Vol. 88, No. 12 3 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Monday, September 19,1988 25$ Officials remain wary in Gilbert’s aftermath M : L V L ~ 9 ü U' ■ _ X x 4 ü 0 4 d u i 1 J V 4 K ‘S : ( / ' i M s t q f i a o j o y q s a n q ^ n o 5 V Í I Q n ■ :■ n o M >10 o J C 0 0 Í y ¿ ' W* Associated Press Emergency Management officials continued to monitor North and West Texas for flooding and torna­ does Sunday night as the remnants of Hurricane Gilbert drifted across northern Texas. Forecasters with the National Weather Service expect that the sys­ tem will continue to spawn thun­ derstorms and high winds in the Texas Panhandle even though the storm had already fizzled down to 9 tropical depression by Saturday. Bob Gibson, controller at the state's Emergency Operating Center in Austin, said his office had no re­ ports of flooding Sunday night but was continuing to monitor the areas where flash tornado warnings were in effect. flood and "We're keeping an eye on great big chunks of the state right now," Gibson said. "But we're not really getting any more additional torna­ does being reported." tornadoes Numerous touched down in San Antonio Saturday, kill­ ing a woman, destroying homes, uprooting trees and roofs at Kelly Air Forve Base, and damaging an air-conditioning system at Audie Murphy Veterans Admnistration Hospital. West Texas tornadoes Sunday damaged trees, power lines and a bam, and Gibson said his office was still receiving information from the National Weather Service. "If s been actually pretty light to­ night," Gibson said. "I think we're still lucky." State officials reported early Sun­ day that the Rio Grande rose 30 feet overnight and was expected to go up even more. In northeastern Mexico, U.S. Coast Guard aircraft from New Or­ leans were picking up people threatened by swollen nvers. Mexi­ can state authorities requested the Coast Guard assistance. In Monterrey, workers searched for the bodies of up to 200 people swept away when a river poured over its banks and overturned four buses. Ninety' people were con firmed dead. A U.S. Coast Guard helicopter lost power and crashed during evac uahon operations in Sabinas de Hi­ dalgo, but no one was injured, offi­ cials said. ‘ W e’re k«¡ ping an eye on great big chunks of the state right now.’ — Bob Gibson, controfter at the state’s Emergency Operating Center Commander Leopoldo Villarreal said the three Americans and one Mexican on board were taken to the local hospital for a checkup and re­ leased. Their names were not imme­ diately available. The buses were caught in the path of the Santa Catarina River when a flash flood spawned by Hurricane Gilbert ripped a 40-mile- long path of destruction Saturday through northern Mexico's most populated region. Gilbert's rains created a 10-foot- deep, 150-yard-wide torrent of muddy water by Saturday when the river roared through the dty. By Sunday, it was almost back to its normal size of 20 feet, allowing sol­ diers to use cranes to pull the crushed body of one intercity pas­ senger bus from the mud. "They hope to find bodies be­ cause they don't know exactly how many people were in the bus or how many were able to save them­ selves," said rescue coordinator Lt. Col. Vicente Gamez of the 7th Mili­ tary Zone. The first bus, yanked by its chassis from a murky grave in die Monterrey riverbed, revealed only empty seats, twisted metal and piles of shoes and clothing. Soldiers used picks to dig through the rubble of mud, stones and tree branches inside the bus's crushed remains. Another bus, also upside down and crushed, lay in the gravel on the other side of the stream. The re­ mains of two other buses were fur­ ther downstream. Gamez said only two survivors were located by Sunday. The storm left 30,000 people homeless and caused about $60 mil­ lion in damages to public roads, bridges and other facilities in metro­ politan Monterrey, Gonzalez Baras said. On Sunday, many used picks or bare hands to dig through the rub­ ble that remained where their tiny concrete and tin houses had stood. Portions of the dying storm will probably drift across the central United States during the week, said Jim Dugan, a weather service fore­ caster. in Authorities the Texas Hill Country were keeping a watchful eye on the Guadalupe River, which easily overflows during rainstorms, but no flooding was reported Sun­ day. In San Antonio, residents of apartment buildings and homes continued their cleanup effort while dty and telephone crews worked to restore service. One twister struck a lone mobile home southeast of downtown early Saturday, killing 59-year-old Emily Dickens, who was thrown about 100 feet from her bedroom. The same storm system later spawned a tornado that tore roofs off several buildings at Kelly Air Force Base, causing more than $3 million damage. With reports from Dennis McCarthy, Daily Texan staff KLRU walkout ‘90 percent’ certain ByALANHMES Daily Texan Staff A KLRU workers' strike is "90 percent" likely as negotiations over wages between labor and management at the TV station stalled after three months of talks, a KLRU Production Workers Guild official said Sunday. "The chances are 90 percent towards striking, and 10 percent towards a settlement before that," said Dan Martaus, bargaining committee member of the KLRU F*roduction Workers Guild. "This is based on [KLRU management's] past willingness to bargain on major issues, especial­ ly wages," Martaus said. Kathleen White, vice president for finance and administration and management's chief contrac­ tual negotiator for the PBS-af filia ted TV station, declined to comment. Guild chairman Paul Sweeney said a strike could be called at any moment, but guild officials wanted to wait for the effects of a "media blitz" they are planning. "Strictly speaking, yes, a strike could happen at any time, but we're going to give our informa­ tional campaign time to have an effect/' Swee­ ney said. The campaign, which Sweeney said would start Monday, is designed to air the guild's grievances over what he called "unfair labor practices," specifically KLRU management's de­ mand that workers accept a two-year wage freeze. "They claim that they can't afford a pay in­ crease, and we feel that we should be able to see some financial proof of this, that we have a legal right to see it," Sweeney said. "They feel that they are not required by law to show us the information," he said. Sweeney said the guild has filed a charge with the National Labor Relations Board — a govern­ mental entity in charge of administering labor law — asking for help in obtaining KLRU's fi­ nancial information. Martaus said the guild has taken the initiative in settling negotiations, twice amending its wage demands, while management has remained steadfast on its position. "We went into the negotiations with guaran­ teed wage increases for every year of the three- year contract, then we reduced the amount of those increases in response to the station's claim of their inability to pay," Martaus said. "Our next step toward reaching the settlement was to agree to a one-year wage freeze with guaranteed increases in the other two years of die contract. They said no." Sweeney said the guild would not agree to management's demand that they accept a two- year contract with no wage increases. Sweeney added guild members also are dissat­ isfied with management's proposed benefit cuts, including less health insurance, reduced sick leave and "weakened" job security. Sweeney said that while a strike is a definite possibility, the guild wants to use it as a last resort. "We are trying to avoid a strike at this point," he said. "We want to exhaust all possibilities available to us before we take a strike, but if we have to take a strike, we will do it." - In the words of come­ dian Tom Hester, "Art is hard, art is very hard ” The Austin comedy scene is growing stronger, with more than 20 co­ medians putting the city on the comedy map Gold — The United States ex­ perienced ups and downs on the sec­ ond day of Olympic competition in Seoul. Boxing woes plagued the Ameri­ can team, while men s and women’s basketball squads recorded victories for the United States And a U.S. women's swim team member won the country a 10 gold medal. WEATHER - Yeah, right Like I’m gonna believe this weather box Everyone and their dog said Hurricane Gilbert would come to Texas with 175 mph winds and annihilate this part of the country Yeah, right. Gulf Coast resi­ dents evacuated, thousands of people stocked up on flashlights, plywood and canned goods, and they almost post­ poned the Texas-New Mexico game And now you say Monday's high will be in the low 90s with a 20 percent chance of rain and 15 to 20 mph winds from the south. Yeah, right. Galveston's still there. Padre's still there. Brownsville? Still there. Monday's low will be in the mid- 70s? Yeah, right INDEX AroundCampus.................................. 15 C lassified .......................................12 Comics............................................. 15 Editorials....................................... 4 Sports ............................. 11 State & L o cal................................ 8 University....................................... 6 World & N atio n ............................. 3 Haitian president ousted in coup Former Duvalier aide seizes control as fighting kills at least 6 salines Barracks, was named com- mander-in-chief of the army, but Avril did not mention Paul. Dessa- lines is the most feared unit in the 7,000-person army. A witness told The Associated Press that she saw two bodies in the courtyard of Romain's luxurious house and that die property was oc­ cupied by soldiers. Associated Press PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Brig. Gen. Prosper Avril, a former mili­ tary adviser for the Duvalier dicta­ torship, declared himself president on Sunday after ousting Lt. Gen. Henri Namphy. Avril, adjutant general of the army, said in an early morning ad­ dress on national television that the Presidential Guard toppled Nam­ phy on Saturday because it was "sickened" by the way Namphy governed. Namphy was sent to the neighboring Dominican Republic. Residents reported hearing heavy gunfire Saturday night near the p resid en tial palace in w hat appeared to be fighting between military factions. Frantz Lubin, Haiti's director of information, said soldiers were killed, but Avril mentioned no casu­ alties. Haiti radio stations reported that at least six people were killed in coup-related dashes, and that mobs pillaged two homes owned by Nam- ty and die home of Port-au-Prince phy Mai tyor Franck Romain. The military government ap­ pealed television broadcast "for calm, discipline and order in respect of individual rights and liberties." in a national "The house was stripped, doors were tom off the hinges. It was a shell," the witness said. Avril took over a week after about 20 men armed with machetes, handguns and steel pikes attacked the Roman Catholic Church during a Mass being said by the Rev. Jean Bertrand Aristide, a vocal critic of the military government. Thirteen people were killed and 77 wound­ ed. Opposition leaders Mamed Namphy's government for die at­ tack and for another church burning two days later. On Sunday morning, slum dwellers killed and burned the body of one man and cheered when a sol­ dier shot and killed another man suspected of participating in the massacre. By midday, the dty was quiet, but die airport was dosed. Avril, who was adviser to ousted President Jean-Oaude Duvalier, said Haiti will respect all interna­ tional treaties, liberties and human rights and said that "dialogue «rill be honored for the sake of national recondiiation." Lubin said Jean-Qaude Paul, commander of the 700-person Dea- Paul, who has been indicted on federal drug trafficking charges in Miami, had been considered the most powerful figure in Haiti after Namphy. In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Anita Stockman said noncommissioned officers of the Presidential Guard captured Nam­ phy in an apparently bloodless coup and persuaded Avril to take over. She said they were believed to be "dissatisfied with recent human rights violations and the general de­ terioration in the security situation punctuated by attacks against the churches over the past two weeks." Stockman said Avril phoned the U.S. ambassador and said he was assuming the presidency. She said the U.S. government still wants Paul to answer the drug trafficking charges in court. Namphy arrived in a private plane at a private airport in Santo Domingo, the Dominican capital, early Sunday morning, said Fabio Herrera Cabral, deputy foreign min­ ister of the Dominican Republic. Haiti shares the island of Hispaniola with the Dominican Republic. Lingering jail issue back in federal court By MMKE ERICKSON Daily Texan Staff Travis county officials will once again be in court Monday, dragged in by an issue that does not seem to go away — the over­ crowded county jail. County officials, represented by County Attorney Ken Oden, will try to convince federal magistrate Stephen Capelle that they are not violating a 16-year-old federal court order to end overcrowding in county detention facilities. "We «rill attempt to bring for­ ward what we consider to be the full picture," Oden said. In other words, Oden «rill try to lay the blame where he and many other county officials across the state believe the blame should lie — at the doorstep of the Texas De­ partment of Corrections. When the TDC set a limit sever­ al years ago on how many state inmates it would accept each month, county jails started to fill with people who were supposed to be TDC guests, but were stuck in the county jail where they were held for trial. Eleven Texas counties, includ­ ing Travis, are under federal court orders to solve the crowding prob­ lem, said Steve Bickerstaff, legal counsel for the Association of Tex­ as Counties. Several dozen others are in­ volved .in litigation «rith jail in­ mates but are under no federal court orders, he said. Bickerstaff said 8,600 state-sen­ tenced inmates are stuck in county jails across the state. Travis County's problems start­ ed in 1972, when Bobby Taylor, a local attorney, filed a lawsuit on behalf of 17 inmates in the old Trains County Jail. As a result of that suit, county officials agreed to dose that jail and build a new one. Only half of that agreement has been met, by the construction of a new county jail. County Judge Mil Aleshire said between 250 and 300 state-sen­ tenced inmates awaiting transfer to TDC facilities are held in county facilities, forcing the county to keep the old jail open. "That's the core of the problem we have," he said. Aleshire said holding those state prisoners already has cost the county several million dollars in property taxes that could have been spent on other programs. "They have been renting our county facilities «rithout paying for them," he said. Aleshire said jail-related costs are the only reason the county is having to consider a property tax increase this year. In July, the Tra\ris County Com­ missioners Court authorized Oden to research all legal options for re­ gaining that money and getting state inmates out of the county fa­ cilities — including filing a lawsuit against the state. Although other counties state- «ride are considering similar litiga­ tion, Bickerstaff said he does not recommend it. "There is not, in my view, im­ mediate relief that is achievable through that litigation," he said. While no counties have yet sued the state, Bickerstaff said "the po­ tential for litigation definitely ex­ ists." Trains County won't take that step until county officials see the results of the federal court hear­ ing, Aleshire said. All future legal action may de­ pend on that federal hearing. Aleshire and others have raised the possibility that the state could be dragged into the county's law­ suit as a co-defendant. Oden said he «rill try to submit testimony from several high-ranking state of­ ficials sho«ving the state is to blame for the overcrowding. Another possible hearing out­ come may be a dass-action suit on behalf of all state inmates held in county jails, a possibility Taylor first raised at a July meeting in Austin of county officials from across the state. Taylor said then that those in­ mates are all losing benefits avail­ able to them in TDC, including good-time credit that allows them early release from prison. Aleshire said he understands Taylor's position. "Bobby Taylor and 1 have this problem in common," he said. Page 2/THE DAILY TEXAN/Monday, September 19,1988 Th e Daily Texan v—' MG rw m w n m m o u n EdNor................................................................................................ M toQ ocM n Managing EdNor....................................... ......................................Charla Handaraon Aaaodaa» Managing EdNora . . . . Bohuytor Dbron, Slaoay Fraadanlhal. Janndar Horan, Robart Wlonaky Nawa EdNor...........................................................................................JundsWoo AaaodaMNawa EdNora..................................................... N ew NaalgnwanM Ed N o r.................................................................... Diana H a w Qanaral Raportara............................................... Karan Adama, Mika Erickaon, Jm Kannatt, Suaan Dtfuini unMn, uvnnii MCvW ^fi u n o i MMcn SpaoM Pagaa EdNor...............................................................................AprNEubanka Aaaodala EdNora...................................................................Scott Hanaon, Saan WaWt EXartalnniant EdNor............................................................................. Slav® Crawford Aaaortafa ErNartMnmant EdNor.................................................................. JaNTurranNna Spor Ed N or........................................................................................MlhoFannin Aaaoriafa Sporta E d N o r.............................................................................. JimQraar Qanaral Sporta Raportara.......................Slava Dawla, Jarry Qamandar, Claranca HM, Qarry LaavaM Photo EdNor........................................................................................ D my Byram Anpgaa EdNor................................................................................... Bra* BtoomquM Aaaodala tmagm EdN ora........................................................ RachalJantona, Hob Walkar Boran, Ksvfr Issue Staff Art O ra d o r...........................................................................................VanGarratt Nawa Aaaiatanta. Jaanna Acton. Andraa Eguiguran, Alan Hinas, Randy Kennady, Tad KNNan, Qrag Part d Sporta Aaaiatant...................................................................................... Ban Cohan Sports W ritor......................................................................... Ray Oaa. Martaaa SNvara EdNortal CcHumnéal........................................................... Rick F ttadga, Jaoquakna Trttniar EdNortal Aaaiatant.............................................................................. Daa Ann Bullard MakaupEdNor......................................................................................... DakaBond WWaEd x ...................................................................................... Craig Branaon Copy Editora................................... Kristis Brown, Janny Jotin, Slava Maraiman. Jukanna Olaon Photographara......................................................Danial Byram, John Moora, Tom Slavana Graphica Aaaiatant............................................................................... Joa SallatwhNa Comic Strip Cartooniata................................................... VanGarratt, John Kaan, Tom King, David Marks, Robert Rodriguaz, Martin Wagnar Volunta ......................JuNa Jaoobaon, Lydia Lum, Rafa Taylor Advertising Local Diapiay.................................... Daborah Bannworth. Tony Colvin, Ann dal Llano, Batty EMa John Farria, David Hamlin, Daniaa Johnaon, David Lutz Bath Mttchsil, Gina PadMa, Suaan Stripling, Chrta WVaon Ciaaaiflad Diapiay................................. Laalia KuykandaH, Ricardo R. Famandaz. NataNa Niaanar Cía '.tifiad Tsisphons Saiaa.......................................Katty Harratt. Chariaa Hyman, Malania Naal, ttNwun rvMntt, w _j i _ j powgi, mona woo, jo s ¿annsr Ciaaaiflad Taiaphona Sarvioa...............................................Suaan Flaiachakar, JannHar Haad. Linda Martin. Shawn McMton. Janat Pabia, Toni Schmitt Tha Daily Texan (USPS 146-440). a tludant nawapapar at The University of Texas at Austin, la puMahed by Texas Student Publications. S00 White. Austin, TX 78705 The Party Texan is putrtshed Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and whan school is not In session. Second dase [«w y paid at Austin, TX 78710. News oonbibutione wW be eooaptsd by tsiephons (471-4661), at the edNorial office (Texas Student PubHcartons BuNding 2.122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Buikkng A4.136). For local and nattonal diapiay advertlaing. cat 471-1866. For rtassttlsd diapiay and rutionN cl— silled display advertising, call 471-8900. For cfasalflsd word advertising, ce» 471 -6244. Entire contents copyright 1986 Texas Student PubHcartons. The Party Texan Mai 9ubacr%rilon Rates One Semester (FsR or Spring).............................................................................. 830.00 Two Semesters (Fal and Spring).......................................................................... 56.00 Summer S e ssio n ......................................................................................... 20.00 One Year (Fal. Spring and Sum m er)...................................................................... 75.00 To chtrae bv VISA or MastsrCwd. cal 471 -5083. Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publcelione, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209, or to TSP Bulking C3.200, or cal 471-5063 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to TSP, P.O. Box 0, Austin, TX 78713-7209. List grows for possible causes of Delta crash ís.-»;í?; Grande 477-7887 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE. W ANT ADS...471 -5244 c o u p o n . ROFFLER SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN SHAMPOO* _ CUT BLOW DRY U S «rv tc*s p*i1orm * ur 4526 A u t ~ Dmmt 78756 (512) 451 it03 MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED T IC K E T D I S M I S S A L O NLY $15.00 NIAt CAMPUS NOTiSTS KfGISTEI IY PHONE coupon «Mh you ) (D o n »format to bnnq Budget Driving School 454-5077 4314 Medical Parkway GYM 4X21 Guadalupe Next door to A ustin B arbell Co Open Every Day 459-9174 STANLEY H. KAPLAN A REPUTATION THAT SPEAKS FOR ITSELF! GMAT GRE CPA LSAT 1 0 /1 5 /8 8 11/ 12/88 1 1 /2 /8 7 12/ 3/88 bPEt D R L A D I N G I KAPLAN OMUVXUnMi (MB Monday, September 19,1988 Page 6 U niversity T h e Daily T ex a n Gearing-up period awaits SA By KAREN ADAMS Daily Texan Staff This semester's first assembly meeting of the Students' Association Monday may not have a crowded agenda, but it is one part of a "gearing-uj period" for the group, SA President Mike Hulbert said. James Ray, SA vice president, said the first meeting will be spent mostly updat­ ing representatives on work done over the summer. Ray also said one bill will be consid­ ered. Business representative Patrick O'Dan- iel, an honors business and accounting senior, is co-sponsoring a bill that would give $283 to the Study Abroad Program through the International Office. O'Daniel said that because of the large number of students that participated in the program — more than 1,000 — there have been some problems keeping infor­ mation on the students updated. A reception for program participants is in the planning stages, he said. The gath- ering would provide an opportunity study abroad officials to talk with th e : dents. for stu- "This bill is to help defray the cost of bringing the students together," O'Daniel said. Defining the relationshij between the Cabinet of College Councils, different SA agencies and SA committees has been one of Hulbert's summer projects as a result of changes in the SA constitution. Those changes, approved by the UT System Board of Regents Aug. 11, include making the chairperson of the Cabinet of College Councils an executive officer of the association, thus incorporating the two bodies. Hulbert said the move would improve the working relationship between the or­ ganizations. "You can have communication without that formal link," he said. But, he said, in past years those in lower levels of the or­ ganizations "didn't interact as much as they should have." One of the first trials of this new rela­ tionship will be the revival of Of Coune!, a course description publication discontin­ ued after the spring 1986 session. He said the councils are an "ideal mech­ anism" for gathering needed information from instructors, because the members of­ ten have good working relationships with professors. "This is a test case to see how well we mesh together," he said. Because the constitution does not spe­ cifically delineate relationships between different SA groups, time had to be spent defining organizational structures. One result has been an increased focus on SA agencies, Hulbert said. The University Policy Committee, for example, will have 10 to 15 subcommit­ tees, and they will be more aggressive in finding potential difficulties for students, Hulbert said. Other agencies will share in the aggres­ sive spirit, he said. For example, Students United for Rape Elimination, or SURE, will increase its publicity and the number of programs it runs. Study: Students consider AIDS risk low By CARMEL ZAVALA Daily Texan Staff The majority of UT students consider themselves sexually active but not in a high-risk category for AIDS, a recent sur­ vey by the UT Student Health Center showed. "Ninety-four percent consider them­ selves not at high risk," said Demetri Va- calis, health center director of emergency medical services. The survey results were presented in a two-day conference by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board last week. The conference, "AIDS and The College Campus: Perspectives and Policies," con­ sidered health and legal issues confront­ ing colleges amid the epidemic of AIDS, a primarily sexually transmitted disease. The survey of 670 respondents to 2,000 questionnaires showed UT students be­ lieve AIDS is a disease that only affects gay men or intravenous drug users. AIDS can be transmitted in any sexual encounter. Pregnant women also can transmit AIDS to their babies. Students also believe AIDS is controll­ able, and medical science will find a cure, the survey showed. Eighty percent said only high-risk groups and prostitutes should be tested for AIDS, 80 percent said anyone getting married should be tested, and 76 percent said all gays should be tested. the Other results indicated 95 percent knew condoms could risk of reduce transmitting AIDS, but only 14 percent said they always used condoms and 31 percent said they sometimes used con­ doms. Fifty-five percent said they never used condoms. One-third of the respondents believed incorrectly that it is possible to contract the disease from toilet seats and half feared being near an AIDS patient who coughed or sneezed. Ninety-seven percent knew AIDS can be transmitted by sharing needles and 95 percent correctly said the exchange of body fluids increases the chances o f con­ tracting AIDS. "We need to get the information on AIDS out through college newspapers, maybe through special supplements," Va- "The classroom activities calis said. should also extend beyond the health and science classes, to the law and education classes." Ray Farabee, UT System general coun­ sel, told the conference that the UT Sys­ tem handles AIDS matters with the rights of patients and the general public in mind. "It's a balancing act between a vic­ tim's rights and the institution's liability," he said. The actual number of UT students with AIDS is unknown, health center officials have said. Open wide Steve Koenig attempts to resuscitate his 1961 two years. It broke down on campus while Bug Eye Sprite. Koenig, a junior at Reagan Koenig was taking it on a test drive to work out High School, has been restoring the car for the bugs. DanM Byram/DaHy Taxan Staff Brackenridge apartment residents protest reduction in preschool services By UNDA MILCH Daily Texan Staff Disgruntled married UT students said Friday they plan a more exten­ sive campaign to secure full-day prekindergarten education for their children. The parents said they will draft a letter to Austin Independent School District board members this week and follow up with phone calls. Fernando Craveiro, a doctoral student in environmental health en­ gineering, said the parents will send the letter "only when we have suffi­ cient data." AISD recently informed students living in Brackenridge Apartments, a married UT student housing com­ plex, that their preschoolers would be offered half- rather than full-day schooling because of overenroll­ ment at Casis Elementary. William Matta, a doctoral student in applied linguistics, said the par­ ents find full-day education essen­ tial because most children affected are from low-income or non-native English speaking homes. The parents had asked that their children be transferred to nearby Mathews Elementary because they believed the school had enough space. Last year, AISD redrew district boundaries, moving Brackenridge from the Mathews to Casis zone. The school district has tried to solve the problem by arranging day care for the children through Ex- tend-A-Care, a non-profit organiza­ tion. But most students living at Brack­ enridge do not qualify for fee subsi­ dies and would be required to pay $105 per month for the service. T C L A S S R I N G S Legend leads the way to a new level of style... strong, distinctive, elegant. LEGEND, with handsome new school identification features, and a multitude of other customiz­ ing options, is also the first ring to offer a choice of two sided designs. For the ultimate memento of your college experience, choose LEGEND. All ArtCarved ring styles are now on sále - the Co-op has them all. Stop by and order yours today! (Deposit required) The Quality. The Craftsmanship. The Reward You Deserve. UNIVERSITY CO-OP M a j o r i n g In S e r v i c e S i n c e 1 8 8 6 M M M M R i 28 4 0 (iCADALCPK • 47(1-7211 T w o L a i i d i *: I ’ a m k i n o L o t s H i : i i i m > Tin-: Go-oi* V - i O caassvC; t o $60 O il Pennzoil Co. donates legal documents to ITT The Pennzoil Company of Hous­ ton has given the Barker Texas His­ tory Center a complete set of legal documents and other materials gen­ erated during the Pennzoil-Texaco trial. William Livingston, UT vice pres­ ident and dean of graduate studies, said the donations will be useful to students for research in law, busi­ ness, history and communications. Don Carleton, director of the mu­ seum, said, "It's a ready-to-go col­ lection that's well put together." The collection includes 23,000 pages of trial transcripts, all testimo­ ny taken in the case, legal docu­ ments and pleadings entered in state and federal courts, and major news clippings of the trial. Pennzoil was awarded $10.3 bil­ lion in April after charging that Tex­ interfered with Inc. had aco to acquire PennzoU's agreement part of Getty Oil. LRJ dean to attend meeting The dean of die Lyndon B. John­ son School of Public Affairs and the director of die LBJ Library will at­ tend a m< *ting on children's issues in Washington, D.C., on Monday. The meeting, called "A Historic Day for Children," will emphasize the importance of investing in chil­ dren's health and educational pro­ grams, said Max Sherman, LBJ School of Public Affairs dean. He and Harry Middleton, LBJ Library director, will represent the Univer­ sity at die meeting. "The greatest asset in our country is our children," Sherman said. "Any time we discuss issues con­ cerning them, it's important. Chil­ dren are our future." Former secretaries of the U.S. De­ partment of Health and Human Ser­ vices, as well as current secretary Otis Bowen, will discuss how gov­ ernment policy affects children. The moderator will be Judy Woodruff of the MacNeiVLehrer News Hour. The School of Public Affairs and die LBJ Library are among the meet­ ing's sponsors. Others include com­ panies such as Ptilsbury and John­ son & Johnson. Grant deadline approaches The annual competition for Ful- bright grants to study abroad will end Oct. 3, said Ivy McQuiddy, UT Fulbright program adviser. Most of the grants provide round- tuition and trip housing for one academic year. transportation, Applicants must be U.S. citizens. They also should have a bachelor's degree and be fluent in the lan­ guage of the host country. Applications are available at the International Center Study Abroad Office, 100 W. 26th St. UT professors to join panel Two UT professors will be among the p melists at a symposium about 1 ' i i1 : i ¡ ■' " H ( ^ k V, f )ni i H f * f i f 11 S ( H i <*< 1 ; ¡ I w • ! ; f i i ■ i h i - . I > ■ 1 )i h o Out of Control ? t h * 1 C o o p o n M 11: ¡: 1. i v . S < | ) 1 < ■ m i ¡ > i ■1 I : ; ii 1 :C>Opm Texas politics Sept. 29-30 at Rice University in Houston. Lewis Gould and Joe Frantz, pro­ fessors of history, will speak at "The World of Texas Politics." Panelists will discuss political financing, scandals and writing about Texas politics. Other panelists will include Jess Hay, member of the UT System Board of Regents; Liz Carpenter, former press secretary to Lady Bird Johnson; Lynn Ashby, The Houston Post editor, and Molly Ivins, Dallas Times Herald columnist. The symposium is open to the public, but seating is limited to 500 people. A $35 registration fee in­ cludes the symposium, a reception and a luncheon. Compiled by Lydia hum DO YOU SUFFER FROM TENSION HEADACHES? If so, you may qualify for a medication survey Financial incentive provided For more information call: BIOMEDICAL ■RESEARCH ■GROUP >nc. * 343-6720 Sx30 a.m.*4i30 p.m. Before his book- signing, "Hollywood” Henderson will give a lecture at noon in the Texas Union Theatre "Hollywood" Henderson's visit is sponsored by: University Coop Texas Union: Recreation Committee Texas Union: Student Issues Committee Texas Union: Afro-american Culture Committee CADEP: Campus Alcohol and Drug Education Program UNIVERSITY CO O P UM4 6 G l'A D A LLPR ♦ 4 7 0 - 7UII P i. k n t y O f F h k f. P a r k i n *. I I k i i i x o T iik (<<> - o i OUR 4TH ANNUAL BRECKENREDGE UT SKI BREAK JAN. 4-JA N .9 • Dapa* Night* $ 3 8 9 p. • tN C L R T A » PROM AUSTIN • W BR/3 BA DELUXE CONDO (8 PERSONS SHARE) • TRANSFERS • i DAY U PTS CALL LISA AT 478-9343 HARWOOD TRAVEL ■ A T 2428 GUADALUPE SINCE 1959M Reception will follow in the Atrium All Interested Please Attend Business Attire Required “My M ends moved into Riverpark Apartments. I wish I had.” THE D a ily TEXAN/Monday, September 19,1988/Page t , « s Good with coupon only. M Cff ¥ 0ne C0UP°n P*r P'm J v H NEW! FREE % A ® FROZEN YOGURT DELIVERY * Lim ited Delivery Area Phi C hi Theta presents Professional Co-ed Business Fraternity MOBIL Representatives Topic: Recruiting and Career Opportunities Monday, Sept. 19,1988 6:30 to 8:30 GSB 2.126 TART IFRESH ATUT We would like to thank the following businesses, agencies, organizations and individuals for their support of this program: 31 Treats Arbor Cinema Burger King Campus Activities Office Capitol of Texas Travel The Chippery Dean of Students Sharon Justice Division of Housing & Food Service Division of Recreational Sports Eastman Kodak Company Ex-Students’ Association I Can’t Believe It’s Yogurt Lincoln Theatre III McDonald’s Mr. Gatti’s Performing Arts Center Pizza Hut Sanborn’s Travel Steve’s Ice Cream Texas Student Publications (Mike Kirkham) Texas Union Thundercloud Subs UT student organizations PRE LEASING FOR SPRING f 1 Bedroom 2 Bedroom $219 $249 immediate occupancy Rherpuk Apartante 444-3917 • f — IN 15 loum Lake Riverside NR SHUTTLE Program Coordinators - Bristol Baxley, Alex Bolbmgge, Cristen Carson, Trinh Pham, Allen Ray, Ruben Reyes, Camille Tipton, and Bradley Wilson Staff - Amy Barker, Jennifer Belk, Felipe Campos, Rubin Casas, Sami Eyskens, Pam Garrison, Shannon Gilliland, Joe Haus, Michelle Hernandez, Tina LeBlanc, Carmen Lizcano, Phillip Montgomery, Traci Thomas, Irene Wang, and Jay Wesevich South LskeHiore Freshmen Services Staff - Maralyn Heimlich, Ron Frigault, Brenda Burt, and Renee Chandler A series of programs coordinated by The Office of the Dean of Students Monday, September 19,1988 Page 8 State & L ocal Man’s death spurs triple investigation By DENNIS McCa r th y Daily Texan Staff After the Sunday morning shoot­ ing death of a 31-year-old parolee by a deputy sheriff, the Travis County Sheriff's Department faces three in­ vestigations to determine whether the deputies involved took appro­ priate action. Sheriffs Department spokesman Curtis Weeks said Deputy Janis Bading shot Patrick Mims at about 2:30 a.m. Sunday after Mims grab­ bed Deputy David Pepper's revolv­ er and tried to shoot him. Sheriff Doyne Bailey has placed Bading and Pepper on administra­ tive assignment until authorities determine whether the two acted appropriately, Weeks said. Shortly after 2 a.m. Sunday, the Sheriffs Department received a call that a man was beating a woman with a sledgehammer, Weeks said. Pepper arrived at 11825 U.S. 183 South at 2:25 a.m., went into the house and attempted to arrest Mims, Weeks said. Mims managed to grab Pepper's revolver when he attempted an ar­ rest, and Mims then tried to shoot Pepper, Weeks said. "They struggled with the gun, and at least three times the gun was pointed at Deputy Pepper's head or stomach," Weeks said. Mims then fired a shot through the ceiling as Bading arrived at the scene. "As Mr. Mims was about to shoot Deputy Pepper, she fired a shot from the shotgun and hit him [Mims] in the upper left arm and chest," Weeks said. Lt. Gary Irwin of the Sheriff s De­ partment said Mims was pro­ nounced dead at the scene. Emergency workers took Pepper to Brackenridge Hospital, where he was treated for a facial cut and re­ leased, Irwin said. Mims' wife, Roy Jean Mims, 28, taken to Brackenridge also was where she was treated for facial in­ juries and lacerations and dis­ charged. Not only will the department's homicide detail investigate the case, Weeks said, but the department's internal affairs department and Dis­ trict Attorney Ron Earle will con­ duct separate investigations. Irwin said Bading has worked in the departmenf s patrol detail and organized crime detail. Pepper, who has worked with the department for two years, has been a patrol officer since March, Irwin said. Weeks said Mims was on parole from Texas Department of Correc­ tions, where he was serving 3V z years for forgery. And th a t goes o ver th e re J. A. Miller helps Olive Lippoldt move back into her Padre Island trailer. Hurricane Gilbert, which forced Lippoldt to evacuate this weekend, caused flooding in her area but no major damage. Local law officials skeptical about defeated gun bill By RANDY KENNEDY Daily Texan Staff Austin law enforcement officials expressed mixed opinions Sunday about the defeat of proposed U.S. legislation that would have re­ quired a seven-day waiting period for handgun purchases. The legislation, which was struck from a House anti-drug bill Thursday, would have permitted — but not required — police to conduct a weeklong background search be­ fore buyers could pick up guns. Curtis Weeks, a spokesman for the Travis County Sheriff's Department, said the wait­ ing period might have helped, but it would not have been the "panacea" to narcotics-re- lated gun problems that legislators imagined. "Lots of the firearms that we've captured were never purchased the way that the law said you should purchase a gun," he said, explaining that especially in drug-related crimes, most of the handguns used are stolen or otherwise untraceable. "They say convicted felons can't buy guns, and they say that people who aren't citizens can't buy guns, but they all do," Weeks said. "They just send their neighbors in to do it." He said he believes some national statistics about handgun possession do not accurately reflect this fact. "If everything were as it was reported to be, this bill would probably help out, but there are lots of ifs in that," he said. Although the problem is getting worse, Weeks explained, he also hates to suggest more legislation. "To add more ifs, ands and buts to the same problem do not make it any easier to enforce," he said. "I've never understood why they stick these provisions on bills that don't have anything, really, to do with guns." Another local law-enforcement spokesman, however, said his agency was disappointed to see the provision voted down. "That's something that we really hated to see get pulled out," said David Wells, a spokesman for the Texas Department of Pub­ lic Safety. Wells said he believed the waiting period would have closed the doors to a number of potential drug dealers trying to "strengthen" their business. "We would not have considered it a cure- all for the problem, but it would have helped us check out the background of these peo­ ple," he said. "Probably fewer people con­ nected with the illegal narcotics business would have been visiting gun stores. It would have made them think twice." Happy Birthday Tara Dawn Mackay ROSES *7" £ \ s one dozen caah’n'carry T T FIESTA FLOWERS 483-7619 3830 N THE DAILY TEXAN/Monday, Sepiamber 19.1968/Page 9 SUN HING Chinese Restaurant Lunch Specials at $2.99 Combination Dinners at 4.99 2801 Guadalupe, Suite A 478-6504 Lunch • m 11 m s.m.-2:30 p.m. Dinner • 8un-Thur 2:30 p.m.-10 pom. Fri-Sat 2:30 p.m.-10:30^m. WMong UNnnct ¡flC a f in & cany out avaM te - 8 Th e Daily Texa n FAA could delay funds for airport I f TED KUAN Daily Taxan Staff After a five-day postponement, the Federal Aviation Administration will make an announcement Tues­ day that could require dty officials to conduct an environmental study on the proposed Austin airport. If FAA officials require an Envi­ ronmental Impact Statement, or E1S, Austin wifi receive no funding from the administration until die study is completed, said Dick Stan­ ford, coordinator of Austin Airport Watch, a watchdog group. The FAA has promised Austin $50 million for the new airport — $10 million a year for five years, Stanford said. Patrick Conner, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service staff biologist, said the FAA solicited comments from the wildlife service, die Department of Agriculture and others. Conner said the wildlife service supports the EIS, which could take as long as a year to complete, be­ cause some questions remain unad­ dressed by an Environmental As­ sessment completed last year by Turner Collie k Braden Inc. "We believe the assessment fails to adequately address the larj ?- scale and long-term aspects of die proposed action on fish and wildlife resources," David Curtis, the wild­ life service's acting field supervisor, stated in an Aug. 16 letter to the FAA. FAA officials could not be reached for comment. Curtis also expressed concern about possible harm to wetlands and prairies in die proposed site as well as to herons, egrets and other migratory birds in these habitats. Robert King, director of the state Department erf Agriculture's natural resources office, said the environ­ mental impact study needs to stress economic concerns, specifically die effect of taking land for the airport out of agricultural production. Shrimpers join effort to dean Gulf By BARBARA UNION Daily Texan Staff Environmental groups made a new ally Friday in die fight against ocean pollution. Ralph Rayburn, director of the Texas Shrimp Association, said shrimpers have agreed to keep all debris they pick up while in the Gulf of Mexico, instead of throwing it back overboard. The shrimpers will get rid of the garbage once they are on land. "Over years of abuse, the Gulf of Mexico has been the dump site for a wide variety of debris," Rayburn said. "The debris that does not make it to the beach ends up in our shrimp trawls. It is in the industry's best interest to have a clean Gulf." The Center for Environmental Ed­ ucation has been urging groups to participate in the center's statewide oeach cleanups. The group's Gulf Coast director, Linda Maraniss, said Texas leads the nation in cleaning polluted beaches and in document­ ing the cleanup. According to a report released Fri­ day on the state's marine debris, volunteers have been able to rid the state's beaches of a significant amount of marine debris. Last year, 7,158 volunteers collected 309 tons of garbage, the rep rt stated. The center documents the cleanups by giving volunteers data cards. Once on the beach, the work­ ers fill out the cards' extensive ques­ tions, noting the types and amounts of garbage found on the beach. Beach cleanups also take place na­ tionwide and in Puerto Rico and Costa Rica. The center has designed Spanish data cards for those areas. "The information volunteers col­ lect is used by policy makers on the state, national and international lev­ els and will be increasingly import­ ant," Maraniss said. The report stated that it has been difficult to trace the sources of debris. Volunteers are asked to record any j ubage with a foreign label. More than 200 foreign items were noted, including debris from Argentina, Denmark, Germany, Thailand and Vietnam. The next beach cleanup had been scheduled for Saturday, but Land Commissioner Garry Mauro and Maraniss said problems created by Hurricane Gilbert would mean a postponement. Mauro said the hurricane could create more need for beach clean­ ing. "Thousands of volunteers are al­ ready organized," Mauro said. "They're ready and waiting to go to work. "In coming weeks, we will be ask­ ing for more volunteers from across the state to come to the aid of their fellow Texans." Jennifer Mitchell, state coordina­ tor for the cleanups, said beach pol­ lution is a serious problem. Animals often get caught in plastic bags or tangled in wire. (conoco) SUPPLY & TRANSPORTATION AND NATURAL GAS & GAS PRODUCTS AND NORTH AMERICAN REFINING MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM All December, May, and August Graduates of the COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING are invited to attend a presentation/reception on career opportunities with Supply < It Transportation, N atural Gas & Gas Products, and North American Refining Departments DATE: Tuesday, September 20,1988 TIME: 6:00 to 8:00 P.M. PLACE: CPE 2.208 * Degrees f w j h t BS or MS in Chemical, Gvil, or Mechanical Engineering MBA's wBh cm Undergraduate Engineering Degree LUNCH C0 A I»f# David McWilliams Bring your own lunch or enjoy a variety of Lunch With The Coach Specials in the Texas Union Food Mall. Lunch With The Coach is scheduled for the following dates: 1988-89 Season Klckoff September 13.1988.............. 12-1 p.m. 1988-89 Series September 20,1988.............. ...12-1 p.m. September 27,1988.............. ...12-1 p.m. October 4,1988.................... ...12-1 p.m. October 11,1988.................. ...12-1 p.m. October 18, 1988.................. ...12-1 p.m. October 25,1988.................. ...12-1 p.m. November 1,1988................. ...12-1 p.m. November 8 ,1 9 8 8 ................. ...12-1 p.m. ...12-1 p.m. November 15,1988.............. ...12-1 p.m. November 22,1988.............. 12- 1 p.m. November 29,1988.............. Most Lunch With The Coach programs will be held in the Eastwoods room, just off the West Mall entrance to the 2nd level of The Texas Union. Sponsored by The Texas Union Recreational Events Committee 'Ey a Macintosh today-youmaywina Now that a new school year is under way, we have an idea that’ll make both you and your parents feel a bit more confident come finals time: Get a Macintosh* computer to help with your homework. Then you’ll never have to spend another all-nighter retyping a paper just to purge a few typos and dangling modifiers. You’ll be able to crank out assign-: ments that look as though ■ you bribed a friend in art school. And with an amaz- ; ing new program called HyperCard—which just happens to come packaged; with every Macintosh—you can easily store, organize, and cross-reference research notes to your heart’s content And if that isn’t enough reason to look at a Macintosh today, here’s another: Right now, you have three chances to win one of Sony’s Discmari- CD players—including the ex­ citing Sony Pocket Discman, which also plays the new 3-inch CDs. And even if you miss out on the CD player, you may still win one of 15 Apple T-shirts. No strings attached—just fill out a registration form at the location listed below. So come in and get your hands on a Macintosh. If not for yourself, do it for your folks. 4. The power to be your best.™ S O N Y ME me AT • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Enter: September 19th-October 7th 471-6227 210 East 21st Street Hours: Monday - Friday 1 la.m - 6 p.m. MicroCenter's special prices are available only to eligible University of Texas students, faculty and staff. ifiie mi EEnG ««■tar aft l a t f - l t a p — r a t a p u t — " lM « ta « ii« f < f p le Cu«p« r .te .S >talM««w fe s ta l— É of w . Swiin MpMSfrirmHta far niaglino oif tata. n«3—r «y fciipwAia «8881 Page 10/THE D AILY TEXAN/Monday, September 19,1988 OPEN LATE TILL 8.-00! H Rosea $8.95 dozen Casa Verde Florist 451-0691 to ta | 41ak St. PVD Austin man sought in estranged wife’s slaying D r. Robert Bayardo, the Travis County medfcal examiner, said Linda Coleman ded after being stabbed aix times in the heart. after receiving a call about the stab­ bing from witnesses, police said. Coleman was taken to Bracken- ridge Hospital, where she died at 2:05 a.m. Dr. Robert Bayardo, the Travis County medical examiner, said Coleman died after being stabbed six times in the heart. Homicide Lt. Jerry Slatton said that before police had learned of foe stabbing from dispatchers, they had pursued Sword down East liver- side Drive because they thought he was speeding. After a brief chase, Sword wrecked the car he was driving and fled on foot down Country Club Drive, where he was last seen, Slat­ ton said. He had been driving Cole­ man's car, Slatton said. Slatton said police consider Sword armed and "extremely dan­ gerous." "He's got several convictions for violent crimes," Slatton said, in­ cluding a conviction for aggravated robbery in Florida. Sword also has been arrested on other charges in Florida and Texas, Slatton said. Police described Sword as a black male weighing about 2UU pounds and having shoulder-length hair and a thin mustache. He is about 5 feet, 9 inches tall. Grand Opening Special! .41 v v/ By d b m s McCa r t h y DaHy Texan Staff Police continued the search Sun­ day for a 31-year-old man charged in the Saturday morning stabbing death of his estranged wife. Austin police homicide investiga­ tors charged Maurice Sword with intentional murder in the stabbing death of 28-year-old Linda Cole­ man, and set bond at $30,000. Investigators found Coleman's body shortly after midnight Satur­ day in the parking lot of her apart­ ment complex at 2501 Anken Chive, FLATRATÉ WATS-F (plustU M ) O n ly 1 6 .8 0 p*r minuta DALLAS, HOUSTON SAN ANTONIO 346-7680 § Cal or Marflyn Lemmon Fta^tatata^tatataA $tatolA A •nd many naortzy oRm M M II . I, US. < , Les A tuts 24th & San Antonio O p e n E v e r y N i g h t Until 1:30 O p e n 11:00 am M o n - S a t O p e n Sun 4 pm H a p p y H ou r M o n - S a t 5-7 |j*u»99eiMneS* pis. Wm ) Bring in any lower p r is d l ►yflsed offer and well match babtai, children, adult* ond tamtty groups. No appointment Is evwr We welcome everyone necessary Satisfaction guaranteed! Poses our selection Black and While kgrc nds. Double Exposure and other Special EWects Portraits not available in advertised pockoge. $1 50 for each additional person in portrait Minors must be accom panied by an adult, ‘approximate size advertised offer and Studio Hours Daily 10am. until one hour prior to store closing; Sunday (where open): store opening until one hour prior to store closing WAL-MART CP'ictureland* CPbrtrait^tudb 5 Days Only! Wednesday, Sept. 21 through Sunday, Sept. 25 MARBLE FALLS, TX 2510HWY.US281 NORTH FREDERICKSBURG, TX 1511EASTMAIN EARN OVER $1,000 A MONTH WHILE YOU COMPLETE COLLEGE W How many corporations would be willing to pay you over $1,000 a month during your junior and senior years Just so you’d join the company after graduation? Under a special Navy program we’re doing just that. It’s called the Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate-College Program, and under this program you’ll not only get great pay during your Junior and senior years, but after graduation you’ll receive a year of valuable graduate-level training that is not available from any other employer. If you are a junior or senior majoring In math, engineering, physics, or chemistry, find out all the details about this pro­ gram and let your career pay off while still In college. Interviews with a representative of the Navy’s Nuclear Propulsion Officer Program will be conducted on campus on Set lember 29-30, 1988 at the Natural Science Job Fair. For an appointment, call (toll-free) 1-800-292-5547, Monday through Friday or sign up at the Natural Science Placement Office. LOCATED AT 2420 GUADALUFf "•*!» <\W/1. S u n G e a r N o n / If you're looking for smart fashions at prices that make good sense, you've found them - at DollarS 'n Cents. % We're the newest "kid" on the Drag (south of the Co-op in the same block) who's causing a lot of campus talk. Because most of our top-quality merchandise is priced at $9.99! The highest price you'll find at Dollar$ 'n Cents is $14.99. ^ k Unbelievable, you say? Well, come see for yourself, you won't find our kind of high-quality fashions at such low prices anywhere else in town. Now it's up to you to take advantage of it all: sensational separates, luxurious sweaters, and much more to add campus class to your fall wardrobe. So be a smart shopper; come into Dollar$ 'n Cents - an­ other student service store from the University Co-op. OLLAR fashions for less r \ V « V / * * * ' . A * up-1 2222 Guadalupe • 476-7211 Monday through Saturday 9:30 am to 6:00 pm T h e Da il y T e x a n Sports Monday, S ptember 19,1068 Pagelf Joy of sacks: Pass rushers bomb Lobos New Mexico quarterback Jere- f Leach and UT Heism an Trophy candi­ date Eric Metcalf encountered a mutual Saturday night foe — pressure. Metcalfs pres­ sure came from feats he record­ ed for posterity. that JIM GREER ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR Leach confronted pressure forced him on his posterior. When the game's final gun exe­ cuted a mercy killing on Leach, vic­ timized by 91 yards in losses on nine quarterback sacks, Metcalf faced his toughest challenge of the night — making it to the locker room without writer's cramp. Autograph hounds swarmed the Longhorns' star running back much as crazed pass rushers mobbed Leach during the game. Metcalf managed to escape after signing a score of items, but Leach never tenacious Longhorn defense. shook the Junior defensive tackle Ken Hack- emack said the Lobos' signal-caller "didn't know where to go" to es­ cape the Big Sack Attack. "It seemed like every time their quarterback turned around, he had one of our defensive linemen or linebackers in his face," Hackemack said. The Longhorn defensive corps produced enough sackers Saturday night to shame any Safeway. Line­ men and linebackers shared the wealth, as two sacks apiece by Giles and defensive end Bobby Duncum were the only repeaters. The nine See Sacks, page 16 Lady Mavs avenge loss to Longhorns UTA upsets 3rd-ranked Texas, record crowd at Erwin Center By RAYOSE DaRy Texan Staff Turnabout became fair No. 13 UT-Arlington upset ranked Texas 11-15, 15-9, 15-11, 15- 12 Sunday night at the Erwin Center in front of a record crowd of 4,103. as The Longhorns had defeated UTA in front of its record home crowd in four games on Thursday. Both nationally ranked teams came out slow, neither of them showing the dominance exhibited during the early games of Thurs­ day's matchup in Arlington. Instead, game one looked like it could have been game five from Thursday, as both the Mavericks (6- 1) and Longhorns (7-1) began where they left off, fighting for every point, with no team holding more than a four-point lead. "We knew we were going to have ups and downs," Longhorn Head Coach Mick Haley said. "We have to go through these kinds of match­ es to get better. Last year we didn't schedule these types of matches, so this is a first for some of our play­ ers." UTA took an early lead in game one on two kills by Chris Rudiger, who finished the match with 15, tying for the team lead with Ana de Oliveira. The two teams battled even at five and seven before the Mavericks took a 9-7 lead on an attack error by Quandalyn Harrell, but blocks by Katie Salen and Stade Nichols brought Texas to a 9-9 tie with the Mavs. The teams traded points the Lady Longhorns seized a 13-10 lead they never relinquished. Texas ended the game on a kill by Harrell, who finished with 10 for the evening but had 14 errors. The Mavericks started off game fo r RESUMES PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS IMMIGRATION t h ir d e y e 2532 GUADALUPE 477-5555 •1 two just like they did on Thursday, as they scored the first five points behind the serving of setter Shawn Sweeten. The Longhorns rallied to get even at nine behind kills by Davenport, Nichols and Harrell, but could get no doser as Sue Schelfhout slipped and sprained her ankle. UTA then used the serving of Sweeten, three errors by Harrell and a kill by Bennett to take game two, 15-9. 'T o begin with, we served bet­ ter," Mavs' Coach Lisa Love said. "We were much more aggressive than we were in Arlington," Love said. "They have such an aggressive offense that we had to come out and serve them tough in order to disrupt their offense." The Longhorns began game three like they were going to put an early end to the evenings' activities. Texas jumped out to an 8-0 lead, but couldn't hold it as UTA rallied behind the serving of de Oliveira and drew close at 8-7. The Lady Longhorns took a short­ lived 10-7 lead, then de Oliveira gave her team an 11-10 lead on a kill and a block. Texas could only manage one more point, as a net violation by Ni­ chols sealed the Longhorns' fate and the game, 15-11. "Once we caught them we were playing for the win all the way," Love said. "Not to place, not to show but to win." The Mavericks wasted no time trying to put away the Longhorns. UTA scored a quick four points on two service aces, a Texas net vio­ lation and a kill by Sara Madariga. The Lady Longhorns tied it at seven and went ahead 12-9 before the Mavericks made last charge, scoring the final six points of the match. their t GOLF i MUt JOANS Practice Range $1.00 offmny buekmt 9 a.m.-3 p.m. M-F • Precto* Orean • Ln m m • TH pM • U R M T m • Loan Clubs • G p a ilu n .-1 0 p jR .7 d m i • NR Cantar M opac@ 1t3 (nao to PuMc 9M0») • P h 3 3 9 - 9 4 0 0 . . Daniel Byram/Daily Texan Staff Duane Duncum (48) and brother Bobby Duncum (46) team up on a Lobo bal carrier en route to a shutout. Horns walk over Lobos, 47-0 Metcalf, defensive line make up for miscues in win over UNM By GARRY LEAVELL his assignment as he sliced and diced the Lobos' defense, rushing Daily Texan Staff for 133 yards on 21 carries and grab­ bing five passes for 85 yards before leaving the game late in the third quarter, with Texas ahead 34-0. W E E K E N D S W C R E S U L T S • Baylor 35, Iowa State 0 • Houston 31, Missouri 7 • Arkansas 21, Mississippi 13 • TCU 49, Bowling Green 12 • Texas 47, New Mexico 0 ing a first half of confused offensive football. Eric Metcalf was crystal dear on But for the second week in a row, the rest of the Longhorn offense was a staccato barrage of missed passes, inopportune penalties and poor execution. See Longhorns, page 16 It took Texas about three minutes to establish control of Saturday night's game against New Mexico, but about three quarters to establish some peace of mind for Longhorn Coach David McWilliams. Texas manhandled the Lobos 47-0 before a crowd of 55,630 at Memori­ al Stadium, but not before overcom- EVERY WOMAN’S CONCERN C o n f i d e n t i a l . P r o f e s s i o n a l R e p r o d u c t i v e C a r e • 1 ice l’i (Mjiiiiiu v. I cst in<; • I’mblcm Preqn.iiu v. ( nnnsrhm} • \| K it I ion St-r v k os mmmmm—_ • Biri bí < > n 11 < > I • l\i|> lost m o ll REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES 4 5 8 - 8 2 7 4 10041. tOlli Asking for a jury trial can help keep you in the driver's seat. Miller & H erring, Law yers for Traffic T ickets For free information, call 477-3221. Fixed $100 fee. 706 W. MLK Blvd., Suite 11 Visa/Mastercard accepted Scale bar licensed, no legal specialization T h i s P c r r \ l i l i s s h i r t o r i m i a l l v c o s t T O . TSf it * A by: month MONDAY... SOS / fag?» ml ear ana a tc m c fy p o o . ‘ 1 A tC *- - -*-----* 1 - 476-5631 9-26P ★ WALK TO CAMPUS ★ 1-1._ $245 2-2 _ $320 Eff._ $225.00 • mwk, mar comptox • cotongfara • wato-w dotan • iquaaky daon • on uto lawndry to manager Avolon Apf* — 32nd of IH35 ★ 476-3629 ★ 459-9898 258-2176 9-26N • $195 - $225 • Fumahed efficiency near M opoc/Bar- *on Spring» CA/CH. W arier paid Laundry focilitie». Short ka»e. 328-6705 • • 9-TON 1 BEDROOM $240 Student Special Seduded, quiel complex in park-lke tailing. Nicehr fumehed, corpefad, and draped. Gai/waler paid. 609 E. 456 Sfreef. 452-1823,451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC 9-29A * 5 Blocks West UT A Large, quioL imtoocubdaly dean semi- efficiency. KHchen, vdk-é cloaeL foundry, go» had coofang wafar/goa fumehed On sia manager. $249. Rad Oak J^ortmetd» 2104 San Ga­ briel ★ 476-7916 ★ 10-18 Reduced Rents! Quiel complex wtih new carpet and appfcor/M. Covered parfang * pool 1 4 2 ld r. La Casita Apartments 472-1704 2900 Cole Si (behind Roadway ton) 9-71F Hillside Apts. 1 to 2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfamehed. dean to Quiet. A l Utikke* Paid 478-2819 514 Dawaon Road Jud Off Barton Springs Rood KMN 1981 CUTLASS Supreme Brougham. covan, 9-300 two-toned, $3900, 4454)583. BACK TO SCHOOU 1979 Dodge Cok. 55,000 mita», AC. itondord, will finance, S493 down. 4454)583.9-300 1976 Datiun 8-210. Economical 6 inex­ pensive. WE finance, $495 down. 526 E OHorf. 4454)583.9-300_________ 1985 RENAULT ENCORE 28,000 mile». AC 2 boon, irvory AC 2 d irvory. Cak evening» 447- 0169. $2,900.9-15 1923 FORD T-BUCKET roadster, 350 Chevy 780 Holey 350 tram 411 rear and too cooll. Paseo Motor Co. 477- 3301. $4950.9-15 1984 HONDA IX foky loaded, tintod vendove, immocutato condition, CoE 331-6178. $6200, negotiable. 9-15 1970 INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL - oE AC «toteo, AM/FM coeetto, custom paint, crueo control. Run» . $600 Trocen 495- 9319.9-15_____________________ 1977 BUICK Skylark new tire*, new brake», PS/P8, AM/FM, 389-3915 Leave mouogs. 9-15 1973 CADILLAC LOADED. Leather into- rior. New tire». Battery oksmator. $959. 323-9023. Leave memogs to Michael 12-19 1978 DATSUN 82-10 otiginal owner. Ten yean of trouble free driving! $900 Muit »el the iveekendl 441-8519. 79 CHEVY NOVA, rebu» engine, A/C good condition. Musi »sR ($980), Lee 462-2836.9-15_________________ 64 CHEVY Impaki Super Sport, 4-ipsed. Ufor machine. $2950 Pasco Motor Co. 477-3301 73 CADILLAC Loaded 9-15 9-15 akomotor, $959. 459-1979. Leave message to Michosl. 12-19_________________________ 1970 CodiEoc Burnt ororae/whke vinyl top Leather interior, A/C new tires. Transport aN your friends! $995. 267- 3392 9-16 1981 CJ-5 Jeep Laredo. Black. 4-speed. 6-cyfinder. Son and btoini top $4950, negotiable. 454-7984.9-16_________ * ** ** I BUY canl Cosh on the spot, 445- 05 83.***** 9-16H 1978 DATSUN 2807. Slack on block. Cold A/C W» «nonce, 4454)583. 9- 16H__________________________ 1982 FORD Granada Wagon. 63K Mi PS/AT/AC great shape, great car, $2850 250-2846,1-858-4722. 9-19M______ 1979 FORD Fairmont. 4 door 110 K Mi, slick, good transportation $650. 250- 2846,1-858-4722.9-19M__________ 1979 MERCURY CAPRI. Low mleoge. A/ C AM/FM. new lire. 454-6176.9-20 1980 TOYOTA CELICA Supra Silver. A l powered, low rnikogs runs great. CaB Mocuf 442-6308. $2500 i - 20 DATSUN 2005X 1982. Fufa equipped. $2900 Negotiobk. Cok 385-4548 9- 20 MUST SELL 1979 Dodge Cok $500. Sonta body domoge. Needs minor work. Col 453-3419. 9-20 1977 4-DOOR FORD Maverick. 81 K. AT/PS, tintad, good running condHion. $750. Col Shelmor. 472-8875, daylima. 9-20_________________________ 1970 FORD MUSTANG, 302 V8 PS, AT, UT orange, magnum 500 wheel» good condition. $1,800. 443-6429 12-19 FIAT SPIDER 2000. Good condHion, 5- speec, Sony AM/FM cauetis deck, 43,000 mi. $3200. 322-9191 H 5. 441- 3744 oftor 6.9-22________________ CAN YOU buy Jeeps, Cars, 4 X4's. Seized in drag raids for under $100.001 Col for fads today. 602-837-3401. Ext. 723.9-16 20 — Sports- Foreign Autos ■ I BUY FOREIGN CARS B lu B bow w tA u tD t l t i 459-4875 |3100QH8riw«'4i*B. N. of UT 1976 ALFA ROMEO Spyder. New to| 1. 1 KabuHl engine. New top seats, records $3,000. 343-9418. 9- 25 1984 SUBARU HATCHBACX 4-speed. AC stereo. Excekent. 82,000 miles new togs new inspection. $2,295. 454-7037. 12-19 c 1983 DATSUN 280ZX Mint condHion and restored. Mud sak $6200 or beet offer 255-4390.12-19_____________ 'GO \AAi j «-•-*- -f -—$— - 04 ▼ yY JWfKI J~$piOQ, wnVGG WwW/Wl, midnight blue, good condHion, $2500 negotiobk. 453-6300.12-19________ 1983 DATSUN 280ZX Low mkeoge. 459-8652.9-13 1982 DATSUN 310GX 5-speed, AC AAA/ FM cowetto, power steering good con- dHion. After 6pm. 444-7528.9-13_____ 1985 SUBARU GL AN power, AM/FM cossetto, low mkeoge, excekent condi­ tion. Cok Goyta, 442-3621.9-19 BEAUTIFUL RED - 72 Mg Midget. Brand new brakes -f dutch. Engine^ point job, tires, top - great condition. $2200, 478- 5063.12-19____________________ 1973 VOLVO 142. Rakabk. Bed offer. 322-0358, Jerry. 9-26_____________ 79 CAPRI. Clean car, V-6, AM/FM AC 4-speed. $1595. Robin, 3434)557. 12- 19 '87 WRANGLER Jeep. Bkck with black tinder, akoys soft interior. 5-speed 6 and bkni top $10,160 251-8567.9- '84 SUBARU-four door, AM/FM stereo radio, JVC kw mkeoge, esuekent con- ttition. $4500 or bad offer 258-9258 .9-27 1984 TOYOTA CELICA GT-coupe. Load­ ed 5 speed excekent condHion. 434)00 mkes Price reduced. 5,700 346-5311.9- 28 1977 BMW 3 2 a 4 speed, AAA-FM ca»- satto, sunroof. Runs great. 476-4110, Matt 9-28 76 BUG GOOD condHion. Run» good. 454-0321.9-28 1985 DODGE DAYTON A Turbo-Z- Sun- roof, 5-speeq. koded, shom; excekent condHion. $2000 below book $4900. 343-1160.9-28 1979 CORVETTE. Black, red leather, l- 82, outomatiE, glass T-tops only 65,000 miles $7950 negatiabe . 478-5564 9- 29 1978 VW BUS original owner. Runs fine Needs some work. Cak 1-869-107» af­ ter 6.10-3 79 CELICA- 5 speed. PS + P J. new dutch, am/fm e&eetta $1675 able 345-7788 oftor 5 pm 9-14 1978 VW RABBIT, ran» good $900. 495-9295.9-15_________________ 1967 TRHJAAPH SpHfire completely re­ stored, wire wheels both tops $2750- negotiabie Pasco Motor Co. 477- 9-15____________________ 3301 1986 CORVETTE, foky koded, automatic, excekent condHion, firemet red/ natural leather $22,500 cak 448-3844 or 255- 1289 9-18 MUST SELL (genuine reasons). 1972 VW camper van. Good condHion. Ollar» at Rivenide Quartan car-park locnsif IS IH 35 RivenideOrive. 9-15 1983 VW R abbit-standard w / ,000 mkes Runs Great! Oiky AC ,: need* cosmetic». $2,200 328- 5804 9-16 1971 VW SUPERBEETLE, one owner, wiofl)NVwoFVt but ¥•iy dupRndabli $710 0 8 0 280-0124 9-16 1983 ACCORD 4 door. 5 .peed « x M 142,000 mka» $4,200. W M O U M N N N S C ilM O U n fw f IV — BUCK’S wipes 4r BICYCLE SALE! Enjoy Iomt pncBi end mt- b from mo! bh dtopi Mounlon Hb$ C n m n , KVtipiodk. Dfcnowd l CydB-fre GT. Sht- bock, Cm dsn! ipocioN Cydbho 12 Rwsd dty- m m, 170. Soutfi Ambi Bicydsd 2210 Soudi Id Si, 444-0005. SCHWINN BIKE for sak. Mud tok before 9/22. $100 - Price negotiable. Cdl 472- 6346. Keep trying 9-23 100—Vehicles Wanted $ Need Cash?? $ / w it pay cash on the spot fo r dean con o r pickups, 1979 A up. t Call 1-754-0304 t ▼ 8 am .-2 am . ▼ Camping Kqulp. Buy or Sale Used Sports Equipment Abdomen mocbmm to otCy etc* Sports & Fitness Resale/Consignment msiani 9153 458 9-190 COMPACT EXERCYCIE MCA Ergo motor - 7000 E, $225. 472-1700. Aher 6 pm. 9-19 200 LB CAST iron weight ckned end e/leg^^B|¡l|f Brand newl $ 2 0 0 ^ ^ ^ 8053. Aka. 9-23 1111 tot 6 DP br­ and curl offer. 440- 9 4 0 330— Pot* FREE TO a good home. Adorable tote iim w i oki lo n a ii inopnMni moi. riouio broken. Ak «hoto Cok 454-1586. 9-19 AFGHAN FUPPIES Champion Bkodknas. Mud sak. Only $200 eoch. 282-0453. 10-3_________________________ GOLDEN RETRIEVERS One tomato, two i melee bnmuttisolton» wortnbig eyes I checked AKC mgidered Tari 1-353-1610 478-7386 weekday» $200 fin T ÍS l 340— Mise OESOLER OPAQUE Protector • high reeo- tiritan enlarger $150 - 402-0270. 9-20 9 NUMEROUS MISCELLANEOUS House- Villa Solano A p a r t a a e a t s SIst&Guodalupt a ShuNlo B ui/G ly Bwa • CtoAMMtom Alemagtsj DDoppmg n to ru y • 2 Laundry Atbo a NkaPod 1 & 2 Badroom Apii Across From Intramural Fields 451-6682 MOVE IN TODAY DIPLOMAT APARTM1NTS BARGAIN RAHS Autos 1973 VW BUG. Rafauik engine. Runs end look great. $1650 0 8 0 . Aker 5 pm end ‘ ‘ 473-8303.9-20 I -to »- -i 84 NISSAN 300ZX Tee top» wNto, I----------» I ----------- 1 * DfwWii PeOfnOT, dash, only 34,000 mi. Offer. 835-2273. 9-21__________________________ 1983 DATSUN 280ZX 5-spoed, T-tap» A/C AM/FM kw mkeoge, Aktoe Alarm System. $7,500 453-Í3&». 9-21 1984 MAZDA 626 LX Loaded. A l op­ tions. Excekent condHion. $6800. 459- 3465.9-22____________________ PARKING PROBLEM* Park anywhere with this 1969 Ausiin-Heaky Sprite. 2 tops, good condHiorv mony new posts Mud sek $2400,080 892-0960 9-22 1982 FIAT 2000 Spider, red convertible. Excekent condHion. Low mkeoge. $4250. 329-2501 (wk). 328-0365 (hmj. 9-22 1980 VW RABBIT, dtosej Snpeedl AC ond sunroof, good condkon. Adring $1700. Cok 280-2543.9-22________ 1987 HONDA CMC - w/AC, 4-speed. 20,000 nuke. Good os new. 465-0635 or 892-0878.9-23_________ 1981 TOYOTA TERCEU 4-speed, new brakes, new toes, new irepeckon dicker. Runs great. Go anywhere. $950 476- 4723. 1971 VW SUPERBEETLE. A bk weath­ erworn but very dependable $620 OBO. 280-0124.9-23 30 —Trucks-Vans 1978 VW BUS. Wok maintained, A/C 84,000 mkes. 458-5355.6-10 pm. 9-19 50 — Service-Repair ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 1C AUTO ELECTRONICS THE PLACE POE AU YOUECASNEEDSWo tewire shorts end rebukh otkmakr» darter» and genaraSors. Wa do ALL cords Cel 339- 9173.9309 NLraiw. STUDENTS, 20% off wSh ID card REAL ESTATE SALES 140 — M obil* H o m ti- Lots -*-t- J t xH MOft : HOME for safe to UT Mobke Home Park. 2-1, CACH, Caking fan» Re- U i/rt Wr/u Portiaky forrwhad $11,500 or Bed Offer. Cak 476-9354.9 20 D^mfuOm, * * » 10-21D 9-20 blanket, AM/FM dock radk, 462-2674 3m LARGE DOG KennaL Welded jotnto Great for larga or «mal dog». $90. 477- 9457.9-21 SHARP ZX 330 Eladrerkc fuk tine co tiorv calcufator mode dual pHdv 8to naw $175.443-4686.9-21 U.T. PARKING garage »po< egotiabf» fak and/or 24-hour» $1 qxing, WK 928-6539, H 28D4609. 9- 70 — Motorcyclas MERCHANDISE ir W d k h C m t R m it 469-0224 M anager Apt. #202 DavieAAeeoc. RENTAL 3 5 0 — R f i t o l S t v I c m b 190—Appliances 18CF Refrigerator. $100. 920-2991 23 2 0 0 — F u m H u m - H o u m H o M CONSIGNMENT SHOP far home fam- idtinge Buy from w or iak titrough u» 266-3377. 107 Ranch Road 620 South »K)8.10-50____________________ MOVING! MUST jmmediatof>H Matching couch 8 chair only $100. Sto- waterbed $200. Ctdi 453- 1.9-19______________________ tok FOR SALE: Waterbed dame, afadric typewriter, and car luggage carrier. From <25-5100.452-696Üa8ér 6 pm. 9-20 UT COLOSSI Matching lave «eat - «afa • chair. Nfoa condHion. $450/offer Coffee table - 2 end table» $200. 327-8199.9- 20___________________________ SALE. 8 4 ' EARLY American Safa wkh matching lam teal 54'. Good condHion ading ¡21 261-5691.9-21 BEDROOM FURNITURE, ofa, chair» aed tabla» men'» bike. $25-5100 hafa Dakver. 474-1 9-21__________________________ QUEEN SIZE mettiew and boxapring» $35,19" color T V, $55, large Door fa» $10.323-2115.9-22______________ SIX CANE 6 metal chain - bfack hamo» (Brewer) $25 each 442-5229. Leave /9-22 MATTRESS AND box raring (ful) $175. Bed frame M /queen $25. lram dtoetto «at w/4 chair» Dud Roae uphobtory $250. After 4 pm. 462-2674.9-23 210— S tm o-TV 19" RCA COLOR TV, good picture $90, 19" 8/W Zankh TV, $30.1-295-3866.9- 19 MONTGOMERY WARD VCR. On programming. 14 done, 4 event. 1 ofa. $195 454-7029! « R j¡lll¡f end*. 9-20 220— Computwra- Equlpmu t —6 YEAR WARRANTY— | MACMT06H MRDDNVE81 iim » « y t i i l t i y titiC W O T a o tW L .to c 1 to » M » tfM M M | OratotiSotoaem E X T P e tt o - d r t t t d B M b H O N D A 459*3311 Full Selection of Motorcycles & Scooters Check on O u r'87 CLOMOUT WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6509 N. LAMAR North Austin Cydea S L Pt— H d tr ig A DBRMFy e Factory trained mechenice e roes snetoe e Cleeneet pre-owned btoee ground e Dtecount Parto E Aoceeeoriee CYCLE SALES 8301 N. I 454*1822 NOTICE TJ'S CYCLE MOVED TO 6215 N. Lamar. Check out our great prk- a» on used bbes tcooton, parti S accee- sories Profet onal service al reaMXwfale 453-6255 104 M O • Jfartkfe B M M B 448-7041 8MB MM Ttifafe FOR SALE: 1985 Honda 230 M ap» Printer. $825 1985 HONDA NIGHTHAWK 450. Rum great, look Be new, $875, or beat offer. 251-9085.9-21 '86 RED HONDA BHe 80 - Low mkeoge, excejenl condHion. Mud tok, $700 nag Cak Mkte @ 445-0557 or 4784767/9- 2____________________________ condHion. 41 Very la 534987.9-22 1980 KAWASAKI 550 LTD, rad, ngly great condMotj wmddtieldLttow | toe, four cylndetA luggage mck. Go any­ where. $575 4764723 9-22 GREAT MOTORCYCLES: 1986 KAWASAKI ZL600, 1500 miles, winddmld - 82100. 1984 KAWASAKI LTD 550, 2,000 mkes, windriiietd $1300 -451-3408.9-19_________________ MOPED - YAMAHA Riva. new, never teed, coral blue. $450.454-8914.9-19 1981 SUZUKI GS450.6,400 mkes. Block. Good condHion. $750. Cak evening» 476-7427.9-19_________________ 1981 SUZUKI GS 550T, Red. heL Jud serviced ond tmpt. Is book rack, 12,000 mka» $750 or bad offer. 458-9725.9-20_____________ depee MUST SELL 1985 Hondo Aero 'SO $700/bad offer. Leave motoage 451- 2358.9-27____________________ ATTENTION STUDENTS! 1986 Hondo / He 250. Scooter, cover ond kelmeL • negotiable. Datek 453-5303 $2.1 9-J CHEAP RELIABLE Iranqtortaton. 1975 Honda C8-360T motorcyde. Red dean, fiiM w gl VMñdrfwld owp Iuqqqqg pock. $35000 negotiable 3430043 even- ing» 9-20______________________ 1985 HONDA AEROUke new 5400 oc- tual mkes. Blue $700. Cak Shawn. 267- 1002 9-20_____________________ '83 HONDA AERO 80 Scooter $200. Some body domoge Needs minor woHl Cak 453-3419.9-2 ______________ HONDA ASCOTT FT500 - 2,500 mko», winddiieU, dean, $950 - negetkfak. 472-3607.9-22_________________ 1987 YAMAHA RAZZ. Red driven only 85 mles $450. Cok Mfte 480-8072. 9- 22 • 0 — W cydM COtoUMBU M -9FSD— Mem t medai new, d> to carton. $150. 346- 7257.9-19 MIYATA 12-SPttD, very dean, chram» Nto» tobm end e y tubing Toada» •res. $160. 480-0283. 19-19 ^ ■ MANCHI M M ) — touring blto 2T NEW AND USED PC'S, PRINTERS AND ETC • IBM PC 640K. 20 meg with e New i/d erm from $649 McComputers 4 5 9 -9 0 0 9 Tue-Sal 10 am-6 pm 10-13M Í8M XT PORTABLE -640K. 20 MJ.hard- driva; one 5V»' koppy, CGA adaptor, hat fad NEC V-20 chip. $1200. 4/7-8566 Todd 9-19_____________________ MOOEl 102 Radto Shack lap top wkh dak drto» portable printer, to erac $100- $250.338-1839 9-21_____________ MATH CO-PROCESSOR. 8087-KMkHZ, New, $100 338-1839 9-21 MISC MM Sohwore - DTP ■ B i l f $695, new; Sal far $175. 338-1839.9- MAONTOSH PLUS, tmagm.ritar k, Ap­ ple BOOK ExtomaL 1 yr. old Plu* a l rato- were. Only $1,550 474-7407.9-21 MAQNTOSH EXTERNAL rin^e dded cfiK drive $100 442-5229. Leave Meo- rage9-22_____________________ 2 ZENITH 183 LAPTOP pe'» 640K. 10 U 1----- mmaaonm nuruonvg. vnma w w mi mm $129900eoch. M k» 447-0912 9-21 M i 230— Photo- FOR SALE Nknn FI wkh 50 mm km cam and drop S8-15 IglH I k $28000 335-8810.9-19 ra 250—Musical Instrument* 1 f i s * « « f )~ ¡ ¡ b $19.9$. Seng kaafa aed ahneto. Jffahe MutocCantor.611W .29tit4774 0 9 9 - 280__________________________ ARTLEV FLUTE SoBd dm. open hofad $400.338-1839.9-21_____________ TAKAMffK ACOUSTIC guitar wtih buff-1 in nick up/EQ Indudai ed di onra. $3 0 * or bad ofhr. 447-2113 448- fftian. 477-9457.9-21 GeSON USA-1 Badric gtotor. 3 pidHm ST8AT dyfa. basalanl eaedHan $375 454-04399-19________________ M A R K X X LEASING FALL Beat Ike High B edncR atnl 1 Bedrooms A 2 Bedrooms Available 459-1664 3815 Guadalupe Davit I Assoc. BIST OCAL IN W EST CAM PUS! • Walk to Campus • Ceiling Fans • Microwaves • Large 1 & 2 Bedrooms ONLY I 1 B D R L 0 T 1479-6108 I Longhaven I Apartments ^ W W .2 3 r i» 1 0 2 j 10-71M R O O M M A TE W ANTED N on smoking student for 4-2. Clean, quiet and spacious. O n shuttle. $150 per month. • Cat 444-753710-6 pm 1 BEDROOM $275 Shjdenl Special Shuffle, carpef- jrapad, wafc-in d o u l pool « ■ /w a te r p aid 4 2 0 0 Ave. A 4 51-6966,451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES IN C lO-TOA KM ALL BILLS PAID Fall Rates Eff. 1 M Sm. 2 BR $295 $ 360-1395 $440 Wafc or dwdfa to compu» CA/CH, mmodeli , convamard to avaqrifang 2212 San Gab >1 474-7732 F R E E Leasing Service Coraxa • neta» • n » /u p t out frota Lamm fmhumngiD u»' 482*8661 888W.80BI haMtat huelen FREE LOCATOR SERVICE ■rr n J f’ o' i'" P’ C • 'Clt-d Br ' v .< r ^ 'l1** ^ r Thom. vCi & ¡ I ho mpvo n Ji B f A L T O B S 4 5 2 - 8 6 2 5 24 Vu ' i o dor NEED TO flND AN APARTMENT? Latuedofae kofangforyoul Capitol Gly Locators 339-7368 r fo r 7 am-11 pm ★ TIRED Of ★ ★ LAUNDROMATS? ★ Rent your own washer ond dryer $35 per month ★ 370-2400 ★ 3 6 0 — F u m . Apta. SFBOMLUTBS Furnished EfRdendes 1-1#s 7 2-2/* • 3 Poo • 3 Laundry Rooms • Gat and Watar Paid a Shutis at Front Door I d e t t b e S t m U e M m t t h e O g k DactHcRaie T a n jlc ro o d W i stsld e M O V I IN TODAY! 1 4 0 3 1 V o n ra ]k L 8 . 472-9614 LAST MINUTE LOOKERS! UTAREA Mark Embers Apts. 3100 Speedway 478-6005 9-2K 346-5252.9-19 1985 TOYOTA CEUCA GTS. Lew mke» werronly, sunroof, e » M lid .^ H l^ ^ m 8 a ^ ■ B e e h $9250. 469-0863 Nbffto. BOBA TALL 9-19 ■m eli $250 caedktort Cdl Cfaudfa 495-9220. 9-19 mirara a-»---------- M e w D B B c n H ie r y • mm 2 BOR S275 81 35 el Capkal Ffaaa 1976 FIAT SNDWt convertible m d new I pgjp^ mbbsf A m m tm cot S3W50 Fred 451-2810day 442-3901.9-19 j 1982 DATSUN W0-GX • JVC eutoeuff» 4f2-7002 After Ypm . 9-20 | 1902 0ATSUN31OGK A ^ , H H H Jkbtine Stome mmS mleege S2J00 472-7002 AftorTpm. 9-20 ü meed m m . d dnddng je e r. $1 $140, or bad d b r. 447- | Metoege 9-21 ■ ¡¡S B i i W i d ^ in q t w d kfack wkh i led i. . M ir CM476-74349-19 800 n m M h Mc I IrmdwNbf M b farS hed y M ig d > ra 6 pra • í t ü m MOUPfDU^OLT $325 xegJUfar 6 pm - 441-6773.9-23 I CAU471-8244 SS> e 3 $22flr9 carpeted» draped» wafit* in doaej bu# in lÉchew ond ponlry. 4 0 0 0 Awe. A , 458-4511, 451-6533. CENTRAL PtOPBTTCSNC. ★ Two Bedroom ★ Fak Rato $4 40 Wab to Compuiti imaM quiet compbw. ceAngtara» poot Cavalier Apts. 307E. 31d 476-6225 473-2513 474-7732 9-2QA 1 BEDROOM $260 to. J y ALL BILLS PAID $275 Student SpeoaL Large m tency • «» » n rt M M b* draped» wofit-ei doeeL bufihin klchen, pantry, and pool 4200 Ave. A , 4S1^ M 451-6533. -i. -M »_---- GMRALnOtBIKSMC e -w A 1 BEDROOM $260 JjgAgg$ L l ^ g ^ L Q A # fe^$feBBfelB fe I j h u ^ L o h tfd o n lb c b iB m í h n . w m h& m m ák A $ M Í4 5 M S r CeflRALFtOFBtTKSMC CENTRAL PROFBtDES IN C GMEAT STUDfNT I */ ~1- Or. Dfdrweabar, dhpH todudraw * . rdea». 327-0657 1»6 4aak»i M 8 D NOffVH OUdfUI we* to UT. Lerga affi- daecy k atora atoa «mal aampw-., 1101 lara Oaaae 8to $275. Jaff Bapn 45V 840 ar476-542* 9-248 C O N D O S LEASE N O W ! * T0-17F WALK UT . 2/1. Aflappfion floors^Fortcqd yard. Quiet West Campus. step One. 482-8925.9-21 I 4 7 6 - 7 7 0 0 Ki< >( ira nek' RINTAL HINT AL : . ' -1 KINTAL I KINTAL KINTAL KINTAL 360— Ftim. Apt*. 370— Unf. Apt*. 370— Unf. Apts. 370— Unf. Apts. 370— Unf. Apt*. BUDGET PLEASERS Cot inbnt location at 41rt and Ave. A, 1 blade aarf of Guodolupe. 1 bedroom $200,4100 Ava. A. Sao monoaor apart­ ment #103 or ca l 451-1084714no on- •war 470-7355. 10-11H QUICT ONE lid n auin, jmm d, $300 + electricity, no dtullla, modal. 1432 Wotantan. 474-4899,477-5009.9-20 GARAGE AFT. noar uni». Private, for- nrihed.A*b*h paid. 478-8850.9-22 370— Unf. Apts. DOGGONE GOOD SAVINGS! • ON UTSHUTTLE • Ff£E phono hook-up • FREE «bdrialy connection • Not ono.bU TWO tonnio court* • FunWhodClubroom • SparMng pool!! 385-2044 Ivanhoe Village Apartm ents - in Travis Heights ~ N a l To Park — Quiet Neighbor­ — Ideal For Grad Stu­ hood dent — Recreation Areas — Pooi/Laundry — Excellent Rate 1500 East Side Dr. 4414375 WALKING DISTANCE TO CAMPUS 1 bedroom Affordable for fa i. $225 Qwet neighborhood ratfinq 2 bedroom «nth Tower view $350 304 E 33rd Co* 3200331 10-6A Students-Study Haven come rtudy with ut. Pre-bawng tor fa*. Newt, remodeled torga effioencie» A* oppfionce» corpebd, mevbfcnd» torge waft-m doaett, laundry tocl ihei. On RR dwtlle, goa/woter pod. $180 DOLPHIN APTS. Office Hr» Mon-Sat 800-500 371-0160 9-2TV SPACIOUS EFFICIENCIES/«riutaw'AI op afiance* mart-hbncb got ft water poto. Pooi, rtoroge 2 weebt free - 305 W 35th. 459-4977 Tem 9-29F__________ SPACIOUS STUDtO apartment W ert camput $300 watar/got paid $250 de- poa*. rater ad porkmg no peh. 1 penon 2512-APeoH 459-8935 9 300 R K N T A L 3 7 0 - U n f . A p t s . John B ark ley Com pany U.T. A R E A Q U A R T ER S Unique, affordable houses, duplexes, and apartments; Most with wood floors, fans, lots of windows, many trees. Historic charm, attractively re­ done. responsibly managed 4008 M aplew ood. 1840* VI ia p retty area eaat of Hyde P a rk . Wood flo or*, tree*, quiet neighborhood. $360.00 IBO BIM n vo o d : Sam e as above, CA/CH. $386.00 E fficie n cy, 808 W . ttn d : E fficie n cy, lots o f windows. $235 00 BO SW .Sfn d : wood flo or, fan; upstair*, lots o f window*. $560.00 •O BW .SSnd: Sm all 1A, close to cam pus, $226.00 c a ll fo r an an a 472-2123 I REDUCED RATES ■ Sm all, quiat community. 1 1 Bedroom homes available I today. Ceding fans, CA/ a CH, on shuttle route. . 1 | B 3501 tpeedwey Cal 472-4893 sdoApts. T h e B r ia r s A p ts. s q q :: re n t 1835 B u r to n Dr. 442-6789 ★ COMFORTABLE AND * ★ AFFORDABLE ★ efficiency, easy waft to school, west tide of campus. Plenty of parking and pool ♦ Fumohed or Unfomáhed it 476-8590 2518 Leon SKY LIGHT and ciílinQ fon, •n a coxy one bed­ room. Sm all, quiet apartm ent commu­ nity Scenic area with easy occest to IH-35 and the U.T. Shuttle. Call M a n a ge r • 443-9614 ★ T0-18P O n e M onth Free W ITH YEA R'S LEASE • 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments • carpal • central av/Heof • iowndryroom • pool • ga8 6 w ot» peed $ 2 6 5 -$ 2 9 5 Corlton Properties 328-8700, 451-4664 9-23V Hyde Park - IF Shuffle LARGE efficreociet with waft-m do­ téis LAUNDRY VERY Quiet GREAT Ratwi! C o l M IKE 2-6 p.m or leave messoge ♦ 323-6526 A Sequoia Apartments • 301 W . 38th St. T0-4N • $50 M0VE-IN • NO DEPOSIT FOR STUDENTS New cometan, d—gnw jrm from $240 oou m 660 iq. h 1-1 - $299. 918 k) ft 2 1 - r lM . $400 N ear Startb — i Properties One 836-0727 9-28N ROOMMATE NOTOT working out* Too m todoyt 38th + Ava 8 Excelsnt lorga Mficbncy-S225/mo ♦ atactnerty A M *br manooer/ 452-4212 9-30J 390— Unf. Duplexes .... HYDE PARKI Great 2 bedroom with 2 liv­ ing areas, covered parking, storage in basement, must see, $495. Apartm ent Finders, 458-1213 9-23H TOP HALF 38ft 1BA, w aft to UT $575. Stove, refrigerator, CA/CH, coin laun­ dry, 801-8 W 28th. Ralph Louis Property Monogamant. 458-6757. 9-26Z ^ ^ ^ ■ $ 4 2 5 , g asl^ Sm w dk to u t, ca/ch , Jm&Sm coin laundry. 2708-8 SoiodoH is Property Monogement. 458-4 26Z o. Ralph Lou- 58-6757. 9- n u n pan. TOP HALF 3BR 1BA, w aft to UT $575. Stow*, refrigerator, CA/CH, coin foun­ dry, 801-8 W 28th. Ralph Louis Property Monogamant, 458-6757. 9-26Z UT AREA rant large Duplex 2 ond 3 bed­ room», 2400 tq. ft, w al to w al carpet. A/ ; W/D connection» Vs block to U.T. Shuttle. 467-6509.10-10_____________ 1940’s 2-1 ON QUIET street. Yard, oak Boon, lots of windows. 1307 Kirkwood. $360.00/mo. 472-2123.10-11F NEIGHBORHOOD, 1940’s style. 5 min. to campus. 2 bedroom, 1 oath duplewes. Upstairs or down, trees, uhnusplieie, ovoíabb now. $325-5375. New Morv- ogement Co. 476-6616.9-71H________ 2 Bdr IN CLARKSVILLE. Large living . kitchen area. Private yard. Very speewsi $60Q/mo. Mmt see. Col 477-HSl5 or 480-9188.9-23D NORTHWEST HILLS large 3-2V4, study, $700-5730. 6006 Shadow Vafley Cove - 469-6300, 441- 5574.9-30P ratio a, 400— Condos- Townhousos • • • uuatasai**: a * Sim * Qubt Compbx i^ M ju e t lOianuteetoCempu*. * Lama one bedroom, canpa z bM *. b«Ny pNMod, M a HW.OO OR Andamn Lana e a < *m a H M a a ■ >ar a a a 484-381Í* 83*8188 a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a > $99 FOR UT STUDENTS? Shuttie, 5 minut* w alk to campus, 15 minutes to downtown, 50 ft. pool, spa, pool table, security. 476-5875 10-6J * 1 Month Free Rent! * $50.00 Deposit EMcbncbi avalabb — near ihuHb on 37*« 8 Speedway end 35th 8 Guodoiupa. e ceftngtam e iwanmmg pooh e I rsplocs» e louray * From $200-$25Q/monlh Col N or 453-1591,480-0662; 453-8026 Walking Distance to Campus One bedroom — $225 + E. Quiet neighborhood setting. 304 E. 33rd Call 320-0331. 10-17P ★ Student ★ ★ Special ★ 3 bedroom $415 1 bedroom $250 ★ 451-2268 ★ TO-20P RENTS r STaSFR f AT$255| C at forfor$goeU a 1 and2Btdrooms ApBftiuBnti and TownhomN • Pool • Hoi Tub • OnCRShum m NOW LEASING! ! Irongate A Apartments f A54-2636 ^ CALL NOW ! ^ i i i i i i i T h e A t t i c Furnished efficiencies e Close to UT Shuttle e F R E E utility hook-up e 10°o discount for students e EFF-2B r starting at $ 199 e Near Highland M a i & Capital Plaza 926 6664 REDUCED Hyde Pork Area Close to UT and Shuttle, 1-1 apt*.; 707b E. 49lh — $165 plus bills. 459-0017 NOW PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER! * 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Starting at $295 a ALL BILLS PAID • Located on UT shuttle & City Bus Linos • W alking Distance to M ajor Shopping Center • Ideal for Students CAMERON GREENS APARTMENTS 5700 Cameron Rd. 454-7007 CASA GRANDE 480-8039 (327-3446) 1400 Mo Grand. e Pool a FumiaherkUnfumiahad a Shuttle BueCRy Bue a Laundry Room e Water Paid L ip 1 Bedrooms Apts. araMA NOW T0-18P HALF-MONTH'S RENT FREE Large 1-1 m small, quiet complex near RR. N ew ly rem odeled. $245. 467-6508 LEAVE M ESSAG E ^ $ 2 2 5 — 1 - l^ L , Only a few left. 3 clean quiet complexes dose Bo campus e 2800 bo Grande 1-1'»: $225 » 2508 San Gabriel 1-IVpoat $225 # 2304 Leon: 1-1'* $225 ’ -” J GAYNER PROPERTY MGMT CO. LYNER PROPERTY M GM T CO. Unique larga basamant oportm ul in hrstonc family homa. 6 blocks wost of compus/CopitoL 2 BR, 1 BA. Lorga rooms, brick walls, soma windows. CA/CH, G raanwich VH- ioga otmosphara. Laos* deposit, reference* required 4 7 7 -4 3 4 8 4 8 2 -8 7 3 3 9-20 South Shuffle Lim itad N um ber o f luxury 1, 2, & 3 Bdrm s. still crvoitab le from $250 Properties One 447-7368 _____________________________9-29N ★ $70 Move-in Special ★ Pre-leasin g fo r Sum m er/Fall * 331-4019A ^ t ABPI! • 1 ft 2 bedrooms Fvmisbod on ruquost Close to campus on shuttle route. River Oaks Apts. Modkal Arts ft Rad Jover t 472-3914 • 10-19F $99 MOVE IN Lorga 1-1'» and 2-1'» Central, n UT, Seton, and state hospitals. 453-4991 10-218 •rtra large aponmenh prompt mamtanance/vary deon NR rtaXIbtM iv m w g pooi nmriy decorated large 1 bedroom - 750 »q ft brga 2-2 - 1025 ft BROOKHOLLOW A PA RTM EN TS 1414 Arena Dr. 445-5655 Fall Rant Spadai 199.0011 LARGE efficioncie» m Hyde Park e A l gppbowca» e Pool e Drope» e Laundry e Go» & Water poto Hyde Park Placa 4400 A n t Manager *113 452-3590 10-14F 710 W . 34TH. One bedroom, one bath, CA/CH, duhwteher, depoaai, very nice. $295. Co* Pot, broker, 454-1711.9-23V 9-27H WEST CAMPUS Quiet street, huge 2 BR in 4-plex. W aft or ihiMie. $550 + E 477-1163.9-19K_________________ C i t y properties _ f t iiiw iflM is in n . wWm UT WALK - efficiency in 192O'» 4-plex 906 W . 22nd St. $225 ‘ $225.00/mo. 472- 2123.10-11F ENFHELD 28R BA Quiet Courtyard; CA/ CH; Modem KArnen; Pool, Shuttle; $350; 499-8584.9-20 ------ property in STUDENTS QUIET South Aurtin. Pool, near busfcn. Very otford- abte. For more information ca* 447- 7898.9-21M SPACIOUS EFFICIENCY Hyde Pork rtrut- *e. Unhjnwhed/Fumished. A* appli­ ances, mmibtnds, poaL Gas/water paid. Two weeks free Ca* Terri. 459-4977. 305 W . 35lh St. 9-28F Q U IP REFURBISHED COMPLEX IN CLARKESV11LE 1-1 ALL APPLIANCES. WATER/GAS PAID, LAUNDRY ROOM $275 SUMMER $295 FALL 1503 W . 9TH. CENTURION PROPERTIES, 345- 6599.9-22 N_______________________ 2201 LEON, W ert Campm, large effi- aency, oppboncet, tma* complex, de­ pot*, bate. $200. Owner telephone. 926-6962.9-23 HALF OFF fint M month'» vent. Large 2- 1Ví townhoura $325 on thuHb. O ote to Co* Pat 445-6471 S99.9-____________________ VERY CLEAN efficiency $225 on SR Route Ceding font, microwovet, pool and more. 385-3842.9-30_______________ Luxurious Sophisticated 2 bedroom 2 bath apartments. Con­ veniently located in the sought after W est Campus orea. Amenities include m icrowave oven, coiling fans, washer and dryer, fireplace, balcony and covered parking. Ca* soon for best selectionl 476-8590. 9-29A ★ Enfiaid 2-2 it a Alapplancat a pooi a codatacwnly a caiingfi a hottub > a gat coating* AVAtOBU NOW! Near riurta - No Pan $700/mo - $4 /dap Slap One Propartiat ★ 482-8 9 25 -3 3 1 -0 1 1 7 ★ T0-4N HALF OFF firrt fu* month's rent. Large efficiency $175 lumehed or unfumehed on ihullw, date to shopping. Ca* Pat 445-6471 or 345-6599 9-30 $99 MOVE-IN tpadoil Luxurious, otkroc trv» condo» UT orao affidonóet: fire­ pioce, jocuzzL ceding font, on RR shultb. Sboron, 926-0898. 9-28L 3 9 0 — U n f . D u p le x e s 6005-A CAMERON. 28R. Shuttle. Appb- CA/CH, W /D pobo, pet dropet, okay $325’ 4?9^0?23 9-: SEPTEMBER FREEI Neor CR 2-1 duplex, hordwood Boon, ceding font, meabbrKh, notar poid. Rani negotiable. 928-3585. 9-27J______________________________ 218 W ert 51rt ocrosa from intramural fields 2-1 oppboncet, w/d connecbont $300 Hufl Properties 346-2121 9-27J TRAVIS HEIGHTS tpodout 1-1. A I omen.- $325/mo Co* Ofce B 327-4800 doy» Gwen 442-8943 evening» 9-10 28lh ft SAN PEDRO. 2-2 SmaN quiet complex pool, hot tub. $550 + E. 477- 1163. 9-19K 10-10F REDUCEDi LEON ft 24th. W aft to UT. 2/ 1, W/D, microwave, ceding ion, mint bbnd, covered parking. $600. Utot Sys­ tem 451-8964.9-30P 2 W EEKS FREED W ert Camput efficiency, woft to UT $199/mo Stop One Proper be» 482-8925 9 22F 9-22N LARGE ONE Oorktvflb, wafk-m closet» CA/CH, bpotai near dty/dwtlb from $275 with Vi month free. 469-0925, 476-2803. 9-20M 2-1 IN borhood near 35th ond $350 458-6824, 480-1868 9 E 31ST ft SPEEDWAY Sunchara. Beauti­ mt- ful 2-2 Fireplace, W/D, ceding fan, Syt- 1650. Bbot appb- crowove, tecurity gate. $650. tom 451-8964. 9-30P 9-22 Hyde P ark Apartments Call For Low Fall Rates! Located Next to City Park, Tennis Courts & Pool • Furnished/Unfurnished • UT SHUTTLE • On-site Mom t • 24 Hour maintenance 458-2096 4 3 1 1 Sp eed w ay Rostin Mgmt. Co. t♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ I » ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ f STUDENTS SPECIALS? V ? ONi AND IWO SIMOOMS S t o r t i n g a t $ 1 9 9 ★ on M S Shuttle ★ W alking Distance to: • F a b u lo u s 6 th S t r e e t a c t iv it ie s • Z llk e r P a r k / D o w n t o w n ★ 2 P o o ls ★ O n - S it e M g m t f t $ 9 9 S a c u i t t y P a p o a i t ▲ H e a t h e r c r e s t A p a r t m e n t s 4 7 6 -2 2 1 9 1616 W. M h St. t♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ I 6 C L O S E TO S H U T T L E STAFFORD HOUSE \ !’ \ fm u v |n 2-1 s starting at: $325 1-1 s starting at: > $ 2 0 0 X f SAN D STO N E I & II 24G8 & 2501 Manor Rd SUMMER f AH YR LEASE 1255 $300 $264 Ctoe# to 6/hjTO* fun*8n*d jrtu wai Sps A CXjbroom LJbjndry Fadbe* • Socur*y Patroéad • PrxW LxnOecopod RnV MonogatT by Rogoocy Propamoa. he • Siuddbrrt Rm k* nt Monogor jrHEDAILY TEXAN/Monday, September 19.1988/Page 13 RIN T A t M N TAL M N TAL 420—Unf. Houses 4 3 5 — C o - o p s 400— Condos Tewnhomes i. I \ S I Large 3-2 brick house in quiet neighborhood, 6 blocks west of campus/Cap- Hol. Patio, yard, CA/CH, ap­ pliances. Lease deposit ref­ erences required. 477- 4348,482-8733. 9-20 BIG MAMA! Hug* 4-2 in TARRYTOWN, hardwood floors, firaploc*, coil­ ing fan, 2 living oreas, W /D con­ nections, covered parking w/ctr- cular drive, $1500. Apartm ent Finders 458-1213 9-23H 1010 É 15sh 3 blocks east of IH-35. Older 2-1, wood floors, $395 Kirktay • Levy Readers. 451-0072,459-5667.10-30 HYDE PARK orao 2bdrm/1bo, hordwood floors, fireplace, tarread yord, lorga go- raga. 476-3634 $495.00 4807 Ava G. TO-6N_____________________________ 3 BR 2 8A with deck. 1400 tq. ft. dota-rn, W bdw r ft sc $800/mo 258- 9258. Avoitobb Oct. 1. CA/CH. 10-17 3006 SPEEDWAY vary large 1-1 in older, hirtoricol route. Avaflaeb 10-1-88, $400. Choban ft Attoc 476-5394 10- 12H 709 W . ELIZABETH. Cute 2-1 w/new car­ pet, wother/dryar connection», $350/ mo. Col Q m Choban ft Attoc 476- 4394.9-29H_______________________ TWO BLOCKS front comput. Nice 2-1, CA/CH, W/D, CD, S500/mo Mova-in tpadol ovoflobb. Brat 453-0540.10-7D 4 BDR/2 8A rteor Hancock shuHb, bring, dkring, rtudy, firapbica, CA/ CH, oppbortcat, toncad yord. $850/mo. 459-9141.9-23 jo 425 — Room s PRIVATE ROOMS - student special - CO­ ED - FURNISHED INCLUDING REFRIG­ ERATOR - UTILITIES PAID - 2 Mods UT - CA/CH - $150 - $225 - 477-5941. 9- 27 LARGE CARPETED room. Private en­ trance, bath, refrigerator. No kitchen. 38lh St. Quiet indfnduob, no pel» no bote. A8P- 422-1212.9-29N__________ MATURE NON-SMOKER. Private room, thore kitchen. Quiet, palien - Vi block to UT. $160 - 5200/month. Lease - thore bdk. 472-5646. 9-30N WALK TO UT, Capitol ft Downtown. ABP induding cabb T.V.I $225 • $400. 1902 Nueco» 472-7562; 474-0750.10-4C 5220/FALL ABP. 2 blocks UT. Newly re­ modeled dorm - styb efficiency. Pork- mg u . CA/CH, laundry. 2502 Nuece» 474- 2365, 476-1957.10-5D______________ ALL SILLS paid. Quiet/thody, next to UT. S150-S220. Murt tee. 472-4205. 9-21F TARRYTOWN BEAUTIFUL home. Superb wooded location, ER shultb, shopping, li­ brary, all amenike» Quiet, studious mob. V3utibtb» 478-8063.9-19____________ ROOM ft BATH. Private exlrance, fur­ nished. Quiet neighborhood neor urtrv. A* txis poto 478-6650 9-22__________ ROOM IN Vrctorion Home. 1908 Son GabrieL Private entrance, bath, share rest. 320-8940.9-22M 4 3 5 — C o - o p s NEAT HOUSE ALL BILLS ALL MEALS P O O L SUNDECKS C O - E D F U N ! all from $230/mo. Pre-leasing for fall, too! ICC CO-OPS 510 W . 23rd 476-1957 FRENCH HOUSE! $289 I lu ll h ie R o o m All bills (Jreat meals 4 blocks UT 478-6586 MATURE NON-SMOKER. Private room, share kitchen. Quiet, pefless - V» block to UT. $160 - S200/monlh Lease - shore bifl» 472-5646. 9-30N_____________ BEAUTIFUL historic home 2 blocks UT Quiet, studious, relaxed. Doubbs $293- $300; singles $325-5354. Indudes ALL food, bid» Ca* soonl Hebous Co-op, 478-6763,1909 Nuece» or coll ICC Co­ ops: 476-1957 510 W 23rd. 10-6D ECLECTIC. CREATIVE, fitq 3 W ade te a UT1 Doldout vaggb cubb *, paaL graol housamotas. Doubbs freer from $357. A l faod ond U k bebdad. Haute of Cammora, 2610 Ro Craw da, 476-7905.1060 LA CASA HISPANICA. Spanbh language co-op hot 1 room laft at IISO/m awK 322-9105.476-6691.9-20 GREP4ACRESI HAS voconcb t far men aidant and woman. W a’ra a tmaR m «cotas seuBrwast of eaamus. $263/mo pays for your awn room, Mb, and grant foodl 809 VAM X 469-0672. 9-20 YOU DON'T NEED A ROOMMATE... YOU JUST NEED TO FIND COURT- IAND. WE'LL FIND ONE FOR YOU OR LEASE YOU Vi AN APARTMENT! DON'T MISS OUT. 1200 BROADMOOR 454-2537 9-27J ROOMMATE BROKER FINDS COMPAT- IB IE ROOMATES. CAN HAVE OR NEED SPACE. 477-5569. fea.9-29N MATURE NON-SMOKER. Private room, tho Utdren. Q uiet pedes» half block to U.T. $160-$20Q/monlh bate. Share b*b 472-5646.9-30N SERIOUS STUDENT teaks roommate for Ik t new 2-2 on FW thufle. $215/mo + Vi b flt w/$50 ait. No enokinq no pel» 327-4335.9-21________________ NONSM OKING FEMALE to thore 2-2Vl luxury condo. W/D, caftng fon» poaL fitaploca, mrci'owova ond much moral $200/month plus V. L Wendy 385- 4391.9-26_________________________ HOUSEMATES WANTED for fix bed­ room house with pool Rent ranging from 95.00 to 272.00. Col 926-4715.9-22 FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to dwra 2-1 in W art Camput, W/D, Microwave, V CR., W C ShuHb $30Q/mo +V2 b*k Co» IGm 473-8828.9-19_____________ LIBERAL ROOMMATE needed for fur­ nished apartment in Riverside area UT thtode, own room ft bath, short bora, $200 ABP 472-1736 or 445-2376. 9- 20________________________________ ROOMMATE NEEDED: W ert campu» private room, $310 + V2 b ik A l ameni- tb» Co* Ed 479-8582.9-21 NEW HOUSE, Lome roommates (mobs). 5BR 38A 175/mo. + q l*i » Abo houramota, lorge 38R 200/mo. Eart Campus 477-6667.9-21 NEED HOUSEMATE to sham 4 bedroom house. 1 mib from camps». $170. Col 454-8535.9-21_____________________ NEED RESPONSIBLE houramota. Largo 3-2 w/evorything. No tmobing, pel» drugs. Great location. Jon. 928-1461.10- 13_________________________________ WC CONDO need one mab roommate share 2-2 W/3 guys $200 + utflflb» 23rd Rio Grand# Ceding fon» cabb, fol­ ly furnished, micro. C ol Colin 477-2311 9-22 HOUSEMATE NEEDED in Vrctorion Home. Private entrance, bad» share rest of House. 1908 San GabrieL 320-8940 9-22M ROOMMATE NEEDED - Pronto! Pleara co* 346-8380. Fantartic place, great lo­ cation on 31st Street. 9-23 NEED FEMALE Roommate» Nonsmok­ ing. Shore one bedroom lorge bring area. 1V2 bath, NR shultb. Only $120.00. Weekend ond day timo. 443-7185 and afternoons 441- 1-1302.9-2 -20 NONSMOKER SHARE 2/1 Duplex near Barton Spring» Z*ker Park $180, Vj b*k 444-4691 onyiime. 9-21 HOUSEMATE NEEDED in Victorian Home. Private entrance, bath, share red of house 1908 San GabrieL 320-8940. 9-22M 500 — Misc. ST O R A G E PR O BLEM S? Short Term/long Term Control, kghtod, 24-hour access and on-«le management. 6 x 20 feet storting at $33.00. h O F F FIRST M O N T H S RENT WITH STU DEN T ID. C A D ILLA C JA CK SEC U R ED ST O R A G E 6623 N. LAMAR 467-2756 9-21K PARKING SPACE for rent. Covered park­ ing space in apartment complex garage. 50 feet off campu» San Jodnto Blvd. $ 50/mo, 472-9233 Catherine- evening hour» 9-23 ANNOUNCEMENTS 530 — Travol Transportation SKI N AUSTIN January trip. Ski ridge Jon. d-8. Lifli ’ son. W aft to C ol 452-6662, -8. Lift» bdaina. $209 per- i lift» night ita tram condo'» 62,4674)610.10-10 5 5 0 — L ic o n s o d C h ild C a r o DAYCARE/PRESCHOOL 18 mae-5yrs. Fu* ond Vl day program» Discounts avaflabb. ShuHb bus route 45lh ft Rad Rivar.467-2121 9-21________________ 5 6 0 — P u b lic N o t k o ARE YOU talar than ovarage* C ol for a trae Tofl CKib of Aurtin newdaltor. 834- 1930.10-7_________________________ CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD Centennial's Best Largest 2-2 comer location, second floor! 2 patios, all appliances, fireplace, pool, under ground parking. Johnson & Co. 452-4300 10-3Z CAMPUS PROPERTIES West Campus Condos Going Fasti Call Now !! 477-3334 Free Service 9-231 ~VERY LARGE TOWNHOME 3-2 and 2-lV;, a* appliances, ceiling fans, firepioce, fenced patio, pool, pet O X S375-S445 N ear W illiam Can­ non and IH-35. 346-4392 10-51 ROOMY! ce ilin g 2 -2 , fans, m i­ crowave, W /D connections, w alk to shuttle, G O IN G FAST! $350. Apartment Finders, 458-1213 9-23H WATER SPORTS - Condo at Logo Vota. 3-2 or 1-1. Fumbhad or unfumithad Owner/broker. 1-273-2742. Leave mes­ sage 9-19 4 1 0 — F u m . H o u s e s 2 8R 2Vj BA Comer MLK ft Rio Grande. Like new. $600/mo or best offer. {713) 723-5170. 9-19 4 2 0 — U n f . H o u s e s Oidor house converted into 4-Pbx. Hugo 2 BEDROOM—iorgo enough for 4 roommate» CA/CH, W/D connection» $375.00. Alto 1 BEDROOM at $200.00 P riva te Pro p erties 4 6 7 -7 1 8 2 3 4 3 - 0 9 9 0 9-16N 906 E. 54th - Older, deon, 2-1-1. Hard- wood floors, bbnd» A/C fon» fenced yard, $425. 926-1999; 472-2097 9- 22N 3 BEDROOM IV» both. CA/CH, dryer, refrigerator, drihwoaher, IF ihto- fle, Speedway $630. Evening» 836- 0375 9-23_________________________ HYDE PARK area. 2-1 A/C, appbonce» hordwood floor*, various omenitie» $450-5500. 451-8122 W ert World Real Ertoto. 9-27________________________ LARGE 3-1, CA/CH, hordwood floor» fenced, carport, W/D, bu» 1201W 40ih $550.255-6778.9-23_______________ AVAILABLE NOW. 3-1 house, near Seton shuHb, hardwood» deck sun room, W/ D included. Co* JBG 441-7880.10-3J 5307 WOODROW 1-1, stove, refrigera­ tor, fenced $275. 1207 W . 40lh 2-1 fenced, neor Seton $375 451-8271.9-21 NEAR UT (eartside). Attractive large 3-2, stova/refrigerator, $395; shady, qubr 3-1, firaploca, $375 472-9019.9-19G BARGAiNI NEAR UT, jurt east of 1-35. 4- 2, 2-1, or 1-1. Spodou» fenced pel» W/ D cormedion» $395-5200. 459-5829 or 327-0425 10-3G ST. JOHN/GUADALUPE area 3-2 do* Irees.fenced yard, quiet house, convenient neighborhood $445/mo Beaver Real Estate 892-4914.9-19J RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. location. W ert Condot/ . Qty Prop- 2 BEDROOM HOME in French Place Hardwood floors, many window*, refrig­ erator, W/D connection» $425.00 H/fe’ve got som e real news for you! Affordable Luxury Designed for Student Living Beautiful 1 and 2 Bedroom Plans from $275 Furnished or Unfurnished. Just off IH South, Qakwood Apartments offer options for every living situation. Set amidst towering oak trees and lush landscaping, Qakwood features fully equipped clubhouses adjoining magnificent swimming pools. Six, nine and twelve month leases as well as month-to-month accom­ modations. C/implete Home Services packages (including dishes, linens, T V . and more). Maid Service is also available. Office open daily 9 to 6. Sorry, no pets. 0a tko UT Skuttlo Liao $100 D eposit CALL AND ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL 1 3 \ Bedrocks . g^’ed Te"^'S 3■>. Bos S»op SE 0 ^ 0 Service I'anspodotiC r tjthng G teer AidO O ' JOC jZZi s k)- B Ques & P.cn.c at li-^es tQ110 r c erorrri T^e • Ceiiioq Fans *n ivm g Rooms o^d Bed' t Car Washing A'pc • Exerose Rooms • Te rn m U l Or. Z up w A on your party* Pro- and bondi ■teonal party and d m o i For mora •a corauR infenwaten oal 764-1656 odor 5 pjn. 458-1846.9-19J EDUCATIONAL 5 0 0 -M u s ic a l Instruction PIANO LESSONS. Exporioncod toachor/ lúdante. All age» porfenwor occopdng and b vo k Clonicol/improvtead iM m 4 5 3 -9 6 9 6 .9 -2 9 GUITA country, R IB . rock, jazz. Uno yean Andy Bunngton, LESSONS: 4 5 2 n 6 l1 l.9-2 U 5 9 0 — Tutoring . 10-7H 4 7 2 -6 6 6 6 House of l% \ T U T O R S W PROFESSIONAL TUTORING ALL SUBJECTS OPEN 7 DAYS/WK SUN-THURS TIL MIDNIGHT 813 W. 24th (T rl-To w nrs) 610 — Misc. Instruction WM double or trtpie your nMdfcig speed! Austin Learning C en ter 3 3 1 -0 4 5 4 SERVICES 740 — Bicycle Repair LOST IN THE WOOD ABOUT WHERE TO GET MOTORCYCLE PARTS? TRY Austin Cycle Salvage Col for lha bert dad on new ft uaad port», occes 4 6 2 6 Burnet Rd 4 5 3 -9 8 0 9 9-27V 750 — Typing ZIVLEY’S THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE PRINTING APPLICATIONS Sure, We Type FRESHMAN THEMES Why Nal Start Out wttt) Good Grodss? Law Briefs RESUMES 27V7HIMPHILL PARK At 27th & Guadalupe Ptenty of Parking 472-3210 472-7677 NETWORK ENT. RESUMES a Resume aid & construction a LasarPnnting a All UT standards compilad a Ganaral word processing 2813 Rio Grande 479-8027 House of I t T U T O R S !! T Y P IN G & RESUMES O P E N 7 DA Y S SUN-THURS T i t M IDN IG HT 472-6666 8 1 3 W 2 4 th (T ri-T o w e rs ) A+TYPING SERVICE 4 0 7 W .M * M Professional Praofreadtafl Spdtag. Punciuallan. Usage Guaranteed Conccl SpacWDtacomt Rata For Rcvtwd ThcMs/DtaaaitaOons 472 335-7903 UNIVERSITY TYPING 473-2948 S2-S3/P» KUSH J06S ANYTIME. Raeumw $10. Highete print quality. Spaing guaranteed correct. 7 days a weak. Forking. UT oreo at 610 W. 3 0 * Street #102. $2.00 OFF W/THIS AD X M H law rata». Fort . Koran 331 WORD PROCESSING 1792.106 HAVE WORD LONGHORN COPIES • Resumes • Theses • T erm P a p e rs • W o rd P rocessing • B in d in g • L a m in a tin g • L as e r P rin tin g • K o d a k '- C o pies 2518 Guadalupe 476-4498 America’s Oldest-Largest PROFESSIONAL RESUME SERVICE JOB WINNING! RESUMES /UP Export Destgnl Printing fttartnc WNtol • jo b taeum aaiattan'A p pllccirtont • MaMng C o m p a g ra St i t t ' i • MHrtarv C onvam ont • Buanea Propoeo* ft Bopcxtj a Free Intandew/Utatlme Updoim g One* t*ftft tk rtta m a ta a ^ ^ 4300 Ouodalupa #103 234* W. Eon Whtta #F *•4 3 Rumat #2031 WOODS TY P IN G A WORD PROCESSING LaserW riter II Printing M acintosh / MS DOS 472-6302 2200 Guadalupe $ 1 1 0 t poy cadi for old Mgh «drool nog*, toyrng up to 1110 (main'»}. Up to 556 M y 'i) Ako buy WK. 14K I. Ifir goto laweky Any «ondAon. (9 3 0 pm^Tpm JAMES LSWtSGOLO EXCHANGE 458-2639 $$$ CASHFOR$$$ $$$ THE NEW YEAR $$$ $$$ WE PAY TOP DOLLAR $$$ Don't giva your voluobla] o xnyt We pay more tor corns, jawoky, gold, ate. Taxes Intamofconol Gold Inc 30lh 4 N tornor 3204)191 30th & N. Lamar 320-0191 10-11F Dance Dimensions The Sound & Light Company Professional Mobile DJ Service 389-1403 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 10-10C CATERING FOR ALL OCCASIONS Lot us do the w ork fo r you. From foot­ ball partios lo holiday entertainm ent INCREDIBLE EDIBLES C all A ngie Thielem ora 442-9434 9-23B EMPLOYMENT 770 — Employment Agencies ★ STUDENTS★ P art-tim e, weekends & evenings tem porary assign­ ments available. Call: AUSTIN TEMPORARY SERVICES. INC 454-5555 780 Employment Services WE HAVE MORE JOBS THAN PEOPLE O ur dwnte ora coling ovarydoy for lo n g ih o rt and temp to parm potilion]. a l area» a? Austin. If you hove expen- anca on any o f the following c o l for • Executive Secretaries • W ord Processors • Legal Secretaries e Data Entry e Bookkeepers e Switchboard Opers e Telemarkets Personnel Pool® 454-3507 N o t An Agoocy. Never A Feo E-ÓJE- 7 9 0 — Part Tima JC Penney Telemarketing Center Port tone openings for nfeduQ k to take CMtomer orden for catalogue merchondee mud be abb to work flanbte Am idiedub between hours of 7:30 ant-11 OO pm Mon-Sal Min. mquirement per day 7 JO am-6 pm; evening 3 pm-11 pm. If yaw enjoy customer contort and hove pleasant tabphone voice, bis may be b e job for you. The patekom of- rm u jn p p o w w a g sonrv. flnauionaM fecounte, paid twining and cmer bonete . Aoptcatom one bang occepted 8-00 am- 4 0 0 pm Mon.-Fri JC Penney Telemarketing Center 836-3786 12246 Runningbirte Ln. (OB Metric Ib d . botamen Burnet & lomar) 9-30M ^ ^ ^ ■ 9 0 + 2RO-1005.9-19 ASAr TYFtNG/Word prowainft papan, 4m 8>a dhMrtotfoA matiouG» w d i o p tf* twipl tPvA f 165/pqnt Canrinnr» 451- ■m. 10-14 MRJJE WORD Fracratewg. Papan , A t m a o l a A S ronftcnpO on, S w r a t o t e m , BFOORBOflMi ID VBOfl MpiW OCB. bow ! /M » 2 IM 9 0 4 .1 0 > U M UT i .346-7100.9-19 ★ ★ CHILD CARE ★ ★ WORKERS Sundays 10AM to 12:30 for Mefhodist Church nunory, npar UT campus. Ex- parianca, references required. Poest* bie weekend and evening houn. Start of $4/hr. Cal Jane» Colins 328-8210 after 6 end weekends. 9-23 RENTAL 4 3 5 — Co-ops In tro d u cin g.... New Guild Co-op 2 blocks UT*ABP*Sundeck*Pets OK B ig backyaid*Great meals*Funfunfun $289 doubles, $369 singles N o w p r e io o s in g fo r fa ll I Ccteraonl S10W .2MSL 472-0392. NEED TO EARN STEADY INCOME NOW? Lomas Telemarketing is looking fo r qualified individuals with ex­ cellent communication skills to m arket premium credit cards na­ tionw ide. WE GUARANTEE $ 6 / HR. G reat atmosphere! G reat people! G reat hoursl 9-1 M-F, 1- 5 M-F, or 5 -9 M-Th and 9:30- 1:30 Sat. A pply in person at: 300 W . 5th St. Suite 840 MBANK PLAZA 10-11D $5.00 Hr. $5.00 Hr. STUDENTS CONCERT TICKET Part tima evening positions Apply: 5 5 5 5 N . Lam ar Bldg. C -1 0 7 1-5 pm SALES H M D $ 7.50/HO UR and upl A n al advertising promotion 473- 3877 9-191 local busmen. for FREE-LANCE Muterator needed now. 100 small drawings Entertaining portrayals of techmcai concepts. Sand «ampia» today to PCI, 6304 Sprocewood Cove, 78731. 9 -20M __________________________ __ CREDIT CLERK needed for port lima posi­ tion. Hour» flexible. Credit related experi­ ence a plus. C ol Sharon Grossi or Mon- nette McDonald 476-6511. Yoring'» Downtown, 506 Congress. 9-19 TELEMARKETING POSITIONS avaHobfo two bioda from campus. Evening ihifte 20/hrv per week, $5-10/hr. C ol lony at 477 -38 08.10-5_____________________ PART TIME job. Student wanted for free apartment near campus in return for maintenance work for tmafl complex. References required. 480 -06 62 453- 8026 9-23 PT TELLER. Experienced preferred. Imme­ diate opening. 12.30-4:30 p.m. C ol Brenda for appt 478 -9 5 0 0 .9 -1 9 DO W NTO W N RECEPTION IST/customer service 11-2 p m M-F. Professional ap- peoronce C a í Leslie 3 2 0 -4 0 0 0 .9-19D CHILDCARE POSITIONS avaflable. Sun­ days and Wednwdante. Please appty in person, first Baptist Church 901 Trinity. 9-19D MAUJRE PERSON wanted to care for in­ fant in my home. 25 hrv/week - morn­ ing». Must have good reference» & own transportation. $ 80/w eek. 327-1550. 9- 19 HOUSEKEEPER/PERSON Friday 20-25 hrVweek. Monday, W edne*day, after­ noon» Tuesday & Thursday $4/nr. 346- ’« 8 4 .9-2 0 PART TIME seamstress, must be experi­ enced. W eekdays, flexible hours. Refer­ ences (3) N ear UT. CalI 4 7 8 -7 4 6 6 .9 -2 0 THREE ENERGETIC persons needed for software development, (1) Project super­ visor 2-4 programmers needed, must be knowledgeable PASCAL; programmed- based I CM-PC Call for interv iew (409) 9 6 8 -68 50 9-20 TOM THUMB PAGE, 12860 Rsearch Blvd. is accepting applications for part- time grocery derks. Mud be w Sng to work in a fast paced environment. Please apply in person. 9-2 0 IMMEDIATELY HIRING. Lunch and din­ ner waiters at an elegant sorority house. Free meats. Cafl mommas. 474 -07 76 ask for Mrs Sweeney. 9 -2 0 0 DAYCARE IN South Austin — von driver/ day care attendant M -F 2:30-6 p m Good driving record required. 442- 0405. 9-20 MESSENGER POSITION avaflable at lo­ cal law firm. Must be avaflabie to work a l day Tuesdays and Thursdays. 495-8576. 9-20 COURIER NEEDED near Seton Tuesdays & Thursdays 8:30-5. Must hove own transportation. 451 -3 7 6 7 .9 -2 0 STUDENTS - HOMEMAKERS PT work cvaJobie. 1O0 p.m. - 5 00 p.m. and 5 00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. shifts avaiiobie. C ol at 338-9261. 9-28P NEED BABYSITTER for church nursery on Lake Travis. Wednesday 1-9 p m $5/hr. references Colt Patti 331-4163. 9-21 PART TIME Socrotory, M -F 1:30-5:30. 327-3397 9-21_____________________ RESPONSIBLE STUDENT to wort; in cut- tomar ««rvics and do fKng. Satorday 8-5, Sunday 10-5. Ponnonunt part-ten* p o r­ tion C ol G *n * Kogfo at McNairs App6- once 454 -45 26.9 -19_______________ GARDENER. ONE to two day* p *r w ok. permanent fob. Som* *xp*n*nc* in gar­ dening required $5.00/hr. CaM Korun 1 10 am - 5 pm woofcdoyi . 837 -66 23 from K 9-23M PART-TIME TEMPORARY potekon opon for totemar t f tor, S 5/W , C ol 320-5877, ate for Morfc Fttxul 9-23 ftxpurtoncod SELF STARTER with car. N oal appoor- ancu. Earn at your awn poc*. 477 -49 26. 9-23______________________________ PAT LUCEY'S Tutoring Survicu it Nring tu­ tor» for a t subjects. Serious inquiries only. 477 7003 9-23____________________ BETHANY INFANTS - todfor proaram B. Now taring mature, experienced adult, care teacher for afternoon posrtions. Ap­ ply at 1934 Berkeley 7 am - 6 pm. 9-23D HOUSEPARENT NEEDEDI Energetic female to care for 2 girts (17-14) and 5 cate. 9/2 9 -1 0 /3 - nights & weekend. 477 - 5918.9-21 MICROBIOLOGY LABORATORY part time couriers from 8 DO am -1 2 :3 0 pm. Must have good, retabte trareporta- tion. Starting at 5450/h o u r at 22c per mile. C o l Microtek. 441-1010.9-23 RECEPTIONIST WANTED for congenial law office 12-2 MWF, or T.TK, 51 C ol 451-0173 from 3 -5 pm or come by 1011 W . 31st St. to HI out applications. 9-23 800 G anaral Halp Wantad Associated Press IRVING — Linebacker Harry Car­ son and comerback Perry Williams intercepted wayward Steve Pelluer passes in the fourth period to pre­ serve a 12-10 victory for the New York Giants over the Dallas Cow­ boys. Carson stepped in front of Timmy Newsome to make a critical inter­ ception at the New York 2-yard line and returned it 66 yards with 7:31 left in the defensive struggle. Then Williams intercepted anoth­ er Pelluer pass at the Giants 45 with 42 seconds to play, putting the game away. The Giants tied Washington at 2-1 the NFC East while Dallas in dropped to 1-2. Lionel Manuel, who twice drew pass interference calls during an 86- yard drive, caught a 9-yard scoring pass from Phil Simms in the third period for the winning points. Ever­ son Walls was flagged twice for in­ terference against Manuel on the third-period drive that gave the Gi­ ants a 12-3 lead. The Cowboys scrapped back on a 27-yard scoring pass from Pelluer to Herschel Walker. a Jets 45, Oilers 3 — In New York, Wesley Walker caught three touchdowns as New York's offense came alive in a stunning 45-3 rout of Houston, the Jets' largest margin of victory ever. The Jets showed an offensive spark missing in their first two games, with Ken O'Brien tossing three touchdown passes. Two of New York's rookie defen­ sive backs got the Jets going. First, comerback John Booty picked off Cody Carlson's pass in the end zone for his first NFL interception. O'Brien hit Al Toon for 23 yards to start an 80-yard drive that was helped by a late hit by Houston's Doug Smith. From the 8, O'Brien found Kurt Sohn at the goal line. Safety Erik McMillan got his first pro interception on the next series and returned it 32 yards to the Oilers' 48. Walker then beat Cris Dishman on a fly pattern for 44 yards and Freeman McNeil swept in from the 8. The 11-second drive made it 14-3. New York again struck quickly on its next possession. A 34-yard swing pass to Johnny Hector preceded Walker's first scoring reception, a 50-yarder over Richard Johnson. That capped a 93-yard, 58-second drive. The Jets went 80 yards the next time they got the bail, with Walker and O'Brien combining on a timing pattern for a 4-yard score. Walker caught a 23-yard touchdown pass from Pat Ryan with 4:23 remaining, giving him six receptions for 129 yards. a Bengals 17, Steelers 12 — In Pittsburgh, Boomer Esiason, held in check for the first three quarters by the NFL's worst-rated defense, hit Eddie Brown on a 65-yard fourth- quarter touchdown pass to rally un­ beaten Cincinnati past Pittsburgh. James Brooks ran 19 times for 88 yards yards and Esiason threw for two touchdowns as the Bengals took over the AFC Central Division lead with the help of six Pittsburgh turnovers, including four fumbles. ■ Redskins 17, Eagles 10 — In Washington, Timmy Smith ran for 107 yards and a touchdown and Washington sacked Philadelphia quarterback Randall Cunningham six times en route to a victory. The Redskins scored touchdowns on each of their first two posses­ sions, but ultimately needed an in­ spired performance by their injury- plagued defense to hold off their NFC East rivals. Washington took a 17-3 lead into the final quarter, but Philadelphia got a 55-yard scoring pass from Cunningham to Mike Quick to cut the gap to 17-10 with 14:08 left. ■ Falcons 34, 49ers 17 — In San Francisco, Chris Miller passed for 130 yards and ran for Atlanta's third touchdown in a 21-point second-pe­ riod outburst which carried the Fal­ cons to an upset. Atlanta comerback Scott Case made a diving, end-zone intercep­ tion of a Joe Montana pass on the first play of the second period, kill­ ing a San Francisco drive. Three interceptions marred Mon­ tana's 100th career NFL start. Safety Robert Moore made the third, early in the fourth quarter, and went 47 yards for a touchdown to virtually clinch the victory. ■ Minnesota 31, Chicago 7 — In Chicago, Tommy Kramer passed for three touchdowns, two to Anthony Carter, and Minnesota took advan­ tage of five Chicago turnovers for a smashing victory over the Bears. Kramer, who completed 15 of 28 passes for 258 yards, threw touch­ down passes of 40 and 16 yards to Carter and also hit Hassan Jones with a 19-yard touchdown strike. ■ Kansas City 20, Denver 13 — In Kansas City, Steve DeBerg threw two touchdown passes in his first start for Kansas City, leading the Chiefs over the Broncos. DeBerg, who played for Denver from 1981-83 until the Broncos ac- EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 800 — G n ral Help Wanted 810 — Office- Clerical TELEMARKETING North Research v d a re a Now hiring for m ntodntt em pioytMtd wflh Ncteonci Company. Mute be ab b to work Tues- doy-Friday 4 pm-9 pm and Saturday 9 am -2 pm. Salary phis bom— Ided for teudonta, homemaken or moonlghtoti . Earn m ofen» incoma in diort noun. 331-1473,4 pm -9 pm. 10-7Z Pori-tomo dtrical position, offici ox* pooonco required, poopio tit ii o f portant Wofd Ptocommiq oxporionco prerenoa nou«s: ^ppvow iRrej w houn/week. MWF 10 a m -l p in. $3.75/hour. AvaBabto for training im- modtototy. M e l raaumafeltor or drop off at Kaplan Educalionof Cantor, 1904 Guodaiupe 78705. 9-23H AMERICA'S BEST WANTS YOU! Part time telemarketing person­ nel needed. Pleasant telephone voice, we will train. Ideal roc stu­ dents, evening hours available, call Judy at 339-6194. 9-20H G O V E R N M E N T JO BS. $ 1 6 ,0 4 0 - $ 5 9 ,2 3 0 /)*. Now Ham a Your A to a 80 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext R-9413 for current Federal Lite. 9-2 3 ABUNB NOW HMNG. wr ftr/dencal poreon noodad for anal prateigiora tow firm dora to UT compos. Appfe it diotdd bo rrepon- tebfe, ornonurad, consdordious and m o ix iN iL M N P t wwreponoxon w» quoad. Prior office oxporionco pre­ ferred houn are MWF 2-6 and TTH 8-2. Sand or drop by r—ume/rofer- encoi to 500 W. 13 *, Autein. TX 78701. No cafe ptoara. 9 -22 NEAR CAMPUS - Ful/part tern. TYPIST tG BO . 5 feo train). 4E I catens9om-4pm_ 408 W 17*. KMC « 4 0 0 0 JOSS. Appt- fe liiiiiliS iH Servios Utefnge Sa 550K. Entry k 6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Éxt to to potetera. C a l 805 - 41 3 .9 -2 3 820—Accounting* 880 — Professional ESI TEACHERS NEEDED lohéplémiomyCmééwéSodh Arencan poopii Worn to qioak Erewipi oxd iomo ó&f óbkk&l Sandra— te Otear Newman 500 San Marcos S*. Austin, Tx 78702 9-23 COM PUTER GRAPHICS a rfe ñ— fed roquirad vM/raicroooraputra gragnci ra* portan» a atote Salary to ba teatonatoad Col 8-5 pm 512-328-0282.9-290 _ _ _ _ Restaurants COCO'S it now accepting application» for Ful & Part Tima wartpanom. PteaM apply in panon Tu W ad, Thurv, Fri. batwgan 2-5 pm at 1605 E. Ottorf and at Shoal Croak and Andareon. 9-198 NEAR CAMPUS - Fid/port term. TYPIST (4 5 + wpm). BOOKEEPER feo tram). RUNNER (your cor). O D D JOSS. A p pl- catens9om pun. at hate 3 óeyt • wreak V wtmGéed, piare» core» bv Tito AAoret» tetra IratauranL 706 Cmmem ha- taraen hour» 2 pjn.-3 pjn. 9-20M_____ TELEMARKETING SALES offica has pormonant port-teee potetera $6-$10/hour 900—Domestic- UtehiBeALteaLI now reiG ia far aatot p m to wfih a rrapontebb a *- WANTED MOTHER luda. Naur hring far currant For an intorviaw cdi 477-3252 D ta trarapartofan praferrate. tofera tomato Highly mofivafed studonts soak­ ing groat incoma ond rasuma buiidar with Fortuna 500 com­ pany. Ftaxibfe houn, salary phis commits ton computer formlionty and safes axporionco hdpM . --- L---- ^ ~ a U M M Od T to n n o w Person-To-Person Cofiect at(212)889-8880 9-22 FUU TIME/PART TIML We raete 6-10 ralm raps e lm to work htef to dra*. Fra Ohara ravage pay C rf Igor 452- 7917.9-21 ( m d m m O s H i ■ S 1 B M . M sum 484U9-20M H0USEKEEFBMA8VSITTER femfe «4* 3 tdwolaga haya to NW Arate. Urn to ra out Nora awn» era. 345-1669.9-20 o u o re r e » 9 3 0 — BualnnM 5 SUPERMARKET 5 5 OPPORTUNITIES 5 obi »re IocMm ti»P G0^ teradfeginranra j^ ja b ja fc n ancteig U UREUf ENTERPRISES 331*1727 MOOMNO flWOt 700 paguhr M*58p«r5C3SEiíw C A U 471-5044 Asooctad Prgss C o w b o y D a n n y N o o n a n t n d d M G ia n t P h i S lm m t in f lr s t - q u a r t n r a c t io n . quired John Elway, flipped a six- yard scoring pass to Carlos Carson in the second quarter and engi­ neered a 77-yard march with Kansas City's first possession of the second half. Paul Palmer caught a 14-yard scoring pass behind Kevin Clark to cap the drive with his first touch­ down reception as the Chiefs, 1-2, seized a 17-10 lead and handed the defending AFC champs their sec­ ond loss in three games. ■ Rams 22, Raiders 17 — In Los Angeles, linebacker Kevin Greene's sack of quarterback Steve Beuerlein for a safety broke a 10-10 tie late in the third quarter and the Los Ange­ les Rams went on to beat the Los Angeles Raiders. The sack was one of nine by the Rams, who raised their record to 3- 0. Gary Jeter had five of them. The Rams clinched the victory when Jim Everett threw a 54-yard touchdown pass to Aaron Cox with 2:13 left in the game, making it 22- 10. ■ Chargers 17, Scahawks 6 — In San Diego, Gary Anderson rushed for 120 yards and linebacker Keith Browner returned an interception 55 yards for a touchdown as San Di­ ego upset Seattle and ended the NFL's longest active losing streak at eight. Anderson's 25-yard touchdown run capped a 76-yard drive in the fourth quarter. Anderson, who car­ ried 19 times, faked a reverse to wide receiver Quinn Early and broke through the right side of the line for the score with 4:05 remain­ ing. ■ Bills 16, Patriots 14 — In Fox- boro, Scott Norwood kicked a 41- yard field goal with 11 seconds re­ maining, giving Buffalo a victory and snapping an 11-game losing streak against the Patriots. Norwood's third field goal of the ie came after Jim Kelly threw his st touchdown pass of the season with 9:15 left, a 3-yarder to Robb Riddick, pulling the Bills to 14-13. ■ Saints 22, Lions 14 — In De­ troit, the Lions' misfire on a fake punt set up New Orleans' go-ahead touchdown in the third quarter, as the Saints beat Detroit. On a fourth- and-18 at the Detroit 12-yard line, Lions punter Jim Arnold appeared to have Carl Painter open for a pass, but Painter didn't turn around in time and the throw fell incomplete. threw ■ Dolphins 24, Packers 17 — In Miami, Dan Marino two touchdown passes and Miami's spe­ cial teams took advantage of Green Bay mistakes as the Dolphins beat the Packers in a match of win!ess teams. U.S. struggles; divers provide Seoul success U.S. SEOUL, South Korea — near boxer Anthony Hembrick, loser tears as he walked away a was without throwing a punch, eliminated from the Olympics Mon­ day after he was late for his fight, compounding America's sputtering start at the Seoul Games. Hembrick, a gold medal prospect in the middleweight class, missed the bus after his coach, Ken Adams, apparently misread the schedule, reminiscent of what happened to two U.S. sprinters at the 1972 Mu­ nich Games. * U.S. divers Michele Mitchell and Wendy Williams won silver and bronze medals Sunday. The U.S. basketball and volleyball teams also got off to winning starts. But the U.S. team could only be declared a qualified success on the first big day of the Seoul Olympics. The second day started in calami­ Hembrick was due to fight a tough South Korean, Ha Jong-ho. But when Hembrick — a three-time U.S. Army middleweight champion boxer from Fort Bragg, N.C. — was late, Ha won in a walkover. U.S. officials immediately filed a protest against Hembrick's elimina­ tion. A few hours earlier, another American boxer, Kelde Banks of Chicago, was back at the athletes' village, discharged from a hospital where he was treated for a head­ ache of Olympian proportions. Banks was kept in the hospital over­ night after a first-round knockout by a Dutchman on Sunday. While Arthur Johnson of Minne­ apolis made a successful boxing de­ but in the 112-pound class with a 5- 0 decision over Andrea Mannai of Italy on Sunday, Banks' Olympic ca­ reer lasted less than two minutes. After Banks missed a right hand, Re ebo Tuir of the Netherlands, a native of Surinam whose father was a profeaaional welterw eight, •mashed a right counter to his jaw, knocking him out for at least a min­ ute in a 125-pound data bout. Mitchell, tne silver medalist in IO­ meter platform diving, said the American# people were expecting too much of the U.S. team. "It's like if you don't win, you've failed," she said. "Td Mke to tee any It’s flee If you don’t win, you’ve M od. I’d ice to see any of those couch potatoes come here and withstand the pressure.’ — U.S. diver Michele Mitchel of those couch potatoes come here and withstand the pressure." Mitchell, a 26-year-old from Boca Raton, Fla., made her swan dive in Olympic competition, ending her career with the silver. Williams, 21, of Bridgeton, Mo., won the bronze, and Xu Yanmei of China took the gold. U.S. swimmers — with the excep­ tion of Matt Biondi and Janet Evans — disappointed, and even the two standouts lost in preliminary heats. Swimming coach Richard Quick, a former UT coach, said there was no reason to worry about Biondi and Evans, even though Eastern Europeans had faster times in quali­ fying for Monday^s finals. However, Janet Evans won a gold medal in the 400-meter individual medley in women's swimming. The U.S. did save some face with a 1-1 tie against reigning world champion Argentina in the soccer tournament. David Robinson, the 7-foot for­ mer Navy center, scored 16 points and led the U.S. basketball team to a 97-53 victory over Spain, the team America beat by 31 points to win the 1964 gold medal. The U.S. women's basketball team defeated Czechoslovakia 87-81 in their Olympic opener. Theresa Edwaids rallied the Americans with 16 of her 24 points in the second half. The U.S. volleyball team beat Ja­ pan 15-13, 15-2, 15-2. Karch Kinüy, with his 40-inch vertical leap, pro­ vided the leadership as the United States defeated Japan for die 38th traight time. The Soviet Union leads the medal standings with four, with the Unit­ ed States and East Germany tied for aecond with tim e. Around C m p si is a dally a h u m list- lag University-related activities aponaored by academic depaitmenta, student services i d registered a len t organizations. To appear in Around Campus, organization must ba registered with the Office of Stu­ dent Activities. Announcements must be submitted on die correct form, available in The Daily Texan office, by 11 a.m . the day before publication. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions to conform to style rules, although no signifi­ cant changes will be made. __________ MEETUQS__________ The Gymnastics d u b will meet from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. every Tuesday and Thurs­ day in the gymnastics room of Gregory Gymnasium. All levels of experience are welcome. Alpha Chi will have an officers' meeting at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the Texas Union Building Board of Directors Room. The School of Law and the Law School Foundation will sponsor a M. Harvey Weil Lecture at 3:30 p.m. Monday in the Moot Court Room, Townes Hall 3.140. Dr. Jorge Bustamante will be the guest, and the topic will be "Legal Rules, Economics and Tradi­ tion in U.S. Immigration Policy." The UT Fencing d u b will meet from 6:30 to 7 p.m. Monday in L. Theo Belmont Hall. This is the best time for new members to find out about the club and join. Condi­ tioning as normal will be held from 5:30 to 6:30. The Campus Entertainment Committee will meet at 6 p.m. Monday in the Texas Union Building Sinclair Suite. The Student Engineering Council will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in the Chemical and Petroleum Engineering Building 2.218. Treasurer elections will be held, and there is a Vector editor opening. Everyone is wel­ come. The Campus Pro-life Movement will hold its first genera] meeting at 7 p.m. Monday in Texas Union Building 4.224. Ev­ eryone is welcome. The Mexican American Association of Pharmacy Students will hold its first meet­ ing from noon to 1 p.m. Monday in Phar­ macy Building 3.106. All pharmacy and pre-pharmacy students are welcome. The University Democrats public rela­ tions committee will meet at 6 p.m. Mon­ day in Beauford H. Jester Center A 217A. Refreshments will be served. The member­ ship and rules committee will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the same room. UT Students for the Exploration Ac De­ velopment of Space will hold a steering meeting at 5:15 p.m. Monday in Burdine Hall 128. All officers and coordinators should attend. The Mexican American Student Leader­ ship Council will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in Texas Union Building 4.304. Everyone is welcome. from noon to 1 p.m. Monday in Parlin Hall Campus Alcoholics Anonymous holds smoke-free meetings at noon Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays in Paulist Hall of St. Austin's Church, 2010 Guadalupe St. Faculty, staff and students with a desire to »top drinking are welcome. The UT Sailing Team will meet at 7 JO p.m. Monday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 5.104. All students interested in competi­ tive sailing should attend. The University Libertarian Group will meet and hold a Libertarian Party candi­ date forum at 7 p.m. Monday in die Texas Union Building Sinclair Suite. Fred Ebner and Gary Johnson and other local candi­ dates will be there. Everyone is welcome. The UT Sailing Team will meet at 7 JO Monday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 5.104. All students interested in competitive sail­ ing should attend. The National Pre-law Association will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in Burdine Hall 228. This is our first organizational meeting of the year. Everyone is welcome. SHORT COURSES The Joe C. Thompson conference Center and Computation Center User Services will offer a microcomputer teaching facility hands-on workshop from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Friday in Thompson Conference Cen­ ter 3.108. The topic will be Lotus: 1-2-3. Cost is $30 with valid UT ID, $108 with government ID, $150 others. Attendance is limited to 28. For registration information call the workshop registrar at 471-3121. Computation Center User Services will offer short courses next week in Computa­ tion Center Room 8. Courses include: In­ troduction to UNIX from 10 a.m. to noon Monday, Wednesday and Friday; Introduc­ tion to EDIT (text editor) from 1 to 3 p.m. Monday and Wednesday; Introduction to VAX/VMS from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday and Wednesday; File Editing: Fundamentals of XEDIT from 5 to 7 pm Monday; Introduc­ tion to MS-DOS/PC-DOS from 10 a.m. to noon Tuesday and Thursday; Introduction to Networks from 1 to 3 p.m. Tuesday; File Editing: Common Tasks in XEDIT from 5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday; Image Processing from 3 to 5 p.m. Thursday; and Introduction to the IBM 3081: Understanding the System from 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday. EVE: the Exten­ sible VAX Editor will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Thursday in T.U. Taylor Hall 101. Tour of the Advanced Graphics Lab will be from 4 to 5 p.m. Tuesday in Engineering Science Building 526W. Courses are $2 an hour with a valid UT ID. Current address, valid Texas driver's license number and So­ cial Security number must be on checks. Register at Computation Center Room 12 or contact the short course registrar at 471- 3241, extension 214, for more information. The Baptist Student Union will sponsor free conventional English classes at 2:30 p.m. Mondays in the Baptist Student Cen­ ter, 2204 San Antonio St. The Seattle Mime Theatre will perform seven contemporary mime pieces at 8 p.m. Sept. 26 and 27 in the Opera Lab Theatre. Tickets are $8, $5.50 for FAN Club mem­ bers, $7.25 group discount and senior citi­ for violin ist Asako zens. Tickets Urushihar performance at 8 p.m. Oct. 3 in the Opera Lab Theatre are $8, $4 for FAN dub members, $7.25 group discount and senior citizens. Tickets are on sale at all UTTM TicketCenters. LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS The Texas Union Recreational Events Committee will sponsor "Lunch with the Coach" from noon to 1 p.m. every Tuesday in the Texas Union Building Eastwoods Room, 2.102. UT football coach David McWilliams will discuss UT football and re­ view game films. Admission is free. The Texas Memorial Museum will spon­ sor a lecture "Flight of the Falcon: Radio Tracking the Peregrine Falcon from the Arctic to the Tropics" at 8 p.m. Sept. 28 in Bass Lecture Hall in the Lyndon B. Johnson Library. Alan Tennant will be the guest. Lectures are free and open to the public. The Center for Asian Studies and the Department of Anthropology will sponsor a brown bag lecture, "Energy Flows and Customary Practices in a Traditional Sri Lankan Village," at noon Monday in the Center for Asian Studies Reading Room in Dorothy Gebauer Student Services Build­ ing 4.126. Jan Bialy from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, will be the guest. The Texas Union Student Issues, Recre­ ational Events and Afro-America^ Culture committees will sponsor "Out of Control" at noon Monday in the Texas Union Build­ ing Film Theater. Hollywood Henderson, former football star and cocaine addict, will speak about his life on drugs and his reha­ bilitation. ____________ OTHER____________ The UT School of Law will have Minori­ ty Law Day from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday at Townes Hall. The program features in­ formation on admissions, curriculum, class visits, student-lawyer panels and much more. All interested minority students are also encouraged to stop by our table on the West Mall from noon to 1 p.m. Monday through Thursday for more information, or call 471-8268. The Asian Business Students Associa­ tion will sponsor a social mixer at 7 p.m. Monday in University Teaching Center 2.112A. Speakers will include Anabella Chan, president of Austin Construction and Steel, and our faculty advisers. Every­ one is welcome. The UT Division of Recreational Sports will sponsor international folk dancing at 7:30 every Tuesday in Anna Hiss Gymnasi­ um 136. No experience needed. Instruction is free. Come alone or bring a friend. The Texas Memorial Museum will spon­ sor several exhibitions at the museum from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, 1 to 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. All are free and open to the public. Exhibitions are "Swante Magnus Swenson Collection of Ancient Coins and Medals" through Dec. 30; "Germans in Early Texas: In Honor of German-Texan Heritage" through Dec. 30; and "In the Dust of the Drags: Ranching Photographs from the Erwin E. Smith Col­ lection" from Oct. 15 through Nov. 27. At the Trammell Crow Building, 301 Congress Ave., the museum will sponsor "The Taul- man Family Collection of Branding Irons" from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Fri­ day, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday through Feb. 28. through Nov. 16 The School of Architecture will sponsor an exhibition from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, in Goldsmith Hall. The exhibition will include original drawings by Goldsmith architect Paul Philippe Cret, and drawings for the new addition by the Dallas office of Thom­ as and Booziotis (with Chartier Newton, Associated Architects) entitled "Goldsmith Hall: A Building in Perspective." The Austin Society for Humanistic Juda­ ism will hold Yom Kippui services at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday in the Texas Federation of Women's Clubs, 2312 San Gabriel St. Ser­ vices are provided at no charge. For more information, call 343-2566. The Texas Longhorn Women's Polo Team is looking for additional team mem­ bers. No polo experice is required. Riding experience is preferred. For information, call Renee at 452-8468. The UT Dance Team will hold auditions from 6 to 9:45 p.m. Monday through Wednesday in the Anna Hiss G ym nasium lobby. Wear comfortable dance clothes. At­ tendance is only required for one night. Bring $1 for fees. For more information, call 479-0947. The Armadillo Folk Dancers will spon­ sor free folk dancing for beginners at 8 p.m. Monday outside the West Mall. The Student Engineering Council will sponsor Engineering Exposition '88 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Texas Union Build­ ing Ballroom. Representatives from more than 50 of the largest technological compa­ nies in the world will be there. Texas Men's Crew will hold tryouts at 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday at Clark Field. Wear running clothes. No rowing ex­ perience necessary. The Student Volunteer Services needs volunteers to be trained as lay case mana­ gers working on a one-to-one basis with pregnant and parenting teens. For more in­ formation, call Student Volunteer Services at 471-3065. Chi Alpha will hold a prayer meeting M,Mm..... Around Austin Around Austin is a column appearing Mondays in The D aily Texan for activities, lectures and seminars going on in higher education and the community outside of the University. Please turn in submissions to the Texan office, P.O. Drawer D, Aus­ tin, TX 78713. ________SHORT COURSES________ The Women's Counseling It Resource Center is offering a group for women who have been physically and/or sexually as­ saulted as adults. "Assault Trauma: Reso­ lution and Healing" will meet from 5 to 6:30 p.m. Thursdays from Sept. 29 to Nov. 17. Payment of the $80 fee is due Friday. For more information call 472-2064 or 472- 3053 The Austin YMCA, 405 W. 18th St., will offer Waist Away, a class for women wish­ ing to lose fewer than 20 pounds. The class meets from 6 to 7 p.m. Mondays through Wednesdays, beginning Sept. 19. The fee is $24. For more information, call the Austin YWCA at 478-YWCA. OTHER The fifth annual Volunteer Fair will be from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at First City Centre, at Ninth Street and Con­ gress Avenue, and at The Arboretum, 10000 Research Blvd. Admission is free and complimentary hot dogs and drinks will be served. The Austin Jay cees and J. Calendar's Restaurant, 4141 Capital of Texas Highway South, will sponsor a pancake breakfast for the Vaughn House from 8 to 10:30 a.m. Thursday. Sponsors request a $3 donation, and volunteers are needed. For ticket infor­ mation call Barbara Beal at 343-7739 or Bob­ bie Mock at 832-0738 or 823-9032. Human Connections is organized to in­ crease economic prosperity, personal en­ joyment and freedom from unnecessary conflict. Activities include one-on-one com­ munication exercises and lunch coordina­ tion. For more information call 454-2060. The Women's Counseling and Resource Center offers the group "Advanced Self-es­ teem" for those who have worked on self­ esteem at a beginner level and who now wish to work at a deeper level. The group meets from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Saturdays Oct. 1-22. The fee is $40 for four sessions and the payment deadline is Oct. 1. The center also offers a group based on Robin Nor­ wood's book Women Who Love Too Much. "Loving Too Much" will meet from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Oct. 19 through Nov. 9. The fee is $40 for four sessions, and the payment deadline is Oct. 12. For more information about the groups or about the Women's Counseling and Resource Center, call 472- 2064 or 472-3053. The Capital Area Coundl-American Business Women's Association will cele­ brate National American Business Wom­ en's Day at 5:30 p.m. Thursday at the Zilk- er Clubhouse. For more information about the organizations or National American Business Women's Day, call Toni Luttrell at 258-6964. P o BURNT ORANGE BLUES BY VAN GARRETT D < LU O D CC > CC CC < o > CD THE DAILY TEXAN/Monday, September 19,1988/Page 15 ACROSS 1 Unpleasant 6 Sleeping 10 Reptiles 14 Seaweeds 15 Nation 16 Cargo vessel 17 Falls short 18 Financing 20 Sicily city 21 Relative 22 Lake Erie island 23 Carriage 25 Most beloved 27 Greeting 30 Prompt 31 Gear part 32 Panama lake 33 Grackle 36 — of C leves 37 French city 38 Blemish 39 Petition 40 Bramble 41 Isle of Wight port 42 Fasteners 44 Headdress 45 On horseback 47 Debatable 48 Corday’s victim 49 Stitch 50 Boast 54 Between bow and stern 57 Unworldly 58 Log sled 59 Son of Zeus 60 Girl’s name 61 Czech river 62 Signora 63 Revise I EVKMM I I Is IeiairbwTansa 00000 HBEia O0O0 0BO00 BH0H aaoB 0 0 0 0 0 00000000000 □□00 O000 □00 0QO0 000 0O O0DD 0000 0 0 0 0 □ ngoo 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a Q 0 0 0 □ □ □ □O0O 00000Q0 00Q00000Q00 □□□ □□000 0BQ0 D0B0 □0O0B 0000 00O0 0 0OQ0 INJEIAIRIS^NIEIEI DOW N 1 Secure 2 Eagerness 3 Opposed: dial. 4 Sled dog 5 Affirmative 6 Inert gas 7 Farm building 8 French coin 9 Socialite 10 To the back 11 Reduced 12 Dawdles 13 Ambrosial 19 Next to France 21 Visualize 24 Irish ancestor 25 Hinder 26 Flightless birds 27 Puncture 28 Top rating 29 Miler’s asset 30 Lung sounds 32 Complain 34 To shelter 35 Direction 37 Romanian city 38 General Wolfe’s foe 40 Young sprats 41 Murmur 43 Merchant 44 Kowtow 45 Famed fiddle 46 Aegean isle 47 Untidy 49 Dashed 51 Offend •52 Range part 53 Travel 55 Salt: pref. 56 Mr. Gershwin 57 School org. 0-19-88 © 1988 United Feature Syndicate a b c m e WORLPOF News. YEAH, THIS IS ATWATER OVER AT THE BUSH CAMPAIGN,.. I JUST WANTED W LET YOU KNOW OUR T0ñC-0F-THE-QAY / f T IS ENERGY. THE PHOJO OP IS ATAN OFFSHORE OIL RI6t ANP THE LINE-0F-THE-PAY IS "REAP MY LIPS: TAX BREAKS \ \ ¿ , w . FOR OIL COMPANIES!u / f T ANP GUESS WHAT? YOU'RE GOING TO PUT IT ALL ON THE NEWS TONIGHT BECAUSE YOU'RE PATSIES A N P YOU HAVEN'T A CLUE HOW TO UH„. RIGHT. BUT YOU'RE PUSHING YOUR LUCK, BUPPY! YEAH, YEAH. BLOW M E A KJSS, PUSSY­ CAT! U L T E R I O R M A R K S BLOOM COUNTY by B erke B reathed Metcalf makes moves toward Heisman After one false start, Eric Metcalf finally got out of the blocks and into the Heisman race. Metcalf danced, twisted and glided for 285 all-pur­ pose yards Saturday. He was the one consistently im­ pressive element in an often unimpressive offensive display, even though Texas ran up 47 points against New Mexico. Metcalf got the ball 29 times — 2L rushing, five re­ ceiving and three returning — and scored three times. Metcalf amassed his yards in just three quarters, and without the padding of any long runs. His longest rush was a 21-yarder; his longest reception went for 43 yards. Were the numbers good enough to put Metcalf back in the Heisman race after a one-game suspension? "I hope so," Texas Coach David McWilliams said. "But it's not the same as being on national TV and getting that kind of exposure." Metcalf, once again, emphasized he's not racing for the Heisman, but only to get Texas a conference cham­ pionship and Cotton Bowl berth. Metcalfs running was dynamic, if not spectacular. Most of the time he raced around the outside, beating pursuit to the comers. He showed that while he proba­ bly won't be going straight up the middle too often, he can squeeze out yards that way nonetheless. On Texas' third drive of the second half, Metcalf took two runs into the middle of the line. He leaped over ladders for five, then six yards. On the next play, Metcalf glided back to the comers, outradng the Lobos' linebackers to the left side for a three-yard touchdown that gave Texas a 27-0 lead. His best highlight of the night, a 24-yard touchdown run in which Metcalf slipped at least three tacklers, was called back because of a dipping penalty. "As I made people miss, I could see I was getting doser to the goal line," Metcalf said. "And when I get doser to the goal line, my eyes get big." His eyes got big at least two other times. Three plays after the TD was negated, Metcalf ran for a 21-yaid touchdown on a draw play. Metcalfs third score came when quarterback Mark Murdock hit him for an easy 7-yard touchdown pass. "The greatest thing was the way he caught the foot­ ball," McWilliams said. Metcalf said it wasn't anything special. New Mexico was "looking more for me to run the football than to catch it. That enabled us to throw the underneath routes," he said. With the Longhorns ahead 34-0, Metcalf played his last series late in the third quarter. Metcalf said at first he wanted to stay in the game. "But the more I thought about it, the more 1 realized thaf s the time when I could get hurt." Which would severely hurt his chances for a Heis­ man. Sacks Continued from page 11 sacks registered by seven Longhoi defenders represented more than quarter of the 1987 total of 33. o m a "Our front line got real good pen­ etration and flushed out the quart­ erback," said defensive end Oscar Giles, a sophomore whose two sacks Saturday matched his 12- game total in 1987. "I have dreams about sacking the quarterback," Giles said. "It feels pretty good." The good cheer Giles felt became a nightmare for the Lobos, who recorded 25 fewer yards in total of­ fense than the 91 they lost in sacks. All-America linebacker candidate Britt Hager enjoyed watching Leach toss and turn instead of the ball. " I think I had the best seat in the house, really watching the front four or five tear into the quarter­ back," Hager said. Leach had the sorest seat in the house after laboring in vain to find a jersey color other than burnt orange in his own offensive backfield. The only widespread sacks in the Brigham Young game were the ones the Texas defenders would have gladly worn over their heads. In that game, the Longhorn defense gave up 47 points and the most passing yards ever against a Texas team. Giles looks upon that game as an aberration. "The tradition here is defense," he said. "As you saw tonight, I don't think people have forgotten our defense." Except for jeremy Leach, who might have contracted amnesia after repeated contact with the Memorial Stadium turf. Pal 3 16/The D a ily TEXAN/Monday, September 19,1988 M m NVf I M H O e m m $17 2 G I wmthkAD rooms C 6706 Hwy290 Wat M tam Cannon 51 tank 13607 tomare* Ik Not. Pilmi f | M mtmmt Os » tN S iA N r a s ir llw w lcM kHkS liww lO l»— M l riaMt* Mood .-■■■■■■•. i7 WUi ri H | t o mm o h yaw tori «Ml. So M p a m M M p *M mS. M m to m «ato «> «Ml proof at A w to mM m ca. B M » k i l H U o M i x M l b M l B t a M H . U I 4 7 4 . n t l . i l n k » i j l MoH.-Fri.9-S By STEVE DAVIS Daily Texan Staff University Market Facts... Students of the university spend $2,377,886 monthly on food and drink at Austin restaurants. (Source: T h e University Market." Betden Associates. 1987) FREE INITIAL LEGAL CONSULTATION awaonATiON ASSISTANCE t o y lio M a i NMnM * Ovportriíon Proowringi ~ * * ~ ~ ^------- *- ~ *9QAViiniSNno>riN(ini ■ vsin«owng • «npowy ¥ k ftn k k Gloria Lee Vera Attorney at Law 443-4788 2512 S. H 36, SI . 100, Austin, TX 78704 UCENSEDBYTHC TEXAS SUPREME COURT SINCE 1979 Not oorMod by tm T ons Bd of Log* SpHciribaton IIIWWMIIWWHWHMHHIIMIHIHimiHIIIIHIHIHIHIHWWWlP Bring your pocket change to The Texas Union Rec Center tonight for 45c Bowling. Bowl as many games as you can from 10:00 p.m. to closing for a mere 45c per game. 45c Bowling is also good on Sunday and Tuesday nights from 10:00 p.m. to closing. Exclusively at The Texas Union Rec Center. Located Downstairs in The Texas Union • 471-0247 BOWUNG ITONIGHT W4I don’t want a lot of hype. I just want something I can count on.}} Longhorns Continued from page 11 "We made way too many mis­ said. takes early," McWilliams "Those things come back to haunt you a lot." Although Texas was never in danger of being spooked by the Lo­ bos, some first-half kinks had to be worked out before the Longhorns evened their record at 1-1. McWilliams replaced an ineffec­ tive Shannon Kelley at quarterback with red shirt freshman Mark Mur­ dock midway through the second quarter, with Texas leading 12-0. Murdock promptly guided the Longhorns to a score, tossing a pass to Metcalf in the back of the end zone to give Texas a 20-0 lead. "That may be one of my most ex­ citing moments in sports," Mur­ dock said of his first collegiate touchdown pass But one of Murdock's least excit­ ing moments came on the next se­ ries when he threw an interception at the New Mexico 5-yard line. Earlier, Wayne Clements had kicked a 36-yard field goal and Chris Samuels had run two yards up the middle for the first of his three scores. Samuels also ran five and 10 yards in the fourth quarter for the final two Longhorn touchdowns. But the spotlight undoubtedly hit Metcalf. Returning from his one- game NCAA suspension, the Heis­ man Trophy hopeful danced for a personal best 285 all-purpose yards and three touchdowns. The senior running back also broke johnny "Lam" Jones' school record of 85 career receptions. Metcalf now has 88 career catches with nine games left in his final sea­ son. It was the Lobos who were ex­ pected to set any passing marks, but the Texas defense — after the Brig­ ham Young debacle — held New Mexico to 66 yards of total offense. Lobo freshman quarterback Jere­ my Leach, who passed for 390 yards in a New Mexico victory last week, was sacked nine times as the Long­ horns recorded their first shutout since 1985 and held the Lobos to minus 56 yards rushing. "We realized after last week [the pass rush] was the weakest part erf our defense and it was a consensus on the team that it had to change if our season was going to change," linebacker Lee Brockman said. Texas defensive tackle Ken Hack- emack said the Lobos' offensive linemen tipped their hand by vary­ ing the position of their fingertips when they assumed their stance at the line of scrimmage. "We could tell when they were going to run or pass," Hackemack said. The Longhorns didn't really need much of the inside information, be­ cause the Lobos used a shotgun for­ mation almost exclusively in the first half. Kelley, whose 43-yard rope to Metcalf down the right sideline in the third quarter provided the Longhorns' biggest gain of the night, proved more effective after consulting with the Texas coaches during his second-quarter respite. Murdock, who played most erf the fourth quarter before giving way to Donovan Forbes, was not about to rock the boat after a 47-point victo­ ry "Shannon's our starter, there's no doubt," Murdock said. Though Texas came out of the contest relatively unscathed, Longhorn wide receiver Kevin Nel­ son hurt die same right collarbone he broke last season. X-rays of die injury will be taken Monday. Some long distance com­ panies promise you the moon, but what you really want is de­ pendable, high-quality service. That’s just what you’ll get when you choose AI&T Long Distance Service, at a cost that’s a lot less than you think. You can expect bw long distance rates, 24-hour operator assistance, clear con­ nections and immediate credit for wrong numbers. And the assurance that virtually all of your calls will go through the first time. That’s the genius of the AI8T Worldwide Intelligent Network. When it’s time to choose, forget the gimmicks and make the intelligent choice, ATffi. If youtí like to know more about our products or services, like International Calling and the AESar Card, call us at 18 00 222-0300. akt The right choice. General Information There are no double features on this schedule; admission is charged for each feature film. All information is subject to change without notice. Please refer to the film ad in The Daily Texan for changes and additions. The Texas Union Theater is located on the second level of the Texas Union. Films at Hogg and Batts auditoriums are designated so. Tickets go on sale approximately 30 minutes before showtime. Tickets are $2.50 for students, faculty and staff, $3.00 for the general public, and $1.50 for children under 12 years old. First run, very long, or unusually expensive films are $3.00 and $3.50, respectively. A current U.T. ID is required for each ticket purchased at the U.T. admission price. IDs will be checked at time of purchase. Monday, September 19 EFFI BRIEST (1974) D Rainer Werner Fassbinder. Effi Briest, a vivacious mixture of anti-conformity and mediocrity, is married when very young to a much older Prussian diplomat Carried away to a remote Baltic port, she drifts into a brief, passionless affair, the effects of which are felt only six years later in a chilling manifestation of the Prussian code. This is Fassbinder's most classical and elegant film. German w/ subtitles. NR. 140 mm. Union theatre 7 00 pm SUSPECT See September 18 Union theatre 9 30 p m TRIUMPH OF THE WILL (1936) D Lem Riefenstahl This is the official Nazi documentary of the Sixth Reichs Party Congress held in Nuremberg in 1934 Hitler commissioned his immensely talented friend to make this artistic propaganda film, and orchestrated the entire convention to ensure the final product would say exactly what he wanted it to say The effect is chilling (from that first shot of Hitler's plane descending god like through the clouds ). and at times every bit as beautiful and awesome as it was meant to be A frightening piece of artistry German w/ subtitles NR 113 mm Hogg auditorium 7 0 0 p m METROPOLIS (1926) D Fritz Lang. Brigetle Helm, Alfred Abel Lang's famous allegory of totalitarianism set in a futuristic metropolis which is divided into a wealthy ruling class who live above the city, and the working masses who live below it Silent NR 97 mm Hogg auditonum 9 15 p m Tuesday, September 20 THE GENERAL (1926) D Buster Keaton, Clyde Bruckman, Buster Keaton. Marion Mack A confederate tram driver gets his tram and his girl back when they are stolen by Union sobers A hilarious action comedy, often ha ed as the funmest ever made each sequence of sight gags unbeheva Wy tops the one that came before NR 80 mm 7 00 p m EFFI BRIEST See Scp!embef 19 Umon theatre 8 45 p m CARNIVAL IN FLANDERS (1935) D Jacques Feyder. Francoise Rosay, louiS Jouvet It is a day in 1616 a Spamsh regiment comes to a town in o c c ^ e d Flanders The coward¡y burghers hide, but their charming iad es meet the cha enge. and m the morning, the Spaniards depart, poorer m wordly goods but all the richer m experience The sophisticated approach to sexual co aboration seen m this classic comedy make it a real treasure 'o see NR French w subt ties 90 mm Hogg auditonum. 5 & 7 00 p.m TRIUMPH OF THE WILL See September * 9 Hogg auditorium. 8 45 pm Wednesday, September 21 ULYSSES (1954) D Mano Camenm, K;rk Douglas Silvana Mangano U ysses and K s :rew sail under the curse of Cassandra and encounter Circes the sire is and the eye ops A we<: spun adventure based on the Homer et>c NR 103 m n 2 & 7 00 p m THE GENERAL See September 20 Union theatre 4 30 & 9 15 p m FRIDA. NATURALEZA VIDA (1986) D Paui Ledu. Ofelia Medina, Juan Jose Gurroia Based on the life of Mexcan artist Frida Kahlo, (and b ossed w th good acting, sens t ve d reci¡on and lyrical photography), this substantial fi m accurately captures the talent, inte gence, spirt and courage of a woman who managed to ve with the continuous physical pa ns of ch dhood afflictions a^d the emotional pam inflicted by a oh lander emerge as a pa n?er feminist, and po tica! activist during Mexico's cultural husband the famed muralist Diego Rivera) to f’amboyantiy revolution of the 20 s and 30 s NR Spanish w’ subtitles Hogg auditonum 7 00 pm THE RULES OF THE GAME (1939) D Jean Renoir, Roland Toutam, Marcel Dalio Perhaps the most influential French film ever grand farce about a big house party thrown at a country chateau Gathered there for the big hunt, the servants and masters begin to chase, and then shoot, one another Banned as demoralizing by the Vichy gov ernment, cut and then restored to its original form this film's attack on a decadent society in decline made it controversial in its day, but luckily it has survived to become one of the great masterpieces of cinema NR French w/ subtitles 110 mm. Hogg auditonum 9 00 p m this is a Thursday, September 22 TORMENT (1947) D Alt Sjoberg. Stig Jarrel, Alf Kjellm Written by the 25- year old Ingmar Bergman on the eve of his directorial career, this film is the famous study of adolescent despair and mean spmted authoritarian education Stig Jarrel plays the sadist schoolmaster, the student and shopgirl he victimizes are played by Alf Kjellm and Mai Zetterlmg ( who also became directors) NR Swedish w/ subtitles Union theatre. 95 mm 7 00 p m FELLINI'S CASANOVA (1977) D Federico Fellini, Donald Sutherland, Tina Aumont Fellini freely adapts from the great lover's memoirs and presents an unflattenng portrait of him while tracing his exploits in meticu­ lous detail R 155 mm Union theatre 8 45 p m. FRIDA: NATURALEZA VIDA See September 21 Hogg auditorium 7 00 p m JEAN DE FLORETTE See September 23 Hogg auditorium 9:15 p.m. lEANde FLORETTE TEXAS UNION FILMS ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Schedule of Films for September 19 -October 23 FILM PASS: 12 FILMS I $20.00 iA> * ,*« viiw* .(a® « * « * o\vV>' c * G° CYW U FE IS A DREAM by Raúl Ruiz (France) The xonoin moviev within the movie suggest amalgams of CASABLANCA THE THREE MUSKETEERS HASH GORDON ond THE ARABIAN NIGHTS the most inventive filmmaker working anywhere " - J Hoberman Villoge Voice Ruiz is currently SUBURBAN ANGELS by Garios Reichenbach (Brazil) A drama based on the lives of lower middle doss school teachers living outside sprawling Soo Pouio Sexual politics, love ond violence presented with consumm realism Best film 1987 Gromodo film Festival Brozil A TIME TO LIVE AN D A TIME TO DIE by Hou Hsiao-hsien (Tai wan) Taiwan's most importont director nostalgicolly recalls his island boyhood followm the Chinese revolution A contemplative perspective tinged with amusement ana offection Beautifully controlled exquisite comerawork -Vanety SECOND W IND by Gerrard Verhage (The Netherlands) Six fnends former 60's militants gather to toik, drink too much ond quarrel A pensive ond intelligent film that ostensibly recoils THE BIG CHILL, but is far mr profound and provocative "Elegant entertainment "-V a n e ty NOSFERATU THE VAMPYRE See September 28. Hogg auditorium. 9:25 p.m. Friday & Saturday September 30 & October 1 WEDDING IN GALLILEE (1988) D. Michel Khleifi; Ali el Akili, Makram Khoury. The elder of an Arab village must marry off his son in the traditional fashion, which includes the public display of the nuptial sheet after nightfall. But, because the village is under martial law, the father must get around the curfew by inviting the Israeli militia to attend, much to the chagrin of the local militants. This Arab film made in Israel has shocked some Arabs circles in its creation of cultural action between these two worlds, but, as the director says, *l think my film shows how, in very a difficult situation, people try to create dignity, liberty, pleasure.” From ali accounts he has succeeded. NR. Hebrew and Arabic w/ subtitles. AUSTIN PREMIER Union theatre. 7:30 p.m. K IN O IN T E R N A T IO N A L P R E S E N T S < Nil* * W edding GALILEE A F IL M B Y M I C H E L K H L E IF I IN H E B R E W AND A R A B IC W ITH E N G L IS H S U B T I T L E S IN TERN ATIO N AL® f CRITICS AWARD f a . CANNES i A K IN O IN T E R N A T IO N A L R E L E A S E r RED HEAT (1988) D. Walter Hill; Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jim Belushi. The Kremlin sends Captain Ivan Danko to Chicago in search of a Soviet drug dealer whom they want captured and returned to them, and who Danko wants to catch in order to avenge a friend’s death. Once in the U.S., the steel jawed Iron Man from Russia is teamed up with a soft, good-old- American guy detective whose laid back attitude and sense of humor provide a perfect counterpart to the Soviet's icy facade Schwarzenegger is the real star of this film as he brings an intelligence and gentle humor to a role that could so easily have been purely one dimensional. Yes, it’s a buddy detective, male bonding kind of movie, but its self awareness and wit set it apart and make it the truly enjoyable action comedy that it is. R. 110 min. Union theatre. 9.35 p.m DONT LOOK BACK D. D.A. Pennebaker with Joan Baez. Vanety Magazine called this film about the great Bob Dylan, ‘ A relentlessly honest, brilliantly edited documentary permeated with the troubador-poet’s music.” Others saw it as much a commentary on our world as it is a documentary of an artist. Ralph Gleason of the S.F. Chronicle wrote, “Dylan expresses something very, very important about the New Youth. Our sons and daughters are beyond our command and Dylan offers us clues as to why." Dylan’s effect on the age comes to life in the hands of this great documentarían Union theatre. 90 mm.11:35 p.m. A TIME TO LIVE AND A TIME TO DIE (1985) D. Hou Hsiao-hsien; T’ien Feng, Mei Fang The director recalls his own childhood in what critic Tony Rayns called “one of the greatest Chinese movies ever made.” Hou’s family moved to Taiwan from the Chinese mainland, and the revolution which followed made it impossible for them to return. The film focuses on the common occurrences of everyday life, the widening of the generation gap in a family brought closer together by displacement, and the inevitability of growing older. Hou avoids both melancholy and sentimen­ tality, achieving instead a contemplative perspective tinged with amusement and affection. NR Chinese w/ subtitles. 137 min. Austin Premier. Hogg auditorium 35 mm. 7:30 p.m. MANON OF THE SPRING (1987) D. Claude Bern; Yves Montand, Ernmanuelle Beart. In this follow up to Jean de Florette, Jean's daughter, now a beautiful shepherdess, exacts revenge on her dead father’s enemies by plugging up the spring and bringing on a crippling drought — thereby devastating not only them, but the entire region. A mythic, at times very surprising, piece of work. 35mm. French w/subtitles. Hogg auditorium. MANON OF JHE SPRING "A FOUR COURSE EPIC FEAST” -David Anseit, NEWSWEEK (HIGHEST RATING) A MASTERPIECE." -Bruce Wllllanuon, PLAYBOY YVES MONTAND DANIEL AUTEUIL EMMANUELLE BEART MANON OF THE SPMNC From the novel by M A R C E L PAGNOL A FIL M BY CLAUDE BERR1 t c ' p i m » W B U i l n IT¥ññag»gEV t . » o». ' A . « J I W « l L - O A íO it L e a » C U U K I Sunday, October 2 WALKABOUT (1971) D Nicholas Roeg; Jenny Agutter, Lucien John. Two European children abandoned in the Australian outback are found by an Aborigine boy and the three enjoy a life in an unspoiled world, until civilization rears its ugly head and destroys their fragile, private existence PG 88 mm. Union theatre. 4:30 & 9:15 p.m. A TIME TO LIVE AND A TIME TO DIE (1985) D Hou Hsiao-hsien; T ien Feng. Mei Fang. The director recalls his own childhood in what critic Tony Rayns called “one of the greatest Chinese movies ever made.” Hou’s family moved to Taiwan from the Chinese mainland, and the revolution which followed made it impossible for them to return The film focuses on the common occurrences of everyday life, the widening of the generation gap in a family brought closer together by displacement, and the inevitability of growing older. Hou avoids both melancholy and sentimen­ tality, achieving instead a contemplative perspective tinged with amusement and affection NR. Chinese w/ subtitles 137 mm Austin Premier. Hogg auditorium. 35 mm 3 &7 30 p.m In this follow up to Jean de Florette, Jean's daughter, MANON OF THE SPRING (1987) D Claude Bern; Yves Montand, Ernmanuelle Beart now a beautiful shepherdess, exacts revenge on her dead father's enemies by plugging up the spring and bringing on a crippling drought — thereby devastating not only them, but the entire region A mythic, at times very surprising, piece of work. 35mm French w/subtitles Hogg auditorium Monday, September 26 BEAUTY AND THE BEAST (1946) D Jean Cocteau; Jean Marais, Josette Day. A magnificent work of art and a personal statement is found in this timeless fairy tale illustrating the overwhelming power of love — the film provides both a sensuous visual experience and great poetry. NR. French w/ subtitles 90 mm Union theatre. 7:00 p.m. 10:00 p.m. THE LAST PICTURE SHOW See September 25 Union theatre. 8 45 p.m. CHILDREN OF PARADISE (1943-45) D Marcel Carne; Jean-Louis Barrault, Arletty. Possible the most loved of all French films, this romantic epic explores the loves and ambitions of a group of actors who eventually achieve fame, but never the happiness they desperately seek. NR. French w/ subtitles 188 mm. Hogg auditorium 7:00 p.m. Tuesday, September 27 TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD (1962) D. Robert Mulligan; Gregory Peck, Mary Badham A lawyer in a small town defends a black man accused of murder in 1930's Alabama. An important film that took a hard look at hatred, prejudice and prejudgement and their negative effects on the people in a community. G 129 mm. Union theatre 7:00 p.m. BEAUTY AND THE BEAST See September 26 Union theatre. 9:20 p.m. PORT OF SHADOWS (1938) D Marcel Carne; Jean Gabin, Michele Morgan This pivotal film not only helped to create the French film style of poetic fatalism, but it also created one of the central figures of French movies for that period — that of the hopelessly rebellious hero, the decent man trapped by society. In this story, a man is running away from the police and arrives at a dock side backstreet looking for a ship in which to escape There he meets a girl, the exquisite, rain soaked Michele Morgan, whom he tries to free from her disreputable guardian — and together they try to escape. NR French w/ subfiles. 85 min. Hogg auditorium. 5 & 7:00 p.m. 8:45 p.m. Wednesday, September 28 SPARTACUS (1962) D Stanley Kubrick; Kirk Douglas, Laurence Olivier. A great, decadent-ancient-Rome film that Kubrick brings to us in an all out cartoon drama style Kirk Douglas at his most muscular, is the slave gladiator who leads a rebellion with his fellow slaves against the might of Rome - only to be confronted later with the whole of the Roman might— acres and acres of soldiers in perfect military formation. G 184 mm Union theatre. 2 4 7:00 p.m. TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD See September 27 Union theatre 9:20 p.m. NOSFERATU THE VAMPYRE (1979) D Werner Herzog; Klaus Kinski, Isabelle Adjani Dracula is obsessed with finding Lucy and, abandoning a bitten, delirious Harker, he spreads plague and death in his search for her. Klaus Kinski seems perfect for (he role, and he is PG German w/ subtitles. 107 mm Hogg auditorium 7 00 p.m. STEAMBOAT BILL, JR. (1927) D Charles F. Reisner; Buster Keaton, Ernest Torrance A hilariously and ingeniously devised disaster movie about riverboat rivalries on the Mississippi. Silent. NR. 71 min. Hogg auditorium. 9:00 p m Friday & Saturday September 23 & 24 BROKEN NOSES (1987) D Bruce Weber Best known for men's fashion photography, Bruce Weber has made a successful foray into the world of documentary in this wonderful film about Andy Mmsker, a lightweight boxer who was once a Golden Gloves champion and who now shepherds a group of teenage boxers in Portland, Oregon Weber met Mmsker while photographing Olympic hopefuls for Interview Magazine — when asked why he came, Mmsker replied, ‘ They told me I was forbidden to come meet you They said that you'd give me a weird haircut and make me wear skimpy see through clothes, and who knows what else you'd do to me, and I thought, that's all I need to hear I’m on my way * With that, their fngndship grew and ultimately led to this film in which Weber explores some of his favorite obsessions — family, Americana, athletic bodies, male bonding - while taking us into the life of a boxer whose young dreams and unbounded promise were colored by a broken family, lack of money and a cruel and abusive stepfather Weber lets Andy Mmsker reveal himself in all his splendor and his unrealized pain NR 75 mm Austin premier. Union theatre 7 30 p m Impeccably filmed, HEAVY METAL D Gerald Potterton Taken from the popular fantasy magazine, this film weaves together impressive animation, music from top rock groups and imaginative stories encompassing science fiction, sword and sorcery, humor and sex R 92 mm. 9 15 p m JIMI HENDRIX Jimi Hendrix. Eric Clapton, Peter Townshend A skillfully woven biography of the great black musician who died tragically at the age of 27 In addition to the personal and professional insights that are shown, there is, of course, his music R 102 mm Union theatre 11'00p.m SUBURBAN ANGELS (1987) D Carlos Reichenbach; Betty Faria, Clarisse Abujamra This extraordinary film is based on the real lives of schoolteachers who try to maintain a sense of dignity as they struggle to survive on the sprawling periphery of metropolitan Sao Paolo portrayal of love and violence among urban Brazil's lower middle-class, the film expands and deepens the treatment of sexual politics previously ex­ plored by the director Reichenbach sees that the characters literally fight for their own unhappiness since it is the only thing that provides continuity in their lives and it is in the sensitivity with which the director delineates this maze of contradictions that the film gams its own haunting pathos NR Portuguese w/ subtitles 104 min Austin Premier. Hogg auditorium In its frank 35 mm 7 30 pm JEAN DE FLORETTE (1987) D Claude Bern: Yves Montand, Gerard Depardieu An exuberant adaptation of Marcel Pagnol's beloved films and novel about shattered dreams among Provencal peasant farmers in the 192Q's In this version we get to see Yves Montand’s old world devious ness pitted against the shimmery-eyed innocence of the fair -haired Gerard Depardieu - and their performances are so magnetic you can’t wait to see who will finally triumph and how Vincent Canby of The New York Times writes, ‘ I can’t recall ever having walked out of a movie theatre with the same mixture of satisfaction and anticipation.” Be sure and see the follow up movie, Manon of the Spring next weekend PG. French w/subtitles 122 mm. Hogg auditorium 9 30 p.m. A BOY AND HIS DOG (1975) D L Q. Jones, Don Johnson, Susanne Benton. A tale of survival in the year 2024 tracing the exploits of Vic and his canine companion in a post-atomic wilderness. R 91 min. Hogg auditorium.11:45 p.m. Sunday, September 25 BROKEN NOSES See September 23 Union theatre. 2 ,6 & 9 40 p m. THE LAST PICTURE SHOW (1971) D Peter Bogdanovich, Cybil Shepherd, Timothy Bottoms. Based on Larry McMurtry's novel about growing up in a small town in Texas in the early 1950’s, this movie takes you to a time and place where you feel what it was like to be at the country dance hall, necking in the back seat of a car or in the balcony at the movies, and what it felt like to graduate from high school and not know what to do. The film looks at the loneliness, naivete and confusion of growing up with the smalltown 50's blues R 118 mm. Union theatre 3:45 & 7:30 p.m. Thursday, September 29 5.30 8.10 00 p.m. SAWDUST AND TINSEL (1953) D. Ingmar Bergman, Harriet Andersson, Ake Gronberg. The owner of a travelling circus leaves his mistress for his separated wife, and is challenged to fight by his mistress's new lover. One of Bergman’s bleaker films where no one is saved from total damnation, life is a circus and people are its gross clowns. Filmed in a style reminiscent of 1920's German Expressionism, this film was a huge hit with young Americans in the late 60's. NR. Swedish w/ subtitles. 95 min. Union theatre. 7:00 p.m. Monday, October 3 YOUNG TORLESS (1966) D Volker Schlodorff Gripping adaptation of Robert Musil's 1906 classic about sadism and incipient fascism in a German boarding school NR German w/ subtitles 87 mm. Union theatre 7:00 p.m. WEDDING IN GALLILEE See September 30. Union theatre. 8 45 p.m. REBEL WrTHOUT A CAUSE See October 4 Union theatre 8 4 5 p m SUBURBAN ANGELS See September 23 Hogg auditorium 3 47:30 p.m. DON'T LOOK BACK See September 30 Union theatre 10:45 p.m. JEAN DE FLORETTE See September 23. Hogg auditonum 5:15 4 9:20 p.m. 7.00 pm. MANON OF THE SPRING See September 30 Hogg auditonum SNEAK PREVIEW See Daily Texan for details Hogg auditonum. 7 00 p.m FELLINI SATYRICON See October 4 Hogg auditonum 9:15 p m. r CHILDREN OF PARADISE See September 26 Hogg auditorium. RED HEAT See September 30 Union theatre. 2 & 7:00 p.m. A FISH CALLED WANDA (1988) D. Charles Crichton; John Cleese, Jamie Lee Curtis, Kevin Kline. This is a very funny, very good movie about a pack of jewel thieves who are running over each other and themselves to get their own hands on the goods they stole together. Jamie Lee is deliciously cool and sexy as Wanda, the woman who holds everything together, usually by manipulating everyone else by various means of seduction, etc. The rest of the cast is equally impeccable — from Kevin Kline’s self-important, pompous, philosophizing American (Otto) to John Cleese’s slightly frustrated, accommodating barrister who is assigned to defend George, another of the thieves who was set up by Otto so he could get him away from Wanda and the jewels. A convoluted, out-of-breath script by the masterly John Cleese carries all the action along with perfect wit, perfect timing. R. 110 min. Union theatre. 7:30 & 9:40 p.m. Friday & Saturday October 21 & 22 BIG BUSINESS (1988) D. Jim Abrahams; Lily Tomlin, Bette Midler. Two sets of identical twins are mismatched at birth sending one set to the big city of Manhattan, the other to Dogpatch, U.S.A. Years later, Sadie Shelton is the head of Moromax, a huge conglomerate where she is in her element as a big city corporate bitch bossing everyone around (and no one does that better than Bette) — while her sister Rose is more interested in saving the whales and adopting sad eyed stray dogs. Meanwhile, the other set of twins lives in rural Jupiter Hollow where they work in a Moromax Factory - and it is the strong-willed, down-to-earth Rose (Lily Tomlin) whose common sense and tenacity keeps her in command there. When Sadie Tuesday, October 4 SECOND WIND See October 7. Hogg auditorium. 3 & 7:30 p.m THE WOLF AT THE DOOR See October 7. Hogg auditorium YOUNG TORLESS See October 3. Union theatre. 7:00 p.m 5 & 9:00 p.m. REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE (1955) D. Nicholas Ray; James Dean, Natalie Wood. The adolescent son of a well-to-do family gets into trouble with his family, the police and his peers as he struggles to find a place for himself in a society that he does not understand (and one that likewise refuses to understand him). James Dean was the archetypal misunder­ stood teenager of the 1950's and this film perfectly captures the feelings of alienation and disaffection that were being felt by rebellious teenagers across the country. NR. 111 min. Union theatre. 9:00 p.m. MONSIEUR HULOT’S HOLIDAY (1953) D Jacques Tati; Jacques Tati, Nathalie Pascaud. An accident prone bachelor arnves at a seaside resort and unwittingly creates havoc for himself and everyone else. This film set the whole world laughing - with Hulot himself being an unforgettable char­ theatre. 8:45 p.m. acter and some of the timing magnificent. French w / subtitles. 91 min. Hogg auditorium. 5 & 7:00 p.m. Monday, October 10 THE KILLING See October 9. Union theatre. 7:00 p.m CrtlZEN KANE (1941) D. Orson Welles; Orson Welles, Dorothy Comingore. What more can be said about a film that is often hailed as Ihfi cinematic masterpiece of our time — the film that is considered landmark for its technical virtuosity, skillful and innovative camera work, dynamic editing and ever-shifting perspective. This film set the film world on fire - and its story of Charles Foster Kane, Goliath of the publishing world, is just as exciting as the style in which the story is told. NR. 119 min. Union FELLINI SATYRICON (1970) D. Federico Fellini; Martin Potter, Hiram Keller. This film explores a universe inhabited by hermaphrodites, dwarfs, elephantine prostitutes, lascivious matrons, beautiful nymphomainiacs and prostitutes. Leave it to Fellini. R 129 mm. Hogg auditorium. 8:45 p.m. THE BIG SLEEP See October 12. Hogg auditorium. 9:20 p.m Wednesday, October 5 Tuesday, October 11 IPHIGENIA (1977) D. Michael Cacoyanms; Costa Kazakos, Irene Papas. Michael Cacoyanms’s version of Euripides' Iphigenia in Aulis is filmed with BLACK ORPHEUS (1959) D. Marcel Camus; Breno Mello, Marpessa Dawn. A retelling of the classic legend of Orpheus and Eurydice in the a fervor and dedication that brings a fresh excitement to this new modern setting of the Rio Carnival. In this telling, a black tram driver interpretation of the classic tale. Costa Kazakos's robust, irresolute accidently kills his girlfriend and, after seeking her in the nether regions, DEATH IN VENICE (1971) D. Luchino Visconti; Dirk Bogarde, Bjorn Andresen. From the story by Thomas Mann, an artist’s search for purity and beauty leads him to Venice where he becomes infatuated with an exquisite young boy. PG. 130 mm. Hogg auditorium. 7:00 p.m LIFE IS A DREAM (1986) D. Raul Ruiz; Sylvain Thirolle, Roch announces she's selling (he factory, the country twins head to the Leibovici. A loose adaptation of a play by 17th century author, city , and that’s where the real comic whirlwind begins. A great Pedro Calderon de la Barca. In the play, a young prince learns the movie where we are treated to not just one, but two Bette Midlers lesson that life is a dream from which we wake when we die, and and Lily Tomlins! 109 min. PG. 7:30 p.m. that dreams may be as real as life. Ruiz translates this lesson to cinema which, he suggests, may also be a dream. Ruiz’ prince is at SLAUGHTERHOUSE FIVE (1972) D. George Roy Hill; Michael once Flash Gordon and a Chilean revolutionary who tries to recall a Sacks, Ron Leibman. Billy Pilgrim. Everyman from Middle America particular film he once used as a mnemonic device for remembering finds himself in a dazzling cascade of time and space shuttles that some secret information. Most of the action takes place in a movie theatre where the characters slide effortlessly between screen and theatre: the two side of Ruiz’ unique “reality." NR. French w/ take him into a future life with a glamorous movie star— and also hurtle him back through his past life from his own birth onward. Based on the Vonnegut novel. R. 104 min. Union theatre. subtitles. 100 min. A ustin prem ier. Hogg auditorium. 9:15 p.m. 9:35 p.m. Agamemnon is superb and Irene Papas brings a scale to her role that kills himself to be with her. NR. Portuguese w /subtitles. 103 mm. Union 9 1 /2 WEEKS (1986) D.Adrian Lyne; Mickey Rourke, Kim Basinger. FRITZ THE CAT (1971) D. Ralph Bakshi. Bakshi’s animated feature makes you believe in the vengeance she will take on Agamemnon. Greek theatre. 2 & 7:00 p.m., w / subtitles. 130 mm. NR. Union theatre. 2 & 7:00 p.m. Sex, domination and obsession in Manhattan - Mickey Rourke and about a hip, drug crazed cat and his various exploits, sexual and Kim Basinger set the screen on fire as a chic couple embroiled in a otherwise. R. 78 min. 11:35 p.m. DUCK SOUP See October 11. Union theatre. 4:30 & 9:00 p.m passionate, erotic affair. See that ice cube melt. R. 110 min. Hogg THE 400 BLOWS (1959) D. Francois Truffaut; Jean Pierre Leaud, Patrick Auffay. First and foremost of the French New Wave masterpieces is this DEATH IN VENICE See October 10. Hogg auditorium. 7:00 p.m story of a young boy who, unhappy and unwilling to conform at school, escapes to the streets and alleys of Paris, only to find himself at a youth detention center— from which he soon escapes and hopes to keep on THE BIG SLEEP (1946) D. Howards Hawks; Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall. Raymond Chandler’s private eye Philip Marlowe is at the center of running As engaging and wonderful a film as anyone could imagine. If this complicated thriller of blackmail and deception. The real stars in this you were to see only one foreign film, this would be the one to see. NR. film is the tight, tough dialogue and the terrific cast of sophisticated charac­ French w/ subtitles. 98 min. Union theatre. 4:30 & 9:20 p.m. ters of all types — blackmailers, apathetic society girls, drug addicts and SNEAK PREVIEW See Daily Texan for details. Hogg auditorium in the plot that the direcotr admitted, ‘ Neither the author, the writer, nor 7:00 p.m. myself knew who killed w hom .' NR. 114 mm. Hogg auditorium. nymphomanaics, and , of course, murderers. With so many convolutions FELLINI SATYRICON See October 4. Hogg auditorium. 9:15 p.m 9:25 p.m. Thursday, October 6 Wednesday, October 12 SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT (1955) D. Ingmar Bergman; Gunnar DUCK SOUP (1933) D. Leo McCarey; The Marx Brothers, Margaret Bjornstrand, Eva Dahlbeck. A country lawyer meets again a touring Dumont. An incompetent becomes President of Fredoma and wages war actress who was once his mistress, and accepts an invitation for he and on his scheming neighbors — the most satisfying of the Marx Brothers auditorium. 11:15 p.m. Sunday, October 16 COMMISSAR (1967) D Alexander Askoldov; Nonna Mordukova, Roland Bykov. Russian anti-Semitism is responsible for this film being put into a vault for 20 years, and for its director being purged from the Communist Party and the Filmmakers Union. For years, Askoldov thought his lone print had been burned only to have it THE MAGIC FLUTE (1975) D. Ingmar Bergman; Ulrik Cold, Josef finally resurface in an unscheduled screening at the Moscow Film Kostlinger. Mozart’s score provides the backbone for this tale of Festival last summer. Loosely based on a 1934 Vasily Grossman love, magic and quest as it follows a pair of star-crossed lovers and an impish little man whose greatest desire is to find a wife. G. 134 story, the film is set in the southern Ukraine at the time of the Civil War, and tells the story of the commissar, a big, beefy woman who min. Union theatre. 2 & 7:00 p.m. coldly metes out justice to those who cross her ways Her well controlled world is disrupted, however, when she must deal with her REPULSION (1965) D. Roman Polanski; Catherine Deneuve, Ian own unwanted pregnancy Mute and glum, she’s left with a poor Hendry. A psychological thriller which traces the mental demise of a Jewish family to have her baby in their rundown shack. In the end, beautiful young manicurist whose resentment of and hatred towards she returns to the front leaving the child with the Jews Filmed in an men lead her to a state of dark and murdering madness. Polanski | expressive style reminiscent of the films of the great Soviet skillfully manipulates image and sound to reveal the crumbling mind | filmmakers of the 20’s and 30 s, this film is remarkable on a visual of his tortured heroine as she moves from mental anguish to murder. level as well as being so exciting on the political front Askoldov his young wife to stay at her mother’s country home for the weekend. A f¡|mS) — the one with some of the best sequences of all — the lemonade R. 105 min. Union theatre. 4:30 p.m. comedy of high period manners with an admirable detached viewpoint and stand, the mirror sequence, and an endless array of one liners and thanks Gorbachev for the re-release of his film, and the word is that ¡ there are still plenty of people in Russia who would still like to ban, if elegant trappings. NR Swedish w /subtitles. 105 mm. Union theatre. comedy choruses. NR. 68 min. Union theatre. 7:00 p.m. A FISH CALLED WANDA See October 15. 9:30 p.m not burn, the film. NR 108 mm Hogg auditorium AUSTIN 7:00 p.m CITIZEN KANE See October 10. Union theatre. 8:45 p.m. THE DEAD See October 15. Hogg auditorium 3 & 7:30 p.m PREMIER. 7:30 pm LIFE IS A DREAM See October 15. Hogg auditorium 5 & 9:15 p.m Charles Dance, John Hurt A wry look at a group of upper-class WHrTE MISCHIEF (1988) D Michael Radford, Greta Scacchi, THE DIARY OF A COUNTRY PRIEST (1950) D. Robert Bresson, Claude Laydu, Nicole Maurey. Bresson’s masterly adaptation of Georges Bernanos novel about the suffering of a young priest whose faith is neither understood nor accepted by his parishioners. A rare film that helps one understand the religious life -which for this young man is a terrible one, yet with moments of holiness. A film of great purity and intensity French w/ subtitles. 110 mm. Hogg auditorium. 5 & 7:00 p.m. DEATH IN VENICE See October 10. Hogg auditorium 9:15 p m. Monday, October 17 REPULSION See October 16 Union theatre. 7 00 p.m. English settlers in 1940's Kenya This story tells of the real life murder of Josslyn Hay Earl of Errol, - a colonial Casanova of sorts who conducted a not so-secret affair with Lady Diana Broughton - to the amusement (and sometimes jeolousy) of his social set Not your usual staid drama about English society folk—this movie provides a lot of wicked fun R 115 mm Hogg auditorium 9 35 p m. In tngland thev were the elite, but bound by the rules of society In Kenya there were no rules only glamour, decadence and murder MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL (1975) D Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones; John Cleese, Michael Palm, et al A series of linked sketches on the medieval theme of King Arthur's search for the Holy Grail. PG. 90 min. Hogg auditorium. 11:35 p m Sunday, October 23 GANDHI (1983) D Richard Attenborough; Ben Kingsley, Candice Bergen. A powerful film that relates the miracle of how one remark­ able man defeated the mightiest empire with the mightiest military force on Earth, and freed 350 million people with one simple plan - passive resistance. This grand scale epic literally swept the 1983 Academy Awards, winning just about every category in sight — PG 188 min. Union theatre 2 & 8 00 p m. MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL (1975) D Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones; John Cleese, Michael Palin, et al A series of linked sketches on the medieval theme of King Arthur’s search for the Holy Grail. PG. 90 min. Union theatre. 6 00 p.m. COMMISSAR See October 21. Hogg auditorium 3 47:30 p.m. WHITE MISCHIEF See October 21. Hogg auditorium. 5 & 9:30 p.m. " M a y be the most taboo movie in Soviet history" — ] H o D e r m a r V IL LA G E V O IC E "Stunning...a brave, humane and powerful work" C n r is Cnase. N E W Y O R K DAILY NEWS THE FOUNTAINHEAD (1949) D. King Vidor; Gary Cooper, Patricia Neal. Based on Ayn Rand's book, Gary Cooper stars as an idealistic architect who, unable to cope with the compromises of big business, defies all conventional standards. NR. 114 min. Union theatre. 9:15 p.m. SNEAK PREVIEW See The Daily Texan for details Hogg auditorium 7:00 p.m. CASABLANCA (1942) D. Michael Curtiz, Ingrid Bergman, Humphrey Bogart. In Morocco at Rick's Bar, a gathering place for refugees awaiting exit visas during the war, the disillusioned bar owner, Rick, re-encounters his great lost passion from the past - the enigmatic Ingrid Bergman. The rest is screen history. NR. 102 min Hogg auditorium. 9 00 p.m. Tuesday, October 18 COUSIN ANGELICA (1974) D. Carlos Saura. The first film made in Spain from the Republican standpoint — a complex, playful memory maze about a man who returns to a Castilian town to relive the Civil War and his childhood romnace with his cousin. NR. Spanish w/ subtitles. 106 min. Union theatre. 7:00 p.m. THE FOUNTAINHEAD See October 17. Union theatre. 9:00 p.m AND GOD CREATED WOMAN (1956) D. Roger Vadim; Brigette Bardot, Curt Jurgens. An 18-year-old finds herself fatally attracted to men. French w / subtitles. 92 min. Hogg auditorium. 5 & 7:00 p.m. CASABLANCA See October 17. Hogg auditorium. 8:45 p.m Wednesday, October 19 ALEXANDER THE GREAT (1956) D. Robert Rossen, Richard Burton, Frederic March. The life and early death at thirty-three of the Macedonian warrior who conquered the entire known world. One of Hollywood’s most colossal epic’s filmed in the days when epics couldn’t be big enough or lavish enough. A grand, entertaining movie. NR. 135 min. Union theatre. 2 & 7:00 p.m. CARMEN (1983) D. Carlos Saura; Laura del Sol, Antonio Gades. The second film in Saura’s dance trilogy is an exhilarating contem­ porary flamenco dance update of the classic Bizet opera. Laura del Sol virtually sets the screen on fire with her vivid, sensuous interpretation of the title role — all of the fire and passion we associate with Carmen is embodied in this captivating woman who perfectly inhabits the role. R. 95 min. Union theatre. 4:30 4 9:25 p.m. COMMISSAR See October 21. Hogg auditorium. 7:00 p.m GRAND ILLUSION (1937) D. Jean Renoir; Jean Gabin, Pierre Fresnay. Renoir's most famous film explores fraternity amidst war­ fare, and does so with the cognizance of class barriers, ethnic backgrounds, and national allegiances. The story, according to R enoir, is based on a true W W I incident. NR. French w/ subtitles. 114 min. Hogg auditorium. 9:15 p.m. Thursday, October 20 UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS o r BUNG t ' . z <,■> Thursday, October 13 THE UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING See October 7 Union theatre 9:00 p.m. THE WOLF AT THE DOOR See October 7. Hogg auditorium. 7:00 p.m THE SEVENTH SEAL (1957) D. Ingmar Bergman; Gunnar Bjorstrand, Max von Sydow. Bergman's stunning allegory of the search for the meaning of life. A knight, returning from the Crusades, piays a game of chess with Death while the Plague ravages medieval Europe. NR. Swedish w/ subtitles. 96 min. Union THE 400 BLOWS See October 5. Hogg auditorium. 9:15 p.m theatre. 7:00 p.m. A FISH CALLED WANDA See October 14. Union theatre. 9:00 p.m Friday & Saturday October 7 &8 THE UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING (1988) D. Philip Kaufman; Daniel Day-Lewis, Juliette Binoche, Lena Olin. Set during the Prague Spring of 1968 and the Soviet invasion that followed, this is the compelling story of Tomas, a young, brilliant brain surgeon and compulsive womanizer whose daily life is most often spiced with erotic, passionate moments spent with Sabina, a joyously sexual, unencumbered beauty who shares his appetites and desires. When Tomas travels to a nearby spa he meets the shy but determined Teresa who loves him obsessively — and their marriage, and Tomas’ continual sexual wanderings provide the framework for this film of passion and obsession set to the raging political tempo of the time. R. 173 min. 7:30 p.m. THE LAST WAVE (1977) D. Peter Weir; Richard Chamberlain, Olicia Hamnet. During a spell of freak weather, a lawyer has recurrent dreams which give him the key to an Aborigine prophesy about the world being destroyed in a flood. This movie has some of the most overwhelmingly beautiful and haunting scenes— frog noises in the night, shadows in slow motion — that add up to make it the wonderfully ominous supernatural mystery that it is. NR. 106 min. Union theatre. 11:00 p.m. SECOND WIND (1985) D. Gerrard Verhage; Jentien de Boer, Pierre Bokma. Six friends spend the day in a house near Amsterdam. They talk, drink too much, and quarrel. Former militants of the sixties and seventies now at the peaks of their careers, these artists worry as much about nuclear war as they do about their relationships. Suppressing their emotions and burying their passions with cynicism- they are themselves unable to cry out for help, in this they contain their crises with a complex array of psychological defenses, creating a self examination of the highest order. Dutch w /subtitles. NR. 77 min. Austin Premier. Hogg auditorium. 35 mm. 9:30 p.m. THE FEARLESS VAMPIRE KILLERS (1967) D. Roman Polanski; Sharon Tate, Jack McGowran. Horror and humor are combined in this film that exploits, to the fullest, the sexual fears instilled by the old vampire legend. R. 124 mm. Hogg auditorium. 11:00 p.m. Sunday, October 9 THE KILLING (1956) D. Stanley Kubrick; Sterling Hayden. Elisha Cook, J, Kubrick’s third film, and the one that really marked his debut as a director to be reckoned with, is this shrewd, darkly humorous suspense film centering on a racetrack robbery. This wonderful movie gives you that rare pleasure of seeing a true master as he was feeling out his talent early in his career — you see the Kubrick touches of fast, incisive cutting, quirky characterizations, the nervous, edgy style, and the obsession with time and space manipulation that he would work out more fully in his masterpieces to come... - -plus, it's just a fun movie to watch. NR. 83 min. Union theatre. 2 & 7:00 p.m. THE GODFATHER (1971) D. Francis Ford Coppola; Al Pacino, Marlon Brando. An absolutely exquisite film about the Italian-American mafia in New York. When the head of the powerful Corleone family, the Godfather, nears death he gives tie family and its considerable power and influence over to his reluctant son Michael - who is soon seduoed by the power and ruthlessnes of the crime world. A visually flawless film - no matter how many times you see it, you see something new every time. As dose to perfect as they come. R. 171 min. Union theatre. 3:45 & 8:45 p.m., THE WOLF AT THE DOOR (1986) D. Henning Carlsen; Donald Sutherland, Jean Yanne. In 1893, Paul Gauguin arrived in France from Tahiti with 66 canvases and 4 francs in his pocket. He was confident that his paintings would take the art world by storm, but instead his exhibition p.m. was a fiasco and was received with such contempt he was plunged into with whom he was involved - it tells of an artist desperately trying to escape once again from the narrow-mindedness and northern chill of Europe - this time for good. R. 102 min. Hogg auditorium. 7:30 p.m. debt. This film tells the story of that period in his life and of the four women THE DEAD See October 14. Hogg auditorium. 7:00 p.m A CLOCKWORK ORANGE See October 14. Union theatre. 11:05 K>HN «.lXESfc KKV IN K 1JN L THE BIG SLEEP See October 12. Hogg auditorium. 8:45 p.m 9 1 /2 WEEKS (1986) D .Adrian Lyne; Mickey Rourke, Kim Basinger. Sex, domination and obsession in Manhattan - Mickey Rourke and Kim Basinger set the screen on fire as a chic couple embroiled in a passionate, erotic affair. See that ice cube melt. R. 110 min. Hogg auditorium. 11:00 p.m. Friday & Saturday October 14 & 15 A CLOCKWORK ORANGE (1971) D. Stanley Kubrick; Malcolm McDowell, Patrick Magee. In a future Britain of desolation and brutality, a ruthless gang leader named Alex is reconditioned by society after a lifetime of the old “ultra-violence". Sent to prison for murder, he emerges perhaps more de-humanized and ultimately more dangerous than ever. This film brilliantly explores the fine line between artistry and insanity, passion and violence in a quite startling and disturbing way. R. 137 min. Union theatre.11:40 p.m. THE DEAD (1987) D. John Huston; Anjelica Huston, Donal McCann. Birgüta Valberg. This film grimly depicts a father’s ruthless Two aged sisters and their neice hold a Twelth Night supper in 1905 vengeance for the rape and murder of his virgin daughter. The — there are songs, speeches, and friction over the Irish question, austere simplicity of the film is a rare achievement. NR. Swedish w/ there is a goose on the table and a drunk or two, and at the center subtitles. 88 min. Union theatre. 7:00 p.m. THE VIRGIN SPRING (1959) D. Ingmar Bergman; Max von Sydow. of the tale are journalist Gabriel Conroy and his wife, Gretta. Closely based on James Joyce's story (even switching the camera’s perspective to Gabriel’s own just as in Joyce’s story the narrative often entered that character’s head), this film ruminates on the CARMEN See October 19. Union theatre. 8:50 p.m. subject of death, the extinction of the human voice. Anjelica Huston gives a stunning, wrenching performance in what would prove to be COMMISSAR See October 21 Hogg auditorium. 7:00 p.m. the final film in her father’s long and remarkable career. PG. 83 min. Hogg auditorium. 7:30 p.m. GRAND ILLUSION See October 19. Hogg auditorium. 9:15 p.m INSIDE Day jobs Page 3 Parks Page 4 ACTV Page 5 Richard Ford Page 6 Hunter S. Thompson Page 7 Video animation Page 8 Chris Thomas Page 9 Folkways Robert Cray Page 12 Greg Allman Deep Puiple Let’s Active Page 13 Fiction contest Page 16 Plus: Comics Complete club listings TV schedule / \ / \ / \ / V W W W W \ A A / / t ON THE COVER When Esther’s Follies opened in 1977, it was the only comedy dub in town. But as a grow ing number of comedians will attest, Austin is ow riding the national comedy boom. In fact, a nice little “scene” is fori Lng in our own backyard. Page 14 Q: Is Nipper LISTENING TO HIS SCHOOLMASTER S VOICE? A: Nope. He’s got his ears turned to some great music! i M T i R H I M ! n r* ■ GRAHAM PARKER The Mona Lisa’s Sister MM OVIL*'* «.lite-» STAFF Images Editor Bret Bloomquist Associate Images Editors Rachel Jenkins Rob Walker Images Assistant Lee Nichols Writers Jeanne Acton Mike Clark P.J. Cosgrove Steve Crawford Jim Kennett Tom McNeely Ernest Rister Bobby Ruggiero Jeff Turrentine Dean Webb Contributors Jeff Adams Karen Adams Ashley Bogle Gerard Farrell John Keen Tom King Jeff Satterwhite Martin Wagner Chris Ware Day jobs Sure the Bruce Springsteens and Paul McCartneys of the world da t exactly have to scrounge to pay the rent. But many local musicians do. And when the lights go back on and they step down from the stage, they have to find a way to pay the billa. Page 3 Parks Summer heat got you down? The cure is just a short drive away. Travis County has an abundance of parks to enjoy. Page 4 ACTV Music, art, duncing, and more: Trella Laughlin covered it all at The =~“_ International Women’s Day Festival. Page 5 Fiction Richard Ford’s collection of short fiction, Rock Springs, has just b m re-released in paperback. Page 6 Essays Famed gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson shares his views on con­ temporary culture in Generation of Swine. Page 7 Video Proof that animation on video is more than a Mickey Mouse affair. Page 8____________________ Profile Guitarist Chris Thomas is well on his way to breaking out of his blues image and into a national reputation. Page 9 l ittin g s g a d comics Pages 10,11 Music A masterful tribute to two folk/blues legends; Robert Cray is back to blue; Greg Allman and Deep Purple have timcwarped into the ’80s; Let’s Active gives their strongest effort ever. Win up to $50 in the Images fiction contest. Pages 12,13 Contest Page 16 SOUOD WAREHOUSE • Burnet at 4fth 454-5253 video 454-7777 • Lanar a l' 1 4 7 V • 1312 Nortti Lamar at Rundberg • Manchaca at Beo WMe 443-7)97 B37-BIM SALE m ok OOOO THROUOH TUESDAY. W TlM OfW 1STU. QUANTITIiS LOOTED. . i. i ^ •• T R ^TTTTTTTT-— When the music ends... ... the real work begins: day jobs of Austin musicians By Lee Nichols September 19,1988 IMAGES 3 Terrific Haircut at PAT PAINTER’S HAIRSTYLING ■AncrrsBAKFOO CONDITION» $A * STYLEMl SET U f IS -WET CUTS -IS 10% OFF ALL PRODUCTS INCLUDING REDKEN & GEFDEN Long hair specialists — Hair regrowth products and New Man Hairpiece products available. PAT PAINTER’S HAIRSTYLING Being a rock and roll star would be great. Glamour, fame, money — musicians have it easy. That’s what most people think, anyway. But in reality, most musi­ cians have trouble paying the bilk. Until that big break comes along, if ever, the struggling artist must con­ tinually live on the edge of poverty. “Don’t give up the day job” is fre­ quent advice. Generally, musicians make so lit­ tle that they must rely on daytime jobs to supplement their income. Oh sure, Michael Jackson can’t find enough ways to spend his money — anyone who wants to buy the Ele­ phant Man’s skeleton is too well off — but most aren’t so lucky. The original, small-club performers who don’t reach the pop audience have to burn the candle at both ends. Many of Austin’s musicians make a natural job choice — something re­ lated to music. Those with good communicative abilities can teach. Mark “Kaz” Kazanoff, a saxophon­ ist for Kazz Jazz, the Antone’s and numerous other groups, said he en­ joys teaching for “that one-in-five student that’s good.” “Teaching a student that doesn’t want to learn is a drag, and that’s why I don’t teach too many.” Working in a music store is anoth­ er good way to earn money within the business. Pat Arbuckle, a guitar­ ist for ASK, is also a salesman at Ray Hennig’s Heart of Texas Music. Being employed where the Fabulous Thunderbirds, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Asleep At the Wheel and Eric John­ son buy their equipment has obvi­ ous advantages: “Being around music in general, meeting a lot of people in the indus­ try and a lot of the big-time people. It’s real beneficial to my band and my career,” he said. Arbuckle also owns a sound com­ pany, and working at Heart of Texas has increased his technical knowl­ edge in that field. “I’m learn ; a lot about sound. I can communicate with the engineer a lot more confidently [now].” Doug Lamb, f nner lead guitarist for Doctor’s Mob, works at Water­ loo Records. Although some musi­ cians may plod through their jobs just to keep their nighttime careen going, Lamb teems to genuinely en­ joy his work. “I've worked in record stores for eight yean, and this is the store to work in,” he said. “I love it. “There’s not a boas here that watches over you. I’m working with music, which is what I like.” But there are only so many jobs of this type, so other artists have to take what they can get. Walter Tote, a singer and guitarist for Spon- tobeat, used to be a florist. “It was flexible, you know? The houn were good, it allowed me a lot time to work on promoting my band.” But, as will happen, he quit. ‘Have you ever seen the movie Cad- dyshack? Well, that’s what I do.’ — Greg Vanilla, Tyrant Swing drummer and golf-course groundskeeper “I needed more time to work on the musk,” he said. Other jobs are more related to musk than one might think. Doug Simmer, vocalist and writer for The Agents, is a professional landscapes “It's artistk,” he said. “I'm my own boss. It’s a chance for me to create and get something sold, whereas with musk you create and create and create and may never get anything sold. “The creative aspect is real im­ portant. Being able to desi n some- thii [ is similar to creating musk. I know the end product is very simi­ lar.” The job has good hours, too. “If I need to sleep late, I can,” he said — ^ hen shows last until 2 o’clock in the morning, that's pretty import­ ant. Greg Vanilla, drummer for Ty­ rant Swing, also has an outdoor job — he's the groundskeeper at a vaca­ tion resort. “Have you ever seen the movk Caddyshack? Well, that's what I do.” “I didn't work, ever, in my life until I started playing musk,” he said. “It was rally new to me to have to work to support my musk. “My boss is totally into rock 'n' roll and lets me go on tour when I want,” Vanilla said. Sometimes, even popularity doesn’t guarantee freedom from the day job. Glass Eye has released a highly acclaimed album and was voted Best Austin Band in a Daily Texan poll of University students, but keyboardist Sheri Lane and bas­ sist Brian Beattk still work at Whole Foods Market. Whole Foods is a popular place to work among artists. 'There's lots of young, weird people [working there],*’ Beattie said. “I think it's re­ ally nice. It keeps me in touch with a certain kind of sanity.” “They [the owners] are pretty lib­ eral about tak ig a leave of al lence. I keep praying I'll get my job back hen I return.” So far he has. But musicians, no matter hov rewarding their day jobs may be, would rather stick with one field of employment. Most all agree with Tore: “I don't like working in the day­ time, you know; I want to make my living playing musk.” call the TEXAN classified HOTLINE 471-5244 RUN YOUR CAR or TRUCK CLASSIFIED AD UNTIL IT SELLS! for only $ 1 Q 5 0 * * 1 5 w o rd s or less. A d d itio n a l words only SI .30 each, r Call 471-5244 fo r complete details. 4 IMAGES September 19,1988 Travis County parks offer pleasant relief from Texas heat ByJimKennett At times it would seem the Texas summer never leaves — it’s just in­ terrupted for a week or two during December. Evadi ig this would be enough to drive you crazy if the heat didn’t take all the fight out of you in the first pkice. But luckily this is Austin, where instant relief can be found along the twisting back roads of Central Texas in the form of deep, cool lakes, bub­ bling creeks or winding rivers. Finding these spots, however, can be tricky. Just outside Austin a variety of swimm ing holes can be found, com­ pliments of Travis County. In­ terspersed along the westernmost end of Lake Travis and the hills and dales of the Texas Hill Country, these parks offer a variety of styles ranging from peaceful to crowded, rocky to flat. All county parks have an entrance fee of $2 per vehicle, which includes the use of boat launches, and those that allow camping tack on a addi­ tional $2 charge. For many this is a small price to pay as the Texas swelter settles in. However, there are smaller, less-used parks where lack of adequate funding and per­ sonnel make the collection of fees non-existent. One of the most popular county parks is Hippie Hollow, located a couple of miles off RR 620 down Co­ manche Trail. This 109-acre park is best known as Austin’s first nude beach, and unlike most other county parks, there is wheelchair access down to a trail that follows the shoreline, about 20 yards from the water. Plenty of p king is pro\ led to accommodate the large crowds, and there shouldn’t be any problem finding a space. The pwk is for day use only, no camping facilities pro­ vided, with the gates opening at 7 a.nl. and closing at 10 p.m. Hippie Hollow does offer some of the most beautiful spots to swim, but it is not for the timid. Nude bathing is a frequent occurrence, so if that’s a problem you may want to consider someplace else. A nearby alternative is Windy Point, another county park located about a mile further down Coman­ che Trail. This area of the lake is not as scenic as Hippie Hollow and lacks good shade trees, but the flat terrain allows bathers to drive straight to the water. There are also businesses on the point which offer a number of activities at fairly reasonable prices, including jet ski, sailboard and sail­ boat rentals. A private park is also located on the point, challenging the county with its claim as the original Windy Point Park. Bob Barstow, owner of the 13- acre tract, claims the county is trying to drive him out of business. His land, located on the cliff side of the point, offers a change from the county park. However, the $3 entry fee is more than the county park, and the parking lot is about 50 yards from the water. The county and Barstow both share acreage on the point through an easement, and a barbecue stand near the end of the peninsula ser­ vices both parks. Two other county parks further down the lake offer a little more soli­ tude than Windy Point and Hippie Hollow. These parks are reached by taking RR 2222 beyond RR 620. The first, Cypress Creek Park, has two entrances. To reach the boat ramp take Anderson Mill Road off RR 2222. A $2 charge is levied here, but if you continue down Anderson Mill and make a left on RR 2769, immediately to the left you will see another park entrance. Here, be­ cause of a small staff, a regular fee is not charged, although the staff will drive by every now and then. Cypress Creek spans 15 total acres. There is a camping area on the cheap side of the creek, secluded by trees from the rest of the park, See Parks, page 19 ^Jlte jC adieá (Center o f ^ 4 u i t l n , nc. Charing fo r you JBecause you re special! a Abortion Service a a Nitrous Oxide Available a a Free Pregnancy Testing a a Confidential Counseling a a OB-Gyn Physician a a Non Profit S.H.E. Center a a Pap Smears a V.D. Testing a a Birth Control a Breast Exams a Total Reproductive Health Care Center for Won n of AH Ages Dedicated toRi ht of Free Choice 24 Hour Emergency Call Service Austin (512) 450-3119 On RR Shuttle Route Suite 13 M edical Arta Square * Toll Free ) (800)327-0 * *0 V ^ \ \ > / / 7? 7 W 23r d 4 7 9 - 8 8 8 8 BUY, S iU , BINT, TBADC. WANT ADS-.471-5244 ACTV to feature International Women’s Day Festival September 19,1988 IMAGES 5 Producer of ‘Let the People Speak!’ rolls film forum for feminine voices BjD eaa Webb The International Women’s Day Festival, which took place way back in March, was a unique spotlight on women’s arts and issues. Trella Laughlin, producer of the award- winning program, Let the People Speak!, was there to film all that she could, and the results are awesome. The programs, which will air Thursday through Sunday, cover nearly all the music, humor, work­ shops, and artwork the festival had to offer. With luck, the series will give these women — many of whom are local artists, like dancer Amaya and singer Jean Marie Houston — media attention they would other­ wise have been denied. The music is truly breathtaking. Artists such as Hope Morgan, Judi Edwards- Shababi and Elouise Bur­ rell & She Bop are captured live with their soaring, rich voices and their compelling lyrics, addressing such issues as anti-feminine discrim­ ination, interracial conflicts and the pride and joy of being feminine. There is a genuine spirit in their music, and it’s a beautiful one, so special that it escapes definition. There is a distinct, and welcome, lack of violence in their music, even though it might be addressing a vio­ lent subject, and the lack is made up for with a concentration on beauty and endurance. Those who are moved by Tracy Chapman’s music will experience similar feelings with these powerful, yet gentle, musi­ cians. The humor and poetry offered in later shows are equally well-done. The fact that these people are not household names does not lessen the quality and personal character of their work. In fact, their lack of fame actually increases the viewer’s ability to relate with the artists’ problems and hopes. The an can be appreciated purely on the basis of its merit, not just be­ cause it is women’s an, and watch­ ing these performances is a very moving experience, one the viewer will not be likely to forget. (Lode especially for the skit performed by Word of Mouth.) The special also covers two work­ shop: “Peace House Panel” (about women and the peace movement) and “Women in Politics.” The seg­ ments covering the workshops, how­ ever, will probably not be as inter­ esting to all viewers as the artistic segments, since they are specialized subjects, and as such have a special­ ized audience. Nevertheless, the workshops are worth watching. The panelists — such as Marta Benavides, a Salva­ doran peace activist living in exile in Mexico Gty, and Wilhehnina Del- co, Texas state representative for District 50 — are ihtematiooaUy and/or locally renowned for their T E L E V ISIO N The fact that these people are not household names does not lessen the quality and personal character of their work. contributions to the cause of wom­ en’s rights and human rights. The series will also feature the art that was on show at the Dougherty Arts Center during the Women’s Day festivities. Especially moving and captivating are the works of Marsha Gomez, which are sure to impress many through their incredi­ ble interpretations of the “earth mother” theme. The other works, such as those of Mary Visser and Ave Bonar, are equally colorful and captivating. They, as well as the other artists, have produced paintings, drawings, pottery, statues and photographs that deserve the coverage given diem. Not all deal with feminist themes, but all do produce a peace­ ful feeling by way of their inherent femininity. Some are maternal, some beautiful and some are spiritu­ al in a feminine way. The camera shots of the art are well-thought out and are timed with appreciation in mind, giving the viewer ample opportunity to enjoy the works. The series itself was shot with ACTV’s brand new “chip cameras,” (so named because they use micro­ chips, instead of vacuum tubes) which produce higher resolution and better color and light balance. Gone are the days of (Hinge-skinned peo­ ple in a nearly black room wearing indescribably drab clothing. Gone, too, are the old computer print-out screen titles, replaced with much readable improved and typefces. The quality of the pro­ duction is incredible, which makes it all the more enjoyable. A warning, however: There are some slow spots. Even though it meant making a 16-hour monster marathon, Laughlin refused to cut any acts from her tapes. She felt that each artist dc sved her moment in the series, regardless of her quality at a performer. As a result, there will be some parts that are boring. But for each w* Mary Visser’s The Dance o f Life is among the works featured in the art exhibit segment of Laughlin’s special. Watching these per­ formances is a very moving experience, one the viewer will not be likely to for­ get. dull section, there are sure to be three or four sections that will grab your attention and not let go. This series is highly recommend­ ed. If you are a patron of the arts in any capacity, go hunt down some­ one who gets cable channel 33, and see the four shows of The Interna­ tional Women’s Day Festival. The International Women’s Day Festival 8 p.m. to midnight, each day Sept. 22 through Sept. 25 on- ACTV channel 33. Thursday, Sept. 22: music, dance, poetry, theater and politics. Friday, Sept. 23: music, theater and dance. Saturday, Sept. 24: two workshops — “Peace House Panel” and “Women in Politics” — plus more music and literature. Sunday, Sept. 25: literature, dance, music and the Dougherty Art Exhibit. (A third workshop, the Intcmüion- al Women’s Panel, was only audio taped, and wW be aired on radio station KAZ1 on Wednesday Sept Ave Boost's photography is shown m the the Dougherty kibit footage. 21.) 6 IMAGES September 19,1988 _________________________________________ —-—-—--— —--------------------- —--------------------------------- The art of writing artlessly: Richard Ford’s Rock Springs contradict their sensibilities, or are just simply unfam iliar and therefore startling. The author has a natural sympa­ thy for the spiritually battered. In the book’s title story, a petty crimi­ nal decides to trek from Montana to a new home and life in Florida. With his little daughter and his wea­ ry girlfriend, Earl Middleton drives his stolen car down to Rock Springs, Wyo., where it breaks down. In an effort to reach a cab, Earl approach­ es the mobile-home residence of an elderly black woman, who trusts Him enough to let him use her phone. Ford captures the irony of the sit­ uation in a brief exchange, which praises the woman for her kindness as it depicts the visceral relief one feels when being trusted. The woman looked at me again as if she was searching for a truth of her own, then back out into the night. She was maybe in her sixties, but I couldn’t say for sure. “You’re not going to rob me, are you Mr. Middleton?” She smiled like it was a joke between us. “.Not tonight, ” I said, and smiled a genuine smile. “I ’m not up to it tonight. Maybe another time. ” Like Earl Middleton, all of Ford’s characters are poised on the edge of discovering hidden truths about themselves and the people in their Uves. In one story, Communist, a teen-age boy sees another side of his mother’s boyfriend during an illegal hunting excursion. After frivolously shooting a goose in the excitement, the man refuses to put it out of its misery until strongly provoked. The narrator reflects on the event years later, with a heightened sense of understanding: “[He], I think now, was not a bad man, only a man scared of something he’d never seen before — t nething soft in himself — his life going a way he didn’t like. A woman with a son. Who could blame him there? I don’t know what makes people do what they do, or call themselves what they call them­ selves, only that you have to live someone’s life to be the expert.’* Many of the stories in Rock Springs hinge on the unanticipated actions of others. In Great Falls, a young boy watches as his cuckolded father puts a gun to another man’s head, then watches as his mother rides away with her lover. In Going To the Dogs, a woman’s unexpected generosity becomes one night’s sal­ vation for a heartbroken man. Both stories emphasize that real knowledge of people is contingent on uncovering layers of truth that often lie hidden from us. The boy in Great Fails, after seeing his father’s potential for violence and his mother’s cool acceptance of the situ­ ation, senses his own rite of passage as a witness: “As I walked toward school I thought to myself that my life had turned suddenly, and that 1 might not know exactly how or which way for possibly a long time.” Ford isn’t a minimalist, although he certainly looks over his shoulder to Raymond Carver from time to time; he’s more of a realist, a thoughtful storyteller who creates art artlessly. His natural flair for pi­ ercing, crystal-clear writing and his the uncanny understanding of Hum an heart are signs that Richard Ford will be a major force in litera­ ture in years to come. Richard Ford will be autographing copies of Rock Sprit p s from noon to 1:30 Wednesday at Gamer and Smith Bookstore, 2116 Guadalupe St. Copies of his other works wifi also be available for sale. Thanks to Gamer and Smith for the loan of this book. Rock Springs Richard Ford Vintage Contemporariei 1987; re-released 1988 $6.95 ByJeffTurrentine in paperback Richard Ford writes the way that honest people talk: candidly, lucid­ ly, without a trace of cant or stylistic self-consciousness. His words, like his characters, cut through the fog of ambiguity in search of the plain truth about people, their feelings and their natures. His 1986 novel The Sportswritcr earned Him renown and positive criticism from reviewers as well as fellow writers. The following year he released Rock Springs, a collec­ tion of prize-winning stories that met with success on commercial and critical levels. These stories, recent­ ly re-released by Vintage Contempo­ raries in paperback form, are largely set in the Northern Montana plains where Ford lives. They deal with the characters’ internal struggles as they are faced with truths that either Richard Ford, who won national acclaim lor has novel H e Sportawi nr, has recently it released an anthology of his short stories in paperback. NU DO Hairstyles for m en a n d w o m e n $5 CUTS & V A V 0 0 M ' P E R M S S15 R E G U L A R and P E R M S H I GH L IG HT S i on first visit with this 3d M o n .- F ri . 1 Oisb to 61sh Set, 1 Gish tc Aish 2222 Rio Grande 0-106 478-8737 Prepared for the future. Yours and ours. ARCO is meeting the challenges of today s petroleum industry through creative engineering and a drive for excellence. Coupled with the largest domestic liquid reserve base of the U.S. majors, our quest to be the best has prepared us for a bright future. We invite you to investigate making our future yours when our representatives are on campus. Please contact your placement office for details. ARCO Oil and Gas Company ARCO Alaska, Inc. Divisions of AtlanticRichf ieldCompany An Equal Opportunity E m p loye M/F Gonzo but not forgotten: Hunter S. Thompson’s ‘Swine’ September 19; 1988 IMAGES 7 Hunter S.Thompson Generation of Swine Gonzo Papers Vol. 2 tales of Shame and mthe 80s '= m Generation of Swiae: Goaxo Pa­ pen Vol. 2 HuaterS. Thompoot Simon and Schuster 1988 $19.95 By Tom McNeely “Truth is found expensive, primi­ tive and crude while hypocrisy is smooth, always up to date and not only cheap but profitable. ” — Ignazio Silone Whenever Hunter S. Thompson, the inventor of Gonzo Journalism, Gonzo comes up in conversation, the first question always seems to be about his health. It bespeaks a mixture of posses veness and condescension to inqire so about someone we've never met, but every high school cynic and precocious closet rebel has gone through a Gonzo phase. like Tom journalism, Wolfe’s rococo reinventions or Tru­ man Capote’s fictional streamlinings of history, drew out the essence of an event by casting it in a new mold. While Wolfe and Capote concerned form, themselves more with Thompson aimed for the essence of the story as he saw it. As Thompson wrote in Fear and Loathing: on the Campaign Trail 72, "Even reading and watching all the news, there is no way to know the truth — except to be diere.” the Unlike most of his fellow New Journalists, he made no claims to objectivity. The fine line in such an exercise is to maintain a balance be­ tween referent, or factual "spine,” of a story and the tangen­ tial fantasies which it spawns in the author’s imagination. A step too close toward pure factuality and the piece withers; a drop into rootless musings and it becomes self-indul­ gent. "I’m a great fan of reality,” Thompson said in a Rolling Stone interview last year. "If I have a fact, I don’t have to wonder if I’ve made the right move or said it properly.” Thompson has fallen into disfavor despite his early stylistic innova­ tions. Cartoonist Garry Trudeau has cast the already unsavory Uncle Duke, Thompson’s counterpart in the Doonesbury world, as a zombie and as a flunky for Donald Trump. Thompi in’s last lackluster effort, The Curse o f Lono (1983), didn't help much either. Generation o f Swine, however, proves that Thompson has kept a keen, if misanthropic, eye on the American political and cultural scene. Thompson binds together a nearly week-by-week commentary on our country — gleaned from his syndi­ cated editorials with inspiration from the Book of Revelation and similarly morbid sources. The pieces run from September 1985 to the ear­ ly part of this year. The sometimes shrill prankish­ ness of Thompson’s past work pales before Generation o f Swine’s stri­ dent outrage. The author who in 1974 called Richard Nixon “a cheap, demented little fascist punk” now graphically paints a vision of hell worthy of William S. Burroughs and puts Ed Meese at its center. Generation o f Swine disposes of the absurdist comedy that sweetened See Swine, page 17 SIMPLY B E A U T I F U L free skin and hair care products. Hhole Foods Market carries an extensive selection of chemical- Products based on the purest, most luxurious ingredients nature has to offer. And nothing else. Products that will keep you looking... simply beautiful. WELEDA NATURAL BODY CARE PRODUCTS WITH A DIFFERENCE One difference is more than 65 years experience in the formulation of the finest natural body care products. Our shampoos, conditioners, massage oils, toothpastes and facial care products ate made with pure, natural ingredients. No artificial preservatives n or colors are used. Try Weleda and judge for yourself. ' WELEDA Free Product Demonstrations and Sampling Fri. Oct. 7 Sat. Oct. 8 Sun. Oct. 9 12-6 p.m. — North 12-6 p.m. — Central 12-6 p.m. — South WH&LE FOODS Central — 914 N. Lamar (512)476-1206 O H D H I South — 4006 S. Lamai, -40 0 ,(512 ) 448-3884 N otth — 9070 Research (512)451-0275 The great gonzoist himself in his pre-post-Reagan-era-depression days 8 IMAGES September 19,1988 Moving pictures A look at the best animation available on home video By Ernest Rister funniest SO minutes ever spliced to­ gether. Walt Disney once equated saying “I make animated films” with say­ ing “I sweep the latrines.*' Indeed, the very word “ anim ation” makes the majority of Americans think “Ick. Kiddie film.” But with the release of Disney's and Steven Spielberg’s Who Framed Roger Rabbit, animation seems to be experiencing a rebirth. People who gagged at The Care Bears but loved Roger are asking, “Is there anything else that's this good?” The answer is yes. A lot of great and fun animated films, as good as or better than Roger Rabbit, have been made over the years, and a lot of them are on video. Here are your best bets. 1. A Salute to Chuck Jones No matter what the Disney worshippers think, the best short cartoons were made by Warner Bros, in the 1940s and '50s. The classic animated shorts on this 1986 compilation have a common bond in that they were all directed by the great Chuck Jones. Jones is the man whose twisted mind inspired such greats as Duck Dodgers in the Twenty-Fourth and 2. PinoccMo This 1940 film puts every other animated movie to shame. Although it's not as funny as the Warner short cartoons, it is simply the technical masterpiece of the animated film genre. In addition to this flawless tech­ nology, the art itself is breathtaking- ly beautiful. The film would cost an estimated $50 million if produced at today’s prices. Of course, the narrative structure doesn't quite live up to the technical sparkle, and the film does start to drag. Fortunately, Pinoccbio saves itself with an awe-inspiring final 10 minutes. When Monstro wakes up and tears after the little wooden prota­ gonist, the movie wakes up, too. The action at the end of Pinoccbio actually tops the climax of this sum­ mer’s Rambo III, and considering that every single frame of this movie was drawn and painted by hand, that's quite a feat. See Animation, page 18 TELEVISION [Pi locckiojputs every other animat­ ed movie to shame. Although it’s not as funny as the Warner short cartoons, it is simply the technical masterpiece of the animated film genre. One-Half Century, One Froggy Evening (you know, the one where the frog jumps around and sings while twirling a cane and a top hat), and the hilarious What’s Opera, Doc? They’re all on this video, which isn't too hard to find. It's the 1/5 CARAT D I A M O N D S $ 1 4 9 ! 1/5 CARAT D I A M O N D $ 1 9 9 ! 1/5 CARAT D I A M O N D s 2 9 9 ! Aaiauiioa has bt * looking up «nee Roger Rabbit started hanging out. the■EMTY Brodie Oaks Center (Next to Whole Foods) Professional Beauty Supplies and Styling Salon. • GotdweN • TiGi • Moc ifini • Joco • Redken • Matrix • Sebastian • KMS • Focus 21 • Mastay a Traaaa a Skin Cara a Pot h a Makeup a Hair Accessories Phis a Large Selection of Sculptured Nail Products to Chome from ia4c3S Sm . 1 * « ■ Al Ywr Bmk* Naaái la O n Stop Nail Polish Buy One Get One FREE! AM Types InhmnwTI feragpmcs l í L_, ■ m $2.49 ea. 16 OK. Limit 2 FREE HAIR BRUSH* N» Pantana ogMOMC D w i H V A iy Watch and jewelry repairs on premises T er ms to fit your b u d g e ’ truargeC H s'* An major credit cards • PauIMHcheN • N anais • Avada THE SHEFTALL CO. JEW ELERS G EM O LO G ISTS irtD Msaofti . 179 “iasar M U m M B "■asa- "ttsasr- atawanaariB I . . i u i i n ' . I , , , ! , . m m , l U ' l 1' - . j i iM. i M w Mr Patio Cafe LATE NIGHT WITH Mamacitas FRt & SAT t i 3 AM FREE COFFEE OR LARGE DRMK FROM MIDNIGHT-3AM BUY ONE BEAN & CHEESE TACO AND GET ONE FREE SATURDAYS* 8IM M YS LO W fM W m iW W A LS $1 HACKS $1 MP0RT AMD D0K 3 TC BEBI HAPPY HOUR 5 -¡L $3 PITCHERS OF F EER WME COOLERS % PRICE FAST DOVE THRU MCE CALLNSmCOME SUN-THURS 7 AM-11 PM FRKSAT7AM-3AM IM S E. OLTORF 4 4 3 -2 9 2 9 . Not just singing the blues Guitarist Thomas makes his mark By P.J. Cosgrove You walk into the Black Cat at midnight and the Chris Thomas Band is in the middle of the blues classic Hootchie Cootchie Man. You settle in with a cold Buck- horn and give a listen. By the time Thomas has executed one blitzkrieg­ like lead, you wonder why you ha­ ven't seen his face on a flier down the Drag, or read about him in the Chronicle. Thomas and band are kicking some ass, even by Austin’s guitar-hero standards. Over the course of the evening, Thomas jumps from blues to soul to rock ’n' roll as if to intentionally play a cross-section of the grittiest, most incendiary licks in the book. This in-your-face stuff, and Thomas tears it up right up to clos­ ing time. is Chris Thomas has been tearing it up for years now, at least since form­ ing his first band in the seventh grade with the son of the Soul Show­ man, Joe Tex. But, to paraphrase a notable metaphysical dilemma about a tree falling in the forest: can a gui­ tar player tear it up when nobody’s around to hear him? No one, that is, in a position to do something that might launch a career skyward? That question was one Thomas M l'W H S r M WRRHSw - I L P R O F I L E pondered for some time while devel­ oping his barrel of chops and grow­ ing up in Baton Rouge, hometown of blues legends Buddy Guy and Slim Harpo. By the age of 22, his stockpile of accomplishments was sizeable: five years as featured guitarist at his fa­ ther’s Baum Rouge club, Tabby’s Blues Box; an album debut on the California label Arhoolie Records which garnered impressive mention in both Musician and Billboard; and a successful tour of three European countries. But these credentials alone were not enough to propel him out obscu­ rity and put a promising career in motion. Thomas realized that the road to success in the music business would have to be picked up else­ where. “I’d reached the limit in Ba­ um Rouge,” he said. “On a local scale, or whatever, there wasn’t any challenge there musically.” Ritan R«Hfg» fxpuwite Chris Thomas may be the next rock/blues guitarist to emerge from the Austin scene. Deciding where to resettle with the intent of throwing his career into high-gear was simply a choice be­ tween two coasts: West and Third. He’d gotten wind of the Austin scene through Antone’s standard- bearers like Stevie Ray and the T- Birds, acts already in the national spotlight. “Austin seemed like the place I could get the attention of the record industry,” he said. “It seemed like they were watching Austin to see what was going on. And I thought the people in Austin would have the ears for my style, more so than L.A.” In June of ’86, Thomas made his initial foray to Austin. One night in Antone’s, headliner W.C. Clark yielded to the new kid’s request for a shot on stage. A few minutes before last call, Thomas made the most of his Austin debut by heating up a gritty mini-workshop in Advanced Guitar Pyrotechnics. See T hom as, page 20 NOW OPEN DISCOUNT OPTICAL OUTLET M O N D A Y T H R U F R I D A Y 1 0 0 0 a . m t i l l 7 : 0 0 p . m . S A T U R D A Y 1 0 : 0 0 a . m . t i l l 5 : 0 0 p . m. 1 8 1 8 «V E 5 T B E N A M ¡ r f B L V 0 A U S T I N T E X A S 4 4 8 - 2 8 4 8 ' * 0 i , R f 4 T t OC A T , 0 NS 5 7 3 2 B U R N E T T R O A D A U S T I N . T E X A S 4 6 7 - 6 9 6 0 BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL DAILY WEAR CONTACTS $89 includes exam, cleaning kit and follow up September Only • a • Appointment only 477-4668 2200 G u ad alu p e Lower Lerai Doctor’s Prescription Required Physician on Premises Round. Flat Top or Executive Bifocals in A N Y Frame , * * 4 9 9 5 COMPLETE • NO LIMITED SELECTIONS! (CHOOSE ANY FRAME I ROM 100*8 W STOCK) • NEVER AN EXTRA CHAI GE FOR: - MstA Rfcidaaa i Designer Trames • n B r C y V W M V v - One Year Frame Warranty • ALL NORMAL m a c n m o SUf ADOe NO MQHER THAN (♦ ) 3.00. (+ ) OR ( ) 2.00 CYUNDER. OTHER PRODUCTS AVAUkBLE: EXT AddtonM $20.00 SUPER OVER ZED OR PRMM LENSES..................................... AdMond $15.00 SCRATCH COAT OR FASHUN TVriS........................................... AddMmi $10.00 ULTRA VIOLET SCRATCH COAT AN TOO PACKAGE....................AddNond $20.00 ■IVM LE MULTPOCALS “ADDITIONAL (TO MFOCAL PRICE"....................S40.00 um ale pnoQREsawE i w an “Aoom nal goaeocAL price)" . . . soo.oo “COST OF EX/MdNATlON NOT HCLUOED M PRICE OF GLASSES" WE CAN RLL YOUR DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTION, MAKE BEPAWS. AND ADJUST YOUR FRAMES. ___________ NEVER A SALE ALWAYS THE LOWEST PRICES 10 IMAGES September 19,1988 DIVERSIONS M 4 Bningr to Image». P.O. Bes D, Anatin, TX 78713, or col «71-4991. P u ffier ter ’Pivta loaa’ jo - a t t o H H H H H H the Widumdoy M om p ie Lae Nichole. UVE MUSIC H mo Tammy D ry. 71 W at, i-5393 Open mike with Tammy D Bill Moor Billy Witaa ACAPULCO RESTAURANTE Y CANTINA 7101 T ent Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat ALEJANDRO’S 3701 Airport Bird., 474-2609 AMIGO’S 1523 Tumin Fotd Rood, 441-3813 Sun,Tue Litre Tétano music (8pm) ANCHOVIES S03-AE. Sixth St., 474-6602 Tue,Wed Hotcakm Thu-Sat Duck Soup ANTONE’S 2915 Guadalupe St., 474-5314 Moo Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat APOLLO’S 300 E. Sixth St., 474-7027 Mon,Tue 2 A.M. Wed Thu Fri,Sat The Racket THEARTSCOMPLEX On campus, Bass Concert Hall Fri,Sat Austin Symphony Jimmy Lee The Rhythm Ran Pete Maya,The Antona Mike Morgan A the Crawl Alan Hayna Band Johnny Reno & the Sax Maman Lonnie Mack Blua Band, Alan Hayna Band Rosie Flora AUSTIN OPERA HOUSE 200 Academy Drive, 443-7037 AUSTIN OUTHOUSE 3510 Guadalupe St., 451-2266 Chris Huff Mon Safer Rhodes Band Thu The Shadowcasten Fri Sat T.K. & the Bluerays BACKROOM 2015 E. Riverside Drive, 441-4677 Mon Tue Wed Thu Straight Up, Argument Clink, Progress, i2i Honeymoon Suite The Bean, featuring Adrian Belcw The Stray Cats (remember They’re back together, and hot a ever) Joe Ely (Texas at its best) these guys? Julk Howard Charbe Beaver Jimmy Roy’s Rockabilly Band J a s jam with Buff Manioo The Stream Melisa Miller St the Eight Second Ride Going South Jimmie Mack Band People’» Chotee Jimmie Mack Band Clay Blaker Alvin Crow Fri,Sat BAILEY’S 6519 N. Lamar, 454-1398 open mike with Chris Huff Tue Track Lynn Fri Sat Betty Elders BARB’S WATERING HOLE 8619 Burnet Road, 467-9547 Sat BEAR CREEK SALOON 10542 Manchara Road, 280-0267 Fri Sat BIG EASY 517 E. Sixth St. Moo Thu Fri,Sat The Brew BLACK CAT LOUNGE 313V4 E. Sixth St., no phone BRANDING IRON RESTAURANT RR 620 at Texa 71,263-2827 Sat RREEZY’S RR 620, One mile north of Lakeway, 266-1979 Wed BROKEN SPOKE 3201 S. la m » Blvd.,442-6189 Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat CACTUS CAFE Texa Union, 471-8228, (musk starts at 9pm unleu oth­ erwise noted) Mon New artist open mike with Brace Newman Tue Hunter Davis Wed David Hailey Thu Fri Sat CAFE ORLEANS 1112 W. Sixth St., 4694)552 Thu, Fri, RAnnir Bachcmm Trio Sun Jazz Brunch () lam-2pm) CAFE ST. CHARLES 333 Guadalupe St. Muak starts at 8 p.m. Fri Sat CAP’N TOM’S BAR-B-Q 11 SOON. Lamar Blvd., 834-1858 Sat CAROUSEL LOUNGE 1110 E. 52nd St., 453-9091 Wed-Sat Jay Clark CASA BLANCA CANTINA 416 E. Sixth St., 473-0905 Thu Cindy Cherry & the Cool Whipa Fri Michael Hamm Band Sat Matthew RobmaooA friends CASINO BALLROOM 9111 FM 812,243-1584 Fri Robert Earl Keen, Will T. Massey Greg Brown The Generic Bhsegrau Band Ken Mea, Fred Waller Hal Michael Ketchum Bin Averbach L a Tigra del Norte, La Sirena del Caribe, Grupo A ran a Grupo Sinjagual Sat n i u i m 900 Red River St., 472-8273 Sun CHELSEA STREET PUB The Stream Square, 327-7794 Fri^at Ita s tm n ft Robertson Tkt Reiven will pU; SatnnUy nj ll tt Liberty Lunch,«» 405 W. S t«»d St. All «ge» Mt w tlc o t, b«t you »«1 to «how f ID to Jn»*. Local Bands: Two weeks ago, we offered free publicity to any band that would send us a press photo at least a week and a Half in advance of a show. NO ONE REPLIED! So bring us a pho­ to with pertinent information (place, time, etc.) by Tuesday a week be­ fore the show. Our offices are at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, or send it to Images, do The Daily Texan,P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. NOW. ____ _ CHEZ FRED 9070 R oorch Blvd., 451-6494 Mon Floyd Domino(cariy), Kaz Kazanoff A Domi- Open mike with Jim H old Poet’» open mike with Glean Hardin Open nuke with Jimmy LaFave Okn Murrell k Toby Solomon Kate McLennan k Ruth Huber Emily Kaitz, Flaky Bircuit Boya Jam a Folk(carty), Akx Coke k Polk Tue Robert Skilo(arly), Tony Campue & Skiks Wed Danny Levm(eariy), Toma Ramirez Trio Thu Sandy AUea(eaty), Jam a Polk Quartet Fri Sat Huaum Touch CHEZ FRED ON BALCONES 5406 Balcona Drive, 45041914 Sandy Allen Wed Carina Fernanda Thu Bill Forat Fri Set Beth UUman CHICAGO HOUSE 607 Trinity St., 473-2542 Mon The Wed Thu Fri Sat CLUB CAIRO 306E. Sixth St., 320-8357 Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat CLUB ISLAS 217 C a n o a Ave., 473-0798 Rmlginga Fri Set Sheri COLORADO ST. CAFE 705 Colorado S t.,479-6346 Man Tue Acouatk Volcánica Wed Open mike with Mark Luke Deaieb Folk Night with Greg Whitfield Thu Dave Scheidd Md Stan Smith Jazz with John Striaman Hdl Nile with Brad From HcU Art exhibition, fathiou fair, and muak Ballad ShamNet, Roman Candka Rap Feat Foi Dog Pondering, The Wayouts Iriah Soottkh jam with Bd Mflkr Fri The Therapy Siaten Sat COMMON INTEREST 8440 Burnet Road, 453-6796 Muak atara at 8pm Tam Griffith Mon DanBobb The Tam Griffith Wed Connie Blake Thu Sendy ABea Fri Set Joe Val COMPADRES NORTH 9025 Reeearch Blvd. at Burnet Rood, 339-0805 TrikTraa Wed Ponche Thu Multiple Chotea Fri Sat Lifneya CONTINENTAL CLUB 1315 S. Gonpen Ave., 441-2444 Mon Tue Wed Sat Thu Fri Lubbock or Leeve It — Jeme Tty lor The Boone Weaaelt Grey Ghoit(12-2pm), Mike Morgan and the Crawl Zydcco Ranch Ernie Bowier k T D Bell (5-8pre), Reverend Horton Heat Grey Ghoat (2-6pm), Jum a Medtaw and the Bad Boya DONUTS DEPOT 1600W. Fifth St., 478-0336 Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Larry Boyd { THE H8R0RT BWT0FTHB!5MfVWNQ BCEMNE 10QK THE- Snafceyjoe Miler ju t ¡an (4:30pn) Sunda-y J w with o k D urtefpife(6pn) Fri S« S T U W S M U 4 I 4001 N. 1-15,465-0177 Fri S n STUMBLE INN 6141 U.S. 200 W ot, 002-0003 Fti S« TEXAS TAVIBN T a w Unan, 471-9231 Wed Tka Fri Sn Teddy A tke Tad Top* Loy Bleaana Bead TkeCnafc Seal Night K kkW kdw WBdwarn Seen Faad Benefit A Aafeep At tke Wked Record Release Fnty Jinnee Dale Gilmore, Erik Hokkeaca Ckfld’eFley ' Btvd, 440-0660 Opea ndte bhiee jeoi 0410 N. L a n Blvd., 431-3440 Wed THUNDBBCLOUD h e x g a b d e n 203 E. Rrianide Drive, 447-7696 M a e c e a m n fp a Moa Tka Fri Sn TOMASITAE COYOTE CAFE 3003 S. Fri,Sa« Glide Blwcherdfriwrel) TOULOUSE 402 E. Sink St., 470-0744 Moa MadHouee TrikTias Tae D add» Wed Tka Pk m rafdosrnetein ), Wynodiupetain Fn.Sai FteaamCdan w dn ), Stattfupuan) THE VELVEETA BOOM (remedy) 317 E. Sink St., 440-9114 Wed VICTORY GRILL 1102 E. Utk St ,477-0237 WATEELOO ICE HOUSE 1106 W. 30tk. 451-5245 Thu Walter Hyan Hal Ketckun Fri Sn Tke Louace Lizards WATEEMELON CAFE 405 Barua Springs Road, 4004446 Fn,Sai Shake Raaacll Bead THE WORLD 505 E Fifth St., 4794034 Pictures Wed Thud I Thu h a d Fri Sn Tan WYLIE'S 400 E SunhSt., 472-3712 Fri Steel Power Seáe See — Ed Vizard, M C. Margaret Wiley THEATER THE ARTS COMPLEX Fine Am Buddw, Baee Coacert Hall, 471 -2717 H em h We Roil Aioag UT Drena Wed-Fri, Ipsa, B. Idea Payne Theatre CAPITOL CITY PLAYHOUSE 214 W. Fourth St., 472-1155 TkeSeagad By Aaeea Ckahhea Turu-of-the-eaaniry Ruerna ranaooe ... the g n u daa- Ticket» $7 WedTku, 9 ) FrVSn Ruot through Oct. I., Spaa. Aleo, Suadays — Sept. 23 aadOct. 2 at 3pm Forreaervaooas,c a l472-2966 By T crw ct McNally A oaa-act coaaady. At a w ren for tke i ned, can heaueiea art ennined ia hAark Happy Hour taaea ThuJ’n (5:30pn) Tickets $3 CHICAGO HOUSE 607 Triaiiy St., 473-2542 Medal o f Homar Directed by Knky Gruhen, seen J VISUAL ARTS •AEKEB TEXAS HBTOEY CENTER Sid Rkkndeea Hall, 471-3961 From tke Vafcaa to tke Arantkln: Bunoo W ilw Fko- 5 S S S wort captura the Auwo naric ecaae daring ita wriy days, the iaitanly crtnove period of 1967-1974. The crtflat frotara 36 black aad white p k o » oí nuci­ a Headband, Way- óme each n Johaay Winter, low A WiBie, Ftaak Zappa, Ariaep At tke Wheel end I jghtan * HmMaa, iaet n a w e a lew, pitying n the Vakaa Gn Co., ArwdHo World Headquarters, aad other Aaada daba of the era. Throagh Octoher. BLACK ARTS ALLIANCE GALLERY 1157 Naraota St., 477-9660 44 aorta f t w foA enm F.L. “Doc” Speflnon. Thrugk Sept. 30. ARCHER M. HUNTINGTON ART GALLERY 23rd Street tad Saa Janato Boulevard, 471-7324 30th Aaaaal Art Faadty F-zhibsrioa Mote than 100 worts by ahoat 30 of the Uararrity'e cunen ambo an fecuky n ra h e n n w d n cneritus prod»now Refly Feanag, Keaank Fake, Michael Fnry, John Gaena, Paul Hand, Lotea Moriey, Everett Spruce, Charles Unlaaf aad Rahph White, Included are Through Oct 9. PERRY-CAST ANEDA LBEARY Oa canpua, 471-3111 (m tm nm l o f tke Smpekot: Brohatom a t Photography h r tke Mam» F.ihihatna tracing the 100th annhemry of tke anapahot, featuring dank canseras, early photographs. Daguerreo­ types, tintypes aad hooka oa photography. Throagh Oct. 17. HARRY RANSOM CENTER 21st «ad Guadalupe streets Eugene Fmmanur/ Vnilet-le-Duc Artttt, Architect, Matter o f Hmoric Pteeenmbaa 135 waeetcoiota aad drawings by tke gran French resto­ ration architect and prominent caponcnt of the Gothic revival ia Fiance. Through Oct. 9 TRANS AVANT-GARDE GALLERY Sketches tod Smdtet Features the worts of Bob Gober, Elizabeth M uiray, Rosemarie Trocfcd, Tan Rolhns aad R.O.S. MOVIE HIGHUGHTS Eddie Murphy, Ancoso Hall Eddie Murphy feas will undoubtedly eat up the comedi- an i latest big screes oonedy venture, Corning to Ameri­ ca, a happily-cver-dter fairy tale ronenrr. Promoted as a '3fe-atyfe ranm tk comedy made « « « ■ ¡ « « y, Com- mg to America it an enfoyabie tuaancttin c divenioo that thoart remarkable effort on tke part of tke 27-ycw- old financier, coocepoomat and sur of the film — B.C. Showing U Lincoln 3,6406 N. 1-35, Nocthcrao 6,2525 W. Aaderaoo Lute; Riverside I, 24IO-E E. Riverside Drive; Wcatgate I, South Lamar and Ben White boule­ vards Thai tad Foot dint Eastwood The Dead ft# / wo t a thriller; it'i not even a vary good cop flick. It it nved, like Sao Francisco every tune • bszzarre murder spree thrrnrta tke town, only by Ent- wood n the iainitahlr Harry Calfehao — JS Showing at M ag 4, 10000 Beacnch Blvd.; Hfekhnd Mall Theater, HRhknd Mad; I rtr h J k 4 ,242S W, Ben White Bhd.; Riveraide1,2410-E E. Riveraide Drive. Die Hard Brace Willit» Boooae Bcdefa D it Hard a a High Concept a l the way : A New York cop Bin to Los Aageka to spend Chnatmn with hie m rmgeil wife end kidt only to find hin eelf «tuck in » 40-emey hnilihag with 12 ten erme and 301 oí whom it the Mrs. — R.W. SI lowing at Barton Creek S, Loop 1 and Loop 360; Lincoln 3,6406 N. 1-35; Noarhow 6,2325 W A n k r- taa Lane; Si 3,1921E. Bea White Blvd. F o 1 21- S t x i Í Hook &uJL QAjOUWiJL CwnjpAAA. the FIRST CHOICE of UT Students, Faculty and Staff 12 IMAGES September 19,1988 MUSIC Paying tribute to the ways of folk Springsteen, Dylan and others honor their influences Woody Guthrie archives. One result of this endeavor is an album just re­ leased on Columbia Records: Folk­ ways: A Vision Shared, the proceeds of which will go toward these two long-awaited purchases. lated into the performer’s particular idiom. A Vision Shared brings together the best of contemporary artists from country, rock and folk: The roster reads like a Who’s Who of who’s hot. The talents of Bob Dylan, U2, Bruce Springsteen, Wil­ lie Nelson, Arlo Guthrie and Em- mylou Harris grace these two sides, as do many others. Each artist renders his/her own interpretation of a particular song by Leadbelly or Guthrie. And for the most part, the album stands up as a respectful and creative tribute to those two men who paved the way for all forms of popular music to come. Some songs are truly haunting. Listen, for instance, to Dylan’s cov­ er of the Guthrie-penned paean to the depression-era Robin Hood, Pretty Boy Floyd. Accompanied only by acoustic guitar and harmoni­ ca, Dylan plaintively mourns for the noble outlaw, sounding as if he’d never departed from his mid-’60s folkie style. Hearing this affirms the itching notion that this is what Dylan was meant to do, and one curses the day he was introduced to “technology” and lost his way. Most of the artists on the album understood that the songs them­ selves were intended to subordinate the interpretations, and most chose songs that could gracefully be trans­ Springsteen’s version of Guthrie’s I Ain’t Got No Home, for example, sounds like a leftover track from Ne­ braska; and John Mellencamp’s in­ terpretation of Guthrie’s Do Re Mi, with its tactful use of dobro and ac­ cordion, fits in perfectly with the musical ideas Mellencamp has been toying with lately. Sadly, one song — Beach Boy Bri­ an Wilson’s attempt at Leadbelly’s Goodnight Irene — stands out sal- iently as the album's one totally in­ congruous track. The idea was to these songs, have artists cover prompting to say, “Yeah, I can see how so-and-so’s music was affected in this way by Leadbelly or Guthrie.” listener the But when Wilson, in that crystal clear white-boy voice, croons a line like “Sometimes 1 lives in the coun­ try,” it just sounds silly. The chi- mey, harmony-laden treatment just doesn’t lend itself well to Mr. Led­ better’s classic. If you need a more specific litmus test, just ask your­ self: Could Leadbelly have done S/oop John B. ? Probably not. Fortunately, the rest of this al­ bum is nothing short of outstanding. Every song shines in its own unique way, from U2’s feverish rendition of to Taj Guthrie's Jesus Christ Mahal’s authentic and insightful sub at Leadbelly’s Bourgeois Blues. Bravo, Smithsonian. It's morning in America again. Various Artists Folkways: A Vision Shared Columbia ByJeffTurrentine The Smithsonian Institution is al­ ways a great comfort when one starts to feel that the federal government is totally, ho[ ¡lessly uncool. Just when you think that the boys in Washing­ ton, D.C., are completely out of touch with America’s rank and file, along comes the Smithsonian to set the record straight by releasing the definitive jazz compendium, or by acquiring the set from M*A*S*H for public display. They’ve done it again. Somebody at the top decided that it was high time the Smithsonian purchased two archival ghosts that had been haunting them for years: The Folkways Records catalog, which contains the majority of mu­ sic recorded by one Huddie Led­ better, or “Leadbelly,” and the Cray goes back to the blues with ‘Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark Yon can get anything you want, when you're the son of a famous peno*. Don’t be Afraid o f the Dark’s excellent synthesis of past and present should serve as a message to The Industry that quality, not marketability, is where it’s at. blues writer since Willie Dixon, a guitarist without peer— in short, a lq ad in the making. Yet moat have probably never heard Robert Cray actually sing the blues. That's because his last and most successful album, Strong Persuader, was nothing more than standard AOR, tailor-made for the white male 16-to-34s who listen to Z-102. It wasn’t bad, com* ired to most of the music on album-rock radio, but Cray's early fans, the ones who bought Who’s Been Talking and False Accusations, were most disappointed. However, as often happens, sell­ ing out brought Cray loads of mon­ ey and fame. What's more, The In­ dustry fpnonii*d to hail him — yyui themselves — as the future of the modern blues. The question now is if a newly fiunous Cray will buy bock some of die blues purity he sold to become a bona fide star. At first glance, this album doesn't hold much promise. The sticker on the shrink wrap says “DISPLAY IN POP/ ROCK SECTION.” And the al­ bum's title just happens to be the ad slogan for Michdob Dark beer — a very bod i p . Appearances can be deceiviis§. Don’t be Afraid o f the Dark, while rooted in mainstream rock, is also steeped in classic R&B influences. In fact, its excellent synthesis of past and present should serve as a message to The Industry that qual­ ity, not marketability, is where it’s at. The best tracks here, by far, are the ones that will never get played on any radio station. Side one is filled With real blues, especially Don't You Even Care? And the side closer, Night Patrol, is a bril­ liant uptempo number about the Homeless, making a sensitive state­ ment that should (but won't) get plenty of popular notice. Side two is much the same story, with tracks the “throwaway” Mowing away the hits in quality and purity. Gotta Change the Rules is a truly funky, joyous num­ ber about cheatin' hearts that could have been recorded in 19Ü, while Across the Line is a classic boogie-woogie track that would bring down the house at Antone’s. And At Last is a perfect Otis Redding sound-alike. Actually, Don’t Be Afraid o f the Dark’s “hit tracks,” while hardly funky or rootsy, are pretty good. The title track, a smooth seduction number with lots of atmosphere, is much better and more real than, say, Boo Jovi singles. (It does, however, sound like a Michelob •d.) Another “hot hit,” Acting This Way, features lite-jazz taxman Da­ vid Sanborn and should find a place on soft-rock stations. Overall, Don’t Be Afraid o f the Dark is a worthy addition to the R&B/r ock canon. It would be nice if Robert Cray could ditch the beer-commadal blues and stick to the real thing, but considering how well he's done so far, he should be around long enough to get the d met. Robert Cray Band Don *t Be Afraid o f the Dark tolygnm By Mike Clark If you want a crash course in the cultural pot s of rock and roll, take a pod look at Robert Cray. He’s widely and justly celebrated as a giant of modern R&B, the best i .i irf.fr.rj H i'3* i JA» ! í y , ' \ September 19,1988 IMAGES 13 MORE MUSIC_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Allman, Deep Purple and the 1970s have all returned Greg Allman Band Just Before the Bullets Fly CBS Deep Purple Nobody’s Perfect Polygram By Bobby Ruggiero For years now, Broadway divas have sung the belief that “Everything old is new again.” That can especially hold true for rock and roll. The moat recent reprise in musical taste, initi­ ated by last year’s “Summer of Love” nostal­ gia hoopla, is late ’60s/early 70s music. Heavy rotation of popular songs in commer­ cials and movies as well as remakes by newer artists have all sparked interest in tunes oider than many of their current listeners. ‘Classic Rock” stations are appearing on radio dials across the country, and acts like the Grateful Dead, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and most recently, Little Feat, have all had their careers salvaged from troubles that included dead members or drugs and alcohol. Keeping this in mind come new releases from two of rock’s most grizzled veterans: Greg Allman and Deep Purple. Just Before the Bullets Fly is Gregg All­ man’s follow-up to last year’s comeback al­ bum, I ’m No Angel. Indeed, many fans are grateful that the blond singer/organist is even still alive. Allman’s excesses with cocaine, booze, and heroin (as well as his stormy, short-lived marriage to Cher) were well-docu­ mented in supermarket tabloids all through the 70s and ’80s. Once, he even offered co­ caine to a then-president Carter. Now, the clean Allman and his sharp new backup band have successfully avoided the sophomore slump. Just Before the Bullets Fly contains some of the great hard drivin’, South­ ern fried blues/rock that Allman is most iden­ tified with. The album opens with the rocking semi- autobiographical Demons, a song about one man’s life in the fast lane and the difficulty of reform, a subject quite close to Allman’s heart. He continues to examine his past with Is­ land, a touching song of regret about his es­ tranged daughter. Allman's voice, on this al­ bum more gravelly and rough than any of his pre-1987 work, elicits incredible passion as he sings to his now-grown daughter. However, this passion fails to show up on the record’s two remakes. His version of Slip Away will not have Clarence Carter rushing out to re-record his own powerful original, and a new stab at of one of Allman’s own tunes from 1969 doesn’t measure up to the singer’s previous version. Modern influences are not lost on Allman either, as he occasional­ ly experiments with the sound that has brought recent fame to both Robert Cray and the Fabulous Thunder birds. He is generally more successful, though, when using his own style of composing and performing. Two excellent tracks, Thom and a Wild Rose, and Ocean Awash the Gunwale, though contrasting in tempo, feature ethereal imagery as well as the blistering guitar work of Dan Toler. Though older fans will welcome the contin­ uing of Allman’s blues/rock style in Just Be­ fore the Bullets Fly, newer enthusiasts not fa­ miliar with Allman could do much worse than give this album a good listen, as one of the forefathers of the sound shows some of his best work in 10 years. On the other hand, there’s nothing new about the latest release from Deep Purple, Nobody’s Perfect. The band, which has un­ dergone numerous personnel changes over the past two decades, is considered by many to be the architect of the heavy metal genre. Deep Purple also enjoyed renewed success with the 1984 reunion LP Perfect Strangers and last year's House o f Blue Light. Nobody’s Perfect promises “the best songs, the best line-up, live.” While the album de­ livers on all three, including FM staples Woman From Tokyo, Hush and the epic Smoke on the Water, it is nevertheless for afi­ cionados only. The double disc set is a bargain in price and certainly doesn’t skimp on music time, but would probably be rather tedious to the aver­ age listener. Each side contains about three songs, guaranteeing that most cuts will be longer than their studio predecessors. But the album really could do without the 11- and 12- minute versions of some songs. Accounting for the extra length are guitar hero Ritchie Blackmore’s at times meandering solos and vocalist Ian Gillan’s creativity with some lyrics. He even throws in parts of Buddy Holly’s Everyday and a few lines from Jesus Christ Superstar (Gillan played Christ on the popular sound track.) However, time has hardly eroded the musi­ cal talents of Deep Purple. While many rock stars are washed up once they reach their 30s and 40s, these guys can go toe-to-toe with any of the makeup-drenched, spandex-wearing younger bands today who would claim their legacy, and blow them away. Album cuts like Highway Star, Strange Kind o f1 7oman and Perfect Strangers, as well as the better known singles, can attest to that. Still, only true fans of Deep Purple are like­ ly to rush out and get Nobody’s Perfect. Oth­ erwise, check out one of the many “greatest hits” compilations available. (Deepest Purple comes to mind.) Though the music of Allman differs quite a bit from that of Deep Purple, both acts are trying to regain some of the stature they once had, and possibly attract the sons and daugh­ ters of their original listeners. Or, if nothing else, show how their formidable influence af­ fects today’s bands. As these two, and other ’70s veterans plunge headlong into the 1990s, it’s anybody’s guess how long they’ll continue to play. (Just look at Chuck Berry, who can soon collect Social Security, still going strong.) Regardless, the influence of these bands that will always be felt, long after the last chord sounds. Easter, Let’s Active have their ‘Day’ KiErSfACTIKE music, considering his work with pre-Top 20 R.E.M. and role as pro­ ducer for California hipster/popster band Game Theory. He has also fronted a wonderful band of his own over the past few years, Let’s Ac­ tive. After a solid debut EP (afoot), a pretty good first LP (Cypress) and a spectacular, if greatly overlooked, second album (Big Plans for Every­ one), Let’s Active has now produced their best album to date, Every Dog Has His Day. The musical success of the album is largely due to the fact that Let’s Active finally seems to be a real band. Before, the group was largely just a front for Easter's studio gim­ micks and occasionally inspired gui­ tar playing. Now, with tire addition of a real drummer — that is, one who con­ centrates only on the drums, as op- p< ed to drums plus guitar, key­ boards and saxophone — Easter can devote all his time and energy to songwriting and his guitar work. Both benefit greatly from his newfound freedom from his previ­ ous role as band be-all. Previous works, while very good, have been somewhat limited; the instrumenta­ tion has been sloppy or songs lack­ luster. But Every Dog Has His Day crackles with new-found proficien­ cy; the songs are crisp and tight, and the band plays with an efficient pas­ sion. The first and title song on the record illustrates the point nicely. Easter lays meaty chunks of solo and rhythm guitar over the primal poundings of bass player John Heames and new drummer Eric Marshall. The song rocks as serious­ ly as anything from the so-called power-poppers proliferating on the college charts these days. Of course, Easter wouldn’t be Easter if he didn’t include a variety of musical styles on an album — that’s been a characteristic of his on all of Let's Active’s records. Every Dog is no exception — Easter exper­ iments with everything from '60s psychedelia on the exquisite and haunting Horizon to pure pop on Mr. Fool to surfer/hockey-rink-or- j in hybrids on the weird but none­ instrumental theless entertaining Orpheus in the Hades Lounge. Unfortunately, it’s when Easter tries to cover too many musical bases that Every Dog has its biggest problems. A couple of the cuts sound like Let’s Active pretending to be Led Zepplin (Bad Machinery) or some souped-up version of R.E.M. (Night Train). When this happens, the band no longer has the air of effortlessness that seems to Let's Active Every Dog Has His Day IRS By Steve Crawford In a different, better world, Mitch Easter would sell as many records as Eric Carmen. No, scratch that. He would sell millions of records while Carmen and his cronies toiled in absolute ob­ scurity and had to have second jobs and real haircuts. Then again, if that were the case, there would be nothing for music critics to get indignant about. But anyway.... Easter arguably is one of the big­ gest jnfln^nrwi on recent alternative Let's Active have improved, but their publicity photos are still lame surround their more accomplished songs. Happily, though, the awkward moments are relatively few and far between — and they’ve been becom­ ing more and more so with each Let’s Active album. Maybe by the time their next album is released they will have ironed out the kinks in their sound. And maybe by that time Eric Carmen and company will be dead, and Let’s Active can take their place as pop icons. But I doubt it. 14 IMAGES September 19,1988 September 19,1988 IMAGES IS A growing number of talented comics have put Austin on the comedy map. By Jeanne Acton Where dancers once wrapped their almost naked bodies around a single chrome pole, comedians now stand and make jokes about the visi­ ble stains on the carpet and furni­ ture. Although the clientele has changed, the atmosphere of the club hasn’t. It is still as cheesy now as it was when it was a strip joint, and in honor of the setting and the charac­ ter Ronny Velveeta from an Austin comedian, the club was named The Velveeta Room. And even though the club, lit with neon lights and flamingos on the wall started out as a joke, the reality is that The Velveeta Room, founded earlier this year, is surviv­ ing and proving a point — the come­ dy boom has hit Austin. “In comedy there has been tre­ mendous growth because of the ex­ perience on television and especially cable specials,” said Angela Davis, promotions director for The Laff Stop and a member of the Laff Staff. “Clubs like The Velveeta Room are a direct result of the comedy boom.” In 1977 when Esther’s Follies, a Vaudeville type of comedy, was muted, nobody knew what to ex­ pect, said Shannon Sed wick, one of the founders of Esther’s and the Vel­ veeta Room. “Since then, there has been a lot of comedy on TV — stand-up comedy has gotten big,” she said. “Comedy has tried to be on the cutting edge.” After Esther Follies, three new comedy clubs followed: The Come­ dy Workshop, which no longer ex­ ists, The Laff Stop and the Velveeta Room. The Laff Stop is on the national circuit chain of comedians and also provides an open-mike night on Mondays. One of the unique things about die club is the Laff Staff, an improv group that warms up the au­ dience before the main show. The Velveeta Room was named after Austin comedian Kerry Awn’s character Ronny, who is “a slime- ball and won’t book me for big mon­ ey,” said Awn, who won the Funni­ est Person in Texas for 1988 at the Improv in Dallas. “Now he has a really big head since he got a club and he is forgetting the little peo­ ple.” The old strip joint at 317 E. Sixth Street was converted into a comedy dub with hardly any problems or changes, said Russell Hebert, mana­ ger of The Vdveeta Room ami an Austin comedian. “The pole is kept over to the side in memory of all those dancers,” he said. “Also there was the idea never to dean the furni­ ture so that we could keep people in their chairs with all that sticky stuff.” Although the club did have finan­ cial difficulties in the beginning, things have really begun to turn around. “We made it through the summer and that is the hardest part,” Hebert said. The national boom of comedy has really helped the club get off its feet, he added. “People can go dancing and get hit on, or come here and get hit on by a comedian; but hey, we may be on David Letterman sometime.” And though Austin still cannot be compared to Dallas, the scene is cer­ tainly getting stronger. “Austin is starting to win comedy awards,” Sedwick said. “The local scene is getting good.” According to Herbert, the main nucleus of this scene consists of about 23 comedians. “They are a very talented pool of comics who hang out at The Velveeta Room af­ ter doing their shows,” he said. Most of these local comedians are just now getting their start and have yet to make it out of Ausin, Davis said. “A lot of people are trying and a lot of people are really into it. There is a lot of potential, but there aren’t very many people who could take it out on the road and make it.” Nevertheless, Austin is a good place for young comedians to work. Said Awn: “Austin is good for me because I can do Esther's, which is theatrical situation comedy. I can walk in and go up any time at the first time at open-mike night I was near the end of the list watching some of the people, and I was asking myself why in the world I was doing this,” Moore said. “I wasn’t pre­ pared, but I was back the next week. The crowd is so addictive.” And Austin offers plenty of clubs to start a comedy career. “Start doing Monday nights at the Laff Stop, Wednesdays at Wylie’s and Thursdays at The Velveeta Room,” Sedwick said. At the Laff Stop there is a sign-up sheet left in the hall from about 7:30 to 8 p.m., but it is limited to about 15 comics each night. “If they have never been up, we save them until last,” Davis said. “We can’t always guarantee them, but we are pretty flexible.” Velveeta Room. And then there is the Laff Stop with its national con­ nections.” . But while the talent is sprouting all over the city, the audience has stayed buried. “Austin comedy first needs to see a demand from the peo­ ple,” said Mark Moore, the barker at the Velveeta Room and an Austin comedian. “People are not aware of the comedy that goes on here.” ■ ■ ■ - — GO FORTH AND BE FUNNY In the words of comedian Tom Hester, “Art is hard, art is very hard.” Fortunately, with all the Austin comedy scene has to offer, an is made easier and more readily avail­ able for new comedian wanna-bes. The key to success is stage time, but in preparation for a performance, observation should come first. “Here is a good first step,” Moore said. “Sit down and watch comedi­ ans; watch how they deliver and build up stage performance. Then get up there and try and use the feedback from the audience and learn how to respond.” But the first step, many comedi­ ans will tell hopeful performers, is to stay out of the business in the first place. “Don’t do it,” Awn said. “You don’t want that much grief and mis­ ery. Only do it because you have to, not because you want to.” Being a comedian is a hard life­ style, Moore said. “You are always on stage even when you’re not (Hi stage. It’s a real emotional drain trying to be up all the time.” Step number two is not quite as easy as one — begin performing at open-mike nights around town. “The first four times I went up I forgot everything and just did im­ prov,” Hebert said. “Now I am more comfortable on stage than off. I have a stage at home so when peo­ ple come over I can stand on it and feel at home.” Chances are, if comedians survive through the first open mike, they come back for more torture. “My “I have pulled a couple people when they were up for being com­ pletely offensive, but we kind of as­ sume everyone is going to be okay.” The Velveeta Room has about the same procedure but call-ins are en­ couraged because the slots fill up very quickly. “Trying out new stuff is really what Thursday nights are about at The Velveeta Room,” He­ bert said. “Guys who have been doing it for less than a year are pol­ ishing their stuff. Touring comics already have their main act polished so they work on new stuff.” Wylie’s discontinued its open- mike night for the summer but plans to start it again in mid-fall, said Sta­ cie Barnett, the manager. Each club gives new comedians five to 10 minutes on stage, which may not seem like much, but “any time is a lot of time for a beginner,” Davis said. Even though getting time is not that hard, filling it with funny things is. “I been doing comedy since the beginning of this year,” Moore said. “It is very tough work at all times. People think its easy un­ til they get up there.” Comedy is more than just telling the joke, it is thinking up one to tell in the first place. “You have to be writing all the time,” Hebert said. And for comics, that does include while driving, in a tub or possibly just right before going to sleep. “You take what your friends say and start stretching it out and stretch­ ing...,” Awn said. Another not so pleasant thing for comedians is the audience. “You just can’t be afraid to talk to them,” Hebert said. “I can handle hecklers but a lot of guys just get up there and freeze.” And then there is pay. “Most lo­ cal comedians have to have a day job too,” Sedwick said. “It’s not a rec­ ommended lifestyle.” Even worse, a few years ago Aus­ tin comics would not even be paid for their gigs. “They [new comedi­ ans] are very lucky,” Davis said. “Most important is stage time — pay is gravy.” But somewhere outside the Austin city limits, dollars are waiting for “good” comedians. “In Austin there are only so many emcee gigs and parties,” Davis said. “If you want to make money you have to go on the road. “It is a very lucrative business for those who are good. When you first start out it is really hard, but every­ thing is really hard when you first start out.” A few Austin comedians have managed to rid themselves of regu­ lar day jobs. “I’ve been doing it for so long that I can do it for a comfort­ able living, but I am not where I want to be — on television,” said Awn, who started doing comedy with his band, the Uranium Sa­ vages, in between sets. So the question is, why work so hard and still be poor? “Stand-up comedy is the edge,” Hebert said. “I thrive on it. I’m an audience lov­ er. Can you make those people it’s a helluva adrenaline laugh, rush.” LEARNING HOW TO DO ART For closet comedians who don’t have the guts to jump right on the stage, there is hope — the Comedy Gym. “It is a support group for people who want to be comedians,” said Sam Cox, a comedy coach and one of the founders of the gym. Comedy Gym, which was started two years ago, creates a structured, guided eight-week workshop where stand-up comics can work out: de­ velop material, character and profes­ sionalism and receive immediate feedback from coaches and students. “The Comedy Gym is a launching pad, a stepping stone,” said Arthur Cicchese, the other comedy coach and co-founder. “Once you get the classroom structure, then you go up on open-mike night.” The gym, which works out at the Laff Stop, starts with basic skills, like how to handle a mike, and fo­ cuses primarily on stage presence in the bej nning, Cox said. “There is an exercise called tread­ ing water which means they [the stu­ dents] go on stage with the mike and the lights and tell what their week has been like without any prepared material,” he said. “Whenever they get comfortable on stage, all of the sudden it be­ comes so much easier.” Within the first four weeks stu­ dents, who range from housewives to lawyers, write some type of an act, performing parts of it each week, and in the last four weeks they polish it for their showcase. “The class is formulated after an acting class,” Cicchese said. “We coach and edit them the same way as a director would an actor. We create a script with them.” At the end of the first eight-week term the students showcase at a pro­ fessional comedy club like the Laff Stop, or they could possibly have the opportunity to showcase in one or more of the four other cities where Cox and Cicchese have the Comedy Gym. Many of the students have no plans to be professional comedians, but instead want to use their experi­ ence in their professional jobs, Cox said. “Doctors use it with their bed­ side manner — kind of gild the lily and help the medicine go down,” he said. “For some it is kind of like living a fantasy for some to do a routine on a stage that at least will get you by.” For those who do have profession­ al aspirations of making an audience roar with laughter, the gym offers exposure to that world. “They have helped me on stage and given me more opportunites to be there,” said Renae Fisher, a 12- year-old student and youngest mem­ ber of the gym. “Other members and the instructors always help you edit your script and help you on de­ livery.” Learning the skills of stage pres­ ence and delivery may help more than just aspiring new comedians. If the classes continue to flourish, they promise to continue the Austin com­ edy boom that has already been started. With the Comedy Gym and three clubs, Austin has been bombarded in the last couple of years with what some might call a new American art form — stand-up comedy. ’ O f > *• ! » ''i T 3 <’ 3 16 IMAGES September 19,1988 Texas Union Films ■ m m -t > ■■■■ w i m O w m o n w /w M M w Tonight at 7:00 pjn. Union Thoatro m Suspect Tonight at 9:30 pjn. Union Thoatro Trhtmph of The W ill f w on w/m btM — Tonight at 7:00 pjn. H ogg Auditorium Metropolis Tonight at Os 15 p.m. H ogg Auditorium ss Shhhhh.. Seattle Mime Theater Monday and Tuesday, September 26 and 27 at 8 p.m. A rom antic interlude in a cafe with a slightly w a r p e d rob ot waiter A lo n g a g o fairytale a b o u t a p rincess in love with a fish erm an A hula h o o p with a m ind of its o w n In g e n io u s m ime, |ust the right m usic, a n d a playful |ab at the h u m a n ra c e — a n e w b re e d of m im e from Seattle M im e Theatre. UT O p e r a L a b Theatre $8; S 5 .5 0 F A N C lu b $ 7 .2 5 S e n io r C itizen s lick e ts at all U T T M T icketC enters C h a rg e -a -T ic k e t: 4 7 7 -6 0 6 0 . A Dean's List Event! AKTS C O M P L E X t h e UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AU STIN General C inem a BARGAIN MUINIIS EVERY DAY FIRST MATINEE SNOW ONLY! PQ11Y 1T H O » + BARTON CREEK MOFAC of LOOP 34 i 327-Mtl SAMi DAY AIM ING TICKET SAIB ★ MO m THX 1MtMMiSSTiliMIPe.il ★ MI HARD IMS M l M l 7J> H itt ★ NARK® TO THE MOB IMSMiStliTdiMM MQ ijiMSMiyiiSMm MQNTMAHI ON ILM STRUT IV ,______ liililSMSTilSMSI H I G H L A N D M A L L HIGHLAND MAU. MYO. 451-7326 ★ N M lilS M iM S M t M S P e n ROOli RABBIT I B H 4 4 I I CAPITAL P L A Z A U S at C A IU iO N I K 452-7644 NMNTMAM ON ILM STRUT IV 1:11 M S S d i TOS M i l Images Fiction Contest What do Stephen King, Ernest Hemingway and the apostle Paul all have in common? They’re all published writers! And now, you can join their ranks, and be a published writer yourself, by entering (and winning) the Images Fall Fiction Contest. And if that incentive fails to thrill you to the marrow, consid­ er the following cash awards: First Place Grand Prize All Around Un­ disputed Champion — $50, Second Ba­ nana Close Call Just About Runner Up — $30, and Third Place Also Ran Pret­ ty Good Try There’ll-Be-Other-Spell- ing-Bees Honorable Mention — $20. The rules are simple: 1. Write a short story. Fiction, please. 2. Keep it under 2,000 words or we’ll arbitrari­ ly cut it to shreds and print it. In bold face. Twice. 3. To enter you must be a citizen of the United States. Or some other country. Or an herbivorous quadruped. 4. Remember, prepositions are things you must mer! 14. Just kidding 15. No more rules 16. Standings: never end a sentence with. 5. Bring your story to us at The Daily Texan, in the basement of the TSP Building at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. Or, if you’re a wuss, mail it to: The Daily Texan, attn: Images Fiction Con­ test, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. 6. Please remember that the judges will laugh long and hard at any silly pseudonyms, and there­ fore will probably have a hard time taking your story seriously should you choose to use one. 7. Spelling and grammar mistakes will not be edited, but will be printed in bold face red type. So be careful. 8. You must be a UT student to enter. Serious­ ly. With your story we’ll need your real name and your student ID number. 9. You must be previously unpublished. 10. Each of the winning stories will be printed beginning Nov. 28,1988. 11. Deadline for entries is Nov. 14,1988. 12. This is real. 13. Stay cute and sweet and have a great sum­ N v J n G n U To** ACV latean B air, AO I Kafca, H arln, CSU Kan, Kvte.cl' l i a a r U , U U Nana. T a a Sna fli|> .OCX k Tartar. VT31 - a G a * , , API MOr T n o i E r a : r i t f e t e . BNMl N a i . T a a Stta Tll|> , ACT D a k Tajfra. VTSV hmmOméry, AOl fcaim O C m O O .CU QanWTaéá. ACX’ N a a . T a a H a a n 4 m , WTHJ kaaABaaACU GaryCaapaaa m u Ga^H.a .wnt uÑATrnu GaaiM Ta40. ACL' K an, S a n a AOl B aa laaakaa». TTTTJENMU m x v d u m . m -nm cs Smmm P ttO ap -0-0 OOOO 2 0 0 47 H 144 I-00 1014 I 10 11-27 1-10 1042 l-IO 7047 O lO M-M OIO 07-SI 0 2 0 4007 VOi Ara I» 0.0 212 0 0 *4 5 2 5* 4.2 115 7.2 TD Ara 2 1200 2 110.0 *4.0 0 5*0 0 575 0 C-A-l h TD TO A a 21-15-1 000 2 241 241 0 40405 07* 2 154 177 0 11-201 421 4 2)0 125.0 .497 1 m 10-15-2 11*5 .440 0 210 23 502 111* 1 2 2 2 2 K a n P a r Taao Aaa -* 241 2M 2M.I 154 141 IT U 25* 2*1 1405 M2 141 141» • 120 1200 O PC T * TD ACJC 7.5 2 15 155 I 4 0 1 0* • 55 • 5 5 4 24 TD P a Aaa 2 12 120 2 12 12.0 2 I II *0 2 0 II *0 12 * SAM VINE The World’s Funniest Hypnotist & His Cast of Audience Volunteers 7:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 23 $12.50 & $10.50 Sponsored Tickets at all UTTM TicketCenters. Charge-a-Ticket: 477-6060 PARAMOUNT THEATRE FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS 713 Congress Avenue • 472-5411 iHiiiiiiiiiniiiiNiiiii Ease Your Housing Search with Texan Classifieds P R E S ID IO THEATRES Í A R B O R A 1 0 0 0 0 R E S F A A C H • 5 4 4 - 4 0 3 ? » 'V / MOON OVER PARADOR p H <2 :50 -S:4 5 )-S:1 0 -1 0 :2 5 ■ y o u n g g u n s i|(3:1S-S:30)-7:SS-10:1S MARRIED TO THE MOB (3:00-5:1 S>-7:40-10:00 A HANDFUL OF DUST - 4: • -7 - - f FISH CALLED WANDA * T Ñ X (1:0S-3:20-S:35)< m m d:4o D IE HARD 5-10:10 i h X i ic VILLAGE <1 2 me vaoerao* • o; ■ aas LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST 12:50-440-7:10-10:20 ¡ »0 B t t c i S § THIN BLUE LINE ■ ) PASCALI'S ISLAND MttM (12:40-2:55-5:101-7:40-1045 H H B H l ■ ^ LAK EHILLB 4 1|¡Í¡L H (12:55-59 f i ’:20-8:3S (140-3:10-5:201-7:30-5:55 BAMBI (1:30-3:50) , C O C K TA IL (240-440-540>-*40-1040 THX BULL DURHAM (S:4 5 )-7 :S0 -1 0 4 S M H d a w n I l»7a 10:10 MMIDNIGHT RUN I (1:45-4:18)-740-8:30 ■ MOON OVER PARADI (1:30-3:40-5:50)-S4O-10:08 ^ H B M M D A W N l (.1 ^1(1:20-3:30-8:40) - 7:5 0-8:5 8 1 i BETRAYED l:45)-7:3C ' 1 0 4 0 mm 1 ^ 8 P H H PAREN T H ESES INOICATE DISCOUNTED SH O W S SHO W TIM ES ARE FOR TODAY ONLY WEDNESDAYS A L L T I C K E T S $2.94 £ im c T H E R E IS A D I F F E R E N C E TOOAY'S T M E S M l CHIUMCN |||K Twum i 111-. IM STUOCNT I m a t m i I THE BEST IWOVIE M IC E IN TOW N 4JO-«n740«548 A FWH CALLED WANDA ■ M H fcW a B M M M 4 5 MENENQER OF DEATH ■ I W H g i M B M i H I ^5 I H ■■ I I I I — TUCKBt E9 e 1*4448 eaua>7:154c25 I ll S S S Í 5 S L 8 P c o m » T O M — CO ■ JM*#45 • M J B M M N W M O m A M H R O W R A W H 2,55 (IW 8 5 J »7 :10045 MQHVMARE0NELMSTREET4 ■ 2 4 0 *4 5 • « 4 * 0 4 0 * 1* A H H GALLED WANDA ■ BB » OF DEATH ■ tmkmmmm-r YOU Q ■ OKHARDM ftf0 4 M K M tJEr:W 0 4 5 e S t t s a s s t t . 1 N O R T H C R O S S 6 r r r n r r r SS MAU. ANDERSON 5 BURNET 454-5147 . S t t K B S U . m m OKHARDM A M N CALLED WANDA ■ M EM N Q B t OF DEATH ■ 5 4 4 M 5 5 M IÍM 4 . . , S 1 ALL TIM ES S1 ALL TIM E S $1 ALL TIM E S $1 . - 4 m mr » T T Y T ' W 1 ■ M M O T M W I 1500 $ PLEASANT VALLEY NO 1 UCENKTODRWE H i nooocw CAOOYBHACKS H T M * M I 1 1 SOU II MMUUft A H Sw B E N WHITE I « " " W O T 1 || 1 1 HHOATHETpHOH ■ 7:10048 p g y w o . » CAPOVMIACTf 1 1 r.nam M4 3222J 442 2333 C O N T I N U E D . . . Swine, from page 7 Thompson's most popular work and replaces it with an aggressiveness which verges on desperation. It is Gonzo at its ugliest and yet most finely honed. Generation o f Swine is not true Gonzo reportage, however, but rather Gonzo editorializing. Thomp­ son has removed himself too far from the pulse of events — whether out of fatigue or arrogance or disgust it is hard to say — to maintain the vortex of fantasy and reality which marks his best work. After “twenty-three years without a job and twenty-three years with no sleep,” as Thom] son described his career in Rolling Stone, he cannot really be blamed for retreating to his house in Woody Creek, Colo., to spend the majority of his columns watching the world through a satel­ lite dish. But Thompson's distance ener­ vates Generation o f Swine at the same time that it lends it thematic unity. Curse o f Lono abandoned re­ ality for a muddled allegory on colo­ nialism and suffered from the same lack of steam. In his latest work, Thompson looks down clinically upon the terror and hypocrisy which fills him with a fundamentalist preacher’s sense of doom. Even at that, Generation o f Swine is the best thing Thompson has pro­ duced since Fear and Li ithing: on the Campaign Trail *72. Thompson shrewdly comments on politics and effectively explores some of Ameri­ ca’s seedier backwaters with a sharp sense of outrage. The book takes off, however, during Thompson’s commentary on the Iran-contra scandal and subsequent hearings. He at first calls the crimes more heinous t h a n Watergate and predicts Reagan’s i m m i n e n t j upeachment or resignation, only to watch despair­ ingly as Oliver North charms his way out. It seems a little pitiful, at first, to hear this dinosaur despise a world in which he is no longer young. But he’s right. Iranamok is more serious than Watergate and our generation has been passive and stupid enough not to worry about it. If Thompson’s rages are embar­ rassing, perhaps we should think about why they are embarrassing. Generation o f Swine testifies to the blindness of a generation too arro­ gant to realize it is being duped. Thanks to Garner and Smith for the loan of this book. AUSTIN 6 5 2 1 T H O M P S O N O F F 1 8 3 1 M I L E S O o f M O N T O P O L I S Phone 3 8 5 - 5 3 2 8 ADULT VIDEC CENTER OPEN 24 HOURS N1ASTV NEWS HOUND (XXX) Mims. (XXX) M O N . A T U I. I FON 1 T A F E N E N T A L S S 1 4 .9 5 TITLES d e v i l in m i s s j o n e s O E B B IE O O E S D A L L A S O E E F T H N O A T OTHER TITLES IN ST O C K T A P E S A S LOW A S S 9 .9 S JESTER AUDITORIUM S2J0U.T. $3.00 NON-U.T. 7PJML PALOOKA BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE. WANT ADS...471-5244 m o n n $loo ALL D A Y ! „ " ALL SEATS—ALL SHOWS j “’IhNN Ur t_ b T Ch ¡ t. 4*00 W ESTG A TE BLVD. m o a n d iw m o t MMftM ■ CADOYWACjC I m sm m hsbI t w t s P u au S H to aw e f q h tq q ay o n ly J I LIVE PERFORMANCE AND AUTOGRAPH PARTY!! — gaSCHOOHUPPUES Get this FREE Value Pack of Staedtler school wh»» you buy a specially-priced Marsmatic HBHRHBHB technical pen set with 7 pens plus Ink. Available HHHi now at your college store. \ supplies and reuseableCacheCa TIm C o w f B c ib Tuesday, Oct. 4 at 8 p.m. UT Bass Concert Hall Charge-a-Ticket: 477-6060 A “ Dean's L ist ” Event! Fhe legendary big b an d that B asie started plus singer Joe W illiam s in o n e toe ta p p in ' fin g er sn a p p in ’ show. $15. $13. $12, $10 50 FAN Club; $13 50, $ 11.75 groups and srm ors Tickets on sale now at all U IT M T k ketCem ers ARTS C O M P L E X THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN Permanent Guest Host of the 'Tonight Show’ Thurs, Oct20 UT Arts Complex 477-6060 to charge advance tickets Tickets available at all UTTM TicketCenters, Arts Complex, Erwin Center, and HEB Superstores. f b / i e k > b /fn J u A ÍA ▼ u v w r v v v w v w 1942 . - . - m - L - j ( M S w Certified Clinical Electrologist Wanda Moutoo Harris C.C.E. /Owner The FDA and AMA recognizes only electrolysis as a permanent method to remove hair. Charter Member of: • Professional Honor Society of I.G.P.E. • Am l ofTexas Electrokit i Member of • International Guild of Pmfeemonel Electrologiete, Inc. • American Electrology Aaen. • Society of Clinical and Medical Elsctrologists Accredited by 1968 Directory ofPmñmionnlEhctroiogietM Complimentary Consultation 459-6353 452-5656 BETWEEN199 aai CONTINUED... Parks, from page 4 but the swimming area here is basi­ cally the mouth of the creek and is pretty muddy. Another piece of land on the other corner of RR 2222 and RR 2769 of­ fers additional recreation, although it is not included in the park. This tract of land is owned by the Lower Colorado River Authority. It is all right to use the land, and the stream running through it is supposedly very good for fishing, but there is no camping and the roads through the park are pretty much limited to trucks and jeeps. Further down RR 2769 is Sandy Creek, a 25-acre park that is proba­ bly the most secluded of the chain. It’s a pretty good way down the road, beyond where state mainte­ nance ends, so don’t let the cattle guards and flood gauge lead you to think you’ve stepped off the edge of the world. This path is much more secluded than any of the previous ones, prob­ ably because of its distance, and the picnic tables are set off from each other. Camping is allowed and there are plenty of restrooms, but the rugged terrain makes it impossible to drive down to the water, and the paths that do reach the lake are very rug­ ged. Also, the boat ramp is very nar­ row, so unless you know what you’re doing you might be safer put­ ting in at Cypress Creek. There is an entrance fee of $2, but there isn’t always staff on duty to collect it. On the other side of Lake Travis ft? ' ' ? : ■ ■-y-’i 9PO \t£ SHOP UDSáTOi SALE until Sopt. 30th we are celebrating our larger location with GIANT DISCOUNTS on EVE­ RY B K E IN STOCK. SAVE 20% to 50% BIKES starting* *99* SPOKE SHOP 208 W.MLK BLVD. 477-4117 * «» . • • * * • i i q p B H R r ; v ^ . a . * > W / : > • ' GIANT SALE ■ ■■■■■■■■ w juuuuunuouuuuuuu ple idea. # - 5 ' ^ ^ r ^ What Kind of Person j Kicks Cowbells for a Living? j Ask the girl in the Red Velvet Swing. KINK ST SI KAKS H U SH SKAKOOl ) 8 7 0 9 N 111 3 5 Y xit 211 North o f 1M 8 3 5 - 9 2 0 0 September 19,1988 IMAGES 19 are two more parks operated by the county. The largest is Mansfield Dam Recreation Area, the namesake of U.S. Rep. J.J. Mansfield, west of and adjacent to the dam. The 38-acre Mansfield park is staffed and has a $2 per car entry fee. Its location on a peninsula al­ lows two swimming holes, one side offering an open view of the lake and the dam, the other backing onto a rocky cove. The tip of the peninsula has a boat ramp, and on most days the cove is filled with scuba divers. There are bathrooms available and drinking water can be obtained from a few faucets interspersed about the park. Another park near the dam is Tom Hughes Park, a 5-acre strip of rocky shoreline that lies at about a 45 degree angle to the lake. It would help if you had some rock climbing experience before this swimming hole, but if you’re in good condition you should be able to tackling make it. The park is free of charge, but once again be prepared for some nu­ dity, although not to the same extent as Hippie Hollow. Tom Hughes Park is hard to find. You can get there by taking RR 620 west, and turning on Park Road shortly before the dam. The road winds for about four miles and a ma­ rina you will pass on the way is the only place to get ice and a drink for miles around. At Smith Corona, simplicity Isthe mother of Invention. Our engineers racked their brains so you won’t have to. We started out with a very sim ­ To make electronic typew riters and word p rocessors that have lots of great features but are very sim ple to use. So sim ple you don’t have to keep one eye on yopr typing and one eye on the instruction manual. So sim ple you don’t need a degree in com puter pro­ W e make the simplest typewriters in memory. We call the SD 700 the Memory T ypew riter. You just may call it the sim plest typew riter in memory. It features a 7,000 character editable m em ory you can access with the m ere flip of a switch. Combined with the 1 6 character LCD display, you can proofread, cor­ rect and make changes before you ever put anything down on paper. Of course, should you want to gram m ing to operate them . So sim ple they can even make a confirm ed non-typist com fortable at the keyboard. Call it human engineerin g if you like. Or call it ergonom ics. Or call it plain old inspiration. What we cam e up with is a line of remarkable typ ew riters that are sophisticated without being com plicated. In fact, th ey ’re unlike any other typ ew riters you’ve ever seen before... or used before...or m uttered at before. Take our new Sm ith Corona SD 700. (L ots of people are going to.) Give your typing a screen test. make changes on paper, w e’ve made that sim pler than ever too. On the SD 700, as well as on every new Smith Corona typewriter, you’ll find our new correcting cassette. It’s easy-to-load and you can insert it in seconds. There are no spools to unwind. No com plicated threading. No tangles. So now correcting m istakes is as easy as making them . W e’ve reformed the correction system. Add features like a Spell-Right ‘ 50.000 word electronic dictionary, WordFind, Word Eraser,' Full Line C orrection and much more and you’ve got a typew riter that’s not just incred­ ibly sim ple to use. but simply im pos­ sible to pass up. Of course, the sam e g o e s for everv other Smith Corona typew riter and word processor as well. Which is why we recom m end that you hurry to your nearest store and try our m achines yourself. Obviously, they won’t com e tovou. Yet. SMITH CORONK TOMORROW S TECHNOLOGY AT YOUR TOUCH For m ore inform ation on this product,w rite to Sm ith Corona Corporation, 65 Locust Avenue, New C a n a a n .C l 0 6 8 4 0 or Sm ith Corona (Canada Ltd.).440Tapscott Road, Scarborough.O ntario.C anada M 1B 1 Y 4 20 IMAGES September 19,1988 CONTINUED. . . Thomas, from page 9 The holdout paying customers got boogied to their bones and Thomas received assurances of return gigs by the house management. More im­ portantly, he was put in contact with one of the key figures in Austin mu­ sic, the Lone Star State’s uncontest­ ed blues guru — Clifford Antone. “Clifford Antone has kept me going,” Thomas said. “He’s done for me, I guess, what he did for all those other guys before they got big — helped keep me alive, keep me eating.” With Antone’s support thrown into his corner, Thomas’ de­ cision to make Austin his permanent home was solidified. Almost immediately, he was given one of his biggest breaks, courtesy of his new music mentor: a spot with his band on the bus for Antone’s Tour West, the first of two West trailblazed Coast sojourns which through 17 shows in 19 days back in the Spring o f ’87. Headlined by Kim Wilson, Bud­ dy Guy, and Albert Collins, and featuring dozens of Antone’s main­ stays, the high-profile tour drew en­ thusiastic crowds at all stops. “They didn’t buy a ticket to see me,” Thomas explained, “but when they left the show, I think they were glad to see a young guy get up there and play with these guys.” At least one person must have tak­ en the same view of Thomas’ time in the spotlight. The girlfriend of Rob­ ert Cray, hottest property in blues today, apparently felt compelled to pass along a little good word about the youngest member of the An­ tone’s line-up. Within weeks, Thomas was con­ tacted by representatives of High- tone Records, including producers Dennis Walker and Bruce Brom­ berg, the men behind Cray’s break­ through on vinyl last year. Now, a record deal in the works for months is heading toward finalization, and Thomas has already begun to meet with Walker to work on prospective material. He is ecstatic about High- tone and the chance to be Cray’s la- belmate. labeled But being the next “young, up-and-coming bluesman” is something Thomas wants no part of. He bristles when spectators at his shows, as well as some people in the business, peg him as a blues artist. “I don’t consider myself a blues­ man, although I play the music and I play it well. I’m a musician whose music comes from the soul, which has no color. But I’m labeled by the color of my skin.” Thomas also insists that when the time comes to take it into the studio, he won’t be stuck singing the blues there either. “It won’t be a blues al­ bum although it will be sincere and heartfelt.” It’s doubtful Thomas will spend too much time worrying about an occasional disgruntled fan. If there are any of those around once he gets his time in the studio, he can soothe the irritation by burying himself in the kudos which will undoubtedly roll his way. Whether that happens next week or next year makes little difference to Thomas as long as he continues to do things his way. “If I’m going to dedicate my life to something, I’ve got to be happy with it.” Ralph J. Branch D.D.S. are the last permanent teeth to ap­ pear — usually between age 17 and 21. If they cause trouble, the rea­ son often may go back to early years. Bear in mind that the permanent teeth known as molars are not pre­ ceded by primary teeth. The first molars usually appear at about age 6 or 7, and influence the position of other permanent teeth. The sec­ ond molars arrive at 11 to 13 years. When a third molar is ready to erupt in late teen or early adults years, there might not be room for it. In such cases, an erupting wis­ dom tooth may take an awkward angle or become impacted behind a second molar. Regular checkups from early child­ hood on can help the dentist mon­ itor the development and environ­ ment of wisdom teeth, and determine the best treatment. WISDOM TEETH Q. Why do wisdom teeth cause prob­ lems for many people? A. "W isdom " teeth, which are the rearmost third molars, ordinarily 4 7 2 - 5 6 3 3 2907 Duval Emergency # 443-1861 Aerobics/Jazz Body Sculpt Expert fitness and dance instruction by certified instructors in a state of the art studio. Classes daily, Call for schedule. The first class is free SPECIAL! 30 day linlmited Pass for new members is only $25.00 in Sept. Members save $5.00 if pass is re­ newed on or before expira­ tion date. 46th and Airport 454-1142 for schedule UVE! 1 his Week at T he A rts C omplex MMIMMVOfl KAMA Sept. 21-23—'“Merrily We Roll Along.” 8 p.m., B. Iden Payne Theatre. ABK C O M P L E X THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN Charqe-a-Ticket: 477-606G i ¡I v i * ¿ K T B C K X A N K L R U 7 AM 1 :3Q 3 o o * Q AM * M 10 M 1 1 m 1 1 31 1 2 "iL :30 A PM 1 :3B o PM L M Q PM 0 ;3S A 7M 4 36 c PM 5 :3B C PM 6 30 7 PM 1 30 Q PM ® 30 Q PM .30 3 1 0 - CBS This Morning . Family Feud Card Sharks Price Is Right Young and Restless News Beautiful As the World Turns Guiding Light Geraldo Jeffersons All Family News CBS News News Cheers Newhart Cavanaughs Movie: A Stranger Waits News Cheers Hunter 1 1 1 2 5 ; Movie Under Influe nc K V U E n o s Good Morning America Donahue Home News All My Children One Life to Live General Hospital WKRP Superior Ct People s Ct Newhart News ABC News News USA Today Monday Night Football ■ (600) Summer Olympic Games Sale Concentrat Wheel Win. Lose Password News Days of Our Lives Another World Santa Barb. Summer Olympics Magnum, PI. Jeopardy! NBC News News Summer Olympic Games . „ News Nightline B. Miller Rhoda Sign Off News Summer Olympic Games K B V O a m Flintstones Yooi Bear I Love Lucy B< itched Judge On Trial Med. Center A. Griffith Gomer Pyle Hooan Quincy Movie: Just for You . Woody DuckTales Smurfs Bradv Bunch Knight Ride Good Times 3 s Company Happy Days A-Team Movie: War and Peace, Part 1 Twilite Zon Movie: That Certain Feeling Late Show GEO Mr. Rooers Sesame Street rrv ITV ITV Mr. Rogers Sesame Street Sauare One Survival W! Bus Rot MacNeil Lehrer Natl Geographic Election Guide 88 Bill Moyers Territory Off Center Sign Off B E T a (6:30) Spc. Program M A X m (6:00) Apt. for Peggy A M C (6:30) Sign Off Movie: Come to the Stable Movie: Dolly Sisters Movie: Western Union • Movie: Dead Reckoning Soecial Programmin 0 Urban Scene Video LP Black Showcase Video Soul Video Vibrations Video LP Soft Notes On the Line Kitchen Video LP Black Showcase . Movie: Night Song Movie: Lady Scarface " Social Club Movie: Night Song Movie: Stranger on the Run Movie: Cheyenne Movie: Ryan s ■ . . T B S « ( 05) Hbil :35) B'wt ( 05) Little House (:05) Pillow Talk • (:05) Perry Mason (05) Winchester 73 (:05) T & (.35) Flin (:05) Flin (:35) Brad ( 05) Muns ( 35) Major League Baseball 020) Smashup on . . Interstate 5 Video Soul Daughter ( 20) A Case of Rape . Soft Notes Video LP Charlie & C Spc Program '0 5) Movie: Investigate ns something (20) National Geographic Explorer Movie: Lady Scarface Movie: Niaht Song Movie: ladv Scarface September 19,1988 IMAGES 21 N A S H a Fandango Be a Star Crook VideoCntrv American Cntrv Movie: Singing Cowboy Fandanao Be a Star Crook VideoCntry American Nashville Now Cntrv Fandango Be a Star Crook VideoCntrv Nashville Now Cntrv Crook VideoCntrv Be a Star American Nashville Now Singing Cow P L A Y © U S A a She-Ra Cartoon Express N IC K Lassie Todav s Sdc Pinwheel Movie: Shall We Dance . A Deal Plav % Potato Reaction Bumper Stum Jackpot Press Luck TicTac Douo High Roller Check It Ou Dance Party She-Ra Fat Albert Cartoons Airwotf Gold Monkey Tales Movie: Sex Comedy ■ " Hitchcock Riotide Edge Search Success! S H O W Elephant Maple Town Pinwheel Belle L it Prince Today s Spc Gold Cities Lassie Gadget Can t on TV Looney Tune Nick Rocks Dennis Keepers Dont Sit Can t on TV Double Dare Mr. Ed Pattv Duke 3 Sons Donna Reed Sat. Night Second Citv Laugh In Car 54 Make Rm Ann Sothern Mr Ed Patty Duke U N I n W G N A L I F E F N N B R A V D I S C O V E f A R T S H B O f f i Business View Man from Moscow Movie: Big Shots (5 00) Sign Off Movie: Love With a (Cont) Infamia 7 AM 1 36 Q AM ® 31 Nuestro Mundo A AM 3 30 1 ° * 1 1 « 1 2 * A PM 1 :3B o PM £ 30 o PM 0 30 4 «■ H 30 r PM 5 30 C PM ® M 7 PM 1 30 Q PM ® JB Q PM 3 30 1 0 " 1 1 - 1 2 “ De Pura Sangre TV Mujer Derecho de Nacer La Hora del Gane T.N.T El Mundo Valeria Alba Marina El Tesoro Noticiero Primavera Retorno de Diana Nombre Es Coraje Noticiero Doctor Perez Noticiero Mala Noche No Movie La Mafia Amarilla Bozo Smurfs Ruxom Incredible Hulk Charlie s Angels Geraldo News (15) Baseball Beaver Gd Times Jeffersons Barney Benson Movie: A Little Romance f f i It Figures Mom Works Nurse Mom Day Baby Knows Wok with Hoilvwd Eve TBA Easy St Attitudes Movie For Love or Money Cover Up ER. Easy St Cagney and Lacey Movie: To Kill a Cop. News Part 1 T Zone Traooer John. M.D Chiefs. Part 1 Cagney and Lacey MacGruder and Loud Invest Advisory Morning Morning New Pacific Regis Phtlbm MarketLme Options Rpt MarketWatch A M Attitudes Animal Aliens 1930s 1930s Heart of Dragon Beyond 2000 Golden Age E S P N A (Cont) SortsCntr NASCAR Winston Cup " Get Fit Workout Motion Bdvshapg CFL Football " Aussie Football Wrestling B ball Sortraits SprtsLk SDrtsman SprtsCntr Monday Night Great Sport Legend Swimsuit 88 Buffalo Bill Movie: Little Princess Movie Charlotte's Web „ Great Detective Com Brk Dining Survival Wld Movie: Blunt - The Fourth Man Great Detective Golden Age Associates Journey Survival Wtd The Changing West Movie: Three O'Clock High Movie: Showcase: Control Movie: Local Hero " Lyle Movie: Pick-Up Artist Movie A Fine Mess Encyclopedia Movie Big Shots Playmate Playoffs Movie: Howard s Spitfire Swina Aoam! Dr. Yes Movie One Night Only Shortstones Evening at Improv The Changing West Our Century Movie: Three 0 Clock High Muscle Movie Meatballs III (35) Stripped to Kill Magazine NFL Triva SDftsCntr (:15) SpoCn NFL Yrbk NFL Moments Playmate Playoffs OISNEY A Donald Dumbo Movie: Huckleberry Finn You&Me Disney Presents Ozzie Movie: Top Kids : Pooh Dumbo Lorax Donald Kids Edisons Movie: Care Bears Adv Shortcake Family Robinson Movie: Auntie Marne Movie: Jeremiah Johnson The Blue Bir Perfect Stranger Movie: Speedway 35) Oliver's Story ( 05) Men Movie: Pick-Up Artist Santiago My 17th Summer 4th of July Movie: Love With a Perfect Stranger Movie: Stakeout Gleason! Movie: Born in East L.A. Boys E Booster - - Evening News Tasmanian Midday Market Rpt Commodities MarketWatch Consumer MarketWatch Wall St. Countdown MarketWrap Wall Street Final America's Business Miss. Myth ? “ . Movie Wild Duck Miss Myth ? Killer Bees Hands Ban Nadi Lost Kingdom Into India Tiger Portraits Camera Monitor Towards 2000 Animal Wtd Animal Wtd Wild Chron Niagara Rendezvous Equinox Nature of Things Monitor Small Ptanet Country Wife Wild Orphans Our Century MOVM (1967) Suzanne Pleshette, Tom Atkins. The widow of business magnate is imperiled by her passionate love affair with a mysterious younger man D 0 0 WWW MOVIE WAR ANO PEACE, PART 1 (1956) Audrey Hepburn, Henry Fonda. Napoleon turns his attentions to Russis and in so doing causes hardships and grief on a vast scale NR 0 0 NATIONAL RtORRAPMC SPECIAL (1967) Look at group of inspired individuals who restore pieces of the past, including war ravaged palaces around Leningrad and turn of the centurv carousel. D 0 W O SO SOUL Host Donnie Simpson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars. 0 N NOMBRE 0 CORAJE Andres Garcia, Salvador Pineda. Novela de Argentina. 0 ww NOME LADY SCARFACE (1941) Dennis O Kaofe, Frances Neal ThriMng pursuit of a dangerous gunwoman and her ultimate capture by a dever pokce officer. NR’ 0 ww MOtRE AIMOOUMMER MRMTS SEX COMSOY (1962) Woody Allan. Mia Farrow Three turn of the century couples exchange playful natations and plot amorous encounters dunng a summer weekend in the country PG' 0 m TNRB S O M The Toupee. Bub's in a poor to cover las bald spot when the sister of m eM buddy comea te teal. 0 MOVIE TO KILL A COP. PART 1 (1978) Joe Don Baker, Louis Gossett. Jr. Two strong men on opposite sides of the law are locked in deadly conflict. Exposes the internal political machinations of police work in a big city 0 THE COUNTRY WIFE (1983) Domini Blythe, Cedric Smith. Ontario s Stratford Theatre presents a funny, fast-paced production of William Wycherty s bawdy tale of romance and jealousy NR' 0 ORPHANS OF THE WILD Rhino The threat 0 M N tSnTU RY: ALL THE KING'S HORSES A study of atomic power beginning with the Mahattan Project and ending with a sober debate on arms and testing. 0 SWIMSUIT *SS (R) 0 HOME CECR. NOWARO'S SPITFIRE (1984) Chelsea Manchester. Annie Sprinkles. A sex crazed senator goes wild to satisfy his insatiable lust, even as he pubkdy condemns such acbvity .welcome to Washington! NR' 0 www MOVM STAKEOUT (1967) Richard Dreyfuss. Emilio Estevez. Two wisecracking cops go undercover to spy on the gorgeous girlfriend of an escaped killer, it's a tough job, but somebody's got to do it. R' □ 0 wwwvh MOVM AUNTM NAME (1956) Rosalind Russell. Forrest Tucker. An eccentric woman jumps Horn one mod escapade te another as she tries to save her orphaned nephew from too much bourgeois respectability. •NR' 8:30 pm 0 NEW COUNTRY 0 DONNA REEO Just a Housewife. Donna tries to raise the consciousness of a cornball radio personality whose supercillious overuse of the term housewife offends her 0 WILDLIFE CHRONICLES When Is a Buffalo a Bison? The buffalo m North America 0 MOVIE THREE O'CLOCK HIGH (1987) Casey Siemasko. Stacey Click. A nerdy high school boy offends the class bully by mistake and has to scramble to avoid a fight after school. Soon things erupt into total chaos! PG13 9 £ 0 pm 0 0 LOUIS RUKEYSER'S 1961 ELECTION GUIOE (1988) A look at the differences in the economic, social and foreign policies of George Bush and Michael Dukakis. Also, results of a nationwide poll. NR 0 1 ITICSIVO UNIVISION 0 CROOK ANO CHASE 0 SATURDAY NIGHT UVE 0 N E W S 0 THE CHALLENGE OF NIAfiARA FALLS i the FW s IA successful businesswoman is faced with an unwanted pregnancy, and a cartoonist attempts to settle old scores at a high school reunion. 0 AMERICAN MUSCLE MAGAZINE: SPECIAL EDITION Men's Pro World Championship from Columbus, OH (R) 9:20 pm 0 www MOVIE A CASE OF RAPE (1974) Elizabeth Montgomery, William Daniels. A young wife and mother is raped in an indoor parking lot, and then must face the insensitivity of police and the judicial system. NR’ 0:30 pm 0 EL DOCTOR CANDIDO PEREZ Jorge Ortiz de Pinedo. Nuria Bages De Mexico 0 ww MOVIE NIGHT SONG (1947) Dana Andrews, Merle Oberon. Socialite meets blind pianist and helps him regain his confidence and his girt. NR 0 VIDEOCOUNTRY 0 SFCONO CITY TV 0 RENDEZVOUS Athens/ Fiji/ California Wine Country. Travel to these fascinating locations 0 PLAYBOY PRESENTS: SWING IT AGAMI 2 (1986) Billy Eckstine and Irene Cara join the incomparable Count Basie Orchestra for a toe tapping tribute to the Big Band era. NR 1 060 pm 0 (CHEW S Tke Pick-Up Artmi KBVO(C 42, Cable S) 1:051.H. OK, so it's been two whole days without Letterman. Now the Olym­ pics kidnap NBC and you're dying for a fix of dumb late-night humor. Nothing could be dumber than Mol­ ly Ringwald playing opposite Robert Downey, right? Absolutely. This movie goes be­ yond dumb. The only joke when it screened in the theaters was that some poor gullible fools, myself in­ cluded, paid to see it. Take advantage of my misfortune. Catch up on some sleep. Substitut­ ing this for Letterman is like dating a 13-year-old. It's criminally offen­ sive and not very satisfying to boot. —Jeff Adams 7:00 pm 0 (D NEWHART Dick and Joanna s plans to makt beautiful music together in the town s newty formed glee club hits a sour note when he's accepted and she isn't. (R) □ i 0 MONDAY M6MT FOOTBALL Colts at Browns (I) □ A-TEARI 0 0 MACNBU LBfflHt NEWSHOUR U SHOWCASE MOV* A LITTLE ROMANCE (1979) 0 a EXTRAÑO RETORNO OE DIANA SALAZAR Lucia Mendez, Jorge Martinez Novela de Mexico 0 wwVfc NOME RYAN'S DAU6HTER (1970) Sarah Miles, Robert Mitchum Willful daughter of tavern keeper during 1916 Irish uprising weds a teacher, has an affair with a British major and is accused of informing R 0 NASHVILLE NOW Susan Norfleet, and Charlie Daniels 0 TALES OF THE BOLD MONKEY n MR. ED Ed, the Desert Rat. Ed, after a tiff with Wilbur, heads for the wide open land, but gets lost in the desert where he encounters all types of misadventures 0 Laurence Olivier, Arthur Hill Parental disapproval sends two young lovers off on a whirlwind chase across Europe, with the help of a dapper former conwd who can t resist romance PG 0 CARNEY AND LACEY 0 WRSS...0R MYTH? (1966) By 1966. an annual feminist protest called The Myth America Counter-Pageant' had grown so large that the Miss America contest moved to San Diego NR' 0 NEW AMMAL WORLD Mweka Wildlife College 0 THE CNANQMQ WEST Tom Brokaw visits SbMwmter, MT and talks to ranch families that are trying to hold on to thee traditional life in face of modem pressure 0 M O V* MR SNOTS (1987) Ricky Busker, Darius McCrary. Two boys from opposite sides of the track embark on an adventure of a lifetime and along the way find something very precious - friendship. PG13' 0 OREATBT SPORTS LEHENOS ISth Anniversary Special 0 PLAYMATÍ PLAYOFFS: THE CHALLENGE CMP PIsymMse meet for spi ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ B s p e c t a c u la r events in this world series of wild, sexy competition. Hosts: Chuck McCann and Playmate Vicki McCflftv NR 0 9 M S S FAMN.Y RORHtlON The Hawk. When Haigs causes the death of a hawk Jeremiah has trained, he leaves the Robinsons in anger but Mor returns to rescue them from a crises. 7:20 pm P MOVIE SMA8HÜP ON NfTERSTATE B (1976) Robert Conrad, Buddy Ebson. Destinies of comp*cti strangers come together when they are part of a massive crash on a southern Cakfomia 7:30 pm 0 ( P CAVAMAUHt The Cavmaughs grow irritabto when Kit vows to stop, smoking end the rest of the family members support her by giving up their own vices M R S ' 0 0 MO— 1 f M e p r H M t m W W k k 22 IMAGES September 19,1988 TUNE IN Bugs Bunny: All American Hero CBS (Ch.7, Cable 2) 7 p.m. Okay, class, get your pens and pencils ready. All that stuff they feed you in his­ tory class is wrong. Completely, to­ tally wrong. And you wondered why it was so boring. Bugs Bunny knows how it really happened. He was there. And Bugs presents history the way it should be — interesting, funny, and in less than 30 minutes. Which, of course, leaves plenty of time for other Fri­ day night activities. What a rabbit. Class dismissed. — Karen Adams PRIMETIME 7 :0 0 p m 6 CD BUG S B U N N Y: A L L A M ER IC A N H ER O Uncle Bugs stands in for Uncle Sam and offers his own version of American history when his nephew Clyde asks for help preparing for a history exam Q O ® G RO W ING PAINS Ben s persistent 'esearch on geneology reveals a shocking skeleton in the Seaver family closet. Mike and Carol confront their parents. (Repeat) □ 0 ® A -T EA M O ® M A C N EILI LEH R E R N EW S H O U R 0 THIS W EEK IN BLACK EN T ER T A IN M EN T 0 E L EX T R A Ñ O R ET O R N O 0 E D IAN A S A L A ZA R Lucia Mendez, Jorge Martinez Novela de Mexico 0 M AR TIN M U L L W HITE M A R R IA G E Martin Mull, Mary Kay Place. Martin Mull returns to the quiet Ohio town of Hawkins Falls to examine the marriage of Hal and Joyce Harrison. Will the marriage endure his probing? N R ' □ o N A S H V ILLE NO W Forester Sisters 0 T A L E S O F T H E G O U ) M O N K EY 0 M R . E 0 Home Sweet Trailer. Ed feels his territory threatened when Wilbur’s former Air Force Commander and his wife come to town and park their trailer in the Post's backyard. 0 C A G N E Y A N O LA C EY 0 * ★ * * M O V IE M EN (1985) Heiner Lauterbach, Uwe Ochsenknecht. An upwardly mobile executive is appalled to discover his wife's affair with an obnoxious Bohemian artist. 'NR' 0 JA C K T H O M P S O N D OW N U N D ER A look at life Down Under 0 T H E E L E A N O R R O O S E V ELT S T O R Y . P A R T 1 Eric Severeid, Peter Graves. Follow the life of Eleanor Roosevelt in still photographs, motion picture footage and newsreel clips from her babyhood to her death in 1962. 0 % M O V IE R A O (1987) Bill Allen, Bart Conner. A high school BM X champ wishes to enter a competition and must convince his mother to agree to it though she would rather he study than race. PG' 0 S U R F E R M A G A ZIN E 0 P L A Y B O Y 'S B ED T IM E S H O R T S TO R IES 0 F R E E T H E C H ILD R EN : T H E B IS H O P TU T U P EA C E C O N C ER T Quincy Jones, Eddie Murphy. Relive highlights from one of the world's greatest concerts featuring dozens of music acts resolved to raising funds for South African children 0 T H E L A W R E N C E V IL L E S TO R IES : B EG IN N IN G O F T H E FIR M (1988) Edward Herrmann. Zack Galligan. Hickey and best friend, Doc Macnooder, agree that they must join forces with The Shad and the 3 develop a scheme to sell restorer to other students. N R ’ 7:20 pm 0 * * * M O V IE T H E M AG N K B I T S EV EN (1960) Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen. A gunfighter recruits six tough guys to defend a Mexican village from bandits. N R ' 7:30 pm D * * W i M O V IE ‘ White Nights' C M T U E S D A Y M O V IE (1985) Gregory Hines. Mikhail Baryshnikov. A prominent ballet star who defected from Russia to the U SA finds himself back in the U S S R after a forced plane landing. PG 13 ' □ 0 0 H E A D O F T H E C LA S S When the lode « KTBC KVUE KXAN KBVO KLRU TBS BET MAX AMC NASH USA NICK One Life to Live Another World Movie: Excuse My Santa Barb Dust 7 AM ' , . .30 8 Aü ?0 _ ____ 9 Aü 30 ____ 1 0 AM :30 , u 1 1 AM . M m 1 2 m30 A PM 30 o PM ........‘ , L J A Q PM r j f i A ™ .........“ J 9 C PM 30 5 C PM 6 30 7 PM 1 :30 Q PM 30 ® Q PM . . . 3 39 10 PM 30 , U 1 1 * * 1 1 30 •4 0 AM ,£ 30 CBS This Morning - Good Morning America Family Feud Donahue Card Sharks Price Is Right Young and Restless News Beautiful As the World Turns Guiding Light Geraldo Jeffersons All Family News CBS News News Cheers Bugs Bunny Movie: White Nights » News Cheers Night Heat M ovie: Love . Mary Home News All My Children General Hospital W KRP Superior Ct People s Ct Newhart News ABC News News U S A Todav G . Pams Hd Class Movie: Man with One Red Shoe News M 'A 'S 'H Nightline 3. Miller Rhoda Sign Off J l ® (6:00) Summer Olympic Games Sale Concentrat Wheel Win. Lose Password News Days of Our Lives L m t o R e a Mr. Roaers Sesame Street ITV Flintstones Yofli Bear 1 Love Lucy Bewitched Judge On Trial Med Center A. Griffith Gomer Pyle Horan Quincy rrv • (0 5 ) Hbil (;35) B w t (0 5 ) Little House C05) Tom orrows g Child (:05) Perry Mason (;05) Bend of the River • ( 05) T & i:35) Flm (0 5 ) Flin 1:35) Brad (:05) Muns (3 5 ) M a x * League Baseball ( 2 0 ) Magnificent * • . Summer Olympics Oprah Winfrey Jeopardy! NBC News News Summer Olympic Games » " m News Summer Olympic Games ITV Mr Rogers Sesame Street Souare One Survival Wl Bus Rot MacNeil Lehrer Woody DuckTales Smurfs Bradv Bunch Knight Ride Good Times 3 s Company Haoov Davs A-Team Movie: War and Peace. Part 2 For Poland Twilite Zon Movie Desire Under the Elms Bill Moyers Innovation Troubled Waters Sign Off Nova Seven (6:30) Spc. Program Vintage Movie: Bill Special Programmin Urban Scene Video L P Black Ent. Charlie A C Video Soul Vibrations Cosby Himself Movie: 1 Was a Male War Bride Movie: Hangman's Knot Movie: Criminal Code Movie: Sahara Video L P Soft Notes (.45) Movie Out of the Past Chapter Two ■ On the Line Kitchen Video L P Black Ent Charlie & C Video Soul . Martin Mull: White Movie: A Hatful of Ram Movie A Hatful of Rain Movie: Out of the Past ■ Movie A Hatful of Ram Movie Out of Past . Movie: Bom m East L A. ( 05) Savage Is Loose Soft Notes Vmtaoe Movie Morning Video L P Black Ent Spc Program After Fandango e a Star Crook VideoCntrv Amer Mag Cntrv Movie: Man Mt. Fan moo Be a Star Crook VideoCntry Nashville Now Cntrv Fandango Be a Star Crook VideoCntrv Nashville Now Cntrv Crook VideoCntrv Be a Star Amer Mao Nashville Now She-Ra Lassie Express Pmwheel Movie: Gay Divorcee ■ * Elephant A Deal Ptav % Potato Reaction Stumpers Jackoot Luck TicTac Rollers Check It Dance Party She-Ra Albert Airwolf Pmwheel Belle L i’l Prince Today s Spc Gold Cities Lassie Can t o n TV Loonev Tune Nick Rocks Dennis Keepers Don t Sit Can t on TV Gold Monkey Tales Mr Ed Pnme Time Wrestling 3 Sons Donm Reed Sat. Night Laugh m Car 54 Make Rm Ann Sothem Mr Ed Late Show 35) Phil ( 45) N o M Man from UNI WGN FNNBRAV DISCOVER ARTS HBO ESPN 7 AM (Cont) Bozo Movie RAD (Cont) PLAY CQ (5 00) Sign Off .........1 30 Q AM Infamia .......r 39 Nuestro Mundo Q AM 38 10 m, u 30 11 AM 1 1 30 12 ™ ...XL 39 A PM 1...-29 9 PM ± J9 Q PM . 0 39 A P " “ J 9 c PM 5 ¡39 e PM 30 8 De Pura Sangre TV Muier Derecho de Nacer La Hora del Gane T .N .T El Mundo Valeria El Tesoro Noticiero Primavera 7 PM Retorno de Diana Nombre Es Coraje J 39 f i P M - - M Q P M ¡39 1 0 5 Noticiero Noticiero De Hollywood Noche ..N o 1 1 m 1 2 5 Juventud Drogada Smurfs Ruxom Incredible Hulk Charlie s Angels Geraldo News Alice JJilY Kotter Ghostbusters BraveStarr Transformers Jem Gd Times Jeffersons B. Miller m i Baseball " News T Zone Traooer John. M .D . Chiefs. Part 2 LIFE ffi It Figures Babv Knows Marcus Welby, MD Regis Philbm Attitudes Mom Day Mom Works Wok with Hollvwd Eve TBA Easv St. Attitudes Movie: Amazing Mr Consumer Morning Morning Mornma MarketLme Catch Winner MarketWatch A M Invest World MarketWatch Consumer MarketWatch Wall St Countdown MarketWrap Cover Up E .R . Easy St Cagney and Lacey Movie: To Kill a Cop. Wall Street Final Americas Business . Cagney and Lacey MacGruder an Movie: Variety Lights Dr. Ruth Invest. Advisory Movie: Men Alba Marina Gl Joe Blunden Evening News ____ o i - Hands Ban Nadi Tasmanian Tiger Odyssey Romantic Spirit Skag Movie Blunt - The Fourth Man Midday Market Rpt Middle Kingdom Great Detective Space Exper Golden Age Towards 2000 Trek About Associates Journey Survival Wld Movie: Murder My Sweet Great Detective Golden Age Brush Stroke Travel Survival Wld Eleanor Roosevelt Movie: Naming the Change Wld Deaf Mosaic Italy Wines Trees. Isles In the Wild Wild Cinema Explorers Monitor T ru e ! v. Co. of Adventures Prof. Nature Noah's Ark 1930s 1930s Portraits Camera Monitor Trade Places Movie Blind Date (:15) Living Daylights . Movie: Man Saw Tomorrow Smart Kids Mother Mine? Movie: Raising Arizona Movie Haunted Honeymoon SortsCntr Beach Volleyball Jet Skiing Get Fit Workout Motion Bdvshaoo College Football • Olympians Rowmo Wrestling B'ball Cvckno SprtsLk PG A Tour SprtsCntr Summer Beech Volleyball Water Skima Movie: Men J . Thompson Movie: RAD Surf Mag Short Story Bishop Tutu Part 2 Water Music Names Daylights Hot List Movie: Durell Dreamgvts Movie: Fleshdance Fever Interviews Short Story Yes. P .M . Com Brk Eleonor nooeeyoit 4:45) America (:15) SpoCn Woody Kid Movie: Naming the | Places SpoAm Movie: Heartburn X T h t r o W t F c n t p u o r G g n i t s i L V T i N T 8 6 9 1 © Hitchcock Riotide Edoe Search Insider SHOW Movie Dark Side of Love • Movie Heaven Can Wait * Movie Man, Woman and Child Movie Streets of D IS N EY m Donald Dumbo Movie My Dog. the Thief Animáis You&Me Disney Presents Ozzie Movie: Princess Justice Pooh Really Rosie Factory Kids Movie: Evil Movie: Prof • * LawrenceviN e Conversation Carol Ashford 6 Simpson Window Ozzie think one of them must go to make room for a brilliant transfer student, they argue about who's expendable. (R) □ 0 C H A R U E A N O C O M P A N Y 0 P A T T Y D U R E 0 T R U E A D V EN T U R E Glacier Hunters. Climbing the Tasman Glacier. 0 C LAS SIC SUN NB B t 0 E V B IY T N M G G O E S : M ILK M A N A N O T H E H O U S EW IFE I K pm 00 * * M O V IE ‘ The Man with One Red Shoe’ ABC T U E S D A Y N IG H T M O V IE (1965) Tom Hanks. Jim Belushi An innocent musician is caught between rival espionage agents and falls for the gorgeous spy lady hired to do him in. PG ' □ 0 O w w w M O V IE W A R A N O P E A C E , P A R T 2 (1956) Audrey Hepburn, Henry Fonda. Napoleon turns his attentions to Russia and in so doing causes hardships and grief on a vast scale. N R ' 0 0 N O V A Many years of experiments led to the now common, yet still dangerous, practice of organ and tissue transplantation. ‘ N R ’ Q 0 V ID EO S O U L Host Donnie Simpson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars. 0 0 N O M B R E E S C O R A JE Andres Garcia. Salvador Pinada. Novela de Argentina. 0 W W W * H O M E O U T O F T H E P A S T (19 47) Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer. A former detective’s double crossing past catches up with him when his one time employer and his lover angje him in a web of murder. 'N R ' E M History of ¡ f l B H H K H H H H i G O P R M K T M E W R E S T L M G 0 M Y T H R E E 8 0 0 The Ever Popular Robbie Douglas. Robbie confuses diplomacy and personality when he runs for the Student Council and tries to win over a new girl. 0 M O V IE T O I 0 U A C O P . P A R T 2 (1978) Joe Don Baker, Louis Gossett. J r .. Two strong men on opposite sides of the law are locked in deadly conflict. Exposes the internal political machinations of police work in a big city.______ 0 A C O M P A N Y O F A D I the Hudson Bay Company 0 M O V IE N A M IN G T H E N A M ES (1967) Sytvestra Le Touzel. Michael Maloney. Against the violent backdrop of Northern Irish politics, a young woman’s life is tom betwesn the man she loves and the country she is fighting for. N R ’ 0 ED W IN D U R E L L Í D R E A M W R L f (1987) Melissa Melendez. Tom Byron. This scintillating collage explores the sexy meanderings of a young man's erotic imagination. ‘N R ’ 0 A C O N V ER S A TIO N W ITH C A R O L S T A R R M G C A R O L B U R N ET T ( 1 9 0 ) Taped before a live audience at Walt Disney World in Florida. Carol Burnett interacts with her audience in this one woman show. ‘N R ‘ 840 pm * 0 N EW C O U N TR Y 0 D O N N A » The Free Soul. When an old friend of Jeff's grandfather visits, his vagabond ways cause the Stones to worry about the effect on Jeff. 0 w wvb M M T H E U V M S D A Y LIG H T S (1967) Timothy Dalton, Maryam d’Abo. James Bond takes on the KGB. squelches the world’s leading heroin suppliers, and falls in love with a lethal Czech cellist. ‘P G ’ □ 0 P R O B EAC H V O L L E Y B A L L WPtnen s from Hermosa Beach, CA (T) §£0 pm 0 0 S T R U G G LES F O R raLANO (1988) Using archival and international news footage, this final episode examines the impect Í Want has had and the role of Poland's new Proletviat. □ 0 N o n c m o u M v is iO N 0 M O V IE BORN M E A S T L A . (1987) Cheech Marin. Jan Michael Vincent. A third generation Hrspantc-Amencan is mistaksniy caught up in an imrmorstion raid and deported to Mexico R' □ C A N D C N A 8 E IA W A T ER M IM IC (1987) English 0 S A T U R D A Y N N N T U V E 0 Bach Festival Orchestra recreMas the music and atmosphere of 18th century En g ta d by performing Handel's Walsr Music. ' R U S T Jeff Marder, Pamela Das 0 P R O F t E S O F N A T U R E The Herring Gun. Herring gulls of the Great Lakes. 0 7 K Barres. If it's h o t if it's steamy, if it's fun, we ll be there! That’s the motto of the Hot L is t a show that previews w hit's hot and w hrt's n ot ________________ N 0 ♦ * * M O M E T H E B E0 R 0 0 M W W OO W (1967) Slave Guttenberg, Elizabeth McGovern. A violent crime, a secret affair, and a single witness combine when a man cant prove his innocence without revealing his affair with his boss' wife. I t ’ 0 A tirO RO A N O S M P 8 0 N : B O M B H O M E (1968) Nicholas Ashford. Valerie Simpson. The sontpvriting team headline a new series of unique music spedais featuring performances by the duo and guests as well as glimpses of family life N R ' 9:30 pm 0 D E S O E H O L LY W O O O Entrevistas con varias cslebridades. Hay espctaculos y diversiones también, presa i por Luca Bentivoglio C IT Y TV 0 8 0 N E W 8 0 N O A H 'S A R K La Pura Camels. Four species of camel. 0 W A T ER S U M O International Water Ski Tour from Wichita. K S m KXAN KBVO KLRU BET MAX AMC NASH NICK September 19,1988 IMAGES *23* C05) Thunder Bay Video Soul KTBC mm CBS This * Family Feud Card Sharks Price Is Right Young and Restless News Beautiful As the World Turns Guiding Light Geraldo Jeffersons All Family News CBS News News Cheers Live! Dick Clark Equalizer KVUE 8 S i Good Morning America Donahue Home News All My Children One Life to Live General Hospital WKRP Superior Ct People s Ct Newhart News ABC News News USA Today G Pains Hd Class Best of SCTV Wiseguy • 7 AM 1 8 Q AM 8 M Q AM * 36 1 0 M 1 1 a 1 2 ™ 4 PM 1 30 9 PM L 30 4 PM 0 ;30 A PM H 30 c PM 5 30 C PM 6 30 7 PM 1 30 Q PM 8 30 Q PM 3 30 1 0 ™ News Cheers Night Heat 1 1 * m AM i £ 30 Movie: Ordinary News M-A*S'H Nightlme B. Miller Rhoda Sign Off (600) Summer Olympic Games Sale Concentrat' Wheel Win. Lose Password News Days of Our Lives Another World Flintstones Yooi Bear 1 Love Lucy Bewitched Judge On Trial Med. Center A. Griffith Corner Pyle Hooan Quincy Movie: Proper Santa Barb. Stranger TBA Sesame Street ITV " . . ■ ITV ITV Summer Olympics Magnum. P.I. Jeopardy! NBC News News Summer Olympic Games * . ■ News Summer Olympic Games Woody DuckTales Smurfs Bradv Bunch Knight Ride Good Times 3 s Company Haoov Days A-Team Mr. Rogers Sesame Street Souare One Survival Wt BusRpt MacNeil Lehrer Movie: Compromisi Live from Lincoln ng Positions Center • Twilite Zon Movie: Matchmaker Bill Moyers Made in TX Sign Off Late Show TBS ■ (:05) Hbil CSS! B'wt (05) Little House (:05) S«veet Hostage • (:05) Perry Mason . (:05) T & (351 Flin ( 05) Flin (351 Brad (f)5) Muns (:351 One ( 05) L & 1:351 Andv ( 05) 9 to (351 Sanf ( 05) Sanf Maior League Baseball " (6:30) Spc. Program Soecial Programmin 0 On the Line Video LP Bobbv Jones Video Vibrations Video LP Soft Notes On the Line Kitchen Video Soul " . (Com) i: Pat and Mike Fats and Friends Movie: Killer Stalked NY Movie: Lawless Street Mov Show Movie: Legend of Lizzie Borden Movie: Tokyo Joe Movie: Streets of Justice Wish Movie: Stripper (05) Platoon " Video LP Bobby Jones Movie: Death Fandango Be a Star Crook VideoCntrv Amer Mag Cntrv Movie: Last Pony Riders Fandanoo Be a Star Crook VideoCntry Amer Maa Movie: Bloodhounds of Broadway Nashville Now Movie: Kiss of Death Cntrv Fandango Be a Star Crook VideoCntrv Movie: Bloodhounds of Broadway Nashville Now Movie: Kiss of Death " Cntry Crook VideoCntrv Be a Star Amer Maa Movie: Bloodhounds of Broadway Nashville Now (15) Korean War Soft Notes Video LP Urban Scene Spc Program (10) (451 Murphy s War Mandmgo Movie: Kiss of Death Last Pony R USA m She-R Cartoon Express Lassie Today's Soc Pinwheel Movie: Flying Down to Rio A Deal Plav % Potato Reaction Stumpers Jackpot Luck TicTac Rollers Check It Dance Party She-Ra Albert Cartoons Airwolf Gold Monkey Tales Street Hawk Mike Hammer Hitchcock Riptide Edae Search Wrestling * Elephant Little Koal 3mwheel Belle Li'l Prince Today s Spc Gold Cities Lassie Gadoet Can't on TV Loonev Tune Nick Rocks Dennis Keepers Don t Sit Can't on TV Oouble Dare Mr. Ed Patty Duke 3 Sons Donna Reed Sat Night Second City Laugh In Car 54 Make Rm Ann Sothem Mr. Ed Patty Duke DISNEY Movie: Sweet Dreams (5:00) Sign Off W G N L IF E F N N B R A V D IS C O V E f A R T S HBO ES P N P LA Y S H O W U N I n (Cont) Infamia 7 AM 1 30 n AM 8 30 Nuestro Mundo Q AM 51 39 De Pura Sangre TV Muier Derecho de Nacer La Hora del Gane T.N.T El Mundo Valeria Alba Manna El Tesoro Noticiero Primavera Retorno de Diana Nombre Es Córate Noticiero 1 0 * 1 1 «■ :30 1 1 1 2 m 30 4 PM 1 :30 o PM L M 9 PM :39 0 A * * * :36 e PM 8 36 C PM 8 39 * 7 PM 1 :39 Q PM 8 :39 Q PM 3 39 1 0 5 1 1 ™ 1 2 “ Bozo Smurfs Ruxom Incredible Hulk Charlies Angels Geraldo News <:15) Baseball * * * Beaver Gd Times Jeffersons Barney Benson Movie Lace. Part 1 8 ) It Figures Mom Works Nurse Attitudes Mom Day Babv Knows Wok with Hollvwd Eve TBA Easv St Attitudes Movie: Marcus ER. Easy St Cagney and Lacey Movie. Mind Over Murder . Cagney and Lacey MacGruder and Loud Invest. Advisory Regis Philbm MarketLine Business Program g Morning Momma MarketWatch AM Midday Market Rpt Prec Metals MarketWatch Consumer MarketWatch Wall St Countdown Change Wld Deaf Mosaic To Survival Pac Outdoor Harness Past Aldo Leooold Moghuls FutureScan Explorers Wild Refuae Explorers Freud: The Secret of Dreams Amandas Movie Murder My Sweet Great Detective Golden Age Brush Stroke Travel Survival Wld Movie: Carnival MarketWrap New Pacific Story Movie Mr. Mom Attractions Movie: Whistle Blower Movie I Want to Live! Welby: Dark Fury Cover Up Evening News World Alive Desert Trio Equinox Walt Street Final America s Business Movie: General Della Rovere Movie Eurooa '51 Monitor Small Planet Nature of Things H.M.S. Pandora Seasons N. America Movie: Hero Ain't Nothin " Great Detective Golden Age GT Cafe Secrets Survival Wld Mountbatten Movie: Mr Movie Big Trouble in Little China Mom Living Dangerously Undercover Churchill Attractions Hitchhiker World War I Movie: Curse Tim Matheson (:25) Shadow Play Noticiero Mala Noche No Movie Neoro Que la Noche News T Zone MD Chiefs. Part 3 Italy Wines Treas. Isles You Australia Mountbatten Movie: Rise of Louis XIV Monitor Africa Focus Living Dangerously - m (Cont) SortsCntr Hydroplane Racing Dog Show Get Fit Workout Motion Bdvshao a Irish Triathlon Water Skiing B ball Mag NFL Yrbk Wrestling B ball Bunch Horse Dost SprtsLk Act n Cvcle SprtsCntr SooAm Pulling Billiards Bowlma NHRA Draa Racing SortsCntr (:15) SpoCn Mtrwk III Sprtsman Fishm Movie: Bill Cosby Himself Movie' One-Eyed Jacks Movie: Gandhi ■ - - : - Movie: Bird Sings Movie Three 0 Clock High X T h t r o v f t t F c n I p u o r G g n i t s i L TV e h T 8 8 9 1 Donald Dumbo Movie Snoopy, Come Home Boomer You&Me Disney Presents Ozzie Movie: Benji the Hunted Willows Pooh Dumbo Raccoon Donald Kids Edisons Movie: Mouse & His Child Babar Wow Wow Wibble Movie: Mr Mom Zorro Ozzie Movie: Those Calloways • Fantasies Erotic Images Chapter 4 Playboy Presents Brothers Dave Movie: Killing Machine Movie: Three Daughters Movie: Bedside Headmaster ( 40) A Man in Love Fantasies Erotic Image In fhe concluding chapter of this senes. Julie finds that fame has a high pnce tag. To placate a film director, she must sleep with a star. NR’ 8 SUPER DAVE (1987) Super Dave Osborne goes on his own to continue his hilarious quest for truth, justice and the American way NR' Q 040 pm REST OF SCTV 8 ® THE EQIMUZBI McCall poses as an international drug smuggler to bap a karate expert suspected of pushing drugs on private school students. (R) 8 • 8 8 * * % NOME COMPROBBSMR POSITIONS (1965) Susan Sarandon. Raul Julia. A bored housewife investigates the murder of her promiscuous dentist and becomes tangled m a world of blackmail and organized crime. R 8 8 UVE FROM L i N CENT» (1968) Faith Esham. Richard Leech. With the guidance of director Tito Capobiano and conductor Eko flocampagm. the New York City Opera presents Verdi's classic Beverly SHts hosts NR' 8 VNNM SOUL Host Donnie Simpson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars. 8 Ml NOMBRE ES CORAJE Andres Garcia. Salvador Pineda. Novela de Argentina 8 * * * MOWS KISS OF MATH (1947) Brian Donievy. Victor Mature. Captured jmwl thief refuses to aid assistant DA to tighten his sentence He learns his cohorts kept all the loot, giving none to Ins family. NR 8 STREET HAWK 8 MY TURK SONS The Proposals. Mike gets cold feet when he decides to propose marriage, Ins bungling attempts further confuse the issue 8 + * MOVIE MINO OVER MURDER (1979) Deborah Raffin, David Ackroyd. A beautiful, carefree model and dancer suddenly and unnervingty realizes that she can sense future events and ««ill objects to move NR 8 NJB.S. PANOORA Recovering relics of H.M.S. Bounty 8 UVNM DANGEROUSLY Modern warfare enters the missile age in this probe of the confrontation of conventional British warships and state of the art Argentinian weaponry 8 * * MOVIE THE HLUNG MACHINE (1966) George Rivero. Margaux Hemingway A conflict between rival trucking factions erupts into violence. R' 8 **V b MOVIE MR. MOM (1963) Michael Keaton, Ten Garr. An unemployed executive is forced to trade his briefcase for an apron when his wife goes off to «vork. PG B:90 pm 8 *+ V k MOVE THE STAMPER (1963) Joanne Woodward. Richard Beymer. A showgirl stranded in a small rmdwestem town brings excitement to the humdrum kves of an old friend and her teenage son. NR 8 NEW COUNTRY 8 DONNA REED The First Quarrel. Alex and Donna think their friends are the perfect couple, until they quarrel and separate. Their efforts to help lead to their own quarrel 8 AMERICA UNDERCOVER: FOOD MAY BE HAZAROOUSP 8 BOWUNG High Rollers Tournament from Las Vegas (T) 9:00 pm 8 CD WISE6UY Vinnie. an unwilling witness to Mel Profitt's cruelty and ruthlessness in his pursuit of power, realizes Mel has plans for him in his power games (R) 8 NOTICIERO UNIVISION 8 CROOK ANO CHASE 8 NEW MIKE HAMMER 8 SATURDAY NIGHT UVE 8 FOUR SEASONS OF NORTH AMERICA North with the Spring The natural landscape of America 8 WINSTON CHURCHILL: THE VALIANT YEARS Churchill lives at the White House as England's Pacific colonies fall. Gary Merrill narrates and Richard Burton is the voice of Churchill. NR' 8 N00 COMING ATTRACTIONS 8 PLAYOOY PRESENTS: OTIS DAY; OTIS . MY I (1967) Kick off your shoes, slip into some sandals and wrap yourself m the biggest bedsheet you can find It's college fraternity party time, toga style' NR' 9:30 pm 8 MUY ESPECIAL 8 VIDEOCOUNTRY 8 SECOND CITY TV 8 NEWS 8 *Vfc MOVIE EUROPA '51 (1954) Ingrid Bergman. Alexander Knox. A wealthy woman s desire to help the needy leads to her own social downfall when she seeks comfort from grief by aiding underprivileged outcasts NR 8 WORLD WAR I (1987) Robert Ryan Elected on a promise to keep the U.S. out of war, President Wilson is forced into action by rising tensions overseas 8 HITCHHIKER: THE JOKER g 8 NHRA DRAG RACING Quaker State Northstar Nationals from Brainerd. MN (T) 8 ZORRO The Gay Caballero 10:00 pm 8 (D 8 8 N E W S 8 8 8 TWILIGHT ZONE 8 SOFT NOTES 8 NOTICIERO Repórtate Olímpico 8 * * * MOVIE BLOODHOUNDS OF 0R0A0WAY (1952) Mitzi Gaynor, Scott Brady Barney M iller ABC (Ch. 24, Cable 3) 11:30 p.m. This is probably the greatest show ever. My favorite part of any episode was when Inspector Luger walked into the squad room and was saying hello to all the detectives. Remember the blind guy who was always getting mugged? The one with the round glasses? He was there too. So Luger walks in, and turns to Harris. "Harris,” he says. Then he turns to Wojohoweicz, and says "Wojo.” Then he turns to the blind guy, and says "Mr. Shearing.” Get it? God, everytime I see that one I just can’t stop laughing. I guess you’ve got to see it for your­ self. — Gerard Farrell © 7:00 pm * (Z) UVE! DICK CLARK PRESENTS 8 QR0WW6 PAMS When Mike puts his • talents to frightening use as a salesman for a stereo store that talks its customers. Jason must teach him a lesson m honesty (R) Q I 8 A-TEAM 8 8 MACNERy LEHRER NEWSMOUR 8 BONY JONES QOSPEl Grammy Award Winner Bobby Jones present the best in urban contemporary gospel 8 a EXTRAÑO RETORNO DE DIANA SALAZAR Lucia Mendez, Jorge Martinez Novela de Mexico 8 * + * MOVIE DEATH WISH (1974) Charles Bronson. Hope Lange. When a man's wife and daughter are brutally attacked by three muggers m their New York apartment, he sets out as a vigilante to find the attackers R 8 NASHVILLE NOW Moe Bandy 8 TALES OP THE BOLD MONKEY 8 MB-HU ove Thy New Neighbor Wilbur reverts to his old Air Force behavior, becoming overly helpful, around Commander Kirkwood, who has bought the house next door 8 + * MOV» LACE. PART 1 (1964) Bess Armstrong, Brooke Adams. An international sex symbol begins a single mmded search to find and destroy the mother she never knew , one of three free spirited school chums □ 8 CARNEY ANO LACEY 8 * + * * NOME QOMRAL DELLA ROVERE (I960) Hannes Messemer. Vittorio Oe Sica Roberto Rossellini's gritty depiction of Italian resistance during the last days of World War II NR 8 NATURE OE TMN8S Where the Bay Becomes the Sea. Wildlife m the Bay of Fundy. 8 M0UNT1ATTEN: THE tQU STATESMAN As Germany surrenders Mountbatten attends Potsdam and learns of the atomic bomb 8 *+ V k MOVE MR. MOM (1963) Michael Keaton, Teh Gar An unemployed executive is forced to trade his briefcase for an apron when his wife goes off to work. PG' □ 8 ML AMERICAN PULLM8 SONES From Stafford. CT (T) 8 8 M 0HCRS Robert Walden. Brandon * PRIVATE PASSNMS ANO THE aiart. Three very different brothers attempt to with the many humorous and tender rMDonsmps ibb tnrows wm wiy. rm WOW WMME WOROLE WAZZIE W0001E WOO (1965) Tim Noah A journey through the imagination of musician Tim Noah as he sevchs for the Wow Wow Wibble Woggie w bzm w o o m woo in song nh 8 SANFORD ANO SON 741 pm 740 pm 8 8 HEAD OF THE CLASS Charlie serves as a medium between Janice and the everyday world when she daxns she has her own poltergeist - and it «Hurts into action in dass. (R) □ 8 MAJOR LiARUE BASEBALL Atlanta Braves at Houston Astros (L) 8 PATTY DUKE 8 DRUARIR Snoohar Pool Challenge from OeeuvMe. France: Straight Pool Competition vsMwraAUT) I ¿¡fe CNAPTBUBnttEkiand W ■ -‘iv, y»;/.,. s ' * * ’ : ■ ' . ' 24 IMAGES September 19,1988 TUNE IN Race and Reason A C T V (Cable 10) 9:30 p .m . Race and Reason is a nationally syndicated white supremacist show. Of course, such a show could only be found on Austin Access Televi­ sion, where anyone can voice an opinion, no matter how radical. No, I’m not advocating white su­ premacy or anything like that. Just watch it for comedic value. It’s real- íy amazing to see so much ignorance concentrated in a short 30 minutes. Great drinking game — every time someone on the show says “white race,” you drink. If the viewpoints expressed don’t make you puke, the beer will. (Yeah, I know we don’t have ACTV channels listed — we plan to fix that.) — Lee “Any Excuse to Drink Beer” Nichols PRIMETIME 7 :0 0 p m O A -TEA M 8 CD 48 HO U RS O <8 G RO W ING PAINS Mike and Caro! stage a sixties-style sit-in to protest the firing of Coach Lubbock, a furious Maggie must cover her own family for the news (R) Q • , Q ® M AC N EIL/ LEH R ER N EW S H 0U R 0 E L EX T R A Ñ O R ETO R N O 0 E DIAN A S A LA ZA R Lucia Mendez. Jorge Martinez. Novela de Mexico. 0 * * ‘A M OVIE TH E RIV ER RAT (1984) Tommy Lee Jones, Martha Plimpton An old crime and a bittersweet reunion with his daughter complicate the life of an ex con in a small Mississippi river town. PG B N A S H V ILLE NOW 8 T A LE S O F T H E G O LD M O N K EY 8 M R. ED Moko. Col. Kirkwood plans a party for his straight-laced, former Commanding General, but a little martian changes the outcome of the event. 8 * * M O VIE L A C E . P A R T 2 (1984) Bess Armstrong, Brooke Adams. An international sex symbol begins a single minded search to find and destroy the mother she never knew , one of three free spirited school chums. □ 8 C A G N EY A N O LA C EY 8 M O VIE A P R A Y E R F O R T H E 0 Y IN 6 (1987) Mickey Rourke, Bob Hoskins. An IRA partisan turns his back on the group and is hunted by two of their members. R' 8 A P E A N D S U P E R A P E , P A R T f The evolution of man 8 t h e ED G E A N D B EY O N D It only takes perfect timing and grace to ski deon the Grand Jorasses; Next take a look at two Lithe Ladies as they take on an Italian Alp. 8 Reaves, Crispin Glover. With the help of an embittered, crippled dope dealer, a band of misfit teenagers try to protect one of their own who has committed a murder. R ’ □ 8 IH R A D R A G R AC IN G Motorcraft World Nationals from Norwalk, OH (T) 8 ELEC TR IC B U IE : B U N D D A TE 8 T H E B ES T O F W A LT D IS N EY P R ES EN T S Disneyland Goes to the World's Fair. A musical animated history precedes a look at the amazing exhibits to be displayed at the World’s Fair. M O V IE R IV ER ’S E D G E (1986) Keanu 8 S A N FO R O A N D S O N Reverend Sanford 7 :0 5 p m 7 :3 0 p m 8 0 GROWING PAMS Coach Lubbock vents his wrath on Mike after Mike’s student protest results in the coach's dismissal; Mrs. Lubbock and M a n e play peacemaker. (R) □ 8 MAJOR LEAGUE BA at Houston Astros (L) 8 * * * * MOVIE THE NOIISE ON SEND ILL Atlanta Braves T (1945) Lloyd Nolan, Signe Hasso. The FBI hunts for a Nazi spy ring stealing atomic secrets. ‘N R ’ 0 P A T T Y D U K E 0 OURSELVES ANO OTHER A N N U LS Naturalist Gerald Ourrell and his wife talk about the why, how, where and when of animal communication. A N pm 0 ( Z ) BNRRE ‘ Kids Lika m a st’ C M I N U M N O M E (1987) Tyne Daly, Richard , KTBC KVUE KXAN KBVO KLRU BET MAX AMC NASH USA NICK 7 AM 1 :3Q 8 * CBS This Morning . Good Morning America Summer Olympic Games G ED Mr. Roaers Sesame Street Family Feud Donahue Sale ITV (0 5 ) Widow TBS ■ (0 5 ) Hbil (3 5 ) B wt (:05) Little House . . (:05) Perry Mason (:05) Rare Breed ( 05) T & 135 ) Flm (0 5 ) Flm (3 5 ) Brad (:05) Muns (3 5) 1 Da (:05) L & (35) Andv (:05) 9 to (:35) Senf ( 05) Si f M a »r League Baseball Flintstones Yooi Bear 1 Love Lucy Bewitched Judge On Trial Med. Center A . Griffith Gomer Pyle Hooan Quincy Movie: Smoke " Woody DuckTales Smurfs ITV ITV Mr Rogers Brady Bunch Knight Ride Sesame Street Good Times 3 s Company HaoovDavs A-Team Souare One Survival Wt Bus Rot MacNeil Lehrer Austin Movie Looker . . . (6:30) Spc Program M o v » : Stranger on Soecial Programmm 9 Spc. Progra On the Line Black Showcase Video Soul the Run M o v » : Made in Heaven Vintage M o v »: Decision at Sundow M o v »: Mermaid Video Vibrations ( 55) in a Lonely Place M o v »: Bad Company * Movie: House on 92nd M o v » : Funny Girl Street Video I P Soft Notes On the Line Blk Forum Black Showcase Video Soul M o v » : River Rat M o v » Roxanne Movie: Bad Company M o v»: House on 92nd Street M o v »: Bad Company Movie House on 92nd Street Fandango Be a Star Crook VideoCntrv Amer Mag Cntrv M o v»: Fernando Valtoy Fandango Be a Star Crook VideoCntry Amer Mao Nashvilto Now Cntrv Fandango Be a Star Crook VideoCntry Nashvilto Now Cntry Crook VideoCntrv Be a Star Amer Mao Nashvilto Now She-Ra Cartoon Express La s s » Today s S o c Pinwheel M o v »: Story of Castles * • cWpnarn Little Koal Check it Dance Party Looney Tune Nick Rocks A Deal p i» % Potato Reaction Stumpers Jackoot Luck TicTac Rollers She-Ra Albert Cartoons Airwolf Gold Monkey Tales Thursday Night Fights * Hitchcock Wired Edoe Edge Search D illi DOW L'H Pnnce Today s Spc Gold Cities L a s s » Gadget Can't on TV Dennis Keepers Don't Sit Can't on TV Double Dare Mr Ed Patty Duke 3 Sons Donna Reed Sat Night Second City Laugh In Car 54 Make Rm AnnSothem Mr Ed Patty Duke One Life to Live Another World Card Sharks 9 M 1 0 ^ Price Is Right Young and Restless News Beautiful As the World Turns Guiding Light Geraldo 1 1 m 1 1 30 1 2 m30 A PM 1 :30 9 PM L 30 3 Z30 Jeffersons All Family News CBS News News Cheers 48 Hours A r * 30 H 5 Zu :30 f t PM 8 30 7 PM 30 1 Q PM 30 0 Movie: Kids Like These Home News All My Children General Hospital W KRP Superior Ct People s Ct Newhart News ABC News News U SA Todav G Pams G Pams Movie: All of Me Q PM 3 :30 1 0 m 30 , u 1 11 1 30 4 0 AM .30 News Cheers Night Heat Movie: Who Is Julia7 News M *A *S *H Nightlme B. Miller Rhoda Sign Off Concentrar Wheel Win. Lose Password News Days of Our Lives Santa Barb Summer Olympics Magnum, P I . Jeopardy! NBC News News Summer Olympic Games . * - News Summer Olympic Games " " Mystery! " " Twilite Zon Movie Assignment to Kill Bill Moyers C o n » . Chron Search of Troian Sign Off Late Show (1 5 ) Korean War Soft Notes Movie Made in Heaven Video LP Bobby Jones Spc Program (:15) Hearts & Minds (4 5 ) Custer of the West Fernando Va PLAY L O U (5 00) Sign Off UNI J E L AM (Cont) Infamia 30 AM 30 AM _ JJL 1 Q 5 11 AM 12 PM - J O j3 0 PM m Nuestro Mundo De Pura Sangre TV Muier Derecho de Nacer La Hora del Gane T .N .T El Mundo Valeria Alba Marina P M I El Tesoro - J & M m . Primavera Retorno de Diana Nombre Es Coraie Noticiero America Noticias No Mala Noche Movie: Pergola de Flores 8 1 0 ^ 11 12 AM .30 WGN U F E FNNBRAV SISC OVEI ARTS HBO ESPN SHOW D IS N EY (Cont) SortsCntr Bowling Fishing Mtrwk III Get Fit t e l i L Motion Top Rank ¡Boxing j Movie Winners Take Movie Mannequin Movie: Jesus Movie Death of a Salesman P G A European Tour Movie: CT Yankee Senior PG A Goff Tma Live From Rio Movie: Over the Top SprtsLk Lt Side SprtsCntr SodWk Bozo Smurfs Ruxpm Incredible Hulk Charlie s Angels Geraldo News Alice 1 D »y Kotter Ghostbusters BraveStarr Transformers Gl Joe J S S L Gd Times Jeffersons Barney | Benson Movie: Lace. Part 2 News It Figures Babv Knows Marcus Welby, MD Regis Philbm Attitudes Mom Day Mom Works Wok with Hollvwd Eve TBA Attitudes Movie: ¡Embassy Cover Up E R Easy St Cagney and Lacey Movie: Out of ¡the Darkness T Zone T r t f p y fth n , Cagney and Lacey | M D H Movie: Katie: Centerfold MacGruder and Loud Invest. Advisory ■ Business View ■ L a J Lovelaw Morning Mornmo ¡MarketLme Potions Rot MarketWatch A .M Midday Market Rpt Commodities MarketWatch Consumer [MarketWatch Wall St. ■ ¡Countdown MarketWrap Wall Street Final Americas ¡Business Movie: A ¡Prayer for Aboriginal Art Movie: Matewan Explorers Smithsonian Ja zz All |ln the Wild Wild Cinema Diamonds m ¡Sky Movie Carnival Story Generation to Gen Great Detective Breakthrough Golden Age f i l f l N — i Secrets l Survival Wtd Movie: Day After the Fair Great Detective Golden Age IVanetv Travel | Survival WW Edge, Beyond Ü O É f t l Nureyev: An ¡Evening with die Royal Ballet G T Cafe Com Brfc i Questors Tasman Tiger Heart of ¡Dragon Middle ■ ¡Kingdom |Pj Ou (Harness Past AMo Leopold Trade Places Ape and | I Superape Explorers 0 WKdRefuoe J Thompson ZQ&A&__ 3 ol ¡Adventurers Evening News To Survival | Young Comedians Inside N F L Off Road Racing Lt Side | [SortsCntr ( 1 5 ) SpoCn tm ¡Football Dr Yes Movie Howard s Spitfire Swmo Aoam! Electric Blue Edge. Beyond Sstiüm__ Nureyev Movie: HeNraiser £ S S L Towards 2000 £ 3 5 ^ 0 n c ^ PuHmg X T r m Wo Ft nc I p u o r G g v - « t * Li TV S M I ti a (Cont) Movie Rustler s Rhapsody Movie Summer 42 Movie Out of the Shadows Donald Movie Poor Rich Girl YouAMe b g n g j ¡P r e s e n ts ^ Movie All____ About Eve Movie Six Weeks Movie Charlie Brown 4th of Juhr M & Q L Rustlers Rhapsody Pooh Dumbo Wuzzles BSM- Kids Í5 2 S 2 L Ludwig Think ¡Tank D 's B e s t Movie: Tough Guys Pon t Dance M ovie H am b. Hill ÍSHSL OZZM I M o vn Teahouse of the August £ 2 L & L the Dying Beyond 2000 Mnstr Trucks Movie Malombra Movie Out of the Shadows of Jarrah Movie: River s Edge IH R A Drag Racing Electric Blue Crenna. When Alex is diagnosed as having uown syndrome, a common cause of mental retardation, his mother is determined to meet the challenge of rearing him. □ 0 0 MOVIE ’ All of M e ' ABC THURSDAY NIGHT MOVIE (1984) Lily Tomlin, Steve Martin. The soul of a rich, friendless woman is accidentally transferred into the body of a swinging single man. P G ’ □ 8 0 ■ MOVIE LOOKER ( 1 8 1 ) Albert Finney. James Cobum. A plastic surgeon is a prime suspect in the murders of former patients who were also models. ‘P G ’ 0 0 AUSTM ON U NE 0 1 down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars. 0 Ml HO M M E ES CORAJE Andres Garcia, Salvador Pineda. Novela de Argentina. 0 TNURSOAY N N N T 0 MY THREE SONS Steve and the Viking. Steve is chosen to nursemaid the attractive daughter of a visiting dignitary. 0 M I E OUT 8 THE I IRRNESS Martin Sheen. Hedor Elizondo. A dedicated police officer and loving family man who (wiped to crack the Son of Sam case triumphs in the shadow of personal grief and conflicto. □ 0 SEYM D 2888 A now unapimebto m 0 NUREYEV: AN EVENM R M T N THE ROYAL ) SOUL Host Donnie Simpson counts (I BALLET (1963) Rudolph Nureyev, Margot Fonteyn. Long-time ballet favorites reach great heights of excitement in an evening of classics from the Royal Opera House at Covent Garden ‘N R ’ 0 BATTLE OF THE M ONBTBI TRUCKS AND MUO RACING Fronf Minneapolis. M N (T) 0 M O V E MALOMBRA (1953) Paoto Senators, Maurice Poli. There's an evil shadow over the Rwninger household in this costume drama of deception and desire set in 19th century Italy. ‘N R ’ 0 M O V E OUT OF THE SHADOWS Alexandra Paul, Charles Dance. While in Greece, an attractive American Embassy worker finds herself the suspect of a murder investigation and turns to a Interpol detective for help. N R ' 0 M OVE THE E M M OF JARRAN (1967) Terrance Donovan, Susan Lyons. Young Englishwoman takes s remote job teaching s timber baron’s children. Courted by 3 other men, it is her abrasive b o u with whom she falls in love. N R ' R 3 0 p ilt 0 * * % M O V E R O IA N M E (19 67) Steve Martin, Daryl Hannah. A modern-day Cyrano de friends take an old deserted house as their secret hideout, but the police disapprove and bring them to the station. M O pm 0 0 MYBTERY1 (1967) Determined to find out more a tm f Miss Jupp's secretive life, Adam Datgkesh questions the M a x » household, but Deborah Riscoo has most to explain. Q 0 CROOK AMO CHASE 0 SATURDAY M ONT LR E ART (1968) View the works of four contemporary Aboriginal artist» who demonstrate the rich visual and oral traditions of their culture. 0 NEW E V L O R B E Sea to Sea. The Canadian 1 N 1 IDUNR COM HNAHt A LL STAR REUNION ( 1 9 8 ) Harry Anderson, Richard Belzer. Popular alumni of H 0 0 comedy specials introduce bright new stars from comedy dubs around the nation. H R ' □ 0 O ff ROAD RACMG Mickey Thom psons Off Road Championship Grand Prix (T) O s M p m 0 A M 8 C A Casas de Cambio an Los Annsise/Dsstonados de M cansue an Miami 0 i ¡W W W ( 1 8 1 ) H N W I R 0 Ricardo Cortez, Helen Twetvetrees. A mobster arranges for a lawyer in his employ to marry the naive sister of a rival gangland figure. NR' 0 VNEOCOUNTRY m I N M CITY TV 0 W ED R E F U G E Come Fly with the Hawk. The great hawk migration. 0 DR. Y E *T H E nyanm s a ffa ir 0 ZORRO Tornado Is Missing 10 0 0 pm 00J | ¡ONE 0 0 M L M OVERS'W ORLD OF R EA S ( 1 9 8 ) As the Presidential atochón draws closer, BiN Moyers talks with people from all walks of American life to discuss the choices our nation faces. N R ' 8 B O F T NOTES 0 NOTICNLS Reporto» Okmpico 0 YOU CAN 8 A STAR 0 CARNEY A M IACEV Sorry, Right Number 0 M O V E MATEWAN ( 1 8 7 ) Chris Cooper. James Earl Jones. During the West Virgin» coal mine wars of 1920, striking minors «w a rm e d men from the cod company hove a bloody titee—^ 1 113' 8H JACK TNOM PSM DOWN N N M R A took at K T B C K X A N B E T M A X A M C N A S H U S A N IC K Donahue Sale One Life to Live Another World 7 AM 1 ;39 Q AM ® :3B Q AM :39 * CBS This Morning . Family Feud Card Sharks 1 0 * Price Is Right Young and Restless News Beautiful As the World Turns Guiding Light Geraldo Jeffersons All Family News CBS News News Cheers Beauty & the Beast Movie: Stillwatch * M 1 » C M 4 PM 1 39 o PM L 39 4 PM 0 30 PM H 39 C PM 5 ;30 C PM 6 39 7 PM 39 1 Q PM ® 39 Q PM 39 3 News Cheers Movie: Educating Rita 1 0 " 1 1 m 4 9 AM 30 K V U E • a Good Morning America Home News All My Children General Hospital W KRP Suoerior Ct People s Ct Newhart News ABC News News U S A Today Strangers Full House Belvedere Ten of Us 20/20 News M * A * S 'H Nightlme B Miller Rhoda Worldvtsion K B V O M D flB l Flmtstones Y o d Bear 1 Love Lucy Judge - On Trial Med. Center A . Griffith Gomer Pyle Honan Quincy Movie: Strategic Air Command Woody DuckTales Smurfs Bradv Bunch Knight Ride Good Times 3 s Company Happy Days A-Team Movie: Uptown Saturday Nioht Twilite Zon Movie Shane Late Show (6:00) Summer Olympic Games 0 «entrar Wheel Win. Lose Password News Days of Our Lives Santa Barb Summer Olympics Magnum. P I Jeopardy! NBC News News Summer Olympic Games . * • News Summer Olympic Games K L R U G E D M r. Roaers Sesame Street ITV . • • * ITV ITV Mr. Rogers Sesame Street Souare One Survival Wl Bus Rot MacNeil Lehrer D C Week T B S ■ (05 ) Hbil 15) B'wt (0 5 ) Little House (0 5 ) You'll Like My Mother (:05) Perry Mason (:05) Night Passage • ( 05) T & 1:35) Flin (05 ) Flin (35) Brad (:05) Muns (;35) 1 Da (:05) L & (35) Andy (:05) 9 to (:35) Maior League Baseball Wall St Canada: True North . 020) Portrait (6:30) Spc. Program Movie: Concorde.A irport '79 About Movie Movie: Pinky 1: Man in the Saddle Martin Mull: White Marriage Movie: Soylent Green Movie: Harder They Fall Movie: Heat Soecial Programmin 0 On the Line Gospel Mag Black Ent. Charlie & C Video Soul Video Vibrations Video LP Soft Notes On the Line Kitchen News Black Ent Charlie & C Video Soul " Movie: Platoon " " Bill Moyers Made m TX Austin City Limits (:20) Tracks News Video LP (:20) Tracks Midnight Love Sign Off ( 20) Tracks Spc. Program Movie Baby Cat ( 35) Vale Indian Terr M ovie: Murder, t .c ,* u ? September 19,1988 IMAGES 25 i ,r fíj^u , Fandango Be a Star Crook VideoCntrv Amer Mag Cntrv Movie: Indian Territory Fandanao Be a Star Crook VideoCntry Amer Mao Nashville Now Cntrv Fandango Be a Star Crook VideoCntrv Nashville Now Cntrv Crook VideoCntrv Be a Star Amer Mao Nashville Now She-Ra Cartoon Express Movie: Carefree " A Deal Plav % Potato Reaction Stumpers Jackoot Luck TicTac Rollers Check It Dance Party She-Ra Albert Cartoons Airwolf Movie: Super Beast Darkroom Night Flight " . " Lassie Today's Soc Pinwheel • Elephant Little Koal Pinwheel Belle L it Prince Today s Spc Gold Cities Lassie Gadoet Can't on TV Loonev Tune Nick Rocks Dennis Keepers Don't Sit Can't on TV Double Dare Mr. Ed Pattv Duke 3 Sons Donna Reed Sat. Night Second Citv Laugh In Car 54 Make Rm Ann Sothern M r. Ed Pattv Duke PLAY © (5:00) Sign Off SHOW Movie: Julia ** D IS N EY © Donald Dumbo Fuzzbucket Movie: Bus Stop Movie: Murder. Inc. Movie: Bus Stop Movie: Murder. Inc. Movie: Bus Stop " " - UNI WGN U FE DISCOVEI HBO ESPN Bozo Smurfs Ruxom Incredible Hulk Charlie s Angels Geraldo News Alice 1 Dav Kotter Ghostbusters BraveStarr Transformers Gl Joe Jem Gd Times Jeffersons Baseball 7 AM 1 30 £ C O * Q AM 30 * (Cont) Infamia Nuestro Mundo 10 % De Pura 1 1 m Sangre TV Mujer 1 1 30 Derecho de Nacer La Hora del Gane T .N .T El Mundo Valeria Alba Marina 1 2 "" ' L 30 •< PM 1 30 7 PM ‘ :3B 0 PM :30 0 A PM * :30 C PM :39 ® 6 39 El Tesoro Noticiero Primavera ft PM 7 PM1 :3B 83 Nombre Es Retorno de Diana Coraje Q PM :3B 51 Noticiero Generaciones Noticias Mala 1 0 M 1 1 3 Noche. No Movie: Mas Alia 1 2 £ Regis Philbin MarketLme It Figures Mom Works Nurse Attitudes Mom Day Baby Knows Wok with Hollvwd Eve TBA Easy St Attitudes Movie: Mafia Princess Cover Up E R . Easv St. Cagney and Lacey Movie: 11th Victim . . FNNBRAV m Let s Travel Morning Momma MarketWatch A M Midday Market Rpt News Issues MarketWatch Consumer MarketWatch Wall St. Countdown MarketWrap Wall Street Final Americas Business Movie: Angry Harvest . . ARTS CB Bluebell Spyship Movie: Day After the Fair Great Detective Golden Age Variety Travel Survival Wld Movie: Hollow Triumph Soloflex Great Detective Golden Age Com Brk Dining Survival Wld 20th Century Sea Victory Movie. Escape Movie: 500 Pound Jerk Movie: Man Saw Tomorrow Smart Kids Movie: Living Daylights " Movie: Showcase Control Encyclopedia Suoermom s ( 1 5 ) Sky s No Limit ■ Inside N F L (Cont) SprtsCntr Windsurfing Aussie Football Get Fit Workout Motion Bdvshap a Mtrwk III Off Road Racing NASCAR Grand Natl PGA Tour Senior PGA Golf SprtsLk Run & Race SprtsCntr Top Rank Boxing . - Movie: House Starshot N F L Moments Sexploration Movie: House 2: 2nd Story . The Improv On Location Horse Rac g SortsCntr 20th Century Sea Victory Movie: Escape Movie: Living Daylights (25) Australian Centerfold! Movie: Malombra II Her Sweetest Dream Movie: Run, Virgin, Run Heart of Dragon Ape and Superape Portraits Camera Lost Kingdom Into India Equinox Prof. Nature Noah s Ark Generation to Gen. H .M .S . Pandora Wild Refuoe FutureScan Monitor Africa Focus 1930s 1930s American Century World Alive Desert Trio Wild Orphans Wild Chron. Monitor Held Trust Evening News Explorers News Stan Getz Moghuls X T h t r o W t F c n I . p u o r G g n i t s i L V T e h T 8 8 9 1 Movie: More Than a Miracle Kids Make Film s You&Me Movie: Mannequin Movie: Action Hunters My 17th Summer Movie. Mark Twain Kina s Road Movie: A Christmas Story Gleason! Movie: Mannequin Cmdv Boys Dave Movie: Nightmare 3 1:45) Nana Disnev Presents Ozzie Movie: Colour in the Creek : Pooh Dumbo Superman Donald Videopolis Special Any Friend of Nick Movie: A Friendship in Vienna Movie: Cinderella Animals Ozzie Movie: Flower Drum Song T Zone Traooer John. Cagney and Lacey M .D . s: How to Be Popular Or. Ruth Easv St Invest. Advisory Movie: Menage Harvest T O P R A M B O X IN G From Atlantic City (L) M O V IE M A LO M BR A H (19 6 4) Paola Brychta. Oppressed Czechs flee the iron grip of Stalin only to encounter betrayal and tragedy over the border in Germany NR • • Senatore. Maunce Poli. Greed, deception, lust, betrayal, sex and more sex color this titillating drama of a wealthy Italian landowner's turgid marriage. NR' • IIA M M C R IT H N 'S C M O E R E L L A (1965) Lesley Ann Warren. Stuart Damon. This version of the classic children's tale of a poor girl who falls in love with a prince marked Miss Warren s professional debut, at the age of 1 7 . NR W W W M O V IE R O O G ER S A N O 0 :9 0 p m • • J U S T T H E T E N O F U S On his first day of school • and his dad's first day on the job - J.R tells an incredible fib about his father in order to win friends. (R) □ • • • her parents' lives as ordinary and routine as compared to the romantic poetry she's been • N EW C O U N TR Y D O N N A R E M A Night to Howl. Mary views W A L L S 1 Ü E T W EEK M & r tE H O U S E K : T H E S EC O N O S T O R Y Arye • Gross. Jonathon Stark. A large old stone house seems the perfect escape for peace and quiet. But the only escape this old home will provide is • Rules Football Sexploration Centerfold! - * to another time and dimension P G13 Q C O M EO Y C LU B N ETW O R K (19 8 7) This • unique, short form showcase spotlights up and coming stand up comics performing m clubs around the nation. NR' 9 :0 0 p m • 2 9 / 2 0 □ • C A N A D A : T R U E N O R TH This program NO TIC IER O UNIVISION W W W U M O VIE P LA T O O N (19 86) Tom • • Records the observations of 21 writers dispatched to different locales throughout Canada to observe regional and cultural differences NR □ • • Berenger, Willem Dafoe The day to day fight for survival of a platoon during jungle warfare m Vietnam as told through the eyes of a college dropout R' □ CROOK A N O C H ASE • D AR K R O O M • S A T U R O A Y N IG HT U V E • NEW S • • STAN G E T Z (19 64) The extraordinary tones of Stan Getz's tenor saxophone ring out across the Northern California wine country in this swinging jazz concert • splendor of the Moghul Dynasties • T H E B O Y S (1988) Jackie Gayle, Norm Crosby When a men's d ub needs a financial n M O G H U LS In the Garden of Delight. The shot in the arm, the older members set out to revive the club by recruiting some new members NR • P O R TR AIT O F AM ERIC A Alaska 9 :2 0 p m 9 :3 0 p m S EC O N O CITY TV T R ES G EN ER A C IO N ES Carmen Monteio, • Angelica Maria De Mexico O V I O E O C O U N T R Y • O H E R S W EETES T D R EAM S A look at the erotic fantasies of a group of sensuous women who star in five separate scenarios each told from the women s point of view NR • S U P E R D AVE (19 8 7) Super Dave Osborne goes on his own to continue his hilarious quest for truth. |ustice and the American way. 'N R ' Q • the variety of animal feet and their uses. A N IM A LS IN ACTION Legs and Feet Explore 10:00 pm • NEW S M U M O Y ER S ' W O R LD O F ID EA S (1988) ( £ • • • • T W I L I G H T Z O N E • • • • As the Presidential election draws closer. Bill Moyers talks with people from all walks of American life to discuss the choices our nation faces NR • • NOTICIAS Reportaje Olímpico * * * V k M OVIE BUS S TO P (1956) • • D .C . V M M M R E V K w □ WWW M O V IE U PTO W N S A T U R D A Y M R . K L V E O E R E Heather and Wesley • V B E O S O U L Host Donnie Simpson counts • arrive in Atlantic City, unaware that George and Marsha are in the same hotel; Mr. B and Kevin hitch a ride with Robert Goulet. (RI D • N N M T (19 74) Sidney Poitier. Bill Cosby Two working man attempt to recover a stolen lottery ticket from the Mack underworld after they were ripped off at an after hours gambling joint. P G ’ • • down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars • Salvador Pineda. Novela de Argentina • w w w M O V * M U R D E R . IN C. (1960) Stuart Whitman. May Britt. Chillingly details the most explosive crime era in history when the syndicate dished out murder on contract. NR' M Y T H R E E S O N S Par For the Course • Robbie decides to take up Stave's favorite sport to get back in his good graces • Armstrong, Max Gail An Iowa news anchorwoman is nearly shattered when her youngsr sister, an aspiring actress in Hollywood, becomes the 1 1th victim of a murderer. NR N H O M BRE E S C O R A JE Andres Garcia. w w M OW S 1 1T H W C T M (1979) Bess C EN T U R Y The Pursuit of (1967) Shaun Scott, Edita AuatnMaa Rule* Football ESPN (Cable 43) 9 a.m . You don’t need caffeine to wake up for that sleeper of a 9:30 a.m. class. Hell, you don't even need to go class. Give yourself over to the dark side. Stay home and watch a bunch of manly Australian football players with no regard for their physical health pummel each other over a ball. It’s invigorating to watch, and you’ll probably get to hear some of their accent, too. Oh yeah, pop open an oilcan of Foster’s while you’re at it. That next class isn’t until 11 a.m. — Keren Adams 7:00 pm • * i f NO W Livingston Taylor H O M E H E A T (1967) B u t Reynolds. P ER FEC T S T R A N G ER S Balki is convinced H O M E S U P ER H A S T • M A C H E */ LE H R E R N IW S H O U R m s » ■; m slack b ite rta jn m ín t • ® B EA U T Y A N O T H i H A S T Father s nemesis returns to wreak vengeance on Father and Vincent by kidnapping Catherine and taking her to his hellish lair, below Tunnel World (R) • Larry is going to die after a newspaper psychic borrows Larry's pen and makes some bizarre predictions about its owner (R) □ m O A T E A M • • m a EX T R A Ñ O R ET O R N O D E D IA N A S A L A ZA R Lucia Mendez, Jorge Martinez Novela de Mexico • Karen Young. He's a deadly private eye ... a down on tvs tuck gambler who s got a score to settle with the mob. R ’ • • 0 M R . E D Ed in the Peace Corps Ed is frustrated when Wilbur hires a secretary, a young Japanese exchange student, whose ever-present efficiency cramps Ed's style C A G N EY A N D LA C E Y • • H O M E A N G R Y H A R V ES T (1965) Armin MuNer-Staht. Elisabeth Trtssenaar Based on a true story, a Polish farmer protacts a Jewish woman during the Nazi occupation. His protaction turns into a perverse type of imprisonment. N R ' • future of the colonies. • The events that led up to the ultimate tragic invasion of Austria. V% H O W E H O U S E (1966) Wkkam Katt, • Georgs Wendt. Following his aunt's suicide, a bast selling author moves beck to the house in which he grew up and becomes terrorized by manaong. unearthly beings. R' □ • Teams (R) m wor n O N S E X : S C X PLO R A TM M • Vh H O W E M A H N 0 U M (1967) Andrew McCarthy. Kim CattraD The Ida of a romantic window dresser is forever changad when one of hts beautiful mannequins comes to vibrant sexy Me. PG ' Q T H E T W E N T N m t C EN T U R Y Walter Craniate T H E I S M The Dawn of Tomorrow. The S G R U T E S T O N Best-Evar 7:90 pm • F U L L H O U S E To earn extra money for a ¿ H A G U E A N D C O M P A N Y M m O W E T H E M M P romises. Promises. Tradition • demo record, Jesse moonlights as Elvis look-alike; Danny seethes when Joey forgets to repay money he borrowed years ago. (R) Q • • • and the promises of progress. • south as the Allies invade North Africa to chsNsngs the waiting i • P L A Y B O Y V IO E O I mm (1967) Tanns phenomenon Ly m e Austin heats up the beach as only shs can do it! Featuring a jet ski ride and s steamy summer night. ‘N R Germans. N R ' ____ C EN T E R F O L D : L Y N N E V IC T O R Y A T S E A (1956) The fleet turns (1967) Tannsd and tawny Florida G40pm l M Q t StMwek " C M F R W U T N O M E i Lynda Carter. Angie OicMnaen. Orama of suspenas, romance and the occult tangled amid We poem and potties of Wo nation's capAoi. g 26 IMAGES September 19,1988 Austin City Limits PBS (Ch. 18, Cable 9) 7 p.m. Yeah, I know the Fabulous Thun- derbirds have been putting out some pretty lame stuff lately, but this epi­ sode of Austin City Limits was filmed before they really started going downhill. Believe it or not, Jimmie Vaughan actually plays his guitar! Kim Wilson’s harmonica playing is impressive, too. The real reason to watch this show is Omar & the Howlers. Play­ ing after the T-Birds, Omar growls his way through a mean, Austin- style blues set. He knows how the guitar was meant to be played — nasty. Check it out before you go party tonight. — Lee “Woody” Nichols 7:00 pm 0 ® FIRST IMPRESSIONS Dave has second thoughts about running against a corrupt city councilman when a campaign consultant discovers a few facts in Dave s background 0 0 WHO'S THE BOSS? Tony invites Mason to move in after he gets kicked out of his dorm during finals week. But when Samantha finds herself attracted to him, sparks fly. Q 0 4 MOVIE GRAYEAGLE (1978) Ben Johnson. Iron Eyes Cody Mountaineer searches for daughter kidnapped by Indians. O 0 AUSTIN CITY LIMITS (1987) The Fabulous Thunderbirds perform Tuff Enough, Wrap It Up. and Why Get Up. Omar and the Howlers add their own style of blues. 0 VIOEO SOUL Host Donnie Simpson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars. 0 *Vk MOVIE SPRING BREAK (1983) David Knell. Perry Lang. Four red blooded young men take off for romantic escapades, fun in the sun and cutting loose in Fort Lauderdale. R' 0 GRAND OLE OPRY UVE BACKSTAGE 0 MR. ED Ed Gets the Mumps. Ed feels neglected when the Posts and Kirkwoods look after a neighbor's baby; so he comes down with self-inflicted mumps. 0 HESS (1986) Michael Burrell. This searing one man teleplay about the arrogant Nazi Rudolf Hess gives a piercing insight into the ideas and beliefs that warped an entire nation. 0 MILES TO GO. PART 2 All-female Outward Bound Expedition 0 LIVING DAN6ER0USLY The Story of Boxing. Marvelous Marvin Hagler, Sugar Ray Leonard and Boom Boom Mancini are in the ring for a blow by blow history of the fight game. 0 MOVIE NADINE (1987) Jeff Bridges. Kim Basinger A woman breaks into a con man's office to recover embarrassing photos and accidentally witnesses a murder and turns to her estranged husband for help. 'PG' □ 0 PLAYBOY’S CANDIO CAMERA 0 * * MOVIE ADVENTURES IN BABYSITTING (1987) Elisabeth Shue, Keith Coogan. An S O S call from a stranded friend turns an ordinary night of babysitting into the adventure of a lifetime. 'PG13' Q 7:30 pm 0 ® FRANK’S PLACE While his employees battle a newly installed sprinkler system, Frank considers an invitation to a men's club with a past he will soon learn about. (R) 0 0 PERFECT STRANRERS Larry gets jealous when he discovers Balki and Jennifer sneaking around behind his back, but they only plan to surprise him with a new typewriter. (R) □ 0 GRANO OLE OPRY UVE 0 PATTY DUKE 0 EVERYTHING GOES: MILKMAN ANO THE HOUSEWIFE 8:00 pm 0Q D BOOYWATCMNG The parts of the body - what they say, how they’reused, what they imply and the uniqueness of each individual - will be explored. 0 0 ROONEY OANGERFIELD: ITS NOT EASY KM * ME (1962) Rodney Dangerfield is joined by stars Bill Murray, Valerie Pemne and Aretha Franklin in his role as the comedian who ’don't get no resoect.' □ KVUE KXAN KBVO KLRU BET MAX AMC NASH USA NICK 7 AM 1 30 8 S Q AM :30 3 KTBC e m Raggedy Ann Suoerman Muppet Babies Pee Wee Garfield Hey, Vern! Flip! i o A; 1 1 * * Mighty Storybreak Alice Bob Uecker Sport Legen Collet Football Beany. Ceci Winnie the Pooh Real Ghosttiusters Scoobv Doo Bugs and Tweety Crack Ups Sav No Soc Fact of Lif Movie: Ouiller Memorandum Kissvfur Gummi Bears ALF Chipmunks D Summer Olympics (:15) NBC Baseball Game of the Week - Fish West Fish q Texa 1 Love Lucy Hillbillies D. Van Dyke Burnett Matt Houston Rockford Files Porno in America Movie. Shuttered Room 1 2 m30 4 PM 1 30 9 PM 1 30 0 PM 0 30 4 «« H 30 c PM 5 30 1 C D 7 PM 1 30 Q PM ® 30 Q PM 3 30 8 1 0 m 1 1 PM 1 1 :30 4 9 AM ,L 30 Col Football „ „ „ Summer Olympic Games Movie: Thunder in the Sun • Knight Rider Mtrwk This is NFL CBS News News Chas Chara Impressions Frank's PI. Bodywatchm 9 West 57th News Embarrassm Movie Stoolie " News Eves of TX Who s Boss7 Stranaers Rodney Dangerfield Garry Shandling News Friday the 13th Movie Von Ryan's Express News Summer Olympic Games * Star Trek: Next G. Movie Grayeagle „ » Maior League Baseball News Summer Olympic Games Sign Off " * Gov't Survey (05) TBS • C05) Bonanza National Geographic Explorer (05) Wrestling Munsters Colleoe Football Andy Beaver H billy Hooan Wrestling (:35) Maior League Baseball (20) Push Pro Basketball Classic (:35) Tracks (35) Trac Bus. File New Literacy American Adv Economics Human Behavior Economics Victory Gdn Yan Can Coo So Cooking Gourmet Joy of Pain W. Alexande Made in TX Degrassi Ramona Austin City Limits Metropolita n Opera Presents Summer Night Music Infinite Voyage Sign Off (6:30) Spc Program Video Soul Movie: (Cont) Mov Show * Video LP Soc Proora Sports Rpt Favorite Brunette Movie: Dirtv Dozen " Financial Freedom Marriage Discover Beautiful Proiine Diet Outlook Rockfile Gardener Joy Gdn Remodeling Kitchen Wish You Side Outdoors CntrvWk Peabody Alley Live CountryClips Movie Night Insider C Story Pro Boxing Movie: Stranger Movie Rachel Special Programmm Movie: 9 Western Union Movie: Absence of Malice Special Programmm g Movie: Subject Was Special Programmm g News Video Soul Movie: Roses Spring Break * Movie Extreme Prejudice ( 50) Dirty Dozen Sports Report Pro Boxing Midnight Love Spc Program Movie: Plainsman Remodeling Kitchen Wish You Side Movie: Smoky Movie Younq Warriors Movie Gentleman s Agreement Outdoors CntrvWk Peabody Alley Live Kitchen Rock Opry Oory Live Peabody Alley Live Kitchen Wish You Cntry Wk Rock Opry Oorv Live Country Clips Movie: Gentleman Agreem’t Movie Plainsman Movie Rachel Fiend . Cartoon Express Trouble Check it Airwotf Hitchcock Professional Tennis Night Flight * * « * . . FN N BR A V K H S C O V E I ! A R T S HBO P U T SH O W U N I m Remi Maauma Centella Tesoro El Tesoro Conan Movie: El Pistolero de Dios Pobrecito 7 AM1 30 s * ; Q AM 3 30 1 0 * ; 1 1 * 12 £ Lo Mejor Mid Ohio Car Race 4 PM ' 30 9 PM A 30 3 S Chesoirito Tu Música Topo Gigio Noticiero Sabado Gigante C PM ® 36 7 PM * :3B Q PM ® 30 Q PM 3 :3B Tu Música Noticiero Movte: Vuelven los Garcia 1 0 m 1 1 2 C M 1 * W G N Farm Report World Charlando Peoole Min Bus T & T Soul Train College Football ■ - Movie Some Kind of Miracle Bustin Chas Chro Living Mom Fam Baseball News Hogan Movie: Warpath U F E m Invest. Advisory Invest. Advisory Creative W Watch Mom Day Babv Knows Mom Works Attitudes Previews Foley Sq Easv St. Cagney and Lacey MacGruder and Loud Movie: Who Wouldn t Die Travel Movie: Prototype * Partners in Crime Cagney and Lacey Lady Blue Dr. Ruth Previews Invest Advisory Movie Nadine SpoAm Odyssey Co of Adventurers World Alive Desert Tno Seasons N America Animal Aliens Niagara Rendezvous Diamonds m Sky Breakthrough Questors Trek About Movie Cat Ballou * Inside NFL Ourselves Survival Wld Triumph of West Journey Photo World Hollywood Movie: Escape Movie Mr. Mom * Shortstones Movie A Fine Mess Movie: Naming the Names America Undercover Movie What's Up, Doc? Attractions fjjlpvie: B« Shots Movie: Nadme Kick Boxing Beat the Pro Pro Line College Football Hess Vaclav Neumann Variety Travel Vanity Fair CO: Rapid River Jane Eyre Survival Wld Circuit. Part 1 Secrets Live Miles to Go, Dangerously Pt 2 You Australia Shortstones E S P N I B Outdr Life Sansua,,. Fishm Mtrwk III Pulling Act n Cycle SDftsCntr Auto Racma Senior PGA Golf Golf College Football College Football • * . (5 00) Sign Off Mickeyf Movie: AR the Brothers Were Valiant Donald £ ]£ !& _____ Movie Million Dollar Mermaid Movie Adventures m Babysitting Realty Rosie Movie; Evil Under the Sun Movie: Streets of Justice urn.______ PiCk-Up Artist Movie: Adventures m Babysitting Movie: Can. Camera Ethmo Goes Movie: Three Daughters In the Wild Wild Cinema Movie: Package Tour Animal WM Animal Wld Ape and Superape Mognuis Movie: Desert Hearts Hitchhiker Comedy Hour Live BAáMJkA- klatC NGrni. NnN Marple, pt. «iiaKoiéAn MOuniDiuBn Movie: A Fine College Scoreboard SprtsCntr Mess Livt Dangerously Shortstones (:35) Postman Ring Twice IHRADrao Racing Surf Mao E Booster - Party Jokes Movie ¿Ü Ü & B____ Movie: Man s Fantasy Can Camera E thmo Goes Stewardess (:S0) Bom in East LA Elephant Wizard Dennis Looney Tune Nick Rocks Can ton TV Don’t Sit Kid s Court Double Dare Gadoet Lassie Zoo Family Family Robmson Movie: Fabulous Baron Keepers Wizard Dennis Kid s Court Looney Tune Gadget Duckuli Mr Ed Patty Duke My 3 Sons Donna Reed Sat. Night Second City Laugh In Car 54 Mad Movies Lancelot MakeRm Smothers Br DISNEY • S fiO tt_____ Movie Prof Popper J& 2 SX______ Animation 2qrro Movie Auntie Marne * ÍX2Ü______ Robmson Movie: Mv Dog. the Thief Superman Boomer KAateÁAimuiNi unoergraos - * • Superman II Movie: Bus Stop . Legend of Marilyn X T h t r o W Ft c n I p u o < G g n i t u l TV e h T M 9 1 C Pistolero de SCTV Hess 0 0 METROPOLITAN OPERA PRESENTS (1988) Celebrated tenor Luciano Pavarotti and pianist James Levine, artistic director of The Met, perform a program of works by Mozart, Bellini and others. NR' 0 PEABOOY ALLEY UVE Concert featuring the Sweethearts of the Rodeo and New Grass Revival. 0 MY THREE SONS Windfall. Chip comes to the rescue of a trapped dog and receives a reward, which leads to newfound popularity with his club members. 0 PARTNERS IN CRIME 0 VACLAV NEUMANN CONOUCTS THE CZECH PHILHARMONIC (1966) Conductor Vaclav Neumann leads the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra in magnificent renditions of Fucik, Dvorak and Janacek at the Smetana Seal in Prague. NR' 0 YOU AUSTRALIA The Endless Desert. Australia's Northern Territory. 0 SHORTSTOAKS Early marriage yields a bittersweet harvest in an Australian Summer. A photographer can't elude his mysterious subject in La Femme de Papier. 0 MOVIE THREE DAUGHTERS (1907) Siobhan Hunter. Gloria Leonard. Two older girts help thee younger sister with love and support as she finds her own sexual identity. NR' i SUPERMAN N (1980! Christopher Reeve, Margot Kidder. The man of steel battles three convicts from In s homeland, after an H-Bomb releases them from their prison, and they try to rule the Earth. PG 8:30 pm 0 WWW MOVIE RACHEL ANO THE STRANGER (1948) Loretta Young. William Holden A man's love for his wife is first aroused when a stranger visits their home NR' 0 DONNA RED The Editorial. Jeff instigates a homework revolt to protest the censorship of his article in the school paper and his dismissal from the editorial staff. 0 MTCHMKBt: FACE TO FACE 960 pm 0 ® WEST 57TH John Ferrugia. Meredith Vieira. CBS News primetime magazine. 0 0 GARRY SNANOUNG ALONE IN VEGAS Garry Shandling is a lonely, single guy who invites his audience to gMaring Las Vegas for his stand-up comedy show based on his own experiences. NR' □ 0 O MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Houston Astros vs San Diego Padres (L) REPORT (1987) Nick Nolle. Powers Boothe. A Texas Rmger searches for his girlfriend who has been kidnapped and taken to Mexico by his pal, now a ruthless cocaine dealer. 'R' □ 0 COUNTRY HTCHBI 0 SATURDAY NNNT LIVE 0 CAGNEY ANO LACEY The Grandest Jewel Thief of All Time * * * * • 0 M THE WHO WITH HARRY BUTLER A Delicate Balance The world of thedesert 0 HOME BBSS MARPLE: THE MOVWB FBtGER. PART 2 Joan Hickson. Suspects pile up alongside dead bodies until Miss Marple puts the finger on the culprit. Conclusion of a two part mystery. NR' 0 COMEDY HOUR UVE: TAKE NO PMSONOIS (1987) Once was not enough! Outrageous Robert pljlilpiB Townsend is back, but this time he's (omed by some of his hilarious partners in crime for an evening of fun. 'NR' □ 0 COLLEGE FOOTBALL 8C0REB0AR0 (L) 0 COMEDY 8P0TU0NT’ BAYNE BOOSIIR, —i W M M S W S ■— l(R)_ 0 TU| 0 WMN YOU M ÉE HERE 0 SECOND OTY TV m B 0 HOME PACKAGE TOUR (1964) A group of elderly pensioners emberk on a sightseeing tour They are Auschwitz survivors revisiting the scenes of their persecution NR 0 VHLDUFE C SfüA Animals in Armor. Eight species of turtles 1060 pm bB bBbbSbBb s a a a g i___ Reportaje IR E I Okmpico (1966) Don Murray. Guy Stockwell. Classic western features historical characters such as WUd Bill tickok. Buffalo BM Cody and Calamity Jane. NR’ 0 TNM WEEK M COUNTRY MUSIC 0 MONT FLIGHT 0 LAUGH M 0NO GAirS HEROES 0 LADY BLUE 0 M W AMMAL WORLD Mwoka Wkdkfe Cottage 0M UNTIATTEN: THESOLMER AND THE STATESBMNAs Germany surrenders munamm snmos noovn tno wvnv w int (1986) Ted Danaon, Howie Mendel. PARTY OF ONE (1986) Critically acdwmed WsmM performer Elayne Booster brings her unique brand of riotous, acerbic comedy to the forefront in this hilarious showcase. NR' fcaopm 0 PUSH PRO BASKETBALL CLASSIC ¡jpp» 0 0 BUMMER MONT MUSIC (1968) Examine ■ ■ ■ the rich and enduring expressions of a nag Amtncan mmomy - mt ptopw or mt unman KTBC KVUE KXAN KBVO KLRU TBS BET MAX AMC NASH USA NICK September 19.1988 IMAGES 27 You Caa*t Do That oa Tfkvitior Nlckdodeoa (Cable 18) 9:30 a.m. Yeah, right. The fact that a show with a title like that is oo a children’s network should be a dead giveaway that it probably doesn’t deliver what it promises. Now, if this were on the Playboy Channel or — better yet — on vi­ deotape ... Besides, who in the hell gets up at 9:30 a.m. on Sunday anyway? — Martin "Watchdog” Wagner 7:00 pm • (D MUROCR, SMC WROTE Jessica and murder are two unlikely attendees at a Canadian rodeo, when Jessica makes an unannounced visit to her niece (Kristy McNichol) (R) Q • « W H O ’S THE BOSS? Tony reunites with his do-wop singing group, The Dreamt ones, for one tost concert to ruse money for his old high school. (R) □ • a U S MOOT WANTED « « CENTRAL TEXAS QAM NBI 0 EVER INCREASING FAITH 0 HOWE MAOC M HEAVEN (1967) Timothy Hutton. Kelly McGillis. Two souls meet m heaven and fail in love and are given only 30 years to find each other on Earth. PG Q « MR. ED Ed s Dentist. When Ed complains of a toothache, the Vet comes to give him a shot tor pain. But Ed disappears when he gets a look It Tn6 H6KW. « STB1AR AWARDS Gospel Music Awards « n m 0 * * * MOV* THE AMERICAN FWBIO (1977) Dennis Hopper, Bruno Ganz. A man. decawed into believing he is about to die. is lured into committing a munJer by a mysterious man. 'NR' ■ space nrrrwnict « THE S H A M E CASE OP YINQO MMNMM Startling expose of Japan's post war author, miktanst. nationalist, and narcissist Matwma is revealed through interviews and readings of his INS' JOURNAL UPDATE « WWW MOIRE LETHAL WEAPON (1987) Mel Gibson, Danny Glover. Two tough cops. One carries a weapon, the other is one! It these guys can just stand each other, the crooks don't stand a chance R □ « PIA1 SHORT STORIES ¿0 « W WW MOIRE STAKEOUT (1987) Richard Dreyfuss, Emilio Estevez Two wisecracking cops go undercover to spy on the gorgeous girttoend of an escaped killer. It's a tough |ob, but somebody’s got to do it. *R‘ p « NFL SCRAPBOOK Had to the Redskins 7:18 pm 7 3 0 pm E M In a dream, 40 « « PERFECT STM years have passed and Larry's apartment is a shrine to Jennifer, the love he lost because he never told her he wanted her to stay. (R) Q « « MARRIED...WITH CHILDREN When Peggy and Marcy go to a male exotic dance club, Marcy loses her wedding ring down Zorro the Great's pants (R) □ 0 PATTY DUKE 0 ANTIQUE CARS: THE WHITE POST STORY 0 HOWE M LOVE (1983) Kelly Nichols. Jerry Butler. Two lovers, after a brief fling m the early sixties, spend the next twenty years trying to recapture their magical romance. ‘NR' CUP RACING ITON 8.*00 pm 0 CD MOVIE ‘ Diamond Trap’ CSS SIINOAY MOVIE (1988) Howard Hessaman, Brooke Shields Two New York City detectives investigate a S12 million dollar diamond heist The trad eventually leads them to London and the aid of Scotland Yard. 'NR' Q 00 * w « MOIRE 'Romancing the Stone* ABC SUNDAY MONT MOWE (1984) Kathleen V t M i • t k l l . M I v $ ,‘h Doubleheader Mind Power Hart to Hart NFL Football Bosch Grand Prix Summer | Olympic J. Sherill ■ ittoooia 88 Fall Guv Major ¡League Firing Line | McLaughlin McLaughlin ISpedad B Live from Lincoln Games Baseball Center J l PM | L a PM | :3S PM | 60 Minutes j a PM | j a 8 Murder. She Wrote Movie: Diamond PM | Trap j a 10 PM | JSL 11 PM | News Movie ABC News N9WS.. Mr Belveder Cadets _ Who s Boss? S irm fls r iB Movie: Romancing the Stone (:15) News C45) USA [15) Zorba. the Greek UNI IB WGN A Hoy y Manana (15) What News piS [Summer Olympic Games News Summer Olympic UFE Q World Written Invest Advisory Investment Cookma Cardiology Physicians Journal Hentaoe Shut In Mass Pooeve Visionaries Movie: Rawhide * Lead-Off Man Internal Baseball Ob/Gyn • 7 AM 1 3Q 8 * ; Q AM 3 30 Am Cultura Grande 10 SOebates Dias. 11 * 12 % Fútbol/Soccer Copa A PM 1 *31 o PM - a t t i ¡ 3 A * * * 30 Box 5 Z Uravtsion 6 Z Movie Las 7 ’ PM * -30 8 ™Siempre en Q PM3 -31 1 0 S - 11 1 12 M Para Gente Grande C 0 5 ) H ¡Baseball Programmin Chapter Two Soc. Program ^atch Sotn Victory ¡Temple Heaven Eart — y j L style Mag iGosoel Mao. Increasing Faith Bobby Jones Vintage Movie: Ryan's Daughter Movie: Made in Heaven Victory Temple Victory Temple Spc Program Movie: Morning After 45) A Prayer for the Dying Movie: Down to the Sea in Ships Movie: ¡Sitting Pretty Movie: Nite Wld Movie. Pad Movie: Games Movie: Down to the Sea ¡n Ships Outdr News Motoworld I American Sports ¡Cavalcade Winston Cup Performance Auto Mao Motoworld [Hidden Hero American Sports ¡Cavalcade | Winston Cup Motoworld Hidden Hero Outdoors Am Horse Mesquite Rodeo Performance A m e'can Sp- 1s Movie: Night of the Master of the Wrld Juggler Psst! Trouble Check It Riptide Airwolf Hollywood [Professional Tennis Baldness Kevs to Discover Conversate Cellulite Blueberry B Keepers A Special Gift Kid s Court Loonev Tune Gadget [Duckula Mr. Ed Paftv Duke My 3 Sons Donna Reed Sat. Night Second City Laugh In Car 54 Stock Marke Kevs to Self Spc Program Movie Sit 50) Stoo (:05)Gome (.35) Beav (-05) [Wrestling Movie: Pony Express National ¡Geographic Explorer Front Row Center TX Gardner Infinite ¡Voyage Sword I lOnhded 21 Jump Street Am Wanted M g r g d K Shandling B uilman Duet— ICNN Headlin Star Trek: Next G. Mamas Its a Livm CNN Butterflies Sojs___ Yes Mmiste Pon t Wait Sign Off All Fam iSIDL Faiwell World Fund FNNBRAV DISCOVEf ARTS ESPN PLAY SHOW DISNEY — ffi___ 5:00) Sign Off Movie: Bird Sings Challenge Movie: Cause Movie: Over IB ..... 20th Century Between James at 16 FutureScan Breakthrough Bill Moyers Pacific Mountbatten To Survival M ijo o r CO: Rapid River Sporting Life Odyssey Killer Bees Animal Aliens Wines Tr l$le$ Space Exp Antigiff pars Olympic Experience Pravda Global Village American Century Niagara Creativity Nureyev: An Evening with the Royal Ballet Handmade Fashion The Changing West Our Century Living Dangerously Case of Mishima Vanity Fair Jane Evre Milsap Celebrates Btockadder 3 Work o Stiff Case of Mishima Vanity Fair Jane Eyre HBO IB _ Sawyer Movie: Charlotte s Web Movie: Sylvester : the Top Movie: Blind Oate Run Race n PGA Magic Yr LiteSide Sportraits Week in Sports SDortsCtr NASCAR Winston Cup - . Movie: Quick and the Dead Senior PGA Movie: RAD Golf - Horse Racing Movie: Three 0 Clock High (15) NFL Primetime Movie: Lethal Weapon " (15) NFL Scrapbk NFL Theatre Short Story Movie: In Love Movie: Platoon - ( 05) On Location (05) Meatballs NFL Primetime SportsCtr Plavmate Playoffs Durell Dreamgirls Dr, Yes Distant Replay NFL Moments Short Story X T h t r o W t F c n I p u o r G g n i t s i L V T e h T 8 8 9 1 Mickey! Wuzzles Donald Raccoon Movie: Gullivers Travels Grimm s Zorro Movie; Those Calloways 35) Santiago Movie: Mr Mom Movie: Heaven Can Wait Movie: Man, Woman and Child ■ Hadleyburg Movie Fifth Missile Movie Benii the Hunted Movie: Mr. Mom Movie Stakeout Bishop Tutu Movie Down Twisted Dinosaurs Danger Animals Movie; Hot Millions - Bernice Bobs Hair Lawrencevill e Movie: Boys of Summer Movie Those Calloways * - * * 0 0 BY THE SWORD DIVIDED 0 VICTORY TEMPLE 0 ww MOVIE THE MORNING AFTER (1986) Jane Fonda, Jeff Bridges. A washed up alcoholic actress awakens to find herself in bed with a dead man, brutally murdered in his own apartment Did she do it7 R Q 0 CELEBRITY 0UT000RS 0 SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE 0 NEWS 0 OB/GYN UPOATE 0 PRAVOA 0 RONNIE MILSAP IN CELEBRATION Country superstar is |0ined by Ray Charles, Glen Campbell, Gladys Knight and Leon Russell for a hip concert of pop and country hits from Nashville 0 wwww MOVIE PLATOON (1986) Tom Berenger, Willem Dafoe. The day to day fight for survival of a platoon during jungle warfare in Vietnam as told through the eyes of a college dropout R □ 0 NFL PRIMETIME (R) 0 FREE THE CHILDREN: THE BISHOP TUTU PEACE CONCERT Quincy Jones. Eddie Murphy. Relive highlights from one of the world s greatest concerts featuring dozens of music acts resolved to raising funds for South African children. 0 THE LAWRENCEVILLE STORIES: BEGINNING In Love Tin Men OF THE FIRM (1988) Edward Herrmann, Zack Galligan Hickey and best friend, Doc Macnooder, agree that they must join forces with The Shad and the 3 develop a scheme to sell restorer to other students. NR 9:30 pm 0 0 CNN HEADLINES NEWS 0 AMERICA’S HORSE 0 SECOND CITY LIVE 0 FAMILY MEDICINE UPOATE 0 AMERICAN BALLET THEATRE AT THE MET (1984) Mikhail Baryshnikov, Marianne Tcherkassky Celebration of classical masterworks danced by the company s major stars Among the works presented are Les Sylphides , Sylvia', and Triad 0 PLAYMATE PLAYOFFS: THE CHALLENGE CUP Playmates meet for spectacular events in this world series of wild, sexy competition Hosts Chuck McCann and Playmate Vicki McCarty NR 10:00 pm 0 (D NEWS 0 0 STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION NR' O ® BUTTERFLIES 0 ALL IN THE FAMILY Hot Watch 0 VICTORY TEMPLE 0 ★** MOVIE DOWN TO THE SEA IN SHIPS Physicians Journal Internal Heart Attack Ob/Gvn Internal Fight AIDS Family Med Physicians Journal Cardiology Powerboat Racing Perfect Diet Sports Forum Sotoftex Svbervision Movie: American Friend Movie: Magic of Lassie Stellar Awards News Ob/Gyn Darfcside Orthopedic Ballet Theatre at Physicians the Met Justine Invest Earth 0 CARDIOLOGY UPOATE 0 THE OLYMPIC EXPERIENCE 0 VANITY FAM When her social climbing hits a dead end, Becky throws herself into her life as a governess 0 NFL THEATRE Fantastic Finishes 0 BERNICE BOBS HER HAIR (1977) Shelley Duvall, Bud Cort. A homely girl is taught by her cousin to use her natural beauty, but when this attracts the boys, her jealous cousin convinces her to bob' her hair NR' 8:30 pm 0 O TRACEY ULLMAN SHOW Francesca calls a boy she likes, sets up a date with him, then dumps him for being too forward; Dr. Gibson reassures his Psych professor (R) 0 HIOOEN HEROES 0 DONNA REED The Gentle Dew. Annoyed by a drop in his children's school grades, Alex Stone decides they need more discipline. 0 INTERNAL MEDICINE UPOATE 0 JANE EYRE Zelah Clarke. Timothy Dalton. Her tragic and lonely childhood prepares Jane for her new and difficult life as a governess of Thomfield. A love story of a plain girl. 9 3 0 pm 0 O DUET Behaving turnabout is fair play. Laura leaves Ben to his former girlfriend and rekindles a romance with an old flame. (R) <• ' , > v *i » ’ v Turner. Michael Douglas. A timid female novelist meets up with a tungie adventurer in the wilds of Colombia, and the two face smugglers, hidden fortunes and wild animals. PG' □ 0 0 ITS GARRY SHANOUNG? SHOW Anjekca cannot cope with Garry and the studio audience; according to Chuck Wootory's advice, she decides to move out (R) 0 0 THE INFINITE VOYAGE Delve into the development of human intelligence and how cells, electrical signals and chemicals compose the awesome and creative mind of man. □ 0 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EXPlORERThe best films in scientific, natural history, travel, adventure and historical documentaries 0 B008V JONES GOSPEL Grammy Award Winner Bobby Jones present the best m urban contemporary gospel 0 SIEMPRE EN DOMINGO Raul Velasco con artistas internacionales diferentes cada semana en vivo vía satélite desde Mexico 0 WWW MOVIE GAMES (1967) Simone Signoret. James Caan Young marrieds. bored with life, devote their time to the pursuit of games, until a woman of mystery moves in on them and the game becomes murder NR' 0 MOTOWORLD 0 MY THREE SONS Top Secret When Steve is handed a top secret assignment, Bub is beside himself with curiosity m s z El Béisbol Put on Hits 28 IMAGES September 19,1988 tfyo d *ifu A T i 'po otfaii U.T. SHOP Qi9D rss U.T. T-SHIRTS • variety of styles 6700 MIDDLE F1SKVILLE RD 9 AM-10 PM MON-SAT, 12-6 PM SUN WAL-MART‘S ADVERTISED MERCHANOME POUCV—It is oof intention to have avery advertised item in stock Howsvsr, it duo to any untor s w n rM son. an advertised item is not available tor porchaaa. W atM art wN aaua a Ram Chack on raquast. tor the merchandise to ba purchased at the sale prica whenever available. or «nil sat) you a sim ilar aam at a comparable reduction m pnce We raaarva tha right to lim it quantities Lim itations void m New M swco 2T*xa* D i9 Q toT^teSf PORTABLE AIR HORN » 12 ox. RERLL 3.86 everyday MEDALLION CHIPS e Tortilla or nacho flavor e 1 pound e Reg. 1.14 and .97 AQUAFRESH TOOTHPASTE e 4.4.4.3,4.6 oz. e Kids, triple protection, or tarter control e Reg. 1.64 CHEX SNACK MIX 10 PK. PLASTIC HANGERS RIGHT GUARD DEODORANT a 10 az. spray a Regular, freeh, or uneoenled 12 PIC WASHCLOTH OR DISHCLOTH