New credit fees ers d , 3 s / X I 9 C tz £ tr X Ü G C t-Sfr X O S ' S V T l V d Ü o d 3 1 N 3 3 Ml IdOdDI s t Herkie Walls Herkie Walls speeds for pros speeds for pros Sports, page 7 Sports, page 7 I1 I Coke machines take dollar bills Business, page 14 T h e Da i ly T ex a n VOL. LXXXII, NO. 189 (USPS 146-440) THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN WEDNESDAY, JULY 27,1983 251 Reagan rejects idea of C. American war U nited Press International W A S H IN G T O N — P resident R eagan said T u e sd a y is “ not p la n n in g a w a r " in C e n tral A m erica and he b e lie v e s a so lu tio n to the r e g io n 's tro u b les th e U n ited S tates “ P re sid en t R e ag an ag ain rev ealed a d a n ­ g ero u s te n d en cy to w a rd m ilita ry o v e rre a c ­ tion in C e n tral A m erica and a d istu rb in g re lu c ta n c e to e n te r real n eg o tia tio n s T he R e ag an a d m in istra tio n has a w ar po licy in ­ can be reach ed p e a c e fu lly — not “ through ste ad o f a p eace p o licy . the b arrel o f a gun In a n a tio n a lly b ro ad cast n ew s c o n fe r­ en ce that c e n te re d alm o st entirely on his C e n tral A m erican p o lic ie s. R eagan insisted he se ek s to b rin g “ a new era o f p eace and social ju s tic e ” to the reg io n , and it w ould n ev er b e co m e a n o th e r V ietn am R e ag an lashed out at critic s he said w ere u n le a sh in g a “ d ru m b e a t o f c o n f u s io n " a bout U .S . in te n tio n s, an d said the A m e ri­ can p eo p le w o u ld su p p o rt his p o lic ie s o n ce they u n d e rsto o d his g o als “ T h e re is no c o m p a riso n w ith V ietn am , th ere is not g o in g to be an y th in g o f that kind in t h i s ," he said At a n o th e r p oint he sa id , “ w e have no that in terv en tio n of for m ilitary p lan s k in d .” “ In C e n tral A m e ric a w e suppo rt d e m o c ­ racy . re fo rm and hu m an f re e d o m .” R eagan said , a d d in g the nation m ust also p ro v id e a " s e c u r ity th e se o ther g o als. ” to su p p o rt sh ie ld “ T o o m uch atten tio n is b eing paid to those e ffo rts w e are m aking to p ro v id e a security sh ie ld , and not en o u g h to the o th e r e le m e n ts o f o u r p o lic y ,” he said flo u rish w hen “ B ut d em o cracy and d e v e lo p m e n t can hardly th reaten ed by v io­ le n c e ,” R e ag an sa id , add in g n e g o tiatio n s for a p eace fu l se ttlem en t can w ork only w h en both p a rtie s are not th reaten ed by the “ b arrel o f the g u n ." A s R e ag a.i sp o k e , the H ouse vo ted d o w n an a m e n d m e n t that w o u ld have lim ited the n u m b e r of m ilitary a d v isers in HI S alv ad o r T h e a m e n d m e n t to the d efen se a u th o riz a ­ tion bill w as o ffe re d by R ep. Ja m e s S h a n ­ n o n , D -M ass , w h o said “ m ore m ilitary a d ­ vise rs m ean m o re A m erican c asu alties T he a m e n d m e n t w as re je c te d on a 2 4 7 -1 7 0 to 55. vote A fte r R e a g a n 's new s c o n fe re n c e . Sen E d w ard K e n n e d y . D -M ass . said: “ I call u p o n him to halt his secret w ar a g ain st N ic a ra g u a , im m ed iate freeze on arm s sh ip m e n ts by all sid e s, and to b eg in n e g o tia tio n s fo r a lasting political to seek an so lu tio n in the reg io n " W h en ask ed w hy the a d m in istra tio n d o es not g o to the so u rc e of the arm s b ein g d e liv ­ ered in the a re a , instead o f c o n c e n tra tin g on the re c ip ie n ts. R e ag an replied : “ If you g o to the so u rce I thin k y o u 'r e talk in g ab o u t the S oviet U nion T h ey know this W e h av e also how w e feel ab o u t (ta lk e d ) to o u r frien d s in C u b a and told th em how w e feel ab out it W e are try in g to bring ab o u t the very th in g you p eo p le think w e are sh y in g aw ay fro m — not bring about a w a r ." C e n tra l A m erica d o m in a te d R e a g a n 's 19th n ew s c o n fe re n c e — his first in a m o n th — an d he a lte rn a te d betw een stem reb u k e o f his c ritic s an d re p eated and so m e ­ tim es fru stra te d e x p la n a tio n ot his in te n ­ tio ns T h e new s c o n fe re n c e cam e as R e a g a n 's re q u e sts fo r m o re aid for C e n tral A m erica b o g g e d d o w n in C o n g re s s, and his p olicies w ere u n d er attack by D e m o crats w ho w arn ed his a c tio n s co u ld lead the natio n into w ar “ T h e U n ited S tates se rio u sly o p p o se s the use o f fo rce by one n eig h b o r ag ain st a n o th ­ er in C e n tral A m e n t a , but w e are not se e k ­ ing a larger p re se n c e and U .S . fo rce s h ave not b een r e q u e s te d ,” he said H e o p e n e d by refe rrin g to a letter he receiv ed from a 1 3-year-old he identified o n ly as " G r e t c h e n " w h o w rote: “ D o n 't yo u w ish y o u co u ld sta m p y o u r feet . and sho ut at the p ress and se n ato rs an d tell th em sit d o w n an d listen to w hat you are sa y ­ in g ? " “ Y es. G re tc h e n , esp e c ia lly in the past w e e k ," R e ag an said. T h en he lau n ch ed into a lengthy and so m e tim e s re p e titio u s d iscu s- Training for the deaf: a ‘sign’ of the times By OSVALDO OSIO D aily Texan S ta ff “ W e ’ve co m e a long w a y , b a b y ,” said T e x a s S ch ool for the Deaf Superintendent V ictor G allo w ay. In more recent years, the interaction o f d ea f p eop le has dram atically im proved, w ith more d eaf peop le b ecom in g important contributors to m odem so ciety . “ In the old d ays, a d eaf ch ild was pro­ vided with traditional training in shoem ak- in g. w ood w ork in g and p rin tin g .” G allow ay said . “ Hour out o f five d ea f m en w ould even tu ally be printers. If a d ea f man w as not a printer, he w as nothing. M ost d eaf w om en w ere hom em akers. “ N o w , there have been som e major c h a n g e s ,” he added. “ The deaf have m oved into such areas as teach in g, law , com p uters and other various field s. The at­ titude toward the d eaf w as very negative. W ith the passage o f S ection 5 0 4 , an am endm ent requiring all federally funded to discrim inate sc h o o ls or a gen cies not against an individual because o f his d isab il­ ity , public perception o f d eaf people has ch a n g ed , G allo w ay said. “ S ection 5 0 4 caused a greater interaction b etw een the service providers and the deaf. C o n seq u en tly , the service providers found that the d e a f can function at the sam e level as their hearing p e e r s .' w ould have thought about a d eaf school having a d ea f superintendent. I w as the first in P ennsylvania and d ea f superintendent I think I am the n ow the first in T exas fourth in the history o f the United States. " G allow ay said his jo b is to prepare d eaf p eop le to be important contributors to s o c i­ ety . “ The goal o f the d eaf school is to pre­ pare a d eaf individual for full participation in m ainstream so c iety . Our goal is to have the d ea f individual stand shouldcr-to-shoul- der with his hearing p eers." he said. The d eaf school g ets m ost o f its funding from the T ex as Legislature. Robert M ehan, director o f Pupil Personal S erv ices for T S D , sa id , “ T S D is receivin g m ore students due to the Reagan cutbacks. T he sc h o o l's enrollm ent is exp ected to rise from 5 2 0 to 5 7 0 next year. W e have made the state L egislature aware o f t h is ,” G allow ay sa id . “ R eagan om ics has pro­ d uced a drastic cut in special education, particularly in T itle I funds. T itle I funds are funds used to assist the sch oo ls in d ev el­ o p in g the in n ovative program s unique n eed s o f the disabled . ” to m eet “ Our future goal here at T S D is to pro­ vid e a continuum o f education services from the residential to the regular class room environm ent. I w ent to a residential sc h o o l and graduated from a public school President Reagan ... wants peace in Central America ‘’without bloodshed.’ ^ o n of his re a so n s fo r o rd erin g m ilitary m an e u v e rs in v o lv in g several th o u sa n d U .S . tro o p s both in H o n d u ras and o ff the co ast o f C e n tral A m e ric a . “ W e h av e d o n e this since 1965. R e a ­ gan sa id , and assu red troo ps w o u ld be train in g w here they w ould not be I S. that in d a n g e r A sk ed if he th in k s the A m erican p eople in C en tral A m e ric a . su p p o rt his p o lic ie s R eag an rep lied: “ I d o n 't th in k that they are as aw are as p erh ap s to they sh o u ld be. W e 'v e m ake th em a w a re , but this d oes c o n stitu te so m e th in g o f a threat in this h em isp h e re to the en tire h e m isp h e re if those ex p o rtin g re v o lu tio n are su c c e ssfu l. tried R e ag an said th ere has b een no req u est to in crease the n u m b e r o f 55 A m erican a d v is­ ers in El S a lv a d o r, but he said “ if there w as an in c re a se , w e p robably co u ld train the ... a little faster than we S a lv a d o ra n arm y are d o in g i t " R e la te d sto r y , p a g e 6 Falling tax revenues could cost state $500 million, Hobby says By JUDY WARD Daily Texan S ta ff U p to $ 5 0 0 m illio n co u ld be lost by the stale b e ­ c au se o f d e c lin in g re v e n u e s in sa les and oil p ro d u ctio n taxes o v e r the next th ree y e a rs. L t. G o v B ill H obby said T u e s d a y . rev e n u e H o b b y sa id , h o w e v e r, any c o n c re te e stim a te s ot p o ­ ten tial losses are p re m a tu re . H e ad d e d , “ T h e r e ’s no q u e s tio n th at w e re lo o k in g at a sm a ller b e g in n in g b a la n c e th an the c o m p tro lle r c o n te m p la t­ e d .” H obby is c h a irm a n o f the s ta te 's L e g isla tiv e B udget B o a rd , w h ich m et T u e sd a y . A cc o rd in g to th e s ta te 's p a y -a s-y o u -g o ru le . C o m p ­ tro lle r o f P ublic A c c o u n ts B ob B u llo ck m u st certify all said. item s in the state b u d g e t. A c o n stitu tio n a l am e n d m e n t p ro h ib its d e fic it sp e n d in g , p e rm ittin g leg islato rs to a p ­ p ro p riate o n ly as m u ch m o n ey as the c o m p tro lle r e s ti­ m ates sta te re v e n u e s w ill b rin g in. “ W hat the rep o rt (p re se n te d to the B udget B oard T u e sd a y ) sh o w ed th is m o rn in g w as that in so m e m ajo r areas o f ta x a tio n , it is likely that th e total rev e n u e s to r the y ear w ill fall sh o rt o f the c o m p tr o lle r 's e s tim a te ." H ob b y said. ” If re v e n u e d o e s n ot re b o u n d as rig o ro u sly as the c o m p tro lle r p re d ic ts, y o u co u ld easily he lo o k in g at a sh o rtfall o v e r ... th is y e a r p lus the nex t b ie n n e u m . o f s o m e w h ere o n the o rd e r o f a h a lf billion d o lla r s ,' he H o w e v e r, a re p re se n ta tiv e o f the c o m p tro lle r's o f f ­ ice said T u e sd a y an y re v e n u e loss e stim a te s are sp e c u ­ lativ e " H e (H o b b y ) w as ju st p lay in g a g am e o f w hat- ifs. an d I'm not g o in g to play that g a m e .” said John M o o re , d ire c to r o f tax in fo rm atio n . D esp ite red u ctio n s in sales tax rev en u es, he said his o ffice believ es eco n o m ic activity w ill in crease in the co m in g m o n th s “ W e th in k T e x a n s are giving to buy m o r e .” M oore said “ W e d o n t think the state is los M o o re said the c o m p tr o lle r 's o ffic e b e liev es its re v ­ en u e estim a te w ill be o n ta rg e t, d e sp ite flu c tu a tio n s in the e c o n o m y . W h en th e e s tim a te is p re p a re d , he said, th ose ch a n g e s are ta k e n in to c o n sid e ra tio n “ T h ere w ere lite ra lly h u n d re d s o f th o u sa n d s o f fa c ­ tors taken into a c c o u n t w h en w e m ad e the rev en u e e s tim a te ," he said. In clu d ed are c o n s id e ra tio n s o f a dow n turn in the oil and gas in d u stry , M o o re said. “ W e see the eco n o m y today p e rfo rm in g as w e p red icted it w o u ld w hen w e m ade th is re v e n u e e stim a te in A p r il." he ad d ed . ing an y th in g “ H o w e v e r, L eg islativ e B u d g et B oard D irecto r Jim O liv e r said a full eco n o m ic re c o v e ry probably w ill not o c c u r in the im m ed iate future “ T h is is the first tim e in my m em ory that we h av e e v e r had an actual d o llar d eclin e in tax c o lle c tio n s fro m o n e y ear to the next, he said “ T he econom y may be tu rn in g around and be gain ing stren g th acro ss the n atio n and certainly to som e “ P eople are b u y in g extent in T e x a s. " O liv e r said m ore cars T h e y 're b u ild in g m o re h o u se s and they re sp en d in g m ore m oney H o w ev er, until an u p sw in g in the p etro leu m indus try stim ulates the sale and tax atio n o f related b u sin ess e q u ip m e n t, no recovery is likely to o c c u r, he said “ U ntil so m e th in g h a p p en s to in crease the level o f w e re not going "Ii activity in the oil and g as industry to h av e a strong tu rn aro u n d here.* O liv er said certainlv hasn ( h ap p en ed yet B u llo ck s rev en u e e s tim a te fo r 1983 p ro v id ed fo r a If $3 37 biUion intake fro m sales ta x e s . O liv er said that forecast is re a liz e d , the sales tax w ill d eclin e in 1983. c o m p ared to 1982, by I 7 p ercen t ” T h ro u g h Ju n e . T ex as rem ain ed 5 6 p ercen t behind in sales tax rev en u es co m p a re d to the p rev io u s year O liv e r said Mattox probe begins H e said . “ W hen I was yo u n g, no one “ I know it can be d o n e .” Galloway of Texas School for the D eaf... Texas’ first deaf superintendent. M cD ad e claim ed he has a tape recording o f M attox's threats but declined to say bonds. Senate vote OKs MX construction, despite criticism U n ited P ress In te rn a tio n a l W A S H IN G T O N In a reso u n d in g vie tory lo r P re sid en t R eag an s m ilitary stra te ­ gy. the S enate T uesday night approved full- scale p ro d u ctio n of the giant MX nuclear m issile b eg in n in g in I9K4 T he e n d o rse m e n t follow ing sim ilar H ouse ap p ro v al last w eek u m t w hen the S enate rejected an effort by Sen Gary H art. D -C o lo , the c h a m b e r s leading MX o p p o n e n t, to elim in a te S2 6 billion from a m ilitary sp e n d in g bill for p roducing the first 27 M X m issiles T he vote w as 58 4 1. only a slight vhange from the 5 9 -3 9 vote by w hich the S enate ap p ro v ed M X flight testin g fund-' in Slay Sen B ob P ack w ood. R -O re . w ho voted for the flight testing fu n d s, voted against the p ro d u ctio n funds T he am e n d m e n t w ould not have affected $2 billion set aside for research and d e v e l­ o p m en t and $604 m illion for fo llo w -u p de­ v elo p m en t ot a sm a ller, m obile m issile S enate ap p ro v al cam e d e sp ite moa* than tw o w eek s o f sp e ech es and arg u m en ts by H art and o th e r D em ocratic o p p o n en ts of the 10-w arh ead w eap o n to r “ T he M X m issile is the w rong m issile being built the w rong rea so n s to be p laced in the w rong silo s. Hart said in his final rem ark s “ T he M X m issile dties not e n h an ce o u r n atio n al security The M X m issile d o es not m ove A m erica along the path to arm s co n tro l and the m utual reduv tion o f fear and ten sio n in a w orld too close to the ‘hair trig g e r' o f n u clear w ar a But Sen H enry Ja c k so n . D-Vkash strong p ro p o n en t o f the m issile program a rg u ed the M X w as part ot a co m p ro m ise re c o m m e n d e d by a presid en tial panel and ' strategic e n d o rsed by R eag an to restore parity ' w ith the Sov iet I nion and t< n e g o ­ tiate arm s red u ctio n s “ By voting to au th o rize funds for the M X m issile and o th er p ro g ram s, we are sending a c lear m essag e to the w orld that we intend to neg o tiate se rio u s ly . Ja ck so n said Hart co n ced e d p ro p o n en ts had the votes to k e e p the w eapon intact he said “ T h e debate on the M X m issile is not o v e r I will be here in S eptem her to raise these qu estio n c ag a in , w hen the S enate takes up leg islatio n appropriat mg the m oney for the m issiles to T h e S enate has w o rk ed I? c o n secu tiv e days on a $ 2 0 0 b illio n . 1984 m ilitary au th o riz a tio n b ill, with m uch of the tim e de v oted the M X L ast year s m ilitary sp e n d in g m easure w as settled in eight d ay s T h e S enate bill, as ap p ro v ed by its A rm ed S erv ices C o m m itte e , authorize^ b u ild in g 21 m issiles in 1984 for deploy m ent and an o th er six as sp a res or for testing pur It also req u ires that the p resid en t subm it as part o f his future req u ests for M X m is siles an a ssessm en t o f the effe ct o f such p ro c u re m e n ts on strategic stability and arm s p o se s. co n tro l T he H ouse v ersio n , passed last w eek calls for actu al p ro d u c tio n of only 21 m is siles m ail and c o n ta in s sim ilar strings link ing in a rm s c o n tro l effort^ further d ep lo y m e n t w ith p ro g ress D ifferen ces b etw een the tw o bills will have to be w o rk ed o ut bv a H o u se-S en ate c o n fe re n c e c o m m ittee T he M X — the in itials stand for M ^ has been under de site I x p e n m e n ta l v elo p m en t fo r m ore than a d ecad e , but C o n g r e " b egan to raise q u e stio n s in 1976 on how to b ase the w eapon so it w ould not be as vu ln erab le to S o v iet attack as the cur rent M in u tem an m issiles are At least M) b asin g p lan s h av e b een co n sid e re d L ast D ece m b e r. C o n g re ss refused to re lease S625 m illio n in flig h t-te stin g funds for the w eapon until R e ag an cam e up w ith a new basin g m ode to rep lace his now aban d o n ed D ense Pack p ro p o sal. By TOM LABINSKI Daily Texan Staff A Trav is C ounty grand jury in v estig atio n into a lle g a tio n s that T exas A ttorney G e n e r­ th reaten ed a H ousion law al Jim M atto x f irm 's bon d b u sin e ss began T uesday w hen five p eo p le tc stififie d lor m ore than eig h t hours D istrict A ttorney R onald E arle su b p o e ­ naed A ssistan t A tto rn ey G en eral R obert L ew is, ch ie f o f M attox s bond d iv isio n , three m em b ers o f H o u s to n 's F u lh n g h t & Ja w o rsk i law firm and S usan V oss, a law yer for the bon d d iv isio n ot the attorney g e n e ra l's o ffic e “ T he in v estig atio n is still co n tin u in g , the g ran d jury will m eet again on “ N o in d ictm en ts and T hursdav “ F.arlc said arc fo rth co m in g at this tim e T hom as M cD ad e, an attorney for Ful- bnght & Jaw orski. has alleg ed that M attox threatened the firm 's bond business because o f its attem pts to subpoena M attox s sister. Janice M attox's o ffic e review s all bonds issued by governm ental entities to ensure they com p ly with state law M cD ade wanted to question Janice M at­ tox in con n ection with a $1 7 b illion suit filed by South T exas oilm an Clinton M anges against M obil O il Corp Fulbright & Jaworski are representing M obil in the case. M attox has denied m aking any threats against the law firm and said M cD ade is in the attem pting to try the M obil case press Mattox ... faces investigation. w h eth er he would present the reco rd in g to the gran d jury Harle said he had no com m ent on w h e th e r the grand jury heard any tape r e ­ co rd in g s W hen asked if M attox w ould be called before the jury. Earle said he had “ no idea at this tim e ." " I'd like to be able to wind it (the in ves­ tigation) up Thursday ... but I dare say it will be next w eek so m e tim e ,” he said. L ew is, w ho w as called for questioning before the grand jury, recently review ed a bond deal Fulbright & Jaworski handled for the Low er C olorado River Authority. LC R A o fficia ls have m aintained that M at­ to x 's o ffice threatened to delay the clo sin g o f the deal M attox said the delay w as caused by a the accom p an ying typographical error PAGE 2/THE DAILY TEXAN/WEDNESDAY, JULY 27,1983 PUC action removes adjustment clause scheduled hearings are held. Public Service Com pany. y . r ) ~2 r 2 s - 22 y i X < r\ C . vC 1j sC j o X 22 U- / O r . __j < w >■ r i i t z l z k- zi) M P 8 Z J 3 z 3* x— zj —; < JO J < ; — z Z y . Li-t H < a r~ z j : z CL oc LÜ H Z CLh 00 Q W r>- CN SD 9 o t o “ Because the fuel factor is a large part o f each custom er’s bill, severe fluctuations in the factor will make it very difficult for a custom er to budget his cost of ele ctricity ,” H unter said Som e consum ers will be “ starting o ff in the h o le ” be­ cause the interim fuel factor is based on a 12-month period end­ ing in June instead o f prospec­ tive costs, said Eddie W atson of the Texas Utility System . W atson predicted the TUS will undercharge its custom ers by $25 m illion during the period from Septem ber through D ecem ­ ber. The costs would then be co l­ lected when the com m ission m atched estim ates against actual expenses, he said. He proposed that each utility com pany be allow ed to set its ow n interim fuel charge in com ­ pliance with the new law. A spokesm an for the Texas M unicipal League said, “ One of the prim ary reasons for the pub­ lic outcry against the fuel adjust­ the pass­ m ent through o f m any items o f e x ­ pense which were not ‘fu el’ as the public perceived it.” clause was By SARAH BARNES Daily Texan S ta ff The Public U tility C om m is­ sion the tem porarily abolished autom atic fuel adjustm ent clause T uesday at a public hearing by enacting an “ em ergency” rul­ ing. The action possibly could in­ crease utility bills, com pany rep­ resentatives said. U nder the ruling, electric utili­ ty com panies ow ned by Texas investors are required to submit any inform ation to the com m is­ sion that is relevant in determ in­ ing an interim fixed fuel factor. The inform ation would concur w ith the Septem ber 1983 billing period and m ust be subm itted no later than Aug. 15. The three-m em ber com m is­ sion enacted the em ergency rul­ ing because o f the pending dead­ line. The clause had enabled T exas utilities to pass m onthly energy costs directly to con­ sum ers. An am endm ent to the ruling added that by Sept. 1, each utili­ ty com pany m ust file an applica­ tion for an interim fixed fuel fac­ tor. The com m ission will then set the interim factor after the com pany notifies PU B and any Custom Remodeling A Design Decks, additions, kitchens, etc. Ex­ pert carpenter and smal crew pro­ vide personal attention and top quali­ ty. UT faculty staff references, free estimates. JimKuyper 441-8904 The PU C will m aintain this in terim fuel factor until the fuel cost is review ed at the next gen eral rate case or the com m ission orders a reconciliation. Any revision o f a utility ’s bill­ ings to its custom ers to allow for the recovery o f additional fuel costs can only be made upon a public hearing and order o f the com m ission. The m onthly fuel factor will be determ ined by dividing the actual unadjusted fuel costs by the actual unadjusted sales for the 12-month period ending June 30. 1983. The new rule could cause som e com panies to undercharge for fuel needed to run generating plants, said several utility co m ­ pany representatives at the pub­ lic hearing Tuesday. This would force issue m uch higher bills to consum ers when the fuel costs are recon­ ciled. the com panies to in “ Severe fluctuations the fuel cost recovery factor from period to period will result if a fixed is u se d .” said Sam R. Hunter, vice president o f rates and econom ic the Southw estern research term o f 12 months for BU$INE$$ NGV$ in The Da i l y T e x a n SHOE SHOP ■ Í h h i We make and repair boots belts shoes leather goods SH EEPSKIN COW & C A LF • S A D O U S • I N G U S H W ESTERN Capitol Saddlery Austin, Texas 1614 Lavaca 478-9309 mCáflTMf irmnwil / wdr%l n á Ü J ‘ KAPLAN ADVANTAGE” DOESN'T THE HAVE TO END WITH YOUR ADMISSION TO LAW SCHOOL' TH E SAM E SKILLED INSTRUCTION THAT PREPARED YOU FOR TH E LSAT. CAN GUIDE YOU THROUGH FIRST YEAR LAW! INIROOUCIION TO LAW SCHOOL A Sfon&y-H. KflPUtN SEMINAR • CASE BRIEFING • TORTS • LEGAL WRITING • CONTRACTS • STATUTORY ANALYSIS • CIVIL LAW • RESEARCH METHODS • PROPERTY World’s longest pipeline United Press International A sectio n o f the U nion o f S o v iet S ocialist R e p u b lic s’ S iberia- long p ipeline w as co m p leted M onday . It is the w o rld 's longest to -E u ro p e natural gas p ip elin e sp an s the D n estr R iv er near p ip elin e o f its kind an d a cau se o f deep strain betw een the G o ro d en k o in the U kraine du rin g co n stru ction in M ay. T he U n ited S tates an d its E u rop ean allies. S oviet g o v ern m en t n ew sp ap er Izvestiu said the 2 ,7 6 6 -m ile T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff Editor. Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors Editonal Page Editor News Editor Associate News Editor Special Page Editor News Assignments Editor Sports Editor Images features Editor Associate Images Features Editor Entertainment Editor Images Entertainment Features Assignments Editor Graphics Editor Assistant Graphics Editor Photo Editor General Reporters Judy Ward, Frank Jannuzi Roger Campbell Mark Stutz Suzanne Michel Scott Williams Chris Boyd Paul de la Garza Kelley Shannon Carol Peoples Lisa Brown-Richau Robert Smith Barbara Paulsen Richard Goldsmith Cathy Ragland Darby Smotherman Edna Jamandre Eddie Perkins Bobby Malish Paul Barton, Maureen Sheeran Assistant Managing Editor University Page Editor News Assistant Newswriters Editorial Assistant Entertainment Assistant Sports Make-up Editor Sports Assistants Make-up Editor Wire Editor Copy Editors Artists Photographers Issue Staff Mike Alexieft David Elliot Robert Hercjndez Sarah Barnes Tom Labinski Jill Davis Jam esbunn. Osvaldo Osio John MacDougall Michael Saenz Brad Townsend Tom Couden Paula Blesener Marty Yost John White Alison Cowden David Nather. Mary Markway Sam Hurt, Steve George Ruben Guzman, Bob Malish Advertising Staff Tom Bielefeldt Leigh Ann Bink Laura Dickerson. Debbie Fletcher. Greg Payne. Jane Porter Marla Press. Doug Rapier Linda Salsburg, Jim Sweeney Sherri Winer Thé Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Studenl Publications Drawer D University Station. Austin. TX 78712-7209 The Daily Texan is published Monday. Tuesday. Wednesday Thursday and Friday except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin TX 78710 News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591) at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or al the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 136) Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in TSP Building 3 200 (471-5244) The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students 1633 West Central Street. Evanston Illinois 60201, CMPS, 1680 North Vine Suite 900 Hollywood CA 90028. American Passage 500 Third Avenue West Seattle WA 98119 The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press the South­ west Journalism Congress the Texas Daily Newspaper Association and American Newspaper Publishers Association Columbia Scholastic Press Association Copyright 1983 Texas Student Publications The Daily Texan Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring) Two Semesters (Fall and Spring) Summer Session One Year (Fall, Spring and Summer) $24 00 48 00 15 60 60 00 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications. P O Box D. PUB NO 146440 Austin. TX 78712-7209. or to TSP Building C3 200 Energy committee advances natural gas decontrol bill United Press International sio n s,” he said in a statem ent. W A SH IN G T O N — The Sen­ ate Energy C om m ittee voted 11- 9 T uesday to send a controver­ sial natural gas decontrol bill to the full Senate without recom ­ m endation, but first affirm ed its intent to free all gas from price ceilings. T h e c o m p ro m ise a w orked out by Chairm an Jam es M cC lure. R -Idaho, and Sen. J. B ennett Johnston, D -L a., would lift all price controls over a three-year period rather than by the end o f 1985 as proposed by President Reagan. b ill, A fter the vote. Sen. H ow ard M etzenbaum , D -O hio, renew ed his threat o f a filibuster. Any effort to take up the bill, he said, would trigger “ exten­ sive and exhaustive d e b a te .'' Johnston m oved to send the bill to the Senate without recom ­ m endation, noting that the same procedure was follow ed on the Natural G as Policy Act o f 1978 — w hich it would am end. The L ouisiana D em ocrat said the m ove m ight help gain the votes o f senators with “ some reservations” about parts o f the com plex m easure. T hat decision follow ed a criti­ cal vote to reaffirm provisions calling for a elim inating price ceilings on so-called “ o ld " gas from w ells drilled before 1977. “ The bill is a H ydra-headed m onster riddled with loopholes, sleeper provi­ confusion and The vote confirm ing an intent to lift controls on low -cost old a m otion by gas cam e on M etzenbaum , the most outspe ken critic o f decontrol M etzenbaum said he offered the m otion only to bring the is sue to a head. M cClure told reporters after­ ward that he does not expect the bill to com e up in the Senate be­ fore early fall. A sked its chances for passage, he said: “ I ’ve never said I’m confident at this stage of the gam e. I’ve said I'm optim ts tic .” The bill, he said, is an effort to balance the interests o f co n ­ sum ers. producers and pipelines, and could fail if it is “ unbal­ a n c e d '’ by changes “ If I had my way . .. I would deregulate utterly, totally, com ­ pletely, im m ediately.” he said New railroad threatens town ‘ 1983 The New York Times L O ST SP R IN G S , W yo. — The building of a new railroad line is stirring up dust in the farm ing com m unities o f eastern W yom ing. The C hicago and North W estern Transportation C o ., m aking a bid for W yom ing coal traffic, has started construction on one o f the few new rail lines seen anyw here in the country in the last 50 years. The railro ad 's plan is bringing disruption, how ev­ er, and it threatens to put Lost Springs out o f busi­ ness. The 56 miles o f new route will cross the lands o f as many property owners in W yoming and Nebraska on a route south o f Lost Springs. The railroad is still negotiating for parts o f the right o f way but has obtained many agreements calling for outright land purchases and for new fences, stock watering ponds and underpasses for cattle. “ I'm sure the people back in C hicago had no idea o f what our wind erosion problem s are, and grass fires and snow blow ing — we certainly had to present our c a s e ,” said Ed M iddlesw arth, a cat­ tle rancher who leads a landow ners' bargaining o r­ ganization consisting o f m ost m ajor ranchers and farm ers on the line. The railroad said in announcing its plan tour years ago that the new line would not “ significant­ ly affect the quality o f the human e n vironm ent” m W yom ing and N ebraska. M iddlesw arth’s group successfully challenged that, winning protection from the Interstate Com m erce C om m ission and a m aster agreem ent this spring requiring a quick re­ sponse from the railroad to future problem s o f daily train traffic across the ranches. “ It has gone well from our point of v iew ,” said Jam es M cD onald, the railro ad 's spokesm an in C h i­ cago. But farther north, in Lost Springs, negotiations have stopped. Six people live in Lost Springs, a cluster of buildings that date from optim istic beginnings in the early 1900s. Today the town lives off highway traffic, while auctions and potluck suppers keep the place a social cen ter for ranchers “ As far as I ’m concerned, everything is h e re .’’ said L eda P n c e , the four-term m ayor. “ But those guys from C hicago, when they com e by they d o n ’t see anything — it’s a dusty little town out in the m iddle o f n o w h e re . ’' ^ H E n d of our Semi-Annual trhofeSale/ xceDtional Values! 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Gibson said he supports the plan but as chairman would only vote if the com­ mittee was deadlocked. Texan Editor Roger Campbell submitted the proposal that would eliminate student body elections for the editor in favor of ap­ pointment by the TSP board or a special committee. The TSP board publishes the Texan and other student publications. Campbell’s proposal will be considered by the full TSP board at 3 p.m. Friday.If the board decides to change the editor se­ lection process, those changes must be ap­ proved by the UT System Board o f Re­ gents. Any changes must be approved by both boards before Sept. 1 to take effect in the spring. Student Senate President and non-voting TSP board member Mitch Kreindler said, “ I’m ecstatic with the recommendation of the committee.’’ Campbell said: “ It was a disappoint­ ment, but I’m not going to quit. I’m confi­ dent that when the board considers this as a group, they will feel confident that the edi­ tor should be appointed.’’ The meeting was marked by sharp differ­ ences of opinion among attending student journalists and leaders. Steve Rudner, TSP board president, said, “ The bottom line to all of this is that the readers of The Daily Texan can be much better served by an independent newspaper edited by students who are selected because of their sheer writing, editing, reporting, photography, graphics and other journalis­ tic skills, rather than by a political entity.’’ However, Paul Begala, former Students’ Association president, strongly disagreed. Begala said the goal of the paper is “ to produce a paper directly accessible to the students and responsible to the student body. Appointing the editor would be the end of the Texan’s role as a voice of the student body.” Campbell said the newspaper’s respon­ siveness to the student body would not be harmed by having the editor appointed. “ There are six elected students (on the TSP board),” he said. Kreindler echoed Begala’s views. Read­ ing from the TSP Handbook o f Operating Policies and Procedures, Kreindler said, “ The board and staff shall recognize the fact that the Texan exists to serve the stu­ dents.” Rudner replied, “ That’s the truth, but that doesn’t say anything about being ac­ countable to the students. What w e’re here for is to provide the students with the best newspaper that we can That's how we serve the students ” Chris Boyd, Texan editorial page editor, said the editorial board of the paper voted Monday in favor of appointing the editor, 15-5 in a secret ballot. M. Lee Kite, Texan editorial columnist, said, “ A good editor, whether elected or appointed, is always open to student inter­ ests. The campus community, unfortunate­ ly, does not know what the position entails, what goes on in the newsroom or what it takes to be a good editor ’’ Mike Godwin, a candidate for editor last spring, spoke against Campbell’s plan “ The 80-year-old tradition (of electing the editor) has not left the Texan without a record of distinction,” he said. " It can't be that hazardous.” Lisa Beyer, Texan editor 1982-83, con­ tested views expressed by Campbell that the editor is hampered by students seeking fa­ vors in return for political support. “ Editors do not run for re-election,’’ she said. “ What can a political group say to an editor except that ‘we re not going to invite you to our parties' if the editor doesn’t sup­ port the decisions of that particular group “ I think if you talk to all the editors I know, you’ll find that none of them felt that they owed anybody anything," Beyer said Nancy Lavender, TSP board member and communication senior, voted in favor of the proposal. She said, “Politics causes dissen sion within the newspaper. We lose people Computer science chairman named By T. JAMES MUNOZ Daily Texan Staff Kanianthra Chandy, associate professor of computer science, has been named chair­ man of the Department of Computer Sci­ ences effective Sept. 1. His appointment comes at the expiration of the computer science chairmanship of Alfred Dale. Chairmen are given four-year terms in the department. Chandy will accept the chairmanship for the second time. His first appointment came in 1978 when he served a year as interim chairman. “ It’s a lot of w ork," Chandy said when asked how he felt about receiving the chair­ manship for the second time. " I t ’s a great challenge and a tremendous opportunity." Chandy said that the computer science department is ranked between eighth and tenth in the nation among all institutions He predicted that by 1990 it will rank at least second in the nation. “ The goal is to be the best,” Chandy said. He said the recruitment of faculty, stu­ dents and equipment will help the Universi­ ty reach that ranking. Chandy discussed his plans to help the department reach its goal He said giving graduate students good fellowship awards, hiring only the best fac­ ulty and acquiring good equipment for stu- dents are the instruments for reaching the department’s goal. Plans have already been approved for four time-sharing systems that could ex­ pand the number of terminals in the UT Computation Center, he said. Dale, who will step down from the chair­ manship Sept. 1, said he will return to re­ search and teaching. He said the biggest challenge he faced as chairman of the de­ partment was addressing the expanding en­ rollment of the department Enrollment in the department was at 400 when he began serving as chairman in 1979 and has grown to 1,500 students this year He said the department suffered from the growing enrollment because it did not have the equipment to meet the needs o f stu­ dents. “ It bums you o u t,” Dale said. " I think Professor Chandy is going to be a first rate chairm an,” Dale said. "H e has very impressive credentials because of re­ search and his experience in industry." Dale added, " I can’t think of anybody who is better qualified to bring the depart­ ment along.” Chandy said he is particularly excited about receiving the chairmanship of the de­ partment now that new opportunities for re­ search have become available through the decision by Microelectronic Computer Corp. to locate in Austin. He said he will initiate efforts to bring to the department research oriented industry so that students can become employed in industry after graduating. To address the department’s enrollment problem, Chandy said he will persuade stu­ dents that e a m in g a computer science de­ gree is not always|necessary to work with computers in private industry. Many other colleges offer computer pro­ grams designed for particular areas such as business, he said. Chandy received a doctorate degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a master’s degree from the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn. He received his bach­ elor degree from the Indian Institute of Technology in 1965. He served as an associate engineer for Honeywell Electronic Data Processing Sys­ tem in 1966. and three years later began working as a staff scientist for the IBM Cambridge Scientific Center. Chandy began teaching at the University in 1970, serving three years as a teaching assistant. He became an associate professor of computer science and electrical engineer­ ing in 1973. He is an expert on performance analysis of computing systems and distributed algor­ ithms, as well as the co-author of three books. High and dry P h o to h\ ( a m e R obertson men! Lauren S chreiber tries to persuade tw o youngsters she would rather not join them in a sw im at the Shipe Park wading pool. Schreiber, a hteguard at the neighborhood park at 45th Street and Avenue H, is a graduate student at the I niversity Credit union members disturbed by rate hikes How the University Federal Credit Union stacks up By JILL DAVIS Daily Texan Staff AROUND CAMPUS Around Campus is a daily column list­ ing University related activities. The deadline for submitting items is 1 p.m . the day before publication. No exceptions will be made. MEETINGS Movimiento Estudantil Chicano de Aztlan will meet at 5 p.m. Wednesday in the Chicano Culture Room in the Texas Un­ ion Building. The Center for Middle Eastern Studies will present a lecture by Terence Carlman entitled “ A Decade of Change: Impressions of Saudi Arabia.” The lecture is at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Texas Union Sinclair Suite. ANNOUNCEMENTS The UT R oad runners will depart from Bellmont Hall on their weekly run at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. Contact Becky Brown at 471-1701 for more information. Student Volunteer Services needs vol­ unteers to help with a garage sale. For more information, call 471-3065. Student Volunteer Services is also looking for students with gardening inter­ ests. For more information call 471-3065. POLICE REPORT In the period beginning 3 p.m. Moo­ ny and ending 3 p.m. Tuesday, the Uni- ersity Police Department reported the blowing incidents: Theft: A UT student reported the theft of cassette player from the sixth floor of the erry-Castaneda Library. ; A UT student reported the theft o f a bicy- ie from the west side of the Engineering- cience Building. Another UT student reported the theft of bicycle from the west side of the Engi- eenng-Scicnce Building. ; A member of the UT staff reported the left of a woman’s wallet containing $19 t>m the Harry Ransom Center. Members of the University Federal Cred­ it Union have voiced complaints over recent rate increases and the continuing lack of member input, credit union members said Tuesday. Bill Bingham, Plan II senior, said mem­ bers of the credit union are disturbed by the rate increases that came only one month af­ ter a credit union board election. “ The rate hike is a little out of line," Bingham said, adding that the increases af­ fect lower-budget people. In a July 1983 newsletter, credit union members were informed that the minimum balance for a savings account would be raised from $5 to $50. This change would affect about 35 percent of the current mem­ bers, the letter stated. Additional service charges were also raised, including a $1 increase — from the previous $3 charge — for a minimum checking account balance under $300 and a 20-cent charge for all transactions on auto­ matic teller machines. UT employee Carolyn Wylie said, “ We have not decided what to do next.” Mem­ bers are still considering plans to gain a stronger voice in credit union policy mak­ ing, she said. “ We do not feel the policies are in the best interests o f the majority of the mem­ bers,” she said. Wylie said board members are not sym­ pathetic to the complaints. “ The credit un­ ion seems to think their purpose is to make money, and we thought they were supposed to be a service.” In a recent attempt to gam more input, the University Employees’ Union supported two non-faculty candidates, Bingham and David Escamilla, a UT graduate. Both can­ didates were defeated in the June election. The defeat was disappointing, Bingham said, but the election had its advantages “ I think that we got a little more attention,” he said. “ In fact, it probably helped us meet a few more people. ” Bingham said members will now be con­ cerned with election procedures and the rate increases. He said members would like the election to be held during a long session, have an independent group count the ballots and have a secret ballot implemented “ I feel that it’s improper for the credit union to hold the election itself,” Bingham said. Concerning the time the election took place, he said, “ It’s a University organiza- Savings account Checking account Minimum balance Service charge $50 $25 $1.00 $25 $50 under$300 $4 per month under $300 $6 per month no charge no charge no charge itecti the main University business takes place During the recent credit union election, members voiced discontent with several of the credit union’s policies, including the ex­ clusion of members from board meetings and the question of undergraduates being allowed access to the union. After the elec­ tion, members said they were not pleased with the answers to their complaints. Bingham said tentative plans for the next course of action have been made. “ I think, perhaps, if we get something going now, start a network among members, we might get something going,” he said. Bingham said he also believes a student organization composed o f mostly UT grad­ uate students will be formed to monitor the actions of the credit union. He added that student government might also get involved in the issue. George Herbert, credit union board member, said, “ There are a great many op­ portunities for input.” The credit union has ‘The credit union seems to think their purpose is to make money, and we thought they were sup­ posed to be a service. 9 — Credit union member always been open to comments, he said Burton Eubanks, general manager of the credit union, said in an earlier interview, “ Member input is valuable, but it is not neccessary " He also said board members are capable of deciding policies without the advice of members. Eubanks was not avail­ able for comment Tuesday. Officials at other Austin credit unions disagree. Tim Rhoades, president of the Govern­ said. ment Employees' Credit Union, " T h a t's the point o f the credit union — to give the members the power to control the credit union It s a cooperative ow ned by the members ” Rhoades said his credit union has con­ ducted surveys to get input from the m em ­ bers on union policies and actions “ We re not this for profit," Rhoades said “ W e're just trying to break even in Jeff Ouston. education inform ation offi­ cer for Austin Area Teachers Credit Union, said, “ Everyone (in credit unions) is a stockholder They do get up and say their piece.” Herbert said the board members were considering allowing undergraduates access to the union, but they first want to make sure the current services are being handled efficiently. Having adequate facilities for the increased membership also has been a concern. The University credit union opened a new building at 46th and Guadalupe streets Monday. R uben Guzman. Daily Texan Staff DOE gives university new grant for energy By JIL L D A V IS l) a il\ Texan S ta f f A 5^5.200 energy conservation grant has been aw arded to UT Perm ian Basin by the I S D epartm ent o f Energy [ he grant will be used to employ profes­ sional engineers to analyze buildings on the cam pus and recom m end possible energy saving m easures In 19K0. UT Auvtm received $178.500 tq^ implement sim ilar m e a s u r e ^ in three cam- p u ' buildings The money was used to systems m odify air-conditioning control a n d install other energy conservation equip-^ H C Lott, director ol the UT Physic Plant said the University considered appl mg for the grants this year but reconside because many public institutions in Texas would be com peting for the grants He add­ ed that the University already has money allocated for energy conservation Lott said the D epartm ent o f Utilities is in the process of form alizing and publishing a kx>k on energy conservation The g r a n t s are received from the federal governm ent through the Texas Energy and Natura Resources Advisory V ouncil Carole Tom bari, director of the council's energv efficiency division, said the Indus­ tria C onservation Program is in its fifth vcar This vcar. Texas institutions were al- Kk ated $4 5 m illion through the program O ur role at the state level is to review the applications and make recom m enda­ tions to the Departm ent o f E nergy.' Tom- bari said Two grants arc offered annually to institutions throughout the country Iom bari said one grant provides funds to em pli's professional engineers to conduct a com prehensive energy analysis The second ivpc of grant provides funds for companies to invest in energv conservation measures The council appropriated $691.000 for 83 b u i l d i n g s undei the #tm type of grant and $3.8 million tor 69 buildings under the second tvpe of grant. Tombari said The grants provide 50 percent of the tunds used to study energy conse^ation by institutions “ As soon a ' the m easures are imple­ m ented. they start saving on energy bills,” Tom bari said There is an annual energy cost avoidance o f $2 million for grant recip­ ients. she said Public institutions benefit from the grants because they save money and provide relief t rom dependency on tax revenues, Tomban said “ It you can start to save that, that’s mon­ ey that s available to pay for professors and like th at." she said. "Hopefully things these funds are freed up for education But Tomban said that over the years, federal money for the program has de­ creased. “ The total funds has decreased radically." she said. "The budget cuts have been very severe ’’ Funds HBre been cut by about two-thirds since 1979. she said. Although the funds are probably safe for the next one or two years, it is possible the federal government will discontinue the program, Tomban said. “ It’s always a gi­ ant question if it will be refunded.” The program has become a big issue m the northeastern and mid western states, she said “ They have a constituency that really requires these programs." FAC E4 m H DAILY TEXAN/WEPNiSOA V, JULY 27, EDITORIALS Columnists Scott Cobb Tracy Duvall Lae Kite Dan Leftwtch Dale Maledon Lisa Parnell Matthew R. Sorenson Burnetta Tate Gary Weiner Peter Zavaletta Editorial Cartoonists Marti Antonuccio LeeCoUison Rick Pressley T h e Da il y T e x a n EDITORIAL BOARD Roger Campbell Editor Chris Boyd Editorial Page Editor Editorial Assistants Brett Beaty John C Bradshaw Henry Cobb Tela Goodwin Patricia Lehman John MacDougall Steve Magid Barry Osborne Corey Peterson Editorial Researchers Barbie Smith J Wray Warren Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those ol the editor or the writer ot the article and are not necessarily those ol the University administration the Board ot Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees No Apples for teachers, students W ith President Reagan pandering to teachers’ Not only does there exist a taint of “ consumer pro­ gramming” of children that smacks of Aldous Hux­ ley’s “ Brave New World,” but this great deal isn’t such a great deal after all. Taxpayers are footing the bill. interests, along with the question of teacher pay com es the subject o f school equipment — specifically computers. Will the Computer Contribution Act o f 1983, infor­ mally known as the Apple bill, serve the interests of the students? The answer “ no” comes from several different angles. The Apple bill was conceived by Apple Computers Inc. to give a large tax break to computer companies which give microcomputers to public schools. In return for giving each o f the nation’s 83,000 public elementary and secondary schools one Apple II microcomputer. Apple wants a change in the tax law so it could write off as a deduction the full retail price o f the machines. This, according to 80-M icro Magazine, would about double the amount allowed under current law . Last year, an earlier version o f the bill passed the House but died in the Senate when it adjourned. This year, let’s hope the same thing happens to it. Contrary to the way it sounds, Apple certainly is not good-hearted in its attempts to help educators. Apple officials themselves say that schools will want more computers in a year or two, and they hope that the schools will stick with Apple when purchasing more. In an even more insidious tone, officials said that when a family buys a computer, the child who worked with an Apple will cause them to lean toward buying that brand. It is estimated that this bargain would cost the U .S. Treasury $15 million in 1983 and $21 million in 1984 in revenues. Is giving away a computer to every pub­ lic school really necessary? According to a survey o f more than 2,000 public, private and parochial schools by Johns Hopkins’ Cen­ ter for Social Organization of Schools, 53 percent of all schools already have at least one microcomputer. The survey also revealed that most computers are used to teach computing rather than drills and practice in different subjects. This sounds blatantly self-serv­ ing for the computer industry. In addition, teachers themselves are not so enthusi­ astic about the bill as it stands. A lobbyist for the National School Boards Association said that while it helps with hardware, it does nothing about training or retraining teachers. He said he would rather it be part of a larger package o f bills that would deal com­ prehensively with education. So with the disadvantage of a high cost to the tax­ payer and the limited usefulness of consumer pro­ gramming of the young and untrained educators, per­ haps Apple should go back to the drawing board with a more carefully thought-out plan to improve the ef­ fectiveness of public schools. — Dale Maledon R ecom m en d ation r e lie f for ratep ayers The Austin Electric Utility Commission has dures along with the firm of Miller, Canfield, Pad­ dock & Stone of Grand Rapids, Mich, in its suits against Houston Lighting & Power Co. and Brown & Root Inc. made a well-reasoned recommendation to the City Council to dismiss the law firm o f Ful- bright & Jaworski, which represents it in two lawsuits related to the South Texas Project, a nuclear power plant near Bay City. But, as Moden noted when he made the motion Monday night, the rivalry between the two firms has wasted time and cost the taxpayers money. The commission has decided that the financial “ burden” on local ratepayers is too heavy. That’s a wise decision, considering commission member Merle Moden estimated that the city has spent about $2 million on legal fees. The reason for hiring Fulbright & Jaworski was to have representation familiar with Texas legal proce­ “ We can’t stand that (expensive legal fees) for an­ other two years,” Moden said. “ I think the disengag­ ing should be done quickly.” That line of thought should give enough incentive for the City Council to approve the recommendation. — R oger Campbell J S BIZARRE 5KWACWN6 ENPEP WHEN[CUBANI A U M E S l TOOK THE MOUSE WrOCUSTOPVANPOEWEPTHEELEPlM I FOR ITS SCHEPULEP FLIGHT TO PISNEWORLD. Israel: a U.S. puppet out of control Matthew Sorenson I srael has upset the troubled waters in Lebanon by proposing to unilaterally redeploy its troops farther to the south. In this move, volatile areas will be aban­ doned and stronger front lines will be estab­ lished. Israel will get sim­ pler logistics and will benefit by some dis­ tance from battles be- ¡ in a n d ! tween Arabs around Beirut. Israel will also be able to re­ duce troops in Lebanon and will be able to claim concessions to the Israeli peace movement, thereby successfully throwing a wrench into the Reagan-Gemayel talks in Washington. Politically, redeployment is a strong move. the number o f 1 from the Phalange government The reaction from the State department in and Beirut is one of fluster and embarrassed dismay. On the one hand, they have been asking for withdrawal and have gotten part­ ly what they want. On the other hand, Israel will be increasing its stranglehold on the south of Lebanon. Such a situation is bad for U .S. strategy and policy planning and for the persistent image of the United States in the region as the rubber stamp for the Zionist war ma­ chine. Washington and the American media have insisted on portraying Israel as an out­ post of American democracy and protector of U.S. interests. The mirror-image of this myth is that Syria and other “ hard line" Arab regimes are puppets of the Russians. This view is being strained by our seeing Pinnochio walking, talking, bombing, in­ vading and redeploying on its own initia­ tive. Now that we have placed guns in the hands of the puppets, they are pulling back on their strings and threaten to drag us all down. American policy makers and the Ameri­ can public are in the process of re-evaluat- ing the nature of the Middle East dilemma. Here are some questions that need to be asked: • If the Israelis withdraw from Beirut, what will be the status of the U.S. peace­ keeping troops? Will they still be needed to protect weaker Moslem factions from the Phalange and other right-wing groups? If not needed, will they stay anyway to force an American presence? • Has the United States accomplished anything at all since the Camp David ac­ cords (if Camp David is considered to be an accomplishment)? Has our influence been totally ineffective? The Israelis have increased West Bank invaded Lebanon, bombed settlements, Beirut, cooperated in mass murder, estab­ lished southern Lebanon as a stronghold and refused to negotiate on Palestinian rights, all of which have been directly against U.S. pressure. We give them guns and money, and they spit at us. A significant part of the pressure that has forced Israeli troops to safer territory has been from Palestine Liberation Organiza­ tion forces. If the PLO is still active and effective in Lebanon, then doesn’t that re­ veal the whole Israeli invasion as a failure? Is the Israeli redeployment partially a ca­ pitulation to the moderate factions of the PLO, which have been involved in an inter­ nal leadership battle with those who pro­ pose a more aggressive and violent strate­ gy? Will further steps toward conciliation with the PLO follow? Why have dissident Israelis been more vocal and effective against this particular war than they have in the past? If internal dissent has been effective in encouraging a troop withdrawl, it will have been the first time in Israeli history. Are Israelis less zealous? Is the Lebanon invasion more blatantly aggressive? Has the political and military resistance by Palestinians and Lebanese been more effec­ tive? It is a significant event requiring some significant reappraisal. The old assumptions won’t die and the old temptation to play the puppeteer again gets the better of an administration that has yet to deliver any foreign policy results. Republicans desperately need some for­ eign policy ammunition for the upcoming presidential campaign. The same gun has been loaded in the Middle East and for Lat­ in America. Reagan is banking on the same strong arm and double talk that Ford and Nixon relied on. The Kissinger view that the world will dance to the tune of the super piper, howev­ er, will not work in a changing world of increasingly unruly Pinnochios.___________ Sorenson is a linguistics graduate. FIRING LINE This letter concerns Ad opinion unjustifiable letter that appeared in Firing Line of The Daily Texan on July 22, titled “ Castilian Ad Unappetiz­ ing.” the When I read the letter written by Profes­ sor Mackey, 1 was surprised that a person with such a high degree of education would formulate an opinion about the behavior of a person, or the quality of a dorm, basing his judgment on a photograph. First, he did not know the situation in which the picture was taken or for what reason the young male was wearing the cap. I think a person of his education could at least investigate these circumstances be­ fore formulating an opinion on it. Second, he not only formulated an opin­ ion of the young m ale’s manners, but he went further to criticize the behavior of the whole family and how the man was raised. I am sure he respects his mother and knows that mothers are sacred to their chil­ dren. You do not mention somebody's mother without thinking first. I believe nobody has the nght to judge another person by a photograph alone, nor to judge his entire family. Likewise, no one should judge a dorm by one of its residents, nor a great institution such as the University by one of its profes­ sors. Luis Brito Mechanical engineering Punk rockers sinful I would like to reply to Tracy Duvall’s column on “ Punkers are humary beings to o .” He thinks he’s a liberal. But I am an ex-punk. Please do not reject this as a lie, for you do not know what you are saying. I have not only sought out the company of punks but have also had my share of slam-dancing. Big deal. So what? Through those experiences I have come to know G od’s forgiveness. Yes. God does love punks. How could he be love if he did not? He also loves rapists, murderers, thieves and self-justify­ ing journalists. In the midst o f his love for all these and every other kind o f people, he hates punk, rape, murder, thievery and self­ justification. He has said through his servants in both the Old and New Testaments that punk is an abomination. It still is. He commands us, “ Be holy for I am ” (Leviticus 11:14, 45; Peter I: 16). He warns us that ” ... without holiness no one shall see G od” (Deuteronomy 32: 48- 52; Hebrews 12:14). If it is the Gospel you revere, then why do you ignore Jesus’ words to the prostitute who was going to be stoned? I do not mean the part where he says, “ Neither do I con­ demn you .” Like every good religious punk, 1 used that verse to defend my lifestyle. 1 actually thought I was thrash-dancing for Jesus. It took me a while before the very next words he uttered sank in. Jesus, in refer­ ence to her prostitution, then told her, “ Go now and leave your life of sin.” So next time, Duvall, you say that punks are people too, think twice and read your A. Aland Bible. RTF Punkers deserve derision Judaism, Christianity, Islam and punk- ism: somehow it just does not have an earthly or sublime continuity. There is the wisdom o f Solomon, the heart-rendering introspection o f Augustine and the moral suasion of al-Ghazali; then there are the lyrics of the Big Boys: “ We don’t fit your dream , your safe reality, but w e’ll do what we want, because we got to be free.” I suggest, Duvall, that punkism is just a tad shallow in content. One does not buigh at a Jew or a Christian or a Muslim at pray­ er, for one feels the gravity o f the act. One ought to laugh, jeer and deride (politely, o f course) a punk at his musical altar, for one knows the bathos o f his act. There is nothing wrong with being a fop so long as the sartorial expression o f a rebel springs not from unschooled, anarchic bad- taste, but from the wit o f serious reflection. Reuel Marc Gerecht Visiting graduate student Center for Middle Eastern Studies Central American strongholds threatened by communism William Safire The central fact about Central America is that it is central to the defense of the United States. If our nearest neighbors continue to be subverted and tak­ en over by communists, the region will of­ fer the Russians a base directly threatening our security and in­ creasing the possibility of nuclear war. S a b e r-ra ttlin g A1 Haig, it turns out, was r e s p o n s ib le rig h t; moderates Sen. Richard Lugar, who urged we give hundreds of millions of U.S. aid dollars to the communists in Nicaragua, like were wrong. A regionwide war is going on, and that undeniable fact forces us to choose up sides. Most Americans do not like that idea at all. They prefer to be on the “ side" of peace, of negotiation, of talking-rather- than-fighting. The trouble with such wishful thinking is becoming plain: unless Americans take sides, no chance for negotiation will exist. When one side is out to win, and the other side is eager for peace, the side determined to win will win. Such an approach is all too simplistic, say those who refuse to resist the commu­ nist tide in Central America. The most self- righteous among them argue that we cannot ally ourselves with “ bloodthirsty" military regimes; they are willing to permit the tri­ umph of greater evil lest they become taint­ ed by supporting lesser evil. The defeatists among the nonresisters say that it is hope­ less for us to stop this wave of the future; as we lost supporting a fight half a world away, we will lose even on our own bor­ ders. And some ideologues in that set think that “ social justice” can be better achieved under communism. Better to be simplistic than paralyzed. An “ our side” is forming that understands that military takeovers by communist guerrillas can be stopped by direct military-economic counterpressures. We need not allow the communists — whether they label them­ selves Castroites, Marxists, Sandinistas or some other euphemism — to continue to operate from privileged sanctuaries. Congressmen are making theological dis­ tinctions between aid for the purpose of in­ terdiction versus aid for the purpose of overthrow. In fact, our position should be undiplomatically honest: Here are the guns to coerce the communists into staying out of El Salvador, which is our purpose. In pursuit of that policy of dealing with the source o f trouble, we have finally cut back on sugar purchases from Nicaragua, which will increase the cost of subsidies to the Soviet Union. We are flexing our mili­ tary and naval muscle in the area, to remind Managua that unless its terrorism in El Sal­ vador stops, a naval quarantine will be the next step. At the same time, we must meet the mili­ tary threat by training an antiguerrilla army in El Salvador and Honduras. Since we disapprove of the customary antiterrorist terrorism, we are required to supply those countries with helicopter gunships and other expensive hardware needed to win that war. Israel, long the target of Nicaraguan- PLO cooperation, has agreed to work with the United States in supplying Soviet arms captured from the PLO and hopes to be as­ signed a more peaceful task of teaching El Salvador's farmers how to revolutionize ag­ riculture. Consequently, Israel can expect to be vilified by appeasers and defeatists in the United States; curiously, a leader of the defeatist crowd in the House, Rep. Stephen Soiarz, has the largest Jewish constituency in the nation. The Kissinger commission, say defeatists like Sen. Robert Byrd, will provide a bipar­ tisan smokescreen for a hard line; let’s hope so. That commission is charged with re­ commending policy to meet the challenge of aggression, not to satisfy the nation’s vo­ cal minority of cut-and-runners. The Reagan administration seems to be moving from rhetoric to reality. As a result, for the first time, the Nicaraguan commu­ nists are now calling for “ a total halt to the supplying of arm s,” an idea that they have hitherto treated with contempt. That’s a good sign. After they have of­ fered amnesty and free elections to those fighting for their nation’s freedom; after good faith is shown by the reopening of an independent press in Managua, and after the threat to U.S. security recedes, our side should think seriously about agreeing to talk. ® 1983 T he New Y ork Times HSfcv 'itft ifnssa*'’ Russians strike back at Afghans United Press International NEW DELHI, India — Soviet troops rounded up at least 20 elderly Afghans at random and executed them to avenge Rus­ sian soldiers killed fighting Afghan rebels, a western diplomat said Tuesday. The envoy also reported that a bomb ex ploded Monday in a Kabul restaurant popu­ lar among Marxists, secret police, diplo­ mats and Soviets based in the Afghan capi­ tal, killing five people and injuring 20. Soviet occupation troops arrested the old men in Ghazni two weeks ago and machine gunned them in public, the diplomat said. The Soviet-controlled Afghan media de­ nied the charge, which could not be inde­ pendently confirmed because western re­ porters are barred from Afghanistan. "Tw enty to thirty of the elders were exe­ cuted" in Ghazni, 80 miles southwest of Kabul, the diplomat said. He said the men were shot to death "in more or less public view near the minaret of Sultan Masood” mosque in Ghazni, witnessed by some passersby. "T he heaviest fighting of the year in Ghazni town and province has been and is currently taking place," he said. "O ver 60 Afghan soldiers died" July 14 fighting anti-communist rebels near Ghazni along the main highway after the execu­ tions, he said. "T he Soviets used a type of shell not previously employed the Ghazni re­ g io n ," he said. "T he incendiary shell bums everything and everyone within 15 meters (50 yards) of im pact," he said. in Rebels for the first time this year at­ tacked the Afghan military installation at Maidan Sher, 18 miles north of Ghazni July 19, killing 48 Afghan troops and forcing others to desert, he said. Guerrillas attacked a combined Soviet and Afghan convoy July 14 just south of Ghazni destroying 30 military vehicles and inflicting "high casualties" on the troops, he said. In a separate offensive against rebels near Kabul, Soviet MiG warplanes, helicopter gunships, artillery and multiple rocket launchers bombed Paghman and close-by. rebel-infested mountain villages, he said. Soviets Sunday morning bombed Pagh­ man, nine miles northwest of Kabul, leav­ ing the southern edge of the tiny resort town in flames into the night. The Paghman offensive began July 19 and continued through Monday, said the western diplomat who gives weekly Afghan war briefings but asks not to be identified. He had no casualty estimates from the fighting. ÍEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK — FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5244 ONE BEDROOM APARTMENTS starting at $345 • Ceiling fans • Custom pool and spa • Beautiful landscaping in a buffer of trees • Club room with wet bar • Custom decorator treatments • Patios or balconies • Large walk-in closets 9-6 Mon.-Fri. 11-5 Sat., 1-5 Sun. 4911 Manchaca 444-5700 STONV CREEK Southwest Austin’s Newest Apartments By Nash Phillips/Copus O nly $ 3 0 0 a m o n th ! ■ ■ NTENSIvH IB ENGLISH Wf [ A u f l u s t 1 5 , 1 9 8 3 | p y T • I r t r p N • | v n S • i • A n n e s r o h t o m n e o t ( 1- 20) e s w a r L m l o i m o r ■ I t s d g O i m u o o o m o a m d t c w a t a h n n v h i o e o a v e s r / d o s e t e f e / d t n i o o u n n n l r i r l U h n n u n n p d d * o o e e e e a a a a a F c c s s z | I - r r r t t l i i l l l l i i | ■ Yes! I want to know more! Name- Addrvss------ City- I I I State_ I I -Zip DURHAM NIXOM-CLAV COLLEGE ■th and Cotorado/M floor 4 7 S - 3 4 4 6 Typhoon ravages Cebu Forty-two people died and up to 150 were missing and feared drowned when this foot bridge collapsed on July 25. It was weakened by typhoon Wayne in the rain-swollen river on Cebu Island 360 m iles southeast o f M anila The footbridge was a temporary structure built after a typhoon w ashed away the concrete and steel Mananga B ridge in O ctober 1981 Violence in Sri Lanka continues U nited Press International ízens to buy p ro v isio n s M ost stre e ts, lined w ith the still-sm o ld er- ing rem ain s o f sh o p s, h o u se s and burned out h u lk s o f c ars and bu se s, re m a in e d d e ­ serted ex cep t for heasil> arm ed tro o p s w ho took up p osts at every in terset tion United Press International COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — Hundreds of inmates at Sri Lanka’s maximum security prison rioted and slaughtered 35 jailed Tamils in apparent rage over their demands for a separate state, the government said Tuesday. The massacre Monday in Colombo s Welikada jail pushed the death toll from four days of ethnic violence to 68. The unrest spread across the picturesque Indian Ocean island formerly known as Ceylon, from the capital and northern area of the country to the hill town of Kandy and the southern town of Galle, official sources said. Fresh columns of black smoke were seen rising from homes, factories and shops along the 20-mile route from the airport to the capital, and air service was limited. But the government of President Junius Jayewardene announced it would suspend an island-wide curfew Wednesday in hopes of restoring normalcy to the nation. The bloodshed began Saturday when Tamil separatists killed 13 soldiers in an ambush in the northern province of Jaffna, a Tamil stronghold. The Tamils, mostly Hindus of Indian ori­ gin, have long complained of discrimina­ tion bv the Sinhalese Buddhists, who ac­ count for 80 percent of Sri Lanka’s 15 mil­ lion people. The central morgue said it held the bod­ ies of 20 people killed in the riots that swept the capital from Sunday until early Tues­ day . “ Several hundred prisoners in the Weli­ kada jail, including re-convicted criminals, defying orders from prison officials, broke into the wards of the detainees, including those convicted under the Prevention of Terrorist Act, and attacked them, the In­ formation Ministry said. Revising an earlier statement that said 37 Tamils were killed, the ministry said 35 died in the massacre. Official sources said the slain inmates in­ cluded several leaders of the Tamil Tigers, a terrorist group battling for a separate Tamil state in northern Sri Lanka. In Colombo, where entire city blocks were in flames Monday, people risked a newly imposed death penalty for looting to carry away TV sets and fans. Firemen brought a blaze at the State Bank of India under control and said India’s diplomatic mission, on an upper floor, was not seriously damaged. Army troops and security police turned a blind eye as a few grocery shop owners unlocked their doors to allow frightened cit- THE DAILY TEXAN/WEDNESDAY, |ULY 27, 1981 PAGE 5 Nuclear plant officials 3 reprimanded by Soviets- 1983 The New York Times M O S C O W A d eb ate about -afety and e n g in e e rin g sta n d ard s in the S oviet nuclear p o w er industry has co m e into the o p en after a reb u k e by the ruling P o litb u ro to o fficials re sp o n sib le for gross v io latio n s of state d isc ip lin e re a c to r-m a n u fa c tu rin g at a plant T he severity o f the cen su re and the fact thai it vs as fo llo w ed by the e sta b lish m e n t of a new g o v e rn m e n t agency to m o n ito r n u d e ar plant safety have b een taken by som e that there w estern an aly sts as in d icatio n s m ay h ave been an u n d isc lo sed accident H o w e v e r, there is no hard ev id e n c e k> su g g e st that the cen su re o f the reacto r tabri eatin g p la n t, k now n as A lo m m a sh . or the visit th ere last w eek by V lad im ir D o lg ik h , the party secretary w h o su p e rv ises heavy in d u stry , has any such dram atic ex p lan a tio n . b e c a m e S om e d ip lo m a ts think it possible that the le a d e r s h ip e x a s p e ra te d w ith slip s h o d e n g in eerin g p ractices and con stru ctio n d elay s at A to m m a sh w hich is the key to S oviet plans lor n u clear pow er e x ­ p an sio n T h o se fav o rin g the accident theory say radical public steps of the kind o rd ered in the last 10 d a y s are com m only tak en >niy w hen a m ajo r e v e n t fo rce s the P o litb u ro ’s In a d d itio n , they cite a passag e in hand D o lg ik h ’s sp eech at V o ig o d o n sk . the D on R iver citv w here A lo m m ash is situated at lack in g the plant m an ag em en t fo r tailing to insure the a c c id en t-free o p eratio n of the p la n t’s serv ice infrastru ctu re T he ph rasin g se em ed to im ply that any accid en t that m ight h ave o ccu rred had been related to som e n o n -n u clear aspect at the Vi billio n plant affe ctin g its su p p lies o r the bu ild in g p ro g ram that has seen V o ig o d o n sk grow from 3 6 .0 0 0 to 1 5 0 .0 0 0 p eople in 1 ' years ANALYSIS that they are not the <¡nly o n e s to su tfer se tb ack s In any e v e n t, the K re m lin ’s actio n s indi Cate that a shake up in the industry is u nder wav and that safety p ro b lem s are to get a s e r i o u s airing p erh ap s for the first tim e F o r tw o decades after the S oviet p ro g ra m of civ ilian n u ctcai p o w er began m the m id |9 s () s , she official line on safety w as that it w as a p ro b lem o n ly in the W est D espite w estern publiciiy there has nev er been anv S oviet ex p la n a tio n lo r the dev a s t a t i o n of a p o p u lated tract of land n ear the L rals citv of S v erd lo v sk it: !9 5 7 that som e w estern s t u d i e s have attrib u ted to a hem i cal reactio n in a n u clear w aste d i s p o s a l site A lthough som e S oviet sc ie n tis ts have u rg ed a m ore cau tio u s ap p ro ach to n u clear p o w er and have w on c o n c e ssio n s such as the d e cisio n to place c o n tain m en t stru c tu re s ’ a ro u n d future re a c to rs the official line con tin u ed to follow the pattern set by an A tom m ash en g in eer w ho said in IMHO th a t, if a h u n d red S o . let reacto rs o p erated for a thou sand y e a r s , there w ould be only one m in o r , accid en t in that tim e E v en now there is little in d ic a tio n that the K rem lin i*- p rep ared to sa crifice speed m its n u clear p o w er p ro g ram A lthough safety w as a m ajo r them e of D o lg ik h ’s s p e e d m ore em p h asis w as g iv en t( g ettin g plant co n stru c tio n back on trac) the need for L arlier this su m m er the P o litb u ro en d o rseo ,i lo ng-range energy program that a f ­ firmed plans tor nuclear p o w er d e v e lo p ­ m en t T he plans include cen tral ste am -h eat sta tio n s in the im m ediate vicinity of large Cities like O d e s sa , M in sk . V >ron< / h and G< »rk v S ev en percent I 8 percent ot S oviet eiec- tricitv is n u c le a r c o m p ared -vith ¡2 percent to 13 p ercent in the I nited Slates and 2u p ercen t in Japan T he g o v ern m en t S ecurity C o u n c il m et and o fficials said refu g e e ta m p s w ould be esta b lish e d for 2 0 .0 0 0 T am il fa m ilie s left h o m e le ss by the v iolence A nother clue has b een the in creased a t­ ten tio n given in the S oviet press recently to the W est T his has n u clear m ish ap s so m e tim e s been a tactic to assure R u s s i a n s in HERPES RESEARCH A new treatment for recurrent genital herpes, called Interferon, is being stud­ ied in Austin. This study has been ap­ proved by the Food and Drug Adm inis­ tration. If you are interested, please call Biomedical Research Group, Inc., (512) 451-0254 between 8am and 5pm. Don­ ald R. Mehlisch, M.D., D.D.S. 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" NOW LEASING Perfect for room m ates NEW two bedroom a p a rtm e n t hom es C onvenient to IH-35 and close to CR sh u ttle Fireplaces W/D connections Ceiling Fans Swimming Pool Laundry Room on Property Apartment Homes by Nash Phillips/Copus, Inc. 1400 E. R undberg L ane 834-2011 Jkdtm hémsn 1204 West 6th Street Austin, Texas (512)476-2291 MCE i/T H f DAILY TEXAN/WEDNESDAY, JULY 27,1963 WORLD & NATION Stone visits El Salvador government U nited Press International SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — U.S. peace envoy Richard Stone arrived in El Salvador Tuesday to meet government offi­ cials on the fourth leg of his Latin Ameri­ can tour. In answer to reporters' questions, Stone shouted across the tarmac of San Salvador’s Ilopango air force base he would be in El Salvador “ at least tonight. ” The special ambassador for Central America has been to El Salvador on three other occasions since his appointment by President Reagan last month. His mission is to bring the government and the leftist guerrillas together for talks that could lead to rebel participation in presidential elections planned for late this year or 1984. News reports in El Salvador said Stone failed to meet representatives of the coun­ try’s leftist insurgents during a weekend stay in Panama. Diplomatic indicated Stone would brief Provisional President Alvaro Magana and members of the government’s peace commission on his trip so far, which has taken him to Mexico, Guatemala. Pana­ ma and Venezuela. sources The sources have said Stone is expected to depart El Salvador for Costa Rica on Wednesday. A major gathering of Central American political figures is scheduled for Costa Rica that day. Reports say Ruben Zamora, a political leader of the Salvadoran Democratic Revo­ the lutionary Front coalition known as FDR, is scheduled to be in Costa Rica for the gathering. A possible meeting between Stone, Za­ mora and Guillermo Ungo, chief o f the FDR coalition, fell through earlier this month in a dispute over an agenda and who would attend the meeting. Earlier Tuesday, in Caracas, Venezuela, Stone said W ashington supports efforts by four Latin American nations to avert full- scale war in Central America. “ This is a very important week for peace in the region. This week there are going to be many opportunities for peace,” Stone told reporters after meeting with Venezue­ lan President Luis Herrera Campins. “ I prefer that we focus our attention on the opportunities for defusing tensions in the region. We are aware that there are problems, but we also must realize that there are possibilities for solving them ,” Stone added. Stone handed the Venezuelan leader a letter from President Reagan regarding the crisis in Central America. Although Stone declined to provide full details of Reagan’s letter, he said that in general terms it explained the U.S. position on Central America and offered U.S. back­ ing for the Contadora Group peace efforts. Venezuela, Colombia, Panama and Mex­ ico form the so-called Contadora Group, which was named after the Panamanian is­ lands where they first met in January to deal with the Central American crisis. CENTRAL AMERICA CALDRON O Up I I I 4 ,0 0 0 U.S. hall ot them combat hoops will |oin I loin It ii ail lotee:; toi six month*, ot maoeiiveis O Const i net ion of naval facility *11111101 consider at ion" m Honduras O U S. Atiny oiximhnms lo expand two lloiMlman aiitiokl:* lo accommodate C IS O h a n s p o its O Some UH) Gnn>n O eiels presently tiamiiH) Salvadoran tloops m Honduras Caribbean Sea Pacific Ocean O Naval battle «iioups to conduct excitases oil Pacilic and Canbbean coasts U nited Press International Pentagon officials view the maneuvers as part of a ‘military shield’ to protect friendly Central American nations. Honduras praises maneuvers U nited Press International to Nicaraguan coastal waters and plans Honduras hailed Tuesday President Reagan’s dispatch of naval tor military forces maneuvers in Honduras, but other Central American nations ex­ pressed concern over the action. The military moves came as the United States also stepped up diplomatic efforts to prevent Nicaraguan-Honduran border tensions and the civil war in El Salvador from mushrooming into a region- wide conflict. U.S. special envoy Richard Stone said in Venezuela there is a “ good opportunity” for peace as a result of the work of tour Latin nations trying to defuse tension in the area. Honduran President Roberto Suazo Cordova called the growing U.S. military role in his country “ necessary and urgent” and awarded visiting U .S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman John Vessey Jr. the Honduran Armed Forces Cross. “ In the moments of crisis affecting Central America, the collabo­ ration between the Honduran and U.S. armed forces becomes more necessary and urgent in favor of peace, democracy, security, eco­ nomic and social progress,” Suazo Cordova said. But Honduran legislator Efrain Diaz Arrivillaga of the Christian Democratic Party said, “ Even with N icaragua’s peace proposal and the favorable reaction from the U.S. government, they are sending warships to the region. ” “ This shows that at the same time support is given to the negotia­ tions, they (U.S. officials) continue to emphasize the military as­ pects, trying to make a show of force,” Diaz Arrivillaga said. Washington has dispatched two flotillas of warships, including the recently recomissioned battleship New Jersey, to practice block­ ade maneuvers off the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Nicaragua, while military exercises are slated for August in Honduras involving up to 4,000 U.S. troops. Reagan also has appointed former Secretary of State Henry Kiss­ inger to head a panel charged with evaluating U.S. policy in the region. Kissinger has indicated he may visit the region. In Mexico City, the leftist-leaning Uno Mas Uno newspaper called the U.S. naval deployment and the war games “ an intoler­ able act.” “ There leaves no doubt that a program has already begun to blockade Nicaragua and in the last resort invade it by land and sea,” Uno Mas Uno charged in an editorial. Mexican Nobel Peace Prize winner Alfonso Garcia Robles charged earlier this week that the Reagan administration was acting with “ enormous cynicism .” “ What has been happening in the last few days is incomprehensi­ ble,” Garcia Robles said, charging the United States was acting with “ the most open discrepancy between words and deeds. ” Israeli stay in Lebanon to continue U nited Press International WASHINGTON — The United States has accepted the Israeli decision to redeploy its troops in Lebanon and has not pressed the Israelis to delay the move or change their minds, diplomatic sources said Tues­ day. The disclosure came after Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir and Defense Min­ ister Moshe Arens met with U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz and his aides for more than 5'A hours, three hours longer than expected. Arens later said, “ There was no pressure on Israeli deployment. There won’t be that kind of pressure. The Americans did not ask the Israelis to delay . ’ Another Israeli official said, “ The talks were explanatory, as it was explained how the Lebanese army would take over the ter­ ritory the Israelis left. There are no changes in the Israeli plans.” In the talks, the source said, the Israelis made it clear they are going to pull back into a security zone in the southern part of the country. During his news conference Tuesday night, President Reagan said he did not think a partial Israeli withdrawal would necessarily lead to a partition of Lebanon However, he said the Israelis would have to make clear that their withdrawal is only the first step, and not a “ digging in” that could lead to the destruction of Lebanon Shamir and Arens arrived in Washington Tuesday with a detailed schedule for the partial withdrawal of Israeli troops trom Lebanon. “ We want to complete the Lebanese-Is­ raeli agreement of May 17 designed to se­ cure and restore Lebanese sovereignty and the territorial security ol Israel's northern border,” Shamir told reporters. That agree­ ment called for withdrawal of all foreign troops from Lebanon. But Shamir said Syria's refusal to pull out its 40,000 troops stands in the way of Israel’s fulfillment of its part ol the agree­ ment. The two Israeli Cabinet ministers arm ed in Washington early Tuesday. They were invited by Reagan, who wants to ensure that the partial withdrawal does not turn into a permanent occupation by Israel of the southern part of Lebanon. They are to meet Reagan Wednesday or Thursday, after two days of talks with Shultz. The newly appointed Middle East mediator, Robert McFarlane, will sit in on part of the meetings, according to a State Department spokesman. Shamir and Arens are expected to present a detailed plan for the redeployment ot Is­ raeli forces from the hills around Beirut to more defensible positions in southern Leba­ non before winter. Israel has vowed to re­ main entrenched in Lebanon, for years it necessary, until Syria agrees to withdraw its troops. Mexico delays loan use U nited Press International MEXICO CITY — Debt-strapped Mexi­ co appeared headed toward financial recov­ ery Tuesday, announcing it will postpone the use of two available loans for more than $1.4 billion because of a huge trade sur­ plus. A spokesman for the Finance Ministry said that Mexico will not draw on pending loans from the International Monetary Fund and the international banking community at the present time. Deputy Finance Minister Francisco Suarez said Monday that the country has a $5.4 billion surplus in the trade balance for the first six months of 1983. Suarez said $1.425 billion has been available since May — $325 million from the International Monetary Fund and $1.1 billion from a $5 billion loan agreed to ear­ lier this year by 530 international private banks. “ The positive trend in Mexico’s external sector has permitted us to reserve the sec­ ond disbursement of a $5 billion loan for this year and also to wait on resources granted by the IMF for $325 m illion,” Suarez said. Suarez said, however, the financial situa­ tion is still difficult because most Mexican firms still have large dollar debts and are operating in the red. The IMF granted Mexico a $3.96 billion standby loan late last year, but set stiff aust­ erity measures as the conditions tor the credit. Financial analysts called the postpone­ ment an important indication of Mexico’s financial recovery following three devastat­ ing devaluations of the peso in 1982 that multiplied the foreign debt sixfold in peso terms. An editorial in the left-leading Uno Mas Uno daily also said the move would make it “ possible to end beforehand the commit­ ment that was signed with the institution (IM F ).” According to a report by the Finance Ministry, in the first half of 1983 Mexico exported $8.4 billion, while imports were slightly under $3 billion. Mexico C ity’s financial daily, El Finan­ ciero, compared the figures to those for the first six months of 1982, when Mexico ex­ ported $7.5 billion and imported $7.8 bil­ lion. IMF bill in trouble ‘ 1983 The N ew York Times WASHINGTON — In what could be a blow to the chances for approval of an ad­ ministration-backed bill to give more mon­ ey to the International Monetary Fund, the House Tuesday defeated an amendment that would have required banks to reduce inter­ est rates and stretch out repayments for heavily indebted countries. The vote was 268-157 against the amend­ ment, with 140 Democrats and 128 Repub­ licans voting no. The amendment, which was supported by both the Democratic and Republican floor managers of the bill, was an attempt to pick up enough votes on both sides of the aisle to approve an $8.4 billion increase in the United States' contribution to the IMF. Many representatives have demanded some provision in the bill which, they say, would in effect make banks bear the burden for having overextended themselves with loans to many Third World countries. They also say they want to prevent banks from reaping new profits from the higher interest rates and renegotiation fees that would come if the loans were rescheduled. “ Without this amendment, you ain’t got a b ill,” said Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass. “ The supporters of this bill who are fight­ ing this amendment are like people who arc drowning and don’t like the shape of the life preserver being thrown to them ’ The amendment, offered by Rep. Charles Schumer, D-Brooklyn, was the first crucial vote on the funds for the IMF. The bill has run into strong opposition despite the com­ bined support of the administration, the , House Democratic leadership and some House Republicans. The administration op­ posed the amendment. ' Schumer argued Monday that his amend- ' m ent, if approved, could swing as many as n ’* 80 votes to favor the b ill. While there was no immediate indication • , it came at a time when it ’ of the full impact o f the defeat of the amendment, appeared that both Democrats and Republi­ cans w o e still short o f the votes needed for approval o f the bill. The Senate has already * passed a similar bill. Castro celebrates anniversary Cuban leader Fidel Castro speaks to a crowd gathered in Antonio Maceo Pieza in Santiago de Cuba, 480 miles south east of Havana, during an event Tuesday to mark the 30th U nited Press International annivenuy of the nation's communist revolution. In his speech, Castro criticized the Reagan administration, calling it the ‘warlike and fascist band. ’ NEWS IN BRIEF From Texan news services Terrorists attack Islamic college on West Bank HEBRON, Israeli-occupied West Bank — Masked gunmen firing assault rifles and hurling grenades attacked an Arab universi­ ty Tuesday in the West B ank's second larg­ three Palestinians and est city, killing wounding 28 others. Palestinian leaders blamed Jewish settlers for the attack. “ I was working in my house, when all of a sudden I heard shots, many shots,” said a woman living near H ebron's Islamic Col­ lege, a liberal arts school with 1,700 stu­ dents. “ There was terrible screaming. And then the ambulances cam e.” Poland toughens laws W ARSAW , Poland — The Polish au­ thorities, having lifted martial law, plan to pass new laws this week tightening control over political dissidents and protesters. The series o f amendments to the penal code would provide three-year jail sentences for anyone belonging to an unauthorized organ­ ization, organizing illegal protests or spreading “ false information” that could either cause disturbances at home or harm Poland’s interests abroad. The government will also present to the Parliament Thursday legislation tightening censorship laws. Kissinger visits Congress W ASHINGTON — Henry Kissinger dis­ cussed the role o f his Central America study group with congressional leaders Tuesday and said no Vietnam-type commit­ ment o f U.S. troops in the troubled region will be necessary “ from all that I’ve seen.” The former secretary of state said lawmak­ ers expressed their concerns to him about President Reagan’s policy o f making a mili­ tary show of force. But he stressed that his 12-member presidential commission will seek only to Latin long-term solutions A merica’s problems and will not get in­ volved in the administration’s immediate plans. Kissinger dodged a specific question of whether he supports President Reagan’s move to station U .S. naval ships off Nicar­ agua's coasts and send U .S. troops into Honduras for five months o f maneuvers. Covert operations debated WASHINGTON — House debate on a bill to cut off administration aid to Nicara­ guan rebels was delayed for a day Tuesday, but Speaker Thomas O ’Neill said the out­ look for passage is good. “ From our count, it will be very close, but it looks very favor­ able to us,” O ’Neill told reporters. Five former top Democratic administration offi­ cials endorsed the bill, saying they are “ op­ posed to the current American covert opera­ tion directed at the government of Nicara­ gua.” They urged Congress to ensure that U.S. efforts in the area “ conform to do­ mestic and international law, are conducted openly and are aimed at negotiating a politi­ cal settlement.” Golden Fleece awarded WASHINGTON — The U.S. Coast Guard spent $1.1 million to build a boat repair station at Cape Harteras, N .C ., and then “ forgot to assign anyone to work there,” Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., charged Tuesday. Proxmire gave the Coast Guard his monthly Golden Fleece award as the “ most ridiculous, wasteful or ironic use of the taxpayers’ m oney.” Lt. Jon Blaney, a Coast Guard spokesman in Portsmouth, V a., confirmed Proxmire’s allegations. “ The Coast Guard did not do as good a job of planning as it probably could have,” he said. “ I think anybody would acknowledge that.” GM profits soar W ARREN, Mich. — General Motors Corp. announced Tuesday it earned $1,043 billion in the second quarter — the best quarterly profit in four years for the No. 1 automaker G M ’s performance works out to $3.32 per share of common stock, which compares to a $560 million profit, or $1.82 per share, in the second quarter of 1982. The profit is the automaker’s best since the it made second quarter of 1979, when $1,188 billion, and its first billion-dollar profit for any quarter since then. It also is the fifth best quarterly showing in GM his­ tory. Agreement looks good DETROIT — Chrysler Corp. said Tues­ day it was confident an agreement could be reached on the demand by the United Auto W orkers for an immediate pay hike for U.S. workers, but cautioned its financial resources are limited. Chrysler Vice Presi­ dent Thomas Miner said he was unsure w hether the union’s 5 p.m . EDT Wednes­ day deadline for completion o f negotiations on the pay issue could be met. However, he said he was optimistic an agreement could be reached ultimately. “ I’d say that if we d id n 't dunk it was do-able, we wouldn’t be fitting around h ere,” M iner said. Wall Street rallies N EW YORK — W ith General Motors leading the way on strong second-quarter earnings, the stock market staged a blue- chip rally that sent the Wall Street averages toward record heights Tuesday. But ana­ lysts noted the advance was not widespread aa cash-laden institutional investors bought selectively among the top-quality issues that would benefit most from the economic recovery. The Dow Jones industrial aver­ age, a 1.70 winner Monday, climbed 10.82 to 1,243.69, close to the record o f 1,248.30 set on June 16. The closing was the highest since the Dow hit 1,245.69 on June 22. SPORTS Noseguard bites back Mike Blackwell L onnie Kennell wrestles alligators and offensive linemen. And he doesn’t see much difference in the two. A lli­ gators bite. S o do linemen. Kennell, a free agent nose tackle trying to make the Pittsburgh Steelers’ roster, wrestles alligators for the money their hides bring He used to hunt wild hogs, but what fun are wild hogs, anyway? Gators are much more challenging. But Kennell w as con­ tent with hunting the hogs. In fact, he was hunting the hogs in a Florida swamp one day when he ran across an old man The man’ s daughter, as the story was told, had been swimming in the swamp one day. Goodbye, daughter Kennell, a nose tackle in every sense o f the word, became interested and decided to give up the hogs for the gators. At first, Kennell and his friends hunted the gators with rifles, but that w asn’t much fun. O r profitable. “When you shoot them, you don’ t al­ ways kill them ,” Kennell said. “ When they ’re wounded, they go down in the mud and hide. Either they stay down there and rest a while, or they die When they die, they don ’t float up until a couple days later, and then their skin is ruined ” “ We put three guys in the boat — one up front, one in the middle and one in the b ac k .” Kennell said. “ Then we stalk the water. When we see an alligator in the w a­ ter, the guy closest to the head jum ps in. The head's the most important thing, be­ cause that’s their main w eapon.” One im agines three guys in the boat ar­ guing over who is closest to the head: “ It ain ’t me. Jim Bob! I’ m way over here in the co m e r!” “ It ain’t me, Billy Ray! I forgot my for?” swimming trunks!” “ It a in ’ t m e. Shorty! It’ s tim e for me to g o plow or som eth ing. ’ ’ O nce in the w ater, that lucky guy g ets to tie the rep tile’ s mouth shut. A fter getting the gator into the boat, they take him to land and shoot him . O r slit his It all so u n d s pretty sc ary , but K ennell isn ’t too con cern ed . “ I ’ ve never lost an arm tice. And you thought football play ers were throat. or a leg . . . " dum b. Former Longhorn wide receiver Herkie Walls clocked fastest time in 40-yard dash in Oiler history with 4.45. Bob MaJish, Daily Texan Staff Walls catching on with Oilers By STAN ROBERTS Daily Texan Staff SA N A N G E L O — Herkie W alls listens attentively as Houston O ilers’ wide receiver coach Andy Bourgeois counsels him on a pass route. “ You can ’t go 11 yards. You have to go nine yards on that pattern. The 5-8, 160-pound rookie from the Uni­ versity returns to the huddle. W alls disap­ pears as he is dwarfed by his teammates. Em erging from the cluster, W alls is ad­ dressed by a fan: "H e y , number 19, who you trying out The 22-year-old W alls, who does not buy alcohol without driver’s license in hand, is trying out for the N F L — not the Pop Warner pee-wee league. " I will survive in the pros the same way I in college, high school, junior survived school — with high speed,” W alls said after Saturday’s prac­ and elementary “ I try to utilize my speed on different routes and ju st stay out o f those big gu y s’ way. They can grab me and throw me down, but they very seldom have got a clear shot at me. “ I had the fastest time here in the 40- yard dash (4.45 seconds) — the fastest time in Oiler history,” W alls said. The ebullient W alls indicated he’ s c a p a ­ ble o f a better clocking. “ It w as 8:25 in the morning, there was dew on the ground and I w as still sleepy . ’ ’ It is W alls’ quickness which com pels Oiler coaches to rationalize his diminutive­ ness. “ His height is a problem , but receivers are flaw less,” Bourgeois said. few Head Coach Ed B iles' lead comment in the O ilers’ 1983 Prospectus explains why W alls, a seventh-round draft selection, was the first wide receiver picked by the Oilers. “ We have to get more speed into our offensive team .” Indeed, W alls’ chances o f traveling with the Oilers to Green Bay for the Sept. 4 opener have improved since cam p started. Biles has labeled W alls' early perform­ ance “ superb,” and Bourgeois praises his mental acumen. “ H e’s adjusted quicker to the pro system than any rookie wide receiver I’ ve seen ,” Bourgeois said. “ I ’ ve been very pleased with his p ro gress. H e has a lot o f c o n fi­ dence in h im se lf.” W alls broke fo r a long gain on a reverse in S atu rd ay ’ s practice The run prom pted W alls to recall a play in 1982. “ The b ig g est thrill for me at U T — it set the tem po for the team — w as the 80-yard reverse again st M issou ri “ It’ s goin g to be a long c a m p ,” said W alls, the U T ca ree r record holder fa r m ost yards averaged per catch. “ If I can m ake it through next w eek , then p re-season is start­ ing and I’ ll be able to get to show m y tal­ ents It ex cites peop le. I want to bring the crow d to its feet like I did in A ustin ” Su n d ay , W alls beat first-team co m e rb ack W illie T u llis on a d eep fla g pattern by three steps That w as good H ow ever, W alls had the ball slip o f f his outstretched fin gers That w as bad But for now . O iler co a c h e s w ill continue if to m ark their sco re card s to determ ine W alls will be given a chance to provide H ouston with the scatb ack threat it has lacked since the departure o f B illy “ White S h o e s” Joh n son . THE DAILY TEXAN/WEPNESPAY, )UtY 27,1963/FACE 7 Phillies nip Astros on Morgan homer L nited Press International I victory Charlie H udson and A1 H olland c o m ­ bined on a Jo e M organ six hitter and cracked a hom e run, his first hit o f the month to lead the Philadelphia P hillies to a 1 -0 victory over the A stros H udson. 4 -3 . allow ed six hits, w alked three and struck out three over 7V innings to win his second consecutive gam e over the A stro s In his last start again st H ouston. H udson pitched a no-hitter for 8 1a innings before givin g up a single to C raig R eynolds and back-to-back hom ers to Penny W alling and D ickie Thon in a gam e won by Phi la d elph ia, 10-3 N olan R y an . 9-4 suffered the lo ss d e ­ spite allow ing only three hits and sin k in g out six It m arked the third co nsecutive loss for R yan after eight straight victories R yan has 3.591 lifetim e strikeouts, three more than Steve C arlton o f P hiladelphia on the all-tim e list The Phillies scored with two exit in the fourth inning when M organ ended an 0-for 35 streak by crash in g his seventh hom e run o f the y ear. In New Y ork. M ookie W ilson hit his first hom e run since M ay 29 with one out in the 10th inning to lift the M ets and M ike Torrez to a 2-1 tnum ph over the Atlanta B raves Tom Herr drilled his third single o f the gam e with two o u t1- and the b ases loaded in the ninth inning to drive in W illie M cG ee from third base and give the C ard in als a 6-5 tnum ph over the San F ran cisco G ian ts in St L ou is At C h ic a g o . K en Landreaux drove in three runs with a hom er, double and single and M ike M arshall had four hits, including a hom er and an R B I sin gle, to lead the L o s A n geles D o d g ers to a 5-2 victory over the C u b s Fernando V alen zu ela, scattered seven hits in pitching his seventh com plete gam e o f the se a so n He struck out 10 and w alked three 10-5. B ill G u llick so n pitched a three-hitter and T im W allach crack ed a solo hom er and an R B I double to lead the M ontreal E xpo- to a 5-0 victory over the R eds in Cincinnati In P ittsburgh, M ike E asier had three hits, including a two-run homer and a two-run d ou ble, and L e e Tunnell pitched his first m ajor league co m plete gam e to lead the P i­ rates to a 10-5 victory and a split o f a d ou ­ ble-header with the San D ie go Padres In the first g a m e . Ruppert Jo n es sm ashed a three-run hom er to lead the Padres to a 6- In A m erican L e agu e action, rookie R ay Fontenot pitched a six hitter for his third straight victory and first m ajor league shut- (xit and Steve B alboni belted his first m ajor league grand slam to give the New York Y an kees a 5-0 victory over the R an gers in Arlington It w as the Y a n k ees' fourth victory in a row and 1 Ith in their last 12 gam e- The loss w as the R an ger- fifth in their last s e v ­ en g am es and their 16th in 21 g am e- since July 4th Fontenot 3-0, a form er R an ger farm ­ hand. beat T e x a s for the second time in two g a m e s, w hile recording his first m ajor league com plete gam e The 25-year-old left-hander struck out one and w alked three The Y an k ees g a v e Fontenot a 4 -0 lead in the fourth inning when B alboni connected for his grand slam o ff Frank Tan ana 4-3 Roy Sm alley open ed the inning with a -in ­ gle and reached third on a double by D ave W infield After Don B ay lor struck out. Lou P m iella w as intentionally w alked and re­ placed by pinch runner Steve K em p to load the b ases B alboni who w as called up lor the second time this season on July 7. fo l­ low ed by d epositing a 1-1 pitch into the left-field bleacher- for hi- third hom er of the season At T o ron to. Floyd Ban nister allow ed six hits over eight inning- and C arh on Fisk and Ju lio C ru z drove in two runs apiece to lead the C h ic a g o White Sox to a 4-3 victory over the B lu e Ja y s for a split o f their double header In the first g am e. Je sse B arfield drove in tw o runs with a homer and a sa crifice fly and C liff Johnson added a so lo hom er to lead the B lu e Jay s to a 6-4 victory In K a n sa s C ity. Toby H arrah singled hom e one run and scored the other on a the sa crifice C lev elan d Indian- a 2-0 victory over the the seven-hit pitching of R o y als behind fly by Pat Tabler to give Lary Soren sen H om e runs by Lance Parrish Chet l>em on and A lan Tram m ell and four innings of shutout relief by Juan B eren guer earn ed the T ig ers to an 8-3 victory over the stru ggling Seattle M an n rs in Detroit At O ak lan d , a seven-run seventh inning that included a two-run single by Carney L an sford and a two-run error by catcher Rich G ed m an led the A s to a 9-2 victory over the B oston R ed Sox in the first gam e o f a double-header itWHY DO I HAVE TO DIE?99 It could be said in a general way that I had a happy childhood. From time to time, questions would come up related to my existence such as; “Why am I me and not someone else?” or "W hy aren’t I a bottle or a tree?” One question that seemed more penetrating than most was; "W hy do people have to die?" More specifically, “Why do I have to die?” Many nights lying awake in bed I would imagine that I was tak­ ing my last breath. While imagining this I would experience a dreadful stinging sensation throughout my whole body. One night this sensa­ tion was so intense that I got up and walked to another room crying because of the realization that, whether I wanted to or not, one day I would have to die. But the whole thing seemed beyond my control. To others I was a very happy person. I had a lot of friends and was involved in many activities throughout my junior high and high school years. Much of the time was spent playing baseball and football. I earned the rank of Eagle Scout, had twelve years of perfect atten­ dance in Sunday School, was class favorite my junior and senior years, and was president of the Key Club. Yet inwardly I wondered what peo­ ple saw in me. If they only knew what I was like on the inside. If they only could see the loneliness and the emptiness. But I guess I hid it pretty well. In fact I eventually be­ came afraid of those inward feel­ ings and refused to acknowledge them. A fear of the nothingness within me drove me to live almost entirely in an outward, superficial realm. Parties, dates, football, im­ pressing people, baseball, "playing the game” — this was where I was, and this was my condition as I graduated from high school. I left for college at the age of sev­ enteen. I was finally away from home and out from under my par­ ents’ restrictive hand. Probably my freshman year could best be char­ acterized as one of attempting to break all the restraints. The out­ ward restraints were of course gone. But inwardly there were re- Straints that I was fighting dertper- ftetyto break. The college in which I was en­ rolled had a reputation of being a party school. Soda) fraternities and sororities were quits strong on the qampus and so naturally I pledged one of the fraternities. SodaNy, the fraternity would meet my need and make me the kind of person I want­ ed to be. We had all the parties and did all the drinking and dating. Yet with what seemed to be an ideal outward situation, my inward condi­ tion had not changed. I was initiat­ ed into the fraternity. Because we had all gone through the same ex­ perience of initiation we were sup­ posed to be “brothers," but for some reason I couldn't call those guys my brothers. Being brothers meant something deeper to me than just having common experi­ ences. Anyway, I became an active member of the fraternity. The fraternity house became my home as a sophomore. It seemed like a good setup. But for some rea­ son I w asn’t looking forward to a repeat performance. I didn't want to do the things that I had done as a freshman all over again. My outlook was changing. All the things that were supposed to satisfy and make me happy only made me more acutely aware of the emptiness and the darkness within. I had to come to grips with this thing, I w as not willing to go on living in a make- believe world of smiling faces where pretense and delusion pre­ vailed. I wanted to be genuine and I wanted to know what was really going on. About this time I received a birthday card from my parents. Sitting on my bed I opened it and began to cry. I couldn’t understand why. Maybe it was because of the yearning for something more than the shallow relationships I had ex­ perienced to that point. For weeks I walked around in a state of bewild­ erment and perplexity — wanting something more, yet not knowing what it was or if it even existed. Then one night something hap­ pened. It was almost as if it had been planned. Walking through the fraternity house in my low state, I overheard some of the guys talking in one of the rooms. They were talking about Jesus Christ. One of the guys was saying how Jesus could come into a person’s life and live His Ufa through them. I stood at the door listening. It seemed some­ what simple, yet at the same time vary refreshing. I had never heard iftything quite Nka it before in spite of my religious upbringing. When he had finished talking, I entered the room and asked him to say some of the things over again to me. “You mean that Jeeus cares enough about me to even die for me so that I don’t have to experi­ ence the death that I feared for so many years? You mean that Jesus bore all the sting of death for m e? Even when I couldn’t have cared less about Him ?” For the first time it all seemed so personal. To that point my only realization had been that of an objective, impersonal God — a God that was far removed from my situation. Could it be that God in Jesus Christ could actually live in me and fill the emptiness, the loneliness, the nothingness of which I was so keenly aware? It did seem possible. For some reason it all made sense. That night I went back to my room, sat down at my desk in the dark and began to pray — to pray to Jesus; the one whom I had been resisting and ignoring for so long. All of my barriers were down and I opened my whole being to Jesus. At that moment I knew that He was real. A s I opened to Him there was the sensation that light was coming into me replacing the darkness within that I had known for so long. I felt full of light. It was dark in that room, but for the first time, there was light in me. It was wonderful! I had just taken my first step out of darkness! All of a sudden I was in the light not because of anything outward, but because the light was now in me! This Light was His very Life — the light of life. My inward condition was met by the only one who could possibly meet it — Je­ sus Christ. "Death is swallowed up in victo­ ry. 0 death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory? But, thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ” (I Cor. 15:54b, 55,57). “I am the light of the world; he that foitoweth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life” (John 8:12). Tommy Roberts » « -« » » ! - ■ i WüMyBbte Study f u i n i lifa rt 4 4 M ---- trtry ww. 14 noon H ------- A ii n CMtfam onCanpw Box 222, Tx. Union Audn, H 71712 For MomMkm cd 4434100 > f / m s e s a t e r ­ 2 4 th & San A ntonio ^ j f r r i — — 5 * tim m JitS f i e f ♦ T O N IG H T * WHOA TRIGGER ♦ T H U R S D A Y ♦ O pen Every N ig h t Until 1:30 O pen 9:30 a.m. M o n .-Sat Sun d ay at N oo n H a p p y Hour Mon.-Fri. 5 -/ GRIMALKIN HORSESHOES; HUGE BEE* GARDEN HP ____ c e r Mjsnw imoMAii.Y mmww mmc tmm AUSTIN RNEST SELECTION OF NEW AND USED ACOUSTIC GUITARS, ELECTRIC GUITARS AND AMPLIFIERS 3004 Guadalupe m 478-0095 in ' m V ? r i t ! s c h o o l Supervised by Association Montesson Internationale PRE-SCHOOL & ELEMENTARY LEVELS explore — experiment — discover freedom with discipline planned learning experiences extensive matenals • math • language • social studies • music • art • science (a few openings for certain ages only) 442-3152 Alpine Fid (St Edward’s area) Jones Rd (Westgate Mall area) Ave. H (UT area) PRESENTS| H H n e r C O M O WORKSHOP 502 UU ! 5th Q t l O V O C O 4 7 5 2 5 0 0 Chartered Bus to SH AKESPEARE Performances in Winedale (air-conditioned bus departs at 5:30 p.m. Fridays) A u g u s t 5 - “The T e m p e s t ” A u g u s t 12 — ‘ The M e r c h a n t of V e n i c e ” A u g u s t 19 — “H a m le t” S12 each performance or 3 for S30 (includes adm ission) R e s e r v * ' by A u g u s t ‘ with c h e c k p a y a b l e to B o o n d o g g l e G e n e r a l D o i i v e ^ UT Sta tio n A u s t i n TX 78 7 12 7 1 3C o ogre»* Avenue *472-5411 CUP AND SAVE $1 DISCOUNT OFF R EG IIAR $3 50 ADMISSION WITH STUDENT I D & THIS AD AT PARAMOUNT BOX OFFICE 7 2 7 - 3 1 ‘BEN HUR H eA -S aa. 7:00 y .o . * San Martarr 1:95 p .o •tfO Sun. thru Thura. $4 8:30411:00 Fri. A Set. 96 Vk Price AdmMon Sunday vrilh Student LO. OPEN STAGE-Hon. t l RICK OVCRTON M I I K V A N C e A N D V H U G G IN S Vintage cartoons & newsreels Your favorite mixed drinks Spacious, historic theatre Just off 6th Street tü*p 90S Bm nvnpmann with • to ts TV P A C I 8/THE DAILY TEXAN/WEDNESDAY, JULY 27,1983 NORTH CHINA RESTAURANT Open D aily 11:30 a*m.-10:00 p.oo. LUNCH SPECIAL — *2.95 FREE PARKING AROUNB BACK 2910 GUADALUPE 476-4819 FREE CONCERT . W‘> h V e t t i ■ § l WJl |e ■e | | tI Jive TOMTE-NO COVER FOR LADCS EXTREME HEAT Austin 's Favorito Dance/Funk Band Doors op*n at 9. Show Marts at 10. Tomorrow —■ VINCE VANCE A THE VALIANTS Outrageous Rock n RoH Shenanigans Cover $2.50 Doors opon at 9. Fit A Sal. Guitar Virtuoso ERIC JOHNSON CHARM y au rtM M to 4 7 7 4 I M Ttcasts S h M M d : Ml ttowt Baa OWIce (h u m M ASHAS > BM W B f - un CmEM IOOHMR OS «TN S SAN MGMIOl Wed. Happy Hour 3-5 p.m . Thor. B ill O liver Fri. Bndy and Hie M agnet» T he D iV inyls T O M O R R O W NITE! CAUDI'S 12173 BURNET 835-6993 "CAM AND BA Ml Located in the Texee Union, mein level LIVE ROCK & ROLL 7 NIGHTS A WEEK TONIGHT VISION No Cover Charge • Ever 2015 E. RIVERSIDE OFFER ENDS FRIDAY! 3 2 0 1. 6th COMING SO ON THURSDAY-SATURDAY ONE WEEK ONLY JOHN WATER'S POLYESTER with D IV IN E TAB HUNTER in ODORAMA SCRATCH'N SNIFF CARDS CARTOONS & MORE THURSDAY 7 & 9 FRI 9 411 SAT 7,9,11 SPO R TSW IR E From staff and win reports Official doubts Soviet Olympic holdout MOSCOW — Despite renewed reservations by the top Soviet Olympic official, the president of the International Olympic Commit­ tee. Juan Antonio Samaranch, said he was confident the Soviet Union would send a team to the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. “ I know the Soviet Union, and I know sports in this country, and I know the word ‘boycott’ does not exist in this country,” Samaranch said at a Monday news conference. He was speaking after having discussions with Soviet Olympic officials, who have been his hosts during the Spartakiad Games. Fresh doubts about Soviet intentions arose last week when the chairman o f the Soviet Olympic Committee, Marat Gramov, answer­ ed questions about the 1984 Games in a manner that left open the possibility that the Kremlin might retaliate in kind for the United States boycott o f the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow. Decker Tabb lowers 1,500-meter record STOCKHOLM , Sweden — Mary Decker Tabb improved on her American 1,300-meter record Tuesday when she clocked 3 minutes 37.12 seconds on the first day o f a dual track and field meet between the United States and a Scandinavian all-star team. Decker Tabb broke her own record of 3:59.43 which she set in Zurich, Switzerland on Aug. 13, 1980. In other events, Carol Lewis of Houston won the women’s long jum p at 22 feet, 4 ‘/a inches, while the American men’s 4 x 100-meter relay team o f Jason Grimes, Willie Gault, Calvin Smith and Elliot Tabron was victorious in 39.17. Jim Spivey won for the U.S. in the m en’s 1,500 in 3:36.97 while teammate Emmit King clocked 10.22 to win the men’s 100 Carmichael signs Philadelphia contract WEST CHESTER, Pa. — Veteran All-Pro Harold Carmichael signed a pair o f one-year contracts with the Philadelphia Eagles mak­ ing him one of the highest-paid wide receivers in the NFL. Although neither side would comment on the terms, Carmichael, 33, who is entering his 13th season with the Eagles, signed for what was believed to be an annual salary of more than $300,000. The signing marked the end of a holdout of nearly a week for Carmichael, who had been a free agent. Carmichael was missing when pre-season workouts for the full squad began last Thursday at West Chester University. More aporta, page 13 Each year cancer strikes 120,000 in our work force, and causes our economy to lose more than $10 billion in earnings. Earnings that American workers might still be generating if they h ad . known the simple facts on how to protect themselves from cancer Protect your employees, your company, and yourself.. call your local unit of the American Cancer Society and ask for their free pamphlet, "Helping Vbur Employees to Protect Themselves Against Cancer" Start a policy of good health today! iyour company on Marion Comt 8mME rILA HOTLINE 427-9305 THE STALLION DRIVE-IN ^ M C 5534 N. LAMAR 5534N. LAMAR 451-1626 Steaks—Seafood—Mexican Food—Sandwiches Fut Service Bar‘Happy Hour 4-8 NOW NEW APPETIZERS: Stuffed Jalap >nos— Nachos— Onion Rings Combo' sggie Plate— Mini EggroAs— Oyster Cocktail Snack Basket— Chicken Legs— Feed Bucket • THE FAM OUS CH ICKEN -FRIED ST EA K only *1.89 (sated w/trias or masheopototoaa) • EN CH ILADAS • HAM BURGER STEAK FREE M IN I PITCHER OF BEER w ith p u r c h a s e o f 16 o z. T -B o n e S te a k a t *7.98 / \ t h e S h e f t a l l CO. JEWELERS GEMOLOGISTS PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE SAVE UP TO 35% FINE JEWELRY WATCHES COLORED GEMS ‘CHINA ‘ CRYSTAL “ CARTIER LUGGAGE ♦WESTGATE MALL ONLY "HIGHLAND MALL ONLY ‘SILVER The Sheftall Co., jewelers for generations, seldom has a sale and, not all our fine jewelry is reduced for this event. There are savings in every department; and some different items at each store. The savings are real — Choose for now or layaway for future occasions. Bank Cards, AmEx, Diners Club, Sheftall Charge. t h e S h e f t a l l c o . JEWELERS GEMOLOGISTS Highland Mall, On the Drag, Westgate Mall North Star Mall in San Antonio / SELL m / . * t/VWr o .', * ^ WEDNESDAY 27th FANDANGO IF a NEVER A COVER e “We Give Good Lunch" $ Q TURN UNUSED ITEMS INTO CASH FOR ONLY... O . JULY with a Classified Ad in USE THIS COUPON TODAY AND SAVE OVER $5! The Da iiy Texan J u ly 29, 1983) 15 Days 5 Days Words (Expires Friday, (Additional words, 4# per day per word) 3 S S . . . a a e e e a a e e e e e e e a _- r l ü O f l D s |Limite d to ite m s under SSOO for sa le ONLY. P rice of Hem m ust aopeer In otee ok o r cre d it eerd enty. ie t - - s. - Bktemn - kQ ---a-- ----- --------------- C ord/Vlee number. A u stin s ho u ld e n clo se either certt* I AN e d esrtls s r e w ithout on A u stin N f | | | t O I e d w ith the U niv ers ity of T e x e s a t m a a I I I I I I I I I I I | □ MasterCard O Cosh In dosod Acct# □ VISA FIACI CBtDfT CARD A M SYPHON! AT 471-5344 Exp. Dala:. SignafuraJ MoM (wrth paymanl) tot P.O. Box D Austin, TX 78712 or bring to Final Examination Schedule, Nine-Week Courses Summer Session, 1983 Wednesday, July 27-Thursday, July 28 GRAOS SHIXT» FOB ALL NINX-WIKR COURSES AAE DUX IN t u b d bv a rtm bn ta l ornas by a j l o n tu x sd a x AUGUST L Jhly 17, • sJte^lX Chasm maadm MTWThF 7-BtM CLASSROOM BUILDING» Sardine Hall Ernest Cockrell, Jr., Hall Engineering-Science Building Garrison Hall Graduate School of Business Building T S. Painter Halt Paiün Hat . Robert Lee Moore Hall Iky lor Hall Robert A. Welch Hall W. R. Wool rich Laboratories BUR ECJ ENS GAR GSB FAI FAR RLM TAY WEL WRW INDEX TO EXAMINATION PBRIOOS O u t meeting rime: MTWThF 7-4:50 MTWThF 8:50-10 MTWThF 10-11:90 MTWThF 11:50-1 MTWThF 1-2:50 MTWThF 2:50-4 Late afternoon and evening classes Final for Final examination time: I Wednesday, July 27 Wednesday. July 27 Thursday, July 28 Thursday, July 28 | r . K Thursday, July 28 | Wednesday. July 27 9 a.m. 2 p.m 2 pm 9 a.m. 7 p.m 7 p.m. .-12 noon -5 p.m. -5 p.m. -12 noon ,-10 p.as. -10 p jn. Wednesday, July 27 9 a.m .-12 noon corresponding to the untndexed das» time. For example. the < ; W 5 K 5 5 ^ 5 ^ 5 S 5 S H J H 5 5 H H M » i i a a for Chuses meeting MTWThr' at 1 p.m. Questions about m am iaatina sdtaduBng for specific d u e s should he dhecsad ta Official Publica- '? • M die same tune M I I I I I I I 40040 C S N T RAI 2.48 15350 E E NS82L ECJ 1 214 42810 M NS93C BUR 20B Jnly 27,2 ym~* pm. 59070 C S 42007 M 10950 M E 40260 S W 40550 S W 4SS70 S W 40590 S W 40400 S W NS28 WEL 5.502 N575B RLM 5.110 N961Q TAY 141 N650B BUR 154 N9B4LA BUR 220 NSB6M BUR 216 NSI7L BUR 224 NS94L BUB ISO July S t, • a j b -12 an m t w im t u S S i 28100 E 15950 E E 45650 PHY 45700 PHY 4(540 S W N502J FAB 501 NS80K ECJ 1.214 NS0SL WEL 2.224 NS27K WBW 102 N684LB BUR 220 July IB, 2 y n . MTWThF 19-11 14550 C E 50970 C S 14050 C H I 05700 DPA 15520 E E 15500 E E 15500 I E H É M PHY iiS S f PHY M f h y ECJ PAI NS41 N547 N507M WRW N55SK GSB N570R ENS NS82N WRW NSBSP ENS N50I RLM N552K RLM NSBIM RLM 7.208 2/48 115 2.202 145 102 657 6.104 5.104 5.118 Jnly 27, 7 p m - N p ju . tfnmnSK N962B ECJ NSSIK ENS NSSS GAB NStSB GAB NS81 GAB 15260 E I 15540 E E 51070 HIS SI800 HIS 55220 MES 1.202 657 5 7 7 Jtdy 88. 7 ¡MBmlt pm. amadag 1-2:50 C I NSI5 WEL 1.516 M 15250 E E N560N ENS 502 42020 PHY N90SK WEL 2 224 THE DAILY TEXAN/WEDNESDAY, »ULY 2 7 , 1983/FACE 9 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Final Touches’: well crafted narrative O N STAGE By JOHN STOKES Daily Texan Staff “ Final Touches” ; written and directed by Kenneth Johnson; with John Martin, Mavourneen Dwyer and Robert Faires; at 8 p.m. Wednesdays through Satur­ days through Aug. 6; at Capital City Playhouse. True to its title. Ken Johnson's “ Final Touches’’ is a polished play, albeit one that needs a bit more work in spots. For the most part it is a solid, well-crafted play deeply rooted in the traditions of narrative drama. Some have called it the next “ Long Day’s Journey into N ight,” and while that may be a little ambitious, “ Final Touches” does bear strong kinship to the best of Tennesee Williams and, ultimately, the best o f the naturalists. The story of a difficult reconciliation be­ tween the son and terminally ill father of a Texas G ulf Coast family rings true. Only the ending lacks the veracity of earlier scenes: the reconciliation of preceding con­ flicts comes about too easily. Nevertheless, the resolution itself is believable and touch­ ing. But the truth of the play lies not just in honest dialogue or realistic issues. “ Final T ouches" takes its five characters and cre­ ates a microcosm in which each person is both right and wrong. Patty Wood, Daily Texan Staff Nan Elkins as Jenkins and John Martin as Lester Connolly in ‘Final Touches.’ The play’s credibility and pathos are achieved by the fine cast Johnson has as­ sembled. John Martin is on target as the crusty old mechanic Lester Connolly. M ar­ tin is well contrasted by Mavourneen Dwy­ er’s portrayal of Lester’s gentle, world- weary wife, Mary. Robert Faires’ Bob Con­ nolly is sincere and sympathetic, although he seems less at ease with his character than the other players. Scottie Wilkison is de­ lightful as M ary’s ribald, live-wire younger sister Ruby, as is Nan Elkins as the charm­ ingly sarcastic Nurse Jenkins. There was little in the opening night per­ formance to indicate that the production had been mounted in three weeks The authen­ ticity of the large, two-room set and the cast’s equally authentic character portrayals implied a longer preparation time. The oc­ casions in which ill-preparedness was be­ trayed — lapse of concentration by this or that actor, mis-timed tech cues, unconvinc­ ing sound cues — seemed more like last minute details to be smoothed out and have probably been corrected. Vaughan unleashes blues guitar ‘Flood’ SOUND ADVICE By MIKE PEARLE Special to the Texan ST EV IE RAY VAUGHAN; “ Texas Flood” ; Epic Records. While playing Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Troubles debut album “ Texas Flood,” l honestly tried to latch onto some­ thing that I didn’t like about the record — some redeeming gripe that would prove to me that my objectivity was prevailing over my natural instinct to rave. But after repeat­ ed spins of this blues barn burner, the only thing that actually bothered me about it was that they didn’t make it a double album. All is an outstanding ip all “ Texas Flood” fiiece o f work, a blues and rock guitar lov­ e ' s dream come true ’ “ Texas Flood" was recorded in just three days in the Los Angeles studio of Jackson Browne, who offered the facility to Double Trouble for free after being blown away by the band’s Montreaux Jazz Festi­ val performance. The band returned the fa­ vor by cutting an album that absolutely thunders off the turntable, powered by Vaughan’s seanng, machine gun leads. This is blues guitar the like o f which may never have been heard before. Oh, influ­ ences are definitely present — Hendrix on “ T estify,” Buddy Guy and Otis Rush on the blues-breaking title cut — but it is the synthesis of these styles and others with Vaughan’s own unique musical sensibility that has critics across the country hailing him as the guitarist of the ’80s. And Vaughan probably deserves these accolades, not simply because he is an in­ credible guitarist — there is no shortage of blazing guitar pickers floating around these days — but also because he plays with a sincerity he carries with him offstage as well as on. Much of the credit for the success of this debut album should go to Epic Records and executive producer John Hammond Sr. for having the sense to let Double Trouble pro­ duce the album itself, without any studio gimmickry to junk up the band’s clean, ex­ plosive sound. Hammond, a legend in his own right after discovering such huge tal­ ents as Billie Holliday, Aretha Franklin and Bob Dylan, was sought out by Vaughan es­ pecially for this record. Some knowledgeable parties believe the album’s sole drawback is its failure to cap­ ture the electricity of a live Double Trouble performance. This may be. for much of Vaughan’s appeal is based on his riveting stage presence and his miraculous guitar acrobatics, things which simply cannot be conveyed on vinyl. But don’t be surprised if this album finds Stevie Ray Vaughan being spoken of in the same terms as such giants as Clapton. Hen­ drix and Beck. Kihn delivers earthy ethos, workaday rock UVE WIRE By DAVID MENCONI Special to the Texan Greg Kihn is one of popular music's more likable, unpretentious figures While Kihn may have made it big. scoring hits with “ The Breakup Song” in 1981 and “ Jeopardy” in 1983, he still hasn’t forgot­ ten his working class roots. Kihn s Monday night the Meadows was low-key and informal Kihn was affable and friendly throughout and came across as just an ordinary guy trying to stay one step ahead of whoever’s chasing him; be it a bill collector, an old girlfriend or someone he’s just antagonized in a bar. show at Kihn has always been regarded as some­ thing o f a mavenck within the music indus­ try He has also been quoted in Rolling Stone as saying, “ The biggest problem with the music business today is that there are too many peckerheads and not enough people who really care about the music ” Kihn is clearly someone who enjoys his work and is happy enough that others, too, enjoy it But he’s not one who comprom­ ises him self for petty commercial concerns. His set at the Meadows concentrated on material from his latest and most popular album, “ Kihnspiracy,” and was well- received by a small but enthusiastic crowd He also tossed in a few inspired covers, from the Rolling Stones “ Paint It Black” to “ Route 6 6 .” He got the best reaction with his latest hit, “ Jeopardy,” and an ex- BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... WANT ADS...471 -5244 REBEL xk DRIVE M 35&-7217 N 6902 Buriraon Rd. Radio Sound System IU O Y IM Y I X I I N N N t B v T P f W PRIVACY OF YOUR AUTO XXX Original Uncut m A l f r e d H i t c h c o c k ' s LMlihJ ITiY m iinu I RARE and CLASSIC HITCHCOCK DOUBLE FEATURE!! A/umv e* r w ty-— n 1932 British comady/thriter, written & directed by Hitchcock. A tram p acddantaOy (tum bles upon a jew el thieves' hideout, ending in an axciting chaaa sequence r e t u r n t f Hi»* J e d l 12-2:90-3:00 7:90-10:00 In 70mm Dolby Sfmrmo •1S J - 7 6 4 6 I 3 S c t CAMERON RD BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... WANT ADS...471 -5244 448-7719 $2.50 I ALL 9HOWS BEFORE 0 RM I I MON. THRU FRI. SATJSUN. 1ST SHOW ONLY Christopher Richard Pryor USD . mtmf cammtmMom COM ^9 Fox 2- 4:30-7-9:30 Westgate 4:30-7-9:30 ■ D A N ■ AYKROYD EDDIE MURPHY amount CD Fox A Westgs** 5:30-7:50- 10:15 ^KSSSSSSSimiSSommmmmmmOmmmí^^ m d t t i l l y o u c e e m T h € ? U * ¿ Z > a p . ■ Fox 5:30-7:30-9:30 WALTDBrCYS ^ £ a*. 12:45-2:46-4:46 5:469:46 “A brainy, co m p u lsiv ely ab sorb in g film ...p la y e d by a sc in tilla tin g i n te r n a tio n a l cast." Kr.Ji NEWSWEEK "A m asterly film , at once superbly intelligent and strangely poignant. The actors are superb.” Richard Sduckrl, TIME MAGAZINE I ATI SHOWS ■ -■EM ~ scv.y.'.-'i C . • , p t»»1 Tomorrow: ■ P y u M o o j | i f d U r i S r t n t o a The Greg Kihn Band ... offered an affable concert at the Meadows Monday. tended version of ‘ ‘Tear That C ity Dow n night Kihn’s band turned in fine wurk through­ out the show, especially bassiM Steve W nght, who continually cranked out some amazingly funky bass lines Every song was an improvement over the studio ver sion, mixing solid execution with a healthy dose of spirit and sloppiness He also intro as ‘my favor­ duced “ Talkin’ To Myself and debut ite song from my latest album ed a new song called “ Work that was del initely in keeping with the spirit of the Throughout the concert Kihn kept up a steadv monologue or: working class life In deed, he looked as if he had gotten home from a construction job a little after 5 p m , then cleaned himself up and humed out to do his show And while the hour-long show mav have been a bit on the short side for all of us hard work in blue collar folk, it was still an excellent performance by one of rock n roll - more o< wn-to-earth stars It s good to see he - doing well TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK — FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5244 T H E A T R E S t i m e s f o r t o d a y o n l y f C dtinn 5 0 0 0 M0M4AT ALL SHOWS OCFOOifcOOXM 0U«M TWUteTFMCa...U«raDTD»TM “ 4H0UMVS WUHOWOUlf «0.(9—0401 áfa tdtiQQ NORTHCROSS 6 < ---- |PG| STAYING ALIVE 0CN0EN1 SCWSN2 I I OOHTUCIIOOO U4U. ¡ 1 ^••*-0147 mmMONO OUOUOTj I 1 1 | JAWS 3-D IPG) (12 00-2 3044M2 OOV7 304:44 CLASS (3 444.40* 00»-7 164 10 [Rj FLASHDANCE (12 «5-3 004 14(2 001-7 46 R BLUE THUNDER (13:300490:44 ¡Ri IIA Q U A R IU S 4 <^444.999. —^ ^ l l l FLASHDANCE RKTURN OF T N i JEW Special EnfBfMMni -No pum o> dacountt PQ (1:304.1003.001-7 STAYING AUVE m JAWS 3-D iPGj (1 10-3 104 JOOl 001-7 404 «# II A M E R IC A N A ^488-9941 itoo hamcock dm -------------- 6Tr,ck DoR>v s,e,*° WAR GAMES {Z3M«t2.»7M« PG L\ I S O U T H W O O D 2 ^449-9398 i«ti yl OCH wmiti $ 4 0 0 ALL MOVIES $ 4 0 0 1 " e x c l u d i n g m i d n i g h t s n o w s ■ BREATHLESS 130-3 304 30-7 444 46 [j[j • om stm ns wkkbd TMS WAY COMES ¡T*G¡ 100440440-7 1(430 III o- 'MK,OL OFF L SO OF M 0N T 0PÜ U I A U S T IN 6 1 PH 1 ■ and Or SeUfW Bumft fcnte* to wmaCocfce» Sporv m puppy traer Crooerooda »i t e 12*00“ 2 0 0 - 4 0 0 - 5 : 5 0 - 7 :4 0 - 9 :3 0 B i T o o ts ie 2:0H2 0 5 - 6 : 15 - 1 0 .2 0 1 2 : 1 0 - 4 :2 0 - 8 :3 0 FILA HOTLINE 4 2 7 - 9 3 0 5 [THC V A R S IT Y ’ 2 4 0 2 GUADALUPE 474-4351 upstairs ENDS TOM ORROW HOLLYWOOD Ol)T-TAKES 7:30,9:15 downstairs ANGELO, MY LOVE 7:15,9:40 J t o m i a k i X CiNtMA "WTsT M C I Conloas • om* 11 • * • *42 sT • ill I S ® ? \SSK IS T E X A S 777* G lM 0» lU *f THE SURVIVORS Rff 12 15 -2 3 5 - 4 . 5 5 -7 1 5 -9 35 A diff erent kmd of game W a r G a m e s 1 2 :0 0 - 2 :3 0 - 5 0 0 - 7 :3 0 1000 RIVERSIDE 1930 RIVERSIDI • 441 S689 2 :0 0 - 4 :0 0 - 6:00-8:00- 10:00 DISCO UN T M A T N E E S M O N -FF# FO R S H O W S S TAR T IN G B E F O R E 6P M HITCHCOCK'S WORLD OF SUSPENSE-ROMANCE! W OODY ALLEN TAKFf; a n o s t a l g ic LOOK AT THE FUTURE ? > .h: SiteI* vS"Td; • V # • .'it->*• To C a tch a T hief * ^ 6 o d y ' c A lle i|_ m> ‘IQ p a to n “S l e c p c f - " w j Lolt Show 11:20 p.m. Union Thtotre 1.75 U.T. 2.25 Non-U.T. PA C E 10/THI D A ILY TEXAN /W ED N fSDA Y, |UIY 27,1983 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 471-5244 / 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Frida^ TSP Building 3.200 / 2500 Whititt CONDOS FOR SAL! CONDOS FOR SAU FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE C L A S s m i D A O v n m s m a CowcuW y Day M m IS word m n w n lack word 1 k m ...........................I U 1 4 M w W l l w lack word 5 tarn . t 3» * 97 Each word 10 teees . 14.44 I coi > 1 nek 1 ten. . $4.23 1 col * 1 «eh 2-9 Km $5.90 1 coi. x 1 nek 10 or m ore) $1.00 cherge (a chong. copy Fed too words moy ha 41 cepM M art. 23c tor aock oddhi 20% DISCOUNT on a l d o a M o k a tm Q placad in partan TSff Buddtag Boom 3200 2300M a li Monday through Friday Cam.-4:30p.m. P8APUN» SCH8DUU k Í M M W l « f < m f i M d a h i M « d - CONDOS FOR SAU UT CONOOS, 1-2-3 bedrooms on UT i — 2 poob — peril Hw tafffna 3 minuta* from M ob prices tram $39,950. CASS y, 479-1711 or 345-5297.___________ UT CONOOS, 1 88. $39,950 2 88, $53,950 - UT dwlde — swimming pool Clff, 479-1711 or 346-1381 o u s t c o n d o Spacious 2 bedroom-2 both condo m historic Hyda Pork — nice and qum l only 4 unin m ankra complex! Mondtoma doc or with comer hreptoce, coring fan. roomy bichen wdk fire# Iraa refrigerator, w/d connection*, drop**, » - egont O’ coring ^ only 4 blocks not#» rd cam- put. 2 blodn eori o l Speedway — 3207 Grooma. lo w then one yeer old — 7 5 % Tex- ot Stone. Com a Seal U r* # 1 - 2 / 2 -$ 8 2 .5 0 0 C o l Judy Hay - 451-2242 or 837 7019 RE/M AX GREAT BUY! Spooou* one bedroom, one bod) condo m el­ egant G reenwood Tower, jud one block to comput! O iligM u l decor, p o o ljo a a Á cov­ ered porting, macrowove and rowigaroRor in­ cluded. vary private, security deluxe. Priced to te l - $45,000 Total moodily payment in­ cluding oR ubktiet lew dmn $440. (9 5 % fi- noncmg ol 12.9% FHA Ratal Owner w * abo se l fumduro. Roady to move M C a l Judy Key. 451-2242 or 837-7019. Wonderhri location —— AAofvwout Buy? LUXURY ItR condo. 2 Nocks from campus, pool ye "™ . Mcunry Reduced to $45,000 Col 473- 2559 INVESTORS Cute I bedroom condo, leu Ikon 2 yean old Looted and wading lor Ike nght investor. M uti tee to appreciate. $41,500 UT oreo C o l M oggie Ford, 345-8741 Deanie Owens, BHG WEST CAMPUS Cozy one bedroom — loft condo . $1500 negotiable kidy 442-8145 oiler 7 pm ________________ 79 CHEVY Chevew* 4-door hatch Good got tover, runs wet $900. C al 385-4444. 49 MUSTANG. Many new parte. Good transpor­ tation. 6-cyfinder $800 or bad offer 441-4075 days, 443-6709 nights. ___________ 1977 HONDA Owe, A C low mileage, $2300 836-21931 1970 FORD LTD, new hr engine rum gmaM Mud H, good honsportokon, tew $800 454-2374, VW RA88IT 1978, CB rod», PM/AM, tee to op- precióte, rum great $1950 or bed offer. 345- 6952 1974 FIAT 128 Sport-l 4-meed, AM/FM castalia, new radtah, sxcoR.nl common. 1$950 458-2779 attar 5 pm. 1974 OPAL Manta. Cram/toman dareo, looks good, rum good. First 1 I $700. Mark, 272 5834 1972 R ID VW Bug. Neat around town cor $950. 476-1496. 1979 FORD Ltd. Stakon Wogon AT, A C PS. P8. Rum greot. Mud tel $2900 476-7169_______ 1981 ESCORT Black/red «tenor. A C automatic. AM-FM stereo 46,600 miles $4200 or takeover 447 2918 STEEL BLUE BMW 32» 1980 38.000 mries, bod •d $11,000. Col Mike Cat attar 9 p.m 477-9599 1980 FIAT Spider 5-speed, A C AM/FM stereo cassette, aloy wheels, $5500 452-1622 CONDOS FOR SAL! 1304 M ariposa Dr. 'P l a c e Condominiums 8 U n its A vailable From $78,500 2 Bedroom 2 Baths 1 Hb% ARM Bwgtfewn P in t • V« (512)478-2782 Shuttle Route Below Mark t Financing A IN cw i jpRanct > Laundry Room * M 4 t j i Rodwood Sauna tauB, Prte l i Complex West Campus M arketed by G erald T hibodeaux 478-2782 Property Management by Witt A Assoc. (512) 478-2782 1 ^ J ra u ió ( j t t r e e n CONDOMINIUMS 1BR-1BA, 2-1, 2-2, 3-2 P re sale P rice s From $39,950 • l a lw t H em e t W wwehtg e U T I a t t b R a e t a e IP a a t a • C e R b sg Faw a • P t b a b O e c b e • Bwc le e e d P e Ma a 0 ] N ? WOOOLAMO — TT1 ★ OS. TON. M arketed by Re/M ax C apitol (512)444-1110 GsnktTNbodssux 478-2782 Cass Hardesty 479-1711 2811 Rio G rande 2802 Nueces FOR SALE A u to s fo r Sole FOR SALE Bicycles fo r Sole G O IN G CHEAP '72 Audi 1001$. 4 dr, wheel drive, 50,000 mile*. $600 445 5741 74 ALFA Romeo 4-dr 60,000 male*, need* body work, run* good $750*v#nmg* 495-4597 1973 TRG New pane and top. Run* greta. Adung $3000 458-2709 attar 5 30 M otorcycle* fo r S o le 1982 HONDA 650 Nighthowk. Highway bor, lug gag* rock. 3,400 imie*. $1450. 447 447-9988 - ‘ - lory and mmor otoclncci work. engine N* $225 442 9302 RALEIGH BIKES, men'» 21-m, 3-speed. good con- drion, $50; and women’* 23-m, 10-ipeed, mmI condition. $100 Co»offer 5 pm 4520521 BRAN0 NEW 22 inch Fuck 10-ipeed, kme* $300 with light and lock. 451-8800 151 880 KOO S atUZER 26" 2 speed lend» kickback hub, cod $465. m R $265 Co8 Stave at 472-0616 SCHW INN VARSITY 10-tpeed. tik* new condition $125 345-6952 MOTOSECANE SUPER Mirage Qwck releoie al­ loy wheel*. Spore kit, water bottle ExceRenl condi­ tion $200 478-0562 PUCH MOPED MK.lt Sport automokc 1979, *xcei- lenl condition, great power, bought car $295 345-6952 CENTURIAN LEMANS 12 nwed bvcycie Brand new, ridden only twice $200 Col Jam, 447- 2373 1978 BLUE Honda Hawk 400 with BeN helmet $595 or bed offer 474-2974 after 1 p.m EUROPEAN 10-SPEED bicycle. 21" frame, alloy nm*. rock. and tight. $110 Call 4541122 eve* MOPED FOR tale Sochi Top Mode! GS 3 Good condMon Only $350 or bed offer Col Mike 477- 2874 SUZUKI MOPED. 1981 model, run» great Pleote col 477-3402 Low pnce. 1981 HONDA 125 New condition. 90 mpg $499 firm, 4,300 mile*. CoR town* evenings 476-0653. 1981 YAMAHA 400 Special II Very cleon. low mileage. CaR Chm, 451-7399 After 8pm, 264 1707 81 PEUGOT Moped $250 1300 mile* Run* weR Eogerloieil 448-3994 Keep trying. 1977 SUZUKI GT250 very fod 2-droke dreet bike, oil infection, dric broke. 13K, exceRent condi­ tion. $495 firm. Don 442-5548. 1980 RED KZ-440 Ltd Good condition Mak* of­ fer Mud seH to buy cor 282-1114. B k y c ie * fo r S a la BICYCLE JUNKYARD Men * Cruzer* $45 Girft Cruzer* $29 3 speed* $39 10 speeds $35 1104 E Id, 1-5. 7 Days Stareos fo r Solo 2-18" K151 JBL loudipeaker*. Never been uted Greta pnce - only $150 eoch CaR Dave 458- 8488 AKAI STEREO radio couette recorder, $80 Pano­ jóme 5" B/W portable TV with F M/AM. $100 Cot- letta deck, receiver, two speaker*, $150 480- 8978 negohoble M u sica l fo r S o la SPRINGSTEEN. BEATLES bootleg*! Alien Notion Record*, 809 W 12th. 10 30-6 00 476-1160, 447 3633 GUITAR, YAMAHA deeJ-dnng, hard-thefi com evening* Keep $175 or bed offer trying. 459-4082, FENDER RHODES 73 Stage piano, exceRent con­ dition. $800 or bed offer. Amp negotiable Stave, 441-5251 WURLITZER ELECTRONIC organ Boss pedal*. hinged dooi. $299 Sony reel tape deck. $200. Phil 452 (452-5511 CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE 307 W. MLK B e t w e e n G u a d a l u p m a n d L a v a c a 9 -6 D aily i 479-6618 c o m e a r o n W e've Done Your Homework S a le s a n d le as in g of S tu d e n t C on dom in iu m s a n d Houses. S o Fees! C all or C o m e by Condominium Owner's Home & Duplex Owners If you worry about the hassles of keeping your property leased and well kept; you should worry no longer. We at C. L. R eaves Real Estate specialize in property man­ agement. Give us a coll and let us help you get the hassles out of owning property. Call 447-8303 and ask fo r Connie toda y I \ . i s f i t i f f . t c ({ C f j n a H i u m s 407 W. 38th St. 454-2580 1 B edroom 1 Bath (a $37,200 Less Than 4% D ow n Fixed Rate FHA VA Financing 3 Blocks from UT shuttle D E A N I E C 3 B CO M PANY. REA LT O R S * 346-0694 § B e t t e r T J O I 1 H o m e s i A l a n d G a rd e n a L I M I T E D O F F K R 6 * /4 */( \ i ’n i l ‘a \ m i * 111 v f r o m STll.'t p e r m o n l h ' <• s t i m n t «* o n l \ P a d i x x i K ‘ A Lim ited Edition~ from $64,400 Offered by Gerald Thibodeaux 1 BR, 2-2 Available • Ceiling fans • Decks e Fireplaces e Washer/Dryer e Hot tub e Security gates • Shuttle Property Management by Witt & Associates 478-2782 3 Blocks to Campus Yesterday’s Memories Brought to Life for the Way you Live Today Eff., 1, 2-2, & 1 Bedrooms w/Study Available Conveniently Located at 28th Street & Nueces f • 1 Block to WC Shuttle e C eiling Fans • Security Gates e Pool & Hot Tub e Covered Parking e And Much More p r f e e d f r o m Arwm C A A 7 , 5 0 0 ★ e z - 27th \ U n ,v o f ■Boieta W.C. thwNta Step. Model Open 10-6 Daily 478-2782 Marketing Agent Gerald Thibodeaux 901 W 24 P r e - L e a s e f o r F a l l c o n d o s L in d a In g r a m 's M o r e I is t m g s A v a ila b le Nueces Come'- i 1 ¡oH Ave A 1-1 Appletree 2-2 loti Tom Green 2-1 1 ■1 San Gabriel West 1 1 Pecan Walk 2-2 3-2, 1-1 Pecan Square 2-1 Shadowtree 1-1 3 2 0 0 D u v a l 3 -2 Hyde Park Oaks 1-1 2313 Longview 2-1 Graham Place 2-1 PRICED IN THE $90'S 5 B L O C K S TO UT On Shuttle Route Two Bedrooms, Two Berths A m e n i t i e s : Security Oele w/Telephone Intercom Three Celling Fens Stocked Washer/Dryer FuR Appliance Pack age Including Micrewove Oven Outside Storage Landscaped Courtyard r c r \ t t e n c e v [SOM€RS€T 1 . M. • :m • U 1 1 e f J8 ,w 5 $ ' • He* • He 1 476-2673 • Dominion • C o n d o m in iu m s EXCELLENT BELOW MARKET FINANCING MODEL OPEN DAILY 1 0 - 6 Two Blocks from U. T. Amenities: * Security System w Tetephone Intercom System * Pool Spa SundecK * Microwave Refrigerator * Wet Bars * Ceiling Fans * Buiit-m Desk and Bookcases f y n é i f i * 476-2673 9200 / f / r a í The M o s t E x c lu siv e C u p o s C o n d o a ü d O n ly a Se le ct G ro u p C a n S till L iv e in this L u x u r io u s C om m u n ity MODEL OPEN DAILY 1 0 -6 * % % l First Year Only t n a u M m c i M V T t i s ELEVATOR • APPLIANCE PACKAGE • FIREPLACES 3 BLOCKS TOUT Tw o B lo c k o from U.T. Amenities: • Pool, Spa • Fireplaces • Private Study Areas • Washer/Dryer Connections • Ample Parking Model Open Daily O p e n 1 0 - 6 476-2673 5% BELOW MARKET FINANCING AVAILABLE for 1styr. Int. R*te (5 yr. ARM w/5-4-3-2-1 Buydown from current Annual Percentage Rate) M. || .| ! - ‘ h i \ i ó 12 14 5 1 - 2 1 9 1 MAC BINTLIFF & CO., REALTORS • 1 5 1 0 \ < i r t h I »|) f M \ ' U • *i - *i I: The pickinss are ripe at Apple Tree Condominiums! Pick from six homes tucked away in a quiet setting. Enjoy the luxuries of brick exteriors, beautiful landscaping, parquet floors, marble vanities, ceiling fans, generous storage, ample kitchens, fireplaces and patios. ( £ j Immediate occupancy for Fall semester. 2 bedroom s/2 baths or 2 bedroom s/loft/2 baths. Priced from $94,500,10% discount for cash buyers. Competitive financing available. 4406 Avenue A A P P L E T R E E in iu m s Marketed by Witt and Associates, Inc. 480-8881 476-2673 DELPHI CONDOMINIUMS Available for Fall '83 3 Blocks to U.T. 706 W. 24th 476-2673 Homos for Sale Monoger Apt #113 Photography for Sale FOR SALE. Canon AE-1 with 14 tens and Vw#or Only u*ed a few tfmei $225 negoti- 477-8457« able C a l 477-1 300M M TELEPHOTO lent f»6 Greta for notare, concerte, eke. $45.474-4156 after 7 p.m. Bats for Sal# AKC WBMERANER docked $125.00. 21 I nuooiai Dewdows and tori FREE KITTENS Variety of color* Calico. Tabby, Tigers, long and shod Sow CaR 480-0150 MALE FERRET $40 Phone 480-8713 HALF BLOCK CAMPUS Available September 1. Handsome 6 bed­ room, 2 story plus 3 bedroom converted go rage. Renovated, large room*, porche*. High ceding*- Fireplace, bnck patio. Aieume VA loan (9 5 % N O /N E). 5 yeor owner carry. Lot 132'x52.5' phri easement Zoned 8-2 Great Rental Income. Bring offer. 474-2002. W H y C E N T ? Perfect for students, near UT shut­ tle, brick duplex, woodburnmg fire­ place Gain equity, not rent re­ ceipts C A LL H E LE N C H IA N G 327-B964 (weekends) 327*9730 (weekdays) JR JAMAJt-RICK CO. DAUGHTER HAS graduated Her house for tale Convenient to shuttle. University, off Cameron Rood Bnck 3-2-2, CA/CH, oil appliances 1 822 3427 PARENT/FACULTY «vestment. Spooou*. sturdy 3- 2 ideoBy arranged and locotod on CR/city buses, pork, churches, 3 shopping centers Use for Mmi- dorm, Co-op Rental, Pnvoto Residence Plus Rental, Simple Duplex Conversion Rental Quality struc­ ture, low momte nonce/utilities Owner finonced 346-3920 M obil* Homos for Solo 1982 LIBERTY. 14x60 Equity neg­ reen!* $221 52 478-2218 1958 LIBERTY travel trader 8x35' Good condi­ tion, original birch pon «ling. AC Co# Lorry 445- 5178 $3,500 Q orogo Solo* M O V IN G - ALL household furniture and lomps Good condition, reosonobie price* 11801 Polyon- 835- no near La Mesa Restaurant. Cash only 4624 Tkkots for Salo CONCERT TICKETS Oavid Bowie. Simon and Gortunkei-HouUon Advance toles Rick Spang- field From $15 480-0757 DAVID BOWIE tickets Various seat*, arena ond floor, reosonobie pnces. 447-7521, keep trying BOWIE. SPRINGFIELD, Morvm Gays Tickets ~*h- « Ibe first five rows. Buy or set Craig 472-7896 Miscollanoous for Solo FINEST SOUTHWESTERN Indion |eweiry plus ex- csilent selection grits & cords. Nelson's Grits, 4502 S. Congress, 444-3814. YUCATAN HAM M OCKS Lorgest ond eheopest m town. $50.00 Mark 441-6454 BEAUTY SECRETS revealed in special diei ond ex­ ercise pion. Guaranteed results or money bock In­ cludes spiritual advice for whole health Only $100 to Evongeiishc Services, P O Box 2609, Austin, TX 78768-2609 LARGE STEREO Speakers, $150 each Ralegh 3 speed bike, $50 Eptphone Guitar $150 480- 9383 evenings _______ SO NY W ALKMAN 7. Dolby, Auto-Reverse, $130 Dinette set, butcher block with 4 dork brown swivel arm chairs. $170 478-0511. PANASONIC VCR VHS Omni Search, soft touch with box, like new. $325 458-1506 SLEEPER SOFA, choir, lamp, stereo speakers, mat­ tress, box springs, very reosonobie. 467-2934 af­ ter 7 pm. S5-S40 __________________ BOOKSHELVES 4138 BLOCKS $1, boord. $2 474- KENNEX GOLDEN Ace atammum racket One month old. 4Vj" light, Frame only Retails for $79.95. Strung with nylon, $45. 476-1223._____ SO NY TRINITRON in great condikon 19" color and remota control. Almost new. C o l 444-6172 ORANGE W IN G Parrot, $150 Com-op video gam#, great for parties, $350 Morv 471 5631 or 267-2609 FULL-SIZE orthopedic mattress, box spnng and -5560. frame, $200.1 X). C o l 474-, 1.7 CUBIC foot refrigerator, Ifte new, $75. Large toaster oven broiler, C ol Chortle 472-9761 orier, $20 Cat SO FA $50. German desk, $100. Gravity inversion boots, $50. AJI in good condition. 459-1867 FURNITURE FOR sole Excellent condition Couch $75, choir $40, Futon $45. Much more. 459- 9229, keep trying._______________________ SCUBA EQUIP US divers, tank, regulator, bock pock, used 5 tenes, no salt $250 firm. 459-5642 Rick. '74 TOYOTA Célico White. 75,000 miles, $600 Pud) Bngodeer, «dudes bookrock and lock. $140 480-9215 AIR CONDITIONER (vnndow) Hotpo.nl cool, BTU 4000, exceRent condition. $125 CaR Bid 441- 8477 MATCHING DRESSER, chest of drawers, ond mir­ ror Like new, $65. 478-7502 after 5 D IN IN G TABIE, 4 chons, $75 FuH size bed. $75 Both 1 year old. CoR Fernando 447-9176 8 3 WAVELESS waterbed - Queen size «dudma pedestal frame, headboard, liner, mattress hose adaptors. OnginoRy $400 Asking $280 442-3819 D IN IN G TABLE with four swivel chatri. Good con- drion, $85. Bs* 476-0183 before 4 30. after. 480- 0132 BROYH Ill SO FA velvet-striped, exceRent condi­ tion. $300. 345-8409. Tobies and ebon for sate - S25-S50. MICROW AVE AM AN A Touchmotk, $375 Dyno- co dereo amplifier, $125. Four teak chon from Contemporary couch ond choir, net, $145. ExceRenl common Kitchen table, $30 $275 Coi dryer $%. After 530 pm. 837-7483 CLEAN FULL sized bed. $80 444-2449 COLOR TV 17" portable, good condition, ctaor picture. $140. 451-3413, keep Vying.__________ MUST SELL large wotarbed, 6 months old, like new Cost $600. !Solid wood. WiR socrifice for $350 or bed offer. CoR 327-9236 SOFA SLEEPER for tale. New condition, poid $500, asking $200 CaR 451-3035 10-7 Keep CONDOS F0I SALE Misceilaneaus for Sola |H DINETTE/CHAIRS. $50. dreuer with deA. li Q C ! Seaty double mottreu, $50; exceRent co 345-3342 «verwig* MOVING, MUST tel couch, $25, drener, $7 end table* S5-S10; lamp*, $4-$18, typewriter, t i table, $15 mtoredmg kmck knocks, 25<-$ dmng table 443 7000 FURNISHED APARTMENTS 1717 Enfield Rd. Luxury Eff and 1BR $ 478-9767 Coll a.m. or ^ after 9 p.m 105 E. 31st {Waft to UT) Luxury efficiency, ad buiR-m». Water, go* poid. 3. M onoger Apt #103 77-4005 ACT VII APTS. 4303 Duval Furnished 16R near UT, shopping and shuttte Private patio* nice closet* Preleaung for foil $315 * E. 459-3082, 453-0555 After 4 p m M-F — anytime on weekend* N ow Leasing for Fall Fleur-de-Lis Apts. 404 E 30th Vi block West of Duval Only a five minute walk to campus from these large 1 bedroom apartments All attractively furnished Owner pays water, gat, and cable Laundry room* provided Contact Jerome Cox, 472-6515 or Cliff Musgrove, 476-7011. — BEE HIVE APTS. 4209 AVE. B Large, wetl-M efficiency near UT ond shuttle, dishwasher ond walk-in closet, praieoung for fad $285 * E. 453-0555 453-7995 5 BLOCKS WEST UT la rge efficiency, paneled living room, kitchen, gas stove, refngerator, walk-in closet, laundry. S2 10-S240 + E. Red O a k Apartments, 2104 San Gabriel. ABP EFFICIENCY $345 In Hyde Pork, close to campus ond shuttle Pool, beautifully paneled, carpeted ond draped Built-in kitchen ond CA /CH 4000 Ave A. 458-4511 ond 4206 Ave A 451- 6966, Central Properties, Inc. ^ ^ 451-6533 * * * * * w . w n 1 1 : : ; ; w v s w v x i I ♦ A*# *4 i- 2 2 C 7 L e c n A p ts . — Fall Leasing — s IBRFum. $355 s 2BR Fum. $520 s Wrik to Campus s Nice Pool & Patio 2207 Leon 478-1781 TIMBERWOOD APARTMENTS — F o il Lem siasg — Large Eff. $350 Finest Location in UT Area Shuttle or Walt to Campus BETTER HURRY! FIREPLACE 2 6 t h f t S a n G a b r i e l 480-9555 VILLA SOLANO APTS. Fall Leasing IBRFum . $340 2BR Fum. $450 Shuttle Comer Intramural Field* Across Street 600 W. 51st 451-4349 MARK VII APTS. F a ll Lea sin g • IBRFum. $3306360 • Shuttle Front Door • 2 Pools • Sma| Frisndy Complex 3100Spt8dway 477-2004 476-2673 urwersxy a) te*a* ire ■ G A B L E S M O D fL O P fN DAILY 10-4 Why it ri that when the average .ompus condominium it selling for $120 per square foot, you con buy a condo at The Gables for only $99 per square foot? Btrm nt at Th« Gabies pnce is os important os the luxury built *OG eoch Mh no p o y R f n t until A u gu st ExceRenf Bekyw Market Financing AvaAabia 476-2473 " h m m m t n m m m h m m s h d a m i t m i n t s fu r n is h e d a t a r tm e n tC " fu r n is h e d a p a r tm e n ts fu r n is h e d r m r t m b w ñ m m m u m m m N Q W F R f U A S N G lar m m m t & ful 1DR, 4 5 4 andTVnnd S > w é O d b A fm tm m * C A .C H . 90. and «MMr pmd O tbuM. and cdy but Sumnwr S U M M E R R A F E S SmaR. oOrocYrvay furm ihod a n d dmuanmó aconmom wm» campu» * 7 7 5 - $ 3 3 0 • F 451*122 Watfwodd Root FstaM THE D A ltY TEXAN/WEDNESOAV, IU IY 27, IM P A C E 11 ~ñÑÑ SHatfM tnM fs~ Leasing for fall 108 PLACE Furnished Efficiency & 1BR ' D n h w a ih o r / D n p o t a i *S w w n m m g P o o l 'R c d io / lo u n y o / E a r b o q u o • (o d m d u o l S t o r o g o 'B o o f » K e iv . » 'V> Block IE ShuiHo 'l a u n d r y Focdrho» Efficiency: $ 3 0 0 / M 0 + E 108 W. 45th 452-1419 453-2771 l o r y . 7B R m 4 pt*> A W E S T C A M P U S A u g 1 W tdwi w aitin g d n ta o c . J S 0 0 < E N o pan Ktr. M c W A k x t » 3 2 7 - 5 0 0 0 Afcar 6 pm 4 7 8 2 4 ) 0 _______________________ _ FREE L O C A T IN G Sa m e » , C o n d o » Aporlmon»» H o u w D u p l.» *» Dorm » A l A roo » A Í P ncm H a b d a l H u nM rj 4 7 4 153 2 TELLURIDE APARTMENTS W a h a v o o l a w I L a d r o o n o n d M l apor> m an*» m o q m at M y d a P a r t to m p *» » d o t * *0 Ib a thuHle A.H a p o rtm a n h are allrocttvaly h r n n h a d h o » . d o t u * . a p p t io n r * » a n d atibar 0 p rív a la p a lto or b a lc o n y r t n M corltngs P a t a » P o r i at Í 3 4 Q f C o m a b y 4 1 0 0 A v e C o r taH H u g h at 4 5 9 9 5 9 2 t o m a S270-S290 + E W a o r . l o o t in g for guta» c o n ttia n H o u » nor. tm oéung iludan»» m*or«i»»od >r. a la r g a • 6 a a » ' cy o r I B * O n a yaa» -ao ta t w o lo rc A o rn M y d a P o rt / n a o r ro m p u » C A / C H k m n d ry d » o d b o f h N O P E T S 4 5 8 -2 4 8 8 S 3 ALL BILLS PAID IBR's A N D EFFICIENCIES A v o tta W a a i The P a p p e d r e e l a u n d r y focAfca*. OppttO' K 0 4 3 btOCk» fr&m t h u M e Slop bONvaon S p e e d w a y a rid [ ) v » a a» 3 0 4 f 34»h Ren»» r a n g in g fro m J ? 6 ‘ S 1 4 5 448-APT S SPI 4 4 5 6 b 2 9 WALK TO UT OLD MAIN APARTMENTS •thcienciet $250 a 25#) ond P*od Ebcfncify 1-295-2276 VIEWPOINT APTS 2518 Uon EfficienciM $340 FoM tatm (tod, kmndry, Monogar, Apt 116 478-3533,476-7205 * O NE BEDROOM/1 BATH K in g n i t W a t e r b e d wrtf. lin e n s A rc M e c t u r o i A m e n itie s Prrvafe Pcrtto/Pool Parking N W A u stin $ 4 ? V m o n f h W o fe r/ c o b ie p a*d 4 5 ? 2 2 6 6 / 3 4 5 ONE BEDROOM $325 Cien* »o r ompu» a n d thuhW P o n a t a d carpo* * d and d r a p a d Buik n b o o k V t a fv m la rg a b e d r o o m wrth w a * in ckn*< C A / C H w ater a n d g a » potd 4 3 0 7 A v e A, 4 5 9 1 5 7 ’ Central Properties, Inc. 451-6533 38TH ~ K j7 W * p 3 8 » '« o r thw M a Al- u t m ara* a W e Eu rrt» h a d / u n fu rn rih a d G a o * w a te r potd 5w ,m m »ng p o o l S u m m e r fun Fro m 1 ) 9 5 4 5 3 4 0 0 2 WEST 26TH 9 1 0 W e t * / 6 th N v ie com m un m , F f f t a a n r * » or. P i j HW G o » w ater p a rd J 2 4 0 2 1 6 0 f 4 7 7 Su Casa Apts. Student Complex N o w P r e t e o u o g f o r Fcrfi Semester BR Furnished opt $375 * £ O n shuttle tw tm m m g p o o * 2 lo u n d ry ro o m s or. site m o n o g a m a n l 2 0 3 W 3 9 » 4 5 . 2 2 6 8 C o m e b y o n d sa c us — yo u c a r ' g o w r o n g 3 0 2 W 38th AH s ilt s N « of sftuftl* G as/w ater p o d 4 5 3 4 0 0 2 furrw$hed/ uH u "ttsh « d S K A N S E N A P T S Aipm e dettgr- ed oe4tng$ teiHnc farts porefves b a k o n ie i ten» summer rer* C a í 4 5 3 4 7 84 for appotrrtment ieoee m essage 4 2 0 5 Sp e e d w ay i CA/C H vex# W A L K C H d r p t w o s d t s p o a o r polio p oo l pfeovxtF 4 5 2 1658 4 7 8 3 3 0 3 UT S U M M E R O N L Y Sp a cio u s 2 i CA/ foundry LA W S C H O O L «Gkcieac y 8u*R * n o**k H x sur deck txlh df»<3ed $ 2 5 0 summer $350^aH 92 6 7243 CHEAP RENT w a rongemerO A C S 7 t 0 461417?_________________________ > OWpMI E Wa#werM Rod ( M l . K J R N IS M E 0 E fF t O E N C Y VTQrmorr* 5 4 4 2 1907 W ( Co» Rruh> hoo d R o oSon 3 4 5 SURER AREA ovoMobt. now Mo'irr*, ci* S / 6i »ho»)»»ng, OwM. 9 ? 6 )I16 Etfco* SyOar* Comoror- Rd- 790 ENsooncy E Rooi rio», «o ATARWtCr APARTMENTS IMG ($775 . E Su» mor S 350 3 7 5 E f aR, Wkcianua» (Fal only 3 7 7 5 • E y C o T U N d c a A n g font AC, *n d*fxnalV\jan6t caa*d comM a * -M R g w M at RKMpHara/suralack and p o o l wdR «vat.• tÓ/vm/k- n g d atan c. to cam pus itw M . SAaal G o a * P a rt 2 9 C / W m A v. ,u* ? 9 * i i 4 7 7 1 6 3 0 * CIRCLE VILLA APTS. — F a U L e a a ü m — • 1BR Un turn. $315 • IBRFum. $345 • Water A Gas Paid • Shuttle But W a l k < r S h u t t l e U t a m o r o ! A p a rtm e n ts Act IQ Act nr A d f l Act rm A d a A d X Thra* Oaks Paean Squara W M tam ai Rio N u r c m Condom inium s 2000 Whitts 3000 G uadalupe 4312 S p o o d w a y 3311 B a d Bi vai 2801 Ho mp h l l i 2808 W h i m 2803 Ho mp f u l l 301 W 29t h 409 W 38t h 506 W 37t h 2806 Ho mp h l l i 600 W 26t h E d P a d g e tt C o m p a n y Main Office 4 5 4 -4 6 2 1 453-0640 474-612» 474-041! 474-6660 476-0411 474-6460 463-3363 469-1697 472-0649 474-0971 464-4421 464-4621 FA N T A S T IC D O L L A F SAV IN GS 4 • 754 Sf fr G iy 45; A i9'h 0 1 5 prr dwiy iOS A '9'h E! Cimpr A,5 i n m p ' c K v r L m j l e d or. I f S H U T T I F Free Apartment Locating (exclusively for women) tCSt Rio Grande 476-499* 2323 Town Lake Circle 442-4967 I Tangle wood Westside 1 1 Apartments I Northwest 451-2223 8501 F3 Burnet R0 Long Haven Apts. Fall Leasing • IBRFum . $350 • Wrik to Campus 9 1 6 W . 2 3 r d Diplomat Apts. FallLeasing • 1 BRFum. $330 • Watar $ Qas Paid • WaNs to Campus 1911 SanGabrial 476-7399 G R R D 6N GRT€ 8P 8R T M EN T S NOW ACCEPTING LEASE APPLICATIONS FOR FALL! A jt y r / w G m l Continental Apts. MARKV APTS. Signing Fa ll Leooes 1BR Fum. $350 a WMrtGMPMO a SmtfFfwrttfy Compt** 3914 Ave. D 453-5983 JEKRICK APARTMENTS 4 5 1 - 4 9 1 9 4 7 6 S 9 4 0 Hyde Park Apts. — * Fm tl Lem m ing — - • Eft. Fum. $285-$300 • 1BR Fum. $300-$330 • 2BR Fum. $430 • CRy Tennis Courts & Pool across street • Shuttle at Front Door 4413 Speedway 458-2096 VILLA NORTH APTS. — Fall Leasing — e Large Eff Fum $280-290 e Big 1 BR Fum $330-340 e Roomy 2BR Fum $400-420 e Water & G a i PAID by Ow ner 4520 D uval 458-3607 UCANADA APTS. — F a l l I f e r i e f — ALL BILLS PAID e IBRFum. $400 e Wafc to Campus e Nice Poof-Patio e Tennis Courts Across Street 1300W. 24th 474-6500 TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD ORDER FORM A d d r s t t I r i O w r 1 4 11 16 31 2 \ 7 12 17 22 i S ta rt D ate : End D ate : T o tal R u n s: 1 P h o n e t t n t * Z i n r .................i 3 8 13 18 |23 4 9 14 19 24 5 10 15 20 25 R A T V S (Minimum Ad-15 Words) MINIMUM A D - 1 5 WORDS Time* Per Word 1 ...................................................................................... J 9 S ............................................................................................4S 4 ...................................................................................... SS 5 ................................................................................ S t « 471-5244 n C harge my V IS A MasterCard r ............................................................................................n S ...................................................................................... 4 1 f ............................................................................................*• I S ............................................................................................97 i t ......................................................................................t . t r 1 3 .................................................................................1 4 9 4 ................................................................................ 14-.' 1 1 5 .................................................................................1.43 1 4 .................................................................................1 4 4 1 7 ......................................................................................141 1 5 ................................................................................. 1.71 1 * ......................................................................................1 4 1 3 » ......................................................................................1.44 »AVE 20%! 1 P í o - , e y o u ' . S t H \ ,V V | -3 ■ T ( .y s n p v ¡ * + < *• »,< r-,,-; y • • • • a n d q p* o . ;><•. r , ^ , . r . 1 Bedroom Furnished $315-365 2 Bedroom Furnished $490-515 Gas & water is P A ID by Owner Shuttle bus is at your front door i I 1 1403 Norwalk Ln. 472-9614 § TViMoui úieeét A fK P ttm e n t Unfurnished—Furnished Large Apartments 1 Bedroom Furnished $350-360 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Fum. $430 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Fum. $470-480 • 2 POOLS • BALCONIES • VIEW APTS. • SHUTTLE STOP 1911 W illow creek 444-0010 444-0014 Davis & Assoc. Management Co. Tanglewood North Apartments m o S p R EV s We Pay All Your Air Conditioning & Heating 1 Bedroom Furnished $370-390 2 Bedroom Furnished $510-520 Shuttle B u s at Your Front Door 1020 E. 45th 452-0060 Professionally M anaged by Davis & Assoc. ^ I I I I I I II I I TRI-TOWERS W. 24TH ST. AU ST IN , TEXAS 78705 (512) 476-7639 l l f f 801 w CO-ED 4 spacious floor plans, pool & sundeck, laundry facilities, cable TV hook-ups, garage parking available, security, 3 blocks to campus. A STEP ABOVE Well Hake Ton A Deal. Best Sommer Rates in Town. ★ Summer Housing A s Low A s ★ ★ $120 Per Session ★ Check These Features And Sign Up Today: — 4 spacious floor plans — Fully equipped Kitchens — Walk-in closets — Garage parking available — Panoramic view — 3 blocks to campus — Pool — Sundeck — Floor parties — Exercise room — Laundry facilities — Cable TV hook-ups T ri Towers Has It All Together For th e UT Man And Woman 476-7636 8 0 1 W . 8 4 t h St. HOME. Been looking for a place to hang your hat? At Duval Villa Apartments, our extensive renovations, now in progress, will offer a wonderful retreat: spacious floorplans; new designer tile, carpet, and mini-blinds; redesigned kitchens and baths; loads of bookcases, closets, and cabinets Conveniently located in Hyde Park, we're close to campus, popular restaurants, shopping, and shuttle bus. So, why look any more? Make yourself at home. DUVAL VILLA APARTMENTS 4305 Duval, Austin, Texas 78751 451-2343 TWO MONTHS FREE DENT River Hills presents Our EARLY BIRD SPECIAL!* If you're staying in Austin this Summer you should be taking advantage of the Best Deal in Town. We have Eff., 1, 2, 3, & 4 Bedrooms available for occupan­ cy Today. Prices starting at $260. 4 swimming pools, 4 Laundries, Sauna, 2 Shuttle Bus Routes, Convenient to Shopping & Enter­ tainment and Cable T.V. is Optional. Open Mon.-Fri. 9-6/Sat. 10-5/Sun. 1-5 River Hills Apt. ^601 Royal Crest 4 4 4 - 7 7 9 7 ' r,Ver •For further intorrrutiot) slop by or a l l All relerem es mill b eiherked 4 » ....................... " , i " .......................... .. PACE 12/THE DAILY TEXAN/WEDNESDAY, |U IY 27,1983 FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS ONE BEDROOM $335 in Hyde Pork on fhutHe. Large pool fully caf peted and d ra p e d Large bedroom with walk m closet Built-in kitchen, C A /C H water paid 4 2 0 9 Speedway. 4 5 8 -2 3 6 7 Central Properties, Inc. 451-6533 ONE BEDROOM $305" V ery close to campus and shuttle Small quiet co m p lex Large bedroom with queen sized b e d a nd walk in closet Built in kitchen, CA/ CH, w a ter p aid 2 02 E 3 ? n d Street 4 74 4518 Central Properties, Inc. 451-6533 LARGE DIVIDED etticwrKy. new point and carpet eight (8) blocks from UT on IF $225 summer $275 fall 302 E 34th Stott I 474 7503 47? 2294 LEASING FOR tall Walk to campus Shuttle at front to door Furnished or unfurnished targe efh ciency, 2BR 2BA efficiency Mouno Kai, 405 E 31st 472 2147 EFF, 1 AND 2 BR $295-5425 Close to compos ond shutHe, pool, folly pan eled, carpeted, and draped Walk in close* built m kitchen CA/CH. water and gas poid 4 2 00 Ave A, 451 696 6 Central Properties, Inc. 451-6533 3401 RED RIVER Effictency avoilotote Auguit 8th N m km ichoot CP -oute $330-ABP CoS 6 30 pm 1100pm 476-2128 ______________ APAR IM F NT FOR r#n*. availobte August teit larg# I8R fvm»h#d P#ti «dcom» IF shuttte Aug usr rm* $200, $375 begmnsng S#ptemb#r 104 t 32nd #103 or *105 Jpmck H ________ _ QUtft 18R on IF shuttl. n«at campus $275 * E 304 E 33rd AporSm.nl »t 4 78 6148 W ALKING DISTANCE UT/ACC Fvrnnlted 1 b#d room n*w carpsrt, pool availobte August 1 Call C o d 478 7517______________________ _ ATTRACTIVE FURNISHED efficiency on shuttle 4503 Speedway $ 2 6 5 'month Water paid 385 3346 days 327 5020 nights LAC ASH A, 2900 Cot. Sir «ni 1BR 1BA $.350 2BR IBA $440 Water goi paid covered porking, 40 pool 3 biks low school 48? 9154 47? 3318 THE ATTIC APARTMENTS Furnished G Unfurnished Eft 1 DR w skylights 2BR sru- dios pool G laundry room Convenient ro businesses 6 shopping Close ro Cameron Rood shuttle From $250 CALL 926-6664 BARRISTER MANOR — Fall Leasing — • IBRFum. $350 • Smal Friendty Complex • Shuttle Comer • Walk to Law School 3301 Red River 477-2859 SCQUOIA APTS. — F a l l L e m m in g — • Large Etf. Fum, Only $300 • Friendly Complex • Shuttle Bus on corner 3 0 1 W. 38th 452-4965 MARK XX APTS. — Fall Leasing — • 1 BR Furn. $340 • 2 BR Fum. $450 • Shuttle 2 Blks. • Water & Gas PAID 3815 Guadalupe 467-8726 FALL LEASING Furnished 1 Bedroom 2 Bedroom PENTHOUSE APTS. 1801 Rio Orande 2 Blocks to UT Swimming Pool 476-2084 SU ROCA APTS. — Fall Leasing — e IB R F u m .$360 • Water & Gas Paid • Wale to Campus 2400 Longview 479-8063 ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD DOBIE DOES IT BETTER FAN TASTIC VIEW SU PER FOOD SPACIOUS ROOMS Mow Leasing For Second Summer Session And Fall CALL OR WRITE FOR MORE INFORMATION DOBIE CENTER (512)472-8411 2021 GUADALUPE AUSTIN, TEXAS 78705 V • ' ^ * it BEAT THE RUSH FURNISHED APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED APARTMINTS UNFURNISHED HOUSES N ow leasing 1 and 2BR apartmenti in Capital Pfaia oreo Pool, nice grounds, on shuttte route 5211 Cam arón Rd. 4 5 8 -4 5 2 1 * ONE BEDROOM/ONE BATH * King-sued Woterbed wifh linens Architectural Amenities Private P a W P o o l Parking N W Austin $425/monlh Water/cable paid 452 2 266/345-5535 PARKSIDE APTS. 4 2 0 9 Burnet Rd 2BR/1BA (760 sq ft) $385 1BR/1BA (575 sq H ) $325 ? mile* from UT campus, small qu*et complex Fully carpeted, draped, CA/CH, all bu»H-m, kitchen, dis posal, baste cable TV Swimming, togging ond ten ms across the street from Ramtey Park No peh, deposit $150 Now teasing for Fall Semester Ideal for faculty o» serious student Cofl Mrs Thompson 453 5239/454 3251 APARTMENT DOWNTOWN 1BR with lofl on 6th Street Parlor, stove, ceiling fans, modem kitchen, hot tub. Available now, 4 7 8 -5 8 1 4 , 4 7 4 -8 2 9 3 GRADUATE STUDENT Avoilobte mmedioteiy large efficiency, shuttte, lorge yord, $ 2 3 0 ABP 451-6731_____________________ __ _____ __ AVAILABLE AUGUST 1 Choice locution Upper 5 room bnck duplex, goroge, refrigerator, stove carpeted, couple, teose. deposit, no pets 707 Grahom Place 2 5 ’c9 ol Rio G rande $ 3 5 0 4 7 6 0 8 3 3 __________________________________ _ NEWLY REDECORATED apartm enti on CR shuttte 1BR $ 3 0 5 , 2BR $ 3 6 0 . Cameron Trace, 1200 6 52nd (1 block east of Comeron) 4 5 3 6 2 3 9 . 4 8 0 9191.__________________________________________ WEST O f compus AH units m older structures Most bitts paid Available August 15th Deposit $150 References needed, no pets 28R $ 3 5 0 , 1BR $ 2 8 8 efficiency $ 2 2 0 Coil Jock Jennings, 4 7 4 -6 8 9 7 of ter 2 p.m Consolidated Realty FREE LAUNDRY/furmture 1 ond 2 bedrooms fenced patios, gas heating, coble water paid 4 5 4 5510 UNFURNISHED HOUSES WATERFORD Unexpected Vocancy luxury 2 - 2 with lofl Approximately 1300 Sq. Ft Aug 83-July 84 Lease Penod 2401 Leon 3 People $810 4 People - $88 0 473-8318, 477-3143 EFFICIENCY Large pool view efficiency. Available in a quiet neighbor­ hood. Convenient location near Highway 290 and IH-35. $265 - etectncrty. Haimark Apts. 7022 Grand Canyon. 4 5 4 -2 1 5 7 SAGEBRUSH 2604 Monor Rd. Newly renovated 1 and 2BRs. 5 min campus/3 Blks. shuttle. Gas & water paid. Swimming Pool. 10% FALL STUDENT DISCOUNT $290-440/mo. 478-0992 Í9-5 Daily) ALL BILLS PAID Penthouse Aportmentv Efficiency, \, 2, ond 3 bedroom units available Close to Capitol and downtown with wonderful views of the city TV coble service available From $375 472-5631 HEMPHILL PARK W ALK TO UT Charming 3BR/2BA, hardwood floors. CA/CH, $950/m onth. Calf Martha Dun­ ham-Stewart. 4 5 9 -3 3 5 9 . EVELYN HEREFORD N O R W O O D APTS. Preleasing for Fall Large O ne Bedroom», S 2 9 5 -S 3 0 5 Approximately 7 block» to shuttte O n bu» line Quiet, newly remodeled 5 6 0 6 N. Lomar 451-9197 TARRYTOW N POOL, laundry, shuttte, large 2BR 1 BR 2BR 2BA, 2BR-lV?SA 2 6 0 6 Enfield Tropicono Apts 4 7 4 -5 9 3 0 ._______________________________ 1BR APARTMENTS available W alking distance UT $ 3 0 0 -5 4 0 0 + utilities. Howell Properties, 4 7 7 - 9 9 2 5 EFFICIENCIES, 1-1'» ond 2-2's, 1900 Burton 44? 961?__________________________________________ FREE RENTAL SERVICE W e hove nice opartments. University area, $ 2 6 5 /u p , Kathy or Tern, 4 5 2 - 2 9 7 8 _________________________________________ RAMPART APARTMENTS N o w leasing for Foil Spacious 1 and 2 bedrooms Quiet, 2 pools and garden O n shuttle C a l now 4 5 4 -0 2 0 ? LARGE 16R/1BA, smoll complex, shuttle, C H/CA. immediate vacancy Sheila after 6 0 0 p.m. 4 5 8 5 9 6 9 $ 2 8 5 , shopping nearby Q UIET IBR on IF shuttte near compus. $ 2 7 5 + E 3 0 5 E. 33rd, Apartment #1 4 7 8 -6 1 4 8 EFFICIENCY UPSTAIRS, quiet ne^hbortsood Large backyard $ 2 2 5 plus utilities 4 4 1 -7 5 8 9 TOWNHOME Residential atmosphere. Apart­ ment convenience. 2BR town- home with private fenced patio, WC connections. Extra-spa­ cious living and dining areas. $420 * etectncrty Hallmark Apartments. 7022 Grand Canyon. 4 5 4 -2 1 5 7 ________ SHARE FANTASTIC 3 2 horn# on CR/city bm#s Responsible, non-smoking individual or group 3 4 6 3 9 2 0 _____________________________ ___ AVAILABLE N O W Two and three bedroom older homes, apartments Coll now for 24 hour informa hon. 4 5 2 -5 9 7 9 511 BELLEVUE Law School, 3 or 4 bedrooms G o i/o ir, heat, appliances, corpeted, kitchen, no peh $1 0 5 0 9 2 6 -7 2 4 3 _________________________ ALL BILLS Paid UT garag e aporlment, only $ 2 7 5 Rental-Aid, 4 7 6 -4 6 8 4 3 0 0 4 G uodolupe Fee (Tex-3).____________________________________ 4 B E D R O O M home, north of UT Perfect for 4's. Students, $875/m o n th N o pets Call Kelly or Hope, 4 5 4 6 6 3 3 , 4 5 8 * 9 0 0 0 2-1 AT 7 0 7 E 49th $ 4 5 0 /m o , 9 /1 /8 3 -9 /1 /8 4 Call Frank Comeo, 4 5 4 -9 2 1 8 (evenings) N o peh CLEAN T O W N H O U S E for rent 2BR IB A Perfect Deposit + $ 3 8 0 / month ♦ btfls 4 4 4 -2 4 4 9 NO RTH CAMPUS 2BR AC Only $ 3 2 5 Rental Aid, 4 7 6 4 6 8 4 3 0 0 4 G uadalupe Fee (Tex-4) HYDE PARK 2BR w/otec room Only $375 R#f#d Aid, 476-4684, 3004 Guodolup# F— . (T#« 5) UT CLOSE 388. AC ooty $ 4 7 0 R#ntol-A*i, 4 7 6 - 4 6 8 4 . 3 0 0 4 Guodolup# F## (T#x 6) i bout# «1 lov#fy Fr#nch Plot#, HUGE 9 10 ttedroom 1 to»# to UT $ 1950/mo 3215 C A /C H , fv*ploc#», ck»« l Dancy (at Edg#wood) Bryan 480-9191, Rodney 4 7 8 -6 0 4 1 , aw n#r/ag#nt HALF BLOCK compui A.ailobte S#ptemb#r 1 H ondiom # 6 b#droom, 2 rtory ptm 3 b#droam room», converted go rag# Renovated porch#» High c#iTingi Fir#ploc#, bnck pa#o Y#OT teal# i#m i himi»h#d 4 7 4 -2 0 0 2 larg# CO-OP HOUSING TRY CO OP LIVING! E v e ry o n e at th e AR K m v ile s you to d in n e r for a ta s te of c o -o p life a sw im m in g p u n ; W e o ffe r c o -e d living air r o o d ' * 4 tion ing h o m e c o o k e d m eals a w e e k self g o v e rn m e n t and i v ariety of so c ial p ro e d u c a tio n a l an d g ra m s W o m e n esp e c ia lly are e n c o u r a g e d to apply S u m m e r & fall v a c a n c ie s CALL 4 7 6 -5 6 7 8 OR COME BY 2 0 0 0 PEARL TAOS WILL be o Coop this foW Coed. AC, wides­ creen cable TV, 19 homecooked meok o week, sundeck, Across the street from UT Colt 4 7 4 6 9 0 5 or come by 2612 Guodolupe for a tour ROYAL C O -O P G ood friends Delicious food Q uiet neighborhood Summer, foil vacancies 4 7 8 - 0 8 8 0 Visit 1805 Pearl__________________________ THE C O M M O N S A health oriented co-op house has male ond female openings for summer ond fait Stogie ond double rooms 3 blocks UT., P o d & sundeck 4 7 6 7 9 0 5 STILL L O O K IN G for summer or fall housing* I C C C O -O P S hove femole/male voconcies for $217 and up Rent includes F O O D /R O O M /U T IU T IE S plus much more For more information call 4 7 6 - 1957 or visit our office at 510 W 23rd DEUTSCHES HAUS, 2103 Nueces has summer and foil vacancies for female German speakers Com e by for dinner ot 6 p.m or coll 4 7 7 - 8 8 6 5 for info S A N D IA C O -O P Beautiful, spacious Half block compus W e prefer mature nonsmoker Reason able 4 7 8 8513 4 7 4 20 0 ? TO P L A C E A C L A S S IF IE D A D , C A L L 471-5244 ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD Welcome to Madison House • GREAT FOOD • FULL MAID SERVICE • FULL SECURITY No Place To Live This Fail? M o v e O n O v e r T o . . . Brownstone Park Apartments e One Block to IF Shuttle e 2 Bedrooms e Gas & Water Paid e 2 Swimming Pools e 3 Laundry Rooms • Hours: 9-5:30 M-F, 11 -4 Sat. 454-3496 5106 N. Lamar Professionally Managed by Pyramid Properties 711 W 32ND Now preteosmg for Fall 1 and 2 b#droomi from $310 plus #tectncity 453 4991 A ll BIUS Paid Only $245 Walk to UT Rental Aid 4 76 4684 3004 Guodolup# F#e (T«« 2) 1007 W 26th Vaulted ceilings lots of gloss pool utility room IBR/16A apairment in the heart of the w «l campus community $285 $385 F Sm horn 3 5 p m Monoger s oportmenl #207 or cofl 477 2696 482-0205 ___ NEED TO subtease lorge 18R aporlment available August 7 IF shuttte, pool, fireplace 453 0205 451 8 06 3 ________________________ _ EFFICIENCY CONVENIENT to UT Now renting tor toll 306 E 30th 472-5134 after 5 30 _ _ CHARM of th« otd (hardwood floors and big win daws) and COMFORT of the new (C A. C H) C O N VENIENCE (wotk to UT) 2 1 for only $400 3108 Wotting. 482-0205, 32/ 2740 ____ AVAILABLE AUGUST 1 FURN efficiency ideal for senous student $199 ABP Pool laundry Mgr 478-6776 Elkot S y s t e m ___ 5 BLOCKS to campus I and 2BR available now Fall rates starting at $295 Manoger 476 0774 Elkot System __ 1 BLOCK from campus 2-2 EURN or UNFURN $535 ABP 476 5631 Elliot System__________ 1BR, UT walk or shuttte laundry pool CA/CH, $295 plus etectncrty (Foil) 472 8420 If t l l t l l l l l l l f I I I I I H I I I I I I I I I I H I I M H I I I I I I I H I t i l l lilt? I CHEZ I JACQUES I ¡ — Fall Leasing — \ i I 1 • 1BR Fum. $360 • Walk to Campus • Nice Pool-Patio • Water & Gas PAID I | 1 | 1 1302W. 24th 478*8331 -•• ■ M iiiiiiM iii i l l i n i u m m m m m in i n h u m n i r VILLA ARCOS F a ll L easin g — e IBRFum . $350 e Water & Gas Paid e Shuttle at Front Door 3301 Speedway 478-9555 ROOMS FURNISHED BOYS Waik.ng distance UT $185 $205. ABP Howell Properties. 477-9925 TAOS COED Dorm ocross the street from UT Now leasing for summer 474-6905 THE CASTILIAN rents rooms by the day or week on our Summer Hotel Floor For economical oc commodotions for your guests contact. The Castili­ an, 2323 Son Antonio St 478-9811 ROOM W/PRIVATE entrance both, fridge in home 6 blocks west of campus ($225/month ABP) Per­ son must be available for mother's helper work in evenings 4 30 7 30 OR 2 weekdays References and interest in children required 477-4348 after 6 p.m TWO UPSTAIRS bedrooms with bath and 2nd liv­ ing area Pnvate - furnished or unfurnished 1 or 2 tenants North Austin home - garage, fireplace, W / D Cofl 835-7521____________________________ ROOM AND bath, pnvate entrance, quiet neiah borhood, near university, ABP 478 8 850 after 6 30 Female preferred TARRYTOWN Clean, 2BR/1BA, 1 block to stores, ma­ ture married couple Available August 20. References, no pets. $ 39 5 . 4 76 - 7916. HYDE PARK neighborhood Large 2-1, ceiling fon» AC, garage, shuttle, convenient, $ 5 9 5 ♦ utilities Available 21 August 4 6 7 -8 6 2 2 after 6 p.m DUPLEX FOR foW semester Porholly furnished, go rage and yard Call 4 7 8 -4 8 8 0 O N L Y $185 Carport, appliances, near compus Rental Aid, 4 7 6 -4 6 8 4 , 3 0 0 4 G uodolupe Fee (Tex-1).________________________________________ 2BR/2BA Appkonces, only SEPTEMBER 1ST $ 3 7 5 Rental-Aid, 4 7 6 -4 6 8 4 , 3 0 0 4 G uadalupe Fee (Tex-10) ROOM AND BOARD THE CASTILIAN has spoce available for the sec ond summer session Double $ 3 9 4 , single $ 5 5 5 Price includes 15 scrumptious meals per week Contract con be prorated os to move-in dote Stop by for a tour today The Castilian, 2 3 2 3 San Anto- mo St. 478-9811._______________________________ THE CASTILIAN has a few remaining spoces avail able for fall/spnng semesters Stop by for a tour today The Costilion, 2 3 2 3 San Antomc St 4 7 8 - 9811. We'll make you feel like one o f the family NOW LEASING FOR FALL Call or Write for more information M ADISO N HOUSE 709 W. 22nd St. Austin, Texas 78705 (512) 478-9891 ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES LEASING FOR FALL!! Not just another dorm! • Best rates in town • swimming pool • courtyard • T.V. lounge 4 J 2 - 0 I 0 0 Professionally managed by Barry Gillingwater Managemanl Company 2505 Longview h It’s not too late to have SUPER accommodations at the most prestigious dorm on UT’s campus! DOBIE CENTER Call or write for more information (512)472-8411 2021 Guadalupe Austin, Texas 78705 X C o llege H ouses Proudly A nnounces the la u n ch in g of a New H ousing C o-operative this Fall. Taos Co-op Room & Board Rates Doubles $259 Singles $359 ^ • Sel l g o v e r n m e n t • A f. • Ai l b i l l s p. t i ri • S u n d e c k ■ 1 9 i n e a i s a k • H e t n q e r j t o r - . i n e a c h - n o m ■ A i M A S ( h e s t r e e l t r : m , e n „ • S t u d y '( i . e r i • ■ C o e d A ! e s c r e e n ' V NOW LEASING FOR I Al l R e a m d o w n f or a t o u r t o d a y 1 2 6 1 2 G u a d a l u p e 4 7 4 6 9 U 5 (M-dbS THE COLLEGE HOUSES, INC. Housing for People, Not Profit. Run to The Castilian STILL LIMITED SPACE AVAILABLE FOR FALL/SPRING SEMESTERS STOP BY FOR A TOUR TODAY <0fke CastiCtan 478-9811 2323 San Antonio FURNISHED HOUSES ROOMMATES MISCELLANEOUS FOR ifNT HELR WANTED LARGF 1, 28R home* neor UT m Hyde Pori Avotl obi» now tor $450 4 $650 No pet* i»n 480 9191 CLEAN RESPONSIBLE M/F to shore 3 2 dupler NoflH#o»t pool, %oonai, wetghf room $130 ♦ ’/3 brih 928 2272 b#fw— n 4 9 p m _ FROZEN MARGARITA cocktM mochmn» for loras p o rtm MargontoviB» Nhghn 837 0890, 837 3904 toy Brim to 454-9724 ______ SHAPE BEAUTIFUL 5 7 'l Norib W»*t Hi#, Kom» Superior omemhe* Profeiuonol couple»/*mgt»» (immo< ulare hone#, conwderole non unofcmg) 3 46 -3 9 2 0 __________________________ A REAt Kom» until June, 1984 2 blocks north ot S»1on Close to everything 3 bed'oocrn 3 both*, country kitchen den Vintage r»novat»d $ 700/ monthly deposit* Appointment*, lock Jenongy 474 6897 Consolidated Realty 1W BLOCK Kom ram pul O ld *f horn» 2 I hord wood Soon window AC No p»ti L*om $550/ month 9 26 7243 CONDOS FOR RENT LUXURY STUDIO CONDOS fo r rent Large designer condo* being boih Alt 2BR» ,2BA's, microw ave, in each fan», room , professionally decorated H ot tub, wet bar, BBQ a rea Ready fo r occupancy Septem- ■ber 1 G o by 2813 Rio G rande O nly 5 units ‘Starting $ 8 0 0 t E 4 44 2 7 5 0 intercom CENTRALLY LOCAT P«E LEASE FOR AUGUST - ED LUXURY CONDOM INIUMS NEAR HAN COCK CENTER 1-1, appliances, ceiling ton, fire- place, adequate storage From $345 ASI Compo ny 345-9643 2-1 NEW, quiet neor Town Lake, furnished Short/ long term leose $ S 9 0 0 0 negotiable 478 8096, 478 2 6 2 3 ________ SUMMER RATES 2404 Longview #106 Appli­ ances furnished, including microwave and ceiling fan $395 1 295 2276 _________________ _ WALK TO UT New 2 bedroom condo W /D, mi crowove fireptoce, jacuizi 3115 Tom Greene, 345-1552,472-0987________________________ MALE STUDENT condo available, foil and ipnng semester Share 3BR 2'*?BA 2 story unit, >160/ mo Nonsmokers, coll 475-5951, days NEW 2 bedroom condos available for fall ol The Wynnwood 4 blocks west of campus Healed pool, security, fireplace, appliances $ 800 $875 GSI, 477-5721______________________________ 3000 GUADALUPE 1BR Walk or shuttle to com­ pos $395 i E 474 2142,926 1661 454-0595 MOVE IN TODAY OR PRE-LEASE FOR FALL 2 BR-V ? BA townhouse on shuttle route Fireplace, washer/dryer con­ nections, gas appliances, earthtone carpets, 2 large sundecks, one car g arage $540/m onth Roommates welcom ed 1705-1713 Burton D r Op w t H ow— J u l y 1 4 , 1 5 ,1 6 Call Connie! C . L . R e e v e s R e a l E s t a t e 447-8303 HUGE BEDROOM (16*21) ond shoe# rot1 of apo CKKrt Houte wiffi iib#rd. nor» Troditionol pkrtomr formly urvt B#out»ful Kom« ond b#out#ui p#opi# Untqo* Imng/Warntng ««pmnonco foe rigNt parson tocto! mkv*c«, $150 mo ♦ 13 utditMM Spacfol #d psychology grad üvóont or focu#y prafarrad AvotkiWa Augotl 15 coH Nancy 928 2ÓJ4 M A tE/Ff MALE housamatat wontad Now or for foil Ac row from low school on 26#» lorn 477 8184 HOUSEMATE NEEDED for 3BA/2BA O oriAviia a rao housa $©ock>uv qmol. thutHe Avoiiobla August 15 Prafar oldar graduóla studant $190/ mo ♦ *3 U CoR Mary Lou or Rtehord, 476-8941 LIBERAL MALE naadad to short 2 1 off Reanuda Eurnishad axcapt badroom $ 185/mo plus v2 b»#t 385 1632 avamngs ROOMMATE WANTED nonsmokar for dupla* $190 ♦ h bi«s 2BR 1BA 6 9om, 10-12pm, 385 0 178_______ _______ ________ ______________ FEMALE ROOMMATE to shore 2BR 1BA beautiful penthouse Nonsmokar Deposit plus $250 rant plus V? b«Rs 444 2449 MALE HOUSEMATE wonted (kberol) $130 ABP fenced bock, IF shuttle Lota colls ok PM 452-5511 RESPONSIBLE PERSON to shore large 3-1 house near E 51st ond Monor Road $155 ♦ '-3 bills 926-0700 after 6 p m SEEKING FEMALE roommate with house/duplex Reliable graduate CaW after 5, 4 54-2687 Leah NEED FEMALE graduate student liberal to shor# duplex $175 rent, $140 deposit 8y 15th 445 5116___________ ___ ________________________ ROOMMATE NEEDED by Aug 1 for quiet 3 bed room house in North Central Austin $158 ♦ v3 b 453-9252, 453-5601________________________ NEAT, SOPHISTICATED, intelligent, creative, ath­ letic. health oriented human snare beautiful old house High ceilings, hardwood Boors, huge win­ dows, French doors, grand piano, nice yord Sim­ ple, natural living 5 miles to campus $250 ABP $200 deposit 441 6454 NEED ONE iiberol M/F to find house with respon sible studter portier preferred 441-4677 (wk) after 6 p m ____________________________________________________ CHRISTIAN MALE undergrod We will look for a two bedroom apt for foN CoH Mark 441 7245 or 928-0694 after 6 p m DEPENDABLE A ND cleon roommate needed be ginning Aug 15th to share secluded two bedroom duplex m WesBoke Hills Call Phyllis 327-1263 Rent is $ 2 3 0 /mo ROOM FOR rent to Chnstion student Furnished, carpeted, pnvote both, near UT on CR route Will occept $120 monthly Phone after 4 p m 462- 6587______________________________________ M/F ROOMMATE for 2 bedroom house Shody near 1M Fields $175 mo + V? fcxHs Call Jess 451- 9502 after 6 p m if you need TV, don't bother RESPONSIBLE NONSMOKER for 3BR house, good location Shuttle Prefer graduate student f 247/mo plus h E 458 1783 SERVICES LAW SCHOOL? is an in te n s iv e , L S A T H W k t n d R e v w w th re e -d a v course h eld in D a lla s A u s tin and H o u s to n D eveloped bv g ra d u a te s o f I T Law School Success ra te H p o in t average im p ro v e m e n t on I^S A T scale b a **d on a c o m p a riso n of d ia g n o s tic and m ock L S A T scores $175 F o r free in fo r m a ­ tio n packet c a ll 472-5510. th e 10-50 N O N SMOKING FEMALE Shore very nice north condo with 2 grods W/D, Pool. Tennis $200 * “ 3 bills Coll 459-1731__________________________ IDEAL M O V IN G — Households offices pianos Local and long distance Finest service — reason able rates INSURED 4 7 6 - 7 7 8 5 ROOMMATES 473-2800 X , S t u r t h e r e . . . ' U o C W W A t C > 0 e tw o rU ) nu s* t h i ' so r r \ 2*13 Hu> ( , runth- a jt n i SANDIA CO-OP Beoutiful spocious Half-block campus We prefer mature non-smoker Reason oble 473-8513, 474-2002___________________ RESPONSIBLE FEMALE grod Shore quiet fur mshed home near CR shuttle Carol 928-2475 $200 00 - V) bills__________________________ FALL N O N SMOKING mature femóle for com­ fortable 2BR duplex fenced yord, W /D Dove Springs (no shuttle) $160 plus bills 441-4507 A U G 1 FEMALE 2 story 1BR, ER, $ 152/mo * h E after 6 0 0 or oil day Sat/Sun 4 74-5179 FURNISHED CO NDO 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Share with 3 other male students Lo Croix. 806 W 24th Street 258-5323__________ _________________ FEMALE, N O N SMOKER roommate needed to shore furnished opt for foil Rent $200 0 0 /mo CoH (409)994-3565_________________________ CLEAN, RESPONSIBLE, liberal roommate needed immediately 2BR/2BA apt 4 blocks from campus No pets Summer $195 00 Fall $242 50 CoH for omenrties 474 8648, 327-3137 BEAUTIFUL QUIET residential duplex 1-2 non smoking, responsible housemates to share 2 br Walk UT $265 single $160 shore bedroom Corotyn 835-1900 473-8524_________________ CONSERVATIVE MALE needed to shore 2BR Town Lake condo $ 2 75/m + W utilities CoH Bill 442-4637____________________________ _____ MALE, 22, seeks female housemate, 18-26 to share house, friendship, companion in Austin Sin­ cere persons write to 711 Maryland, Liberty Texas 77575 or coll 409-336-2081 after 5 p m Chortes MALE NO NSM O KIN G to shore bedroom in neor campus condo 2BR-2BA $200 » ^ bills 478 7572___________________ roommate wanted FEMALE ROOMMATE(S) needed for 2 bedroom apartment m Duvol Villa, on IF shuttle 458-6001 ROOMMATES NEEDED!! to shore large bedroom m beoutiful three story duplex, own pool, on RC-SR shuttle $150 ♦ electric 443-8510 ONE FEMALE roommate to share new 2 2 fur mshed condo Pool and tennis courts CaH (713) 444-5279_________________________________ FEMALE ROOMMATE needed immediately for 2- 2 apartment $225 ♦ E Pool ond laundry 2 blocks campus 477-4879 18 22 YEAR old mole to share beautiful 2BR con do in Northwest Hills $2 2 0 /month for foil Beouti fully furnished. 346-9698 NO NSM O KIN G MALE roommate needed for Aug 1st 38R, lV?BA house Rent $132 + V3 fcxHs C o l Ion 928-4810__________________________ PECAN WALK condominiums 2BR/2BA fully fur- mshed, security entry and security porting, fire- pioce, W/D, microwave, hot tub, sauna, shuttle stops in front Within 5 blocks of campus $ 27 5/ month ♦ E each. 214-298-5460 CROIX CONDO, 2 male freshmen need room mate to share 2-2 furnished for 1983-4 $ 27 5/ month. Call collect 713-486-0562 or 713-486 . 5 2 2 6 _____________________________________ - ÍEMALE ROOMMATE, Village Glen Apartments to ' share 1 or 2 bedroom, tolly furnished Pool, ex­ ercise room, etc. Call 713-493-0544 . MALE NEEDS mate for 2BR/2BA lownhouse on . C l shuttle. Prefer responsible grod student 458 9 6 7 6 _____________________________________ AUG 1, 2 responsible females, nonsmokers to shore quiet, new house near Manchoca/WiNiam * Cannon $300 ABP 447-3185________________ - FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted New house com- * pieteiy furnished. $ 300 plus Cod collect for more ► ^form ation (5121658-1395__________________ ' NORTHWEST HILLS lownhouse needs 2 clean, quiet, females. Pool, tennis court, private study * soom $35Q/mo oB utilities potd (713)827-8700 » j?404 LONGVIEW, one bedroom condo, all oppk- * anees, plus pool and laundry room Near tennis * courts. Walk to UT Female roommate wanted. * f ?4° Avoitobl* 81 83 1/} 345-6936. TWO FEMALE nonsmoking roommates Spacious " luxury 2BR/2BA condo on shuttle Walking dis­ tance to campus Security $250 each + v3 bids ' 479-0305_________________________________ Gr a d u a t e STUDENT seeking housemate Shore » M R in quiet residential neighborhood Washer Garden. Bathroom recentar redone W ood floors. * ytX o n d dog Coll 4 76-7856 after 3 p.m. , HOUSEMATE TO shore 2-1 duplex with AC 5 „ minutes from campus $175 per month plus W Mis . *» deposit 454-0985 PHOTOS f o r PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 m i n u t e s e r v ic e M O N - F R I 1 0 - 6 S A T 1 0 - 2 4 7 7 - 5 5 5 5 THE THIRD EYE 2 5 3 0 G U A D A L U P E NEED A Post O ffic e Box? UT area N o w aiting list CaH 4 7 7 1915 5 0 4 W 24th____________________ P H O N t A N S W E R IN G service O n ly $15 0 0 a month* CoH 4 77 1915 10 3 0 a m -5 30pm TW O BROTHERS M o v in g Households, offices a n ­ tiques, pianos Reasonable rotes Insured Local- long distance 4 7 2 -2 9 1 8 FURNITURE M O V IN G P rotected transport »n my large ca rg o van Three years experience Steve, _______________________ 442-9302 YO G A LESSONS groups, $ 15/hour 4 7 4 7 6 2 8 Private $ 3 0 /h o u r SmaH CARD R E A D lN G /helpful. inform ative, occurate Please call after 6 p m fo r inform ation or ap p o in t ment Valene 444 5431 ALTER YOUR state pre p a re fo r finals by taking out one hour to sharpen your mental functioning while releasing muscle tension G ift certificate also Call FLOAT TO RELAX. 4 5 8 8 4 3 5 TUTORING MATH TUTOR O v a r 8 y e a r s o f p r o lo o o io m a l s o r- v ic o io h e lp in g U T s t u d e n t s o a k o t h e G R A D E ! S tr o g g U a g ? P r o s tr a t ­ e d o n t h e t e s t? S o c a ll o r co m e b y to r I m I m m . ACC 3 1 1 * 0 1 2 M 302 303f ST A T 3 0 9 M 4 0 3 * 410 t C O 3 0 * 303 M 3 1 6 * I f m 334 3 5 7 PHY 301 n n 30**11 n n 3 0 3 * 1 p m 3* 7 * 1 Math M 3 0 5 C M407 MBM A R M 0 0 0 L A B M 3 1 0 * Ch am íatry C H C M 3 0 I CHEM 3 0 * C M E M 0 I0 A 9 M 4 2 7 * L M3 i t jaeáe • rrimg EM3 0 0 EM300S Aatrmmami» AST 30 A S T 3 0 * A S T 303 E M U E M I f E M I 4 E M I 9 3 Dam I p e l thia a lt mmiU tha a ijA t M e * am ese», h a $mm tata A m .. • * Weeks hrmm camp mm p tma parhtm§ • Vary rmaammahta raima • Lmtrn oé patéame a • Im Immpmmpr ymm tt mmémrmtamé a Atam h iph mchmmi cmmrama im 9*0 ahmrm am* imrta, UT Ptacamaml Tamt Prmpar aitmm amé S A T G M E raaiaw Pat Licey Titoriaa Service 504 W. 2 4 th St O ffice 458 -5 04 0 4 77 -7 00 3 (upttotra from In n e r Sonctum) TUTOR FOR first year moth, cakulus, physics, chemistry, posed logic economics, and history Jeffrey Jocobson 477-2359 PROGRAMMING PROBLEMS »n CS/DPA courses? Several years of my teaching experience con help, 479-0992 mornings, evenings TUTOR ENGLISH other courses requiring writing Ph D Nine years teaching experience, many UT courses 837-6579 PRIVATE TUTOR available term papers essays - critiques. Special help with English Literature, Poet­ ry or Prose 474-0139 MATH TUTOR $8-$10/hr Ph D student, expen- enced teacher (why pay $14/Hr?) CaH mostly mornings, evenings. 473-2135 SCHOLASTIC SERVICES/RESEARCH AN D TU TORING Reasonable prices, fast service Hours, 5- 12pm. 477-8184 PERSONAL MALE PH D cand, tall good looking, good com­ pany, very busy, seeks smart, good looking woman who loves to talk, donee, swim, etc I like Pressure, Twme Time, Lucinda, Paiefoce P.O. Box D-8, Aus­ tin, TX 78712 DESIGNERS' SPACE, 1704 S Coogrm* hat w ta ti iludios ond two tmoB o iliest for loots m Augito GeBsry avoitobls for p»rtormoncsi, sxhtortt ttort ing September 472 8393 EM AOTdlHT SHVKIS RESUMES WRITTEN, composed edited by person net professional Interview counseling, and copies included SCA 451 7184 HELPWANTED BANKER'S HOURS! Pelican j W K arf is n o w accepting applications fo r p art tim e fo o d preppers 9 am 1pm A p p ly in person only 4 2 5 W Rrvervde N o pbone calls, please A pp ly 9 Horn E C O N O M IS T I Powhon ovoitobi* m tae economic forecothng tec hon of Texot Deportment of Human Retourcet Job retpomibclrtiet include reteorch and onaiyvt of van out heolta core mduftnet, projection of cot* data for prospective role te llin g and onofytn of cate load projection* Minimum requirement* are BA m economic* plu* one yeor of experience m economic» Salary $1,906/monta $1,982/monta effective 9/1/83) Contact M» PJ Fnttche 441- 3355 ext 5008 for application procedure* by 4pm August 4, 1983 EOE LOS TRES BOBOS RESTAURANT is n ow hiring fo r cocktail woitpprsons, w a itpq r- son*, a nd kitchen help Please a p p ly m person ot 1206 W 38th T H A N K Y O U VER Y M U C H LES AMIS CAFE Interviewing for kitchen and busing positions Apply 3-5 p.m. 24th & San Antonio PedunkeTs 1003 Barton Springs Road O pe n ing fo r all position* — p ort timk — days ond weekends Must be able to w ork days in the foil Starting w a ge $4 0 0 /h o u r A p p ly in person between 2 0 0 and 4 3 0 p m , M-F Looking fo r a ton career that offers unlimited o p p o rtu n ity a nd earning potential? A rthur M u rra y Donee School seeking ambitious men o nd w om en to train as professional dance in­ structors N o experience necessary Full and part tim e training p ro gra m storting soon A p ­ ply 8 7 7 6 B Research Bfvd , G ra nd Centro) Station, M-F, 2 -5 p m , 6 -8 p m N O PHONE CALLS JUAN GOLDSTEIN'S CAVIAR BAR is now accepting applications fo r p art time cocktail persons N o experience necessary A p p ly at 4 0 4 E 6th N O CALLS INSTANT CASH & BONUS If you need cash etxle you rt c school, why not donto» p io­ rno/ You con donate Knee r o iwen doy penod. and recave $8 on your frit donation, ond $11 on your second donaton •ntam the lame week Every tenth donation, you * 8 receive o $5 bonus — plus wih the od. you m l -ecene a $2 bonus on your first «sit So heip others vide heiping yourself Mitohove vakd ID and toaie proof of Audv residence. Col 474-7941, Austin flosmo Center 2800 Guadalupe O f f SHORE OIL jobs No experience necessary Many positions available For information, 1-312 8 8 8 4 3 4 7 e .t E 1114___________________________ OFF SHORE OIL JOBS N o experience necessary Many positions available C o l refundable 312* 8 88-4347 EXT E-1114_______________________ PHONE SALES port time in the evenings $5 00 479-6219__________________________________ DESK CLERK, motel, port time, 9pm-7om every other night also 2pm-9pm 6 days Applicant must be available through summer ond fall semesters Must be personable neat opjseonng some col­ lege, experience in dealing with public depend­ able Ideal for low student Apply m person morn­ ings West Winds Motel, IH35 and Airport Bivd ASSISTANTS TO A M I Montesson teochers Ex­ cellent preparation for Montesson training or work tn education psychology philosophy Hours pres­ chool 8-1, elementary 7 30-3 30 Cumcutom-oide positions 8 1 AH five dayV week Minimum wage Part time |onitor positions also ovoitobi» 442- 3152____________________________________________________ TOKYO STEAK House is taking applications for bus persons, oyster shockers, host persons Please coH 346-3112 after 2 30 p.m PERSONAL CARE assistants (must be UT students) needed for male ond female disabled UT students for FaH semester 1983 Apply Student Heotta Cen­ ter, Rm 339, or colt Shern Allen, 471-4955 - ext 166 for apjpomtment WANTED RESPONSIBLE, mature person Live-m companion for elderly tody Light housework — dnve car Room/board and >8 0 /w eek 327- 0895___________________________________ _ MOTHER'S HELPER for 2 girts (4 ond 1) evenings 4 30-7 30 (M-F) ond Saturdays m home 6 btocks west of campus Must hove excellent references ond interested in children Prefer person also inter­ ested in renting room m home w/private bata, en­ trance, fridge Also need a person for 2 dayv wh. 8-4 30 477-4348 after 6 p m PART TIME checkers and package clerks needed for evening) ond weekend hours Apply in person, Tom Thumb #77, 3700 Bee Caves Rd Austin CHILD DEVELOPMENT Center on shtolle bus line interviewing afternoon teochers for preschool and elementary age children Hours 2 3 0 6pm Mon- doy-Fndoy Contact CDC Office. 453-7842 PART TIME jomtor positions available late after- noons M-F, minimum wage, 442-3152 ROYAL COURT Racquet B al Club needs responsi­ ble, outgoing person for front desk Saturday and Sunday 8am-6pm Contact Bob Philippy, 459- 7638______________________________________ PERSONAL CARE for disabled grod student Earty mornings and other hours $ 4/hour 458-3382 ENERGETIC MEN and women needed tor part time employment m afternoon enrichment pro ­ gram for school aged children. Beginning 8-24- 83 Some supervisory positions Competitive sol­ a r, Experience working with groups o f chidren required Education m chid related field preferred. Extend A-Core 454-3651 EOE PART TIME Flexible hours, toed for co le g s ito- dents C o i 467-8156.________________________ PERMANENT FULL or port tune postaons avoiobie for condo grounds, pooL spa maintenance Good references necessary Apply m person, 4105 M edi­ cal Patkwoy, Suita 201 ERtot Systems 451-8178 PART TIME choir director's pottaon ovoitoble Sal­ ary negotiable. C o l for interview appovttmer* 4 76 -6 63 3 _________________________ _ BUTTERFLY CHRISTIAN Pre school of Shepherd of the Hi#» Lutheran Church a now taking applica­ tions for the position of otoe to 4-year-otd class (M-W-F). Teacher for 2-yeor-otds (T-TH) I f « ed. c o l 327 -3 37 0 or 327-5902 CHH.D/MOUSÍ toter f o r ! to stay m my house lone mie from compus) and care for I-ye o r aid daughter Im school 7 3 0 5 30) Can pay some Ctanno 4 76-1762 TEACHERS ESTABLISHED leam m g Center tetang applications for tutors/part hme «proctors tor Eng ksh comp osition College degree and/or related experience pteton od Salary and hours negoti­ able Send resume to P O Bax D I AuPtn TX 7X712_____________________________________ ESI ESTABLISHED learning Canter latang a pp t canon» tor M ors/part time melrucion ei Engtoh As Second Language program ESI Degree and/or related experience preferred Salary ond hours negokabJe Send resume to P O Box D 1 A u to r. TX 78712__________________________________ BAKERS HELPER neodod eorty a m toril Capable of dnvmg step von 477 8 3 *8 COUNTER HELP needed Mu# be ovaiabto even mgs Apply in person, 9 4 Cato du Jour ENTERPRISING PERSON with finishing carpentry experience To do work m UT oreo Ful or port tune 478-8905, Frortk _______________ CLERK/TYPIST - port tune 20 hrs/week. lextoto mu# type, nontmoher . good atmosphere, mup have cor, telephone Garland JooaaAhtaorSan- Joedu Insurance 452-6226 BEAN'S RESTAURANT ond Bor now taking apph- catMms for noto, dependable wadperxoru apply between 2-4, M-F, 311W 6ta APARTMENT COMPLEX needs gradúale Pudor# for asustanr manager pouhon Part tone « ex- change for aportmonl Appointment c a l 454- 0 2 0 2 _____________________________________ SHERIDAN INCORPORATED, and Austm-basod transportation services company a looking for part tone personnel for its exoo tovo runner dnnsron Economical excellent driving transportation record, references required C o l 452-6422 CHILD CARE needed for 2 b afoot, flexible hours, own transportation is nocewery C a l Catay, 327 5234______________________________________ APARTMENT MANAGER for 23-umt complex, dose to UT Apartment furnished plus bonuses Some smsdl momtenonce espuinifoktisi reqtered. Mu# hove goad references C o l 327 -2 74 0 for 4-NIGHT shifts, 11pm-9am Saturday-T ves days. Available to convenience pora/saff-serve gas sta­ tion m North Austin Start to $3 60/hour Apply altar 2pm to 8 330 Bsrmet Rd., Suite 101 DAYCARE TEACHER Arde postaom open August 29 Afternoon hours 1 block from UT C o l 472- 4984 WAITRESS, WAITER H i Country Inn, 3437 aporeng - PT/FT CaveRd 327-9771 PART TIME totoscfork needed for tatos and LgN bookkeeping in retail shop Hours Mondoy-Fndoy, 9-1, and Saturday 9-5 C a i for appaetoneto, 454- 8601, KAT Fans and Flourishes.________________ NEED FRIENDLY and mtatigent people to dean residences in Austin. Part tone, hours (texifato M u# be able to work some morrxngs $4 25/hour ond up Cherry Street Cleaning Company. 453-1339 NEED AID for assistant in kitchen in private nursery school B 30 1pm Also aid fo r vonous ockvtoes 8 00-12 30pm. ond aid for afternoon ackvtoos 1-6 Co# 327-1530 aftkr 4 30_____________________ FULL TIME mgN stacker for Tom Thumb Experi­ enced onfyl Apply m person, 2725 Expoufcon __________________________ Bfvd $7-$10/HOUR tutors Economics, Finance, Busi­ ness, Geography, Astronomy, DPA, Physical Sci­ ence Appfy House of Tutor, new owners 474- 4723 RECEPTIONIST POSITIONS moouog. 8 30-1, M-F Professional office, ptoosonl voice ond neat ap- peoronce a mu# 4 54-5929 8 30-5 30, M-F PART TIME help Opening for «dividual to operate copy machine ond coBata copws Fihng ond word processor helpful Director of IrakMc, 474-6066 PART TIME iocretanal and housekeeping needed for home office Tuesdays, Thursdays 9am-12pm, $4 25/hr M u# have own transportation Co# 459 1773._________________________________ CITY OF Aushn it currently accepting appkeofcon* for adutl school crossing guordt to various loco non* Hour* 7 am-8 30om and 2 pm -3 30pm Soi- ary $4 38/hour Apply Personnel Department, C#y of Austin, 150 E Rmered» Dr Austin, TX An Equal Opportunity Employer________________________ ONE FULL tone rught worker, orie port tone mgN worker and rebel workers needed to sma# renden- ta l treatment facility for 4-12 yeor old emokonoty disturbed cM dien Starting pay at $3 65/hour if interested, please appfy m person to 3804 Ave 8 N o phone cols ptoose WORKING COUPLE seeking housekeeper m ta ­ chonas for room and boord Student* welcome 250-8481__________________________________ COOK NEEDED for »mo# reudenkto treatment center for young children Hours Uom-7pm w#h rotating days off Duties include meal planning and preparation and food purchaung $875 mon##y Apply ■n person to 3809 Ave 8 by Monday, Aug- u# 1 RECEPTIONIST/TYPIST needed for photography buuness. WoH-drestod. nonsmokar able to work with university students W i hondto customer *, type and telephone C o l Phototech. 4 74-4879 for interview. LOST A FOUND LOST JULY 24 Blue bike chain and keys Town Lake Hike and BAe Trail, Capttoi Comptox, UT Campus or Speedwa y to 38th Street areas. Reword 4 5 8 -5 5 3 2 __________________________ FOUND IN Torrytawn on Windsor Young Golden Retnever-type male. Short hair, Bea cafar 472- TYPING A TYPING STORE W e a ta o p r o v id e • Word Processing • Typesetting e C o lo r Copies e X erox 9500 C opies e R eductions e P nnting and B inding e O ffice a nd S chool S upplies 1505 LAVACA 478-9484 (Free perking white shopping at Honey s') Master Typist R E SU M ES T ÍR M P AP ERS THESIS Dobie Moi 36 4 ’ r o: T Y P I N G SERVI CE 4 4 0 - 4 4 3 0 T E C S INC t 0 0 5 t U f i M - Vera Tee's Typin g/W ord Processing 18 -h yr>. le g a l e x p . 7 D a y s a W e e k C o ll A n y tim e Area — 38V5 & Duval 454-1532 CONDOS FOR RENT CONDOS FOR RENT HELPWANTED HELPWANTED FOR LEASE CENTENNIAL CONDOMINIUMS 501 W. 26th Only a few units available A m a n lt ie s i • Washer/dryer • Microwaves • Underground Parking • Security • Pool & Spa • Elevator e 1 Block to Campus 478-7746 AUSTIN CABLEVISI0N If you are looking for good income potential in the growing television industry, please read further. We have a position open on our staff of commis­ sioned, outside sales representatives. If you are a self-motivated hard worker, you can gain excellent income with relatively flexible hours, as one of our sales reps. A nationally recognized training program will help your success. The candi­ dates we are looking for must be presentable, a good communicator, and must have dependable transportation. Past sales experience and an inter­ est in cable television programming are desired. If you desire an interview apply at 2191 Woodward or call Otis Johnson at 448-3977 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N / W E D N E S D A Y , J U L Y 2 7 , H M / f A C f 1 1 SPORTSRECORD MAJOR LEAGUES P f UhBr# Ft### beemakoswt ( U t o Upe smé west eeeat pssrne m l Del'CX! Hew Yon BafnTiore Tor ON'. MrrwauM*' BcrMOf C *veiaria Cnicttgc Texas Cantor» »a Kan*m O y Oakar-C Mi'ioeaoia S eatt* OB W Ik Pet 579 55 40 579 55 40 674 54 40 55 41 573 547 52 43 510 49 47 412 40 Wtotot 50 47 49 49 46 49 45 47 44 56 42 56 37 fez 515 500 495 469 444 420 374 Toronto6 C h ic a g o 4 's '^ a n « C h ic a g o 4 Toronto 3 2 nd gam e Debo»' 8 Sean* 3 O aklan d 9 b o strx 2 1 s' garr* Bos'or at G axiaf'd 2 n d g a n ie N e * York 6 Texat 0 C ie ve ian d 2 Kansas City 0 M i' 'le so ta 6 M^wa-m ee 6 EtattiMore a' C a m o rra (Al Testae COT) C h tcag c :Hoyi ' ' 1C at Toronto ¡ant . S e a n * Moore i 3 a* Oatron Pe»ry io New York 'keougt 3 6 a' Texat HougY 1 9 # ) 6 3 0 p i t 6) 6 36 p m 8 -8 ) ? 3 5 p - r C ie ve iaric A no e rsor 0 ' a' r a r sn‘ Crty b e rr y 3 ' ’ 7 36 p rr M fw a u xe e 'W iltia m i # 1 ’ Baltimore i Wit» 4 7, 9 X p rr 7 35 p rr f o r » - 2 5 a M innesota 'Ramirez 3 1 a! atitofrvia Bosior Browr 6-6 a' Osr a rc - lord 0 4 9 36 p rr Thursday s Qamas SitaMte s ’ Ueirod ' igtn Oar ar'd a’ Ca»iorr'ia regnt (onfo gamas achaduiad) NATIONAL LEAGUE By UnBad Pvsaa hRsrnslotte Eaat us A ngetes 5 Ct«cmgc 7 rsw Dtegcfc P’i ’st*j'Qr 1 1st gama H -s b irg ' 10 Sar mgp 5 2nd game Mot ‘ '«a 5 Cmcmoati 0 h r * Yota 2 Abanta t 10 mmngs 5» ..outs 6 S a rF ra n c « c o 5 Fh-.nadeiphia 1 Houskor- C (M Tima COT) Jkoanta iMcMcHtry 11-5) at Nat» Yota ■Terrel ? 4 i 12 36 p rt- Sar f err tsco (iaan.es 11 -8) at St Lou* (J M artin 3-1) 12 36 p m l os Artgexn 'W een fe 9i at Chicago jf'fint, i-6, ‘ 2 0 p tr W Gleg-. 'Show 10-#) a* Pittsburgh (J Deteor 0-0) 6 36 p rr Montrea barga' ’ -0 at Ctncmnali (Paa tore 4-ft) 6 36 p nr >" a Je y ' o Danny % 5) a* Houalori (J NtofefC 8 71 T 35 D Tf- NEW YORK Wmtir Bayo» at Pruts rt Karnprt Ban»' !c M d'-ig, lb Mu"lph'y C1 Caronec Hooi"sor s* ToMs Nee» Yota 4 1 1 4 1 2 0 0 0 4 0 2 4 0 0 4 0 1 38 S 12 I r h to W r h M ja m p ie it 4 0 0 0 Totean 2b 4 0 0 0 bet 3b 3 0 ’ 0 Parrish # 4 0 3 0 Wright d 3 0 0 0 nstetir CR 3 0 1 0 C Bnar 103 0 1 0 JOhnsnc 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 Derf ss 8 9 • • • 0 80 'ja r r * . w irm rig RB batoon, (2) DP Near York 3 Te x a t 1 ¡.OB Nse York r, >>d-, fc ?6 O Bner Be* WmttsKJ 3B P a " i v HP B aiO orM 3) New Vota f’ QOfetXY ■ W 3- Tesas ' ar ¡a' a ' . 4 3 WP a ris r* PHLAOELP98A Rose 1b Men g a r 2b Scnrrndi 3t P H R 8 R » a O 9 6 0 0 3 7 1 3 11 1 1 2 3 2 25 A 5 2 0 0 6 0 33 775 ' HOUBTOM r h fo t e r k i 0 ' G Wafting rt 4 0 1 0 C O O Daeneyp 0 0 0 0 4 0 3 0 ' ' Punte» 0 0 0 Tncir U 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 Same» 3b 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 C 'jz H 4 0 0 0 C 0 0 Kruger i b 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 AshDy c 0 0 0 D o ra r 2b 0 0 0 Ryar p 4 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 3 1 Torn 11 0 8 8 000 100 089-1 0 0 0 M fl^ 4 S c o rd nor rnnirig RB DP Housio» S * " « e ' 26 P jn 1*4, M organ |4 ) H ouston 2 . 0 6 ’ HP Morgan 7 S8 Rhke P H ft B IB B 90 6 0 0 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 GB Houston W L 50 47 49 47 49 46 4fc 4 ’ 45 53 P itlstjj'3» MO' "ea S! LOUto taiHacJe^ia Cfeicag N ew Yorx Atlanta . 04 A r ig e * i H ojstor Sar Diegc Sar francisco C io c ir 'ia ' 4# Claava 48 Soup ACROSS 1 Stalk 5 For fear that 52 Co-op bonk 9 Largggpoort 58 Aurida 14 Cattle 15 Venezuela coppar cantar 57 Braothing organa 58 Liquid 16 Bird 17 Humortat* 18 Charga 19 Poptar 20 ika a command maaourg 59 Unuaad 60 isáuatM thing 61 US play­ wright 62 Saaforca 21 Triba doctor 63 Widow'f — 23 Racapit- 84 Raquiramant utation mus 65 War god 25 Aftar praf 26 MST plus 2 hr* 27 Topmaat 29 Maka laathar 32 Narcótica 35 Ptundar 36 Iniquity 37 Spokan 38 Fanoakaddar 39 Rapaat 40 CoNaan 41 Languish 42 Qarman city 43 Expioatva 44 Had on 45 Darby DOtftfN 1 Guttar 2 Thraadbara 3 Impada 4 Franch pooaaoatva 5 Nawaat 6 Daatroy 7 Alona: praf. 6 Powdar baaa 9 Ser atontar 10 Shoaiaca tip 11 Emotionaiism 12 Gottar Tony — 13 Biuaahada 21 Stata: abbr 1 2 3 4 rxxwoui ru Z Z L X S O * VCD 1 3 ] J 3 1 3 3 3 3GJGKJ I J ' J t l 3 J J J a J D J J J 3 Ü 3 d J D J J U J J J . I 1 'J □ ; J J ' J J J . M J J J J : J J ' J J J J J J J J 3 J ü i i O D Q j J J ' J J J j j l i U d J J 1 J . J ' J J J J J J J J J J J J J Ü J J J O l J J J J J 3 J J J J J J 4 3 J J J J J J 3 3 3 J 3 3 J 3 J J 3 3 J J 3 J J 3 J 1 9 rJ 3 3 3 3 3 L J j J J J J 3 J 3 J Q j a a J J J l 3 J J 0 j j □ J J 3 J J Ü I 1 j j j 22 Effigy 24 Film units 27 Hoga 28 Cotoneas 30 Agoniza 31 Gas 32 Stupid ona 33 Algarta city 34 Novabai s madrurrt 35 Buatia 38 Garments 38 Divaratoo 42 Daaarva 44 Blouaaa 45 Booad 47 Movad atd«ways 48 WW party 49 Wood 50 Cut tn two 51 Carda 52 Hammer part 53 Trick 5 4 -------- tha air 55 Golfing unit 5 9 -------- nutshell M l k i l l M U I I U U t t f j T 3 3 34 i r T T 2*b T T n r T T " ■ H ■ TYMNG TYPING TYRING ■ FAST occurota ■ e B ag/ grammor Resume 9596 Excettont Candy. 451- WORD PROCESSING/TYRtNG * my SOUTH AUSTIN home Ten yean sec ratona! empanante m engmeamsg and occounfcng fields Theses cktser takora. tecnmcto reports low ravsaw reanteenpis rearmes ele Müe. 440-3959 COMPUTERIZED TYPING Foto, accurate. Otoay changes »>to»n»nced Col Margaret 837 2440 FAST SERVICE rypmg Engtoh $1.00 page Sporv ah, Itakan. Portuguese $1 25 page Karen 452 0/PAGE Ley# oiptoin cto tytypto (near UT campus) TYPING REPORTS, Rush jobs accepted Col 8 am-K) pits Reasonable rates Carolyn 459-9527 BUSINESS OPPOaTUWmtS PHONE SALES hi# tone m tae evenings $5.00 479-6219 U ftl W EA TH E ft FOTO CAST t N ATIO NA L W E A T H E R S E R \ IC E F O R E C A S T TO 7 P.M. CDT Hot afternoons and warm nights are I ire^ast for Austin through T h u rsd av . with low temperatures in the m id-70s and high temperatures in the mtd-9(h The extended ¡oresast tor Fnda> through Sunda> khows panlv clouds skies and fair nights with high lem peraturts in the mid 90s Elsew here in the nation rain is expected in parts o f the southern Plateau region and portions of Florida Fair weather is forecast for most o f the rest of the nation PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz TSA T6A TSA T&A T5A rs A I'M PRAJTiCiNé V' ' ” C A N N c V N C E l M V T B A 5 ( T B A S ' |P Any't hinc AROIW MERE 15 TO B6 ANNOUNCEP ll BE REAPv ! B .C . b y J o h n n y h a lt K£LP! Vth &E\H6r M£iP Ppisohep is The m pc>^b O f T f \ e S a k a t a d e s e r t 1 S k & M £ p <9i S < Í3 E R « A 3 - P b r ? r - , R > KMOLO MAN N HR MOST BU55FUL STATE D W r ING> UGHTiy ON THE SOFT EDGE OF CONSCIOUSNESS. . r\ A n IN THE PROSPECT SECURE Of CONTINWNG TO W8FT LATE INTO THE MORNING IGNOR/WT Of th£ PRESENCE Of AN UNEXPECTED AND D6APPRCMNG RLPRESENTATIVE F K T THE UJORLD Of R£SP0NSl6JLfTV \>y J 7 th STRRfT M B A f f a T Y P I N G , P R I N T I N G , R I N D I N G T h a C o m p l e t a t r a t a u t a o a t FULL TIME TYPING SERVICE 472-3210 472-7877 2707 HfMPHIlL PK. Manly at Parking______ TYPING BY DEANNE Specokzmg « taens, tank papen, iktosrttoinm, legal IBM Correcting Setec- tnc. Reasonable rates 447-7284 KATMfS QUICK Type • « • « U 9 0 Í fcpfm cw ovariobéo 15 7E2-Ó139 PROFESSIONAL TYPIST Accurate serace. tost turn around. Times, dim rt torn rt. profotoinnd reports toe Borfaora Tulas 453-5124_______________ WOODS TYPING Serves ■ when you war# « dona nghi 2200 Guadalupe, ads entrance 472-6302 TYPING ■ TUTORING ■ proofreotang. 10 yean ex­ perience. former calsgs teochor MA m Engtoh Soe your gradas go up. 276-7771____________ PATTY'S WORD Pracassmg Tarn» paper*, prof»» ■anal reports ditesrmknni, Pick up rash servios kl mrdrvgN . 345-4269 YES w e typ e FRESHMAN THEMES So a ta ri o u t w ith g o o d g ra d o s PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE typing /paos, moto ca anddskvery Jante, 244-0213 TYPING IN my North Auskn I n M i rates IBM Setoctnc H Col Pal, >34-0778 I , I ,i| ()l| PROFESSIONAL TYPING $1 25/poge or $1.50 te- gaL Rushan wetcome Candace. 451-4M 5 100 VttaM TYPING, protoseienol job Edhng «- duded M oral Roehster, 346-3590 (days) 345- BB11 (mghts and 11 sekendi) $1.25 TYPING, rashes ««duded. CaraArl proofing, eiodsmii espenenca (PR. these, legal BA, 467-0167 (lamar/5: Correcting jsmar/55ta| Rush i Leceted souta Col Donne 9 5c/page double 13 yean i 443-5613 RESUMES * THESES * Protoaonto Reports * Word ..... Cel GM4RTY Word Prmreseng Cen­ ter Competen» rates foto, protosaonel service Col 451-0736 8711 Bumto Rd, Stele AS mEUNOAS TYPING $1 K V page IS ye ■onai s#psnewrs Noon te mtenigfo. Vicmdy IH35-32r«d 479-8871_____________________ JEANNES TYPING Service Word procemng and general typing in my North Autoin home faugh S S Ts estofotey Feto, e esssWto 836-4303 MELINDAS TYPING Sl.tO'psgi 15 yeen gratos uonto superienra Noen te m ^igk* VtanPy RqS-32nA 479-8871._____________________ EXPERIENCED TYPIST m North Autoin hom o.fai* mnehto rates and eccuraey; term popen, ram ies eta 836-4971___________________________ TYPING, DMGOP4AL proofing nenmrafi report, usenpte Wters toektotcaL 8- .4 4 7 -3 5 5 3 T tlptfU J m h fa á u , M BA 0 • RESUMES wMJi or wNhout pktom o n a o r V w o d a y 8 * r v k « 2707 Hemphill Park ie to fto to k g ftX h te B to to d d g p e 472-3210 472-7677 $150/p TYPING/WORD b ulakls Careful proofing toneokng 283SoT WORD PROCESSING - tool accurate, boeuKte work. Rush jabs and toudete papen 'mdcams. RO­ BIN'S TYPING SERVICE 1706 S. Lamar. 443-8119 mellaj-cfraina imAiiou a m f e u t Bút u0maaaáU feW I UTTtfm S- m a a K r m a e a m t f h a t m a u o e r r m a t f p a t i n a * Fat mamaif! b y l c i t i l r i i th M BLO M C C O U N T Y .MR r UtCKP. I r u m t o r m w x A A - TKM ftQ R IH E L86AL MBM8 FD88UM0N OF 30888 Bfn-HBK A M U *. BM00KA5-. ■ ■ ■ COOP | \ B% 1 BUSINESS Ruben Guzman, Daily Texan Staff David Hailey shops frequently at north Co-Op, now a warehouse that sells used books back to University students for 2» percent of original listed price. North Co-Op closes for lack of sales By T. JAMES MUNOZ Daily Texan Staff University Co-Op officials have decided to close the C o-O p’s north retail branch be­ cause o f financial losses resulting trom a lack o f book sales. The University Co-Op North Discount, 4101 Guadalupe S t., sells and purchases used paperbacks, records and textbooks not adopted by UT faculty. Co-Op President Jerry Matthews said many customers visit the store to sell used paperbacks, but few com e to buy. “ It flatly didn’t pay for it­ se lf,” he said. The branch also acts as a warehouse for used books the Co-Op has purchased from students. The w arehouse will rem ain in o p ­ eration, although the retail section will close Sept. 1. M atthew s said. The retail store opened last fall as an e x ­ perim ent, but officials decided to discontin­ ue the store after sales did not justify its existence. M atthew s said the north branch was pri­ m arily designed as a w arehouse lor books sold to other stores. The w arehouse was purchased in 1979 as a w holesale business. M atthew s said w holesale bookstores sell used books to students at 20 percent of the original list pnce and at 50 percent ot the list pnce to other bookstores. to 1979, the C o-O p purchased Prior books through w holesalers who bought the books directly from students, M atthew s said. Because the m anagem ent does not know until sum m er which books will be adopted by UT faculty, the C o-O p has been forced to buy books from w holesalers that were purchased directly from students. The exchange caused problem s for the store. M atthew s said, because the w hole­ salers purchased the books at 20 percent of the list price and sold them to the C o-O p at 51) percent. To im prove the situation, M atthew s said the Co-O p decided to becom e a w holesaler to buy books directly from students. As a w holesaler, the store also sells books adopt­ ed by UT faculty to bookstores on other cam puses. The new transaction w as designed to save students m oney and prevent them trom having to pay higher prices because o f the sto re ’s need to re-buy the books from a w holesaler. M atthew s said the C o -O p ’s north branch has becom e the second largest used book w holesaler in the nation since its form ation four years ago. The store still purchases books from w holesalers but no longer has to purchase the sam e books w holesalers bought directly from students, he said. Campus Coke machines accept bills, return change have been doing for u s .” he said. “ About one-third o f the m oney in those m achines are dollar b ills.” John C orrigan, accounting junior, said. “ I think it is a lot m ore c o n v en ien t.” Stoffer said A ustinites and U T stud en ts could expect to see m ore o f these vending m achines “ hopefully by N o v em b er.” “ The value data for these m achines is not even on the m arket yet. but I am plan­ ning to buy som e m o re .” he said. He added that if the m achine takes the dollar bill but does not give the buyer a drink or the change, a refund is possible. refund “ There is an envelope on the side o f the m achine with th e m ,” S toffer said. “ The person should fill out their nam e and dorm and the cam pus ser­ vice should mail the refund to th e m .' ’ form s in S toffer said C oca-C ola is testing another type o f Coke m achine, but it will not be available to the A ustin m arket. This m a­ chine, he said, enables a person to buy a Coke and play a video gam e at once. “ 1 think that m achine is just a dying gim ­ m ic k ,” Stoffer said. “ In the places w e 'v e tried it, w e ’ve noticed that it holds the at­ three tention of the buyers for m onths, but then the novelty w ears o f f .” two or He said the m achine is program m ed by a com puter chip and m alfunctions easily. “ A lso, we want to try to hold our prices down as low as p o ssib le .' he said A nother new project C oca-C ola has un­ dertaken is a caf feine free version o f Coke. “ T h at’s doing real well for u s .” Stoffer said. “ Not as well as our regular C oke, obviously, but w e’re pleased with it By JAMES DUNN Daily Texan Staff You have just walked 20 minutes in the sweltering summer heat from your apart­ ment to class on campus. You walk up to the nearest soft-drink machine and dig deep into your pocket, your mouth feeling drier by the second. Thirty-five cents. Five cents more and you might not collapse from heatstroke. You have seven bucks in your pocket, but it might as well be seven seashells because the vending machine only takes change. For those o f us who do not tote our piggy banks all over the place, this scenario may have occurred on more than one occasion. But the Coca-Cola Bottling Company has come to the rescue. The company has de­ cided to offer the public a Coke machine that takes dollar bills and returns a drink and change. The soft-drink company is testing this de­ vice at the University, said Charlie Stoffer, Coca-Cola vending manager. Such ma­ chines have been placed in Jester Hall, Bur- dine Hall and the Fine Arts Building, Stoffer said, and one more will be placed at Jester bookstore. “ The only four machines like that are right here at the U niversity,” Stoffer said, “ because o f the volume o f students even during the summer and because we could place traffic the machines at heavy outlets.” The machines were installed earlier this summer, Stoffer said. Stoffer said sales have increased in ma­ chines that accept dollar bills. “ W e’re really pleased with what they 70%, (■nor* th an 33,000 parsons) University students In off-campus live hom es and apart­ ments throughout the Austin areal On work break, H.B. Smith selects soft drink from Coke’s dollar machine. Ruben Guzman, Daily Texan Staff Electronic news boards to expand UT services By JAMES DUNN Daily Texan Staff T he U niversity is am ong 120 colleges and universities the U nited States using electronic news and m essage boards. throughout T he boards are set up to run local new s, cam pus announcem ents and national and international news in eight-m inute cycles, an official for the Electronic N ew s Network said M onday. ENN is a D allas-based firm. Rick M ackey, vice president o f opera­ tions and one of the founders o f Dallas- based E N N , said tw o o f the c om pany’s 5- foot long m essage boards w ere installed at the U niversity last O ctober for free. “ The college d o e sn ’t pay a n y th in g ,” M ackey said. “ W e get our m oney through outside a d v ertisin g .” T he tw o electronic boards are in the For­ ty A cres dining room in the T exas Union Building and in the Varsity C afeteria. A d­ vertising a 50-character m essage on one of the boards costs betw een $100 and $600, M ackey said. C am pus unions supply “ traffic fig u res" o f the num ber o f people w ho see the m es­ sage boards so advertisers m ay determ ine the effectiveness o f them , he said. H ow ever, T exas Union M anager M arcia H arelik said: “ W e have not m ade any sort o f attem pt to gauge the num ber o f people w ho see it. W e certainly like having them (the m essage boards), but we d o n ’t have any obligation to EN N . “ 1 w ould think the advertisers would w ant to com e up with som e sort o f rating sy ste m .” Student response to the m essage board has been favorable, she said. “ People do seem to w atch i t,” Harelik said. “ T hey m ight not w atch it if they had to stand up, but as it is now they can sit dow n and watch it We h a v en ’t received any unfavorable com m ents about them . ” M ackey said SM U , T exas Tech and the U niversity o f H ouston also have electronic m essage boards. “ W e’ve gotten 15 to 20 super recom ­ m endation letters and no negative o n e s,” M ackey said o f nationw ide reaction to the new s service. He added that Harelik wrote his com pany in D ecem ber saying the “ sys­ tem is very w orthw hile. “ We plan to expand our services to other cam puses, and we plan to expand within the c a m p u se s," M ackey continued. The U niversity will have additional message boards in the future, he added. ENN President Bruce M cD ougald said his netw ork reaches 1.7 m illion university students M any o f these students do not read cam pus new spapers or bulletin board posters for m essages, he said. “ One university ran a test announcing one cam pus candidate m eeting on the ENN sign, another in the student new spaper and a third on bulletin board p o ste rs,” he said. the “ T he poster m eeting drew poorly, new spaper m eeting drew a larger crowd and E N N 's m eeting drew standing room only ” The co m p an y 's national and international new s com prises six o f the eight m inutes, w hile cam pus, local news and advertising are allotted a total o f tw o m inutes The board uses United Press Internation­ al wire for its national and international new s, and m ost local news is sent one week in advance to the co m p an y ’s Dallas office. M cD ougald said the m essage board can ac­ com odate som e cancellations and changes in local news. " W e can have som ething up and running w ithin 15 m inutes, and we do that fairly fre q u e n tly ." M cD ougald said. Mexico’s fiscal dilemmas cause industrial restrictions By ROBERT HERNANDEZ Daily Texan Staff The devaluation o f the peso in M exico has caused the M exican governm ent to limit purchases by private industry to certain pri­ ority item s. “ The situation is tough because the ex­ change rate is 150 pesos to one d o lla r,” said V ictor Rom ero L opetequi, a represent­ ative o f the M exican C onsulate office in A ustin. “ The exchange rate is harder for the M exican citizen so they cannot com e as o f­ ten (to T exas) because o f their b u d g e t," L opetequi said. Total exports to M exico from the United States in agricultural and nonagricultural goods were valued at $17 billion in 1981 and slipped to $11 billion in 1982. accord­ ing to the U .S . Foreign A gricultural Trade Statistical Report for 1982. T exas exports o f agricultural goods to M exico fell by alm ost half, from approxi­ m ately $148 m illion in 1981 to $76 m illion in 1982. M exican President M iguel de la M adrid’s governm ent inherited m assive econom ic problem s including an inflation rate o f 98 percent, an unem ploym ent rate o f about 50 percent and a private and public foreign debt o f m ore than $83 billion, according to a status report by the D epartm ent o f Re­ search and Data Services o f the T exas In­ dustrial C om m ission. The report also stated M exico had a near­ ly bankrupt treasury , a peso that had lost about 83 percent o f its value against the dollar and ram pant governm ent waste and corruption. T otal im ports to the Port o f H ouston in 1982 w ere valued at alm ost $10.6 billion, w ith exports at $13.3 billion. Im ports to the Port o f H ouston from M exico exceeded $1 billion, w ith crude petroleum the biggest im port at $ 898.6 m illion. ‘Texas im ports from M exico are m ainly oil to be re fin e d .” L opetequi said. “ We d o n ’t pay (for the refining cost) in cash: we pay in products R efineries keep som e of the refined oil in lieu o f cash In 1981, M exico m oved trom fifth to third as the largest trading partner for the U nited States, said Frank A lagna, head o f international research for TIC. M exico is one o f T ex as' biggest trading partners, with $10.2 billion worth o f goods shipped to M exico from T exas in 1981, he said. “ W e are concerned with M exico buying in T e x a s ,” A lagna said “ M exico wants to buy $1.6 billion worth o f grain from the is accepting bids from Texas U .S . and farm ers “ D evaluation and restrictions o f imports to M exico has been devastating, it has re­ duced the (Texas) oil field exports pretty lo w .” A lagna said. “ Along the border they have been hit over the head. ” L opetequi said Austin is not a major trad­ ing city with M exico and has not felt much o f the devaluation effect. “ The market and the shopping area is bigger in other cities than in A ustin, and the prices are m ore c o m p e titiv e,” Lopetequi said. A ccording to the status report released by Dr Bob M cKay o f D epartm ent o f Research and D ata Services o f the T exas Industrial C om m ission, the M exican crisis has seri­ ously im pacted trade, real estate, banking, in te rn a tio n a l e m p lo y m en t throughout Texas. tra d e an d Som e m erchants have liquidated their in­ ventories by selling their m erchandise to businesses in San A ntonio, while others have opened outlets in com m unities away from the border, according to M cK ay's re­ port. The report also states m ajor T exas banks are jeopardized by the M exican Financial crisis because the banks have loaned ap­ proxim ately $1.4 billion to M exican cu s­ tom ers