^ 9 - t t £9. ZVCI ' / j t 3 uj *) w { T, x ° 9 d - j T W v T 1 3 • ' U h 3 n 3 0*a il y T e x a n Vol. 87, No. 160 2 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Monday, June 13,1988 25c Gramm stands back from Wright uproar By JOHN COUNCIL Daily Texan Staff HOUSTON — Prom inent R epub­ licans continued to blast U.S. H ouse Speaker Jim W right on Friday for al­ legedly unethical behavior, but Sen. Phil Gram m refrained from attack­ ing the speaker. The H ouse Ethics Com m ittee unanim ously voted Friday to begin an inquiry into six possible viola tions by the Fort W orth Democrat. Frank Fahrenkopf, chairm an of the Republican National C om m it­ tee, said in H ouston that the investi­ gation should be handled by an in­ dependent investigator outside the H ouse and partisan politics. "Speaker W right's position and the m agnitude of the charges call for an investigation that is beyond the scope and m eans of the Ethics C om ­ mittee and its staff," Fahrenkopf said. Also Friday, the platform com m it­ tee of the State Republican C onven­ tion adopted a resolution calling on the House to censure W right for his conduct. W right said Sunday in W ashing­ ton that the charges against him never w ould have been raised had the Republicans not needed som e­ thing to deflect the so-called sleaze issue from their presidential candi­ date, Vice President George Bush. "I have absolute confidence that the com m ittee will find that no rule of the H ouse has been violated," W right said. "I d o n 't think there's any question but that they're politi­ cally m otivated." The ethics com m ittee, consisting of 12 m em bers equally divided be­ tw een the two parties, chose to in­ vestigate W right about: ■ C ontacting Egyptian president A nwar Sadat on behalf of a friend and financial associate w hen the C am p David accords threatened the friend's M iddle East oil interests, ■ Intervening w ith federal offi­ cials on behalf of another Texas oil com pany that m ight have had some financial relationships to the speak­ er, ■ W hether W right's campaign fi­ nanced publication of a book for w hich the speaker earned $55,000 in royalties, ■ The use of a Capitol Hill staffer and office funds to help with the drafting of the book, and ■ The use of a Fort W orth con­ dom inium , ow ned by the family of a business partner, as his Texas hom e w ithout paying a m onthly rent. The com m ittee was silent on w hether it planned to hire an ou t­ side counsel to handle the case, as Republicans were dem anding. "I haven't done anything dishon­ est or illegal," W right said during back-to-back appearances on CBS- TV's Face the Nation and ABC-TV's This Week with David Brinkley. "I'm convinced I haven't violated any rules of the H ouse," W right said. Sen. Phil Gram m , R-Texas, said in H ouston Friday he was glad the H ouse com m ittee decided to inves­ tigate W right's conduct. "W e have an opportunity to hear to say," the speaker has w hat Gram m said. "W e have standards \ve set for public officials. They are high and tough — but reasonable," and W right should be presum ed inno­ cent, he said. "I would be the last person on earth to ever accuse him of not hav­ ing bad judgm ent, of not being w rong-headed," Gramm said. "I w ould have to say that, given my limited personal experience, that I d o n 't think Jim W right's a crook." Although he has been one of W right's harshest critics in the past, Gramm said his adversary's investi­ gation gives him no comfort. "I take absolutely no pleasure in anybody having problem s — least of all Texans," Gramm said. But Rep. Newt Gingrich, R- Georgia, wfio initiated the investi­ gation into W right's political busi­ ness dealings, was not as forgiving. "I think he is a m an w ho system ­ atically breaks rules in a way which makes it extremely dangerous to have (him) third-in-line to be presi­ d en t," Gingrich said during a visit to the Republican convention Fri­ day. Gingrich has a history of partici­ pating in the exposure of Capitol Hill scandals such as Abscam and sex scandals, he said. But he said his crusading " tra n ­ scends politics. "This is not a fun job — w hat I am doing is not easy and it's not pleas­ an t," he said. As the "sleaze factor" becomes more publicized in the presidential race, Gingrich said exposing one's opponent's w eakness is standard procedure. "It is perfectly legitimate in the political process to use any of your opp onen t's w eaknesses if it's effec­ tive," Gingrich said. Gramm said political ethics inves­ tigations of Wright and Attorney General Edwin Meese stand on the sideline to issues debates. "W hether you talk about Meese or W right, this is a side show ," Gramm said. "O nce we start getting the real com parisons of George Bush and Mike Dukakis — w hen we focus in on the issues — I think all these things will cease to be national issues." With wire reports. SWT controversy grows Resignation letter reportedly offered to Hardesty By JULIE BLASE Daily Texan Staff A Texas State University regent allegedly offered SWT President Robert H ardesty a pre-prepared letter of resignation before the board voted to fire him May 19 — and the action could result in criminal charges against the regents, an attorney said Friday. H ardesty said Friday that form er Chairm an Ruben Escobedo gave him a letter of resignation about 30 m in­ utes before the board voted to fire him at its May 19 m eeting. The letter had been typed on his office sta­ tionery, he said. H ardesty refused to sign the letter, and the board voted 5-4 to fire him. Two m em bers of the board, w ho asked not to be nam ed, said they knew of the letter. Susan M orrison, attorney for four SWT students who w ere granted a tem porary restraining order against the board's actions at that m eeting, said if the letter was prepared in advance of the m eeting, it could show "crim inal conspiracy" an d allow criminal prosecution of board m em bers u n d er the Texas O pen M eetings Act. W hen asked w hat had h ap pened to the letter, H ar­ desty said, "Escobedo took it back." Escobedo could not be reached for com m ent. M orrison said stud en ts are searching for inform ation pertaining to a possible secret m eeting before May 19 that could prove "som e kind of internal scheme to cir­ cum vent the O pen M eetings A ct." Jody D odd, one of the SWT students w ho filed for the tem porary restraining order against the board, said a district attorney w ould have to look at w hatever evi­ dence is available against the board and decide if it justifies a criminal complaint. "The letter is enough to establish prior intent," Dodd said. O n June 3, state District Judge Jon Wisser ruled the board violated the O pen M eetings Act because the agenda did not properly list the board's action against Hardesty. The ruling nullified all decisions m ade at that m eeting, and the board will m eet again M onday in Austin to reconsider them . The O pen M eetings Act requires governing bodies to post a detailed agenda of m eetings. The May 19 agenda listed only "executive session,” with no m ention of w hat would be discussed, for the private regents' m eet­ ing that preceded the 5-4 vote to fire Hardest}-’. In addition to firing H ardesty, the board also voted to dem olish an historic building on the SWT cam pus and to ban contraceptives from the health centers at SWT and the other three cam puses the board governs. The other cam puses are Sam H ouston State Universi­ ty in Huntsville, Angelo State University in San Angelo and Sul Ross State University in Alpine. After the decision, H ardesty said he was fired be­ cause of politics. Hardesty' is a friend and former speech writer for former Democratic Gov. Mark White. Three of the five board m em bers w ho voted to fire Hardesty were appointed by Republican Gov. Bill Clements. M orrison said any vote change at M onday7s meeting would be "d u e to politics.' "There's speculation that Clem ents has pushed for a tu rnaro und," she said. W hen asked about the M onday meeting, Hardest} said he would not com m ent on the regents' possible actions. "I'm president at the m om ent and I d like to remain president," he said. Jack Martin, current board chairm an, said he "w o u ld n 't w ant to speculate" about w hat will happen at the meeting. "We d o n 't w ant to be falsely accusing anyone, but the im plications go way beyond the decisions they m ade," she said. "If there is evidence of a conspiracy, we d o n 't w ant people like that running our board of regents." "M y personal preference would be to see Bob H ar­ desty continue as president of the university, but the most im portant thing is to resolve it in some fashion so we can get on about the business of running a system that includes four schools, Martin said. W e build excitem en t Ten-month-old Ashley Seoggin tries out the driver's seat on a scale-model Indianapolis 500 race car at the Malibu Grand Prix on North 1-35. Ashley s thony, put her in the car to take his own photograor Korean youths try to storm ruling party headquarters Associated P'ess SEOUL, South Korea — Waves of students veiling Revolution and hurling firebombs tried to storm the headquarters of the governing party Sunday during a funeral march tor a radical who committed ritual sui­ cide Thousands of not police firing volleys of tear cas fought off attack­ ing students and pursued them in running clashes through the center of Seoul. Protesters showered police with exploding firebombs that cov­ ered streets with blazing gasoline H undreds of people out tor walks choked and cned with pain when they were caught in clouds ot >ting- ing tear gas. "D ow n with the military' fas­ cists!" and Revolution of the m ass­ es!" the radicals screamed as they broke up sidewalk paving stones to hurl at police. The violence began when lü.tKX) students and sympathizers mar hed through the city with the coffin of Park Rae-chun, who died June h af­ ter setting himself on fire It was the third protest suicide by radical stu­ dents since May 15 Marchers armed with firebombs, rocks and clubs tried to attack the headquarters governing Democratic Justice Part}- but were blocked by not police in combat fa­ tigues and black helmets the of Protesters set fire to a police truck with firebombs and damaged the in­ formation office of the Japanese Em­ bassy with rocks. A number of po­ lice and students were hurt and some protesters were arrested, but no figures were available. Police reported the first death from the unrest A not trooper died Sundav after being injured in fight­ ing the dav before in the central city of Taejon The wave of student protests is the nation s worst political violence since ant.-gi v- m m e rr r 1987 • But unlike last sum,me- p ro -d e m o c T a c y Jem joyed wide supp* rt ” . - yelled slogans they passed the U.S. Information Service humi mc but there were no incidents The dead student belonged h faction seeking creation o f a r e o . tionarv government Republicans adopt English-first plank By SIVA VAIDHY ANATHAN Daily Texan Staff HOUSTON — The Texas Repub­ lican Party Friday adopted an "Eng­ lish First" plank to its 1988 platform despite opposition from Vice Presi­ dent George Bush and Gov. Bill Clements. The plank petitions the U.S. Con­ gress and the Legislature to consti­ tutionally establish English as the official language of both the United States and Texas. Fred Meyer, incoming chairman of the Texas Republican Party, said the resolution will "support the teaching of English to ensure that all citizens can share fully in the eco­ nomic and political activities of this state." "The surest protection of plural­ ism and cultural diversity in Texas is for our government to foster the similarities that unite us rather than the differences that separate us," the plank reads. But Bush said Thursday, "I don't think we need that kind of legisla­ tion. "I've long been a supporter of bi­ lingual education," he said. "I want to see our kids preserve their Hispanic culture, but I certainly want to see them all to speak Eng­ lish." Clements said in December 1987 the issue "brings on racial overtones and a dichotomy within our Texas people," but said Thursday opposi­ tion from the Hispanic community will not substantially harm Bush's political status in Texas. "Thirty-five percent the Hispanic vote in Texas] is a realistic See Republicans, page 6 [of Socialists fall short of majority — Associated Press PARIS — President Francois Mitterrand's Socialists to win a majority in Sunday's Na­ tional Assembly elections and must form a coalition or attempt to govern with a minority. failed With returns lacking only from territories in the Caribbean and South Pacific, the Socialists and the conservative parties were in a near dead heat, but only the So­ cialists were in a position to form a governing coalition in the 577-seat assembly. At least 289 seats are needed for a majority. With 10 districts still undecided, the Socialists won 271 seats and the Communists 26. The conservative Rally for the Republic won 126 seats, the cen­ ter-right Union few French Democ­ racy 129 and minor rightists 14 for a total of 2b9. The extrem e-right National Front won one seat. Its leader, Jean-Mane Le Pen. was defeated in Marseille. Mitterrand could form a coali­ tion with the Communists or tr}’ to lure centnsts awav from the right­ ist camp. "Francois Mitterrand does not therefore we have a majority, w on," declared Jacques Toubon, secretary-general of the Rally for the Republic. "The ball is in his camp. It is up to him to m anage his defeat." But Pierre Mauroy, first secre­ tary of the Socialist Party, said, "The right is beaten. It will not win a majority of seats. Only the Socialist Party is in a position to constitute a parliam entary majori­ ty." Georges Marcháis, secretary- general of the C om m unist Party, said it was out of the question that his party would participate in a So­ cialist government. He said the Communist Party would support bills it approved and fight "every­ thing that goes against its inter­ ests." Jean Uecanuet, president of the Union for French Democracy, did not say w hether any of his centrist forces would participate in a coali­ tion with the Socialists. that I hope "Personally, the French get a governm ent m ade up of the best," he said. "I w onder if the time has not come for national union." Valery Giscard d'Estaing, for­ mer center-right president, said the results show ed the French did not want one party to have all the power. "That is a good thing. They tried to say, 'W e w ant the two halves of France to work to g e th e r,'" he said. WEATHER " a h i , Dog days weather dog Hey there s m , owne' S** *' • -s im stupid We' f you wanted ’ o e*- <;> Monday s part*/ c¡oudy smes a 'd ' q' in the low 90s you might accidenta y / ,,r me run into a screer door famity s having barbecue tonight /on if the 10-15 mpn winds were' ? Know from the southeast : woo-dn t nave H get up to enjoy that tasty aroma O' boy time to ge‘ underfoot and Knock ne' r I bet me water temperature s the poo‘ like Mondays » ented at the Fourth International Conference on AIDS. Pizzo's findings came unexpect­ edly d u rin g the testing of a portable p u m p to adm inister the drug to chil­ dren. He found that y ou ng ste rs IQ scores increased about 13 points, a n d m anv of the other severe brain sy m p to m s of the virus al>o went a wav. looks at thus "Everybody w h o data has to get excited said Dr. Daniel H oth or the L S. National In­ stitute of Allergy and Infectious Dis­ eases We are all nervous by small nu m be rs [of patients studied], but the data itself is very exciting In his studv Pizzo tested AZT on children 21 AIDS-infected ranged in age from 14 m onth - vears. About two-thirds got the rus from blood products, rest were infected by their m Ú before birth More than 7,000 people, rru - them doctor^ and scientists fi 138 countries gathered in Stock h tor the o pening Sundae or the : day AIDS m eeting the bigges the vear A lthough they make about 3,6*.) b re ak th ro u g h s v ways of c u n nc deadlv illness auiev >resentaticns n< :r re expected preventing tht discouraging In an op ening ad a r t " Dr. Lar- Olof Kailmg> of S w e d e n ’s National Bacteriological Laboratory noted r e s e a r c h c o n v e y s th a t m u c h results concerning the n sk s of AIDS after a decade or follow-up of HIV-infected persons the involvement ot the central n e r ­ vous svstem, the difficulties to p ro ­ duce an efficient vaccine, the side effect- of new anti-viral agents and the contin ued rapid spread of HP- over the w orld." In o ther presentations Sundav Dr Jonathan M ann, head of the AIDS program at the World Health said an estimated O rganization, 150,000 people aro u n d the world will develop AIDS thi- year This double the total n u m b e r of AIDS cases reported since the epidemic began. ' AIDS is changing t h t w orld he said. "It h a s become a key part of the history of our time. Hup, 2 , 3 , 4 Government troopers march past a grandstand at Manila's Rizal Park as they join other participants in a civic and military parade to celebrate the 90th anniversary of the proclamation of Philippine Independence. More than 20,000 people turned out for the June 12 celebration. Associated Press Bush, Dukakis appeal for black votes Associated Press T he tw o front- r u n n in g p r e s i­ dential c o n te n d ­ s o u g h t e r s to S u n d a y b r o a d e n th e i r a m o n g a p p e a l blacks, ^with R epublican G eorge Bush urging a stro n g civil rights agend a an d D em ocrat M ichael D u ­ kakis m eeting w ith black m ayors a n d p rom ising a to u g h policy in the w ar on d rugs. D ukakis, in a sp eech to the U.S. C onference of M ayors in Salt Lake City, lashed o u t at th e R eagan a d ­ m in istratio n 's a n ti-d ru g pro g ram s, criticizing th e p re sid e n t's cu ts in the C oast G u ard b u d g e t a n d federal aid to state a n d local police in light of his to u g h rhetoric on the issue. "W h at w e h av e to day is c h a o s," D ukakis said. "W e'v e got to back u p w h a t w e say w ith w h a t w e d o ." The M assach u setts g o v ern o r also m et w ith D em ocratic m ayors a n d held a private session w ith a sm aller g ro u p of black m ayors. The likely D em ocratic no m in ee called for to u g h e r d ru g law s a n d strin g en t se n ten cin g g uidelines, b u t he sto p p ed sh o rt of urg in g capital p u n ish m e n t for d ru g d ealers. B ush has criticized D ukakis for failing to en d o rse th e d e ath pen alty for m ajor d ru g traffickers. T he vice p resid e n t, m ean w h ile, delivered th e co m m en cem en t a d ­ d ress at a p red o m in a n tly black col­ lege in W ilberforce, O hio, w h ere he told th e 275 g rad u a te s of C entral State U niversity th e n atio n nee d s a "p o sitiv e civil rig h ts a g e n ­ d a ." th a t Bush ad d ed th a t th e policy m u st "kn o ck d o w n the w alls of indiffer­ ence a n d o th er b arriers th a t result in econom ic exclusion." The certain G O P n o m in ee, re­ sp o n d in g to re p o rte rs' qu estio n s, said h e w o u ld w ork "to b ro ad en the base of o u r party , talk on the issues th at I th in k tran scen d black, w h ite — A m erican issues th a t are o ut th ere an d are going to a p p e a l.” Bush, w h o w as celebrating his 64th birth d ay , received an ho n o rary doctor of law s d eg ree from th e col­ lege. The aw ard w as an n o u n c e d last to year, b u t Bush w as u nab le it until S u n d ay , said Ed receive C h am n e ss, a sp o k esm an for th e university. In his speech, Bush told the g ra d ­ u ates th ey m ad e it th ro u g h college d esp ite "p o v erty , b ro k en hom es, in a d e q u a te schools and the social challeng es or th reat of d ru g s a n d vi­ o len ce." D ukakis, focusing on th e d ru g is­ sue in his speech to th e n a tio n 's m ayors, said th a t th e w ar on d ru g s can be w o n , " b u t w e have to recog­ nize th a t it is a w ar, a w ar of wills, a w a r of values, a w ar of confidence a n d courage a n d s tre n g th ." D ukakis p rom ised th at if elected he w o uld increase federal law e n ­ forcem ent staffs an d federal aid to state a n d local police. H e d id not p ro vid e specifics. H e also said he w ould issue an executive o rd e r proh ibiting th e p a y ­ m e n t of CIA or o th e r g o v ern m en t fu n d s to su sp ected d ru g dealers, a reference to alleged p a y m e n ts to P an am an ian ruler M anuel N oriega. "N e v e r again, n ev er again are you going to bankroll a d ru g p e d ­ dler w h o is p o iso n in g o u r society a n d killing o u r c h ild re n ," D ukakis said. Jesse Jackson, ru n n e r-u p to D u ­ kakis in th e p resid en tial n o m in atio n sw eep stak es, to back d o w n from claim s th at th e D em o­ crats sh o u ld offer him th e vice p resi­ den cy b ased on his second-place show ing. ap p e a re d A sked if in his recent co m m en ts he w as saying he shou ld be offered th e no m ination a n d th en w o u ld d e ­ cide w h e th e r to accept it, Jackson said, "N o , I'm n o t saying th a t b e ­ cause I do n ot w an t to p u sh M ike D ukakis to th at point. It's not neces­ sary ." Jackson, interv iew ed on NBC- TV 's M eet the Press, said he has n ot m ade a decision on w h e th e r he w ould accept th e vice presiden cy, b u t ad d e d , "I believe I'v e e a rn e d se­ rious c o n sid e ra tio n ." Jackson backed efforts by his s u p ­ p o rters, m eeting in M ichigan w ith o th e r D em ocrats to d iscuss the p a r­ ty platform , to include a call for rais­ ing taxes in a p ro p o sed plank. "W e o u g h t to be candid w ith the A m erican p e o p le ," Jackson said. "T h e re 's no m iraculous w ay of g e t­ ting o u t of this b u d g e t deficit. ... We certainly can n o t com e o u t just by collecting the uncollected taxes of R eaganom ics. W e m u st collect som e ex em p ted taxes of R eaganom ics." Jackson said th a t R eagan has giv­ en the R epublicans "a p arty, now th ey m u st pay for th e p arty . " The D em ocrats, w in d in g u p their w eek en d m eeting, sid e ste p p e d the q u estion of th e federal deficit and w h e th e r to call for h ig h e r taxes on the rich. China enforces control on college campuses Associated Press BEIJING — L eading n e w sp a p e rs S u n d ay car­ ried a stern g o v ern m e n t call for tig h te r discipline an d m ore ideological ind o ctrin atio n am o n g s tu ­ d e n ts after a w eek of political agitation at Beijing U niversity. " O u r college stu d e n ts sh o u ld u p h o ld the [C om m unist] p arty lead ersh ip , u p h o ld social­ ism ," th e official p arty n e w sp a p e r, the People's Daily, a d m o n ish ed in a fro n t-page article. Beijing U niversity au th o rities tore d o w n d o z ­ ens of p o sters stu d e n ts h a d p u t u p in th e past w eek. The p o sters d e m a n d e d dem ocracy, an e n d to g o v ern m e n t bureaucracy a n d co rruption, an d better living conditions. P u tting u p a n o n y m o u s p o sters is ag ain st u n i­ versity rules. The u n re st w as triggered by th e slaying June 2 of Chai Q ingfeng, a 22-vear-old physics stu d e n t w ho died in an off-cam pus braw l. U niversity officials allow ed stu d e n ts to set up a sm all sh rin e to Chai in a room used for staff m eetings. D ozens of p ap er flow er w reath s lined the sm all space, b u t th e m essages w ere n o n -p o ­ litical, ex p ressin g sorrow over C hai s death . S tu d e n ts said th ey w ere not sure w h en they w ould be allow ed to hold a m em orial service for Chai. A ny words or actions that impair party leadership, discipline, stabili­ ty and unity also obstruct the re­ forms and are against the basic in­ terests of the people of the whole country.’ — The Chinese State Education Commission T he killing b ro u g h t to the surface s tu d e n t u n h a p p in e ss over p o o r living co n d itio n s on cam ­ pu s a n d bleak econom ic p ro sp ects after g ra d u a ­ tion for th e n a tio n 's low -paid intellectuals. T h o u sa n d s of stu d e n ts last w eek p ro tested C h ai's d eath by taking to th e stre e ts a n d calling for a pro-dem ocracy m arch to central Beijing s T iananm en Square. Police sealed off th e square to keep p ro testers aw ay. The stu d e n ts said C hai w as beaten to d e a th by "h o o lig an s" w h en he w as b uying liquor at a store, an d they p u t u p p o sters angrily d e m a n d ­ ing speedy p u n ish m e n t of the u n e m p lo y ed local y o u th s w ho had allegedly killed him . T he d em o n stra tio n w as th e largest since m a s­ sive pro-dem ocracv rallies in D ecem ber 1986 and January 1987. H u n d re d s of stu d e n ts also g ath e red on the c am p us of Bening U niversity for im p ro m p tu d e ­ bates on w hat b ro ad er lessons are to be learned from th e incident. The People s Daily said the State E ducation those C om m ission m et Friday an d o rd ered that w’ho have violated school regulatio ns s h o u ld be dealt w ith quickly a n d severely b u t it did not sav w h at steps w ould be taken. W ithout specifically m entioning the u n re s t at Beijing U niversity, the com m ission said that a few stu d e n ts can not tell n g h t from w ro ng w ith reg ard to som e political princip les a nd even open lv sp rea d reactionary view s The n e w sp a p e r called tor increased ideological e d ucation a n d b e tte r school adm in istratio n to m aintain order. Anv w o rd s or actions th at im pair party lead ­ e rsh ip discipline, stability an d unity also o b ­ stru ct the reform s a n d are ag ainst the basic in te r­ ests of th e people of the w hole country the n e w sp a p er q u o ted the ed ucation com m ission as saving. W ith th e school year alm ost at an e n d the extent of any discipline m av not becom e clear until a new sem ester starts in Septem ber. Tax reform troubles state governors Associated Press ALBANY, N.Y. — Gov. Mario Cuom o has a $900 million problem; California G ov. G eorge D euk- mejian's is $2 billion and Democrat­ ic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis' just grew to more than $400 million in M assachusetts. State budget deficits are sw eeping the nation as a result of w hat alm ost everyone thought was a good idea — federal tax changes that have re­ sulted in a slum p in capital gains tax collections. North Carolina Gov. Jim Martin announced last w eek that he w ould have to pare as m uch as $60 million from his budget proposal because of a slu m p " brought on by lower-than-expected tax collections. o n e -sh o t " rev en u e Connecticut budget chief A ntho­ ny Milano warned state agencies last w eek that sluggish revenue col­ lections could m ean th e state will start its new fiscal year July 1 w ith a deficit. In P ennsylvania, state officials say th at total rev en u es are u p b ut th at taxes on sales of p ersonal in­ v estm e n ts, also k n o w n as capital gains, are d ow n ab ou t 8 percent. There are indications that other states that rely heavily on personal incom e taxes for revenue may have similar problems as the year goes on, said Dali Forsythe, Cuom o's budget director. Democrat Cuom o has even pro­ posed cutting funding for the state's Council on Children and Families, w hich is run by his wife, Matilda. Most states reaped tax revenue windfalls from 1986, w hen investors rushed to take advantage of tax breaks that the new federal rules w’ere designed to erase w hen they took effect Jan. 1, 1987. Then the tax changes sent taxpay­ ers running to their accountants tor help in reducing their taxes, and the taking of capital gains slow'ed, re­ ducing capital gains tax revenues. The fiscal problems are causing political headaches for Dukakis and Deukmejian Dukakis, likely Democratic presidential nom inee, based his campaign on his abilities as a mana­ ger. He m ust now cut his budget because his num bers were wrong. the Republican Deukmejian had pro­ posed $800 million in revenue ra­ isers to help close his budget gap, estim ated at about $1 billion this year and $1 billion next year. But he w ithdrew the proposal, angry at re­ porters for calling it a tax increase. "The deficit he has is just the right size," C uom o said of Dukakis. "I think this is a break for Dukakis. H e will now show you how he han­ dles a deficit. He will do it sw iftly, cleanly, effectively." Associated Press Most voters would not re-relect Reagan for 3rd term, poll says NEW YORK — A su bstan tial m ajority of A m ericans said they w o u ld not vote tor P resid en t R onald Reagan if he could seek a th ird term a M edia G eneral-A ssoci­ ated Press peril found Most Republicans in the national poll supported Reagan for another term But Democrats and inde­ pendents, w h ose support w as critical to his 1980 and 1984 victories said overw helm ingly they w ould not back him again. The decline in Reagan's support outside his ow n party could im pede his ability to draw' non-Repubh- cans to Vice President George Bush, w ho needs out­ side votes to win. Western novelist L’Amour deceased at 80 LOS ANGELES — Louis L'Amour, w h ose novels about gunfighters, law m en and dnfters drew on his colorful past as a gold prospector, roustabout and jack- uf-all-trades, has died of lung c a n ­ cer. He w as 80 L 'A m o ur died Fnday night at his hom e, his wife, Kathy, said S u n ­ day. He w rote 101 books, nearly all including Hondo, How W esterns, the West Was Won, The Iron Marshal, an d Ride the Dark Trad L’Amour Earthquake strikes Northern California ALUM ROCK, Calif. — A sh arp earth q u ak e jolted a w ide region of N o rth e rn California S un d ay night, but au tho rities said th ere w ere no im m ediate rep o rts of d am ag e or injuries. The q u ak e hit at 6 46 p .m an d had a m ag n itu d e of about 5.3 on the R ichter scale, said a spo kesm an for the U niversity ot C alifornia Seism ographic Stations in Berkeley Its ep icen ter w as ab o u t 10 m iles n o rth e a st of San Jose or east of A lum Rock, th e spok esm an said The I S Geological S u rv ey 's N ational E arthquake Inform ation C en ter in G olden Colo ■-aid its prelimi­ nary estim ate of th e tem blor w a> 5 I News media exploit prostitution busts Earlier this m onth, a dozen of Austin's sexually adven­ tu r o u s m ale r e s id e n ts found their evening of love ruined Page 4/THE DAILY TEXAN/Monday, June 13, 1988 E ditorials VTonpcwnf opinions expressed in Th0 Duty Toxtn are those o! the editor and the writer ot the article They are not necessarily the opinions of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Opinions expressed in Second Opinion and staff or guest columns are those of the writer Seco n d C hance Regents should retain Hardesty H ow often does anvone get a chance to undo a mistake? Today at 10 a.m . the Texas State University System Board of R egents will have such an opportunity. Thanks to the legal efforts of supporters of Southw est Texas State President Bob Hardesty, the regents have been forced to reconsider their May 19 decision to fire Hardesty. The question is w hether they'll have the w isdom to use that oppor­ tunity. A lthough Hardesty has been an accom plished president — w inning the respect of students, faculty, alumni and the San Marcos com m unity — the regents fired him on the basis of still-unelaborated "philosophical d ifferen ces." But w hat are "ph ilosophical d ifferences?" As Ed Longscope, one of the regents w ho voted against firing Hardesty, explains, 1 hat s a broad term used w hen you d on 't have a strong reason for doing som e­ th in g ." And it's becom e increasingly clear that the strongest reason the re­ gents had for w anting to dump H ardesty is his long-term political association with prom inent Texas D em ocrats, and with form er Gov. Mark W hite in particular. Will the regents reconsider their decision to fire Hardesty? It d oesn't seem likely. For today's m eeting, they've been striving to concoct a publicly acceptable justification for letting Hardesty go: They're raking through the SW T presid ent's travel and expenditure vouchers in the hope of finding fodder for charges that h e's spent too much on univer­ sity-related en tertainm en t, or that h e's traveled too much and spent too much time off-cam pus. These charges would m ean a lot more were it not for the fact that entertainm ent and travel are sim ply part of the job of running a large state university. It's one of the m ajor ways of keeping up the flow of endow m ents that are necessary to bring university funding above the level of mere adequacy. "It's been w ork, not fun and g a m es," says Hardesty of the en tertain ­ ment and travel expenditures, and no one has yet adduced any evi­ dence to the contrary. Still, from the look of their efforts to build a case against Hardesty, it appears that the regents have already made up their m inds to blow their second chance. Yet it's possible that they can be persuaded to change their m inds. T hey're m eeting at 10 a.m . today in Room 1-104 of the William B. Travis State O ffice Building, 1701 N. C ongress Ave. If you want to show your support for Bob Hardesty, be there. — M ike Godwin Pea ce P lan Israel should accept U.S. proposal A fter m onths of rioting and nearly 200 deaths, the Palestinians in the occupied territories have gained little. They still can't vote or legally strike, and they now live under martial law. Nor have the Israelis gained m uch. As they grapple internally with the moral dilem m as of occupation, they must face a strategic dilem m a, too: The occupied territories are a pressure cooker that can erupt into bloody conflict at any time. Israeli bullets haven t stopped the unrest. T hey've only subdued it briefly. Israel's deadly tactics have also eroded its world reputation. I he deaths, the beatings, the assassination of a PLO leader, the deportation of a pacifist and the tear-gas attacks on pregnant w om en, elderly peo­ ple and children have all played poorly on the world stage. Both sides, then, desperately need a com prom ise, yet representa­ tives from both sides have rejected U .S. Secretary of State G eorge Shultz's plan for a world conference. The problem s with Schultz's plan lie on the one hand with the Arab nations' insistence that the PLO be included in the talks, and on the other with Israeli Prime M inister Yitzak Sham ir's position that Israel must not give the Palestinians autonom y, and that the í LO should not be included in the talks until they change their stated goal: destruction of the state of Israel. N evertheless, Sham ir and his hard-line supporters must realize that the anguish in the territories is genuine. W hen the Palestinians riot, it's not because of som e covert PLO brainw ashing plot; it's because of their human need for self-governm ent and equal opportunity. Until the Palestinians gain a m easure of freedom , neither side will live in peace. If Sham ir offers adm inistrative autonom y to the Palestini­ ans in the territories, Israel will regain world respect. The Arab nations will feel huge pressure to revoke their dem and for PLO inclusion in the talks — and the PLO may even soften som e of its own harsh stands. Besides, the focus of the peace process should be the Palestinians in the territories, not the surrounding Arab countries If Sham ir w ants to ensure the security of Israel, he must work toward a real solution to Palestinian unrest within Israel's borders — and not just a forced d e­ lay. O ffering sovereignty is the place to start. — Tom Philpott C anon n eed s to exp and 1 was sho< ked by the callow ness and ob­ vious lac k of thought show n by the writers of I uesday's V iew point ("C o re curricula should keep the classics," I he Daily lexan, June 7) First of all, the ideal is not to replace all white male authors wath w omen and m i­ norities, but rather to in dude the works of m em bers of non-dom inant groups in the c anon. Women and m inorities have been strug­ gling for equal opportunities in this coun try for quite som e time, and the results of their struggle's are beginning to show: White male's a r e no longer the' only ones running the governm ent, heading corpo­ rations, and getting tenure. (h ere is a growing aw areness that "A m erican C u ltu re" is neither monolithic the* im portant culture nor the* only world I here are othe*r voice's, speaking of a different Am erica, to which it is im port­ ant that an educated person be exposed. in C cmferring canonical status to the* work of writers such as Baldwin, O 'C onn or, M orrison, and W nght will neither "d istort the- history of preceding cen tu ries" nor "prom ote a false- vision of our cultural his­ tory" as Philpott and Godw in fear. Rather, the inclusion of such works will help students to gain a truer picture of our country's history and our place* in the world I his necessarily m eans becom ing aware- of and eventually eom ing to terms with the reality of the- U'ss noble elem ents by the sting of a police undercover operation — an event which should have stayed in the dark. The undercover schem e operat­ ed fairly simply — female police officers posed as hookers and ar­ rested any "Jo h n s" w ho attem pt­ ed to solicit sexual services. Arresting prostitutes or "Joh n s" en masse creates a spectacular me­ dia event. Only multiple homi­ cides and a few other violent crimes get more press attention. But despite the good intentions of the Austin Police Department, officers need to concentrate their related energies on attacking crimes and their victims instead of creating media events. While the coverage is designed to discourage "Jo h n s" from ap­ proaching prostitutes, the televi­ sion cam eras and reporters' pads exploit the women as much as their pimps. These events criminalize the tricks even the Police Department hookers and though claims they are often victims. their As vice-squad senior Sgt. Gene Freudenberg explained, prostitu­ tion carries a whole host of prob­ lems beneath its skirts. Robberies, assaults and even m urder are part of the prostitution trade for both hookers and their "Jo h n s ." Prostitutes regularly steal their trick's w allet, w atches or jew elry, and "Jo h n s " or pimps beat, maim or kill prostitutes. A ccording to one vice-squad of­ ficer, som e pimps regularly walk into jew elry stores with bags of chains, rings and w atches stolen from tricks by their prostitutes. M ost of the girls involved in prostitution are young and poorly educated, and have run away from hom es where they have been sexually abused. Their ow n fam i­ lies (especially m others) often be­ gan their prostitution career. For girls caught in the early part of their career, an arrest may be J a m e s G e s h w il e r TEXAN COLUMNIST the only thing that can save them from a life on the street or in a club, abused, addicted to drugs and living in constant fear of their pimp. To help these abused women, Austin has a counseling program for prostitutes (mainly for younger ones) coordinated by the police victim services departm ent and Middle Earth Crisis Services. They are treated as victims (as they should be) rather than criminals. For women who have willfully chosen a career in vice, an arrest is nothing more than a minor incon­ venience. Solicitation is only a class B m isdem eanor on the first offense (class A on subsequent ones). The women who are not victims soon return to the street. Arrests thus are not a m atter of morality but of liberty — they ac­ tually protect prostitutes by keep­ ing their violent custom ers off the street or by rem oving w om en from an environm ent they may not be able to leave. And for the "Jo h n s," a single ar­ rest on such a m isdem eanor charge usually am ounts only to public em barrassm ent. The Austin vice squad has arrested lawyers, public officials, UT athletes, and even a highway patrol officer. Most have suffered little. As would-be "Jo h n s" w orry more about being arrested, they are less likely to seek out hookers. And fewer "Jo h n s" means less revenue, encouraging w om en to leave the abuse of prostitution. Also by lowering the prostitu­ tion traffic in business neighbor­ hoods, police improve the levels of econom ic grow th and investm ent in areas such as East and South Austin. Unfortunately, m edia-event op­ erations occasionally put a "Jo h n " on the nightly news while his wife incident is w atching. happened after one Austin arrest, according to vice officials.) (Such an Rather than put these w om en and men on display at multi-m e­ dia undercover operations, our city's police should publicly treat these women as victims as they do off-camera. They should continue the undercover operations but dis­ continue press coverage. Otherwise the police merely cor­ rupt their goals by showing the press flashy arrests of sleazy w om ­ en or sexually adventurous men. They become the city's sensation­ alists instead of its saviors. G eshwiler is a Plan II senior Restore grad benefits with non-state funds A s a graduate em ployee of the U niversi­ ed $60 million for basic research grants to uni­ versities in Texas, leaving many legislators op­ posed expenditure on higher to education. ty, I recently learned that beyond my normal duties as a teaching assistant and my academ ic responsibilities as a doctoral E r ik D e v e r e u x GUEST COLUMNIST futher student, I will be spending the next 12 m onths as one investigator in a critical experim ent to be conducted at the University. If you are a graduate em ployee of the Univer­ sity, then you are another investigator in this critical experim ent. Together, all of the som e 2,600 teaching as­ sistants, research assistants and assistant in­ structors em ployed each sem ester at the U ni­ versity will evaluate one im portant hypothesis: Is the welfare of the graduate em ployees o f the University of Texas at Austin im portant enough that the UT adm inistration will revise its priori­ ties to restore em ployee benefits for graduate students? The opportunity for this experim ent was pro­ vided by the February 1988 ruling of the Ad­ m inistrative Council of the Texas H igher Edu­ cation Coordinating Board that the University can no longer use state-appropriated funds to pay the em ployee-benefits prem ium s of gradu­ ate em ployees. These premium co-paym ents had provided graduate em ployees with a benefits package that included life, medical, dental, disability, and accidental death insurance, accounting for alm ost 15 percent of the real incom e of the graduate em ployees. W hen the new s of the cut in benefits reached the UT Austin cam pus, the graduate students and the adm inistration reacted in a m anner that set the final param eters for the critical experi­ ment. The students sent one clear m essage to the Main Building. W e w ant premium sharing re­ stored without any cut in benefits and w ithout our salaries becom ing mixed up with our insur­ ance prem ium s. The adm inistration responded with its own plan. During the 1988-89 academ ic year each graduate student em ployed half-time or more will receive a tem porary monthly salary supple­ ment of $115 in lieu of premium sharing. While this money can be used by graduate students to enroll in any of the UT benefit plans, the fact remains that the University will no longer be making direct premium co-pay­ ments. Here now is the crux of the experim ent: The tem porary salary supplem ents are being taken from the money originally appropriated for this premium sharing. U nder current law, money cannot be resupplied by the state Legis­ lature. President Cunningham accurately presents the implications of this situation in his May 5 letter to the UT com m unity: "Several factors make it impossible to project at this time what will occur beyond August 31, 1989." The test to be conducted involves the strate­ gy the administration selects to restore em ploy­ ee benefits for graduate students. One option being discussed is a lobbying ef­ fort to achieve the changes in the law necessary to make the use of state-appropriated funds le­ gal again. This strategy has a fundamental flaw. Re­ search by graduate students reveals that the Legislature may be indisposed to making any general changes in the insurance code or grant­ ing any special dispensation to the University. General changes in the code will open the door to premium sharing for graduate em ploy­ ees at all state universities in Texas, potentially presenting the state with a bill in the eight-fig­ ure range. M oreover, in 1987 the Legislature appropriat­ While the decision to seek Legislative relief for restoring graduate benefits may be a losing strategy, there is a second strategy that the Uni­ versity can follow. The restrictions on premium sharing from state funds seem legally correct, but there is a law in the Texas Insurance Code — Article 3.51 Section 1(a) — that seem s to open the way for the University to continue premium sharing if it uses non-state funds. Here lies a true test of the will of the Univer­ sity to protect the health and security of its graduate em ployees. N on-state funds are a pre­ cious resource reserved for telescopes and other high-visibility items, not low-visibility items like employee benefits. If the University moves to explore its legal options under Article 3.51, and to actively re­ structure spending priorities to find the neces­ sary monies, then we may see a restoration of premium sharing after Aug. 31, 1989. We might even see it before then. If the UT administration selects a Legislative solution to the graduate employee benefits cri­ sis, it seem s unlikely that our benefits will be restored. If this scenario occurs, we all must decide the truth of the hypothesis about the importance of graduate em ployees in UT priori­ ties. If the University concurrently explores other viable alternatives, we may see a neces­ sary reorganization of priorities that reaffirms the im portance of graduate employees. W hat will be the outcom e of this critical ex­ periment? As the collective investigators in the experim ent, we will have our results within the next 12 months. Devereux is governm ent departm ent chair o f the Graduate Students Organization ■ 4 * ' ; < ■ ' ; ■ ' / J | ¿ t 'f- P' • '' . ’’ : y', • •' • • ’ ' ’ m ■ ' v ; * '? '^ / . f ' ' ' : ----------- ---- Classes" (The Daily Texan, June 9), Certain­ ly — iet students pelt the politicians with Texas governm ent books! W hy not? You would be charged with at least assault and battery and maybe as a result you would learn about Texas governm ent from hands-on experience. Ignoring the fact that Ms. W ong has ob­ viously missed the relevancy that a knowl­ edge of governm ent has to every individu­ al living in the state and nation, she does have one valid point: GOV 310L can be a real bore. Why? Because instructors are forced into watering down such lower-division courses in order that everyone at the Uni­ versity w ho feels that they are above get­ ting a com plete education and don't need to attend such "irrelevan t" classes can still pass. After all, making the course challenging and interesting would probably cause stu­ dents to complain that since it is not im­ portant to their degree plan, it shouldn't be so time-consuming. Ever w onder why mainly graduate stu­ dents teach GOV 310L? Probably because the professors refuse to lower their stand­ ards just so some students who have refused to take on the responsibility and discipline of earning a higher education degree can pass their classes without hard­ ly cracking a textbook. ents, and administrators about failure rates and finally taught at the level of their own high standards, people could no longer complain about the quality of edu­ cation in general in Texas. But as long as educators have to bow to administrators and to incoming money, education will re­ main the same. Okay then, you throw your books at the legislators — only allow each educator who feels that he has been forced to lower his standards for whining students to throw books at those students as well Ginny Clegg Special Student Need to talk to the editor? Mike Godwin wtfl hold ottct hour» on Monday and Tlw—diy from 1 p.m. to S p.m. to l i t M p Tmm M m , of our shared cultural heritage: slave*ry, racism, sexism , and the hope'le'ssnc'ss of poverty The acceptance* of works by w om en and m inorities does not me*an raising the sta­ tus of literature that is second-rate. It does mean recognizing the pow er of voices that speak with a different accent than we* are used to hearing, and taking them serious­ ly Philpott and G odw in say that the G reat Works grapple with the question "W hat does it mean to be h u m an?" They admit that Baldwin, etc., de al with this same question, but they do not seem to realize that seeing the world through the eyes of another, whose reality is pro­ foundly different from our ow n, can give us a richer, more com plete understanding of the ways in which that question may be answ ered, and the wealth of possibilities open to each of us as we try to answ er that question for ourselves Rebecca Allbritton Psychology T h ro w b ook s at stu d ents In regards to "C u t Texas Governm ent If the day ever cam e that all educators stopped taking crap from students, par­ T h e Da il y T e x a n U n iv e r s it y Police urge students to register campus bicycles 'M o n d a y , J u n e 1 3 ,1 9 8 8 Page 5 By KEVIN HARGIS Daily Texan Staff A perennial worry for people w ho ow n bicycles and park them on cam pus is the chance of the bike disappearing. To help keep track of bicycles on campus and aid in returning bikes to their ow ners, the UT Police D e­ partment runs a bicycle registration table every W ednesday from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m. in front of Gregory G ym ­ nasium. The registration process takes only five m inutes, said UT Police In­ vestigator Lou Graham. "If the bike is registered, w e can find w ho the ow ners are," Graham said. He said the UT Police Departm ent has com piled registration informa­ tion for 7,779 bicycles in its com put­ er files since the program began sev­ eral years ago. Graham estim ated that an equal num ber of unregis­ tered bikes are ridden on cam pus. UT parking regulations state that "bicycles operated or parked on the main cam pus shall be registered with the University Police Depart­ m ent." Graham said people with unregis­ tered bikes on cam pus can techni­ cally be given a ticket, but usually are not. The police strongly recom m end that ow ners register their bikes if they are going to have them on cam pus, he said. W hen a bike is registered, the ow ner's driver's license number is stam ped directly into the sprocket of the bike. Then a description of the bike, along with the driver's license num ­ ber, is entered into a com puter data­ base. That w ay, an ow ner can be contacted im m ediately if a bike is found. "When a bicycle is found with just a serial number on it, it is hard to know w h ose bike it is. People People should at least know the [bicycle’s] brand, color and serial number so that a report can be made to the UTPD’ — Lou Graham, UT police investigator sh o u ld at least kftow the b ran d , col­ or an d serial n u m b e r so th a t a re­ p ort can be m ad e to th e U TPD ," G raham said. The A ustin Police D ep artm en t u sed to register bicycles b u t disco n ­ tin u ed the service. People also can lock bikes to racks to p rev en t thefts, G raham said. H e w arn ed against u sing sim ple cable locks, w hich can be easily cut w ith bolt cutters. M ost stolen bikes have had cable locks on th em , he said. in th e d e p a rtm e n t's G raham said th ere are at least 75 im ­ bicycles p o u n d storage area th at have no registration n u m b e rs and have n o t been claim ed. The d e p a rtm e n t usually h o ld s a bicycle auction in th e fall to m ake room . Stolen bikes are so m etim es h ard to find, because th e th ieves e ith er keep the bikes or sell th em to o th e r people w ith o u t a n y so rt of record of the sale, G raham said. The UT Police D e p artm e n t also is concerned th a t m any bicyclists seem to believe th a t traffic rules d o not ap p ly to th e m , G raham said. UT park in g a n d traffic regu lation s state th at all bikes o p e ra te d o n cam ­ p u s m u st be u sed in accordance w ith city an d state traffic rules. D espite th e reg u lation s, G raham said, m any c am p u s bicyclists o p e r­ ate in an u nsafe w ay, such as rid ing on the sidew alks. How to rescue your pocketbook if dininc out is eating your lunch. On )une 1. Riverside Quarters (formerly the G o n ­ dolier Hotel) opens its dining room again, and we think you should try it. Riverside Quarters (RQ) is now operating as a student community, but will be offering non-resident dining at excellent prices. The good news Is you don’t have to be a student to get student discounts. Buy a punch card or a monthly meal contract, and your meal cost wW be between $2 and $4 a piece! We serve three scrumptious meals daily, and all are buffet-styie; great if you're in a hurry. Drinks are In­ cluded in this all-you-can-eat buffet and you never have to tip! We love parties, too! Call for reservations in advance. R I V E R S I D E . Q U A R T E R S 1001 S. IH -35 and Rhwrsfcte Drtve/Austtn. Tex» 78741 '4 44- M I I UT Police Sgt. Ronald Stalder cisplays impounded bicycles. Students can register bikes 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Wednesdays in Gregory Gymnasium. T here have been a n u m b e r of bike and vehicle accid ents on cam p u s and several accidents involving bi­ cycles an d p ed e stria n s, he said "W e w ould like to e m p h asize th e safety aspect. We d o n 't like picking u p stu d e n ts off th e sidew alk w hen th ey get h u rt," G rah am said. W hen riding at n ig ht, a red rear reflector a n d a front w hite headlight are req uired, G raham said. H e also riders w ear th a t recom m end ed light-colored clothing and w atch out for cars that m ight not ->ee them "W hen there is a confrontation betw een a 150-pound bicyclist und a 4,000-pound car, th e bicyclists u-u- ally lo se," G raham said O p erating a bicycle in violation of traffic regulations is punishable by a S6 line or im p o unding of the bicy­ cle. The cam pus registration is o pen to all UT stu d e n ts faculty and staff Frac* Ooo^ez Da fy Texa^ StaM Council to increase communication By GREG PERLISKI Daily Texan Staff N ew ly elected officers of the C ouncil of G ra d ­ uate Students — the organization that rep resen ts graduate students university-w ide — said con­ tinued student activism will prevent su rp rises like last April's insurance controversy. Stan Gaines, a doctoral student in psychology w ho was elected council president by a 9-8 vote Thursday, said a lack of com m unication between graduate students and UT administrators creat­ ed a crisis w h en teaching assistants, research as­ sistants and assistant instructors learned from The Daily Texan they w ould be losing health in­ surance benefits. "The adm inistration found them selves in the awkward positon of explaining them selves after the fact," Gaines said. Gaines said he will push for a graduate stu­ dent new sletter as a m eans to fill the gaps that separate the administration and graduate stu­ dents. "O n e th in g 1 w o u ld like to see com e o u t of this is to im prove th e co m m u n icatio n th at takes place am o n g ad m in istra to rs, faculty a n d g ra d u a te s tu ­ d e n ts ," he said. Erik D evereux, a doctoral s tu d e n t in th e D e­ p a rtm e n t of G o v e rn m e n t w h o ran u n o p p o se d for secretary, said all g rad u a te stu d e n ts are in vit­ ed to atten d council m eetin g s, b u t th at tim e con ­ t r a c t s often lim it a tte n d an c e. D evereux said ab o u t 73 g ra d u a te s tu d e n t o r­ ganization s, d e p a rtm e n ts an d councils have the right to a p p o in t a re p re se n ta tiv e to th e council, but co n sisten t tu rn o u t is rare. "G ra d u a te stu d e n ts are no to riously too b u sy ," he said. A lso elected T h u rsd a y w ere vice p re sid e n t Jam es Elston, a doctoral s tu d e n t in th e D e p a rt­ m en t of Sociology w ho w on by an 8-6 vote, an d D analynn Recer, a g ra d u ate s tu d e n t in th e D e­ p a rtm e n t of H istory w ho ran u n o p p o s e d for treasu rer. D evereux said th e new officers will w-ork to m ake the council a m ore effective organizatio n. " O u r first goal is to take th e ste p s necessary’ to revitalize th e council," D evereux said. "W e w ant o rd e r to assu re all view s are includ ed " Since m em bers decide w hat issues to take to the a d m in istratio n , D evereux said reaching e v e­ ry d e p a rtm e n t and com m ittee is im portan t lead ersh ip faces u n a n sw e re d q u estio n s abou t fu ture health benefits for TAs, RAs an d AIs. The council The Texas H igher Education C o ordinating Board said in February th at a Texas law th at re­ quires p articipation in the sta te 's retirem en t p ro ­ gram to receive in surance benefits cuts off g ra d ­ uate stu d e n ts from receiving benefits. UT ad m in istrato rs have decided to te m p o rari­ ly su p p le m e n t $115 p er m o n th to offset lost b e n ­ efits. But D evereux said the su p p lem e n ts, w h ich run from Sept. 31, 1988, to A ug 31, 1989 are onlv "sto p -g a p so lu tio n s." T h e real problem is th at there is no pian for w hat is going to h a p p e n 12 m onths from the end of this su m m e r." D evereux said UT dean wins top award By ANDREA ANDERSON and JIM GREER Dai.y Texan Staf The Texas Stxiey/ .f Pr ’ -*• ai Engineers has g iv e r its *.4 n.es? h o n o r — the O u tstan d in g Eng: ierbe~t neer of *he re a r — W oodson, acting dear / College jf E ngineering f *n- "W o o d sor w as r r r.r a te d r r r. his overall w ork that he has trib u ted to the en gineerin g field said D iare Jones Wnods< n s a s ­ s is ta n t a n d senior ad m inistrative asso ciate tn the D epartm ent * En­ g in e e rin g I think he w as a perfect :h . for the aw ard has done an. e re engineering u s : try r e tr g ; r e ars .■ n gin *r*r r a .odser - h . • ,\:e-ze u r r ¿ tear, -re •.-mfcer ’ ír g in e e r r n e i f - d o p m e - ; r -2 r r .«rim ;.r.ce c .iriru r e a»:* la s :e e r u :tr"í n h e * ic c o iit t e i r 5ep- /’ < d • >- . the p m t academic year recruiting I c e i c e r r r.uch :r r *. • v.c “f o r ts e s ~: ' mat "r • - ire an- r a - ¡muunmitty l*w fc s a tf Suura tf L a y v i Spm cuuuutvoa 704 Rio G ran d e 477-7887 -< e 3 T 0 I - a m */M STEAK MOUSE *4*111 luiKintuii*» > ri** V ' < n f m ■ jj 6 3 > I 5 •3i i i NIGHTLY SPECIALS GOOD 5 P H -9 Pld MONDAY-HUDAY V íC íO A T v :G ¿ T 5F5 CLA1 — 3 m ArsIIwa JUrlcm i -*z rc u rcc suur*r joicC. r C C S I R C S C *# *! Q ii fU M V I *1. Only 3.79 7 !t« 4 M d tu g « r « u r tu r v in Only 3 49 VS-NESiTA ' h»,h' j n llw U C ü t v U H i S r e tis i VMSl * C1KÍ t*v* k.-ii'W n m m / iin u m vriu u . >«tn> o . . • O n l'y 4 » ’•HUR^L'A ' jfehCUw. m T-M oa* ftwaJR JuwnM i j * Only 3 49 NJG.U 'feh’.hv. Only 5. S9 i 1 «uvat« » il W»jam It 1 I V» OffT M O M I tlA iX BLIIK K U f M A K t t | H A I T I 19 ÉBNH8HL Oafi «B «8ÉMB - B IM W B i » i i , r i w f c a t a . m L w h « t a m m L W o c tk Monday, June 13,1988 Page 6 State & Local T h e d a il y T ex a n City seeks funds for airport By GARRY LEA VELL Daily Texan Staff A delegation of d ty officials met with the Federal Aviation Adminis­ tration last week in hopes of per­ suading the government to contrib­ ute more than $330 million to the development of the new Manor air­ port. Mayor Frank Cooksey, City Avia­ tion Director Timothy Ward and act­ ing Assistant City Manager ]im Thompson were joined in Washing­ ton Thursday by U.S. Rep. J.J. "Jake" Pickle, D-Austin, for talks with FAA administrator T. Allan McArtor. "It was as positive [a meeting] as we felt we could come out of there with," Ward said. The discussion revolved around the city's proposal to the govern­ ment for eight years of federal fund­ ing totaling $336.6 million, Ward said. "We had submitted through a re­ gional director a request for a letter of intent which commits the FAA to funds as long as they are available," Ward said. This meeting was a fol­ low up to that March request, he said. If the city receives the full amount of its request, "it would fill a little over 50 percent of the cost" of Phase 1 of the airport construction, Ward said. The total cost of the first phase is projected at $647.9 million, Ward said. It would include replacing all facilities that are currently at Robert Mueller Municipal Airport and building the airfield and complexes necessary to meet the expected 1995 demand at Manor. Ward said the remainder of the Phase 1 cost would be paid for by the sale of revenue bonds and by tenants constructing facilities for their own use. He expects such tenants to account for between $50 and $70 million of the total cost. "We are really trying to deter­ mine the amount of federal partici­ pation and then we can begin to focus in on the amount of revenue bonds," Ward said. "We could per­ haps be in a position to have a reve­ nue bond sale by later this year so we can begin the land acquisition for the new airport." Ward said Pickle attended the meeting to lend his expertise in fed­ eral affairs and Cooksey's presence exhibited Austin's commitment to the project. Libertarians pick fall candidates State convention delegates nominate unconventional election slate missioner Kent Hance after their original candidate withdrew. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen. By JUNDA WOO Daily Texan Staff The Texas Libertarian Party slate for 1988 is quirky by most political standards: the candidates have little election experience, even less mon­ ey, and one nominee exists only on paper. At a state convention in South Austin last weekend, delegates se­ lected Jeff Daiell of Houston to run for U.S. Senate, Rick Draheim of Austin and "none of the above" for railroad commission, and Calvin Scholz of Rockport for Supreme Court Place 3. The Libertarian Party, formed in 1971, views government regulation as intrusive. The party platform includes abol­ ishing income taxes, shutting down many federal agencies, reducing U.S. involvement abroad and re­ turning U.S. currency to a gold standard. Delegates unanimously selected Daiell, 36, to run against Democratic Daiell, who works for an electron­ ics firm, said Saturday he will turn the incumbent's popularity to his advantage. Republicans are "showing no en­ thusiasm at all for the fight," Daiell said. "Voters from both tax-subsi­ dized parties are going to be much more willing to support a third-par­ ty candidate than is normal." Unlike Daiell, an unsuccessful candidate for Houston City Council in 1978, Draheim has no political ex­ perience. Draheim is a jewelry salesman who defeated Chloe "Jack" Daniel, the party's 1986 candidate for Rail­ road Commission, by a 27-6 vote. Draheim, 30, said he would not take a salary if elected to Commissioner Jim Nugent's spot. "I would be a devil's advocate on the commission by bringing a free- market point of view to the others," he said. Libertarians also selected "none of the above" to run against Com­ "We're going to remind the secre­ tary of state that in Nevada 'none of the above' is an option — and it should be an option in the state of Texas," said Alex Snead, former party vice chairman and a Libertari­ an candidate for Congress. The party's unanimous choice for Supreme Court, Scholz, was absent from the convention. Delegates also nominated Egon Tausch of Bulverde and Carol Caul of Houston for Criminal Appeals Court Places 1 and 2, respectively. All three court nominees are attor­ neys. The candidates, who are running with as little as $500 each, said their primary goal is to increase party vis­ ibility. They seemed less concerned with election-night victory, even us­ ing the phrase "When I get elected" to elicit laughs. The party has qualified to list all its candidates on the Nov. 8 general election ballot in Texas. And the winner i s . . . Je ssica ! Jessica’s McClure’s mother, Cissy, declares Jessica the victor after she knocked out’ wrestler Kevin Von Erich at a charity match in Lancaster, Texas. Je ssica s rescue from a Midland well made her famous. ____ % Overcrowding may provoke inmate deaths Republicans I T New federal study shows jail-packing ‘breeds suicide;’ Texas rate highest in nation O • / Continued from oaee 1 Continued from page 1 By MIKE ERICKSON Daily Texan Staff Jail overcrowding that stretches the ability of a d m in is tra to rs to single out suicidal inmates may be one reason Texas has the highest number of jail suicides in the nation, the Travis County sheriff said Friday. "When you suffer overcrowding, everything suffers," Sheriff Doyne Bailey said. The results of a new federal study by the Na­ tional Center on Institutions and Alternatives show Texas has the nation's highest number of jail suicides. Texas had 46 jail suicides in 1986 and in 1985, according to the study. The next-closest state, California, had a total of 69 for the same two-year period, the study stated. Bailey said guards and jail inmates have stopped three or four suicide attempts in the last two years at the Travis County Central Booking Facility. Jail suicides typically occur within 12 to 15 hours after someone is arrested and are usually committed by people who were jailed for an al­ cohol-related offense, he said. Officials try to identify possibly suicidal in­ mates during their initial jail booking by observ­ ing their behavior, asking questions designed to highlight suicidal tendencies and checking into ‘W e’ve gotten ourselves in such a bind with the justice system as it exists now, I’m not sure a whole lot can be done about it’ — Sheldon Ekland-Olson, UT associate professor of sociology their background, Bailey said. Travis County also has a psychologist who works with inmates and jail staff to prevent sui­ cide, he said. The officers who have the responsibility of spotting suicidal inmates have been specially chosen and trained on the job, he said. Bailey also said the presence of inmates during a suicide attempt may actually help stop the at­ tempt. "The best prevention is to have people around the person," he said. But Linday Hayes, director of the study, has said overcrowding leads directly to suicide. Overcrowding "breeds violence, depression, acting-out behavior, all of which breeds sui­ cide," Hayes said. Sheldon Ekland-Olson, a UT associate profes­ sor of sociology who has studied suicide and prisons, said jail suicides are not that different from other suicides. "When your life is going through some sort of inner turmoil, the chances for suicide goes up," he said. "Going to prison or jail means a pretty severe life change or life turmoil." Ekland-Olson said "historical neglect" has kept prisons and jails from confronting the sui­ cide problem. "We've gotten ourselves in such a bind with the justice system as it exists now, I'm not sure a whole lot can be done about it," he said. Mike Feary, a supervisory criminal investiga­ tor in the Texas attorney general's office, said Texas law requires jail and prison officials to re­ port any suicides to the attorney general. Feary said the state supplies the information to the U.S. Justice Department, which funded the study. "We're not disputing the numbers. I doubt we have quarrel" with the study, Feary said. "If our rate is higher, then obviously we need to find out why," he said. But Feary said Texas may simply have more people in jail than other states, and the state's suicide rate may be proportionally lower than other states. W ith wire reports SAVE 20 - 70% es Huns MacProducts Disk and Ribbon Sale! Sony DS DD Disks Sony DS Bulk Disks Black Ribbons Colored Ribbons $19.95 1.55 4.00 6.00 Dobie Mall 2021 Guadalupe Austin 469-5000 BIG DOG SUNGLASSES D O B I E MA L I 2 n d F l o o r 2021 G u a d a l u p e 4 7 6 0171 $189 Get Daily Wear Contacts plus Bausch & for one low price. Includes a pair of contacts, exam and fitting, follow-up visits, instruction, and chemical care kit. LombRay Ban sunglasses U S (eyssgre) 441-9771 1909E. Riverside River HUs Center 476-1000 1904 Guadalupe MBenk Mall 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1:30 Open 11:00am Mon-Sat Open Sun 3:00pm Happy Hour Mon-Fri 5-7 5 Sunday and Monday Special: ALL YOU CAN EAT! asm. altar 11 U k , Monday after 5 p.m. A special plate prepared by your Aleta’s Chef including Soup and PoUo Esteban O n ly excluding fs/Xas 1907 G uadalupe 479-0940 Remember* Lunch Specials Starting at 42.991 Get 4 tickets in 12 months and you could lose your license. M iller& H erring, Lawyers forTrafficTickets For free information, call 477-3221. Fixed $100 fee. 706 W. MLK Blvd., Suite 11 Visa/Mastercard accepted Suit’ lu í l u n u r i i rx i !<>yl s(*> uli/jiK m prediction — but 40 percent is our goal," Clements said of Bush's cam­ paign. Clements is the co-chair of Bush's Texas campaign. "We have a long history of work­ ing with the Hispanic community in Texas," he said. Clements said he garnered 26 per­ cent of the Hispanic vote in 1978, and 31 percent in 1982, when he lost to former Gov. Mark White. Meyer said he would continue outgoing Chairman George Strake's efforts to include Hispanics in the party, and try to surpass previous successes. "The Hispanic community should be a significant factor in the Repub­ lican Party, because the values of the community are very similar to the values of the Republican Party," Meyer said. Meyer said he did not know how many Hispanic candidates for the Texas Legislature were Republican, but did note that two Hispanics sit on the State Republican Executive Committee. The Republican Party nominated no Hispanics for statewide office in 1988. The Democratic party nomi­ nated one — Supreme Court Justice Raul Gonzalez. In 1986, the Repub­ licans nominated Roy Barrera for at­ torney general, but he lost a close race to Attorney General Jim Mat­ tox. Meyer was not specific about his strategy to expand into the Hispanic community. "It's going to be on a personal basis — not by commer­ cial» — but basically building a par­ ty on a one-on-one, grass roots or­ ganizational basis," he said. Meyer also endorsed the entire platform as "one that a large majori- I don’t think we need that kind of legislation.’ — Vice President George Bush ty of the people of Texas would agree with." "Almost 70 percent of our citizens believe as the Republican Party be­ lieves," he said. The platform also endorsed the direct election of Texas judges, de­ spite Chief Justice Tom Phillips' support for some form of an ap­ pointment or merit system for judi­ cial selection. Other adopted planks include: ■ Opposition to federal taxation of higher education scholarships. ■ Opposition to the Universal Vo­ ter Registration bill now before the U.S. House of Representatives. for maximum ■ Support local control of school district policy. ■ Support for "the teaching of a balanced view of the origin of life in Texas public schools." ■ A declaration that the family is "a God-ordained institution." ■ A statement that "the practice of sodomy leads to the breakdown of the family unit and spread of the deadly disease, AIDS." ■ A request that governments en­ force anti-sodomy laws. ■ And a plank stating, "No per­ son should receive special legal enti­ tlements and/or privileges based on sexual preference (homosexuality, necrophilia, pedophilia, bestiality or incest), including marriage between persons of the same sex or custody or the adoption of children." AMBASSADOR PAUL F. GARDNER will be available for information on careers in the U.S. Foreign Service June 15 from 10-11:30 and 2:30-4 Those interested may contact the Career Center Jester A115 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 l i v e ( a r e • !; i -1, ' —^ • i ¿ 7 REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES B 158 8271 M I N 1 1 1 ; T h e Da il y T e x a n Sports Lakers win one on the road, take 2-1 series lead L.A. pulls away in second half Monday, June 13, 1988 Page 7 Associated Press PONTIAC, Mich. — James Worthy scored the first eight points of the second half and 12 of his 24 in the third quarter as the defending champion Los Angeles Lakers pulled away to beat Detroit 99-86 Sunday and take a 2-1 lead in the NBA fi­ nals. The victory broke the Lakers' four-game road losing streak and assured that Detroit would have to beat them at the Inglewood Forum to take away their NBA title. Los Angeles is trying to become the first team to repeat as champion since the 1969 Bos­ ton Celtics. The Lakers led 47-46 at halftime before Worthy hit two baskets and converted four free throws in the first 2:50 of the second half, giving them a 55-46 lead. Los Angeles, which made 11 of 17 shots in the third quarter, went on to outscore the Pistons 31-18 in the period and took a 78-64 margin into the final 12 minutes. Worthy scored his 12 third-quarter points in the first seven minutes of the period. The Pistons got as close as 85-76 with 5:28 remaining, but Pistons Coach Chuck Daly argued a foul call too vehemently and was whistled for two technicals. Byron Scott hit all four free throws, and Detroit didn't threaten again. A.C. Green scored a playoff-high 21 points and Magic Johnson had 18 points and 14 assists for the Lakers. Scott finished with 18 and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who had three rebounds in the first two games, had four in the decisive third period. Isiah Thomas scored 28 points and Adri­ an Dantley 14 for Detroit, which was play­ ing its first-ever home game in the finals in front of a crowd of 39,118, second-largest in championship series history. The next two games of the best-of-seven series also are at the Silverdome, on Tues­ day and Thursday nights. The best the Pis­ tons can do before returning to California for Games 6 and 7 is a 3-2 lead. The Pistons, making their first appear­ ance in the championship series in 31 years in Detroit, have won five of their last seven playoff games on the road. The Lakers have won 10 titles, five in the 1950s when the team was located in Minne­ apolis and five in Los Angeles, including four this decade. Los Angeles, hitting 42.5 percent from the field in the first two games, made its first six shots, but the Pistons stayed close, trailing 12-10 with 8:41 left in the opening period. A 3-pointer by Scott gave the Lakers a 19- 12 advantage with 6:15 to go, but the pace slowed considerably after that. Los Angeles went 5:34 without a field goal, missing six straight before Worthy's fast-break layup Scott comes one out shy of no-hitter Associated Press HOUSTON — Mike Scott was only human Sunday, and that was good enough for 8% innings of hit- less ball against Atlanta. Scott lost his no-hitter when Ken Oberkfell lined a single to right field that Kevin Bass had no chance to catch. Scott then retired Gerald Per­ ry to finish with a one-hitter as the Houston Astros beat the Braves 5-0. It was the sixth time this season a pitcher has carried a no-hitter into the ninth inning only to lose it. "They hit the ball pretty good," Scott said. "[Second baseman] Bill Doran made a nice play on the ball [hit by Ken Griffey] to start the ninth. We made three nice plays in the third inning." Scott walked none, but the Astros had made two errors, spoiling his chances at a potential perfect game. Scott pitched a no-hitter Sept. 25, 1986, in a game that clinched the National League West Division title for Houston, beating San Francisco 2-0. No NL pitcher has thrown a no­ hitter since. "It was one hit short of that mag­ ic," catcher Alan Ashby said. "If you're comparing him to two years ago, he was great today. Two years ago he was super-human." "I don't think that I had the stuff I had against the Giants," Scott said. Teammate Nolan Ryan, who has five career no-hitters, pitched 8VS no-hit innings against Philadelphia on April 22. The last no-hitter in the majors was by Milwaukee's Juan Nieves, a 7-0 victory over Baltimore on April 15, 1987. "It's always disappointing when you come so close and don't get it, but at least we got the win," Scott said. "I wanted to get in a lot of inn­ ings today because our bullpen needed it." Oberkfell hit Scott's first pitch for the single. "I threw the pitch I thought I'd get him (H it with but he hit the ball well," Scott said. "I don't know if it was a good pitch or not, but it doesn't really (flatter now. It was a ■ Los Angolés Lakers 99, Detroit Pistons 86 a Key to the Lakers’ win — The fast break returned to the Lakers, who had 10 fast-break baskets in the crucial third quarter. In that period, Los Angeles made 11 of 17 shots, or 64.7 percent. In the same 12-minute span, Detroit made just 34.9 percent to go from one point down at halftime to a 78-64 deficit. L.A. LAKERS (99) — Green 9-11 3-6 21, Worthy 8-20 8-8 24, Abdul-Jabbar 4-7 4-8 12, E. Johnson 7-8 4-5 18, Scott 6- 13 5-5 18, Cooper 1-6 0-0 2, Thompson 2-6 0-2 4, Matthews 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 37-72 24-34 99 DETROIT (86) — Mahom 0-3 0-0 0, Dantley 6-11 2-2 14, Laimbeer 5-12 0-0 10, Dumars 4-10 0-0 8, Thomas 10-21 8- 10 28, Salley 4-9 0-0 8, Edwards 3-6 0-0 6, V.Johnson 3-11 0-0 6, Rodman3-7 0-0 6, Russell 0-0 0-0 0, Lewis 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 38-91 10-12 86. L.A. Lakers................................... 23 24 31 2 1 -9 9 D etroit......................................... 21 25 18 22—86 3-point goals — Scott Fouled out — none Rebounds — Los Angeles 48 (Worthy 9), Detroit 52 (Rodman 12). Assists — Los Angeles 21 (E.Johnson 14), Detroit 18 (Thomas 9). Total fouls — Los Angeles 13, Detroit 23. Technicals — De­ troit illegal defense, Los Angeles illegal defense, Detroit Coach Daly 2 (ejected), Laimbeer. Att. — 39,188 Detroit Coach Chuck Daly was ejected with two technical fouls. Lakers finally get running game in gear on Detroit’s home court Associated Press PONTIAC, Mich. — The Los Angeles Lakers finally got their fast break going and ran the Detroit Pistons right out of the big­ gest building in the NBA. Leading just 47-46 at halftime, the Lakers turned the third quarter into a track meet and left the Pistons in the dust Sunday. Los Angeles raced to a 99-86 victory at the Silverdome and took a 2-1 lead in the best- of-seven series before 39,188, the second-largest NBA playoff crowd ever. cham pionship "We got everybody the break, finally," said Magic Johnson, who had 18 points and 14 assists. involved in In a 105-93 loss in the first game, the Lakers had trouble running because Detroit made 57.5 percent of its shots. In a 108-% win in the second game, they ran a bit more, but settled for jump shots. In the third quarter of the third game, the Pistons missed shots and the Lakers got re­ bounds and ran. Of Los Angeles' 11 third- quarter field goals, 10 were on fastbreaks or layups. "We've got to score to keep the transition game under control," Detroit Coach Chuck Daly said. While the Pistons were missing their first five shots of the third quarter, the Lakers were opening a 55-46 lead. Detroit made eight of 23 shots in the period and 16 of 47 in the second half. "I saw three transitions where we had three guys back [on defense] and didn't converge on the ball," Daly added. The Lakers got the first eight points of the third period, the first six by James Wor­ thy, to take a 53-46 lead. With the score 61- 56, Los Angeles went on an 11-2 run, open­ ing a 72-58 advantage with 3:27 left in the third quarter. The lead never fell below nine points after that. "We didn't play 48 minutes of basketball mentally," Detroit center Bill Laimbeer said. "We kind of lost our edge in the third quarter." Detroit's Isiah Thomas missed the first shot of the period, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar got the rebound and Worthy scored on a layup. Worthy made two foul shots before Joe Dumars missed for Detroit. Abdul-Jabbar got that rebound, too, starting Worthy off on a fast break that ended with a dunk. After John Salley missed a shot, the Lakers ran again and Thomas was forced to foul Worthv to prevent a fast-break layup. Wor­ thy made both free throws. "Today our big men came to play John­ son said. "Kareem made some big plays, either blocks or getting the rebound and then getting out and running. Abdul-Jabbar nad a total of three re­ bounds in the first two games, but four ir the third quarter Sunday Johnson said the Pistons had pressured him when he brought the ball upcourt in the first two games so the Lakers let for­ wards Worthy and A.C Green handle the ball more. "Wre stopped looking for me," Johnson said. Rangers tip A’s, gain series split Associated Press ARLINGTON — Charlie Hough scattered six hits and Ruben Sierra hit his 10th home run as the Texas Rangers beat the Oakland A s 3-2 Sunday night. Hough, 6-7, has defeated the A s seven consecutive times and is 14-5 lifetime against them. Former Ranger Dave Stewart, 9-5, lost for the fifth time in his last six games. Stewart allowed five hits and struck out seven. The A's took a 1-0 lead in the first inning on Terry Steinbach s two-out double and Glenn Hubbard s RBI bloop single. With two outs in the second, Steve Buechele walked and Cecil Espy doubled just over third base to tie if 1-1. Curtis Wilkerson then sin­ gled Espy home. Sierra homered into the right- field stands in the third inning, his third in four games. ■ Yankees 6, Orioles 5 — In New York, Claudell Washington's single over Baltimore's drawn-in outfield drove home the winning run with one out in the ninth inning. Wayne Tolleson bunted for a one- out single against Tom Niedenfuer 0-1, and took third when Jose Cruz followed with a single Washington then hit a long fly ball over right fielder Fred Lvnn Cecilio Guante, 4-2, w ho w as met bv Eddie Murray’s game-tvmg, two- run homer in the eighth, pitched two innings. ■ Tigers 5, Indians 4 In Cleve­ land, Luis Salazar s two-run homer capped a five-run outburst in the first two innings and Detroit held on to sweep its four-game sene** against the Tigers. Frank Tanana, 9-4, gave up tour runs on nine hits in 6-W innings. Mike Hennenxan, the third Detroit pitcher, pitched two scoreless um- ungs for his 13th save Scott Bailes, 6-5, lasted |ust 1W innings, giving up five runs on five hits to break a string of 24 straight games in which Indians starters had made it to the sixth inrung. ■ Red Sox 8, Blue Jays 2 — In To­ ronto, Mike GreenweÚ's three-run homer highlighted a five-run first inning as Boston snapped an eight- game losing streak against the Blue Jays. Dennis "Oil Can' Bovd, 6-5, al- S tarxings and boxes, page 11. lowed eight hits, walked two and struck out two m eight innings in Boston's first victory over the Blue Javs since Aug. 10, 1987 Bob Stan- lev pitched the runth. Boston sent 10 batters to the plate in the first. W'ith one out, Martv Barrett singled and Wade Boggs walked. Dwight Evans hit an RBI single and Greenwell followed bv hitting a 1-2 fastball from John Cerutti, 3-3, for his eighth homer. a Twins 6, Mariners 2— In Seat­ tle, Garv Gaetfi s two-run homer sparked a rive-run fitth inning and Charlie Lea allowed four hits m sev­ en innings as Minnesota deleated the Manners. !ohn Moses opened the firth with a single and took second on Mark Davidson s groundout Kent Hrbek walked and was caught stealing but Gaetfi homered to left off Bill Swift, 5-3. Gaetti -i 12th homer gave the Twins a 3-1 lead. Lea, 2-3, struck out two and walked rive The right-hander en­ tered the game with an earned run average of 0.65. ¡uan Berenguer pitched two hitless innings. ■ Royals 6, Angels 4 — In Ana­ heim, Ted Power allowed tour hits in eight innings and Bill Buckner drove in three runs with a homer and a double as Kansas Otv belted California and won tor the runth time in 10 games. Power 4-1 retired 20 batters sn a row following lack Howell's leadott double un the second. He struck out six and walked none m winning his third straight game Gene Garber pitched the ninth and allowed Chili Davis two-run homer, his seventh, ■ Brewers 16, Whit* Sox 2 — In Chicago, Robin fo u n t hit tor the cycle and Dale Sveum drove in five runs with a pair of home runs to lead a 16-hit attack as Milwaukee avoided a three-game sweep against the White Sox. Yount became the third Brewer to hit tor the cycle. He singled in the first, homered in the third, doubled the in eighth. Mike Hegan hit for the cycle in 1976 and Charlie Moore did it in 1980. the sixth and tnpled in ■ Expo* 4, Met» 3 — In M ontreal Hubte Brooks singled home Tun R u m s in the llth inrung as the Ex­ pos com pleted a sweep or the three- game senes. Romes led off the llth w ith a walk against Teirv Leach, 1-1 *rhe rourth New York pitcher Raines stole second, was sacrificed to third bv Casev Candaele and scored on Brooks single. ■ Phillies 5, Pirates 4 — In Pitts­ burgh, Kevin Gross Ditched ^ ' nn- ings to win tor the fifth time n his last six decisions and Steve ieitz drove in two runs with a m pie and double as Philadelphia edged the Pirates. Gross, 6-2, allowed 10 hits, waiked one and struck out six be- forc being -eiievec by Steve Bedro- sian with two outs in the eighth. Bedrosian earned rus seventh save • Cubs 4, Cardinals 3 — In St Louis, Greg Maddux Decame the maior leagues first 11-game w inner and also scored twice as Chicago swept the three-game senes. The 22-vear-oid Maddux, I ' - al­ lowed eight ruts, strucx out e«ghc and walked two to wm rus fifth straight game He also singled twice and reached on an error n a rwo- run sixth. ■ Padres 3, Dodgers 2 in San Lhego, Carmelo Martinez and Beiu- to Santiago each iro v e in two runs in the third lining and Bd W hitson won his third straight game as the ,* Padres >wept tne three-gam e e n e > . W hitson, o-5, allowed >ix o ils n * seven innings and Mark Davis , pitched the unal two nmng> ror ois ; ninth -Hive It was ne %weep of the LYdgers u home -uue , April 14-16, t%6. 'adre> rust • Reds 10, Giant» o In >an Francisco, Danny lackson drove n three rui \> and urioweu hits n seven uuungs to ead Ctncm nao pdi»t the Giants. lackson, o-3, m uted he G iants u one hit until the sixth inning, retir­ ing 15 straight batters toiiowmg a first-uuung single bv C hns Spe»er Tim Birtsas pitched the final two timings for the Reds, v *eiduig a three-run hom er to Rusts V filman w ith tw o outs in the tunth. lackson, who struck out eight, had a rurescoring single in a five- run second and added a two-run double in the third w hile the Red» were budding a 10-d lead o#i starter Kelly Dkwns, 4-6, and reliever Ran- dv Bockus. Associated The Lakers returned to their old form, and the sky hook returned to Kareem. gave the Lakers a 23-21 lead with 41 sec­ onds left in the period. A jumper by Thomas and a fastbreak layup by John Salley after he blocked a shot by Mychal Thompson gave Detroit its first lead, 25-23. The Lakers responded with a 9- 2 spurt, including two fast-break layups by Thompson, giving them a 32-27 edge. The Pistons came back to make it 35-35 with 5:07 left in the half, but they did not regain the lead until Dantley7 s three-point play made it 46-45 with 25 seconds remain­ ing. Johnson, who had nine points in the second period, then hit a jumper with six seconds to go, giving Los Angeles a one- point halftime edge. "We couldn't slow the game down. Their defense was that good," Thomas said. "They more or less controlled the game from start to finish." Associated Press Mfce Scott pitched his second career one-hitter against the Braves. nice, clean hit." Scott has often been accused of scuffing baseballs, but he got only praise from Atlanta Manager Russ Nixon. "He's one of the premier pitchers in baseball," Nixon said, "H e's the faced performance- best we've wise." Scott's near no-hitter was a dras­ tic turnaround from his last start against Los Angeles, when he was the loser in an 11-1 decision. Scott, 7-2, won his first six games of the season, a career best, but had lost his last two decisions and had given up 20 hits, 13 earned runs and four home runs in 15 innings The right-hander struck out eight and now leads the NL with %, sev en more than Ryan The Astros gave Scott an early lead with three runs in the first in­ ning off Rick Mahler, 7-6, Terry Puhl extended his hitting streak to four games with a single and scored on Doran s double After Denny Wailing reached on second baseman Ron Gant s field­ ing error, Bass' single scored Doran and Craig Reynolds singled to score Walling. Bass singled again in the third in­ rung, went to second on Reynolds' single and scored from second base on third basem an Oberkfell s throwing error to first base. M o n d ay, June 13. 1988. P a g e 8 T h e Da il y Te x a n In D epth THE BIG STING K i l l e r b e e s s w a r m n e a r T e x a s b o r d e r Story by Jeff Adams Graphics by Ashley Bogle and Hank Demond T exas w ill soon be invaded by a whole new breed of alien migratory workers, driven across the Rio Grande not by the hope of a better life, but the simple urge to swarm In addition to across new land. rattlesnakes and fire ants, Texas w ill soon have another pet to enjoy — killer bees. It started in tropical Brazil, 1956, like a cheap sci-fi movie of the time. A genetic researcher, Dr. W arw ick Kerr, crossed European and African strains of honeybee trying to breed superbees to produce honey and tolerate hotter climates. U nfor­ tunately, an assistant released 26 hives. The hive queens had been trapped in wire cages with gaps just large enough for the worker bees to come and go in order to attend to her. Since the queen was trapped, the hives could not leave. Kerr left for a time and a visiting assistant watched over the hives. The assistant noticed that as the workers came and went, pollen scraped off onto the bars, m aking it more difficult to properly feed the queen. So he removed the special doors. By the time Kerr returned, 26 hives had sim ply packed up and left. Entomologist Robert Bartenett, director of H arris County Mosquito Control, said the "ve ry vigorous and active" bees spread from A r­ gentina to Mexico and now are 450 miles from the Texas-Mexico bor­ der. Estimates on the bees' arrival range from one to three years, pro­ vided they do not hitch a ride. Two swarms have been destroyed in each of the cities of Houston and New Orleans already, w hile 14 swarms have been destroyed in C al­ ifornia and two in Florida. Surprisingly, the Africanized bees are slightly sm aller than the Europe­ an but deliver venom of equal po­ tency'. Though smaller, they are much more prolific. M ike W arnke, public inform ation officer for the Houston Fire Depart­ ment, took a fact-finding tour to Ca­ racas, Venezuela, between M arch 3 and March 7 and found that African hives hold up to 85,000 bees per than European. hive, W hile European hives may birth two or three hives annually, A fri­ cans may form as many as 14 new hives. far more H ow ever, though they are much more prolific than the European bees, they produce far less. African­ ized bees do not cross-pollinate plants as w ell as Europeans. Since they are a tropical bee, they do not store honey for winter, which means they produce far less, mak­ ing just enough for the hive to swarm, or separate and form a new hive. Bartenett said some South Am eri­ can countries have experienced an 80 percent drop in honey produc­ tion. The possible danger to the Texas honeybee industry is substan­ tial. .frican hives assign 50 percent of their population to "guard d u ty" to defend the hive against invaders, w hile the Europeans devote only 20 percent. To add to the trouble, the African gene is extremely dominant. A Eu ­ ropean and African cross, regard­ less of which is the queen or drone, w ill alw ays yield an African, so not only do they outbreed Europeans, they convert existing hives as well. Also, Africanized bees suffer from what appears to be psychotic European bees aggressiveness. claim a few yards as "personal" space and w ill pursue invaders per­ haps a hundred yards at the most. U .S. Department of Agriculture entomologists Anita Collins and Rick Hellm ick, stationed in Vene­ zuela to study the bees, said they found Africans attack animals w ith­ for RESUMES PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS IMMIGRATION AUSTIN 6 « 2 1 T H O M P S O N O FF 183 1 MILE S O . Of M O N T O P O LIS Phone 385-5328 ADULT VIDEO CENTER OPEN 24 HOURS TOYS FOR US 2 (X) WILD BRAT (XI I AMJLT VIREO 5 ALE5 A A EM T a lsÍM I L O W E S T P R IC E S - M A G A Z IN E S M i VID EO P E E P S IN A 6 C H A N N EL ■ t h ir d e y e 2532 GUADALUPE 477-5555 ¡ o - ■ r n - y j 7iio-»iM -a a.ao ■BILOXI BIM S i jjj_____ 4:30 j'u 1 «0 9:20 fa 2.30 Ji MMDS SOON H a Tr s p r a y 7:20-12:00 a 2 10 2 1st and G uadalupe 477-1324 ot¿4# T H T A T It £ General Cinema BARG A IN R EVERY DAY F1R$T M ATINEE SHO W 0N LY[ p o l o y it im o « t M BARTON CREEK MOPAC at LOOP 360 327-8281 SAME DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES ★ POLTERGEIST III t n x 1:30 3:35 5:40 7:45 9:50 P0 13 ★ s ia 1.00 3:05 5:10 7:13 9:20 PO ★ FUNNY FARM 1:103:155:207:25 9:30 PO BILOXI BLUES 1:153:20 5:25 7:30 * 4 5 PG13 BEETLEJUICE 1*051:15 5:25 7:35 945 PG H IG H LAN D M A L L HIO H IAN P MAU. ILVPi 451-7326 ★ MO 1:2S 3:30 5:35 7:40 9:45 PO HOIK STR U CK 1:30 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 PO C A P I T A L P L A Z A I-3 S mt CAM ISO N UP. 4 3 2 -7 * 4 4 POLTERGEIST III 1:30 3:30 5 4 0 7 :3 0 9 :3 1 * 0 13 FUNNY FARM 145 345 543745 945 P0 B m g n g a r in 200 meters and pursue them for a half to a full mile. John Goetter, a news reporter from Channel 11 in Houston, said that in his encounter w ith the bees, they followed him for more than two miles. The Africanized bees mark their targets w ith a special pheromone that tells other bees to sting the same spot. This guiding scent al­ lows the bees to track, call help and continue attacking the intruder. Furtherm ore, Collins and Hel- mick found Africanized bees sting 80 to 100 times in 30 seconds, in contrast to 10 for the Europeans. One experiment even found more than 500 stings in a 4-inch-square area of skin after half a minute. 100 stings equal a rattlesnake bite. W arnke had an eye-to-antennae encounter with an African hive. " It was am azing," he said. "Ten thou­ sand bees came out at the very first. They attack the nose, ear, mouth. They crawl into any body cavity. They crawl as far as they can and then sting." Despite two taped-shut bee suits, bees still got inside the suits. G o e tte r, w h o acco m p an ied W arnke along with Chris Kelly, a news reporter from Channel 2 in Houston and Allen Kim bel, a staff w riter for the Houston Post, said, "It was an amazing experience. It must be experienced to be appreciated. It was like a cloud of smoke coming out of the hive. ... They were com­ MIKITY ■ STUDENT D I S C O U N T ^ SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY $3.00 wltti valid I.D. H G R A N D H IG H W A Y ■ TONIGHT (3:15 fa $3.00) 7:13 Mf ALAN RUDOLPH’S ■ ■ T H E Wi m o d e r n s ! | N B TODAY (3:10 (a $3410) 7i30,4:43 H| gig I v ñ ñ Y f l ■ i f » » A L L D A Y ' I BbH " ALL SEATS-ALL SHOWS y ñ M A N N W E S T G A T E 460B WESTGATE DLVD Robin MMarru In GOOD MORNING VIETNAM — 41:4 1 1:1» 4:41 7:18 M l IS r a m S M k L S to w Guttonbtg TbHDantonfn THREE MEN ANDABABY 12.-00 2:44 4:44 7:18 *34 ffffl RETURN TO SNOWY RIVER II 11:48 2* 0 4 * 0 7:809:1» (3 > > ( TIMES PU BLISHED ARE FO R TODAY ONLY ing out of the hive so fast some fell to the ground before they could be­ gin to fly. The pheromone smell was strong, like a sweet banana sm ell." A thousand fatalities have been documented in Venezuela alone and hundreds more in surrounding countries. W arnke's advice to anyone who runs into the bees is to "ru n like hell in a straight line in the opposite di­ rection." Those most at risk from the bees are those such as small children, the elderly, or handi­ capped who can not run away. Those to anaphylactic shock, a dangerous allergic reaction to bee venom, are at even greater risk. subject report arnke's w to Robert Clayton, the Houston fire chief, rec- ómmended several other courses of action. Prim arily, the report emphasized the need for public education. W arnke does not anticipate "m as­ sive deaths" from the Africanized bees, but said an uninform ed public could be in danger. W arnke also recommended that the city acquire special equipm ent, such as bee suits, for firefighters and paramedics w ho may be called upon to rescue victim s from an at­ tack. Goetter illustrates the point by re­ calling a case of one college student in Venezuela, where the emergency medical technicians had to w ait un­ til after dark before the bees dispersed enough to allow them ac­ cess. They found an average of 49 stings per square inch of skin on the corpse w hen they finally were able to retrieve it. The param edics and firefighters also need to be trained in using equipment and techniques. Carbon dioxide fire extinguishers have been found helpful in controlling the bees. Soapy water shot from a pumper hose also kills the bees by knocking them out of the air. If the stream's im pact does not kill them, the soap clogs the pores through w hich the insects breathe. Param edics should also be trained to use bee suits and be aware of spe­ cial aspects of this type of rescue, such as the need to dress in lighter colors and w rap victim s in w hite sheets to deter additional stings as they remove the victim . The bees attack darker colors more fiercely than lighter ones, at­ tacking most furiously against black and least passionately against white. W hen the bees lived in A fri­ ca, their only predators were native Africans and a honey-stealing small mammal w ith black fur and thick skin. As the bees evolved, they ac­ quired a trait of attacking darker in­ intently, truders first and more W arnke said. Preventive measures are also being considered. Houston's Harris County mosquito control agency plans to fumigate for the bees just as they presently do for mosquitos if the bees become a problem. Requeening, a process in which beekeepers replace the hive queen w ith a virgin European queen, may also help to m inim ize the impact of the Africanized bees on honey pro­ duction and agriculture. Unfortunately, various attempts to establish a "bee-free zone" in Mexico have met little success. The problems in trying to secure the bor­ der against the bees are roughly the same in trying to secure the border illegal aliens and drug against runners. There are too few re­ sources to guard such a large bor­ der. There had been hopes of breeding the aggressiveness out of the bees, to dilute the gene before they reach Texas. Unfortunately, the gene is so dom inant that aggressiveness has not dim inished. Perhaps the only thing that will stop the Africanized bees is a cold climate. W arnke said that three or four days of freezing temperatures kill the insects, w ho were bom for warm er weather. W am ke said all land north of Centerville should be safe. Howev­ er, the bees have shown the possi- bilty of adaptation. The Lone Star is on the rise again and the killer bees are follow ing it straight to us. Unfortunately, the perfume they bring smells m ainly of trouble. TO N S of IRON a Pennies Pound 4 1 2 3 Guadalupe Next Door to H yde Pa rk Gym Texas Union Films S u s p e c t Tonight at 7:00 pm Union Thaatra Dr. Strangelove Today at 4:30 A 9:1S pm Union Thaatra E l S tir Spanish w/mMHm Tonight at 7:00 pm Hogg fe**- É WithnaU and I Tonight e 940 pm Hogg Aud. B STUDENT SPECIAL SUPERCUTS-Style Makes the Difference Let SUPERCUTS treat you to a spedd $6 SUPERCUT™. That's $2 off our regularly S8-priced SUPERCUT™ And, as a bonus, you can get a shampoo for only $1. Good only at these locations: Park Green Center at Riverside and Pleasant Valley 3025 Guadalupe at 30lh & Guadalupe Valid through June 20 Nat good «Mi any adiar aftor DAILY BARGAIN MATINEES TILL 4 30 SUPER DISCOUNT DESIGNATED ( ) TWILITE SHOWS JlilM lilllillJililll'l ¿ i m e - IE^ T G A T E 8 WESTQATE MALI S. LAMAW $ BEN WHITE SMART S T E R E O SOUND IN ALL AUDITORIUMS PRESIDIO si ON TWO SCREENS 12:23-M S-(Sd3)-7:3»-1M 5-lM S WILLOW m 11i3S-aáS-(4dSH7i2S4MUONMU COLORS U 12«S-2*SHSi«S)-7:aS-1fc0SO2:1S ABOVE THE LAW IB 12:25-2:55>(9:13)-7:23-9:33-11:33 MILAGRO BEANRELD WAR ■ l2,13-243-(S:23)-7>45-lfr«3 THE LAST EMPEROR wm l24(M445)-$i$$-11:2S BLOOOSPORTn 12:35-2:35-<5i$8>-7:13-903-1143 DOt BY S U R F Q 'N I O F FOUR AUDITORIUMS BIG BUSINESS 0 NIW0 SCMMSI 12i2$-24$-(94$H 7iJ$ WILLOW m lit$-(4rilH7ita4*ll NO MM» POLTERGEIST M irum 124$ h* (M $)-74$-9t$i CROCODILE DUNNE II \im4m oh mo ictami tin $CBNN2i IMP* M01 M l (MB M$AS9H IMMCf SMART ST ER EO SOUND IN ALL AUDITORIUMS BIG BUSINESS «. st 1240-2:30-(3t$0)-7:25-M3-l 1:2S POLTERGEIST III HOI 12:30-3«$$-(5t25)-745-f£S-1249 BIO eaMOMUM 1i$$-J:IS-(5t2S )-7«S5-fi4$-l2 «l$ RAMS0III Unom m m 1,1$-3J$-(348)-$43-19tI3-1M $ CROCODILE DUNDEE II m m i» 12:2$-24$*($«13)-7iíS-94$-11t3S i d COLORS oa 12i1$*2:J$-(4«$$)*7il$-94$»tM $ BEETLEJUICE 12J$-M»-(»48)-7.13-9t23-Ui2S 2:3$-(3i3t)-743-94i OAAgiMiflHiaM w • I wm B&l i ■ EWETBEED i» mm h i umimnn n — ■HUM 10 _____ IM M H !,V,i IB '.Hi h X I -iirruir s ~) i (rj-7 " ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ c o u n t r y mm ■ l l B ( 1 2 : 4 » - 3 « O - » : 2 0 ) - 7 : 5 » - 1 0 « 8 jPfibRB ¡¡PO U N D P U P P I E S M O O N S T R U C K * ! H T ( 12:4 0 - 2 : 2 8 - 4 : 1 0 -8 :8 » ) t f l » « ¡ja l ' l i g h t h o r s e m e n B I I I ™ (1 2 :2 0 - 2 : 5 0 - 8 :1 0 1 - 7 : 3 8 - 1 0 : 0 0 JPGjR M IL A G R O B E A N F IÉ L D W A R * ^■ ■ ^■ ■ ■ 7 :4 5 -1 0 .2 0 ■ ^ ^ ■ P H 1 C R O C O D IL E D U N D E E 2 NO ™«12:18-2:40-§*0»-7:25-10«0 \ P R A M B0 III " ^ * « y u y I n i : » o - 1:2O -3:30 - 5:3 8 H la 0 8 - U Vm B O U T M P A R K 3 ys 197’ I it** WHfTI o 44 ’ I2ÚC T U B M E f t i P i ó ■■•JM H»»O-3:85-0:20>-T:45-10:10 7©| W IL L O W (12,10-2:40-0i00)“7:j L A K E H IL L S ** 2A2t U N WVtm • ÍRO C O D ILE PUND I two aio »cneEN«t 'fo, ho famc* ) «10 »C«EEM»I HOP! 1: (11:45-2:15-4:48H7:1i-0:45 (13:20-2:50-0:301-7:00-10:30 2: EE 2 i R A M B O ÍH 1(11:15-1;a0-»:*5-»:00) -0:18 mo * * • « » PO. liOMO 1 H X ■ » » 1 a - 10:30 B i P A R E N T H E S E S IN D ICATE D ISCO U N TED .M O W S | S H O W T IM E S A R E F O R TODAY ON 1 la SUMMER CHILDREN'S I ■ FILM F E S T IV A L F O L L O W T H AT OWO V IL L A G E H ■ ■ VISA/MasterCard Accepted C la ssified A dvertising For Word ads, call 471-5244/For Display ads, call 471-1865/8 a m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitis Avenue “ ™' VlSA/MasterCard Accepted R K N T A L RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 350—Rental Sorvicoi 360—Fum. 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E ffic ie n c y to 3BR 4 7 4 - 1 9 0 2 h H R E E ¡0AKS 1 apartments • FROM $200 • 1 Bdr/1 Ba • Furnished • Laundry Room • PRELEASE FOR SUMMER • PRELEASE FOR FALL LOW RATES! 451-5840 409 W. 38th Sty HYDEPARK LUXURY M A R K E M B E R S APAETMEJÍTS 31st & Speedway Lerfc 1 B r*. Furnished, 2 Cetiia* Fxne. Mieruwevee. Slidin* GUue Doors. Patios and Balconies Vaulted Celling* 2 Pools, Shaded Courtyard. Covered Parkin*. Quiet Complex 4 7 8 - 6 0 0 5 The Ashford S eáio U S m i w i T k e tl ★ ALL BILLS PAID * P riv a c y F e n c e d F*ooi * W a lk in g D te ta n ce so U T • N e w ty R e m o d e te d * F u rm s h e d o r U n fu m ta re d * L a rg e E ffic ie n c ie s M t & 2 -2 1 e 476-8915 Pre-Leasing for Summer Fail CLASS ACTS! SUM M ER F A L L % S P EC IA L d e a ls $ N O W Call to find out how 4 5 2 - 3 3 1 4 Villa Orleans 206 W 38th & Villa Gardens A p t * . 3704 Speedway 34tft Stroot oik! Guodolupo 1-1 Cetong F ^ ts & Patio FULLY FURNISHED $300 /Yetoose Summer to# 4 5 4 - 4 4 1 1 H O U S T O N 28C* Herrpjh# f-Xtr - 472-8398 8RAN0 VW1NE 2804 M e t* Ave -4 7 2 -7 0 4 9 DALIAS 28C3 HemcaMI ’■ "** — 472-8398 WILSHlPt Xi‘ H 29th - 4 7 2 7049 Low Summer Rates! From $195-$250 ED P A D G E T T C O 4 5 4 - 4 6 2 1 O N E-H A LF BLOCK UT LAW S C H O O L ALL BILLS PAID Two b ed roo m A w c 5 0 # tm o i qwet property Trae tfto se d bokorxes o r beautiful courtyard. N e w carpe» ap­ pliances a r d sort -huge bedrooms with o u tit-r desks a r d b o o ta h e k e i usrge ctosels «n#- b u t t - r ffighboyv C e rttrd A / C heat a rd e ie d n o ly p o d M oder ate prces. N o w p retoo wng for ju tw tie rfc A . 476-5631 ALL BILLS PAID $245 N o w prptooiir g fo r » jr w e r and to* la rg e pfhoerarr r Hype Park. N e ar ih u tto carpeted draped, w a fc-tr doset b u k-m o tc n e r and pontry C o u rtya rd 4 2 0 0 Ave A . 451 -69 66 451 -65 33 CENTRA! PROPERTIES INC. 7-12A CASA DE SALADO O ne Bedrocr- A p n • CLOSE 7 0 CA m A . S S - JTTLE • m e r a n d fa d . _ a rg e c ie a r e ^ c x e n c y n H y d e P a r t N e a r carpe»- e d , d r a p e d , w a tk - r d o te » , owto- 4 0 0 0 m k itc h e n a n d p a n tr y A v e 4 5 6 - 4 5 1 ' 4 5 1 - 6 5 3 3 aN TttP soP sre nc 7-'2A EFf, & 2 BEDROOMS $215-5315 N o w p rele oeng to r m mm er a rd to*. Q ue» apartm ent* tn H yde Park N ear muHto carpeted, draped, o k r dot*». pcx>L g o v 'w ater po«d 4 2 0 0 A ve A. 451 -69 66, 4 5 1 -65 33 CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC 7-12A leasing fo r summer and f o i N o w Ctoon, que», wok maintained apa rt­ ment. W alk o r shuttle to UT FuBy car­ peted and draped, queen s o * bed and w a l- m dose» Wetter p o d 202 E. 32nd S» 4 7 8 -7 1 2 5 .4 5 1 -6 5 3 3 C E N T R A L PROPERTIES I N C 7-1 LA 1 BEDROOM $225 N o w sreteasnG fo r sim m er and f o i Q ue» j t x j rt* * ' " « H yde Pork 8 u iM r o e s w#< a x o e r m Lob o f o o s a ft carpetee. O roped g a * * a t * r p a c 4 3 0 7 Ave. A 4 5 '- 6 9 6 é 4 5 'f o 5 3 2 C E N ^ R A i BR O f>E R T£S N C 7-12A EFFICIENCY $215 SUMMER SPECIALS Wp'rn toapng now tor June-A*qco» B8 • 4105 Speodwar bodroom offioonoei $195 Soo ~ " 3 . 451- 4 2 0 * iaoam wTv iv e rto o x ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 7 - ’A par. ana# comctow. C a t k * a o p o m n e r f . 2 6 -3 -5 5 Ó C 6-T5C A/AJL TQ CAMPVS S A N O C " ' BE0- lARGí EFFtOENCY $ &'- ROCitv A N D 2 8 ÍD 9 0 C W EfFtOEN- oes furntsheo or v a KA 2 2 2 -5 3 ' a 6 - 2 AC x G E A # Carpetoc onc COS 1009 W o * 2 5 'i 45*>-6533 6 -2 4 A $25*- 25w L. V f t n -,Ci-prwr: >-n-iciirtir. ~ w 476 - 872 í,-24 » . c--a«aci« reotiv pixttort tmctoa -a l $ 2 8 5 *un- Í 7" “w r c n il *-art. YOU AND YOUR ROOMMATE NEED A TWO-BEDROOM!! 7(k fcejmmd iep iate A Sfcct*u ‘Z —A 14+f • i c w i Y R j R M s » APTS. AVALARLE • M n - B t r y j s • Huge One • Designer Cotcr Beamons A t a m Schemes t Mao«aves t Sun Deck • 2Pooe • QrSnuae • Soaoous PRE-LEASE SUMMER Willow Creek Hills 444-0010 V NORTH CAMPUS STUDENTS WELCOME1- - ^ ' HMKnAPTSb 3S130uoNohips i42Mh MaamlmTaémyi 4 » « S 4 Wi ScImm A % eqO A 1 to'to— wbIRkug tog ffo^toli t to iRsenrar — K tiyt CmMmiM Id»— I Kb Oi IbJbyf H *H |4 tlllA S . . . SflOH# ÉtepqMtototWf RteOte —2 A—te 1524447 bd*4* _. ki . .uk tuq ironn ■Anei Uwng 4W-9131 493POwvat A^c Ihtex %nO llktáféa YA8PA4MA ENGLISH AIRE APARTMENTS Sow Leasing for Summer Preleasing for FaE! Rent specials' Efficiencies 1 -1 ‘s 2-2‘s Townhouses cLam n g a t $199 $229 $299 $329 •rjf 1 f du mum. ib u rw mum» t.mi t ra c q u e t- BmskjetbeL Courts, i-T.L HÜLI* A*Y‘ c pert From $190/Morrtfi 106 PLACE APARTMENTS 106 W 45fh S tree t 452-1419 if no a re w e r 3S5-22T1. 453 -27 71 6-28L ONE MONTH FREF $100 O qtaek 3 btoda fo x * UT. 1-1. Eff from $ 2 4 5 Fwm foed pool, on-«to mono- gar and m artenance FOUNTAIN TERRACE APARTMENTS 6 1 0 W 3 0 * 4 7 7 -6 6 5 8 7 -K ★ Two Bedroom ★ Summe r Rato $330 w g ft «9 v a m p ** « > 0* qh WEST CAMPUS BFfOENOES 9 ) 0 W Si $ l 7 $ 4 2 0 0 f o t o # 8 8— 1m »ato $ 2 5 C k to o to t F e i5 p r tw g k r b e q u * g *A tau fid ry teom. C o i » w to c h — 1> — i * » p o t e q * . CALL 47S-1350 _ 7-1SC $210 - $225 to e Sprtwp C A r O t W a to r gfoto 328-6705 7 -2 0 5 Blocks West UT to— cuiate o— lo tto * quaef b — t o o * * K A c h e ik w e A m c fo iato . tounatoy g o a K e W l O u w u e i M B I n Í u - s K » U ó O ak W m m m m v q * Son G o b — l i 1 4 > 6 - H k M I I M i i l i l l l P B B w duai N e p a to 4 2 S -t2 )2 6 - 2 X 1981 V W Rabbit Convertible. 5-speed, stereo. N e w point. G reot condition. $ 4 9 5 0 Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Bumet Road. 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 6 -1 4 N ___________________ 1980 DATSUN 280ZX. 5-speed, tooded, stereo/caisette. N e w Pireflis. $ 3 4 9 5 . Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Bumet Road, 4 5 0 - 0128. 6 -1 4 N __________________________ 75 FIAT SPIDER. Green, looks good, runs very good, new tires, and rear brakes. $ 12 00 4 8 2 -8 2 4 9 6-15_______________ 1968 K AR M AN G hia Coupe. Mechani excellent colly sound. Body/interior $ 2 2 0 0 3 2 0 -8 0 6 1 .6 -1 5 ________________ 7 3 V W BUG - recently rebuilt engine, many new ports, looks and runs greot $ 16 50 4 7 3 -8 3 0 3 6-13 30 — Trucks-Vans ' 8 6 D O D G E Ramcharger 2 5 0 SE Royol. 4x4, immaculate, tow mileage, loaded, $12 ,98 8 2 8 0 2801 6-10______________ SURF/PARTY W A G O N -'7 1 Ford Postal Von-reeks of charocter- tooks, runs great $1,150 4 7 7 -1 8 3 4 8-12__________ 70 — Motorcycles H O N D A . 4 5 9 - 3 3 1 1 Full Selection of Motorcycles & Scooters Check on O u r'87 O M o m WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6 5 0 9 N . L A M A R TJ's S A LES «.S E R V IC E Austin's New Alternative for: USED BIKES, PARTS. ACC 4 SERVICE H O N D A YAMAHA KAWASAKI, SUZUKI SPRING TUNE-UP SPECIAL 10% OFF W /AD Registered Technicians 6721 NORTH LAMAR. 2 blocks louth of Lomar & Airport Turn on Raymond 4 5 3 -6 2 5 5 6-23B H O N D A C M 4 50E 1982. dark blue, un­ der 1 0,000 miles Asking $ 7 0 0 negon- oble Co» 4 5 3 -8 2 4 0 offer 5 p m 6-13 GRADUATED SELL 1980 Kawasaki 4 4 0 LTD G o o d condition, windshield. 1 0,000 miles, $ 5 0 0 . Daytime, 4 72 8 2 8 5 ; after 7pm, 4 5 2 -7 1 7 3 .6 -1 6 UT CONDO 2400 SPEEDWAY #204 8 blocks from campus. 2 bedroom studio. 850 square feet. $54,000. 451-6961. 6 -2 3 MERCHANDISE 190 — Appliances G O O D C O N D IT IO N . GE washing mo- chine - $ 2 0 0 . Hotpoxit gas dryer - $150. Both white. Cosh only.4 5 8 -5 5 5 1 . 6-14 200 — Fum lture- Household S U M M ER SPECIALS! EXECUTIVE SWIVEL CHAIRS $ 4 8 .8 8 3 0 x 6 0 D E S K S .............................$ 9 0 .0 0 GUEST CHAIRS . * .........................$ 2 8 .0 0 FO L D IN G T A B L E S .........................$ 3 8 .0 0 Cox Office Producís 346-1120 10938 Research, M-F 8:30- 5:30, Sat. 10-4 7-128 CARPET REMNANT SALE * 12 ft x 9 ft. or larger. Qudtty carpets, popular colon, variety of Pyles. $4 95/ip. yd. and up. h Block pkxfi Saxony nxtafale for home and auto. $6.95/tq. yd. * String doth, grow and popular pattern walpaper $ 8 95 s/r 7 0 4 1 Lamar M-F 9 ajn.5p.rx Sal 9-2 pjn. 6-17 M O V IN G SALE, boxjpring $150. U $200. linen after 5pm. 6-13 Q ueenuze nxjttieei 150. Untque europeon toko cabinet i 5 etc. 4 7 3 -8 3 6 4 UPRIGHT P IA NO : 1920 Wertor (Oxco- go). Dark brown wood. Colectibie an­ tique $ 3 5 0 / 0 8 0 459-6110, leave mes­ sage 6-13 W A T E R B E D Q U E E N bookshelves. Dark takn 0 6 0 459-6110, lac s ize w ith fineh. $ 1 2 0 / 6-13 , sJm o o t UKE N E W , i (complete) - $ 2 0 0 Matching dr $150 Cash only 4 5 8 -5 5 5 1 6-14 r toko - $ 2 2 0 Kxig bed 220 — Computara* Equipment ★ McComputer ★ Let us Buy or Sell Your Macintosh or XT-AT C o m p a tib le Computer 2105 JwÉn In. #T11 (Juki Plan) Twee-Sat. 10 AAA-6 PM 459-9009 6-136 1983 H O N D A V 4 5 Sabre. Shaft drive 7 5 0 cc't. Coll Stove after 5pm. 4 5 2 - 4 7 5 0 . $1450. 6-21____________________ COMPUTER GAMES! D A D roto ptoymg. N e w low ratos. 3 0 0 /1 2 0 0 baud, 8 i r w 2 8 0 -0 2 3 0 6 -2 4 ______________________ 1983 H O N D A 2 5 0 XL 5 ,0 0 0 mBe* G ood running condition. $ 7 5 0 or beet offer. 3 22 -9 67 1 , 2814 W ln d u x 6-17 RADIO SHACK TVS 8 0 G ood be y m er computer $ 5 0 or best oftor C o l 4 4 4 - 4 8 7 6 6-16___________________________ 1975 H O N D A CB 200T Excelent condi­ tion, only 3 ,3 9 9 mitos, «dudes 2 hel­ mets $ 3 0 0 C o l M ane. 4 6 7 -1 8 4 2 .6 -1 5 MUST SELL 1985 Hondo Etoe 8 0 Scooter. In good coodtoon $ 7 5 0 or best oftor 3 3 9 -6 8 3 5 6 -2 4 ___________ BRIGHT RED Honda Ekto 1501 Beautiful condHionl Runs kke a dream! $ 7 5 0 0 6 0 Coll Stove 4 8 2 9141 or 4 8 2 -8 7 0 4 C o l oftor 8 0 0 p m . 6-17________________ GREAT DEAL. 1987 Hondo Spree Scooter O nly 5 5 0 mi es. Ik e new. $ 4 0 0 C o l 441-9341 6-16 80 — Bicycles ’87 MOUNTAIN BUS CLOSEOUT! (wh»e ihev ta rt . BUCK’S BIKES 4 6 1 l j * r t ^ M * j VISA MC. Am I sovei «toteóme N E W SOFTWARE • OR dm nkwrapped Framework hhttde*. $ 25 Leodtog Edge word procsaor $ 50 . 4 7 6 - 1709 6-16 II $ 2 0 0 . TURBO C O tO N card colar m ontar 40MB hard drive, and B M ujmpiAbto. $800 C o l 338-1186. 6 - U 2 5 0 — M u s k o i Instruments HAYENES C luto. Cktood hato. C toa». Very good candtoon. Appmmmotot) T2 year» akd. 445 -20 30 evenng» and . 6-17 EXCEPTIOtNALLY BEAUTIFUL Monogum W ukteor Semet piano and bench. Ev ca lttnl condtton. wgwfy tonod. wtth wnh ton pratoiaonol apprgwoi. V $1195 3 4 5 -5 4 3 8 .6 -1 5 10 — Misc. Autos 10 — Misc. Autos ENJOYABLE DEFENSIVE DRIVING COURSE! • Traffic Ticket Dismissal • Weeknight & ★ ★ ★ ♦ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ a ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Weekend Classes 339-4781 c u r N C T I 1980 FORD Mustang Ghia. 5 .0 V 8 , auto­ matic, AT, AC, stereo, great car $1950. Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rood 4 5 0 - 0128 6-14N__________________________ 1987 CHEVY Comoro Bright red, 5- speed, stereo, 24K miles. Extra nice $ 6 9 9 5 . Auto Trends 6 7 2 4 Bumet Road, 4 50 -0 1 2 8 6-1 4N _____________________ '8 3 M U S TA N G GT High output V 8 . T- top, AC, showroom condition. $ 5 0 0 0 / offer 837 -1 91 0 .6 -1 5 _________________ 1968 CHEVROLET Impalo, $ 4 0 0 1977 H onda Accord, 1981 Ford Fairmont, $1000. 1975 Dodge Van, $1000. All in good condition 4 7 2 -8 1 2 0 evenings, weekends. 6-16 $ 9 0 0 1977 TRANS Am. Black, burgundy interi­ or, cruise, AC, A M /E M cassette Perfect condition $ 2 6 5 0 4 5 3 -1 3 5 9 8-12 ASSUME LO A N on 1987 Escort Wogon. Excellent condition. 2 8 0 -3 8 4 2 . 6-16 BILL BÜYS CARS 4 5 1 - 6 3 0 4 TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR CAR! ★ * ★ ♦ ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ W e B u y C a rs Call Tony (« 4 4 5 - 5 7 8 7 '81 BUICK Century, AT, PS/PB, A M /F M , cassette, new tires, 6 0 ,0 0 0 miles, $ 2 3 5 0 Coll 3 2 3 -2 7 9 7 .8 -1 2 ___________ 1985 CAM ARO , A M /E M , cassette, AC, cnme control, new radial tires, low mile­ age, excellent condition. 8 3 7 -3 1 4 5 . 6-10 1975 FORD T O R IN O G ood student car High mileoge Runs good $ 5 2 5 4 4 7 - - 9891 Leave Message. 8-12 1981 OLDS O M E G A , 5 7 ,0 0 0 miles, ex cellent condition. $2,100 4 5 2 -7 5 3 6 . 8- 12____________________________________ 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 7 9 SCIROCCO 4-speed, air, tow miles, Pioneer system, moonroof, fog lights 4 7 8 -4 0 3 4 after 6 8-12________________ '67 BUG Greot condition, high perform­ ance engine, $ 9 0 0 or best offer 4 4 3 - 7 8 9 5 . 8-12____________________________ FOR SALE: 1986 Hondo CRX, excellent condition, 3 4 ,0 0 0 miles, AC, automatic cassette ployer, $ 6 5 0 0 . Dick, 3 88 -1 36 6 . 8 - 1 2 __________________________________ '71 M G B GT, great condition, runs good, looks good. Must sell. $1100 O B O . 2 8 2 - 7 3 5 9 8-12___________________________ 1974 CORVETTE ORANG E, T-Top, auto, air, superb condition, $ 6 ,1 0 0 , book ue. $ 5 ,9 0 0 .1 -2 6 2 -2 2 0 2 (Kyle) 6-10 8 6 RX7 TINTED glass, excellent condi­ tion, tow mileage, $10 ,20 0 2 4 4 -0 7 6 0 , evenings and weekends 8 - 1 2 1973 V O L V O runs well, dependable, $1,500 3 2 2 -0 3 5 8 , Jerry. 8-12_________ 1983 V O L V O DL wogon AC, A M /F M , 5- speed, cruise, 8 2 K miles, tinted gloss, $ 7 ,8 0 0 Call 1 -2 8 5 -4 2 3 8 . 8-12_________ 1984 SUBARU GL W agon. White, excel­ lent plush interior, power windows/ mir­ rors, new Michelins. Will negotiate. 4 7 2 - 9911. 8-12_____________________________ 1976 ALFA R O M E O Spyder. Ivory, 1 owner. Rebuilt engine. N e w top, seats, battery, records. $ 3 ,5 0 0 . 3 3 1 -4 8 6 0 . 8-12 1983 M A ZD A RX-7, 5-speed, A /C , sun- roof, great carl $ 5 9 5 0 . Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Bumet Rd. 4 50 -0 12 8 . 8 -1 2 N 1983 CHEVROLET CAM ARO , 5-speed, A/C, stereo. 3 9 ,0 0 0 miles. 1 owner Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Bumet Rd. 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 8-12N________________________________ 1979 H O N D A PRELUDE. 5-speed, A/C, power sunroof. G reat condition $ 2 2 5 0 . Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Bumet, 4 50 -0 12 8 . 8-12 N________________________________ 6 7 M U STA N G 6-cylinder, automatic, new paint, new engine, restored to ong- inal. $ 3 5 0 0 , negotiable. 4 7 7 -9 4 2 0 7-14 1976 M G M IDGET Redl 4-speed, stereo, 5 8 ,0 0 0 original miles. $ 1950. Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Bumet, 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 8 -1 2 N 1974 DATSUN 2 6 0 2 , 4-$peed, A /C . Super clean, super condition. $ 2 4 5 0 . Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Bumet Rd. 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 8-12N ________________________________ 1985 NISSA N SENTRA Deluxe, red, 4- door, loaded. Must see. $ 4 8 0 0 . 4 4 8 - 8 - 1 2 ___________________________ 2661 F IN A N C IN G AVAILABLE, 1985 Renault Alliance 1.71. Blue, 4-door, AC, new brakes. $ 2 5 0 0 . Susan, 4 4 2 -9 6 0 3 ; 4 2 2 - 5 5 6 3 . 8-12____________________________ 1985 SCIROCCO Super nice, tooded Kamet XL sport pockoge, $ 8 0 0 0 value, oskmg only $ 5 7 0 0 8 3 5 -9 0 9 8 . 8-12 1973 SUPERBEATLE, dependable trans­ portation, spirited performance. $ 9 9 5 . 9 2 6 -8 9 7 7 .8 -1 2 _______________________ 8 6 SUBARU XT A M /F M cassette, loaded, beautiful, $ 8 ,5 0 0 negotiable. Call Lou, 3 2 8 7 7 4 4 or 3 8 5 -3 6 0 8 8-12__________ 1987 V W GTI-16V, 7 8 0 0 miles, mica blue, sunroof, radio, cassette. 2 -2 4 w a r­ ranty. Beautiful performer. $11,900. 4 5 3 - 0 7 0 3 . 6-13____________________________ 1966 V W convertible, fuMy restored. Red in color, moa wheels, excetent condi­ tion 1 -2 9 5 -2 0 7 5 , Monehaco oreo. 8-12 Irftbock N e w 1981 TOYOTA Célica brakes, battery, starter, ca rburetor, tune-up dutch, struts and alignment, $31 00 Co* 471 0 5 6 0 or 451-1453 6 - 14______________________ PORSCHE 9 4 4 A U T O M A TIC red, fu»y tooded, pow er sunroof, suspension pockoge, under book. N egotiable Ed, 3 85 -9 27 1 . 6-14_______________________ 1984 Jeito G IL While, 4-door, 5 speed W e i cored condition for Excellent $ 5 8 0 0 2 5 8 -2 4 4 4 6-17_______________ 1973 VW , SQUARE bock new lues, new seats, runs well. Cleon, dependable. $ 8 0 0 , 4 7 8 -3 0 4 4 , evenings 6-17 1984 SUBARU HATCHBACK. 4 speed. A C stereo Excellent 79 0 0 0 mile*, new new inspection $ 2 5 4 5 4 5 4 7 0 3 7 togs, 1 6 17 ALFA R O M E O Spydor, 198Ü Eastttom condition $ 4 0 0 0 4 4 7 -3 7 4 7 o»k fcv Rod 6-13 _____________ 1977 280Z, run» good Mu»! «oinhce Bet» oftor Come oñd tee 4 4 5 -6 1 7 6 B 12 7 9 M O N TE CARLO AT, AC, PS, PB. A M / FM cassette, cruise, excellent condition $ 13 00 obo 4 7 3 -8 9 3 4 .8 -1 2 ___________ '8 6 REGAL Limited. Loaded Excellent condition Unlimited mileage Warranty available. 17,000 miles. Must sell. 2 5 0 - 8 2 0 5 8-12___________________________ LINCO LN TOW NCARS: leather intenor, m oonroof, signature series, 1 9 8 4 - $ 7 5 0 0 , 1 9 8 3 -J 6 7 5 0 . After 6 p.m 3 4 3 - 0 4 5 4 . 8-12___________________________ 1957 CHEVY 2-door, runs great, looks sharp. $ 5 ,0 0 0 negotiable 8 9 2 -3 5 7 3 8 - 1 2 __________________________________ "78 MERCURY Cougar RX7. Power win­ dows and sun ro o f 95k miles G ood condition- $1050. 4 9 9 -8 3 3 3 8-12 1976 C AM ARO V 8 N e w tires, AC A M / FM stereo, great condition. Best offer. $ 1500, call Amy. 4 7 9 -6 9 5 8 . 8-12 '81 FORD ESCORT, 2-door, 4-speed, A / C $1,200 or best offer. 3 3 1 -5 5 3 2 8-12 1979 CUTLASS SUPREME. Excellent run­ ning condition Must sell Best offer over $1,700 Coll Lyso, 328-5131 doys 8-12 1983 Datsun 2 0 0 SX Hatchback G reat college cor. SGL package, loaded. Al- __________________________________ r . Negotiable. Must sell. 2 8 0 -3 1 5 4 8- MUST SELLI 8 5 Mustang convertible new tires, clean, $ 8 9 0 0 or offer. 3 3 1 -4 6 0 7 8 - 1 2 _________________________________ 1980 MERCURY CAPRI 2-door, 4-speed AC, A M /F M tape, 70K, runs good $ 2 ,0 0 0 negotiable 4 7 2 -9 4 8 4 , Randy 8 - 1 2 __________________________________ 1979 FORD Fairmont Runs good, tow Any- miles. AT, PB, PS Coll 3 4 6 -5 0 5 1 18-12 RED HO T bargamtl Drug dealers' cors, boats, planes repo'd Surplus Your area Buyers Guide (1) 8 0 5 6 8 7 6 0 0 0 Ext S 9413 7 25 1957 PLYMOUTH Looks Greot 0 8 0 Coll to see Robert 4 7 7 1854 8 12____________________________________ $ 1500 '87 N E W Yorker Tuitio, silver /blue, loot! ed, leather seats Like new, must sell O nly $11,500 3 2 8 2 758 8 12 H O N D A ACT O RD 1985 Hatchback N e w brakes, clutch and tires Coll 4 48 - 4 0 8 5 6-15 _____________________ 1$ IT True You < an Buy Jeeps for $ 44 through the U S government» G et the taels lodayl Coll 1 312 7 42 1142 Ext 9013 6 13 1973 MERCURY B tA G H A M . FuMy load ed, excellent condition, low milage For more information < oM 46 / 8150 6 -2 4 1985 CA M A R O Beitmeltu autom atic, T lo ad ed kOO 7 59 7 2 6 8 ,8 3 2 5431 6 21 a A M /F M cassette PVPB 1 9 /3 MtRCURY BRAGHAM M y lood ed, • • 1 ellent condition low m tooge fo r more informatton to * 4/s 7 8 150 6 2 4V Í 9 7 0 C H fV R O Ü fr M oWhi four door rum ureoi, $ 8 0 0 or bed o 8 «i C oll Dei rtck 4 / 4 6318 anytime 6 1 > 74 muon/ dwu •totUM wogon $ 7 0 0 All in gx.ickondi Hun J / l wugui, I 3 3 4 3 6 2 2 $ 12 0 0 ,6 3 RomUei M p i lot»» PLYMOUTH H O R I/O N /A 0 0 0 Exce8 ent condttion O rigm a! Cu* I 491 9314 A Í 9 1985 IASER TURBO 5 u w ed 'very ctoon * 8 u u m turn oof, bra iowvie» IA 0 0 0 mttot $ 5 9 9 5 251 V 0 3 9 6 21______ FOB SALE V W Superbeo8 e 19» 4 O ne 1, good Ceil 4414 4 1 -0 2 3 4 4-14 condition $ 17 50 or to n t< ) 8 5 A IÍ 1941 antique < hevrutoi q * i d.*.u .m I deluxe 7 5 ,0 0 0 mtto* black tx.eitonr boouty and condibon $ 3 5 0 0 1 2 / 4yJO 9 7 8 6 5 9 0 8 12 3 3 0 — R u t s ____________________ '-4 CHÍNESE SHAk PEl awpptot. Two week tomato* Papers n procem. $375 1 8 3 » 4 6 3 2 6-»5 4 7 3 -25 13 Cavalier Apts. 3 0 7 1 3 fo 4 7 4 - 7T33 6-21A BICYCLE TUNE-UP Summer G ea re d toko* $ 2 5 . G u a * r o r 1 ipoodl $ 15 An»»» Cruzer Bike Shop. 6 2 0 W . 34th S» 4 5 2 -6 8 6 4 7-11 340 —Misc. 1978 RABBIT, 8 7 ,0 0 0 mito», new broket, A /C * toreo runs groo» $ 1 2 0 0 nego* able Co* 4 7 9 0 8 6 9 6 22 2 0 IN C H IU r w o g o H lip thiftorv rack ndden onty $ 2 0 0 4 4 0 7917 6 12 ipeed tounng b * e 4 tono* 8 5 TOYOTA Corolla GTS Twm Com tooded $ 6 0 0 0 3 4 6 8 8 T8 6 24 1985 SUBARU GL AH power A M FM cattette. low rmtooge. excoltonl conck hon Co* Gayle, 4 42 -3 6 2 1 6 -2 7 ¡9 8 4 V W RABBIT Convertible low m i» oge look» beoukful, greot condrhon $ 9 0 0 0 or bent idler C o* 4 7 4 6 3 l i on» time 6 27 1981 VW SCIRROCCO S 5 -tp e e d otc ttora, new $ 2 3 0 0 3 8 8 260 3 6 16____________ tire* w e* mamtatned RIAL ESTATi SALKS 1 2 0 — H o u s u s GREAT LO CATIO N 1105 Norwadk En held thuttto to U1 3 2 Skykghto Ttee* $115.000 TXntot Agent 2 58 7 0 2 2 6-15 1«00 tq t 1972 MC» Midget G reat condttton ne» broke* lecent pamt *ob goo» lire* wool teat c overt Alpuw atoren opbonol $ 2 2 0 0 C o* 4 7 8 5 0 6 3 7 1 130 Condos - Townhouses REPUCA WATCHES W ear the worWi most expensive watches at a fraction of their origma! price. Call 473-3802 „ m a h o g a n y p i a n o $ 9 0 0 ar bad oftor t o d 6318 unibaae, 6-10 uqngN t o i Cde l 4 » 4 LO N G H O R N O lA M O N O I hagcaea rm g 1 # * 25ea dtoe $ 5 0 0 Ca8 * 6 1 -6 9 9 2 toettot to 8 5 C O N V tR lim t M U STA N G GT lood lo w iimY i Stiver butter V u i A a ed $ 1 0 9 0 0 4 8 0 0 1 2 8 M ___________ 83 V W l i tte w e WuKRivig ( 0 Red. Nock toother tiufttrmcu.»' 13 intone» Sumoid N e w ’ 3K $ 4 5 0 0 4 7 7 4 6 5 0 6 ¡9 78 litum ph TR7 R t S I G t t D L IA 5 5 K $ 4 0 0 0 i d k i N e w engine mapemattn etodttcol mton.» pun« tuutte* ate ?$T 4341 A ) l 1974 M t 81 H i t s 2 8 0 4 Am* mitotee» ic otr t iwtdmuned I nwkt end turn g re ca» $ 4 0 0 0 2 8 / 5 4 ‘ 0 a n x M ig ttov* 4 4 3 ^ 7 0 0 1 .tak *«» t o n e 6 14 L U N D O b f D R SAL f 330—Bomol SorutaM F R I I L O C A T O R S I R V K i 1985 C k tfV tO tfT Cevohttc U m k AC, bony A M /F M l a i f excioeoitt condition $ 3 4 0 0 4 5 4 *5 .1 5 4 14 tt* 6 8 k 4 du... 1985 M A /U A 85 ' G 5 Whtoa, A t aun root Alpina atore.* 26K x.ttoc $ » 9 5 0 Auto tre n d * A * 24 iucnel ftoed 450- 012 8 A T4N CALL 471-5244 TO PLACIA CLASS IIIKD AO Free Maid Service L a r g e 1-1, fu m i$ h e d . N e w c a r ­ pet, lo ts o f w in d o w s , h ig h ce il­ in g s w ith fa n s. 2 5 1 3 S e t o n A v e . ENFIELD 1 B E D R O O M WITH LARGE # 2 0 1 . $ 6 5 0 / m o . L o w e r s u m m e r s tu d y . 2 s t o r y , l a r g e desk, $450. CALL ZACH-PMT, 476-2673. 7-14A rates. 1 2 m o n t h le a se . 263-3174 261-7034 6-13 S A N PEDRO O A K S 2-2 FULLY FUR­ NISH ED. G A S PAID. $595, CALL ZAC H AT PMT, 476-2673. 7-14A___________ Page 10/T H E D A IL Y TEXAN/M onday, June 13,1988 RENTAL RENTAL : . ' -.IRINTALJ RKNTAL 360— Turn. Apts. 370 — Uni. Apts. 370— Unf. Apts. 370— Unf. Apts. 370— Unf. Apt»._____ RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 400— Com >* TownhousM 400— Condos Townhousos 400— Condos Townhousos ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ALL BILLS PAID $214 1-1............... $260 2-2............... $364 SOUTH SHUTTLE BLOWOUT G i l F or Others PROPERTIES ONE 447-7368 6 -22C SUMMER LEASING SPECIAL $165 a Efficiencies a N a w fy Ramodeted a AM Appfioncas a O n Shuttle — 390— Unf. DuptocM — — W A LK T O UT. Both sides of charming older duplex. Available June 1st. Each un# 2-1, lorge rooms, CA/CH, hardwood floors, appliances, nice yard. Special summer rate, $400. 2 8 4 $ San Gabriel. 4 7 6 -3 7 4 9 .6-14K____________________ M O D E R N DUPLEX for rent - 4513-A Speedway, 3-3. IF shuttle. Summer rate, $600. Catherine, 328-0600, 9om-5pm. 6-28K_______________________________ D A N D Y DUPLEX in pleasant neighbor­ hood. 2-1, ceiling fans, CA, carport, W/ D connections, wed maintained $425. 335-0197.6-10 UT AREA. 3-1, ceiling fan* wooden Boors, appliance* $ 7 5 0 plus electricity. 3411-8 Cedar. 444-7460, 442-8587. 6- 21K_________________________________ RO O M IE S! GREAT 3-3, built-in shelve* woflc-tn dosets Only two blocks from shuttle. Ceiling fan. $750. Apartment Findert-458-1213.6-29A______________ 371-0160 7-1 5 6 0 6 JO E Sayers off North Loop. 2-1, carport, $325, Kirlaey-Levy Realtors. 451-0072. 7-1L______________________ 3000 Guadalupe 1-1/Ceiling Fans and Patk) F u t y F u m m h d Starting at $325 454-4621 2000 W hitts P l a c e $429-Fall $325 - Summer • Vi block from campus • microwaves • celling fans • washer/dryer • private balcony • covered parking • fully furnished 454-4621 MULTI-TIER POOLS WITH FO UN TAIN Overlooks densely wooded ravine. A l Gas — Gas Paid. From $245, 2-1 $375. On shuttle. PROPERTIES ONE 836-0727 6-13C REDU CED HYDE Park cottage 4414-8 Speedway. 1BR/1BA, ceiling tans, wood floors, $ 23 5 + b ib 459-0017. 6-17 $ 2 2 5 + T W O W EEKS FREE. Very nice 1- 1 in small quiet complex. Ctoee to cam­ pus. Water/gas paid. Convenient to UT. ________________ -2773. 7-58 Shuttle/metro. 4 72 -2 7 S P A C IO U S HYDE Pork efficiency Quiet study environment. Gas/water paid. Summer rent. 4 5 8 -8 8 9 3,47 2 -0 84 2 . 7-6 VERY NIC E 1 bedroom and studio apart­ ments. West Campus Summer $250- $285, fall $300-5355. C o l 480-0976. 6 -22 C ______________________________ W EST C A M P U S Large 2 -l’/5 w/mi­ crowave, ceiling fans, walk-in closets and morel Great locationl Campus Prop­ erties,. 4 7 7 -3 3 3 4 .6-21L_______________ QUIET REFURBISHED C O M PLE X IN CLARKESVILLE. 1-1. ALL APPLIANCES, W ATER/GAS PAID, L A U N D RY R O O M . $ 2 7 5 SU M M E R $ 2 9 5 FALL. 1503 W 9TH. C ENTU RIO N PROPERTIES, 345- 6599. 7-11C_________________________ LARGE O N E bedroom garage apart­ ment, appliances, AC, perfect for couple. Walk to UT. Summer rate. 478- 7892; 837-8018 6-16________________ SUPER SPECIALS: 1 to 3 rooms furnished/ shuttle. unfurnished. From $150 on Available now! Will prelease, 462-3300. 7-12L 380 — Furn. Duplexes N ORTHW EST OFF For West/Pork Lone, near shuttle 3-2-1; fireplace, C.F., $600. 6 9 0 4 Thomdiff. Evergreen Properties, 331-1122. 7-1C 390 — Unf. Duplexes CENTRAL AUSTIN: No more roommate bas­ tes. Spacious 1-1, $175 9010 Golewood, 835-1001, summer leases; Hyde Pari, 2-2, 701A E. 5*i, $450; dossic Wed Austin - Hardwood* high ceilings, large 1-1 w/stody, 1207 W. 22Vi, $500; Pecon Pork, large 2-2 condo* $590/summer, $650/WL 4202 Speedway. MATTHEWS PROPERTIES 454-0099,835-5928 7-15L LARGE 1 bedroom Walk or shuttle to UT. Hardwood floors. $275. 3301 Duval, rear 345-0186 6-24_________________ BEAUTIFULLY REMODELED, historical 4 plex. 3 0 0 6 Speedway. Large 1-1 with study: $425. Chobon and Associates, 476-5394; Chris, 451-4565.6-24 2914 B EA N N A , across from Low School. 2-1. Huge trees. Appliances, window unit* ceiling fans, faux fireptace, lots of 1930's chorm. $60 0 Cindy, 328-6138 6-14____________________________ EFFICIENCY - 2914 Beanno. Across from Law School, window unit, ceiling fon, appliances, wood floors. $300. Cindy, 328-6138 6-14______________________ 2-1, CA/CH, carpeted, carport. 4705B Caswell, 2 blocks UT. Shuttle, forge yard. $295. 445-4903, 479-6194. 7-13 H O M E I SP A C IO U S 2 bedroom with cov­ ered pariring. Close to campus! Lots of windows, hardwood floors. $385. Apart­ ment Finders- 458-1213.6 -2 9 A 1012 E. 15th (east of IH-35). Large 2-1, hardwood floors, $285. Kirksey-Levy Realtor* 451-0072,459-5667. 7-11 5 4 0 3 O V E R B R O O K (northeast). Extra large 1-1. High on hi!, carport, $225. Kirtaey-Levy Realtors. 451-0072. 7-1L ZILKER PARK area Luxury 2-1. W o od floors, vaulted ceilings, deck, fireplace, forge oak frees. $450/monttv 263-9421. __________________________ 6-17K A N E IG H B O R H O O D TO CALL H O M E I 5 min. to campus. 2 bedroom duplexes. Peaceful M aplewood area, available now, $ 325-$375. New Management C o , 476-6616 7-5L__________________ STUDENT H O U S IN G 4BR/2BA 2 story older home. 5 min. to campus. Great student neighborhood. Summer rates, $950. CoN N ew Management Co. 476- 6616 6-13_______________ ___________ L A W S C H O O L. 5 0 7 Elmwood. Large 2 bedroom , h a rd w o o d floors ond fireptace. 478-1078; 477-8172; 4 43 - 3 6 9 0 $500.6-16____________________ W ESTLAKE/EANES 4-plex. 2-lVi, 2- storey. W /D connection* fireplace, po tio, off-street parking. $395/mo! C A S Management, 3 2 7 -2 5 2 7 .6-16N LARGE 2-1, walk UT. Hardwood floors, fireptace, AC, appliances, deck, yard, storage building. $495. 478-3069. 6 -30 SUPER SPECIALS: spocious 1 to 3 rooms, appliances, fireplace, fenced yard, available nowll From $150, 462-3300. 7-12 L_______________________________ D A N D Y DUPLEX in pleasant neighbor­ hood. 2-1, ceiling fans, CA, carport, W/ D connections. Well maintained. $425. 335-0197.6-17V_____________________ REDUCED SU M M E R rates! UT area; 1-1 $ 2 2 5 ; h a rd w o o d , $ 2 9 5 ; appliances, AC, W /D connections, super conditionl 452-8575.6-15 2-1 400 — Condos- Townhousos O i T Y P R O P E R T IE S i * N o w L o o s i n g N o h m LUXURY CONDOS Relax around the pool after class at your luxury 2 BDR condo. 31st St. Condos have washer/dryer, mi­ crowave, ceiling fans, fireplace. Sum m er/)400, Fall/$750. Lea Ann, Amelia Bullock Realtors 345-5771. 6-13C 2913 PEARL St. Furnished 2-2 condo, fireptace, ceiling fon, microwave, W/D. ($500/mo), and Available school year ($750/mo.J, free rent with one year lease. 328-6137.6-13 summer ENFIELD 2-2 Vj. Gorgeous, enormous, loaded! $625, ask for Wayne, City Properties, 478-6565. Evenings, 462- 0 6 2 5 6-21N LARGE 1-1, C EILIN G fon, water paid. Per­ fect for roommates. Large closets. $350-summer. Apartment Finders- 458- 1213 6 -2 9 A Town Lake Circle Apartments 2409 Town Lake Circle 4 4 7 -5 9 7 1 1-1 $289/month 2-2 $350/month June, July & August: $50 off every unit! * $100 refundable deposit Can be made In 4 payments of $25 each Elmont * Shuttle bus/dty bus * Shopping & entertainment * Laundry room * Pool * W/D connections * Special prices on selected units. AN OASIS IN IHE MIDDLE OF AUSTIN M O V E IN SPECIAL!! VERY LARGE T O W N H O M E CA/CH, all appliances, fireplace, pool, sauna, peb OK. 2-1 Vi, $375. Near IH 35 and William Cannon. 346-4392 7-iu STOPI CENTRALLY located! Tennis courts, pool, covered parking, W /D con­ nections, microwave, 2-2, Paddock C on­ dos. $525. Apartment Finders- 458- 1213. 6 -2 9A _________________________ CALL N O W ! Furnished 1-1 only 5295- Sum m er; seel Apartment Finders-458-1213.6 -2 9A $ 3 5 0 -F a ll. M u st M E D E R N C O N V E N IE N T I.M. Fields shut- fle 3-2. High efficiency CA/CH, Washer/ Dryer, microwave, $695.00 summer 8 3 6 -0 3 7 5 evenings. 7-19 THE POINTE. Huge 2-2 on shuttle. N ear Law School. Furnished, pool. $400. Available summer. 2 50 -0 0 7 6 .6 -3 0 $ 9 9 M O N E - IN Special! Luxurious, at­ tractive condos. UT area efficiencies, fireplace, jacuzzi, ceiling fans O n RR shuttle. Sharon, 926-0898. 6-30L. L E N N O X C O N D O S 915 W 23rd Luxu ry 1&2 bedrooms. $650-5950, Kirksey - Levy Realtors, 451-0072. 7-5L WEST C A M P U S large 2-2 condo All a p ­ pliances, ceiling fans, microwave, W/D, vaulted ceilings. $ 7 5 0 furnished, $ 7 0 0 unfurnished. 4 80-8200. 7-5 IF SHUTTLE. Summer rates. Small, quiet complex. Efficiencies, I, 2, & 3 bed­ rooms. G os and heat paid. Ceiling fans. 4401 Speedway, 459-0889. 6-14N S A V A N N A H C O N D O M IN IU M S . 915 West 2 2 1/2. 2-2, W/D, dishwasher, fireplace, microwave, low summer rates. W e have a few left for fall. Call 480- 0976. 6-22C ________________________ BU EN A VISTA G O R G E O U S 1/1. SECU- RIY, 1 BLO C K F R O M C A M P U S $ 40 0 CALL JO H N AT PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 7-11A HUGE 2/2 T W O STORY WITH LARGE S E C U R IT Y S T U D Y , C O V E R E D PARKING. $ 9 5 0 CALL T A M M Y AT PMT 476-2673. 7-11A________________ CRO IX 1/1- POOL, HOT-TUB, SECURITY $ 5 0 0 CALL T A M M Y AT PMT 476- 2673. 7-11A.________________________ BU EN A VISTA 2/2 FULLY FURNISH ED FOR 4. $750. CALL JO H N AT PMT 476-2673. 7-11A_____________________ C RO IX 2/2 FULLY FURNISHED. $ 89 5 FALL/SPRING. CALL T A M M Y AT PMT. 476-2673. 7 -U A _____________________ 1-1 W EST C AM PUS. N E W CARPET, W/D, 3 BLO C KS TO C A M P U S $ 37 5 CALL ZACH AT PMT 476-2673. 7-11A_______ PRESERVATION SQ U A R E 2/2 - H A RD W O O D F LO O RS M E X IC A N TILE $ 7 9 5 CALL Z AC H AT PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 .7 - 11A $ 5 5 0 / S U M M E R O RANG ETREE 2-2, FURNISH ED O R UN FU RNISHED. W/D, CEILING FANS, ETC S850/FA LL CALL A G E N T MITCH O N L Y AT 476- 2673. 6 -2 8 A ________________________ S U N C H A S E 2/2. SECURITY - C O V ERED PARKING, LARGE P O O L A N D HOT TUB $ 6 5 0 CALL MIKE AT PMT 476- 2673. 7-11A_________________________ C E N T E N N IA L 2/2 PRO FESSIO NALLY DECO RATED A N D FURNISH ED $1000 CALL M IKE AT PMT 476-2673. 7-11A CHELSEA 2/1 PRO FESSIO N A LLY D E C O ­ RATED A N D FU RNISH ED $ 5 5 0 CALL J O H N AT PMT 4 76-2673. 7-11A Perfect 2BRD/1BTH 3 40 0 Speedway. All appliances, CA/CH, W/ D. $ 5 5 0 -5 6 0 0 depending on lease 3 2 7 -8 2 0 7 6-15 location Centennial Condos Several 2-2's, Court yard level. All appliances, fire­ place, pool, and security parking! $8501 year lease. Johnson and Company 452-4300 7-11 Chelsa Condo Sharp 2-2V2, Two Story, fireplace, fans, all appli­ ances, huge walk-in closet, and reserved parking! Johnson and Company 452-4300 7-11 LARGE 1 B E D R O O M near Law School. Walk to UT or take shuttle. Private indi­ vidual garage, microwave, ceiling fans, pool, security system and guard. 477- 3198. 6-21___________________________ PARTIALLY FURNISHED. 1 Bedroom, cor­ ner unit. Two Blocks west of campus. Super condition. Lease for fall. 473- 2 27 2 or collect (713) 780-4149 6-23 1 B E D RO O M , 1 bath Campus Preservation Square Ceiling tan, Summer Special: $450/month + utilities. Call Stacey 4 7 4 -0 8 0 6 CACH. 6-24 condo. $99 M O V E -IN special! Beautiful 2-1V2 condo. Fireplace, fans, byilt-in book­ cases in small complex with Jacuzzi. O n RR shuttle, call Sharon, 9 26-0898. 7-1L O N E B E D R O O M on Seton. Ceiling fans. $ 4 5 0 month. Available August 15th. 331-7328. 6-24______________________ PRESTIGIOUS LIV IN G with all the trimm­ ings at Vanderbilt Apartments - 912 West 22nd. New summer and fall rates. Call Seth for details: 4 7 9 -6 0 0 4 .6 -2 4 A C E N T E N N IA L 2-2, TOTALLY FUR- N ISH E D W/D, M IC R O W A V E , ETC 5 550/SU M M E R , $800/FALL. CALL A G EN T MITCH O N L Y AT 476 -2 6 7 3. 6- 28A ____________________________ ____ C RO IX 2-2, FU RN ISH ED O R U N FU R­ NISHED. W/D, M IC R O W A V E , ETC. S5 00 / SU M M E R ; 5795/FALL. CALL A G E N T MITCH ONLY, 4 76-2673. 6- 2 8A _________________________________ SE T O N 1-1, FU R N ISH ED O R U N FU R­ NISHED, W/D, C E ILIN G FANS, ETC. $ 3 00/SU M M ER, 5500/FALL. CALL AG E N T M ITCH O N L Y AT 476-2673. 6- 2 8 A ___________________________ O R A N G E TREE EFFICIENCY - 6 0 0 SQ/ FT FULLY FURNISHED, SECURED P A RK IN G $ 4 5 0 CALL ZAC H AT PMT 4 76-2673. 7-11A_____________________ SPLIT LEVEL - 2/2. FULLY FURNISHED $ 5 9 5 CALL M IKE AT PMT 476-2673. 7-11A R E N T A L 3 7 0 — U n f . A p t s . LEASING FOR SUMMER PRE-LEASING FOR FALL 3 2 2 -9 » 17 .CONDOMINIUM QUALITY LM N6 AT APAKTMtNTHOMiWCtS • | T X M l » r t 2505 Longview THE ADDRESS IN WEST CAM PUS # Efficiencies e 1 BdTl Ba. e 2 Bd/2 Ba. A n Intm rfatm A Aanag o m mnt C o m m u n it y Being only a freshman» Tony was unaware of what Oak Lodge Apartments ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ . A f A S T S S I H T S 2124 twrlon Drive \ \ \ \ \ m \ \ \ \ \ \ m \ \ \ \ ' I $ 1 7 5 ! A B P ! I 2 B L O C K S UT ; ; ! \ l W I K I M O D V I 1 I) I H ) R M S I N I 1 I I I K I I A ( I I S 476 1957/ 474-2365 \ o h p r e - l e a s i n g f o r f u l l , t o o ! MESQUITE TREE APARTMENTS O n * bedroom furnished apartments. Close to campus, near shuttle Dishwash­ er, AC, ceiling fan. Laundry facilities and hot tub. Water and basic T.V. cable paid. N o pets! Resident manager #301, 2410 Longview St For info. 478-2357. UNITS AVAILABLE N O W ! 7-6L CHECK IT OUT Sep» low RoIm for Mtrmer/fal Efficiency, 1 bed­ room and 2 bedroom» fumehedWumahed Conrenfont to UT, Seton. Hancock Center. Startle and Q y 8 reine. Al oppfanca* pool, foundry room. Gas and water paid. 3 0 2 W . 3 8 th 4 5 3 - 4 0 0 2 6-13C ALL BILLS PAID Summer Rates Eff. 1BR Sm. 2 BR Summer Full $295 $330 W a lk o r shuttle to campus, C A/C H , remodeled, convenient to everything. 2212 San Gabriel 474-7732 Preleasing tor Fall 6 -2 0A FRONTIER APTS.-$210 SUMMER RATES ALL YEAR! 4111 AVE. A: Large efficiencies. On shuttle & city bus. Quiet com­ plex, CACH, G & W and basic TV cable paid. 462-0930,323-5982 7-12L CLO SE TO UT north Efficiencies, $165 $185. $275- IBr, $185-5225 2Br, $ 3 9 0 404 E 31st 477-2214, 453-8812, 452-4516. 6-30L_____________________ SP A C IO U S & NEAT! Furnished 1 bed­ room in attractive H yd e Park neighborhood Some bills paid! Mark V, 3914 Avenue D 323-0740. 6 -3 0 N • O N E HALF month free rent 1-1, 3000 Guodalupe Ceiling fans, parking, and foundry $2 75/mo Julio, 477-6131 6-17 EFFICIENCIES-5175 One bedrooms $27 5 Along Speedway Furnished or unfurnished Call Brett Moody, 453- 0 5 4 0 6-13C_________________________ SPEC IAL-LARG E CLEA N 1-1, 2-2, CA/ CH, fans, appliances, pool, sundeck. 30th/Red River $ 3 5 0 $ 45 0 477-3388, 472-2097. 7-13C____________________ G A R A G E A PA R T M E N T Pemberton Heights West of UT Treehouse setting in quiet neighborhood Bills paid exclud­ ing electricity $ 29 5 472-3056. 6-17 SPECIAL LARGE clean 2-2, CA/CH, fans, oppliances pool, sundeck. 30th/ Red River, $ 4 5 0 -$ 5 0 0 477-3388, 472- 209 7 6-17C 370 — Unf. Apts. 305 V? E 38th - Convenient UT, shuttle, older 1-1, A/C, appliances, carport, yard $260. 472 2097, 4 7 8 -5 7 3 9 6-20C 2 8CD RO O M -1 BATH, fenced yard, cen- ka l air, $ 3 5 0 plus deposit Near UT area. Coll 892-1255 6-21 RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. NO W PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER! * 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Starting at $295 • ALL BILLS PAID . Located o n UT shuttle & City Bus Lines • W a lk in g Distance to M o to r S h o p p in g Center • Ideal for Students CAMERON GREENS APARTMENTS 5700 Cameron Rd. 454-7007 NOW LEASING! PRE-LEASE FOR FALL • FURNISHED UNITS AVAIL • Efficiencies, One Bedrooms and Two Bedrooms avail • Large Pool Patio • Microwaves e 2 Shuttle Routes e Clubhouse 4 4 4 -7 8 8 0 2124 Bu rto n Dr. John Berkley Company U .T. AREA QUARTERS ❖ -------- Unique, affordable houses, duplexes, and apartments; Most with wood floors, fans, lots of windows, many trees. Historic charm, attractively re­ done, responsibly managed i n hie to ric house. $ 2 7 6 .0 0 7 0 S W . S 8 t h : U r g e 2/1-1/2, p e la ire b e d ro o m *, w o o d floor*, v e ry nice. $ 6 2 6 .0 0 9 0 6 W .2 2 n d b E ffic ie n c y in 1 9 2 0 » 4-plez. $226.00 a O O tW rig h tw o o d : N ic e 2/1 in p re tty a re a e a st o f H y d e P a rk . W o o d floors. $ 3 9 0 9 0 4 W . 22-1/2: L a r g e 1A w it h fireplace. $ 32 5 .0 0 C A LL FO R O T H ER S 472-2123 7 ) VILLA VALLARTA addreea in Weet Campual Teete- fit tor 1-i’a summer and tall Pool, Jacuzzi, bee- ketbte court and oigantzad aodai ac- Your home to Pared»» I 29 ILoefview 3 2 2 * i V M l l i t ’MU Windjammer Apts. $ 1 N OFF 1 * AN. rial e 3 ewtmming poota a On UT Shuttle . On the lake 442-6333 1M1 Tree Creek ★ $50.00 Deposit ★ Probating for sum/nor A fall Efficiencies and One Bedrooms available near shuttle, on 37th & Speedway ond 35th & Guadalupe. e ceiling tans • swimming poo k • fireplaces • loundry room From $ 2 0 0 -$ 2 7 5 /mortthl Call Now: 495-9055; 480-0662,453-8026 i i Í i Í LARGE lan d 2 Bedrooms Apartment» and a ■ • m m a Hot Tub • onorshum PRE-LEASINO FOR SUMMER AND FALLI I $ 4 M T o M D a p e a N * Irongate Apartments f 453-5300 1 2 2 5 W M t t r e k n e r D r . ^ • • DRIAT LOW RATH • Smal quM compfon eriro large • • 1-1 $199. Al appliance* new capet. • • n l b t i t fc * • 1W $ 2-1 $299. Huge Mng room - • • • ■ e b a lh lo b o fir t n d o w K la p M . * • i MBs H I * A n i l . 0 0 7 V 3 Q 1 7 T X D E M M • * I f l g r # 1 0 8 4 8 4 - 8 0 1 8 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ARE YOU BORED wMt kcky-tadry aportmant complexes that a l look afika and lack character and style? Then please coma see Rio House Aportmenh, a renovated I9 ?0 s apartment complex, located at ihe northeast comer of 17fo & Rio Grande. Large pool laundry, etevtrtor and a relaxad comfortable ambiance. 1-1 available 6-10 for $295.472-1238 6 -2 9 WALK TO CAMPUS AVALON APTS. 32NDATIH35 Summer Ratos Eff-$195, 1 I $2 , 2fir2lo- $295 Cammment for fow/engmeennQ stodenk, low depo*, eating fans, wdknti dim an-sia loundry/monogar, quial, daon Smol homey *'* 4 5 9 -9 8 9 8 476-3629 258-2176 7-11C ~~ WALKING DISTANCE TO CAMPUS Summer spec id on 1 bedroom — $195. Quiet neighborhood setting. O ne 2 bed­ room now ovoifoble. 3 0 4 E. 33rd. Coll 320-0331 7-1A 7 -3N ♦ e e e e e e e e e e ZILKER AREA Efficiency, $175; 1 bed­ room $250; 2 bedroom, $275. Pool and laundry Sp*al staircase, microwave, marbled fire- placa, cmUng font, W/D coontdiofli, pool. on site. Jacuzzi, units storting from $260 447-7525 or 440-0944 7-11L ★ LOFT ★ A D V A N T A G E 4 4 3 - 3 0 0 0 $99 - Move In Woodland Heights No deposit Open house on 20th, 21st, & 22nd of May Rent starting as tew os $229 for 1-1. Rent storting os taw as $315/mo. for 2-1 2 pods, |acuzzi. W/D con­ nections Bosk coble paid, hot water paid. Fire­ place, only minutes from downtown. On-site security. Walk to UT shuttle 8312 N. IH 35 837-9453 7-14B A * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Rent Special 195.0011 LARGE efficiencies in Hyde Pork oreo e All appliances * Pod e Drapes e Loundry e Gas & Water paid H yd e Park Place 4 4 0 0 A v . B M onoger #113 452-3590 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 7-15N ZILKER A R E A Efficiency, $175, 1 BR $250, 2 BR $275, Pool & Laundry on site. 447-7525 or 440-0944 * * 7-13L Northwest Hills First month free. N e w ly remodeled Tennis, pool, clubhouse summer foil O n Shuflb Advantage Properties 452-0103 7-15L ★ STUDENTS ★ e 1-1, 7 5 0 square feet, $260. forge enough for roommate e 2-2.1025 sq ft $350. 1st month's rent $ 7 0 L ow deposit Extra Large Apartm ent Prom pt M am tenonce, very clean N R ShtXHe Bus Sw im m ing Poo l N e w ty Decorated A nice small quiet community BROOKHOLLOW APARTMENTS 1414 A re n a Dr. 445-5655 $ 2 0 0 S U M M E R R A T E Preleasing wltj, fa || vacancies 3 clean quiet com ­ plexes close to campus, e 2 7 0 3 R IO G R A N D E : efficiencies e 2 8 0 0 R IO G R A N D E : 1-ls e 2 5 0 8 S A N G A B RIEL: 1-1/pool 331-4019 7-1C L O C A T IO N L O C A T IO N A l bifis paid downtown, near UT and Copitol. O lder building, renovcrted with forge rooms and plenty of ambionce. 1 more reason to five there! W e have Ihe best residents onywhere. C o l owner of 4 7 4 -4 8 4 8 for a chance to experience convenient fiving a* on affordable price. C o l us on weekends, too, we wM be glad to help you. 6-16A 7-1N urge W A LK UT, 1-1, CA/CH, freshly pointed, dishwasher, forge windows, covered parking, foundry facilities. $275. 474- 5929. 6-14L_________________________ BIKE TO UT. 3 30 5 Merrie Lyn Ave. Sun­ ny 2-1, screened porch, hardwood floors, room/workshop, stove, refrigerator. $385/mo. 926-5811. 6-16N__________________ _ forge hobby small, quiet complex near RR. Carpet, flooring, & point like new. $ 2 4 5 + elec­ tric. Leave message at 476-6508. 6-24 7-22L T RO PIC A N A APARTM ENTS Extra forge 1-Vs ond 2-2's available Pool, loundry, ER shuttle 2 6 0 6 Enfield #6, 4 7 4 -6 3 5 4 or 474-1100 6-24K CENTRAL ATTRACTIVE efficiency, fur­ nished/unfurnished. All appliances, pool 2 weeks free. 50.00 deposit $ 2 0 0 0 0 + E 459-4977. 7-15 C O N V E N IE N T UT, IH-35, forge upstairs, 1-1-1 garage apartment. A/C, yard. 1003 E 15th. $ 3 0 0 4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 478- 5 73 9 7-1C CLOSE TO SHUTTLE STAFFORD HOUSE \ p .\r r \ i í v i - 2-1 s starting at S U M M E R FALL YR L E A S E $325 $350 $325 / You’ll Save a Fistful of Dollar$! a m s phone hook-up a n nCRy ooni a Not one, but T W O t a m il courts a E: an ty e t o u M f e 1 V » a Sp o tfn g p o o R ! JT • a D iacountstoG oidanlJa, M r G a S *» . C o M N R d P a rta manca A to o morel ,t* ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ J 2400 W1CKERSHAM LN. Cap Lore el 385-2014 a r e » * » no morel S A N D S T O N E m i $100 D eposit PRE-LEASE S U M M E R /F A L L ■ >r", e O i l n q fa r " , lr • , v THrTHi‘/ tor*) I v nq Ban ms j nq fte<1r e S p r i t e Bu-, Sir.:t , 'fit e o ' A nq A rp . e St*c , - ■ * - ■*-' - - -- e ( I ' i i i ' y p o r ’ -'Jti'-r e t I p r r .,p B .-IT" e Ifn n ii . ,V. e P j t t i r q ' / p e r e C ;b *p rV . t e S»u*dr'< )' i x - •< e ' v»-. S w m m ir-q P o ', e bey 6 v m, & P • e b< :•>> Í > » . r - v ” . N E w C L U B H 0 U S E N D E R C 0 N S T R U C í ¡ 0 N a ” t H P'Xji T o t t l p s • A e r o b i c • J ( j f . u / / i S • I ' ¡ n j i - S< [1‘ i ' n T v • V - d r o i K i m r l EFF — 2 BR. STARTING AT « 1 9 9 00! ! Close to UT Shuttle • FREE utility hook-up • 10% discount for students Town Lake View Pool, Private Balconies Utilities Paid Furnished Rooms Free Parkini Free Cable from 9 2 6 - 6 6 6 4 MMe tom e hopeteatty watcmng o tor aeoyoatts In ihe mtddtoolihe desert He meets Tracy Helot Where are you gom gT -rm going to Canyon tart. *o - cyanwren has to offer. . . i f * ~ U f ) 1 1 Í P e i u r s k f k e s v « « te i L M * i t 8 f i t * '* 447-4130 2101 BURTON DR Tours Datfy 1001 S IH-35 and Riverside Dr. 444-3611 C a n y o n Pa s s 454-2157 r i v e r s i d e q u a r t e r s Soefo. tom leoches the oaes and loafei at Tiacy untxxtvng * the poo# FM fo. tom X nappe» M n g <# Canyon #a»anoatelne«em toae«XAiren Rents start at * 1 9 5 ! ! tod PrtvcA bateóme* of pobo» OnCRShuMe m M H f l a o e a t i — Eff. 2 A 3 iCRm» -O u b to o m — V#D connection» in tome apti — Plenty of tree parting What’s your excuse? TW O PO OLS • W ATER V O LLEY BA LL TW O HOT TORS • (H U N G FANS • ON uHUTTLE • FDtEFLACES FREE LAUNDRY 4404)118 2317 Plcaaaet V aley R4. HIT YOUR SNOOZE BUTTON, Because you're only 1 block from Ihe UT Campus in this fully furnished 1-1. Includes washer/ dryer, microwave, ceiling fans, and covered pad ig. Call 322- 9887 for leasing information.^ W EST C A M P U S remodeted 3-2. CA/CH, hardw ood* all applfoncat, W/D. 2 3 0 6 B Longview $ 7 5 0 summer; 327-0049. 6-1 3______________________________ __ 4401 SPEEDWAY. 1-1 condo, comrentent UT shuttle route, appliances. Summer $300, foil $325, deposit $175. Foil pre­ lease. Michael, 3 3 5 -5 5 7 7 .7-11L 1000 W 24TH. 2-1 condo. Appliance* ceiling fan, fireplace, balcony, shuttle route Summer $500, foil $550, depot# $250. Will prelease. Michoel, 335- 5577. 7-11L__________________________ C O ZY 1-1, microwave, dishwasher, vault­ ed ceiling, near UT shuttle, $350, monlh. 261-4025. 6-16N_____________________ SH ARE C O N D O 2-2, pool, on SR shuttle, dose to campus/downtown. Call 440- 7571 or (214J-231-9994 after 6pm. 6-17 RIO G R A N D E C O N D O S 6 0 0 SQ. FT. N E W PAINT, N E W CARPET, FIREPLACE. $ 4 0 0 CALL JO H N AT PMT, 476-2673. __________________________ 7-14A PARAPET 2-2 FULLY FURNISHED, C O V - ERED PARKING, $ 7 5 0 CALL J O H N AT PMT, 476-2673. 7-14A_______________ 31 ST STREET C O N D O - 2-2, POOL. HOT-TUB, C O V ERED PARKING. $650. CALL T A M M Y AT PMT, 476 -2 6 7 3. 7- 14A_________________________________ SR SHUTTLE 3-2 T O W N H O M E . W/D. 2 CAR GARAG E. SPLIT-LEVEL $600. CALL TA M M Y-PM T 476-2673. 7-14A 1500 W EST LY N N T O W N H O M E M U L ­ TI-LEVEL 2-2 WITH STUDY, WETBAR, T W O CA R GARAG E, $795. CALL MIKS-PMT. 476-2673. 7-14A__________ C H A M O N IX O N PV SHUTTLE G O R ­ G E O U S 1200 SQ. FT. 2-2, CITY VIEW, W/D, $595. CALL MIKE-PMT. 476- 2673. 7-14A 410 — Furn, Houses C L O S E T O UT • 2-2 on 30th St. All appliances, W/D. Available now $650. * 2-2 on 40th St. All appliances, fire­ place, washer/dryer, garage. Available now $750 Hope Properties 453-6673 6-13 420 — Unf. Houses Great House with Swimming Pool suddenly available for summer. Walk to UT. 3-2, AC, appii- cances. Already leased for fall for $1100/mo. $600/mo. for summer. 476-7608 6-14 4-5 BEDROOM Elegant/modem 4-5 BR, 3 BA close to UT. 1 block from Shuttle. CA/CH. Quiet neighborhood next to park. Rent very negoti­ able. 272-5783, 2 7 2 -4 0 7 6 7-12c H YDE PARK Elegant, modern, 7-8 bedroom , 3 bath home close to UT. 1 block shuttle. C A /C H . Quiet from neighborhood next to p ark $1800/m onth. 272-5783; 2 7 2 -4 0 7 6 7-6C AVAILABLE N O W , 2 through 5 bedroom houses for rent. 4 5 2 -5 9 7 9 (24 houn). 6-19 ___________________________ 505 E. 40th. 1930's stucco 3-2 Ceiling fans, window units, appliances, $675. Cindy, 328-6138 6-14 44TH A N D Caswell. Gorgeous 2-storey 4-3, fireplace, central heat and oír, W/ D, appliances, lawn service. $1175. G n- dy, 328-6138.6-14 __ W A LK TO UT Great old 4BR/2 both du­ plex. O n site parking. 1911 Nueces. CaN Betsy, 474-7859, 343-1267, evening». 6-14 K_______________________ _ 3210 NORTHEAST Dr Large 2-1, all ap­ pliances, utility room, covered parking, nice yard. $295. 3 4 6 -4 3 9 2 6-2 6 9 0 0 DU BUQ UE (northeast area) Large 3-2, extra living, nice neighborhood near Community, pool ond tennis court». $495/mo. 346-4392. 6-29L___________ AVAILABLE N O W . 3-2-2 plus loft. $575. N ear Porker at Oltorf. CA/CH, pool, tennis. 451-4386. 6 -30 TASTEFUL, C H A R M IN G , spaciousl Torry- town, Shoal Creek, Hyde Pork, 3,4,5 bedroom s $ 7 0 0 -$ 1 6 0 0 . 477-1163. Agent. 6-17 _____________ SQ U EEK Y C LE A N efficiencies, duplexes, houses. Available now. All areas. Flexi­ ble terms. 2-1's; 2-2's; 3-2's. 454-8387. 7-1 _________________________ _ UT CLOSE, 2-1, AC, appliances, hard­ wood floors, fenced back yard. Quiet neighborhood. Tall trees. 3310 Hemlock. Leose $450. 327-4154. 7-1____________ THREE A N D FOUR Bedrooms. Campus Area. All Appfiances From $600/mo Call Now l Habitat Hunters 482-8651. 6- 24_______________________ FENCED YARD, ceiling fons, 2 BD. 4114 Ave C 454-3128. 6-13. 4-2V2, $550, fenced, W /D connection* A/C, hardwood floors, covered porch, near UT, 5012 Eilers, 255-6778. 6-13 THREE BLO C KS from UT. 5 0 4 BeKvue 2- 1, CA/CH, like new. $475, negotiable. Coll Brett Moody, 453-0540. 6-13C PRIVATE SEPARATE, clean garage apart­ ment. 1-1-1, A/C. yard 305V2 E. 38lh St. Single $ 2 6 0 472-2097, 4 78-5739. 7- 5C____________________ C LO SE TO UT 610A W 35lh. 3-lVj, CA/ CH, deck, ceiling fans, appliance* re­ cently remodeled. $550. 6108 W. 3 5 * 5-2, CA/CH ceiling fons, fireptace, dock: $ 8 0 0 228-5076,458-3241 6 14. $400/M O NTH , 2BR tree-shaded house at 1206 Marshall near Enfield and buses. N o pets. Owner pays wteer 474-0129. 6-14_________________ __ M U ST SEE 2-1, two bfocks IF. $295, gas ond water paid. 4 53-7633.6-17 36RD, LARGE fenced yard, W/D, mr- crowavee, near $495/month. Call collect 512-696-6332 d o y * 5 12 -7 35-5695 evening* 6-17 Intramural shuttle SEE TO believel Seven bedroom, 3 berth, 2 kitchen. South, good condrtéon, $1200. Bed» and Company, 458-1777 6- U ________________________________ 4 5 0 9 AVE D 2-1-1 rennovated,taroe kitchen, ceiling Io n * appliance* A C W/ D hook-up. deck, fence. Neor thtrtlle $ 4 9 5 4 7 8 -7 6 3 5 6-14________________ A C LEA N 2 bedroom house, fenced yard, one block west IH35, three blocks north 51st Available August 15 $350/ mo $ 2 0 0 deposit on lease only- C d l owner 4 5 3 -6 0 6 6 onytwne. 6 -2 0 O N SHUTTLE 3 bedroom w/den. large bockyard A l appliances. 5 3 0 4 A biiqf- don Hace S 5 5 C A T L , 477-3334. 6-231 9 0 6 E. 5 4 * . Older, dean, 2-1-1 Hard w o o d * blind* A C * tens, fenced yard. $ 4 9 0 9 2 6 1999, 472 2097. 7 12C NIC E 3-1 Hyde Pork. 4 5 2 2 S p r e d w y. O n UT shuttle, one block ham pork $ 4 4 5 .4 7 2 2 4 3 3 6 1 7 ________________ MORKCLASSIFICDS PA Q 112 C A L L 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 TO P L A C IA CLASSIFIED A D ■ ■■■ | ! ■■■ - 1 ■■ ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED THE D a i l y TEXAN/Monday, June 13, 1988/Page 11 Major League Standings Houston Game Winning RBI — Doran (4) E—Gant, Oberkfell. Ramirez, ¿Reynolds LOB—Atlanta 3. Houston 12 2B— Doran SB— BHatcher 2 (19), Bass (14), Puhl (6) SF—Ashby P H R EN BB SO 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 301 000 01k—6 Tigers 5, Indians 4 DETROIT CLEVELAND New York Detroit Cleveland Milwaukee Boston Toronto Baltimore Oakland Minnesota Kansas City Texas Chicago Seattle California AMEMCAN LEAGUE c a n u v w ro n W L 38 36 36 31 28 29 15 W L 21 23 25 30 29 33 45 21 27 29 31 33 37 38 Pet. GB 644 — 2 610 3 590 8 506 491 9 101/& 468 23 Vt 250 Pet. GB 656 — 542 7 8 525 10 492 441 13 15 413 17 .377 W s o tD M N o n 40 32 32 30 26 26 23 Sundry's f lm n Boston 8, Toronto 2 Detroit 5, Cleveland 4 New York 6, Baltimore 5 Milwaukee 16. Chicago 2 Kansas City 6, California 4 Minnesota 6. Seattle 2 Texas 3. Oakland 2 New York (Dotson 6-1) at Boston (Clemens 9-3), 6 35 Monday's Qarnss p.m p.m. pm . 9:35 p.m. Baltimore (Bautista 2-5) at Detroit (Terrell 2-3). 6 35 p m Cleveland (Yett 5-3) at Toronto (Clancy 3-7), 6 35 p m Chicago (Perez 5-2) at Minnesota (Straker 2-3), 7 05 t O t A n g g lM S snU sfo Seattle (Campbell 3-7) at Milwaukee (Wegman 4-5), 7:35 * Kansas City (Bannister 6-5) at California (Finley 4-7), New York Pittsburgh St Louis Chicago Montreal Philadelphia Los Angeles Houston San Francisco Cincinnati San Diego Atlanta NATIONAL LEAGUE EaatDMaion W 38 34 32 31 30 25 L Pet. GB 633 — 4 VS 557 6 VS 525 7 517 7 VS 508 431 12 22 27 29 29 29 33 WsstOMaion W 32 32 31 28 25 20 Sunday's Gamas L Pet. GB 552 — 542 508 459 410 351 VS 2 VS 5 VS 8 VS 11 Vs 26 27 30 33 36 37 Philadelphia 5, Pittsburgh 4 Montreal 4. New York 3, 11 innings Chicago 4, St Louis 3 Houston 5, Atlanta 0 San Diego 5. Los Angeles 2 Cincinnati 10, San Francisco 6 Monday’s Gamas Pittsburgh (Walk 6-4) at Chicago (Schiraldi 3-3), 3 05 Montreal (Heaton 2-4) at Philadelphia (Rawley 4-6) 6 35 St Louis (McWilliams 4-1) at New York (Cone 7-1), 7 05 San Francisco (Krukow 4-3) at Gan Diego (Show 4-6), Atlanta (Coffman 2-6) at Houston (Ryan 5-4 or Darwin 3- p m p.m. p m 7 10p m 4). 7 35 p m Major League Box Scores Astros 5, Braves 0 ATLANTA HOUSTON AHall cf Oberkfl 3b GPerry 1 b DMrphy rf DJames If Virgil c Thomas ss Gant 2b Mahler p Griffey ph Totals BHtchr cf Puhl If a b rh b i 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 Doran 2b Ashby c 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 Walling 1b 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 CRnlds 3b 3 0 0 0 Ramirz ss 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 30 0 1 0 Totals Scott p Bass rf a b rh b i 5 1 2 0 5 1 3 0 3 1 1 1 4 0 0 1 5 1 1 0 4 1 3 1 4 0 3 1 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 38 5 13 4 ■ % # i ' % m rn rn m m m m M of continuous sobriety. ' ' i : * 'V * SHORT COURSES The Thompson Conference Center and Computation Center User Services will of­ fer a Microcomputer Teaching Facility Hands-On Worksnop — Lotus 1-2-3 for Be­ ginners — from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Fri­ day in Thompson Conference Center 3.108. Cost is $30 with valid UT ID, $108 with government ID and $150 for others. Atten­ dance is limited to 28. For registration in­ formation, call 471-3121. Computation Center User Services will offer several short courses this week in Computation Center Room 8. They are: In­ troduction to UNIX, from 10 a.m. to noon Monday, Wednesday and Friday; Introduc­ tion to MS-DOS/PC-DOS, from 1 to 3 p.m. Monday and Wednesday; Introduction to Digital Command Language (DCL), from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday; EDIT (Text Editor), from 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday; XEDIT For New Users, from 5 to 7 p.m. Monday; and Using CP & CMS Commands, from 5 to 7 >.m. Tuesday. Tour of the Advanced Grapnics Lab will be from 4 to 5 p. day in Engineering Science Building 526W. Courses are free to anyone with a valid UT ID. Register at Will C. Hogg Building 8 (471-3241 ext 253). ~ _____________ OTHER_____________ Services for Students with Disabilities is seeking volunteers who can spend one to Mahler L.7-6 Houston Scott W.7-2 T—2:19 A—31,778 Padres 5, Dodgers 2 LOSANGELS SANDMEGO Sax 2b Stubbs 1 b Shrprsn 3b Gibson If Marshal rf Shelby cf Scioscia c Hamltn 3b Andesn ss Belcher p MiDavs ph Holton p Heep ph Crews p T o ta s a b rh b i 4 0 1 0 Wynne cl 2 0 0 0 RAIomr 2b 1 0 0 0 Gwynn rl 4 0 0 0 Morelnd II 4 1 1 0 MaDavis p 4 1 3 1 CMrtnz 1b 4 0 1 0 Santiago c 4 0 1 0 Brown 3b 3 0 1 1 Tmpltn ss 1 0 0 0 Whitson p 1 0 0 0 Mack cf 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 33 2 8 2 Totals 0 0 0 0 a b r hb i 4 0 2 0 2 1 1 0 3 1 1 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 1 2 4 1 2 2 4 0 2 1 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30 5 9 5 000 100 10 0-2 004 001 OOx—5 Game Winning RBI — CMartinez (4) E—Gibson, Hamilton DP—Los Angeles 1 LOB— Los Angeles 5, San Diego 6 2 B - Brown, Gwynn, CMartinez, Shelby 2 S— RAIomar 2 H RER BB SO Los Angsiss Belcher L.3-4 Holton Crews San C Whitson W.6-5 MaDavis S.9 a BK—Whitson T—2 13 A— 20,112 4 2 2 7 2 0 2 0 0 2 0 Expos 4, Mets 3 NEWYORK MONTREAL a b rh b i 6 1 1 0 Raines If 0 0 0 0 Candael 2b 6 0 1 0 Galarrg 1b 5 1 3 1 Brooks rf 4 0 1 0 Wallach 3b 5 0 1 1 Webster cf 5 0 2 0 3 1 1 0 Rivera ss Foley ss 5 0 0 0 4 0 1 1 Teiada c 0 0 0 0 WJhnsn ph 0 0 0 0 McClure p 1 0 0 0 Winghm cf Burke p BSmith p Hesketh p Engle c Reed c 44 3 11 3 Totals ab r h bi 2 2 0 0 4 1 1 0 4 1 1 3 5 0 1 1 4 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 33 4 4 4 100 000 110 0 0 -3 000 000 003 01—4 One out when winning run scored Game Winning RBI Brooks (7) E—Carter LOB— New York 11, Montreal 5 2B- Web ster, Magadan, Fernandez HR Galarraga (16) SB Raines 2 (20), Dykstra (13), HJohnson 2 (9) S Candaeie H RER BB SO « 8 0 1 2 0 3 0 3 2 10 0 0 1-3 1-3 7 2-3 11 0 0 0 1 2 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 7 1 1 1 Myers pitched to 3 batters in the 9th HBP—Raines by Mvers T— 3 16 A 32.245 Dykstra cf Leach p Bckmn 2b M agadn1b Strwbry rf McRylds If Carter c HJohsn 3b Elster ss Frndez p Myers p McDwll p Wilson cf Totals New York Montreal New York Frndez Myers McDwll Leach L.1-1 BSmith Hesketh McClure Burke W.2-1 Pettis cf Brokns 3b Salazar If Tramml ss Lemon rf Herndn dh DEvns dh Knight 1b Heath c Wlwndr 2b DetroR Cleveland A r h M Franco 2b 4 2 1 0 Upshaw 1b 4 1 1 1 Caner cf 5 1 1 2 4 0 1 0 Kittle dh 5 0 2 2 Jacoby 3b 2 0 0 0 Snyder rf 2 0 0 0 CCastill If 4 0 0 0 Hall If 3 0 1 0 3 1 3 0 RWsgtn ss Allanson c DCIark ph Totals ab r h bi 4 2 3 1 5 0 1 1 3 1 1 2 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 4 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 36 4 10 4 230 000 0 0 0 -6 001 010 200—4 Totals 38 5 10 8 Game Winning RBI Lemon (4) DP—Detroit 1 LOB Detroit 10, Cleveland 7 2B RWashington, Franco 3B Franco HR Salazar (6), Carter (12) SB Walewander (3), Petlis (28) SF Brook- ens Detroit Tanana W.9-4 Tru|lo Henneman S,13 Cleveland Bailes L.6-5 Perlman Dedmon BK Dedmon T - 2 50 A 41.345 IP H RER BB SO 6 2-3 9 1-3 0 1 2 1 2 - 3 5 5 1-3 3 2 2 4 0 0 5 0 0 4 0 0 5 0 0 2 0 0 3 2 0 6 0 0 2 2 0 Brewers 16, White Sox 2 Amadcan at Chicago MM.WAUKEE CHICAGO Moiitor 3b JCastill 3b Hamiltn cf Yount dh Leonard If Deer r4 Adduci rf Robidx 1 b Sveum ss Schroedr c Gantnr 2b Totals R hraijlisa Chicago ab r h bi 3 2 3 1 Redus If Lyons 3b 2 0 1 0 6 0 0 2 Baines dh 4 4 4 2 Caldern rf 3 2 0 1 GWalkr 1b 4 1 2 3 0 0 0 1 Salas c 4 1 1 0 Guillen ss 5 2 2 5 Manriq ss 4 1 1 0 Hill 2b 4 3 2 0 Boston cf ab r h bi 4 1 2 0 4 0 2 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 1 4 0 0 0 4 1 2 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 39 16 16 15 Totals 34 2 9 2 003 064 030—16 110 000 0 0 0 - 2 Yount (2) Game Winning RBI E Calderon DP Milwaukee 2, Chicago 2 LOB Milwaukee 4, Chicago 7 2B Moiitor, Yount, Robidoux Redus 3B Moiitor. Yount HR Yount (8), Sveum 2 (8) Deer (9) SB Calderon (4) Boston (3) Guillen (9) SF Leonard. Adduci IP H RER BB SO August W.2-1 Chicago JDavis L.O 1 Long Rosenberg 4 1 2-3 3 1-3 Rangers 3, A’s 2 OAKLAND TEXAS Lansfrd 2b DHedsn cf Canseco rf Parker If Baylor dh McGwir 1 b Hassey ph Stein bch c Hubbrd 2b Weiss ss Totals Oakland Tsxas ab r h bi 4 0 0 0 McDwel cf Fletchr ss 1 0 1 0 Sierra rf 4 0 1 0 Incvgli dh 4 0 0 0 4 1 1 1 OBrien 1b 3 0 0 0 Petralh c 1 0 0 0 Buechie 3b 4 1 1 0 Espy If 4 0 2 1 Wilkrsn 2b 3 0 0 0 ab r h bi 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 1 2 1 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 3 1 1 1 3 0 1 1 32 2 6 2 Totals 28 3 5 3 010 000 001—2 021 000 OOx—3 Game Winning RBI Wilkerson (3) LOB—Oakland 6 Texas 3 2B Sierra Steinbach Espy HR—Sierra (10) Baylor (3) Oakland Stewart L 9-5 Tsxas Hough W.6-7 WP -Hough PB— PetraHi T—2 11 A -17.867 P H RER BB SO 8 9 5 6 3 2 3 2 2 3 7 7 time reading, writing, five hours a week this sum m er. Volunteer a little test-taking, etc., while sipping coffee. For more infor­ mation, call Mary O 'D onnell at 471-1205. Student Volunteer Services has volun­ teer opportunities for people of all ages in­ terested in being advocates for retarded cit­ izens. If you have a couple of hours to share and are interested in being a "spe­ cial" friend, call 471-3065. Texas Memorial Museum (Education Office) will sponsor two Natural History W orkshops for Children — July 25-29 for ages 7-9 and Aug. 1-5 for ages 10-12. Both sessions will be from 8:30 a.m. to noon. Fee is $50 pier person. Registration will be ac­ cepted by mail or in person. For more infor­ mation, call 471-1604. Armadillo Folk Dancers will sponsor free folk dancing at 8 p.m. M onday on the West Mall. Around Austin is a column appearing Mondays in The Daily 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. ___________ MEETINGS____________ The Afghan Refugee Fund will meet at 7:30 p.m. W ednesday at 5200 N. Lamar Blvd No. N204. For more information, call 459-8142 or 442-0363. _____________ OTHER_____________ Loyd Williams, a deaf missionary from H ouston, will be the guest speaker at the Church of Christ for the Deaf, 1500 Newton Street, at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. The service will be in sign language and will be inter­ preted for the hearing. Everyone is wel­ come. A dinner on the grounds will follow the service. In recognition of the 123rd anniversary of the emancipation of black Texans, the Texas Association for the Study of Afro- American Life and History, a non-profit o r­ ganization, proudly presents its annual Emancipation Week celebration beginning Monday and continuing through June 20. The weeklong program of events includes an art exhibit, children's program, dance, luncheon and seminar, golf tournam ent, and a Capitol cerem ony honoring prom i­ nent black Texans. For more information, call the Austin Chamber of Commerce, one of the co-sponsors of the event, at 478-9383 by susan boren Top SWC award goes to Mitchell Associated Press DALLAS — Betsy Mitchell, who completed her eligibility for the Lady Longhorns in April, and Ar­ kansas' Joe Falcon were selected 1987-88 Southwest Conference Ath­ letes of the Year. Mitchell won the Athlete of Year award for 1986-87 and returned to lead the Texas swim team to its fifth consecutive NCAA championship. She holds a world record in the 200- meter backstroke. A Marietta, Ohio, native, Mitchell competed in the 1984 Olympics and is a leading candidate to make the 1988 team. Falcon, a four-time NCAA Track champion, added a fifth champion­ ship to his collection when he won the 1,500-meters at the recent 1988 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships at Eugene, Oregon. The junior from Belton, Mo., was named the Most Valuable Performer at both the Southwest Confrence In­ door and Outdoor Meets. Rockets’ hiring of Hawks aide nearly official Associated Press HOUSTON — Don Chaney, ex­ pected to be named head coach of the Houston Rockets Monday, ar­ rived in Houston Sunday to discuss final contract terms with General Manager Ray Patterson. Chaney, an assistant coach with the Atlanta Hawks this season, ar­ rived Sunday afternoon and a short time later, the Rockets called a news conference for Monday morning. A former University of Houston guard and former head coach of the Los Angeles Clippers, Chaney had been the Rockets' leading candidate since they fired Coach Bill Fitch. “I don't want to say that I got him because he's the opposite of Fitch,” Patterson said. "But as you look at it, you can see they are very differ­ ent.” Around Campus is a daily column list­ ing University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and registered student organizations. To appear in Around Campus, organizations must be registered with the Office of Stu­ dent Activities. Announcements must be submitted on the correct form, available in The 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. ____________MEETINGS____________ Computer Professionals for Social Re­ sponsibility will hold its monthly business leeting at 6:30 p.m. Monday in T.U. Tay- r Hall of Engineering 3.128. At 7:30 p.m., falter F. Jones, ethics officer at Tracor Corp., will speak on "From the Creed to the Deed: Corporate Ethics Policies." A new Weight Watchers group will form within easy walking distance of the campus to meet at lunch time one day of the week. Everyone is welcome. If interested, call Andy at 471-5965. Smoke-free Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, sponsored by the University Group of AA and the St Austin's Promises Group of AA are held at noon Mondays and Fridays in Paulist Hall of St. Austin's Catholic Church, 2010 Guadalupe St. Stu­ dents, staff and members of the communi­ ty are welcome. Traditionally, Fridays fea­ ture guest speakers within a year or more sexlife C hapter 1 Simon sat m the hoi green grass and' finally let the ants crawl on his feet Me­ tropolis loomed ahead o! him on the akytine Black concrete Sallow popula­ tion Where could Truth be hiding m there? Diane watched him with a growing curiosity. Most man and women came from the city looking for her, but he, he had stubbornly Ignored her The cool blue stream. The purple and yeUow ir- iaes The pink granite chtfs The white triangles ol light between the tree leaves. His attention never left eye- level. She was akve in the rancid smell ol sweat under his nose Simon smelled nothing BLOOM COUNTY byB erl * * 6 * ^ m a r t in WAGNER'S 1 Scoundrel 5 Stupid 9 Loses pep 14 Volume 15 Fancy case 16 Mindful 17 Leave out 16 Drizzle 19 Rich fabric 20 Alcott girl 21 For rent 22 Movement 23 Prove (a will) 25 Observed 27 Next to Calif. 28 Seed coat 29 South of Can. 32 Promontory 35 Turmoil 37 French river 38 Seine feeder 39 Monster 40 Taught new skills 42 Sharp weapon 43 Excessively 44 Football field 45 E. Can. prov. 46 Vegetable 47 Lazy one 51 Time of year 54 Cinema prize 56 Mouths 57 Stove part 58 Impure diamond 59 Dry, of wines 60 Antipathies 61 Lodged 62 Mustard- family plant 63 Get together C U B A A N O N S T 5 A H O U S U R P A S T 0 s 1 N A 1 B E E R u N 1 T S A C A T lS G R E S M O T O S T R E W S 1 R E N B E A R E R A G N E W □ T E E L B E D E E S S S T A G N A N T S T R A- D D L E C O N S H O T Q O 1 S E C 0 O V E R □ C O U R 0 H O E S S b u N D R D R O N E S C □ 0 0 0 E 3 S 1 S L e '-fl o L L A L 1 E S I O P 1 N E E A S E I N A M E D H A G P 6 P E R 0 O M O D S D 64 Alaska city 65 Emmets DOWN 1 Jazz piece 2 Promising worker Friend: Sp Gamble Lower Beneficial Cogitate 8 Last extremity 9 Attaches 10 Medallion 11 Engagement 12 “Come back to — ” 13 Launch 21 Pastry 24 Silly error 26 University 28 Exposed 29 Entreat 30 Rail bird 31 A of USA 32 Beverage 33 M ountain pref. 34 Penetrating 35 M innesotan's neighbor 36 Subject 38 Slush 41 Everlasting 42 Parch 45 Iowa river 46 Nips 47 Fabric 48 Sacred text 49 Burst forth 50 Reckons 51 Islam title 52 Carriage 53 Pro — 55 Alone 59 Bikini part 6-13-88 1988 Un •■y: 3 <- d . v A N B P !P H A N i\ LOOK AT THE FACTS, SIP THE , SOVIETS ARB IN TUB THROES OF j PERESTROIKA, THB CHINESE ARB * RESTRUCTURING THEIR ECONOMY. ° \ ii/H A T FROM POLANP TO VIETNAM, DiSCRE&TEP common < r e c p.o m - APB <0 ■ CL CL < O > CO TM SAY/NO THE OXPUJAR S OVER, SIR' IT'S OVER, ANP ME W ON' % ¿UB / \o m iN HOURS TIMES ! SQUARE ERUPTED. N2i t e r ' l&P HcPLiSancP R o b e r t Tfr MONDAY RELIEF b > t o m k i n g 6-13C The men were flying to Austin for With wire reports. NEED SHARP INDIVIDUAL wüh profeaatooal aWtode and appearance to be on.uta monogar of unal, Wait Am oportmani Community. Compemotio» pock- oga induda*: affidancy oporlmant, irtSitot, plus unal tokwy and conwniuiont. Bring or moR rafumn to: MJ 11940 JollyvilleRd 12017 Austin, Texas 7 8 7 5 9 6-17 Local wreck victim in stable condition P a g e ^ ^ T l f f i J D M L t t Y T E X A N / ^ 1^ I 2 2 S — RINTAL RINTAL RINTAL EDUCATIONAL SKRVICES IMPLOYMINT 425 — Rooms 435 — Co )pi 440— Room m atii 590— Tutoring 760— M b c Sarvkaa PRELEASING FOR SUMMER Lory*, carp sled room» Two M o d o lo UT • mor 2 M 6 t ío G ra nd * W Fra* M w q laundry, k han w/fridga. Quit*. ■ n a b n g A non-trnotong rooms ovoüod s M ow * In M a y 22 M ove Ovrt A ug 26. Smgfa Occupancy Double Occupancy 476-0645 S200/monlh $125/nwn* 477-5307 6-14B room, Refrig- VERY LARGE daon pnvo orator, both, no kücnen. 3 8 * Si. Quiet mdmduoi* N o pah. N o loos*. 422-1212. __ 6 -2 4C N E A R UT la w School on RR ihulto. fur notad rooms $150 to $ 2 2 5 ABRI CA/ C H ~*hora b a *. 3310 Rad Rivar, 4 7 6 3634. 7-1N__________________________ IN V IC T O R IA N horn* Raducod summor rants. Summor loas* luxury omen**». 2818 Rio G ra nd * 3 4 3 -0 9 6 5 6 29 PRIVATE BATH, prívalo room. S t a r * küchen, CA/CH Qutot, non-; potass 4 0 8 W. 1 7 * St Li ASP. 474 -2 0 0 2; 4 7 2 222 2 7-1C «moking, so, $225, R O O M FO R root in 3BR condo Fiv* min­ utos from shunto. N E Austin. Pool, W/D, $235/mo ABP 9 2 8 -4 6 7 2 6-17________ HYDE PARK room for nonsmoking grad­ úalo «Tudor* $179 ABP Naor inulta M oumon Monagom oni 4 5 3 -4 5 0 0 6- 17N 435 — Co-ops For a great summer! $ 2 6 9 double $ 3 6 9 single A ll bills paid 17 home-cooked meals/week On the drag 476-5678 474-6905 CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD NEAT HOUSE A L L B I L L S 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 F R E N C H H O U S E ! $ 2 5 0 d o u b l e s $ 3 1 4 singles All h il l s ( ¡ r e a l m e a l s 4 b l o c k s U T 4 7 8 - 6 5 S 6 440 — Roommates Female student needed to share two bedroom two bath apartment for summer or summer and fall. SR shut­ tle route. $90 month plus Vs utilities. Call 441-2739. Nice place, nice people. 6-16 LET R O O M M A T E BRO KERS HELP YO U F IN D C O M P A T IB L E R O O M M A T E S . 1304 W EST AVENUE, 4 7 7 -5 5 6 9 FEE 6-20C ______________________ _ W E N E E D o n * moro non-smoking fomcil* for now 2-2'/5 condo. Pool, security, mi- crowovo, computar and primor, W/D, an- twonng mochin*, and toh mor*. $200/ month + Vo bills. W ondy 385-4391. 6-17 WALK TOUT Two room» in 3 M housa toeing Eastwood park for 1988-89. This July fro*. Quiot, shady Proof, CA/CH, W/D, coiling fans. $200/mo + Vi bids. I'm a arod siudont. Smokon OK. Call (farol 476-2160. 6-13 N O N - S M O K IN G mat* (siudont) wontod to sta r* fumistad 2BR/2BA oporlmont. Pool, statta, micrawavo, $175 + V i M b 462-9631 aftor 5pm 6-21_____________ 2 FEM A LES to sta r* O range Tro* Con- daminiumo. 2-2 V), fuSy fumistad, secur­ ity. $ 6 0 0 m o o * c o l 4 7 7 -7 4 6 2 6 -22 FEMALE SUTDEN T noodod tostara 2-2 condo: Parquet floors, Fronch ale... $ 3 2 5 / m o n * CaN 454-4518, or 261-5563, ask for Brando. 6-16________ on, C O N SERV AT IV E UT fomai* roommoto noodod to s ta r* fuSy fumistad 1-1 condo. Cantor of W e * Campus. Non- imokor, dependable Mid-August Rom negotiable 282 -1 4 5 6 6-16____________ PRIVATE BATH, prtvato room. S ta r* küctan, CA/CH. Quiot, non-smoking, potass 4 0 8 W. 1 7 * St Loos*. $225, ABP 474 -2 0 0 2; 4 7 2 -2 2 2 2 7-1C SE E K IN G roommoto» re- lib mdrvrduols piaos* cok 477- DESPERATELY O oso to UT. Inoxporwvo M otor* spc 0865.6-17__________________________ 450 — Mobile Homee- Lots ★ UT D ISC O U N T * No doposit — N o movo-in too. Goan 2 or 3 bodrooms. Security - Club Houso - swimming pool - washor & dryer & transportation available. CALL 441-1627 6-13N 480 — Storage Space G A R A G E P A R K IN G ipoco on compus complotoly 4 7 4 -2 9 3 0 . 6-13 enclosed w i* lockod door. ANNOUNCEMENTS 540 — Lost A Found F O U N D BLACK Univogo 12-spood 345 3071.6-15 EDUCATIONAL 580 — Musical Instruction GUITAR LESSO N S: R I B, Rock, Jazz. Country, thing» in botwoon. 9 yoon tooching ox moneo. A ndy BuBtof 452-6181 7-11L 590 — Tutoring RENTAL 435 — C o -o p s introducing The Campus Guild 2 blocks UT*ABP*Remodeled*Spacious rooms Cable TV’Dellclous meals*Sundeck*Funfurtfun $235 doubles • $330 singles Also pre-leasing for fall! 510 W. 23rd V Call soon! 472-0352 ! C o - e o 707 W. 21 st . I tv*- In A Ski I c ’ I his Su m ille r $266 A 1 I urn I )i uit'li $347 A i I uri. s 11 ,,p, y ^ \ \ L A i-Iks i-1 i Diw-rsi- nicrutifTsfii} * ABC u I "fllpuln •y v ‘" 4 99-874 3 4 7 6 -5 6 7 8 PEARL ST. CO-OP 2 0 0 0 P e a rl w o te h T h e p l u r e >r this foil1 A (jreal new ( o op vith a hand picked offi er crew & ff-novated je 111 * y with o p< )ol Inviting applications 476-5678 476-9478 EM PLO Y M EN T 790 — P art time MATH TUTOR S M W . M t h S L Office 477-7003 O v e r 10 y e a r * o f p ro fooo ln n ol ente m a k e S t r u g g li n g ? ? rr C a ll o r U by for MATN ' 302 eTTBRMB. EM 6 •If M306O M407 M303F M403K/1 V EM311 EM306S CS20S EM314 CS31S 3* EM319 EE316 CSX 10 EE411 C8328 EE318 CS330 H EE212 CS34S C8362 AM27KA E E f fl C8372____ 8NBLWH M311 ohyscs Setterw enu C H E M 3 0 1 /3 0 Z E N Q 3 0 7 P H Y 301 PH Y3 0 2 K V C H E E N D 3 0 0 PH Y 3 M t y U C H E M B 10N B E N Q 3 1 0 PMY3 7 7 K /L M M M O A T A P n O . O 1/312 A S T 301 N I A C C 3 2 M Z 7 A S T 30 ? A S T 303 A C C 3 M A 8 T 3 07 S T A TS WjWCH P8 V 3 1 7 geWMMI S O C 3 1 7 m e e t PA ■ 0 0 E C O 3 0 E C O » EC 0 9 2 0 K /L E C 0 3 2 4 Don’t gut e ta off uMB th* topN bo­ tar» a n o M m . r o toe M o tio n ... • imoeátoUT V ,¡a t a n c o » t • *10 Next dopr to ModDogABoano L S J !— I— 9 í [ I SUM*. SSS/10HR. BLOCK S E R V I C E I Ease Your Housing Search w ith Texan Classifieds 472-6666 House of |B\ T U T O R S U > PROFESSIONAL TUTORING ALL SUBJECTS O P E N 7 D A Y S / W K 'ju N T H U R S T il M ID N IG H T 8 1 3 W 2 4 rti T rl T o w e u 610 — Misc. Instruction A ER O B IC S INSTRUCTORS training/cor- fcficaton. A . F A A , certified trainon at Studio O n*, iu n * 15. M a k * rosorvotton; 454-1142. 6-14 I.D .E A SiRVICES 750 — Typing ASIAN STUDENTS Home cooked food delivered to you every doy of reasonable cost. Your choice of 1 or 2 meals per day, any day of the week. Chinese, Malaysian, Singa­ porean, and various other spicy foods available. Call 450-0257. 800— General Help Wonted CHRUBtQMQ OPPORTUNITY, 00MPEHIMEMV u- tar nartMng Mratatad BctanSSc mgmi. Nggd uppgr-dMNoti Of grad ilu- IdgniB who hug oonpdM MHfiv Jdm Itngugog court# Adequ||p MM M a t* et toigtoh «nd gooe B É ^ M naaaqi atotdnattaot aapartano* pratairad. bul not a muat Ftatata *Hamaon or *nentng how FW ahutaatua touta. Send none, ptoa No., and gumimSon* * 0 ■ *» 2TBB4, Atuih, TK 7B7SS-M24. $$$CASHF0R$$$ $$$ THE NEW YEAR $$$ S M W E M Y T O F D O U A D S S S Don r* your con* jaw**?. »okl Uc. Tom MamMond Gold I k . ] » ( n i ow l Wa pay * • 1 Need Sharp Individual wdi proftMffind oNfcidg ond oppeoronce to b# on-tRg m anager of tm ai Wegl Austin u$jcn1ntent community. Compemotion pock- ogg mdudei: (fKdmcy oporRviont, d tt s L plut if nod salary ond comnwraons. Bring or mol resume to: 30th & N. Lamar 320-0191 7-208 MJ 11940 JoHyvMeRd 12017 Austin, Texas 78750 $ 1 1 0 I pay cash for old high school rings. Paying $40-)T10 (men's). $15-$35 (lady's). Also buy 10k, 14k & 18k gold jewelry. Any condition. James Lewis 458- 2639, (9om-6 pm). ★ V EN D O R S ★ • Port tima/FuH-tima, D a y i/ n igh b saR- m g hot d o g s o n d fajitas dow ntow n location». • M ust b * daan-cut, sobar a n d bondobla. $3.50/hr. • C aR 2 8 2 -6 7 2 1 ; 4 7 3 -2 6 1 6 aftor 6-23B 1 2 0 0 noon. 8-10 6-17 ZIVLEY’S THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE PRINTING, BINDING W ANTED: G R AD U A T E itodant to totor ¡ñ Engfah. Stocy IAAMEDIATELYI 6-14 454 -4 4 5 0, aftor 5pm EMPLOYMENT 790— Port Time____ Now Accepting Applications for CLASSIFIED AD SALES REPRESENTATIVES for THE DAILY TEXAN O N THE JOB TRAINING STARTS IMMEDIATELY! Duties include solicitation of classified ads by telephone, pri­ marily to business people. Must be detoil-oriented and depend­ able. Must have pleasant phone personality and excellent cus­ tomer service skills. Straight commission — averaging $10/ hour. Spelling test required. Two shifts available; 9 a.m.-12 noon or 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Apply in person; Student Employm ent Referral Service Room 135 Student Financial A id Office 2 6 0 8 Whitt* Telephone Inquiries not accepted. A p ­ plicants must be o University of Texas OFFICE JOBS V A R IE T Y O F O F F IC E A S S IG N M E N T S A V A IL A B L E . 6 M O N T H S O F F IC E E X P E R IE N C E R E Q U IR E D . N O FEES T O D A Y S TEMPORARY NORTH 346-1440 SOUTH 448-2223 6-16B NEED TO EARN STEADY INCOME FOR THE SUMMER? Lomas Telemarketing is looking for qualified individuals with excellent communication skills to market premium credit cards nationwide. WF GUARANTEE $6/HR. Great atmosphere! Great people! Great hours! 9-1 M-F, 1-5 M-F, or 5-9 M- Th and 9;30-l;30 Sat. Apply in person at; 300 W. 5th St. Suite 840 M BANK PLAZA 6-301 10 OVERWEIGHT PEOPLE WANTED RevokAonary, doctor-recommended prod­ uct» Lose up to 29 pourxb/mon*. Guaran­ teed rewlb Hurry. Vivian 323-5817 _ 6-14 Telemarketing assistant. Pleasant phone manner and thorough understanding of Public TV. Out­ going, persuasive, previous ex­ perience preferred. Hours M-TH 6-9 pm. Apply 26 & Guadalupe or write KLRU TV PO Box 7158 Austin 78713. Eto Wonted Student familiar with Macintosh and Apple Systems to set up a n d irutaM hardw are (or a u ­ thorized A p p le deolen. Permanent Flexible a nd part-time positions. hoar», professional appearance, a nd reliable transportation required. N o calls o r w a lk-ins p le a se S e n d resumer AMn: D a v id Borlond: C o m ­ puter Solutions; 271 2 Bee C a v e * R o o d Surte A Austin, Tx. 7 8 7 4 6 . $ TELEMARKETERS $ $ 4 0 0 - $ 5 0 0 / w e e k Now office opening — necetutotei tmmedt- ate fob opportumiiot here in Audm NO SELUNG-oppomtmont lolling only. Salary or g*n*ro bon Vocation xi Botamo» for mow who qualify! CaR onyhm*. oik for P*to. ★ 2 5 1 - 5 5 5 6 ★ 6 -2 3 N MANAGEMENT TRAINEES Due to a nationwide expansion, an established Wall Street in­ vestment firm is seeking aggres­ sive, self-motivated individuals to join our registered representa­ tive corps in management train­ ee program. 250 new manage­ ment trainees have been promoted to the position of divi­ sion manager since 1983 and our goal is to promote 100 more in 1988. For a rewarding career in investment planning with a progressive company, call Mr. Joseph Morones on Tuesday 9- 5 p.m. at 459-0743. r T E L E M A R K E T IN G N orth Research Bhrd orea. N o w hir­ ing for immediate employm ent with National C om pany. M ust be o b i* to w ork Tuesday-Friday 4pm -9p m ond S a la ry plus S a tu rd a y 9 am -2 p m . 6-23 m akers o r moonlighters E om excel lent income in short hour». 331-1473, 4pm -9pm . 7-12N BE O N TV Mo dolt. Catling Exl TV-9413 6-10 BE O N TV dab. Catting Ext. TV-9413 7-25 any needed fo r commer- info (1) 805-687-6000 Many needed fo r commer- B info. (1) 805-687-6000 OVERSEAS JOBS. Abo Cruii >-$$ $15,000-$95,400/yr Now Hinngl + opening»! (II 805-687-6000 Exl. áng»l (1) 805-687 941Í 7-19 itothipt. il 320 OJ- needed for commer- (1(805-687-6000 8E O N T V. Monv dais. Costing info. Ext TV-9413.10-27 ORGANIST FOR a smol congregation and working w i* 6-8 member choir For ’more information coll 459-7747. 10:00-200 pm . 6-13________________ $200 PER DAYI People will call you. 499-8543, Extension L-l. 6-13_________ GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTORS Previous experience required, col Morgoret 451-3227.______ 8 1 0 — Office- C lerical - NEAR CAMPUS FuR/Port-km*. BOOK KEEPER (W* Train). TYPIST (45 + wpm). ODD JOBS. Appli RUNNER (Your Cai I W. 17* St. cation 9am-4pm, 41 23C NEAR CAMPUS. FuR/Port-km*. Book­ keeper (We Train). Typot (45 + worn) RUNNER (Your Cor) ODD JOBS. Appli­ cation 9am-4pm. 408 W. 17* Si. 7-1C 8 2 0 — A ccounting- B o o k k e p in g NEAR CAMPUS Fu«/Port-lim*. Gain bookkeeping experience. TYPIST (45 + wpm). RUNNER (your cor) ODD JOBS. Application 9om-4pm, 408 W. 17* Si. 6-20C 8 4 0 — S o las ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE for odvertbing firm. Mutt be independent, wN-riwtor. Excellent commotion. 451-8728. Solet experience necettory 6-13____________ SALESPERSON for 20-30 morning ond eorty obem oon taut* for Dona'» Jewel- ry. 451-5463 9om - 5pm. 6-15________ 6-13 ACTORS, STUDENTS, Modebl Zachary repre- Scott Theatre need* telephone tentotrves Ful/port-tim* fund robing. Don, 4 6 9 -0 0 4 4 .6-17N 8 6 0 — in g in a a r in g - Tachnical GRADUATELE. STUDENT PART-TIM E W O R K W# need a ieN Porting EE grod e d e r t to help develop ond tod SPtCI modeb for e4>- monno power system. We hove taxibb hour» and low hold* working condition» naor corn- put. Mud ba U S dteon and ovadabto for 20 houn/woak during Fol and Spring «amador» Contact John at 477-6011. Wo w# nnnd cap­ iat o f your birth certificato, tromcripT. and portond rato ranea» 8 9 0 — C lubs- • s t a u r a n t s Sure, We Type FRESHMAN THEMES Why Not Start Out wHh Good Grades? Law Briefs RESUM ES 2707HEMPHILL PARK At 27th & Guadalupe Plenty of Parking 472-3210 472-7677 LONGHORN COPIES • R esu m e s • Theses a Term p a p e rs • W ord P ro c e ssin g • B in ding • Lam in atin g a Laser Printing • K o d a k ' C o p ie s 2b 18 G u a d a lu p e 476-4498 Am erica's Oldest-Largest PROFESSIONAL RESUME SERVICE JOS WINNING! RESUMES $9/ur ip 'D i*i N N h la h i f • Job B— unuul a**n/Anp*ro*nn« a *• • M ^ ^ w w a g i i p a l i y » * < 7 1 i H o u s e o í ||% T U T O R S 1 V T Y P IN G & RESU M ES O P Í N 7 D A Y S SUN THUBS TU M IDH IO H T 472-6666 81 3 W 2 4tfi (T r i- T o w e r» , ACADEMIC TYPING SERVICE 504 W. 2 4 * St. 477-8141 Tan» Popar» Raaurn*» Bnaft, Dnaartohon» 82/PU- w /14 bra. woH ea toattm ne. g| /q r ta a f d a o r to Mod Am ■ ■oon'* ¿ ¡ s r . tu WOODSTYPING W O R D P R O C E S S I N G 472-6302 2200 G U A D A L U P E (aide entrance > When You W ant It Done Right A + T Y P IN G 7 -0 0 a m - 1 1 0 0 pm daily Rath job* onyktn e Foreign dudenta O .K. $2.00/ p a g e N o o r U T 473-2948 MICHELE M ICHAEL * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 7-12 IBERIAN E X P R E S S -P roteitional W ordprocettmg Engkth, Spomth, Por­ tugese*. Reasonable rate*. Pickup; defiv- ery ovadabto Karan, 331 1792 7-6 S5/HR. 450-0187 S5/HR. SUMMER J0BS-STUDENTS CONCERT TICKET SALES 6-9:30, M-F 9-12, SAT Apply; 5555 N. Lamar # 00 7 7-131 TELEMARKETING POSITIONS ovadafai» near comput evening M h only $5- $ 10/hour C a l PBC Marketing. 477 3 8 0 8 .6-14B EXCITING OPPORTUNITY Bridal corv shows, toiling convention», hotab. S e in g cmmtha through color anatytd. U nta d openings. 345-9851. 6- 13_________________________________ loth ton PART TIME potibon ovadabto 20-30 hr/ m on* for tolephnne «oÜdtohon work. Downtown Stole Farm agent. 478-0620. 6-14_______________________________ PERMANENT APARTMENT monoger nee d ed Flexible hoars H H 5/hour T f i s - ASAP TYPING/WORD Procettmg po I'D LIKE to tend to your butmett on my IBM word pracetto r McCt# ONtc* Sor meet 346-6150 7-58________________ PR, caBectant ond leatana rienced. N. Auehn at $ 7783 7-6 EASY WORK, —ceierd pay, dmmhlt product* at home. Col for tafot— Bon. 1^312-741-6400eat A479.6-13 NEAR CAMPUS Ful/Port time. 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Lamar, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. M-F. 4 » 6 f I LINDA CLAYTON 454-6874 CALL 471-5244 TO PLACIA CLASSIFIID AD Now Accepting Application* for CLASSIFIED AD SALES REPRESENTATIVE for THE DAILY TEXAN On the job training •tarta immediately Dutioo include aoltcitaUon of classified oda by telephone, pnm anly to buainooa people MuM bo detail-ononiod and dopondablo Mum hovo ploooont phono personality end oacollant g—lamer oorvtco oktlla Straight oommiootnti-ovorofoo 110/hour Spelling t*m required T w o e h ifU a v o i lab io 9 a m - 12 noon or 1 pm -4 pm A P P L Y I N P E R S O N S t u d e n t Em p lojrm a nt R e fe rra l S o r v tc * ft— 136 S t u d e n t F in a n c ia l A id Office 2 8 0 8 W h itia tnar— *—r - AyptlaaaM omU to a «rYiaa* XitoialNoaaidiOilial Plane crash costly for hospital staff By JIM GREER Daily Texan Staff ELGIN — A Panhandle hospital lost a physician, a nursing supervi­ sor, an adm inistrator and a m em ber of its board of directors Friday after their single-engine airplane crashed into a field six miles south of Elgin. The victims, all representatives of Ochiltree General Hospital in Perry- ton, were en route from Perryton to A ustin to attend a medical confer­ ence w hen their plane crashed at about 8:45 a.m ., Sam Lovelace, a D e p a rtm e n t of P ublic S afety trooper, said Friday. DPS troopers identified the vic­ tims as Dr. V.S. C hristopher, 41, the plane's ow ner and one of the hospi­ tal's five doctors; Roy G runden, 34, hospital nursing supervisor; Jerry W eatherly, 44, hospital adm inistra­ tor; and Donald Holm es, 36, a m em ­ ber of the hospital board of direc­ tors. C hristopher, w ho lived in Book­ er, was the only one of the four m en not from Perryton, a town of about 9,000 people seven miles from Okla­ hom a and 110 miles northeast of Amarillo. Booker is about 15 miles east of Perryton. In addition to losing one-fifth of its physicians with the death of C hristopher, hospital officials now m ust deal with fatalities that hit the usual closer deaths to which they are exposed. to hom e than An Ochiltree General nurse said the deaths of G runden, w hom she said she had know n all her life, and the other three m en have dealt a blow to the hospital. a Texas Medical Foundation confer­ ence, said Lawrence Ellzey, presi­ dent of the hospital board of direc­ tors. After losing the plane about 8:43 a.m ., the Federal Aviation Adm inis­ tration called the DPS, w hich spot­ ted the crash site several m inutes later in Coon Neck. Lovelace said the crash tore u p both the plane, a Cessna 205, and its occupants. "They were totally disfigured, dism em bered, dis-ev- erything," he said. The plane, heading east w hen its engine sputtered, landed upside- dow n after the pilot lost control of it, Lovelace said. Jim Childress, w ho w itnessed the accident while picking green beans in his garden nearby, said the pilot m ight have been attem pting an em ergency landing. "It was a hell of a gruesom e sight out there," he said. "There was no use calling an am bulance ... there w asn't anybody going to live." The plane "just disintegrated — you could see parts flying every­ w here," Childress said. The plane's engine sputtered, picked up again and then lost full pow er right before the crash, Chil­ dress said. DPS officials said three of the plane's occupants were throw n from the aircraft and a fourth re­ m ained inside. FAA representatives, w ho arrived from San Antonio at the crash site about 2:30 p.m ., and National Transportation Safety Board officials are investigating the crash. By JIM GREER Daily Texan Staff A w om an injured in a car wreck that killed her husband Thursday night rem ained hospitalized in good and stable condition, a Bracken- ridge Hospital nursing supervisor said Sunday. Betty Smith, 45, was heading west on RR 2222 in a 1983 M ercedes 240D driven by her husband, Col. Jack Hendrix Smith, 48, w hen the car collided w ith a 1981 Ford pickup driven by G us Roesler, 22, of 3300 Parker Lane, an A ustin police acci­ dent report stated. Roesleris pickup crossed the cen­ ter line of RR 2222 and collided w ith the Smith car, police said in the re­ port. Smith, an Army officer w ho lived w ith his wife at 13305 Briar Hollow Drive in Williamson County, was pronounced dead at the scene of the accident in the 6200 block of RR 2222 near City Park Road. C harges of involuntary m an­ slaughter were filed against Roesler, w ho was released Friday on $10,000 bond, police said. Roesler drove his truck off the roadw ay onto the right shoulder of the eastbound lane of RR 2222 be­ fore overcorrecting and driving into oncom ing traffic, police said in the report. Roesler's truck then struck the left front and side of the M ercedes, which flipped over onto its left side, police said in the report. Roesler was treated Thursday for m inor injuries and a cut on the head at Brackenridge Hospital before his release to police. Mrs. Smith was taken Thursday to Brackenridge Hospital by STAR Flight helicopter in serious but stable condition. Hospital officials upgraded her condition to good and stable this w eekend. Police continue to investigate the accident and do not know if alcohol was a factor, said Kellye Norris, Austin police spokesw om an. Police sent a sam ple of Roesler's blood to the D epartm ent of Public Safety Crime Laboratory and expect results from lab next week, Norris said. the Texas Memorial Museum short on visitors from UT Center features science, history exhibits By HENRY DEMOND Special to the Texan More than 94,000 people visited the Texas Memorial M useum last year, but UT students seem to ig­ nore the center's history and natural history exhibits. "W e had people from 40 different countries, lots of tourists ... but not nearly enough UT stu d en ts," said Dorothy Young, education coordi­ nator for TMM. The m useum director, William Reeder, said UT students are usual­ ly "toe involved in other activities" to visit TMM. But students w ith a strong inter­ est in m useum s find the m useum on their ow n. Many of the visitors are school­ children, Reeder said. "All Austin schoolchildren come at least twice during their prim ary and secondary education," he said. But the m useum , which opened in 1938, is not exclusively for chil­ dren — m any Austin adults also are familiar w ith the m useum , Reeder said. He said the biggest attractions are the vertebrate fossils, such as the door-greeting m osasaur, a 30-foot m arine near Onion Creek. lizard uncovered Scott Sw earingen, an Austin-area high school teacher, said the only reason he knew of the m useum 's ‘W e had people from 40 different countries, lots of tourists... but not nearly enough UT stu­ dents.’ — Dorothy Young, TMM education coordinator existence was that he had visited it w hen he w as a child. Sw earingen said he w as particu­ larly interested in the fourth floor collection of N avaho art. "I've been through Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona ... you just can't find a better collection of sand paintings," he said. M argaret N ash, a form er UT stu­ dent, said she becam e familiar w ith the m useum during the 1940s. "By seeing the [statue of] m us­ tangs out front ... students should w onder w hat is th ere," N ash said. N ash w as visiting the m useum 's natural science exhibit w ith her granddaughter, Jody. The m useum , at 2400 Trinity St., was established as a part of a project celebrating the Texas State C enten­ nial in 1936. The state turned the building over to the University in 1958. KMFLOYMKNT IMFLOYM8NT 900— Pom— ttc- H ou n h old 900— Dom— 9k- Hou— hold Sinai* mother, terns happy rtf lor professional. op* 7. Stfora/oftai tchooT and occasional baton**» houoi. Moat proparaMon, vary fight hoae* Iggins and oiimufo in ta­ chona* for room/board/gas. Non smoking 267 9553 Efizo ■ W i liitotoi i*» etae* »*ip*wifofoA*ta*4>ar. C*I34¿B666614______________ RERSON NEEDED for otrauonai baby ■ H eunew y vary C*B Alton 451 H u ll 471-5244 ~ m TOPLACIA ■ CLASSIFIID AD 614 The A r t s & Entertainment Supplement to The Daily Texan June 13, 1988 Smithereens Tue., The Back Room Texas Blues Reunion'88 Fri.-Sun., Antone's The Reivers Sat., Liberty Lunch Hole in the Wall's 15th Anniversary Party Eating on the Drag Street musicians Juneteenth Bad Mutha Goose 2 IMAGES June 13,1988 Ch tap cinema Bored and broke? Austin has several discount theaters that offer a de­ cent selection and a surprisingly good atmosphere. — — — — Page 3 —— — ——- Eating on the Drag From a simple burger to kung pao chicken, Guadalupe’s 29 restraunts have it all. Street music You don’t have to be down and out to be part of an Austin tradition. _________ Theater Charles Pace, an actor, playwright and UT graduate, returns to Austin for a Juneteenth performance celebrating black culture and artists. Page 6 Books Humor writer and social critic George Toomer takes a low-budget look at Americans diving head-first off the deep end in American Extremes. Page 7 Diversions STAFF Images Editor B re t Bloomquist Associate Images Editors Ben Cohen Lee Nichols W riters Karen Adams * Sharon Beynon Brian C arr Robert Lucey Kevin McHargue Gilbert Garcia Joe Sim s Camille Tipton Graphics Ashley Bogle Chris Ware Contributors Hank Demond Trevor Feagin Jim Greer Kevin Hargis John Keen Dean Webb ON THE COVER Listings, Chris Ware and John Keen. _____________________ Pages 8,9_____________________ With the private sector, the city and the state spending precious little on culture, Austin’s artistic community — although one of the largest in the nation — faces a constant struggle to get its work before the public. What would Austin have to offer with funding to match its talent? Music Austin’s Bad Mutha Goose gets a so-so start, other local musicians work together, plus new stuff from Everything But The Girl and Graham Par­ ker. Page 12 Pages 10,11 Get funky Bad Mutha Goose’s self-titled debut album continues this year’s vinyl barrage from the local bands. Images’ Joe Sims feels the EP had both ups and downs, but predicts a good future for Austin’s favorite funk band. For this and reviews of Graham Parker and Everything But The Girl, See Music, page 10. B E SOME Bopy NU DO 1 1 \J H A I R L J \ J Hairstyles for men and wom en ^Jhe njCadieó (Center o f m duótin, ^9nc. • - ■■ I Iff ■"ik ’ : < . ■ ?s 'M 3 kr- m m fyy ^ 'S ' ^ > N 3 H r * m ... M on.-Fri. 1 Oish to 6ish Sat. 1 Oish to 4ish \ 2222 Rio Grande d-106 478-8737 24 Hour Emergency Call Service Austin (512) 459-3119 On RR Shuttle Route Suite 13 Medical Arts Square Toll Free (800) 327-9880 C .ariny fo r you b e c a u se you re special,. • Abortion Service • • Nitrous Oxide Available • • Free Pregnancy Testing • • Confidential Counseling • • OB-Gyn Physician • • Non Profit S.H.E. Center • • Pap Smears • V.D. Testing • • Birth Control • Breast Exams • Total Reproductive Health Care Center for Women of All Ages Dedicated to Right of Free Choice University Market Facts... 32,601 students and 9,827 faculty/staff of the university read classified advertising in The Daily Texan, 9% more than read the classified pages of the American-States- man. Source: "The University Market” BekJen Associates, 1987 Bored? Celíuloid relief is only 100 cents away Discount theaters offer wide selection, nice atmosphere By Kevin McHargue June 13,1988 IMAGES 3 DADS LIKE DIAMONDS TOO! Everybody has mini-crises once in awhile. ■ After a few months of utter bliss, the love of your life slumps down on the couch, stares at you blankly and utters the words that are the end of romance: “I dunno. What do you wanna do?” ■ Your parents come to town and want to hang out with you. After you’ve seen every furniture store and distant relative in Travis Coun­ ty, the evening comes — and with it, the question of what to do with these people who made you eat tuna all those years. ■ Or maybe you’re just winding up another day of playing with the cat (who doesn’t even really like you) and trying to pick up dates at the washateria. You realize your life is going nowhere and long for some­ thing meaningful to do. What do these daily disasters have in common? Nothing — except a so­ lution. All these problems can be re­ solved simply by invoking a time- honored recreational incantation. “Let’s see a movie.” Ah, but lies there the rub. Whether it is nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outra­ geous boredom, or to shell out a half-day’s pay to some geeky teen­ ager in brown polyester just to see Sylvester Stallone’s latest steroid fantasy. Students are not alone in their di­ lemma. Self-styled movie maven and New York Mayor Ed Koch an­ nounced a theater boycott when ticket prices jumped to $6. In retali­ ation, theater owners announced a boycott of short, loudmouthed bald men. But in Texas we have a more civilized way to deal with the high cost of viewing. Dollar cinemas can be the stu­ dent’s greatest friends. No longer does cheap theater-going conjure up images of cheesy Westerns, 19th- century projection and floor tiles that stick to your shoes. Austin’s cheap moviehouses offer a fairly decent atmosphere and a chance to see feature films before HBO runs them into the ground. The AMC and Mann dollar cinemas have offered a variety of slasher clas­ sics, mainstream action and respect­ able comedies, including Nightmare on Elm Street III, Lethal Weapon and Good Morning Vietnam. More important, you don’t need any shots to enter these theaters. The Aquarius 4, 1500 S. Pleasant Valley Road, is as nice a theater as you’ll find in the city. Even nicer is the fact that Aquarius applies its economizing philosophy to conces­ sions as well, with promotional dis­ counts that make the food prices merely outrageous instead of ob­ The Aquarius 4 offers a wide variety of movies for only a measly $1.25. Joha Foxworth ‘No longer does cheap theater-going con­ jure up images of cheesy Westerns, 19th- century projection and floor tiles that stick to your shoes.’ scene. Southwood 2, 1423 W. Ben White Blvd., could use some of its sister cinema’s class. The floor can often be a sea of Milk Duds and nastier things, and the seats leave a lot to be desired. But then, no one expects Radio City Music Hall for a buck. You can also go on safari to the Westgate 3, 4608 Westgate Blvd. It’s way out of the way for most col­ lege types, but the film quality is a cut above other bargain theaters. If you want to stay close to home, check out some theaters that break the dollar limit but still merit a few points on the cheapness scale. Dobie Theatre, at 21st and Gua­ dalupe streets, boasts one of the most eclectic menus for the money. Tickets are a respectable $2.50 (or a buck if you go before 5 p.m.), and the selection is fascinating. Feature films such as Moonstruck and Broadcast News are complemented by quirky late shows, from cult clas­ sics (Wizards, Polyester) to beautiful trash (Slave Girls from Beyond In­ finity, Surf Nazis Must Die). But be warned: This is the poor­ est projection quality in the greater metropolitan area. Worse than that, the wonderful late shows draw large crowds of noisy drunks and giggling women with spandex brains. This place is not for the easily annoyed. Another nearby movie haven is the Texas Union, which shows films in the Union Bulding, Hogg, Bur- dine and Batts. The Union gives Dobie a run for its money in variety, mixing white-bread releases with foreign films and a healthy flow of Woody Allen and Monty Python masterpieces. Flashing your UT ID will get you in for $2.50 — assuming you can convince them that the picture that looks like Abe Vigoda is actually you. This puts the Union on a Dobie price scale, only without the free drunks thrown in. If all else fails, almost every major theater in town cuts to $2.50 before 5 p.m. And you can always pool money and rent a VCR for about $8. Divided four or five ways, a night of videos can undercut even the revered dollar movie. Bin it will probably never be as fun. Honor Dad with a fine diamond priced from $399 to $4000 Dozens of styles and priced to fit every budget, with terms if desired. T H E S H E F T A L L CO. JE W E L E R S G E M O L O G IS T S 2236 Guadalupe P arM ree*U B C M erch a n ts in A m erica S in c e 1733 Highland Mall Lower Level at the fountain If You Have ASTHMA And WHEEZE AROUND CATS You could be part of an exciting new clinical research study Call: HEALTHQUEST RESEARCH Financial Compensation for study completion 345-0032 Dedicated to Education Research and Patient Care CUTS $5."* PERMS $20."* Professional Consultation—ALWAYS! •QWw good odh it* coupon on)». C u m ty fii long non earo. a p e e » » tft-aa Command performance STYLING SALONS 2200 Guadalupe (Lower Level) Mon-Fri 10-7, Sat 10-6 322-0641 No Appointment Necessary 4 IMAGES June 13,1988 When eating isn’t a Drag Guadalupe restaurants offer variety of dining options CA STILIA N /%r,6¿Ufo m '■S a t u ^ St&Mi 111 ^ ^ * \ g iieye w ic M e s KandgednS I ¿ ¿ 5 . A /\ m / 5 CotiarrS By Karen Adams In the beginning, our ancestors were forced to hunt for the food they needed to survive. Necessity re­ quired them to roam continents, and luck brought them into contact with other primitive peoples and cul­ tures. Evening came and morning followed — for a few million years. With the advent of agriculture all this changed. People began to live in communities together, to work to­ gether, to share. Civilization ad­ vanced, home-cooked meals were in style and the future was bright. Then came evil incarnate — fast food. Our well-developed culture began to crumble under the weight of Big Macs, Colonel Sanders and Wendy’s kind of people. Evening came — and millions hopped in their cars, heading for the nearest drive-thru. As college students, it’s very easy to fall into this fast-food trap. When you’re studying for that big test cooking takes up too much time, and rationalizing becomes easy. “What better solution is there than to pick up a few burgers or have some pizza delivered?” you ask yourself. To tell you the truth, there are quite a few better solutions — al­ most 30, to be exact. And all are lo­ cated on or just off of that familiar main thoroughfare next to campus, Guadalupe Street (better known as time “the Drag”). So you’re at the library on that lazy Monday afternoon studying and you’re hungry, don’t take the easy way out — try one these places. You won’t be sorry. the next ■ PIZZA AND ST U FF : There are four pretty good sources of pizza close to campus. Tops on the list are Mr. Gatti’s on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and San Antonio Street, and Conan’s on the Drag be­ tween 26th and 27th streets. Gatti’s lunch has the “All you can possibly stuff your face with” lunch buffet every day, and Conan’s has the slice-or- sandwich-and-a-drink spe­ cials. Niki’s Pizza in Dobie Mall (the big, tall thing on 21st Street and the Drag) and Pizza Hut on M LK and Guadalupe come in neck-and- two, also neck behind featuring those inexpensive lunch specials. the first ■ FO R T H E SAN D W ICH JUN K IES: Several places make sandwiches or subs the mainstay of their menus. Phil’s Subs (between M LK and 21st Street) and Alvin Ord’s Sandwich Shop (22nd Street and the Drag, downstairs) rank the highest in this category. Phil’s has a wide variety of subs and other goo­ dies to choose from, and Alvin Ord’s “salvation specials” live up to their name in every way. The Samwitch Shop and Skokies Famous New York Deli call Dobie ice crúm -* aflore farmers s(y s\ Y A l A i l O O - F , n - H a o t í u o • • • M L s WtfM»tu* f 'm .t& o'A c h ít e s e J o o d J k L t Casablanca c u iú tt irdtrtvl Sküki&’s f a mous. f / e w Xorh d e lt P lcV oH ild'S BumrjCim N i k { s pizza. The Samcwi-fth Shop Buster's ü& fen) 0 q ~ I L x ■ ¡JJi for a quickie eggroll fix, either of the stands parked in front of the Univer­ sity Co-op will do the trick. Try to beat the peak lunch hour, though, because when lots of people have the same idea, long lines are the result. Sometimes you think you want a sandwich, but then you change your mind. If you’re headed to Alvin Ord’s, you can always stop next door at Wok and Go instead. Or if you’re trapped in Dobie, Hao Huo Vietnamese and Chinese Restau­ rant or Casablanca Cuisine Inter­ national Food are there to satisfy your tastebuds. ■ T H E B E E F - E A T E R S ’ CHC CES: Here you have a wide variety of good picks. G/M Steak House No. 14 (between Phil’s and 21st Street) may not be as famous as some of its counterparts, but it’s definitely got some of the best food. Mad Dog and Beans, with its ample outdoor seating and huge burgers, deserves all of the accolades it re­ ceives. You can find it just down the street and across from Subway’s on 24th. The sentimental favorite, with the best cheesesteaks this side of Phila­ delphia, is Texadelphia, between 24th and 25th streets on the Drag, south of the Varsity Theatre. Not only is the food good, but the guys behind the counter are some of the friendliest you’ll ever meet. Keep an eye on your watch, because this is yet another place always packed at lunchtime. If you’re looking for a reason to avoid the Jack-in-the-Box at 26th and the Drag, the Hole in the Wall is right next door. It’s a great place to catch a bite and play a relaxing game of pool afterward. Busters Beefery in Dobie is also a good deal, and you can catch the soaps on the big-screen television, too. And last but not least is Players on M L K across from Pizza Hut. If you have an urge for a good, greasy burger, this is your spot. ■ OTHER ASSORTED EN ­ T R EES: Mexican food is the name of the game at Aleta’s, found across the street from Phil’s and G/M Steakhouse. Specials depend on the day, and it’s a lot more filling than Taco Bell. The mainstay of The Bagel Manufactory is, well, you guessed it. And they do have a lot to choose from, too. Besides, bagels just seem to taste better at a place that special­ izes in them. Then there’s Les Amis, buried in the trees next to Mad Dog’s. It also sports an outdoor patio, daily spe­ cials and a variety of types of foods at relatively inexpensive prices. ■ AND NOW, FOR D ESSER T: When it comes to yogurt, ice cream and other fun munchies, the Drag is the place for you. I Can’t Believe It’s Yogurt is in the same building and right behind Phil’s. Steve’s Ice just across the street, Cream ready to make your ice cream to or­ der. In Dobie, your cookie fantasies can be fulfilled by the Chippery. is Once you finish at Banh’s, you can always hop next door to Captain Quackenbush’s Intergalactic Des­ sert ( ). and Expresso Cafe for the best in, well, dessert and coffee. Penguin’s Frozen Yogurt Place is next to the Bagel Manufactory, and if you just keep walking down the Drag, you’ll hit 31 Treats Frozen Yogurt and Bakery just before you run into 24th Street. There you have it — 29 good rea­ sons not to bother with the fast-food havens which also populate the Drag. Twenty-nine real reasons to give yourself a break today. Enjoy. DINING ‘Texadelphia offers the best cheesesteaks this side of Philadel­ phia.’ home. Their choices aren’t as var­ ied, but they will satisfy your hun­ ger. And who could possibly forget Subway’s subs. They’re a block off Guadalupe at San Antonio and 24th Streets in that other big, tall thing known as the Castilian. ■ FROM TH E EAST: If you want a lot (repeat, a lot) of food, Banh’s Kitchen and their lunch spe­ cials are the best-tasting deals around. But if you’re just looking Street performers earn cash while they wait for stardom By Robert Lucey Last year, Timbuk 3 was nomi­ nated for a Grammy award for best new artist of the year. A few years before that, the band members were singing their songs on street corners. Now they have a nice house in Oak Hills and a second album heading toward the charts. Singing on street corners has been a long, though not always respected, tradition since the days of minstrels wandering from town to town in England. In Texas, the tradition goes back to such early blues musicians as Blind Lemon Jefferson and his pro­ tege, Sam “Lightnin’ ” Hopkins. Their songs are the starting point for almost any rock music heard today, and they began — like Timbuk 3 — playing for spare change on street corners. Austin is an ideal place for this type of musical performance. There are no laws specifically regulating street .musicians here. “You’re fine unless you break some other law,” said an Austin police sergeant, “like obstructing the sidewalk, or if you get too loud and disturb the peace.” Almost any day one can walk down the Drag and hear lyrics weav­ ing in with the reverberations of gui­ tar strings. Usually somebody with long hair, an abundance of facial fol­ licles, and clothes that double as bedding will be the source of the sound, but not all street songsters have to use their guitars as pillows at the end of the day. Students can play the street, too. Really. My roommate and I do it. I’ve heard other students say they’ve done it “after a few beers.” You could do it, too. And now is the ide­ al time. Dur lg the warm months most of the regular street musicians head north, which means less com­ petition. Why let that acoustic guitar sit in the closet after Mom and Dad spent all that money on your guitar les­ sons? Make them proud. Tune up and hit the streets. It will be fun. You’ll add your contribution to the Austin music industry. The least you can do is earn your laundry money. The most you can do is win a Grammy. Everyone has to start somewhere. A little planning will lean you more toward the Grammy than the Laundromat. The first thing to con­ sider is whether to go solo or with a partner. Solo seems to be most pop­ ular, although groups of four or more people have been seen on cor­ ners of Sixth Street. Like any band, you have to con­ sider the economics. Lindsey Buck­ ingham makes more money from a slightly successful solo album than he does from a Fleetwood Mac al­ bum where the profit is split five ways — maybe that’s why he quit the band. Of course the music is a consider­ ation, too. Going solo leaves little room for error with nobody else to fill in the gaps. And although larger groups have a fuller sound, they are sometimes hard to keep together. Duets are nice and you only have to split the proceeds down the middle. If your friend doesn’t play guitar, make him or her sing and play tam- borine and harmonica. Once you figure out the format, you have to begin your playlist. Peo­ ple are going to say, “Do you know this or that?” More often than not, “this” will be Twist and Shout and “that” will be Louie Louie. This is good, and so is that. Learn them first. They are easy three-chord songs — and how can you possibly mess up the lyrics to Louie Louie? ‘Students can play in the street, too. Real­ ly. My roommate and I do it.’ Next, learn the traditional three- chord, 12-measure blues pattern. That way you can always improvise. Then add whatever songs you al­ ready know, following the basic premise that you must be able to strum them loud enough to get peo­ ple’s attention. Finally, if you want the Grammy, write a few original songs. Now you’re almost ready, but first you need the uniform. There are several options like the “I-wear- tom-blue-jeans-so-rm-needy” look, or the traditional cowboy-boots-and- hat southern look. You may want to wear something to get people’s at­ tention. My partner and I have been known to don metallic pink gradua­ tion robes. It gets attention. Other miscellaneous items you will need if you use a guitar format are extra strings (my partner has never failed to break at least one per outing), a string winder to change strings quickly, extra plectrums, ex­ tra bridge pegs, and beer (although whiskey traditional blues beverage). the is Besides your instrument, sun­ glasses are the only necessity — you know the kind: just like Jake and Elwood of Blues Brothers fame wore. Lightnin’ Hopkins used to wear them, too. Like the Lone Ranger’s mask, they provide instant anonymity. You will be able to play anywhere without risking the em­ barrassment of being identified. You won’t want to play just any­ where. The main idea is to go where there are people with spare change. In Austin, this means the Drag dur­ ing the day and Sixth Street at night. If you play the Drag, around lunch hour is probably the best time to get a good quarters-per-pocket ra­ tio. Sixth Street, however, is the best place to start because being good becomes less important as the night progresses. Most people won’t be able to tell. If you play Sixth Street, wait until after 9 p.m. at there aren’t then least. Before enough people it worthwhile. Peak hours are between 10 o’clock and 12:30. to make The only good reason to go before 10 is to claim a good comer. In the summer this isn’t much of a prob­ lem because many of the minstrels migrate north, but in the cooler months it gets difficult to find a de­ cent corner — especially with palm readers, jugglers, magicians and mimes competing for pavement. the lights Corners are traditionally preferred because people have to stop there while waiting for to change. You will get a 90-second captured audience this way. When choosing your stage, you have to balance between how busy a corner is and how loud it is. You’ll waste your time trying to compete with the sound pouring out the doors of Steamboat. Besides, a flower cart usually stakes that comer out first. If there aren’t any good comers, set­ tle for a doorway until one is avail­ able. Once you find your spot, open your guitar case and throw in several dollar bills and a handful of quarters — no pennies. This is known as “priming the pump.” When people stop and see big money in your case, they will feel compelled to put big money in also. They will also think that other people think you are good — a good form of reinforcement. This effect reverses if you go too far, however. If you line your case with bankrolls somebody is more likely to appropriate it for their own use than to add to your fortune. Now you are ready to play. The best idea is to take a big breath and start. You will begin to loosen up as you go. If you smile occasionally, move a little bit while you play, and make eye contact — or rather, sun- glasses-to-eye contact — you will reap greater financial rewards. By talking to people who stop between songs you get more of those “Do you know this or that?” requests which also bring forth numismatic encouragement. The acoustic guitar format is only the most popular format for street music. However, many others exist which you may want to experiment with. Timbuk 3 has a husband-and- wife team playing guitar and singing with a portable tape deck filling out the band. In New York, tape decks often provide the only music for street musicians who “rap” over pre­ recorded music. Some musicians buy portable, battery-operated am­ plifiers and play electric guitar on the greets. In San Francisco there is CONTINUED ON PAGE 9 State off the Art | C olor 1 1 C opying! 1 on the revolutionary new | fj Canon Laser Color 1 ¡ right bright colors never I before available faithful to ¡ the original ¡ ¡ | | • photos • reports • maps & | | | site plans • portfolios • I t-shirts • presentations • ¡ § artwork & comps • posters & | | murals • slides • overheads | | & transparencies • yearbooks ¡ ¡ | • family albums • old photos ¡ & manuscripts faithfully | | reproduced in color or black & | | white or sepia • color, b/w • | | I up to 4 times enlargement | I at prices never before available § § _______ June 13, 1988 IMAGES 5 Heart Answers Arrythmia Arrythmia is any irregularity or abnormality in the rhythm of the heartbeat. An abnor­ mal rhythm, or arrythmia, usually starts somewhere other than the normal pacemaker cells in the heart. Arrythmias may be caused by disease or injury to the heart or elsewhere in the body, by drugs such as caffeine and by anxiety or nervousness. Arrythmias may occur without any sensation at all and usually must be identified by recording the heart’s activity on an electrocardiogram. Often, no special treatment is necessary to treat or prevent arrythmia. { Laser Color { ] Copies, Inc. ¡ WE'RE FIGHTING FOR NOJRUFE I ¡ 002 E. 47th 1st hfcoff Redder Cal 467-9675 ¡ ¡ i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i H i i i i H i m m i H i i H i i i i H i r American Heart Association 809 W. 12th « IMAGES lone 13,1988 Ed Tyson, M .D. AUSTIN YOUNG ADULT MEDICINE Specializing in Quality Health Care of YOUNG ADULTS & TEENS Ages 11-30 Confidential Health Care Including: • General Health Care • Contraception • Eating Disorders t Gynecology • Sexually Transmitted Diseases 706 W. Martin Luther King Suite 2 M o n . , W e d . , F r i . 477-3385 8 a m - 5 p m By Appointment call the TEXAN classified HOT LINE 471-5244 RUN YOUR CAR or TRUCK CLASSIFIED AD UNTIL IT SELLS! for only 5 0 * 1 9 15 w o r d s or less. A d d i t i o n a l w o r d s o n l y S I ,30 each, Call 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 for compl e t e details. Keeping Pace Performer returns to Austin with ‘Theatre in Black’ By Sharon Beynon Returning to Austin for a one- night, one-man show, actor-play- wright Charles Pace will perform Theatre Id Black at the Capitol City Playhouse on June 19 for the Black Arts Alliance’s Juneteenth-Father’s Day Theatrical Extravaganza. A 1974 biology graduate of the University, Pace — who presently teaches theater at Purdue University — has traveled and studied exten­ sively in Africa and the United States. He has performed a series of one-man shows that focus on black theater and black artists. The Juneteenth celebration, com­ memorating the day slaves in Texas learned of their emancipation, will feature dramatic interpretations of black American poetry and prose, including the works of Langston Hughes, Dudley Randall, Lorraine Hansberry, Nikki Giovanni, Athol Fugard and Pace himself. Pace will devote the second half of the per­ formance to the political activist Malcolm X, using the speeches and writings of the late black spokesman for the monologue. “W e want to dispel a lot of myths about Malcolm X as a controversial figure. Most people don’t know the revelations that he had during his life. He went from a drug addict to a dedicated black leader,” said Black Arts Alliance program coordinator and curator Valerie Cassel. Pace, also interested in dispelling myths, has followed Malcolm X’s life from the time he rose to promi­ nence. The two halves of Theatre in Black were completed in 1979, and have been performed “dozens” of times by Pace, using no props other than a stool. “I see Malcolm as three people: Malcolm the man, subject to all of the flaws of any human being; Mal­ colm the challenge for all of us to develop ourselves; and Malcolm the symbol, which reached the level of myth. I am interested in interpret­ ing a number of viewpoints,” Pace said. “Although I don’t see myself in him, or equate myself to him, many of the thoughts we have were the same. I love Malcolm and I love his memory.” Although Theatre In Black fo­ cuses on black artists and culture, both the Alliance and Pace invite all of Austin to attend. “B< ng a Juneteenth celebration, we expect a lot of blacks. However, all of Austin is welcome and could benefit from the performance,” Cas­ sel said. Pace, a student activist who helped combat the lack of Afro- American classes at the University in the late '60s, has continued his educating/entertaining campaign since his undergraduate years. “I was a child of the '60s. The whole world was politically active. Either that or you were comatose,” Pace said. '60s activist Malcolm X is portrayed in Theatre in Black. m&M? ÍÜÉ ■v:%• ' • - - ‘Although I don’t see myself in Malcolm X, many of the thoughts we have were the same.’ — Charles Pace,| actor-playwr gl Pace will conduct a developmental workshop on Saturday, June 18 at the University Hills Library, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Covering a series of lectures on blacks in American theater, the role of creativity, and the creation of a one-man show, the workshop will cost $10. “The seminar teaches the visual­ ization process, how to transfer something from the idea stage to the product stage and how to make a liv­ ing d< ng what you want to do,” Pace said. Involved in theater since 1972, Pace has not lost his excitement for the trade. “It’s gonna be wonderful. I am thoroughly look lg forward to com­ ing back to Austin,” Pace said. “I was good when I left, but I'm real good now.” Having planned Theatre in Black for about a year now, the Alliance will have a free, open-to-the-public “Meet the Playwright” reception June 17 at Mid Town Live from 5 to 8 p.m. 7fcM M I* Black Capite l City Ptayhoim Jmm 19, p.m. THEATER A Vietnam vet-biologist-actor- playwright, Pace has a lot to say about developing into a well-round­ ed person. He has also earned a mas­ ter’s from Purdue in American Studies and is working on a doctor­ ate in anthropology. “I was in science long before I was in theater. Looking back, I see how valuable my education was. You have to be able to use both right and left brain thinking. That's the world we live in.” Compar tg himself to a shaman — a spiritual leader who seeks en­ lightenment, finds it then enacts his vision — Pace calls himself a cultur­ al artist. “For us [black activists], activism has become a way of life. Something we pull from, the source of our creativity. It has sustained me spirit­ ually, intellectually and financially,” Pace said. From the KKK to Elvismania, Americans are Going to ‘extremes’ By Brian Carr If there are 1,001 strange tales in the naked city, humorist and social critic George Toomer has uncovered at least 208 pages worth in his low­ brow commentary on the culturally bizarre, dark side of daily life, American Extremes. BOOKS From his expose on hunters who eat the raw genitalia of freshly killed wild boars to a review of Tammy Faye Bakker’s new cosmetics line featuring smudge-proof mascara, the author leaves no cultural stones unturned, and proceeds to play with what he finds growing underneath them/' However, the author, who attrib­ utes his success “to the use of a 10th-grade vocabulary,” maybe should have stayed in school a while longer instead of hunting for rocks in what should have been familiar territory. Touted as something of a Bible of National Enquirers, Extremes reads like a script for Real People and picks over the mundane scabs left behind by that popular television genre of years past. As a partisan observer, Toomer chooses to write about that element of society which forms a “lump” in the overall social cream-of-wheat — the “extremists” for whom he holds a bizarre respect. He supports them for their misguided dedication and praises them as “mind-boggling wedges of fruitcake ... driven, like salmon, to swim against the murky currents of society, often at the cost of friends, love, and their own per­ sonal safety.” More a black-and-white picture book for the coffee table than prize- winning expository prose, Extremes takes a random cross-sectional ap­ proach at finding the “lumps” in the cereal, and reports them in a ram­ bling, disjointed chapter form. Granted, although this is the stuff that constitutes “light reading” ma­ terial, at times the text seems so airy it appears the book might blow away unnoticed with the next breeze. When Toomer dedicates the longest chapter in his book to the continu­ ing legend of Elvis Presley, he opens with “to write about Elvis Presley is to write about myself,” and the reader can only suppose this means that the “King” is alive in everyone — or at least in the author’s mind. He even perpetuates the myth that the rock ’n’ roller is not dead but in hiding, coming out publicly dis­ guised as one of his own nationally Most anything can be taken to ugly excess, as this skate punk proves. of this size, but his alternately liber­ ally and conservatively biased essays undermine the objectifive intention of the project. When at his farthest left, he con­ demns plastic surgery by claiming that “a more perfect breast will not save a mind that can conceive a need to go under the knife.” Later, he expresses the liberal no­ tion that to shave is un-American and that “what this country needs is to get back on the track and elect a president with a beard. This will set an example for following nature and the natural order of things.” But instead of getting a cohesive message, the reader gets the notion that Toomer has a phobia of sharp metal objects. Published in Dallas by Taylor Publishing Company, Extremes has the look and feel of a high school yearbook — what that company is best known for making. Yet the more than 200 black-and-white pho­ tographs contained on its pages give it a cheaper and more cluttered look than would have been achieved through the use of color. Several typos and crooked line settings further detract from the whole project, and make the book seem like a rush job, pushed onto booksellers' shelves for its early May release date. Wait before buying this book as a coaster for the coffee table ... an ex­ tremely long time. American Extremes George Toomer Taylor Dallas, 1988 $9.95 famous Las Vegas impersonators like Johnny Harra. But all hope is not lost. At his best, the critic also delivers morbid tabloid-ish tell-alls, including the fact that Elvis gave his “last per­ formance” straining on the john at the time of his death, as well as other little-known tidbits that may or may not be fact, but are always entertainingly questionable. Perhaps the National Enquirer comparison is justified. Toomer, however, does do re­ markably well at condensing the work of more than 100 contributing photographers and writers in a book June 13,1988 IMAGES 7 Ralph J. Branch D.D.S. but they still require prompt care. For instance: • Broken, chipped, or loosened teeth — Save any pieces of the broken teeth. The dentist may be able to bond fragments onto the injured teeth. • Loose teeth may result from an injury or from advanced gum dis­ ease. If the nerves in teeth are damaged, they may eventually die, and the teeth will discolor. • Abscess — An infection in a tooth or in the gum causes pain, swell­ ing, and discharge of pus. Unat­ tended, it may affect adjacent teeth and general health. • Toothache — D o n 't ignore it, no matter how minimal the pain may seem. D o n 't crush aspirin against an aching tooth; it can chemically burn the gums. Rinse the mouth with warm water and call for an appointment. Emergency # 443-1861 EMERGENCY DENTAL INJURIES W h e n dental injuries occur as a re­ sult of serious accidents, we kn o w ’ en ou gh to seek immediate dental attention. O ther dental problems, however, may not be as dramatic, s 2907 Duval 472-5633 urnnn 6509 N. Lamar between Airport & Koenig Sales 459-8944 459-3311 WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 86VFR700 (700 Interceptor) $3995* 1986 Rebel 450 par month SuppH— •xtrn n ly limited on somo *** 36 months financing 10% down 1S% APR with Approvod Crodtt • + TTAI ■ NQ50 ■ Honda Spree *198* 8 IMAGES June 13,1988 DIVERSIONS LIVE MUSIC ACAPULCO RESTAURANTE Y CANTINA 7101 Hwy 71 West, 288-5393 Wed Thu F n Sat Tish Hinojosa Jeff A Jim Tim Bushoog (early), Summit Kathy Kidd A CLUB In Paperbacks Plus 405 Lavaca St., 474-5488 AMIGO’S 1523 Tinnin Ford Road, 441-3813 Sun, Tue Live Tejano music (8 p.m.) ANCHOVIES 503-AE Sixth St., 474-6602 Tue, WedHotcakes Thu-Sat Duck Soup ANTONE’S 2915 Guadalupe St., 474-5314 Mon, TueHank Crawford and Jimmy McGriff Alan Haynes Blues Band Wed Thu Teddy A the Tall Tops Fri-Sun Texas Blues Reunion’88 APOLLO’S 300 E. Sixth St., 474-7027 Mon, Tue2 a.m. Thu Fn Sat Sun Multiple Choice Lifcseyes L'paya Solid Senders AUSTIN CREST 111 E. First St. Fn Marvin Crow Big Band ' 9 p m j AUSTIN O UTHOUSE 3510Guadalupe S t.,451-2266 ( .hamp Hood Band Mon Jubal Clark, Mark Luke Daniels Tue Primitive Moderns Wed Shadowcastcrs Thu Nasty Brothers Sat Hank Sinatra Presents: Wigglies, Individuals, Sun Shadowcastcrs, Serena A Dave BACK ROOM 2015 E Riverside Drive, 441-4677 Mon Tue Wed Sat Underworld, 3rd Person, Maury A the West Smithereens John Kilzer Battle of the Bands playoffs BARB’S W ATERING HOLE 8619 Burnet Road, 467-9547 Mark Luke Daniels Sat BASIN ST. WEST 1112 W. Sixth St., 469-0552 F n.Sat Johnny Bachman Tno '9:15 p m. ) BEAR CREEK SALOON 10542 Manchaca Road, 280-0267 Fn George Williams and the Sundowners BIG MAMOU 2008 S Congress Ave., 445-2080 Wed Thu Fn Sat Zulu Tune, Gravity Jacket Guardez Lou, Puffy Brotha Man Workers, Child Bearing Hips Roman Candles, Shoulders BLACK CAT LOUNGE 3I3V4E Sixth, no phone BOARDWALK BEACH CLUB 215 E Sixth, 479-8601 BRANDING IRON RESTAURANT Hwy 620 at 71, 263-2827 Tropical Denny Wed Summit Thu Janie A the Little Darlings Fn Jerry Sires Sat BREEZYS RR 620, 1 Mile N of Lakeway, 266 1979 Wed Ihu F n Julie Howard Bruce Newman Mickey Bassinger BROKEN SPOKE 3101 S Lamar Blvd., 442-6189 T ue Wed Ihu Fn Sat Michelle Murphey People's Choice Jimmy Mack Geezinslaw Brothers Rosie Flores CACTUS CAFE Texas Union, music slam 8-9 p m Mon Tue Wed New artist open stage His Boy Elroy 3rd annual Underground Kerrville Revue with Ky Hote Loudon Wainwnght III (9 p.m.) Loudon Wainwnght III (8 A 10:30 p.m.) Two Nice Girls Ih u Fn Sat CAFE ORLEANS 1112 W Sixth St., 473 2047 Fn-Sat McMillan Parker 'I rio (9 p.m ) Sun Jazz Brunch (11 a m 2 p.m.) CAP’N TOM’S BAR-B-Q 11800 N Lamar Blvd., 834-1858 Sat Sun Bluegrassopen mike (7 p.m.) Bluegrass jam (2 p.m ; CAROUSEL LOUNGE 1110 E 52nd St., 453-9091 Tue-Sun Jay Clark CHEATHAM STREET WAREHOUSE 1 Cheatham St , San Marco*, 1-353-9341 Tue Wed Thu Fn Sat Mental Tounsi Toyz Painted Puny Uranium Savages Code Blue Javelin Boot will play with Grains of Faith Friday night at the Texas Tavern. Hoipolloi will open the show. The concert will be open to all ages. CHELSEA STREET PUB Barton Creek Square Mall, 327-7794 Fri.Sat Lame Hilboldt (9 p m ) CHEZ FRED 9070 Research Blvd., 451-6494 Mon Tuc Wed Thu Fn Floyd Domino J W. Davis Paul McKee A Jeff Hellmer l omas Ramirez Happy Hour: Clay Palm Trio Evening: Human Touch The Brew Tony Campise Trio Sal Sun CHICAGO HOUSE 607 Trimly St., 473-2542 Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Open mike with Jim Heaid Shawn Seigel Open mike with Jimmy LaFave Second annual post-Kerrville reunion Tom Ash Michael J Martin Char Bussc u p e release COLORADO ST. CAFE 705 Colorado St., 479-6346 Mon Irish-Scotush iam Tue Bill Oliver Wed Open mike with Mark Luke Darnels Thu Olin Murrell, Toby Solatium Fn John Stanm an, Paul McKee, Horacio Ro driques Quizumba Sai CONTINENTAL CLUB 1315 S Congress Ave., 441-2444 Mon T ue Wed Thu Fri Sat I-Tex, DJ: Jah Fred Jesae Taylor A T o nu do Alley Trout Fishing in America Junior Medlow A the Bad Boys Water the Dog, Ballad Shambles Grey Ghost (2-6 p.m .), LeRoi Brothers DONN’S DEPOT 1600 W Fifth St., 478-0336 Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Larry Boyd Donn Adelman Loy Blanton Jew De Maine Donn Adelman Loy Blanton DRI-DOCPUB 4919 Hudson Bead Road, 266-1044 Moo Thu Fri Sac Open mike with Bow Brannon Bam J a s Stoadum e Flaky Biacuit Boya DR1SKILL 117 E. Seventh St., 474-5911 Mon-Sat Connie Blake, Barbara Emautald (8:30 p .m - Foothilla Thu Fri, Sat Jamie Hilbrothe, Myra Spector Jamie Hilbrothe 12:30 a.m.) FILLING STATION KOI Barton Springs Road, 477-1022 Wed-Sat Hope Morgan GREEN MESQUITE BBQ A BEER GARDEN 1400 Barton Springs Road, 479-0485 Music 8 p.m. Tue Wed Thu Fn Sat Sun W.C. Clark Blues Revue Blue Plate Special with Rusty Trapps Lillian Stanfield Solid Senders, Shadowcastcrs Zydeco Ranch Jam session GRUENE HALL 1281 Gruenc Road, New Braunlcls, 1-625-0142 Tue Wed Thu F n Sat Bow Brannon (7:30 p.m .) Rob Watkins (7:30 p.m .) Hudson A Franke (7:30 p.m.) Hal Ketchum Alvui Crow (8 p.m .) HEADLINERS EAST 406 F. Sixth St., 476-3488 Thu Bill Forrest (8 p.m .) F n , Sat Bill Forrest (9 p.m .) HENRY’S BAR 6317 Burnet Road, 453-9594 Fri Charlie Day Band HIGHLAND MALL Wed Prune Swing (8 p.m .) HOLE IN THE WALL 2528 Guadalupe St., 472-5599 Mon Mark Luke Daniels T ue Wed Thu Fri Sat Blue Plate Special Carolyn Caffrcy Reverend Horton Heat Blue Mist 15th Anniversary Party HUT'S Sixth St and Shoal Creek Blvd., 472-0693 Tex Thomas and Sun (noon) the Dangtin' Wranglers HYATT REGENCY 206 Barton S prites Road, 477-1234 Braachwaiar Thu Mady Kaye Trio (6 p.m .) Fn Sat Mady Kaye Trio (7 p.m.) JOE’S GENERIC BAR A BEACH CLUB 315 E. Sixth, 480-0171 Tue Wed Thu-Sat Blucsprint Sun Swinging Nuts D ’Phile, Serious Fashion Audition Night LAUGHING LYNX (Comedy) Embassy Suites North Hotel, 5901 N. 1-35, 450-0203 Thu Ray Anderson LIBERTY LUNCH 405 W. Second St., 477-0461 Thu Fri Sat Reggae Force They Might Be Giants Reivers LITTLE WHEEL 12013 U.S. 290 W ., 288-4268 Music starts at 9:30 p.m. Fri Sal Crossfire Weekenders LIME STREET STATION 323 A 325 E. Sixth S t.,478-8541 Music su its at 9:30 p.m. Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Franchise Bizness Michael Michael A the Max Pictures, Double Take Picture*, Tortured Genius Pictures, Tortured Genius, Rhythm Rats NORTON’S ALL NIGHT 407 E. Sixth St., 472-8851 Wed, ThuRockin' Numooias Fri, Sat XKE PEARL’S OYSTER BAR Colonnade Shopping Center, 9003 Research Blvd., 339- 7444 Moo Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Jimmy Lee Huff Mystic Knights of Amnesia Latest Flame Dixie Scat Cats Toby Anderson Solid Senders KADISSON HOTEL LOBBY LOUNGE 700 San Jacinto Blvd., 476-3700 Intermezzo Tue McCoU A Tracey Wed Thu Intermezzo Fri, Sat Ernie Mae Miller JcffHeUmerDuo Sun RAVEN’S 603 Red River St., 482-9272 Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Buddy A John Shane Decker A the Vibroiux Cowboys Tony Perez Beth Williams (7 p.m .), W.C. Clark Inside Strait (inside), Sleepy La Beef (outside) Ha) Ketchum (inside), Sleepy La Beef (outside) Kent Finlay's Songwriters Showcase RITZ THEATRE 320 E. Sixth St., 479-0054 Corkscrew Night Tue Pool Hoot with Michael Maye Wed SCHOLZ GARDEN 1607 San Jacinto Blvd., 477-4171 Fri Lee Roy Parnell, Ted Sweeney SHUCK FIN N ’S 906 Congress Ave., 477-1244 Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Bobby Mack W.C. Clark Blues Revue Solid Senders Brew Alex Coke SIXTH STREET COUNTRY CLUB 508 E. Sixth St., 469-9234 Porsche Tue Bizncss, Pictures Wed Third Language Thu Third language, Lookout Fri Madhouse, Blue Mist Sat SOUTHERN PALAIS RESTAURANT 607 San Jacinto Blvd., 477-4538 Seventh Sente Wed Stick People Fri Steel Power Sat STEAMBOAT 403 E. Sixth St., 478-2912 Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Van Wilks R ingof Power, Ring Theatre, Crank View Ro-Tel A the Hot Tomatoes, Freddy Steady Zulu Time, Ty Gavin, Gina Fobia, Ring of Power, Occupants (9:30 p.m .) Reverend Horton Heal, Water the Dog Lifeaeyei, Freddy Steady, Motive, Zydeco Ranch, Mannish Boys, Mac Abernathy (9 p.m .) Sat Sun STUBB’S BAR-B-Q 4001 N. 1 35,465-9177 Stubb’a Night Fri Jeaae Taylor Sat Sunday Jam with emcee Dm Purfccyptle (6 Sun P J u ) June 13, 1988 IMAGES 9 SYMPHONY SQUARE 1101 Red River St., 476-6064 Wed Fri Sat Sun Ballet Folidorico Aztlan (morning show) Tina Marsh Collaborative Voices (8:30 p.m.) Jerry Jeff Walker, Ha) Ketchum (8:30 p.m.) Harvey Pittel Saxophone Quartet (8:30 p.m.) TEXAS TAVERN Texas Union, 471-9231 Fri Sat Grains of Faith, Javelin Boot, Hoipolloi Killer Bees WEST END 727 W. 23rd, 479-8889 THEATER B. IDEN PAYNE THEATRE 23rd St. at San Jacinto St., 471-2787 Merrily We Roll Along June 17-18, 22-25,29-July 2 at 8 p.m. THREADGILL’S 6416 N. Lamar Blvd., 451-5440 Jimmie Dale Gilmore Wed THUNDERCLOUD BEER GARDEN 203 Riverside Drive, 447-76% Musk starts at 9 p.m. Mon Michael Hamm Band Jump Start Fri Mud Ducks Sat TOULOUSE 402 E. Sixth St., 478-0744 La Franz Mon Trik-Trax Tue Daddiot Wed La Franz Thu Supply & Demand Fri Woody & the Rudders Sat tw t n t 400 E. Sixth St., 472-3712 Thu Fri Sat Jazz Jam with Human Touch Quizumba Heart & Mind OTHER CLUBS AMNIZ1A 601-/ E. Sixth St., 479-6318 ANN’S LITTLE BOTTLE 11940 Manchaca Road, 282-9804 AUSTINIGHTS 9515 N. Lamar Blvd., 837-4825 BACK FORTY (O.HENRY’S) 407 Neches St.,478-0411 BAILEY'S 6519 N. Lamar Blvd., 454-1398 BDtRAPORETTrS 905 Barton Springs Road, 480-8446 BUNKERS 311 E. Sixth St. BOATHOUSE 407 Colorado St., 474-9667 BOMBER’S 5736 Manchaca Road, 448-2788 CAFE ST. CHARLES 333 Guadalupe St. CHANCES 900 Red River St., 472-8273 CLUB ISLAS 217 Congrai Ave., 473-0798 COMMON INTEREST 8440 Burnet Road, 453-67% DECA 709 E. Sixth St. HITCHING POST LOUNGE FM 1327, Crcedmoor, 243-1263 J.T. MANORS 290 E. Manor Road, 272-4528 LUMBERYARD 16511 Bratten Lane, 255-%22 run ; 304 W. Fourth St., 477-0970 PAN-AMERICAN CLUB 1800 E. Sixth St., 477-0615 PEPPER’S AT THE FALLS 100 Sessoms Drive, San Marcos, 1-396-5255 THE VICTORY GRILL 1102 E. llth St., 477-0257 WALLER CREEK PLAZA HOTEL 500 N. 1-35,474-0948 Lobby bar; Lloyd’s of Austin CAPITOL CITY PLAYHOUSE 214 W. Fourth St., 472-1855 Billy’s Last Broadcast Randall Wheatley directs his newest comedy, following up Bugs in the System and Along for the Ride. Wed-Sat at 8 p.m. June 13-July 9 CHICAGO HOUSE 607 Trinity St., 473-2542 The Human Potato and Rain o f Terror Thu-Sat at 8 p.m. Through June 25 HYDE PARK THEATRE 511 W. 43rd St., 452-6688 American Realism The play concerns the dilemma of the Fletcher family, who must decide whether to sell their downtown Austin home in order to make way for another high-rise bank building. It asks the question “What do we gain or lose in tearing down the past to make room for the future?” Fri-Sun at 8 p.m. Through June 26 MARY MOODY NORTHEN THEATRE 3001 S. Congress Ave., 448-8484 Texarkana Tanzi Thu-Sat at 8 p.m. Sun at 2 p.m. Through June 19 How the Other Half Loves Tue-Sat at 8 p.m. Sun at 2 p.m. June 22-July 3 ZACHARY SCOTT THEATRE 1421 W. Riverside Dr. One M o'Time The off-Broadway hit musical conceived by actor/director Vera Bagncris played for three years to a sold out bouse at the Village Gate in New York City. Set in the decadent ’20s at a vaudeville house in New Orleans, One Mo’ Time is baaed on the famous black variety house, the Lyric Theatre, which reigned at the corner of Iberville and Bur­ gundy in the French Quarter until it was destroyed by fire in 1927. Starring Eloise Burrell. Wed-Sat at 8 p.m. Sun at 2:15 p.m. June 16-Juiy 10 VISUAL ARTS BAUHAUS PICTURE FRAMING 610 E. Seventh St., 478-1239 Black and Color Drawings by Paul Russell; batiks, silk paintings and mar­ bled works by Coscttc Russell Through August 1 GALERIA SIN FRONTERAS 1211 E. Seventh St., 478-9448 Art Forms: A Survey o f Contemporary Three-Dimension­ al Works Exhibition of sculpture, construction and installation featuring Michael Ameacua, Marsha Gomez, Johnny Mar­ tinez, Mike O’Brien, Max Praneda, Cecilia Rangel, Jose Luis Rivera, Carmen Samora, David Santos, Michael Walker and Steve Wiman Through July 29 HARRY RANSOM CENTER Austin Photography Collection Forty photos from 1903-1939 from Christina Broom Through June 30 LAGUNA GLORIA ART MUSEUM 3809 W. 35th St., 458-8191 The Texas Fine Arts Association’s New American Talent ms Exhibition oí painting, sculpture, photography, graphic art and assemblage from 61 new artists nationwide. Through June 26 PRO-JEX GALLERY 109 E. Fifth St., 472-7707 Palestine 1988 Twenty-five journalistic black-and-white photos selected from Keith Dannemiller’s assignment in the Gaza Strip and West Bank. Through June 30 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5 even a guy who plugs a microphone into his amp so he can further as­ sault tourists’ ears while they wait to ride the street cars. Poi Dog Pondering, a group that moved to Austin from Hawaii, fre­ quently performed on street comers between club shows. Their last show in Austin before starting their cur­ rent tour was an acoustic set across the street from the University Co- Op. The half-dozen musicians, play­ ing a wide variety of traditional in­ struments, attracted a crowd of nearly 50 students and sold at least a dozen albums. Now their album is on the most-played list at KTSB. Horas, banjos, tambourine, har­ monicas, mandolins, bells, recor­ ders, snare drums, and steel drums are among the many instruments be­ sides the guitar which have been tried successfully on the street. If, however, you don’t happen to have the ability to make inoffensive sounds on any of these instruments, you can always try being a mime. With mimes being a rarity in Aus­ tin, you might even make enough to pay your grocery bill — but you won’t win any Grammies. 10 IMAGES June 13,1988 MUSIC Bad Mutha Goose flashes promise Austin funk band provides fun, but inconsistent, debut album their melody, African and beat orientations far better than their rap bent or locally celebrated funk ele­ ments, which Austin fans may find disappointing. But, with so many other influenc­ es and good interpretation of them all, the EP deserves some credit. For a debut from a band this musically complex, it holds together remarka­ bly well and even the flaws seem mi­ nor depending on listener’s taste. the The only real regret is that Jump the Funk didn’t come out better. Even though it’s a likeable — even danceable — enough song with ex­ cellent groove, it seems they could have done more with it. An open- ended beat begs to be layered over with ultra-funky instrumentation but BMG didn’t. Had they just gone crazy, it probably would have been better. Being too restrained certainly isn’t a problem with the bouncy One Mon One Vote. Its heavy message doesn’t stop it from being a lively number with a good melody and rhythm. A nice chorus and big per­ cussion section are the impetus for the clever, fun tune. The band’s major problem on fu­ ture efforts won’t be coming up with original material, but will be whether or not they can combine el­ ements rather than simply showing them off on different songs. Be Bad Mutha Goose Bad Mutha Goose Fable By Joe Sims Most artists, with obvious dissent­ ers like Tracy Chapman, Sinead O’Conner and Terence Trent D’Arby, find putting together a pol­ ished debut album a rather difficult task. And, as a result, these projects usually leave a lot of room for im­ provement. No exception is Bad Mutha Goose and the Brothers Grimm’s premier release. Like most first efforts, it lacks any consistency as each song man­ ages to have both flaws and success­ es. The four-song EP highlights Bad Mutha Goose and the Brothers Grimm have built a loyal following among the Austin funk-dance crowd. ‘Each song manages to have both flaws and successes.’ Somebody was probably intended to show off the band's ability to mix genres, but, even though it’s not bad, it’s not much funkier than trad­ itional rap. Rather than combining styles, they only managed to compromise one to bring out the other and the result might not be what they want­ ed. Instead, they should have gone straight ahead, mixing everything head on and then checking for survi­ vors. An odd sidenote to Be Some­ body’s thematics is that, a few years ago, Mr. T recorded an album called Be Somebody with a title song whose message was to BMG’s. identical Of course the song isn’t a straight- up rap with fresh-fly MCs and the whole bit, but it does use some pret­ ty good speaker-hurtin’ scratchin’ and works better in that medium than funk. The only true rap on the album is an untitled quickie that might cause a few people to gag. A great teaser of what BMG could do wraps up the first side. About a minute of helter-skelter rhythmic noise that hints at the Adam and the Ants classic Stand and Deliver, the untitled cut jukey kinetic is a masterpiece. For any future efforts, this should be what the band ex­ pands on and funk should be what they base it on. Compilation captures Austin’s best unknowns Anyone who frequents Austin’s better record stores — i.e., those that promote local albums — may have noticed small boxes near the cash register that contain cassette tapes recorded by area bands. The first inclination of many is to disregard these tapes. After all, if these bands aren’t even signed to a record contract — much less famous — how good can they be? Well, believe it or not, many of them are damn good. Proof of this came recently with the release the Mojo Music cassette Coales­ cence: The Austin Cassette Compendium. The new tape is a compilation of tracks from various cassettes put out by 21 local bands. The recording serves as a great introduction to Austin’s best undiscovered talent, helping guide club-goers and record-buyers locate some of the hottest new acts around town. Of course, not every song on Coalescence is good, but most of them are. The tape is cer­ tainly worth shelling out a meager three or four bucks for, and it will undoubtedly per­ suade you to check out some of the other cas- AUSTIN MUSIC settes it draws from. Highlights from Coalescence inlude the al- ready-popular Weeds and Child Bearing Hips. The Weeds contribute Mentally 111 from their self-titled cassette and CBH offers The Kicker from Child Bearing Hips. I personally had the chance to hear mem­ bers of Swine Patrol and D.C. Fudge jam at a friend’s party. Get That Thing Outta’ M y Face and Piece o f M y Flesh will let you hear some really talented musicians and good gui­ tar-playing. Other good cuts include Ono Milo by the Rag Mummies, Shoes In M y Closet, a folk- blues number belonging to the Lucky Tailors, and the hilarious K ill For God from the Rudy Schwartz Project. Fans of dance music should be attracted to W hy It Seems So Real from Anneke’s Romp! tape, and punkers will get off to ST37’s Suck­ ing on the Family Tit. The limitations of space won't allow me to list every good song — it’s a very long tape — but there are others than those mentioned here. Anyone who has heard Coalescence or attended the tape-release party at Liberty Lunch on June 5 will agree. ■ ■ ■ One thing can’t be denied — Austinites love their music and the community never stops trying to promote it. The latest example comes with a new music program weekly se­ ries featuring bands taped on location in Aus­ tin clubs. The first program, a Killer Bees show recorded at Liberty Lunch, aired June 2 and was rebroadcast June 6. The Bees also had another performance shown on June 9 and 13. The program airs every Thursday at 7 p.m. and again at 11, with another rebroadcast on Mondays at 6:30. This week’s show will star Great Guns and the hot Louisiana band Dash Riprock. Austin legend Jerry Jeff Walker will be on next week. If you don’t already have cable, get it quick — you don’t wanna miss this! ■ ■ ■ Another good reason to get cable is KTSB’s new summer programming schedule. The new format has some exciting changes. Hard­ core blues fans such as myself are excited about the new blues show from 1-2 p.m. on Mondays, and Deadheads will go crazy over Live Dead, a solid hour of Grateful Dead Fri­ day at 7 p.m. The folk hour has also been expanded (Sat. from 1 to 4 p.m.), and the regular features have been moved back to the 10 p.m.-mid- night block. If you can’t get cable, don’t fret — the Un­ dergraduate Library has KTSB in the third- floor Audio-Visual Library. — Lee Nichols ‘Idlewild’ provides acoustic pleasure June IB, 1988 IMAGES 11 the Yellow Pages to find an unlisted number. You know it exists, but it isn’t written down in black-and- white and Ma Bell can’t lead you by the hand into the record store. Narrowing down the search, Ev­ erything But the Girl has produced pure acoustic ambrosia with their latest offering. Idlewild is the fourth domestic release on Sire Records in as many years from Tracey Thorn and Ben Watt. More disciplined and sharply de­ fined than its predecessors, Idlewild strives for an earthier sound com­ bining folkish melodies with “real” jazz instrumentation, guitar licks, and for the first time, a synthesizer. And for all practical purposes, they work to the group’s advantage. In fact, all 11 mid-tempo tracks on the album are written and performed al­ ternately by Watt and Thom, creat­ ing a cohesive package based on the ‘Everything But the Girl has produced pure acoustic am­ brosia/ inevitable — love, marriage, child­ bearing hips and discontent. When Thom croons on the open­ ing cut, “ Desire is a child that clings/and I know the trouble it brings...for reason is unkind/but still Til know next time that’s not the way love is,” her conviction practically melts the vinyl and saves many trite lyrics from sounding ... well, trite. Showcasing the group’s small but impressive hom and keyboard sec­ tion, the remainder of the first side glides smoothly through familiar ter­ ritory with a few surprises. Johnny Marrish guitar riffs and saucy sax solos weave in and out of strong vo­ cals, and add to the album’s heavy- handed texture. On The Night I Heard Caruso Sing, Watt takes over the lead in an anti-political ballad about nuclear weaponry and music’s power to make one forget about the “bombs in the hills,” if only through the temporary enjoyment of an old record. Taken as a leftist statement, he polarizes and contrasts the oppo­ sition between man’s ability to cre­ ate life and his capability to destroy it, ending with a haunting question for the listener. Known for being a recluse band, only performing before studio mi­ crophones, Everything But the Girl unexpectedly dropped its Michael Jackson facade last fall when it ac­ cepted a Paramount Pictures and I.R.S. Records offer to produce an original tune for the She’s Having a Baby sound track. The resulting cut appears on Idlewild, newly orches­ trated and resung by Thorn with more inflection and caring in her voice. Although the album tends to sag under the weight of its own preten­ tiousness, the group supports the lyrics with a rich, full sound, en­ veloping each word in a stay-fresh wrapper for the listener to take home and sample individually. But don’t be misled. This is defi­ nitely not just mind-candy in the vein of Cocteau Twins or The Smiths. Everything But the Girl has carved its own niche into the quasi - bohemian pseudo-folk scene, per­ haps redefining and reshaping it to fit their own individuality. Thanks to Waterloo Records for the loan of this album. Everything But the Girl Idlewild Sire By Brian Carr Finding a good album nowadays, let alone one that is intelligible, is pretty much like thumbing through Parker ignores pop for artistic values record company indictment as spiteful as Mercury Poisoning, his 1979 single directed at Mercury Records. On The Mona Lisa’s Sister, he directs his attention to society’s illusions and hypocrisies. He even includes a musical open letter to 15 th century Dutch painter Hieronymous Bosch in which he punctures Bosch’s idyllic view of life. When he says “don’t get bent out of shape” over life’s daily tragedies^ he’s not merely being smug. He’s suggesting that it’s useless to dwell on that which we’re powerless to af­ fect. And while he later bemoans people “jerking to the rhythm of success,” he ap­ pears to have come to terms with his com­ mercial position. The album features two members of The Rumour — guitarist Brinsley Schwarz and bassist Andrew Bodnar — and it is no coinci­ dence that Parker receives his most em- pathetic backing in years. Schwarz and Par­ ker’s co-production is reminiscent of T-Bone Burnett’s recent work for other artists — au­ stere and free of the kind of obtrusive clutter that has plagued recent Parker records. Pro­ pelled by Parker’s sturdy, rhythmic acoustic and Bodnar’s elastic, Fernando Saunders-in­ spired bass lines, The Mona Lisa’s Sister has a texture distinctly its own. Oh yeah — he can sing, too. Often over­ looked in critical appraisals of Parker’s work is the fact that he may be the finest white R&B singer since Van Morrison. He demon­ strates this ability most vividly on the tender I ’m Just Your Man, and the album’s final track, a cover of Sam Cooke’s classic ballad, Cupid. While barker’s performance is not as gracefully fluid as Cooke’s, his precise phras­ ing and impassioned delivery transform this lighthearted song into a tale of quiet despera­ tion. Graham Parker appears to be stuck in the Graham Parker The Mone U se's Sister RCA By Gilbert Garcia Graham Parker knows frustration. Meld­ ing the R&B proclivities of ’70s British pub rock with the defiant spirit of the then- emerging punk movement, he released such brilliant records as Heat Treatment and Squeezing Out Sparks a decade ago, but was largely ignored by the record-buying public. Commercially usurped by Elvis Costello, and his brilliant band The Rumour going its own way, the 37-year-old British songwriter has wandered erratically through the ’80s. Thus, it is hardly surprising on his new al­ bum The Mona Lisa’s Sister to hear him sing that nothing lasts “under the mask of happiness.” Yet, the unnerving anger and cynicism at the heart of many of his new songs is partly responsible for Parker’s artis­ tic rebirth. Parker has long been the master of seeth­ ing bitterness. Few others could write a Fortunately, The Mona Lisa ’s Sister does not reflect Graham Parker s taste in clothing same commercial no-mans-land where Cos­ tello currently resides. Too current and idiosyncratic to he lionized by “oldies" radio stations, and too established to win the en thusiasm of the “ trend of the mouth" club, he must struggle to win an audience tor each new release. However, as with Costello’s King o f America, he has stripped his music- down to its essential core strained, The sound is not as ricry as X’ceec mg Out Sparks, and there s nothing quite a> venomous a-' Pvi: Ask Ue Quc>'.< ns trom ’’V II -na Psa > v s u Howim ’ Wind Bu demonstrate" - r Parker ha- stopped -ñas mg Billboard char' som ething more value r\e tv. leaven a rc setuec a ‘ sue ir.cgr. Thanks to Waterloo Records for the For some the results may be a bit re­ loan of this album 12 IMAGES June 13,1988 June 13, 1988 IMAGES 13 A ■ Austin possesses, and continues to accumulate, the artistic talent to be­ come a cultural boom town. It lacks only the facilities and opportunities — dependent on private, city and state funding of the arts — to reach this level. “If Austin had sufficient funding for the arts, it could attract people from all over the state,” said Don Toner, producing artistic director of Live Oak Theatre. “The music scene is beginning to grow but ev­ erything else is lagging behind.” Largely because of its musical reputation and the presence of the University, many artists find Austin attractive. It boasts the sixth largest concentration of artists in the Unit­ ed States. Still, the artistic commu­ nity remains somewhat self-con­ tained. “Austin has been called ‘the San Francisco of Texas.’ It’s a top choice for artists to relocate to,” said Albert Valle, vice chairman of the Austin Arts Commission. “But the AAC doesn’t have the funds to support all the artists who are here. A lot of art goes unexposed. If you seek it out you’ll find it, but the general public doesn’t often seek it out.” Increased public and private sup­ port could result in a more dynamic arts community, through such im­ provements as a fuller schedule of drama productions. Some theaters have found the current level of fund­ ing insufficient to remain open. “The UT drama season had to be cut back, the Paramount [Theatre for the Performing Arts] may not re­ open in the fall and the Austin His­ tory Theater is now a nightclub,” said Penny Taylor, executive direc­ tor of the Austin Circle of Theatres. Despite the size and reputation of Austin’s artistic community, there’s simply “less activity” here than in other, better-funded cities. “It’s a mistake to compare Austin to either coast,” where most of the nationally renowned arts cities are found, Taylor said. “But regional theaters have been very successful in Louisville and Minneapolis, and Dallas and Houston have some in­ teresting things going on in theater. “Austin’s ripe for a regional the­ ater scene. It has some incredibile theater facilities — the University has facilities available that you can’t find anywhere else in the world ex­ AUSTIN RICH IN TALENT, BUT LOW FUNDING KEEPS ARTS COMMUNITY STRUGGLING b y B E N C O H E N a n d C A M I L L E T I P T O N Imagine Austin as the artistic and cultural capital of the South. Bright lights and neon shrines beat down on its busy streets as a young, enthusiastic couple approach one of Austin’s finest theaters on opening night. Their mouths are sandpaper-dry and their hands moist as they clutch tightly to souvenirs purchased from a nearby tourist shop, which specializes in paraphernalia commemorating Austin’s premiere plays and bands. cept New York. There’s a lot of tal­ ented potential, but not enough money.” But while Austin’s theater facili­ ties sometimes overshadow its theat­ rical activity, some artists find the city too small to suit them. Although smaller Texas cities like Beaumont, Corpus Christi and Temple have their own performing arts centers and cultural arts centers, Austin art­ ists and organizations must often rely on the University to stage per­ formances and cultural events. “The symphony and ballet have nowhere to play in Austin, and the University isn’t always readily avail­ able to outside groups,” said Cathe- from education to health care, ac­ count for the low priority the state gives to arts funding. Spending 18 cents per capita on the arts, Texas ranks 54th out of all 56 U.S. states and territories. New York state’s $43 million an­ nual budget dwarfs Texas’ $3.6 mil­ lion allotment. “If the economy weren’t so bad, people would be behind things like a cultural arts center,” Goddart said. Many members of the arts com­ munity, however, see public indif­ ference as the most serious obstacle to funds. According to Olota Patton, executive director of the Zachary Scott Theatre, the past two years AAC’s budget comes from the hotel/ motel occupancy tax, so it varies from year to year. Its 1988-89 budg­ et is $770,000. “People don’t recognize the value of the arts and legislators have just not set aside the money,” Valle said. “There’s just a small minority of people that appreciate the value of arts. It’s hard to break out of that stigma.” O n e way to promote the arts, Valle suggests, is to show people the eco­ nomic benefits they reap within the community. the city in direct revenues. For every dollar spent on the arts, three to four more dollars are gener­ ated inside the city, according to the report. It conservatively estimates that 5 percent of restaurant revenues in Austin directly correlate to partic­ ipation in cultural events. “ Hotels and motels, restaurants, real estate agencies that sell property to artists and the tourism industry all profit through the arts,” Valle said. Valle believes the state could play a major role in promoting greater appreciation of the arts. “We could use the same kind of energy expended on the ‘Don’t Mess rine Goddart of the Austin Visual Arts Association. Laguna Gloria Art Museum pro­ vides the only large-scale venue for contemporary art in Austin, but it too has limited facilities, which pre­ vents it from displaying many works that one might find in other cities’ contemporary art collections. “A lot of arts groups in Austin have nowhere to show their work or perform. There are a lot of artists here, but they often have to leave town to display their work,” God­ dart said. Texas’ currently weak economy, as well as its traditionally low spend­ ing in all areas of human services have been bad ones for private sup­ port of theater. “The community’s contributions have shrunk from about $40,000 two years ago to about $10,000- $15,000 this year,” Patton said. “Texas spends money according to what the people want. If Texans want more support of the arts and do something about it, they can get it,” Toner said. The city of Austin supports the arts through the Austin Arts Com­ mission, which hears proposals from artists and organizations and then makes recommendations to the City Council, the only body authorized to funds. The actually distribute “The more we show how the arts help the economy, people will see [funding the arts] as an investment, in the community and will support the arts.” According to an in-depth study by the Leisure Variety Action Team of Leadership Austin 1986-87, non­ profit organizations like theaters, museums and dance companies pump a total of $6.4 million into Austin’s economy. Laguna Gloria’s “ Fiesta” brings in 40,000-50,000 people to celebrate the arts during the third week in May every year. About 20 percent of those attending come from out of town, contributing $4.6 million to with Texas’ campaign to promote Texas art nationally. Right now there’s a tourist campaign for Texas which focuses on the stale’s land. The same thing could be done focus­ ing on Texas’ cities and art. Every major city in Texas has an establish­ ed an scene that’s pretty much kept to itself,” Valle said. In the absence of such a push on behalf of the am , which would make the excitement of opening night at the Live Oak or Zachary Scott an image familiar to Austinites and tourists alike, the city’s anistic talent will remain unappreciated and unrewarded. 14 IMAGES June 13,1988 TUNE OUT Dune (Pert 1 of 2) KBVO (Ch.42, Cable 5) 8 p.m. It’s a rarity when a movie which has been adapted from a book turns out to be good. Unfortunately, Dune is not one of those rarities. In fact, what happened to Frank Herbert’s novel is almost criminal. You’d think that even making a mediocre movie out of Herbert s fantastic tale would be easy. After all, there’s a lot of material to work with: complex characters, the poten­ tial for great special effects, the list is endless. That’s why the people that worked on this flick and made it awful must be talents — incredibly bad ones. Do yourself a favor. Go to the bookstore, pick up a copy of Dune and settle down to a night of enjoy­ able reading — and thank God there were no sequels. — Karen Adams PRIME TIME 7 :0 0 p m 0 HT. BLUE SK IES F 'a nk and Annie married five ^ ie e k s strive to form their separate families from former m arriages into one 'am ily O S ABC M O NDAY NIGHT BASEBALL fl) Q o S i ALF Kate gives ALF a ci vi cs lesson and then dream s m a’ toey are both opponents m a preside: na electior iR j Q o ® A TEAM 0 1 » MACNEIL/ LEHRER NEW SHOUR 0 BLACK SHO W CASE Featuring Jean-Luc Ponty) + * MOVIE ABOUT LAST NIGHT ... (1986) Rob Low e Dem< M oore A young man and w oman 'm d them selves co n 'u se d frustrated and enthralled ir this bitmg story of contemporary 'om ance R Q 0 DIGITAL DISCO VERY S ER IE S 0 NASHVILLE NOW Canyon 0 RIPTIDE Home For Christm as 0 M AKE ROOM FOR DADDY Love Letters Linda p.a/s maiimar witt her parents old love letters 0 CAGNEY AND LACEY 0 MOVIE ONLY E M P T IN ESS R EM A IN S (1984) Tne tray¡f plight o ' five w om er whose children and g randchi¡drer were tott-red killed of sold by Argentina t bruta military Junta is chronicled NR 0 PERSPECTIVE Bnght Ideas New applications of light 0 LIVING PLANET PORTRAIT OF THE EARTH (1 9 85 i Attenboroug* :a*es a voyage dowr the A m a zo ' R /e- with its 3 90L species of fish including itife infam ous flesh eating piranha Q 0 *>/, MOVIE WHERE ARE THE CHILDREN’ <1981 Ji Clayburgt M ax Gar A happily married couple s suddenly piurigec into a nightm an woe: their 'w o childrer are KtdriappfcC R O 0 COURSE TO THE A M E R IC A ’S CUP © PLAY B O Y'S W ORLD OF CARTOONS AND FUNNIES Ga‘ you' favoott Riayboy cartoons come to life ¡n this g psi- rito tbf ' reative worlds of four of A ; s o ' Bucx Bm wr S om e o' 986 Danny Playboy ■ " o s' fam ous ca'toor artists 0 * V , MOVIE W ISE GUYS DeVito y o n R 'S 'o p c G oo'ba gangsters bet a buridie >' tin b o s s boo t' o f trie w o n g horse swipe < f i-? * Cadillac arid party o r the Dor s credit card R 0 S W IS S FAMILY RO BINSO N Neptune Ne' Títere ' evidence of a •• ystenous creature o'; the ■n o' • wo fo' Bu' w they t - r callee Neptune s N e p’iev. Kar s e " and i 'tie, begin to s . .pact a c r i sii Idrer t’ d '" a , be < •• n¡ o* its t.g e - 0 MOVIE IH Í KID WITH THf BHUKLN HALL 7 0 0 prr* 7 DC p ri I <% THf H O N A N ' AWIIl Y M R ED mts Wilbu Q J r o . a ( uif arid 1.1 KBVO KLRU TBS BET MAX WGN NASH USA NICK :05) Hbil :35) B'wt Cont) Fat Free 15) Little Your Skin Movie: Bless the Beasts Bozo (6:00) Cartoon Dr Snuggle T o d a y 'i iD £ _ Fandango Express Movie: Suez Riptide KTBC I KVUE KXAN f B i BS This Gurnev. Pt4 T ouble River Movie: Dos Cruces 8 or. Id umbo lovie: Peter ind the Wolf Movie: La Hora del Coraje Sera Anunciada Vida Diaria M ovie Border ncident * - loomer V ovie: )isnev Jampus Man " ■ lm_________ Special Kind X T m. Wor Ft Inc Group Ltsltoq TV e n T 988 1 © H earns' Hits 1lovie: Harry md the ourney, Pt4 J Aovie Last * riovie Campus Man Soltero en e 24 Horas Sera Anunciada Movie: Los Enamorados billows isons Donald Kids Video R a j j e d j r A n ^ (PI 5) Kaleidoscope Movie: Los Miserables ■ Cartoons Hot List Private Practice Movie: Wise Guys Robinson Rosalia ’ Hearns' Hits Dorado June Playboy Video Movie. La Plaza de Championship * Puerto Santo Boxing (:05) Ozzie Movie: Man Puss in Boots Festivals Horseshoe Rendezvous Small World - At the Improv Cagney and Lacey Foley Square Street Invest. Advisory Movie Samurai, Part 2 Living Isles Living Planet TBA Secrets ot Nature Movie: Diamond Movie: Youngblood NFL Moment Cartoons B ball Mag Hot List Secretaria 24 Horas Movie: Adriana del Movie: Harry and the River Spec. Kind o Great Hits SoortsCntr NFL Moment Fantasies Can Cam Movie: Mirror 0 S K I THE OUTER LIM IT S Skiing m New Zealand 0 THE HOT LIST Jeff Marder Pamela D es B a n e s 4 ’ s no* * ¡t $ steam y if it s fun we II oe then Tr a ’ s hie motto of the Hot List a show that previews wf at s hot and wf at s not 8 : 0 0 p m o ry, NEWHART A Halloween parly at the Stratford Inr «. inte'- jpted by a new s report of an invastpr from outer space which causes 'tie ;R, □ townsfolk o p a 0 3 4 “f ve-greet Part / NBC MONDAY NIGHT AT TH f M O V IE S A o t't ’ 9 85 ; Leslie Anne A "i.a n d A ssa rte Au rv, r a eene dese't po-.et PC13 fc} i? AÜVE NhUHf W. jf Op ... •' * i '.u a 8 V i * i ,. a i-f r i n v. . i i j ped ’ (O' tO or S co n neve» t-n ate / m g 0 VIDEO bOUt • d o w ttie hottest urbar contem porary musa, videos and Miter v.e*: 'e c w d in y s'a /. MOVIE ANN VICKERS (1933) Irene Dunne Walter H uston A young soldier leaves a social worker an unwed mother and she eventually finds happiness with a |udge NR 0 * * MOVIE THE OTHER LOVER (1985) Lindsay Wagner Jack Scalia A happily married marketing director for a book publisher tails in love wit11 one of her firm s authors N R 0 ANIMALS OF THE GREAT NORTHWEST Bighorns of Beauty (.reek A look at bighorn ! cec - r e '- car .."*"/ V cve R e v r e Z*r-f.r Fancamo: Be a S’j r Z'Xl« Voeo Amercan Nashvue How F andarle Be a Star Crook Video Nashville Now Cntry Crook Video Be a Star Amertcar Nashvii-e Now R«)m the 3icr Ce — l Money A "eat P’ay Hi w X* T c T*C .aoxpec Pearr.or SCvfftcers Dares - .SA Cartoon Express knot flipf ce MeT.W Bacy Max.r KTBC CBS This Morning KVUE m aa KXAN o t a Today Good Morning America 7 AM 1 .30 f l AM 8 30 Q AM * 30 i o 1 1 ** 30 1 1 1 2lL 30 4 PM 1 30 9 PM £ 30 4 PM 6 30 A PM * 30 c PM 5 w e PM 6 m 7 PM 1 30 Q PM 8 30 7 AM 1 J L 8 AM :3B 10 AM 30 11 AM :30 1 JSL Pyramid Donahue Card Sharks Price Is Right Young and Restless News Beautiful As the World Turns Guiding Light Geraldo Boss? Hiime News All My Children One Life to Live General Hospital Hart to Hart Jeffersons Star Trek All Familv News CBS News News Wheel Charlie Brown NBA Basketball . News ABC News News M*A‘ S*H Who s Boss7 Strangers Moonlightm 8 thirtysomet hing News M 'A 'S 'H Nightlme B Miller Rhoda Sign Off LIFE It Figures Babv Knows Nurse Falcon Crest Attitudes Mom Day Mom Works Wok | Hllvwd Regis Philbm Attitudes 11 30 1 0 * News Cheers Diamonds Diamonds CBS Late Mo 1 2 *" 1 4 :30 AMC JSLm HBO ESPN PLAY Movie Karate Kid, Pari II (Cont) SportsCntr Auto Racmg - Q - (5 00; Sign Off News Late Show FNNBRAV PISCOVEf — m ■ Business Business Mkt Prvw Morning I Survival Fit Condor Cry MarketLme Business MarketWatch A.M. Mid Day Market Rpt Business MktWtch Business MktWtch Wall St Countdown Wall Street Final FNN News Americas Business h a Symphony Movie Happiest Days Movie Kipper bang Animal Wndr Amerindian Commodities Space Oasis Barriers Questors Triathlon Living Isles TBA Nature Rt 11 Cities Usbnov in China Paradise Camp In the Wild Wild South Seas Voyage Wild Orphans Prof Nature Adventurers Kiiamar.iaro Anma' Noah s A** Secret Agem Wilderness Wudemess Exptorrs ARTS | £ | Triumph of West Leon s B Hood Movie Emperor Jones Guggenheim James at 15 Gold Age Amanda s Journey Survival Wld Movie If I Were Rich Movie Baby Legend Movie Starship Tanner 88 Movie. Dirty Dancing Will Rogers Pokertown James at 15 Movie Learning Tree Gold Age Police Sc Travel Survival Wld Age of Kenneoy Movie N»gm of the Shooting Stars GT Cafe Com 3™ Age of Kennedy Movie Snoot"v Movie Cnmewave Movie Karate Kid Part ii Mov*e D«rty Dancing C oned Hour Live 45. Tarwe 15 -leave" Js Get Fit Workout Motion Bdvshao a USTS Triathlon IHRA Drag Racing Ftshin Hole Wrestling Trivia Puh SprtsLk PGA Tour SponsCnb Surfer Mac Classic Sunme- Beacr Vobeybai Witer s*. ^00* SoorsC-- PGA ' o r *ur & -.¿Clr SpoArr Lie >ce On Sex Comedy Theatre -amas.es Playmate p'ayoMs Me. tney a on t eaf~ it 8 * * * MOVIE THE PATENCIA NEAL STORY (1961) Gie^ida Jacxsor’ Dex Bogarde P w ic a Neal s incredible recovery horn ¿ - w *ata stroke with ttie love anc centro»' of her a - t v husband Roald Dah 8 THE ADVENTURERS Wavs over Piecipicc Seating Europe s Mcv*: Bt-anc 8 * * * * * MOVIE THE NIGHT OF THE SHOOTING STARS Margarita i wane ’ h-ee decaoes ahe Wor< War II a w o m a n w ft© e a r 1 s * *’ '■** ’■*"* recounts ttve -así ,1a» o' Na: . ...*.a 'y Italian vaiage R 8 ROSALIA 8 TEN FIRST OLYMPICS ATHENS Iff* WIRT 1 ?a>'C .¡go# Starrs 92 yea s age a ay tag tea ’ o’ ' J American athletes stunned tne worse sweeping the track a *c tie982 O n r v A > 1:30 pm 8 NEW CUUNTRI 8 DONNA REED B g ,S. s i oi eve 8 * • • MOVH CALI OF THE WU.D >93? Ciaix viAbit ja.». . ' i i c Basec in Jacx L U I U IO t • S t o r y O ' a l O v 'C W H JO W w rii.. a \ - ge*: A."tanm Dvorak s arc adve-jre « - ¡ y : yjector r ¿ A.asui dec " 8 OVORAA S NEW WORLD S'fWPHONT NC 9 rn E OPUS 95) Symphon*1: homage . ’e* wor c ,*r A - r ;a •i t?e s ’ijrxh“ ac» y r ■ j 'xr j - jne ‘ C .’C jOch.1 thew ;v <; ¡ves tAe .A-'r js >iut J.i Hams KíSÍS NR 9:00 pm J * ’eme- ,j-ev • rv. .uiehue . ’«Ji’uKJ-' .i'eepe1. x í"cou jgei-e-': R 3 8 2* THW ’ *SOMETHING Mi 'ae me -ape d’sagie- VKHkiC Menssu ge: 8 S F»WRTLINI : ..... me SAivadc «rheie "*e L J juve "m»>" "as jc mie*v S.- X h w rcVijge ’ 8 « ***-» WOVH N*rtn >neet repisen 1 We niflffie ;■ a stimg j* gwesuivec jcec f U!«.irotflW> J' XMimgs «'nc" na^ :>r -Hue- inave a na» ncs .t- 'inc 'i ■ W; Q jii* wuUtn,' s -eciusive SELtEVERS ‘9S’ *ui - Beile . i -- res ' -,Ca>i i :OC C.ty ii Goi .ana.fi iUtCHT Gar " ir " i Wcrirsen Htr.v R scks G erns r.aecers Guo«.ia Gar * i r "i Go.oe Gaie 3r Mr Ed My 3 Sons G -eec -JLQT P Gar 54 Mctksss V r \ T | i r Wane R ” Mr £ : C 2eih: . kjy r DtSNET ffl Dcru-: fW -Vffc Move 6'C • C‘ v-.i v x A M * Rnsjc'its C:;e M .ve S: J. I Poo* A-CWS Ed sens Dgrajd (15) DTV Video Movie Myst Edward Srms Kmc Beast Biack Beauty Athens '896 first O y n p cs Par* > 0m e Move Duchess A rwoif Oagriet Ecoe Search Insde* SHOW (Cont; Move u s : Su-vivtvs Move At American Pans Move Money Pi? Move V,* P J & P-es Son Movie Amencar Rabbh Movie ¡.as? Sorvtvors Movie Mar Snowy Rive 45 C'Seu Move Be erers GALA -J3L- (6 00) Para Serv:r Uste Movie Puerto Maldito Movie Viva Jalisco Sera Anunciada Vda Duma En Pantana Mmeres en M 24 Horas Sera Anunciada Movie Fray Doiar Mov« Ageme Especial l K Rosa a Movie rF“i£-/| MOVIE SONS AND LOVERS (1960) Trevor Howard Dean Stockwell The unusually affectionate bond between a coal miner s son and bis mother leads him to reject rom ance and to study art iri London NR 0 WINSTON CHURCHILL: THE VALIANT YEARS Gary Merrill Richard Burton M ontgom ery and Patton pinch ofl the Bulge as Churchill goes to Athens N R 0 DUELING FOR PLAYMATES 0 IT'S GARRY SHANOLING'S SHOW Garry Shandlirig A neurotic com ic with problem s getting a date deals with the important issu e s facing any healthy young man N R Q 0 DANGER BAY Old Friends A charism atic old gentleman creates havoc for Dunbar when he attempts to trade in his old performing seal tor one of trie aquarium s Q 8:00 pm 0 ® W IS E G U Y Tough undercover Federal agent Vmnie Terranova alter serving 18 m onths in prison to establish his cover, infiltrates organized crime Syndicate (R) 0 0 HOOPERMAN Harry anxiously awaits an encounter with a recently released convict who vowed vengeance on Harry when he w as sent to jail ( R i O 0 0 DÁYS AND NIGHTS OF MOLLY DODO Fred visits the bookstore and sees M o ss almost kiss Molly, sleazy ex boss, Dennis, in tail, makes his one phone call to Molly Q O 0 SURVIVAL SPECIAL The working of the dwarf mongoose s family system, in which young, subordinate females act as babysitters while others forge for food, is illustrated Q 0 VIOEO SOUL Host Donnie Sim pson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars 0 MY THREE SONS The Wiley Method A professor of history, who believes in teaching history by having the students live it, is the class idol at Robbie s high school 0 * * > * MOVIE A SHINING SEASON (1979) Timothy Bottoms, Rip Torn True story of a New Mexico track star who learns that he has terminal cancer and devotes the last year ol his life to a sports program for youngsters NR 0 AMERICAN DIARY Sate for Democracy Includes a look at (amine and plague in Russia 0 CONTARY WARRIORS: THE CROW TRIBE A fascinating historical lourney through the life ol the American Crow Indians Rare vintage photos arid recent interviews with living tribe members 0 LIGHTER SIDE OF SPORTS (R) O TALES Of EROTICA: HEAVENLY BODIES 0 ROSALIA 0 * * MOVIE SUMMER HEAT (1987) Lon Singer, Anthony Edwards A young wife and mother m an Eastern farming community during the 30s enters a passionate affair with a handsome newcomer that results in tragedy. R' 0 THE FIRST OLYMPICS: ATHENS. IB M - PART 2 (1984) Louis Jourdan, David Ogden Stiers 92 years ago, a rag tag team of 13 American athletes stunned the world by sweeping the track and field events at the first modern Olympic Games NR 8:30 p m 0 0 A MATTER OF TRUST: BILLY JOEL IN THE U.S.S.R. (1988) Billy Joel bridges the gulf between the American and Soviet people and between American and Soviet music in an intensely personal odyssey to Russia Q 0 0 SARA Sara and Roz. concerned that Helen is not getting out enough since her divorce, take her out, then Helen takes off with an older man (R) O NEW COUNTRY 0 DONNA REED Pioneer Woman When Alex's bachelor friend tells Donna that all women are soft and pampered she sets out to prove him wrong 0 MOVIE EL AMOR BRUJO (1985) Cristina Hoyos, Laura del Sol Passionate flamenco performances set the stage for this tragic tale ot two sets ot star crossed lovers wrongly divided by an arranged marriage PG 0 PBA BOWLING Showboat Senior Invitational from Las Vegas, NV (L) O PLAYBOY PRESENTS: JERRY LEE LEWIS IN CONCERT (1986) The rock n roll legend from Fernday, LA performs his greatest hits at the 1986 Expo in Vancouver, British Columbia NR 9:00 p m 0 0 THE BRONX ZOO When Harry learns that Vince, a closet gay student, has imminent plans to wed 18 year old Linda, he intervenes and drops an emotional bombshell Q 0 0 AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE (1986) Daniel J Travanti, Harold Gould The strained relationship of a father and son is the tocus of this play in which the son recounts his final visit with his lather. □ 0 * * % MOVIE PERSONAL SERVICES (1987) Julie Walters, Alec McCowen The true story of a London madam who caters to the fantasies of the rich and powertul R 0 NEWS 0 CROOK AND CHASE 0 LAUGH IN 0 SECRETS OF NATURE Worshipped. Feared. Persecuted The importance of snakes 0 WHY WE FIGHT Walter Huston Frank Capra s dramatic newreel footage ot the Battle of Russia Narrated by actor Walter Huston 0 HITCHHIKER 6 0 FEEUN* □ 48 Noun CBS (Ch. 7, Cabla 2) 7 p.m. 48 Hours is a must-see film . Ed­ die Murphy delivers his first (and funniest) film performance, and Nick Nolte has perfected the surly cop routine. And best of all, this movie has ... Dan Rather? W hat do you mean, this is a C BS News show? You mean, instead of seeing a successful, fast-paced comedy, we have to watch a burned-out, temperamental news anchor try desperately to get into heaven by doing a bunch of in- depth pieces? Those of you who just can’t get enough of Gunga Dan on his eve­ ning borecasts can certainly get your fill at these journalistic wet dreams. Just don’t expect Dan to make any kind of coherent point or go beyond the most superficial analysis. The rest of you, go rent the real 48 Hours, fire up the V C R and have a good laugh. Dan probably won’t even notice you’ve gone. — Kevin McHargue PRIM E TIME 7:00 pm B O D 48 HOURS 8 1 8 SLEDGE HAMMER! When Sledge goes undercover as a con at a federal prison, he gets invited to a breakout party with an important crime boss present (R) □ o OS THE COSBY SHOW Cliff has his hands full when he takes Rudy and her friends to see a vaudeville show and none of the kids find the performers very tunny (R) Q 8 ED a team O ® MACNEIL/ LEHRER NEWSHOUR 8 * * ' * MOVIE THE SEDUCTION OF JOE TYNAN (1979) Alan Alda Barbara Harris A young liberal minded junior senator from New York ignores his conscience and seizes the chance tor national publicity by opposing a nomination R B NASHVILLE NOW B RIPTIDE The Pirate and the Princess B MAKE ROOM FOR DADDY Tonoose vs Daly Danny competes verbally and athletically with Tonoose during one of his visits Guest stars Hans Conreid and William Demarest B CAGNEY AND LACEY B * * * MOVIE THE SOFT SKIN (1964) Jean Desailly Francoise Dorleac A married man and his beautiful mistress find pleasure and peril in their illicit relationship and an ironic twist ol fate provides a final solution NR 8 LIVING ISLES New Pastures Wildlife of the meadow B MY FAMILY AND OTHER ANIMALS The magpies and snakes get loose as the Durrell's have their final celebration on Corfu B NHRA DRAG RACING Caiun Nationals from Baton Rouge, LA (T) B ELECTRIC BLUE’S VERY CLOSE ENCOUNTERS B THE BEST OF WALT DISNEY PRESENTS Goofy s Salute to Father Goofy, a typical father stars in this show which is dedicated to dad 7:20 pm B * * * * * MOVIE ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST (1969) Charles Bronson, Henry Fonda Gunslingers fight to acquire possession of a tract of land containing a water source, located along the route of a new transcontinental railroad PG 7:30 pm B B MOVIE "Hearl sounds" ABC THURSOAY NIGHT MOVIE (1984) James Garner, Mary Tyler Moore A love as strong as life itself provides the courage and the stubborn determination that deties death, in this drama based ori real events B 8 A DIFFERENT WORLD Denise campaigns to get her street smart, genius study partner properly enrolled at Hillman College (R) B MR ED Ed Goes to College Ignoring Wilburs pleas to stick to being a horse. Ed decides to go to college to become a doctor B * * movie ADVENTURE! OF A YOUNG MAN (196?) Richard Beymer Diane Baker A series of adventures turn a boy mlo a man in this film adapted from Hemingway s stories of Nick Adams NR B T M BTNE LAST OF TNI MOHICAN! 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Lose Password News Days of Our Lives Another World Santa Barbara Wmfrey Magnum, P.I. Jeopardy' NBC News News Family Ties Cosby Dift World Hart to Hart Oprah Movie. Heartsounds Cheers NkiM Court LA Law 0 KBV0 mm Jetsons Flmtstones Happening Bewitched Pvt Beniami B.J./Lobo CHiPS Rockford Files Quincy Movie Naked Runner 0 Woody DuckTales Smi/rfs Bradv Bunch Knight Ride Good Times 3 s Company Haoov Days A-Team Movie Mane A GED Mr Rogers Sesame Street Mr Rogers Read Ram bo 321 Contact Sesame Street GED Society Society Society Gifted Microwave Nature Survival Wl Mr Rogers Sesame Street 321 Contact Read Rambo Bus Rot MacNeil Lehrer Governor Reports • ( 05) Hbil (.35) B wt ( 05) Little House (05) Long Hot Summer, Part 2 (Cont) Fat Free Lose Wght Your Skin Lose Wght Your Skin Look at Me On the Line ( 05) CHiPs Movie Murder (05) Monte Walsh with Music Video Soul . 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SPECIAL MOVIE (1984) Greta Scacchi Colin Firth The tragic love story ot a young man and a beautiful Parisian courtesan, who find that their true love cannot be g 8 » CHEERS Sam and Rebecca harbor differing desires on a romantic cruise aboard Evan Drake s yacht, which forms the setting lor a love quadiangte (R) B O * * * MOVIE MARIE A TRUE STORY (1985) Sissy Spaiek, Jett Daniels A woman who woiked hard tor her education and position in the Tennessee state government nsks everything to tight political cunuption PG13 B O GOVERNOR REPORTS B VIDEO SOUL Host Donnie Simpson counts down the hottest urban cuntempoiaiy musn videos and mteiviews reuniting stais B Ml MOVIE I MILLION WAVS TO O il ( M B ) Jetl Bridges Rosanna Aiquetle Investigating the murder ot a hooker an alCOhoiiC ex cop and a hard edged piostitule aie drawn into a deadly game of survival in the I A underworld R Q B THURSOAY NIGHT FIGHTS B MY THREE SONS The National Pastime tt baseball s the tavonle sport III the all male Douglas household why is Chip1 Utile league uniform distar dad h i the Hash/ B MOWS SNtUGAM f Brenda Rob*» Gar mem Blossom j " ‘ " • * 8io)ogtsi Houde A sharp jwyef ¡s aegf” between, me underwudc! and (he police NR B QFD The Bats teed on the recta* ot the e ' ry pían? B MOVIE FAMILY BUSINESS V ton Be e David G.ufiekl Four adversara tvofNr*s must contend with themselves j k ' with each othei when their wealthy 'a(he' dies ano oíd heartaches are letived NR B MOVIE CYCLONE {<98/! Vj-un Landau Jeffrey Combs Double agents a??e 4 ,cpe* charged molorcyue designed tor me government kill a scentist whc nterferes at their obtaining it H B HYDROPLANE RACING DOCUMENTARY 198/ Miss Budweiset ¡T) B MOVIE FMMNOUSf 198/' «a er Moimus Shannon Murphy Where there s smokv there s thiee women firefighters trying to "aae the grade as the somewhat va?.s'* .eie ans give them a han) time H B ROSALIA 8 * 4 MOVIE APRN FOOLS OAT Deboraft loreutan Griffin 0 New The fun turns aito honmidal honor when guests gathered N# Mufty s Apnl foot s Day bash are v o w , stalked and knocked oft one by one H Q B • * MOWS THE APPLE OUMPLWtt GAM (1975) bid bub» Susan Clark If» guardian of thrae yuungalws stnkes 4 rich tnggaretg a «rid 0 * ’* jeeery ,i sdr'e Oungi-ng Sieves G S 30 pm •■■. -.i? B 34 R'GHT COURT 4 h.s a jrfr* ? r > r s f e s „ . i < S u n jteo am attend ‘ " t S.g 9j .,j >e .tres south ene.- he ep.ese"rs gtt einOiheied 'alhe, atCusnd h Child moiesUfrgn wrs Jaugntei R) B Ml mysteny* 19» ) AshOys a tV4¡ 1 'u wei*-'jr*'« 4 ew hew *0 their ' nmly «state But the soi,!e(.Jir*iiig >peii-> Jjrger 4s ’he suspn.’Ous Srttyn M’harnes to Jiscredit his ’win Q B NEWS B CROOK AND CHASE B LAUOH IN S AMDRfW LLOYD WEBBER STORY ¡1987) ah BngMman Har Pnnue ’ h* ca w b ia M • . > t ,' - 1 ' B P TO * USTINOV M CHINA T v j.;' Che» a MOVIE LA OfOSA AAROORLAOA 4 Ccrdcv j ,c sCi*’Ci« ;ue cuar'dd heiteza .•«; .t a a s 'jt.a \ y i X C fjrydos 14 .'«s’ .c c o r- i * "1 ms.Ii'W ,’e - f t M cer'd •:<;!xT: *: i"'ic a c c x - 4 -0 9 30 pm ima •'* , •• rtiM-'i t v *ark. 4- "wg Lem; * . f ' Vih.h V >;ars w Mitcf* Mu!». guai’ r}’ w je i'u i " 4 :ai*<.e jutm e B movie Clinton m s naoine - *,•* l v . Jarea drrvenjt - vweer 1 'ai'Csome srnuggier and 4 sign /ass jrosH -.t* «n»- .auger n 4 wee ;’f ^.r uiin.nU 4rd nutde* NH □ B PLAYBOY WTfRVtfWS THE ACTORS ’ Ns program '«atures .ar did perscx jr rtervwws with Sylvester Stadone Brity Oee Wtilia-'^s Pmwc# Brosfan and uohf- I mgoe» NR B COMEDY SPOTLIGHT EUYNE BOOSLER BROADWAY BABY (1987) E ayne Soosrer stars m this warmly humorous, autobiographical ahowcasa jmacue 18 IMAGES June 13,1988 Jaws III CBS (Ch. 7, Cable 2) 8 p.m. First, they concoct a phony writ­ er’s strike to keep the final episode of Moonlighting, which was to in­ clude a 12-minute three-dimensional segment, off the air. Now they are showing Jaws III — but not in its original 3-D form. I see a pattern emerging here. The technology for 3-D television exists, but the CIA is concealing it from us. We Americans must de­ mand our God-given right to see an exploding shark fly off the screen in the privacy of our own living rooms. Let your voice be heard. Boycott this miserable two-dimensional trav­ esty. Strike a blow for artistic free­ dom. Instead of watching Jaws III as rendered impotent by network exec­ utives, write your congressman. Tell him “ I want my 3D T V .” — Kevin Hargis PRIME TIME 7:00 pm O ® BEAUTY AND THE BEAST Her in ve stigatio n into the stra n g e p o is o n in g death of a w e althy N e w Y o rk soc ia lite m a rk s C a th y for a v o o d o o style d o o m (R ) O ® PERFECT STRANGERS W h e n the b o y s w in a su p e rm a rke t s h o p p in g sp re e B a lk i o p ts to grab ite m s h is frie n d s need. L arry p la n s a gre e d y a ssa u lt on the go u rm e t s e c tio n (R ) Q O ® t h e BEST OF TV’S BLOOPERS AND PRACTICAL JOKES D o c S e v e n n s e n G arry S h a n d lin g Pat M c C o rm a c k . Nic C o ste r and L o u is e S o re l are featured in h ila rio u s b lo o p e rs, a lo n g with an im al b lo o p e rs. (R ) 0 © A-TEAM o ® MACNEIL/ LEHRER NEWSHOUR 0 THIS WEEK IN BLACK ENTERTAINMENT 0 * * * MOVIE THE STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO (1 9 7 2 ) Karl M a ld e n . M ic h a e i D o u g la s A Detective lieutenant an d h is sid e k ic k try to d isc o v e r the m u rd e re r of a y o u n g girl w h o s e b o d y is !o und floa tin g in S a n F ra n c isc o B a y N R 0 NASHVILLE NOW 0 MOVIE THE OMEGANS ( 1 9 6 8 ) Ke ith L arse n . Ingrid Pitt A w orld re n o w n e d artist d is c o v e rs his wife and h is gu id e are lo v e rs w h o intend to kill him 0 MAKE ROOM FOR DADDY D a n n y W e a v e s a W e b D a n n y tries to get a w a y w ith little w hite lies but le arn s h is le s s o n w h e n o n e b a ck fire s G u e st s ta rs J a c k A lb e rtso n and Bill B ix b y 0 CAGNEY AND LACEY 0 w w * MOVIE CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS (1 9 8 3 ) F a n n y Artiant J e a r v lo u is T rm tign an t W h e n a b e le agu ere d b u s in e s s m a n is c h a rge d with the m urd er of h is a d u lte ro u s w ife an d her lover a s le u th in g g a ' F rid ay tries to clear his n a m e PG 0 NEW WILDERNESS P lan e t of the B a b o o n s Two ty p e s of b a b o o n s 0 MOVIE THE FACE OF TRESPASS ( 1 9 8 7 ) S te p h e n D illon A m a n d a D o n o h o e A b lo c ke d writer tries to re sist a se d u c tiv e w o m a n but is d raw n into a w e b of m u rd e r d e ce p tion and o b s e s s io n N R 0 NFL GREATEST MOMENTS 1 9 6 3 C h ic a g o B e a rs (R ) O WOMEN ON SEX: SEX AND ANGER 0 * * V , MOVIE SUMMER SCHOOL (1987) M a rk H a rm o n K irstie A lle y A p a rty -lo vin g C alifo rnia h ig h s c h o o l g y m c o a c h g e ts stu c k with a s u m m e r re m e dial re a d in g c la s s full of crazy m isfits P G 1 3 0 THREE STOOGES 7:25 pm 7:30 pm 0 ® FULL HOUSE D a n n y m a k e s elab orate p la n s for a Father D a u gh te r d a y w h e n guilt strik e s h is so u l b e c a u se he fe e ls he h a s not be en c lo s e e n o u g h to h is c h ild re n (R ; □ 0 CHARLIE AND OMPANY 0 MR ED 0 NEW WILOERNESS M o th e r Nature s L o n e s o m e C o w b o y T he elk of W y o m in g 0 PURSUIT OF EXCELLENCE U S S e n a to r Bill Bradiey (fij O PLAYBOY’S CANDID CAMERA 7:40 pm 0 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL H o u s to n A s t ro s at A tlanta B r a v e s (L ) KTBC - E f l L CB S This Morning • KVUE I A . Good Morning America 7 AM ____L - j l a AM .. 0 ; » A AM * £iü¡L¿! L_ 1 0 * 1 1 m * 8 Ü _ Young and Restless News 1 2 ' ; Beautiful Home News All My Children ...1 M As the World Turns One Life to Live ± .Jfi Light Q PM Geraldo Hospital Hart to Hart . J . M , A FIR * 30 c PM :30 ® Jeffersons Star Trek All Family News News CBS News ABC News ■ Sale Concentra’ Wheel Win. Lose N r Days of Our Lives World Santa Barbara Oprah Winfrey PI. Jeopardy! NBC News KXAN KBVO KLRU TBS b h MAX W6N NASH USA NICK Today Jetsons GED (:05) Hbil (Cont) Bozo Flmtstones Mr. Boners 4:35) B'wt Happening BeMtefcetL Pvt Benjamin Sesame Street ( 05) Little House Mr. Rogers BM d Rainb o (05) Catered (Cont) F id Lose Wght Your Skin Lose Wght ‘night Mother Smurfs Buxpin Beaver Movie: All !v CHiPS 321 Contact Affair Lose Wght About Eve Waltons American Petroceili Elephant . Geraldo That Girl Pinwheel On the Line (:05) CHiPs Gospel Mag. Street GED Stones Ston es. Writing Rockford Files Quincy Movie: Italian Job • Woody BucklaJes Smurfs Bradv Bunch (:05) One Million Years B.C. Charlie & C Video Soul • Movie: D.O.A. News Hbilly Movie: Crv Anc of the City Beaver Video Ghostbuster Vibrations Movie. Major Lm to Read Madeleine (:05) T & Survival Special 1:35) Flin (05) Flin Survival Wl 1:35) Brad Mr. Rogers (:05) L & Video LP Bell Baseball (.35) Maior Soft Notes C PM News ® :30 Wheel Beauty & the Beast Movie Jaws III News Cheers C BS Late Movie * - 1 30 ® 30 Q PM 5 30 1 0 m 1 1 m 1 1 30 a n AM :30 News News 3 's Company Read Rainbo * Knight Ride Street Good Times 321 Contact League Baseball M ‘A * S ‘ H Strangers M House Family Ties Best of Bloopers iH e e y D a y s A-Team Bus Rot MacNeil Lehrer Mr Belveder Sonny Spoon Motown 25: D C Week Married Dor 20/20 Miami Vice Yesterday, Today, Forever Wall St Joseph Campbell Movie: Haunted Video LP Urban Scene News Movie: Teen - Cheers Barnev ( 25) Stoo Black Ent. Wolf ( 40) Maior Charlie & C Movie: Streets of Nashville Now Movie: Omegans League Baseball Video Soul Com Exp San Movie: Francisco Cntrv * Meatballs III News USO Tour Wired News News Twilite Zon Bodywatch (:25) Tracks News M ’A ’S 'H U.S. Open Niahtline B Miller Rhoda Tomaht Show Movie: No Made in TX Letterman Way to Treat a Lady Austin City Limits (:25) Night Tracks Friday Nite Late Show (:35) Trac Sign Off Video LP Midnight Love Venture Marketing Movie: Lady Chatterley T. Zone Maanum. II :35) Personal Services P.l. Movie: Legend Hell House American Nashville Now Silver Cany Rock N Rol Night Flight 8:00 pm O ® * * MOVIE “J a w s III" CBS FRIDAY MOVIE H 9 8 3 ) L o u is G o s s e tt J r D e n n is Q uaid P a n ic g r ip s the h o lid a y c ro w d at F lorid a s S e a W o rld w h e n a great w hite s h a rk e n te rs its la g o o n an d d e v o u rs a n y th in g in its fre n zy to e sc a p e PG O ® MR. BELVEDERE K e v in re luctan tly a g re e s to p o s e nu d e for his art c la s s in an attem pt to u n d e rsta n d w h y h is n e w girlfrie nd h a s a part tim e job d o in g the s a m e (R ) □ O 3$ SONNY SPOON W h e n Sonny accepts a routine a s s ig n m e n t to r e p o s s e s s a car, he is c h a se d b y hit m e n w h o c o n fu s e him with a sin g e r w h o w a lk e d out o n a m o b contract (R) O © ) MOTOWN 25: YESTERDAY, TOOAY, FOREVER O ® D C WEEK RVW g 0 VIDEO SOUL Host Donnie Simpson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos a n d interviews recording stars 0 COMEDY EXPERIMENT: TERI GARR IN FLAPJACK FLOOZIE Ten Garr. Larame Newman. Flapjack Floozie w a s born to be a star but her addiction to p a n c a k e s nearly rums her career N R g 0 MY THREE SONS The Croaker A persistent a m p h ib io u s friend w in s B u d s affection and attention p o s s ib ly b e c a u se the frog resembles Uncle C la n c e y 0 Casey 0 WWW MOVIE FAHRENHEIT 451 (1967) Julie Christie Oskar Werner In an unspecified country at an undetermined time period, the reading of books is strictly forbidden and readers are hunted by the authorities NR' 0 MOVIE GHOST DANCING (1983) Dorothy McGuire Bruce Davison An aging widow wages a one woman war when she finds herself and others on the verge of poverty N R' 0 OUEST FOR HEALING The Balanced Body Traditional medical practices of China, India and Tibet 0 MOVIE APOLOGY (1986) Lesley Ann Warren, Peter Weller A n artist tape records telephone confessions for use in a daring art piece, but experimentation turns to danger when murder plans are revealed N R g 0 PLAYBOY’S WORLO OF CARTOONS AND FUNNIES Gahan Wilson. Buck Brown Some of your favorite Playboy cartoons come to life in this glimpse into the creative worlds of four of Playboy s most famous cartoon artists 0 ROSALIA 0 ww MOVIE SPEEDWAY (1968) Elvis Presley. Nancy Sinatra Stock car racer with generous impulses and a wastrel manager finds himself owing the Internal Revenue Service $145,000 in back taxes G 8:30 pm 0 8 I MARRIED DORA In an effort to help Peter s wealthy sister in law salvage her self respect, Dora ends up coaching her in how to behave like a Latina (R) g O ® WALL STREET WEEK 0 wv. MOVIE MEATBALLS III (1987) Sally Kellerman Shannon Tweed Rudy struck out two summers in a row This is his summer to score R O NEW COUNTRY 0 DONNA REED Where the Stones Are Donna persuades Alex to allow Mary to go away for the weekend with her friends The hitch Alex insists they go up and spy on her 0 US OPEN GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP Second Round from Brookline, M A (R) 0 6REAT AMERICAN STRIP OFF ’86: ROUND IV Cheer on your favorite contender lor the th ron e of A m e ric a s b e st strip artist in ro u n d four. 8:45 pm 0 COMEDY CLUB NETWORK ( 1 9 8 7 ) T h is unique, sh o rt fo rm s h o w c a s e s p o tlig h ts up an d c o m in g sta n d up c o m ic s p e rfo rm in g in c lu b s a ro u n d the nation N R 9:00 pm O ® 20/20 g O » MIAMI VICE g O ® MOYERS: JOSEPH CAMPBELL AND THE POWER OF THE MYTH The planting cultures with their emphases o n death, sacrifice and rebirth are highlighted, importance of sacred places an d creativity are discussed, g 0 NEWS 0 USO CELEBRITY TOUR Lee Greenwood & Lane Brody 0 AIRWOLF Daddy's Gone a Hunting 0 WIRED 0 LAUGH IN 0 JAZZ ALIVE (1 9 8 3 ) Woody Herman, Mel Torme It s ho?1 It's c o o l' It s jazz's legendary musicians in a swinging celebration performed at Toronto s Ryerson Theatre NR 0 THE EXPLORERS The Shadow Worlds of Bali. A n ancient Hindu Buddhist civilization. 0 SHORTSTORIES Love and death find their place behind The Painted Door Hell hath no fury like a woman thorned in Not Just Any Flower. 0 MOVIE EL INOCENTE Pedro Infante. Silvia Pmal -Por no poder recordar que sucedió durante una borrachera, un mecánico se ve obligado a casarse con una rica heredera G 0 GLEASON: HE'S THE GREATEST (1988) A comic compilation of the Great One's greatest shows, featuring many of his classic characters. NR 9:30 pm 0 CAR 54 WHERE ARE YOU? Schnauser's Last Ride Memories of Schnauser's last ride as a mounted policeman lead the precinct to a band of hoodlums using Schnauser's old horse as a messenger 0 MOVIE GOODBYE. EMMANUELLE (1977) Sylvia Kristel. Alexandra Stewart In a tropical Eden as sensual as their lifestyle, Emmanuelle and her husband play the field until a seductive stranger makes it a whole new ball game. R' 10:00 p m 0 (2)08080 NEWS 0 0 0 TWILIGHT ZONE 0 0 BOOYWATCH (1986) Look at the scientific evidence that links the mind to the immune system and what the implications are for staying healthy g 0 MOVIE YOUNG LADY CHATTERLEY H (1986) Harlee McBride. Adam West. Insatiable in her pursuit of pleasure, the sensual Cynthia Chatterley carries on her family's romantic heritage R 0 ROCK N ROLL PALACE 0 NIGHT FLIGHT 0 MONKEES Monkees Get Out More Dirt Friendships are threatened when the Monkees all fall for the same girl. 0 * * • / . MOVIE DRAGONWYCK (1946) Gene Tierney Walter Huston A woman's secret thoughts lead her to secret love, rapture and finally terror NR 0 WWW# BERLIN ALEXANOERPLATZ V (1980) Gunter Lamprecht, Hanna Schygulla Franz falls m love with the prostitute Mieze, but realizes that another loves her, too NR 0 THE AOOER A look at the adder snake. 0 BEA ARTHUR AT THE IMPROV Bea Arthur Featured actress, Bea A rthu r and talented comic duo Mack and Jamie, team up for a round of laughs, nd of laughs 0 MOVIE BLACKOUT (1985) Richard Widmark, Keith Carradme A detective obsessed with a gruesome, unsolved murder finally tracks down a suspect but the man has had amnesia for seven years. NR g 0 THE MISSING ADVENTURES OF OZZIE AND HARRIET Old Band Pavillion When Ozzie picnics with friends near a band pavillion that hasn't been used in years, he thinks it would be nice to start the concerts again The park commissioner agrees and appoints Ozzie a one-man committee to interest the community in his plan 10:25 pm 10:30 p m 0 NIGHT TRACKS: POWER PLAY DANCIN' 0 ® CHEERS O ® M*A*S*H 0 8 TONIGHT SHOW 0 0 * * * * * MOVIE NO WAY TO TREAT A LADY (1968) Rod Steiger, George Segal Delicious blend of romantic comedy and murder about a flamboyant ladykiller, the cop on his trail and the cop s new lady who could be the next victim NR O ® MADE IN TEXAS 0 VIDEO LP O MAGNUM. P I. 0 AMERICAN MAGAZINE 0 ANN SOTHERN O'Connors Stick Together. A pair of hard-to-get tickets for a Broadway hit becomes a double-edged sword. 0 UNDERWATER PRAIRIES Explore the Mediterranean 0 SPORT! ENTER (L) 0 * * * MOVIE EL DORADO (1967) John Wayne, Robert Mitchum A rancher with a paralyzed hand joins his friend, a drunken sheriff on crutches from a leg wound, in trying to stop a range war NR 11:00 p m 0 ® CBS LATE MOVIE 0 ® U S. OPEN HIGHLIGHTS 2nd round highlights 0 9 AUSTIN CITY LIMITS Roger McGuinn performs his greatest hits. 0 MIONIGHT LOVE O NASHVILLE NOW 0 MAKE ROOM FOR DADDY Danny Weaves a Web. Danny tries to get away with little white lies but learns his lesson when one backfires. Guest stars Jack Albertson and Bill Bixby. 0 NEW DR. RUTH Single Women who Date Married Men g 0 ANIMALS OF THE GREAT NORTHWEST Bighorns of Beauty Creek. A look at bighorn sheep 0 MOVIE THE FACE OF TRESPASS (1987) Stephen Dillon. Amanda Donohoe A blocked writer tries to resist a seductive woman but is drawn into a web of murder, deception and obsession NR 0 BEACH VOLLEYBALL Coed Classic from Palm Springs. CA (R) 0 Ml COLONIA LA ESPERANZA 0 NIGHT TRACKS 11:25 p m 11:30 p m 0 ® N IG H T U N Eg O ® LATE NIGHTWITH DAVID LETTERMAN 0 * * * MOVIE THE LEQENO OF HELL HOUSE (1973) Pamela Franklin, Roddy McDowall. A team of scientists and mediums is Fandango Be a Star Crook Video Cntrv Movie: Silver Canyon Fandanao Be a Star Crook Video Nashville Now Cntrv Fandango Be a Star Crook Video X T . h t r o W t F c n I p u o r G q m t s U V T « h T 8 6 9 1 © (6:00) Cartoon David, Gnom Express Pinwheel Riptide * A Deal P la v % Potato TicTac Jackoot Reaction Dance Party USA Cartoon Express * - - • Belle Today's Spc Citv of Gol Lassie Can’t on TV Nick Rocks Keepers Duckula Can’t on TV Double Dare Make Rm Mr Ed M y 3 Sons Laugh In Car 54 Monkees Ann Sothern Make Rm Mr Ed D. Reed Laugh In commissioned to investigate a millionaire s newly acquired mansion for spirits. NR' 0 MR. ED EYE ON HOLLYWOOD D WILDLIFE CHRONICLES Wild Creatures Great and Small 0 'FANTASIES: VISIONS 0 24 HORAS Con corresponsales en todo el mundo, 24 Horas les hace llegar desde Mexico via satélite las noticias mas actuales y acontecimientos del momento. 11:35 p m O * * * / . MOVIE PERSONAL SERVICES (1987) Julie Walters, Alec McCowen The true story of a London madam who caters to the fantasies of the rich and powerful. R 11:40 pm 0 COMEDY HOUR LIVE: HARRY SHEARER You can expect uncensored, unpredictable comedy when Harry Shearer takes the stage in Los Angeles NR g 12:00 am 0 ® BARNEY MILLER O ® SIGN OFF 0 VENTURE MARKETING 0 DONNA REED Where the Stones Are. Donna persuades Alex to allow Mary to go away for the weekend with her friends The hitch: Alex insists they go up and spy on her. 0 * * * MOVIE FAHRENHEIT 451 (1967) Julie Christie, Oskar Werner In an unspecified country, at an undetermined time period, the reading of books is strictly forbidden and readers are hunted by the authorities. NR 0 INVESTMENT ADVISORY 0 * * * * BERLIN ALEXANOERPLATZ VI (1980) Gunter Lamprecht, Hanna Schygulla. Mieze approaches Eva about her inability to bear Franz's children and decides to go on a holiday with a wealthy client. NR 0 NATURE OF THINGS Return to the Land/ Jellyfish of the Skies 0 UNITED HYDROPLANE RACING OMC Cobra of St. Petersburg from St Petersburg, FL (T) O WOMEN ON SEX: SEX AND ANGER 0 PROGRAMA ESPECIAL 0 »* MOVIE LADY CHATTERLY’S LOVER (1981) Sylvia Knstel. Nicholas Clay The passionate, tempestuous tale of forbidden love between a sensitive, married lady of means and the uncommon lover she takes. R ' 12:30 a m 0 ® RHOOA • 8 FRIDAY NIGHT VIDEOS Series aimed at the young adult audience featuring the best in musical videos from today's top rock stars 0 O LATE SHOW 0 MOVIE SILVER CANYON (1951) Gene Autry. Pat Buttram Gene is a Union scout in the days of the Civil War He brings to an end the marauding of Jim Davis and his gang of hoodlums NR 0 LAUGH IN 0 BOATING Inboard Championship Series from Toledo, OH (T) O PLAYBOY'S CANDIO CAMERA ^ NIGHT TRACKS 12:35 am June 13, 1988 IMAGES 19 3:20 am 0 * * l/t “ Sum m er S chool" 1 9 8 7 1 Var< H a fm o '1 Kirstie A ey A o s '*/ lo v n g 3a *v~ a h ig r sciio o gy"- coach gets stucx <* • - a sum m er remedia* *eac ' g c a s t U of crar# m isM s p G t3 3:30 am iggf., - cc 0 ♦ * “About Las’ Ngr* 0 * r- V o o 'e A y o u rg m a r a rc woman ‘ r c >bemse: “'O ie v a * o ra g p "c e s t s ser s-g 4.-00 am 0 *c- Gac->“5- Mama-aya* mexicano o o c ce mar , r > .e 'c coo G Tjr magma cu» a.gi.ra ,e: *.e .r Tar ; comic: 0 M f l GREATEST MOMENTS ’ 96.3 C h ca m Sears R 740 pm 7:30 pm 0 PURSUIT Of EXCELLENCE .3 5enar: - = B-aciey R 7:40 pm 0 MAJOR LEAGUE BA SE8A L. 8:30 pm 0 US OPEN GCtc CHAMPIONSHIP > r.m Rour-c * -;r sroc* ~e VIA R 0 SPOR’ SCENTER . 1 0 :3 0 p m 1 1:00 p m O a u S OPEN HIGHLIGHTS " * * r r - i 0 BEACH V O LLFrBA LL Coed 3 acs c =a - $;-■ ngs CA ^ 0 LIM ITED HYDROPLANE RACING . s* ^ -“e'e 's Ci. , * St --j'--' - - • - — 0 BOATING : : es 1 2 :0 0 a m 12 3 0 a m t.O O a m 1 3C a m 2:00 a m 2:30 am 0 SPORTSlQG* 0 SP'CR’ SCEN-’ ER . 0 MCTORtoEEX U U S r RA’ E2 : 0 .S CPEN 'jO J C H A itfP 'C llS H IP :m ;i xh.ira wa R Retsc 0 a c t io n c t ^ c o o f i s w n t . u l u s ü c r c s (R PLAY mi (5:00) Sign Off GALA SHOW OtBIRY o (6:00) Vertigo Movie: Chiflados Golpen Movie Centro de Tierra (6:00) Come Donald PJ 4 Pres Son Movie: Movie: the Little My Aunt YouAMe Sera Anunciada Vida Diana Movie: A Piece of the Presents Action Movie: Drums AMC LIFE FNNBRAV DISCOVE ARTS HBO ESPN FutureScan Gold Age of Inquiry (Cont) SpgrtsQntr College Tennis Fishin' Hole Movie: Foul Play Lovejoy Breaking Away Movie: Blood Hunt Movie: A Streetcar • Named Desire Get Fit Workout Motion James at 15 Waldheim A Commission Variety Travel Movie: Diamond Movie: Still of the Night US Open US Open PGA Tour Horseshoe Sinbad Bdvshao'a US Open Golf Championship James at 15 Movie: Karate Kid, Part II US Open Golf Championship Q AM Falcon Crest 7 AM . Jff i o s 11 % 1 2 m ___ L » Q PM 0 :30 A FM — ? w — iW - ..¡W 7 PM. iW Q PM 8 ;3t Q PM ... J f It Figures Mom Works Nurse Attitudes Mom Day fiabxKnows Wok Hllvwd Regis Philbin Business Mkt Prvw Mornino MarketLine Business MarketWatch A.M. Mid Day Market Rpt MktWtch Business MktWtch Wall St. Countdown Movie: Capture of MktWrp Am Inv Grizzly Adams Final and Loud Cagney and Lacey ■ ■ America's Business Movie: Confidential! y Yours Jazz Alive Grape Lands Dutch Bulbs Trek About Spirit of Paradise Camp Florilegium Ark on Move Abnaki Commodities Underwater Trainina Who Living Tom’w Soacewatch Golden Roads, Pi 2 Wilderness Wilderness Ouest for Healing Explorers Movie Fahrenheit 451 Movie Dragonwyck - • Movie Fahrenheit Movie: Ghost Dancing 451 O FML 30 Movie: Dragonwyck Attitudes Dragonwyck 1 0 mMovie 11 m w ’ 4 0 AM 30 Movie Fahrenheit ■ Dr Ruth Hllvwd nvest Advisory Berlin Alexanderplat z V ” The Adder Underwater NW Animals Wild Chron. Bea at Improv Movie: Face of Trespass Alexanderplat z Nature of Things Mohawk Con a Killer Pooh tiers Lovey Hart P.J 6 Pres Son Edtsons Kids Movie: Come Back J. Dean Movie: En Pantalla Hooar Dulce 24 Horas Sera Anunciada Movie No Habras Mas Pena Movie Muchacho Rosalia * * * Gold Age Yes. P.M. Creativity Movie: Face Shortstories * " . „ Movie. Foul Play SportsCntr Pullino YFL Moment Excellence Movie: Apology " Movie: Blackout SportsCntr Beach Volleyball Hydroplane Boating (.40) Comedv Hour Live :40) Rawhe US Ooen Golf Championship IV On Sex Can Cam Cartoons Strio Off 86 Movie Goodbye. Emmanuelle Fantasies On Sex Can Cam Movie: Summer School Movie: El Inocente Gleason: He s The Greatest Movie: Ugly Dachshund Movie: Ozzie La Esperanza 24 Horas Program a Especial ■ Dorado M ovie Lady Chatterty :45) Drum s 12:40 am f f i MOVIE RAWHEAO REX (1987) David Dukes. An ancient evil is unleashed upon a sm all Irish village Ar Am erican historian arm ed w ith only a m agic stone dares to tace the evil Rawhead Rex R 12:45 am * * * • / , MOVIE ORUMS ALONG THE MOHAWK (19 3 9 ) Claudette Colbert. Henry Fonda S tory of colonial life along the M ohawk Trail in New York State during the R evolutionary period as settlers battle the Indians and the Redcoats NR 1:00 am e ® NEWS ORLDVISION 0 DISCOVER O CAR 54 WHERE ARE YOU? Schnausers Last Ride Memories of Schnausers last ride as a mounted policeman lead the precinct to a band of hoodlums using Schnauser s old horse as a messenger 0 INVESTMENT ADVISORY 0 DRUM Simon Le Bon sails around the world 0 SHORTSTORIES Love and death find their place behind The Painted Door Hell hath no fury like a woman thorned in Not Just Any Flower 0 SI O PLAYBOY’S WORLD OF CARTOONS AND FUNNIES Gahan Wilson, Buck Brown. Some of your favorite Playboy cartoons come to life in this glimpse into the creative worlds of four of Playboy s most famous cartoon artists. 0 HUI comico musical lleno de diversion, bellas muieres y muchas sorpresas. 1:25 am IMENTE Raul Astor. Un programa 0 MOVIE DANGER ZONE (1987) Gorgeous all-girl rock group looking for their big break meets macho motorcycle gang looking for action Terror in the desert with no help in sight. R 1:30 am 0 00 SIGN OFF • 00 NEWS (R) 00 CNN 0 SUM FOR LIFE 0 KEYS TO SUCCESS 0 MONKEES Monkees Get Out More Dirt. Friendships are threatened when the Monkees all fad for the same girl. 0 SPORTSCENTER (L) 0 GREAT AMERICAN STRIP OPF M : ROUNO IV Cheer on your favorite contender for the throne of America s best strip artist in round four. 0 M 6 H T TRACKS 1:35 am 1:46 am 1 * * * MOVIE RICHARO PRYOR HERE ANO IW (1983) Richard Pryor. The popular comedian pokes fun at everything from Africa to the American South to his meeting with Ronald Reagan, as he performs many skits R' Q University Market Facts... WWnn •« paw ao day*, wudanw al Vw uw- varaity purchaaad 11.304790 worth olgaao Una and on lor Wav automoMaa tmm» naU w M iflW W ' i.m r MOVIES 7:00 pm l * * * "The Streets of San Francisco" (1972) Karl M alden M ichael Douglas A detective lieutenant and his sidekick try to discover the murderer of a young girl whose body is found floating in San Francisco Bay. NR 0 “The Omegans" (1968) Keith Larsen, Ingrid Pitt A world renowned artist discovers his wife and his guide are lovers who intend to kill him. 0 “The Face of Trespass" (1987) Stephen Dillon, Amanda Donohoe A blocked writer tries to resist a seductive woman but is drawn into a web of murder, deception and obsession. NR 0 Harmon Kirstie Alley A party-loving California high school gym coach gets stuck with a summer remedial reading class full of crazy misfits. PG13 “ Summer School’ (1987) Mark 8:00 pm 0 G D * * “Jaws III" (1983) Louis Gossett Jr., Dennis Quaid Panic grips the holiday crowd at Florida s Sea World when a great white shark enters its lagoon and devours anything in its frenzy to escape. PG 0 www ‘ Fahrenheit 451" (1967) Julie Christie. Oskar Werner In an unspecified country, at an undetermined time period, the reading of books is strictly forbidden and readers are hunted by the authorities. NR 0 “Ghost Dancing’ (1983) Dorothy McGuire, Bruce Davison An aging widow wages a one woman war when she finds herself and others on the verge of poverty NR 0 “Apology’ (1986) Lesley Ann Warren, Peter Weller An artist tape records telephone confessions for use m a daring art piece, but experimentation turns to danger when murder plans are revealed. NR □ 0 ww “ Speedway’ (1! 8) Elvis Presley, Nancy Sinatra Stock car racer with generous impulses and a wastrel manager finds himself owing the Internal Revenue Service $145.000 in back taxes. G 8:30 pm 0 w V i “Meatballs III" (1987) Sally Kellerman, Shannon Tweed Rudy struck out two summers in a row This is his summer to score. ‘R' 9:00 pm 0 ‘ El Inocente’ Pedro Infante. Silvia Pinal Por no poder recordar que sucedió durante una borrachera, un mecánico se ve obligado a casarse con una rica heredera G' 9:30 pm 0 ‘ Goodbye, Emmanuelle' (1977) Sylvia Kristel. Alexandra Stewart In a tropical Eden as sensual as their lifestyle. Emmanuelle and har husband play the field until a seductive stranger makes it a whole new ball game R 1040 pm ’ Dragonwyck" (1946) Gene Tierney. 0 ’ Young Lady Chatterley H* (1986) Hartae McBride. Adam West Insatiable m her pursuit ot pleasure, the sensual Cynthia Chatterley carries on her family s romantic heritage R‘ 0 Welter Huston A woman s secret thoughts lead her to secret love, rapture and finally terror NR 0 ’ Blackout’ (1985) Richard Widmark. Keith Cerradme A detective obsessed with a gruesome, unsolved murder finally tracks down • suspect but the man has had amnesia tor seven years. NR Q 10:30 p m Q ( 5 ) w w w '/ i “ No W ay to Treat a Lady" (1968) Rod Steiger George Sega! D elicious blend of rom antic com edy and m urder about a fla m b o ya n t ladykiller the cop on his trail ano the cop s new lady who could be the next victim NR 0 w w * “ El D o ra d o ' (1967) John W ayne. Robert M itchu m A rancher w ith a paralyzed hand joins bis friend, a drunken sh e riff on crutches from a leg wound range war NR in trying to stop a 11:00 pm 0 "The Face of T respass" (1987) Stephen Dillon, Am anda Donohoe A blocked w rite r tries to resist a seductive wom an but is draw n in to a web of m urder, deception and obsession NR 11:30 pm 0 w w * "The Legend of Hell House" (1973) Pamela Franklin-. Roddy McDowall A team of scientists and mediums is commissioned to investigate a millionaire s newly acquired mansion for spirits NR 11:35 pm 0 “Personal Services’ (1987) Julie Walters, Alec McCowen The true story of a London madam who caters to the fantasies of the rich and powerful R 12:00 am 0 * * * “ Fahrenheit 451’ (1967) Julie Christie Oskar Werner In an unspecified country, at ar undetermined time period, the 'eadrng of books is stnctly forbidden and readers are hunted by the authorities NR 0 V» “Lady Chatterty s Lover’ (1981) Sylvia Kristel, Nicholas Clay The passionate tempestuous tale of forbidden love between a sensitive, married lady of means and the uncommon lover she takes R 12:30 am O “Silver Canyon" (1951) Gene Autry. Pat Buttram Gene is a Umon scout m the days of the Civil War He brings to an end the marauding of Jim Davis and his gang of hoodlums NR 12:40 am 0 ’ Rawhead Rex* (1987) David Dukes An ancient evil is unleashed upon a small Irish village An American historian, armed with onty a magic stone, dares to face the evil Rawhead Rex R 12:45 am 0 * * * v t “ Drums Along the Mohawk’ (1939) Claudette Colbert Henry Fonda Story of colonia life along the Mohawk trad m New York State during the Revolutionary penod as settlers battle the Indians and the Redcoats NR 1:25 am 0 "Danger Zone" ¡1967) Gorgeous aft p i rock group lookmg for the* big break meets macho motorcycle gang looking for action Terror m the desert with no help m sight R 1:45 am 0 “Richard Pryor Here and Now* (1963) Richard Pryoi The popular comedian pokes tun at everything from Africa to the Amencai South to tvs meetmg with Ronald Reagan as he performs many skits R Q 240 am 0 * * * * "Footkght Serenade" (194?) John Payne, Betty Gratüe It's romance songs and spectacle when a pnzehgMer signs to do a Broadway ptay NR 2:15 am 0 Bedroom Eyes" 1985. Kenner* G >m ar D a ye Hadcon A young sto cxb ro « e ' enhances his d aily ogg-ng 'o u t ne v m v o y e u rs '- accidentally a tresse s a m urder a -c f r cs h im self accused of the crim e R 2:30 am i-' a ’ 3 7 7 Sy . a :a E ce ' as e a rc “e - © ‘ G oodbye Em m anue1'? ' Kristei A^exa^d'a S’ e *a ~ testy e Em sensua as th e r husband p ay the f e d urn a seduct ,e sr-a-ge- makes 0 Sinatra Sfoc« car 'a c e ' w f and a w a s "? " a -a g e - f nds “ m s e -* :w Interna Re.emj-e S e-, ce $ ’ i ; 000 taxes G t a w ^oie r e * oa 'S p e e d w a y* M 96 8 E v s P'es e . S a - :. generous -mot ; a m e R 3.-00 am 0 * * ‘ Pot 0 G o ld ’ ^94’ Pause-e Godearc Jam es S te w a " A po> manages ‘ o get the Horace He dt Band on h,s unc e s -ad-c jyoc-a.” NR BUY IT! Smart Shoppers Read the Texan Want-Ads! PAT PAINTER’S ■ u a t s m i N c IABCIT,8IARPaa,CMMIIMnASnU M SR IllM im tll BRMGAFRIENO! 98 MISCOUNT ON: PERMANEMTS • STRAIGHTENING • FROSTING BIS OFF ALL PRODUCTS INCLUDING REDKEN & GEFDEN Long hmr sfM ostots — Hmr r*gro*& f products and Norn Man Htmjmco products a v a M M P A T P A I N T R K ’ S u n u m n c «chonor 1011 E.41ST 4 5 4 -3 6 7 6 MC.V, CALL DISCOVER TOD AMEX 20 IMAGES June 13,1988 TUNE OUT Sea World's All-Time Lone S tar Celebration CBS (Ch. 7, Cable 2) 7 p.m. Hey kids! Its right here, on CBS! This sappy made-for-television non-event will attempt to tell the na­ tion about Central Texas. Unfor­ tunately, after viewing this unpleas­ ant bit of tripe, many Texans will be left with a bad taste in their mouths. For no apparent reason, nighttime soap star Patrick Duffy will be party to an “all-time Lone Star celebra­ tion." I suspect there have been and will be better all-time celebrations than this. Viewers, especially the Nielsen families, should take my advice — rent the classic Texas movie The Alamo, and resist the temptation to watch any of Shamu’s antics. — Trevor Feagin PRIME TIME 7:00 pm 0 7 SEA WORLD’S ALL TIME LONE STAR CELEBRATION '988; Patrick Dufty hosts this entertainment extravaganza celebrating the cultura^ heritage of the Texas hill country its legend ano lore 0 ® PROBE A world famous science fiction w ite ' believes his house is haunted by a visitor from outer space (Rj Q O 0 FACTS OF LIFE Ar exchange student arrives in the middle of the night under questionable circumstances (R) Q 0 0 MOTOWN RETURNS TO THE APOLLO O 3 AUSTIN CITY LIMITS 0 VIDEO SOUL Host Donnie Simpson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars 0 * * * i ¿ MOVIE THE STRATTON STORY 11949) James Stewar June Allyson True story o' one of basebal1 s heroes Monty Stratton who at the peax of his career lost a leg ir a hunting acciden' and did not quit the game NR 0 GRAND OLE OPRY LIVE BACKSTAGE 0 +★ MOVIE MIDNIGHT OFFERINGS (1981) Melissa Sue Anderson Mary McDonough An innocent young coed frightened by her awakening psychic powers, is threatened with death unless she confronts a smister witch NR 0 LAUGH IN 0 THE MYSTERIES THE PASSION (1985) An enthralling mixture o' powerfu verse ingenious staging anc uplifting religious themes surround the crucifixion arid resurrection of Christ NR 0 ARTHUR C CLARKE'S MYSTERIOUS WORLD Strange Sxies Ar unxnown planet crossed the sur ano disappeared 0 THE TWENTIETH CENTURY The tide turns against the Naze, during this epic World War II battle Walter Cronkitf- hosts ® EVERYTHING GOES ARABIAN NIGHTS 0 MOVIE SED DE AMOR Pedro Armendariz Ana Luisa peiuffo Lina fuerte historia de amor que tiene como marco e¡ paisaie mexicano P 0 * V t MOVIE AMERICAN NINJA H: THE CONFRONTATION-1987 Micnae Dudmoff Steve Jame* Am , >.<■ .ge- Joe Armstrong anc Sg- Curt- ja e s o r are investigating the C'sayptd ¿ ’ce of Ma'ines or- a Canboear slanc R . 7:30 pm 221 Te» owner o1 « v ery v*- » sma • re ' S a n d ra to oe a w e ath er . teams the hare way not to pot Anne Baxte' A- ambitious actress O te ie v is io ' g ir , (R 0 GRAND OLE OPRY UVE 0 MAKE ROOM FOR DADDY Henpecked C hancy Co his tiose .• on ft' people • affaire Pat Carro got', f star1 0 * * * » MOVIE ALL ABOUT EVE '1950 Bette Dd. uses from oetr s a mousy gm r tne theatre alley to ar aware w ■ «e* NR 0 TOWARDS 7000 A .our a* science and technology 0 VIETNAM THE TEN THOUSAND DAY WAR A histor, o' trie se/. MOVIE THE GHOST AND MRS MUIR M947) Rex Harrison Gene Tierney A toneiy widow finds peace and material for a best selling book wrien she falls in love with the ghost oí ai uic sea captain NR 0 LADY BLUE 0 ORPHANS OF THE WILO Ostriches The parenta care lik e n during egg hatching 0 SHORTSTORIES Wife is arrested for strangling death of tier husband in A Jury of Her Peers and Monaco Forever takes a farcical look at love and war 0 ON LOCATION RICHARD LEWIS I’M EXHAUSTED Poor Richard Lewis gets through his firs? HBO comedy showcase by turning his misery and hypochondria into a laugh riot NR ® SPORTSCENTER (L) 0 STEVE ALLEN'S GOLDEN AGE OF COMEDY (1988) Steve Allen leads us through the glory days of live television in this compilation of some of the best performances from 1956 through 1961 NR 0 NIGHT TRACKS: CHARTBUSTERS 10:05 p m 10:30 p m 0 ID TAXI O ® FRIDAY THE 13TH 0 0 SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE 0 ® WWW MOVIE LAWMAN (1970) Burt Lancaster, Robert Ryan A New Mexico marshal finds himself in a hostile community when he goes to a nearby town to arrest seven people for an accidental killing. PG 0 w w /i MOVIE ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT (1979) Richard Thomas, Ernest Borgnme A sensitive German youth plunges excitedly into World War I and learns of its terror and degradation. NR 0 ROCK 'N ROLL PALACE 0 MONKEES One Man Shy. While the Monkees plan to play at a coming out party. Peter falls in love with the debutante and steals her portrait 0 PROFILES OF NATURE The Great Blue Heron Their courtship and territorial behavior. 0 AWA CHAMPIONSHIP WRESTLING O FANTASIES: IMAGES 0 FUTBOL Sábados por la tarde, directamente desde Mexico, presentando los meiores partidos en vivo vía satélite. G 0 MOVIE VANESSA Olivia Pascal. Anthony Diffring An innocent girl raised in a convent inherits a chain of luxury brothels and is introduced to a daring, intimate and sensual playground. NR 11:00 p m 0 D MOVIE 0 3 NATURE Look at man's destructive influence on a spectacularly beautiful coral reef located in the Malay Triangle in the Philippines Q 0 MIDNIGHT LOVE O GRAND OLE OPRY LIVE BACKSTAGE O ww MOVIE THE FABULOUS DORSEYS (1947) Tommy Dorsey, Jimmy Dorsey Story of the life of the battling Dorsey brothers, swmgdom s top musicians, who were embroiled in a bitter feud NR 0 NEW OR. RUTH Single Women who Date Married Men □ © H O M E OF THE BRAVE (1985) Laurie Anderson. Adrian Belew Using a hypnotic blend of film video animation arid electronic gadgetry, Laurie Anderson creates a technological concert paradise NR 0 HEAVEN. MAN ANO EARTH Walled city of Kowloon, Hong Kong 0 THE TWENTIETH CENTURY The tide turns against the Nazis during this epic World War II battle Walter Cronkite hosts 0 w'/. MOVIE OUT OF BOUNDS (1986) Anthony Michael Hall, Jenny Wright An innocent Iowa farm boy stranded in L A finds himself trapped between the law and a vicious crime ring R 0 MOVIE BEYOND DESIRE (1986) Vanessa del Rio, Seka When a hunky private investigator saves gorgeous call girls from an ambitious pimp, the grateful call girls repay him the way they know best NR 0 MOVIE JESSE OWENS STORY, PART 1 (1984) Donan Harewood, Georg Stanford Brown True story of the man who won four gold medals at the 1936 Berlin Olympics from his college days to post Olympic period when shamelessly exploited NR 0 NIGHT TRACKS: PART I 11:05 pm 11:30 p m O ® www MOVIE MACKENNA’S GOLD (1969) Gregory Peck, Omar Sharif. A motley crew of 17 men and 4 women, in search of a canyon full of gold, find themselves chased by both Apaches and the cavalry. PG O GRAND OLE OPRY LIVE 0 EYE ON HOLLYWOOO 0 VIETNAM: THE TEN THOUSAND DAY WAR A history of the search for peace throughout the war, hosted by Richard Basehart. 0 SURFER MAGAZINE (R) 11:45 pm 0 MOVIE CITY OF THE SHAOOWS A policeman can t bring himself to kill a tough criminal & only a mysterious figure from the past knows why. R 11:50 pm 0 rVk MOVIE HANOI HILTON (1987) Michael Moriarty. Paul LeMat A glimpse into the bleak, desperate lives of American soldiers held as POWs in Vietnam. R 12:00 am Q ® ww wvt MOVIE THE GAY DIVORCEE (1934) Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers A lovesick dancer pursues a lady who mistakes him for another man and issues a strange invitation NR 0 3 SIGN OFF O SOLOFLEX O COUNTRY CLIPS 0 *ww>A MOVIE THREE CAME HOME (1950) Claudette Colbert, Patrie Knowles True story of Agnes Newton Keith, her husband and son, who were imprisoned by the Japanese during World War II NR 0 INVESTMENT ADVISORY 0 THE AOVENTURERS Ways Over the Perciptce O LIVING DANGEROUSLY Ricardo Montalban This episode presents a fascinating account of Ken Warby s record breaking streak across the water m a jet propelled hydroplane 0 AUSTRALIAN RULES FOOTBALL (T) 0 EVERYTHING GOES: ARABIAN NIGHTS 0 NIGHT TRACKS: PART II 12:05 am 12:30 am 0 ® SIGN OFF 0 $1,008 CASH EVERY 5 HOURS 0 KILAMANJARO RICORO A flight from Kilimanjaro O PRIVATE PRACTICE STORY OF A SEX SURROGATE (1985) This award winning documentary examines all aspects of the most controversial new form ot sex therapy, the use o! sexual surrogates NR 0 BOXEO Los sábados por la noche, desde Mexico, via satélite Grandes encuentros con los mejores púgiles de las divisiones livianas G 0 wvs MOVI! THE BEARS ANO I (1974) June 13. 1988 IMAGES 21 • * * * ' A Tr.« e t- o T o n a t 1 a w k - a( 4:00 am Daley A rre ¿d,<*er T'-ivenng drummer 'intis hrmself n me midst of a ralroad ‘ranchise rathe upon r s amvai r Tomanawk a pretty jir keeps r,r f ne igm NR I I 'Beyond Desire' <1906 /aner.sa lei Rio Sexa A/her , -up*/anvafe nver.bgator -.aves gorgeous :a gir s "o r- ar ambitious oimp he gratefoj .ai gir's -»cay mm -ne «ay ’hey y s tollege days to pos! Qlympii period when shamelessly exploited NR 11:30 p m “MacKenna s Gold" (1969) Gregory Q $ $ Peck, Omar Sharif A motley crew of 17 men and 4 women, m search of a canyon full of gold find themselves chased by both Apaches and the cavairy PG 11:45 pm "City of the Shadows" A policeman can t bring himself to kill a tough criminal & only a mysterious figure from the past knows why R 11:50 pm 9 * V i "Hano Hilton" (1987) Michael Monarty Paul LeMa* A glimpse into the bleak desperate lives of American soldiers held as POWs in Vietnam R 12:00 am Q 3 $ *♦★«/! "The Gay Divorcee" (1934) Fred Astaire Ginger Rogers A lovesick dancer pursues a lady who mistakes him for another man anti issues a strange invitation NR 9 ★★★>/« “Three Came Home'' (1950¡ Claudette Colbert Patrie Knowles True story of Agnes Newton Keith, her husbanc and son who were imprisoned by the Japanese during World W a rll NR 12:30 am 9 *>/i The Bears and I' (1974) Patrick Wayne Chief Dan Geofge A Vietnam veteran takes the personal effects of a dead friend to h s father an Indian chief and ts caught m the struggle of the Indians over ¡and G 12:35 am 9 'Breaking Al the Rules' Twc guvs a ' . wan: to score big before the end o' the sumnre' g c themselves anc their grrifnends m *ec up - bungled diamond ne.st R © * * * Ange <"Hl the Badman H947 jo r Wayne Ga Russe A Qua*e gn saves a wanted man from a girs.in g e' see»--; t .em> NR 1:00 am 1:55 am 1987* M a r ■ 5 nee 9 #w*/i The Believers Helen Shaver A man h ds h.mseif • the m»cd e of a string ot unresolved k m gs a qn na» oe traced to practitioners of me ancient Air car: religion Santería R 2:00 am 9 * * * Arabesque (1966) Gregory Pecx Sophia Loren An American protesso England, kidnapped by a prime numste helped lo escape by a vtnam s rrcsliesS NR ,$ * * '/* Girl Happy 1965! Eivis P'es.e» Shelley Fabaies The eaoe' or ¿ . u>,qa, combe is given the tas* of max-ng >j-e a mobster > dauyhte< stays out ot ¡rouble o u >g Easier vacation NR ÜG g trw JOs n 4 . - j >v, 9 * * Sornrne Hes' Anthony Idwu an Eastern tanning von 2:05 am Í9 8 1 A young •* e n t e s a p a s s . o a t r a r ! a ntJ^LUiHt ttldl Ciuti a a . age-. is 2:10 am ■98-h A 9 Clinton a.u! Nadnie * f He ' Ba x betwee a ha dsom e piO SliluÍ! A r r i a..-g' and molde NK Q AnOy Gan;, .e Ueve vVs anti a c" gv ign >, utti - v’ n a i- ..gq r ■ a we: 2:30 am 0 1 Vd -! d B-Olive » Mi*.’ Taiso I us Agu e u>‘ anv ‘-¿s a+,sn wuv doe id vida nti>n>4 y na> protuHk* que a y . -.i , ' 22 M A G B June 13, I f t i TUNE IN America'a Moat Wanted KBVO (Ch. 42, Cable 5) 7 p.m. Thu* show is great. L ik e, they real real crimináis doing ‘‘how crim es1 The criminals they leature on this program get caught — and it’s all on live film! like, after you see But the coolest part of the whole show is the thing they ask everyone to do, which is to catch the crimi nals So, the show vou just gotta sit there and “ Have I ever seen anv of think these desperate ch aracters’''” And ii you have seen one of these dudes, vou call in and report them Who knows-' Maybe one of these g u ys wa- the dude that bumped into vou just the other day at the grocers store Then again maybe not But still, show RealJv it’s a massively cool PRIME TIME 7:00 pm (fl oversee. r, reviví ¿(tí . *,Uf VIVO' 1(1 t5 tevr • > ) > - . n r l v o • • Char-wua -.<• 7 MURDER SMf WROTE Q 34 MACGYVER MacGyv** venture’ out to jnmriatiitefl territory t a n k e - ?»u- teqenoar 4 THE NEW MIKE HAMMER Deadly Reunirn a n d O i ' . f i n v e r >d'*Í.Uí5‘ Q f t fa m ily tie s o' hr, ciutey piay bu • • overzeaiou'. enthusiasn rria/ Dung !tti- curtan ü w S B , AMERICA'S MOST WANTED 0 « OR STAGE A7 WOLF TRAP Witt a música teperto >4 ranging trorr dassica ptecr favorite. fno Canadiar brae to popula mus perform d Wol? ¡rap 0 EVER INCREASING FAITH 0 ®*Ll V GRAHAM • ® MAKE ROOM FOR DAODY ® PHYSICIANS JOURNAL UPDATE ® HORSE IN SPORT Drivng Th*- mu of a ftof temar © POLICE S0UA0 e- Niece /• foghon o- a lub-i ^ D-eur r.a' b‘ cum hut fM- . hot Or tfi< tra o ' © SCHOLASTIC SPORTS AMERICA 196/ 66 Higr jtu u o Cnampionshipc © PLAYMATE PLAYOFFS ROUND II The actior g e i ', rougne a r id mor» s p i r n e d a gorgeou playmate, demonsoau »?iey re more tha1 juc pretty lacee Nb 0 MOVIE MYSTERY AT CASTLE HOUSE Ire ftinos explorar una mansior abandonada y descubre ut íufi*- s e c r e t o p o 'tua v. wnoeriirati e ¡ secuestro y espionaje ® * * * MOVIE THE BOUNTY Gibso* Anti’ony Hoprnu- '¿(iiprtiaic f retch*- CMiSha- -ead'. t« 1 789 mutiny o* tin- ftuiiS' Ship The Boon), dgd - • commanoe bug K , xiduappe . ao/wa» •. d /'no- lana* m< /:3 0 pm 0 34 M-r TWO DAOS Ih fc I f S p O o M b i l i t / 0 * fit- . c a m - promb'IO Miff I r o r r p e o g ■ ( o - : o ' p a r e ' t >■ « o u t e p m - " gutt .. ¡ I H , b e t o h o o t e m m MARRIED WITH CHILDREN Q O INSIDE WINSTON CUR RACING 0 MAKE ROOM FOR DADDY uu)a! '• j1' " y Du'ariii . d- d . , d ,m, ii amc a s s o c i a f * a s f t e t f e titenii A, ,p ,.d ® * * * MOVIE c e O - r c a t * ' m s c * * r ' p i, / , I HE BRIDE WALK’, DU' ‘ 1 9 3 b ; O a r b a n d . * / - ^ e o r R a y m o n d A ¡ g r . t , , d • 1 I! (/*’ * p 4?' »' f I/ i j 0 ‘ j y e *•' ¡ 0 0 : ' i d f f ^ d - 4»,!* d l f f t O * / O **">.> *: A '»** ‘ ' i i V tr i - ’ ' MOVIE LOS TARANTOS aW fy'd- - • , ,d 1 i ,i / ,*• ' baipftioi- w - - < -• ( . > ■ / ' a • . • ./, < * ' • e ■' a ■ o BRUSH MHOKES p a '. V i p r N b ,« d I/ , 7 * a - ■ ,» e t a r « a f t- - b o / '* (Li THE MIS&INC ADYENtDHE', DI 0/¿lE ANt HARRif1 d|f; , d r f , d r