned the favor fum ­ bling with 12:37 to go in the second quarter. H ackem ack's recovery gave* the Longhorns the ball on their ow n line. O n 39-yard the next play, G ardere lofted a 61-yard bom b w hich I ony Jones hauled in at full stride for Texas first touchdow n of the gam e that m ade the score 10-7. After the gam e, A rkansas tight end Billy W inston said the words that Texas has been w aiting so long to hear. "T h a t was a vintage Texas te a m ." Aggies Continued from page 9 "I had really second guessed m y self," A&M C oach R .C . Solcum said. "T h e first tim e, I w ished we had gone after that punt so after the penalty I told the coaches it gave us another chance. Snapping that ball into the wind, it w as floating a bit, we had problem s w ith it to o ." Pavlas threw to Percy W addle for an apparent tw o-point conversion that would have tied the gam e, but it was ruled that W addle w as stand ­ ing on the end line. Another field goal by Ireland, this one of 31-yards with 4:48 left in the gam e, made the score 11-6 for the Bears and set the stage for the Aggie com eback. Larry Horton took the kickoff one yard deep in the end zone and re­ it to the 34. Pavlas then turned guided a 12-play, 66-yard drive, highlighted by his 34-yard scram ble on third and 13. Pavlas dove in from the one for the score. W ilson scam p­ ered around the left end for the tw o-point conversion m aking it 14- 11 with one m inute rem aining. "T h ey w ere dropping a lot of guys into man coverage and there was no one on the quarterback. W hen they did that I was able to get out of the pocket and scramble a lit­ tle b it," Pavlas said. Taylor gave the Bears a glimpse of hope with a 20-yard return to the A&M 49. After gaining only six yards over the next three plays, Baylor set up for a 60-yard field goal attem pt with 36 seconds remaining. Kicking with a 15-25 miles per hour wind at his back, Ireland had the necessary distance, but the kick faded four feet to the left leaving the Bears four feet wide of second place in the SWC. 2 Images THE DAILY TEXAN October 23, 1989 ■ ■ m DISCOUNT W m wmmm ★ 5400 N. Lamar 453-8438 (2 minutes North of Intramural Fields) WE WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY PRICE! EVERYTHING YOU NEED FOR • Futons • Frames Covers • End Tables • Coffee Tables HALLOWEEN! C o stu m es for all ages, Glitter Makeup, Wigs, Hats and Costume Kits. hone iones Now open in Dobie Mall! (see Tuesday coupon) Featuring Crazy, Hilarious, Answering Machine Tapes We have sounds toilets flushing to Clint Eastwood. From Monty Python to Porky Pig! from Stop boring your friends with dull outgoing messages. Come get a C . H . A . M X . Ü c m k v . m u M i o m i n s w c i i i n s m s c n i n c n Located on Second floor of Dobie Mall on Whitis side Ph. 397-3000 University Market Facts... Within the past 30 days students of the uni­ versity purchased $1 394.790 worth of gaso­ line and oil for their automobiles Source The University Market Be Wen Associates 1987 ★ Halloween Party and C A Reed Paper Goods, Balloons, Piñatas, and Decorations Elvira Costumes, Wigs and Makeup, Bugs. 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LSAT: Tuesday, Oct. 24th 7 PM-8:30 PM GRE: Wednesday, Oct. 25th 7 PM-8:30 PM GMAT: Thursday, Oct. 26th 7 PM-8:30 PM CaU 472 EXAM 1 STANLEY H. KAPLAN JL Take Kaplan Or lake Your Chances TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5244 O ntom Shir FRATERNITIES SORORITIES CLUBS ■ O R G A N IZ A T IO N S • D 0 R M S B • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••a •••••••••••••••••a •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••a m e n M iV i'lliV n ili1' ! iV 1* ' •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••a •••••••••••••••••a •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• »•< }«••••••••••«•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• ••••■I • • • • ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a * • ^ j % V ■ ’ •100% COTTON, PREMIUM WEIGHT WHITE T ’ S IN STOCK AUflM SCREEN PRINTING (5 1 2 )4 5 4 -6 2 4 9 4 2 0 4 M edical Pkwy. Austin .Texas 7S7*s ............................ • 5 % D \ S C 0 UV)l \ VOID A F T E R N O VE MB E R 1 st Y * » KTSB RADIO 91.7 CABLE FM AUSTIN’S ALTERNATIVE Images October 23,1989 £ I F E A T U R E S COVER STORY* PAGE 12 Head Shops Well, they prefer to be called tobacco shops, but anti-drug activists think differently. Where are the lines drawn? Like other "radical" fashions, tattoos are beginning to carve a niche of their own. DRIVE IN SIBviCE Renaissance Festival One need not go to England to visit King Arthur's court - just head to Plantersville. PAGE 8 Tattoos PAGE 9 PAGE 10 IB ■ B Fiction "In the Hall" by Mike Trent BAKERY M u f f i n s , M u f f i n s , M u f f i n s \ B m i 1 • G e t t F R E E H! Oat Braa | Baaama Nat Blaeberry RooaeveH U | Apple Walaat Blaeberry Braa 411E. 43rd té*., om c earn SAME DAY SERVICE ’til 12 noon M onday-Friday ★★★★★★★★ r p | j r - i / - « T x a 1 Laundered 99c e; Tw o Shirts ★★★★★★★A HOME STEAM LAUNDRY & CLEANERS A DAVIS FAMILY TRADITION SINCE 1915 478-2586 Mon.-Fri. 7:00 am-6:30 pm Saturday 8:00 am-12:30 pm 2301 M a n o r R oad NOW WE RE ONE D E P A R T M E N T S PAGES 4-5 MUSIC Agony Column, Angkor Wat, Tracy Chapman, Tears for Fears and NRBQ. PAGES 6 BOOKS Miles Davis' autobiography and Tom Clancy's Clear and Present Danger. PAGE 7 OPEN MIKE A local club has refused to allow a memorial to Janis joplin on its front sidewalk - and offended some Austinites in the process. PAGES 15-21 PAGES 7,23 PAGE 22 TV LISTINGS THIS WEEK COMICS EDITOR Lee Nichols ASSOCIATE EDITORS Mike Clark, Greg May LISTINGS EDITOR Andrea Reece CONTRIBUTING WRITERS David Adcox, Katie Bassman, Charlie Earthman, Bobby Ruggiero, Mike Trent, Shai Tsur, JeffTurrentine CONTRIBUTING ARTISTS Wnda Barry/Tom King, David Marks, Roy Tompkins, Chris Ware CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS David Adcox, Merrill Nix ñhe C adeau has expan ded . N ow w e're th ree sto re in one . So com e in a n d see th e b ig g est, b rig h te r selection gifts, fashions and objects d'art ever at 2316 Guadalupe M onday through S a tu rd a y 4 / r o m 9:30 to 6pm. Park in our lot on San Antonio Street. It's one big shoppping experience. É Steal in Stainless. / ■ elegant, spherical cocktail shaker designed circa 1925 by Bauhaus AM teacher, Marianne Brandt. Redesigned by Alessu Polished stamlen steeL 1 M 9 2 4 0 M Wendy Sieveni leather m d stainless deeli ckpack. 9250.00. Matmiqne pants 995M Matmsque puü ocer 965M I nder the Volcan rest 152.00 Mkhael Simon sueater fo r her $156.00 / 4 7 7 - 7 2 7 0 o 4 0 (> OO IM rkn iK in o u r lo i o n Sun A n to n in S ir r r t t * I in h I il m ■ < . i< K '< in 22. 24 (.u.kI.iIui*- AUSUII. I V V is 7870.3 Speed metal emerges from the closet on new LPs music Agony Column God, Guns and Guts Big Chief Records Angkor Wat When Obscenity Becomes the Norm... Awake! Death Records By Bobby Ruggiero T hrash and speed m etal have long been the leper cou sins of the genre, kept in a dark closet with the slim e and the mold and left there to rot. But with the popularity of groups like M etallica, A nthrax and Slayer on the rise, it's only nat­ ural that a slew of head banger re­ leases would follow. Tw o energetic thrash bands, Agony Colum n and Angkor W at, follow this trend. God, Guns and Guts gives us the "hellbillv deathm etal o n slau g h t" from A u stin's own Agony C olum n. The band faces the form idable di­ lemma of translating its live show to vinyl and d oesn 't alw ays succeed. Songs like 66 Six-Guns for Satan and Snakebite no doubt would send fans into a frenzied slam at Liberty Lunch, but on record lose som e of their punch. The group has quite purposefully added a Texas flavor to the songs, waxing poetic about the joys of driv­ ing fast on 4X4 and celebrating scaly, nasty critters on Snakebite. Ag­ ony Colum n also know s how' to have fun, utilizing the com ic-book ghoulish im agery of serial killers, dem ons and mad scientists. By doing so, the band puts a badlv needed shot of hum or in the veins of heavy m etal, although one w ond ­ ers if the band has anything w eight­ ier to say. to The band sounds particularly tight on m ost songs, but vocalist Richard T u rner's fluctuation from growl track d oesn 't work as effectively as was probably intended. He also sw al­ lows Ivrics w hole, losing the w ords in a mixture of phlegm and spit. falsetto w'ithin a As a w hole, the m usic of Agony Colum n is strictly in the beer-drin- kin' truck-drivin' m ode. This album is the sound track you w ant while speeding dow n 1-35 or going down a w aterslide. O ccasionally, the band delves into som e serious and dark im agery, as in the excellent Vicious Pack o f Lies. But A gony Colum n isn 't pretending to deliver som e grand statem ent on God, Guns and Guts, ju st trying to m ake som e party m u­ sic. O n the other hand , A ngkor W at's When Obscenity Becomes the Norm ... Awake! is w aist-d eep in insightful lyrics full of things to say. U nfor­ tunately, the total inability of the lead singer to en u nciate even the sim plest of sen ten ces un does much of the record 's potential. its strength The band 's lyrics are no doubt lies but, even w here with lyric sh eet in hand , one would be hard-pressed to correctly identify th e ch o k in g sounds and guttural inflections as resem bling any thing in an English dictionary. a s s o rte d s in g e r 's Angkor Wat leans m uch closer to pure thrash than does A gony C ol­ um n, and the frenzied and forceful zeal with w hich the band com m its itself to its m usic is both adm irable and obvious. Successfu l social crit­ ics, the songw riters cover every­ thing from child abuse, anim al trap­ ping, Satan w orship and apathy to a d am nation of the Jim Bakker school of religion. Particularly good lyrics can be found on Awake! and To Search. Both songs, in a sen se, deal w ith the in­ dividual's struggle to find an identi­ ty and truth in life, som etim es using m eans that abuse the seeker rather than shed light on the problem . It's truly a pity that the w ords are all but lost on the album , because the m usic alone d o e sn 't salvage the release. The songs tend to run to­ g ether and sound sim ilar, despite the fury with w hich th ey're played. P erh aps A ngkor W at's next release should be titled When Verbal C om prehension Becomes the Norm ... Buy This Album ! incredible T hrash m etal m av never be ac­ cepted as m ainstream m usic, and m ost of its fans rightfully believe it sh ou ld n 't be. T hrash and speed al­ low their bands to express som e darker thoughts and allow their lis­ teners to release som e aggression. To w ater dow n the m usic for w ide­ spread airplay w ould be far w orse than the m ost d ep ressin g M etallica- esqu e doom and gloom tune. Ruggiero is a journalism junior. Angkor Wat’s got good lyrics, but they're impossible to understand. Talking ’bout an evolution? The '89 model Tracy Chapman goes nowhere fast Tracy Chapman Crossroads Elektra Records By Mike Clark I f you'd said in 1986 that an ob­ scure folkie's sparsely produced debut album would be one of the biggest sellers of the decade, you'd have been laughed at. If you said today that the sam e folkie's follow- up would be a weak and tired m ess, the laughter would probably be even louder. N evertheless, Tracy C hapm an's Crossroads is som ew hat wreak and extrem ely uneven, filled with good ideas gone bad, lyrics production that misfire and perform ances that just don't work. It's by no means an unmitigated disaster, and som e of the songs are indeed excellent. But sophom ore w hether slump or a sign of limited talent, Crossroads d oesn't com e close to the majesty and artistry of C hapm an's stunning debut LI\ )ust a it's There are significant chunks of Crossroads that are stupefyinglv, mind-numbingly boring, m ostly b e­ cause they lack the focus of the d e­ but. The bulk of the songs have rambling, conga-laden settings sim i­ lar to the first album 's M ountains o' Things; taken bv them selves, they range from sub-O K to stand-out, but three or four of them in a row get quite tiring. im portant All of this shapeless noise ap­ pears to be Chapm an and co-pro­ ducer David K ershenbau m 's at­ tem pt to "flesh o u t" her sound and maybe imply musical grow th. Why this would be is un­ know n — after all, she did fine on her first album on several songs with nothing but a guitar, and on one song nothing at all, backing her up. fact, C h ap m an's "p u rity " and "g u ts " (both of which are syno­ nyms for "so lo acoustic fo lk ") were supposedly what m ade her so at­ tractive in the first place. In Even if Chapm an and her posse felt the need to expand her musical it's a sham e that they horizons, didn't try for more variety in tone. K ersh en bau m , w h o's produced such m asters of eclectic pop as Joe Jackson and Joni M itchell, seem s constrained here to a ultra-tasteful approach that sounds like the music Southw estern Bell plays to entertain custom ers on hold. Plus, another rem arkable aspect of the debut was that even though the songs sounded alike on one level, on another they were very dif­ ferent, ranging from rock to pop to straight folk to gospel. It's a testa­ ment to the strength of C hapm an's songw riting that her tunes have been covered bv both Neil Diamond Indeed, and T heloniu s M onster; it's d ou bt­ ful that the tunes on Crossroads will engage sim ilarly disparate artists. there are songw riting faux pas on Crossroads that a writer of C h ap m an 's caliber ju st should not m ake. Bridges, a prospective sin­ gle, gets com pletely bogged dow n in its repeated choruses and cheesy dueling-piano breaks. A H undred Years likew ise suffers from its lack of exciting lyrics and surfeit of lame '70s-pop licks. O n both songs, the oddness of C h ap m an's voice d eg en ­ erates into plain old bad singing, and the listener longs for som eone like Joni with real vocal control, M itchell, to take over. lyrics alone, a E lsew here, the problem s lie with C h apm an's real surprise. Be Careful o f M y Heart, This Time and M aterial World are ju st plain dum b, boring, not any better than the usual. And Freedom Now, d ed icated to N elson M an d ela, sounds all right at first listen, but the lyrics are rem arkably em pty. intrinsic T here are several tracks on C ross­ roads that m easure up to the quality in we had thought was C h ap m an's w ork. The title track is stunning, with a chip-on-m y-shoul- der lyric that effortlessly com bines personal and political d im ensions and reaffirm s that C hapm an, d e­ spite her unassum ing dem eanor, know s how to give attitude. O n the social front, Subcity m erges a kinda A very tired mind hides behind the face that bled a thousand hearts. com plicated harm onica-and-organ driven arran gem ent around a great hook line — "I'd like to give Mr. President my h on est regards/For disregarding m e ." For pure songw riting craftsm an­ ship, nothing on C rossroads, and lit­ tle in C h ap m an 's entire career, eq u ­ als the side tw o closer All That You Have Is Your Soul. A traditional-style (al­ ballad though not to any effect), it's as beautiful as any of the best early Dylan tracks. And Born to l ight is a '50s style jazz/R & B shuffle featuring featuring Neil Y oung a trum pet accom p anim en t — a n o­ velty, to be sure, but a dam n nice one. tow ard d ispelling But in general, C rossroads goes a long way the m yth that Tracy C h ap m an is a n atu ­ ral genius. T h e re 's a d istu rbing u n ­ dercurrent throughout the record that C hapm an d o esn 't know w here sh e's going or how to do w hatever it is she w ants. P erhaps the car she drove to success is going too fast. Clark, a graduate student in journal­ ism, is an associate editor o f Im ages. music ‘Seeds’ succeeds Long-awaited LP garners cheers for Tears for Fears Tears for Fears The Seeds o f Love Fontana/Polygram Records By Shai Tsur D oes anyon e out there rem em ­ ber Tears For Fears? Think real hard. Try thinking back to your high school d ays. This should do the trick for m ost of you — "O h , that Tears For Fears. Th e ones with that big album a couple of years b a ck ." As m ost of you m ay now recall, Tears For Fears did have a b est-sell­ ing album , Songs From The Big Chair, back in 1985. It spaw ned several hit songs and put the group on the verge of actually becom ing big rock stars. But then ... nothing. Curt Sm ith and Roland O rzabal, the grou p 's m em bers, kind of dropped out of sight one day and have kept a pretty low profile ever since. Every now and then Kurt Loder would have a little item on MTV N ew s about follow -up being in production, but still no al­ bum . W ell, after four breathless y e a rs,The Seeds O f Love is out, and it looks like it m ay be as successful as their last one. the So w hat took so long? It's hard to tell, but a good guess would be that this record has spent m ost of its life It being produced and rem ixed. seem s the boys w anted to put a bit of m usical d istance betw een Seeds and Big Chair, so they dum ped the synthesizers and traded them in for all sorts of oth er instrum ents. Unlike TFF's first tw o album s, w hich had a dark, claustrophobic sou nd , The Seeds O f Love looks o u t­ ward all over the place and incorpo­ rates every broad m usical influence it can find. For instance, the band uses heavy fusion bass lines, a la W eather Report, all over the place, occasionally m ixing them with sal- sa-style piano solos. O n m ost of the tracks w here they use this eclecticism , it w orks as an like every­ interesting effect. But thing else, it gets overdone and tire­ som e, especially w hen they mix in too m any different styles. This hap­ pens on the 8 '/2-m inute Badman's Song w hich starts off w ith the salsa riff, then ju m ps into a long, Eagles- . esqu e guitar solo, and follow s up with an R & B-flavored chorus, re­ plete with fem ale backup singers. And then th e re 's the "title s o n g ," w hich stand s ou t from the rest. In­ stead of using the heavy bass or the long-ass guitar solo at the end (yes, they still have those at the end of every song), the duo raids the Bea­ NRBQ Wild Weekend Virgin Records By Jeff Turrentine NRBQ, the W orld 's G reatest Bar Band, has m ade an oth er bad record. But so w hat? T h ey 'v e d one they 'll probably do it before, it again. Fortunately for us, the goods cancel out m ost o f the bads: For eve­ ry atrocity like God Bless Us All th ere's a brilliant record such as Grooves in Orbit o r Dancin' Bats to redeem things. T h ey 've alw ays stood apart from other bands b ecau se of their care­ free attitude tow ard the m usic they played; before D octors' M ob, before the R eplacem ents, N R B Q 's sound was predicated alm ost solely on in­ souciance. O n e listen to Wild W eek­ end, though, and it's obvious that a taken in philosophy has change place. The title track, for instance, is ju st plain dull. O ver a generic guitar riff, vocalist Terry A dam s sings about the usual N R BQ fare — girls, cars, parties — and the song just effetely plods along, never going anyw here. This m ight m ake a great driving song if you 're in a school zone, but it's a far cry from M e and the Boys. At other tim es, the band is guilty of overproduction and ov erestim a­ tion of its ow n abilities. Tw o songs — Im mortal for a W hile and Firezvorks — sound as though they w ere writ­ ten for Robert Palm er, d en se with superfluous effects and histrionic rock 'n ' roll-ism s that com e off as m erely stupid. And on Fraction o f Action, the band s attem pt to sound "m o d e m " goes aw ry due to the b an d 's obvious aw kw ard ness in this context. If you w anna go high-tech, guys, th at's fine, but d o n 't buy your sam plers at Sears. Too often on these songs, one sen ses that N R B Q 's ongoing battle to win the airw aves has rather hide­ ously m anifested itself in a stream ­ lined sound, full of the sound and fury of A O R-ready product, but sig­ nifying nothing. Little Floater — a love song to a car — and Boy's Life are not only laughable for their in­ ane lyrical content, but despicable for the way in w hich the band's tal­ ented percu ssionist Tpm A rdolino is relegated to the status of H um an Drum M achine. Producer A ndy Paley has worked extensively with Jo n ath an Richm an (he w as even a M odern Lover for a while during that gro u p 's second KTSB’s Top Ten Albums — Oct. 1 6.1989 Tomorrow ... Next Tears for Fears catch every pop riff known to man in their sonic net. ties. Sowing The Seeds O f Love bor­ rows liberally from M agical M ystery Tour, w ith the band using every horn and w histle it can find. from To help create these great sound s, Sm ith and O rzabal have logically gotten a their little help friends, using a variety of well- know n stud io m usicians behind them . Som e key stand ou ts are O leta A dam s, w ho lends her singing to three songs, and M anu K atché, who handles m ost of the drum m ing. And m aking a surprising guest ap­ pearance on drum s on the first track is none oth er than Phil "O F Balding D u d e" C ollins. H ow ever, Tears For Fears h asn't been able to distance itself from the insecurity and angst that character­ ized its first tw o album s. Rather, the to include several duo has expanded the scope of their tim e­ worries worn they're issues. O n Seeds, mainly concerned about things like the N eanderthal attitu des that men have towards w om en, global ten ­ sions and the environm ent (several songs have cryptic references to "th e sun and the m oon, the wind and the rain.” Global warm ing? You be the judge.) Anyway, Tears For Fears put its career in som e jeopardy waiting this long betw een album s. Fortunately, The Seeds O f Love is strong enough to alm ost justify the wait. Now we can all breathe easy and start waiting for the next album — w hich should be out som etim e around 1994. 1. Red Hot Chili Peppers Mother's Milk 2. Glass Eye Hello Young Lovers 3. Sugarcubes Here Today, Week! 4. Hand of Glory Far from Kith and Kin 5. Timbuk 3 Edge of Allegiance 6. The Fall Seminal Live 7. Meat Puppets Monsters 8. Beat Happening Black Candy 9. Shellyan Orphan Century Flower 10. Mighty Lemon Drops Laughter Tsur is a business sophomore. — Oct. 22, 1989 incarnation), but his presence on this album is surprisingly negligi­ ble. Still, there are a few songs sug­ gesting that N RBQ is still alive, but just laying low until it's time to put out another m ini-m asterpiece like Grooves in Orbit. This Love is True has Terry doing is so sw eet, so sm ooth, his best Fleetw oods im itation to a dazzling degree of success. Adam s' it voice could soothe the troubled mind of a hem ophiliac C hristian Scientist. And If I Don't Have You is a fine pop song, a la N R B Q 's ow n When It instru­ Rains at the Drive-In. The NRBQ’s press for success creates a lost ‘Weekend’ O ctober 23, 1989 Im ages TH E DAILY TEXAN 5 ICHARTS Waterloo Records’ Top Ten Albums 1. k.d. langand the reclines Absolute Torch and Twang 2. Tracy Chapman Crossroads 3. James McMurtry Too Long in the Wasteland 4. Rickie Lee Jones Flying Cowboys 5. Neil Young Freedom 6. Bob Dylan Oh Mercy 7. Jeff Beck Jeff Beck's Guitar Shop 8. David Byrne Rei Momo 9. Rolling Stones Steel Wheels 10. Tears For Fears The Seeds of Love the sounds all mix m ents m esh, well, nothing is em barrassingly overdone, and w hen it's over you're still hum m ing the chorus to your­ self. The Most Lovable Track Despite Itself award certainly goes to Boozoo, That's Who! — a goofy num ber that sounds like a child ren's singalong until you realize it's an historical ac­ count o f the life of great zydeco ac­ cordionist Boozoo Chavis, who guests on the song. This one defi­ nitely com es closest to reclaiming the feeling that N RBQ so effortless­ ly used to exude. The New Rhythm and Blues Q uartet used to be the kind of band you laughed with, not at; their ir­ repressible goofiness, like Jonathan R ichm an's, was so overt that it had to be intentional. Now it seem s that the band, desperate for the airplay and attention that they truly d e­ serve, are willing to try anything to achieve their ends — even if that m eans tradem ark aesthetic of sloppy but incandescent brilliance. A few bright spots hint at the possibility of redem ption, but — as with all NRBQ releases — we'll have to wait and see. forfeiting their NRBQ’s i80s sounds are about as well-done as their ’80s hairstyles. Turrentine is an English junior. books The king of bebop tells all 'Miles' portrays the intersection between fast living and timeless art though he encountered som e form of racism at most every turn, which cam e to shape the way he looked at the world and still looks at it today. His relatively comfortable upbring­ ing afforded him ample time to pur­ sue the one thing he loved dearly: music. By the time he was in high school, the young trum peter was good enough to sit in with the likes of Lester Young, Sonny Stitt and See Miles, page 14 lifestyle that stole Parker, C oltrane, Powell and Holiday from us. But Miles Davis, on the other hand, seems to belong opposite Gil­ lespie, in that camp of self-destruc­ tive geniuses who "lived " them ­ selves to death. Davis was a part of the bebop clique in the m id-'40s; he ran with Parker, played with his group, and picked up a few of Bird's deadlier habits. Although Davis' music often possesses a gen­ tle, purposeful tone that bespeaks level-headedness and moderation, Davis has never shared Gillespie's talent for staying above it all; in­ deed, for most of his life, Davis has been in the middle of it all. in St. Louis during In his new autobiography, Miles, co-w ritten with journalist Q uincy Troupe, the greatest jazz trum peter who ever lived shucks his hyper- diffident, d on't-com e-n ear-m e im­ age and lays it all dow n: his child­ hood the D epression, his introduction to the 52nd Street jazz scene during b e­ bop 's heyday, his m arriage to ac­ tress Cicely Tyson in 1981 and sub­ sequent fall into illness. In betw een the pivotal points, we get the m ost interesting — and often disturbing — part of this great story: The de­ scriptions and depictions of the real lifestyle that these m ythic figures led. ' Miles Dewey Davis II, the son of a dentist, was born into a m oderately w ealthy black family in Alton, 111. He never really suffered the indigni­ ties growing up that m ost black chil­ dren suffered during the '30s, al­ Miles:The Autobiography Miles Davis Simon and Schuster 414 pages $22.95 By Jeff Turrentine O f all the people who shaped modern jazz, changed it so ir­ revocably that it could never be the same again, only two are still with us: Dizzy G illespie and Miles Davis. Gillespie is still alive and playing b e­ cause of his Aristotelian m odera­ tion, his refusal to get caught up in heavy narcotics, a definite negative tropism away from the foredoomed GARNER & SMITH BESTSELLERS Fiction *1. Foucault’s Pendulum (H) Umberto Eco 2. The Tao of Pooh (P) Benjamin Hoff 3. On the Golden Porch (H) Tatyana Tolstaya 4. A Confederacy of Dunces (P) John K. Toole 5. The House of the Spirits (P) Isabel Allende 6. Mile Zero (H) Thomas Sanchez 7. Hollywood (P) Charles Bukowski Tells All (H) Allan Gurganus 9. The Stranger (P) Albert Camus Milan Kundera 8. The Oldest Living Confederate Widow 10. The Unbearable Lightness of Being (P) Non-fiction 1. Adam, Eve, A the Serpent (P) Elaine Pagel s 2. Graywolf Annual Five: Multi-Cultural Li­ teracy (P) Rick Simonson and Scot Walker 3. Miles: The Autobiography (H) Miles Davis 4. Woman Warrior (P) Maxine Hong Kingston 5. The Power of Myth (P) Joseph Campbell 6. Solitude: A Return to the Self (P) Anthony Storr 7. It Was On Fire When I Lay Down On It (H) Robert Fulghum 8. Wartime (H) Paul Fussell 9. Italian Days (H) Barbara Harrison 10. Straight From the Heart (H) Ann Richards •H: Hardback P: Paperback — Oct. 19, 1989 Cocaine, not communism, becomes Clancy’s new ‘Danger’ A grinning Davis parallels the open, nothing-to-hide attitude of Miles. Clear and Present Danger Tom Clancy G.P. Putnam’s Sons 656 pages $21.95 and the United States are indeed now deeply involved in a conflict involving real guns, real soldiers and real deaths — the type of war on drugs Tom Clancy predicts with stunning poignancy in his new book Clear ami Present Danger. Unlike Clancy's first two novels, Hunt for Red October and Red Storm Rising — both of which were based on possible, yet improbable, hypo­ thetical conflicts between the Unit­ ed States and the Soviet Union — Clear and Present Danger not only deals with a highly probable situa­ tion, it deals with one that, in sev­ eral ways, is actually occurring. Though Clancy seem s to have taken the basic premise for the book from new spaper front pages of the past few m onths, the details are still very much Clancy-style fiction; an intricate compilation of characters and view points is in­ terspersed with lavish portrayals of gee-w hiz military gadgetry. Clancy's book begins just as the president, intent on keeping his promise to the Am erican people to put a dent in drug traffic, has au­ thorized the CIA and FBI to con ­ duct a covert military operation against the Colombian drug cartel. The operation involves sending small platoons of elite troops into the jungles of Colombia to system ­ atically destroy the drug lord's se­ cret air strips and processing plants. In the ground troops, operation Showboat — code nam es abound in the book — involves, either directly or indi­ rectly, an incredibly wide array of governm ent officials, cocaine king­ pins, spies, hitm en, sm ugglers, law yers, sailors, pilots, political leaders and countless others. addition to As the the offensive against drug lords unfolds, the program becom es much too complicated for even to control. Soon it becom es a political time instigators its bomb which threatens to blow up in a scandal that would put G. Gordon Liddy to sham e. C lancy's recurring protagonist, Jack Ryan, makes his appearance in the book as a high-ranking offi­ cial in the CIA. As in all Clancy novels, Ryan stands out am ong the com m on horde of characters as the ever-righteous and courageous guy w ho in the end sets every­ thing straight. tech n o-th riller After the first hundred p ages of Clear and Present Danger, anyone who read The Hunt for Red October will realize that Clancy has re­ moved himself som ew hat from the pure style which characterized his early nov­ els. Though Clancy still relishes detailed descriptions of the poetic workings of a m achine gun, radar system , helicopter or similar mili­ tary gizm o, such accounts are giv­ en considerably less em phasis. For most Clancy fans, how ever, this should com e not as a disappoint­ ment but as a refreshing change from C lancy's occasional techno­ overload. for the One frequent, and often justi­ fied, criticism of C lancy's work is that everything seem s to work u n ­ "g o o d imaginably well g u y s." In a clutch, Ryan and crew always pull off som e m iraculous stunt which leaves the book en d ­ ing like a Superfriends episode. In Clear and Present Danger, how ever, major things do go w rong for the United States — formerly C lancy's eternal "g o o d g u y " — and the line between right and w rong, as in real life, seem s a hazy one at best. With Clear and Present Danger, Clancy has definitely regained some of the m om entum he lost with his tw o previous releases Pa­ triot Games and The Cardinal o f the Kremlin. Though the new book doesn't dive into the w orkings of toy box with as the military's much enthusiasm , Clear and Pres­ ent Danger is still an unm istakable Clancy thriller in every w ay. Thanks to the University Co-op for the loan of this book. May, a Plan II sophomore, is an as­ sociate editor of Im ages. By Greg May I n recent m onths, the United States has seen the traditionally moral/ideological "w ar on d ru g s" become more and more of a w ar in the classic sense. Both Colombia open m ike Cry, cry baby Club owner insults Joplin with refusal of memorial By Lee Nichols O ne thing that fans of A us­ tin's music scene will nev­ er be accused of is m odes­ ty. Many of our town's citizens fervently believe that the the current owner of Threadgill's, the obstacle is Maggie M ae's co- owner Bill Shea. Wilson is justifi­ ably miffed — to put it mildly — about the situation. There's really no controversy about whether the stars will be laid in concrete — they will. But now, Wilson says, the sponsors of the project will have to find a new loca­ tion. In an interview with Images, Shea neither claimed nor denied respon­ sibility for the opposition. In fact, he never mentioned Joplin by name and proved very reluctant to com­ ment at all; he finally conceded a two-sentence statement that he ada­ mantly dem anded be printed verba­ tim: "I believe that it's time we dra­ matically lifted our sights in the se­ lection of those whom we immortal­ ize in concrete. The preferences of the least common denominator must not be allowed exclusive rule in the ideals we convey to our chil­ dren." Given that the comment came in direct response to questions about Joplin, it's reasonable to assum e that it is she whom "the least com­ mon denom inator" prefers and is therefore unworthy of immortaliza­ tion. Wilson had a stinging comment on Shea's views. "H ere we got a guy feeding bowheads margaritas ... but he doesn't want [Joplin's star) buried in the sidewalk in front of his store. "A fairly amazing story consider­ ing w hat Janis did for the communi­ ty," he added. See Janis, page 14 best music on the planet emanates directly the dark-and-dirty from bars throughout the city. Of course, our sense of self-im­ portance often outw eighs reality, but few would dare deny that at least one former Austinite made a tremendous impact in rock 'n' roll — Janis Joplin. Originally scorned and ridiculed — she w as voted "ugliest man on cam pus" during her brief stay at the University — Joplin went on to achieve fame for a powerful blues/ rock vocal style never before heard (at least among white musicians). Although the height of her fame came later during her San Francisco re stau ran t y e a rs, T h re a d g ill's proudly promotes the fact that Jop­ lin's career began when she w as a folk singer under its roof. But not everyone in Austin shares this pride. When Joplin and her mentor, Kenneth Threadgill, were honored with inclusion in the Texas Walk of Stars on Sixth Street — an accolade, similar to the "Walk of Fam e" in Hollywood, that ranks them with Texas heroes from Ste­ phen F. Austin to Willie Nelson — the original plan w as to lay the late musicians' memorials side-by-side in front of Maggie M ae's, on the corner of Sixth and Trinity streets. But someone, presum ably one or more of Maggie M ae's owners, ob­ jected. According to Eddie Wilson, LOOK WHO'S S ERVIN On Sunday ! Qaimby the Mouse— 1 the Wait. O cto b er 23, 1989 Im a g e s T H E D A IL Y T E X A N 7 f f l ~ 'Trp --- SSli. L 4 V m' tór4' h & ti Reg. U.S. Pat Off. r mi i i l I f -----—IMi . a. r TT T Ttenutife A Fundamental Treatment M odem science has m ade available to you at home all the stim ulating, health-promoting forces o f electricity and rem oved every shock and jolt. You feel tust a pleasant, invigorating sense o f well being-wnile the ailing, weakened, or painful organ or area are treated with nature's powerful aid to normal conditions. A LL N EW TNIS YEARHHSES T H I M O S T O I O A N T I C E X H I B I T I O N OP MAMMOTH EN TTR TAIN M FVT UhJ A S T O U N D I N G N EW F E A T U R E S IN T H E H I S T O R Y O F T H E W O R L D C O M I N G Advertise in The Daily Texan Classifieds. SellODMBiedIras. ItreaUywofcs. C*Utoday Thousands Tell of Benefits: "I find i! such a helg in nervousness.'' "1 would not pan with it for five úmes the price. It is sure a little wonder.'' I am more than pleased with the Genera­ to r the whole family are usinc it." "I think it is one o f the best little machines that was ever invented." PROOF BY TRIAL You can determine by actual mal in your home just what the RENULIFE will do for you. It has done so much for others, you are entirely justified in finding out for yourself. You should have this generator. Investígate at once. RENULIFE ELECTRIC CO. E x c lu s i «re D is tr ib u to r s W rite We have an attractive connection to offer the right people id some territory. Ralph J. Branch D .D .S . WHEN FLOSSING HURTS Ideally, the use of dental floss should have only beneficial effects on the gums and teeth. U n ­ fortunately, w hen someone first starts to floss regularly, it is not uncom m on to experience soreness and bleeding. It takes a w hile for the gums to accept the technique of scraping the sides of the teeth w ith the floss and the contact w ith the gums. If the flossing technique places too much force on tender gum tissues, damage may result. Learning the right technique at the dental office can m in im ize the initial soreness of the gums. The type of floss used, wax-coated o r uncoated, generally makes little difference. Daily floss­ ing is a basic defense against tooth decay and gum disease. If soreness or bleeding continues after a few days of flossing, see the dentist. Continued soreness or bleeding may indicate the presence of gum disease, which should receive p rom pt treatm ent. WITH SJA&JUÜlUfl 'iMÑDñFpt M E F T I H F M MASKS H * - * MU. 3»w-uu1J-ü1J.U.|JuWMYMyMy|¥|V».r A A AAA aararrarbaaa**A***^ ■ : Il#é s. c m w i i ! AUSTIN'S LARGEST M&fJ XititíJ ; AJÜ/J S/APy S ÜM J SS'JM # h i sum; h i v is it o u i AN M Y III JML ADULTS ¿ CHILDREN'S CLOSEOUT COSTUMES FOR SALE 9 9 c -fl9 .9 9 « • « « • « « a l s o ft o m e ot — — — ínlbcvmc 4765858 35 Serving continuously 11 A M -10 PM 2113 Manor Road 4 blocks cast of 1-35 2907 Duval 472-5633 Mn««rCord ■ Em ergency # 443-1861 8 Images THE DAILY TEXAN October 23, 1989 Tattoos are forever... ... and they cost a lot less than diamonds By Katie Bassman S e u s s ' Dr. s t a r - b e l l i e d S n e e tc h e s h a d th e star-o n , star-off m a c h i n e , b u t real p e o p le h a v e to visit a ta t ­ too s h o p to get the ir stars, a n d the tattoo artists can o n ly p u t th e star on. O ften , ta tto o s h o p s o p e r a t e like hair sa lo n s — y ou m a k e a n a p p o i n t ­ m e n t, c h o o s e y o u r style a n d p a y w h e n y o u 'r e fin ish ed . M o st ta tto o s h o p s p ro v i d e w all-to-w all o p t i o n s for th e d e s i g n of a c u s t o m e r 's n e w tattoo. In a h air salo n , th e r e w o u ld be p ic tu re s of m o d e l s w ith th e late st styles, w h e r e a s a ta tto o s h o p offers "f la s h " — s h e e t s w ith c a rto o n -lik e or realistic d r a w i n g s of ta tto o d e ­ signs. But d o n ' t th i n k th a t th e flash d e s i g n s are y o u r o n ly choices; y ou can create y o u r o w n , a n d a g o o d tattoo a rtist can d o th e s e as well. But h e re th e c o m p a r is o n b e tw e e n h aircu ts a n d ta tto o s e n d s . Y ou r hair g ro w s back, a n d the scisso rs cut on ly d e a d h a ir cells. A ta t to o is p e r ­ m a n e n t , for th e m o s t p a rt, a n d d e fi­ nitely p ainful. "If v o u a re afraid of n e e d le s , it's the w o r s t , " sa y s G u y Lipof, a m e ­ s o p h o m o r e c h a n i c a l - e n g i n e e r i n g a n d tatto o su rviv or. But, Lipof ex ­ plains, if y ou d o n 't h a v e a p r o b l e m w ith n e e d le s , " it's really a piec e of c a k e ." O th e r s d e sc r ib e th e ta t to o e x p e r i­ enc e as sim ilar to h a v i n g a cat scratch y o u , o r s o m e o n e p i n c h i n g y o u r skin. T h e m o s t p a in f u l places to get a ta tto o a re a r o u n d th e a n k le s a n d n e a r b o n e s . A p e r s o n g e tt in g a ta tto o sits d o w n in th e ch air, a n d his o r h e r is s p r a y e d w ith d is in fe c ta n t. skin Stick d e o d o r a n t is a p p li e d to th e area of th e sk in to b e ta tto o e d in o r ­ d e r to tr a n s f e r th e d e s ig n . A n o u t ­ line is u s u a lly d o n e in black b e fo r e the color is filled in — co lors d o n e w ith o u t a black o u tl in e s p r e a d . T h e p ro c e s s of g e ttin g a ta tto o looks like a n artist p a in t in g a c a n ­ vas. T h e e n g r a v i n g tool is d r a w n across th e su r fa c e of the skin a n d th e p a in t sp la tte rs. T h e artist c o n ­ sta n tly clea ns th e skin a n d th e p ic ­ tu r e fo rm s like m agic. in to t h o u g h , y o u realize S u d d e n ly , th at th e r e a re little n e e d le s th r e e r u n n i n g u p a n d d o w n , five lay ers d e e p s k i n . S u rp rise. T h e are a a r o u n d th e e n ­ g ra v in g t u r n s red a n d b le e d s a little. All in all, it d o e s n ' t look c o m f o r t­ able. p e r s o n ' s th e T h e ta t to o e r co u ld be c o n s i d e r e d a n u m b e r of th i n g s by th e o u ts id e v ie w e r — a sad ist, by s o m e o n e w h o h a s n e v e r h a d a tattoo; a n artist, by th e r e c ip ie n t (if th e w o rk is d o n e well a n d beautifully ); or a s u r g e o n , by a r e m o v e d o b se r v e r. Jo h n S tu c k e v of H o u s t o n s a w ta t­ to o in g as a n o u tle t for his artistic i n ­ c lin atio n s a n d h a s b e e n in th e b u s i ­ n e s s for 27 yea rs . " I 'v e b e e n in to art ev e r since I w a s a little kid. 1 w'as d r a w i n g p ic t u r e s o n m y fr ie n d s w h e n 1 w a s little, I w e n t to college a n d w a s a n art m a j o r , " h e says. S tu c k e y s a y s h e 'd s e e n a lot of p e o p le w h o h a d m a c h i n e s for ta t­ to o in g b u t d i d n ' t k n o w h o w to u se t h e m . H e s o m e o n e w h o k n e w how' to u s e th e m a c h in e , b e ­ c a m e his a p p r e n t i c e a n d th e n d e v e l ­ o p e d an artistic style w ith in th e ta t­ to o in g m ed ia. f o u n d A t S tu c k e y 's s h o p , C u s t o m D e ­ sign T a tto o in g in H o u s t o n , art is th e p r o d u c t . H e is so c o n f i d e n t th a t h e p u t s " lif e tim e - p l u s - s i x - m o n th s g u a r a n t e e " o n e v e r y ta tto o . a "I d o n ' t w a n t s o m e o n e w a lk in g a r o u n d w ith a ta t to o of m in e th a t lo oks terrible. I'd r a t h e r tak e th e ex ­ tra tim e to fix s o m e t h i n g , re g a r d le s s of w h o s e fault it is ," S tu c k e y say s. T h e re a re m a n y th i n g s th a t can h a p p e n to a ta t to o th a t a re n o t th e fault of th e artist. I n d e e d , th e life of a largely d e p e n d s o n how' well it's c a re d for. C o lo rs fa d e o v e r tim e, a l t h o u g h th e y c a n be to u c h e d u p ev e ry th r e e to te n years. tatto o It is im p e r a t iv e th a t new' ta tto o s are k e p t o u t of th e s u n , c h lo rin e, salt w a te r, a n d g re a s e . E ven o l d e r ta tto o s can fad e from s u n lig h t. A n d d o n ' t pick at a n e w tattoo. ch e m ic a ls , d irt "Y o u d o n ' t k n o w w h a t to ex p e c t w h e n y o u g e t a ta tto o , so b y th e tim e y o u realize w h a t y o u ' r e feel­ ing, it's t h r o u g h . A t least it w a s in m y c a s e ," sa y s R achel H a m p s h i r e , a n E n glish s o p h o m o r e . H a m p s h i r e h a s a fo ur-lea f c lo v e r ta t to o e d o n h e r a nk le. See Tattoos, page 14 TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK — FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5244 Liberal arts sophomore Eric Jones says a tattoo must have meaning to its owner, and “you’d better want it for the rest of your life ." M e rrill Nix Sanctuary Comnnittee of the Friends M eeting o f Austin Presents: SANCTUARY BONNIE RAITT * a benefit concert special guests TIMBUK3 Proceeds to: Political Asylum Project of Austin, Casa Marianella and Central American Resource Center November 18th, 8:00 pm - City Coliseum ALL-U-CAN-EAT LUNCH BUFFET $ 4 5 0 EVERYDAY 11-2 • Choice of 20 Items • Egg Rolls • Many Kinds of Foods • 2 Soups • Desserts 2 f o r 1 HUNAN KING CHINESE RESTAURANT 2 for 1 good for doing room only hdudet «Choiceof 12Entrees Q P F M A I g r b v / i n k DINNERS 2 FOR 1 With (Ms coupon good thru 10 3089 6517 Airport Blvd. In front of Solo Serve 452-5172 Ask About Free Delivery I I I I I I II I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I University Market Facts... 7 7 % ol all students of the universi­ ty have a car in Austin Source "The University Market Belden Associates, 1987 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: STAR TICKETS CHARGE/INFORMATION: 462-0303 GENERAL ADMISSION - bleacher seating RESERVED SEATING - individual cushioned chairs For Cast Reception Information, contact: (512) 385-5571 IN A SSO C IA T IO N W ITH J.T.O.'C. & RO AD STAR P R O D U C T IO N S T í * f 9 • 1 - r* - - , • • *V *SI> *> \ * » * * 13 Burnet Road 452-2807 In our 9th Year TUESDAY NIGHT O ctober 24 We’re giving away our “1955 Classic Chevy Pickup” (Must be present to win) also: Tuesday Night KQFX “B low Out P arty” 9-12 p.m. enjoy 550 Bar Drinks, Wine, Frozen Drinks 1.55 Bottled Beer for Everyone 8 to 11 In days of not-so-olde Renaissance Fest takes Texas back in time By David Adcox Britain h a s in v a d e d an d o c­ c u p ie d th e p in e fo re s ts ju st n o rth o f H o u s to n . N o t the B ritain th at w e k n o w , b u t th at o f K in g A rth u r, H e n ry V II and R obin H o o d . T a k in g th e fo rm o f th e 15th A n ­ n u al T e x a s R e n a is sa n c e F estiv al n e a r P la n te rsv ille , th e ra id in g p arty in c lu d e s k n ig h ts , o u tla w s , w itch e s, w e n c h e s , o g re s , k in g s an d je s te rs. H o w e v e r, a sid e from an o cc a sio n a l jo u s t o r sw o rd fig h t, th e in v asio n h as b e e n a p e a cefu l o n e . E v ery fall, a b o u t 2 ,0 0 0 p a rtici­ p a n ts d o n c o s tu m e s from m ed iev al E n g lan d to e n te rta in b e tw e e n 7 ,5 0 0 and 2 3 ,0 0 0 festiv al v isito rs p e r d ay for se v e n w e e k e n d s . T h e T e x a s R e n a is s a n c e F estiv al w as fo u n d e d b y G e o rg e a n d D avid fro m S alt C o u la m , tw o b ro th e rs Jo y c e to L ake C ity . A cc o rd in g F lo y d , a d m in istra tiv e a s s is ta n t for the fe stiv a l, to start a festiv al in S a lt L ak e C ity a fte r G e o rg e h ad w o rk e d at o n e in C a li­ fo rn ia. th e b ro th e rs tried T h a t a tte m p t failed , b u t th e b ro th ­ ers m o v e d to M in n e s o ta in 1970, w h e re th e y fo u n d e d th e M in n e s o ta R e n a is sa n c e F e stiv a l in S h a k o p e e , a b o u t 20 m iles s o u th w e s t o f M in n e ­ a p o lis. In 1975 th e C o u la m b ro th e rs sold th e M in n e s o ta R e n a is sa n c e Festiv al an d b o u g h t 2 3 7 a c re s o f land o u ts id e o f H o u s to n , w h e re PLEASdRELAMD 613 W. 29th 478-2339 OVER 1,000 VIDEOS FOR SALE OR RENT th ey started the T e x a s R e n a is sa n c e F estiv al. T h e festiv al is m o d e le d a fte r the co u n try fairs th at a b o u n d e d in E n g ­ land at th e e n d o f th e M id d le A ges and th e b e g in n in g o f th e R e n a is ­ sa n ce p e rio d . A t th e s e fairs, th e e n ­ te rta in m e n t ran g ed from m u sic to ju g g lin g , falco n ry s h o w s to roval p ro c e ss io n s, jo u s ts to p lay s. T h e jo u s tin g an d th e h o rs e and ch a rio t ra ce s p ro v id e so m e o f the m o st e x citin g e v e n ts o f th e fe stiv al. T h e stag ed (b u t n o n e th e le s s v io le n t) jo u s ts w e re o rig in ally p e rfo rm e d by b u t h av e s tu n tm e n , H o lly w o o d sin ce b e e n local tak en o v er b y h o rs e m e n . P e te Y o rk , w h o p lay s th e B lack K n ig h t in th e jo u s ts an d w o rk s as a ra n ch e r in N av aso ta th e rest o f th e y e a r, sa y s th e p a rtic ip a n ts striv e for re a lism in p re s e n tin g th e festiv al. S o m e tim e s it's a lm o st to o real. " L a s t y e a r I g o t m y fin g e r b u sted o p e n an d it to ok 23 s t it c h e s ," Y ork sa y s. " T h is y e a r C o le H arit [a n o th e r jo u s te r] g o t h is jaw b ro k e, and right n ow Jim H a rrin g to n , the jo u s t m a s ­ ter, h a s a h u rt k n e e from th e ch ario t r a c e s ." T h e a u th e n tic a tm o s p h e re e n g e n ­ d ere d by su ch sp e cta c le s is e n ­ h a n ce d b y stra in s o f trad itio n al Irish fo lk m u sic w a ftin g th ro u g h th e air. W y n d n w y re , a H o u s to n -b a se d m u ­ sical g ro u p , h a s p layed at th e R e­ n a is sa n c e Festiv al fo r 10 y e a rs, say s Bill K leck a, o n e o f th e m e m b e rs. K lecka p lay s th e h am m ered d u l­ cim e r — a P ersian fo re ru n n e r to the p ian o — w h ile o th e r m e m b e rs play the C e ltic h arp , flu te and m an d o lin . O th e r p e rfo rm a n c e a rts to be found at the festiv al in clu d e v ario u s p ro fe s sio n a lly p ro d u ced plav s, su ch as E xcalibu r, M erlin and T he Fu rther A dven tu res o f R obyn H oode. T h e plays are p re se n te d tim es th e festiv al by a ctin g th ro u g h o u t tro u p e s from H o u sto n . at v ariou s Je ff B ald w in , w h o plavs R obin in T he F u rth er A dven tu res o f Robyn H oode, is in his 10th v ear o f p e rfo rm ­ ing at th e festiv al. " I started o ut p a in tin g faces and kind o f had to w o rk m y w ay u p ," he say s. " S in c e th en I'v e played th e S h e riff [of N o tt­ in g h a m ], K in g R ich ard , and th is is m y first y e a r to play R o b in ." T he F u rther A dven tu res o f Robyn H oode d e p ic ts R obin H ood h e lp in g K ing R ich ard reg ain the th ro n e from P rin ce Jo h n afte r R ich a rd 's retu rn from th e C ru s a d e s . " T h is g iv e s vou a little m o re idea w h at it w as like to p erfo rm th e o rig ­ inal p lay s — like S h a k e s p e a re — o u td o o r s ," sa y s D avid B o rn , w h o p lay s P rin ce Jo h n . " I th in k it m ak es m e a m o re w e ll-ro u n d e d a c to r ." A v a riety o f o th e r p e rfo rm e rs w a n d e r th e fe stiv al g ro u n d s m e e t­ ing p e o p le an d p e rfo rm in g at d iffe r­ e n t tim es d u rin g th e d ay. T h e O g re , p layed by C ra ig D ale fro m T o d d M issio n , w alk s th ro u g h th e festiv al w ith a g re e n p a in te d face, a h o o k ed DISCOUNT VIDEOS 718 Red River 478-8938 University Market Facts... UT students spent $ 1,4 22 ,1 3 6 over the past thirty days for al­ coholic beverages at Austin clubs, bars and retail stores. Source: "The University Market" Belden Associates, 1987 i : OPEN 24 HOURS H A L L O W E E N LARGEST SELECTION OF DISCOUNT VIDEOS IN AUSTIN LARGE SELECTION OF • NOVELTIES • DISCOUNT VIDEOS • RENTAL TAPES • MAGAZINES :r : ■ : ■ • i : ■ : ■ : ! " v i d e o s ” STARTING AT $9" • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • C O S T U M E R E N T A L S HALLOWEENS NOT JUST FOR KIDS ANYMORE! H O U R S OCT. 24 - 30, N O O N - 6 PM (CXTT 28, !() AM 12, 3.30 -6 30 PM) 1421 W E S T R I V ER S I DE DR. i CORN PR OF SOUTH LAM AR ) 476-0594 Z A C H A R Y S C O T T THEATRE CENTER 2 For 1 ! Rental ¡ "Normal Deposit Required EXPIRES 10/31/89 | I David Adcox The past meets the present at Plantersville’s Renaissance Festival. n o se , a ru b b e r frog for an earrin g , and a rat stu ck to c lo th e s th a t h av e ap p a ren tly n e v e r b e e n w a sh e d . H e e n te rta in s h is a u d ie n ce s w ith su ch classic s o n g s a s Fart in M y Bay and Bite M y B on e w h ile fartin g , b e lch in g and p ick in g h is n o se. " I 'm a v ery sick p e r s o n ," say s D ale, w h o is in his fifth y ear o f p la y ­ ing th e O g re . " I c a n 't get aw a y w ith it a n y w h e re e ls e ." W ay n e P arso n s of T o m b all, w ho plavs the b arb arian " T in y ," w a n d ­ ers the festiv al d re sse d in anim al sk in s o ffe rin g to bu y ch ild re n from th eir p a re n ts. P a rso n s — a red -b eard ed m an w h o w eig h s s o m e th in g clo se to 250 p o u n d s — k n o w s not to carry his See Renaissance, page 14 LEARN THE LESSONS OF LEADERSHIP THROUGH AIR FORCE ROTC. W hat m akes a leader? Ask an y on e w ho joined Air m F o rce ROTC. Ask ab o u t th e training in m an agem en t p r a c t ic e s .. . ab o u t th e variety of e x p e rie n c e s that ROTC o f f e r s .. . ab o u t th e c h a n c e to learn new skills and re sp o n sib ilities. You’ll find that Air Fo rce ROTC ad ds a w hole new d im ension to you r e d u catio n , and d ev elo p s a leader in th e Air Force. Learn more: call CAPT MARK LADD DET 825 512471-1776 Leadership Excellence Starts Here In the Hall fiction b y mike trent "W h a t's going on out here?" the asked Diego after surveying empty hallway. " O h , thev're having another w a­ ter fight down there, Hui and the Rappers." "Hui? He doesn't usually partici­ pate." "I know, but tonight he mu^t be feeling wild. He just drenched them with a wastebasket full of water." Diego looked suitably impressed. "W o w . What are you doing out here?" " S h h h , " Chet said, putting a fin­ ger to his lips. "C h ris is trying to sleep and I'm writing a letter." He whispered a s much for show as for Chris' sake, since his roommate was « Chet sat with his back the yellow wall, against contemplating the blank page before him. A few feet away, on the brownish-red car­ pet of the hallway, two crumpled- up pieces of paper lay, casualties of his dissatisfaction. It was hard to be­ lieve that a simple salutation could so difficult, but he had prove known from the start this was going to be no easy letter to write. His roommate Chris had gone to bed early, and not wanting to dis­ turb him, Chet had gone out into the hall. It was important, he felt, that he finish the letter that night so he could mail the next day. it Though he was not a natural writer and did not consider himself ex ­ tremely adept with the pen, he had found from past experience that cer­ tain things were communicated bet­ ter by the written rather than the spoken word. "L ike broken p ro m ise s ? " he thought, and instantly cursed him­ self. "C ut it out!" he rebuked him­ self angrily. After all, it wasn't really a promise, and it wasn't like he was breaking her heart, either. All he had to do was write a nice, polite letter explaining to Julie that he would be unable to go out with her as he had said he would when he returned home for the summer No . no hideous offenses war crimes ju s t a normal against humanity ... change of mind. Most guys would have scorned anv such courtesy and left her v\ aiting forev er. though He returned to the blank page in for a front of him and moment. He had rejected h i s two previous openings a s being too s e ­ r i o u s or "Julie: seemed a bit intense, while "H i!" its v\as downright annoying bounciness. He finally settled on the old standard, "D e ar Ju lie," as the most appropriate salutation. cheerful too in 1 le put this down and then looked up as a door opened farther down the hall. The small, skinny form of Hui Phong emerged from his room and glanced up and down the hallway. The shy, quiet Viet­ namese almost furtively hurried to the their community bathroom wing shared, acknowledging Chet's presence with a quick nod. "E n g i­ neers," Chet thought and rolled his eyes. Neither he nor Chris had known they were living on the E n­ gineering Floor until after they had moved in. Chris was an engineering major, and since they had asked to be roommates, Chet was dragged along. Most of the sixth-floor guvs were like Hui: quiet, studious, ultra-intel­ ligent and sterotypically geekish. Being more of a social and athletic person, Chet did not fit in very well with them, but they were fairly nice guys once you got to know them — a lot nicer than most of the ones in his fraternity. were played by both sides on the other, and now, as Chet watched, the Rappers took up positions by the restroom door, both armed with motori/ed water guns. As the un­ suspecting Hui came out of the bathroom, the Rappers yelled and fired their weapons, soaking him as he fled to his room. Chet smiled at this. There was al­ ways something going on here, e s­ pecially late at night. Hui would probablv get some of the other geeks and cut off the power to the Rapper's room again. Turning back to the letter, he began to write. Julie had The first part was easy enough, consisting mostly of the usual "Hi, howya doin'?" and similar small talk. Soon the hard part would come. How was he supposed to tell her he didn't want to go out with her? Was it really that big a deal? Perhaps forgotten all about it, and wouldn't think twice if he ever called her. If that were the case, h i s letter would sound egotist­ ical, like "H ey, babe, I'm sorry to break your heart, but you're just not good enough for a hunk like me This was precisely the message he did not want to convey, for he knew that m t h i s situation courtesy could easilv be construed as pretentious­ ness. that From where he sat, Chet could see the Rappers' door was slightly ajar, and he could hear them laughing and talking as they their squirt guns. Slowly refilled and cautiously, he sav\ Hui's door open, and the damp Asian poked his head out. Ehen, with that swift silence that precedes only the most gleeful sort of revenge, Hui tiptoed towards the Rappers' room, carry­ ing what looked like a very heavy wastebasket. Chet's eyes widened as he realized what was about to happen. With one blow Hui kicked the door open, and screaming "Y a aa ah !" at the top of his lungs, the excited Vietnamese doused the stunned Rappers with a trash can full of water. "S h it!" cried one, am azed at the sheer volume of water that had hit him. Both grabbed their squirt guns and lunged after Hui, but he was too spry and made it back to his room. Sopping w'et and furious, they pounded on his door for a while before retreating to plot re­ venge. Chet was still laughing to the door himself when across from him opened and Diego, his neighbor, came out. He was a big Mexican Another door opened and the Rappers came out. Thev were the black sheep of the floor. Rude and ob ­ noxious, their constant playing of rap music at high volumes had earned them the hatred of most ol the geeks (a term Chet and Chris used more out of cynical affection frequently pranks than malice), with thick glasses, and he and Chet were usually on uncertain terms, since Diego associated C het with frat-boy stereotype the conceited and Chet thought of him a s a fairly typical geek. Craduallv both were realizing that neither fit their as ­ signed role very well; Diego had a good-looking girlfriend and enjoyed s p o r t s , while Chet had some charac­ ter and not a little intelligence. probablv wide awake bv now. Chet knew C h r i s could hear them even now, and wanted to at least sound like he was being courteous. Diego flashed him the OK sign and went back in, closing his door behind him. Anybody else would have asked who the letter was to, but the stoic Diego kept his affairs private and treated other peoples' as s u c h ,to o . it used on Again Chet returned to the letter, still wondering what to put. There had to be a tactful way to do this. He though of the many ways he had been rejected. There was the old "L e t's |ust be friends" cliche, which he despised with the sam e passionate hatred that all guys felt them . who had had There were and also though these were usuallly polite, it seemed that the warmth with which they were expressed was inversely related the ones that spared your feelings were most often based on lies. Finally, there was the option of having an­ other person, but he did not feel like right inventing a girlfriend now. W hat about the truth? Now there was a novel concept! their truthfulness; excuses, to Dear Julie, I'm writing to tell you that I'm a weenie and I've changed my mind about going out this sum mer. I guess I'm even more o f a w eenie because I can't think o f any neato lies to explain why. M aybe I should ask one o f my fraternity brothers for help ... at all. Most of them in a similar situ­ ation would not have done so, which was one reason Chet had ended up de-pledging after less than two months. He had endured the hazing and all the pledges were put through, he had learned to drink until he was blind with alcohol, and he had even got­ ten used to his shallow brothers; but in the end, Rotation had killed him. the crap Every weekend, the new pledges were set up with a different sorority girl who was guaranteed to "p u t o u t." They would go to a party, get smashed, and wind up having a one-night stand together. (That is, if you didn't find yourself with so m e ­ body else when the partv e nd ed .) Originally, this sounded exciting to Chet, but after the first time ... after not seeing the girl for a whole week, and when he did, her turning away . after listening with revul­ quickly sion the other g u y s bragging to about what they had done the night before ... after waking up with a stupendous hangover, wondering who was lying next to him and whether there was anything more to life than ab undant alcohol and mindless, animalistic mating ... af­ ter all this he had known G reek life was not for him. But had he quit? No, sir! Chet Wilson was no quitter! He had endured it for six more weeks and two more Rotation dates before the em ptiness finally got to him and he de-pledged, giving his brothers the lame excuse that he didn't have time for all the activi­ ties. As much as he shuddered to re­ call that life, and as much as he looked down on his former frat brothers, he nevertheless consid ­ ered what he had done an act of cowardice. There was som e flaw, that was some weakness constantly at work, hindering his every action, enervating his most determined resolve. in him Even now it w as at work, forcing him out in the hall at one o'clock in the morning so he could write an idiotic letter to a girl w ho probably had forgotten him and his prom ise and already found herself a sum m er boyfriend. Why was he so absurdly weak? Infuriated with himself, Chet slammed his fist into the dogfood- brown rug. It felt m ore like A stro­ turf than carpet, it w as so thin and cheap. The whole dorm was like that; grey little room s with a view of nothing; corridors long, well-lit where hum m ing bars of flourescent lights served only to illuminate and enhance the bare ugliness, reveal­ ing in every nook and cranny the com plete lack of decor. It w as m ore like a m adhouse than a college dorm. looked on, carrying a large cup and a w astebas­ ket full of w ater. Curious, Chet watched as he set the heavy trash can down outside Hui's d oor and filled the cup at the water fountain. In past w ater fights, cups had been used to pour w ater under the doors and get the room s wet. W as he going to dum p the wastebasket too? the Rapper As Chet poured the cup under Hui's door, then leaped back and quickly sw ept the w astebasket. W hen Hui up opened the door to retaliate, he would be doused from head to foot. Chet held his breath as the Rapper w aited, poised to unleash the bucket's contents. Fifteen sec­ onds passed like an eternity, and the door did not open. A gitated, the Rapper carefully poured another cup over the threshold and stood back to wait, tense as a spring. Still Hui did not com e out. At last frus­ tration got the better of the Rapper, and with angry heave he dum ped the entire trashcan under Hui's firmly shut door. an Unfortunately, most of the water never made it over the threshold, and splashed ineffectively against the outside of the door, soaking the carpet. " G r e a t , " though Chet. Now it would mildew and the hall would smell Just one more problem for the cleaning ladies to deal with. for weeks. In the begining the m e sses the geeks had made were harm less, and Chet had thought they were funny; but he had gotten on friendly terms with one of the Spanish ladies who he passed every morning in the hall on his way to class, and after seeing her at work the Monday following a w eekend of water wars and food- fights, Chet had realized that all the clogged toilets and shaving cream bombs were not so harmless after all. And yet, there it was again! That damnable w eakness, the sam e g u t­ less feeling that drove him to write this letter. Could he not just for once look beyond the consequences? It would certainly make his life a lot more convenient. The Rapper placed the cup inside the empty wastebasket and slowly m ade his way back to his room . Chet shared som e of his disappoint­ m ent at not getting Hui; it would have been som ething to see. At least the Rapper could rest easy knowing Hui was having to deal with the flood in his room , and that, the V ietnam ese sooner or would exact his revenge and it would all begin again. later, Chet felt very tired, and looked at his w atch. It was past 1:30, and he had barely begun to write. He d e­ cided to put the letter off until to­ m orrow , and crum pled up w hat he had already written. M aybe he wouldn't write it at all. It was his privilege as a guy never to speak to her or bring up the subject again. He had initiated it, and he could drop it, no explanations necessary. But he knew he w ouldn't. W ho was he kidding? Tom orrow would com e, and he would soften up. And in the end he would com e up with some sim pering excuse that spared her feelings at the expense of his ego. It was the inescapable process that had m ade him what he was. Picking up his pen and notepad, Chet went in to get som e sleep. Trent is an English sophom ore they could help him! They were experts at every sm ooth line in the book, or they were when at they even bothered to talk to the girl Yes, least W ith a sigh he picked up his pen and was trying to write when he saw' one of the Rappers ap­ pear down the hall. It was the tall one, and he was Y io n n l ■ «/WALL DAY H V Al l SEATS - ALL SH O W S October 23, 1989 Images THE DAILY TEXA N 11 A - . A U ST IN 6 «dJlt * , ADULT VID EO 5 2 1 THOMPSON OFF 1 8 3 1 MILE SO. Of MONTO PO LIS Phone 3 8 5 - 5 3 2 8 A L L M A I F T H E A T R E o p e n 2 4 h o u r s CALL THEATRE FOR TITLES [ ALL RENTAL» 2 FOR ONE EVERY PAY MON. WED. & F R L t w o d a y s FOR THE F R K X O F ONE | RENTALS $ 1 -$ 3 SALES $9.95-954.95 TAPE EXCHANGE DISCOUNT M A G S - S 0 F T > H A R 0 < P A P E R B A C K , BWIWOER 6 A I L MALE Bill Murray Dan Akroyd A Sigourney Weaver in GHOSTBUSTERS II S:1S7:30V:45 (PC 13) ( TIM E S PUBLISHEO ARE FOR TODAY ONLY ) GET WIRED 9 M 9 9 9 M 9 M 9 9 9 9 9 Austin 's Alternative 91 7 Cable FM 471 -5106 ( m s Í ) $ , RIVERSID E DOLLAR C IN E M A 19.10 í R IV Í M SI01 OR MILLENIUM R CHRIS KRISTOFFERSON, CHERYL LADD Fri & Mon -Thu 5 30,9 45 Sat & Sun 1 15. 5:30. 9:45 YOUNG EINSTEIN PG yahoo se riou s Fri & Mon.-Thu 7:45 Sat & Sun : 3:30. 7 45 KICKBOXER R van damme Fn & Mon -Thur: 6:00. 8 00. 10:00 Sal A Sun 2 00. 4:00, 6:00. 8 00, 10:00 Special Admit 2 for $1.00 With This AO!!!! 4 : 4 5 - 7 : 1 0 - 9 : 2 0 C E L E B R A T I O N ( H I 4 1 1 * 1 1 ENOS THUR 4:30-7:108:30 DCEIE NRAVT METAL 12:00 WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? 11:30 2 1 St and G uadalupe 4 7 7 - 1 3 2 4 CINEM ARK THEATRES MOVIES 12 -35 N @ F.M. 1825 251-7773 J Supor Tuesday Is Back! ALL SEATS *2.75 FOR ALL TUES. SHOWS EXCEPT BLACK RAM LOOK WHO’S TALKING E S I THX 2:45 4:45 7:159:30 FATMAN AND LITTLE BOY SSnl THX 12:30 5:00 7:3010:00 NO PASSES INNOCENT MAN 2:30 5:157:45 10:00 l BLACK RAIN 1 thx 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 NO PASSES SEA OF LOVE l 2:45 5:30 7:45 10:00 PARENTHOOD 4:30 7:00 9:30 SEX, LIES AND VIDEOTAPE 3:00 5:15 7:309:45 HALLOWEEN 5 3:155:157:159:30 |r TURNER AND HOOCH IB ] 3:00 7:15 LETHAL WEAPON 2 5:00 9:15 WHEN HARRY MET SALLY l 3 15 5 30 7 45 9 45 THE ABYSS 6 « m 4:00 7:009:45 UNCLE BUCK m 2:45 4:45 7:00 9:15 $2.75 AH shows before 6 pm BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... WANT ADS...471-5244 VHE W K IlY ¿ S « B ia S , 50 All Seats I ■' f All S/iOwsv-j ■ Kivki Costnar 1 FIELD OF DREAMS ¡¡i ;-~j 9 30__________________- ■ Y a h o o SarkNM I YOUNG EINSTEIN mm ; 7 30 frV - lo o THE rTgHT THING M | r ^ 1 ■ Inda Soon ROMERO 715 ■ MYKONOS Greek Food STEVE K 0K 1N 0S (512)451-0677 7329-A Burnet Rd. Austin, Texas 78757 TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK- FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5244 BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY ALL SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6 PM ★ DENOTES STEREO SOUND GREAT HILLS 8 US 183 t GRUT HILLS TRAIt 7 9 4 - 8 0 7 6 _______ FAT MAN AND LITTLE BOY 6*G131t h x 12.202.45 5 10 7 35 10 00 GROSS A NA TO M Y Pels!* 1 0 03 1 0 5 :2 0 7 3 0 9 4 5 N E X T OF K IN H THX 1 00 3 1 55.35 7 45 1 0 00 DRY W H IT E SEASON ffl * 12:40 3 05 5 25 7 40 9 55 SEA OF LOVE [1 * 12 30 2 50 5:10 7:25 9 45 ABYSS (P&ÜÜ* 1 104 107 159 55 LETHA L WEAPON 2 l l * 12 45 3 00 5 15 7 25 9 40 H O N EY , I S H RU N K TH E K ID S m * 1 15 3 15 5 15 DEAD POET'S Eg) ★ SO C IETY 7 159 50 HIGHLAND M ALL HIGHLAND MALL BOULEVARD 4 S 1 - 7 3 2 6 a a ALL SEATS ALL TIMES . *1 MILLENIUM 6*0131 + 5 20 7 20 9 25 2 00 4 30 7 30 9 40 SAT 4 SU N FR ID A Y TH E 13TH- PART V III [it] 5 45 7 45 9 45 1 4 5 3 4 5 5 4 5 7 4 5 9 45 SAT & SUN BARTON CREEK M0RAC at LOOP 360 3 2 7 - 8 2 8 1 G R O S S A N A T O M Y 1*213] THX 12 45 3 00 5 20 7 35 10 00 PARENTHOOD pgTsJ * 1 3 0 4 0 0 7 15945 SEA OF LOVE [b] THX 12 3 0 2 4 5 5 0 0 7 2 0 9 3 5 A BYSS 8*013), 1 154 157 15 1000 UNCLE BUCK [w.] 1 30 3 30 5 30 7 30 9 30 HIGHLAND 10 I-3S at MIDDLE FISKVILLE RD 4 5 4 - 9 5 6 2 FABULOUS BAKER BOYS 11 THX 12 10 2 3 5 4 5 5 7 2 5 9 5 5 GROSS A NA TO M Y 6*213] |HX 12 302 45 5 00 7 159 30 N E X T OF K IN 1 JHX 12 1 5 2 40 5 05 7 30 9 50 H A L LO W EENS 1 * 12 05 2 05 4 05 5 55 8 05 10 05 BLACK R A IN 1 THX 12 00 2 30 5 00 7 30 10 00 BREA K IN G IN 1 * 12 00 2 00 4 00 6 00 8 00 10 00 B ATM AN 6^:i3| + 12:00 2 25 4 50 7 20 9 50 SEA OF LOVE 1 THX 12 1 0 2 3 5 5 0 0 7 3 0 1000 UNCLE B UCK [P2] + 12 05 1 5 5 3 5 5 5 5 5 7 5 5 9 55 DEAD POET'S 6?2] + S O C IETY 7 40 10 05 HO N EY, I SH RU N K THE K ID S [P2] + 12 00 1 55 3 50 5 45 P PRESIDIO THEATRES FABULOUS BAKER BOYS BLACK RAIN SHIRLEY VALENTINE ARE SPECIAL ENGAGEMENTS DISCOUNTED MATHEE ARE SHOWS B&ORE 6 0 0 PM ■■■ — "■ VILLAGE CINEMA ART - — WESTGATE 8 4 NORTHCROSS 6 NortHcro«« M il Andorsoo A ButobI LOOK WHO'S TALKING (PO I 3) 2:30-5:00-7:30-9:30-11:45 NO FREE PASSES NEXT OF KIN (R) 2:45-5:15-7:45-10:15-12:30 THK FABULOUS BAKER BOYS (R| 3:00-5:308:00-10:15-12:25 SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT NO DGCOUNTS4IO FNEE PASSES AN INNOCBNT MAN (R| 2:45-5:00-7:30-10:05-12:15 NOFNEEPASSES BLACK RAIN (R| 2:15-4:45-7:15-9:45-12:15 SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT NO OCCOUNTS-NO FREE PASSES HALLOWEEN V (R) 2:30-5:308:00-10:05-12:00 A DRY WHITE SEASON (R) 4:45-7:15-9:55 SHIRLKV VALENTINE (R) 3:00-5:15-7:45-9:55 COOKIE (R) 2:15PM ONLY THE FABULOUS BAKER ROVE (R| 2:30-5:00-7:30-10:00-12:25 SP EC IA L E N G A G E M E N T NO OtSCOUNTS-NO FREE PASSES OLD GRINGO (R) 2:004:30-7:00-9:35-12:00 SEX, LIES, AND VIDEOTAPE (R| 2:40-5:10-7:40-10:10-12:30 AN INNOCENT MAN |R| 2:154:45-7:15-9:50-12:15 NO FREE PASSES FATMAN ANO LITTLE IOY |PQ13| 2:25-4:50-7:25-10:00 SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT NO OCCOUNTS-NO FNEE PASSES LOOK WHO’S TALKING (P O I3) 2:104:108:158:15-10:25 NOPNEEPASSES SEX, UBS, ANO VIDEOTAPE (R) 1:45-3:50-5:55-8:05-10:15 OLD GRINGO (R) 2:50-5:10-7:30-9:55 PARENTHOOD (PG13) 3:058:25-7:45-10:10 AN INNOCENT MAN (R) 3:20-5:408:00-10:20 LOOK WHO’S TALKING (POI 3) 3:008:20-7:45-10:00-12:15 NOPNEEPASSES SPEAKING IN (M| 5:00-7:15-9:20-11:45 •LACK RAIN (M| 2:004:30-7:00-9:30-12:00 S P EC IA L EN G A G E M E N T NO USCOUNTSMOFNEE PASSES HALLOWEEN V (M) 1:45-3:358:35-7:30-9:45-11:45 WHEN HARRY MET SALLY (H> 2:104:45-7:25-9.30-12:00 PARBNTHOOO (POI 3) 2:10-9:45 THE BIO PtCTURK (POI 3) 4:45 PM ONLY ROCKY HORROR 12:15IM)MGHT FI IAY A tC SATURDAY NIGHT ONLY STUOENT DISCOUNT DAILY M UST P R E SE N T CU RR E N T V A I I ED (SPECIAL E N G AG E ME NTS E X C L U D E D ! NEXY OF KIN (R) 2:45-5:15-7:55-10:20-12:40 LOOK WHO’S TALKINO (POI 3) 3:15-5:35-7:45-10:00-12:10 NOPNEEPASSES AN INNOCENT MAN (R) 2:30-5:00-7:258:45-12:10 NO FNEE PASSES NALLOW EIN V (R) 3:30-5:458:15-10:30-12:30 SEA OP LOVE (R) 3:00-5:258:05-10:20-12:35 BLACK RAIN (R) 2:004:45-7:25-10:00-12:25 SP E C IA L EN G A G E M E N T NO D6COUNTS-NO FREE PASSES LETHAL WEAPON II (R) 2:005:007:007:45-10:05-12:15 ERIK THE VIKING (P013) 2:004:45-7:15-9:45-12:00 CHÍNESE MOVE THEY CAME TO BOB NONO KONG 12:30 AÜ. PR! A SAT MONTS ONLY) LAKEHILLS 4 FATMAM AMD U TTU BOVfPBIR 2:104:56-7:36-1015 NO OBCOUmS4K) FNEE PASSES SEX, LIES, ANO VIDCOTAPS |N| 2:50-5.15-7:56-10:06 BRSAKMG IN (R| 3 108 25-7 46-9:56 H E R IIABRY MKT SALLY (R) 2:40806-7:258:36 LA LECTRICE (R) 2:30-5:00-7:30-9:40 MUSIC YEACHER(PO) 2:50-5:15-7:40-9:50 VILLAGE TWIN $1.00 FIELD OF DREAMS (PO) 7:209:45 RELENTLESS (R) 7:15-9:20 MILLENIUM (PG13) 7:45-10:00 PETER PAN (O) 5:15 AQUARIUS 4 $1.00 RELENTLESS(R| 7:30 KICKBOXER (R) 8:05-10:15 GHOSTBUSTERSII (PO) 7:008:30 MILLENIUM (PQ13) 9:45 NIGHTMARE V (R) 7:45 LOCK UP (R) 9:55 PETER PAN (O) 7:15 YOUNG EINSTEIN (PO) 7:40 FIELD OF DREAMS (PO) 10:08 KICKBOXER (R) 9 :2 0 CALL THEATRE FOR UPDATED SNOW TREES SOUTH WOOD 2 $1.00 Texas Union Presents 10th Annual Texas Union Poster Show and Sale Featuring Original Movie One-Sheets Large and Small Rock & Roll and Movie Posters also liters Jfrom $olattb A special selection o f lithos with superb graphics advertising film s, circuses, opera, th eater and museum events. Im ported from Warsaw Spectacular Selection! Texas Union Texas Union Video Store M o n d a y - f r i d a y , 1 0 a . m . - 6 p . m . V i s a ^ C A c c e p t e d 12 Images THE DAILY TEXAN October 23, 1989 Still controversial, still beset by anti-drug paraphernalia activists, the pipe shops around Austin have remained open and prosperous. Story by Charlie Earthman October 23, 1989 Images THE DAILY TEXAN Left: Happy tobacco consumers employ a variety of pipes and smoking techniques to further enjoy their smoking pleasure. Below: Enthusiastic smoker experiences a tobacco "high" - a feeling in which one's senses are heightened and enriched. In the world of pipe shops and tobacco accessories, there is no such thing as black and white. For years, pipe shops have been quietly operating in Austin, complying with the laws that allow them to exist. However, recent pro­ tests and pickets spearheaded bv Austin activist Mark W eaver have rekindled interest in an industry u n ­ daunted since 1981 when the cur­ law was rent drug paraphernalia passed. This is an industry dom i­ nated by shades of grey, where one man's tobacco accessory might be another m an's drug paraphernalia. Under current Texas law, a prod­ uct is onlv illegal if it is "u sed or is intended to be u se d " for an illegal purpose. Since its passage in 1981, the courts have ruled that pipes, strongly snuff kits, m a ga z ines *\^ based on illegal drugs, inhalants or ,anv other types of products carried * in these stores are legal unless the store has prior knowledge that the purchaser intends to use it for an illegal purpose. In effect putting the responsibility on the shoulders of the consumers, these shops have remained open and fairly prosperous. As is often the case in controversial lawmak­ ing, differing interests interpret the laws in very different ways. Inter­ estingly, both sides have used the wording of the actual law to argue their cases. law According to Weaver, head of the American Family Association of Texas, "T h e is very explicit about what's illegal, and they could easily go in there today and justify cleaning out half of those stores us­ ing our state laws currently." Conversely, Jerry Shults, owner and president of the Gas Pipe E m ­ porium at 701 F. Fifth St., interprets the law quite differently. " T h e law itself is so ambiguous that anything could be drug paraphernalia, or nothing could be drug parapher­ nalia. It just depends on the intent that comes with it." Although Shults has had prob­ lems in Dallas with confiscations, he has had no problems with the A us­ tin Police Department, warmly say­ ing, "I don't mean to jump on the bandwagon, but I can't tell you the difference betw een Austin police and everywhere else in the state. They're a lot nicer overall.'' W eaver's criteria to operate under, we wouldn't sell a n y th in g ." In reference to the Dallas prob­ lems, Shults explains, " T h e y [the Dallas Police Department] have come to the realization that they just can't come in and arbitrarily take things, that vou could buy at any convenience store, and say, per se, it's drug paraphernalia. They lose every time they go to court and trv to do tha t." like cigarette papers T he controversy concerning these stores boils down to the basic question of what the products in the stores are being used for, and as would be expected, the answer to that q ues­ tion usually d epends on who you ask. Weaver has been the loudest voice against the presence of these shops in Austin's recent history. In Novem ber of 1988, W eaver got a complaint concerning pornogra­ phy at one of the local shops. Upon investigation, Weaver became d eep ­ the ly concerned with many of proucts being sold. "1 was totally shocked to see the d r u g s t a t e s p a r a p h e r n a l i a , " Weaver. "Y o u hear about a war on drugs. You see all types of edu ca­ informa­ tional groups promoting tion, but in practical terms, if this type of stuff is still readily avaliable, then most of that is nothing but to­ ke n ism ." Shults, however, d ocs not share the same opinions. " I f we or any other store were going to use Mark The position of the pipe shops re­ mains fairly consistent — the sm ok ­ ing products that they carry are solely intended for use with tobacco and tobacco products. Period. Ac­ cording to Doug Brown, co-owner and manager of O at Willie's C a m ­ paign Headquarters at 29th and Guadalupe streets, "T h e r e 's a para­ in the books, and phernalia we're complying with it. If som e­ body com es in here and states that they want to buy this product for an illegal purpose, we'll get them out of the s to r e ." law Similarly, Mike Stewart, manager of Aaron's Emporium at 423 E. Sixth St., says, "W e 'r e trying to stay very conservatively within the spirit and the intent of the law ." Brown adds, "R ecently , some wholesalers have been hit by customs [regulations]. They're trying to say what is and federal what level." legal at the is not Austin got its first taste of the so-called "h ead s h o p s " in the mid-'60s, w h en the U n d e rg ro u n d City Hall opened at 1606 Lavaca St. The emerging liberality of the times gave founders Joe Brown, Gilbert Shelton and Tony Bell the necessary founda­ tion on which to open a store carry­ ing, am ong other things, pipes and cigarette papers next to beads, but­ tons and posters. (Incidentally, the original Underground City Hall was located in the same spot currently occupied by the beer cooler of Dan's Liquor Store.) to According to Doug Brown, "It was a store selling products that young people were interested in. It was the focal point for the under­ ground com m unity, if you want to •call it th a t." Catering the underground scene, City Hall also carried many of the underground new spapers of the time, including the Los Angeles Free Press, the Berkeley Barb, H ous­ ton's Space City Neu>s and Dallas' Notes. In 1968, the shop was handed over to Doug Brown, w h o later changed the nam e to O at Willie's. Shults recalls working out of a cardboard box at manv of the Texas pop festivals during the late '60s. "I was selling lots of peace signs, ciga­ rette papers, onyxs and stuff like that." from the pop In 1970, with m oney saved from his service in Vietnam as well as his profits festivals, Shults op ened shop in Dallas. In February of 1987, Shults finally brought the Gas Pipe to Austin. In addition, Austin has seen the em er­ gence of many more pipe shops around town. One thing that both proponents and opponents of the shops do agree on is the increasingly conserv­ ative trend throughout the country — a trend that will surely affect the future of pipe shops. "I think the '80s are going to be the most liberal part that we're g on­ na see for a long tim e ," says Brown, adding, "I think it's turning around to be really conservative." Often the opponent, Weaver agrees, putting the present conserv­ ative swing in perspective. "Th ing s always cycle. In the '60s and '70s, we saw the cycle swingin g way to the liberal element. Free sex ... ev­ erything was free, and we pushed those things all the way to the limit. When we got to the limit, we saw that there was a price tag attached to it. We are now on the swing back because we didn't the price tag had on it, which was often death." like what the Along with Brown, Shults sees increasing c o n ­ servatism as a threat to his stability, own stating, " T h e only thing I'm con­ cerned with is that they're going to make tobacco illegal." financial In the eyes of opponents such as Weaver, the concept of "tobacco products" is a loophole that is m ak­ ing a mockery of the Police Depart­ ment as well as society as a whole. "It's amazing that somebody can get awav with selling that tvpe of merchandise and all they have to do is put on there that this is for tobac­ co use when anyone standing in that shop with one eye and half good sen se knows that this is not for tobacco u se ." How ever, Shults holds steadfast to the position that selling pipes is within his legal and moral right. "T h e y can't say pipes are illegal u n ­ less thev make tobacco illegal. Any pipe conceivable, you can sm oke to­ bacco out of. Anv ty p e ." For the shop ow ners, the charge that their products promote drug use seems to com e with the territo­ ry'. "1 worrv about it so m e tim e s ," explains Brown, "b u t I firmly be­ lieve that we're not doing anything any worse than people selling guns or alcohol. 1 could take the whole weight of the world on my shou l­ ders if I wanted to, but I refuse to ." Shults similarly adds, " I t's just like any business. O u r intent is to make a profit. It has nothing to do with the use of the item after the p u rch ase." Since the Under­ time of ground City Hall, certain publica­ tions have come and gone, but co n ­ troversial books, magazines and comics remain on the shelves. Re­ cently, periodical magazines such as High Tim es, a magazine w h ose sub ­ ject material often cente rs around marijuana, as well as books contain­ ing mariju ana-growing tips, have been targeted in protests by com ­ munity group pickets, the American Family Association. like the According to both Brown and Shults, the presence of controversial publications both upholds the c o n ­ stitutional right of freedom of the press and reacts to the econom ically viable aspect of supply and d e­ to S h u l t s , m a n d . A c c o r d i n g "T h e re 's such a thing called free­ dom of the press, and to sav that because we carrv a magazine that has inferences to drugs we cond one drug use is unfair." Similarly, Brown adds, "I t's infor­ mation. I here's other books in there to get off teach you how that d rug s.” Under current state law, these magazines are legal, and just as with any other marketable prod­ uct, there is an econom ic incentive in carrying products that are in d e­ mand. Shults em phasizes, "It's not a question of legality or illegality, but rather a question of connections. W hy should I deny a person the le­ gal access to that book? Most n e w s­ stands would and do carry these magazines. W hy is it wrong for us to?" T he selling of inhalants has also been a source of contro­ versy involving som e of the pipe shops around town. Al­ though inhalants, including the bet­ ter-known Rush and Locker Room, are law, legal under the current many of the local shops refuse to carry them. This decision is due greatly to the State Health Department's position that certain inhalants are adulterat­ ed and often mislabeled, whereby the actual composition of the in­ halants in the canisters is not the same chemicals indicated on the la­ bels. In this case, local law enforce­ ment authorities have the the mislabeled products back manufacturers, where they could be relabeled and eventually redistribut­ ed. sent to Manv shop ow ners feel that soci- etv is adhering to a dangerous d o u ­ ble standard in a time when alcohol abuse is so widespread. Brown con ­ tends, "I f you would like to put us the rest of mainstream in with America, we're just like the Stop N' G o across the street. They don't in­ tend for somebody to get tw o six- packs and go out and kill s o m e ­ b o d y ." According to Lori Shults, Jerry's wife and secretary and treasurer of the Gas Pipe, an insinuation was made that the Gas Pipe and other local pipe shops were carrying and distributing syringes. Although this type of charge is completely untrue, it does point out another valid d o u ­ ble standard. Under current state law, drug­ stores can distribute syringes with­ out anv medical documentation proving the purchaser's need tor It is then left up to such a product pharmacists to use their ow n discre­ tion in distributing syringes. In light of the current paraphernalia law, questions have been raised as to why no laws exist regulating the distribution of syringes, products that the Shultses feel pose a much more dangerous threat to society than their stores. anything carried in Interestingly, the tobacco prod­ ucts represent a minority fraction of the total inventories of these shops. Upon walking into just about any one of Austin's pipe shops, novelty gift items like buttons, T-shirts, in­ cense, posters and toys seem to clutter the shelf space. "It you want to take a hard-line point of view on it, roughly 25 per­ cent of the stuff in the store is q u e s ­ tionable," s a v s Brown. "D iversity is what we're looking for. W e'v e got everything for people from three on up to whatever age vou want to b e ." total Put in an econom ic perspective, Stewart concedes that less than 10 percent of inventory dollar amount is smoking-oriented. Shults explains, " W e sell more dart sup­ plies than anyon e else in Austin. to mention any I'm not going names, but a lot of well-to-do peo­ ple in Austin-come in here and buy dart supplies and gift items, just not smoking item s.” So that's how it stands today. To­ bacco is legal, " d r u g s " aren't. Prod­ ucts used for tobacco are also legal, yet the same products used with illegal drugs are not. It is a time where pipe shops are finding them ­ selves looking down the barrel of an increasingly conservative America, vet they continue to push, test and reinforce manv of the constitutional rights that we all dem and, including Mark Weaver. Miles, from page 6 Clark Terry. Eventually Davis was accepted at Juilliard; immediately upon arrival in Manhattan, he began pounding the pavement, searching for his idols Bird and Diz. Within months he was playing frequently at M in­ ton's Playhouse in Harlem — the birthplace of bop — and along 52nd Street, " t h e place for white people to come to and spend a lot of m oney to hear this new m u s ic ," in Davis' own words. W hen Gillespie left Par­ ker's famous quintet due to Parker's drug addiction, Davis — who didn't seem to mind as much — stepped in and took his place. At that point, Miles Davis entered the pantheon of jazz immortals. 1 he a u t h o r s trip through the Birth of the Cool to the death of John Coltrane, colorfully but succinctly chronicling a period of American music that has no par­ allel in terms of dynamism , output and impact. Thankfully, the authors let us in on the philosophy behind the music a s well. take u s on a Davis doesn't dwell solely on a n ­ e c d o t e s about musicians, or rail against the injustices of a culture wlm h has more or less neglected its black artists (although Davis does plenty of this, too). Thus we be­ come privy to the atmosphere at recording sessions, club dates, re­ hearsals; we get to read how the music was constructed in the cre­ ator's mind; we learn how the life bled into the jazz and vice versa. in Just as interesting are the peeks into the personal life of this most recalcitrant of public figures. Miles Davis touched upon the lives and careers of just about every jazz m u ­ sician (and many rock musicians) af­ ter the year 1950. The relationships covered these pages betw een Mile--’ and his peers — Coltrane, Gil­ lespie, Prince, Wynton Marsalis — range from the intimate to the vola­ tile in (or dow nright unfriendly, Marsalis' case). The passages d e ­ scribing drug use and Davis' sexual to-the-point; life are graphic and Davis s a y s he places honesty above all other character traits in others, and he practices it as well. M iles is truly written from the heart. The informal tone of the book situates the reader across the table from the genius in some sm oky bar som ew here, as he spills out storv af­ ter story spanning his entire life. That Miles Davis has long enough to tell his own tale is noth­ ing short o f miraculous; to be taken into the confidence of som eone s o talented and integral to modern m u­ sa is a very, verv fortunate thing. lived T h a n ks to the University Co-Op for the loan of this book. Turrentine is an I nglisli junior Renaissance, from page 9 role too far. W hen one little girl started crying after his approach, he broke out of his role. "I'm only p la y ing," Parsons said softly, putting his arm around her. "I 'm not going to take you a w a y ." The creation of this medieval at­ mosphere involves more than just actors — other costumed vendors and craftsmen, speaking in thick English accents, do their best to convince the crowd it has entered another time. At the Sea Devil Tavern, festival-goers are invited to join in with the bards singing bawdy songs from atop the w ood ­ tables. Middle-aged men at­ en tending their wives are often accosted by lip­ stick-laden w enches who leave their mark on a cheek or a fore­ head. festival wih the A three-man juggling and c o m e ­ dy troupe called the Flaming Idiots also encourages audience partici­ pation. The Idiots pick a spectator from the crowd to be blindfolded, and then then knock a carrot from the person's mouth with torches two of being niggled betw een them. Rob Williams, who plays Pyro in the act, serves as the fast-talking spokesman for the group while on stag e. B e fo re s h o w , he knocked the hat off an older man in the crowd with a juggling pin. the "S orry, I thought you were my d a d ," Williams said. "Ju s t what you wanted to see — your son running around in tights." from Arts and crafts can be found in abundance at the fest. Hawkers advertise the their wares small shops built in styles from the Middle Ages that line the walk­ ways. Merchants offer sand sculp­ tures, leather goods, handblown glass, woodcrafts and medieval clothing to the passing visitors. The food at the festival also re­ flects the medieval time period, with fare such as roasted turkey legs, apple dumplings, mulled cider, imported beers and ales and plenty of the King's Brew (Miller Lite). So remember, if your car is ac­ costed by a drunken ogre on the highway near Plantersville, don't be alarmed — just follow him into the woods for a merrv olde tvme. E d itor's note: T h e T exas R e n a is­ sance Festival is held every S a tu r­ day and Su n d ay from 9 a.m . un til dark through Nov. 12. Adcox is an English senior. Tattoos, from page 8 For Hampshire, the tattoo took about 13 min­ utes and fills about one square inch on her ankle. Bigger tattoos take much longer, depending on color and detailing. The color possibilities are endless, with the exceptions of gold and silver. These can be simulated, but true gold and silver ink would be toxic. Paint made from mineral derivatives and d e­ signed for tattoo use is safe, yet red can cause an allergic reaction in a small num ber of people, according to Dave hum, an Austin tattoo artist. Lum tests a person's skin before doing an entire area in red. Over time, the lines in a tattoo spread a little. This is important to keep in mind when ch o o s­ ing the design and location of a tattoo, lasa C o s ­ tello planned to get a picture of the Western Hemisphere on her shoulder until Lum said, "You'll hate me later if we do a perfect circle. I think vou should put clouds around the g lobe." Costello heeded his advice. As the aging pro­ cess sets in, chances are a tattoo, if not carefully planned, could resem ble the Sillv Putty version of the original. Choosing a specific tattoo should not be a snap decision. "Y o u can get tattoos that are just decals if part of your inner being isn't in it," Lum warns. Liberal arts sophom ore Jones' tattoo consists of a dove, an eve and some small roses. He researched extensively before getting his tattoo to find"images that symbolized aspects of him­ self. The dove, obviously, represents peace, while the eye indicates knowledge. Tattoos are expensive, but they last forever. Prices are based on the time, detailing and color spent on a tattoo. Som ething small, like a 2- square-inch rose, would probably run $35 to $50. Large tattoos are far more time-consuming and can cost from $75 on up. But while tattoos are costly and som ew hat painful, people do get them. The typical stereo­ type is of a biker with a sleeveless shirt sporting eagles and partially nude w om en on both arms. Yet it seem s like tattoos are taking on a new image. Students, friends, mothers and d augh­ ters and professionals are having tattoos put on. "I have people com ing from as far as Florida and California. I do a tremendous am ount of couples and my clientele are primarily between the ages of 18 and 30. I d on't have a large biker trade and there are other shops that cater to punk [rockers]," says Stuckey, "1 like to do beautiful tattoos, a rt." As far as the trend, Hampshire says, "I don't think it will ever be mainstream, like pierced ears, but I can tell they're a lot more h ip ." Bassman is a journalism sophom ore. HAPPY HOUR Mon-Fri 3 pm-7 pm Draft Beer Margaritas Finger Food EVERY SUNDAY ALL DAY HAPPY HOUR 5-12 VALID snjDf NT. D THE TAVERN AIR CONDITIONED RESTAURANT & BAR Never to far from 12th and Lamar EVERY MONDAY M 99 BURGERS Mon-ThufS, Sun 11 a m -1 2 p m *F ri8 iS a t 11 am 1 p m * 474-7496 • 922 W 12th Rent your very unique Halloween Costume from Teenie ime 35eenieJ I U ( U fi St CLtL i°PP T R A D E 2 F O R 1 O R B U Y AT 1 / 2 P R I C E USED PAPERBACKS H O L L Y W O O D NITES THE B O O K RACK 3 2 0 2 G U A D A L U P E - 4 5 4 91 10 Specializing in clothing and accessories from the Victorian period to the 1960 s OPEN 11-5 Mon.-Sat. 1126 W. 6th St. 477-2022 F O R S A L E THE B O O K RACK 1202 G U A D A L U P E 4 0 4 10 Janis, from page 7 Right on, Eddie. Shea's morality does seem a bit contradictory; exactlv what is it that bothers him about the ideals that Joplin's image conveys? If it's her drug addiction, which eventually killed her, does he have qualms about selling one of the most damaging drugs in history — alcohol — every weekend? O r perhaps it's her lifestyle — Joplin certainly never claimed to be a pillar of virtue. But many of the blues bands that frequent S h e a's es­ tablishment worship the same he­ roes that she did, especially Muddy Waters, a notorious whiskey-drink- er who sang about the virtues of Cham pagne & Reefer. Ultimately, of course, one cannot question Shea's right to refuse the star's placem ent (assum ing that he actually ow ns the sidewalk in front of Maggie Mae's). No on e would want a person they consider moral­ ly repugnant memorialized in front of their property. But there's som ething about the whole situation that just stinks. Jo p ­ lin left a stamp on rock 'n ' roll not the whole only world. How can she be considered "th e preference of the least com m on d en om inator"? in Austin, but innovative bands play Equally smelly is that a figure of Joplin's stature can be rebuked by som eon e like Shea, who has c o n ­ tributed little, if anything, to A us­ tin's music scene. Rarelv do origi­ at nal, Maggie's — weak-kneed cover bands and white-boy blues groups constitute the majority of the club's bookings. About the only thing that the bar has to offer fans of quality music large stock of foreign beers (a necessity when tolerating a night of Bob Popular). is a Closed-m inded attitudes drove Joplin to flee the state and experi­ ment with drugs. N ow Austin wants to apologize and praise her for her positive contributions. But apparently some people still have cloudy vision. Nichols, a history sen ior, is the editor o f Images. THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS PR ESEN TS m m ARMS AND THE MAN by George B ern ard Shaw Wit and irony propel Shaw's sendup of heroism and idealism as an enemy soldier finds himself in a young woman's bedchamber. A light look at love and war. Oct. 20-21, 24-28, 8 p.m. B. Iden Payne Theatre Tickets on sale at all UTTM Ticket- Centers. Charge-a-Ticket: 477-6060. Call 471-1444 for more information. CALL 471 >5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD M O N D A Y PRIME TIME M ovie F 'e o c h ( 15 ) M e io tiv C ru 'se ( 4 5 ) * - . La c ie s P ro B o w ing G e ttin g Fit W O 'k o u t B o d y M o tio n B o d v S h a o n a P r o f e s s o 'a . G o lf A u to R a cin g B o w lin g W re stlin g M u scle S o o rts L o o k S p o rts C e n te N F L Triv a Spirit 0 * A d v e n t S w im s u t Ja m a ic a October 23,1989 Images THE DAILY TEXAN 15 1 1 1 1 30 R e s tle s s P n c e Is Rig h t N e w s B eautiful A s Th e 7 AM 30 1 C O I s Q AM 3 30 10 AM 30 , U 12 PM 30 iL 4 PM 1 30 o PM L 30 Q PM 0 30 4 pm * 30 C PM 5 30 C PM ® 30 7 PM 1 30 Q PM ® 30 Q PM 30 3 KTBC 0 (7 ) C B S Th is KVUE a ® M o rn in g M o rn in g A m e rica G o o d T o d a y G h o s tb u s te r G E D S o io fle x M o vie A u KXAN KBVO KLRU TBS ffl ( 0 5 ) Gill BET f f l MAX ffl AMC £0 (6 30) S ign O ff M r R o a e rs ( 3 5 ) B w t S d c P roora R e v o ir L e s D en n is B eaver B ra d v B u n ch S e s a m e S tree t . C o n c e n tra t Kathie Le e H o m e G o ld G irls Bu rnett 2 2 7 M a m a s Insa nity ( 0 5 ) Little S p c Prog ra E n fa n ts H o u se (0 5 ) S d c Pro o ra M u rd e r B y S o c Pro o ra Re a s o n O t O u r V o ic e s M u s t Be Jo k in g 1 J o a n R ive rs S a lly S c ra b b le R e g is & IT V S p c Pro g ra M o vie Y o u W ith D inah L o s t In Y o u n g & S tra n g e rs F a m ily Tie s G o m e r P y le ( 0 5 ) Pe rry B lack M o v ie King M o vie R id e , C ham React C as tle L o v m a A ll M y Child ren Liv e s G e n e ra tio n s H o a a n M a s o n S h o w c a s e K o n g D a y s O f O u r Fall G u y I T V ( 0 5 ) Fin al V id e o S o u l O n e L ife T o A n o th e r M o vie M a d e W o rld T u rn s Liv e G u id in g Lig h t General H o sp ital W o rld S a n ta B arb ara Fo r Ea ch O ther ( 1 5 ) T h in Blue Lin e V id e o V ib ra tio n s . . NASH ffl A m erica n M a g a zin e USA B H e -M a n NICK (D L a s s ie C artoon Pinw heei Ex p re s s T o d a y s S pc LM Prince Lil Koa la T o o Card S pace D a v id . G n o m V id e o C o u n tr La n d 0 ! Th e Ele p h a n t O n S taoe G ia nts Eo re e ka s Ra n g e r. Ride T o o Card Am erica n B u m p e r S tu m Fre d P e nner N a m e Tu n e N o o zie s W -p eout Pm w h e e i T ic Ta c D o u g T o d a y s Spc M a g a zin e P y r a m e La ssie W ith D m ah H igh Roller C n t D ucku l CrOOk P re s s Lu c k S 'O D D Y Care E T N e w s C 8S N e w s N e w s C o s b v N e w h a rt T e d d v Z D e sig n in g N e w h a rt G e ra id o H u nte r C u rr A ffat D u c k T a le s IT V M o vie N ash ville H o l'y w o o d S H e a th d ift In Ed itio n C h io & Date R a p C ity B iloxi B lue s Now- C o u ch Potat D en n is H a rd C o p y D o n a h u e O p ra h N e w s W in tre y J e o p a r d y 1 V id e o L P O n S taoe C arto o n s D o n t Sit ( 0 5 ) H b il S o ft N o te s M o vie Th u n d e rin g A m e rica n J e m T h in k Fa s t D ance Pa rty C a n t O n T V A B C N e w s N B C N e w s S h im n a T im ( 3 5 ) A n d y W a ckiest H o o fs M ag azin e H e M a n N e w s N e w s S q u a re O n e ( 0 5 ) J e ff B lack S h ip In Th e M o vie U S A T o d a v W h e e l N io h t C t ( 3 5 ) S a n t S h o w c a s e A rm y Invisible V id e o C o u n tr T o o Card ■ M a k e G rad e In sp G ad ge L o o n e v Tu ne H a p p y D a y s L & Shirle W eb ster M r R o g e rs S e s a m e S treet 3 s C o m p a n y W h o s B o s s 7 M a io r D ad M a c G y v e r A L F 2 1 J u m p M a c N e if L e h i 05) V id e o S oul M o vie W o m a n R og er M u rd e r . S he Be w itc h e d H o a a n F a m S tree t rer Firecreek Strip e s M o v ie S n a ke M JIe r S p c W rote M r Ed M u rp h y B ro w A B C M o n d a y M o v ie False Alie n N a tio n T ra v e ls * Pit N ash ville W restling P a tty D u ke N o w C ar 54 N ig h t W itn e s s Fo o tb a ll . S ta r Tre k W e s te rn ( 2 0 ) R o u g h Ou r V o ice s M o vie Great M ia m i Vice S at N ite W o rld A rt N ig h t In O u td o o rs M o n e O n Staae 10 PM 30 , U N e w s C h e e rs 1 1 PM ' 1 30 •4 0 AM P a t Saiak N e w s S h o w N iQ htlm e Le tte rm a n T o n iQ h t S h o w Te rrito ry * A fte r H o u rs San ford C N N • N e w s A rse n io H all O ff C en ter Je ric h o BlacK S h o w c a s e W t c h e s O f Invisible W o m a n V id e o C o u n tr C ro o k 120) N ational M id n ig h t Lo v e Ea s tw ic k M o v ie S nake N ash ville M ike Pit N o w H a m m e r Tw ilite Z o n S ig n O ft G e o g ra p h ic Ou r V o ic e s Dragnet Bew itc hed 3 0 N ig h t H eat S ig n O ft B o b C o sta s S 'q n O ff Ex p lo re r Ja g g e d E d g e O n S tag e T B A M - E d O n Th e T V La u g h In M v 3 S o n s D o n n a Reed M a k e R o o m C o u n td o w n (0 5 ) T & ( 3 5) Flin ( 0 5 ) Flin ( 35) B rad (05 ) M u n s 1 3 5) G d T UNI B A rc o in s T e d d y R u x p i M o v ie L a B u gs B u n n y C a s ia S u s a n a B o zo Be aver F a n ta s y Island 7 A M 1 o o 30 I S Q A M 3 30 1 0 A M 30 , U WGN LIFE FNN BRAV 30ISC0VEF ARTS f f l _ f f l f f l f f l HBO f f l ESPN f f l PLAY CD M o v ie R o c k y (C o n t) (5 0 0 ) S ign i! S o o rts C e n te ' O ff SHOW CD 6 30) D u s ty D I S N E Y CD A s s ig n m e n t E v ita P e ró n S katin g R ink M o v ie Lig h t M arc u s W e lb y E R D a v 8v D a v In ve s tm e n ts M arket Pre v ie w M o rn m a B a b y K n o w s M a rk e tLm e S u rviva l G d M a rk e tW a tc A m e ric a n A lb u m C o m e d y Brea M o vie W o rld L o v e r Tou - M o vie W inning f f l (C o n t) ( 3 5 ) L J a G o ld A ge M o v ie Blithe T ra m p o s a J o a n R ive rs A ttitu d e s h A M W o rld T a s te E l D e re ch o G e ra id o F o o d F lo y d M id d a y D 's c o v e r y O n S pirit P a s c u a ie M a rk e t R p t G o M o v e C la ra s H eart N e w s In ve s to rs A n im a l W ildern ess M k tW a tc h M o m N atu re P ro files V g v ie G o u rm e t J a n e W a llace 1 1 1 1 A M 30 d e Nacer 1 2 P M 30 A g u a V- .a P M E n a m o ra d a A G riffith C a g n e y & I R S T a x Bea W o rld Ta ste C h ro n icle N atural x T . h t r o W Ft c n I g n i t s L i V T 9 8 9 1 -« 1 o 30 4 w H .3 0 c 5 C O 1 3 0 f t PM ® 3 0 q p m 3 30 30 N oticiero S e ñ o ra Ru b í D ulce D e safio Porta d a N o tic ie ro A g u í Es ta D V a n D y k e La c e y P M T V M ujer Fa c t O f L !* A ttitu d e s L .3 0 Y o g i B ear q P M M i S e g u n d a C O P S J 3 0 M ad re D u c k T a le s D o u b le ta k e P a rt 1 O f 2 M k tW a tc h W all S t C o u n td o w n Pa sa u a ie P a s s p o rt S u rviva l W l C o m e d y Brea M a rk e tW ra p D is c o v e ry O n E v e n in g N e w s G o N atu re G o ld Age M o vie B it h e M o vie A ro u n d T ne M o v ie R o c «y S u ' x st K ID C nstrna C hip & D ale S e c re ts O f S pirit W o rld A m e r Pu lun P M U n í Y N iñ o s C h a s C h a rg H e a rtB e a t In ve s tm e n t A m m a l W ild e rn e ss II F j n H o u s e W K R P C heers A rt M a rx e t M e m N atu re P ro fi'e s Th is E v e m n A m e ric a s G 'e a t Es c a p C h ron icle N ia h t C o u rt D a v B v D a v B u s in e s s W rld S u rviva l W i 7 P M Reb e ld e L o v e B o a t S p e n s e r F o r D avid W a r S to rie s M e m o rie s Fa ffn e r Ha M a tc h U p P 'a y D P y Ld'.e M o v e F;re P u ttn a m O f C hina M o vie N F L M a a a zm W ith f re < 50) T e a ' Hire M o v ie Q u a rte rb a c k Ka fka L o v e B oat W riters S a fa ri O u r C e n tu ry C la ra s N e w s Prin c e ss M o vie B reakin g H o lly w o o d C s t T o C st S h o rts to n e s Heart M o vie N ile M o vie S ngie G irts E r o K Ta 'e M ovie G o th a m S p e n s e r F o r M o vie H e y C h allen ge A t Im p ro v M asq u e rad e S tih l Tim b e E u ro p e Girl N e w h a rt Hill S treet Hire B abu R ib a 1 0 " 1 1 ™ 1 1 30 4 0 AM 30 M o v ie L a C a s ta S u s a n A q u í E s ta B lu es T h is E v e n m M o vie All E R - S p o rt g Lif M e m o rie s K id s In Hal N F L G reates En c o u n te rs W h o W a s n t O u td o o r Lit O f C hina M o vie N F L G reates Th ere Th at J a z z S e lt-lm p ro v D avid W rld O u r C e n tu ry H e llb o u n d N F L G reat P la y D o y La te em e n t P u ttn a m R e n d e z v o u s M o m e n ts Nite ( 3 5 ) H ero S o o rts C e n te R o m a n K i 4 5 ) M a n © LAUGH IN B NEWHART The Lo o k s Of Lo ve SPENSER: FOR HIRE g WWW MOVIE HEY BABU RIBA (19 8 6 ) Gala Videnovic, Nebojsa Bakocevic. This is a witty portrait of a group of teenagers growing up in the politically turbulent Yugoslavia of the 1950s N R ' B CHALLENGE Circuits O f Gold B VIOEOCOUNTRY B LORENZO LAMAS AT THE IMPROV Loren zo Lam as Featured actor Loren zo La m a s and talented com ediansns Dennis Blair and Larry Miller team up for a round of laughs. B STIHL TIMBER SPORTS SERIES Lum berjack World Cham pionships from H ayw ard, W! B GIRLS OF EUROPE This program offers a whirlwind tour of the world, featuring some of the m ost startlmgly beautiful w om en on the continent of Europe. B ADVENTURES OF OZZIE AND HARRIET O zzie N elson , Harriet Nelson O zzie and Harriet raise their tw o real sons, David and Ricky, m a house m odeled on the Nelsons' actual home in Hollyw ood 10:30 pm BCD CHEERS g Q ® TONIGHT SHOW Guest Host Ja y Leno Q ® TERRITORY © w w w WITCHES OF EASTWICK (19 8 7) Jack Nicholson, Susan Sarandon Three bored, bewitching women coniure up a devilishly funny time when the devil in the guise of a handsome stranger comes to stay a spell R g © MY THREE SONS s HILL STREET BLUES The Rites Of Spring (Pt 2 O f 2) B CROOK & CHASE B SPORTSCENTER B ROMANTIC ENCOUNTERS Boy meets girl B o y gets girl. Boy keeps girl! Six couples, six sexy scenarios of romance and passion Don t m iss it! B + * * MOVIE SITTING PRETTY (1948) Robert You n g , Maureen 0 Hara A sharp tongued author goes undercover in suburbia to do research He secures a |ob as babysitter for a busy married couple's bratty children 10:45 pm B * MOVIE THE MAN WHO WASN'T THERE (19 8 3 ) Steve Guttenberg, Lisa Langlots An assistant clerk in W ashington, D C , puts his life on the line when he inadvertently stumbles onto a miraculous invisibility potion R 11:00 pm * * MOVIE SNAKE PIT (19 48 ) Olivia de B CD PAT SAJAK SHOW B ® NEWS B ffl AFTER HOURS B MIDNIGHT LOVE B AQUI ESTA Cada semana un artista invitado es entrevistado por Veronica Castro B * Havilland, Mark Stevens The horrors of a m ental institution are recalled by a woman who lived through m any tormented days there. B NEW MIKE HAMMER M istress For The Prosecution © DONNA REED B THIS EVENING B SPORTING LIFE Aquatic Frontier B NASHVILLE NOW ( D MEMORIES OF CHINA Chinese food expert Kenneth Lo hosts a gastronomic tour behind the Bamboo Curtain where sea slugs and boiled tortoise are delicacies (Pt 1 Of 2) B KIOS IN THE HALL Dave Foley, Bruce McCulloch The critically acclaimed Canadian comedy troupe puts its customarily bizarre spin on everyday events, g B N FL’S GREATEST MOMENTS 11:20 pm B NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EXPLORER Subm arine Races, Gorilla Watch 11:30 pm B ® NIGHTLINE g O ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN Guests Radio personality Howard Stern, Com edian Super Dave Osborne (R) 8 ffl SANFORD A SON © MAKE ROOM FOR OADOY a * + * MOVIE ALL THAT JA ZZ (19 79 ) Roy Scheider, Jessica Lange The story of a self destructive Broadw ay director choreographer and his relationships with his ex-w ife, his girlfriend and his daughter (Edited) B E . R . B OUTDOOR LIFE Skeet/ Bluefish B MOVIE HELLBOUND: HELLRAISER II (1988) Clare Higgins, Ashley Laurence A murderous stepmother schemes to use the blood of innocents to revive the dead, while her stepdaughter fights to rescue her father s tormented soul R B NFL'S GREATEST MOMENTS 12:00 am B ® NEW TWILIGHT ZONE B ffl CNN B OUR VOICES B MOVIE LA CASTA SUSANA B DRAGNET © BEWITCHED ® SELF-IMPROVEMENT GUIDE B SOUTH BANK: DAVID PUTTNAM HOLLYWOOD AND AFTER An exclusive profile of David Puttnam, the crusading British Producer of such film s as Chariots Of Fire and Local Hero B WORLD MONITOR B OUR CENTURY: DE GAULLE D o n a ld D u m b o In F o re s t ■ 3 5) Y o u D is n e y Pre s e n ts D u m b o W o w W ib b e P o o h B ean es D o n a ld Kid s ( 0 5 ) Jo h n n y Lu n c h B ox B elinda M o vie Fire K o o k y W ith Fire C la ssic s M o v ie D u s ty R a c c o o n B v G o,-.:s M ic ke y S ka tin g R in k G rm c h N ig h R o b m H o o d Ha ow een W itc h7 W tch N iQ ht F a m ily R o b ' M o v ie F u n n y Fac e O z zie S itting P re tty M o vie L ght in F o re s O f TRAVELS Visit Iquitos, Peru, a traveler s outpost at the edge of the A m a zo n jungle which was once the remote home of wealthy European rubber barons, g B DULCE DESAFIO Adela Noriega. Eduardo Yan ez. Novela de Mexico B PRIME TIME WRESTLING B p a tty DUKE B LOVE BOAT Viking s Son (Pt 2 O f 2) B + + m o v ie q u a r t e r b a c k p r in c e s s (19 83 ) Helen Hunt, Don Murray. A forthright Canadian girl disrupts a sports-m inded town in Oregon when she tries out for the high school football team . Based on a true story. ® GREAT WRITERS: FRANZ KAFKA Franz Kafka's The Trial, the story of a man who is arrested on an unspecified charge and then executed, is dramatized. Tim R o th , Michael Bryant star. B SAFARI In The Jaws Of Satan B NASHVILLE NOW B OUR CENTURY: DE GAULLE On June 1 19 58, Charles De Gaulle was recalled to power, continuing a lifetime of service to France on the battlefield and in the political arena. B SPIRIT OF ADVENTURE Uncovering China's Hidden Wildlife C D * * MOVIE SINGLE GIRLS (19 7 3 ) Claudia Jen n in gs, Jean Marie Ingels. A psychopathic killer stalks women at a beautiful singles resort on an island off the Pacific coast. R C D * * + MOVIE FUNNY FACE (19 5 7 ) Audrey Hepburn, Fred Astaire. When a fashion magazine photographer talks his editor into sending a pretty bookstore clerk to Paris, they romance, but a Frenchm an alm ost ruins it. 8:30 pm BCD FAMOUS TEDOY Z Jon Cryer, Milton Selzer. Teddy Z finds himself in trouble when a major client backs out of a $5 m illion film deal because of an unfavorable horoscope g © CAR 54 WHERE ARE YOU? 9:00 pm B ( D DESIGNING WOMEN Delta Burke, Annie Potts. When Anthony is hired to remodel a client's kitchen the Sugarbakers disapprove of his of his ex-con workers and his pushy new girlfriend g B © STAR TREK Q ® ART OF THE WESTERN WORLD Focus on three artist s works Da Vinci s Last Supper and its restoration, Michaelangelo s Sistine Chapel ceiling and Raphael s Vatican frescoes ® OUR VOICES © PORTADA Teresa Rodriguez © * MOVIE THE GREAT OUTDOORS (1988) Dan Aykroyd, John Candy A solid breadwinner s communion with nature is wrecked by a boorish brother in law and his obnoxious offspring. PG g B MIAMI VICE Give A Little. Take A Little © SATUROAY NIGHT LIVE B NEWS B MOVIE BIKO: BREAKING THE SILENCE (19 8 7) This political documentary looks at the effect of South African leader Steven Biko's murder on the world wide anti apartheid lobby B AMERICA COAST TO COAST The Adironkacks (D SHORTSTORIES Adrienne Barbeau. A spinster is in search of a man in The Couch and a lovesick cook concocts a tasty way to capture the heart of a custom er in Breakfast Messages B SWIMSUIT JAMAICA B MOVIE GOTHAM (1988) T o m m y Lee Jo n e s , Virginia M adsen. A down on his luck gum shoe is thrust into a passionate and ghostly love affair when he hunts down a beautiful, but supposedly dead socialite. R 9:20 pm B *★ MOVIE ROUGH NIGHT IN JERICHO (19 6 7 ) Dean M artin, George Peppard The female owner of a stagecoach line is the only person man enough to stand up to the unscrupulous boss of a W estern tow n. 9:30 pm BCD NEWHART Bob New hart. Julia Du ffy Michael m akes a sudden career m ove , leaving a promising future at the grocery store to become a lounge singer g B NOTICIERO UNIVISION Edición Nocturna B * + * MOVIE THE INVISIBLE WOMAN ( 1 9 4 1 ) Jo h n Barrym ore, Jo h n H ow ard. Eccentric scientist causes a series of m ysterious goings on when he makes a girl invisible. M obsters try to steal the invention © ON THE TELEVISION B HOLLYWOOD CHRONICLES M ysteries And Secrets B ON STAGE B * MOVIE MASQUERADE (19 8 8 ) M eg Tilly. * R ob Lo w e Love and deceit lead to murder when a lonely, young heiress is the unknowing victim of a plot to steal her m oney R □ m TALES OF EROTICA: SENSUOUS SKIES Just when you thought air travel was getting dull, here com e three high flying beauties w ho always treat their passengers first class 10:00 pm B C D O® NEWS B ® ARSENIO HALL O ® ALIVE FROM OFF CENTER The Quay brothers present an extraordinary work of puppet animation B BLACK SHOWCASE B AQUI ESTA Cada semana un artista invitado es e n trfvistfd p por Veronica Castro 7:00 pm B C D MAJOR DAD Gerald M cR an ey, Shanna Reed. Marine wives gather at Cam p Singleton for Jane W ayne D ay. Polly dodges bullets, sw im s streams and tries to survive to prove she’s a trooper □ O ® MACGYVER Richard Dean Anderson, Dana Elcar. W hen M acGyver returns to his alma mater to judge a highly competitive physics contest, he m ust prevent a distraught student from igniting a b o m b . (R) Q O ® ALF O © 2 1 JUMP STREET The Ju m p Street cops go undercover on the streets as homeless runaways to find a missing teenager. Q 0 ( 0 MACNEIL/LEHRER NEWSHOUR B VIDEO SOUL H ost Donnie Sim pson counts down the hottest urban contem porary music videos and interviews recording stars. OD REBELDE Grecia Colm enares, Ricardo Darin. Novela de Argentina. B * + MOVIE STRIPES (1 9 8 1 ) Bill M urray, Jo h n Candy A group of army recruits stumble their way through training and graduate to creating international incidents. R' Q