£Z79-I8£S¿ xi s v n v a ' d ANWdWOD W lI d Od DI W 38IdW3 £ 2 7 9 1 8 XQ8 ‘ O 069 Wdd l t Da il y T exan Vo». 85, No. 115 The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Monday, M arch 17 ,1986 25C Voters give ACC local taxing authority By THANHHA LAI Daily Texan Staff Austin Community College on Saturday got what its officials have said is needed most to ensure the college's future — a tax ing authority. Austin and Leander citizens approved the tax issue with 18,658 votes, or 54.21 percent. Opponents cast 15,763 votes, or 45.79 percent. The total number of voters, 34,421, represented about 16 percent of those eligible. ACC President Dan Angel said the ap proval reflects Austin citizens' increased awareness and appreciation of the school. Since ACC was founded in 1972, more than 130,000 people have taken at least one cred it course at the school, he said. "The school has come of age," Angel said. "I feel very good here, and the future is great." At an ACC Board of Trustees meeting in February, the board voted to add three classroom sites in the city and one in the Leander school district if the tax base was approved. Angel said the expansion proposal now is secured, and ACC will work to carry out the plan. Jay Johnson, chairman of Stop Taxing Our Property, or STOP, said the turnout was too low to counteract the number of built-in ACC supporters — the faculty and students. "I'm willing to do what the voters want," Johnson said. "You just can't make it with that few voters." In 1981, the drive to defeat a similar ACC tax request was successful because 70,000 voters turned out, Johnson said. ACC now has permission to collect a maximum of 5 cents per $100 property valuation. The tax would be $50 for an aver age Austin home — valued at $100,000 — if the full 5 cents is used. The tax will provide a $75,000 exemption for property owned by disabled or senior citizens. Homeowners will be able to de duct 10 percent from the property's as sessed value for tax evaluation purposes. Johnson said he does not consider the tax passage a total failure for ACC's tax oppo nents because the exemptions do provide some compensation. State Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos, D-Austin and co-chairman of Austin for ACC, said the tax approval is "h isto rical" for Aus tin "This will ensure the (state) funding will be there, and ACC will be th e re," Barrien tos said ACC receives 67 percent, or $20 million, of its budget from the state. The tax will give ACC up to $8 million in additional funding. ACC officials have said the money will be used to open more classes, buy equipm ent, build better facilities and give teachers sal ary increases. ill t t Negotiations halted on city office project By PAULA BLESENER and DONNY JACKSON Daily Texan Staff City officials have halted 14 months of negotiations with the municipal office complex project managers because the company could be in financial trouble, Mayor Frank Cooksey said Sunday. City Manager Jorge Carrasco said he sent a letter March 7 to the prin cipal partners in the Watson-Casey Cos. calling for a suspension of ne gotiations between the firm and the city regarding the municipal office complex. "W e recommended that they not incur additional expenses or spend any additional time on the project," • Carrasco said. Watson-Casey received a notice March 4 warning the development company that First City Centre, a downtown office building owned by Watson-Casey, would be fore closed if the company did not make a mortgage payment within 30 days. The warning was issued by the Teacher Retirement System of Tex as, which is the mortgage holder on First City Centre. Clark Manning, TRS's chief investment officer, said Watson-Casey paid $970,253 on the delinquent mortgage last Monday — more than two weeks after the payment was due. The company also paid for the next quarter's mortgage last Monday, he said. Carrasco said the late mortgage payment was the "primary reason" for suspending negotiations. Alan D odd, W atson -C asey spokesman, the company said spent $1.7 million conducting stud ies for the city hall complex — lead ing the company's cash-flow problems. to In addition, 44 Watson-Casey em ployees hired specifically for work on the office complex were laid off because of the delays in negotia tions, Dodd has said. The development company dis continued studies for the complex early last fall, Dodd said. The com pany cannot recoup any of its in vestment unless a lease agreement is signed with the city, he said. Dodd said Watson-Casey officials have had no further indication of the city's next step. "W e're that once confident (Cooksey) understands our financial situation, it won't have any effect on MOC negotiations," Dodd said. Carrasco said he will be working with the City Council to assess the situation before the council makes a final decision about negotiations with Watson-Casey. Cooksey said the council will re view the company's situation before deciding on further action. "W e will have to take a serious look at the situation to decide whether the con tinuance of our negotiations will take place," he said. The council has several options, Cooksey said. "I couldn't speculate now on which one the council might use. They range from killing the project altogether to having somebody called in to take a look at where we might go." Company representatives dis cussed the warning of possible fore closure March 7 with Cooksey and Councilmen George Humphrey and John Trevino, Cooksey said. Dodd said the city's action is not unusual. "A t that time (March 7), they (TRS) didn't have any pay ment. (The letter) was a typical re sponse from the city in a situation like that," he said. Watson-Casey officials charged this fall that the city refused to com plete the project and would not ne gotiate after the council declared an option agreement offered in June unacceptable. Under a recommendation from the council scheduled Cooksey, three work sessions to be devoted to discussing the company's progress on the office complex. The council and Watson-Casey representatives met for only two work sessions. The council indefi nitely delayed the final session March 5. Cooksey said the work session was canceled to allow the council to discuss Watson-Casey's financial problems in executive session. W B A T H Yap. If a Monday. - have a high near 80, perature Monday drop down to the low will also be mostly c 20 percent chance gusting winds fronr| don’t go skipping yet. For national a weather, see page 19 ’ I N D K X Affcund C a m p u s ...................... 19 | k ..............n1 . . 1$ ......................... 19 1 4 ........................... ......................... 13 f u : f , .......................... 10 11 . , b á t o c a i .......................... 8 University................................ 6 2 World & N ation.......................... inmant . Lady Horns do it again C. J. Jones, left, Annette Smith and Cara Priddy celebrate after defeating Missouri Friday night at the Frank C. Erwin Jr. Special Events Center. The victory gave the women’s team a win in the second round of the NCAA Basketball Championship playoffs. See story, page 11. KeHy Pace Das'y iexan Staff APD officers request required drug testing By KELLYE NORRIS Daily Texan Staff A group of Austin police officers has asked that all commissioned personnel be required to submit to drug testing, a move they say is sup ported by most of the city's law enforcement of ficers. Members of the Austin Police Association voted last month to ask the department's admin istration to begin testing all current officers as soon as possible, an APA board member said. Association president Sgt. Jerry Spain declin ed comment. But the board member said the motion to re quest the testing passed with little debate. "There was a little concern that if we voluntar ily gave up this right, then the administration might ask for even m ore," he said. "But we don't foresee that. Most of the men support this. You can look around, and I'll bet you'll only find about two or three percent of the officers who are not in favor of this. I don't remember the exact numbers at that meeting, but we had a pretty good turnout, and the vote was over whelming in favor of the testing." Police administration officials confirmed that APA members, including Spain, have ap proached them about beginning the tests. But the testing, which must be approved by the ad ministration before it is initiated, probably will not start for several months, they said. nation to require current officers to undergo the tests, APA members said. "There have been no ground rules laid yet for this," said Assistant Austin Police Chief George Phifer. "W e aren't certain just exactly how to set it up or what penalties will be imposed. We are just beginning to look into this." If approved by the administration, the testing will be mandatory for all officers, Phifer said. Phifer and APA officials said the request to begin testing, which could be done through uri nalysis or blood tests, does not indicate a drug problem among officers. "On the contrary, by volunteering to do this we hope to show we have nothing to hide," a board member said. "And if there is a problem with anyone, we want to take care of it. I don't want any police out there who may have their judgment impaired, especially if my life is de pending on them." "I think they (the officers) want to do this to show their strength and honor to the communi ty," Phifer said. "And I think they did that, in part, by volunteering. This is not something that the chief or the administration mandated. This came from the men and women themselves. This is something they want to do.” If the administration approves the request Austin will be one of the first major cities in the A state law which becam e effective Sept. 1 mandated statewide drug testing for all recruits to Texas law enforcem ent agencies, but the law does not affect officers who were hired before Sept. 1. No law enforcem ent recruit hired by an Austin area agency, including the Austin Police Depart ment and the Travis County Sh eriff's Depart ment, has failed the test since the program be gan, officials said. Police said most officers, including those that are not APA m embers, support the idea of man datory drug testing. "I'm for it 100 p ercen t," said Austin police Sgt. Larry Sigler. "I think most of the men feel the same way. Anyone w ho uses drugs has no busi ness Jbeing out there on the street ' "It doesn't bother me a bit," said Austin police Sgt. Dusty Hesskew. "I'm ready w henever they are. I don't have anything to worry about, and I think that's true of most of the officers 1 11 coop erate with w hatever they decide to d o ." "I'll submit to w hatever type test they want to run," another sergeant said. "1 have nothing to hide. This job doesn't pay well enough for me to be able to afford narcotics." St. Patrick honored in style By CHRISTINE CLARRIDGE Daily Texan Staff St. Patrick's Day observers are best known for using alcohol and the color green to excess. But the connection between the modem festivities and the original signifi the day has become cance of blurred. St. Patrick established the Catho lic church in Ireland in the fifth cen tury. According to legend, he was captured and taken to Ireland as a slave from his native England. He escaped but later returned to be come the apostle of Ireland. He is credited with expelling all poisonous snakes from Ireland, and he used the shamrock, not a four- leaf clover, to represent the trinity in unity. St. Patrick's Day is the anniver Tim Martin, bar manager of Birra Poretti's cm Barton Springs Drive, speculated St. Patrick's Day is a drinking holiday because "this is the beginning of spring. People were getting ready to till the soil, so they celebrated and made merry." Birra Poretti's will offer green beer and the world's smallest pa rade in honor of the day. Martin said that the bartenders are getting ready "for the biggest day of the year." Maggie Mae's on Sixth Street, de scribed by manager Greg Sponger as an "Irish bar of sorts," expects "thousands" to participate in the re velry Monday night. "St. Patrick's Day always has been a drinking hol iday, and I don't imagine that that will change too m uch," Springer said. Springer said Maggie Mae's would feature three bagpipe shows and a special on Irish whiskey. Cameron McCaa, a graduate stu dent of Irish descent, said St. Pa trick's Day is associated with green "because of shamrocks and things" and is celebrated with booze be cause "the Irish are such big drink ers." He said he prefers to walk to the day's parties or take a cab. Joe Brady, an Irishman and mem ber of the Boston Police Depart ment, said the "smart people" in Boston, which has the highest per centage of Irish-Amencans of any U.S. city, celebrate at home with private parties instead of going to the city's St. Patrick's Day parade. "It used to be a big thing and ev erybody would come to the parade, but the parade is getting smaller and smaller because young kids use it as an excuse to be stupid," Brady said. "They get into fights because they are stupid, they don't know how to drink and be normal," Brady said. He said because of new drinking or dinances, St. Patrick's Day will be come a more private celebration this year Kitzi Stenicka, KLBJ radio spokes woman, agreed that St. Patrick's Day celebrations are changing "W e are not doing the pub crawl this year — no w ay," she said. A f i k t t M f i p K r - James Roosevelt Jr., toft, mré Joseph Konnody II, right, per during an annual St. Patrick * Day roast at a South look on as MMaachuset» Sonata President WNftkm Boston dub Sunday. Roooeevelt and Kennedy are can- Bulger holds a satirical mock-up of a Boston newspa- dictates «or the stale s eighth congressional dtetrfct. Associated R um sary of his death. world & nation Page 2/The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17, 1986 Mitterand may face hostile parliament Associated Press PARIS — Results from overseas voters apparently will determine if the opposition conservatives won enough seats in Sunday's National Assembly elections to end five years of Socialist rule. The official vote count went down to the wire in tabulations early Mon day. Earlier computerized projections were for a conservative victory that would force Socialist President Francois Mitterrand to govern with a hostile Parliament and premier for the last two years of his seven-year term. With votes from 98 of France's 100 mainland departments and two overseas departments counted, the moderate conservatives had 285 of the 289 seats they needed for a ma jority the 577-seat Assembly. That included the 147 seats won by the Rally for the Republic, 126 for the centrist Union for French De in mocracy and 12 for several minor rightist parties. Hurting the conservatives's per formance was surprisingly the strong performance by the extreme- right National Front, which won 33 seats. Another far-right party had one seat. Two overseas departments and five territories with 12 seats at stake have not been counted. They in clude Guadaloupe and Martinique in the Caribbean, and the territories of French Polynesia, Wallis and Fu tuna and St. Pierre and Miquelon. The Socialists had been projected to win 32 percent of the vote, and 210 seats, remaining the largest sin gle party in France but without enough seats and partners to form a government. Mitterrand has said that if the op position won, he would name a pre mier from its ranks. French President Francois Mitterand casts Ms balot for the French legislative elections at a voting booth Sunday. Associated Press Audit results show waste of NASA funds Associated Press MIAMI — NASA has wasted millions of dollars on space shuttle contracts because of excessive markups on parts, freeloading con tractors and loafing work crews, a newspaper reported Sunday. Audit records show the space agency routinely paid $30 for pins that should cost three cents, paid $159,000 for a $5,000 cooling fan and paid $256 to fly a contractor's dogs coast to coast, The Miami Herald reported. Up to one-third of NASA's budget, which was more than $8.3 billion last year, is wast ed, estimated George Spanton, a former De fense Contract Audit Agency supervisor of contractor filings at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral. The charges, backed by dozens of NASA and DCAA audit reports obtained by the H er ald under the Freedom of Information Act, follow recent disclosures by NASA that it had cut back on its safety staff, slashed shuttle reliability programs and abandoned backup safety features because of lack of funds. Officials for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, stung by recent criti cism from the presidental commission investi gating the Jan. 28 explosion of the space shut tle Challenger, denied NASA is wasting taxpayers' dollars. "O ver the years, we've proved that we've done a very efficient jo b ," said Richard Ban- kowski, NASA's director of procurement pol icy. Bankowski told the H erald he "wouldn't even attempt" to estimate the extent of waste at NASA, saying, "I don't have any feel for what the problem is." When reached by The Associated Press at home in Washington, NASA spokesman Dave Garrett declined to comment on the Herald article without first seeing the audit reports obtained by the newspaper. Last summer the General Accounting Off ice said the $500 million Centaur project, to adapt a liquid-fueled rocket to be carried into space by the shuttle, was $140 million over budget. General Dynamics had swept overruns "under the rug," James Beggs, then NASA administrator, told a congressional subcom mittee. "There were problems in their sub contracts that they had known about, but that they had not owned up to, and there were problems in their own shops." Auditors also blame the cozy relationship formed by NASA officials and contractors who worked side by side for years for some of the agency's waste. Reagan urges public to pressure Congress Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Reagan, seeking public pressure on Congress to approve $100 million in aid for "virtually defenseless" Ni caraguan rebels, declared Sunday evening that the funds are needed to "deny the Soviet Union a beach head in North America." Beseeching Congress "to vote yes," Reagan emphasized his belief that "it is not Nicaragua alone that threatens u s." In a televised address from the Oval Office, he asked viewers, "Tell them to help the free dom fighters. Help us prevent a takeover of Central communist America." In prepared remarks, four days before the House votes on his aid proposal, Reagan urged his coun trymen not to ignore "the malignan cy in Managua until it spreads and becomes a mortal threat to the en tire New W orld." Sen. James Sasser, D-Tenn., lead the Democratic response to ing Reagan, agreed with much of the president's view of the Sandinista government in Nicaragua but said it was time for negotiation, not mili tary buildup. Sasser has proposed compromise legislation that would give the Sandinistas time to talk. Making his case for $70 million in military aid and $30 million in non- lethal funds for the so-called contra forces, Reagan said, "W e are asking only to be permitted to switch a small part of our present defense budget — to the defense of our own southern frontier." A senior administration official, briefing reporters at the White House on the president's speech but insisting he not be identifed, said Reagan was about 10 to 12 votes short of victory in the House and would lobby members in search of support. Reagan portrayed a dire situation in Central American should the con tra forces lose American assistance. "Using Nicaragua as a base, the Soviets and Cubans can become the dominant power in the crucial corri dor between North and South America. Established they will be in a position to threaten the Panama Canal, interdict our vital Caribbean sea lanes, and, ultimate ly, move against Mexico." there, Soviet-U.S. talks fall short of hopes Associated Press WASHINGTON — The first high- level U.S.-Soviet meeting since the "fireside" summit in Geneva four months ago has failed to reverse a slide in superpower relations. A weary Secretary of State George Shultz, flying home early Sunday morning after overtime talks with Soviet Premier Nikolai Ryzhkov in Stockholm, was obviously disap pointed. "It's basically where it stood," he said of the snagged attempts since the first of the year to set a date for a second summit meeting between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. Repeatedly, the small band of re porters aboard his Air Force jet tried to pin Shultz down on whether hopes for a summit here by the end of the year were being abandoned. He flatly refused to answer. Shultz would say only that Ryzhkov told him at the end of their one hour and 45-minute meeting that "we'll look forward to further discussions." Also, Shultz expects the Soviets to agree to U.S. Over tures for a meeting between him and Foreign Minister Eduard She vardnadze. But at this point, there is no date for Reagan and Gorbachev to meet again and the two sides are still far apart on nuclear arms control, which the Soviet leader would like to make the centerpiece of the sec ond summit. Shultz said the Soviets have failed to respond to U.S. proposals on space-based defense systems and on sharply reducing long-range nu clear bombers, submarines and mis siles. He said negotiators in Geneva had "narrowed the issues a bit" on reducing U.S. and Soviet medium- range weapons, those with a range below 3,500 miles. But there is no prospective agreement there either. Shultz handed Ryzhkov a letter from Reagan to Gorbachev outlin ing the president's latest proposal to have Soviet monitors at the U.S. test site in Nevada for the next under ground weapons blast to see for themselves that explosion limits set in a 1974 treaty were observed. The Soviets have reacted coolly to the proposal, which Reagan said could set the stage for Senate ratifi cation of the agreement and a 1976 accord by demonstrating new tech nology is a safeguard against cheat ing on both sides. A reporter asked Ryzhkov, through a Soviet interpreter, if Sovi- et monitors could be expected to be in Nevada for the next test, proba bly in April. He answered by saying the Reagan administration ought to consider carefully Gorbachev's pro posal to end such tests on both sides. White House Chief of Staff Don ald Regan, asked on NBC's "Meet the Press" Sunday about the delay in setting a date for the summit, said, "It's up to the Soviet Union. We don't understand it. For some reason they are delaying notifying us as to when the general secretary will be coming over here." Searching for survivors Associated Press Rescuers work Sunday in the rubble of the collapsed six-story New World Hotel in Singapore. The hotel collapsed for unknown reasons “like a deck of cards” Saturday, killing at least six persons. As many as 100 could still be trapped in the debris. No Americans were known to have been in the hotel. Court decision erodes civil rights Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court's decision in a sex discrimina tion case two years ago has led to diminished enforcement of a wide range of laws designed to protect women, racial minorities, the dis abled and the elderly, civil-rights groups say. "Americans can no longer feel as sured that the schools, hospitals, airports, correction facilities and other institutions which they sup port through their federal taxes are required to treat than fairly," ac cording to a joint report of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educa tional Fund and the American Civil Liberties Union. Their study, released Sunday, vir tually matched the findings last month of several other groups, in cluding the League of Women Vot ers, the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights and the National Wom en's Law Center. All complained of a serious ero sion of four key civil-rights laws since the Supreme Court ruled in February 1984 that the government can't cut off all federal aid to a col lege because it practices sex discrim ination in a particular program that does not directly receive taxpayer assistance. "created a giant In that case, involving the small Grove City College in Grove City, Pa., the court narrowly interpreted Title IX of the Education Act of 1972 and loophole through which institutions can now discriminate even if they are receiv ing substantial contributions from the federal government," the latest study says. From Texan news services Swiss voters reject U.N. m embership BERN, Switzerland — Swiss vot ers on Sunday rejected by a 3-1 mar gin a government-sponsored pro posal to join the United Nations. Foreign Minister Pierre Aubert, a vocal supporter of the proposal, said the government was disap pointed that the measure failed but said it would not change Swiss for eign policy. Switzerland will remain an ob server in the United Nations Gener al Assembly and a full member of all U.N. specialized agencies, most of which are headquartered in Gene va. The Swiss voted 75.7 percent to 24.3 percent against seeking U.N. membership, final results showed. All 26 cantons (states) rejected the measure. OPEC talks unsuccessful GENEVA — OPEC oil ministers emerged glum-faced and with no word of progress Sunday after four hours of emergency talks on strate gies to halt the steepest oil price de cline in history. Saudi Arabia's oil minister, Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, was quoted by Britain's Sunday Telegraph newspaper as saying prices could hit $8 a barrel unless all oil-pro ducing countries, including those outside OPEC, agree on a price-sup- port program. oil m in is te r, Arturo Hernandez Grisanti, presi dent of the Organization of Petrole um Exporting Countries and Vene z u e la 's said participants at the Sunday meeting voiced their general positions but did not discuss the main issues. Budget cuts responsible for m isleading statistics WASHINGTON — Many of the nation's economic statistics are pre senting a very misleading picture of the economy they are supposed to measure, a congressional study said Sunday. The study prepared fór the Joint Economic Committee that government statistics-gathering op erations had fallen victim to Reagan administration budget cuts and out dated practices. found The study found that the Stan dard Industrial Classification, which the Census Bureau uses to categor ize companies, was last updated in 1972. A revision was nearly com pleted in 1981 but it fell victim to budget cuts. The outdated classification sys tem means that the fast-growing service sector of the economy is un der-represented with such major enterprises as computer software makers and retail computer stores not even having their own classifi cation categories, the study said. Crucial shuttle pieces may have been located CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Navy and civilian ships bucked strong winds and thunderstorms Saturday in efforts to recover three large pieces of Challenger's booster rockets, more of the crew cabin and additional remains of its astronauts The USS Preserver returned to the search area 15 miles offshore where parts of the space shuttle's flight deck and some of the crew members' remains were recovered last week. The civilian salvage ves sel Stena Workhorse moved into po sition to grapple and hoist to the surface heavy parts of the solid-fuel rocket boosters. A crucial missing piece in the in vestigation of the Jan. 28 shuttle ex plosion is the aft segment of the right booster rocket. One of the large pieces to be re covered by the Stena Workhorse was a 500-pound lower portion of a booster. Wholesale price decline caused by oil, toed drops WASHINGTON - Collapsing world oil prices helped push down wholesale prices in February by 1.6 percent, the largest monthly decline since the government began keep ing track of the figures in 1947, the Labor Department reported Sun day. The drop in the Producer Price In dex followed a 0.7 percent decline in January, after it had climbed sharp ly in the last three months of 1985. The decline was largely due to plummeting prices for gasoline and other petroleum products. Gasoline prices fell 11.1 percent, after a 5.7 percent decline in Janu ary. This decline was also the larg est recorded in the department's 39- year history of keeping track of producer prices. During January, food prices after seasonal adjustments also declined 1.6 percent after moving down 0.4 percent in January. Thatcher receives Afghan rebel leader Associated Press LONDON — The other day a sturdy Afghan guerrilla leader with a bushy beard and baggy trousers walked through the black-enameled door of No. 10 Downing St. and spent a half-hour with Prime Minis ter Margaret Thatcher in one of her luxurious reception rooms. The invitation to the unusual visi tor was an escalation of Britain's ef forts to keep the 6-year-old Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the public eye and to turn up the pres sure on Moscow and its ally, the Af ghan government. A sure sign Britain's ploy had worked was angry protests from Moscow and Kabul, the Afghan capital, over the British govern ment-sponsored visit by Abdul Haq, one of the best known and most effective Afghan guerrilla commanders. Haq's high-profile trip to London included calls on Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe and a separate meeting with Howe's deputy, Lady Young, senior minister of state in the Foreign Office. The official and news media at tention the 28-year-old guerrilla received would have pleased a prime minister from some close Brit ish ally. Haq was assured of “ full sup port" by British ministers "for the Afghan peoples' courageous strug gle against Soviet occupation ... backed by the full force of modem weaponry." In Kabul, the Marxist regime of Babrak Karmal sent a protest note to the British Embassy. Haq was called a "well-known professional terrorist and felon" responsible for attacks on Kabul in which dozens of inno cent civilians were killed. Britain returned the protest note unanswered, a stinging diplomatic gesture. A Soviet Embassy official went to the Foreign Office with a formal protest about Haq's red-carpet treat ment in London. Tax proposals move to Senate committee pared by Chairman Bob Packwood, R-Ore., and endorsed in principle by Reagan. Congress, however, is unlikely to get a completed bill to Reagan for his signature before mid-August. While tax-writers fuss over what the tax system should look like, the House will concentrate on interna tional trouble spots, and the Senate will talk about domestic water proj ects. On Tuesday, the House will con sider spending $4.4 billion to beef up security at U.S. embassies around the world. Reagan's call for $100 million in aid to rebels fighting the government in Nicaragua will be debated the House on Wednesday. A vote will come Thursday. in The Senate will vote on a bill au thorizing 170 Corps of Engineers water projects costing $11.1 billion. The measure has been trimmed con siderably from the $20 billion, 230- project version approved by the House last year. In overhauling the tax system, the finance committee is restricted by demands imposed by Reagan and by the House, which passed its own bill last December. • Reagan wants the new tax sys tem to bring in the same amount of money as present law. Each provi sion cutting taxes for somebody will have to be balanced with a tax in crease on somebody else. • The House rejected two of Reagan's biggest money-raisers: repeal of the deductions allowed for state and local taxes paid, and a re troactive tax increase on businesses that have invested heavily in ma chinery and equipment since 1980. To make up for the loss of those proposals, the House fell short of Reagan's goal of a top 35 percent in dividual tax rate and a $2,000-per- person exemption for all taxpayers. The House also reduced business investment incentives to a level that Reagan said was unwise. UNISA $36.25 Comes in: Natural Turquoise W hite Red Black Grey Associated Press WASHINGTON — The battle over how to overhaul the federal tax system is moving to the Senate Finance Committee, where mem bers face the prospect of having to water down tax reductions for some individuals to pay for cuts President Reagan wants for corporations. The 20-member Republican-con trolled committee will begin writing its version of tax reform on Wednes day, starting from a package pre- Corrections and Clarifications As a result of an editing error, The D aily Texan Friday incorrectly identified Texas Railroad Com missioner Clark Jobe as an aide to former Railroad Commissioner Buddy Temple. CAPITOL SADDLERY EQUESTRIAN HEADQUARTERS FOR AUSTIN ENGLISH WESTERN Boot 8c Shoe Repair ♦Handtooled Belts 8i C h a p s* *H an d m ad e B o o ts* ♦Sterling Silver Belt B uckles* - i 1614 LAVACA 478-9369 u Beer i n = > CO I U G/U^Uj% 12 N O O N -9 :0 0 PM M O N .-SA T. University • Barton Creek Square • North Loop Plaza • Travis Square • Highland Mall • Downtown SPECIAL: 10 VISITS*» 39.” Win a Free Trip to Cancún for Two! Register with hr. session Drawing Held April 1st The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17 1986/Page 3 T h e Da i l y T e x a n PermanGnt Staff Rus seil Scott Michael Whaien Ten Ager Barry Cline Tim McDougafl Michael Sutter Todd Pratt Matthew Geiger Joe Yonan Matthew Matejowsky Jeff Crosby Dan Jester Brian Zabdk Mark Greene Stan Roberts Will Hampton Howard Decker Ed Shugert Rick Dyer Kathleen Me Tee Tnsh Berrong Debra Mutter Michael G Smith Lorraine Cademarlor Chris Ware Sean Price Morris Goen Carlos Moreno Martha Ashe Lisa Baker Robert Bruce Brian Edwards. Donny Jackson David Nather Lisa Brown Issue Staff Paula Blesener Christine Clarridge Darryl Ewing Judy Jones Thanhha Lai. Ketlye Noms Steve Powell Deborah Kett Dana Trevas Frank Kozik Andrea Beebe Madison Jechow. D J Whitlock Ronnie G Robinson Gary Sikxrtt Judy Watgren Dimitry Chamy Jayne Eudy. Laura Gadbots. Judy Engibous, Christy Moore Stephen Bedtkian Miles Mathis Van Garrett J eft Beckham Laura Rollins, Steve Zach Kelly Pace Editor Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors News Editor Associate News Editors News Assignments Editor Associate Editors Graphics Editor Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Sportswriters Entertainment Editor Associate Entertainment Editor Special Pages Editor Associate Special Pages Editor Images Editor Associate Images Editors Entertainment Images Reporter Photo Editors General Reporters Around Campus Editor News Assistants Editorial Assistant Entertainment Assistant Entertainment Writer Entertainment Reporter Special Pages Writer Sports Reporters Sports Make-up Editor Sports Assistant Make-up Editor Copy Editors Wire Editor Comic Strip Cartoonists Volunteers Photographers Rachel Wax man Lon Ruszkowski Chris Bake Leanne Ney Sherry Braslau Marc Muchmck Leslie Wetlons T ammy Haiovsky Susan Flood Karen Krail Kay Carpe riter Edy Finfer Jeff Wallace Display Advertising Kim Goynes Sherri White Lynn Colgin Marty Schack Kristen Gilbert Bridgette Reed Denise Johnson Sara Shaw Ken Butts Leta Dorset! Jeanne Hill Ben Regalado The Daily Texan (U SPS 146-440) a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin is published by Texas Student Publications Drawer D University Station Austin TX 78713 7209 The Daily Texan is published Monday. Tuesday, Wednesday Thursday ano Friday except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austm. TX 78710 News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471 4591) at the editorial o ttice (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication B uilding A4 136 Inquiries concerning local national and classified display advertising should be directed to 512 4 71 1866 Classi tied word advertising questions should be directed to 512 4 71 5244 Entire contents copyright 1986 Texas Student Publications The Da9y Texan Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring; Two Semesters (Fall and Spring; Summer Session One Year (Fall. 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BEACH 819 W. 24th 472-7003 Page 4/The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17, 1986 i m vrnxatajtm m t editorials O pinion s e x p re sse d in T b s Dtffy T sxan are those of the editor or the writer of the article and are not ne cessa rily those of the University administration, the Board of R eg en ts or the Texas Student P ublication s B oard of Operating Trustees BSA intolerant to dissent T he Black Student Alliance faces increasing opposition on cam pus, some undeserved and some deserved. The BSA is often opposed, unjustifiably, for trying to better the quality of black students' education at the University. But occasionally the enthusiasm and frustration of the BSA carries them beyond the bounds of reason, and they start hurling nonsense about “ slaps in the face" and charges of racism. That's when the BSA deserves opposition. Take, for instance, the BSA's reaction to last week's announcement of a new minority retention program. The program will take 50 mi nority scholarship recipients and instruct them in study skills and freshman-level courses. The University will spend near $50,000 pro viding room and board, and hopefully a “ head start" to help these students adjust to University life. The new program, added to the existing 129 minority recruitment and retention programs, reflects a sincere effort by the University to tackle the problems of minority recruitment and retention. In fact, the program is similar to part of a comprehensive eight-part recruit ment and retention program proposed last year by the BSA. Despite this, a BSA member said Tuesday “ unless our entire plat form is implemented, anything less is a slap in the face." Even al lowing for a certain amount of rhetorical hyperbole, this statement is absolutely ridiculous. How does the University slap the BSA by doing what it asks? Sadly, the BSA position has dissolved into a mentality that says anything less than full capitulation to their de mands is a slap in their face. The notion that the BSA, and the BSA alone, knows always what is best is particularly noxious and pernicious. That attitude is obvi ously narrow-minded and presumptuous, and it alienates otherwise sympathetic supporters. The BSA faltered again later last week. BSA members said they were outraged by the replacement of John Warfield as the head of the Afri can and Afro-American Studies and Research Center. On March 6, Liberal Arts Dean Robert King asked Warfield to step down as the center's director. Apparently, King did not consult black student lead ers or all the 10 faculty members who are affiliated with the center. That upset BSA members. This is how they reacted to the affair in fliers distributed around campus last week: “ As black students we can not tolerate the racist actions of Dr. King." Racist? How so? We wondered, too. A BSA member told the Tex an, “ Any move that is detrimental to the black community can be considered racist, and this was a detrimental move." Hmmm. Detrimental. Warfield was replaced by George Wright, a black man and an assistant professor of history. How is replacing a black man with a black man racist? Some have speculated, including Warfield himself, that Warfield was replaced because of his vocal criticism of the University administration. But Wright has been an ac tive supporter of increased minority faculty recruitment. No one has suggested that Wright is some sort of Uncle Tom. The controversy boils down to the BSA not being consulted by Dean King. Of course, it's not often, if ever at all, that deans consid ering a personnel change seek the counsel of every faculty member and every interested vocal student group. Nor are they obliged to do so. Now, maybe King's action was unwise. He certainly would have ruffled fewer feathers had he spoken to all 10 center faculty members and consulted the BSA. But do King's actions deserve the label “ rac ist"? Wright, for his part, says he doesn't see “ how in the world" the BSA can see it as being racist. “ Nothing King has done is racist. And I think I know what racism is. I get bothered when people toss the word racism around." We do too. Unfortunately, the word racism has been applied to matters that have nothing to do with racism. If you oppose divest ment, you are racist. If you support welfare reform, you are treading dangerously close to racism. If you don't completely agree with the BSA, you have slapped them in the face — a racist act. And if you are black and disagree with the BSA, watch out, you Uncle Tom. BSA members apparently believe calling someone racist, or at least implying that racism is in the air, is an effective way to fight their battles. To a certain extent, they are correct. No one really wants to add to constructive debate when they fear they will be stigmatized as "racist." The BSA says it's fighting for tolerance and acceptance of blacks on this campus — a noble goal. How about a little tolerance and accept ance for those who, from time to time, disagree with the BSA? — Dan Jester president vice-president A N D R E W CHIN B L A IR SCHLOSSBERQ The Daily Texan Editorial Board Pursuit of knowledge ain't such a bad thing I t seems to me that there's been an awful lot of speculation and yes, moaning, about whether we can go ahead and classify the University right up there with Harvard. Will SUE QUATE GUEST COLUMNIST the public accept that? Can we start feeling good about going to a “ first-class" university while we're still here? (Wouldn't it be a bummer to have them officially proclaim the University "first class" the year after you grad uate?) Anyway, and not coincidentally, the first- class rating seems to be directly correlated to the amount of money we have to throw around. (Gee, Dad, it's just like on airplanes!) After all, it is a material world. Everyone knows that “ lotsa money" and “ esteem" stroll hand- in-hand. Well, I'm afraid that the longer we perpetuate this attitude the longer everyone stays in coach. Just because you struggle through these four or six or eight years along with the rest of us in pursuit of that parchment doesn't guarantee that you get your money's worth. No, you have to do that part. The experience of college isn't worth what you pay for it — its worth lies in what you take away. Its lessons can't be learned by reading chapters and its teachers can't make you understand, and neither can any amount of money the University does or doesn't have. At no other time in your life will you have the opportunity to come into contact with such a variety of opinion and knowledge (or lack of, if you make it that way), and variety is not just the proverbial spice of life; it is a key element. It is what makes each one of us have a different face and a different attitude and a different way of looking at the same things. Maybe you don't think it matters. Okay, I admit I probably wouldn't have voluntarily tak en any of that boring stuff they made me take in college, like geography and history and gov ernment and a foreign language I'll probably never use. me take that stuff: I started to get interested in new things, and I knew a little about so much and now there was so much more to think about. It's all relevant! Life wasn't destined to tiresome programmed plodding be toward some diaphanous Career Goal at the top of a ladder I haven't picked out yet (al though I think I know which "field" my ladder is parked in). some No, now I'm kind of excited knowing that my life can take a hundred different directions at my (informed) whim. Whatever I do, my cri teria are that I do it well and that I like doing it, and I can't understand anyone not wanting the same. I feel sorry for people whose sight for their own future peaks out at, “ I wanna be the CEO for a Fortune 500 company and make at least $165,000 a year by 1990." Throw in a nice boat and lotsa good-looking dates. You're still in coach. I'm sorry, folks, but tunnel vision leads to an extremely narrowed sense of per ception. If that's the way you want it, fine, but it seems pretty mundane to me. If you've got it all figured out, why bother? But then I started to realize why they made Quate is a public relations senior. First-class could be better There is something transparently hypocritical in vice-president Gerhard Fonken's remarks made during the symposium “ University of the First Class: Who's teaching us?" In response to the question of whether UT students are get ting a "first-class education," Fonken pointedly asked two questions of his own: "Will your col leagues in the student body really care?" and “ Would you know it if you were?" The answers are yes and no. Students gener ally do care about the quality of education they get, but they are also generally unaware that 500-person classes can be anything other than library study 500-person classes, cramped space can be anything other than cramped li brary study space, that college requirements aren't necessarily etched in stone and that any thing can be other than it is at this, the best of all possible world-class universities. Chalk some of it up to student malaise, but the greater blame goes to a university adminis tration that has the gumption to comment on student apathy while doing nothing about a status quo that makes the individual student feel like nothing more than an anonymous cog in a degree factory. Would I know if I'm receiving a first-class education? I do know that I care and that I'm not alone. I also know there is something wrong with a university that spends millions misguidedly parading rare books, high-tech hoopla and merit scholars in the name of quali ty (more truthfully, in the name of status) while not spending a fraction of that amount on the real issues of quality undergraduate education: retaining vitally minded faculty and reducing the student-faculty ratios. Education does, as Fonken says “ take two — a teacher and a stu dent," but it's a damned sight harder when you have one teacher for 500 students. Would I know if I'm receiving a first-class education? I ask, in return, who is responsible for telling me how 1 know? Vince Lozano Plan II Harassment a real problem As one of the authors of the original report published in the American Psychologist, I was interested in your article (“ UT professors skep tical of survey results," Feb. 4) concerning sex ual intimacies between psychology educators and female graduate students. As a graduate of UT (B.A., '57, Ph.D., '60), I am bemused to see that empiricism has fallen into such disrepute at my alma mater! Your article quoted the reactions of several persons in the UT psychology department, but their comments lead me to suspect that they did not read the original report. Thus, Lee Willerman was reported as stating that the study's definition of intimacy may be too gen eral. In fact, as noted in the report, the ques tionnaire defined sexual contact as “ sexual in tercourse or direct genital stimulation." Greater specificity may border on prurience. Clarke Burnham was reported as having doubts about the accuracy of the results and as saying the survey's conclusions should be carefully checked. In fact, as noted in the report, our study was an effort to replicate and clarify a 1979 survey that reported almost identical inci dence rates among recent female doctorates. A female graduate student is quoted in the Texan article as stating that such intimate con tact between educators and students "... is something between two consenting adults," implying, I suppose, that there are no problems in that. I would strongly uige this student to read the report, in particular our discussion of how such dual relationships are problematic for those who consent. She might also peruse the ethical principles of the American Psychological Association which address those problems. With all of that, Janet Spence's comment hits the mark, to wit: the issue is complicated. Amen. Joseph S. Thorpe Professor of psychology University of Missouri/Columbia Thomas a seasoned leader As former candidates for Students' Associa tion president,... the campaign has drawn to a close for us, (but) the question of who will be the next SA president is still unanswered. We feel that to remain neutral on this issue would be a mistake, since the future of the SA de pends so vitally on the outcome of the runoff on Tuesday. While Andrew Chin is a brilliant student and an excellent legislator with well-researched pro posals, he has never proven himself as a leader of people by managing a campus group or even a SA committee. By comparison, Trent Thomas has enourmous experience as a campus leader in SIC, Tejas Club, the Business Council and Mortar Board. Additionally, Chin's view of SA is inconsist ent with ours and with that of his opponent. Chin has expresed a relatively narrow, limited view of the SA as primarily a university policy advocacy group, rejecting (at least partly) the other roles of the organization. On the other hand, Thomas views the organ ization as a hub around which other campus organizations may revolve. He envisions the SA providing greater campus unity through a roundtable similar to that of UT President Cunningham. He looks forward to fulfilling the vital role of working with other organizations to bring about change, rather than allowing the SA to become an isolated policy advocacy group. And he has the unique talents and expe rience at working with other students to forge a “ new direction" for SA. No organization that claims to be an elected student government charged with representing all students can afford to narrow or limit its vision and purpose, as Chin has advocated. On Tuesday, March 18, students will face a clear choice between a proven leader who wants to make the organization more than it currently is, and an unproven leader who wants to make the organization less than it cur rently is. The decision will determine the effec tiveness of SA's efforts to represent you. We urge you to vote on Tuesday for Trent Thomas. Rick Patrick Business Bob Hamm Business Brian Peters Engineering Chin appeals to wide base In the runoff election for Students' Associa tion president, there is a dear choice as to who should lead student government for the next year. Andrew Chin is the most experienced candidate and will be effective in office. Chin also is a candidate whom persons of all political persuasions can support. He is getting support from both liberals and conservatives. This proves that he can lead all students in SA and get things done. Daniel Rodriguez Government Mike Moon Government U.S. lacking global view Most Americans realize by now the complexi ty of the situation and the events in Nicaragua. As one digs deeper into the causes leading to the 1979 revolution and the U.S. role in these factors, the complexity is not necessarily re duced and often seems illogical. Taking all these factors from detail up to gen eral conclusions or statements, one cannot help but arrive at the logical conviction that we should not be supporting, and should not at tempt, military ventures in order to arrange things as we see fit. We are rapidly eroding good feelings toward America in the region; in deed, to some degree, in many parts of the world. I have had an opportunity to see the U.S. as a Latin American might, having lived in Costa Rica for five years, and I feel it's vitally import ant to look at U.S. actions and policies from an outside point of view as well. We are not alone; what others see and think of us can be quite different from our own perceptions. World wide, the Nicaraguan government has broad support and certainly not just in communist countries. We should reassess our outlook and our actions. I could go on and on, but it comes down to the fact that, as it stands, we have no business behaving as we are, military action is not a via ble answer to the problem (if indeed there real ly is a serious problem at all) and we need to commit ourselves to constructive approaches concerning Nicaragua. Let us take their rights into consideration, and let us seek negotiation toward peaceful relations. Joel Viers Computer science Neurologist to speak at UT "A box of matches on their table fell, and discharged its contents on the floor: '111/ they both cried simultaneously; and then, in a mur mur, John said '37.' Michael repeated this. John said it a third time and stopped. I counted the matches — it took me some time — and there were 111!" Such is the story of John and Michael, the mentally retarded twins who, except for their amazing and inexplicable mathematical genius, were otherwise diagnosed as idiot savants with “ nothing much to them." And then there's the story of Jose, the 21- year-old autistic man with uncanny artistic skill, and Dr. P., the teacher of music, who per ceives his wife's head as his hat and tries to lift it off and put it on. Describing these remarkable but true tales of neurological disorders is Oliver Sacks, profes sor of clinical neurology at Albert Einstein Col lege of Medicine and author of Migraine, A Leg To Stand On and the highly acclaimed bestsell er, Awakenings. Sacks will be on campus to deliver the inau gural Joe Thome Gilbert Lectureship, establish ed in honor of Gilbert, surgical consultant to the UT Student Health Center for 29 years. Sacks's first lecture, "A Romantic Medicine," will be Monday, March 17 at 7:30 p.m. in Uni versity Teaching Center 2.112A. A second lec ture, "Awakenings," will be given Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. in the same room and will include a showing of the film based on the book. Because Sacks works where science joins the arts, where chemistry, biology and physics meet with music, literature and philosophy, both lectures promise to be a treat for students of all disciplines. David Mack Biology Health-care cuts to hurt poor Associated Press GRAPEVINE, Texas — The poor Will pay the price in term s of health care as the Texas Departm ent of Health meets Gov. Mark W hite's re quest for a 13 percent budget cut, (he agency's top officials say. "W e have met the state target of $19 million this budget year and $19.5 million for the next budget Lear," Dr. Ron A nderson, Board of Health chairm an, said Saturday. "B u t those dollars w ere used to tar get programs for the poorest of the poor in the sta te." Anderson and Dr. Robert Bern stein, state health com m issioner, said proposed deficit reduction cuts, coupled with federal cutbacks, will slice as much as $36 million from the departm ent's $345 million budget for 1987. "O bviously, these m easures are sev ere," said Bernstein. "1 believe we can scrape by, but not for lo n g ." He told a news conference prior to the board's monthly meeting that programs such as Early Childhood Intervention and adult health care face funding cuts and maternal and child clinics will be consolidated as a result of general-revenue paring. "W e are a state agency — one of the few — that met the target" cuts, said Bernstein. "W e are o n e of the few, but it was not without p ain ." The austerity cuts requested by the governor will especially hurt many residents of South and W est Texas, with the most dam age to people w ho live at or below the fed erally determined poverty level, he said. "W e are not dealing with sacred cows here, but important health is su e s," said Anderson. "W h en you don't fund these programs, people d ie ." Hance says Clements avoiding him Associated Press ROUND ROCK, Texas — G uber natorial candidate Kent Hance says Opponent Bill Clem ents seem s to be ducking him. "Bill Clem ents seem s to be pull ing back a little from joint appear ances because his strategists are tell ing him that the more he appears before voters, the more likely he is to make one of his famous m isstate m ents and remind people that he's still the same Bill C lem en ts," Hance said. The com m ent cam e in conjunc tion with a Saturday meeting in Round Rock of the Texas Associa tion of Concerned Taxpayers, a meeting that attracted five candi dates for governor. the told crow d H ance that C lem ents might have had good rea son to skip the session. Hance spent part of his time com plaining about the 1977 state law that set up central appraisal districts in each county — the Peveto bill. "I think that's probably one of the reasons Bill Clem ents is not here to day. He signed the Peveto bill. I d on't blame him. I w ouldn't be here either. He wants to talk about not raising taxes. I can tell you, he raised taxes tremendously when he let the Peveto bill get lo o se," Hance said. A Clem ents spokesman said the former governor had other plans Saturday and could not attend the meeting here. "W e'v e had 10-12 joint appear ances and there are going to be at least a half dozen m o re," said Reg gie Bashur, Clem ents' press aide. "T h is is the third or fourth time w e've been confronted with news release criticism from Hance. If Mr. Hance has concerns, why doesn't he make them know n to Governor Clem ents' face. Mr. Hance is always very congenial and very friendly” w hen speaking with Clem ents, Bashur said. Also speaking against taxes at the Saturday m eeting were Republican candidate Tom Loeffler, Democratic candidates Don Crow der and An drew Briscoe and Libertarian candi date Theresa Doyle. "I'm just like y o u ," Loeffler told the crowd. "1 d on 't believe a gov ernm ent can tax itself into prosperi ty ." "A s long as Tom Loeffler is gover nor o f Texas, there will never be a state incom e tax and you can count on th a t," he said. Doyle indicated little confidence in the motives of the other four can didates at the meeting. "H ave you ever examined the word politics? Poly m eans many and ticks m eans blood -suckers," she said. 25% Off y H A R D B A C K & P A P E R B A C K ) B E S T S E L L E R S * 1 H O F ' N i'« Y o r k I in n ■. I t o o k H e t i r n l o T ir o l 'ill li* -s i S * * llc r p u r» ha>*«*r», »-v<*r> w e e k ' The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17, 1986/Page 5 FICTION 1. Family Album, Danielle Steele. NON-FICTION 1. 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Checks, end P.O.’s Accepted university Page 6/The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17,1986 UT receiving more funds to continue SDI, defense research By LAURA ROLLINS Daily Texan Staff I he U n iv ersity 's C e n te r for E lectro- m ech an ics will receive $ 1 .7 5 m illion to c o n tinue research for the D ep artm e n t o f D e fen se an d the S trateg ic D efen se Initiative program , a U n iv ersity official said . W illiam W eld on , ce n te r d irecto r, said the con tract w as approved last w eek by th e A r m am ent R esearch and D ev elo p m en t C om m and , a g o v ern m en t a g e n cy , and sh ou ld arrive next w eek. for research W eldon said $1.25 m illion w ill be u sed solely for SD I, com m on ly know n as star w ars. T h e o th e r $ 5 0 0 ,0 0 0 will be used for o th e r D ep artm en t o f D efen se research, he said. "In our particular area of electrom agnetic gun research, the SDI is interested in elec trom agnetic guns for missile d efen se," W eldon said. "O n the other hand, the Army is interested in them for defeating tanks. So they jointly funded this pro g ram ." Weldon said the m oney will be used to test pow er supplies for electrom agnetic guns, which are being designed to achieve high velocities. "T here is a need to build pow er supplies for electrom agnetic launchers in smaller said. smaller packag es," W eldon and W eldon said $1 million of the contract money will be used for tw o different types of power supplies. "W e have been building a com pulsator for the last two years, and it is now ready for testin g," he said. "W e got $500,000 to do the testing on that compulsator. "T h en we have invented a new kind of com pulsator which is much lighter and sm aller," Weldon said. "W e got $500,000 to pursue the detailed design of that ma c h in e ." W eldon said the other $750,000 would be used to test another type of pow er supply. "W e have had a hom opolar generator pro gram for years, and we are doing som e new com ponent developm ent to be able to run those machines at higher energies and higher p o w ers," he said. "W e got $500,000 to continue to support that program ," he said. "W e also have a new homopolar generator which uses some of the technology like the new com pulsator to make it much smaller. We got $250,000 to do the detailed design of th at." Although the $1.75 million contract will be used only for SDI and D epartm ent of D efense programs, Weldon said the cen ter's other research in acceleration and achieving high velocities has several pur poses. "W e're doing this research for a variety of applications," W eldon said. "In the case of the SDI proposal, w e're using it as a gun to shoot down a nuclear missile. We also have a proposal in to the Navy to use it to launch airplanes. In April, the center will host an electro magnetic launch technology conference in which hundreds of researchers will com e together to exchange technology and ideas. "T h e vast bulk of the conference will be about rail guns, the pow er supplies that drive rail guns and the diagnostic tech niques that you m easure the effects w ith ," Weldon said. Pat Hummel, adm inistrative assistant for the center, said about 400 people are ex pected to attend the conference. "It's going to be a highly technical con ference, and this will be the first year that this conference has had so m any interested participants," Hummel said. Janet Cox, confessed ‘groupie’ of Arts and Sausages, plays croquet. Rommy Goode, Special to the Texan Professor recognized for poisons research By DARRYL EWING Daily Texan Staff A national p h arm aceu tical c o m pany h as selected a U n iv ersity p ro fessor from am o n g 50 national c a n didates to receive a $ 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 aw ard to fu rth er research o f p o iso n s. Daniel A co sta, p ro fe sso r of p h a r m acy, said Friday th e Burrough - W elícom e T oxicology S ch o lar aw ard .ttract top grad u ate stu w ould also d en ts to the U n iv ersity . T h e aw ard, p onsored by th e B u rrou gh -W ell- om e p harm aceu tical co m p an y , is d esig n ed to p rom ote sp ecifically stud y o f toxic su b sta n ce s and to aid alread y estab lish e d toxicology p ro gram s, A costa said. Robin S m ith , g rad u ate research assistan t in p h arm acy , said A costa received the aw ard at th e S o cie ty of Toxicology co n v en tio n M arch 6 in New O rlean s. H e said th e aw ard is given to d ev elop the toxicology p ro from gram teaching to g rad u ate stu d e n t re cru itm ent. in all areas rang ing B asically (th e aw ard) allow s a p ro fesso r to look for bright grad uate stu d en ts and ap p ly for oth er re search g ra n ts ," Sm ith said. Sm ith said th e aw ard w as first given in 1981. A costa is th e first UT p ro fesso r to receive the aw ard, he said. R ecipien ts o f the aw ard are s e lected for past acco m p lish m en ts and for in tern ation al recognition in to xicology, Sm ith said. Ih e aw ard co n sists of $ 5 0 ,000 a n nually for up to five y ears, w ith $45,000 of the yearly grant tagged for the recipient's salary, Acosta said. The award will allow the Uni versity to hire more faculty with the money it would have used to pay Acosta's salary, he said. The remaining $5,000 will be ap plied to direct research and devel opm ent of the toxicology program, Acosta said. The award also releases Acosta from his undergraduate teaching re sponsibilities at the University, which will give him more time for research and to apply for further re search funding, he said. Acosta said he will have more time to recruit graduate students interested in toxi cology. Acosta said he is currently in volved in cellular toxicology which deals with the effect of poison on the cells of laboratory rats. "M ost cells are affected in some way by poisons, and we exam ine cell cultures in the lab to determ ine to what extent they are affected by certain p o ison s," Acosta said. Jam es Doluisio, dean of the C ol lege of Pharmacy, said the award should help in attracting faculty and graduate students to the University. "I think it will catalyze research and study in (toxicology)," Doluisio said. "W e try to develop a them e of success within the college, and this kind of national recognition draws attention to our internal com m it m en t." átome earn SAME DAY snvicf 't i l 9am Monday-Friday TUESDAY SPECIAL á 10 Laundered Shirts M on-Frl 7:00 am -6:30 pm 77 each Saturday 8:00 am -Noon I A Two Shirts or more HOME STEAM LAUNDRY & CLEANERS 2301 M anor Road A Davis Family Tradition Since 1915 — < g r 478-2586 WE WANT YOU TO VOTE IN THE RU N -OFF ELECTIONS POLLING PLACES School: A rch./G rad . Sch A ib . Arts Bus./Grad. Bus./EduAi. Sci. Communication Engineering Fine Arts Law S ch oo l LBJ Sch o o l N atural Scien ces Nursing Pharmacy/Social Work Posifirns President: Andrew Chin Trent Thomas Vice President Kelly Leach Blair Schlossberg Co-Op Board Mace 1 Karen Casbum Wai Tern Kan Location: Main Mall UTC/PCL Comm. Complex RLC/ECJ ArtBldg. Courtyard/Sunflower Sid Richardson Hall Between Welch/Hogg Bldg. Nursing School Burdine March 18,1986 Sh xlcntt' Association »xo« Union 4.310,471 -3166 iMwlrnta' A mmekdkm Arts and Sausages folks tell jokes, play croquet By TODD PRATT Daily Texan Staff About 40 students and former students involved in The D eadly Texan, the Arts and Sausages stu dent governm ent in 1976-77 and the various political groups that helped elect the governm ent, reunited on campus Friday and Saturday to play croquet, tell jokes and reminisce. The participants cam e from as far away as New York to celebrate the rise and fall of Arts and Sausages, Tomato Hubris, the Red Ryder Pres ervation Society and other similar organizations that arose during the 1970s primarily to oppose the UT administration and have fun. Arts and Sausages President Jay Adkins and Vice President Skip Sly- field campaigned for the 1976 elec tion on an absurdism platform and won with more than 60 percent of the vote. They and their friends spent a large part of their term or ganizing various parties, absurd public jokes and rallies. "A rts and Sausages was elected to oppose the adm inistration, and they did have an ag en d a," Red Ryder member David Mitchum said. "A nd that agenda was to take a shot, no matter how bizarre, at the U n iv ersity ."' But the Arts and Sausages gov ernm ent did make som e serious changes, including forming the Stu dent Services Fee Com m ittee and making various boards, such as the Co-O p board, elected instead of ap- pointed. Although older, most participants had not changed their attitudes. At a day-long symposium Saturday, they made fun of past and current UT adm inistrations and them selves, played with balsa wood airplanes and kazoos and tried to sell imagi nary products such as "D ogm a — It gives you the relief of rhetoric w ith out the pain that often accom panies real learning." Former D a ily Texan editor John Schwartz and Scott Campbell, w ho was appointed by Schwartz to lead the last Deadly Texan, also spoke the about D eadly and its demise. the philosophy about for the reasons "I knew we w ere going to offend som e p eop le," Campbell said. "W e certainly did. There's alm ost no joke, no parody, that makes every body laugh. There is always going to be at least one person w ho is the butt of the joke, w ho is going to be offended. And if you make fun of everybody, then everybody's going to get offended. And that's w hat killed The D eadly Texan." The D eadly was discontinued in 1982 after a libel suit. The case was settled out of court. Adkins said most current UT stu dents have never heard of the or ganizations because the University tends to "h o m o gen ize" its past, and the non-conform ist periods of the 1970s are being written out of UT history. CUSTOMER INFORMATION FROM GENERAL MOTORS HOW TO AVOID THE DANGERS OF COUNTERFEIT AUTO PORTS INFERIOR PARTS COULD THREATEN YOUR SAFETY Today, a counterfeiter no longer has to print phony twenty-dollar bills. Selling imitation automotive replace ment parts —packaged to resemble products from legit imate manufacturers—is big business. For people who buy and use counterfeit auto parts, though, the conse quences can be costly. For example, body panels may require expensive labor to bring their finish quality up to the rest of the car. Bogus oil filters have failed after 200 miles, causing unpro tected engines to seize up, requiring their complete replacement. Inferior transmission fluid has solidified at 0 ° Fahrenheit, ruining trans missions. And counterfeit antifreeze has eaten right through aluminum parts. T h e failure can be safety-related. A fatal 1985 bus accident in Britain was attributed to the installation of counterfeit brake parts. Ill- fitting counterfeit gas caps can fall off, increasing the risk of a fire in a roll-over accident. Here’s how to make sure you receiv e p arts th at are m ade to work best in your GM car. Your most reliable source is your GM dealer. He can supply any part for your GM car or truck. Buying popular brand parts from reputable stores or garages is another way to improve your chances of getting the right part. But wherever you buy, be sus picious of discounts that seem too good to be true. Some tip-offs that a part might be counterfeit: Flimsy packaging. Lack of name-brand id en tificatio n such as AC-Delco. “Look-alike” graphics or a change in the spelling of a recognized trade name. In this way counterfeiters can avoid prosecution under the 1984 Trademark Counter feiting Law. So examine the package carefully. If a replacement part doesn’t fit easily, you should probably return it. A repu table distributor will almost certainly give you a refund or credit. General Motors is tak ing strong measures in the U.S. and overseas to put a sto p to p a rts c o u n t e r feiting. GM is trying to stop the problem at its source. So far we’ve helped U.S marshals confiscate parts in raids on 29 counterfeiting operations. Another eight operations have been un covered and prosecuted in foreign countries. GM is also developing a hologram identification device, much like those be coming popular on credit cards, to improve security in our parts distribution. A f t e r all, Ge n e r a l Motors has a tremendous investment in GM parts that work together to give our customers safe, reliable cars and trucks. We want our cus tomers to be confident they can maintain their GM vehi cles at the same level of high quality we build them. This advertisement is part o, our continuing effort to gm customers useful informatiot about their cars and truck and the company that buildi them. Chevrolet • Pontiac Oldsmobile • Buick Cadillac • GMC Truck Students protest ‘racist’ fraternity party By MATTHEW GEIGER and JOE YONAN Daily Texan Staff About 40 members of various stu dent groups protested a University fraternity's "porter party" Friday, calling the party and the fraternity system racist. The party, given Friday by Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, was ad vertised in The Daily Texan as "Big John's 6th Annual Porter Party." According to the ad, all fraternity porters were welcome to the party and would receive free drinks. Carey Hattie, biology junior and Alliance of College Students for a Unified Left (AXLE) officer, said the students picketed to protest the Greek system's use of porters — maintenance and service workers — in fraternity and sorority houses. "First of all, if you go into a frater nity house at UT, unless you walk into a black frat, the only black per son you're likely to see at any frater nity house is the porter," Hattie said. "We've known some porters, and they've described their working conditions to us. They have very low wages and work very hard hours." David Zertuce, a psychology jun ior who participated in the protest, said the protest was held across the street from the PKA house, at 24th and Leon streets. PKA members pe riodically threw beer cans and stole and destroyed the students' signs, he said. But PKA Vice President Rick Kel ly said most of those antagonizing the protesters were not PKA mem bers. Students going to another par- ty on the street also stopped to ar gue with the group, he said. Kelly said protesters started gath ering at about 5:30 p.m. "They just started yelling stuff like, Down with white supremacy' and 'frater nities are racist,' " he said. The party was a tribute to "Big John," a PKA porter who died in 1983, and was not racist, Kelly said. Last year the fraternity ran an ad for the party in the Texan featuring a caricature of Big John. The ad drew criticism and a similar protest. PKA withdrew the ad and printed an apology, and this year there was no cartoon on the ad. "I don't understand why they did this (in spite of the revised ad)," Kelly said. Kelly said the party may not be held again next year — but not be cause of the protests. The raised drinking age "would be the only reason we wouldn't have it," he said. Jamie Otis, an ACC student who took part in the protest, said there were only three black men, one of whom he said was the PKA porter, among the 600 people who attended the party. "I asked one of the fraternity members, 'Why aren't any of the porters here?' and they said, 'Well, it's not our responsibility to call them,' " Otis said. About 10 or 12 police cars arrived during the protest, and police ar rested a student who was attempt ing to steal a protester's sign, Otis said. The student kicked the police man and was arrested, he said. The student was not charged. m mt mmmmmmmmr n m m m . ------------ | n . ★ - IH« BAHAMAS - ★ Cruise the oufislands this summer 7 full days aboard a 65' yacht. Sailing, diving, fish ing, island-hopping, swimming, and much more $495 , Call John or Cathy: 451-5699 G r a d u a t i o n QUALITY ANNOUNCEMENTS BEAUTIFULLY STAMPED WITH THE SCHOOL SEAL. MILTO’S PIZZA PUB GREEK AND ITALIAN FOOD SUN-THURS 11:00 a.m.-Midnight FRI & SAT 11:00 a.m .-la.m . 19S5 TVfl D COAST MAGAZINE BEST PIZZA AWARD 2909 Guadalupe FREE DELIVERY 476-1021 EVERY WOMAN S CONCERN C o n f i d e n t i a l . P r o f e s s i o n a l R e p r o d u c t i v e ( a r e • 1 rcc Uruqnaru v Testinq • Problem Pruqnam v C nunselinq • A b o r t i o n S e r v i t es 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 1 * B i r t h ( o n t r o l • P a p T e s t I H T REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES • H o a r d ( p r t i f l e d O b G y n f r o l o g i i f t • I ¿ r e n a r d N u r a i n g S t a f f • f * p e r i e n r e d ( o u n a e l o r a • O n ( H a h u t t l e 45 8 8 2 7 4 1009 1 40th ►\zzocz o 3 z NAME AND DEGREE ON YOUR CARD 504 PER ANNOUNCEMENT 754 PER NAME CARD INCREMENTS OF TEN ONLY ORDER NOW IN TIME FOR GRADUATION ABSOLUTE DEADLINE MARCH 22 UNIVERSITY CO-OP H U LONGHORN COUNTRY • UPPER LEVEL ■ 2248G uadalupe Phono 476-7211 F ree P ark ing 23rd K San A ntonio « 83 P u rchase EimDETH CHRISTIAN West 38th Street at Jefferson #9 Jefferson Square 458-1142 The Dr. Joe Thome Gilbert Lectureship presents OLIVER SACKS, M.D. Neurologist, Beth Abraham Hospital, N.Y. and Author of Migraine, A Leg to Stand On and Awakenings Professor of neurology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Sacks’ brilliant literary skills allow him to bring seemingly abstract problems of neurological science to life. So claims Sacks: “ For here, the patient’s personhood is essentially involved, and the study of disease and of identity cannot be disjoined. ’’ TOMORROW TONIGHT 7:30 pm UTC 2.112A “A Romantic Medicine” 3:30 pm “Awakenings” Noon Brown Bag Lunch and Discussion Sponsored by Education for the Health Professions, 471-3172. WEDNESDAY UTC2.112A Governors Room The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17, 1986/Page 7 W M M T M 4 K » • Froo*w*Sng • GhoeherWng • Rm u t t im • Cov»r Lfftto • Typing • Tulortng • ftmm Contuftofton iMiMh|Pkoti|npkfli 13 yrs. experience starting at $175 Call 282-3972 Video taping also available (eyecare) OPTICAL CENTER at MLK & Guadalupe in United Bank Mall FRAMES 33% OFF Selected Styles W e carry all types of lenses, including: Bausch & Lomb Daily Bausch & Lomb Extended Wear " O " Series Tinted “O" Series $49.00^Mr $69.00 perp^ $89.00 Doctor's prescription required. Prices subject to change. Exam and care kit not included in above price, but are available at Eyecare. Replacement lenses available at above prices. O ffer ends April 15,1986. CALL TODAY 476-1000 HAVE YOU HUGGED YOUR PROF TODAY? The Jean H olloway Award for Teaching Excellence in Liberal Arts or Natural Sciences Nomination forms are available in West Mall Bldg. 101 or W.C. Hogg 109, or you may submit a description of your professor’s outstanding teaching qualities. Please include his or her departm ent and class number. Deadline: Tuesday, March 18,1986 at 5:00 p.m. f ° r March 3 0 send 13p i Easter Cards SHARE THE FEELING SEND SOMEONE A LITTLE LOVE send your cards before spring break RENAISSANCE HAS THE PERFECT CARD FOR THAT SOMEONE SPECIAL CO-OP EAST 26fh A M odical A rts M onty o f FREE P arkin g State & local Page 8/The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17,1986 IIT professor to file suit against Marcos From staff and wire reports A University School of Law professor, ap pointed to represent the new Philippine govern ment, said Sunday he plans to file a federal suit this week to reclaim almost $30 million in Texas real estate allegedly bought with illegal funds by deposed leader Ferdinand Marcos. Michael Tigar said he and two other Austin attorneys were selected last week by the Center for Constitutional Rights in New York to repre sent Philippine President Corazon Aquino's gov ernment in its attempt to recover hundreds of acres of Texas real estate. The other two attor neys appointed by the commission are Jay West brook and Pieter Schenkkan. "Ferdinand Marcos and his wife stole millions of dollars," Tigar said. "They used that money to purchase property which was designed to be used for their personal benefit." Tigar said attorneys are investigating land holdings in Tarrant, Nueces, Denton and Bexar counties, and "based on what we know at the present time, it is (worth) between $25 and $30 million." Under investigation as owners of the disputed property are several corporations based in the Netherlands Antilles and controlled by Jose Campos, reportedly one of Marcos' cronies, Ti gar said. Campos heads one of Asia's largest pharmaceutical corporations, United Laborator ies, Inc. of Manila. "Other people of Philippine origin" linked to Campos and a number of Texas brokers and investors also are under investigation, he said. "We have a list of people we'll be evaluating as potential defendants," Tigar said. "That infor mation will be made public at the time we file the lawsuit." Tigar declined to say where the lawsuit would be filed. The Aquino administration last week froze the assets of Philippine business leaders reported as Marcos' associates, including those of Campos. Texas real estate linked to Campos includes $20 million in Tarrant County, Tigar said Friday. Records examined by the Dallas Times Herald show Campos-directed corporations own $1.6 million in property in Bexar County near San Antonio and 486 acres assessed at $693,000 in Denton County. Pedro Yap, a member of the Presidential Com mission on Good Government in Manila, said Campos has conducted business dealings for Marcos in the past. He said the commission plans to investigate land purchases made by Campos through Dallas real estate agent Richard Gray. Campos began acquiring land through Gray in 1980, when be bought the first of seven tracts of land on or near the bayfront in Corpus Christi, the Corpus Christi Caller-Times reported. Gray denied Campos acted as a front for Mar cos when he purchased the real estate. Yap said his commission also will investigate New York and California land purchases made by several close colleagues of Marcos. According to Nueces County deed and tax records, Campos is listed as president of Point Gray Investment Corp. N.V. and Chilliwack In vestment Corp. N.V. — two investment corpora tions that purchased Corpus Christi land. The latest Corpus Christi land purchases made by Gray were in July and August 1985, when he acquired a 63-acre tract and a 447-atre tract of land on Mustang Island. Gray said only one tract was for Campos, but did not say which one. But deed records show Gray as the trustee for the unidentified owner of the island land, the Caller-Times reported. Developer may get MUDs over city protests By DONNY JACKSON Daily Texan Staff Nash Phillips/Copus will become the first developer to create a mu nicipal utility district over a city's objections, if the Texas Water Com mission upholds a hearing examin er's ruling. Hearing examiner Claire Patter son recommended Friday to the commission that NPC be allowed to establish three MUDs in Northwest Austin despite the city's refusal to consent to the districts in mid-1984. The commission will vote April 10 on the creation of the districts. Frank Booth, an attorney represent ing the city, said he would be surprised if the commission voted against the recommendation. "We believe the commission is bi ased for water districts and biased against the City of Austin," Booth said. If the commission approves the recommendation, it will mark the ALETAS M ancan Raataurant and Cantina first time in Texas that a MUD has been created adjacent to a city's lim its against the city's wishes. Booth said he does not believe such a case has been brought before the com mission before. Lee Biggart, an attorney repre senting NPC and a former water commissioner, said he also thought this was the first time such a case had been brought to the commis sion. "That's because Austin is the only area in the state where the city says 'No, we're not going to serve you and we're not going to consent to let you serve yourself (with a MUD),' " Biggart said. "All the city would have had to do was provide service to the area to prevent these MUDs from being created," Biggart said. Booth said the case "set a signifi cant, bad precedent." "Now, a developer can petition the city for a MUD and, when the city turns it down, wait six months and gel the commission to approve it," Booth said. A MUD is supposed to be a vehi cle to that allows a developer finance utility services in an area where the city will not provide ser vice. For any development, the de veloper is responsible for establish ing a system within the developed area following utilities: roads, drainage, water and waste water. the for With a MUD, only roads are paid for completely by the developer. If the MUD is located outside the city, the developer only has to pay 30 percent of the costs for the drain age, water and wastewater systems. The MUD can issue district bonds — paid by the district residents through a tax — to cover the other 70 percent of the utility system costs. Kent Butler, UT associate profes sor of community and regional planning and former member of the Austin Water and Wastewater Com mission, has said MUDs are worth $6,000 to $9,000 per acre to the de veloper. Booth said that if the water com mission rules against Austin, the city will appeal the decision in dis trict court. City Manager Jorge Carrasco said the city offered service to NPC. "We felt our service plan was a viable one, and we still feel that way," he said. Biggart said one problem with the city's offer was that the city wanted to use a private water treatment plant co-owned by NPC and River Place development. "The city said, 'If you give us your water treatment plant, we'll provide you with service,' " Biggart said. "That's not what we consider to be the city providing service." ! ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ St. Patrick’s Day celebration ... get a Green Margarita for 75^ When you wear anything green into our restaurant on March 17th. We promise not to pinch you . . . and w e’ll even give you a Green Margarita for 750. That’s Green You Can Enjoy! St. Pafoccá'd *Dcuf, . . . An Extra Special Day at A L E T A ’S Guadalupe & MLK 479-0940 R eg ister to Win 1. $25 BAR TAB—group o f four 2. Breakfast for tw o at Padre Cafe Padre Island’s N ew est H ottest R estaurant 3. One Pair of R ay-Ban Su nglasses 4. $20 for Gas 5. $15 for Gas • No Purchase Necessary • Drawings will be held at 5:00, March 20th • Need not be present to win Associated Press St. Patrick’s Day preparation The statue of Dick Dowling, an Irish hero of the Civil War, is given its yearly cleaning by Robert Miggins of Houston Friday in Hermann Park. St. Patrick’s Day is Monday, but the city held a ceremony at the base of the statue Saturday after its St. Patrick's Day parade. .E nvision A Career In Vision Care. The best sales people make an Impact on their profession. They set high goals an d achieve them. Not because o f luck, but because o f motivation, desire an d intensity. If you have the desire an d self-motivation to he a winning sales person, consider Barnes-Hind Inc. As a Sales Representative fo r Barnes-Hind inc., you can be p a rt o f the fastest growing, most dynam ic segment o f the health care market. And, you i t be working with the nation s innovative leader in the manufacture o f contact lenses, solu tions an d related vision care products. Your opportunity to make an im pact on the vision care market is now. Put you r skills to work fo r an industry leader. Our representatives w ill be on you r campus Monday, April 7, in the Student Placement Center. Contact you r Placement Center im mediately fo r consideration an d inter view appointment, i f you can t make it, please send a letter o f interest to: Personnel Department Barnes-Hind Inc. 895 Kifer Road Sunnyvale, CA 94086 BARNES4IIND. 2246 Guadalupe Phone 476-7211 Parking 23rd A San Antonia An Affirmative Action, Equal Opportunity Employer. Butts says Pickle ignoring students By DAVID NATHER Daily Texan Staff U.S. Rep. J.J. "Jake" Pickle has played an active role in accelerating military spending at the expense of student loan programs, his Demo cratic opponent said Friday. Nina Butts, an Austin anti-nude- ar activist who is challenging Pickle in the Democratic primary, said Pickle has ignored student needs by supporting budget-cutting pro grams such as the Gramm-Rudman Defidt Reduction Act. Because the Gramm-Rudman bill raises the fees students pay to quali fy for Guaranteed Student Loans, the bill will force low-income stu dents to pay an extra $1.5 million this year for a college education, Butts said. The fee hike will cost UT students an extra $87,500, she said. "In a world where jobs will in creasingly be mental instead of menial, nothing could be more dan gerous to our nation's future than closing the classroom door in the face < f students who need help pay ing for college," she said. Butts, who taught freshman and sophomore English at Austin Com munity College for five years, said military projects such as the Strate gic Defense Initiative, the B-l bomb er and the MX missile have received funding at the expense of federal student loan programs. "Shifting the burden of paying for higher education low-income families wouldn't be so galling if all to loans have to be touched at all," Williams said. "But it's not correct to imply that Gramm-Rudman is singling out student loans." Williams said Pickle plans to study the effects of the first round of Gramm-Rudman cuts during the next session of Congress. Butts said the Gramm-Rudman cuts, which are supposed to elimi nate the federal deficit by 1991, should be concentrated on military spending rather than social pro grams. "If we bite into the deficit there, we won't have to adhere to Gramm- Rudman by cutting social spending so drastically," she said. Butts said Congress should cut defense spending by reducing fund ing for "foreign intervention," such as aid to the contras; by cutting spending on nuclear weapons; and by changing Pentagon contracting practices reduce waste and abuse. to The United States can cut spend ing on nuclear weapons without waiting for an agreement with the Soviet Union, because defense ex perts such as Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger have said they would not trade the U.S. nuclear arsenal for the Soviet Union's, Butts said. "When you're talking about being able to kill every Soviet citizen twenty times over, talking about who has more weapons becomes ir relevant," Butts said. Mm Butts federal programs suffered alike, but they don't," Butts said. "We keep neglecting our basic domestic needs while giving the military every dan gerous toy it can imagine." But Monte Williams, Pickle's press secretary, said Pickle support ed the Gramm-Rudman bill because he believed the biggest threat to stu dents is the federal deficit. "He feels that if something isn't done about the deficit right now, students will be carrying that deficit around on their backs for the rest of their lives," Williams said. "It's unfortunate that student Swimwear Mix & Match Separates For A Perfect Fit Tops: A B, C, D Bottoms: S, M, L 1605 RIVERSIDE DR. (11/2 BLOCKS EAST OF I-35) M-SAT. 10:30-7:30 SUNDAY 1:00-6:00 446-0736 “ON THE DRAG” 2404 GUADALUPE M-SAT. 10:30-7:30 SUNDAY 1:00-6:00 476-3536 SUN. SOUNDS. SURF. STARSHIP IT’S THE BUD LIGHT SPRING BREAK ’86 IN PENSACOLA. Free Concert: Starship, March 28, on the beach. The Bud Light Frisbee Team. Sugar white sands. Sparkling surf. Plenty to see and do. We’re not very far from where you are. So come on down, check out Starship and get a head start on summerT ’ In Pensacola. C a ll o r w rite : Visitor Information Centeiyi401 E. Gregory Street/ Pensacola, FL 32601/904/434-1234/Toll Free 1-800-874-1234/ltoll free in Florida 1-800-343-4321 . / . . i i • # • • v* . , • r. ' • T * , T ' V i '■ .;•* V ' . y * * * y ■« \ The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17, 1986/Page 9 CLASS RINGS ON SALE ♦W JnRT(71RVED ^ C L A S S RINGS INC " S I L A D I U M • 1 0 K G O L D • 1 4 K G O L D — See Owi Tteiv HURRY a n d ORDER Sale Ends MARCH 22 UNIVERSITY CO-OP LONGHORN COUNTRY • MAIN LEVEL Free P arking 23rd & San Antonio « $3 P urchase Moi*nCofi 2246 G u adalup e P hone 476-7211 j / m r n . {Jjc^yvi^L A STREAM OF GENIUS PHILIP GLASS LicfycLcL cLa^fs GLASS. Philip Glass takes the song— rethinks it, FM 39564 reshapes it and creates a completely new idea of what a song can be. 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This sesquicentennial year, the Texas Memorial M useum celebrates more than Texas' anniversary of in dependence. The m useum , estab lished as part of the 1936 centennial celebration, turns 50 this year. And under the m useum 's jurisdiction fall more than 4.5 million specim ens, docum enting 150 million years of history. President Franklin D. Roosevelt led groundbreaking cerem onies for the m useum June 1 1,1936. The mu seum and its displays opened to the public in January 1939. Fifty years later, Lynn D enton, assistant direc tor of the m useum , stresses that the m useum is a ''d yn am ic'' place. Based on appearances alone, ''d y nam ic'' may not be the m ost accu rate description. The building is, af ter all, a memorial. Carved in lim estone on its cam pus-side wall are 107 names, a roll call from the conventions that declared Texas' in dependence in 1836 and Texas' statehood in 1845. The wall reads like a county listing: Forty counties — including Caldw ell, Childress, H ouston, Navarro and Tarrant — honor men listed there. Perched on a hill at 2400 Trinity St., the museum looms like a tom b stone over cam pus. Below, toward Red River Street, a herd of bronze mustangs gallops from the gra- vesite. The Performing Arts Center, Art Building, Tow nes Hall and new parking garage form a tight box around the museum. For descrip tive purposes, "h id d en ” m ight prove to be a better word than "d y n am ic." By and large, the U niversi ty community tends to overlook the museum, Denton said. But the museum is not hurting for business. Last year, 82,000 people visited Texas Memorial M useum. School groups com prise approxi mately one-third of the visitors, ac cording to Dorothy Young, educa tion coordinator for the museum. Spring draws the heaviest crowds — in February, each week an aver age of 17 groups of 50 children, some coming from as far away as Houston, visited the museum. "I'd say there isn't a parent of a six- to eight-year-old in the area who d oesn't know about u s ," Young said. The contents of this museum and its associated facilities are the result of University studies in natural his tory. For most visitors, the museum is a learning tool. O ne visitor, a UT art student, com m ented that the museum was "an interesting be- tween-class sto p ." The m useum 's collections are considered to be am ong the finest in the nation, standing in league with the American M useum of Natural History, the Carnegie M useum of Natural History and the Sm ithsoni an Institution. The invertebrate fos sil collection is the third largest in North America; the vertebrate fossil collection is ranked seventh. But the total collection includes more than fossils. M inerals and arti facts from around the world, includ ing coins, saddles, tools, quilts, paintings and Navaho rugs, round out the collection. The museum primarily serves as a display area for work conducted at the University. While most m use ums display approximately 10 per cent of their holdings, Denton said, space constraints limit the Texas Memorial M useum 's display to one tenth of 1 percent of its holdings. The rest of the collection occupies research and laboratory facilities in the Education Annex and the Bal cones Research C enter. M useum di rector William Reeder said he is working toward the establishm ent of a single collection and research facility but said such plans are "strictly tentative." The lobby has one perm anent dis play — a 35-foot-long mosasaur found near Onion Creek in 1936. This 70-million-year-old swimming lizard has become som ew hat of a trademark of the museum. Tem po rary and travelling displays are set up around it. The lobby currently features mammoth and mastodon bones unearthed at a downtown Austin construction site last winter. The walls are lined with photos of ancient plant and insect parts found at the site, such as the upper lip of a centipede and the eyes of a jum ping spider. O ther special displays are planned in honor of the Sesquicen tennial and the m useum 's 50th an niversary. For example, an exhibit of 21 Texas quilts, featuring a spe cially com m issioned Sesquicenten nial Quilt by Beth Kennedy, opened Feb. 16. A nother sesquicentennial display will include selections from the Pinch Mineralogical M useum , one of the largest private mineral collec tions in the nation. In Septem ber the museum will present Treasures o f the Texas Memorial Museum, which will include several items never before exhibited. But the bulk of the m useum 's ex hibits are sem i-perm anent displays. The first floor features geology and paleontology. The third floor fo cuses on natural history, with diora mas show casing Texas wildlife in natural settings. The fourth floor traces the anthropology of Texas and North America with displays of pottery, clothing and everyday items. Staff members have begun updat ing the displays. The size of the m u seum , compared to the size of the staff, makes the process a slow one, Denton said. The m useum 's $750,(XX) budget covers 35 perm anent staff m embers, plus several part-time workers. It is funded by the University through legislative appropriations. Although the collection covers all areas of natural history, the dino saur displays steal the show. "T h e children were intrigued by the Tyrannosaurus Rex. They were awed by the size of it," said Kay Halm, a first grade teacher at Hyde Park Baptist School. "O h , they just talked about and carried on about it the whole tim e." Texas Memorial M useum ow ns a section of the w orld's most famous fossil tracks, which were identified in 1939 in the Paluxy River near Glen Rose. The dinosaur footprints are the first known to science, recording a chase which occurred approximately 105 million years ago in a tidal pool 50 miles southw est of today's Fort Worth. Apparently, a two-legged meat-eater followed a brontosaur-like dinosaur, but the result of the chase is not known. In 1940, blocks of the tracks were re moved — one set is housed in a small building next to the Texas M e morial Museum, the other in New York's American M useum of Natu ral History. More dinosaurs and ancient skeletons are on display on the mu seum 's first floor. A typical visitor will hear the com m ents of young families and couples echoing throughout the museum. In any given room, at any given time, at least two parents are reading the in scriptions accom panying each ex hibit to their children. The remains of a saber-toothed cat greet visitors to the prehistorical skeletons display area. A boy scrunches his nose at the cat and at a nearby sloth. He is equally dis pleased by the five-foot shell of a Glyptodon, a heavily armored rela tive of the armadillo. A Typothorax skeleton found in Howard County sits nearby, looking like an eight- foot-long hom ed toad. "It'd be scary to be in here all alo n e ," one boy tells his mother. A parent stutters his way through "croto steata" and laughs; turning toward the cast of a huge dinosaur skull, he confidently pronounces "tyran n o sau r." O ne family leaves the prehistori cal fossils room, heading for a meteor display. Nearby, a 12-year- old sits on a petrified log. "M e te o rs," reads a father. "M eat-eaters," repeats his 6-year- old daughter, obviously im pressed by the dinosaurs. W hen that family moves on, an other w anders up. Leaning against the glass, the little girl reads, "m eteo rs and co m ets." Her younger sister arrives and peers through the glass. As she walks away, she repeats "m eteo rs and cosm its" over and over, not w ant ing to forget the proper nam es. In an adjoining room, several children stand in front of a display of cut gem s. "D iam o n d s," explains one child. The other children re spond with awed "o o o h s ." A ctual ly, except for a few tiny stones, the only diam onds in the room are rough, uncut rocks in a different case; nevertheless, the children move around the room labeling eve ry clear stone a "d iam o n d ." The third floor features the natu ral wildlife of Texas, including birds, reptiles and m am m als. It in cludes the "N ight Sh ift" display of nocturnal animals. A father carrying a small girl swings open the saloon doors and enters the room. "O o o h , Jill, w hat do you see? Do you see the flying squirrel?" he asks. Jill is delighted. The two proceed around the room, the father m arking each stop with "O o o h , a (nam e of ani m al)." According to museum staffers and visitors, "N ight Sh ift" follows only the dinosaurs in popularity. "T h e children really like going in that little dark ro o m ," said Doris Ploeger, a first grade teacher from Carlos Moreno/Daily Texan Staff Valley View Elem entary w ho has been bringing her classes to the m u seum for five years. Robert M artin, director of the Texas Natural History Laboratory, designed the display. Keeping the animals in a separate, darkened area enhances audience involve ment, he said. The fourth floor houses Indian lore, including a substantial display of Peruvian pottery dating back to before Colum bus' arrival. Navaho sand paintings feature images of Navaho healing figures, created by arranging colored sand under glass. C lothes and w eapons show the life styles of North American Indians. A group of boys huddles over an arrowhead display. "H ey , isn't that just like the one you found?" one asks. O ther groups exam ine a set of Apache playing cards and an Eski mo suit made of salmon skin. Dow nstairs, near the entrance, is a gift shop. Children stopTiy on the way out to ask for diamonds. "W e don't have d iam on d s," said gift shop m anager Ruth Baker. "B u t I point them to the quartz, and it kind of looks like diam onds, so they're h ap p y ." W hat does one give a museum celebrating three ways all at once — its oVvn anniversary, Texas' anniver sary and Texas through time? Ac cording to assistant curator Cheri Wolfe, the m useum w ants to en courage Texans to strengthen the collection by donating Texas heir looms to the m useum for safekeep ing. WLtf' iA TU flf i 17 DIFFERENT DIAL PLATE DESIGNS. COLORED HANDS BLUE, RED, AND YELLOW ¡y BALL SHAPED STEMWINDER WITH RED LACQUERED FINISH. RUBBER, DURABLE RIBBED WATCHBAND WITH HEAVY DUTY SNAP. METAL WATER RESISTANT WATCHCASE WITH BLACK LACQUERED MAT FINISH AND A HIGH QUALITY QUARTZ MOVEMENT. 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BOX 4 9 m AUSTIN, IX . 7S765-933* ORDER FORM NAME ADDRESS CITY-------------------------------- Endowed: □ Chock -STATE □ Monoy Order .ZIP MODEL NUMBER _______ QUANTITY PRICE ($32.0000*) •Fitee inoRidw loxAdMkMV RoMik, you'io akoody latei Say » before If* too late and remember, ietter late lhan neverl . - " „ - Flying Mlghl Yet . a Victor Hugo really | IBM BM BpraB M M «ala it it. omckn 1816 Century Tribal numbers. ^ the 10016 anniversary c » » 0 « » h o ( v > c i « h u b o of Ih t 20th Csotufy Jewish Klofc The hands turn In N you really need a translation here It Is “talk to me of love, please!" > #6 New duo leads UT to title By STAN ROBERTS Daily Texan Staff After watching the Texas swim ming and diving team come from behind to win its fifth and sixth con secutive Southwest Conference meet championships in 1984 and 1985, Longhorn swimming coach Eddie Reese decided to make his job easier. He recruited Andy Gill and Brian Cisna. ‘We’re going to be ret I g od at the NCAAs.’ —Eddie Reese, UT men’s swim coach Freshman Gill won three individ ual events and freshman Cisna two more as Texas steadily increased its lead from Thursday's beginning to Saturday's ending to win its sev enth conference title in a row. The Longhorns won 14 of 16 swimming events in the Texas Swimming Cen ter to outdistance SMU, 973-702. Cisna set SWC records in both the 1,650-yard freestyle Saturday and the 500 freestyle Thursday. Gill be came the first freshman to win three events since Steve Lundquist of SMU accomplished the same in 1979. In addition, Gill swam legs in two winning relay events, and Cisna did so in one. "I'd like to keep recruiting people like Cisna and Gill," Reese said. "They make it a lot of fun. But I was a little bit worried about us winning so easily because it's a little easier to keep it up when you have to fight somebody for it." But despite carrying a 146-point lead into Saturday's six events, the Longhorns just kept swimming bet ter. Cisna started the night by better ing the SWC record in the 1,650 freestyle by almost 11 seconds, and Texas swimmers went on to win the other five events. Gill finished first in the 200 back stroke, and seniors Asa Lawrence, Ken Flaherty and Rick May won the 100 freestyle, 200 butterfly and 200 b reaststro k e. The Longhorns capped the meet by winning the 400 freestyle relay. Both Gill and Cisna said they were surprised by their performanc es. "I was planning to come in and just challenge for the 200 back stroke," said Gill, who is from Oviedo, Fla. "It (the three first-place finishes) is quite a history." "N o, I wasn't expecting to do what I did at all," said Cisna, who is from Williamsville, 111. "I was hop ing to swim a 4:24 or 4:23 in the 500 and a 15:10 in the 1,650." Instead, Cisna swam a 4:20.28 and a 15:02.46. Times like those lead an optimis tic Reese to expect further success at the NCAA meet April 3-5 in Indian apolis. After all, his teams have fin ished no lower than third in the NCAAs the last six years, and rarely has Texas entered the meet on such a roll. "W e're going to be real good at the NCAAs," he said. "I'm pleased with where we are. I feel we have a lot of fast times left in us." sports Texas’ red-hot shooting spells doom for Missouri By ED SHUGERT Daily Texan Staff Texas picked an ideal time to make three-fourths of its field-goal attempts, as the Longhorns blasted Missouri, 108-67, in an NCAA sec ond-round game Friday the Frank C. Erwin Jr. Special Events Center. in The Longhorns, who drew a bye in the first round, found open shots inside the lane time after time to post their second-best shooting per centage ever. Their 75 percent accu racy ranks second to the 77.9 per cent Texas shot against Miami, Fla., earlier this season. Missouri, playing a loose zone most of the game, discovered why opponents have usually played tight, sagging zones against the Longhorns. But Missouri Coach Joann Rutherford would not say the Tigers should have played top-ranked Tex as differently — just better. "Every coach wonders how to beat Texas," Rutherford said. "But no one's been able to figure it out yet. We just needed to shoot better and play more aggressively on de fense." Texas' hot shooting took aw ay perhaps the strongest part of the rebounding. Tigers' defense — Tickets to the Midwest Regional may be purchased at the Frank C. Erwin Jr. Special Events Center or at any UT-Ticket Master outlet be ginning at 1 0 a.m. Monday. Three- game packages are $12 for stu d e n ts, citizen s and corporations and $16 for all others. Ten tickets or more may be pur chased for $8 apiece. Single-game tickets may not be purchased until Thursday. sen io r M issouri w as averaging 43.1 re boun d s per gam e but only pulled d ow n 30, with just 12 of those co m ing on m issed Texas shots. T he L on ghorns, 30-0, will face O klahom a, an 86-67 w inner over Vanderbilt on Sun d ay, in the Mid w est Regional at 7 p .m . Thursday in the Erw in cen ter. M issouri finished 20- 12. T exas streaked to a 17-1 lead in the first 5:05 of the g am e, let its lead dw indle to 12 points by halftime and then blasted off in the second half by scoring on 30 of its first 32 possession s. The victory gave the L on gh orn s their eighth 30-w in sea son in 10 years. "I gu ess you saw tw o or three to n ig h t," Texas "W e Jody C onradt said. g am es out C oach there started out like a h o u s e o f fire and played intense for the first seven or just s o easy eight minutes, early, we lost ou r p a tie n c e ." it w a s Missouri m ad e a d efensive a d ju stm e n t after that early Texas streak and worked its way back to pull within eight points at 26-18 with 5:57 to go in the first period. By the halt, the L o n g h o rn s had built the lead back to 42-30. tho ug h, I "W e ca m e out cold, then c a m e back and th o u g h t o u r players k new what it would take to stay with t h e m ," Rutherford said " B u t Texas is a team that can take you out of a gam e very q u ick ly ." Missouri called a tim eout after a Fran Harris u n d er-the-backb oard , left-handed layup made the score 49-32 early in the second half T h e Tigers th e m se lv es from that point but could not slow the Longhorns. scored better Harris and Clarissa Davis led T e x as scorers with 24 and 21 points, re spectively. A n nette Sm ith (16), B ev erly William s (13) and H em phill (13) also scored in dou ble figures. T he 6-1, 160-pound Kelly led all scorers with 28 points but did not hit a field goal until alm ost m idw ay th rough the first half. Texas’ Yulonda WJmbish attempts to block the pass of Missouri's Lisa Efts. Kelly Pace/Daily Texan Staff Texas allows eight runs, wins by 13 over SW La. By HOWARD DECKER Daily Texan Staff After splitting two games with unranked Southwestern Louisiana Friday and Saturday, top- ranked Texas Longhorns Sunday busted loose for 18 hits in a 21-8 vic tory that took more three hours to play. than the Texas' 21-run outpour, the most the Longhorns' 26-6 runs since thrashing of Maine on March 9, 1984, was fueled by home runs from third baseman Jay Searcy, left field er Eric Koenig and first baseman Bobby Behnsch, whose 425-foot blast flew over the 20-foot green monster in center field. In all, nine of 16 Longhorns who played had at least one RBI and scored at least one run off seven Ca jun pitchers, and Texas still man aged to strand 12 base runners. Mark Petkovsek went 7Y.i innings to raise his record to 5-0. Glenn An three derson (2-3), who lasted batters, suffered the loss. "I think it was pretty important to get a two-out-of-three break in the series," Texas Coach Cliff Gustaf son said. "I don't think it would look good if they took us two out of three." For the first two games of the se ries, Southw estern Louisiana looked nothing like the 13-17 team that came to Disch-Falk Field Fri day. In their first-ever game against a No. 1 team, the Cajuns handed Tex as its first loss in 14 games. Winning pitcher Xavier Hernandez (4-2) threw his fourth complete game of the year. He scattered 10 hits and struck out seven in Southwestern Louisiana's 7-5 victory. Texas took a 4-2 lead as a result of homers by Searcy, designated hitter Kevin Gamer and second baseman Todd Haney. But the Longhorns lost the lead and the game in the seventh. Starting pitcher C u rt Krippner w as relieved by W ad e Phillips with no ou ts after he gave up tw o con secutive singles. Phillips let in four runs to give the C ajuns a 6-4 lead. In the eighth, the C aju ns hit three con secu tive singles and scored their final run of the con test. Texas a t tem pted a rally in the ninth but m an aged just one run. "Ph illip s w as terrib le," G ustafson said Friday. "K rip p n er d id n 't have a very good night, but still, he pitched well enough to win if Phil lips co m es in and does his jo b ." "I d o n 't think I w as m entally pre p ared for it," Phillips (1-1) said Fri d ay. "E v ery th in g w as going their w ay, an d I just co u ld n 't throw a g oo d pitch. I d on 't k n o w ." S econ d -y ear S outhw estern Loui siana C oach Gene Shell took a m ost hum ble attitude after the victory. "O n e gam e is n ot going to make o u r s e a s o n ," Shell said. " W e really See Baseball, page 12 Texas’ Todd Haney realizes catcher’s throw is headed for center field. Carlos Moreno/Daily Texan Staff UT women finish 2nd, men 5th at NCAA Indoors By D.J. WHITLOCK Special to the Texan OKLAHOMA CITY — The Texas women's track and field team placed second in the NCAA Indoor Track Championships this past Friday and Saturday for the second year in a row. Alabama accumulated 41 points to Tex as' 31. Arkansas won the men's NCAA indoor title for the third consecutive year. Although the Longhorns were picked by many to win the 1986 women's title at the Myriad Center, their runner-up finish was not, according to second-year coach Terry Crawford, a terrible disappointment. "Last year, we took second place somewhat by surprise, so this year we came in battling and wf knew we could be a top three team ," Crawford said. With only two seniors traveling to Oklaho ma City, the tender age of the Texas team made this year7s NCAAs a valuable learning tool. "We are considered a growing team right now, and although you always have to want to win, this proved to be a learning exp eri ence that will make them a better team," Crawford said. The Longhorns' 3,200-meter relay team failed to score points in their event, yet fresh men Laura McCloy, Eileen Ellig, Julie John son and sophomore Mimi King now have an NCAA championship meet under their belts and plenty of time remaining to leave their mark. Another sophomore, Mary Bouldin, made the finals in the 55-meter dash and gave Texas its first point with her 6.89-second time, good v for a sixth-place finish. Terri Turner, a senior, pulled double duty as she placed second in the triple jum p with a leap of 43-2V2, and also ran the first split of the 1,600 relay. T urner w as alw ays easy to spot on the track with h er head phones p erm an en tly in place. Eddie M u rp hy's "P a rty All The T im e" provid ed the w arm -u p background prior to T urner's secon d-p lace effort in the triple jum p. Stan dou t sophom ore Karol D avidson h an d ed Texas a runaw ay first-place finish in her even t, the 1,000-m eter run. Junior 3,000-m eter ru n n er Liz Natale gave the L on ghorns four team points as she placed fourth in her race late S aturday night. In the 1,600 relay, seniors T urner and Juliet C uthb ert and freshm en Leslie H ardison and Barbara Flow ers set a m eet record in their p re !------- liminary heat with a time of 3:36.59. In the finals they beat that time with a 3 :3 5 .4 6 , vet they placed ju st second to T e n n e s s e e , w hich finished in a new N C A A meet record 3:34.19. The finish mav be considered d isappoint- ing for Texas 1,600 relay team b eca u se a c o u ple of w e e k s ago it had set a world record in the event. Th e four were out to av e n g e a sixth-place finish in last vear's m eet cau sed by an u n tim ely fall in the finals w hen the te am was, again, picked to win. Th e T e xas m e n finished with a best-ever fifth-place finish utilizing only five athletes. High ju m p e r Jam es Lott cleared 7-5 to take the m e n 's title, and Eric M etcalf took third in the long ju m p with his only clean ju m p of 25- 10V4 . Jo h n Patterson took fifth in the 55-m eter d ash to add to the Texas team totals. w l l l v 1 l u i a i a . Navy upsets Syracuse to highlight ‘Day of the Underdog’ Associated Press MEN East David Robinson scored 35 points, grabbed 11 rebounds and blocked seven shots as Navy upset Syracuse, 97-85, Sunday in a sec ond-round game of the NCAA East Regional basketball tournament. Robinson, a 61 percent foul shooter going into the game, hit 21 of 27 free throws. Navy was 41 of 52 from the foul line as it boosted its record to 29-4. Dwayne "Pearl" Washingon led Syracuse, 26-6, with 28 points. Cleveland St. 75, St. Joe’s 69 Cleveland State, which had upset Indiana, got 23 points from Ken McFadden, 17 from Clinton Ransey and 16 from Clinton Smith in win ning the battle of unranked teams. St. Joseph's, 26-6, took a 32-28 lead on two jumpers by Geoff Ar nold, but Cleveland State, 29-3, fought back for a 46-42 lead and then pulled away. Saturday's survivors: Duke, De- Paul. Southeast Alabama 58, Illinois 56 terry Coner's 12-foot shot from just inside the foul line at the buzzer was the winner for the Crimson Tide, who had blown a 13-point halftime lead. Buck Johnson's block Texas men play at Ohio State Ohio State Friday night earned the right to host Texas in a sec ond-round National Invitation Tournament game with a 65-62 victory over Ohio University. The 15-14 Buckeyes will host the 19-12 Longhorns at 6:30 p.m. Monday at St. John Arena (Radio: KVET-AM 1300). Ohio State, which finished sev enth in the Big Ten, features 7-0 center Brad Sellers, one of the country's top rebounders at 13.2 per game. Ohio State Coach Eldon Miller was fired Feb. 3 but is coaching the team through the tournament. Texas Coach Bob Weltlich earlier this season was rumored to be heading to Ohio State, his alma mater, after the season, but the Buckeyes filled the void Friday by hiring Gary Williams from Boston College. If Texas, which won its first- round game at New Mexico Thursday, were to beat Ohio State, it probably would have to play its third-round game on the road as well. The third-round games will be Thursday and Fri day, and the Frank C. Erwin Jr. Special Events Center is hosting the NCAA women's Midwest Re gional Thursday and Saturday. of a baseline attempt by Efrem Winters with 26 seconds remaining set up the winning goal for Ala bama, 24-8. Illinois dosed at 22-10. Kentucky 71, W. K. 64 Kenny Walker hit on all 11 of his field-goal attempts and scored 32 points, pacing third-ranked Kentuc ky, 31-3, to its 13th consecutive win in only the second meeting between the two schools. Saturday's survivors: Georgia Tech, LSU. Midwest Iowa St. 72, Michigan 69 Jeff Grayer scored 16 points and Ron Virgil added 14 as Iowa State built an 11-point lead and held on to oust No. 5 Michigan, the second seed in the Midwest, which finished 28-5. The Cyclones, 22-10 and runners-up in the Big Eight, are coached by Johnny Orr, who led Michigan to the Final Four in 1976. N.C. State 80, Ark. L.R. 66 Ernie Myers scored all six of his points in the second overtime, in cluding a 15-foot jump shot that put North Carolina State ahead to stay in another game between unranked teams. The Wolfpack finished 20-12, the Trojans 23-11. Saturday's survivors: Michigan State, Kansas. West Auburn 81; St. John’s 65 The fourth-ranked Redmen couldn't handle powerful Auburn on the boards, especially Chuck Person, who scored 27 points and pulled down 15 rebounds. The Tigers, 21-10, had 39 rebounds to only 22 for St. John's, 31-5. St. John's All-America Walter Ber ry had 20 points, but just four in the second half. UNLV 80, Maryland 74 The Uth-ranked Runnin' Rebels, 33-4, were led by Anthony Jones, who was held to one point in the opening 15:27 of play. Jones, the PC A A Player of the Year, scored 17 of his 25 points in the second half, however. Two keys to UNLV's victory were its low total of turnovers, just four, and its 40-36 advantage in rebound ing. Maryland finished 19-14. Saturday's survivors: Louisville, North Carolina. WOMEN______________ Fifteen of the top 16 seeds ad vanced to regional semifinals, as James Madison was the lone under dog survivor. Southwest Confer ence runner-up Texas Tech almost upset the West's No. 3 seed, Long See Dog day, page 12 David Robinson of Navy was haad and shoulders ovar Syracrusa Sunday. 1 age 12/The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17,1986 I ' S / i w / s 24th & San Antonio Open Every Might UwlilhaO O p e n 1 1 O O a m M o n - S a t O p e n S u n 3 : 0 0 p m H a p p y H o u r M o n - F r i 5 - 7 BICYCLES A ustin’s Largest Selection o f Quality Bicycles! m iy a t a cannondale SPECIALIZED 7 m *1986 Centurion Ironman and Nishiki International now in stock! 2404 San Gabriel 477-6846 UT golfers do well Baseball in Mexican tourney Continued from page 11 By SCHUYLER DIXON Daily Texan Staff The Texas men's golf team estab lished itself as one of the best in the country with its performance over the weekend at the Rafael Alarcon Intercollegiate in Guadalajara, Mexi co. The Longhorns finished second behind Oklahoma State in a field that featured 11 Top 20 teams. The Cowboys tallied a 25-under-par to tal of 839 for the three-day tourney, three shots better than Texas. The Texas A&M Aggies finished third with an 846 total followed by highly ranked Wake Forest at 854. Round ing out the top 10 finishers were LSU, Arkansas, Arizona State, Ok lahoma, BYU and Lamar. Individually, the Longhorns were led by Todd Franks, Bob Estes and Blair Manasse, who all finished in a tie for fifth overall with 6-under-par totals of 210. Chris Kite of Wake Forest won medalist honors with a 10-under 206. Wrapping up the Longhorn entries for the week were Kyle Coody at 215, Brian Nelson at 219 and Paul Earnest at 226. Head Coach Jimmy Clayton stressed the strength of the week's field when referring to his team's play. "This was probably the strongest field we've faced this year, and it will probably be the strongest until the NCAAs," he said. "I was very pleased with our team's play," he added. "We would have liked to have won the tourna ment, but considering the strength of the field, I think our team is play ing good." didn't hurt anybody. This loss shouldn't hurt him (Gustafson) at all. "His kids don't have to worry about losing to us because they've got a good chance to go to the Col lege World Series. Our kids are trying to build a program. Now, our guys can say, 'Hey, we really did beat Texas.' And I think we really did beat Texas. "I would have to say that if we played Texas a three- or five-game series to see who goes to the Col lege World Series, I'm afraid we'd come out on the short end o f the stick." The Longhorns bounced back Sat urday and won, 3-2, behind Daniel Pena's second consecutive complete game. Pena (5-1) struck out a sea son-high 10, walked three and gave up only four hits. "I think this game is building my confidence a lot," Pena said. "Usu ally I'm out in the later innings, but tonight he was able to leave me in and I really like that." Texas needed all of Pena's out standing performance as the Long themselves. horns were four-hit Four Cajun hurlers combined to strike out 10, and they allowed only 10 Texas baserunners. Merv Wau- kau (2-2) took the loss. Had it not been for shortstop Ran dy Robicheaux's seventh-inning throwing error that allowed the winning run to score, the outcome might have been different. In fact, had Southwestern Louisi ana not run out of pitching strength Sunday, the Cajuns could have swept the series. "Their real team showed up to day (Sunday)," Shell said. "We ran out of pitchers. I think that game was played like it should have been played. Those (Texas) guys can hit. I really felt they were a little flat the first two games." Southwestern Louisiana may have caught Texas in a lull during the first two games, but the Long horns were surprised that a team with a losing record played them so close for two days. "They're a good team," said Sear cy, who went 6-for-10 with two home runs and six RBI in the series. "I think they have a better team than their 14-19 record. Their pitch ing was pretty salty. We were hav ing to fight for runs (before Sun day)." "They've played as tough as any body we've played this year," Gus tafson said. "1 think they're a pretty good little team." Top-ranked Texas (24-4) and Southwestern Louisiana went their separate ways Sunday and probably won't meet again this season. But for two games in a long season, rankings and records didn't matter, and the Cajuns found out they could play with the best team in the country. Longhorn Notes: Regular left fielder Doug Hodo slightly pulled his left hamstring muscle Saturday and did not play Sunday. Gustaf son said Hodo will miss Monday's 5 p.m. double-header against Manka to State but may return Friday when the Longhorns begin Southwest Conference play hosting Arkansas ... Searcy has hit five home runs in the last eight games and leads the team with 42 RBI. Twenty of his 30 hits this year have been for extra bases ... Greg Swindell and Rusty Richards will start Monday's games for Texas. Dog day Continued from page 11 Beach State, but fell to the 49ers, 78- 73 in overtime Saturday night. In the East: James Madison 71, Virginia 62; Western Kentucky 74, St. Joseph's 64; Penn State 63, North Medical Hair Center provides Total Hair Restoration As Seen on “20/20” And Replacements Park St. David Prof. Bldg. 800 E. 30th at Red River Suite 210 472-6777 We care - We can help IMMIGRATION Permanent Visas Relative Petitions Labor Certifications Naturalizations Adjustment of Status Consular Processing Asylum H, Work Visas PAUL PARSONS pc Attorney at Law < BOARD CERTIFIED • IMMIGRATION 5 NATIONALITY LAW • TEXAS BOARD OF LEGAL SPECIALIZATION 704 Rio Grande 477-7887 Carolina State 59; and Rutgers 85, Villanova 58. In the Mideast: Georgia 103, Illi nois 64; Tennessee 73, Iowa 68; Ohio State 87, Maryland 71; and LSU 78, Middle Tennessee State 65. In the Midwest: Texas 108, Miss ouri 67; Oklahoma 86, Vanderbilt 67; Auburn 61, Illinois 39; and Mis sissippi 84, Drake 71. In the West: USC 81, Montana 50; North Carolina 82, UNLV 76; Long Beach State 78, Texas Tech 73; and Louisiana Tech 79, Washington 54. More Sports, page 18 ★ * ★ * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ V U A R N E T & R A Y -1 IN SUNGLASSES OVER 30% OFF THE SUNGLASS CONNECTION 451-7198 ★ ★ ★ + ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ WISDOM TEETH Moles — Do you need the remov al of an impacted wisdom tooth? You may be eligible to participate in a clinical study to evaluate the effectiveness of a new investiga tional medication. FINANCIAL INCENTIVE For more info please call 451-0411 M-F 8:30-4:30 BttMIMCAL RESEARCH M OW , INC CLASSES BEGINNING NOW DAY OR NIGHT SESSIONS AVAILABLE I N T K N S I Y K E N G L I S H * 1A « A N G L A I S I N T K N S I F I N G L K S I N T L N S I V O • NINI LEVEL COMPREHENSIVE COU SE • SMALL CLASSES, INDIVIDUAL ATTCNTION • NEW LEVEL EVERY 4 WEEKS • AUTHORIZED UNDER FEDERAL LAW TO EN R O U NON-IMMIGRANT ALIEN STUDENTS (1-20 FORM) DURHAM-NIXON-CLAY COLLEGE 119 W. 8th at Colorado 478-1602 Ba c h e l o r s & M a st er s c a p s & GOWNS ORDER NOW March 17 thru April 11 B ach elo rs $18.85 M astors $35.00 DEADLINE APRIL 11 UNIVERSITY CO-OP H SPO R T S STO P • U PPE R LEVEL H i 2246 G u a d a lu p e P h o n e 476-7211 F re e P a rk in g 23rd & S a n A nto n io w $3 P u rc h a s e MasterCard “Robert Frost: Fire and Ice” “Robert Frost Lives A gain ... in the Magnificent, Witty, Heartwarming Arthur Peterson.” Joyce Hauser — WNBC-RADIO Starring Arthur Peterson (The M ajor’ on TV’s SOAP) March 1 9 ,1 9 8 6 8 pm , H ogg Auditorium $ 8 .5 0 UT ID /$10 public Co-sponsored by the Texas Union Arts & Humanities and Cultural Entertainment Committees. S p E C IA l o f t N e %% / i m w ^ m " ( jh u s u a t e y e w e a r t o r w e n t h e mosfdWlncWvetosl «. Glasses duplicated or doctors pwtcripfiomoccurotolyflllod. Bum*tat183 Ooseoods Center 452-0930 36maj*ftemon Jeftetson Squat* 451-1213 S g a j g Fc Optical (b. UNIVERSITY CO-OP General Books • Upper Level mmmm Phone 476-7211 M M SM !! P afk iin 23rd A Sen Antonio w S3 PurchaseMHBw B H I 2248 Guadalupe j g O B 1 | l «Hirgers PEPSI Super-Bert 2 QUARTER POUNDER "On Whole Wheat" ■ ■ ■ ■ c o u p o n REDEEMED IN STORE ONLY i'm w 3 n *La m a r e 452-2317 * i ^ i Ii h I I NSBtFMBOOL When you need copies quickly and hassle-free, see us at Kinkofc. Our self- service copiers are very easy to use and give you the great quality, inexpensive copies you expect. kinkoT 2200 Guadalupe 476-4654 2913 Medteai Arts 476-3242 arts & entertainmen Paramount features comid view of Bert Parks’ domain Charlotte spins depression By DANA TREVAS Daily Texan Staff I didn't cry during Bambi. Gen erally, I don't like to emote during public performances. I almost cried during An Officer and a Gen tleman, but that was only because I couldn't bear watching Richard Gere with a crew cut. For more virtuous reasons, I almost cried the UT Drama Depart- \ during ment's production of Charlotte's ) Web. As animal stories go, Charlotte's ¡ Web ranks in popularity close to such old faves as Black Beauty, ~ Lassie and OI' Yeller. E.B. White's story involves a humble pig named Wilbur and a valiant spider named Charlotte who befriends him. Basically, it's light tragedy with a happy ending for the kid dies. Robert Schmidt designed an in teresting set with lowering back- v drops that created the effect of a spacious bam. All of the set props were oversized so that the whole production was seen from an ani mal's — and a child's — perspec tive. Even the adult characters wore stiltlike devices under their costumes, making them about 2 - feet taller than the animals and children. Costume designer Theresa Pur cell's creativity also added to the production with her unique ani mal costumes. Charlotte's costume (although it looked slightly un comfortable) deserves praise for its intricate design, which gave ac tress Marinell Madden the miracu lous ability to appear attractive in a torso-concealing outfit resembling the Fruit of the Loom Guys' attire. Wilbur's costume — a baroque pink-and-cream-paisley long coat and knee-length pants with lace — came as a refreshing surprise to the audience. But despite a hat complete with pig ears, he looked more like a long-lost Musketeer. Without employing any espe cially unusual techniques, director Coleman Jennings did a good job with the difficult task of keeping the attention of a very young audi- CALL 471-5244 TO PLACI A CLASSIFIED AD River City winner: satirical, scathing ‘Miss Firecracker’ By DEBORAH KELT Daily Texan Staff Beauty pageants just aren't what they used to be. First, they can Bert Parks for growing some gray hair, and then Vanessa you-know-who gets the boot for some kinky shots in Penthouse. To say the least, things have changed in that won derfully wacky world of bathing- suit competitions and rhinestone crowns. But luckily, playwright Beth Hen ley seems determined to have a little fun with this American institution before it completely crumbles. Her award-winning play, The Miss Fire cracker Contest, is a hilarious look at one girl's attempt to win the an nual beauty contest held every Fourth of July in her hometown of Brookhaven, Miss. Performed by Houston's Alley Theater, the play last Friday at the Paramount proved to be as sweet as Miss Texas' smile. The girl with the big goal is Car- nelle Scott. Wanting desperately to lose her not-so-ladylike nickname of "Miss Hot Tamale," Camelle strug gles to win the local contest and leave Brookhaven in a "blaze of crimson glory." With fierce determi nation, Camelle dyes her hair bright red and works up a show stopper — a tap-dancing, baton-twirling rou tine to The Star Spangled Banner. To add to all the hilarity, Henley brings in characters like Delmount, a former mental patient who has a thing for dead dogs on the side walks, and Popeye Jackson, a wom an who sews outfits for frogs be cause she "didn't have no dolls." These zany characters have helped earn Henley her reputation as a comedic playwright, and got Miss Firecracker named one of the Ten Best Plays of 1983-84. In an in terview with The Houston Chroni cle, Henley described her comic ap proach to theater: "I don't say that viewing everything comically is the best way, it's just my way; my point of view. I was brought up to feel that it's self-indulgent to take your self or your problems too serious ly." Apparently, Henley's point of view makes for succesful theatrical productions. In 1980, Henley's first play, Crimes of the Heart, won both the Pulitzer Prize and the New York Drama Clitics Award. Crimes fo cuses on three sisters in Mississippi who have come together after one shoots her husband. ("I just didn't like his stinkin' looks!" she claims.) One sister works in a dog-food fac tory, and one unfortunate sibling can't get a husband because of her shrunken ovaries. The black come dy had a succesful run on Broad way, and will soon be made into a movie featuring Diane Keaton, Jes sica Lange, and Sissy Spacek. The Alley Theater did Henley's hysterical characters justice in Miss Firecracker, making for a delightful ly funny evening. Cynthia Gorman convincingly portrayed Carnelle's beauty pageant plight, while Kristin lilustration by Frank K ozic Wilbur’s Ufe gives Charlotte’s death meaning. Whoa, heavy dude. ence. Pratfalls and a chase scene helped in volved. to keep the kiddies H olden H ansen, w ho alternates w ith Joe R eynolds in the role of W ilbur, certainly m ade a good, piglike im pression. His grun ts, squeals, and aw kw ard pig m ove m ents w ere prim arily responsible for m aintain ing th e sh o w 's pace. M arinell M ad den , w ho alternates w ith K athy T rageser in the role of C harlotte, played an arresting ara chnid so valiant and endearing that sh e 's m ade it h ard for m e to im agine ever ruthlessly squishing an o th er sp id er in th e attic. The geese, (K athy T rageser and Joe R eynolds) did ou tstan d in g ly well w ith enthusiastic honks. A special m ention goes to the Jody W assel, as T em pleton their noisy, Rat, for a great perform an ce as a despicably ratlike rat. that p erform ance So w hat w as it a b o u t this love able alm ost m ade me cry? E.B. W hite's alm ost dep ressin g ly sober, subtle in sin u a tions ab o u t o n e 's ow n m ortality strike a d eep chord w hen you real ize that they are aim ed at sm all children. W hen C harlotte m u tters on her d eathbed — or d eath w eb — that "w e 're born, w e live a lit tle, then we d ie ," you can't help but detect a cynical sense of p u r poselessness C harlotte explains that sacrificing herself to save W il b u r's life m ade her ow n existence w orthw hile. W hen think about the fact that m ost of us will probably never do an y th in g as noble as saving a life, life itself does seem sort of useless. you M a c P r o d u c t s TV W e Reaiiy Know Your M ac S on y Disks K o d a k Disks Double Sided 25.50 18.90 512-1024k U p g ra d e $ 2 8 ! Box oM O 128-512k U p g r a d e $ 1 4 9 ¡ oo™ 4 7 3 -2 6 0 4 2200 Guada.upe ste.216 above Kinkos on the drac e s M m 3 24th & San Antonio Open Every NIgM UnM IM O p e n 11:0 0 am M o n -S a t O p e n Su n 3 :0 0pm H a p p y H o u r M o n -F ri 5-7 Illustration by Frank Kozik Humor explodes in Beth Henley’s wacky play about a beauty pageant. ingly tunny. In the same Chronicle interview, Henley acknowleged her Southern roots and influences. "I don't think it's a bad thing to be a Southern w riter," stated, "though I don't know that every thing I write will always be about the South." Regardless of what Henley writes about next, it's sure to bring a smile to even old Bert Parks' unemployed face. she ^ H E A T E R _ Norton as Popeye gave a solid per- fomance as Carnelle's bug-eyed buddy. The Alley's professionalism was apparent throughout the show, making their first dramatic tour a success. Miss Firecracker puts another su ccessful play under Beth Henley's belt. Her somewhat Warped view of the South makes for fine comedy, as seen in both Miss Firecracker and her previous play, Crimes o f the Heart. Perhaps the fact that Henley herself was born and raised in Mis sissippi makes her plays so convine- Prepare for OF THE WEEK Chocolate Covered _ Raisins Educational Center TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Cambridge Tower AUSTIN: 1801 LAVACA 78701 472-8085 DALLAS: 11617 N. CINTRAL EXPWY 75243 d f * reg. price $7.00 lb. M O W $ 4 . 0 0 l b . U N I V E R S I T Y ( O O P I I I I I I ISA • > l \ l \ I I \ I I ' •• • •< . I I . . . r . . . k III u ........ . ......... I*I,..... I . I, . _> i i 8820 Burnet Rd. #407 Austin, Texas 78758 (512) 450-0807 A D a n C e l e b r a t i o n Event! jllllllllinM IIM IIM IIM IIIIIIM IIIM IIIM IIH IM IIH IIIIIM M IIM IH g I Roses Say It r ! 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(^harge-a-Ticket, 477-6060 Information 471-1444 Performing Arts Cantor College of Fine Arts Th e University of Texas at Austin O N SALE T O D A Y RESTAURANT • BAR Celebrate St. Patrick's Day March 17th $1.75 Magnum Margaritas $1.00 Green Beer All Day Long Fun-Prizes-Specials Open 1 lam-2 pm Daily 2313 Rio Grande 477-5001 9 Page 14/The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17,1986 C E L E B R A T E S T . P A T S D A Y W I T H T H E T A V E R N Featuring: The Urge from 5-7 pm on the Patio $ 1.75 Pints of Guiness $2.10 Irish Coffees Green B eer A ll Day Texas Urnon y THE CHURCH IN THE SOVIET UNION Presented by DR. BRUCE RIGDON Chairman, National Council of Churches Committee on US/USSR Church Relations MON., MARCH 17, NOON Eastwoods Room, Texas Union Sponsored by: United Campus Ministry of Austin CiNfMA W esT Bad Gi rl s « PART I I I also- F ir e s t o r m x V H S - B E T A R E N T A L S - S A La m General Cinema BARGAIN MATINEES-EVERYDAY AU SHOWS BEFORE 6PM $2.75 HIGHLAND MALL H IG H L A N D M A L I BLVD. 451-7326 The Color Purple im-i» M Sot 1 00 4 00 7 (XT 10 00 ____ __________ Sur rhua 1 00 400 8 00 Brazil » M Sat 710 4 50 7 JO 1610 Sur Thurt 210 4 508 15 CAPITAL PLA Z A 1-35 a t C A M E R O N RD. 452 - 7646 House i 106 3 15 525 7 35 <745 Highlander 1 2 ® 306 5 20 7 35 10 d 1(700 Out of Africa m 2 15 5 15 Í 15 $ 2 « o TW1 LITt SHOWS 4MATHUfS ■0* UT M l SHOWS M K M 5 « I is iM M o a n so M M itx o iw m U U IFCCMi fNGAfidMATS A M E R I C A N A 2700 HANCOC* DP (PG-13) < (St**.. $ 2 J4 ) ***. I » 15 c N O R T H C R O S S 6 . . . , . WO»TMC«0»« HANNAH AND HER SISTEBS [PG-13] taee-s^e-. sa.M>-7: ts-e.te »NOf»»OX 4 « “ *.( ' f/x m ft»** 4^».$aje»-7ii»-eje HOWLING II m CROSSROADS u ( I >45-5:1». PtfTTY IN HNK (PG-13) O iae*ae«. aue»-7»w-*i«s AURORA ENCOUNTER Put n*aO - M ft> M h M M A B A Q U A R I U S 4 r HOUSE» ( f c n t . w j e t . 7 i a e GUI HO (FG-13) (fcwt.wa6-7>4a HOWIINGN m m (fctfc>WJfc-7sM [MOMMY'S TUMSl m A n n # J 00 B A R G A IN P R IC E won ail shows iii i mi i r im ' MON THRU fRl SATURDAY & SUNOAY URST SHOW ONiYJ P r e t t y 1m P i n k
> C rtB s rs R d s a 3:30,7:30,0i30 W ild cats (PG-13) 3) IS, 7:30,0:30 A D a n C e l e b r a t i o n E v e n t ! S H A R I R D A N C E C O M P A N Y P R E S E N T S : S N A IK I I I D A N C I C O M P A N Y A N D ANNUAL PERFORMANCE * Suite, C hopin M ore Bits o f Bolling Bach • * * m m ® Saturday, March 22 8 pm Performing Arts Center Concert Hall $10, $8, $6 (Seniors and UTID $8, $8, $6) Tickets available at the PAC, Erwin Center and all UTTM TicketCenters Information: 471-1444 UTTM Charge-A-Ticket: 477-6060 B Performing Arts Center C ollege ot Fine Arts Th e University ot Texas at Austin O n Sa l e T o d a y BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE WANT ADS...471-5244 ••• 32 NEW LUXURY STUDENT CONDOMINIUMS 11 AM, SATURDAY APRIL 5TH AUSTIN, TEXAS Centennial * St. Thomas * O ld M ain 807 W. 25th Street Austin, Texas Thirty-two exclusive student residences with prestigious University of Texas west campus addresses w ill be auctioned. These condominiums represent the highest level of luxurious student living. For additional information and to receive the Auction Brochure call Auction Company of America Toll Free 1-800-643-0808. Auction Corppapy \ f \ of America l.Kvnst-d Real Estate Broker " A M E R I C A S #1 A U C T IO N T E A M W->J4 5-8300 Terms $10,000 deposit required dav of auction • 45 davs to close • 10'í Buyer's Premium Texas Real Estate Broker's License #303630-32 • Texas Auctioneer's Lie. #Tx5-03fi-071f> I he IV i n il s fi iTrrm >st < >(\'UUh hiinti me SHERRILL MILNES Sherrill Mtlnes h;\s polished the art of the baritone to a rare luster, sinking with magnificent style, flawless enunciation.” Washington Post April 5, 8 p.m. Tickets available at the Performing Arts Center Concert Hall P A C , Erwin Center, and Tickets: $15, $10, $5 all U T T M TicketCenters. C E C and Senior Citizens.: $10, $10, $5 Most people think that heart disease only happens in the elderly. Yet. ac cording to the Am erican Heart A ssociation, each ye ar alm ost 200,(XM) Am ericans die from heart and blood vessel diseases before age 65. ¿X 3 ^ DRIVE IN THEATRE 6 9 0 2 Burleson Rd. PH. 3 8 5 -7 2 1 7 REBEL ! COM ING I ANGELS 2 CXI j \ 7co1m1 >7g ~ o f 'a ñ q e ls ! | ^STARtT O PKN N IG H T LY 7:00 ^ O A D M. JMONP A Y ^ G H JJD N L Y J Charge-a-Ticket: 477-6060 Information: 471-1444 B Performing Arte Center College of Fine Arts The University of Texas at Austin O N S A I . F T O D A Y 474-43S1 fl — R o g e r t t> ert ! ' — ( i e n e S i n k e l The Official Stoi ; 4 THURSDAY (S:15fa <2.7517:30,9:45 AUSTIN 6 aT f^terEO 621 T H O M P S O N O F F 183 1 M IL E SO . of M O N T O P O L I8 Phone 3 8 5 - 5 3 2 8 r » D C K J ( J r t N 24 HOURS SüMÉlÉft PKHfYI ?— (x B S M F a E ADULT VIDEO SALES & RENTALS ■ M AG AZIN ES VIDEO P E E P S IN 6 CHANNEL H ALL MALE AUDITORIUM 2815 G u a d a lu p e 478-3560 BONANZA B o n a n z a ’s F r e s l i t a s t i k s Above and beyond the ordinary salad bar. Freslitm s- tftks includes: Hot soups, nachos, a variety of deli sal ads. A mountain of cheddar cheese. And lots of delicious fresh fruits, gelatin desserts, puddings, and more! A L L Y O U C A N E A T $ 2 .9 9 (Good after4:00 p.m.) BUY ONE ONE, GET FREE QOABTEB PODIO nUOIfiEK * LAME FRIES Buy one at $2.79 and Get One FREE expiree 3-31-36 Vi I- I ; ? f.VY'-Tv1* .'.V, O' !1 / »* * r . , j The Baker's Bread" Omnmmn tvlHt eutMHme N H 9 M I I ■ J 2815 Guadalupe K tttid f o r n i l m e m b e rs n f t h e p n r t \ THE BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR. -NATIONAL BOARD OF EE VIEW -new ramK. re x carnes circle ^ i N m T od a y a t 7 iM p a i PRESIDIO THEATRES ^ L I N C O L N 3 6406 IH JSNOPTh • 4*>4 646V IIHXI DO P O U T IT — U É b i * VZ DOWI 2 0 - 2 : 4 5 - 5 : 1 0 - 7 : 3 5 - 1 0 : 0 0 DOWN AND OUT I HX IN BEVERLY HILLS o o o m u m % H 12:18' 2:35~4:S5' 7:1S~9: 1 -0 :4 0 I prettmnoink W O R A N 000 M 1 2 :3 0 -3 : 4 0 -7 : 0 0 - 1 0 :1 0 Iran 1 :0 0 -3 : 0 0 - 5 : 0 0 - 7 : 0 0 - 9 : 0 0 I ODDJOBS NAKED CAGE ■NOM ADS! 1 :1 5 - 5 : 3 0 - 0 :5 0 @ SilltaH 3 : 3 0 - 7 :4 5 TheTiui*T(i BttUNTIFllL ; R I V E R S I D E a s 19 30 i m p s . f 'l • 4416669 Y O U N G B L O O D ^^fl8:99-7:48-9:98^^H Á ------ •ALL FI t 32J NAKED CAGE 5 : 2 0 - 7 : 2 5 - 9 : 3 0 Reduced prices tor features starting at or before 6:00 p.m. weekdays and the first faature only on weekends at all Presidio | theatres. ¡SHOWTIMES ARE FOR TOOAY ONLYR A R B O R A 10000 R E S E A R C H • 346 6937 m u m XI (XIOOCRV STEREO ® 1 1 :5 0 -2 :1 0 -4 :3 0 - 7:15-9:45 B K R I 11:45-2:15-4:41 I T H X t x a w n — 1-7:30-10:00 DOWN AND OU IN BEVERLY HILLS t I H X OD O O L T E T U U O [R] 1 2 :1 5 -2 :4 0 -5:1 0 - 7 :4 5 -1 0 :1 5 H k m a n d e r [ R ] 1 2 :0 0 -2 :3 0 -4 :5 0 -7 :2 0 -9 :5 0 1 S O U T H P A R K 3 BIN WWfTF • 44 7 <'260 1’"* COLOR IHXI I PURPLE OOOOLSVtTCfMlOy lwT.il 12:30-400-7:20-10:30 P ltV N W II AM) ■MIKR SISTERS WOODY ALLEN' j M l2 :4 0 - 3 : 0 0 -3 : 2 0 -7 : 3 3 - 9 :5 5 I g O u t O p A f r i c a WBm 1 2 : 0 0 - 3 : 3 0 -7 : 0 0 -1 0 : 1 □ D [^ w s T!y o ] | L A K E H I L L S ¿X 24 26 BEN WHI7I ■ 4 4 4 , H ig h lan d er 1 2 : 0 0 - 2 : 2 0 - 5 : 1 0 - 7 : 4 0 - 10K)0l s o n 1 2 : 3 0 - 2 : 4 5 - 5 : 1 5 - 7 : 4 5 - 1 0 : 1 0 S iDÓWKl AND 6 uf~ i IN B E V E R L Y H IL L 8 CD ^ ■ ® 1 2 :1 5 -2 :3 0 -5 .-0 0 -7 :2 5 -9 :4 0 H H l l M M 11 I ■ ríffÜ S S S ft* SADDLES T oday a l l M E p a i i i n i a n n . - 3 J 0 U .T . ln n m ili. T V * . New Film H Calendar in the Wednesday Daily Texan Texas Unon VV;' y.i V.'vJ Tv», |A D V A N C E TIC K ET S MAT B E PU RC H A SED AT ANY TIME D URIN G TH E B U S IN E S S DAY : A RBO R C IN EM A FOUR AND LINCOLN T H EATRE 3 RIVERSIDE AO FOR SPECIAL PRICES ADULTS > 33.00 CHILDREN -12.73 REDUCED PRICE-32.7# classified advertising The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17,1986/Page 15 Visa/Mastercard Accepted For Word ad i call 471-3244/For Display ads caM 471-1865/8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 WhMs Ave. Visa/Mastercard Accepted MIRCHANMSI SIR VK IS TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION RSAl ISTAT1SALIS MSKCHANDISK MIBCHANPISg 70—Motorcycl«s 90-V ehicles Leasing 1 3 0 - Condos - H O — tteroo-TV 250 —Musical UT STUPE NTS enjoy T nerds*, end H ?5/ofloc 442 w w F iitnom RH iwhq demsnwm Only $ ^ 9 ^ 0 Ask for Roger I 327 93KV892 5 3 5 7 M ^ ^ H ^ H 220—Compufors- ÍAN C 7 ROAD StaTwtth '"r ote P e ^ r oudihon 20 omp $?00 Artxjf cxowik w»lh cose, $100 Both now, ercedent con drt.on Chns 469 5868 3 21 TURNTABLE. SONY, tene-auSomakc. kn cqrtudue New- $225, 4651 371 Instruments CLAISimO AOVMTISINO C w n d w Pay i t — 15 word msnimutn Eoch word 1 limo . . Eoch word 3 times . Each word 5 ttmes . Each word 10 limo» . Each word 15 tim e t. Each ward 20 hmot 1 coi. x 1 inch 1 Nmo . . $ .28 S 774 $ 1.17 .$ 190 $2.295 $ 2.48 $ 6 85 $1.00 chorge lo chango copy. First two word» may bo all capital letters. 25c for ooch oddHtonul word in capital letters. Mo itarcord and Visa occepted D IA D LINI SCHEDULE Monday Toxan............ Friday 11am Tuesday Toxan . . . Monday 11am Wednesday Toxan . Tuesday 11am Thursday Toxan. Wednesday 11am Thursday llom . Friday Toxan . . In Mso even t e l e rro rs m ode In Be n ig n A m o s CLASSIFICATIONS TRANSPORTATION 1 0 — M lec. > M o i 8 0 — t p e rf 1 0 — T rv tk s -V a n o 4 0 — V s tild e s to T ro d * 5 0 — So rvfe o -S ap ta fr 00—Own- Acceooorteo 7 0 — M s to rc y d M 00 — 9 0 — V o M d e LosM lng 100 — V i RIAL ESTATE SALIS 1 10 — S e rvke o 1 20 — How one 1 30 — 1 40 — M o b Me H orn eo lo h 1 30 — S cro o g e l o t» 1 0 0 - Id e e W ar té -1 w nhow eee 1 70 -W o rs te d 1 00 — L oom MIRCHANDISI 1 90 — AppN oncea 2 0 0 — F w m ltw re -H o tiee h o l d 2 1 0 — S te re o -T V 2 2 0 — C om p o te ra - be given by 11 o.m. Mm first 2 2 0 — F tio to -C e m e rtao sponstolo to r e n ty O N I In co r rect InoerMen. AM cbdnso fo r e d - le te r Mi en 20 deys o tte r pwb ll- - 230 — M w sko l In s tru m e n ts 2 4 0 - H o b b le » 2 7 0 — I ftln e ry - F re-petdkM o receive c re d it sNp aM OSoeora «amaollm | i Ml t^^MP 89 ^BBtjs m ust be isr^ro^t^st^r^t to r e re o rd e r w tMMn 90 deys to be veMd. C redit oNpo e re non - 2 9 0 — Fw m ttw re-A ppM once w—^MPv^YwM 2 0 0 — O o ro g e Ownw io g e 2 1 0 — T ra d e 2 2 0 -W a n te d to Bwy RENTAL ASO e----- i ---- 370 — U n f. A p to . . > 200 — Fw m . Pw ploKeo BRm 2 9 0 - 4 0 0 — ConMoo- Tow n hew oeo 4 1 0 — Fw m . Howte o 4 2 0 — U n f. Hosroee 8 3 3 — So os— .« 423 — C o-opo 4 7 0 — te e o rto M B tB fi »POCO 4 9 0 — W o n te d to Oerst -te o e o ANNOUNCEMENTS 3 1 0 — I nte rta d iin M iil-T lc fceto -----------*- MOO OA1P — FWrSOfMMi 3 2 0 — T ra v e l- 3 4 0 — Loo t A F ound H i 3 3 0 - U cenoe d OsMd C ore 3 4 0 — FwbNc N o tice 5^ q M w slc-M vitd B fM EDUCATIONAL ERR RAaae^eedl Eai^nMMtaooM^o^ra m grrvcvrun 9 9 0 — T u to rin g 4 0 0 — Instrw cM on W onted 4 1 0 — M isc. Inetrw cM ori SERVICES AAA ___ I MeraJ R J V ^ iV p R I NTYVC8I 4 2 0 — C e n ip w te r t e rv l eee 4 9 0 — M o v in g H o w lin g 4 0 0 — O tora g o 4 7 0 — PotnM ng T9D •— PwfVll9lfVO 1 s in ■ ■ m T T ^ T m n o T3B *■“ M om o y js m----- x- 7 9 0 — T y p in g 7 0 0 — M lec. Servfaeo EMPLOYMENT 7 9 0 — S w « Nme m H mqocoI H d lp lN n V M 0 1 0 — OtWtta c ie ik ta l I — A d n d fd e tr I^WG$$$UFkG 9 2 0 — W o rk Wo n te d BUSINESS O p p o rtlM llllA B i — < TSF Building Room 3.200 2S00Whilis Monday through Friday 8om-4 30pm 471-5244 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 10 —Misc. Autos 20— Sports-Foreign 20— Sports* Foruign 70—Motorcycles Autos Autos 1985 CADILLAC Fleetwood, FWD, 15.000 miles, every available option, excellent condition, call 473-2244. 4-2 1982 VW Scirroco. Gold, tan doth interi or, 5spd., AC, 48,000 miles, extra nice, $5100.442-6464. 3 18C____________ MUST SELL '74 Grand Torino, 2-door, AC, very retablo, $600 472-5868 3-17 1984 MUSTANG GT, T top», 302 engine, 5»pd, AC, loaded, show room condition, 24.000 miles, sell for wholesale, $7300, retail $8525, 8-4 444-5555, ask for Lorry, after 6/weekends 1-863-6570 or 1 863 5386 3-17C 1982 BUICK Riviera fuMy-loaded, 1 owner, $8500, call Jays at 452-0623, or 345 7573. 3-18C 1984 CAVALIER. Red and silver fuNy loaded sporty model. 5spd. manual 15.000 miles. 454-0760 3-17________ 1984 BUICK Riviera, 1 owner, well taken core of, $9950. Call Laurie at 331- 0149 3-18C '79/GRAN Prix-white, It/blue doth/ inter., auto, AC, AM/FM cass.- Alpine, $2000/best offer. Call 443-7532, 3-1B 1929 MERCEDES, SSK Replica 800 miles on '85 engine, immaculate. $7000/ best offer 345-5354 3-19B________ 1984 MONTE Carlo, fully loaded, low mileage. Excellent condition. $8700 negotiable. CaB 454-2537, 9-6; even ings, 450-1279. 3-20B 1986 CHEVETTE, $139 month Special, no money down, terms avail lease/pur- chose. 443-9046 3-200____________ 1986 FORD Escort, $169 month. Special, no money down, terms avawoble. lease/purchase. 443-9046. 3-20D 1986 BUICK Somerset, $194 month. Spe cial, no money down, terms available. lease/Durchase. 443-9046. 3-200 G D W Investments Inc. '84 Honda CRX 1.5 — $6750 '8 4 M azda 626 LX — $8350 '8 4 Audi 5000s — $9750 '8 5 Isuzu Trooper II, Loaded and W arranty — $9650 AND MORE, MORE, MORE 2305 W. Anderson Ln. at Bumet Rd. Phone: 459-6059 __________________________ 3-14D 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 1973 PORSCHE 914 2.0 liter, white/block interior, 5spd, AC, cassette, 60,000 miles, rust free, extra nice. $4695. Coll: 442-6464.3-18C_________________ '79 MGB Roadster, brown, 27,000m., original owner, good condition, $3995. 346-5422 after 6pm. 3-17 1977 PORSCHE 924 silver/block interior, i4spd, sunroof, AC, runs and drives d, $5400. 442-6464. 3-18 1975 TOYOTA Corollo Deluxe, blue, 4tpd, AC, AM/FM cassette, PireMi-tires, weN-maintained, runs great. $1250. 339- 1969.3-19 ■81 CONVERTIBLE Rabbit, great condi- 50,000, $6200 neg. CoH 477 Samer after 7pm. 3-19 1980 BMW 320i, light blue/camel. Sspeed, AM /FM /cassette, alloys, xoof. $6500 or best offer. 327- ^467 after 5pm. 3-21 1976 MG8, great condition, new interior, iphoistery, top, and wheels. Must tacri n e at $2500 negotiable, 473-2505 or ¡>73-2621, evenings, 453-8232 3-17 130—Condos - Townhouse* MUST SELL 1981 Audi 5000 SD. Navy, vary dick, axbamafy doon, upgraded tlarao, other option», priced to te l. $6900 499-0205,473-3421 Jack 3 18C 1981 SUBARU G l, 33/27 mpg. 5-ipeed, AC, AAVEWcoMelta, exceNeñt engine and body condition, $3500. 836-6645 3-21 '81 VW Rabbit Silver/red interior, 5»pd, AC, stereo cassette, $2800. Sergio, 499-8436 evenings Neg. 3-18 1980 HONDA Prelude 5-speed, AM/FM cassette, sunroof, $3495. CaM 892- 2035 3-18 '83 PORSCHE 944, loaded, dean, rebuilt engine, black with fabric interior. CaM 834-1555 for detaib 3-18 1976 TOYOTA CoroMa wogon-dark brawn with ton intertar, 5spd, AC, looks and runs good. $1450.442-6464. 3-18C 1984 RED Mustang convertible LX 13,000 miles. Like new. lBmo warranty. $9950. CoM 476-6711, ext. 123. 3-188 1982 MAZDA RX7. White/brawn. 5 speed, sunroof, AC, AM/FM cassette. ExceMent condition. Must seM. 476-8845. 4-2 1982 MERCURY LN7 - AT, PS, PB, AC, AM/FM, stereo, good mileage, excellent condition, $2700. CaM Shannon at (512) 837-1073 days, (512) 459-1513 even ings/weekends. 3-19C 1983 MAZDA 626 Whrte/2 door 26,000 miles. $6900 328-5050 4 3 '77 VW Scirocco. Good condition, low miles. $1200. 3-17 1980 TRIUMPH TR7 convertible, block, new top and upbostery, Wever carbs, Koni shocks. Clean, weM-maintained. Craig, 343-1600, 261-4047. 3-21 1986 NISSAN Sentra, $127 month. Spe cial, no money down, terms available Lease/purchase 443-9046. 3-200 1986 BWM 325, $333 month. Special, no money down, Lease/purchase. 443-9046. 3-20D terms available. 1986 NISSAN Maxima, $269 month. Special, no money down, terms available. Lease/purchase. 443-9046. 3-200 1986 NISSAN 300ZX $287 month. Spe cial, no money down, terms ovoilobie. Lease/purchase 443-9046. 3-200 1968 VOLVO, good condtttan, runs weM, $700. Jenny 476-6611 ext. 2327, 8- 5pm, must seM two coo. 4-4 1980 JAGUAR XJ6, classic body style, sil ver with burnt-orange pinstripe Quick tale. $8950, 4518983 4-4 '80 BMW 320i, dark green, sunroof, 12,000 miles, warranty, exceMent condi tion, $6600,445-2732.3-21 30— Trucks-Vans 1985 0 7 Jeep, white on while to ft top with doors 441-7854. Keep Iryingl 3-17 1986 JEEP Cherokee, $239 month. Spe cial, no money down, terms available Lease/purchase. 443-9046.3-20D . 1986 CHEVY S-10 Blazer, $210 month. Special, no money down, terms available. Lease/purchase. 443-9046. 3-20D 1986 NISSAN pickup, $130. Special, no money down, terms available, lease/ purchase. 443-9046. 3-200 1986 CHEVY S-10 pickup, $125 month Special, no money down, terms avail. Leate/purchose. 443-9046.3-200 1985 FORD FI 50 pickup, $189 month. Special, no money down, terms avail. Lease/purchase 443-9046.3-200 70 — Motorcycles CAGIVA/DUCATI Europe's finest motorcycles. Arlette Motorcycle Sales 13497 Research Blvd. 250-0774 3-17 VF-1100C M AGNA Rag $4050, Sola $3595. Sava $455 VF-500C MAGNA Roa $2450, sola $1898, Sava $552 Similar Savinas on 85's AUSTIN H O I DA 1901 East 1st 10 blocks oast o f 135 on East 1st 476-7547 4-188 130 — Condos-Townhousas Do you need an apartment? DMUS HOU TON NMNDYMK MLE9E y n a u a r CALL NOW FOR LOWER RATES 2 b lks north of U .T ., 1-1 Apts. Ready for immediate occupancy, N o w pre-leasing for Sum m er an d Fall. C all Phil, 480-9358 Keep trying! Ben's Custom MOTORCYCLE PAINTING o lacquer o Fiamos o Enamel o Pinstnpe o Imran o Murals o Candy Colon e Fibergio n Repair 282-9945 H O N D A NiGHTHAWIC, 1982, 4 3 0 ,10K, extrem ely w ell-m aintained mites Beautiful condition $900. Evenings/ weekends. 929 3315 3-14 3-21 '82 HONDA MB5, oxceRent condition Helmet included $500 Sergio 499- 8438 evening t.Meg.3-18 '82 HONDA mghlhowit 450 Perfect condNton, 3200 miles, garage kept, with helmet, h i rain suit and accessorial $950 459-9490 318_____________ '84 HONDA Aero 50 scooter, $350 fwm, 327-0098 Margaret. 3-18 SUZUKI 250G1, runs good, dependable, 2 strobe, $200 obo, 469-9577 3 19 condMion. $1050 25?T499 3 198 HONDA CX500 custom ExceMent cond. lion, shaft driven, water cooled, 15,000 miles. $900 Bab, 453-4509, 459 7069 1-5pm. 3 20 MOPED HONDA 82 Express V , good firm . Great gas condition, $275, 453-5418. 3-21 '72 HONDA motorcycle, 750cc, 4-cylin der, OHC, inspected, dependable, $500 cash, socrifice. 447-5774', leave .3-21 7 8 SUZUKI GS550E. Good condition, noads tags and impaction, naads paint ond soot. $500 P orral 445-5104. 3-21 80— Bicycles BRIDGESTONE 400, 23', mint condition with extras $200 836-6109 3-17 BICYCLE MIYATA sport tour, now whoals and tiros (13. Asking $160. Buddy 495- 2982. West Jester 3-18_____________ 90—Vehicles Leasing 1986 CAMARO, $185 month. Spaoai, no money down, forms avaibfaio. Laosa/ purchosa. 443 9046. 3-200_________ 1986 FORO Mustang IX, $179 month Spaciol, no money down, tarms ovalafate lease/purchase 443-9046. 3-200 RIAL I8TAT1 SALIS 130 —Condos - Townhoutos GREAT PRICE! Condo by owner 4 blocks from UT. 28R 2BA, many amontaos. Pool, locuzzi, security system. Furniture negotiable Col 472 3613 3 2) 10% OWNER carry, 1-1 condo. $11000 down, Non QuaKFyma backed im> to woods, convement/r^ordable Carol Ann 327 9310/263 5750 and Associates. 4-9 WEST CAMPUS 2 2 condo for sale by owner. 1 block from UT. Many amenities, ceiling fans, balcony. M y fur wished, etc CaB 477 7488 4-4_______ CHARM OF old Austin! Luxurious 2-1, breothtakmg Capitol, dty view Near UT ERA McIntyre Associates, 327- 9202 3 18______________________ LAVISH LIVING, west campus atmos phere Roommate ready, 2-2, comfort designed. ERA McIntyre Associates, 327 9202 3 18 IN THE heart of Trovts 1, loft, study, charmingly < McIntyre Associates. 327-9202. 3-18 Height si Darting 1- y decorated. ERA 2-1 on thitale Mirrored fireptoce, security system, large trees. ERA McIntyre A na cióles 327 9202 3 18 N O N QUALIFYING ASSUMPTION $40,800 loan only $1900 down. Vary large, 1-1, suitable fo r room mates o r professional». 202 E. 45th. $9,000 below appraisal. Must sel now. C a l M 328-3876 4-7A ACTIVE WEST CAMPUS Condominium Community Hove cov ered parking, walk to campus, securi ty, atmosphere. Spacious 18R IRA home, below market. Terry 451-8183, Elliott System 451-8178. 3 17 GOING TOUT THIS SUMMER OR FALL? notad a placa lo Irva four blocks from campus? 7 8 5 sq. ft. 288 condo. N o money down, first year payments $ 7 5 0 /month Tax advonfoget fo r parents. CaR owner 3 4 5 -9 4 3 5 . 3-71 MIRCHANDISI 200— Furniture- Household CASH FOR eetatat and used furniture CaR 258 5479 4-1________________ We Bwy and SeR Used Furniture and Anliquet Trash 8 Treasures 11712 N. Lomar 832 1007 2587729 3 20 QUEEN-SIZED teuton with cover and pod the now J$80 454-6907 eves, lesiva message. Shyamo. 3-17 QUALITY FURNITURE Beige sofa. $100 Birch table, $75. Aquarium» A fob, $40. Weight sets, $30. 458-6777 3-17 LOVE SEAT ANO chair, g o o d M B M H $70 Shoun 451 3310 3-17 TWO HANO cro cheted UT afghons in burnt orange and while. #KX) each, Deborah. 243-1920 Muta tool 3-18 THREE BOOKCASES, 6 x2V>xll m deep unstained pondenwo pine. $40 each. 3 for $110, 474 9474 3 21 210— S fraa-TV 19“ COLOR TV $100 Louis 452^)572 4 14___________________________ COLOR TV. Groat condition $60 462- 9436, Darcy. 3-17 PIONEER 7500 omplAer, $125 Onkyo tuner, $75 Bo condition < Andy, 346-2869 3-19 35 walls, Both exceient PIONEER STEREO system Linear back ing turntable. Audio/video receiver, tpaakers w/rock. Exceient condition, many features/469-0860 3-21 WHITESIDE MOTORS CLEAN USED MOTORCYCLES OVER 50 IN STOCK BUY-SEll TRADE FOR CARS 5715 BURNET RD. 458-5631 (Free tank of got with Mm ad) 3-26) 1986 FORD Bronco, $279 month. Spe cial, no money down, tarms avoilablo. Laos#/purchase 443-9046. 3-200 RENTAL 350 — Rpntal Services WE DO IT BETTER Property Management of Texas Offers you a convenient location near campus and over five years of condo experience. Now leosing for Summer and Fall. CONDO SALES CONDO LEASING PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 704 W. 241ft Austin 7B705 476-2673 RENTAL 360 — Fum. Apts. C ^ o n t i n e n t a i NOW LEASING MOVE ¡N TODAY FANTASTIC STUDENT SPECIAL "Loigt” 2 Bedroom Furnished $500 e Water 6 Gas Paid • e Shuttle at Comer e Nice Fool • 9101.40th 452-4639 +Ñ0MITY MANAGEMENT OF TEXAS T h ib od oov x A A ssoc Tfms T 12 S P A R T l E I N T f ^ i MOVE IN TODAY! • Efíiciency $350 • 1 BRFurn. $390-$410 2 BR Fum. $530-$550 Large Pool and Patio Luxury Club Room 2 Shuttles Routes 444-7880 Davis and Assoc. Management Co. IqidpviMNit APPLE 300/1200 mortem with M ot cable $200 C ol after 5 30pm 834 8107 3 17 TERMR4AL AND cable Accesses most UT ■ms. Green screen and i keyboard $775 385 3385 3-18___________________________ APPLE lie 178K- 2 dec drives, Hayes ns cro modem, monitor 11, foystrck, tons at software and monweh $1200 443- 5166 3-188______________________ E.E. 345K TRS-80 color computer, tape recorder, Editatwi, everything you need $115, ce* today, 478 9028 3 19 MACINTOSH SYSTEM for tsde Mocm tosh, Imagewriter, modem, t software, $1100 W S seB aB or port 458 5358 (Bl 467-0232 (H) 3-21_____________ 240— Boats MISTRAL MAUI saSsourd Footstraps, re tractable doggerboord, new 6 3 8 $500 478-647$ 3 21 5K1 BOATS-------- A fter shopping efsawhere come fo r a ride in the legends o f perform ance booh. CHRIS CRAFT 17' 140hp to 3G lOSOhp Dealer rabota con be used as down payment on five models o f 17' and 19" fam ily ski boots including ctosad deck, bow rider, o r cuddy cab in until A p ril 1st, 1986 Lake Travis Yocht Sales, 266 1 3 49 _________________ U 1 L 250—Musical Instruments STUDENT LINE Conn aho saxophone, good condition, great for the beginner or intarmasfai te band student. $500 834-2431 3 17___________________ 7-PIECE Ludwig drum set. ZBdyan cym bals Concert toms $500 346 7833 3 17_____________________________ ALTO SAX exceient condition, $250 836 5652 3-18J KORG SYNTHESIZER- $400, 5 octaves electric pwno- $150 Late evenings 495 5214 3 19___________________ KAWAI PIANO, ebony studw model. 7 transferable warranty, years old, 474-9720 3-71 360 — Fum. Apts. 270 —Machinery- Equipment G€ M IC R O cassette recorder with adapt er and tou r M o n t cassettes Used only twice $ 3 5 ,4 7 6 3619 3-17 280— Sporting- Camping Equip. MEN'S SKI boots Lange, adva nce d rec reahonM, racing Bo poclr Fits shoe sizes 9 10 $ 6 0 4 5 3 1172 otter 5pm 3 17 FI5CHFR SOFT fcte rocmg cut snow skis, I/ro U o Mndmgs. $ 3 5 0 Dyisaht S com p boots, $ 7 0 0 N e ver used 44 3 6017 3 188 _______________________ t ren tier* selection o f GOLF CLUBS used equipment Bargain prK.es* W e buy, sell, trade a nd repo» Instant Replay 4 7 2 3 9 0 7 3-716 WEIGHTS. CAST won, white letters 2 5 ’s, 10's, 5's ond 3's 5 0 c/p o u n d o ffe r 4 42 4651 3 71 330 — Pets FERRET FOR sale 8wks old. descented and spayed with coge, must sell $ 6 5 o r best afte r 451-1727 after 6 pm 3 18 340 —Misc. CENTIPEDE Gome ma chine! Perfect condition. Very few plays. Recondi tioned like new. Make of fer. 451-8978 day; 4 7 2- 6165 night. 319 DRAWING TABLE, large all w o od , slur dy, $65 Electro typewalef SOM ekt“ excellent condition $ 60 4 7 4 9 4 7 4 3 18 C O N TIN E N TA l UNDERWRITERS Insur once low daw n, ro tes, open Sat 5 4 4 8 Burnet monthly Rd 7 8 7 5 6 4 5 9 2 2 7 7 4 16 competence rates IBM TM4EELVAÍITER V M em ory Typewrit er with speBcheck Brand new $1150 7 5 5 4 0 8 7 3 19 R h fS ta k k f S S B k C S M U S S m iS S B h f u r n / 8 R B1 / t a i T i/U io c p O tee AfiantmeHfo MOVE IN TODAY! Unfurnished and Furnished Large Apartments 1 Bedroom Furnished $395-$405 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Fum. $505 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Fum. $530*$545 • 2 Pools s Balconies s View Apts. • Shuttle Stop 1911 Willowcreek Davis & Assoc. Management Co 4 4 4 -8 0 1 0 4 4 4 -0 0 1 4 rTTTTTTTTTTTTTT'iTTTTTTTTTTTTTT'TTT'r CHEZLASU APARTMENTS 1 BR Fum. 1 BR Fum. 2 BR Fum. $440 ABP $415 + E $560 ABP MOVE m TO D AY! • Nice Pools • Walk io Campus • Across the Street from Tennis Courts Office Open Daily Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m .-5 :3 0 p.m. 477-36 19 1302 W. 24th St. a & J L e L i S l u E l M s f e E l l K l f t l l l l l f t K l i l l f t C l f t C l f t C l f t K l i M FOLLOW THE RAINBOW TO OUR SHAMROCK SPECIALS 2 2 C 7 Leen Apts. MOVE IN TODAY! • 1 BRFurn. $400 • 2 BRFurn. $570 • Walk to Campus t Nice Pool A Patio 2207 Leon 478-1781 i VILLA ARCOS Mo wmhs Today Barpis Price For OMBo*oosiFHraWtad RENT REDUCED NOW TO OUR SUMMER RATE $ 3 3 6 8 On Shuttle 8 Nice Pool/! 8k> s Laumky Fadllties * Waiting Distance to Campus s Plenty of Parking 3361 Speedway 476-1619 CaMAftfcmil A Luxury Condominium With Everything. Including 103 Years Of History. Twenty-six exclusive condominum residences with a prestigious west campus address, heated pool, whirlpool spa and monitored security sys tems. Featuring fireplace hearths which have been painstakingly crafted using bricks from The University of Texas' first Main Building. In the new Old Main Condominiums, no detail has been overlooked. We've even builMn a "past" on which you can build a future. O L D M A I N 8 0 7 W . 2 5 th A u s tin . T e x a s 7 8 7 0 5 (5 1 2 ) 4 7 2 -8 6 0 5 Available August 15,1985. # a * a * a - * * * * 6 Get in on the savings shenanigans! N EW SOM M ERS FALL RATES A P A I T M l N T S, 2124 Burton Drive (512)444-7880 Features: • Large 1 & 2 Bedrooms • Adult & Family Living • Ceftng Fans • Swimming Pool • Fum. & (Infum . • Patios & Balconies CaH about Specials Today Hage 16/The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17,1986 MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL M N TA l -1 MNTAL I RENTAL RENTAL MNTAL MNTAL 340—Ml«c._________ 360 — Furn. Apts. 360— Furn. Apts. 370—Unf. Apto. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370— Unf. Apto. 390 - Unf. Duplaxas I—Condos- QUEEN SOEA simpar, $125 Answanng machine Phonemote $ 6 0 O ffice supplies. $1-$50 Misc furniture Call 345 1526 3 20 RENTAL 350 — Rental Services HOME RUN A ^A rT mT n TsT dupTeTes. re houses, never o fee Also roommate ferrals 474 7775 3-19 .........• ■ I I I I I M I I H I I I I I I I I I I I I M I I I I I I I I I I l llC !tü S M D @ (9 Q )(B 0 (k S 1 ftwaofi nr uroflni I FR EE I 480-9443 | Im m ediate ( J rru p a n ry * : A Pre-Leasing 5 s for Sum m er j : n i l l l M I I I I M I I I I I I I I t l l l l l l M l l t l l l l l l l l l l l l i r 360 — Furn. Apts. Warwick Apartments 2907 West Ave. 1 bedroom & efficiencies for rent Ceiling fans in bedroom & living room, dishwashers, gar bage disposals, pool, laundry mat, garden landscape. Walking distance from West Campus. 474-7426 OR 444-2750 3-21 108 Place Furnished Efficiencies ready fo r immediate occupancy • dishwashers/disposals • swimming pool • patio/lounge/BBQ grill • individual storage • bookshelves • Vi block to IF shuttle • laundry facilities • resident manager furn. ef., $325 +- E. 452-1419 tf no answer, 453-2771 108 W. 45th St. 3-21J "REDUCED" A LL BILLS P AID 1 BR $ 3 4 9 .0 0 N E W L Y R E M O D E LE D m icrowave, 24-hr. security 2 4 0 8 Leon 4 7 6 -8 9 1 5 7-21 ONE BLOCK FROM UT 2 7 nicely furnished All bills paid. $ 5 9 5 0 0 . 476-5631 or 469-9342 Stan 4 23 Efficiency - $305 -f E W ell-m aintained apts in Hyde Park, close to IF shuttle, kitchen has lots of cabinets and counter space, bar, large BR wi*b walk-m closet, most apts overlook pool. 4 2 0 0 Ave A 451-6966, 451-6533, Central Prop erties, Inc 4-16A W EST A U S T IN Larg e fu rn ish e d e ffic ie n c y n e a r shuttle $ 3 1 0 plus E 1115 W 10th 4 76 7 145 a n y tim e 4 3 W A L K T O co m pus L o rg e e ffic ie n c y Shuttle a n d c ity bus M a u n a K u i 4 7 2 - 2 1 4 7 4 18 One Bedroom - $335 N icely furnished apartm ent in Hyde Park. Convenient to IF shuttle and city line Paneled living room with bus built-in bookcase. Large bedroom with wolk-m closet. 4 3 0 7 Ave. A, 459-1571, 451-6533. Central Proper ties, Inc. 4-I6A HYDE PARK AREA 1 bedroom, approxim ately 6 7 5 SqFt O n shuttle ond city bus, carpet, crapes pool, laundry, ossigned park mg Utilities fo r cooking and heating free $100 deposit Spanish Oaks Apt., 45th & Duvol $ 34 5 For more inform ation, call 458 5743, 4 4 7 -9 8 4 5 4-22A $285 + E. We are looking for quiet consci entious, non-smoking students interested in a large efficiency in Hyde Park. CA/CH, Laundry. No Pets. 458-2488 4-1 HYDE PARK one bedroom, furnished ?as/water paid, near IF shuttle, pool, 335/mo 4412 Ave. A. 451-3180 3-21 LOVELY VIEW of Pease Pork. Large fur- nished efficiency, corpet, drapes ond oil oppliances. Laundry, pool, on site mana ger Water paid $30*0 CaH PMP, 458- 4155 or 476 8590. 3-21 EFFICIENCIES SUMMER RATES Only 3 left, for senous undergrods or grads, quiet. 5 blocks west of compus. 5259- mo., Neuman Management 453-4500 255 1564 3-20C___________________ ALL BILLS paid. Near campus, on shuttle. Furnished efficiencies ond IBR's in small quiet complex $295-$430. 451-8532, 442-4076. 4-4J furnished efficiency, WEST CAMPUS, $ 3 0 0 /m o , new carpeting, gas, water sewage, garbage paid WC shuttle. 910 W 26 St #105. Call 478-1350 3-21 de p o sit, $125 fully furnished, WARWICK APARTMENT, 2907 West Ave.. 1BR apartment, dishwasher, garbage disposal, ceiling fans in bedroom and living room. Pool, laundrymat, garden landscape, walking distance from UT. Coll 474-7426 or 444-2750 3-21A___________________ NICE QUIET one bedroom opt. in small complex neur Highland Moll. Coll 453- 3706 3-I8C_______________ 2 BLOCKS UT, 1-1, CA/CH, dishwasher! carpeted, large windows, covered park ing, laundry, pleasant environment. 474- 5929 3-20 AFFORDABLE 2-1, shuttle of* Riverside, pool, free HBO, rent all/share with pres ent tenant 480-0523 3-20 EFFICIENCY FURNISHED Surrounded by trees $270, small complex on shuttle, all appliances, available Apnl, 478-9767,453-6673 3-20 2-1, CA/CH, NR shuttle across the street, $375 + $200 deposit, gas + water paid Available 3/26/86. 2225-L Elmont Dr 441-3392 (leave message). 3-21 DOWNTOWN WEST 1211 W. 8th St., shuttle bus, water/gas/coble paid. Good condition Efficiency, $260. 477-5012, after 5pm. 4-11 NORTH OF UT, on shuttle or walking dis tance, efficiencies, $295. 1BR $295- 320 477-2214, 452-4516, 453-8812. 4-14 GREAT OAK -one block large clean 2-2 Ceiling fans, CA/CH, pool Laundry 2900 Swisher 477-3388, 472-2097 4-29 law school, FURNISHED efficiency, 6 blocks to com pus, ceiling fan, patio, small and quiet complex, nice condition, $295 + E, 4100 off 1st month 454-0167. 4-14 UPSTAIRS EFFICIENCY, carpeted, ceiling fan, near Low School, large storage, * 4 utilities, lease $298 926-7243 4-30 3408 SPEEDWAY. Immediate move-ins available On shuttle route. Cute fur nished efficiencies. $240/month Coll Equity 452-9357 4-16_______________ MOVE IN today 1BR IBA new carpet new appliances, water gas paid, covered parking, pool. LaCosita Apts. 2900 Cole 482-9154 5-12 CASBAH APARTMENTS 2200 San Ga- bnel condo living at apt pnces, luxury space convenience (walk or shuttle) spa cious 2-2 with ceiling fans, microwave, intercom, BBQ pits and 2 separate en tries 3-19 RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. t p g g n m m m m w i h h i u m Tanglewood North Apartments ! /* \ ; i»< NOW LEASING MOVE IN TODAY! We Pay All Your A/C and Heating ! ! 1 Bedroom Furn. $410-$425 2 Bedroom Furn. $560-$575 1020 E. 45th 452-0060 LARGE 2 M /1 BA. West campus. Cov ered parking. M icrowove. Ceiling font. Dishwasher Disposal Sauna. Pool. Close to shuttle. 472-8689, afternoons or leove message. Rent reduced. 3-21 Large one bedroom, one both. West campus. Covered parking. Microwave. Ceiling fans. Dishwasher. Disposal Sau na. Pool. Close to shuttle 472-8689, af ternoons or leave message. Rent re duced. 3-21 3 7 0 - Unt. Apis. ONE MONTH tree rent, great location for UT area, studio efficiency $350 Col 452-2816 or 480-2816 4 2A APRIL FREE Spend April snug in your new 1- 1. Includes ceiling fan, fireplace, walk-in closets, private patio. On UT shuttle. Come pick your ac cent colors — Let us point for you. Call 345-8848. 4-288 BEAT THISI The next 10 qualified people we sign leases with No Rent Til May 1st Super Location. Bike route or take the shuttle. For Details 454- 0202 . ____________________________ 4-25A 99 Moves You Into a 1-1 149 Moves You Into a 2-1 plus application tee charged only if you ••ase—pays deposit rent through April 15 Near UT Stadium and Shuttle Immediate occupancy, immediate electricity turn on W ater ond Gas (cooking, heating and hot water) paid. Office Hours: M F 9-6 Sat 10-4 Sun 12-4 Autumn Ridge Apartments 1220 E. 38V2, 459-1361 3-21D ENCHANTED WOODLANDS Let us put you under our SPELL with your new apartment home, nestled among the trees, the creek or near the pool. BEWITCHING 1 & 2 bedrooms available. Ask about our MAGICAL SPECIAL! Call 3 4 5 -4 4 4 4 before they DISAPPEAR! STUDIO APARTMENTS CEILING FANS, MINI BLINDS, FIREPLACES. $ 2 9 5 .0 0 / MONTH. 478-7963. 4-3 MOVE IN FOR DEPOSIT ONLY spoctous 1BR and 2BR apartments, con venient to IH35, 290 and 183 on CR shuttle, secluded , WD hookups, fire places, covered parking. Coll today, Cal gary Square Apts., 1604 Whelesi Lane, 452-4907. 3-31 SPRINGTIME SPECIAL Family environment, (2) courtyards: poolside with heated spa & recreation room; quiet side with picnic area, bike parking and volleyball. Entire com plex security and clothing optionol. Apartment size and housebroken pets allowed with $150 pet deposit. 2 Bdrms $ 35 0, 1 Bdrms from $ 29 5. N o gimmicks just reasonable rent. 47 6 - 5 8 7 5 ‘ 3-21A 1*2 BEDROOM — $345-$375 Located in central Austin. Close to City and shuttle bus lines and shopping centers, pool. Gas cooking/heating paid. No pets. 1501 West North Loop. 452- 0937, 451-6533, Central Prop erties, Inc. 4-23A Central location. Large apart ment with hollywood bath, lots of closets, plenty of kitchen counter space and large pantry. Water/gas paid. 115 West Koe nig Lone. 459-8077,451-6533, Central Properties, Inc. __________________ 4-23# SPECIALS! Move in — $50 deposit. 1st months rent free. New residence only. On shuttle. Near Capital Plaza. We pay gas, cooking, heating. 1-1'*, 2-1,'s 2-1 Ws, 2-2's. 452-3202. 4-11A O N TO W N LAKE WeH help pay your 1st month's rent on any of our effic., 1, 2, or 3 bedroom opts. Prices from $310 to $495 ond we pay gas ond water. Relax by the lake or w a ll in the park. W e're convenient to every thing! Southshore Apts., 300 E. Riverside. 4 4 4 -3 3 3 7 4-4J "REDUCED" ALL BILLS PAID 1 BR $349.00 NEWLY REMODELED microwave, 24-hr. security 2408 Leon 476-8915 3-21 UNBELIEVABLE SPECIAL RATES Quiet, comfortable community near Zilker Pork, with many amenities. O f fering spacious efficiencies at $27 0, 1/1's at $310, 2/1'» at $ 3 7 0 , for a short time only! 1500 South Lamar or Coll Sandra or Tom 4 4 7 -5 9 8 0 . 4-9A TWO WEEKS FREE RENT RENT SPECIAL Extra large 1 bedroom apart- mont, 725 sq. ft., only $298 with 6 or 12 month lease. Gas heat ing and water paid. Pool, laun dry facilities and quiet, central courtyard. Perfect tor students Near UT shuttle, city bus, and shopping. Rent reduction limited time only! 459-9974 3-21J FREE rent for 1 month. Efficiencies available offering: large floorplan, lots of storage, heat and hot water paid. Close to UT and shuttle bus routes. Quite small community. From $ 2 9 9 per month. Coll 8 3 5 -4 1 3 0 for appointment. The Retreat, 4 4 0 0 Ave nue A. 4-11J ROSEDALE DUPLEX 1 bedroom, $36 5. UT-DOWNTOWN 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, 2 kitchens, 3 story, references. NEWLY REMODELED efficiencies, 1 and 2 bedroom, some with fireplaces ond •kytghk- -convenient north central loca tion near shuttle $295 $455 + E $100 off 1st month's rent 451-4561, 442- 4 0 7 6 .4-4J________________________ BROWNS TONE PARK Apts is now leas ing efficiencies, 1 and 2 bedrooms-- $315 lo $465 * E. Gas ond water paid First stop on IE shuttle $100 off 1st month's rent 454 3496, 442-4076 4- 4J TARRYTOWN LARGE, dean, quiet, shut tle, pool, laundry, reasonable. 1-1 and 2 - 2. 2606 Enfield Rd. Manager #4, 476 1861.474-1100 4-7___________ 1-1 APARTMENT in shady, small complex Gas/Heat Window units $34 5/mo. Call 474-6330. Monday through Friday, 8am-5pm 3-18C WEST OF campus, W 22nd St. One bed room, living room, study ond large kitch en. All utilities paid except A/C Window unit No pets. $390 + dpst. Call 397- 2576. 3-18A 1BR $275 plus E 304 E 33rd (near Speedway and 33). See # 16 or call 479-6331.4-2A____________________ GARAGE APARTMENT 29th ond Guo- dolupe. $330 + E. Howell Properties. 477-9925 4-24____________________ HPO Real Estate 467-7212 ALL BILLS paid, quiet complex, near shopping, buses, and downtown, pool, covered parking, $500. 482-0611 3 19A SMALL COMPLEX 4306 Ave. A LARGE redecorted 2BR apt. in Hyde Park. C o ve re d p a rk in g , b u ilt-in bookshelves, ond desks Gas cooking heating ond hot water paid. $480 + E. 2 weeks free. Avail, now. Cod manager: Elizabeth, 458-9809, 837 7880 4-I8A V2 Month Free Rent Summer Special N e a r UT and downtown. Large effi ciency. View of Pease Pork, pool, sun- deck, laundry. Viewpoint. 2518 Leon — PMP, Inc, 45 8 -4 1 5 5 or M anager, 4 7 6 -8 5 9 0 . 4-18A NO SECURITY DEPOSIT Immediate occupancy near IF shuttle; small quiet complex with pool, large efficiency and 1BR. $ 3 0 0 -3 2 5 + E. 451 -9 0 0 7 or 4 4 2 -4 0 7 6 . ONE BEDROOM with a vaulted ceiling, across from shuttle. Near OTtorf and 135, small complex, $310 + E. 441-8365 or 442-4076. 4 - lu 1-1 EFFICIENCY for mature, responsible student, on city bus lines. $195/mo. 459- 0247, Rondo. 4-10 NEAR HIGHLAND moll—dean, quiet, 26R. Water, gas, coble paid. $395. 505 Kenniston. JM Rally-454-6658, 928- 0 8 9 4 .3-20D DIRECTLY ACROSS from UT, 1-1, living room, kitchen, hardwood Boon, AC, $435, ABP. Co* 327-7929 If no answer, leave message. 3-21 LARGE 1-2 bedroom apartments near IH- 35, 1-83, 290, city and UT buses. Pool. From $295/mo., 452-7499. 3-21 ENFIELD-PEASE Pork, spacious 2-1, also 1-1, CA/CH, jogging trail, shuttle, park ing. 472-2779—leave message. 3-17 HYDE PARK-on UT shuttle 1BR 1BA, $325/mo. 467-0117, leave message. 3- WEST 26th. Newly-dec orated efficiency. Crispí Separóte, Aril kitchen, tile bam. Pool ond laundry. Quiet comer location $265. References pleose Pets no. Jock Jennings. 474-6897. Consolidated. 3-20 $300-1/4 month month complex north. Pool. 339-6961.4-16 free o r $315-ona free. One bedrooms. Small 1-2 bedrooms, 905 E. 51, oppliances, shuttle, water poid, $350/$425m o. Real Estaters-835-4500. 3-19C WALK TO UT CA/CH, ceiling fans, 2100 Nueces, coll Shown 472-5258. 3-19 PRE-LEASE now for foN! Brand new apartments at 1905 Rio-Grande. Private jacuzzi, microwave, covered parking. 2 BR/2 BA only. Rent very negotiable. CaH 482-0278. 4-3_____________________ CHARMING 1-1 in older house. Three blocks west of campus. Hardwood floors, fans, enclosed palio. $475/month, $200 deposit 474-0875, evenings. 3-21 ceiling WALK TO compus, large efficiency with hardwood floors, lots of windows. Gas ond water poid. $250. Visto Properties, 472-3453. 4-4A___________________ UT AREA, spocious efficiency in small complex. New paint, carpet, walk-in closet, no pets, gas and water poid. $275. Visto Properties, 472-3453. 4-4A UNFURNISHED BEDROOM, kitchen effi- ciency, UT oreo. ABP, $295, 836-1802, 453-0638, 345-6707 4-2A__________ 4-11J O ne bedroom, pool, laundry room, quite, clean, near shuttle, $30 5/m o. 6 month lease, $ 2 0 0 deposit. South Cliff Apts., 2001 S. IH35. 3-17 445-0551 4-16J Large efficiencies, furnished and un furnished, built-in kitchens, walk-in closets, some with microwaves and ceiling fans. Laundry facilities and pools, close to bus lines. Suitable for singles or couples. $280 and up. 453-5737. 4-16J CAPITAL PLAZA VILLA AN utilities paid! 1 Bedroom from $355. 2 bedroom from $475. Convenient to shop ping. 2 laundries & pool. BeoufifuNy groomed kindscoping & quiet adult atmosphere. Di rectly on shuttle 5700 CAMERON ROAD 454-7007 Open aN weekend. 4-5 FREE RENT * Spacious 1 and 2 Bedroom Apartments Convenient to IH 35, 290 and 183. Also on CR Shuttle. Secluded, W D Hookups. Fireploce, Covered Paiking. CaH Today For Move-in Special. Calgary Square Apartments— 1604 Wheless Lane. 452- 4907 or 835-0303. TEXAS PROPERTIES 2 MONTHS FREE RENT Sizzling Vacation Special. Let us pay for your vocation. Spocious 1,2 & 4 bedroom apartments, large closets, ceiling fans, 2 pools and laundry facil ities. Start a 1 year lease now and take a vacation with July and August rent free. 4 4 4 -4 4 8 5 . This offer for limited time only! $75 DEPOSIT! Per person is all it takes to move into our It 1 bedroom apartaments lo cated in small, quiet complex. Rotes begin at $ 2 9 0 plus E. Convenient to shuttle, city bus, shopping. Office hours, M-F, 9 am - 2 pm ond Satur day, 10 am - 2 pm. 441-8413 U.T. ONE Block Remodeled Efficiencies, 1 and 2 Bedrooms. Many Extras! Hurryl Habitat Hunters. 482-8651. 3-20 411 EAST 30th. UT walk! Cute efficiency behind Posse, new appliances. $250 deposit, $325 lease. 452-1236. 3-27A HYDE PARK, 1-1, AC, ceiling fon, carpet, appliances, water poid. $395. 451- 8122. West W orld Reol Estate 3 20 3 BEDROOM. Private, west Austin, appli ances, partially furnished $600. 1 bed room, near shuttle, carpeted, appliances. $350. 453-7832 3-31A_____________ 3-2U NEAR IF shuttle. Nice 1BR apartment in small complex. Gas ond water paid. Pool. $320 + E. 453-7514, 442-4076 4-4J OAK HILL, neat, 2-lVi, fireploce, kitchen appliances, fenced yard, kids welcome, $475, 892-0195, 288-0671 Bill, DJ 3 21 400—Condos- Townhouses CROIX CONDO 1 IR , furnished. WD, ic . maker, microwave, ceiling fan, security, summer/fal, $67S. (713) 626-8193, (713)963-8700.3-17 AVAILABLE N O W -1 bedroom condo S huttle, app liances, m icrow ave, overlooks pool and hot tub. Real Es tator* 835 -45 00 3-19C NEWLY REFURBISHED condo 2 1 CA/ CH. Noar park on Enflald. O n dwtfla/ metro $500 Loo m reqwred 476-2923. _________________________ 3 -2 0 FOR IMMEDIATE occuponcy. Savannah. Unfurnished 2BR 2BA Comer W . 22VJ and San Gafarial HowoB Properties, 4 7 7 -9 9 2 5 .4-1B EXCEPTIONALLY NICE forge 2BR 2BA furnished. 3 blocks compus, all amenities, move in now at $650-$800. Howell Properties, 477-9925. 4-18 NEAR UT, luxury condo, 1-1, fireploce, aR appflonceit goroge, near fouttfo $750 neg. Summer spedaM C o l Robertson Properties. 832-1166.4-25A __________ 4 1 0 — F u m . H o u s m HYDE PARK 1BR house, 4414-A Speed way, wood floors, on shuttle line, no pels, avail. 3-1, leose through 8 /8 6 . $425 + bills. 459-0017 4-3_______________ THREE HOMES available. University neighborhood (Hyde Pork). Furnished/ or unfurnished, $425-475. New corpet, or hardwoods, oppkances, 453-4990. 3- 17 4 2 0 — U n f . H o u s m recently HYDE PARK, 4311 Ave. C. 2-1 hordwood floors, remodeled. CA/CH, kitchen appliances. Fenced yard. $650 bids. By appointment only. 459-0017. 2 BEDROOMS, fenced, appliances, ceil- afons, shuttle $550/m onth. 5309 Du- 4 5 3 -7 8 3 2 .3-2QA_______________ TO SHARE-3-2, restored Victorian, ap pliances, shuttle, beautiful 5306 Evans. 453-7832. 467-0149 3-20A 3-2 HYDE PARK 4807 Avenue F — 2 AC7ceiling fans, hardwood floors, WD con nections, polio, double carport, fenced yard. Prefer faculty/mar ried TAs/Grod Students $750 and $300 deposit call 452- 4030. 3-18 UNIVERSITY AREA Large 2-1, hardwood floors, re modeled. Pets okay. $725/mo. Drive by 900 W. 30th or call 472-2922. 4-11J Fireplace/Swimminq Pool Newll! 2-story, 5-3, hardwood floors, microwave, W /D connec tions, 6 blocks to UT. 3208 Hampton, 472-7362 or 452- 3031. 4-10J STONEY OLDIE Large comfortable 3-1, separate dining, fireplace, across 26th St. from UT law school. $600. 2900 Hampton. 454-7619, 837-7458. Prime Properties. 4-3 HYDE PARK-Large Remodeled 3-2, Two Story, Hardwoods, Ceiling Fans, On Shuttle. Habitat Hunters, 482-8651. 3-20 ACROSS FROM LAW SCHOOL Right across from Low School, 2-1 ex tra roomy. $ 7 5 0 0 0 ONE BLOCK TOUT 1-1 hardwood floors, $ 3 8 5 .0 0 BRAITHWAITE PROPERTIES 441-8379 3-21 2-1, high efficiency CA/CH, appli ances, fireplace, utility room, W/D connections, new carpet, fresh paint, carport, outside storage, fenced yard. Excellent condition. 3202B Jack Cook, near Manor ond Northeast Dr. $395/mo. 346- 2751, 892-4100, Tim Townhous— * * Í Z z * * * * * * 9 * Now Loooim tt * * * * * S to n tli f h C o n d o s $ J M M L e e e * M . t -1 .3-3 AsiefleMe now for occupancy Leeefog office Witt 110. Onen 11-4 ensdnllv or caff 327 4980 or 474 7628 * * . ▼ i * * * * * * * * * » u ▼ * i CAUUf M fñ 8 We hove over 80 luxurious I West Campus condos ovail- 9 able now to pre-lease for ¡summer and fall of 1986. For ¡information call 3-20 I a S i i h S S » C6N50S K X I U A H • lim m d lB ts O c c u p a n c y ¡¡j • ffr o - lo o s in g F o r su m m e r-fl Faff I CONDO C0NMCTI0VII 307 W .M .l.K . B lvd. I 479-6610 O N ow Pr mg The Palladian Condominiums These 2-2 units hove W /D, microwave, individual security systems, mini-blinds, ceiling tons ond more. Pool and jocuzzi on site and are within «walking distance to campus. Must see to appreciate how large these units are. CoR 480-0097 or 276-3887 4-4 3-17 Vi MONTH FREE Two "walk to campus” apartments 3 0 0 0 Guadalupe, 1/1, $ 3 5 0 621 E. 31st efficiency/one, $27 5. F.SA-Horrison Pearson 472-6201 4-17J EXCEPTIONALLY NICE large 2BR 2BA furnished. 3 blocks campus, all amenities, move in now at $650-$800. Howell Properties, 477-9925. 3-17 NEW 3-2, Ave. 8. Shuttle, ceiling/attic fons-energy efficient CA/CH-cable / telephone—appliances-washer/dryer— garage $795. 345-9442.4-3 BE THE FIRST Start pre-leasing now now. Summer and foil, one ond two bedroom condos. CAMPUS AREA. Apartment Finders, 458-1213. 4-4A_____________ LETS MAKE A DEALI1-1 condo w/aH ap pliances. Campus area, mini-blinds, po lio, only $395. Apartment Finders, 458- 1213.4-4A WEST AUSTIN. 3-2 duplex for the dis criminating. Everything new. Fireploce, dining room and goroge. 3006 May wood Circle. 477-8811 or 472-6206. 4- 8________ NORTH AUSTIN Brandywine condomini um, 2-2, microwove, refrigerator, WD, other extras, landscoped. $650, John af ter 5pm, 244-7160 4-11 CRIOX CONDO Large 1-1, W /D, mi crowave, pool, jacuzzi, fp, cp, security. Summer 1986. CaH Judy 477-2233 or 478-5651.3-20____________________ 1 bedroom, 1 bath townhome, close to shuttle. Pool, security. $475. Available June 1. Call Mark after 6pm, 385-6766. 4-1 FOR LEASE—2BR/2BA campus, all amenities; unfurnished, 9 or 12 mo lease. 2300 Leon. CaH Renee, 328-1550 or 474-7092 (wknds). 4-1A condos—West 3-2: $545, 2 -lV * $495, 2-1: $445. Large, MODERN, fireplace, pool, sauna. Near WHIiam Cannon and IH- 35. 346-4392.4-16 1701 Burton Drive. 2-116 Du large plex. Fireplace. Two sundecks. Gas appliances. Washer, Dryer. Ceiling fans. All appliances. On two shuffle routes. $5 85 .4 47 -830 3. 3-25 JERRICK SOUTH TWO WEEKS FREE SENT One BR's and 2 BR's $285-$350 hardwood Boors centrally located 2606 Wilson Street 443-8366 3-17 FIRST 2 weeks rent free. Close to UT shut tle, 3-2, new carpet, fireplace, dishwasher, water paid, sprayed monthly. $550 447-1589. 3-18_______________ 1940's 2-2. Oak floors, ceiling tans, up stairs bedrooms, large trees, quiet street near 35th and Guodalupe. 703 W. 35th. $660. 472-2123.4-1________________ UT AREA. Huge 2-1 in triplex. Built in 1920's. Quiet neighborhood, hardwood floors, lots ot windows, high ceilings, ap pliances, covered parking. $550. Vista Properties. 4 72 -34 53.4-3A__________ HOLD ITI Look no further! 2-lVj, oH ap pliances, ONLY $395. Apartment Find ers, 458-1213. 4-4A 3511 RED River, 1250 sq ft, 2-t, CA H, hardwood floors. $65 0 onth. $450 deposit. Available 8907. 4-4_________________________ immediately. 451- 1 MONTH tree-duplex: 1-1 near High land Mall and UT shuttle. Patio. Yard maintained. No pets. $310. 258-5831. 3- 28A______________________________ BRAND NEW 2-1 large yard, pets OK, potio, ceiling fans throughout, new ap pliances. $650 ABP 450-0295. 3-18 TWO BLOCKS from UT. 1-1, natural rock waNs. Bargain rent. Call 476-4851 or 478-6510.4-2C____________________ 2-1, A C refrigerator, covered parking, dose to campus, avail, now $475/mo. Clear Rock Properties. 335-1151.4-2A 2BR, CACH, carpeted, carport, 4705A Caswell, 2 blocks, UT shuttle. No pets. $350 453-3843; 928-3829, 282 4644 3-17A_______________________ LARGE 2-1 duplex lo r rent. Units avail able M ay 1 ond M ay 31. One block from campus on west 21st. Summer - $550, Fall - $700, 478-0885 or leave message ot 476-8353. Tim. 3-19 TRI-PLEX IN established neighborhood in UT oreo near IH 35. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, # 360/mo., 478-1631. 4-1C___________ 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath. Hardwood floors, ceiling fons, quiet neighborhood. 476- 4851 or after 5 00pm 478-6510. 4-17 AVAILABLE April I. 2-1 near Tarrytown shopping center. $500. $150 deposit. Coll 480-9777 3-31________________ GREAT LOCATION close to 135 and Rundburg. 3 bedroom, 1 bath, newly re modeled, fenced yard, stove, refrigero- tor, corport. $475. Coll 259-0989 4-1 400 — Condos- Townhouses FOR IMMEDIATE occupancy. Savannah. Unfurnished 2BR 2BA. Comer W. 2 2 ^ and San Gabriel Howell Properties, 477-9925 3-17 2 BLOCKS to campus. West 24th Vi and Seton. Efficiency. $260 + E. Coll FSA H-P 472-6201. 4-4 7403 GUADAIUPE—1BR, new carpet/ paint. O n bus route. $375/mo. $200 deposit 244-1474, 837-0950 3-21A 2 BLOCKS UT, 1-1, CA/CH, dishwasher, carpeted, large windows, covered park ing, laundry, pleasant environment. 474- 5929 3-20 3-21 390 — Unf. Duplexes ! ( Tanglewood Westslde Apartments NOW LEASING MOVE IN TODAY 1 Bedroom Furnished $350-$390 2 Bedroom Furnished $540-$570 Gas & W ater PAID Shuttle bus is at your front door GREAT SOMMER RATES El Campo 305 W 39th Street F u m is h t-d U n ta rn is h e d LaPaz 401 W 39th St furnished Unfurnished El Dorado 3501 Speedway Furnished 1 Bdrm. 1 Ba 2 Bdrm. 1 Ba 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba Unfurnished Unf. $275-$285 -F E. Furn. $295-$305 + E Unf. $370 + E Fum. $390 + E $425 + E A b o M i f K M M to ahottlo. m » ft : ÍT T Y T ilT,I'',l TTTTTTVIV ITTTTTTVTTTTT^r 472-4893 ft 452-8537 Professionally managed by Johnston Properties, Inc Move In Today! 2 Bdrm/2 BA $490 1 Bdm/1 BA $350-$390 FURNISHED! 2323 Town Lake Circle L 442-1991 ¡ Professionally M a n a g e d b y Davis & Assoc. - 1403 Norwalk Ln. 472-9614 , Professionally managed by Davis & Assoc. . RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. TIMBERWOOD^ APARTMENTS MOVE IN TODAY! *• Large Eff. $390 * • Finest Location in UT Area • Shuttle or Walk to Campus • Fireplace BETTER HURRY! 26th 6 San Oabrtol 499-8712 Í L E A S I N G t S U M M E R A F A L L t L a r g e 3 M r m / 2 B tti. L a r g o 4 ♦ 1 M r w o ls o . Few steps from 4 4 shuttle, furnishings, quiet and secure 4 4 4 with pool and polio. ♦ 9 ♦ V I R A P T S . 33rd and Speedway Appointment only, coll * ♦ 8 ♦ Alpine Forest Apts. • *295 (Furnished or Unfurnished) • Newly Remodeled Efficiency • Large room with large bath and closet s A/C & Appliances s Shuttle to UT Campus • Laundry Room • Lota of Parking 4558 Ave. A 4SM7SS 4S4-SSSS BEST SUMIMCR RATES ¿o* J w U Shuttle at F ront D oor Century Square, All S i z e s .................478-9775 Century Plaza, All S iz e s .....................452-4366 V.I.P. Apts, 1 and 3 B d r m .................476-0363 Granada, All Sizes.................................453-8652 Century, Eff. and 1 B d r m .................499-8136 Walking Distance to Campus Excellent Management Lots of New Furniture GARDEN GATE A P A R T M E N T S COED NOW LEASING MOVE IN TODAY ! CLOSEST * TO CAMPUS i RIO NUECES t 4 • Tired of driving to doss? Walk • One block torn campus. • 2 Shuttle Stops • Free Parking wtlti Permit • A . > •.5? e All Units Funtohed • Security Service 9 e Balcony with Storage sy • • ^ • V • • Luxury 1BR Furnished 476-4992 2222 Rio Grande Aspenwood Apartments MOVE IN TODAYI e 1 BR Furnished $380 e 2 BR Furnished $500 e Water & Gas Paid Shuttle Bus at Front Door! Intramural Fields Across Street Professionally Managed by Davis and Assoc. 4539 G u ad alu p e 452-4447, \ \ 7 t Special Group Rales 6 1-Bedroom ♦ Summer Rotes $315 474-0971 474-1004) ^eeeeeeeeeeeeeeq THE 305 APTS. MOVE IN TODAY! • "Large" Efficiencies • $345 + E • Small Friendly Complex • Near Shuttle Corner Move In Today! 459-4977 Davis & Associates * • • • • • • • • • • • • • • # VILLA SOLANO APTS. MOVE IN TODAY • 1 BR Fum. $390 • 2 BR Fum. $500 • Shuttle at Comer • Intramural Fields across Street 6 0 0 W . 51 st 451-6682 Hyde Park Apts. MOVE IN TODAYI • Eff. Fum. $320-$330 • 1 BR Furn. $335-$365 • 2 BR Fum. $466 • City Tennis Courts & Pool • Shuttle at Front Door 4413 Speedway 458-2096 HINT AL KINTAL ^ T O J C A T I O N A L ^ EDUCATIONAL SERVICES SIRVICKS SIRVICKS 1 B R L O T K I 1 M T E M P L O Y M E N T The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17,1986/Page 17 420- U n f. House» 440-Room m ates 500 — M usical 590— Tutoring 750-T yp in g 750-Typing 750— Typing 7 9 0 — R o r t T im w UT A C R O SS the street from campus, nice, smalt 2 badroom . 926-2295, 478- 9810 3-31 PORT A R A N SA S 3BR/38A house wrth •undeck, hot tub availab le, deposit re quired. 327-8527, Mrs. M urray. 3-19 • EXAM PREP r , U \ l S A I M r A T G M A T V W V M A U T IT U l lM O ". Victonar house Adjocent to BOfk, 1 b it « to of UT, Swedish background. 3BR JlA . 477- 2331 $795 WOO E 14#,. 3-21A A VA ILA BLE now. 1,2,3 M Sc u m s for rex*. 432-5979 (24 houfi). 4-9__________ T H R ff H O M ES priced below market (non-smokers discount $425-473) Stow carpet, appfcoctas, university neighbor hood. 453-4990-owner. 3-17 C APITO L PLAZA, lively, so ociout 3-2. CA/CH, carport, cloan, oppaoncas, cor- patod, face ad, trees, shuffle $595. 474- 3929. 3-17_____________________________ BIK E TO UT 2-1, Sordw ood Boon, casting fon», (anead, floraga. Convantont BR/ downtown. 47/-8110, evenings. 3-17 C O UN TRY H O M E--14 mitos aost, lorga old ar 3-1, ponchas, tonca, CA/CH, wood burning haotar. $500 472-2097, 478- 5739 4-29___________________________ 2-2 W IT H wosher/dryer, mtcrowova, tone ad bock yord, closa to UT shuflto ba- twaan Cam arón + Barkmon. $600. 450- 1985.3-18 A VA ILA BLE N O W O na badroom Sousa V ary good condition, (anead yord, screened porch, IF shuttle $375. 458- 2949. 3-19 SO UTH A U STIN , naor SR. 1-1, 2 -1, privo cy. $275/xx, $325/xx, 6mo lease, $150/»» deposit 448-3034 4-2 UT H O U SE-o R built-ms Ramodatod, 2-1. $650. 304 W . 41. Harrison Pearson 472-6201.4-2A________________________ LAKE A U STIN , 2-2, wotortront, boot dock, spoctocufor M editerranean style A l am enities. $850, 441-1253, 263- 2357.3-2 0_____________________________ 1BR IN 2BR House W aBt campus. $175 A SP. Pretor Spanish ipeoher or C S mo jor but not picky. 478-8354 Corky. 3-18 W A LK TO low school. Lorga room pri- voto both. Gorgeous hom aTPrivóla en tronca 477-4441. I> 3-18 ___________________________________ IF SHUTTLE-cuke house nica guys need 2 more roommias. G ood pfocal Cheap! 477-4441 Tom. 3-18____________________ N O N S M O K IN G FEM A LE needed to tovam da condo. shore 2-2'/5 East Firapfoco, W /D , pool, security system, ceiling fans, PV shuffle $225/month plus Vs b is. W endy, 385-4391 3 20 FEM ALES TO shore 3-2 condo $225/ mo + '/O bids, pool, W D , CR shuttto, 452 8914 3 18 H O U SEM A TE W A N T ED : nonsmokmg mole or tomato for 3-1 orea. $180/mo + Vt M b. 926 5436. 3-18 FO U R BLO C KS from UT G raduate stu dents share big old house, antique fumi- ture and modem plumbing. $250/mon#i A BP 454-6125.4-4_____________________ FEM A LE 2-1, share badroom + V$ E. $130/$100 dap. flexible on SR shuttle. 445-3676,6-10pm Sue. 3-21___________ 460 — Business Rentals SM A LL TWO-room office. W est UT cam pus. $225 ABP. How ell Properties, 477- 9925 4-16 470 — Resort* O N E BLO C K FRO M LA W SCH O O L, charm ing old ar home, freshly pointed, 2- 1, firaploce, oak Boon, ceiling fan, fenced yard, Borage, 2915 Beanna, $700/ month. 477-9376. 3-21 H YD E PARK c o n 1-1. H ard wood Boon; , M iniblina Recently remodeled. Large, fenced backyard. Close to UT. $450. 4103 Ave. A. 467-0431 after 6pm. 3-18 425 — Rooms R O O M S FO R boys with adjoining both, 3 blocks campus. $230/mo. A B P Howell Properties, 477-9925. 3-17_____________ C LEA N RO O M , privóte entrance/kitchen. M en share bath. Quiet, m ature individu al N o pets. 474-1212 4-8 PRIVATE FU RN ISH ED D O RM RO O M S N EA R UT-kitchen privileges--bills paid - AC. CaK 477-1529 Men/women. 3-19 FREE R O O M fo r housekeeper, N W Hills one-person residence. Q uiet, liberal fem ale with cor. 451-8728. ext. 700. 3- 31_______________________________________ R O O M S FO R boys with odjotning bath, 3 blocks campus. $230/mo. A BP. Howell Properties, 477-9925 3-18_____________ 435 — Co-ops G RA D N O N SM O K ER M arch, Summer O w n in com fortable house. Unbelievably dose. 9 people. 472- 5646, 474-2002 4-8 room I M A T IO M N IN G S Welcome to the Ark Coop tot the Springs Friendly. sett-goveintng, In ternational community dose to campus Pod. sundeck. answering •enrice, computer ladMles A/C. Fun, educaNond octtvttles ok meals ABP Come by tor a tour M M Petal 4144471 •togto$>74 t o Í * * Looking for great housing? Taos i« a . * friendly co ea community across from* * campus. AC, 19 great m eals a week,* * sundeck. fun educational programs* * and security. Tours availab le anytim e* * com e by and apply! • < Sp rin g Ratos: Single: $ 4 1 9 / n tO .¿ ; Doubles: 2 9 8 / m o .* 2 6 1 2 G u a d a lu p e í . . #4 4 7 6 - 5 6 7 8 # 440 — Roommates D O YO U need a room m ate? Coll Room m ate Brokers, Inc. 910 W . M LK #201 478-5096 3-21_________________________ G RAD U ATE N O N SM O K ER , furnished 4BR 2BA house, CR shuttto, $285/mo. + Vs b ills D avid, G ary 459-7199, 474- 8564. 3-21______________________________ H O U SEM A T E N EED ED im m ediately. O w n room in quiet 2-1 with graduate fem óle 477-8110, evenings. 3-17 LIV IN G A RRA N G EM EN T for conscien tious non-smoking person. Private bed room and both. CA/CH, p o d , furnished 2-2. O ne block law school $300. 472- 2097, 477-3388. 4-29_________________ $175-PLUS V i bids. Share 2-2 furnished m obile home with fem ale graduate stu dent, 447-5072 or 478-1631(mso) 3-19 SO UTH PAD RE condo, lovely G ulf tide, 2BR, 2BA, M arch 15-22 and June 7-14. 388-3877 3-17_________________________ 490 — Wanted to Rant L o o m TW O BED R O O M apt. or condo to sub lease during summer PhD student. 445- 6081. 3-19 ___________ AN N O U N C IM IN TS 530 — Travel- Transportation S PR IN G BREA K on the beach at South Podre Island, D aytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort W alton Beach or M us tang Island/Port Aransas from only $89; ona skiiing at Steam boat o r VoB from only $861 Deluxe lodging, parties, goo dto bags, more .Hurry, call Sunchase Tours for more inform ation and reserva tions toll free 1-800-321-5911 TO D AYI VBten your Spring Break counts...count on Sunchase. 3-17 SK I BREC KEN RID G E and Summit County. Room and board at our youthful home. $60/day for 2 persons. $ 75/day for 4 persons. Cod 303-453-4904 N ow ! 3-21 A M ER IC A N A IR LIN ES ticket for sale Round trip up to V) off regular fore. Tick et good for U S, Canada, M exico and Caribbean. 255-3334 3-21_____________ 540— Lost 4 Found LOST. LA D IES gold nugget bracelet. Please cod 469-0772. Reword. 3-19 FO U N D : Young, euphoric golden cock- rspcx black : collar, no togs. 24th area. C all 478-0283 for details. 3-17 560— Public Notice 100 O V ERW EIG H T people needed to try new weight reduction program . N o ex ercise required--guaranteed. 454-6141. 3-17_____________________________________ STUDENT LO A N . $25,000 moximum, 8 % simple interest, 10 ye ar repay. N o credit check, no oge limit. Benefit of in surance plan. N o income limit, 12%. M r. Hayes, 465-8150.4-1 VISA CREDIT CARDS W A N T A V ISA CREDIT CARD A N D BEEN REJECTED ? W e Can Help (Savings Account & F e n Required) Free Details — Phone or Write: C.R. Pringle, 1401 E. Rundberg, #331-1, Austin, Tx. 78753 (512) 837-3599 4-23 570 — Music- Musicians N O N - W O R K IN G bond seeks vocalist and keyboardist wanting to work on songwriting and becom ing integral part o f original band. After 7pm Philip 478- 8630, Je ff B. 453-1938 3-17 RENTAL 370-U nff. Apts. JU ST C O M P LET ED !! CLOSE TO CAMPUS/SHUTTLE BUS M O V B - IN S P C C 1 A L S M M MMT *1* m o OP M OT MONTH • Semester Leases e 20% Summer discount e 5% Student discount e Starting at $375.00/month e 562 to 906 Square Feet e Large Walk-In Closets e Laundry Room • Jacuzzi Spa SANDSTONE APTS. 2408 M anor Rd. 478-0955 Instruction Q U A LIFIED EXPER IEN C ED mus* educa tor and perform er it offering PRIVATE VO IC E, PIA N O , and M U SIC THEO RY lessons in individual instruction. 328- 2822 3 26 G U ITAR LESSO N S: R and 8, rock, jazz, country, your choice of matoriol 8 yeon leaching experience, reasonable rates Andy, 452-6181 4-4 ___________ IN TERN A TIO N A L PIA N IST teaches peo ple who wont to loom how to play the prono ABIovoft C o l 454-0540 4-16 P IA N O LESSO N S. Beginner through od- vonced. Experienced, qualified leocher Classical and im provisad stytos. 453- 9696. 5-1 ____________ 590 — Tutoring 904 W . 24th St. Office 477-7003 MATH TUTOR 4 r ir n 10 .rm rn o f p ro . .r v ir r fra .io n a l h r lp id f atu 4 rn i* a r t . TH E U lA f ll S tru x x liB ii?* F r y . tr atari •«■ m u " I all nr ro a r by For ap p u in la .n l tlATH M301 302 M303F M403K I STA3O0 M310K1 M305G M407 M006AB MOOSE. A8 • M310K M427KL M311 RM VtCS ^ ^ ^ ■ a t e R B r m v F Ñ G e o - r ™ PHV301 M H H C M E M 3 0 1 307ENG30/ P M V 3 0 7 X I C M E M 8 1 0 A B F N G K W Bn P M Y 3 0 3 X I C H E M 6 1 ÍA B F N G 3 I0 A S T A O N ¡Ml PH Y 3 7 7 K L B U B M B M M T S F R O A C C 3 ' 1 317 AST 301 jgg ACC37A 3 ? 1 AST 30? KgBS OF*A310 AST303 BBra A C C 364 0 C A 3 3 3 K r 1*4354 B O O A S T 30/ HB E C O 3 0 ? TIN3S/ M E / .U 3 0 J EC O 37 0 X I 0 .0 3 7 4 « Don’t pul M o off was :*» r t f * baton snai o 0's a b e t a r • / MbtoA to 1/7 »#maAeto>p EM30B F.M3H FM30SS EM3M EM3I9 tE3l6 EE411 FF318 EE71? 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630 — Computar
Services
STATISTICAL C O N SU LTA N T W » pró
vida haip with SPSS, EDIT, qu M otiva
mafhods, statistical analysis, and research
m ethodology. Tabey Koop, Ph.D., 451-
8152 4-16
720 — Stereo-TV
I »pair
TV REPAIR-oil brands, used TVs from
$100. Buy repoirobto solid state TVs. $10
off with ad. 4-10
750 — Typing
THE INF0-PR0S
288-1930
Resumes lo Dissertations
Q uality Work
At Economic Prices
Discounts For Quantity.
PC STATION—
LASES JET PRINTER
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7am 12m ld
7am 5pm
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4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6
813 W 24th St.
Tri-Towers
Free P a rk in g
H o u se of \| t
T U T O H S l W
“ G o One on One
with a Winner”
S E L L
IT !
W ANT A D S
471-5244
370 — Unf. Apts.
cMi cH mi o
4 1 LET’S MAKE
A DEAL”
on one of our newly remod
eled one and two bedroom
apartments and townhouse
units. Nice neighborhood near
major shopping areas and city
park.
• Large enough for roommates
• Pool
• Gym/Sauna
• Recreation Room
• On RR/IF Shuttles
4505 Duval
4 5 4 - 4 7 9 9
Z r V L E Y ’S
THE COMPLETE
PROFESSIONAL
FULLTIME
TYPING SERVICE
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2707 HEMPHILL PARK
At 27th A Guadalupe
Plenty of Parking
472-3210
472-7677
italics
specializes in personalized servio
• word preceartag
starts (a) SI 80/p;
• Mler-qeeMy prtotiag
from your disk
IBM compatible
starts (u $ 30/pg
• Wordstar tetortog
• the»*», reseete. dtowrtattoe
draft to Final copy
e ovr nrifhl/ weekend service
CALL 459-1120
TYPIN G A N D w ord processing $1 50/
pg. Monthly accounts $8 50n *
CaM
C andoc* 451-4885 4-14
doc* 451
PR O FESSIO N A L TYPIN G , IS M Sritoctnc,
orarm ght m tvks $1/paob most itorm
campus pKkup/dshvary 244-0213, Jan
m. 3 17
LETTER PEREECT Pap an, rbiumas, low
bnaf», rash tm m c t Thoiat, dmbrtobom,
tochmcaf prasentobons 2111 Rio G rand*
474-2749 3 20
YO UR D EA D LIN ES mm, my pneas Km
W ord procaswng for low ond graduate
tontorris. Expert ityto, usage, and ipeAng
assnSanea 339-8178 3-17
TYPIN G PR O FESStO N A Lf7 d o n « on Ap
pto Ik N o |ob too large o r too tmoH
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9641 4-2
TYPING , STARTÍÑ G “ $T25/poge Rush
(otw acceptod 928 4930 until 8pm 4 2
760 — Misc. Services
W A K E U P REM IN D ER SERVIC E Any
Hour $15
ER M O N TH 454-7444 3-21
M A SSA G E THERAPEUTIC Swettah, Sh,
oho, Reftoxofogy Raotonabie Special
heotlh and beoiriy beutmh Home vw h
397-6644 Liscence pending 4-4
M O R N IN G - PR ESC H O O l d a u 8 45
11 45 Mondoy-Fndoy $120/month 837
6001 8203 Som Rayburn Dove 3-31
CO M PLETE TAX PREPARATIO N lnd»v«d
uot busmeMet, profeswonoh, studenh,
oH types, very reoionabto 18 yeoCi ex
perience R.M. Slaughter. CaM 472-
6210 3-21C
f A
PHOTOS
for
PASSPORTS
APPLICATIONS
RESUMES
3 m in u te service
M O N - F R I 9 - 6
S A T 1 0 - 2
4 7 7 - 5 5 5 5
THIRD EYE
2532 G u ad alup e
EMPLOYMENT
7 9 0 — P a r t T i m e
IN TERESTIN G W O R K ! Marketing re
search interview en needed WM tram
N o selling. D ay & evening shifts avail
able CoR M-Fri 9om-5pm 495-6465
3-21
N EAR C A M PU S TYPIST 65- wpm
W ordprocessm g experience prefered
Flexibto hours $4.50-5.50/hour Apply
9om-4pm 712A E 26 St 474 2002 4
10
A TTEN TIO N STUD EN TS! W ork evenings
ot Tri-Tow ers Sun -Thur
5-9pm
A verage $5-15/hour tetomorkebng Coll
M ike 474-8087 3 21
PART-TIME DRIVER
A sheltered industry fo r m entally re
tard ed ind ivid uals needs a d river for
d e live ry o f products 8 A M - N O O N ,
M O N - FR l, $ 4 9 8 m onthly, to be in
creased a fte r 6 m onths to $553
m onthly A p p ly
in person Austin
Travis C ounty M H M R , 1430 C o llie r
Street, Austin.
_____________________________________ 308
JANITORIAL SUPERVISOR
A sheltered industry fo r m entally re
tard ed ind ivid uals needs jonitonol su
p erviso r fo r even in g contracts. Duties
include supervision an d transportation
o f w orkers ond m eetings, 8PM-mid-
night d aify, $ 5 2 9 m onthly A p p ly in
person. Austin Travis C ounty M H M R ,
1430 C o llie r Street, Austin
Phone Sales-Show Tickets
450-0151
450-0151
PART-TIME EV EN IN G
PO SIT IO N S
PAID W EEKLY, $5/HR
M R DAVIS
3-18J
APPOINTMENT
SETTERS
c o m p a n y needs
O ur grow ing
leff
motivated, reliable, enthuvosbt 8 powtwe
mdividuoh to tet appomtmenh in a com
fortobfe environment G ood money &
commneion CaM Edward, 454 8351
3-19
TOM THUMB PAGE
n o w hiring p a rf tim e p ro
d u ce clerks, flex ib le hours.
A p p ly in person Tom Thumb
Po g e # 8 0 . 7100 H ig h w a y
’ 2 9 0 W at the Y.
APPOINTMENT
SETTER
Fun and Exciting!
55-7/hr. part time Call Craig
between 2:00 and 7 00 pm
244-9676
3-18J
tra n sp o rta tio n
W A N T ED BA BYSITTERlor two smotl cM
d re n ,
n «ce$ so ry,
f'ortfowast Austin M ondoy ond Thurs
day, 3-8 30pm, excluding Spring Breofc
Down. 258 436 5,459 5766 3 19
EARN $5.00/HOUR
W o rk in g in on ice cream w arehouse
Som e h e avy lifting but oH the ice
cream you con e at Lo cated 15 mm
utes by co r from UT cam pus You
need transp ortation to w ork Hours
7 30 A M -12:00 P M
d ays a w e ek. 251-3481 m ornings
(flex ib le) 3-6
3-14
M ust like w orking outdoors and
doing excellent w ork, good dnvm g
record W e offer flexible hours,
good pay, training program ond
responsibility fo r those individuals
w ho w ork hard, like to team and
excel. Chnstian m anagem ent Coll
4 58-8873 Cleon Cut Law n C o re
LOSE WEIGHT
10-29 lbs/mo.
G om energ y Look ond
feel g re at1 SA FE EA SY
1 0 0 % M on e y bock g u a ran te e 1
O p tio n al opportunity to earn
m oney part-tim e
346-8041
LUNCH O R dinner experienced wottpei
son A verage 6 00/hour
(woge ond
tips)
459-6001 3 18__________
Jo de Fountain 3704 N
IH 35
TEACHER AIDE positions available Ex
penence preferred CoB University Pres
bytenon Child Developm ent Center 4 72
49B4 3-18
REC EPTIO N IST FO R optometrist W e d ,
Th, Fr., 12 00-5:30pm, Sat, 1000
3 00pm Barton Creek M all, 329 1305
4-8
N IG H T C O U N SELO R
for vocational
Rehob facility for M R moles Every
other week night m exchange foe fur
nished apartment and meals CoB 478
7557 for appointment 3-18
BRO KE AT SPR IN G BREAiO ' Part-tvne
positions in local public relations firm
$5 00/hr Apply 5555 N Lomar C107,
l-9pm M r Dovts 3-21
W A N T ED CARE giver for infant m my
home, 8-noon, week do ys References
required Cod 474-4413 3 20
3-18
Cafe Tortugas
Now hiring day waitpersons,
bartenders and hostpersons
Apply in person, 2-4 pm, 3010-
M W . Anderson.
EOE
3-28
PART-TIME PH O N E work, evenings ond
weekends, bilingual helpful, but not re
quired Co# Juon, 480-8219 3-21
SEEK IN G EXPERIEN C E or business stu-
dent for accounting clerk position
20
hours/week, beginning Apnl 1, contort
Jo n or Rhonda. 473 2020 3-18
VERY SM ALL but up ond coming produc
tion com pany wants morketm ^publK
relations major to do reseorch ond typing
port-time $250/mo . 480-8100 3 20
$ M O N EY C O M JN '$ Tired of waiting for
your check? Instant cash doiiy.
flexible
hours call Mope. 443-6296 After 5pm.
448-0368 3-17
C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD
3 7 0 — U n f . A p t s .
TYPING
WORD PROCESSING
SourtimostSorvicoi
453-0323
4311 Avenue F
Pickup/Delivery e S
it A
DitMrtations
Theses
Reports
★
Lo w Pnces, Free D rafts
Unde Cheek Word
t f R c e i l f l j b n i c M
0 0 2 - 0 0 7 8
PC STATION—
P R O F E S S IO N A L
T Y P IN G
A N D
W O R D P R O C E S S IN G
Comp*6*v# Rota
Convenient Hoon
469-5632
23 D O BIK M ALL
S701
SPEEDWAY
TYPING
i if shuffle wmimm
( y W lg h t / lu p e f R u ih I
1 472-4039
^p^pED^RPirlt^DE^ R t o it f |
COLLEGE AID
331-5500
X
FREE
Pick-Up & Delivery
Open 24 Hours
V E R A T E E S
W o rd Processing
P u b lic N o tary
20 Years Legal Experience
• Term Papers
• Law Briefs
• Theses
• Dissertations
• Cover Letters
• Resumes
512'/? E. 38'/z St. «.ft Duvni,
4 5 4 -1 5 3 2 * 7 day s a week
JE A N N E 'S TYPIN G Service. W ordpro-
cessing/transcribing/general
typing
North Austin home. Fast, reasonable,
accurate 836-4303. 4-14
PR O FESSIO N A L W O R D processing
Theses, dissertations, term papers typed
by
experienced individuo!. $1 25/pg
W ill deliver Cynthia, 495-9663. 4-2
» * W ESTLAKE DATA Services** W ord
and Doto Processing -Resumes, M anu
scripts, Reports, Bookkeeping, Custom
Programming, Consulting for
IBM-PC,
IBM-PC-XT. Reasonable **327-8434**
M B A U
*
RESUMES
2707 Hemphill Pork
Jus» North of ? /th a» Guodtjlope
472-3210 472-7677
term
PR O FESSIO N A L Q UALITY w ord pro
ce ssin g ,
th eses,
dissertations,
IBM PC, letter
resumes
quality printer. N ear compus, 478-5485.
4-14
p a p e rs,
PR O FESSIO N A L TYPIN G Reseorch pa
p en, theses, dissertations, resumes. Fast,
occurote, reasonable Correcting Seiec-
tric. O vernight availab le 441-1893 4-9
Biases, papers, all stytos. Rush |obs w el
comed. Cynthia 445-6937, evenings/
weekends 4 -10
typist
Rush iot
PATTY'S TYPIN G and W ord Processing.
Themes, dissertations, PR's, and
low
briefs. Personolized professional service
345-4269 3-31
R 0 0 -G en eral Help
Wanted
GUYS & GALS
A FUN JOB
Are your tired of being unem
ployed? A re you tired of hear
ing "you ore too young or too
inexperienced?" Are you tired
of the some old bonng |ob with
the same old boring people?
the same old
And worst of all
bonng paycheck?
$ YES $
W ell our company is looking for
several guys ond gals who have
ambition, imogmation, ond en
|oy working with others You con
earn $387 + per week in in
centives, commissions ond in
creases N o experience neces
sary, on the |ob training. For on
exciting new career, cad
462-1131 OR 1132
3 20
INSTANT CASH
ANDBONUS
N yew need ceeki to help yew ewt
j,®
t , fr*»
Yew can
rinnese tw ice In a 7 to y p arted —
for the le t doneM en receive $?• ,
to r the 2nd d en elten to d ie M Ene
■teak receive f 12 Ptwa e t h dds
ad yo u 'll receive a f t fcenm e n
y o u r R m risk . A lso eetc to e d
bones prepr eins. So help odtnrs
wtrito h elping yewreeN. Mwai h u e
vndd ID and sem e p r M M t o B
residente Orewktp ['a Ji'ft'- ’■ "tf.- '.'l
monrti tor tw o S2S k ^ U H H i^ H
■
474-79*1
M en.-M . 4-5
■
A u s tin F fo s m o C a n t o r B
1-11 C A B D R IV ER S
4 7 2 - i m
Dnve for loccigy owned noPonagy knowr
YELLOW CHECKERED CAB Eom up to
$450 - per «reek bemg your own boss
Dnve 6 days get one free Lease rates 2*
hours $50 12 hours, $40 weekends (7PV
Fn 7AM, Mom. $100 Bring dnvmg record to
319 E Ben Whde Anytime
A-tAP
Serio us students needing m oney
com e to A m erican C ob C om p any
O u r new ly d evelo p ed state o f the on
com puterized despatching system wih
allo w study tim e m b etw een taking
3 28A
tnps A p p ly m person 10315 M cKoH o
Place 8-5 pm M F M ust hove 7 years
U S dnvm g ex p erien ce
3-17
LAKEHILLS
CINEM A FOUR
N o w hiring floor staff positions,
storting salary minimum, fle x ib le
hours. N o experience neces
sary. Apply in person. 2428 W
Be n White Blvd .
3-19
CAMP WEKEELA FOR
BOYS AND GIRLS,
CANTON, MAINE:
seeks staff for positions in tennis, water
front, water skiing (W .S.I required), com
petrtrve swimming, athletics, gymnastics
creative/perform ing
arts, wdeo/radio
broodcosting, comp crafts/ropes course
secretaries, bookkeepers, kitchen & moir
lenonce workers
June 70-Augup 24
Contact Enc/Lcxjr*n Scobhonko 4892
Georfork, W estervAe O H 4308 ' (614
899 1373
3-17
CRUISE SH IPS A IRLIN ES, HIRIN G* Sum
mer, Career. O verseas Cod for Guide
Cossette. N ewsservice1
Í916I944-4444
ext 189 3-31
N EED ED PH O TO G RAPH ER with access
to a medium form at comerá to do on
August wedding Coli Koren. evenings
847-5635 3 17
CHILD CARE W O RK ER for toddler doss
experience ond/or child developm ent
degree preferred Hours 8 30-2, good
benefits University Boptist Church 478
1066 3-18
BRO KE AT SPR IN G BREAK# Port-xme
postoons m ¡ocal pubhc retohons firm
$5 00/hr Apply 5555 N Lam ar 0 0 7
1-9nm M r D ovs 3-21
C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AO
• PAPERS
• RESUMES
• WORD
PROCESSING
In by 11 Out by 7
Open 'tilMidnight
House of H a
T U T O R S l W
4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6
Vie Never Stop!
JOB W IN N IN G
RESUMES
W e D o It A ll!
Expert Services Included
Layout e Typing
Printing W h ile You W ort
e Jo b Resumes/Letiers/Applicotions
e M oiling Compoigns
e SF Forms 171's
e M ilitary Conversions
e Business Proposals & Reports
e Free Interview/Lifetime Updating
Stncn 1958 — Nahonwiria
Canuol 1300 Gooriolupe #103
SoiriA
? ? 1 9 W ian W riin * # f
ttoriti 9513 Bm-nai # ? 0 3 t
499 8 86 ?
443 6 34 n
836 94 77
D o n n a 's T yp in g &
W o rd Pro ce ssin g
C STUDENT
PAPERS
RESUMES
¡f c s r -
5 0 c
Free Gram m ar and Speii*nK Check
746-B W . Stassney Ln
462-1111
M o n ThurA 9-9
Fr?
9-6
W K t t N D S 12-6
RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts.
Su re, w e typ e
FRESHMAN THEMES
Why Not Start Out
With Good Grades?
472-3210 472-7677
H O M E TYPIST-experienced, occurote.
fast tomoround. Close to compus. $1.25/
poge special! 472-4066 keep trymg. 3-
P R O F E S S IO N A l W O R D PR O C ESSIN G
Fast, reliable, ond accurate. Speaakze
in rash orders. W ig deliver $1.50/pooe
M ory, 836-7474. 3-31
PR O FESSIO N A L TYPIST Theses, disserta
tions, professional reports, le ao l G radu
ato school quality from $1.25.
TuBos 453-5124 4-8
Break Away
From The Ordinary
Enjoy Condo Luxury A t Affordable Prices.
Racquet Club/Creekhaus
Apartments
Spring. There’s no better time to leave behind
the mundane and begin to enjoy the place you
call home.
Like the large swimming pool, hot tub,
and tanning decks. Spacious fltxtr-
plans with newly renovated
interiors. Loads of bookcases, ,(<
closets, and cabinet^ A n d
locations that are cl
popular restaurants,
Isn’t it time yo
pack? C all us today
campus
d shuttle bus.
art from the
S ) t a u lc2 JU la
Apartments in Hyde Park
4305 Duval
Austin, Texas 78751
451-2343
U M N i f A l
Apartments in West Campus
2810 Salado
Austin, Texas 78705
472-3816
From the collection of
H utkin Properties
on Town Lake
• Lakefront Apts
• 2 Pools
• Sundeck
• Tennis Court
• Volleyball Court
• Boat Dock
• Clubroom w/FirepIace & Bar
• Shuttle Route
1720 S. Lakeshore Blvd.
Austin, Texas 78741
(512) 444-2882
VILLA
ORLEANS
ARTS.
206 W .SOtli
EL CID
ARTS.
3 7 0 4 S p t t d w a y
• Great location
• On Shuttle
• Ceiling Fana
• Poolside Units
O s e M o a tfc F B E E B e a t
W k h 9 o r 1 2 N o a lb L a a a e !
2 14m .l B*. S5ZS-SS45 ASF
l U a j l k $ n S 4 H 5 E
WE’LL MOVE
YOU IN!
Vi0H2nd
Month’s Rent
with 6 Month
leas*
12, 3 & 4 Bedroom with
Fireplace, PooL Hot Tub,
WoRer and Gas Paid On
C« Shuttle
IS0NGATE
APTS.
4 5 4 -2 6 3 6
¡T r e s t l e s!
Apartment*
s
¡
=
1 a n d 2 B e d ro o m s
o n S h w tfte B u s B o u t*
C A L L T O D A Y
—
S
=
4 5 3 - 4 9 6 8
1071 C la y to n L a n e
s
=
n i m i i i i u i i i i i ii m i i im i i i ii i i i i u i A l ■
5
§ 370— Unf. Apt S .
SUPER
RENT
GIVEAWAY
• 1 and 2 Bed
room Apts.
Available Now!
• FREE Gas and
Water
• On Shuttle Route
1500 Royal Crast
444-7516
THE A£BOR
BRAND NEW
ONE MONTH FU I
Spacious 1 Bdrm; G re a t
2 Bdrm/2 Ba. g reat
room m ate plan. O n
shuttle bus route and
within walking distance
to grocery store and
entertainm ent. C om e
Visit Us Todayl
T O W N L A K E a S C L E
A PA R T M EN T S
MO? Town lake Onto
447-5971
Large Pool and Sundeck
Spacious Walk-In Closets
Close to Central Campus Shuttle
STUDENT SPECIALS
1 0 % D iscount - S ta rt a t $ 3 2 5
S h o rt term sum m er leases.
SAGEBRUSH
4 7 8 - 0 9 9 2
■
C A L I F O R N I A D R E A M I N ’
. .
A U S T I N T A T I O U S L I V I N ’
■ Southern Califomia-style clubhouse with trellis. J patio
■ Crystal-blue pool and spa ■ Tile-hearthed fireplaces
■ W et bars ■ Ceiling Fans ■ Washer/dryer connections
■ On Shuttle ■ 1 & 2 Bdrms. ■ It's all here at Monteeito
Apartments.
Where the West Coast meets the Third Coast ■ 447-3806
Mo h t e o t o
3111 Parker Lane
•
447-3806
OMce Hours 8 aBB-é p n M-F
Set. 10— 0
\ f
\
^ ‘ 0 » C ■( r M e e » |U v '/ <;
52 Rowboat
53 Tchrs.' gp.
54 Blvds.
55 Keen
57 Hero
58 Automobile
accessory
59 Displeased
60 Bonanza
61 Nogs
62 Hose
makings
63 Fork over
DOWN
1 Moslem
supreme
being
2 Dwelling
3 British —
4 Reserved
5 Shrill cry
6 Innocent
7 Divide
8 Corrode
9 Miserable
10 Helix
11 School song
12 Metal
13 Deftness
21 Coffin
G A S P S
/C L L O T
L E A S E
PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED
s o L E
p L A Y
1
R A KEl R 1 I j A
E X Tl E N s 1 V H L 1 V E, R
S 0 N S
P L O T
S T u InM sIO O N E, Si T
R O D
F R 0 O N T O A S K
R E V E R S E D
E D A M
T O L E D 0
R E 0
R E L A Y S
0 P E E
R 1 P A R 1 A N
S A L E
E N D
M A R
B E G G A m0
A L L E N 0a O N O 21 1 S
L O A N
B □ S 1 £
□G3 3 0
0E R E
E P 1 CBO
a E S S
3 ■1
S E R E
fT
3
0
C
23 Adamantine
25 Divulge
26 Perfume
28 Sidetrack
29 Pickable
30 Barbecuing
gadget
31 Hurried
32 Jai —
33 Continue
34 Undamaged
37 Water source
38 Immanuel —
40 Fuel
41 Comfortable:
var.
43 Seals
44 List
46 Gambling
game
47 Subcontinent
48 Lights
49 Squalls
50 Pro —
51 Loathsome
52 Twofold
56 ”— Havoc”
57 Sprite
ACROSS
1 “No
Refunds”
5 Propeller
10 Store event
14 Delicious
15 Net
16 Pretext
17 — white
18 Income: Fr.
19 ”
corny
as Kansas...”
20 Feasted
21 Ornament
22 Diatribe
24 Mercenary
26 Take off
27 Encircle
28 Learned ones
31 Tang
34 Luster
35 Pourboire
36 Beaver skin
37 Came across
38 Military cap
39 Hearing
40 Figure
41 Insert mark
42 Rebate
44 Wheedle
45 Antelope
46 Enduring
50 Rise up
1
2
3
14
17
20
24
M
J
1
25
-
'
© 1986 United Feature Syndicate
Around Campus is a daily col
umn listing University-related ac
tivities sponsored by academic de
partments, student services and
registered student organizations.
To appear in the Around Campus
column, organizations must be reg
istered with the Office of Student
Activities. Announcements must be
submitted on the correct form by 11
a.m. the day before publication to
The Daily Texan office. No excep
tions will be made.
La Amistad will meet at 6:30 p.m.
Monday in the Texas Union Build
ing 4.206.
Student V olunteer Services
needs a volunteer to be a "friendly
visitor" to an elderly stroke victim
in a nursing home. Call 471-3065 for
more information.
' The Union Dancers will present
"old timey" dancing with live music
at 8 p.m. Monday in the Texas Un
ion Building Quadrangle Room.
“Th* Church in the Soviet Un
ion," sponsored by
the United
Campus Ministry of the Austin Stu
dent Council, will be presented at
noon Monday in the Texas Union
Building Eastwoods Room. Speaker:
Bruce Rigdon, the chairman of the
National Council of Churches Com
mittee on U.S.-U.S.S.R. Church Re
lations.
The Department of Spanish and
Portuguese will meet for "Bate-
Papo," a Portuguese conversation
hour, at 5:30 p.m. Monday on the
patio of the Texas Union Building
(inside if it rains).
The Department of Music will
present Paul Olefsky on the cello
and William Race on the piano at 8
p.m. Monday in Jessen Auditorium.
The Longhorn Pre-Pharmaceuti-
cal Association will present "Words
of Advice and Helpful Hints from
Upperclassmen in Pharmacy" at 7
the Pharmacy
in
p.m. Monday
Building 2.108.
Student nominations for out
standing instructors in liberal arts
and natural sciences will be accept
ed until Tuesday. Turn in nomina
tion forms to the West Mall Office
Building 101 or Will C. Hogg Build
ing 108. The recipient of the Hollo
way Teaching Excellence Award
will receive $2,500.
United Campuses to Prevent Nu
clear War will meet at 4 p.m. Mon
day on the porch of the Texas Union
From 3 p.m. Friday to 3 p.m.
Sunday, the University Police De
partment reported these incidents:
Assault: A non-student reported
at 10:01 a.m. Sunday that he was
struck in the face by another non
student in the Texas Union Qua
drangle Room at 11 p.m. Saturday.
There are no suspects.
Burglary: A UT student reported
at 1:30 p.m. Saturday that a sound
power booster and a pair of sun
glasses were stolen from the glove
box of her car while it was parked in
the C section of Lot 67 south of
Beauford H. Jester Center. The inci
dent occurred between 7 p.m.
March 1 and 11:30 a.m. Saturday.
There are no suspects.
Criminal mischief: A UT staff
member reported at 7:10 p.m. Satur
day that the left front door window
of his car was shattered between
3:45 p.m. and 7:10 p.m. Saturday.
Damage was estimated at $50.
There are no suspects.
Driving while
intoxicated: A
non-UT student was arrested in the
400 block of West 24th Street Satur
day when his car was observed
weaving and almost striking a
parked car. The student was deter
mined to be intoxicated and was
taken to the Travis County jail.
Public intoxication: A non-stu
dent was arrested at 2:40 a.m. Satur
day and taken to the Travis County
jail after an officer saw him stum
bling in a parking lot at 26th and
Speedway streets.
Two UT students were arrested at
2 a.m. Sunday when they were
found leaving the scene of an acci
dent in lot 69, south of Texas Me
two were
morial Stadium. The
intoxication
charged with public
and taken to the Travis County jail.
Simple assault: A UT student re
ported at 10:45 p.m. Friday that a
man struck her in the face and ab
domen in a Beauford H. Jester Dor
mitory East hallway at 10:20 p.m.
Friday. The suspect is described as a
short, white male with dark wavy
hair and a large nose.
Theft: A UT student reported at
5:15 p.m. Friday that his bicycle,
chain and padlock were stolen from
the 23rd block of San Jacinto Boule
vard at about 4:45 p.m. The bike
was valued at $50. There are no sus
pects.
A UT student reported at 12:05
p.m. Saturday that his 10-speed bi
cycle was stolen from the north side
of Moore-Hill Dormitory. The bike
was valued at $200. There are no
suspects.
Page 20/The Daily Texan/Monday, March 17, 1986
SPRING '86
Te*o> U:' on
u
The Texas Union invites you to participate in its Spring '86 Inform al Class Pro jram. These classes are non-
credit, ungraded courses designed to provide you with new skills, opportunities for self-developm ent and
just plain fun I They are open to the entire Austin community.
REGISTRATION
I
In person, at the Texas Union (comer of 24th 5 Guadalupe)
Mon
Tues-Thurs
Enrollment Is lim ited, so registration is on a first-come, first-served basis.
6-8pm
11am-7p0i
M ar 17
M ar 18-20
Presidential Lobby
Art G allery
MULTIPLAN FOR MACINTOSH II
216
See h ow you can use Microsoft's M U ITIP LA N to its fullest potential. From sim ple appfica-
tions like form and table design, to com plex applications such as statistical analysis ond
modeling, w e can talk a bout H here. This c lo u includes extensive use o f M icroso ft CHART
lin kin g worksheets a nd linking to CHART are explained through examples. (2 meetings)
Ini Sec 2
Instructor: Seekings, Roddy. Fees: $55-UT, $ 7 0 -0 . Enrollment Limit: 12.
A p r 2 6 & M a y 3
12-4pm
Sal
JITTIRBUG
Is o m the basic steps o f Jitterbug o nd its multiple turns o nd variations. Jitterbug is a realty
versatile dance which con be done to C W o r Rock musk INTERMEDIATE w A concentrate
on intricate turns a nd steps. (1 meeting)
BEG Sec. 3
INT
Instructor: Horton, A ntone. Fees: $6-UT, $ 8 - 0 . Enrollment lim it: 70.
3 -5pm
3 5 3 0 p m
A p r 5
A p r 12
Sat
Sat
220
WORD! (M ACINTOSH WORDPROCESSING)
This c lo u is lo r those w h o need to use (he high p ow e re d M icrosoft W O RD w o rd processing
software on their M acintosh computers, o r fo r those w h o know w o rd processing and w ant
to see h o w easily it can be d one on Ihe Mocintosh. W e w A creole ond update files.
University accepted form ats fo r form a l pajsers w A be d ea lt with a nd a mailing m erge w ill be
produced. H o w the p rinting options operate is a b o covered. (3 meetings)
S ec 2
Instructor Seekins, Roddy. Fees; $55-UT, $ 7 0 - 0 Enrollment Limit: 12
A p r 3 - A p r l7
6-9pm
Thurs
49 0
ROCK 'N ' SW ING 'N ' ALL THAT JA ZZ
Austin m usk created its o w n style out o f rock, p o p and jazz, o nd n ow it has its very o w n new
dance style It's a special one that lets you hold yo ur partner dose and swing to Ihe most
popular rock music around. This is a high energy doss, focusing on three dance styles — the
Jitterbug, the Jazzi Rock, o nd the Southern Swing. Leom Ihe latest steps especially a dapted
lo r Austin dancers A keep your p ortner swinging to the hottest musk in town. (2 meetings)
Sun
Instructor: Horton, A ntone. Fees: $18-UT, $ 2 1 -0 . Enrollment Limit: 70.
A p r 2 0 A 27
3 -5 30pm
M O U n A T I O N I N P O R M A T I O N z
M I A S B N O n i
Paym ent fo r dosses must be m ade a t re g istra tio n (cash o r chock). Chocks must ba
m ade o u t to Ihe U n iversity o f Texas, d riv e r's fica n te # required . You can n g t take a
course card and pay fo r H la te r
To q u a lify fo r reduced student/facuR y/staff rates you must present yo u r v a lid S pring
1986 UT ID. You m ay register fo r yourself and up to thre e others, how ever, you
MUST b rin g th e ir IDs to receive the SFS ratos. NO TE: You must register IN PERSON
fo r some classes, os in d ica te d in ih e descriptions fo llo w in g .
THERE ARE TW O PRICES USTED FOR EACH CLASS: "U T " in d ko te s the cost fo r
those presenting v a lid SPRING 1986 student, fa cu lty ond sta ff ID cards; "O " in d i
cates the cost fo r others.
A room lo c a tio n list w ill be a va ila b le a t re g istra tio n . Be sure to p ick one up) A
lo ca tio n fist w ill be m oiled to m o il-in registrants.
BE SURE BEFORE YO U REGISTERI You a re responsible fo r checking yo u r registra
tio n form and a v o id in g schedule conflicts. If you cann ot a tten d the course you have
registered fo r, you m ay hove o frie n d o r re la tiv e atten d in yo u r place. Due to
expenses in vo lve d in course planning, N O REFUNDS a re possible, unless a course is
cancelled due to in su fficie n t enrollm ent.
Due to the in structors' enraflm ent lim its, it is ra re ly possible to sw itch dosses o r
sections once registered. Thonk you fo r y o u r co o p e ra tio n .
« M M B I M h
If the c la u you w o nt to take is fu ll, ask to be p u t on the w a ilin g list. Than, if a person
e n ro lle d in Ihe d o u fin d s it necessary to sell h is/h e r p lace b e fo re Ihe d a n begins,
w e w ill te ll them to co n ta ct you. The tw o o f you w ill han dle a ll m onetary exchanges,
but you need to n o tify In fo rm a l Classes (471-5651, e xt 2 7 0 ) so w e can in form the
in structor ond upd ate o u r records.
If you hove questions, n o t answ ered in the descriptions, c a ll In fo rm a l Classes a t 471-
5651 du rin g busineu hours, M onday-F rida y.
In some circum stances, lo te re g istra tio n m ay be possible, thro ugh A p r. 3. There w ill
be a $10 la te re g istra tio n fee in o d d itio n to the course cost. Com e to 4.312 in the
Texas U nion (enter th ro u g h 4 .3 0 0 ) betw een 9am and 4pm , to la te register
M P T — b m m m m
Second re g istra tio n fo r Summ er sem ester dosses w ill be h eld June 4-11.
ARTS
102
VISUAL T H IN K IN G FOR THE ARTS
This course is a b ro a d survey o f art history emphasizing Ihe study o f (he structure o f the
a rtw o rk Analogies w A be made between the art o f diverse cultores throughout history W e
w A relate artists o f vonous tones ond places, discuss the political and philosophical m ove
ments that have coincided w ith ortistic thought. The course w ill develop Ihe students' ability
to think visually o nd w ill enhance Ihe understanding o f Ihe arts os a vie w e r o r a creator. (6
meetings)
M o n
Instructor Voter, Regina Fees: S18-UT, $ 2 2 - 0 Enrollment Limit 24
M a r 31-Apr 14
7 -8 30pm
105
BATIK II: P R IN T IN G FOR FABRIC
Design yo ur o w n fab ric! W e i cover o voriety o f techniques fo r printing on fabric: block o nd
woodcuts, discharge dyeing, different types o f resists, a nd more types o f dyes. Requires
p rio r know led g e o f either batik, dyeing o r printing. Bring $ 5 to tost class fo r dyes ond
waxes. Expect to spend up to $ 6 on supplies (6 meetings)
M o n
Instructor: Foss, Sue. Fees: $30-UT, $ 3 4 -0 . Enrollment Limit: 15.
M a r 31-May 5
6 :30-9pm
106
CALLIGRAPHY: CHANCERY CURSIVE
A n elegant, ye t less form a l style o f slanted handw riting. Chancery Cursive was invented in
the 15th century fo r p a p a l scripts, ond it soon spreod oH o ver Europe This wA be o n in-
depth study o f the Hoke a lph a be t — You wiH leom u pp er ond lo w e r cose letters ond
numbers. Pick up callig ra ph y supplies at C O -O P EAST (2901 Medico) Arts St. They hove o
supply list. Plan to spend $ 5-$8 ). (5 meetings)
Sec 2
Instructor: Dunlop, Anna. Fees: $30-UT, $ 3 4 - 0 . Enrollment Limit: 17.
A p ril 3 -M a y 8
5 :3 0 -8 pm
Thurs
115
DR AW IN G
H o i o f each doss meeting w A b e spent on one- ond tw o -p o in t perspective ond other classic
form ulae fo r le ft-brain draw ing. D raw ing on Ihe Right Side o f the Brain (Betty Edwards,
author) w A be emphasized the other h o i o f each doss meeting (book optionol). Bring
sketch p ad a nd soft leod pencil to first dass. Plan to spend $10 on materials, depending on
w ho* you a lre a d y hove (this w A be discussed a t first clou). (6 meetings)
Sec. 2
Instructor : Thompson, M urry Fees, $28-UT, $ 3 2 -0 . Enrollment lim it: 20.
A p ril 1-May 6
7 -9pm
Tues
117
BASIC P A IN T IN G WORKSHOP (OILS/ACRYLICS)
The w orkshop w i l consist o f tw o separate classes one in ACRYLICS ond one in OILS/
AIK Y D S . These studio dosses w ill include on in troduction to color, elements o f design, value,
shape, m ovem ent ond vie w p oin t C olor mixing, use o f glazes ond washes canvas preparo
Hon, ond varnishing the finished picture w ill be dem onstrated. Discussions and dem onstra
tions w ill be accom plished during the time period fo r each medium, the rem ainder w ill be
ope n studio tone fo r pointing. Students must have done some draw ing a nd be com fortable
w ith their d ra w in g skills. Bring materials ond ideas to first class. Plan to spend $ 3 0 -$ 4 0 on
supplies depending on medium chosen. (6 meetings)
Sec 2
A p ril 5 -M o y 10
12 3 0 -4 30pm
Sot
Instructor: Clarke, Alisan. Fees: $39-UT, $ 4 2 -0 . Enrollment lim it: 20.
A c ry lic s -I2 :3 0 -2 :3 0 /0 4
UFE DRAW ING
120
C lo u tim e w ill b e spent d ra w in g under supervision from the figure. The g o a l is to see and
transcribe the fig ure while d eveloping visual perception. W e will w o rt m ainly with pencil
a nd charcoal. M o re advanced students w ill be e ncouraged to experim ent w ith other media.
Plan to spend a p p ro x. $10 on supplies (to be discussed at first meeting). Bring pencil and
p a p e r and a $ 7 m odel fee p aya ble to the instructor the first night. (6 meetings)
Sec. 2
Instructor Sipe, Sloci Fees: S28-UT, $ 3 2 - 0 Enrollment lim it 18.
M a r 31-M ay 5
7-9pm
M o n
WATERCOLOR
130
There will be dem onstration a nd explanation o f technique a nd basic theories o f art. Stu
dents will spend the m ajority o f the doss tim e painting u nder supervision. Supplies w ill cost
approx. $ 2 5 (6 meetings)
Sec. 2
Sec. 3
Instructor Clorke, Alison. Fees: $30-UT, $ 34 -0 . Enrollment Limit 20.
A p ril 3 -M a y 8
A p ril 1-May 6
6 3 0 -9pm
6:3 0 -9 pm
Thurs
Tues
CAMERA BASICS
154
Become acquainted w ith yo ur cam era through a series o f talks, slide shows, and practical
experiences. The course w ill cover camera handling, making sharp and w ell-exposed p ic
tures in a voriety o f situations, picture composition and photo-history These are skill-orient
ed courses ond inform ation is cumulative, so please plan to attend from the start. 35m m
cameras o re required. (4 meetings)
Sec 3
6 -9 pm
Instructor Donnemiller, Keith Fees: $43-UT, $ 4 7 - 0 Enrollment Limit: 18
A pril 2 -A pril 23
W e d
WILDFLOWER WORKSHOP
159
G o b eyond bluebonnetsl This photo workshop explores the vibrant colors o f the Spring
countryside and the images o f Eliot Porter, Jim Bones etc. alon g with tips and critiques. (6
meetings)
M o n .
F/T
Instructor la ke , Tina. Fees: $ 3 2 -UT $ 3 6 - 0 Enrollment lim it: 25
3 /3 1 ,4 /7 ,2 1 , & 5 /5
4/13 & 4 /2 7
7 -9pm
9am -5pm
160
WILDLIFE A N D CAVE PHOTOG RAPHY
Join us fo r a p ho to safari to a nearby drive-through w ildlife park with 6 0 species o f animals
fro m o round the w orld. W e 'll "sh o ot" these exotic anim als in a natural setting. Then, w e ll
visit a private cave with spectacular form ations a nd le om the pho tog ra ph ic art o f painting
w ith light First doss covers basic skills and equipment. Follow -up doss offers a slide show
o nd critique Lead by G eorge M iller, nature p ho to g ra p h e r a nd author o f "P hotographing
Texas " Fieldlnp plan to corpool. buy lunch, film ond processing and p ay $10 fo r p o ii
odmissions. (3 meetings)
Thurs
FieldTnps
8 am -6pm
Instructor M iller, G e o rg e Fees: $28-U T $ 3 2 - 0 Enrollment lim it: 15
7 :3 0 -9 :3 0 p m
A p ril 6
A p ril 3 & 10
Sun
170
HO O KED O N CROCHET
This class covers all the bosic crochet stitches, the afg h an stitch and reading patterns.
Projects include o p illo w ond a project of yo ur ow n choosing. Time wiH o h o be spent on
"fre e -fo rm " crocheting Depending on the p ro ject you choose, matenols w ill cost $10-25.
Bnng size "H " crochet hook, 1 skein o f knitting worsted yarn a nd scissors. (6 meetings)
Tues
A p ril 1-May 5
Instructor Thompson, Suzann Fees $28-U T $ 3 2 - 0 Enrollment lim it: 15
5 :3 0 -7 3 0 p m
K N IT T IN G
172
W e 'll leom basic knitting, ribbing, h ow to make cobles, tw o -co lor knitting, & some lace
knitting Choose a protect o f yo u r o w n (socks, sweaters, etc.) — almost anything you see in
cra fts magazines
Bnng $8 to first dass to cover needles, instruction booklet & ya m fo r first 4 weeks. Planto
spend on additional sum fo r materials fo r individuo! projects o f your choice. If you know
how to but, but w a n t to razz it up, try the A D V A N C E D doss. Bnng needles o nd a bout 1 oz
each o f 3 yam colors to first doss. W e ll cover mosaic knitting, argytes, fa ir isle, advanced
finishing techniques ond dra ftin g yo ur ow n patterns M a te ria l cost wiH depend on project
choice. (6- meetings)
Sec. 2
Instructor Thompson, Suzann Fees $28-UT $ 3 2 - 0 Enrollment Limit 15
A p ril 3 -M a y 8
5 :3 0 -7 30pm
Thurs
PERSONAL
COMPUTING
N O T!: AN c o w t m i focus on the uso of microprocessors — person* ?
computers" — fo r business or homo. Lab feos oro inducted in course
coat fo r aN "hands-on" classes.
205
SOFTWARE SAMPLER ("FREEWARE" O N IBM)
le o m w h a t "fre e w a re " (non-copyrighted software) is o nd h o w to get it This course gives
C lhe opportom ty to see many different types o f software in o d io n and determ ine which
fit yo ur needs. Try w o rd processing, gomes, communications and spreod sheet p ro
grams hands-on. H y o u'd like, b nng an IBM PC disk and make y o ur ow n c o p ie s (1 meeting)
t o n
6 -9pm
A p r 14
instru cto r SuAvon. M a lt. Fees: $25-UT, $ 3 5 - 0 E nrolm ent lim it: 12.
208
INTRO DUCTIO N TO WORDPROCESSING (IBM)
This course introduces the student to w o rd processing. W e i start with entering and editing
text on the com puter screen N ext, w e 'I leom to store and retrieve documents on disk ond
p nnt them Finally, w e l learn to generate a form le tter o nd m erge it with o m oiling list. The
course is taught o n the IBM PC, bcX w o rd proce u m g concepts o re o p p tc o b le to other
system s (2 meetings)
Sec 3
Instructor Sufkvon. Mott. Fees $45-UT, $ 6 0 -0 . Enrollment lim it: 12.
A p r 8 & 15
6 -9pm
Tues
210
BASIC PRO G RAM M ING (IBM)
If you o re interested m le arning to w rite your o w n programs, then this course • fo r you. W e
w « g e t you started b y teochmg you the BASIC commonds ond functions Then y o u l le om
the techniques fundam ental to the interesting ond rew o rd ing field. W e w ill start slowly, but
by the e nd o f the workshop, y o u l b e able to w rite tm a l program s o f yo ur ow n. Hands-on
experience using the IBM PC. The INTERMEDIATE doss w A extend yo ur understanding o f
BASIC to m d u d * c o lo r graphics, disk confrol & odvonced scr een i ke ybo ard interaction
Prerequisite know ledge o f BASIC as described herein (BEG - 3 meetings A (NT - 2
•NT
Instructor Suflrvon. M od Fees: $45-UT; $60-0. Enrolm ent lim it: 12.
A p r 28 A M ay 5
Mon
6 -9pm
SPREADSHEET PROGRAMMING (MULTIPLAN/IBM) 212
This course e intended fo r those with M e experience in computers who would Ike to
understand and loom to use a spreod sheet program (like M U I TIPIAN) Spread sheets
make long and tedioue cafofohons a snap. They ate on invaluable tool fo r scientific and
business data analysis. Topics w il include what a spreod sheet a, and u s x ^ designing, and
b u ld u ig them. A fte r fliis d m the student wA be afate to set up his ow n programmed
worfcshe st The d o ts wA be taught on the IBM PC uung M U I TIPIAN (2 msetmgs)
Sec 2
Inslnicter. SiA w q M o t. Fees: $45-UT, $60-0 En rolm ent lim it 12.
Tues A W ed
A p rl A 2
6-9pm
214
MAC ENVIRONMENT
The M acintosh is a M G M e mochino. It’s a p art o f Ihe com ing wove o f highly complex
computers twl era sifeeeedhr simefer to use. This dm é for *ew who wish to invwve
th e ir underetandm g o f lie logic behind tie system. Mac Environment is an intone no intro
ductory dass. I
tt GFWp nC M tt» I ___
iy and concepta, ond t mo to ning sequences (2 mesOngs)
Sec 2
Instructor Seetans. Noddy. Feos: S45-UT, SAGO- Eera lmeni lim it: 12
M o r 3 1A Apr 7
6-9pm
M on
^
215
MULTIPLAN FOR MACINTOSH I
An orgoniaod introduction to M icrosoft M LH.TM AN on the M acintosh. This d m fo c u m on
provjomg o boo» fo r u im fu ilo b b l omAorily w flh
.TIPIAN work — shoot packc s.
con bo M od fo r financed gf — do» gotta not management tasks and record
M U TIP
i few. Thá dato town taflbig ugt M
I wflh CHART a introduced, and a
i-up M UL1VLAN to ms
I n j W i W i ' l i ( 'V
i
Instructor Seatons, Roddy Faee S55-UT,
iilM B B B H B B
As
Apr 23
$70-0. Enrolment lim it: 12
SELF-RELIANCE
MONEYWISE TRAVEL TO EUROPE
235
D aydreom o f travekng to foreign lands? Turn those daydream s into reality w ith this course.
The instructor, an experienced traveler, believes tha t yo ur travels con be richer and more
culturally re w o rd ing Ihe le u m oney you spend o nd Ihe more you travel to places off-the-
beoten-trock (Prerequisite: a sense o f wanderlust ) (5 meetings)
Sec. 2
Instructor Sharpe, David. Fees; $21-UT, $ 2 4 - 0 Enrollment lim it: 3 0
A p r l- A p r 2 9
7:3 0 -9 pm
Tues
CAR REPAIR
24S
A wrenching experience lo r oH novices I Classroom topics include safety, to o l selection,
engine theory, ignition, fuel system, used car purchase, " s e l defense" during on-roa d
breakdowns, o n d more, la b s cover inspection or failure-prone items, use o f jum per cables,
toe changing, fro n t a nd rear broke inspection ond tune-up (no tune-up on o ir cooled VWs).
Suitable fo r both domestic ond fo reign cars. BYOC bring your o w n cor. (6 meetings)
Beg Sec. 3
M o r 3 1-Apr 9
6-Bpm
M /W
Instructor: M cG uire, Steve. Fees: $32-UT, $ 3 6 -0 . Enrollment Limit: 25.
la bs: Sun A p r 6 4 13
250
MOTORCYCLE M AINTENANCE
Tired o f paying the high price o f motorcycle maintenance? W e w A show you h o w to save
m oney b y teaching you h ow to d o maintenance ond some m inor repairs yourself Expect to
purchase some basic tools o nd parts. (6 meetings)
W e d
Instructor: Feogin, Pot. Fees: $26-UT, $ 3 0 -0 . Enrollment lim it-15.
A p r 2 -M a y 7
6 -8pm
252
DEFENSIVE D R IV IN G :
Defensive driving means "d riving so as to prevent Occidents in spite o f Ihe actions o f others
o r the presence o f a d v e n e driving conditions." Com pletion o f the course m ay save up to
10% on outo insurance premiums (check with yo ur agent p rio r to registration — it varies
fro m com pany to company).
T /W
Sec. 6
Sot
Sec. 7
T /W
S ec 8
T /W
Sec. 9
Sec. 10
Sot
Instructor. Chisholm, Tom. Fees: $20-U T; $ 2 0 -0 . Enrollment lim it: 40
6 -1 0 pm
8am -5pm
6-10pm
6-10pm
8am -5pm
& 2
12
2 2 & 23
6 & 7
17
A p r l
A p r
A p r
M a y
M a y
272
PHILO SO PHY OF INVESTIN G
W a n t to understand m ore than investment term inology? Be an inform ed investor by learn
ing the key concejsh behind successful investing. N o p rio r know ledge is necessary, oHhough
Ihe m ore p rio r investment experience the participant has, the m ore meaningful the course
w ill be. (1 meeting)
W e d
A p r 2
Instructor: W o le , N eile. Fees: $11-UT, $ 1 3 -0 . Enrollment lim it: 40.
7 -9 3 0 p m
IN D IV ID U A L RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS
276
Leom a b o u t the lo ws rotating to IRAs, Ihe financial institutions offe rin g them a nd Ihe mony
types o f investments available. Also future financial implications o f IRAs w ill be discussed (1
meeting)
W e d
Instructor W o le , Neile. Fees: $11-UT, $ 1 3 -0 . Enrollment Limit: 2 0
7 -9 :3 0 pm
A p r 16
GAMES &
SPORTS
© i
NOTE: For «ho fo llo w in g classes, yo u MUST REGISTER IN
PERSONI
RIFLERY
Rifle shooting is a competitive sport fo r both men and women at the intercollegiate ond
O lym pic levels! Course consists o f rifle safely, hunting safety, firing positions, rotaxotion
exercises o nd targe t practice. YOU MUST REGISTER FOR THIS CLASS IN PERSON Tought
by the UT Rifle Team coach. Plan to spend a iip ro x . $14 fo r .22 ca lib er long ammunition. (6
meetings)
Sec. 2
Instructor: McKenna, G e o rg e F. Fees: $28-UT, $ 3 2 - 0 Enrollment lim it: 12
A p r 3 -M a y 8
3 7 8
7-9pm
Thurs
H A N G G L ID IN G
380
Leom the basics o f hong gliding ond enjoy this spectacular sport! The course is presented in
three segments: 1) bosic g round school - stressing aerodynomies, o ir movement, glide per
form a nee o nd safety, 2) g round handkng - covering testing, set up o nd carrying o f the glide,
running, h a m e u functions ond w in d measurement, o nd 3) beginning flight — practice take
off, pitch control, o nd glides in teams o f throe. 2nd & 3 rd c lo u o ff campus YOU MUST
REGISTER FOR THIS CLASS IN PERSON (3 meetings)
Bosic
Instructor Austin A ir Sports. Fees: $72-UT, $ 7 7 - 0 Enrollment lim it: 30.
A p r 5 -A p r 19
10om-6pm
Sat
S A ILIN G
386
Basic soiling instruction w A include one classroom seuio n in rigg in g and general technique,
ond 2 o ne -h ou r soiling lessons (2 persons p e r boat, scheduled from noon-dork on week
days, o nd must be com pleted within 4 5 doys o f classroom session). Also includes 2 one-
hou r fre e practice sessions fo r student only, practice tim e must be token on w eekdays within
the 4 5 -d a y period, lessons w ill only be rescheduled once (u n leu by Towntake Sakaway
due to w eather) o r forfe ite d NOTE: Y O U MUST REGISTER FOR THIS CLASS IN PERSON
(3 meetings)
Sec 2
Instructor Towntake S oitawoy Fees: S58-UT, $ 6 2 - 0 . Enrollment lim it: 40.
7 :3 0 -8 :3 0 p m
M o r 31
M o n
388
SCUBA D IV IN G (BASIC)
Become fa m ilio r w ith scuba equipment, diving p h y s io o nd physiology, safety, dive tables,
marine life, first a id a nd rescue breathing. U pon successful com pletion o f exam, p o o l work,
and o pe n w a te r training, you w A be certified as a PADI o r N A U I b ask scuba diver. Fee
« d u d e s d ivin g equipm ent, ok, lo g b o o k ond dive tobies. Students must dem onstrate bask
swim ming skAs o nd p ro vid e light w e ig ht tennis shoes o r w e t suit booties fo r p o o l o nd open
w a te r sessions. NOTE: 1 you nave h od o ny m edical problem s within the Iasi 5 y e a n o f a
circvkotory o r resp ira to ry nature o r possibly leod in g to unconsciousness, you must hove a
m e d k a l a p p ro v a l to dive Y O U MUST REGISTER FOR THIS C lA S S IN PERSON (14 meet
ings)
Tues
A p r 1-M ay 6
6 -9pm
Instructor Fufler, Jim (J. Rich Sports). Fees: $K)5-UT, $ 110-0. Enrollment lim it: 50.
-f Pool sessions & dives
398
W IN D SU R FIN G
W indsurfing dem onds co ordination ond agility as you leom to w o rk with Ihe wind, water,
yo ur sail, a nd b o a rd . The course includes one classroom seuion, one 1 V i-h o u r sim ulator
lesson (4 persons) o nd o ne 1 hour w a te r lesson (2 persons) to be scheduled noo n-da rk on
week d a ys. C om pletion entitles you to 2 hours o f fre e practice tone. Lessons a nd practice
must b e comp le ted w ithin 4 5 days o f classroom session, lessons w A only be rescheduled
once (u n le u conceded by Towntake Sakaway due to weather) o r be forfeited. NOTE: YOU
MUST REGISTER FOR THIS CLASS IN PERSON (3 meetings)
S e c 2
Instructor: Towntake Sakaway. Fees: $58-U T, $ 6 2 -0 Enrollment lim it: 40.
7 :3 0 -8 3 0p m
A p r 2
W e d
DANCE
BELLYDANCC
e*
na it a series o f sensuous, undulating movements which are very graceful, supple,
and fluid. The exercises can remove inches from the waist, hips, and thighs. You wA leom
ihe trad itiona l styta from Egypt which distinguishes itself from the more common "cabero*"
style by the dual concentration o f Bowing hand movements and grocefik body techniques.
This course it tailore d etpectafly fo r women. INT requires TWO previous Beginning dosses.
AOV wA cover staging costuming, perform ance techniques and ethnic trib o l dances and
n q u iffi
beginning B? is tm n s o io li densos. R tQ uirx) fo r INT: vek A finger cymbals.
ACM: finge r cymbals. O ptional: practice tape and costume W ear loose clothing.
Thun
Adv
M /W
Begl
tat
M /W
Instructor Steele, Cindy. Fees: $30-UT, $ 3 4 -0 . Enrolm ent lim it: 13.
A p r 3-M ay 8
M ar 31-May 8
M ar 31-M ay 8
5 4 5 -7:15pm
5-6pm
6:15-7:15pm
Sec 2
Sec 2
Sec 2
BALLROOM DANCI
47 6
le a rn the m od populor baflroose dances. Emphose on technique end style and being able
to lead and fo flo w under any dr cumstonces Become a more com fortable and confident
partner by dancing the fo xtro t, w altz, swing, and rumba. (6 meetings)
Sec 2
Instructor. Patton, V e ra Fees: S24-UT, $ 2 8 -0 . Enraflment lim it: 60.
M ar 31-M ay 5
8:30-10pm
M on
480
COUNTRY WISTIRN
M ake yourself a t hom e a t focal dance haflsl W e i learn the cotton-eyed joe, schottische,
jitterb ug w altz, poise and Texas two-stop — kicker stylel INTERMEDIATE coven more
table? Try
advanced versions o f fltese steps w ith additional toms and variations. Inexl
Are AOVANCEO dass (Beg A Int - 5 meetings Adv • 3 meetings)
le g Sec 2
In?
Instructor Tarfton, Jsmn. Feat: $24-UT, $ 2 8 -0 . E nrolment lim it; 70.
A p r9 -M o y 7
A pr 7 -M ay 5
8 30-10pm
8 3010pm
W ed
M on
COUNTRY WISTIRN ("LONGHORN")
MINI COURSI
482
here's just what you
• • P i wCPI, CO m K rS jflS fOG OHO SCnOVBBCnO. MB
and mo ves In no lim e youl
Sun
Indructer- Horton, A m ena Fees 87-UT, $ 9 -0 . Enrolm ent lim it: 70.
be t w inging w ith the best o f 'e m (4 msetw ns)
j -5.30pm ■
§¡
13
BALANCE
N O TI: These
mant covrsos offarad by David Balmar, PhD.
i s m ara p art of a continuing «arfas of snood monago*
500
ASSERTIVENESS
Assertiveness is m ore than just standing up fo r yo ur rights, tt is a philosophy o f rotating to
others — o philosophy based on chokes. Broaden yo ur chokes ond develop yo ur social
competence in this p roctkck app ro ach to assertiveness $2 fo r handouts p ayable to instruc
tor. (1 meeting)
Sun
2-5pm
Instructor: Btemer, David. Fees: S12-UT, $ 14 -0 . Enrollment Limit: 30.
A p ril 13
503
BEHAVIORS IN EXCESS
A nything tha t con b e done, can be done to e xceu. Despite o u r best efforts, w e aN occasion
ally g et h ooked on se l-d e fe a tin g habits o f thought and behavior. Chocolate, gam bling,
alcohol, house-cleaning — oN can be done to exceu . In this course you w ill team proven
systematic methods to reduce compulsive behaviors ond oth e r p ractical tips fo r se l-co ntro l
$2 fo r handouts p aya ble to instructor. (1 meeting)
Sun
2 5pm
Instructor: Biemer, David. Fees: $12-UT, $ 1 4 -0 . EnroNment Limit: 30.
A p ril 6
HEARTBREAK: END OF A ROMANCE
519
Falling in lo ve is risky busineu. tt leaves you vuneroble to being hurí. The distress o f losing a t
love is inevitable, but it con be managed. This course provides p ra c tk a l lips in m anaging the
predictable steps in recovery fro m heartbreak. $2 fo r handouts payable to instructor (1
meeting)
Sun
2-5pm
A p ril 27
Instructor: Biemer, David. Fees: S12-UT, $ 1 4 -0 . EnroNment Limit: 30.
HATHA YO G A
554
Yoga was developed as a science with specific methods fo r bettering the total w ell-being o f
on individual. Hatha Y og o consists o f "postures" that w o rk on the m ojor physiological
systems — circulatory, respiratory, nervous, glandular. W hen projserfy com bined w ith spe
cific b reathing and rotaxotion techniques, these "postures" a ffect the nerve o nd glandular
plexuses a nd natural control over Ihe bod y is established. A recommended le xt w ill be
available fro m the instructor fo r $6.25. ‘ NOTE: BEG I, sec 1 A 3 ore held in the morning.
Prerequisite fo r BEG II is BEG I, o r equivalent Yoga experience (6 meetings).
B eg l
8 -9-30om
Instructor: Yogo Center (Herry). Fees: S26-UT, $ 3 0 -0 . Enrollment Limit: 15
A p ril 2 -M a y 7
Sec. 3
W e d
MASSAGE
558
Leom o set routine o f Swedish and Esa ten massage techniques which the instructor w ill
demonstrate and you w ill practice under supervision. C over the basks o f anatom y, acupres
sure ond the healing a rt o f massoge fo r neck, shoulders, bock A feet. Beg II co ve n Ihe tace
A bock in greater depth ond introduces massage fo r the legs A arms. Bring massage or
vegetable ok in a plastic bottle w ith o small spout to cla u . W e a r loose com fortable clothing
over o bathing suit (pre ferab ly 2 piece fo r women, o r shorts and a hotter to p that leaves Ihe
bock free) a n d bring a sheet and both tow el. (2 meetings)
Beg II
A pril 5 A 6
Instructor: Fearing, Stephen Fees: S32-UT, $ 3 6 -0 . Enrollment Limit: 18.
10 30am -6pm
Sat/Sun
MEDITATION
562
Practice personal m ethods in progressive relaxation, breathing techniques, and ancient and
m odem meditative pralice. This course also covers the origin o f m editation from its begin
ning in the East as a spiritual gro w th discipline to its contem porary adaptation as a stress
reduction technique. Bring piNow to first class. (6 meetings)
Sec. 2
Instructor: Yoga C enter (Blodgett). Fees: $26-UT, $ 3 0 -0 . EnroNment lim it 18.
A pril 3 -M o y 8
5 3 0-7p m
Thurs
LANGUAGES
N O TI^Iach
u a g * level cannot n o c M s a rN y ba co varad In ona ses
sion. Tha same lava! may bo repeated lo r additional conversational
p ra c tic e — c h e c k w ith Instructor.
652
CONVERSATIONAL CHINESE
M ondarin Chinese is spoken a nd written by o ver one fourth o f the w orld's population
Everyday greetings a nd useful conversation wiH be emphasized. W e w ill also w o rk on
pronunciation and the Four Tones. Use yo ur Chinese w ith yo ur friends o r in restaurants!
PREREQUISITE fo r INTERMEDIATE—o n e semester o f Chinese o r equivalent know ledge. (12
meetings)
Beg Sec. 2
•"*
Instructor W a n g, Phoebe. Fees: $ 24-U T $ 2 8 -0 . EnroNment lim it: 18
M a r 31-M oy 7
M a r 31-M ay 7
6 3 0-8p m
8 -9 :3 0 pm
M / W
M /W
65 4
CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH
This is a course on everyda y French, courtesy, foo d , environment, etc. The vocabulary and
structures o re dro w n fro m these areas so that the participants con function in French from
the start. Cultural contrasts, b o d y la nguage a nd "h o w -to 's" a re p art and p arcel o f Ihe
course. P ra ctka l know ledge wiH be emphasized. BEG is fo r those w ith N O previous k n ow l
edge. INT continues w ith g ram m ar a nd v o cabulary fo r those w h o have covered the bosks:
present a nd past tense and elem entary everyday conversation. A D V is fo r those using
multiple lenses, expa nd e d vocabulary, a nd idioms. Bring $ 2 to first c lo u to cover cost o f
handouls.(12 meetings)
A D V
A p r 1-May 8
5 :3 0 -6 :4 5 p m
Sec. 2
T/Th
BEG
Sec . 4
Sec . 5
M /W
T/Th
M a r 31-M oy 7
A p r 1-May 8
7 -8 1 5 p m
6 -7 1 5 p m
INT
Sec. 2
Sec 3
Fees: S24-UT, $ 2 8 -0 . EnroNment lim it: 20.
M /W
T/Th
M o r 31-Moy 7
A pr 1-May 8
5 :3 0 -6 :4 5 p m
7 3 0 -8 :4 5 p m
CONVERSATIONAL GERMAN
656
This course is designed to introduce the beginner with no previous knowledge to contempo
rary German language ond culture. It w ifl cover bask gram m atical features o f the lan
guage, vocabulary, and phrases ond sentences pertaining to everyday life. INTERMEDIATE
requires knowledge o f present tense usage and bask grammar. ADVANCED is designed
fo r those w ith 3 o r m ore semesters o f college German o r equivalent skill. W e w il concen-
te on vocotxkory, idiom s, ond com plex tenses. (12 meetings)
Sec 2
Beg
•n*
Instructor Beike, Dieter. Fees: $24-UT, $ 2 8 -0 . Enrollm ent lim it: 25.
A pr 1-May 8
A pr 1-May 8
T/Th
T/Th
6 -7 :30pm
745 -9.15pm
CONVERSATIONAL PORTUGUESE
6 6 0
Brozk, a fascinating country and touristic p a ra d a * wiN provide greater pleasure if you are
able to function in Portuguese and understand something o f its culture. Here is the opportu
nity. This course emphasizes conversation suited to the needs o f the group. $1 payable to
the instructor at first c la u to cover cost o f handouts. (12 meetings)
8*9
Instructor T o o * Teresmha Fees: $24-UT, $ 2 8 -0 . EnroNment lim it: 22.
M ar 31-M ay 7
5 30-6 45pm
M /W
CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH
662
"Si", you can speak Spomshl In this practkal course, you w ill get a thorough background in
grommoticoi structares, vocabulary and phonetics. There w ifl be special emphasis on correct
pronunciofton. In addition, we w ifi p ro e lk * useful topics m everyday Spanish conversation
ond ctktorol and travel topics. BEGINNING is fo r those w ith no background in Spanish.
INTERMEDIATE is fo r those who have mastered present tense — it w i cover tenses and
more vocabulary. ADV is designed fo r those w ith 3 o r m ore semesters o f caflege Spanish o r
equivalent ski». We w kl concentrate on vocabulary, idioms, coaw lex tenses. Plan on spend
ing $3 fo r m aterials payable to instructor a t first clo u m eeting. (12 meetings)
Adv
A p r 1-May 8
7-8 30pm
Sec. 2
T/Th
S*c.4
Sec 5
M /W
T/Th
Sec 3
Fees: $24-UT, $ 2 8 -0 . Enrollm ent lim it: 25.
M /W
M ar 31-M ay 7
A p r 1-May 8
7-8:30pm
5:30-7pm
M ar 31-M ay 7
5:30-7pm
ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE
672
Each dass session w ifl foqut en a reoi-kfe situation requiring specific vocabulary, phrases
and gram mar. U to ning and pronunciation w ill be taught, arid (here w kl be extensive
conversational practice. Plan on spending $4.50 fo r m aterials payable to in
at first
meeting. INTERMEDIATE I is fo r those who can communicate an a basic level. INTERMEDI-
AOV Sec 2
IN TI Sec 2
INT II Sec . 2
T/Th
T/Th
T/Th
A p r 1-May 8
530 -6:45pm
A pr 1-May 13
N o C lou A p ril 24
A pr 1-Moy
N o does A p ril 24
ay 13
6:30-745pm
8-9:1Spm
OUTDOORS
30 0
RANCHO DEL CIELO
C o m * to a cloud forest fo r a w * * k this summer! Rancho d * i Cielo, located a t ab o u t 3 7 0 0 ft.
elevation on Ihe eastern fro n t o f Ihe Sierra d * G uatem ala in southwestern Tomoufipos,
M exico, is an e cological w o nderland fo r naturalists o f a ll persuasions. M o re than thirty non-
U.S. b ird species nest in ih e cloud forest, and orchids a nd brom efiods g ro w in abundance.
You can participate in an inform al schedule o f walks and hikes le d b y expe rt naturalists a t
w e ll as e xplo ro the cloud forest on yo ur own. O nce you roach Roncho del Cielo, you w ill
have no expenses; yo u r a ccom odations w ill be in rustk cobins a nd a ll meals ore provided.
You must pro vide yo u r ow n linens. The cost o f the trip does not cover yo u r transportation
and expenses to G om ez Farias, M e xico w h k h is a t the base c Jth e mountain up to Roncho
del Cielo. For m ore inform ation a bo ut Rancho d el Cielo, call M r. Fred Webster at 451-1669.
W hen registering, you must put d o w n a $ 5 0 NO N-REFUNDABLE deposit to hold yo ur
place. This deposit w ill be a pp lie d to the fee,- you must remit the batanee on o r b e fo re June
12,1986
Sun-Sat
Instructor W ebster, Fred. Fees: S385-UT, $ 3 9 5 - 0 . Enrollment lim it: 22
June 15-21,1986
308
NATURAL HISTORY OF A U STIN
O bserve natural history in the making! Tour various sites in and aro un d Austin to study w ild
areas as wefl as some urban sites. W e shall e xplo ro the diversity a nd ecológico! interactions
o f plants, anim als, and microorgonisms. The anim al emphasis w ill be on arthropods and
other invertebrates. Sections A & B o ffe r different fie ld trips. W e 'll visit the UT Campus, Red
Bud Isle, a nd W ild Basin in Sec. A, B rackenridge Field la b , W est Cave Preserve, and W alnut
Creek in Sec. B. Transportation wiH be b y carpoofing in private vehkles. Participants should
bring w a te r o nd snacks. The trips wiH involve hiking ond some clim bing — appro pria te
clothing necessary. (4 meetings).
Sec. B
7 -9pm
A p ril 16
W e d
Field trips: A p ril 20, 27 & M a y 4, 9am -2pm
Instructor: Bratteng, Steve. Fees: $16-UT, $ 1 9 -0 . Enrollment lim it: 20.
WILDLIFE REHABILITATION
314
W o u ld yo u like to bottle feed a raccoon o r raise a young owi? W ildlife Rehabilitation witl
teach you Ihe b o sk skills in helping the injured a nd orp ha ne d w ild anim als in the Austin
a re a Through slides, Ihe direct handling o f w ildlife ond discuuions o f yo ur rehabilitation
m anual (included in course price) you w ill team about the supplies, caging permits ond
technique needed to ossist o u r native species bock to release in their natural habitat. (6
meetings).
W e d
Instructor: Austin N a ture Center/Lyon. Fees: S28-UT, $ 3 2 -0 . Enrollment Limit: 25.
A p ril 2 -M a y 7
7 -9pm
SPIRITS &
CULINARY
ARTS
N O T Ii For «HI win# and bartending classes, participants must ba a t loast
19 and Have proof of age.
BARTENDING
700
This course wiH cover the basics ofliquor, m ixing drinks, glassware, recipe: m ixed drinks,
kqueures, o nd afte r-d in ne r drinks. Students w ill mix a t least o ne a nd sample several drinks
each c la u period. Students should b ring o p od o nd pen to c lo u . Participants must be at least
19 ond have p ro o f o f o g *. (5 meetings)
Beg Sec 5
Sec. 6
Instructor: Leach, Dawn. Fees: $33-UT, $ 3 7 -0 . Enrollment Limit: 15.
M a r 3 1-A pr 2 8
M a r 31-Apr 28
7-8:15pm
8 :3 0 -9 :4 5 p m
M o n
M o n
INTRO DUC TIO N TO WINE
702
le a rn to appreciate, taste & select wines, as w ell as to match wines w ith foo d . This survey
c la u w ill stress a fo u n da tion o f w ine knowledge, covering w ine-m aking techniques ond
w in * produ cin g areas w o rld w id e , with emphasis on the m ajor ones — France, C olifom ia
and G erm any. (5 meetings)
Sec. 3
Sec. 4
Instructor: Jones, Crist. Fees: $43-UT, $ 4 7 -0 . EnroHment Limit: 24.
A p r 2 -A p r 3 0
A p r 3 -M a y 1
6 -7 30pm
6 -7 .3 0 p m
W e d
Thun
FRANCE VS. CALIFORNIA:
A STUDY IN STYLE-WHITES
711
W h it* wines fro m France hove built a reputation fo r quality a nd consistency. C alifornia
producers have a do pte d Ihe French style to r their white wines — have they succeeded in
■notching the French quality — o r hove they surpassed it? You decide, a fte r enjoying
notable wines fro m b oth countries. (5 meetings)
Thurs
Instructor: Kerpoe, Mitch, Fees: $45-UT, $ 4 8 - 0 EnroHment lim it: 24.
A p r 3 -M o y 1
8 -9 30pm
BORDEAUX: A N IN-DEPTH STUDY
712
Decide fo r yourself w hether the renow ned Bordeoux wines d o in deed live up to their
reputations. Find o u t h o w soil, tem perature a nd w ine-m aking techniques produce these
unique a nd p ow e rfu l wines. (5 meetings)
W e d
Instructor Jones, Crist. Fees: 145-UT, $ 4 8 -0 . EnroHment Limit: 24.
A p r 2 -A p r 3 0
8 -9 :3 0 p m
725
FRENCH WINES: BU RG UND Y
A classic I The m ero name conjures up images o f delicious wines. W e ll enjoy a variety o f
wines fro m the B urgundy o n d discuu French w ine-m aking history. (1 meeting)
Tues
Instructor: Lothrop, John Charles. Fees: $12-UT, $ 1 5 -0 . Enrollment lim it: 24.
7 -8 :3 0 pm
A p r 2 2
C H A R D O N N A Y FROM A R O U N D THE WORLD
727
Are you a w h it* w in * lover? Enjoy tasting a rang* o f wines made from the prem ier w hit*
wine grape, and a discussin o f wine making techniques and styles (1 meeting)
Tues
Instructor: Lothrop, John Chorlos. Fees: $12-UT, $15-0. Enrollment lim it: 24
7-8:30pm
A p r 15
734
CALIFORNIA VARIETALS: ZINFANDSL
Taste a variety o f zinfandeh produced in C alifornia — from Napa, Sonoma and Ihe Russian
River Valley. W * w ill cover some history o f wines in C olifom ia, as w ell. (1 meeting)
Tues
Instructor, lo th ro p , John Chades Fees: S12-UT, $15-0. Enrollment lim it: 24.
7-8:30pm
A pr 8
BASIC W OK C O O K IN G
741
lo am bask Chinese cooking in the wok, use o f a Chines* cleaver, cutting m eal and vegeta
bles, debonxta chicken, stir frying, e tc Recipes rang* from bask Chines* to spicy Thai
dishes. Bring $12 in cosh to first d a u to cover food coils. (3 meetings)
Sec 3
Instructor Teepaftganond, Pat (Soy Hi) Fees: S30-UT, $ 3 4 -0 . EnroNment lim it: 12.
M ar 31-Apr 14
6:30-9pm
M on
ENTERTAINING W ITH WINE A N D CHEESE
761
le o m the different classifications o f cheese ond the wines that complement them — both
domestic ond im ported. Dessert wine and cheese, w in * and cheese appropriate before and
w ith meals, cheese plotters, presentation, and com plim entary fruits and breads included.
M ore Ihon 25 cheeses and a variety o f wines vrifl be enjoyedl Bring $20 to first d a u to
cover food costs. (2 meetings)
Tues
A pr 22-A 29
630-9pm
instructor W alsh, Lisa Stark. Fees: $16-UT, $19-0. Enrollm ent lim it: 30.
Being $20 foe food costs
CHINESE VEGETARIAN CUISINE
779
Chinese food is already low on calories and carbohydrates. Chines* vegetarian food is
even low er in bath, le o m to make sweat and sour vegetable*
fro m ix vegetables, and
spicy vegetables. Use sauces maka these vegetarian dishes spadoH The seuion w fll indude
discussion on dishes w ith w h it* m eat (fish, duchen and seafoods) and tofu Bring $5 to d a u
to caver food cost. (1 meeting)
Sec. 3
Thurs A pr 10
6 30-9pm
Instructor Teapaliganoncl Pal (Soy Hi). Fees: $12-UT, $15-0. EnroNment Limit: 12.
Bring $4 fo r food costs
ORIENTAL STEAM ING
781
Steaming is one o f the most nutritious farms o f cooking. You w ill leom to prepare and
sample steamed meat (fish, chicken o r shrimp) served w ith "Pat's Special O riental Sauces"
llhese sauces are also dafldous as salad dressing o r party dips). Bring $6 to d a u to cover
food cost. (1 meeting)
M on
6 :3 0 -9pm
A p r 21
b rtru c to r Taepaflganond, Pal (Say Hi). Fees: $12-UT, $15-0. Enrolm ent Limit; 12.
Being $0 fo r food cotH
SZECHUAN SPECIALTIES
788
Szechuan food is hot and spicy com pared to Cantonese o r Taiwanese dishes, le o m to stir
fry m eat and vegetables w ith a variety o f sauces: g a rfi* black bean, etc. Bring $5 in cash to
d a u to cover food casts. (1 meeting)
Sec 3
6 :30-9pm
A pr 3
Thurs
Bring $5 fo r food cods
bNkuctor: livesey, Don. Feas: S24-UT, $ 2 8 -0 . Enrolm ent lim it: 24.
•ortructor Teepalfgonond, Pal (Say Hi). Fees: $12-UT, $15-0. Enrollment Limit: 12.
TOEFL PREPARATION
678
Need dm Test o f Engflsh as a Foreign Language? This course w i help students prepare fo r
the exam. It w i cover la toning comprehension, grommor, vocabulary and reoding com
prehension by moans o f practice tests. Stodents enroKng should be intending to take Ihe
TOCFl exam in the near hitare. $3 payable to instructor at first clo u to cover cost o f
handoito. Stodents w i need to purchase book flam instructor ($10).(12 meetings)
Sec 2
intauctar livesey, Dan. Fees: S26-UT, $ 3 0 -0 . En rollm ent lim it: 24.
A p r 1-Moy 8
7-9pm
T/Th
TH A I C O O K IN G
7 9 9
Thoi fo o d lit a very spicy, hot and pungent style o f O riental Food. Leom to d ir fry Thai dufi,
h*™» and meat. M ake Thai soups o r Thai curry, a le Bring $ 5 in cash to d a u to cavar food
costs. (1 moating)
Sec. 2
A p r 28
Instructor: Teepakganond, Pat (Say Hi). Fees: $12-UT, $15-0. E nrolm et* lim it: 12
Bring $5 fo r food costs
Complete TV Listings
Advertising Supplement to The Daily Texan
March 17-23,1986
Oscar viewership declines
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — The Academy
Awards as a television attraction
has withered in the ratings in the
past two years.
Viewers seem
to be growing
disenchanted with Hollywood's
most cherished spectacle, and Oscar
officials grapple with how to jazz it
up.
Last year the Oscar show was too
lean. In 1984 it was too long. This
year the Academy of Motion Picture
Arts and Sciences will attempt to
lure back the lost audience with big
production numbers and bieeer
names.
Last year four producers tried to
solve the ratings problem by com
mittee, including the use of warning
lights to keep acceptance speeches
short. This year, the warning lights
are being reconsidered and there's
only one producer.
"There is a concern that it could
stifle some great moments, like Sal
ly Field's 'You like me!' acceptance
speech last year," said Academy
spokesman Bob Werden. He said
producer Stanley Donen hasn't yet
made a final decision.
The 58th annual Oscar presenta
tions on March 24 will be broadcast
live from the Dorothy Chandler Pa
vilion of the Los Angeles Music
Center beginning at 8 p.m. Austin
time on ABC-TV.
In the past two years, the pro
gram has been criticized for having
far too much, such as the three-
hour, 47-minute show in 1984, or far
too little, such as the spare 1985
show. The latter was only a few
minutes over its scheduled three
hours, but sparse in entertainment.
"You're dealing with an establish
ed format, and there's really noth
ing you can do to change it," said
Jack Haley, who produced the 1984
show. "I think the only answer is if
everyone just walks out and says"
who the winners are.
But that would destroy the enter
tainment value of the show, he said:
"You're virtually in a no-win situa
tion."
For all its miscues and overtime,
the 1984 show still did better than
last year's, with 25.4 million house
holds viewing, for a Nielsen rating
of 30.3 and an audience share of 50.
The 1985 show fell to 23.5 million
households, with a rating of 27.7
and an audience share of 45. Com
pare those shows with 31.6 million
households watching in 1983 with a
rating of 38.0 and a share of 59, and
there seems to be a problem.
A rating measures the percentage
of the nation's TV homes watching
a show.
The Oscars also are fighting the
overall decrease in viewership suf
fered by network television over the
past few years because of competi
tion from cable television and home
videocassette recorders.
Pasetta and Donen have decided
to return to more production num
bers, with three or four song-and-
dance routines to be added to the
usual performances for the five
nominated songs of the year.
Benson makes impact
in CBS’ Tough Cookies
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Twelve years
after he made his first and only pi
lot, Robby Benson is starring in his
first television series, CBS' Tough
C ookies.
He was not sitting idly by, of
course, between that first nibble
and reaching the air. He was very
busy making feature films and tele
vision movies.
In 1974, he played a teen-ager in
Rem em ber When, a story about a
family with four sons serving in
World War II. If it had become a se
ries it would have been called Four
Stars in the Window.
"That was for Witt-Thomas Pro
ductions, the same company that's
making Tough Cookies,"' he said.
"The show that beat us out as a se
ries was 'Little House on the Prai
rie.' Now we're up against Michael
Landon again, because his 'High
way to Heaven' is opposite us on
NBC."
Benson, who
is 30 but looks
younger, plays a Chicago detective
who is assigned to the tough neigh
borhood where he grew up. CBS
now is broadcasting six episodes of
the comedy.
"I was never interested in doing a
series until about a year ago," he
said. "My wife and I have been
married four years ... and we have a
beautiful baby, and I didn't want to
go on the road again making movies
on location."
He is married to singer-actress
Karla DeVito, who formerly teamed
with rock singer Meatloaf. Benson
met her while performing in Pirates
o f Penzance in New York. They
have worked
togeth er as a
songwriting team, with two gold
records for songs they wrote for Di
ana Ross and the movie sound track
for The Breakfast Club. They have a
2V2-year-old daughter, Lyric.
His wife has an album out in
April called W ake 'em Up in Tokyo.
It's her first solo album since she left
Meatloaf.
"I didn't want to drag my family
along, and I didn't want to be away
from them. I thought the perfect sit
uation would be to work at home on
a series," Benson said. "In the last
few years I've done movies in Flori
da, Mexico, Canada, New York,
Mississippi and Tennessee."
The current series came about af
ter Paul Junger Witt and Tony
Thomas saw Benson jn a TV movie
called California Girls. "The day af
ter it was on the air they called me
in for a meeting," he said. "When I
went in I didn't think they'd nail me
Benson stars in Tough Cookies.
but they did. It seemed like a good
idea to m e."
He said the lead character of Cliff
Brady "was molded around me and
they envisioned what I should be."
Tough C ookies began its run as a
regular series two weeks ago along
with Fast Times, which precedes
that production.
The series has been seen as an ef
fort by CBS to capitalize upon its
younger viewership that had until
lately been rather enthsiastically
committed to M cGyver which airs
on ABC Wednesdays at 7 p.m. Aus
tin time and runs throughout the
duration of both Fast Times and
Tough C ookies.
The series has been seen as an ef
fort by CBS to capitalize upon its
younger viewership that had until
lately been rather enthsiastically
committed to M cGyver which airs
on ABC Wednesdays at 7 p.m. Aus
tin time and runs throughout the
duration of both Fast Times and
Tough C ookies.
Benson was bom in Dallas, the
son of former actress Ann Benson
and producer-writer Jerry Segal. At
that time his father was in the cot
ton business, but at night he wrote
satirical political revues. His father
and mother went on the road with
the revues, and when they reached
New York they stayed.
"I was 5 when my mom did sum
mer stock and I started appearing in
some things," he said. "When I was
8 I played 'Oliver' and my mom
played Nancy."
He made his Broadway debut at
12 in Zelda as the grandson of Ed
Begley. He had been doing movie
work as an extra since he was 7 and
made his debut as a lead in Jory at
14.
Robot on Rampage
Karen Austin stars as a professor who creates i
deadly robot that threatens the surrounding commu
nity in Assassin, a CBS movie that airs on Wednes
United Medta Enterprises
day. Robert Conrad also stars as a former secret
agent who is forced out of retirement to help ap
prehend and finally destroy the robot.
Page 2/TV Watch Weekly/Monday, March 17,1966
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Enter the Ewings
Dale Midkiff portrays Jock Ewing and Mollie Hagan plays Miss Ellie in
Dallas.The Early Years, a three-hour prequel’ tracing the beginnings of
the Ewing dynasty. This C B S movie, which airs next Sunday, will also star
Kevin Wixted as the young and becoming indomitable J.R.Ewing.
PBS to present version
of Sondheim’s Follies
Associated Press
NEW YORK — New York's big
gest musical theater event of 1985
played only two nights at Lincoln
Center last September.
It was a concert version of Follies,
the Stephen Sondheim musical
about a reunion of performers who
appeared in those lavish, Ziegfeld-
style revues popular before World
War II.
Now public television, courtesy
of Great Performances, gives
viewers a chance Friday to see what
some of the excitement was all
about. The program is Follies in
Concert, an unusual and entertain
ing documentary narrated by Roy
Scheider about the creation of that
historic evening of theater.
The original Broadway produc
tion of Follies was not a financial
success, despite 522 performances,
and its cast album infuriated Broad
way buffs. Some songs were severe
ly cut and others eliminated entirely
to get the score on a single record.
And prospects for a first-class revi
val were considered dim because of
the show's requirements for a large
cast and lavish scenery and cos
tumes.
When Ellen Krass, producer of
Sondheim's Sweeney Todd and the
Jason Robards revival of You Can't
Take It With You for pay-cable's
Showtime, heard about the concert,
she knew it had to be captured on
film.
Alas, the television version of Fol
lies is not precisely what the audi
ence in Avery Fisher Hall saw. The
TV show is a hybrid, half rehearsal
shots and interviews with partici
pants and half actual concert. It was
a decision dictated by budget con
siderations, said Ms. Krass.
“We couldn't shoot everything
because we didn't have the money.
So we decided that we would only
follow certain songs from rehearsal
into the performance," she said.
Ms. Krass envisioned the show as
similar
to other documentaries
about the theater, including one on
the making of the original cast al
bum of another Sondheim musical,
Company.
The first part of the 90-minute
documentary is a countdown to the
concert. There are interviews, con
ducted by the director of the televi
sion show, Michael Houldey, with
participants in the event.
Sondheim succinctly recaps the
story of "Follies," which was writ
ten by James Goldman. "What we
started to write about was what
happened at a reunion," the com
poser said.
The cast includes such accom
plished theater people as Barbara
Cook, George Hearn, Lee Remick,
Mandy Patinkin, Carol Burnett,
Elaine Stritch, Betty Comden,
Adolph Green, Liliane Montevec-
chi, Phyllis Newman and Lida Al-
banese.
TV Walch WftkJy/Monday, March 17,1906/Paga 3
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National Geographic
focuses on Jerusalem
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES - The new Na
tional Geographic
Special,
Jerusalem : Within These Walls,
looks at the ancient city of Jerusalem
from the viewpoint of the people
and the cultural ties that draw them
together rather than the political
turmoil that pulls them apart.
Producers Thomas Skinner and
Dennis Kane went to Jerusalem to
decide whether to do a special
there. They entered the Old City
through the Jaffa Gate and knew
right away they had found a TV
show.
"We entered a whole new
world," said Skinner. "It's a place
that's alive any time day or night.
There are a tremendous number of
people. You get such a feeling in the
moonlight when you see
these
structures that are so important to
Christianity, Judaism and Islam."
The one-hour special was broad
casted last Wednesday over most
public television stations and is
scheduled to be aired again in April.
Christopher Plummer narrated the
feature.
Skinner is executive vice presi
dent of WQED-TV in Pittsburgh,
and he and Kane are co-executive
producers of the special.
"We felt no one had tackled
Jerusalem as a single entity other
than in a political documentary. We
wanted to do a cultural documenta
ry with an emphasis on people,"
Skinner said.
Producer Miriam Birch had been
in Jerusalem researching the special
production and looking for people
who were interested in being in
volved in all aspects of the docu
mentary. Birch was given a $30,000
grant to get the production rolling.
"We were in Liechtenstein look
ing at the art collection of the crown
prince, but we felt it was very limit
ing and went on to Jerusalem," said
Skinner.
The first day after their arrival
they called on Teddy Kollek, the
mayor of Jerusalem. "Have you
ever been in a room with someone
and you feel the room is vibrating?"
Skinner said. "He starts to talk
about Jerusalem and the individual
ity of the people. He says it's not a
melting pot but a mosaic."
Next, they went out to see the
"cast" assembled by the producer.
They also hired an Israeli produc
tion manager who was Arab.
Miss Birch wrote a 50-page treat
ment of how she visualized the doc
umentary. She had first worked for
the National Geographic when she
produced Living Sands o f Namib in
1976. Her last production for the
Geographic was Ballad o f the Irish
H orse.
Still, problems remained in film
ing the one-hour special. For one
thing, they had to seek permission
of the Muslim Council to film in the
holy month of Ramadan.
During Ramadan, Muslim com
munities reflect an .almost dormant
state given the tremendous empha
sis placed on 'spiritual renewal' that
characterizes the Islamic world at
that time.
The Israeli police had also said
they were concerned about the safe
ty of the crew given the high suspi
cion that is generated whenever
American film makers decide to film
anything within either Israel itself
or the occupied territories.
The National G eographic produc
tions are just part of the output of
WQED-TV, the nation's oldest pub
lic television station and one of the
most active production centers.
for
Its other shows include Conserv
ing America, The Living Planet and
shows
the dramatic series
W onderworks. Next is The First
Eden, a look at the Mediterranean
from David Attenborough, who did
The Living Planet.
The National G eographic has co
operated in the past not only with
producers of documentaries with a
cultural base but also with produc
tions that look a subjects in the
areas of earth science and marine bi
ology.
"We concentrate on specials,"
said Skinner. "We don't want to be
on the treadmill of doing weekly
shows."
Skinner said he and Lloyd Kaiser,
the station president, joined WQED
in 1970. "They had a new produc
tion center building and the board
challenged us to turn Pittsburgh
into a national production center.
It's the Lincoln Center syndrome:
you've got a new building, do
something with it."
WQED-TV has continued to be
one of the few stations that have
concentrated seriously on local pro
duction and has placed its emphasis
away from accepting the 'pre-or-
dered' productions of the major
netwirks as well as PBS.
Skinner said the station took over
the National G eographic Specials in
1974 after they had been on ABC
and CBS. David Wolper had pro
duced them for the networks.
Skinner said that he had seen
some of co-proucer Kane's work in
the past and had been interested in
his emphasis both on natural histo
ry and also geography.
"I took Dennis Kane sailing on
Chesapeake Bay and told him we
had similar goals and we should do
the shows together," Skinner said.
"We got $3 million from Gulf Oil for
12 shows. When Gulf merged with
Chevron, Chevron took over the
project and we're now working on
shows for 1987 and 1988."
He said he and Kane make the as
signments for the specials and do
not accept ideas from the outside.
"We work very hard to see that they
are subjects that are ageless," he
said. "The old shows are syndicated
to stations and distributed by video
cassette."
This is done to generate addi
tional funds for investigation into
future prospects that could receive
eventual funding from either a ma
jor corporation or from a scientific
or research organization.
The next N ational G eographic
Special will be Realm o f the Alliga
tor. It was filmed in Okefenokee
swamp in Georgia, and Georgia na
tive Pemell Roberts will narrate.
March 18-23
"Re Defining The
Puget Sound
TV
Watch
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O’Neil D. Hamilton
Editor
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TV Watch Weekly is pub
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Stations reserve the right to make
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the TV listings.
Linden adjusts to ‘magician’ role
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Hal Linden
says the toughest thing about his
rede as illusionist Alexander Blacke
on NBC's Blacke's Magic is the pres
tidigitation.
TÍiat's a fancy way of saying fast
fingers — one of the essentials of
magic tricks.
"I've never done magic before but
I'm learning," says Linden, who
had the title role in the old Barney
Miller series. "Except for the main
tides, I do all the magic on the
show. The magic and die illusions
are created by Jim Steinmeyer, who
creates illusions for Doug Henning
and before that for Orson Welles.
"The magic tricks are very diffi
cult, but die illusions are easy.
That's engineering. It just takes a lot
of pizzazz. Everyone gets in the
right place and you slap your hand.
"But hand magic is tough. These
hands aren't made for that. I may
do a trick three or four times. We
don't use any camera magic. We
may use film magic to take apart a
scene, but it's not anything you
wouldn't normally do."
In the show series, Blacke uses a
bit of sleight-of-hand each week to
solve a crime that has baffled the
police. He is usually called on be
cause of his intimate knowledge of
illusions and trickery. If flimflam is
required, his father, played by Har
ry Morgan, is on hand to draw on
his background as a camy con artist.
The show is the creation of Rich
ard Levinson, William Link and Pe
ter Fischer, the team behind CBS'
Murder, She Wrote. Levinson and
Link also created Columbo and
wrote Merlin, the Broadway play
about the wizard of Camelot.
Linden is filming this day in the
penthouse suite at the Hollywood
Roosevelt Hotel, a landmark that is
getting a multimillion-dollar face
lift. The hotel is standing in as the
Riverside Towers in Chicago.
"I've come here to visit a sick
friend who's being victimized," Lin
den explains. "We're setting up a
scam to victimize the victimizers."
The first show, a two-hour movie
telecast on NBC in early January,
called for Blacke to solve the baffling
murder of a colleague, The Great
Gasparini. Gasparini, it seems, was
shot to death while locked in a cof
fin that was underwater in a swim
ming pool in plain sight of everyone
as part of a magic feat. Blacke finally
determined that the doctor who
opened the coffin at the end of the
trick shot him with a silenced gun
hidden in his instrument bag.
In the series, Alexander Blacke is
a man who is at the top of his field,
a world-class magician.
"That's fictitious, of course, be
cause I don't know of any magicians
that are that eminent today," Lin
den said. "We juggled time a little
to make him like Blackstone or
Houdini."
Blacke learned his trade at his fa
ther's knee. He was raised in a car
nival, where he learned illusions
and scams.
"He taught me a lot of illegal
things," Linden says. "When Har
ry's doing something illegal he's
usually inept. Unless there's a vil
lain on the receiving end."
Since Barney Miller ended its reg
ular run in 1982, Linden has done
movies, specials and personal ap
pearances.
"I have a yen to return to Broad
way," he said. "I did do a few plays
and did 'I Do, I Do' for the Arts and
Entertainment Channel with Lee
Remick."
His last appearance on Broadway
was in a revival of Pajama Game
just before starting Barney Miller in
1975. His contract stipulated that
he'd have time off to do the pilot.
is
In Blacke's Magic, Linden
somewhat more expressive than the
rather somber character he portryed
on Barney Miller.
However, in all fairness to Linden
and the new series, it would not be
at all reasonable to even make a
comparison.
The producers of Barney Miller by
and large succeeded simply becuse
they played down the usually tense
and overly active scene of the typi
cal police precint and emphasized
instead the day to day realities and
personal conficts of the committed
police officer.
Linden says he finally returned to
television because "I spent a lot of
time
reading bad Broadway
scripts." He says, "I was looking for
something interesting. What attract
ed me to the role of Alexander
Blacke was his theatricality. His
ability to declaim. Rarely on televi
sion do you get a chance to play a
larger-than-life character. So what I
didn't find on Broadway I found in
television."
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TV Watch Weakly/Monday, March 17,1906/Page 5
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war buddy’s hometown escalates into a mi
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Charles Grodin, Candice Bergen. A business-
man-turned-burglar and a bored socialite
challenge the world’s greatest security sys
tem in order to steal a fortune.
0 MOVIE A A ’/4 "Love Letters" (1983) Jam
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that her recently deceased mother had been
involved in an extramarital affair throughout
her marriage, a single woman becomes in
volved in an obsessive affair with a married
man. R ’
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(1937) Paul Robeson, Cedric Hardwicke. An
exiled African chief leads a group of adven
turers straight to the diamond mines they’re
seeking.
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fugitive radical from the 1960’s who emerges
12 years later to find an apathetic world.
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Brooke Fields, Honey Wilder. A call girl ser
vice that caters to exclusively wealthy cíten
tele specializes in eroticism.
* 0 0
Ü MOVIE A A A A “The Man In The White
Su it" (1951) Alec Guinness, Cecil Parker. The
market goes wild when a brilliant young
chemist invents a virtually indestructible fab
ric.
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CB NEWS
1 I 0 MOVIE "E l Heroe Desconocido” (No
Date) Rafael Inclan, Diana Bracho.
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9 WILD, WILD WORLD OF ANIMALS
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Dean Stanton, Nastassja Kinski. After four
years’ absence, a social dropout reappears in
L.A. to claim his abandoned son and then
heads for Texas to reunite the boy with his
mother. ‘R ’ g
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CELEBRITY LIFESTYLES
ANIMALS OF THE SOUTH AMERICAN
JUNGLE A South Americap rain forest is the
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inhabit the Amazon jungle.
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Armagh to their 1984 reunion concert at New
York’s Lincoln Center (R)
9 MAN FROM U.N.C.LE. Russia blames the
U.S. for launching fungus-spraying missiles
that are destroying its grain crop. So lo 's mis
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sible.
9 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EXPLORER
Featured: the dolphins of New Zealand and
Australia; bird master and conservationist
Mortey Nelson discusses the art of falconry; a
re-creation of the golden age of motor racing
(1924-1939). Host: Tom Chapin.
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Marshall, Mary Stahl. The investigation of the
discovery of a skeleton in a water main leads
a newspaper reporter to one of the city's
most powerful families.
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teams compete.
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Jean-Pierre Aumont. A beautiful and willful
prostitute puts her appearance and body to
use to become the toast of the town. R '
O M OVE A A A "Against AM Odds” (1984)
Rachel Ward, Jeff Bridges. A fading profes
sional football player falls in love with the girl
friend of a small-time hood and becomes in
volved with shady, high-stakes real estate
dealings. ‘R’ g
O MOVIE A A A A "Genevieve” (1954) John
Gregson, Dinah Sheridan. Two English cou
ples pit their wits and determination against
each other to win a cross-country antique car
race.
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when Chip befriends a homeless, retarded
man.
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Robert Bedford, Peter Boyle. A young liberal
tries desperately to avoid being corrupted by
his campaign for a seat in the U.S. Senate
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turns to drugs and alcohol when she finds it
difficult to cope with the pressures of fame.
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tics for straighter behavior,
o NEW COUNTRY
0 B ACCION
0 0 ESPECTACULARES... MARTES 13
I MOVE A “Second Time Lucky” (1984)
Diane Franklin, Roger Wilson. Attempting to
wipe out sin worldwide, God recreates the
Garden of Eden and populates it with two
mousy coeds.
6:46
0 SECRETS OF THE PLANT WORLD The
various means by which plant-life reproduce
are shown.
9 *0
B BLACK FORUM
0 MOVE AAA "9 To 5" (1980) Jane Fon
da, Dolly Parton. Three working women rebel
against their subjugation by a male chauvin
ist boss. PG
S VIOEOCOUNTRY
DICK CAVETT Guests: Mike Wallace, who
discusses "ambush journalism,” and The
Roches, who perform two songs from their
new album.
0 O FRONTLINE This profile of the Nicara
guan Contras examines who they are, the le
gality of private aid to the rebels and the
White House's support of this tactic. □
( | fsEW8
0 0 MOVIE ”0 Amor Y Esas Cosas” (No
Date) Mauricio Garces, Enrique Guzman.
0 DR. RUTH SHOW Guest: actress Betty
White.
0 0 SPENSER: FOR HIRE Susan's preg
nancy and the plight of two orphaned chil
dren whose father he killed in self-defense
upset Spenser. (R) g
S TELEPHONE AUCTION
RAY BRADBURY THEATER A city resi
dent's (Jeff Goldblum) idealistic view of rural
life is shattered when a train drops him off at
an unscheduled stop.
O WORLD CUP SKIING Women's giant sla
lom from Waterville Valley, N.H. (Taped)
0 PAPER CHASE Ford defends a law stu
dent who assaulted a professor; Rose Samu
els (Lainie Kazan) accepts her first date after
her separation.
® THE MIND’S EYE: THE EXPERIENCE OF
LEARNING The eye-brain connection and the
results of its failure to function properly are
discussed by host Alvin Sargent and two very
famous people with dyslexia, a perceptual
learning problem, Bruce Jenner and Oliver
Reed.
9 *5
0 MOVIE A A Vi "The Naked Jungle” (1954)
Charlton Heston, Eleanor Parker. Billions of
soldier ants invade a South American planta
9 *0
0 WILD AMERICA
11-40 PARADISE
0 CELEBRITY CHEFS Guests: Rita Moreno,
Rusty Staub.
00 LOCO AMOR
0 NOT NECESSARILY THE NEWS Comedy
sketches combine with classic film and news
footage in an offbeat, satiric take-off.
10*0
2)00880news
8 CHALKBOARD
8 YOU CAN BE A 8TAR
DR. FLOWER8 ON CALL
ALFRED HITCHCOCK HOUR
© O WILLIAM STY RON The author of the
best-seller "Sophie’s Choice" is profiled.
0 o MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING CIRCU8
( I MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. Solo races an en
emy agent (Ricardo Montalban) in a small Eu
ropean nation to find a tiny silver dove con
taining a vital list of THRUSH agents.
0 MOVIE AAAVi "This Man Must Die"
(1970) Michael Duchaussoy, Jean Yanne.
Based on a story by Nicholas Blake. A father
enraged over his son's hit-and-run death sets
out to find his killer.
§ EVERYBODY’S MONEY MATTER8
D 24 HORAS
0 MOVIE AA'/i "The Flamingo Kid” (1984)
TV Watch Weekly/Monday. March 17,1986/Page 7
Prim e Time
7 *0
® 8 FAST TIMES Linda's friends finally
learn if her long-distance boyfriend actually
Q ITS YOUR FUTURE
I I BLACK SHOWCASE
0 MOVIE A AV4 "Teachers” (1984) Nick
Nolte, JoBeth Williams. A lawsuit brought
against a zoo-like urban high school for
awarding a diploma to an illiterate student
spurs a burned-out instructor to search for
his discarded ideals. R ’ g
8 NASHVILLE NOW
8 THREE’S A CROWD
Í 8 WORLD WAR II: AIR POWER
(Ü 8 MACNEIL / LEHRER NEWSHOUR
8 BORN FREE George is handed the se
rious task of preventing the spread of an in
fectious disease carried by Shifta cattle.
Guest star: Dane Clark.
8 8 MOVIE “Don Juan” (No Date) Fernan
do!, Carmen Sevilla.
8 AMERICAN GIRLS
®
MACGYVER MacGyver attempts to
track down a con man who pulled off a mul-
timiliion-dollar diamond heist. (R) g
8 AMERICAN BABY Featured: how to se
lect and use car safety seats; a debate on the
controversy about vaginal birth after
cesarean delivery; a visit to an exercise, play
and learning center for youngsters.
8 8 JUANA IRIS
8 8 BOB HOPE SPECIAL “Royal Com
mand Performance From Sweden" Guests
include Liv Ullmann, Boy George, Omar
Sharif, Dolph Lundgren and Shirley Jones.
I KIDS IN CRISIS This examination into
teen-age suicide includes interviews with
troubled adolescents, parents and psychia
trists.
© 8 QUINCY An oil refinery's deadly emis
sions send Quincy on an investigation after
two people die with traces of sulfur in their
lungs.
8 BASEBALL’S GREATEST HITS World Se
ries Greatest Moments.
8 MORE RIBALD CLASSICS THEATRE
8 BROTHERS There’s speculation that a
new waitress at the restaurant is Lou’s illegit
imate daughter, g
7*5
CHIEFS At the end of World War II, Billy
Lee (Stephen Collins) and Sonny Butts (Brad
Davis) return to Delano; when Billy, a politi
cian and ally of Hugh Holmes (Charlton Hes
ton), protests Sonny’s abusive behavior as a
policeman, Sonny tries to redeem himself by
reopening the murder cases left unsolved 20
years before. (Part 2 of 3)
7:30
CD 8 TOUGH COOKIES Cliff and Connie
pose as workers in a diner to infiltrate a
crime ring.
8 HOMEWORK HOTLINE
«ASSOCIATES
8 OPPE HOMER
8 TRAVEL VI8ION INTERNATIONAL
1 M IL HOCKEY Hartford Whalers at St.
*
Louis Blues (Live)
8 THE INCREDIBLE TIME TRAVEL8 OF
HENRY 08G000 Former SCTV cast mem
ber Dave Thomas plays a successful college
professor who’s transported back in time.
Guest stars include Catherine O'Hara, Martin
Short, Joe Flaherty and others.
8 MOUSETERPIECE THEATER
8.-00
CD 8 MOVIE “Assassin” (Premiere) Robert
Conrad, Karen Austin. A retired agent is
called upon to destroy a humanoid robot that
has run amok and launched a murderous
campaign against its creators, g
8 VIDEO SOUL
8 CHASE
8 8 SMITHSONIAN WORLD This slice of
Americana features the Experimental Aircraft
Association's Annual International Fly-In held
in Oshkosh, Wis.; author Garry Wills’ portrait
of George Washington; the architecture of
American churches; and the renewal of Fay
etteville, N.C. g
8 700 CLUB
REGIS PHILBJN’S LIFESTYLES Featured:
comedian Harry Shearer; mind reader Max
Maven.
8 a DYNASTY The trial gets off to a
momentous start when Ben reveals Blake's
role in their mother’s death, g
8 SECRETS OF SUCCESS
g8BO O ASDEO O IO
8 BLACKE’S MAGIC Alex and Leonard
work on a sting operation aimed at bringing a
corrupt toy-manufacturing king to justice.
(Postponed from an earlier date.)
8 MOVIE AAVk “Desoeratelv Seekina Su
san” (1985) Rosanna Arquette, Madonna.
Amnesia, mistaken identities and danger be
fall a bored New Jersey housewife who be
comes involved with a free-spirited young
woman. *PG-13’g
© 8 MOVIE * ★ "The Culpepper Cattle
Co.” (1972) Gary Grimes, Luke Askew. A
teen-ager becomes a mature cowboy during
a long, difficult cattle drive to Colorado.
ELECTRIC BLUE: SCHOOL FOR STAR
LETS
MOVIE A A A "The Railway Children”
(1971) Dinah Sheridan, Bernard Crlbbins. Af
ter their father is sent to prison, three chil
dren move to a small Yorkshire village on a
railroad line. ‘G’
8:30
§ INSIDE YOUR SCHOOLS
NEW COUNTRY
8 HORIZONS “The Insect Alternative”
An examination of the misuse of insecticide
which has led to a new strain of-dangerous
insocts
8 8 Él MUNOO DEL ESPECTACULO
38 MUY ESPECIAL.. CALLE OCHO
MOVIE AAA!* “Zelig" (1983) Woody Al
ien, Mia Farrow. Documentary-styte profile of
a man with the ability to acquire both the
physical and mental traits of the people he
meets. PG'
9*0
8 GREAT DECISIONS’88
MOVIE A A “Fast Forward” (1985) John
Scott Clough, Don Franklin. The chance to
compete in a high-stakes showdown leads an
Ohio high school dance group to New York
City. ’PG’ g
8 «CO U N TRY
EDOIE CAPRA MY8TERIES
8 O AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE “TeN Me a
Riddle" A withdrawn elderly woman, unaware
that she is dying, embarks on a long Journey
to reacquaint herself with her geographically
and emotionally separated family. Lila Kedro
va, Melvyn Douglas and Brooke Adams star
in this 1980 movie, g
8 NEWS
8 MOVIE "Negro Es Un BeNo Color” (No
Date) Libertad Lamarque, Femando Allende.
SDR. RUTH 8HOW Topic: affairs.
8 HOTEL Julie's entered In a talent-
search competition; an aaroepace engineer
thinks her husband’s a spy. Guests Include
Charlie Robinson and Mlcheie PhNtpe. g
8 WORLD VISION
8 8 ST. ELSEWHERE A tenement house
turned over to St. Eligius Hospital is a center
for drug-selling activity.
8 PLAYBOY COMEDY THEATRE: HENNY
YOUNGMAN
9*6
8 MOVIE AA A “The Guyana Tragedy: The
Story Of Jim Jones" (1980) (Pert 1 of 2) Pow
ers Boothe, Ned Beatty. The Ufa of People's
Temple leader Jim Jones Is traced from his
caN to the ministry to the mass suicide at
Jonestown.
9*0
8 CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH
8 M 0 PARADISE
88 ITALIANS
8 CAN YOU BE THINNER?
88 LOCO AMOR
10*0
_
8I I 8 (I) 8 NEWS
)CHALKBOARD
I D a FLOWERS ON CALL
) YOU CAN BE A STAR
J ALFRED HITCHCOCK HOUR
“ I GREAT DETECTIVE
_ MAN FROM U.N.C.LE. Investigating the
d-a ppearance of underworld leaders. Soio
runs afoul of a deposed Middle Eastern
monarch who plans to conquer the world.
8 MOVE AAVk “Heatwave” (1982) Richard
Moir, Judy Davis. The architect of a propoeed
residential complex in Sydney. AuetrNia.
forges an unlikely amanee with the leader of a
community movement opposing Ms construc
tion.
VUeekiy/Monday. Meen 17. 1966
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• 0 MOME “ En Las Garra» De La Ciudad”
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8 C A M E 6 GO
• R W LET S B B JE V E IT OR NOD A visit
to a tarantula ranch; a street that goes
nowhere, strange creatures that live beneath
theses. (R )g
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• BEXCETERA... THE NEW S ACCORDING
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ric.
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husband and his daughter Stars Bess Arm
strong.
• WORLD CUP SKIIN G Men’s giant slalom
from Lake Placid, N.Y. (Taped)
• IT S SHOW TIME
846
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• W ILD AMERICA
• MOVIE * * * ¿ “ Frances" (1982) J eeeica
Lange. Kim Stanley. Chronicle of the tragic
Hie of Frances Farmer, screen star of the ’30»
and ‘40s, whose domineering mother com
mitted her to an insane asylum. ‘R‘
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by Hugo Lovelace Charters (Robin Bailey)
and Giles Evelyn Caidicott (Michael Aldridge)
of a young woman’s dead body in Cakficott’s
apartment disrupts their otherwise agreeable
existence. (Part 1 of 6) g
Date) Roberto Bonfim, Betty Faria.
• DR. RUTH SHOW Topic: affairs.
31 O 20 / 20 Scheduled Hugh Downs re
ports on the relationship between a killer
whale and her calf at Sea World in Orlando,
F la .g
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S O HILL ST R K T BLU ES Bates comes to
her new partner’s defense when she's
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lives of the wives of famous Hollywood stars.
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• MAN FROM U J4.C .L.E. In a tiny Balkan
police state, an old flame (Madlyn Rhue) talks
a vacationing Solo into helping discredit a
treacherous colonel
• MOVIE + * * "Sm ash Palace” (1981)
Brunc Lawrence. Anna Jam ison. A New Zea
land junkyard owner s ruined marriage takes
a dramatic turn toward desperation and vio-
lence
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Johnny portrays a hoodlum being audited by
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• MOVIE
“ EmmanueHe" (1974) Sylvia
Kristel, Aiain Cuny. The wife of a French dip
lomat becomes involved in a series of sexual
liaisons after joining her husband in Thailand.
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Brad Davis, John Hurt. Based on the true sto
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in Turkey for attempting to smuggle out
hashish, who suffers a grueling incarceration
in a torturous prison. 'R '
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hippie creat— problems for his tough driK
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0 M O VE * ♦ '* “ The Hunter” (1979) Steve
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dangerous life — a modern-day bounty hunt
er. PG
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Bobby Driscoll Robert Newton. Baaed on the
novel by Robert Louis Stevenson. A young
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and his pirate crew to scout the se— for
ships laden with valuable cargo. G
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Stan ley, vice president of research,
Westhewn & Co.
0 0 V D E0 6 EXITO S
0 0 HE’S TH E MAYOR Mayor Burke Mr—
a consultant to improve his popularity among
the voters. Q
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0 NOT N ECESSARR.Y THE N EW S Comedy
sketch— combine with classic ton and news
footage in an offb— t, satiric take-off.
0 TOP RANK 8QXMQ John Meekins vs.
Grant W alters in a junior weltarw tight bout
scheduled for 10 rounds Hve from Arianttc
City, N .J.
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9 4 0
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Championship Regional Sem ifinal. (Live)
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y:Mm MMMB WCC D st Trudy Jap — risks
lowng her lover when she pursu— Ms drug-
deaBng friend. In stereo. (R )
0 M O VB frfrfr “ The Blu— Brothers’'
(t980) John Betushi, Dsn Aykroyd. Two bkj—
singers must contend wrih the Chicago po
nce. the CIA, neo-Nazis and the U S Army to
put togeth— a bsnsrit concert lo ral— money
(or their orphanage. *R*
0 M O VB * “ Another RoB In The Hay”
(1965) Trad Lords. Eric Edwards. Four ranch
hands attempt to retrieve a kidnapped m«-
Kon-dotar racehorse.
«■ CONVERSATIONAL 8P AN B H
■ M O VB * * % “Sotaan Candtas” (1994)
MoOy Ringwatd. Anthony MMhaoI H oi. An tov-
sacure Midwestern taow d0sr's N R birthday
go— unremembared, j—I anothw aymptom
of the pain of adoi—osnca and growbig up In
a mtddla ct—« ta rn * ‘PG ’ g
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0 HOW TO BUY ANY CAR W H O U BA LE
0 0 LOGO AMOR
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borah Harry, Dennis Upacomb. bi the 195C
• b—in—«man trt— to cover up a sensata
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pape 1QTV Watch Weekly Monday. March 17,1986
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f f i 0 AIRW O LF A group of handicapped
mountain climbers are threatened by a ruth
less archer.
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_ MOVIE AA Oh God! Book M" (19®0)
George Bums, Suzanne Pteshette God re
turns to Earth and chooses the young daugh
ter of an advertising executive to spread his
message to the world PG
«GRANO OLE OPRY UVE
MOVIE A A A “ The Cat People" (1942)
Simone Simon, Kent Smith. A girl is cursed
with the ability to convert herself into a vi
cious panther at wW.
0 0 M OVE
“ St. M artin’s Lane"
(1940) Charles Laughton. Vivien Leigh A
street entertainer adopts a homeless waif
and helps her become a star
0 0 AUSTIN CITY LIMITS “ George Strait /
Dwight Y oak am " in stereo.
0 MOVIE A AH “Come Next Spring" (1955)
Ann Sheridan, Steve Cochran. After desert
ing his wife and family tor eight years, a
wanderer tries to regain the respect of his
community.
8 WORWNG MOTHER
0 REDO FOXX SHOW Al tries to play
matchmaker for his ex-wife Felicia. Q
0 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
0 0 MOVIE “ Asalto Al Casino" (1981) C.
Augez P Cushing.
0 O NELL CARTER SPECIAL "Never Too
Old to Dream" The Four Tops, PhyUcia
Rash ad and Harry Anderson join the "Gimme
A Break” co-star tor an evening of music
spanning four decades.
0 MOVIE A A “ Porky’s Revenge" (1985)
Dan Monahan. W yatt Knight. A group of Flor
ida high school students matches wits with
the proprietor of a local brothel. ‘R ' g
& o MATT HOUSTON Matt searches for a
mentally retarded, diabetic boy (Alejandro
Uribe), who was mistaken for an illegal alien.
0 WOMEN’S BASKETBALL NCAA Champi
onship Tournament Midwest Regional Final
live from Austin, Tex.
8 SEX AND VIOLENCE FAMILY HOUR
PAPER CHASE Ford defends a law stu
dent who assaulted a professor; Rose Samu
els (Lamie Kazan) accepts her first date after
her separation.
7:15
0 CENTENNIAL Romance between Char
lotte (Lynn Redgrave) and her foreman (W il
liam Atherton) coots when he rekindles an old
relationship with the half-breed Ciemma
(Adrienne La Russa); Sheriff Dumire (Brian
Keith) and Philip Wendell (Doug McKeon) end
their feud. (Part 10 of 12)
7:30
0 CHURCH STREET STATION
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o f s 4 u A t i n y *$ n c .
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lor Women of All Ages
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I MOVIE "Negro Es Un Bello Color" (No
Date) Libertad Lamarque, Fernando AHende.
8 A WHOLE NEW YOU
0 BENSON A conservation expert testi
fies at a hearing on the issue of toxic waste.
(Postponed from an earlier date.) g
0 MOUSETERPIECE THEATER
7:35
*0 0
CZD 0 MOVIE A A A “ Private Benjam in"
(1980) Goldie Hawn, Eileen Brennan. A well-
to-do young woman joins the Army following
the death of her new husband on their wed
ding night and soon finds it's not what she
expected. (R)
O AMERICAN SPORTS CAVALCADE Fea
tured: U.S. Nationals. In stereo.
0 O UNDERSEA WORLD OF JACQUES
COUSTEAU “ Sm ile Of The W alrus" Captain
Cousteau and his crew conduct the first de
tailed film study of the massive walrus, both
above and below the water.
0 JOURNEY TO ADVENTURE
0 0 FORTUNE DANE Perfect Tommy is
stabbed by an inmate white trying to protect
an imprisoned witness. In stereo, g
0 0 GOLDEN GIRLS Dorothy's beau
shows more than a passing interest in
Blanche. In stereo. (R)
& 0 MOVIE A A “ Race With The Devil”
(1975) Peter Fonda, Warren Oates. When a
vacationing foursome inadvertently witness
es a human sacrifice by Satan worshippers,
they flee in terror.
9 ELECTRIC BLUE: YOUNG VAMPIRES IN
LOVE
0 MOVE A A H “ Reckless Disregard"
(1985) Tess Harper, Leslie Nielsen. A store
front lawyer defends a doctor whose reputa
tion has been ruined by an investigative TV
reporter's story alleging his involvement in an
illegal prescription-drug operation.
0 MOVIE A A Vi “ The Champ" (1979) Jon
Voight, Faye Dunaway. A divorced ex
prizefighter attempts a comeback to retain
custody of his young son. 'P G '
Ic30
0 MOVIE ♦ A “The Curse Of The Cat Peo
ple’’ (1944) Simone Simon, Kent Sm ith. After
her visit to a mysterious old house, a child
whose mother was cursed begins to behave
in a peculiar manner.
8 FAMILY GUIDE PRESENTS
0 227 Brenda discovers that one of her
ancestors made his mark in history as a Civil
W ar coward. In stereo. (R)
( I RAY BRADBURY THEATER A dty resi
dent's (Je ff Goldblum) idealistic view of rural
life is shattered when a train drops him off at
an unscheduled stop.
8:36
0 MOVE A A “ Oh God! You Devil” (1984)
George Bums, Ted W ass. A struggling musi
cian declares in desperation that he would
trade his soul for a chance at fame and for
tune and the ever-obliging devN grants his re
quest. PG ' g
M 0
STONY BROWN’S JOURNAL
0 MOVIE A A H “ Dinner At The Ritz”
(1937) AnnabeNa, David Niven. The daughter
of a murdered French banker places bNnd
trust in the help offered by her financier
fiance in locating the killer.
00 FRONTIER: COCAINE A cocaine man
ufacturer’s day-to-day activities in Colombia.
0 TO BE ANNOUNCED
0 0 MOVIE "Llovizna” (No Date) Aaron
Hernán, Silvia M ariscal.
0 CHRISTIAN LIFESTYLE MAGAZINE
d i O LOVE BOAT A psychic predicts the
end of the world; a dead man arranges a
cruise for his wife and her former lover; a
groom-to-be meets a woman who claim s she
was once his wife. Eva Gabor and Patrick
Wayne guest star, g
0 RESORT REAL ESTATE
0 0 EL SAMURAI FUGITIVO
0 o REMINGTON STEELE At a triathlon,
Laura is abducted by goons who mistake her
for another athlete. (Postponed from an earli
er date.) In stereo.
0 BOXING Pinklon Thomas (26-0-1, 21
KOs) vs. Trevor Berbick (30-4-1, 23 KOs) for
the W BC Heavyweight title scheduled for 12
rounds live from Las Vegas, Nev.
0 WOMEN’S BASKETBALL NCAA Champi
onship Tournament West Regional Final live
from Long Beach, Calif.
0 MOVIE A !* "Private Fantasies” (1984)
Honey W ilder, Eric Edwards. Three lawyers'
wives reveal their most intim ate fantasies at
an elegant dinner party.
0:25
0 AUTO RACING IM SA 12 Hours Of Sabr
ing live from Sabring, Ra.
*3 0
8 WHY IN THE WORLD
COUNTRYCUPS
0 WORLD TOMORROW
0 MOREY’S MARKDOWN MARKET
10 *0
0 0 8 0 0 0 NEWS
O CHALKBOARD
0 NIGHT FLIGHT "Best Of Night Right
Short Film s"
8 8 UNIVERSE
«SUCCESS 'N ' UFE
JIM M Y SWAGGART
0 NEW GENERATION HAIR CARE
t O TWILIGHT ZONE
Í APRIL PLAYBOY VIDEO MAGAZINE
0 JOHN LENNON IN NEW YORK CITY
Rimed in 1972 at Madison Square Garden,
this concert performance by the former Bee
tle features the songs "Im agine,” "Pow er to
the People,” “ Come Together" and more.
1*30
4 “Android” (1982) Klaus Kinski,
Don Opper. In an isolated space station, an
almost-human robot is horrified to discover
thet he is to be .put. out of commission .by a
crazed scientist. PG’
0 * * ' 4 "Never A Dull Moment" (1968) Dick
Van Dyke, Edward G Robinson. An actor
who is typecast in gangster roles is mistaken
for the hit man a mobster hired to do a job
G ’
10*0
0 0 "La Miel Se Fue De La Luna" (No
Date) Alma Rosa Aguirre, Abel Salazar
10:60
0 * 4 "Fighting Back" (1982) Tom Skerrltt,
Patti Lupone An angry Philadelphian organ
izes a vigilante force to stem the tide of vio
lent crime in his neighborhood. ’R’
11*5
0 * * * "The Great Gatsby" (1974) Robert
Redford, Mia Farrow. Based on the novel by
F. Scott Fitzgerald A wealthy 1920s boot
legger devotes his life to reclaiming the wom
an he loves
Thursday's Movies
EVENING
8 *0
0 * * * “Bye Bye Birdie” (1963) Dick Van
Dyke, Janet Leigh. A teen-age singing idol
about to be drafted gives his final television
performance.
0 * * * 4 "The Boy Who Talked To Badgers"
(1975) Christian Juttner, Carl Betz. A little
boy tost in the Canadian wilds receives suste
nance from a friendly badger.
7*0
0 * * "Roadhouse 66” (1984) Willem
Dafoe, Judge Reinhold. Driving through Ari
zona, an Ivy Leaguer is assisted by a worldly-
wise hitchhiker when local rowdies shoot a
hole in the radiator of his ’55 Thunderbird. ’R’
0 * * “The Meanest Men In The West"
(1979) Charles Bronson, Lee Marvin Two
outlaws share a hatred for each other and a
love of double-dealing.
0 0 "En Las Garras De La Ciudad” (No
Date) Roberto Guiñar, Antonio Espino.
0
* * " Porky s Revenge" (1965) Dan
Monahan, Wyatt Knight. A group of Florida
high school students matches wits with the
proprietor of a local brothel. ‘R’ g
8*0
0 **1 4 “The Karate Kid" (1984) Ralph
Macchio, Noriyuki "Pat” Morita. After several
violent dashes with Ms California school
mates, a reluctantly transplanted New Jersey
teen-ager seeks help from his apartment
building’s maintenance man, a karate mas
ter. PG g
0 0 * * * “Search" (1972) Hugh O'Brien,
Elke Sommer. A space-age detective investi
gates the disappearance of a famous gem
collection.
8 * * * * "The Man in The White Suit"
(1951) Alec Guinness, Cecil Parker. The mar
ket goes wild when a brilliant young chemist
invents a virtually indestructible fabric.
9 *0
0 * * ’4 “Frances” (1982) Jessica Lange,
Kim Stanley. Chronicle of the tragic life of
Frances Farmer, screen star of the '30s and
'40s, whose domineering mother committed
her to an insane asylum. ‘R’
0 0 “La Hora Dei Verdugo” (No Date) Ro
berto Bonfim, Betty Faria.
10*0
0
* * * "Smash Palace" (1981) Bruno
Lawrence, Anna Jemison. A New Zealand
junkyard owner’s ruined marriage takes a
dramatic turn toward desperation and vio
lence.
0 * * “EmmanueUe" (1974) Sylvia Krietel,
Alain Cuny. The wife of a French diplomat be
comes involved in a aeries of sexual liaisons
after joining her husband in Thailand.
0 * * * "Midnight Express" (1978) Brad
Davis, John Hurt. Based on the true story of
Bitty Hayes, a young American arrested in
Turkey for attempting to smuggle out hash
ish, who suffers a grueling incarceration in a
torturous prison. ‘R’
0 * * * "The Secret Ufe Of Walter Mitty”
(1947) Danny Kaye, Virginia Mayo. A meek
man burdened with domestic attachments
conjures up illusions of himself as a hero.
10*6
0 * * * “The Guyana Tragedy: The Story
Of Jim Jones" (1980) (Part 2 of 2) Powers
Boothe, Ned Beatty. The life of People’s
Temple leader Jim Jones is traced from his
call to the ministry to the mass suicide at
Jonestown.
10*0
0 0 "Actas De Marusia” (No Date) Gian
Maria Votonte, Claudio Obregon.
11*0
0 0 “Separation Matrimonial" (1974)
Jacqueline Andaré, Ana Beien.
11*5
0 * * * “Pauline At The Beach" (1983)
Amanda Langlet, Arieile Domba e. The ro
mantic ups and downs of a young Parisian
woman vacationing in Normandy as viewed
through the eyes of her 16-year-old cousin.
(Subtitled) R’
11:30
0 0 * ★ * "Sitting Pretty" (1948) Clifton
Webb, Robert Young. A snooty, middle-aged
"genius” proves to be an excellent baby sit
ter.
0 * * * ' 4 "The Killing Fields” (1984) Sam
Waterston, Haing 9. N jr.
Friday's Movies
EVENING
7*0
0 * * * "The Natural" (1984) Robert Red
ford, Robert Duvall. The uncanny, almost
mythical, natural ability ot a middle-aged
baseball player rockets a major league team
toward the 1939 pennant. ’PG’ g
0 0
* * * "Morgan!" (1966) Vanessa
Redgrave. David Warner A schizophrenic
can't accept the tact that his ex-wife is re
marrying and attends her wedding dressed
as a gorilla
0 Q "La Mujer Que Yo Perdí" (No Date)
Pedro Infante, Blanca Estela Pavón.
0
* ★ "Fraternity Vacation” (1985) Ste
phen Geoffreys, Sheree J. Wilson. Despite
being saddled with a nerdy pledge during a
weekend in Palm Springs, two fraternity
brothers vie for a poolside blonde. ‘R’ g
8 *0
0 O * * ’4 “Tribes" (1970) Darren McGa-
vin, Jan-Michael Vincent. An early '70s hippie
creates problems for his tough drill sergeant
because of his unconventional ways.
0
* * ’,4 “The Hunter" (1979) Steve
McQueen, Eli Wallach. Based on the true sto
ry of Ralph "Papa" Thorson, who leads a
dangerous life as a modern-day bounty hunt
er. 'PG'
0 * * * ’4 "Treasure Island" (1950) Bobby
Driscoll, Robert Newton. Based on the novel
by Robert Louis Stevenson. A young boy with
a secret map joins Long John Silver and his
pirate crew to scout the seas for ships laden
with valuable cargo. 'G'
9 *0
0 0 ‘Juicio De Faldas" (No Date) Conchita
Velasco, Manolo Escobar.
0 * * * "The Blues Brothers" (1980) John
Beiushi, Dan Aykroyd. Two blues singers
must contend with the Chicago police, the
CIA, neo-Nazis and the U.S. Army to put to
gether a benefit concert to raise money for
their orphanage. 'R'
0 * "Another Roll In The Hay” (1985) Traci
Lords, Eric Edwards. Four ranch hands at
tempt to retrieve a kidnapped million-dollar
racehorse.
9:30
0 * * ' 4 "Sixteen Candles" (1984) Molly
Ringwald, Anthony Michael Hall. An insecure
Midwestern teen-ager's 16th birthday goes
unremembered, just another symptom of the
pain of adolescence and growing up in a mid
dle-class family. ‘PG’ g
10*0
0 * * ’4 "Union City" (1980) Deborah Har
ry, Dennis Lipscomb. In the 1950s, a busi
nessman tries to cover up a senseless mur
der he committed.
0 * * "Missing In Action 2: The Begin
ning” (1985) Chuck Norris, Soon-Teck Oh.
An American colonel, held prisoner by sadis
tic Vietnamese captors, makes a bid for free
dom for himself and his fellow POWs. 'R'
0 * * ★ Vi "The Great Chase” (1962) Buster
Keaton, Pearl White. A nostalgic look reveals
the ingredients that went into the making of
silent film classics.
10*0
0 O A A "Yellowstone Kelty" (1959) Clint
Walker, Edd Byrnes. An Indian uprising start
ed over an Indian maid draws a fur trapper to
the scene.
11*0
0 0 A A A "Morgan!" (1966) Vanessa
Redgrave, David Warner. A schizophrenic
can’t accept the fact that his ex-wife is re
marrying and attends her wedding dressed
as a gorilla.
0 0 "Cadena Perpetua" (No Date) Pedro
Armendariz, Narciso Busquets.
11:10
0 A "Candy Stripe Nurses" (1974) Candice
Rialson, Robin Mattson. Three young girls
have different reasons for volunteering to
help at their local hospital. 'R'
11*0
0 0 A A A "Tortilla Flat" (1942) Spencer
Tracy, Hedy Lamarr. The poverty and suffer
ing of Mexican peasants in California is ex
plored.
11:45
0 AAV4 "The Soldier" (1982) Ken Wahl,
Willi n Prince. A ruthless CIA agent is sent
to neutralize a Soviet-backed terrorist plot to
hold the Mideast hostage with nuclear explo
sives. ‘R’ g
0 A *14 “The Adventures Of Buckaroo
Banzai: Across The 8th Dimension" (1984)
Peter Weller, John Lithgow. A band of adven
turers battle enemy aliens who are acciden
tally released from the 8th dimension as a
result of a researcher's experiments. 'PG'
12:30
© * * * ’4 "The Shining" (1980) Jack Ni
cholson, Shelley Duvall. A winter caretaker
for a remote, and apparently haunted, Colo
rado hotel is snowbound there with his wife
and clairvoyant young son. ‘R’
0 O A * "Crucible Of Horror” (1969) Mi
chael Gough, Yvonne Mitchell. A sinister man
is determined to drive his wife over the brink
of sanity.
1:15
0 A * ’4 “Moscow On The Hudson” (1984)
Robin Williams, Maria Cpnchita Alonso.
Monday*» Sports
Thursday*» Sports
EVENING
MO
0 GEORGIA TECH BASKETBALL
0 SPORTSCE TER
040
E) BASKETBALL TODAY WITH JEFF MUL
LINS
O COLLEGE BASKETBALL REPORT
7 40
0 WRESTLING
0 COLLEGE BASEBALL Maine at Miami
(Live)
745
0 NBA BASKETBALL Philadelphia 76e at
Cleveland Cavaliers (Uve)
*00
O WRESTLING (R)
NfcOO
6 ARM WRESTLING Major League baseball
teams compete.
10:30
® SPORTSCENTER
1140
a WORLD CUP SKIING Men’s downhill
from Are, Sweden. (R)
1240
m MARK SOSIN’S SALT WATER JOURNAL
1240
a OUTDOOR UFE
aSPO R TSLO O K
a SPORTSCENTER
140
1:30
240
a COLLEGE BASKETBALL REPORT
2:30
a TOP RANK BOXING Roger Mayweather
vs. Sheldon LeBlanc in a junior lightweight
bout scheduled for 10 rounds from Las
Vegas, Nev. (R)
EVENING
740
IFSHIN' HOLE
840
(7) a COLLEGE BASKETBALL NCAA
Championship Regional Semifinal. (Live)
8:30
a WORLD CUP SKIING Men’s giant slalom
from Lake Placid, N.Y. (Taped)
940
S OUTDOOR NEWS NETWORK
WORLD CUP SKIING Women's slalom
from Lake Placid, N.Y. (Taped)
a SPORTSCENTER
1040
1140
CD a COLLEGE BASKETBALL NCAA
Championship Regional Semifinal. (Tape de-
lav)
aSPEED W EEK
a WINTERWORLD
a FISHIN' HOLE
8 WRESTLING (R)
a SPORTSLOOK
8 WRESTLING (R)
8 SPORTSCENTER
1140
1240
12:30
140
1:30
240
a HORSE RACING WEEKLY
2:30
a COLLEGE BASKETBALL NCAA Champi
onship Tournament Regional Semifinal
Game. (R)
fflSPORTSLOOK
4:30
Tuesday*» Sports
frlday*s Sports
® JIMMY HOUSTON OUTDOORS
a SPORTSCENTER
EVENING
640
6:30
840
8:30
a WRESTLING
a ROLLER DERBY
a a ACCION
940
a WORLD CUP SKIING Women’s giant sla
lom from Waterville Valley, N.H. (Taped)
10:00
a WORLD OF SPORTS
10:30
a SPORTSCENTER
a INSIDE THE PGA TOUR
1140
11:30
a TOP RANK BOXING Roger Mayweather
vs. Sheldon LeBlanc in a junior lightweight
bout scheduled for 10 rounds from Las
Vegas, Nev. (R)
0 WRESTLING (R)
a SPORTSLOOK
a SPORTSCENTER
140
1:30
240
a COLLEGE BASEBALL Maine at Miami (R)
340
O WRESTLING (R)
a WRESTLING (R)
440
W ednesday9* Sports
EVENING
640
6'30
a SPORTSCENTER
a NBA TODAY
EVENING
640
740
740
840
a SPORTSCENTER
6:30
a COLLEGE BASKETBALL NCAA Champi
onship Tournament Regional Semifinal
Game. (Live)
a WRESTLING
® JIMMY HOUSTON OUTDOORS
a BOXING From Miami. (Taped)
8:30
a TOP RANK BOXING John Meekins vs.
Grant Walters in a junior welterweight bout
scheduled for 10 rounds live from Atlantic
City, N.J.
940
(D O COLLEGE BASKETBALL NCAA
Championship Regional Semifinal. (Live)
a SPORTSCENTER
1140
1240
CD O COLLEGE BASKETBALL NCAA
Championship Regional Semifinal. (Tape de
lay)
S a LUCHA UBRE
HORSE RACING WEEKLY
a SPORTSLOOK
12:30
140
1:30
© SPORTSCENTER
240
I I PGA SENIORS' GOLF Vintage Invitational
first round from Indian Weils, Calif. (R)
440
8 1985 PGA GOLF SENIORS' TOUR
HIGHLIGHTS
aSPO R TSLO O K
4:30
Saturday*» Sports
740
a BASEBALL S GREATEST HITS World Se
ries Greatest Moments.
7:30
a NHL HOCKEY Hartford Whalers at St.
Louis Blues (Live)
® SPORTS SPECIAL
<8 a WAR OF THE STARS
AFTERNOON
1240
12:30
10:30
a SPORTSCENTER
1140
a SKIING MAGAZINE
11:30
a SKIING Volvo International Show. (R)
a TENNIS MAGAZINE REPORTS
a NBA TODAY
12:30
1240
a SPORTSLOOK
aSPO R TSCEN TER
140
1:30
f> COLLEGE BASKETBALL NCAA
CD
Championship Regional Final. (Live)
0 O SUPER CHARGERS
12:35
a PRE-SEASON BASEBALL Atlanta Braves
vs. New York Mets (Live)
140
® 0 EL MUNDO DEL BOX
0 Q WORLD CUP SKIING Scheduled:
World Cup Finals from Bromont, Canada.
240
a GREAT DRIVERS Featured: Ai Unser. Sr.
In st6f60
a PDA SENIORS' GOLF Vintage Invitational
second round live from Indian Weds, Calif.
240
8 TRACK AND FIELD NCAA Division I
CD
2:30
COLLEGE BASKETBALL NCAA
Championship Regional Final. (Live)
a AMERICAN SPORTS CAVALCADE Fea
tured: U.S. Nationals. In stereo,
a BILL DANCE OUTDOORS
a a TENNIS Paine-Webber Classic semifi
nal matches live from Fort Myers, Fla.
340
340
a TOM MANN OUTDOOR8
8 FttHIN* WITH ORLANDO WIL80N
a WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Dwight
Muhammad Qawi (25-2-1, 14 KOs) vs. Leon
Spinks (17-4-2, 11 KOs) for the WBA Cru-
iserweight title scheduled for 15 rounds live
from Reno. Nev.
a RAYO BRECKENRIOGE
440
a FUN OF FISHING
a a PGA GOLF USF&G Classic third
round live from Lakewood Country Club in
New Orleans.
8 HORSE RACING Jim Beam Spiral Stakes
live from Florence, Ky.
a ROLAND MARTIN
aSPEEDWEEK
446
440
445
a MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED
540
a WOMEN'S BASKETBALL NCAA Champi
onship Tournament Mideast Regional Final
live from Iowa City, Iowa.
546
a WRESTLING
a BABE WINKELMAN’S GOOD FISHING
640
EVENING
6:30
8 COLLEGE SPORTS REVIEW
740
COLLEGE SPORTS
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL NCAA Champi
onship Tournament Midwest Regional Final
live from Austin, Tex.
840
a AMERICAN SPORTS CAVALCADE Fea
tured: U.S. Nationals. In stereo.
940
8 BOXING Pinklon Thomas (26-0-1, 21
KOs) vs. Trevor Berbick (30-4-1, 23 KOs) for
the WBC Heavyweight title scheduled for 12
rounds live from Las Vegas, Nev.
a WOMEN'S BASKETBALL NCAA Champi
onship Tournament West Regional Final live
from Long Beach, Calif.
Sunday*» Sports
08PEEDMNEEK
MORNING
840
1040
0 0 FI8HMG TEXA8
1040
a AUTO RACING Formula One Grand Prtx
of Brazil live from Rio de Janiero.
aWRESTUNG
1140
TV Watch Weekly/Monday, March 17,1986/Pi ie 15
a MI8L SOCCER Baltimore Blast at San Di
ego Sock r e (Tape delay)
340
0 a WIOE WORLD OF SPORTS Sched
uled:
international Toboggan (CRESTA)
Championship from San Moritz. Switzerland;
Superbikers - International Invitational A*-'
Around Motorcycle Championship from
Carlsbad, Calif. (Taped)
440
a OUTDOORS WITH BILL HARPER
540
a PGA SB00R8' GOLF Vintage Invitational
final round live from Indian Weds, Calif.
1140
a a WORLD CUP 8MMG Scheduled:
World Cup Finals from Bromont, Canada.
a OUTDOOR ENCOUNTER
EVENING
540
AFTERNOON
1240
a TENNI Virginia Slims Championships
Women’s Finals, live from Madison Square
Garden.
S a FUTBOL DESOE MEXICO
GYMNASTICS International Mixed Pairs
Championship (R)
1240
f f i a COLLEGE BA8KETBALL NCAA East
Regional live from East Rutherford, N.J.
a NAME OF THE GAME 18 GOLF
0 a TENNIS Paine-Webber Classic Cham
pionship live from Fort Myers, Fla.
1248
a PRE-8EASON BASEBALL Atlanta Bravas
vs. Houston Astros (Live)
140
0 COUNTRY SPORTSMAN Lane Brody
goes fishing for salmon in Racine, Wise. In
stereo.
0BASSM A8TER S
140
240
* 8 BOXEO DESOE MEXICO
lom from Waterville Valley. N.H. (R)
WORLD CUP SKIING Women's giant sla
240
(D a COLLEGE BASKETBALL NCAA Mid
west Regional Hve from Kansas City, Mo.
8 a BOXING TyreN Biggs (8-0, 6 KOs) vs.
Jeff Sims (23-3-1, 21 KOs) in a heavyweight
bout scheduled for 10 rounds live from Reno,
Nev.
340
a a L U C H A U B R E
a O PGA GOLF USF&G Classic final round
live from Lakewood Country Club in New Or-
840
a COUNTRY SPORTSMAN Lane Brody
goes fishing for salmon in Racine, Wise. In
stereo.
aWRESTUNG
0 BASSMASTERS'
08PORTSCENTER
040
740
740
a NHL HOCKEY Chicago Black Hawks at
New York Rangers (Live)
948
0 SPORTS PAGE
0 8PORT8CENTER
1040
1140
I
BA88MA8TER8
(
BOOYOUtlDINQ Mr. Universe Competi
tion from Sweden. (R)
1140
a COUNTRY SPORTSMAN Lane Brody
goes fishing for salmon In Racine, Wise. In
stereo.
140
0 ROAD RACING Manufacturers Hanover
Corporate Challenge Series from New York.
(R)
0 8PORT3CENTER
140
240
0 PGA SENIORS' GOLF Vintage Invitational
final round from Indian Weds, Calif. (R)
440
0 SURFING O.P. Pro Championships from
Huntington Beach, Calif. (R)
“We’ll clean your teeth
come hide or hoof’
Les Crane
DDS
Kelly Keith
DDS
3800 Speedway
452-6405
EVENING HOURS
AVAILABLE
General Dentistry
• Payment by Parents accepted • Insurance assignm ents after first visit
Special Dental Health Offer:
Free Cleaning with exam with this ad.
OBur expires Match 31,1936
The Best Catch in Town.
McDonald's® delicious light Filet-O-Fish®
is America's favorite fish sandwich.
Probably because McDonald's insists on
nothing but Prime portions of white filet from
the North Atlantic.
It’s dipped into
golden batter,
breaded, cooked
hot and crispy
outside, moist
and flaky inside,
then garnished
with our special
recipe tartar sauce
and full flavored
cheese.
Could be the
best bite you'll
get all day.
ITS A
GOOD TIME
FOR THE
GREAT TASTESM
Offer good at
2021 Guadalupe
until March 23,
(Dobie Mall)
1986
Come in and catch this special:
ilnSl^GEOT^R
II when you buy a
}! FILET-O-FISH®
I. Buy a Filet-O-Fish Sandwich at
McDonald's® and enjoy a free
II large order of McDonald's
| | golden-brown French Fries.
II Limit one coupon per
■i customer, per visit. Please pre-
j j sent coupon when ordering.
!l!'
Cash value 1 /20 of 1 cent
rrSA
GOODTIME
|l
II
FOR THE II
GREAT TASTE . II
AAf a*.
I ■
'
i
'II
II
Good only at
2021 Guadalupe
(Dobie Mall)
Valid until March 23, 1986
476-7259
Minimum Order $10.00
Limit one FREE sandwich per order
To save time and energy, McDonald’s® has created a special telephone
takeout order service called Dial ‘M .’ Perfect for parties and late night
study breaks, Dial ‘M’ makes it possible for one person to collect
everybody’s food order (minimum total $10.00) and then phone in to
have it all ready for super-quick pick-up.
So collect a 10.00 order and McDonald’s®will give you a FREE sand
wich of your choice when you pick it up. With Dial ‘M’ everybody gets a
a quick, great tasting meal!