T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r a t The University of Texas a t Austin Forty-Eight Pages Vol. 79, No. 141 Copyright 1980. Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved (U S P S 146-440) Austin, Texas, Monday, April 21, 1980 v n o r . J Fifteen Cents News and Editorial: 471-4591 Display Advertising: 471-1865 is Office and Classified: 471-5244 Student questions constitution delay By ALISA HAGAN Dally Texan Staff Although regularly scheduled constitutional convention meetings are a thing of the past, questions concerning the legitimacy and legality of the document written to restructure a Students’ Association continue to concern University students and organizations. A predominant area of concern surrounds a decision by convention delegates to postpone voting on the constitution until next fall. John Henley, sophomore business major, said delegates have acted in “ bad faith” by not allowing a vote on the document this semester and has called for the Univer­ sity’s Election Commission to issue a written opinion on his specific points which question the legality of a fall vote. ELEC TIO N COMMISSION chairman Ja y Gribble said a formal opinion would be mailed to Henley late this week. Henley’s basic question to the commission is whether the delegates, whose terms of office expire at the end of this semester, are capable of delaying the vote on a con­ stitution past their mandate He is also seeking an opinion on whether any other person or group can present an alternate document in the fall, if the fall election can be funded by any source other than voluntary contributions and whether the delegates have acted in bad faith by denying seniors a right to vote. Gribble Sunday said the commission’s opinion would probably approve of the fall voting date on the constitution. “ I THINK AS LONG as they (delegates) have passed a final document within the group by the end of this semester it’s okay,” Gribble said, stressing he was not speak­ ing for the commission. “ Their mandate was to draw up a document this semester.” Henley said he would prefer to see the commission's opinion before commenting, but added that he would “ continue the fight” regardless of the opinion Convention chairman David Bright said the document — which was presented in early April to students in The Daily Texan — would definitely be completed before the end of the semester. No date has been set for the final convention meeting at which the constitution will be completed, Bright said. TH E T ER M S under which the 25 delegates were elected to the convention did not stipulate a voting date on the completed document. Therefore, Bright said, the Elec­ tion Commission would finance the election cost next fall and that funding would not have to come from contributions as Henley suggested “ We re damned if we do and damned if we don’t,” Bright said, summing up the con­ vention’s predicament on any voting date. “ The senior students who are complaining that they won’t get a vote would be voting on a document which would never affect them anyway,” Bright said “ I per­ sonally was for putting up the document for a vote this semester but so many people kept saying not to rush it. “ What do they want?” Bright asked. “ Would they rather vote on a constitution which may be rushed through or the chance to vote on a document which has been passed around for students’ comments and suggestions?” Delegates may be postponing the vote on the document because they fear seniors, who were at the University during the past Students’ Association, will vote against it, Henley said. “ I WAS A FR A ID people would start saying that,” Bright said in response to Henley’s suggestion Whether or not seniors have the opportunity to vote would not affect the legality of the convention’s decision on the date, Gribble said. In response to Henley’s question to the commission on whether another group, other than the delegates, could present an alternate document next fall, Bright said an arti­ cle in the existing portion of the constitution stipulates creating a new document must be done by an elected constitutional convention. “ They would have to follow the same process that we did,” Bright said. Students should “ work together” in constructing one document, he added. Henley said he is in the process of writing suggestions which could improve and clarify the proposed constitution and plans to present those ideas to delegates before the end of the semester. “ I wish he would come and talk to us,” Bright said. UT pianist wins gold medal Allen gains honor in international competition Wayne Comeaux, a freshman business major at the University, spends some time Sunday night with his girlfriend Carol Krueger in a parking lot at 29th and Guadalupe streets. Krueger, a journalism major at Baylor University, intends to transfer to UT next fall. Never can say goodbye Howard Castleberry, Dally Texan Staff Defense motion denied in pretrial hearing By RON SAINT PIERRE Dally Texan Staff A pretrial hearing for 24 Middle Eastern students charged with disrup­ ting a public meeting inched forward Friday as the judge denied one defense motion and two more University police officers testified. County Court at-Law No. 3 Judge Jon Wisser, who had taken three defense motions seeking either to dismiss or reduce the charges under advisement, denied the defense request to compel the state to specify the exact verbal utterances the defendants were alleged to have made at a Jan. 31 speech by form er Iranian ambassador to the United Nations Fereydoun Hoveyda in the Texas Union Ballroom. Wisser has two more defense motions under consideration and is hearing testimony on another which alleges selective arrest and discrim inatory prosecution of the Middle Easterners. The two previous motions ques­ tion the constitutionality of Section 42.05 of the Texas Penal Code, which outlaws disruption of a public meeting by physical action or verbal utterance, and seek to have jurisdiction of the cases transferred from 42.05 to Section 433 of the Texas Education Code, which for­ bids disruption of an organized class or school activity on school grounds. Transferring jurisdiction from the penal code statute, a class “ B ” mis­ demeanor punishable by a maximum penalty of 180 days in jail and/or $1,000 fine, to the education code statute, punishable by a maximum $200 fine, would remove the cases from Wisser’s court and place them in Justice of the Peace Court No. 5, where Frank Ivy presides. Wisser requested further argument on the jurisdiction motion and defense and prosecution attorneys reiterated their positions on the point Friday. Defense attorneys contend that the education code statute, pertaining to violations on school property, is more specific than the penal code statute and is. therefore, more applicable. The prosecution sought to have the in­ terpretation of education code statute 433 limited to entail only organized classes or functions at which students’ attendance is required In addition, the prosecution main­ tains that in the case of overlapping statutes, the penal code statute prevails and any other applicable statute is “ impliedly repealed.” Two University police officers then took the stand to testify concerning their roles in the arrests of the Middle Easterners. Sgt Jim m y Moore said charges are normally filed against alleged law­ breakers immediately upon arrest but that charges were not filed against the current defendants until a week after the arrests. Moore said he made arrests because he felt the defendants were disrupting Hoveyda s speech but that if Hoveyda did not feel a disruption was made, no charges would be in order. Hoveyda has been quoted as saying he did not feel his Jan. 31 speech was dis­ rupted and defense attorneys are seek­ ing his testimony in the cases. Lt. Leonard Young, who was present at a speech im m ed iately before in te rru p te d by H o ve yd a ’s also demonstrators and eventually canceled, said he did not characterize the demonstrators at either speech as belonging to any specific ethnic group. Although no arrests were made at the first speech, Young said the noise level was “ definitely enough” to disrupt the speech and that he saw 15-20 persons Polls open Monday for Co-Op runoff; board decides against new election By GARDNER SELBY Daily Texan Staff Runoffs for two two-year student posts on the University Co- Op Board of Directors are scheduled for Monday, and campus polls will be open from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Running for Place 1 are Kirk Crocker and Je ff Blumenthai, while Place 2 runoff candidates are Andy Richker and John Cracken During a Friday afternoon emergency open meeting the Co-Op board decided not to hold another Place 2 election despite con­ troversy surrounding a Wednesday vote recount — which award­ ed 167 extra votes to Richker. Based on election “ irregularities” — last Monday, polls open­ ed and closed late — and “ ambiguous” reasons given for the original vote count mistake, Place 2 candidate George Coleman Friday morning requested that the board schedule a repeat elec­ tion. The recount by Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity moved Coleman from second to third place in the race — and out of the running for a board position. Richker jumped from third to first place with 313 total votes. Joe Phillips, APO election coordinator, Friday told the board that the 167 extra votes were apparently mixed up with a stack of no-votes during Tuesday’s original vote tally and went un­ counted. During the meeting, allegations of election fraud were withdrawn by both Daniel Matthews, student Board member, and candidate Coleman, while faculty board member Robert Hamilton, law professor, said, “ Clearly, (these allegations) are without substance. You don’t stuff a ballot box to get in a runoff, you stuff -to win. “ There is absolutely no basis at all for running another elec­ tion,” Hamilton concluded. Phillips apologized to the board, saying, “ We've being doing it (running campus elections) for over 40 years. It ’s just that one day we made a very big mess-up ’’ Kathryne Judy, APO service vice president, said if APO wanted to “ fix an election, all we’d have to do is get them (all the APO members) out to vote.” APO has 200 members, she said. Board members also requested a second recount — and Friday’s results differed slightly from Wednesday’s recount totals. Richker gained one vote in the Friday recount, making his total 314, Coleman lost a vote to fall to 151 — the number of votes he had in the original count — and both second place finisher John Cracken and fourth place candidate Mark Wilder remained where they stood after the first recount. standing and chanting at the speaker, a member of the Israeli consulate in Houston. Young said it did not matter if the speaker felt he was disrupted but that a violation would still exist if audience members or sponsors felt the speech was disrupted. Dean of Students James Hurst and associate dean of students David McClintock are expected to be called to the witness stand by defense attorneys Monday. Also subpoenaed to testify by the defense are University President Peter Flawn, Travis County Attorney Jim McMurtry and Sheriff Raymond Frank. By CLARA TUMA Daily Texan Staff University associate professor of music Gregory Allen was recovering from a bad cold and a pulled arm mus­ cle when he recently left Austin for Tel Aviv. He could barely play the piano because of his physical ailments, but he s till wanted to com pete in the prestigious Artur Rubinstein Inter­ national Piano Master Competition. Allen recovered enough not only to compete, but to win last week’s contest. Along with $5,000 and a Rubinstein Gold Medal, Allen won the chance to Israeli and American perform with orchestras. He is now touring with the Tel Aviv symphony. But his tour will not last long. The maximum age for international com­ petition is 32, and the 31-year-old Allen has a birthday in May. “ The reason for the age lim it is because the older people would win con­ tests hands down because of all the years they have been practicing.’’ Ken Kunkel, a friend of Allen, said Sunday. The announcement of Allen's victory was greeted by a solid round of boos from the crowd, which favored British runner-up Ian Hobson “ The booing was a political thing,” Kunkel said. “ He told me he wasn’t the only one (to be booed) and at the recep­ tion afterward he said there was no problem. It was strictly politics.” The music hall was packed by Israeli music lovers who booed almost every contestant, Kunkel said. Gregory Allen UT News and Information Service Next year’s contest may include a special honor for the audience’s choice of best pianist Allen, who is on a month-long leave of absence from the University, played Serge Rachmaninoff s “ Piano Concerto No. 3” for the panel of 12 judges “ The University was really gracious enough to grant him the leave, but he’ll be back on the job as of the first of M ay,” Kunkel said. Allen, who has been on the University faculty since 1973, placed second in 1978 in the Queen Elisabeth International Music Competition in Belgium Last year he placed third in the Gina Bachauer International Piano Competi­ tion in Utah He earned his bachelor's degree in 1970 from Oberlin College, where he studied with former University faculty pianist John Perry. Allen received his master s degree in 1972 from the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, where he studied with Leon Fleisher. a noted pianist and conductor Monday Hot and cloudy . . . Monday’s skies will be partly cloudy, providing intermit­ tent shade from the 80-degree temperatures. The weather Tuesday through Thursday should continue dry, with temperatures in the high 80s to low 90s, and lows in the 60s. The sun will set Monday at 7:02 a.m. and rise once again Tuesday at 5:56. Single-minded mule sidetracks fraternity member By PATRICIA YZNAGA Daily Texan Staff The mules were issued to each fraternity member as “ I had control (of the mulei, but after a while it went part of the party’s Mexican theme, Smith said. where it wanted to,” Smith said. Sigma Phi Epsilon member Chuck Smith has painfully “ It was kind of funny until I realized I might never get learned the truth in the adage “ stubborn as a mule.” back,” he said. Smith, a 20-year-old business major, was on his way to pick up his girlfriend Friday afternoon to attend his fraternity’s annual “ Down South” party when he lost control of the mule he was riding “ It (the mule) dragged me around campus,” Smith said We went up 24th Street and through the Inner Campus Drive to Littlefield Fountain.” he said “ The mule apparently has no regard for traffic lights.” “ We usually have horses, but this time we had mules instead.” Smith said “ They belonged to some guys in Lockhart.” Fraternity members said some of the mules were “ pretty bad,’ and Smith said he accidentally picked one of the more ornery ones. “ I was having trouble getting on (the m ule),” he said. ' but a friend of mine had given it to me after riding it, and he said that he didn't have any trouble Smith said University police helped him control the mule at Littlefield Fountain. “ They were real nice about it.” he said. Once the mule was under control. Smith continued his journey to pick up his girlfriend and then went to the par- ty. Smith said his girlfriend did not mind being late “ She was amused,” he sa*d. “ She was wondering why we were so late “ We were pretty tired, the mule and I," Smith said. “ I think we may never have mules again ” [Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, April 21, 1980 I FREE CANOE M X » . Rent a canoe for 1 hr. a t regular rate ■ ($4 for firwt hr. — $2 for each additional hr.) ■ f & get second hr. FREE! SA V E $2! E or get a second Canoe ride FREE! ( B rin g tomm b i e m h ) * || Offor good M o n d a y through Friday at n Zilker Park Boat Rentals, just downstream ■ from Barton Springs Swim m ing Pool W n k d a y i — 11 a.m. until dark ! I ■■■■■■■■— ^ ° m Wn^ ^ J H o M ffltn »> u {7 1 4 ) Í47-47M Clerical /Administrative £Rn I STEITZ PERSONNEL 6R0UP. INC. 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(You may want to see your Dean or department advisor for degree requirements in your m a­ jor.) B r in g the s c h e d u le of co u rse s to the S U M M E R C O U R S E P R E A P P R O V A L D E S K in the lobby of the Academ ic Center April 21- 25 for certification of transferability. (Rem em ber, preregistration for F a ll '80 classes at UT is taking place at the same tim e.) (4 ) Have a great summer learning experience. Office of Admissions V - ■ 1 □enrome B O O K C A S E in teak 75 ■ 351 2 ■ 11 optional frontal doors also available as shown below 0220-501 Reg 161 Now in progress Picked-up unassembled 118. Assembled and delivered 138. B O O K C A S E m teak 401 <3512 - 1 1 - Frontal doors available 0220-502 Reg 111 Picked-up unassembled 78. Assembled and delivered 88. Fish deaths investigated By RON SAINT PIE R R E Daily Texan Staff City health officials remain unsure of the cause of a massive fishkill in W a lle r Creek F r id a y , but w ater samples taken from the creek are be­ ing analyzed and every precaution is being taken to prevent further deaths from an unspecified chemical put in the creek Hundreds of fish were killed Friday in the creek from the 2300 block of San Jacinto Boulevard into Eastwoods Park by what health officials and biological scientists theorize was a pesticide, fungicide or solvent Fre d Rodgers, d ire cto r of E n ­ vironmental Health Services of the Austin Health Department, Friday said samples taken from the creek when the lethal substance was in the water have been sent to the laboratories of the Texas Health Department for analysis but no word is expected as to the con­ tent for "a couple of weeks ” In the meantime, Rodgers said the health department has attempted to cleanse the creek by pumping out the affected water or absorbing the lethal substance to prevent any more fish deaths from the suspected poison Rodgers said the odor from some kind of chemical was detected in sewer lines feeding into the creek as far away as 26th and Swisher streets but that the determination of the exact substance responsible for the fishkill has stalled pending the results of the water tests. When the test results come back, the health department w ill be better equipped to determine the source of the lethal substance, Rodgers said “ What they (state laboratory) find will give us clues as to where the material came from ,” he said. Businesses in the vicinity of the 26th and Swisher streets, including the Villa Capri Motor Hotel and some medical office facilities, were asked whether they had done any painting or had sprayed for insects in the past few days, Rodgers said. None of the businesses questioned had engaged in any such activity. The unidentified substance also could have been washed into the creek from storm drains anywhere along 26th Street, Rodgers said. Pumping water and absorbing toxic material from the creek water would still leave enough water to sustain the fish that survived Frid a y’s lethal dum­ ping. Most of the live fish remaining in the creek congregated south of the 23rd Street bridge over Waller Creek near the ROTC building and only a few live fish were observed north of that point. Math scores to aid registration % College Board Achievement Test scores in Mathematics Level I have been correlated with University math courses to aid students in selecting courses suitable to their education. Jim Daniel, mathematics department chairman, announced in a University-wide memo. The information is based on a study of correlation between scores on the Math Level I test performance in entry-level courses at the University. All students are required to present a score on the Math Level I test before registering for any lower-division course in math, with only three exceptions: • College of Engineering students with college credit for calculus. • Non-engineering students who have either completed a math course at the University with a passing grade, received credit by examination for a math course at the University or received transfer credit at the University for a math course taken elsewhere. • Graduate students who have received college credit elsewhere for a math course that would be accepted by the University as transfer credit in math. The following information from the College of Engineering and the Department of Mathematics supersedes any other, in­ cluding the Course Schedule for Fall Semester 1980: Calculus is offered via two tracks covering essentailly the same material — M808a and M808b; or M608Ea, M608Eb, and M325 Each track has a prerequisite of four years of high school math and a satisfactory score on the Mathematics level I (or I I ) test or credit for M305G or its equivalent. Engineering students are advised by the College of Engineer­ ing to follow this placement plan: • If a student has not studied trigonometry, he should enroll in M304E before enrolling in any other mathematics course, regardless of Mathematics Level I test scores. If a student has studied trigonometry, he should enroll as follows: • Students with scores between 620 and 800 on the Math Level I exam should enroll in the M808a course. • Students with scores between 560 and 619 on the exam should enroll in the M608Ea course. • Students with scores between 200 and 559 should enroll in the M305G course. Fo r non-engineering students, the D ep artm en t of Mathematics suggests that factors other than the Level I test score should also be taken into account. For example, if one has completed a math course since taking the Level I test, then the performance in that course should influence one’s choice. Concerning all entry-level mathematics courses: According to the Department of Mathematics, most students who score below 400 on the Level I test have considerable dif­ ficulty with all of the courses offered by the department. Those who score below 400, are strongly advised by the department to strengthen their mathematics preparation with extensive review or to complete one or more high school-level mathematics courses. R A SSL offers advice on mathematics review and a self-paced algebra review for strongly motivated students. High school- level courses are offered at Austin Community College and similiar institutions; intermediate algebra would probably be appropriate. For students with a score of less than 400 interested in taking M305G, M608Ea, and M808a, the previously suggested methods for strengthening math skills should be practiced. Students with scores between 400 and 459 should take M301 and M304 before M608Ea or M808a. Students with scores between 460 and 569 who have not studied trigonometry should take M305G before M608Ea or M808a. And students with scores of 570 and above may take M608Ea or iM808a. In reference to M603a, students scoring less than 400 should do the previously mentioned practices to strengthen skills. Students scoring between 400 and 459, may take M603a but should be aware that half of the students who score in the lower end of this range finish M603a with a grade of “ D ” or “ F . ” Students with scores between 460 and 599 should take M603a. Students with scores between 600 and 800 who are planning to take both M603a and M603b, may want to consider taking M603a and M808a or taking some other combinations approved by the College of Business Administration. RTF MAJORS (60 hours and above) CONSENT NIGHT — APRIL 21 YOUR CHANCE TO GET CONSENT CARDS FOR FALL RTF COURSES. 6-8 PM Lounge, CMA Building N O CONSENT CARDS GIVEN PRIOR TO THIS TIME!! RTF REQUIRE WRITTEN CONSENT. DOES The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, Drawer D, University Station, Austin, TX 78712 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and F ri­ day except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin. 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Box fH JB NO 146440 D Austin. Texas 78712, or to TSP Building C3 200 .................................................... $10 50 11 00 GET REA D Y FOR S U M M E R ... S P E C IA L LOW PRICE 1 2 7 ® Reg 16 25 A Sandal for carefree w alking Available in: • white • multicolor • Spanish saddle • bone • camel T V - S T E R E O U N I T m teak 6 8 V * 41 > 18 Optional frontal doors for right side also available as shown below 0220-505 Reg 260 Picked-up unassembled 198. Assembled and delivered 218. B O O K C A S E in teak 24 wide 0220-500 Reg 148 108. Picked-up unassembled Assembled and delivered 128. =, D O O R S m teak 34’ 4 * 34’ 4 Optional for bookcases indicated and stereo unit as shown 0220-504 Reg 87 68. Picked-up unassembled Assembled and delivered 78- H i IIII ........... ^ 1912 W e st A n d e r s o n L a n e / A u s t in , Texas 78757/(512) 451-8105/Daily 9-6 AA & Th 9-9 on-tha-drag at 2406 Guadalupa Anti-nukers gather for weekend protest Peaceful group warns against mounting Mideast tensions G O L D E N , C o l o . ( U P I ) — Escalating tensions in the Middle East added urgency to the annual call by anti-nuclear activists and en­ vironmentalists to convert the Rocky Flats nuclear weapons plant to non­ nuclear production. The state patrol estim ated 15,000 persons gathered on the edge of the Department of Energy plant Satur­ f aci l i t y, op erated by day. The Rockwell International, makes the nuclear com ponents for nuclear bombs. On Sunday, workshops on nuclear issues were held. Speakers including former Pen­ tagon a n a ly st D an iel E llsb e r g , C itizens’ Party presidential can­ didate Barry Commoner, Reps. Ron D e l l u m s , D - C a l i f . , a nd P a t Schroeder, D-Colo., warned that the nation was moving toward war. is “ Rocky Flats is the place where the next war, the last war, will start. the tr ig g e r , not ju st the It m anufacturer of tr ig g e r s,” said C om m oner, a p r o fe sso r of e n ­ vironmental science at Washington University. As in past years, the protesters were peaceful and organizers were firm about banning alcohol. But un­ like previous rallies, there were no blockades of the railroad tracks on Saturday or Sunday and subsequent arrests. Dellums and Mrs. Schroeder, both m em bers of the House Armed Ser­ v ic e s C o m m itte e , sa id the war hysteria w as m ounting daily in Washington, as was evident in the up­ coming vote on draft registration. “ We must challenge the madness. Let the clarion call be sounded: No nukes and a foreign policy that respects the hopes and dreams of third world nations Let us save the world for our children and our children’s children,” Dellums said, provoking a standing ovation. Festive notes lightened the tone set by gas masks and skeleton costumes. Sunburn proved a greater hazard than radiation to the mostly under-30 crowd, who walked, bicycled and car pooled to the rangeland field at the base of the Rocky Mountains. Humor balanced the grim posters of “ Death is good business at Rocky F la ts ” and “ Hey Jim m y, m ass suicide is not the answer ” in the f o r m of b u t t o n s and t - s h i r t s proclaiming “ Mutants for Nukes” and “ Eat More Harp Seal.” T h e f o u r - h o u r p r o g r a m of speakers, which included N ative A m e r i c a n s , B u s i n e s s A g a i n s t Plutonium Pollution and the widow of in­ a Rocky Flats engineer, was terspersed with songs, notably by Peter Yarrow. Yarrow, form erly of “ Peter, Paul and Mary,” and a patriarch in the civil rights and anti-war movements, defended the m usical portion of the program as being m ore than a cosm etic gesture to draw crowds. “ If there is any doubt that people can change things by singing and holding hands, then we must look at the said integration m ovem ent,” Yarrow, who predicted anti-nuclear forces would triumph. “ If we do not, we will not survive.” Ellsberg, who was arrested at Rocky Flats in previous years for joining sit-ins, traced the buildup of nuclear arms in the U.S. Monday, April 21, 1930 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 3 Military coup in Iran suggested by report WASHINGTON (UPI) — The State Department said Sunday it “would not be constructive to the hostage situation to comment on a report that the administra­ tion considered a military coup in Iran to block Ayatollah Ruhollalh Khomeini from power. T h e .Yetr Y o r k T i m e s reported that in January 1979, Air Force Gen. Robert E. Huyser was sent to Tehran to look into the possibility of organizing a m ilitary task force to support the m odorate govom m pnt named by the shah. But the Iranian military machine collapsed before the plans could be carried out. "We have no comment on the substance of the report.” said David P assage, a State Department spokesman “ It would not be constructive in view of the present negotiations to get the hostages released.” T he T i m e s based its report on “ senior administration officia ls.” Meantime, the W a s h i n g t o n Q u a r t e r l y , in a study of the period im m ediately preceding Khomeini s triumph, said Huyser’s mission was unclear and obscured any decisive steps to maintain a stable government in Tehran. THE QUARTERLY said presidential adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski and the National Security Council favored showing U.S. support for a strong m ilitary stance by Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, but the State Department favored “ a more m oralistic approach” of letting the shah go into exile and backing a reform government it felt would be controlled by western-oriented m oderates. The president, according to the quarterly, never took a firm line between using force to back the shah or speeding his departure to clear the way for a reform government. The Carter administration did neither,” the authors wrote. “ It hoped for the best and got the w orst.” The T i m e s said Huyser, an assistant to then-NATO commander Gen. Alexander Haig and former adviser to the shah’s military, was sent to Iran Jan. 3,1979, when the government of the shah’s handpicked prime minister, Shahpur Bakhtiar, was near collapse. The White House ordered General Huyser to develop contingency plans for a coup in the event that revolutionary forces appeared to be toppling the Bakhtiar governm ent,” unidentified senior administration officials told the T i m e s . HAIG opposed the choice of a military man for the political job and resigned from his post a few days later, partly to protest the appointment, according to the Times. After the shah went to Egypt in mid-January, Husyer reported to Carter and Brzezinski a coup could be staged on short notice, the sources said. "The purpose was to install a military government that would keep Ayatollah Khomeini and his supporters from dominating Iranian politics.” But events moved too swiftly. On Feb. 1, Khomeini returned to a rousing welcom e. The Bakhtiar government was collapsing and Iranian troops and officers were deserting to the Ayatollah by the thousands. The ‘Grim Reaper’ joins protesters. UPI Telephoto Japan, West Germany show signs of U.S. support TOKYO (UPI) — Reports from both Japan and West Germany suggest strong U.S. backing against Iran with Japan bracing for a quick and total cutoff of Iranian oil. Japan said Sunday that Tehran had priced itself out of the market, and reports said Tokyo had American assurances of help in finding alternate supplies. In West Germany, Chancellor Helmut Schmidt issued a strong statem ent supporting A m erica’s handling of the Iranian crisis and urging West Germans to show understanding for Washington’s position The bold m ove by Japan appeared to have removed from Iran’s hands the oil weapon it had brandished at A m erica’s m ost important Far Eastern ally to try to dissuade it from backing U.S. econom ic sanctions against Iran. The government Saturday instructed Japanese oil importers to reject Iran’s latest $2.50-per- barrel price hike to $35 per barrel despite Tehran's ultimatum to Tokyo to either pay the price or face a cutoff in oil shipm ents, effective Monday. Officials at the Ministry of International Trade and Industry insisted Japan’s decision Saturday was not part of the economic sanctions now under consideration, ministry sources said. “The new Iranian price is sim ply too high,” one MITI official said, noting that the mark-up make the Iranian crude more expensive than com ­ parable oil from other exporting nations. In Omaha, Neb., Saturday night, State Depart­ ment spokesman Hodding Carter said a cutoff of Iranian oil shipments would put Japan in the forefront of U.S. allies in term s of sanctions. He added, however, that it could also be a ploy to drive down the price. BUT TOKYO’S prestigious financial daily Nihon Keizai Shimbun reported Sunday that the government had won agreem ent from the Carter Administration for cooperation in providing alter­ native oil supplies in case of an Iranian oil em ­ bargo against Japan. THE SITUATION IN WEST GERMANY was evenmore encouraging, with Chancellor Helmut Schmidt's firm support arriving one day before foreign m inisters from West Germany, the eight other European Economic Community nations and Japan m eet in Luxembourg to decide whether to follow the U.S. and impose sanctions against Iran. West Germany has indicated it will support sanctions, possibly imposing them unilaterally if there is no agreem ent between the European allies. In a major speech Sunday, Schmidt made no mention of sanctions. But his econom ics Minister Count Otto Lambsdorff told the newspaper “ Welt am Sonntag” it looked likely the EEC would en­ dorse sanctions, and Schmidt gave strong expres­ sion to his sympathy with the U.S. RECALLING the tension West Germans felt in hostage dramas enacted by Baader-Meinhof terrorists in the 1970s, Schmidt called on West Germans, especially “ those critics of American behavior,” to sympathize with Americans now that the hostage crisis has dragged on alm ost six months. “ I understand this only too well, and they (the Americans) must feel that we understand it,” Schmidt said in a 75-minute speech to a m eeting of defense experts of the ruling Social Democrtic party, News Capsules By United Press International Riots force university closings TEHRAN — Authorities closed all universities throughout Iran for two days in an attem pt to control student riots which left at least one youth dead and several hundred others knifed, beaten or bruised, reports said Sunday. Nearly 500 students were injured during day-long rioting Saturday in Shiraz, south Iran. Several of the wounded were reported to be in critical condition. President Abol Hassan Bani-Sadr m et with universi­ ty officials Sunday to work out a solution to the crisis, which was triggered by a government attem pt to evict political groups from campuses. Costa Rica opens doors to Cubans SAN JOSE, Costa Rica — The Costa Rica govern­ ment Sunday told Cuban officials in San Jose it would accept all of the estim ated 10,000 refugees in Havana and asked permission im m m ediately resume to evacuation flights from the Communist Caribbean island. There was no im m ediate response from the Cuban consulate. Americans support-military force WASHINGTON — Americans, by alm ost a 2-1 margin, support setting a deadline for freeing the hostages in Iran and then using m ilitary force if it is not m et, a Washington Post poll found Sunday. The newspaper said its poll, conducted April 9-13 among 1,873 Americans, showed public hope of getting the hostages back through peaceful m eans has largely disappeared. The survey w as m ad e shortly a fte r P re sid e n t C a rte r broke relations w ith Iran e a rlie r this m onth and an­ nounced new econom ic and political sanctions. Chinese teams overcome hostility WALNUT, Calif. — Ending a 30-year deadlock, N ationalist and C om m unist Chinese ath letic tea m s com peted ag a in st each o th er for the first tim e in a weekend m eet, socialized and struck up friendships. The chief of the P eking track squad said he hopes to take a tea m to T aiw an and expressed confidence N ationalist the m ainland. te a m s “ would be w elcom ed” on A fter decades of hostility, the coaches and track team m em b ers got to g eth er socially and m ade friends w ith each other. The college-aged a th le te s danced together a t a p a rty given by A m erican students, said coaches for both team s. United Auto Workers end dispute DETROIT — M em bers of the U nited Auto W orkers voted Sunday to ra tify a new c o n tra ct ag re e m e n t with International H a rv e ste r Co., ending a 5 1/2-month labor dispute th a t cost each union em ployee m ore than $8,000 in wages. IH spokesm an Bill G reenhill said work will begin a t som e plants beginning a t m idnight Sunday and m ost plants would levels throughout Monday. to norm al operating re tu rn Reverse discrimination by universities subject of new Supreme Court case SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A new l e g a l c l a s h o v e r “ r e v e r s e d i s ­ crim ination” renews the demand for an unequivocal ruling on whether state un­ iv e r sitie s m ay give p referen ce to minorities in their adm issions — an issue the U.S. Supreme Court skirted in its 1978 Bakke ruling. is before the California The case Supreme Court. In 1975 Glen DeRonde, a white male from Fairfield, Calif.,, applied for ad­ mission to the University of California’s Martin Luther King Law School at Davis and was rejected. He filed suit claiming discrimination because many minority applicants with lower scores than his were admitted. The l ower co u rts ruled agai ns t DeRonde, saying he would not have been admitted even if there had been no dis­ crimination. An appeals court heard the case and also rejected DeRonde — in a ruling last February that astonished un­ iversity lawyers. THE COURT went back again to the crucial constitutional question and declared that any form of favoritism to minority applicants is unconstitutional. Judge Jam es G. Changaris, who wrote the ruling, scolded the Supreme Court for its fuzzy decision in Bakke, where s a m e s c h o o l , Un i v e r s i t y of th e Califomia-Davis, w as ordered to admit Allan Bakke to m edical school but said som e other kinds of “ race sensitive” ad­ mission policies favoring minorities might be permitted. This ruling, Changaris said, “proved weak and inconclusive.” He said the justices “ intellectualized them selves into decisional obscurity.” Changaris said the use of ethnic origin even as a secondary factor in deciding t h e “ s u b s t a n t i a l a d m i s s i o n s equivalent” of reserving places for minorities by quota — which the Bakke case banned. is DERONDE did not w an around while his c a se m oved legal process He was admitted to the Univer­ sity of San Diego Law School and now is an attorney in Fairfield through the He and his brother, John, also an at­ torney, want a high court ruling to e s­ tablish, once and for all. that “ the con­ stitution is color blind,” John told UPI. Besides winning a victory in principle. DeRonde could recover legal costs if the supreme court decides he should have been admitted to Davis. The university also is appealing. It wants the lower court decision flatly outlawing all racial considerations in adm issions to be thrown out. “ We could not possibly accept the court of appeals’ sweeping decision w’hich purports to prohibit the university from considering race in any part of the university admission sy stem ,” said Don Reidhaar. head of the university legal team. THE UNIVERSITY contends the case is now moot because DeRonde no longer wants to get into the law school. It was the California Supreme Court which decided in Bakke’s favor when he was fighting to get into Davis medical school. Changaris cited that court's ruling which went much farther than the U.S. S u p r e me Court did. He said that regardless of whether the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution the permits some racial favoritism , California Constitution does not. Primary 1980 Eight states pick By United Press International While presidential candidates cam ­ paigned for this week's crucial primary in P e n n s y l v a n i a , t he i r d e l e g a t e counters studied results from local con­ vent i ons and c a u c u se s in Al aska, Minnesota and six other states Saturday and Sunday. Alaska's Republicans were choosing 19 delegates Sunday at a state conven­ tion that opened Friday and was top- heavy with Reagan supporters — even though Gov. Jay Hammond favored George Bush. Meantime, President Carter was the favorite to win m ost of the 18 delegates being chosen in three congressional dis­ trict conventions Sunday in Minnesota. Reagan picked up all six delegates at st ake t wo GOP c o n g r e ssio n a l caucuses in Minnesota on Saturday, and now has 528 of the 998 national conven­ tion delegates needed for his party’s nomination. Bush has 96 and Rep. John Anderson 56. in REAGAN also w as supported by Nevada’s 17 GOP delegates chosen Saturday — but their vote on the first ballot at the Republican national con­ vention will be based on the results of the state’s primary’ May 27. Bush shut out the front-runner in Maine Saturday, capturing 17 of that state's 21 GOP delegates. The other four Maine delegates chosen w ere un­ com m itted. and Bush said he w as “delighted with the results,” which he hoped would help him win Tuesday’s primary in Pennsylvania. In T H E R E W E R E the national Dem ocratic race. Carter has a total 945 delegates com ­ pared to 477.5 for Sen. Edward Kennedy — with 1.666 needed for the nomination. 49 d i s t r i c t Democratic caucuses held in North Dakota Saturday and Sunday, but the votes were not expected to be tallied un­ til Monday and it was possible the full results would not be known until later in the week. The remaining Democratic results the weekend were second- or from third-stage events with few surprises: • The Mississippi state convention Saturday gave Carter the final 10 delegates to be selected from the state, adding to the 22 he won at congressional district m eetings earlier this month. A small group of uncommitted delegates failed to get the necessary strength to be represented at the national conven­ tion. delegates • In Oklahoma. Carter captured 24 national convention delegates at district conventions — one more than expected based on precinct caucus results. Kennedy won three, and two uncom­ mitted delegates favorable to Kennedy were selected. Another 13 delegates will be chosen in May. • In Virginia's congressional district caucuses. Carter held on to the strength that is projected to win him at least 55 of the sta te’s 64 delegates. • In Iowa’s Dem ocratic congressional di stri ct c a uc us e s , C arter got 21 delegates as expected, Kennedy won 11 and two w ere unc ommi t t e d. The remaining 16 of the sta te’s 50-member delegation will be selected in June. BUSH’S VICTORY in Maine was the second boost the state has given his can­ didacy in six months. He won a straw poll there in November that helped his early campaign, and he said Saturday’s results prove the race is far from over.” “ We’ve been clobbered.” conceded Frederick Biebel, vice chairman of Reagan s national campaign “ But I feel nothing can stop Reagan from get­ ting the nomination unless he gets hit by a bus,” he said. Any last words? UPI T«l®photo Sticking a pellet gun to the head of an effigy of Fidel Castro being hanged, Gilbert Mojena shows the feelings of most Cuban exiles who live in Miami’s Little Havana. Costa Rica has urged Castro to increase the number of flights carrying refugees from Peru’s embassy in Havana. - EDITOMALS TV image false Hodding Carter sincere, adept By BETH FRERKING initial embassy takeover WHen TíoddíngXarter 111 began facing the nation s press during the last November. Americans watched and listened to a man who seemed impersonal, impenetrable and unflappable. The assistant secretary of state for public affairs appeared to be an administrator with an enormous capacity for information but little room for humor in Tehran His on-camera “cold fish image is deceptive. Carter came across as an extremely personable man last Friday in while speaking at a college journalism conference Fayetteville. Ark Through his persuasive style of delivery, Carter managed to convert more than a few audience members to the “administration line" on U.S. foreign policy. Perhaps the fact that Carter practiced journalism at the D e lta -D e m o c r a t T im e s in Greenville. Miss., for nearly 20 years created a certain camaraderie between he and his audience. Everyone there instinctively liked him and seem­ ed determined to believe him. (He was, after all, a journalist first — something that absolves him of the usual taint of politics and government. ) HOWEVER, CARTER has become adept at playing the political game since coordinating Jimmy Carter’s last cam­ paign and working in the Carter administration. He ex­ hibited that savvy Friday by doing what any politician does best; he emphasized the successes and underplayed the failures That’s not to say that Carter didn’t address the problems. He simply did not dwell on them. He talked about the “Chicken Little syndrome” which reappears every four years While the United States is “be­ ing tested in ways unprecedented in the past,” Carter said the doomsday predictions expressed by President Carter’s challengers are exaggerated. He believes the country “is not in retreat in its purposes, its commitments or its ac­ complishments.” Carter added two interesting qualifications to his observa­ ®IW|MW1P*»Í , . i tion. apparently hoping to convince the audience that (1) the president is not totally responsible for our foreign and economic problems, and < 2 > the United States is still a great place. More specifically, he said the Carter administration did not invent the tracks this country is on, and that the world looks worse from the Soviet Union’s perspective HE APPARENTLY meant, in his first qualification, that the president inherited several bad situations he could not solve com pletely in four years. The statem ent was superfluous, because e v e r y new president faces similar cir­ cumstances when taking office. It also sounded like a thin excuse for basic botch-ups. While he outlined several real crises the Soviet Union may face in the near future — oil shortages and growing worldwide opposition to its imperialist tendencies — Carter seemed more intent on drawing attention a w a y from our own problems. Analogies and comparisons should be drawn only in the strictest sense, but Carter relied on sweeping generalizations in this case The resulting point seemed rather petty. However, Carter performed more admirably during the question/answer session Unlike so many administrators, he did not skirt issues, but answered questions as directly and candidly as possible in his position. He defended President Carter’s decision to boycott the Moscow Olympics; he ad­ mitted that the president’s “open" foreign policy has been confusing to allies, adversaries and the American public; and he roundly criticized the American media for distorting reality by emphasizing the immediate events without put­ ting them into perspective. More than anything else. Hodding Carter came across as a person deeply committed to solving America’s problems. There would be no reason to question his integrity or sinceri­ ty But leaving the auditorium, I realized why this articulate man could not remove or reduce my cynicism. He works for President Carter. F r e r k in g is T e x a n editor Diversity sought on editorial pages University students might be under the mistaken impres­ sion that columns, letters and cartoons on the Texan’s editorial pages represent the paper’s editorial stand on those particular issues. However, the Texan does not necessarily agree with views advocated by local or syndicated colum­ nists and cartoonists Similarly, the editor and assistant to the editor sign their editorials to remind readers that those editorials do not necessarily reflect the views of the entire Texan staff. Unlike some professional newspapers, the Texan does not have an editorial board which formulates editorial policy. Therefore, editorials represent the opinions of the writer. Since the Texan is a student newspaper partially sup­ ported by mandatory student fees, we have a responsibility to use the editorial pages as a forum for all views. We en­ courage students of every political and social orientation to submit letters and columns for publication. Subject to the constraints of space and timeliness, we will print as many columns and letters as possible. Letters, because they are shorter and usually more concise, have a better chance of getting published DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau ID O K TB eU te TH6. THEfVB s m r M e a m \CJ6CSOFVOP - - KA FOR T0NI6HT. I THOUGHT W V SWORN OFFOFRS- UNONDUTY, MARCUS. I PONT HAVE ANY CHOICE. PAPS IM- POSEPASPENPING CE/UNG ON MY EPU- OWON THS YEAR THAIS AN OUTRA&t HOUJCOUUP HEPOTHAT TO YOU7 WELL, FOR ONE THING, A YEAR HERB NOW COSTS *8000. \ IT POEGNl HAVE TO. JUST CUTOUT THE EXTRAS, MAN. m r, i 'm only FAYING *3.400' UH-HUH WHAT SORT OF EXTRAS ARE WE TALK­ ING ABOUT, ZONK? I WELL, UKE TUmON. I FINO THAT I CAN MAKE 00 WTTWUT CLASSES T h e Da il y T e x a n Assistant to the Editor News Editor Associate News Editor..... Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor........ Arts and Entertainment Editor ................... Features Editor ........................ Photo Editor Associate Photo Editor Images Editor Images Assistant Editor Campus Activities Editor General Reporters Editor.................................................................. Beth Frerking Managing Editor................................................... Walter Borges Assistant Managing Editors...................................... John Havens. Diane Jane Morrison .................. Ken Macdowell ................ ........Jann Snell ................Mary Ann Kreps .............. David King .................Jimmy Burch ...................... Scott Bowles ................Melanie Hersbon ...............Harley Soltes ............... .....Ed Malcik ..................... Steve Davis .............. Victoria Bamaart ................... Suzy Lampert ..Jenny Abdo. Tom Baker, Robbie Sabo. Ron Saint Pierre, Gara Turna, Patty Yznaga, Pat Jankowski, Melinda Magee. Diane Ballard, Alisa Hagan Gardner Selby, Shonda Novak Richard Polunsky, Martha Sheridan .............................................Kathy Shwiff News writers Senior Copy Editors Senior Wire Editor ........... Issue Editor...................................................................Donna Drake News A ssistants................................Joey Lozano, Tina Romero, Patricia Oden, Karen-Ann Broe Editorial Assistant.................................................... Brian Dunbar Sports A ssistants.....................Doug Folkerson, Susie Woodhams .Martha Trevino Make-up Editor ............................... Vicki Totten Wire Editor Pam Nester, Carlos Sanchez, Copy Editors ... Mark Randall. Sarah Whistler ...................Howard Castelberry Photographer t 1980 T#*as Siudent Publications Reproduction o» any part ot tfw* pubnca on »s prohibited «itnout frm express permtsaron o4 the Oaity Texar editor Opinions expressed m The Daily Texan are those o< the editor or the * • ter o’ the ad. :ie ana are not necessarily those of the University or administration the Board of fegents or tte Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trusteas THE DAILY TEXAN Monday, April 21, 1980 Page 4 In favor of creationism: Fossils evidence for creation By JAY BAUERLE j In his April 11 article. “ Evolution only rational a p p r o a c h /’ P hillip DiVaierio bases his argument on two assumptions. The first assumption has two parts Mr. DiVaierio assumes that the general theory of evolution fits all of the scientific evidence; I» also assumes the corollary statement that creationism fits none of this evidence There are, however, serious problems with this assumption. In the fossil record, the evolutionary model would require the oldest fossils to be the most primitive; there should then be an upward progression of more complex life forms. However, the earliest known multicellular fossils, found in rocks of the Cambrian Period, are fairly complex and rather diverse T h e se in c lu d e , am on g o th e r s , crustaceans, corals, and jellyfish. The only evidence of life in Pre-Cambrian strata are of alleged single-celled animals; according to Albert Engel, discoverer of these fossils, “ ...skep­ ticism about this sort of evidence of is ap ­ ea rly P re-C am brian propriate.” D. Axelrod, an evolutionist, states that, “One of the major unsolved problems of geology and evolution is the occurrence of diversified, mul­ ticellular marine in Lower Cambrian rocks on all con­ tinents and their absence in rocks of greater age.” This very lack of earlier, less complex, multicellular fossils is exactly what would be expected on the basis of the creation model. invertebrates life Another problem for the evolutionary model is the apparent lack of tran­ sitional forms in the fossil record. If the evolution model is correct, one should see, for example, animals with appen­ dages intermediate between fins and feet, or front legs and wings These are not found W E Swinton in his book “Biology and Comparative Physiology of Birds” writes that “ the origin of birds is largely a matter of deduction. There is no fossil evidence of the stages through which the remarkable change from reptile to bird was achieved.” George Gaylord Simpson, in “Tempo and Mode of Evolution,” states that “This regular absence of transitional forms is not confined to mammals but is an almost universal phenomenon, as long been noted by p a leo n ­ has tologists.” This lack of transitional forms is, once again, consistent with the creationist model. The alleged links between ape and man are not without problems either. R a m e p it h e c u s , which consists of a handful of teeth and jaw fragments, is now doubted even by one of its original supporters. Dr David Pilbeam of Yale. Louis Leakey’s A u str a lo p ith e c in e s , according to Asheley Montague, “ show too many specialized and ape-like characteristics to be either the direct ancestors of man or of the line that led to Ma n , P ith e ca n th ro p u s, was constructed from a skullcap and a femur found one year and 50 feet apart. Also found in the same strata were two fully human skulls. m a n . ’ J a v a S i n a n t h r o p u s , or Peking Man, appears to have been hunted and eaten by true men whose bones were found with those of Sin a n th ro p u s, according to Marcellin Boule and H.M. Vallois, both evolutionists, in their book Les H o m m e s Fossiles. This clearly casts doubt on Peking Man as an ancestor of the human race. Nebraska Man consisted of a single tooth, later found to belong to a pig, and Piltdown Man was found to be a deliberate hoax. In January 1972 Dr. Robert Eckhardt headlined his S cien ­ tific A m erica n article with the state­ ment, “Amid the bewildering array of early fossil hominoids, is there one whose morphology marks it as man's hominid ancestor? If the factor of genetic variability is considered, the answer seems to be no.” So the fossil record’s support of the concept of evolution is at best shaky. Mr. DiVaierio’s second assumption is an implicit one: he assumes that scien­ tists, as a rule, are objective in their viewpoints. However, scientists are human and subject to bias just like anybody else. George Gaylord Simpson in “The Major Factors of Evolution” writes that paleontologists “find it logical, if not scientifically required to assume that the sudden appearance of a new systematic group is not evidence for creation.” It is clearly unscientific simply to assume that a possible solu­ tion is invalid; it is actually a leap of faith and not a scientific argument. Neither evolution nor creation can be scientifically proven or disproven, for these processes are not directly obser­ vable, We must apply the evidence we do have where it fits and modify the models where it does not fit. It has been shown here, albeit in a brief and sketchy manner, that much fossil evidence supports the creationist model while contradicting the evolutionary model. Does it make sense to reject creationism categorically? Think about it. Bauerle is a c h e m istry m a jo r at Rice w orking fo r the U T c h e m istry d ep a rtm en t this sem ester. Chance inconsistent with nature By GARY EVANS and NEAL WOLFSON On Friday, April 11, a guest editorial appeared in which the author boldly claimed that “evolution is the only rational approach” and that to believe in creation “ is pure fantasy.” But how rational is evolution? Is it really the “rational approach” that it’s made out to be? Most thoughtful persons usually have one of two explanations as far as the origin of the universe is concerned. The first says that the universe cam e through natural evolution and self­ interaction and the second attributes its origin to a personified Being with in­ tellect and purpose. Where did the universe come from? Did it come into existence through chance’’ Or was it designed by one from whom we derive the concept of God? Things that come about by chance are unorganized and at most partially in­ tegrated Also, chance events have lit­ tle or no consistency. For example, a chair that is thrown into a room will not consistently land at the same spot and angle. Hence, chance can only provide partial integration. Furthermore, all random interactions are aimless and purposeless, without order and struc­ ture, and are not directed towards any m eaningful purpose. B riefly, the characteristics of chance are dishar­ mony, irregularity, inconsistency and insignificance. Compare the things in the universe with these characteristics — rationally. Take, for example, the human being. He is conceived in his mother’s womb for about nine months, delivered, grows up and eventually dies. This cycle is repeated for every individual. It is con­ sistent. It is not a wild game of chance. Also, the moon, stars and myriads of galaxies follow definite tracks and patterns. They are all organized. Their manner of motion can be calculated and predicted. The calendar in your hand is derived from them. All these witness to one fact, that the is universe, even organized, consistent, purposeful and meaningful the micro-world, That most plants are green and yet depend upon visible light to carry chi the process of photosynthesis has bothered many physicists The most logical ex­ tension of the argum ent of s e lf­ interaction and natural evolution would mean that plants should be black, thus enabling them to utilize the full range of light wavelengths, instead of the relatively small range that they are now limited to by their green color. Indeed, i f the universe had come into being as a chance event, and i f life could have been generated through this means, and i f plant life depending upon photosynthesis could have been the result, then black, not green, is the most likely color for plants to be. As a matter of fact, it is astounding that this is not the case. The problem with this view is that it precludes any purpose for plant life outside of self-existence. The Bible points out that in generating the (¿ant life God took care not only of forming an inherent ability to survive, reproduce and support other forms of lile , but another m ajor criterion was that vegetation should be “pleasing to the sight,” a goal that could never be achieved through basically black flora. Thus, even the color of vegetation testifies that there is a purpose in the universe other than mere existence, and that this purpose is the result of an intelligent design. It is much more rational to believe that the universe was created by someone with profound wisdom, vast knowledge and intricate design, than by an accidental, random event. E vans and Wolfson are rep resen ­ tatives o f Christians on Cam pus. Jiring line Class instructors deserve raise, too Isn't it nice that the University, in its limited benevolence, awards head football coach Freddie Akers a $3,800 cost of liv­ ing increase, when the base pay of a teaching assistant I is $3,500 for nine months work? The base pay of TAs and AIs has not been increased since 1975. From 1975 to 1979, there was an increase in the general price level of 40 percent. This means that TAs and AIs have taken a 40 percent cut in real wages. President Flawn, it’s hard to fight a war on mediocrity on an empty stomach! Carol Petersen Danielle Jaussaud Economics Department A recent T e x a n story put my editor's campaign expen­ ditures at $142. Yes, I spent less than my opponents on the race, but, no, not less than half of what they spent. As I ex­ plained to your reporter, I had spent $142 by the Monday before the election, but subsequent expenditures, which I es­ timated to be $75-80. put my total at about $220. Please don’t discipline the reporter for this distortion of the facts concerning campaign rules, for a consistent application of punishment for that offense would result in the dismissals of many of the staff and would reach the highest levels of Texan management. Robert R. Hamilton Journalism ‘Non-Ordinary Reality' not a blow-off I would like to respond to Mr Havens’ inclusion of ANT 306, “Non-Ordinary Reality,” in his hit list of "marginal,” “ blow-off” courses This is a very popular course that receives a large enrollment and enthusiastic student evaluations not because it is a snap-course. but because a lot of solid information and complex ideas are imparted in a fashion that stimulates new ways of thinking about old things. This is a freshman level course (there is no such thing as ANT 324L, Advanced Non-Ordinary R eality); and yet, it is basically about phenomenology and epistemology — not your run of the mill freshman fare. Students are encouraged to ex­ amine the nature of reality by becoming aware of alternate modes of knowing In this they are taught some of the fun­ dam entals of cultural and physical anthropology, neurophysiology, clinical psychology, psychpharmacology, economics, classical and modern philosophy. Thus, there is nothing soft about the subject matter (unless one is of the school that only courses such as plasma physics inorganic chemistry are hard). Of course, blow-off or courses are considered to be such because of the multitude of easy A s that they generate; but, it is no easier to get an A in this course that any other. Indeed I, as the TA, have adopted a fairly rigorous grading standard in order to do my bit toward stopping grade inflation. Those two characteristics of a blow-off course — subject matter and easy grades — are not applicable to Non- Ordinary Reality. This is a stimulating, educating course that is taught by one of the best teachers in Texas, Dr. Henry Selby In addition to not being marginal, this course, as it is taught by Dr. Selby, is of great benefit to the University because it ultimately shows that education and hard thinking need not be dull and onerous. Sheila Womack Graduate School Mudd society should do research After a painstaking search. 1 was able to uncover the con­ s titution of the Roger Mudd Society of Semi-Professional Journalists The first article reads: “ In continually striving for excellence, we like to see ourselves in print Rather than bother with checking our facts I am happy to report that this is faithfully followed My course “Skiing and the Early .Nordic Man could hardly yet have earned the reputation as in that it has never been offered before. a “blow-off' Furthermore, an inquiry into the nature and content of this course might have been more revealing than a cursory in­ spection of the Course Schedule. John Weinstock Associate Dean of Liberal Arts _ I L (p 0'f4M¿U(tu i, Campaign expenditure story m istaken Monday, April 21, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page New cheerleaders picked Saturday tryouts draw 74 hopefuls By JOEY LOZANO Daity Texan Staff Early Saturday morning there are no cars barreling down the campus streets or students rushing to class, but on the fifth floor of Bellmont Hall, things are lively. In room 546, young men and women are stretching their arm s and legs, performing backflips and cartwheel^ Young ladies sit on the strong hands of their m ale p artn e rs, balancing precariously between a perfect stunt and a dangerous fall. Tryouts for the position of University cheerleader for 1980-81 are about to begin T O D D M IN O R A N D Ri nk L a n h a m , t wo cu r r e n t cheerleaders, set up chairs in the two gymnasiums, while Rich Heller — coordinator of student activities and cheerleader sponsor — m akes coffee for the 10 judges who will narrow the field of 74 students down to eight men and eight women. Mike Quinn, journalism faculty m em ber and one of the judges, shows up in the typical instructor’s a ttire of blue jeans, T-shirt, jogging shoes and burnt orange felt cowboy hat. Other judges include two ex-cheerleaders, representatives from the National Cheerleading Association, another faculty m em ber, one student representative and one person from the Ex- Students’ Associaton. In another gym, which serves as a preparation and waiting room for the candidates, head cheerleader Joel F errell shines a pair of orange and white oxford shoes for his partner. Despite the large field of candidates, everyone rem ains friendly and relaxed, outwardly, a t least. “ It’s a little easier this time, just because I know what to ex­ pect,” says F errell, who is trying out for his third time. “ Still, I’m a little nervous.” Between auditions, he’ll stretch frequent­ ly. “ Staying warm ed up all day is the hardest thing to do because it’s real easy for muscles to tighten up.” After Pam McGee, a non-returning cheerleader, and Minor dem onstrate the sam ple stunts, he explains to the panel how to judge the perform ance of candidates. “ With the guys, you’re looking for them to be able to hold and be considerate with the girls, not let ’em crash ,” he explains. “ We’ll have spotters out here for the g irls’ safety,” he said. “ He drops me all the tim e,” McGee quips. T H E F IR S T WOMAN enters the gym, “ flip-flopping” herself across the floor. “ Yeah Longhorns! C’mon, I really wanna hear that sp irit!” she yells. But the judges simply look at her and return to their score sheets. “ It (cheering before the judges) is really hard,” says Jeff Webb, a m em ber of the current squad. “ It’s like talking to an audience that doesn’t respond. They just look at you like you were a piece of m eat.” A few of the pairs are somewhat m ism atched, with slender males trying to lift and balance m ore full-figured women. One student approxim ately 6 feet 2 inches tall tries to lift McGee in a chair stunt but trem bles heavily. A few m ore m ism atched pairs enter, several requiring the spotters’ guidance to prevent dealing the woman partner a dangerous fall. The experience of the current cheerleaders who are trying out again for next year is evident when Rob Julien enters and flip-flops across the floor with astonishing speed, finishing with a precise, expert backflip. The stunts, in which he lifts Alyson Lacey, another current cheerleader, dem onstrate his combina­ tion of strength and balance, as he lifts his partner without bat­ ting an eye. His routine is refreshing after watching the near­ falls of the less-experienced candidates. R IN K LANHAM EN TER S and perform s a sim ilar routine, stopping once to grab his abdomen — “ A little sore,” he ex­ plains — and another tim e to take a breather. “ Think I had the flu last week,” he mumbles. But no apologies are needed, his stunts appear perfect also. Both m ales and females are judged on the stunts, the women being judged for their control and balance. “ If you were just standing there, th ere’s no way a guy could lift you, ” Gretchen Alston explains. With waggling fingers as improvised props the women selected for the sem ifinals perform ed a pom-pom routine. Then a long afternoon of interviewing begins. Those who have made it to the finals pass the time by milling outside the interview room, discussing their school work or pondering what questions they might be asked. “ If we were losing 40-0. what would you do?” one asks another. “ Stadium yell,” someone suggests. “ If they ask you anything, just take the F ifth,” another jokes. Ferrell and ex-cheerleader Pam Burkhalter sing a duet from “ The J e rk ’’ as the final moments tick by. Finally Heller em erges, preceded by the judges, most of whom are hurrying to the first available elevator before the decisions are announced. Seven of the current squad who auditioned again were successful. Four new men — Eric Chuber, Tony Salters, Grant Johnson and Hunter Holiday — were selected. Salters. Johnson and Holiday will cheer at basketball gam es, while Chuber will join returnees Julien, Ed Malclk, Dally Texan Ann Wickham (r) watches her daughter perform during tryouts. Lanham, F errell and Webb on the football sidelines. Gretchen Alston, an alternate last year, Cindy Runte and Shawnna ( ochran will lead football cheers with returning women cheerleaders Shenikwa Nowlin and Iris Hudson. Sue Fumic, Michelle Boniol and Alyson Lacey are the basketball cheerleaders. Brian Jones won the job of mike (microphone) man. The announcement brought smiles, hugs and handshakes to * those who were selected for the first time, as well as t$ repeaters. Alston said she was particularly gratified becausq| although she served as an alternate last year, a knee injury prevented her from cheering. She wore a heavy knee brac£ throughout Saturday’s tryout. “ I’m really excited because I'm only a freshm an,” said Chuber, when asked how he felt about being selec ted cheerleader. “ I ’m really happy to be one.” China expected to increase American grain, cotton imports PEKING - China (UPI) will be a heavy buyer of American grains and cotton during the 1980-81 crop year starting next sum m er, Peking diplomatic sources predicted Sunday. E c o n o m i c d i p l o m a t s s p e c i a l i z i n g in C h i n e s e agriculture said the Chinese wheat crop to be harvested in June and July probably will be sm aller than last year. The swelling output of the Chinese textile industry also seems likely to keep demand for cotton high, even if China i m p r o v e s i t s own cot t on harvest, they added. C h i n a ’s p u r c h a s e of a g r i c u l t u r a l A m e r i c a n p ro d u cts cur r ent l y tim ated at $1 billion a year. is e s ­ T h e U. S. A g r i c u l t u r e D epartm ent in W ashington reported March 21 that China so far has contracted for 2.5 tons of Ame r i c a n mi llion wheat, 1.37 million tons of cor- n. 614,400 tons of soybeans, and 38.800 tons of soybean oil for the 1979-80 crop year. from America in the months ahead may come in im ports of seeds for ma n u f a c t u r e of cooking oil. Diplomats in Peking said the only declines in purchases University receives energy conservation grant The Departm ent of Energy last week awarded the University a $178,500 grant to im plement energy conservation m easures in three campus buildings. The funding will be used for modification of air- conditioning control system s the Art and Education Buildings and in Sid Richardson Hall, Bill Worsham of the University physical plant staff said Sunday. in The grant will specifically fund either technical identify and analyze the effec­ assistance to tiveness and payback periods of m easures to reduce energy consumption or installation of energy conservation m easures. Work on the project should begin before the sum m er session, Worsham said. The University and four other institutions in the UT System are among 119 institutions in Texas to be awarded $5,389,000 in grant money from DOE’s grant program for schools, hospitals and buildings owned by units of local governments and public care institutions. Under the program, authorized by the National Energy Conservation Policy Act of 1978, the energy departm ent has made a grant of $92,500 to the UT System Cancer Center in Houston, one of $38,000 the UT Health Science Center at Houston, a $29,500 grant to UT Dallas and a $70,000 grant to the UT Health Science Center at San An­ tonio. to The DOE grant provides 50 percent of the total project cost while the University provides the rem ainder of the funds. Tradition. than the crop harvested in the sum m er of 1979. The current crop, planted in late 1979, suffered from cold damage, although late winter the th re a t of snows eased drought. The area planted this y e a r to have de c l i n e d 2 or 3 p e r c e n t in the provinces of Sichuan, Shandong, Anhui and Hunan in China’s wheat belt. is believed China co n tracted to buy 2.231 million running bales of American cotton in the 1979-80 m arketing year ending next July 31. Diplomats in Peking said the Chinese already have plac­ ed orders for another 587,200 running bales for delivery i$ the 1980-81 m arketing year starting Aug. 1. Declines in cotton purchasei might come if the world tex* tiles m arket, vulnerable tcj recession, starts to slump* diplomats said. So far this hai not occurred T ex tiles a r t China's leading export. I China last year grew 2.2| million m etric tons of cotton* and a drive to step up produc* tion is under way. Diplomats believe that a h a rv e st ol between 2.3 million and 2A million m etric tons is likelj this year, which is not enougi to m eet the textile industry’^ needs. China’s harvest of rapeseed this year is expected to reach about 2.55 million m etric tons, up around 10 percent from 1979 Peking observers said the area planted for rapeseed has increased between 7 and 9 per­ cent, and that larger amounts of chem ical fe rtilize r a re available from new factories. They also estim ated that China’s winter wheat crop, to be harvested soon, probably will be about 57.5 million tons, about three million tons less ISRAEL AWARENESS WEEK REVEREND JOHN GRAUEL Crew member of the ship, i(The Exodus” "A CHRISTIAN S COMMITMENT TO ISRAEL" M onday, April 21st — 1 2 :3 0 p.m . Patio, Texas Union REV. GRAUEL, April 2 1 *t AC AUDITO RIUM 3 :0 0 p.m D anskin. Freestyle Summer Prints Ju s t arrived, available in Blue, S, M, Lg. *2 0 °° Lots to choose from our su m m e r collection of T erry s and F re e sty le s Check our large group of Danskins at 25% off PREGNANCY ^TERMINATION^ • Free Pregnancy Testing • Confidential Counseling (21 4) 3 6 9 -5 2 1 0 North Central W om en's Center 1141 l - R N . C en tra l E xp w y. D allas, Texas 7 5 2 4 3 lo ok in g good fee lin g good 478-6754 2408 Son Gabriel A A N N O U N C E M E N T Thom as L. Kolker, fo r m e r ly of the Student Attorney's O ffice is in association with M a l c o l m G r e e n s t e in fo r the p ra ctice of C I V I L A N D C R I M I N A L LAW including felonies and m isdem eanors 472-6270 1402 E 1st C all fo r ap p o in tm en t Rates a v a ila b le upon request Doctors Commencement is May 17th Now is the time order y o u r cap, gown and hood. De livery takes 4 to 6 weeks. Y our c h o i c e of 6 materials: 1. 5 0 % c o tto n , 50% polyester 2. 100% acetate 3. 100% ac eta te, lig h tw e ig h t 4. 6 5 % d a c ro n , 3 5 % c o tto n 5. 5 0 % aeed ate, 5 0 ( < ra yo n 6. 1 0 0 % dacron p o lye ste r ORDER TODAY. For m ore infor ma ti on call: te M eschke, 176-7211, ex. 2 4 . Choose the 1981 Cactus. I t ’s about tim e, it's about tradition, it's about UT, i t ’s about you. The Cactus yearbook is the oldest publication on cam p u s and re m a in s the m ost inform ative, com plete historical account of the ex citem en t th at is the U niversity experience. Mark your optional fee card and re se rv e your tradition a t p rere g istratio n this week. The cost is only $13.65 (tax included), payable later with your other fees. LIKE IT? LAY IT AWAY IN Arv\\ppainel Slnop street level vrsA’ Free 1 hr. parking w/$3.00 purchase When you preregister this week for fall 1980, choose The CACTUS on your optional fee card. vrsA' free 1 hr. parking w, $3.00 purchase Page 6 □ TH E DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, April 21, 1980 GRADUATE STUDENTS • • • pursuing a Master's degree in: Government Economics Management Public A ffairs (LBJ School); considering a career in the public sector? interested in a specialization to make you more employable in a grow ­ ing public policy area? The HUMAN RESOURCES PROFESSIONALS PROGRAM at UT offers: co-ordination of course options within your existing degree requirements, designed to enrich your master's program ; concentration in human resources development as well as generic management skills; workshops and seminars with faculty, researchers and professionals in the field; internship experience in public sector program ad­ m inistration; job placem ent assistance. For further information, contact: Human Resources Professionals Program Center for the Study of Human Resources 107 W. 27th St. (on cam pus) Austin, Texas 78712 (512) 471-7891 To find out how this program can work for you, contact us prior to fall preregistration Earth Day kicks off weeklong ecology fest WASHINGTON (UPI) — The first sliver of sunlight to touch Maine's Cadillac Mountain this Tuesday signals the start of Earth Day. just as it did when the movement was bom one chill spring dawn 10 years ago But the group that scales the mountain this year will be the vanguard of a vast pageant that has grown far beyond the expec­ tations of 1970s environmental crusaders This year, Earth Day is the centerpiece of a weeklong rite of spring — a festival embracing more than 1.000 communities and such unlikely “ ecology freaks as businessmen and government officials. “ T H E R E ’S A T REM EN D O U S number of labor, senior citizens and consumer groups participating," said Mike McCabe, executive director of Earth Day ’80 “ We stopped keeping count about mid-February because so many groups were becoming involved." Deputy Energy Secretary John Sawhill will lead an Earth Day bicycle brigade through the streets of the nation’s capital Other officials are participating in a “ jog-in.” The Energy Department is spending at least $76,000, and probably more, on Earth Day exhibits on Washington's grassy mall and at 10 regional headquarters around the country. At least $40,000 of the money is earmarked for local groups in­ terested in conservation, solar energy and fossil fuels TH E S IE R R A C LUB and other organizations planned a Mon­ day news conference to ask Americans to refrain from driving cars to work on Earth Day or to complain to their congressmen if they have no other transportation. New Yorkers will rope off 10 blocks of Sixth Avenue for a gala street fair. San Francisco plans an environmental neighborhood self-help exposition, and Los Angeles residents will plant smog-resistant trees to combat floods and erosion. Colorado mountain climbers will place ecology banners atop Rocky Mountain peaks, and energy companies will smoke a peace pipe with environmentalists in Denver. “ THIS IS T H E F IR ST time Earth Day has been organized on a nationwide basis," said McCabe. “ I think many of the people that were part of the movement in 1970 have grown and matured and recognized how it fits into the rest of society," he added. “ It ’s to be expected that it’s a much more mainstream event " While this year's Earth Day is focusing on accomplishments of the past decade, kepone pollution, PBB contamination and the Love Canal disaster of the 1970s may be dwarfed by the problems that lie ahead, McCabe suggested. “ I think it’s going to be a tougher decade, more challenging and the issues more complex,” he said. “ Environmental respon­ sibility costs money, requires a level of concern and evaluation not part of the normal way we do business.” But he warned the price paid by future generations will be enormous if Americans don’t take the meaning of Earth Day to heart. Howard Castleberry, Dally Texan Staff Strained muscles Tug-of-war participants ‘hang on’ at the College of Communication’s Olympicomm. The event, held Sunday, raised money for a scholarship. Picketers protest sterilization remark By TOM BAKER Daily Texan Staff Thesis, Dissertations A Professional Reports I n n y CO PY IN G SERVICE J f 44 D o b ie M all 476-9171 Controversy has flared again over a remark state Board of Human Resources chairman Hilmar Moore made in February about sterilizing able-bodied welfare recipients who refuse to work Approximately 50 women, men and children crashed the board's Friday morning meeting seeking Moore’s resignation. The picketers carried signs and banners stating: “ Hilm ar s Racism is Exposed — He’s Naked as a Forced Sterilization Equals Genocide" and "Women of Texas Demand — No Moore. The group chanted, “ No more, Hilmar Moore — throw the racist out the door.” Jayb ird ." After the board's February meeting, Moore had said off-handedlv a person should lose the right to have children if he or she can't support them. Saying his position had been distorted, Moore vowed Friday to serve out his term which runs un­ til May 1981 when "m y successor has been ap­ pointed and confirmed by the Senate and not until then.” Some of the demonstrators promised to con­ front Moore again when the board meets next month in Beaumont. Attending the Summer Session? W hy not try the Best! Accepting Contracts for Summer I* y.# St. Edward's University MADISON HOUSE n » —J i * i I ? 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Housing Office 739 W. 22nd 478-9891 478-8914 i « K M e r e d it h Wilson's MUSIC M AN ' " j O ne W eek O nly April 2 2 -2 7 Call 4 4 4 -8 3 9 8 A n exclusive design for Eileen a n d Tom Smith by s'— The jeweler s art at its finest Charles Leutwyler Jewelers * m s i n o n s m . r 4Vtn l\ 4 M CfPTH) MEMBER A M ER IC A S GEM SOCIETY 2510 G uadalupe • 4’’6-6552 Custom er parking at the back door, off San A n to n io Street Redefining National Security — U.S. and Soviet M ilita ry Strength — First Strike Nuclear W eapons — Reversing the Arms Race — Backward Budget Priorities A talk by Randy Forsberg ... RANDALL FORSBERG is the Director of the Institute for Defense and Disarmament Studies is co-author of The Price of (Boston). She Defense: A N e w Strategy for M ilitary Spending and was form erly a research fellow at the Stock h olm In te rn a tio n a l P e a c e R e s e a rc h Institute. Monday, April 21 8 p.m. Catholic Center 21st and University Ave. ( across from Littlefield Fountain) Sponsored by University Mobilization F C a n o n m a c r o Demonstration Workshop L earn the Art of Close-Up P hotography Wednesday, April 23, at 2 and 4 p.m. Co-Op Conference Room Ask for directions in Co-Op Camera. FREE, but space limited a Canon specialist will demonstrate and answer your questions about the full line of Canon close-up equipment. The complete Canon system of fine SLRs, lenses and accessories. The system designed for professionals5 SEE THE C O M PLETE LIN E of C an o n Products, e v e ry d a y in — VISA' kf> \*» s , second level free 1 hr. p a rk in g w / $ 3 00 purchase Bryant reveals reform plan Texas House speaker-hopeful John Bryant of D allas has laid out plans for the office, w ith a c o n ­ re fo rm in g stitutional am endm ent the speaker to two te rm s a t the top of his list. lim iting B ryant, who announced his candidacy for the office in F ebruary, called it th e speaker over the affairs of s ta te be given som e reasonable boundaries ” the pow er of e sse n tia l th a t In a pointed reference to Speaker Bil­ is seeking an un­ ly Clayton, who precedented fourth term. Bryant noted in the last 144 years “only six out of 78 (Texas) speakers have been elected to more than one consecutive term and only one has ever sought more than two Avoids subpoena consecutive term s” — the one being Clayton. Rep. Gib Lewis, D-Fort Worth, and Rep. Bill Caraway, D-Houston, two other speaker candidates, have said they would lim it them selves to two terms as speaker but added they would not push for a constitutional limit on the office. In the 1972 “ reform ” Legislature after the Sharpstow n sto c k s and s e c u r it ie s frau d s c a n d a l, H ou se Speaker Price Daniel attempted to set a statutory one-term lim it on the office, a move then-Attorney General John Hill held unconstitutional. B ryant a lso proposed am ending House rules “ to require the speaker’s office to live within a budget” and give serious consideration to “ diminishing the too-great authority of the speaker.” The House A dm inistration Com­ m ittee should have its business “ reduc­ ed to writing and distributed to all m em bers” and be forced to operate within tighter guidelines than previous­ ly, Bryant said. Bryant also suggested eliminating overlapping com m ittee jurisdictions, h a v in g r e q u e s ts for c o m m itt e e assignments openly made when based on s e n io r ity and a b o lis h in g the speaker’s power to remove em ployees from a m em ber’s staff. Commissioner still at large By ROBBIE SABO Dally Texan Staff “ K iller roach” C om m issioner David Sam uelson has successfully avoided a subpoena and arrest warrant, thereby temporarily foiling the other com m issioners’ plans to purchase the Stokes Building. Samuelson was dubbed a “ killer roach” by the other com ­ missioners when he did not show up at Thursday’s m eeting to approve bonds to purchase the Stokes Building. Five minutes before Thursday’s m eeting, Samuelson sent the com m issioners a m essage saying he would not appear until four positions in the criminal justice system were funded. Samuelson, who began sending m essages through his ad­ ministrative aide Joan Bartz when he disappeared, has not lost his sense of humor. Upon hearing his new nickname, he told Bartz Friday he was “deep sea fishing and using roaches for bait.” Other com m issioners also do not know where Samuelson is “ All we have heard is that he is at the coast,” Gary Spoots, ad­ m inistrative aide to County Judge Mike Renfro, said Friday. A sign stating “ Day Two” was posted in front of Spoots' office, but Spoots said he did not know where the sign cam e from. On Sunday, Bartz said she could not locate Samuelson. “I just wait for him to call m e,” she said, adding that others had said Samuelson was in Louisiana. “ I was slightly surprised to hear he was in Louisiana. He did not tell m e he was going,” Bartz said. Samuelson’s absence upset the other comm issioners because the law states that all five m em bers of Commissioners Court must be present to levy a tax, which is the next step after bonds are sold, Russell Bailey, assistant county attorney, said. Despite Samuelson’s absence, the com m issioners awarded the bonds to First National Bank of Dallas. It was the low bidder, with a 6.51 percent interest rate. The law also states that a tax must be levied during a regular session, which can only occur the second week of the month. “The tax must be levied within the weekend. Monday is too late,” Bailey said. In efforts to reach Samuelson, a subpoena was issued Friday to bring him im m ediately into the court. An arrest warrant was attached in case he refused to come, John Milloy, Precinct 5 constable, said. The officials who issued the subpoena waited at both his house and precinct office, but Samuelson never showed up to receive the subpoena. Bartz said. The com m issioners, who have been working on the purchase of the Stokes Building for two and a half years, were angered by Samuelson’s refusal to com e to the court’s session. “ He ought to be here. We could do it next month, but we would rather do it this month,” Commissioner Richard Moya said. The com m issioners have until June 3 to buy the Stokes Building. If they want to extend their option to purchase the building, they will have to negotiate a new contract. Marchers help charity NEW YORK (UPI) — As far a s t h e e y e c o u l d s e e , thousands of people marched down Lexington Avenue Sun­ day to raise money for the March of D im e s’ crusade against birth defects. An estim ated 25,000 people registered to take part in the 18.6-kilometer walk, billed as Superwalk 80. It was clear that a large percentage of them took part in the walk f r o m t he C e n t r a l P a r k bandshell to the Battery and back again. Many carried radios and sang to take their minds off few cheated, their riding b icycles and roller skating. feet. A The walkers enlisted spon­ sors to pledge contributions for each kilometer they walk­ ed. The event raised $650,000 last year, a March of Dim es s p o k e s w o m a n s a i d . The money is used for research, education and medical ser­ vices to prevent birth defects. Monday, April 21, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 DR. DOOMS YARDBIRDS' 4 OTHER F R IE D THINGS (Fried C hicken, Fried V egiee A O ther Good Stuff) 24th at Rio Grande^ | < i W g e r s W f STILL DELIVER 3303 N. lo m a r 4 5 2 -2 3 1 7 Shoe Shop Ryfl* W« m ake and repair boots shoos bolts loathor goods SHEEPSKIN COW & CALF ★ SADDLES * ENGLISH WESTERN Capitol Saddlery w s r 1614 Lavaca_______ Austin, Toxas 478-9309 Get Your Locks Off! KickHAlUSTYUNG 2414 G uadalupe noet doer to faring » 476-6960 O pon M-J 9-4 2 1 k DOMINO’S PIZZA I ROOM "s e r v ic e SPECIAL HAPPY HOUR 4 :3 0 • 9 :0 0 M onday th ru T h u rs d a y Relax! Call Dom ino's Pizza and have a hot, delicious, New York style pizza delivered th irty m inutes or less. in It’s just like Room Service. Free Delivery W e a c c e p t c h e c k s to r P i t t a p u rc h a s e w *th a v»imJ ~ T e *a s O fív e r s L ic e n s e W e re s e rv e th e n g W to h rm t o u r de«-v#ry * r « a JslsN BEAUTY IS YOURS with individualized skin care by Erno Laszlo. I ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ $1 °°O FF Q ¿ F R E E k ‘ VCOKES w i t h a n y 3 o r m o r o I t o m 1 6 i n . p i z z a Order Free Coke with Pizza. ONE COUPON PER PIZZA Name____________________ A d d r e s s _____________________ Phone ___________________ To v a lid a te coupon, please fill out Expira*: 4-28-80 DT-5 O C a m p u s « 7 6 7 1 8 1 O Entiakl 474-7676 O «i»ar»ida 44 7 6681 O Hyde Part 458 8101 1 ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ PROBLEM PREGNANCY? A re you considering Abortion? Confidential Free P regnancy T estin g & Referr als F or in f o r m a tio n call PROBLEM PREGNANCY of AUSTIN (512) 4 7 4 -9 9 3 0 600 W. 28th, No. 101 Austin, Texas 78705 J L O V t TPhat is Love? FOR GOD SO L O V E D T H E W O R L D ( Y O U ) T H A T HE G A V E HIS O N L Y B E G O T T E N SON JESUS CHRIST T H A T IF YOU S HOU LD B E L I E V E ON H I M , YOU SHOULD NOT PE RI S H , B U T H A V E E V E R L A S T I N G L I F E , -im it Believe on the Lord Jesus C h ris t a n d thou shalt be saved. Acts 10 31 HE IS NOT H E R E , HE IS RISEN. L u k e 24:6 JESUS S AID : I am the W A Y , the T R U T H and the L I F E : no man comet unto the Fat he r but by me. jn u :6_____ JESUS SAID : He that cometh to me I w i l l in no wise cast out. jn6 37 H ow to be saved, born a g a in , and stay th a t w a y : (1 ) P r a y and ask JE S U S to com e in to you r h e a rt and life, re c e iv in g H im as i.o rd , S a vio r, and e te rn a l K in g . Ask h im to fo rg iv e you yo u r sins and g iv e you e te rn a l life. John I 12; 3:16; 3:36 (2 ) Be b ap tized in w a te r (fu ll e m e rs io n ) in th e n am e of the F a th e r, Son, & H o ly G host Acts 22 16, M a tt 28 18 20, M a r k 16:16 (3 ) R e p en t of you r old, sinful w a y of life, and a im at liv in g a good C h ris ­ tia n life . A cts 3:19; L k 3:13. (4 ) P r a y d a ily . P h il 4:6-7; 1 Thes 5:17. ,5 ) R ead you r B ib le d a ily . John 8 31-32 (6 ) A tten d ch u rc h w h e re the B ib le is p re a c h e d and Jesus is p raised. H eb 10:25 ( 7 ) Ask G od to b ap tize you in the H o ly S p ir it. L K 11:13, E p h 5:18 FOR MORE INFORM ATION WRITE OR CALL RHEMA P.O. Box 17997 Austin, Texas 78760 Or come by our meeting» every M onday night at 7:00 p.m . in the Education Hldg. Rm. 104. w vtf w w w ire w ire it ti ire ire ire i No. 5 Jefferson Square Call 4 5 2 -8 8 4 6 PREREGISTRATION FOR FALL 1980 April 21-25 (1) Buy a course schedule. (2) Obtain materials in your major department and get your (3) Complete mark-sense cards (read the specific instructions (4) Turn in all materials at the Academic Center BEFORE 5 adviser's approval. on each card.) P.M., Friday, April 25. Fee bills w ill be mailed to your permanent a d ­ dress after July 23. Payment deadline is August 13. Failure to pay w ill result in the cancellation of your Preregistration course requests. QUESTIONS? Consult the Course Schedule AND your adviser. Office o f the Registrar FreeFree Hamburger Y o u r c h o ic e o f a n y h a m b u rg e r — 1 0 0 % all m e a t, c h a r-b ro ile d to y o u r ta s te , w h e n y o u p u rch ase a ny re g u la r p ric e d h a m b u rg e r, o r o n e o f e q u a l p ric e . Oftar good April 23 April 28. 1S80 2 Romant:, MotDouyll ( r,, ,t>> No Polovetsun Dances— A Sight On Bald M aintain Russian Fluster & Pr.nIgor Overture Mozart Fine kleini Saihtmusik K 12 5—Dtt.’tmcnt K 'nl CONORASHIN/RCA V IC T O R SYM PH Tchaikovsky; Caprucio Itaken, Rtmyky-Konakoff; Caprucso Fspagnnle ,1 KHARDT/GAM1 FY/NA I T P H II H O R C H IR12 Overture—Ru nun Sailors Dan, < Pobictsun Dan, . Mepbistu Wait. f,* RHARD T/G A M l.FY/N A P I . P H II H ORC H. Sm etana: The Moidam— Bart, red Bride Dan., Dvorak 1 Slat na Dan,, N A I L P H II H. ORCH MA I Al IC/PHU H ORC H Pomp & ( ircumstance—II Spe, la, uLir if j,. la ■■ B O U I I/LONDON P H II H O RCH . Colonel Bogey— la Gnat Military Marches SI! \ FSTRl/G A M I KY/GF-RFIARDT/FISTOL'LARI/NKU MANN/ROBIN SON/1 F IB O W ir Z Sabre Dance—10 Specltt, ular Dan, , t .11 \ F S I R I V I I NNA P H II H. ORCH A R R A l OA1 1 IF R A/PHIL H A R M O N IA A K R A U 'C .A i I IFRA/PHI1 H A R M O N IA A R R A U 'G A l I IFR A /PH II H A R M O N IA !R A U / G A L L IE R A / P H IL H A R M O N IA Roumanian Rhapsody—-Rhap„>Jie FspagnoU Game Love I ’ Thre* Orang, - Suite Complete Beethoven Concertos, VoL I —FXin,, Concerto I Coro,Ian Dtcrtur, Complete Beethoven Concertos, I ol. II—Plan,. Concerto Xu Icn n Overture \ i Complete Beethoven Concertos, Vol. HI—FSan,. C un,, r1o \ I Tcmont Ocrtur, Complete Beethoven Concertos, I ol. 11 —Pur, , ( -overt, • X i Pr ,m. tv, Durian A K R A l C .A I I IF K A / P H II FI A R M O N IA Complete Beethoven Concertos, V ol. \ ~-Piun t ,,n,ctio S’, S. I mp, ' S / I K Y N G S< H M ID I IS M R S I I D ! / I O N IX ) N S ) M F H O N Y ORC H I S t R A Complete Beethoi, n Concertos, Vol. \'l— I V / » I „ * n m D If » S I K P A N F N K A , C H U t U R O M A S l ’R /l H F ( ZFC H P H II H A R M O N IC Complete Bcetboten Concertos. Vol. VII—"Triple rio in C AC JOC H I M B A V A R 1 A N R A D IO SY M P H O N Y ORC H I S I R A Beetboivn: Symphony So. 5—FsJ.hu Ourtun M O R A S FC/V I ACH/C Z.FCH P H IL H A K V IO N IC M mart: Psano Concerto So. 2 5. K AOl—Fantaoa In < Mm or A , ' JC X f f l M /BI R U N P H II H A R M O N IC A M I I INC. I F O N H A R D I Bach—Selecto ns From It., Anna Ma,.ia¡, na X itcbo ,t S / F R Y N G K Y B A R / l O I I F G H JM M U S IC U M , W IN I I R I'H l'K Baih: V utlin Concertos I & 2 — D 1 be ( mcerti C O I I I G i l M A l RF I'M Handel— W/, D m The Wat, i Mas SC H R O D I R'C ONC I R I O A M S T E R D A M I if aid i: I he Four Srtuom C O I I F G IC M A l R F U M C O L ! P G i l M A C R F I'M Dance Music Of The Renaissance M A I AC 1C /C ZFC H P H II H A R M O N IC Beethoven: Symphony So. I— ‘I roua S V F I I A \ Q \ I S S R S Y M P H . ORC H Tchaikovsky S ymphony .Vo. 2— "I.tilli Ihissiar S V F I I A N O V/l S S R S Y M P H O N Y O R C H Tchaikovsky: Symphony S‘o. I—"Winter Dream, K I M PI /HI R l IN P H II H A RM O N IC Brahms Symphony So 2—Schumann Mun/r, d (h, rtnr. K l M P F / B F R l IN P H II H A RM O N IC Brahms Symphony So, I— ’ Tragic Overrun FISC HI K-D IFSK A l C/H 11 P H II H A R M O N IC Brahms Symphony Vo. t s / F R Y NC, D O R M i l O N IX )N S Y M P H O N Y O R C H F .S I R A Brahms: \'u>hn Con,erto In U W II I). I A R I W II 1). I A R I H t!d About I azt, Vol. I W tld About ! at, Vol. II S I K \NC I R l C / I I H P H II H S H M O N K A M F I INC, 1)1 MUS/DI I N / I R Sc hubertsade Beethoven: Symphony Vo. 2—Rr. n Ol Ath,n Creatures Ot Pi nn them Otertmr, • J O C H I M / B A V A R IA N R A D IO S Y M P H O N Y S I O K O W S K 1 / S Y M P H O N Y O F I H I A IK Beethomm Symphony V,, ' m A, Dp 92 S C K I K K ) Schubert Pian, /> S turn. S i K / A M F R I ( ZFC H P H II H A R M O N IC Diorak I uihn ( one erto In A Minor. Dp 5 T—Ri ! S M P A I K C X 'S S F I A M IQ U A M l S IC A Quantz'Haste'GrammiFrederu k I he Great— Flute ( vrii art SC H R O D I K CONC F R I O A M S I F R D A M Paendel Telemann Haydn — Vt I I VVI N I H A I U A N N O N MF I R O P O I 11 AN S Y M P H O N Y G e r % h u m — £ " * c . i t In F R ls ip , ' t In B in « CM I F O IL M A l 'R I l M Handel Royal Fireworks Suite Mi ndcIssohn * I u,hn < one erto in F Minor— Bu,, i- I 1 n..'t ’ (, Mr Schubert: Symphony So 9 in ( — "The Gnat P A M N K A S K A M P A N O V A K /PO S T A / K O H O U T Schubert Qum tet m A Major— ‘ Tin I > M \ I AC IOC /FC H P H II H A R M O N IC Tchaikovsky Symphony So. b— " P a t h S I K FISt H I K D ll S K M C /FC H P H II H A R M O N IC BerlsoHarold In Italy S C H M ID I- IS S F JIS T K D T / L S O Mozart Symphony V,,. 19, K O ( — S impi n¡ N » ?!», * ! MARKSMANSHIP ORIENTEERING ALSO MOUNTAINEERING CONFLICT SIMULATION THESE ARE SUBJECTS TAUGHT TO FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES BY ARMY ROTC. FREE BOOKS ELIGIBILITY FOR FULL SCHOLARSHIPS NO HAIRCUT REQUIREMENTS NO MILITARY OBLIGATION FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL OR STOP BY 471-5919 or 5910 RUSSELL A. STEINDAM HALL RM. 110 Houston drops 4-2 decision Red Sox rally in eleventh to defeat Rangers By United Prees International LO S A N G E L E S - L e ft fielder Jo se Cruz dropped a fly ball in the eighth inning Sun­ day. paving the way for a two- run uprising that enabled the Los Angeles Dodgers to defeat the Houston Astros 4-2. R eu ss, 2-0, reach ed firs t b a s e s a f e l y w h en C ru z dropped his routine fly ball, was sacrificed to second by Davey Lopes and scored the tie-breaking run on a single by Rudy Law. Law stole second, and a fter Dusty B aker was walked intentionally, the two worked a double steal which set up a sacrifice fly by Ron Cey. The Dodgers scored in the first inning on Law 's sac rific e fly and in the third on a wild pitch by loser Jo e Niekro, 1-1. Houston scored two runs in the seventh on J e f f Leonard’s R B I single and a sa crifice fly by Jo e Morgan. ★ ★ ★ - B O S T O N C a r l Y astrzem ski stroked a run- scoring single with one out in the 11th inning Sunday, lifting the Boston Red Sox to a 6-5 triu m p h o v e r th e T e x a s Rangers. R ick Burleson drew a one- out walk off losing reliever Jim Kern, 1-1, and moved to third when Fred Lynn singled off the left field wall. Jim R ice was walked intentionally and Y astrzem ski singled to right to settle m atters and m a k e a w in n e r o f T o m Burgm eier, 1-0, who pitched two-hit relief over the final 5 2/3 innings. Boston tied the score 5-5 in th e six th on c o n s e c u tiv e singles by Carlton Fisk, Ja c k B roham er and Dwight Evans. The R angers had taken a 5-4 lead in the top of the inning on back-to-back doubles by A1 Oliver and Buddy Bell and a run-scoring single by Rusty Staub. The Red Sox jumped to a 4-0 lead in the second on a two-run double by Broham er, an R B I double by Evans and Je rry R em y ’s run-scoring single. Texas countered with a pair of runs in the third, highlighted by Mickey R iv ers’ first homer after a walk to Jim Sundberg. Texas closed to within 4-3 on R ichie Zisk’s R B I single. Reds 5, Braves 3 ATLANTA — George Foster smacked a two-run homer in the eighth inning Sunday, powering the Cincinnati Reds to a 5-3 victory over the Atlan­ ta Braves. With the gam e tied 3-3 and two out in the eighth, Dave Concepcion reached base on an error by shortstop Chico Ruiz F o ster then ripped his third homer into the left-field seats off loser Larry Brad ­ ford, 0-1 and helped Cincinnati re liev er D ave Tom lin, 2-0, earn the victory. The B raves tied the score 3- 3 in the sixth off Reds' starter Tom Seaver. Larvell Blanks reached on an error by third baseman R ick Auerbach, and after Brian Asselstine bounc­ ed force out, Chris Chambliss reached base on ca tch e r’s interference. Dale Murphy then followed with an R B I single. into a Yankees 9, Brew ers 5 - R e g g ie N EW Y O R K two-run Jackson cracked a homer to cap a four-run eighth inning Sunday, enabling the New York Yankees to snap a three-gam e losing streak with th e a 9 -5 v i c t o r y o v e r Milwaukee Brew ers. With the score tied 5-5 in the eighth, W illie Randolph singl­ ed and Ruppert Jon es was hit by a pitch by reliever and loser Je rry Augustine, 0-1. Bill Castro replaced Augustine and promptly made a throwing e r r o r on B o b W a t s o n ’ s sa crifice bunt attem pt, allow­ ing Randolph and Jones to score. Jackson followed with his second homer of the year to give reliever Ron Davis, 1- 1, the victory. The Brew ers took a 5-4 lead in the sixth on Paul M olitor’s sacrifice fly off Davis but the Yankees tied it in the seventh on Rick Cerone s sacrifice fly. Expos 7, Phillies 6 M O N T R E A L - G a r y C arter’s sacrifice fly in the ninth inning Sunday scored Andre Dawson and lifted the Montreal Expos to a come- from-behind 7-6 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies. Dawson led off the ninth with a walk, and after E llis Valentine struck out, moved to third when Larry P arrish singled to center and G arry M addox bobbled th e b a ll. C arter then followed with his sacrifice fly. E lias Sosa won his second game of the year without a loss, while Tug McGraw, 0-1, was tagged with the loss. The Expos tied the score 6-6 the eighth when Warren in Crom artie led off with his third single of the game, took second on C h ris S p e ie r ’s sacrifice and scored on Ron L e F lo re ’s single. White Sox 9, Orioles 6 B A L T I M O R E - M a rv F o le y ’s n in th -in n in g R B I single scored Harold Baines from second base writh the tie- breaking run and triggered a three-run uprising Sunday which gqve the Chicago White Sox a 9-6 victory over the B altim ore Orioles in a game m arred by a benches-clearing brawl in the sixth inning. Baines stroked his third dou­ ble and fourth hit of the gam e — off reliever and loser Sam ­ my Stew art, 0-2 — and scored on F o le y ’s seco n d g am e- winning hit in as many days to give Rich Wortham, 2-0, the victory in relief. Mike Squires singled home another run and a third scored on an error by center fielder A1 Bumbry. The White Sox. who had 19 hits, grabbed a 3-0 lead in the first inning off starter Dennis M artinez on Chet L em o n ’s two-out. two-run double and Jim M orrison’s R B I single. Baltim ore made it 3 1 in the third on Kiko G a rcia 's R B I single. P irates 6, Cardinals 3 P IT T S B U R G H - D a v e P arker smashed a three-run h o m er and K ent T e k u lv e p itc h e d 1 2 /3 in n in g s of scoreless relief to pick up his second save Sunday, leading the Pittsburgh P irates to a 6-3 victory over the St. Louis C ar­ dinals. P a rk e r’s blast to right field off starter P ete Vuckovich, 2- 1, capped a four-hit, five-run second inning. Phil Garner and Tim F o li also singled home runs in the inning. John M iln e r ’s R B I g ro u n d o u t scored Foli in the fifth. Jim Lentine singled home Bobby Bonds, who had tripled in the fifth, and Keith Her­ nandez doubled home Tony Scott and G arry Templeton in the eighth for the Cardinals’ final two runs. in T e k u lv e re lie v e d the eighth inning a fter the C ar­ dinals had scored tw ice and had two runners on base and retired two batters in a row to retire the side. Blue Ja y s 5, Indians 3 CLEV ELA N D - Otto Velez belted a three-run homer to highlight a four-run first in­ ning Sunday that paced the Toronto Blue Ja y s to a 5-3 vic­ tory over the Cleveland In­ dians. Alfredo G riffin opened the game with a single against starter and loser John Denny, 0-2, and R ick Bosetti beat out an infield hit. Denny struck out John M ayberry and Roy Howell but Velez hit a 3-2 pitch into the left field stands for his second homer of the season. Barry Bonnell followed with the first of his three doubles and scored on Damaso G ar­ left. G arcia to c ia ’s single added a sa c rific e fly in the ninth. Cubs 6, M e t* 3 CHICAGO - Ivan D eJesu s’ run-scoring sing le keyed a three-run seventh inning Sun­ day which paced the Chicago Cubs to a 6-3 victory over the New Y ork M ets and co m ­ pleted a sweep of their three- gam e series. led o ff M ike T yson the seventh by reaching on an error by third basem an E llio tt Maddox and went to second on M ick K e lle h e r ’s s a c r if ic e bunt D eJesus then singled off reliever Kevin Kobel, 0-1, who had replaced started Craig Swan. A M E R IC A N L E A G U E By United Praaa International Night Qama not inctudod Eaat W 5 5 4 4 4 2 2 W a d W Pet. .556 500 500 500 400 250 200 L 4 5 4 4 6 6 8 Boston Baltimore M /.a.ikee Toronto New York Cleveland Detroit Texas Oakland . . . C h icago Seattle California K an sas City Minnesota N A T IO N A L L E A G U E By United Praaa International Eaat . Pittsburgh C h icago ... Philadelphia Montreal St Louis New York . . Cincinnati ... Houston ...... S a n D iego .. L os Angeles Sa n Francisco Atlanta ........ W 6 5 4 4 4 3 Waal W 10 7 6 4 4 t Pet. 700 .700 700 583 444 500 417 Pet. .667 625 .500 500 400 3 3 3 Pet. 909 700 545 364 364 .100 OB V* 1* Vi 11* 21* 31* OB 1 21* 2 3 QB 1* 11* 11* 21* 3 OB 21* 4 6 6 81* E = NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING SALES in a d v e r t i s i n g s a l e s to sell S t u d e n t e x p e r i e n c e d s p a c e in T h e D a i l y T e x a n on c o m m i s s i o n . P r e f e r a d v e r t i s i n g m a j o r , but all q u a l i fi e d a p p l i c a n t s will be c on s i der ed . P l e a s e g i v e full d e t a i l s in a letter, or s en d y o u r r e s u m e . A p p o i n t m e n t s wi ll be a r r a n g e d wi t h a p p l i c a n t s w h o qu a l i f y . WRITE TO: ADVERTISING DIRECTOR P.O. Box D; Austin, TX 78712 i f i i i i i i i i i i i i i i t i i i i i i i i i i i t i i i i i i i i i n u n i m i i i t i i i i i m i t i i i i i i i i i i i it k i i i i i i f m i m i l i t t l i m i t m i i i i u Call 471-5244 to place a Classified Ad in The Daily Texan = = Benefit Concert for the Capital Area Rehabilitation Center featuring THE D ESIRES INTRODUCING THE ALL-EUROPEAN LIMITED EDITION tfUTRO-MinilR from SPECIAL PURCHASE YOU = A u s tin ’s most en te rta in in g R ock & Roll d a n ce band, | p la y in g y o u r favorites from the ’50s th ro u g h the ’80s. 5 Í 1 M O N D A Y , APRIL 21st 8-11 p.m. 1 I SILV E R DO LLA R NORTH j ^ i i i i i i i t i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i l i i i c j i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i t i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i t i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i t i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i n t i R Brunos (SANDWICH CQ ) ^ SALADS- SOFT DR1NKS&.ETC F re s h Wholewheat & White B rea d B ak ed Daily. 615 W est 29th 476-4738 next to D y er E lectronics for those who are going places Peregrinus. A complete chro­ nology of the academ ic year for the University School of Law. The excerpted doings of the “ law persons” who comprise the students, faculty and staff of the scholastic jurisdiction of jurisprudence. Peregrinus — the that m akes your travels through The Law com­ plete. tome When you p rereg is te r this w eek fo r Fall 1980, choose Peregrinus on the optional fee ca rd . Peregrinus — one who travels from place to place PEREGRINUS YEARBOOK — SCHOOL OF LAW /W JTRO -M inLCR fl-DJ Suggested Retail * 2 7 9 " n o w ’ 1 5 9 00 WHILE THEY LAST ! Other 10 speeds priced from only$l 19 00 ASK ABOUT OUR TIME PAYMENT PLANS UNlY*RS,T2i°-0p COME BY SOON FOR BEST SELECTION 476-7211 505 W. 23rd Str— i At last!' •. A shoe for walking women. ' Step into the new Vasque Walking Shoe a n d feel the fit Snug, so the heel won f slip But wide where your foes like to spread A cushiony leather insole breathes comfort While on fop. rich full-grain leather repels water And the sole -like our vasque hikd, h w a s h e r, a c c e s s ib le s h u ttle , p a r t ia l leases a v a ila b le 454 3414 4 4 7 - 6 6 9 6 M -F 9 -6 SAT. 1 0 -4 S U N . 1-5 Preleasing S u m m e r/F a ll S u m m e r e ff. — 2 / 2 $ 1 9 0 to $ 2 4 5 Fall eff. — 2 / 2 $ 2 1 0 to $ 3 2 0 unfurnished plus t * Sum m er Special * 2 /1 Furn. $ 2 3 5 & I . 2 / 2 Furn. $ 2 4 5 A E. fu rn h h m d b y G ra n Tree 2 0 0 5 W illo w C reek E N G L IS H A IR E APARTMENTS EFFICIENCY 8: 1 BEDROOM Starting at *185. Some Utilities Paid On shuttle route FREE Racquetball & Tennis Courts Free Cable TV See one of Austin's FINEST APARTMENT COMMUNITIES 1919 Burton Dr. English A ire 444-1846 9 6 Mon -Sat. 12-6 Sunday I I I I ■ I Tanglew ood Westside A p artm en ts I S l i m m e r Special Run, don't w a lk — tom orrow w ill be I too late for these choice residences. 1 1 Bedroom FurnishedM 5 0 -*1 9 0 I 2 Bedroom Furnis hed$2 4 0 - $2 6 0 Gas & w a te r is p a id by ow ner. T V. C a b le , Too! Shuttle buses a t your front door Signing tall leases n o w I 1403 Norwalk Ln. 472-9614 DON'T WAIT A few choice a p a r t m e n t locations are s till a v a il a b le — but they a re going fast. Aspenwood Apts. 4 5 3 9 G u a d a lu p e 4 5 2 -4 4 4 7 Sum m er Rates 1 Bedroom Furnished * 195 2 Bedroom Furnished *2 4 0 Shuttle Bus a t front door! Also signing fa ll /eases n o w In t r a m u r a l Fields across street O L D M A I N A p a rtm e n ts . 1BR and e f ­ fic ie n c ie s a v a ila b le now F o u r blocks U T , sh u ttle . 474-2958 U N I V E RSTt Y N E IG H B O R H O O D 1 BR a p a rtm e n t Shag c a rp e t, off stre e t p a r k ­ ing C a b le , w a ’ er. and gas p aid . 1010 W 23rd No pets. * 2 4 0 /m onth plus E . No p re le a s ln o fo r fa ll 472-2273 f a ll, N O W P R E L E A S IN G spring 1-1's n e a r U T , also on w est s h u t­ tle R ates fro m *159 L e a s e now, av o id sho rtag e 476-0953, 700 H e a r n S u m m e r , to c a m p u s E F F I C I E N C Y C L O S E C a r p e te d , d r a p e s , a p p lia n c e s . C a ll Chris, 478-5489, 2302 Leon LA PAZ APTS. Sum m er Specials • 1 BR Furn. $ 1 8 5 • 2 BR Furn. $ 2 2 0 • Shuttle 1 block • Nice Pool, Patio • Fall Leasing, Too 4 5 1 -4 2 5 5 401 W . 3 9 MARK XX - Sum m er Special - • 1 BR Furn. $ 1 9 5 • 2 BR Furn. $ 2 3 0 • Shuttle 2 Blks. • Nice Pool - Patio • Fall Leasing Too 3 8 1 5 G u a d a lu p e 4 5 1 -2 6 2 1 H1IME LOC ATIO NS — FA NTA STIC RATES JERRICK APARTMENTS N O W LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL WALK TO U T 1 F u rn is h e d , s m a ll one lu x u r ie s . b e d ro o m s w ith a ll D uplexes, too. th e * 1 7 5 * 1 9 5 & E 104 E 3 2 n d block Ecul S p x o d w a y ) M g r N o 103 4 7 6 -5 9 4 0 fu rn is h e d lu x u ry HYDE PARK! S m a ll ones T rees , sh u ttle , g ro c e ry , post office, etc. * 1 7 9 & E 4 1 0 3 -5 S p e e d w a y M g r N o . 2 0 3 4 5 9 -4 8 1 1 VILLA NORTH Sum m er Special Eff. Fum. $165 1 BR Furn. $185-$195 2 BR Furn. $210-$230 Fall Leasing, Too! 4 5 2 0 Duval 4 5 1 -5 6 4 1 Su Roca Apts. Summer Special 1 BR Fum. $ 1 9 5 W a lk to Cam pus Nice Pool - Lawn Fall Leasing, Also 2 4 0 0 Longview 4 7 7 -3 0 6 6 CHEZ JACQUES — Sum m er Rate — • 1 BR Furn. $ 1 9 5 • W a lk to Cam pus • Nice Pool - Patio 1302 W. 24 474-0163 2207 Leon Apts. — Summer Specials — • 1 BR Furn. $190 • 2 BR Furn. $290 • Walk to Campus • Nice Pool & Patio • Fall Leasing, Too 2207 Leon 472-5974 PRELEASING EFF. THR O U G H 4 BRMS. SUMMER AND FALL SUMMER RATES! SHUTTLE BUS MODERN, SPACIOUS FURNISHED, UNFURNISHED POINT SOUTH 2200 WILLOWCREEK (Riverside A r e a ) 4 44 -7 5 36 • 2 pools & clubhouse • room mates welcom e 1221 Algarita 444-4485 BARRY G IU J N G W A TER M G T . CO. Preleasing for fall SUMMER RATES ¡ . e a s i n g fo r S p r i n g • s e cu rity service • 2 lig h te d tennis courts • shuttle bus stops • exercise rooms saunas • free cable TV 2101 Burton Dr. . ro o m m a te s e le c tio n service • p u ttin g greens • three pools • fu m is h o d /u n firn is h o d • arcad e room 447-4130 —I. I—... -- 1.4 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS ROOMMATES SERVICES TYPING TUTORING Monday, April 21, 1980 □ T H E D A I L Y T E X A N □ Page 15 Diplom at Apts. — Summer Rate — • 1 BR Furn. $185 • Water, Ga*, TV Cable Paid • Walk to Campus 1911 San Gabriel 472-5974 VILLA S O L A N O APTS. - Sum m er Special > 1 BR Furn. $195 2 BR Furn. $240 1 Shuttle Comer Intramural Fields Across Street 51st & Guadalupe 454-3270 M o v in g to H o u sto n ? T ell us you r n eeds — w e ’ll fin d you r a p a rtm en t free. For information call: Steve Snyder 346-1103 or Houston (713) 871-0602 R a e P f f e f f f e r Apartment Locators P R E L E A S I N G F O R F A L L A N D S U M M E R M A U N A K A I 405 E. 31ST 2 B R , 2 B A efficiency, sin g le efficiency I B R W a lk to cam p u s, shuttle and city bus. 472-2147. E F F I C I E N C Y L a rg e lu x u rio u s efficiency apartm ent. C lose to U T. On shuttle and city bus routes A v a ila b le im m ed iately. C all 459- 1538 or 258-9902 H A N C O C K I I I 4100 A V E N U E A A C T V I I 4303 D U V A L U nexpected v a c a n c y for M a y 1st at su m m e r rate O ne bedroom fu rnishe d n ear U T, sh o p p in g and shuffle. A lso su m m e r le a sin g available. 453-0298 or 345-8550 W A R W I C K A P T S . Close to campus, beautiful landscape, pool with waterfall - Now leasing for su m m e r at lower rates. Call 477-1630 4-9 p.m. 3 B L K S . TO L A W S C H O O L 2900 C O L E s m a ll 24 apt com plex 40' pool 2 B R $240 plus E. L A C A S I T A A P T S . 472-3318 472-8915 G O IN G B A N A N A S ? W e r e n t a p a r t m e n t s , d u p l e x e s , h o u s e s a ll o v e r A u s t in . F R E E Real World Properties 443-2212 South 458-6111 N orth 345-6350 N orthw est P re le a sin g for S u m m e r and F a ll B R O W N L E E D O R M - $150 A B P F A L L R E N T $165 2 Blocks to Campus 2502 Nueces 477-0883 C O U P O N F O R S U M M E R G O O D T I L L A P R I L 21 ST E n jo y A u stin ta tio u s su m m e r and school, Le M a r q u e e A p ts (302 W. 38th) Special low s u m m e r p re le asing p rices if you sign up before A p ril 21st: 1 B R $169, 2 B R $239, eff. $149 D o n 't delay, sa ve m oney! _____________ 453-4002 S185-S210 S U M M E R R A T E S L a r g e 1 B R f u lly c a rp e te d , w a lk -in closet, d isp osa l, C ab le TV, water, and g a s fu rn ish e d N ice pool and patio W a lk ­ ing d ista n ce to U T N o pets, no children. Fountain Terrace Apts. 610 W. 30th M a n a g e r apt. no. 134 477-8858 3 2 N D A T IH35 A V A L O N A P T S . E ffic ie n cy - S165 plus E , 1 B R $195 plus E and G , 2B R , 2 B A *280 and up plus E and G W alk to cam p us. 472-7604 S U M M E R L E A S E S G E T Y O U R C H O I C E NO W 1 and 2 bedroom s. O n shuttle, reserved parking, pool, lau n d ro m ats Soft water. A B P except E „ $190 and up C all T om or L a r r y now T H E S P A N I S H T R A I L 4520 B e n n e tt 451-3470 A B P E F F ., I B R s From S 160 L e a sin g for su m m e r 5 blo cks to c a m ­ pus, shuttle, pool. C H A P A R R A L A P T S . 2408 Leon 476-3467 N E A R S H U T T L E , efficien cy in sm all c o m p le x ia u n d r y C a rp e t, C A / C H , facilities Call m anager, 453-0876 after 5 p.m., or 451-8178, E llio tt System . M A U N A K A I now leasing for su m m e r and fall. Reduced rates for sum m e r. W alk to cam pus, shuttle and city bus. 472-2147 F A N T A S T I C L O C A T IO N one block law school, shuttles L a rg e 2-2, sundeck, pool, laundry, cable Sm all, quiet c o m ­ plex $360 d I u s E (Ju ne 1st). G re at Oak, 2900 Sw isher, 477 3388 *140 P L U S E su m m e r rate. W e are look­ ing for quiet, co nscien tious students in ­ terested la rg e e ffic ie n cy . T w o locations near shuttle. C A /C H , laundry, deadbolt, d isposal 476-2812. in a F U R N I S H E D I F F I C I É N C Y great w in - dows, pool, close to shuttle, three blocks to ca m p u s C all 476-7934 or co m e by 709 W 26th, The R o c kc re st A p a rtm e n ts W A L K T O U T T T S I 69 No children, pets. 304 E 33rd 476-0953 W A L K L A W school, L B J L ib ra ry , shu t­ tle. I B R s - su m m e r *165 plus E ; fall *220 plus E O ne block east of Red R iv e r on 26th T ow e rvie w A p artm en ts, 478-5105. C E Ñ T R A L F U R N I S H E D efficien cy with g a s heating and co okin g paid. L a u n ­ d ry and pool. C onvenient to U T shuttle and city bus *189 plus E 451-4584 or 476- 2633. B a r r y G illln gw a te r M a n a g e m e n t Co H Y D E P A R K - unexpected vacan cy. S m a l l , 4 1 0 5 Speedw ay, m a n a g e r no. 203 459-4811. l u x u r y 1 b e d r o o m P R E L E A S I N G S U M M E R / f a l l. L a rg e IB R *185 and up plus E N ear U T shuttle. P o o l , S h a d o w O a k s A p a rtm e n ts, 2404 Longview , 472-2068. l a u n d r y . O R A N G E T R E E c o n d o m i n i u m av a ila b le for sum m e r. R oo m for 3 or S535/month 471-2603 S U M M E R A N D fall le asing A ttractiv e m odern com plex n ear cam p us, n ice ly furnished lau n d ry I B R s P a tio s and facilities. Su m m e r rates S200 plu s E Lease and deposit. C all C h a rle s R eagan, 476-7261, or W E A ssociates, 478-9521 S U M M E R L E A S E only. H and ie st lo ca­ tion y o u 'll find, block cam p us, quiet, cool, A B P No pets. E ffic ie n c y *180, room s $150. 205 W 20th. 453-4082 for a p ­ pointment. T E N M I N U T E w alk U T. 104 E 32nd A p artm en t a v a ila b le M a y 1st, su m m e r rates 476-4257 A T UT. H U G E old apartm ent. Tw o quiet p e r s o n s w ill a p p r e c ia t e *420. 1902 N ueces 2 B R , 1400 square feet S alad o - 28th. AC, *250. pool, cab le V e r y re a so n a b le . S u m m e r only. 474-5796 2 B R , 2 B A condo. C A / C H , fire p lace . O ra n g e Tree. Rent M a y throu gh A u g u st Call 478-0606 S M A L L U N I Q U E co m p lex now le asing for su m m e r and fall. I B R *230 plus E, ef­ f ic ie n c y S 173 p lu s E C a ll 451 8059 between 12-5 for inform ation. U N I V E R S I T Y A R E A IB R , all b ills pal'd A d u lts only, no pets. *260. 3011 W hltis. 477-1734 2 B R F U R N I S H E D apartm ent. A B P , on shuttle route. No pets. *240 two persons, $220 one person $ 100 deposit. 909 W. 22nd St. 255-6972 after 6 p.m. L A R G E I B R four b locks west U T on shuttle A v a ila b le M a y 1. *185/month. Robert, 474-2434, 476-6051 ext. 35 B E A U T I F U L , S E C U R E O r a nge Tree condo. IB R , enclosed p arkin g, w alk to cam p us. S u m m e r only. 713-444-6620. S U M M E R R O O M M A T E , 2 B R d uplex n ear c a m p u s *142.50, Vi bills. C A /C H , m a n y windows, large back yard. D ave, 451-3426 around 6:00. S U M M E R S U B L E T S h a re 2 B R a p a rt­ ment, *115 N ear L B J and shuttle. Pool. 474-5492 S H A R E L A R G E house close to shuttle Quiet grad uate student preferred. No sm oking/pets. 451-4343 S U M M E R S U B L E A S E . 1-1 w a lk to U T , C A / C H , c a b le 31 st/ Sp eed w ay, *175 plus E 458-8511, 474-6202 I M M E D I A T E L Y A V A I L A B L E L a rg e fu rnishe d IB R , IF shuttle, *215, E N ice pool. W e e k n ig h ts after 9 p.m . and weekends: 451-6956 Rent now avoid fall in crease R I V E R O A K S A p a rtm e n ts 2 B R A B P law school, spacious. A v a ila b le near now, *325. 472-3914 A L L B I L L S paid *175 efficiency. V e ry chic fu rn ish in g s. A v a ila b le now. 458 3485 Q U IE T S U B L E T W alk to cam pus, park, ten nis C h e a p I B R w ith ev e ryth in g P a rk in g . 478-1220, e v e n in gs F u rn is h e d 2B R , 2 B A sublet sum m e r. 2 blo cks c a m ­ pus F u rn ish e d *365 m onth C all today, 474-8280 I P A I D *220 M a y rent but m ust move. Sublease M a y for only *125 R eq u ired 3 low s u m m e r rates. m on th B e a u tifu l fu rn ish e d a p a rtm e n t n e a r cam pus. Shuttle at front door. 451-2826 evenings. le ase at Q U I E T L O C A T IO N , 400 W 35th, 2B R " 2BA, *240 plus E., Ju n e -A u gu st sub lease Call 477-5734, 478-8276 S U M M E R L E A S I N G 2 B R , 2 B A f u r ­ nished, C A / C H , close c a m p u s, d is ­ hw asher. C all 478-9630 S U B L E A S E A P A R T M E N T for su m m e r. 2 B R , 2B A , five m inute w alk to cam p us. Call 472-8715 UNFURNISHED HOUSES 3 B R , C A / C H , f e n c e d b a c k y a r d , w ash e r/ d rye r connections. Pets okay. Call 445-2982 to see. C O U N T R Y L I V I N G - la rge 3-Í. Fou rte en m iles east on 969. C on scien tiou s couple L ease *300 _478-5739 472-2097 V E R Y N IC E large 3-1, close law school N o p e ts $300 M a r k G o od rich between 10 a m.-noon 474 6898 R e f e r e n c e s N E A R Z I L K E R 3 B r 71 B a 7 fenced yard, appliances, carpet, quiet neighborhood *450 per m onth 453-8356 C U T E , C L E A N 2 1, w ashe r, d ry e r, refrigerator, stove included Pets okay. 3319 C h e rryw ood S300/month 443-8566 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I im wM Vi OFF FIRST M O N T H 'S R IN T 6-12 month loaso 1 BR-1 BATH $230 por month limited to 10 apartment* WITH COUPON E x pires A p ril 30 1601 Ro^al^rest ^ j —^ — — 444-7797 Circle V illa Apts. Unfurnished Sum m er Special • 1 BR $170 & E • 2 BR $200 & E • Shuttle Bus • Fall Leasing, Too 2323 Town Lake Circle 444-5003 A S S O R T M E N T A ll ap artm en ts are close, west of c a m ­ pus Style is either a large house con­ verted or sm a ll older com plex (none lu x­ ury). R e q u i r e m a t u r e s t u d e n t s w i t h references and no pets. D ep osits *100 per person. Lease, som e su m m e r only, m ost for su m m e r plus full sem ester • Efficiency, A B P • Share 4 B R (wom an, nice $160 hom e fu rnishe d ) s i 50 $225 • 2 B R (su m m e r) • I B R $150 In fo rm ation I 30 to 3:30 only, Ja c k Je n ­ nings, 474-6898 Consolidated Realty. T R A V I S H O U S E A P T S . O ne and two b ed room s F ir st shuttle stop, large pool, free cable 1600 Royal Crest 442-9720 A C O M M U N I T Y of friends. C lo th ing op­ tional A p artm en t livin g that Is! W e 're not the sam e S180-S215 all b ills except electric H B O / c ab le free, huge pool, 24- hour security, three blo cks from shuttle, l a u n d r o m a t , p l a y g r o u n d , b o o k s t o r e / h e a d s h o p . N e w M a n o r A partm ents, 2401 M a n o r Road, 474-4319 or 477-3125 $240 P L U S E L a r g e 2 B R , 2 B A near N o rth cro ss M a ll. W e are looking for quiet, conscientious students or faculty. Pool, patio, C A /C H , laundry, deadbolt, d ishw asher, disposal. 476-2812. T H E L O F T - fireplace, bonus room s, and in b e a u t i f u l l o f t s a v a i l a b l e I B R a p a rtm e n ts In a tree co vered , Set landscaped co m m u n ity We n atu rally have a stylized sw im m in g pool and c o m ­ plete lau n d ry facilities. O n ly 5 m inutes from dow ntown Starting at *195/month. 444-7688 or 476-2633 B a r r y G illln gw a te r M a n a g e m e n t Co. W E S T - O N E a n d tw o b e d r o o m ap artm en ts with paid ga s heating and cooking. Convenient to U T c a m p u s and dow ntown Starting at S225/month 477- 7794 or 476-2633 B a r r y G illln gw a te r M a n a g e m e n t Co. S O U T H - E F F I C I E N C Y and I B R a p a rt ­ ment. On Tow n L a k e Pool, W / D room , convenient to downtown and city bus. S tartin g at *210/month A B P 444-3337 or 476-2633. B a r r y G illin gw a te r M a n a g e ­ m ent Co. I B R Q U IE T , trees, convenient N ear M o P a c - N o r t h l a n d C A / C -H , p o o l, *250/month. 459-9047 before 10 a m , after 7 p.m. M O V I N G ? W A N T E D : n oncom p lex 1-1 startin g 6-1-80 close to cam p us. U n fu r ­ nished, appliances. 471-5288, keep trying. ROOM AND BOARD “PLAZA 25” i : 2505 Longview : COED Dorm O pening This Fall! • I ► Competitive rates • * 2 blocks from shuttle ■ 2 blocks Pease Park I 1 2 blocks Caswell Tennis • ; 1 Pool & Courtyards : ] « • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a Call 472-0100 or 476-2633 S .O .T .A .? S O L A R ? O lder than a v e r a g e ? L ik e to live in a soiar cooled co o p e ra tiv e ? 21st Street C ollege H ouse has a few vacan cie s now and will h ave m ore for su m m e r and fall. P riv a te or shared room for w om en and men, 19 m eals a week, all conveniences. In ou r a c a d e m ic a lly oriented, self- g o ve rn in g cooperative, you can c o m ­ plete your education with freedom and a strong sense of com m u nity. Y o u can also swim , shoot pool, socialize, cook, g a r ­ den. A p p ly now by co m in g by 707 W 21st Street or call 476-5678 W O M E N - W O M E N W e need you. The A r k has v a ca n cie s for the su m m e r for w om en (and m en). O ur co-ed coop erative w o rk s better w hen the gro u p by the pool is eve nly m ixed. Y o u 'll l i k e o u r m e a l s , o u r s o c i a l a n d e d u c a t io n a l e n v ir o n m e n t , a n d the freedom to be your ow n person *574 will get you a p rivate room and 19 m e a ls a week for the whole su m m e r A nd you are in c o n t r o l; a ll o u r d e c is io n s a r e dem ocratic. A p p ly by co m in g to 2000 P e a rl or call 476-5678 M A L E A N D fe m a le v a c a n c ie s . T w o blocks from cam p us. L a u re l H o u se C o­ op, 478-0470 D E U T S C H E S H A U S : co op e rative livin g S e v e r a l g r a d u a t e clo se to c a m p u s s t u d e n t s a n d n a t i v e s p e a k e r s . Im m e d ia t e o p e n in g m a le d o u b le S u m m e r a ls o G e r m a n or S p a n is h speakers, students only. 477-8865 F E M A L E A N D m ale v a ca n cie s now and su m m e r O u r life style is different N ew G u ild Co-op, 472-0352 P E A C E F U L . N O N S M O K I N G~, ve ge ta rian hom e - looking for m ature, easy go ing ad ults for single room vacan cies for sum m e r, fall and sp rin g C all P r a n a H ouse Co-op, 476-7905 UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES U N I Q U E L u x u r y duplex unit on hill ove rlo o k in g ZH ker P a rk. Wooded, private, quiet 2 B R , tile, and carp et Deck. M in u te s from c a m p u s *415. R e q u ire m atu re r e s i­ dent with references and no pets. Jac k Jennings. 474-6898, 1:30 to 3 30 p.m. C on ­ solidated R ealty A T T IC A P A R T M E N T 1 2 bedroom s, *210 plus E Spacious, appliances, on shuttle 3400B Sp eed w ay L o u is H in e s P ro p e rty M an age m e n t, 458-6757 R I V E R S I D E A R E A 3 B R 2 B A s u m m e r lease N e a r R C / S R *325/month. 441- 5042 J U N E 1ST, huge 2 1 fourplex in T r a v is H e igh ts *350 447 5843 H O U S E M A T E OR S U B L E A S E Q U IE T . R E S P O N S I B L E H O U S E M A T E share sm a ll id yllic cab in on Barton Creek G rad u ate student or prof 25-40 ye a rs p referred S u m m e r possibly fail 15 m inutes to town *175 plus '"1 bills Or sublet entire house for su m m e r *350 A v a ila b le M a y 7 442-7191 A U D I O P H I L E L O O K IN G for fun loving, conservative, n o n sm o k in g m ale to share ap artm en t or duplex nex» fall 473-6977 L e a v e m e ssa ge L A R G E . D U V A L . T w o story. Lib eral. $150 plus 1 4 b ills C all 12 a m -10 p m 476 1137 m a l e R O O M M A T E sh a re 2 B R house *150 a b p N ^ a 1- i f pichare! before 4 p.m. 451-0796 ___ rent own room, F E M A L E W A N T E D v e r y n i c e h o u s e n e a r c a m p u s . S u m m e r-ta ll. S180 month. A B P 472- 5119.___ H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D : nonsm oker, $145/m onth plus 1 6 b ills Call 474-8439 from 5 to 8 R E S P O N S I B L E F E M A L E share 2 B R apartm ent. W a lk in g d istan ce U T shut- tle. *100, Vi electricity 477 2383 H O U S E M A T E T O sh are nice 3-2 duplex. South Austin, near S R shuttle. 441-8677, keep tryin g N O N S M O K I N G F E M A L E 'sh a re Tu xu’ry co nd o m in iu m one m ile C R Pool, tennis, W /D, nicely furnished. *175, 1 3 bills. 459- 1731. F E M A L E G R A D student share 3 B R house, C A / C H , *136, 1 3 bills. B egin n in g M a y 19 E a stw o o d P a r k area 474 4587, 5- 7 p.m. S U M M E R R O O M M A T E blocks fro m c a m p u s *120 plus tric ify_ A fter 5-J^80 M ike, 472 5686 - 2 B R three 2 elec­ M A L E R O O M M A T E , I B R a pa r t m en t Split *190 p lu s b ills for sum m e r. On IF 454-1697_____________ ; I N E X P E N S I V E place for N E E D A N s u m m e r? 2-1 duplex, s 125, ' 2 bills. Mt. Bonnell area D avid, 451-8010, 11 p.m .-11 a.m. T W O N O N S M O K IN G fe m ales d esirin g to live in the O ra n g e Tree co nd o m in iu m s su m m e r and/or fall. 477-4684 after 7 In T ra v is F E M A L E T O sh are house H eights N e a r S tacy P a r k and U.T. shu t­ tle E v e n in g s , *137 50, weekends, 443-5937. ' 2 u t ilit ie s L I B E R A L M A L E ~ - T o sh "are 2 B R / 2 B A , n e a r s h u t t le a n d d o w n t o w n , g r e a t v ie w , A B ^ *230, d e p o s it 478-2133, 476-8362 S H A R E L A R G E house close to shuttle Quiet g rad u ate student preferred. No s m o kin g pets 451-4343. F E M A L E W A N T E D sh are 3 B R south, shuttle, W / D V e ry nice, $150 Need A S A P E x c e p tio n a l C all 443-4926 H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D to share "nice 3 B R Pets, off C R shuttle, *150, 1 1 bills. 452-6217 F E M A L E G R A D n o n sm o k in g sh are 2/1 on R C with sam e. AC, pool, carpet, etc. Needed M a y 1st $127 50, ' 2 bills Libby. 441-1810 S H A R E B E A U T I F U L 2 B R apartm ent" F u lly furnished, phone, pools, jacuzzl, no deposit. N e a r IH35 and 183 $150 836 4443 O N E O R T W O h ou se m ates to share room A B P , w asher, d ryer, freezer, C R shuttle, $125 454-9380 L I B E R A L S T U D IO U S fe m ale to share sp acio us su n n y duplex near cam pus. *165, >/j b ills. 478-9239 F E M A L E T O share 2 B R townhouse Pool, tennis, SI40. 2 bills N onsm oker, no pets. 837-3350 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D for su m m e r S92.50, ’/j b ills A p p ro x im a te ly one m ile frorrvcam pu s. Kenny, 452-7352 F E M A L E G R A D sh are 2-2 apartm ent; su m m e r *120, ' 2 electricity E R shuttle. Leigh, 478-4806. W A N T E D F E M A L E to sh a re h ou se close to cam p us, s u m m e r Claire, 471- 1080. Keep trying. FURNISHED HOUSES S T U D Y , S H A R E B E A U T I F U L 3 B R , 2 B A H O U S E O N C R S H U T T L E . A I R C O N D IT IO N ­ E D , G A R D E N , W A S H E R / D R Y E R , O T H E R G O O D IE S . D I R E C T S H U T T L E T O L A W S C H O O L L A W / G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S P R E F E R R E D S U M M E R A N D F A L L O P E N I N G E R IC , 452-4442, E V E N I N G S *165 F O R F A L L R E N T M I D - M A Y to m id -A ugust. F u r ­ nished townhouse. 2 B R , I'/j B A , W B F P Burnet/49th area. *390 plus bills. 453- 3388 N I C E L Y F U R N I S H E D 2 8 R house, Sw ede Hill, for su m m e r L a rg e yards, g a r a g e W a lk to U .T , d o w n to w n . * 300/month 1407 W aller, 477-4904. F U R N I S H E D 3B R , 2 B A house with CA, near pool and tennis courts, 15 m inutes fro m U n iv e rs ity A v a ila b le M a y 15 to A u g u st 20 *325 m on th ly plus utilities. 458-9553 B E A U T I F U L H O U S E su m m e r sublet, 8 m inute w alk to cam p us. Ideal for couple, f a m ily 4 B R . 3 B A , a ll a p p lia n c e s, C A C H . L o v e ly shaded fenced yard. Rent, period of stay negotiable. F a cu lty only. Call 478-3099 W O M E N F A L L F iv e beautiful room s in co-ed room in g h ou se . S e m i- p r iv a t e bath, k itc h e n privileges, near cam p us, A C CH, *145- *156 A B P In su m m e r for both m en and w om en 477- 1205 between 12 00-3:30 p.m. 2411 R io G ra n d e S om e ro o m s a v a ila b le N O W L E A S I N G fo r su m m e r. Co-ed d orm next to ca m p u s Rem odeled, new fu rnishing s, recreation area, sundeck, wide screen T V, refrigerato rs, no m eals, 24 hour se cu rity Taos, 2612 Guadalupe, 474-6905. N IC E R O O M , C A CH, w a lk in g distance U J J H 5 and up Call 477-9388 A T U T C O R N E R room in ca rria g e house Quiet person will appreciate, p rivate entry 1 185 A B P 1902 N ueces N O R T H E A S T S H U T T L E, s u m m e r room s, C R , 3-2, study, AC, fenced yard, S100-S135 C all John. 452-2071. S I M P L E R O O M , hotplate, refrigerator, sem i-p rivate bath, *150 A B P , w alk U T 477-0883, keep trying. MISCELLANEOUS E L P A S O J C C 1980 s u m m e r softball b e g in s June 1st (m en), June 8th (w om en). Contact R o c k E l lis for all inform ation and sch ed ules J C C of E l P a s o / 405 M a r - di G r a s / 79912 MUSICAL INSTRUCTION P IA N O L E S S O N S A ll levels E x p e rie n c ­ ed qualified teacher. F o r inform ation, phone 451-3549 P R I V A T E IN S T R U C T IO N T n T h e perfor m a n e e of v o ic e , p ia n o , a n d m u s ic th e o ry; c la s s ic a l or p o p u la r m u sic, m u sic d ra m a ; studio recordlnq. 327 6471 TRAVEL IN M E X I C O ! E x ­ L E A R N S P A N I S H cellent school, expe rien ce d teachers L iv e with M e x ic a n fa m ilie s Contact Brother Ja m e s Weston, P O Box 548, Sain t E d w a r d s U n ive rsity , Austin, T e x ­ as 78704 444-2621 ext 44 i ROOMS T ROOM S T a o s mu* tin, tasas zazos 4 74-4*04/4 7 S- 4 74 7 N O W LEASING FOR SU M M ER & FALL Co-ed d o rm a c ro ss the street fro m c a m p u s at 27th St Recently renovated facility with tasteful, efficient fu rn ish in g s Recreation area, sundeck, w ide screen TV, re frig e ra to rs in e v e ry room, 24 hour security, in e xp e n sive p a rk in g a v a ila b le PHOTOS for PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 m i n u t e s e r v i c e M O N - S A T 10-6 4 7 7 -5 5 5 5 THE THIRD EYE 2 5 3 0 G U A D A L U P E P an M r t i l» A m let— ca ft y o u 'ro a n tlo u t d * p r * t t * d ot c a n 't Umrnp. ihm f a b t * C lin k ot A u ttin m a y b * o b i* to hmlp Trmatmmnf it b m * lot th a t* w h o m oot t i m p h ontry trltotia btn o d tofo- ty on m o d k o l o v a lu o tio m T h k o p p o rtu n i­ ty it o v a ila b l* d o * to totting p ro c o d o r ** roq oirod b y th * f * d * r a l L a w r o g a td in g i h * fot d * v * lo p m o n l o f n * w m o d k a t io n t co m p lo t* inform ation a n d to find out if yo u q ua lify call ________ « T 7 - 1 W 7 . ________ F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T S C o u n se lin g on all p re g n a n c y a lt e r ­ n a tiv e s, b irth co n tro l m e th o d s and w o m e n 's health co ncerns W alk-in basis, M o n -Fri. 9-5. W o m e n 's R e fe rra l Center, 1800B Lavaca. 476-6878 All referrals made locally. P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y C O U N S E L IN G , R E F E R R A L S & F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T I N G T e x a s P ro b le m P re gn an c y, 600 W 28th, Suite 101. M -F , 7 30-5:30. 474-9930 A R T 'S M O V I N G and H au lin g any area 24 hours, 7 d a ys 447-9384, 477-3249 C O N SC ¡E N T IO U S IN D IV I D U A L will do y o ur p ro ofre ad ing for you 836-6517. L O A N S O N an yth in g of value. Used m e rch an d ise - buy, sell, trade. 5134 Burn et R d 454-0459 G R E C L A S S E S for June exam - c o m ­ plete m a t h / v e r b a l r e v ie w H ig h ly qualified instructor - reason ab le rates 443-9354 G E T S N A P P E D ! P erson alize d p ortraits at location of your choice R eason ab le rates. Call M s. S m a rt at 472-2866 G O M E Z A N D Son P ain t and B o d y Shop. Com plete paint |ob, $150. Spot rep air specialty. 443-1221 305 E. Sain t E lm o Road. O S C A R 'S T R U C K I N G . M o v e r with large pick-up. slO/hour Fast, efficient. Short notice ok. 452-8374 M U S I C Í A N S R E F E R R A L service. Call 443 5398 WANTED TOP C A S H ★ ★ fbr Gold & silver coins, Noticeably marked sterling * silver flatware, Gold Jewelry! W e beat any advertised price. We pay CASH! 10:00-5:00 daily 458-2186 Austin Gold & Silver Exchange 314 H ighland M a ll Blvd. Suite 212 Com m unity Bank Building C L A S S R IN G S , gold jewelry, old pocket w atches, c u rre n c y , s ta m p s w anted H igh prices paid. P ioneer Coin C o m ­ pany, 5555 N orth L a m a r, B ld g C-113 ir. C o m m e rc e P ark, 451-3607. B U Y I N G W O R L D gold, gold jewelry, scra p gold, old coins antiques, pocket w atch e s P a y in g fa ir m a rk e t p rice Capitol Coin Co., 3004 G uad alupe, 472- 1676 P h ilip Nohra, owner. F R O N T M O N E Y , m o n e y fo r y o u r plants! C all 441-0732 LOST & FOUND $100 R E W A R D T a n / w h i t e S h e l t i e m i x , female, missing left front leg. Lost in Oak Hill area. 288-1490, 452-0730, 477-3666. PUBLIC NOTICES N O T IC E O F I N T E N T I O N TO I N C O R P O R A T E N otice is h ereb y g iv e n that W A D E T R U C K IN G , whose p rincip al b usin ess office is at 12403A W est V illa g e D r , Houston, H a rr is County, T exas, intends, on or before M a y 1, 1980, to becom e in­ corporated without a ch an ge of firm name. Dated: M a r c h 28, 1980 W ade E lso n A lm on ey, O w ner TYPING H O L L E Y 'S 1505 Lavaca 478-9484 P rofe ssio nal typing, copying, binding. Color Xerox T Y P IN G P R IN T IN G B I N D I N G The Complete Professional FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 472-3210 472-7677 2707 HEMPHILL PK. Plenty of Parking Rental Í, Supplies NORTH Mon.-Thurs. 8:30 - 8:00 econotype : econocopy : • Typing Copying, e Binding, Printing IBM Correcting Selectric * J J • • J « 453-5452 * J J » • £ • SOUTH Mon.-Thurs. 8:30 - 8:00 E. Riverside & Lakeshore 443-4498 Fri. 8:30 - 5:30 Sot. 9:00 - 5:00 Sun. 1:00 - 5:00 Fri. 8:30 - 5:00 Sat. 9:00 - 1:00 37th & Guadolupe ; « 6 G R A H A M 'S C ENTRAL 5 5 5 5 N. Lajntvi, L - l l I W O O D S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E When you want it done right 472-6302 2200 Guadalupe, side entrance T Y P IN G . T H E S E S , dissertations, term papers, reports, etc. Exp e rien ced , IB M Selectric N e a r N o rth c ro ss M a ll. 458- 6465 C A L L D e A n n e at 474-1563 8-5 M - F or 345- 1244. 453-0234 w eekends and e v e n in g s N o rm a lly 1-day service. P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I S T on ca m p u s T h e se s, d isse rta tio n s, te rm p ap e rs, resum es, themes. I B M C o rre ctin g Selec­ tric II 445-0052 P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P IS T , econ om ical - experienced. A ll types of w o rk accepted 251-4454 after 6 p.m. F A S T , F A S T p r o f e s s io n a l a n d e x ­ perienced IB M Selectric. Sl.QD a page Call Bonnie, 441-6657. T I R E D O F halt-fast t y p in g ? I h ave a B A in E n g lis h , 12 y e a rs s e c r e ta r ia l e x ­ perience and a C orre ctin g Selectric. C all A n n at 447-5069 RESUMES with or without pictures 2 Day Service 2707 Hemphill Park Just North of 27th at G u ad alu p e 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 P R O F E S S I O N A L Q U A L I T Y C a m p u s p ick -u p an d d e liv e ry . C o rre ctin g Selectric II. Helen, 836-3562 typ in g . I B M E X P E R T T Y P IN G . Theses, reports, fast, accurate U T delivery. I B M Se le c­ tric, carb on ribbon 458-2649 after 5 p.m. T Y P I N G A N D proofing. 80*/page. O v e r ­ night service a v a ila b le 7 a m -7 p.m. Elizabeth, 472-2865, leave m e ssa g e Q U A L I T Y T Y P IN G , proofing Theses, dissertations, reports, papers Selectric, ove rn igh t service, on shuttle. P at M ills, 475-4593 472-3450 after 5, weekends. P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P IS T with legal e x ­ perience. D issertatio ns, term papers, re p o r t s, etc I B M S e lf C o r r e c t in g typew riter. C all Dottie, 327-0754 T Y P I N G B Y ex -sc h o o l teach e r. A c ­ c u r a t e . d e p e n d a b le , r e s p o n s ib l e P a p e r s theses. SI 50/double sp a c e d page 444-8160 F A S T S E R V I C E I B M C orre ctin g Se le c­ tric R esum es, theses, reports, etc. D e b ­ bie, 454 8838 after 5 T Y P I N G C O R R E C T I N G S e le c t r ic Papers, reports, theses, $1.00 page 327- 1488, B ox 904, Austin, Texas, 78767 P E R S O N A L I Z E D Q U A L I T Y typ in g to fit your needs 9C page F re e pick-up and d elivery Kendra, 282-3167. T Y P IN G : F A S T experienced - $1.00 text pica. $1 10 text elite M !lie, 447-5906 before 11 a m., after 5 p m sure we DO type FRESHMAN THEMES why net start art with geei §tw4o% 2 7 0 7 H .m p h ill Ju*t N o rth of 2 7 t h ot G u a rh jlu p o 472-3210 472-7*77 SERVICES SERVICES *5 BONUS (on first d on ation on ly) BRING IN THIS AD & I.D. WITH PROOF OF AUSTIN RESIDENCE, OR STUDENT ID Austin Plasm a Center 2 8 0 0 G u a d a lu p e 474-7941 s8.00 — Rr$t Donation ’10.00 — Second Donation ’10.00 — Bonus on 10th Donation RO OM S F O U N D O R L O S T a pet? Special P a ls Hotline, call 258-0408 p h D M A T H tutor w ill help you m a k e a s s i g n m e n t s . the g r a d e on t e s t s Ve terans free 443-9354 PERSONAL P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ’ F r e e p re gn ancy testing and re fe rra ls 474- 9930 HELP W ANTED NEED A JOB THIS SU M M ER? We'll Pay You To Try Army ROTC. $ 4 5 0 p lu » * r o o m b o a r d a n d transportation cost* to attond a c a m p a t Fort Knox, KY. 19 M a y -2 6 Juno 9 Juna-1 7 July 7 July-14 August N O Military obligation limited openings CALL NOW! 471-5919 EVENING JOBS FOB STUDENTS 4-9 p.m.. g u y s or gals, no experience needed, west cam p us, good starting salary, c o m p a n y bonuses, w eekly pay, in te re stin g w o rk. C a ll M r Stoner, 451-3147 after 2 p.m. Jewelry firm near ca m p u s needs full-time em ployee to grind a n d polish c a s t i n g . N o e x p e r i e n c e necessary. Requires energetic person. A real worker. Call 4 7 3 - 2 7 7 7 tor appointm ent. D A N C E IN S T R U C T O R S Suffering a case of the b lahs from b orin g routine jo b s? A rth u r M u r r a y d ance in ­ structors earn top h ou rly pay In fun job with excellent care er potential. P art- tim e (e ve n in gs) w ork also a v a ila b le No experience n ecessary. Y o u r tra in in g is free if you qualify. W e want m en and wom en who like people, have outgoing personalities, and are well groom ed A p ply A rth u r M u r r a y D ance Studio, G rand C en tral Station, 8776B Research, for personal interview between 2 and 7 p.m. No phone calls, please R A S S L L E A R N I N G S E R V I C E S is c u r re n t ly s e e k in g a p p lic a n ts fo r s e v e r a l p a r t - t im e p e e r c o u n s e lo r positions for the 1980-1981 school year. A n y interested student should co m e to one of two in fo rm a tio n a l m e e tin g s Tuesday, A p ril 22nd, noon, Jester A325; W ednesday, A p ril 23rd, 5 p.m., Jester A325 A n E q u a l O p p ortunity E m p lo y e r W ant to get personnel exp e rie n ce ? A p p ­ ly at T he U n iv e rsity Co-O p Person ne l Departm ent, 476-7211 O pening for a p e r­ sonnel/ p ayroll clerk, 40 hours/week. P re v io u s office experience required M u st be able to type 60 w pm and use 10- key ad d in g m achine. In su ra n c e and/or payroll expe rien ce d e sirab le E.O .E . If you h ave a great personality and like talking to people, w hy not get paid for it ? $3 .5 0 / h o u r p lu s b o n u s e s to m a k e telephone ap p o in tm e n ts. N o se llin g H o u rs M o n d a y -T h u rsd a y , 6-9 p.m. N orth area F o r Interview call Charlotte after 5 p.m., 837-0045 M E N T A L H E A L T H W O R K E R S S O U T H A U S T IN Be part of a treatm ent team sup e rvise d by a profe ssion al at The R anch T re a t­ ment Center at The B row n Schools We a re n ow in t e r v ie w in g fo r fu ll-t im e positions. M u s t be over 21. Call 478-6662 for m ore inform ation. E.O .E . A L L Y O U F O L K S th a t need e x tra m oney can sell flow e rs with The O rig in a l Flo w e r People. P a id dally. 288-1102 P A R T - T I M E C O O K to prepare evening m eals for bachelor, eat dinner with him, w a sh d ish e s, sta y after d in n e r for d r i n k s - c o n v e r s a t i o n , a n d d a te on w eekends O n ly single women please Photo, address, and phone num ber, first letter please W rite to Post O ffice Box 18)53, Austin, T e x a s, 78760 D Y N A M I C S A L E S person needed A p p ly in person between 10:30 3. Im a g e s B y Bob Elliott, on D ra g O V E R S E A S J O B S - S u m m e r / y e a r round. Eu rop e, S A m e rica, A ustralia. Asia, etc. A il fields, $500-51200 m onthly. E x p e n se s paid. Sightseeing. F re e info - W rite IJC, B ox 52-TE, Corona del M a r, C a 92625 C R U Í S E S H I P s T / S A I L I N G e x- p e d it io n s !/ s a ilin g c a m p s . N o e x ­ perience Good pay S u m m e r C areer. Nationw ide, w orldw ide! Send $4.95 for a p p l i c a t i o n ' i n f o r e f e r r a l s to C ru ise w o rld 189, B ox 60129, Sacram ento, Ca. 95860 HELP W ANTED S U M M E R JO B S Dallas-F t. Worth Houston Austin San Antonio Lubbock Suburbs of above *6.65 per hr. ap p ly in person T e xa s U nion G o ve riso r's R o o m A p ril 2*,* 29, t 30th 8 a.m., 10 *. m „ , 12 noon, 2 p.m.. or 4 p.nj. W E A I. S u b s id ia r y ot A L C O A , * N A T U R A L O P P O R T U N I T Y • F o r those w ho enjoy w o rk in g with) children in an outdoor setting Houston* independent School D istric t has fall* openings for ca m p leaders/ in stru cfo /i- with the Outdoor Ed u cation Center on- L a k e Livin gston , T e x a s In terview s. A p ril 29th and 30th at the Educations Placem ent Service, room 294, E d u c a tio n B uilding. | ------------- —------------ S U M M E R J OB S Still looking for y o u rs ? If yoif would be interested in s a v in g $3123 this summer, call 472- 2865 for meeting times. C O N S T R U C T I O N S J O B S :! There aren't any this year. l o o k i n g f o r If y o u ' r e summer work and would like to save $3300, call 459- 4080 for meeting times. K I T C H E N W O R K E R ? p.m. hours Start S3.50 per hour L E S A M I S C A F E 24th and San Antonio Apply 5-6 p.m. R E S E A R C H S U B J E C T S Needed to rate speech sa m p le s for In­ telligibility. P riv a te re se a rc h co m p an y. S3 10/hour plus paid h o lid a y s and atten­ dance bonus. W o rk 13Vi h o u rs per week, M -W -F, 12:30-5 p m or 1-5.30 p m P E R M A N E N T P O S I T IO N M u st be native E n g lis h sp e a k in g antf have good h e a rin g D yn astat, In c 476- 4927. 2704 R io G ra n d e S U M M E R H E L P , full-time, exp e rie n ce **• with dogs C anine Hilton. 926-8905. A V O N IT p ays to be y o u rse lf Y o u d on 't need a " s e l l i n g " p e rso n a lity to sell A v o n You d on 't need experience, either. C all 477-8261. A V O N S T A R T y o u r o w n b e a u t y b usin ess Becom e an A v o n re p re se n ­ tative full-tim e or part-tim e. Be yo u r ow n boss E a r n good m on ey C all 477». 8261. A V O N G R A D U A T E to a second income. Sell A von and earn the m oney you need to g^et ahead of Inflation. C a ll 477-8261- P E R S O N A L C A J ?E a ssista n ts needed for U T students for s u m m e r and fall. 1-29 h o u rs'w e e k , option for room and board, F o r further inform ation, call S h e rry Allen at 471-4955 ext, 167 between 8 a m - 4 p.m. S U M M E R W O R K - trav e l - U T stu d en ts» b u sin e ss ad ven tu re - good m oney - td ap p ly for Interview phone 454-2275 W O R K IN M a in la n d C h in a , Ja p a n , T a iw a n ! N o e x p e rie n ce , degree, dr la n g u a g e re q u ire d tor mosH fo re ig n positions T each co nve rsation al English., Send se lf-a d d re sse d envelope for details ESL-18, P.O. Box 336, Centralia, W a 98531. stam ped, long, F U L L - ® R part-tim e cooks, w altpef- sons bus help and kitchen help w anted Im m ed iately. 442J for V ik a sh m o 's, too » 0287 E N J O Y L I F E in b e a u t ifu l h is t o r ic F re d e ric k sb u rg M a in te n a n c e en gin ee r needed for 84-unit motel, restaurant, and lounge E x p e rie n c e In a ir conditioning^ heating, carp entry, and p lu m b in g r*» quired J o u r n e y m a n 's license In at least one P re v io u s motel expe rien ce a plus. Contact Lee T a u fe rn e r or W alt Je ffris at 5j2-997-4333 _____ ^ in beautiful h isto ric E N J O Y L I V I N G F re d e ric k sb u rg Im agin a tiv e , cre ative club m an ag e r needed fo r ou tstand in g facility with lounge, s w im m in g pool, and co-operative p ro g ra m with a fine G e r ­ m an restaurant. Food an d b e v e rage ex­ perience required. V e ry lu cra tiv e p osi­ tion for the right person. C ontact Jo ho Grote or Lee T auferne r at 512-997-4333 or 512-997-7533 S U M M E R C A M P counselor. T ra n s p o r ­ liv in g quarter^ tation from A u stin , in gymnastics.' availa ble E xp e rie n ce * W S I required 478-9416. S E C U R I T Y G U A R D needed for local of­ fice building W eekend g r a v e y a r d shttt. 472-6798 HELP WANTED 1 HELP WANTED w e a r your b lue jea n s L o o k in g for a high-paying tamporary job? Join Victor Temporary Services — W EA R YOUR JEANS! W o need people for North, Sovth, a n d East Austin! High pay. N o fee. Vocation bonus.... Refer your friends ... and w hen they work 40 hours — earn an ex­ tra $ 1 0 . 0 0 . VICTOR T e m p o r a r y So rvico e NORTH 1 11 W. Anderson No. 328 454-5731 SOUTH 1301 S. Interregional No. 101 445-2525 NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING SALES Student e x p e rie n c e d in a d v e r t i s in g sales to sell s p a ce in T h e D a i l y T e x a n on c o m m is s io n . Prefer a d v e r t is in g m ajor, but all q u a lifie d applicants will be con side re d . P le a s e g i v e full d etails in a letter, or send y o u r r e s u m e A p p o in t m e n t s will be arranged with a p p lic a n t s w h o q u a lify . WRITt TO: ADVERTISING DIRECTOR P O Box D; A u stin , T X 7 8 7 1 2 Beat Double- Digit Inflation Extra $$$$$$$$$ T e m p o r a r y e m p l o y m e n t for a b o u t one week. 100 p e r s o n s needed b e g i n n in g A p r i l 28 & 29. T w o sh ifts to fit y o u r s c h e d u le — 1:00 a .m .- 7:30 a.m ., 8:00 a . m . -5:00 p.m . B e a b le to use 10-key c a lc u la to r . Comptroller of Public Accounts Personnel Office, Room 124 111 East 17th Street Austin, Texas (512) 475-1919 An fqu*i Opportunity im ptorot UL/f Page 16 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, April 21. 1980 HELP W ANTED HELP WANTED Brackenridge/Deep Eddy decision OKd By TOM BAKER Dally Texan Staff The state higher education board has given its go-ahead on a new University student family apartment project, providing for d e m o l i t i o n 40-year-old Brackenridge/Deep Eddy housing beginning in May. the of The Coordinating Board, Texas College and University System, Friday approved a Feb. 29 Board of Regents action to spend 18.9 million in housing revenue bonds to begin a three-step phaseout of the converted Army barracks. In the operation’s first phase, which F r i d a y ’s board action cl ear ed, 189 apartments in 95 one-story duplex structures will be demolished with 230 new units con­ structed. Ralph Kristoferson, System facilities plan­ ning and construction director, said the board’s action merely clears the way to proceed with a design plan for the new apartments with the project hinging on bond- sale plan interest rates. The coordinating board in taking the action noted regents had determined “ the useful life of the buildings located on the Brackenridge tract is at an end and that rehabilitation and continued maintenance is no longer feasible or economically practical.” The board approved a total of $34 million in in­ college construction projects Friday, cluding a $16.2 million engineering laboratory at Texas A&M and $5.1 million for a UT Galveston Medical Branch Physical Plant Building and Pharmacology Building ad­ ditions. In another action, board members authoriz­ ed a Travis County Community College District to provide countywide Austin Com­ munity College bonding power for campus construction and ad valorem taxing power to operate the school’s physical plant. ACC, which opened in 1973, has grown to a 16.000-student enrollment as of last fall, but is operating prim arily out of two former high school buildings provided by the Austin Independent School District. The board also adopted a report recommen­ ding better use of existing facilities in all state colleges and universities over construc­ tion of new ones. The report found that ex­ isting classrooms are used less than 23 hours per week with only 32 percent used each hour. Some board members objected to the report, savine it failed to adequately evaluate utilization of existing space. The Legislature may rely on the report as the board’s official paper without considering other factors, such as the quality of space, op­ ponents of the report said. P R O G R A M T E C H N IC I A N position working with m entally retarded adults, 9-5:30 M-F Call 926-5976 T H E N O R T H W E S T Y M C A needTparT- time instructors for summer program beginning in Ju ne for ballet/dance, gym- n a s t ie s , t e n n is a n d s w im m i n g . A p p lican ts must have p revious tx- pe rie nce Call 459-9720 P E T R O D O L L A R S . B R IN G some home Booklet outlines em ploym ent oppor­ tunities in Saudi A rab ia 63 check or M.O. to C R O W , Box 392, Huntsville, A l„ 35604 L E G A L S E C R E T A R Y needed part- tim e Spanish fluency and 65 wpm re­ quired Office on the Drag Start M ay 14th 477-7867 F R E E H A IR C U T S for men and women Call H a ir N aturally, 443-1578, between 6- 5 M on days and Tuesday» only. No children or babies, please T E A C H E R S W A N T E D , elem entary and se co n d a ry W es* ano o th e r states Sou thw est P la c e m e n ts since 1946 Teachers' Agency, P O Box 4337, Albu­ querque, N.M. 87196 W A N T E D P A R T - T IM E by executive D river, yardwork and errands 345-4777 F u l l -Ti m e N IG H T Stocker. Must have experience Prem ium pay Tom Thumb Food Store, 5311 Balcones 452-9497 M A JO R T E X T B O O K S publisher hiring sates representatives for Texas Salary, auto, travel expenses paid Contact 294 Education Building tor details and Inter- view time Send resume lmmed¡atel> tely to Follett Publishing Company, 100) Ming, Ming, W arre n sb u rg , M O 60493 Attention Stanley Sm ai ill M O 60493 R E C E P T I O N I ST 1-5 M - F . H a n d le phone, light typing, varied office duties 447-4443 P A R T - T IM E D A Y and evening help wanted, weekends also Experience not required Tom Thumb Food Store, 5311 Balcones 452-9497 ________________ T O D D L E R T E A C H E R needed weekday mornings until twelve Un iversity area parent cooperative 474-5101 or 474-8643 T H U N D E R C L O U D S U B S now’ has part- time openings for spring and summer Apply In person, 1608 Lava ca, between 8- 11 am. N IC E U N IV E R S I T Y area restaurant needs part-time bartender Apply in per­ son at 725 W 23rd before 4 p m TO PLACE A C LA SSIFIED AD CALL 471-5244 H E L P W A N T E D . Frl#nty<«, ha»h browns, toast or biscuits, cream gravy on request w ith 7 piocos of bacon or sausogo ★ coWoo »orv»d w ith an y breakfast * Chicken Fried Steak 11 a.m.-9:30 p m. 7 Days served w ith salad, french fries A roils "T C 1 I . / J LOCATIONS: 2 80 1 G tM K kslvp* ( 2 8 th & G u a d a lu p e ) 2701 CuHen A ve ( Congress A Live D a li) w ith baked potato 2.25 STORE FOR THE SUMMER HANDY SELF STORAGE 2301 E. BEN WHITE 8525 N. U M A R 12611 RESEARCH BLVD. 441-7269 837-0551 258-5255 Hightower blasts Railroad Commission in campaign speech at Texas Tavern By K A R E N -A N N BROE Daily Texan Staff A country singer and a late president’s niece came out to support Texas Railroad Commission candidate Jim Hightower, who brought his 10- month campaign to the Texas Union Tavern Friday. Hightower commenced his 15-minute talk with an apology for politicizing during the lunch hour, but he said students should know about what he called the “ Texas railroading agency.” “ It ’s the energy agency,” he said, because the three-man commission regulates such items as utility prices, oil and gas industry, trucking permits and lignite strip mining. In the past 10 years, the commission has allowed utility companies to raise their rates about 30 percent each year, he said. As a result, “ our utility com­ panies are among the most profitable companies in the entire United States.” HIGH TO W ER reiterated his charge that his opponent, Jim Nugent, has collected 90 percent of his campaign funds from utility companies. “ The commissioners are owned by the com­ panies they’re supposed to regulate,” he said. Singer and guitarist Steve Fromholz accompanied Hightower at the Tavern and sang “ Dear Darcey,” “ I ’d Have to be Crazy to Fall Out of Love With You,” and other tunes. Fromholz, who called this his “ first venture into politics,” said Hightower first solicited his help “ because of the way I write songs, he thought I might be a populist too. “ I ’ve known him some time and I ’ve respected him as Texas Observer editor,” he added. Mary Kerry Kennedy, daughter of the late Sen. Robert Kennedy, also stopped by as part of a one-week campaign tour for Sen. Edward Kennedy. She said Hightower and her uncle share views on oil and gas regulation. “ Hightower’s point is that the oil companies are taking control of this country,” she said, adding that Kennedy holds similar views. “ Kennedy has always believed in the American system,” she said, which is evident in his work to deregulate the airlines and trucking industries as well as in his opposition to oil and gas deregulation. IN A LA T ER interview, Hightower further addressed campaign politics. c o n t r i b u t i o n s Nugent recently charged Hightower with collecting nearly 40 percent of his c ash a “ northeastern liberal bloc that wants to control Texas energy p o l i c y . ” Hightower called those charges “ wrong and pathetic.” f r o m Hightower said he enjoys broad- based support from people who believe in “ small capitalism and the free enter­ prise system.” He refused to label himself a liberal or conservative, or divide the election along “ meaningless ideological lines.” Rather, Hightower sees himself as a “ populist,” a belief which “ lies at the heart of the Democratic Party.” Placing a consumer advocate on the commission can have two advantages, he said, even if he remains in the voting minority. The first is to raise issues and inform the public. “ That’s what politics is all about — changing the debate,” he said. But more importantly, “ I w ill have brought an entirely new contingency to the Railroad Commission,” which might help another consumer candidate become elected the next time, he said. New RAs chosen for campus dorms More than 125 University students have been chosen to serve as resident assistants in campus dormitories for the 1980-81 long session, University residence halls officials announced Friday. A total of 129 students were appointed as RAs for Jester Center, men’s residence halls and women’s dormitories. Of those, 97 are designated for Jester and the men’s residence halls. The remaining 32 will supervise residents in the women’s residence halls. Four male students have also been appointed head residents at Simkins, Moore-Hill, Prather and Brackenridge-Roberts men’s dormitories. Applications were taken near the end of the fall semester and beginning of the spring term from students interested in work­ ing as RAs, Michael Foraker, director of Jester Center, said. A committee of housing and food service personnel handled the selection process and chose students who exhibited maturity, leadership and experience living in University residence halls, he said. “ We look to the RAs to be the primary representatives of the division of housing and food service,” Foraker said. “ We as! them to assume some degree of responsibility for the students welfare and to serve as a referral agent to other University ser vices. RAs will also be asked to perform need-analysis studies to determine what programs residents are interested in, he said The most important thing for the RAs to remember is that s lot of education takes place in the residence halls,” Forakei said. Opportunity for personal growth is much greater for the students living in residence halls than it is for those students liv­ ing at home,” he said. RAs will participate in in-service training programs and must also take a University course which is concerned with the stu­ dent as resident, said Sherry Melecki, assistant to the director of the division of housing and food service. All RAs are paid a monthly salary, from which is deducted the cost of room and board, Melecki said. Newly-selected and returning RAs w ill begin their duties in the fall, returning to the residence halls one week before the beginning of the semester. Foraker said. M Y 6RANPPARENTS JUST 60T BACK FROM CALIFORNIA THEY 5AU THE OCEAN, ANP THEY VI5ITEP A WINERY < üÉjk )i UNITED Feature Syndicate Friday’s Puzzle Solved I w o u ip n 't m i n p SEEING THE OCEAN... BUT I'P RATHER VISIT A ROOT BEERERY I " - * ? 2 words 48 West Pointers 50 Poems 51 Tender 52 Meal 55 Window adjuncts 59 Shop owner 61 Dismounted 62 Eye 63 Lets fall 64 Key 65 Inform 66 Expunge 67 Turnip: Scot. DOWN ACROSS 1 Den 5 Custom 10 Bristle 14 Actor Robert 15 Spanish province 16 Shore 17 Bolivian Indi­ an 18 Social dos 20 Pots and pans 22 Zoroastrian 23 Endure 24 Antitoxins 25 Flowers 28 Displayed clothes 32 School subj. 33 Evil one 35 Chip 36 Domesticate 38 Giver 40 Scream 41 Cork natives 43 Made harm o­ nious 45 Four qts 46 Ocean phenomena 1 2 3 4 0 ■ ■ 25 m 25 23 14 17 20 32 N 41 4 i 5» «2 ts 1 Secular 2 Choir voice 3 Notion: Prefix 4 Irritate 5 Pestered 6 Prevent 7 Color 8 — de France 9 Struck lightly 10 In coils 11 Love god 12 Timbre 13 Church area 19 Weeds 21 Dependent 24 Wise one 25 Bustling 26 Alarm 27 Shy 28 Less 29 Vassal 30 Brilliance 31 Valleys 34 Referenda 37 Legal ploy 39 Resort 42 Secreter 44 Scoot 47 Razz 49 Hold back 51 Stores 52 Stain 53 Exhort 54 Survey 55 Portico 56 Otherwise 57 Annoy 58 Tread 60 Blunder 7 8 10 11 12 13 5 6 ’ 5 ” 21 ’ 6 19 _ ■ ■ 24 29 30 31 34 I L 37 I 1 ■ 43 47 35 ■ IE1¡¡¡■ 4 C 44 ■ 45 50 53 54 44 ■ 51 55 ■ ■ É so 57 58 to “ | !: 41 ■ 44 17 1 Brought To You Evory Week By T Íw U n iv e rs ity C o-O p B.C. €> 1W0 u n ite d F«ature S yndicate. Inc by jo h n n y hart vie a v ia n w ith M e f?ve £ Or ^ f e e u , . . . AN P i‘L l <£HPvV Yoo A v o m e p A ¿?UAZ T O f &CQXOL.. J O ^ r The woman on the famous Mona Lisa painting was painted without eyebrows. TANK HFNAMAllA by Jeff M illar & Bill Hinds A-h Reacting to the 24 Action News By Martha Sheridan "The highest power of television journalism is not in the transmission of information but in the transmission of experience . . .joy, sorrow, shock, fear, these are the stuff of news.’’ — Reuven Frank, an NBC Evening News producer. I dislike sto n es that begin with inscriptions. The only thing I hate more than a pretentious opening is a writer who has the gall to try to p ass off a biased, poorly researched essay a s a legitim ate article. Also, I abhor writers who bury the point of their sto n es under a self- indulgent diatribe of their pet peeves. This is an essay about one w riter’s broken prom ises and her broken dream of making the ultimate argument against new scasters. My broken prom ises consist of a myriad of writing standards which I promised m yself I would uphold but have abandoned to discuss television journalism The broken dream is another m atter. Scenario: Six journalism students list the perceived shortcomings of an Austin television news program , “ 24 Action N ew s." The students are ruthless in their attack. After two minutes, the criticism list is abandoned at No. 24 — an average of six per m em ber of the four-man Action News anchor team . One student is inspired by a mission which seem s un­ deniably clear: Expose 24 Action News. Destroy its threat to transmission of the news. No holds barred, barring libel. She wonders if her brains have become scram bled from too many long nights on a newspaper copy desk. Reality has an irritating ability to end dream s Mine shattered after the dawn of rational thought. How do you actually prove the four smiling men of Channel 24 are a threat to serious journ alism 7 Considering the generally shabby nature of Austin jo u rn alism , how do you justify assassin atin g the ch aracters of four individuals? Abandon all fairn ess and reason, that s how. Go right for the sweeping generalization and move on to exaggera­ tion. Don’t even talk to the people you’re demeaning Ju st step right into the battle and shoot from the hip, alw ays accepting your responsibility, but not the blame. First, Ren Storey. The man enjoys a challenge. So, every once in a while, he shares his sports challenges with you, the sports-minded Austinite. Aren t you the lucky one” No. Because if you really are into sports, you don’t get to hear much about it if Ben w astes his brief airtim e and a cam era crew ju st so you can chuckle over his fairly consistent challenge loss record. Although they are inane, sports challenge is not alarm ing in itself. It’s a little dif­ ficult to take a sportscaster who can ’t even beat a little boy’s challenge seriously. The real dangers lie in the way big Ben speaks. The man must learn to relax his sm ile while speaking. Too much happiness tends to cause nausea on the part of the viewer. He also runs the risk of sm all insects sm ashing against his teeth like the grille of a car. Another danger is that he Ross alerted Texans to a dangerous situation: a ‘Suntan Lotion Alert. ’ ... the man to watch out for our interests. ’ never pauses between sentences, or between stories. His report sounds like one continual sentence, so we can only assum e he w rites it that way. What I really want to know is when does he take a breath7 If I have to watch Ben keel over and die of asphyxiation I ’ll .... Well, I’ll be mad as hell, but at least I won’t have to take it anymore. N ew scasters Dave Smith and Rick Hull don’t appear to be dangerous. This m akes them particularly deserving of a closer look. Dave and Rick are a kind of father and son team, and watching them is like getting to watch Walter Cronkite teach Dan Rather the ropes of newscasting. Although I resen t this subtle m anipulation of my emotions, it’s satisfying to see Dave and Rick hang them selves on those ropes when they interrupt and con­ tradict each other. Dave and Rick seem to have been paired a s anchors to give view ers the im pression they are getting both an older man s perspective and the idealistic energy of youth. Instead, we are burdened with Sm ith’s awkward “ happy talk com m ents and the sight of a young man who refuses to believe that wide ties are out of style. W eathercaster Tim R oss is in a c la ss by him self, probably because no one else would consider attending. Friday's edition of the news clearly illustrates that R oss has single-handedly taken television news to an all-time low On the 6 p.m. edition, he reported on his visit to Pecan Springs Elem entary School and Austin got a cioseup view' of the boutonniere the children presented him. During the report, R oss alerted Texans to a dangerous situation: a Suntan Lotion A lert.’ ’ Since “ sunshine is the word for the entire state this weekend,’’ R oss reasoned that suntan lotion was called for. Ju st shows that R oss is the man to watch out for our best interests. In addition to his w eathercaster role, R oss perform s community and public relations duties. No gim m ick is too demeaning Although I once saw him w ear a plastic hog hat a s penance for U T ’s loss to A rkansas in a football gam e, F rid ay 's 10 p.m. Update gim m ick m ade him look unusually absurd. At the end of his report R oss appeared in a white jack et and a chef’s hat — the kind resem bling a miniature mushroom cloud. The effect was overwhelming and obscured his purpose for wearing the costum e in the first place. He was advertising his judgeship of a baking contest and ju st wanted to m ake sure you knew that you were invited. Well, there it is. P rom ises to m yself as a w riter have been sm ashed, but for a good cause. I can ’t ju stify m yself by saying my dream to expose local TV news a s irrelevant journalism is fulfilled. Channel 24 is only one exam ple, taken because the men are widely known, not necessarily because they are the worst offenders. However, I do speak for everyone who has listened to in­ ane com m ents and wanted to scream , “ Who c a r e s ? ’’ The problem is that Fran k ’s standard of emotion — joy, sorrow, shock and fear — is sparked by the new scasters instead of the news they are hired to present. D ifferent Strokes quently, A m erica g ets ‘ Pink I,ad y” and touted as the epitom e of com edy. But then how can anyone ex­ pect a rt from people who have lived on in­ tellectual o a tm e a l9 Comedy is not the only thing th at has been affected. Science fiction and fantasy hav e long been bound by c h a in s of m ediocrity. Sf on TV has consisted of such epics as “ Lost in S p ace,’’ The Tim e and “ Land of the G ia n ts.” Rod Tunnel Serling did som e good program s, and S tar T rek' was occasionally excellent, but by and large, television has been the different-m onster-every-w eek syndrom e has escaped “Mork and Mindy the m onsters but is still giving us tripe. The prem ise — an alien com es to E a rth and sends rep o rts back to his hom e — is the oldest in the genre. Still, a w rite r who knows sf, and who can w rite hum orously, like Isaac Asimov or H arlan Ellison, couid take the show ’s com edic talent (and there m ight be a fair am ount outside Robin W illiams) and turn out a m eaningful show. Instead, script assignm ents a re given to stan dard Hollywood hacks whose ideas of high com edy com e from the above-nam ed innocuous sitcom s of the ’60s. Aside the people w riting L av em e and S h irley ” a re using physical com edy gags th at com e I Love L ucy” alm ost unchanged from the shows of the early 1950s. 3 So how do you keep the babble box from jellying your b ra in 9 How do you w age your own w ar on visual m e d io c rity 9 E asy Turn off the set for one hour a night Ju st one hour Not cold turkey. J u st p a rtia l w ithdraw al And turn on the radio Ah yes, the radio. I t ’s am azing how som e people com plain th at th e re is n ’t a decent radio station in Austin A ctually, Austin is probably one of the best pop m usic radio towns in the country. Most people a re used to a radio station that they can turn on in the m orning and listen to all day without hearing anything that invades th eir sensibilities But with Austin s stations, anyone who is not to ta l­ ly co m m itted to Top 40 or progressive pop cannot listen to any station in town for any length of tim e. BUT there is a solution for those who really w ant to listen to the radio and not ju s t to h a v e b a c k g ro u n d m u s ic fo r w hatever they re doing All you have to do is sw itch the stupid dial. K LB J lets you know w hat the new groups and local bands a re doing If som ething com es on th a t’s too obscure for you. tw iddle it over to KHFI. A fter you’ve heard the e n tire Top 40 two or three tim es (it takes a half-hour or so», go back to KLBJ B etter yet. try country at KOKE. J u s t m ove it around cam pers, and broaden your horizons Read any good books la te ly 0 appearance and quality. BELTED T/A 70. a wide profile tire with deep tread for long mileage Two fiberglass belts for good handling Sporty raised white letters Size Our Price B70X13 E70X14 F70X14 G70X14 G70X15 H70X15 41 00 45 00 47 00 48 00 50 00 54 00 FE T 2 .0 5 2 41 2 .5 6 2 .7 2 2 .7 8 3 .01 " * 4 1 . 0 0 Plus 2 .0 5 F.I.T . for s u e 8 7 0 * 1 3 The re a lly s c a ry thin g ab o u t TV- watching is that people a re no longer do­ ing it in the privacy of their own homes. They have actually sta rte d to do it in public places. W itness the spreading of television to re sta u ra n ts around town th at c a te r to the college crowd. I used to work in a Pizza Hut right a fte r a big screen w as installed there. We would turn the thing on as soon as we opened, and it would stay on until we closed. And people w atched it. Not only college students, but e v e r y b o d y . B usinessm en, laborers, anyone who w alked in headed up stairs and sat down in front of the TV. The only way th ere w ere ev er m ore than two tables of people dow nstairs w as if the TV room u p stairs w as full. Sturgeon’s law s ta te s th a t “90 percen t of T h a t’s probably too everything is crap conservative a figure these days, thanks to the influence of TV. The new generation of “a rtis ts w ere kids when “The B everly and “ G om er P y le ’ w ere the Hillbillies highly rated shows on the box Conse­ HFGoodrich April 2 5 - May 18 The Runner Stumbles Drama by Milan Stitt A love story and psychological mystery based on the actual trial of a priest accused of the murder ot a young nun Austin C iv ic Theatre D ire cte d b y J R obert Sw dir Wed.-Sat. 8 :1 5 Reservations 4 7 6 -0 5 4 1 S u n 2:15 Zachary Scott Theatre Center Riverside & Lamar ol e* ,.«• ‘PeC‘ do«',vr . . , g j • ( BfG oodnch j a WHEEL ALIGNMENT COUPON SPECIAL For all American Cars cx; o i - Call for an appointment Proper w heel a lig n m e n t c a n he lp save tire w ear. Save $5 off regular price Regularly $16.95 0ffere*Plfes 4-25-80 « 4 9 .0 0 S*7 ct iM Q Q jM Q M Q i)Q A M ü M ( BFGoodrichÍM9VMMQ3MMQQQOQ c h ° " ! c ° b 0 6 0 SZSci A emptov m e chan,cs certlfied * * National Institute For Automotive Service Excellence f VIE S P E C * KFGoodrich sTIRE CENTER SALES & SERVICE 116 CONGRESS 476-9155 presents TONIGHT ONLYI Hollywood is a lonely place ... in N I C H O L A S R A Y 'S IN A LONELY PLACE HUMPHREY BOGART GLORIA GRAHAM E OH-beat Murder Myttery with Bog*• at a V ioient-Tempered S c re « n w n te r and Grahame at the Actrett Who Loves Him JESTER AUD. at 7 & 9 p.m. Genius Madman Animal God NIJIN5K9 A TRUE STORY A hmm Retire Capv*W« MCM.IUI t% R KNDf THU**. 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V lot* Show U"**" Thmrttr 11:30 p.m. $1.50 UT $2.00 nott-UT , V ^ * /. * --- -------------------------- --- ---------- ----- ----------------- ------------------- ---------- CQrY Grant & Katharine Hepburn in H o lid a y (1938) Directed by George Cukor Tedey at 5:30 I. 9:45 p.m. 'Vv-'^y* i vr.V-T.' 1.V y , ‘ y. U IYIXAN WHNMN F i J U IW w Theeter $1.50 UT $7.00 eee-UT lexas Union SANTA RITA ROOM Open for Lunch 11 -2 Daily Texas Union Third Level New Menu! Santa Rita Cocktail Hour 4:30-7:00 Special every Monday: Soup and Salad Bar for the same price at the Salad Bar Only. T*‘xa" I nntn Dining; Ser\»<'t' ¡J IP S PRE-REG WEEK DON’T MISS YOUR OPTION TO OFF CEC U e brought von discounted tickets to E A R T H . W 1 N D & E I R E L I N D A R O N S T \ D T T Y W E Y T H A R P L . A . P H I L H A R M O N I C G L E N N M I L L E R X H I S O R C I I E S T R V AI N T M I S B E H YV IN' It 5 Qu ite A ri Option! AMERICAN MULTI CINEMA .¿ rs ssr. TWI LITE SHOW $1.50 S O U T H W O O D 2 . 442-2331 "Little I S S P lA iL Bts uuh.ti etvc "Darhngsmn"‘""CHO,| I I» (*: 15/11.50)4:15 „ and everyone else s (5:45/S l-50>-7:45 A Q U A R I U S 4 ‘Kram er * Kram er (*•.15/51.50)4:15 4 4 4 3 2 2 2 s RU*S»N' '..lif. op K U v l l f y 2. GREAT h its ROCKY n (5:45/51.50)4:00 D a u g h t e r SISS1 SfWKK Tt I i>: .* »Nft (540/51.50)440 d e r a . 7 < T T W - C un t K v irr W hich Wav Kactwooo But loose* (*40/51.50)4:15 ‘Kram er /^Kram er (*: 15/51.50)4:30 Olwt Iastwooo Btrr Lo o m ’ Iw *y WMicm Way ^ (5:45/51.50)4:15 L J k i w m PBANCIS rO«D I MARTIN MULL TUESDAY WELD SERIAL TH E ELEC TR IC H O RSEM AN ROBERT m mo (*40/51.50)4:15 7 4 0 JODIE FOSTER SCOTT BAI0 !ane roNDA m m m gegag* (5-41/51.50)7:45 A M E R I C A N A . 4 8 3 - 6 6 4 1 d¿ O HANCOC» now OWiC&JhlG, An experience beyond totsi femr. * i v ******** * * * * * CEC Present* f o r ) our Pro-Keg Eun BATTLE OF THE BANDS T H E E X P L O S I V E S S C A N N E R S P A S S E N G E R B L U E M I S T music beer fun Texas I n i o n B a l l r o o m M o n d a y , April 21 n o on-6 p.m . Iree a d m is s io n f t £ 8 £ i D r b e -ln 6902 Burleson Road New Cine-fi Sound System XXX Original Uncut 385-7217 Privacy of Your Auto Theatre Note sou n d operates through your car radio If your car has no radio, bring a portable P q H V C flT RANCH *1» « ’s >f A L A N D M A R K I N P O R N Hof» \.IJM I ( MIKI XI \i V/iM i d l i t t v n s i n or eeu y STARTS 7 00 $ 1 .5 0 Fir»» S h o w O n ly H ig h la n d M a ll iv o r y D a y C a p it a l P la z a S a t A S o n CAPITAL PLAZA 457-7646 I H 35 MOUTH 7 75 9 SO James C aan Marsha M ason C h a p te r T w o : it ; 4a i i W HIGHLAND MALL IH 35 AT KOENIG IN. 451-7376 1 70 -3 75-5 JO-7 35-V 4 0 U W A L T t J i M 4 T 7 H A V J U U f A N D R E W S L IT T L E M U S S I 0 0 5 3 0 -1 0 00 (P C ) tí A C A D E M Y A W A R D T W I N N E R S a lly F ie ld L n o rm a ra e 3 0 0 -7 :3 0 I BETTE MIDLER B | ALAN BATES T H E R O S E l THE ELECTRIC HORSEMAN WILLIE NELSON 5:00-7:15-9:30 FEA T U R ES S 1 50 til 6 00, S2.00 alter M ID N IG H T ER S: $1.50 \ \ > ^ NOSFERATU - "A FINE FRIGHTENING FILM WITH HUMOR AND ^ YEARS IT ,S ™ E BEST lOOK,NG AND SCAR,EST VAMPIRE MOVIE IN Gene Shalit/NBC-TV Showtown 2 Outdoor Theatre »»«• HWY i»3 4C*Mt«ON IJM544 BOX-OFFICE OPEN 6:4$ H E L D O V E R ! M F Q X J E E N < ■!»■» TOM HORN Basad on the True Story r wm m M - ¡ S H S S S ! O O ■+*> **«■•* * «un- «M P L U S F M K B I S A N D T H I B E A N SHOWTOWN-W EST R O B E R T R E D F O R D IA N E F O N D A THE ELECTRIC^ HORSEMA] WILLIE NELSON IPty P L U S the. .China. J A C K t ( M M O N J A N E F O N D A M IC H A E L O O U G L A 3 MR«cn Wanr R u t Loose' -JtLUS _ CUNT IA ST W O O D SHIRLEY MaxLAINE "2 M U L K S F O R > I 1 TJL1 B A R A " * r SQUTHSIDE - NORTH r ■IfkAIROi 9 ACftDCMY M U R O S ! J BEST PICTURE BEST ACTOR BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS BEST DIRECTOR D U S T I N H O F F M A N M E R Y L S T R E E P Kramer Kramer PPOl Q -P L U S ROBBY B EN SO N M rftm e p s D aily N o (* n r U nder 1R A d m itte d • *»te S h o w s Friday ft Saturday S u n d a y s H o m N'.i»n Please Bring I () s Waqardlf»*-*. Of A ge MIDNIGHTER The original... M A SH Donald Sutherland Elliot Gould MIDNIGHTER 6 Akira I ndiv ( .reat G a te of Kiev from Pictures at an I xhibition MOUssORt .sko C apriccio Hspagnole RIMSkX k o r s \ k o \ Blue D a n u b e W altzes l s i r a i s s Fiddle F addle M arche Slave \ N D I r s o \ I it 11 mkc IHURSDAY. FRIDAY & SATURDAY MAY 1, 2 & 1 7:45 P.M. MUNICIPAL AUDI rO R IU M AUSTIN SYM PH O NY Beto a n d th e Fairlanes Fantasia 1 a tin a ^kii ES Brasil, íic o rico; A qua rela d o Brasil. Tico Tico n o Fuba B \RRAst> M X R C O m ABRI I Arr s k i l l s Salsa Medley MCllis THE PROMENADE POPS CONCERT Balconx tickets a r e available for $5 a n d S3 (half price for s tu d e n ts ) a n d can be p u r c h a s e d at Disc R ecords in H i g h la n d Mall, Discovert R ecords in W e stg a te a n d R iv e rto w n e Malls, In n e r S a n c tu m in B iu e b o n n e t Plaza, Zebra R ecords A n d e r s o n 1 a n e a n d l.avaca sto res, a n d th e LBJ C e n te r Box Office at S o u th w e s t Texas State. C a b a r e t table tickets tor SS are available at S y m p h o n y S q u a re n o w a n d at A u d ito r iu m box office o n d a y of concerts. CEC I* resents f o r \ o u r P r e - R e g F u n BATTLE OF THE BANDS TH E EXPLOSIVES SCANNERS PASSENG ER BL U E MIST music* b e e r f u n Texas I nion Ballroom M onday, April 21 n oon -6 p.m. free* admission ¡ • • • • • • • • • DUKES • • • • • • • • • I T Week: Tuesday REACTORS - ELECTORS ACTION TOYS W ednesday BIG BOYS — F-SYSTEMS Thursday TERMINAL MIND — REACTORS Friday JOE "KING" CARRASCO CASA NOVAS S a tu rd ay STANDING N A V IS — CHICKADIISILS S u n d a y IOI “KING" CARRASCO - TIXTONIS Duke’s Royal Coach 472-0321 318 N. Congress I SOUND WAREHOUSE! Nominated For 9 Academy Awards V I C T O R I A S T A T I O N ' h i l ! i 11 iii i \ Best Adaptation Score. t !( Mi l t h e M i ¡s k ( 5 ig ir u l \ lo tio n I V t u i c S n i i u i t t . K k uLthli ' (Ml ( a s a h l a iK ,1 I v a o i J and Í ilm W o rk v Our new lunch menu: ^4 fast, fun and / delicious. /J r ^ / choice of five A u stin -sty lc burgers. Hot Texas chili or iuicy beef ribs in b a rb e q u e sauce. O rder a n d you'll be served in 15 m i n ­ utes. L unch. Today, the Station. L u n ch served M o n d a y th ro u g h Friday from 11:30 a m to 2:(X) pm . D in n e r served nightly. 6319 1-35 N o rth • Lake the H ig h w a y 290 exit off 1-35, located n o rth of the M a rrio tt • (512) 459-4242 5.55 L P o r T a p e The B ig g e st M u sic For The S m a llest Prices 4 9 th & Burnet Rd. Pizza inni *3000 Duval Sub & Suds $200 EVERY MONDAY NIGHT 5:00-11:00 Any Pizza Inn Sandwich and a mug of beer *200 DAILY HAPPY HOUR 1 p.m .-7 p.m . T u td a y MICHAEL JAMES BAND Wsdnmtday DAVID CHILES BAND Thurtday LEE ROY PARNELL fnday A Saturday OMAR A THE HOWLERS Sunday EAGLEBONE WHISTLE (Happy Hour Until 9 p.m.) 1201 S. Congress 443-1597 22Z Z 2Z 2222222. B FRAM E & M O UN TIN G DESIGN BY BRIDGES & BASIL FOR PHOTO GRAPH S, P R IN T S, PA IN T IN G S AN D FIN E O BJEC TS MARK E. BRIDGES & PAUL E. BA SIL 1806 N u eces A U ST IN , TEXAS 787O I 474-9081 (5’2) 2304 IaiIcc Austin Blvd. 478-8643 Omelettes Extraordinaire Gingerbread, If hole if heat ¿i Buttermilk Panrakes soup%. Salads. Sandwiches & Desserts Ctassif (men. an Breakfasts (treat Coffee and Nothing on the menu is over S3.25 Open 7 da _T a.m. til 9 p.m. / T e x js AUSTIN CIVIC BALLET FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 454-8193 JACK JACKS ON ^Texos a r tis t well knownforniscontributions to Slow Death, Zap, Fantegor and God Nose, just to name a few . His latest projects include the excellent Texas historical comics'* Comanche Moan” and Recuerden El Alamo'.' ED H E A L *** Remember the hitchiKer in Texas Chainsaw Massacre ? He will be displaying original props from the film and selling, rare movie posters, lobb y cards and stills. MIC HEAL X GI LBERT ~ Underground comic artist Known for his work in publications Such as QuacK, Star Reach , Imagine, Slow Death and c4bers. He is well Known among comic fans for his excellent character the W raith in QuacK comics. £For aduarua 2-day tickets and additional information call Austin Books at 454*4197 • • • for only *3.50! This w eek it's easy to subscribe to during preregistration (April 21-25, 1980). Check U tm o st on the optional fee card. 10 A radio station for all listeners KUT—FM offers a variety of programs at the turn of a dial By Stacy Meier To public affairs director Dawn De Long, U T’s home- grown radio station, KUT-FM (90.7 MHz), is a radio sta ­ tion to be proud of. “ KUT offers the widest variety of programm ing in Austin,” she says. Licensed by the University and an affiliate of the National Public Radio system , KUT is supported by local grants and mem bership drives. The survival of the station depends, like public television, upon this kind of local fun­ ding There are 72 people on the staff at KUT, and 40 employees are UT students. Most of the student workers are communication m ajors, and they help KUT stay on the air with their skills in both production and perfor­ mance. Freshm an technical assistan t Raymond Peters is enthusiastic about student opportunities at KUT. He says, “The opportunities have really improved lately, and a lot more internships have been offered I’m sure that my ex­ perience at KUT will really help me in my broadcast career.” What kind of radio fare does the KUT menu offer, anyway? De Long stre sses the wide selection of appetiz­ ing program s, pointing out that, not only are there music program s, but that there are also program s geared toward audiences hungry for informative m aterial. Musically speaking, K U T’s air waves send out probably the widest variety of m usic in the city. For connoisseurs of classical music, there is “ Eklektikos,’ which is aired daily beginning at 6 a.m . Jazz buffs can tune in local jazz groups on K U T’s “Jazz in Austin” or well-known national and international m usicians on “Jazz A liv e !!” And there is enough folk, soul and opera music program m ing to please the rest of K U T's music listeners Proof of K U T ’s diversity is found in the number of non- m u s ic a l p r o g r a m s . R a n g in g fro m c u r r e n t a f ­ fairs/educational program s to children’s shows, the varie­ ty is refreshing There are two shows devoted entirely to news; National Public Radio’s “ Morning Edition," which is broadcast from 5 to 6 a.m . weekdays, and "A ll Things LAFinrs TRADING POST Open 11 am - 11 pm Closed W ed . Beer Garden • Cocktails Specializing in: STEAKS (¡Off I REEF) BARBECUE PRIME RIB (25 as.) SEAFOOD HI FFET FRIDAY SEAFOOD SI \ HAM U PI \ E iPPLE s a I CE ALL YOU CAN EAT EVERY NIGHT Chicken Fried Steak w /C re am G ravy ............................. $4.75 Fried Catfish ................................. 4,95 Sirloin Steak ...... 5.95 * WIDE VARIETY SALADS, GARDEN FRESH VEGETABLES, HOT BREAD, DAIRY FRESH BUTTER Hwy 71W. Between Cave i, 420 243-2975 “ Charlotte’s Web.” KUT allows plenty of room for originality in program ­ ming. In a special experim ental series of local program s, Austin poets read their work on KUT. “ E a rp la y ,” a nationally produced show, offers fresh comedy m aterial by young American writers. KUT is launching many new projects in the near future. Among these are a dram atization, radio-style, of “ Star Wars. In addition, there will be a new nationally broad­ cast program called “ Radio Sm ithstonian,” which will in­ vestigate such unusual topics a s Hollywood costum e design and life for black fighter pilots in the Second World War. In the next month. KUT will be one of 192 public radio stations acro ss the country to join a radio satellite link-up, a technical adventure that will improve both the sound quality of KUT and which will also increase the number of available program s for its listeners. KUT is one of 16 satellite stations which will feed program s directly into the satellite network. The presidential debates to be held in Houston will be among the first events broadcast by KUT to a national radio audience via the satellite system . Although it is not directly affiliated with KUT, the Longhorn Radio Network shares the sam e building and facilities. The network began a limited distribution of program s in 1939, before any sort of a communications com plex existed at the U n iversity. R adio House duplicated program s on large, unwieldly 16-inch acetate discs before facilities were converted to tape in 1952, Bill Giorda. acting director of the Communication Center, ex­ plains. “ At the network operated out of the Littlefield C arriage House, and its service w as limited to T exas and the surrounding sta te s,” Giorda adds. From a sm all handful of stations, the network has grown steadily to its present responsibility of providing program m ing to 1100 stations around the country. that tim e, The new uplink unit that will connect KUT with the satellite relay system will m ake instantaneous distribu­ tion of program m ing possible, but Giorda is not certain of the exact procedures the network will use. “ Nobody here has any real experience with the sort of satellite hookup we’re going to have, but it will certainly m ake our whole set-up more flexible. There is such a demand for program ­ ming right now that no one agency or distribution method can satisfy it.” Public funding is what KUT depends on for its survival. In fact, these crucial m em bership fees are the lifeblood of any non-commercial radio station. New m em bers receive a y ear’s subscription to the KUT monthly program guide, “ Listen, which lists the station ’s daily schedule and features stories about program s and the people involved with them. And a station that needs the support of its listeners and offers them more dimensions in program m ing than most broadcasters, the words of Dawn De Long, in “ everybody’s station .” is, FOR THE ULTIMATE IN MOPEDS M op ed M a rk e t is A ustin's m axim um m oped store & exclusive d e a le r fo r PUCH, the C a d illa c o f largest selec- & w e service w ith easy m opeds W e have the n o n o f bra nd s in town a ll makes Best prices fin a n c in g John *E. Dee’ Hanson, KUT’s soul DJ Considered." which is aired at 5 p.m. daily. Access, a live public a ffa irs program originating at KUT, features a guest panel which discu sses controver­ sial community issues. Listeners are able to call in, pose questions to the panel and air their views Representative topics which have been explored recently on the program are abortion, nuclear power and the draft. H ost John H ansen e x p la in s the im p o rtan c e of : "I enjoy the program because we try to stay "A cce ss current In reference to the controversial subject m atter of the show. Hansen adds; “ Public radio needs controver­ sy because it gives the public a chance to express view s.” Hansen is also the announcer for K U T ’s “ Soul on F M ," but goes by the nam e of John E. Dee. Voted the sta te ’s number one disc jockey by Texas Monthly, Hansen calls the show “ an outlet for m e,” and he say s with a grin. “ I like the love tunes best " The radio m ystery, a product of the World War II generation when fam ilies sat around the radio and gaped with horror at what they heard, will return to to KUT in May with the program “ The Creaking Door.” Audio dram a is alive and well on “ M asterpiece Radio T h eatre," hosted by actre ss Ju lie H arris. C lassics such a s “ Anna K arenina" and Moby D ick" are stories being dram atiz­ ed this month on that program . For children, there are program s such as “ Radio T rek,” a fairy tale series, and “ The Spider’s Web,” with productions of such children’s classics a s “ R a sc a l” and FR EE BEER The Cutting Room Individual Attention Haircuts $9.95 Red Ken Perms $25.00 EXPERIENCED HAIR DESIGN C all 451-4565 North of Highland Mall on the comer of Airport and Kenniston 5341-B Cameron Rd 458-1321 1806 San Antonio 478-2192 Radio programming and the numbers game By Jeff Whittington A while back — three years ago, to be precise — I inter­ viewed the program directors for most of the commercial radio stations in this city. I thought this would be a great wav to get the real low-down nitty-gritty about why radio stations play what they do, since program directors are usually the ones who make the final decision about whether a new record will be aired. My modus operandi was simple: I asked each one what criteria he used when listening to a new record in order to decide whether to air it. My enthusiasm turned to chagrin, however, when I com­ pared the answers. They were all the same. Practically all the program directors I talked to, regardless of how similar or different their stations were, gave virtually the same answer, often using the sam e words. The upshot of the Universal Response was something to the effect that “ when I receive a new record I listen to it with total objectivity and evaluate it on its ability to appeal to the Austin market. I never arbitrarily exclude any record, and never automatically include any record, even if it s by a big star. Additionally, my decisions are totally my own and I never pay any attention to the national record charts in Billboard." Now, not everybody said this, but these sentiments were incredibly common. If you’ve listened to any radio at all in the last 10 years, you’ll find this puzzling. How come so many stations sound alike if programmers are actually so independent? If everyone is so objective, how come so much music never gets heard? Let s go deductive and try to determine what really goes into programming decisions, based on the facts of the business and what we actually wind up hearing on the radio. To begin with, radio stations must be concerned with The Numbers. The Numbers are usually Arbitron ratings, determining how much of a share of the local audience each station is getting. Arbitron has received a great deal of flak lately about the accuracy of its procedures for es­ timating audiences, but it makes little difference: the bot­ tom line is that stations and advertisers look to Arbitron as a virtual Bible of audience size, and it is the Arbitron ratings that ultimately determine how much a station can get away with charging for commercials and how many commercials it can sell overall. If a station isn’t getting The Numbers, the management is more than likely to make changes (i.e., hire new people, change the musical format) to bring the numbers and the revenues up. So, a program director with a healthy interest in his own sur­ vival had better program his station with an eye to max­ imizing the audience. The first thing this implies is avoid “ tune-out factors ’’ A tune-out factor is something that makes someone turn his radio off. or worse, tune it to a different station. This is one reason long songs frequently go unheard on Top 40 stations. Not only do they leave less time for com­ mercials, but they also risk boring those members of the audience who don’t like that particular song It must be noted in connection with this tune-out factor business that it doesn’t matter if a large part of the audience is crazy about the song in question. So what if 28 percent of your audience thinks it’s the greatest song of all time? If 42 percent of the audience can’t tolerate it, the song must go — the name of the game is maximizing the total audience. A concern with tune-out factors gravitates toward a profound conservatism, a lowest common denominator effect. It is little wonder that radical change comes very slowly to radio. It took almost three years for new wave to make any sort of penetration at all into American com­ mercial radio. Despite the immense commercial success of disco, it took four years before anyone was willing to risk an all-disco radio station. Mull over this for a moment. There are literally thousands of radio stations this country Disco (regardless of what you think of it) had demonstrated a tremendous m ass appeal, sold millions of records, generated untold publicity. Yet in spite of all this, it was four years before anyone was willing to put it on the radio in genuinely concentrated doses in This goes back to a very fundamental rift which characterizes the music industry, the split between art and business. Art — and even popular music is an art — thrives on creativity, on the expansion into new areas of possibilities. Business, on the other hand, must maximize profits. To avoid throwing good money after bad, one must have a pretty good idea of what’s going to happen next — and the more variables there are in the produc­ tion/distribution/marketing process, the less chance one has of accurately estimating how much capital and energy should be put where, and the less chance one has of ef­ ficiently building profits. Where the problem has really grown pernicious is when PDs eliminate the middlemen (that’s us in the audience) and go right to the heart of the m atter: programming for the advertisers. This happens more often in small towns, where ratings aren’t that critical. The local merchants want something they can listen to, and if the station can give them what they want, it stands a better chance of get­ ting their advertising dollars. Even radio stations have to THE KEG 725 W. 23rd 477-5505 “A College Tradition” MONDAY COUNTRY & WESTERN or Bust! $2.75 Guys $1.75 Gals ALL THE DRAFT BE E R YOU CAN DRINK TUESDAY “Two for Tuesday” All Mixed Drinks and Pitchers of beer, two for the price of one all night (No Cover) 3 Hours F re e Parking In Tri-Towers G arage WEDNESDAY “ College Night” 15r Beer THURSDAY ROCK & RO LL NIGHT $1.75 Pitchers & $1.00 HI-BALLS (No Cover) FRIDAY & SATURDAY 7:00-10:00 p.m. 25' HI-BALI.S $1.00 Cover for Ladies pay the electric bill. But there is only a limited number of frequencies available, and stations are granted licenses with the provision that they use their licenses in the public in­ terest. The FCC is there to try to insure that they do this Unfortunately, the FCC is virtually toothless and nowadays exists mainly to protect the broadcasters And besides, how can you say that a station is neglecting the public interest if it brings in The Numbers? High ratings are a sign that a lot of people like the station What could be more in the public interest than that? Well, for one thing, the current rating system and tune- out-factor paranoia leads to a mind-set wherein the background music aesthetic is best — it is in the best in­ terest of a station for people to turn on the radio to their station and then forget about it, letting it drone on in the background all day Radio isn’t for listening, it’s for wallpaper Ultimately, this even works against the in­ terests of the advertisers, whose commercials fade away ignored into the background noise. And this leads us back to one more factor working against creativity in radio: homogenization Two summers ago, a then-unknown Debbie Harry and Chris Stein of Blondie toured the country talking to AM and FM program directors about their new record, “ Denis.” The song had reached No 1 in eight countries internationally, including the U.K., so it was obviously a song with appeal. Here nobody played it, FM or AM. Consequently, audiences never heard it, and it got no higher than about No. 112 on the charts. Why wouldn’t they play it? “ They all said the same thing,’ Stein lamented “ They said it was a great record, but it just didn’t fit in with what they were doing then.” So much for creativity. Happy listening. SAIL THE BAHAMAS After Exams, M ay 17-24 $339 Food and Drinks Included Our sailboats will depart From Miam i: M a y 17 Contact Brice Campbell 454-6110 ( a b m r 5 p m ) or call Toll Freo 1- 800 - 223-1682 Intarcollagiate Sailing Club THE TEXAS TAVERN 9 O 9 0 B S K lees CHICANO NIGHT BLUE MIST SALSA NIGHT Thun Fri H appy H a m HAROLD DUBINSKY fi$o-r Jo KRAYOLA ROCK A ROLL Sot in the Texas Union between the lines 12 “The Return of Eva Peron,” by VS. Naipaul; Alfred A. Knopf; $10; 228 pages. By Greg Beal I ’ve been remiss: I ’ve read too little of V S. Naipaul. My loss indeed, for Naipaul must be ranked among the best writers in the English language. Each new novel, each essay, further establishes his reputa­ tion. Born in Trinidad, to which his grand­ father had emigrated from India, Naipaul has spent most of his life in London. From that base he watches and writes, he witnesses the world. His novels and essays explore continents and peoples — India, Europe, the Caribbean. Africa, South America. Listen to this passage from the title es­ say of his collection “ The Return of Eva Peron : Peronism was never a program. It was an insurrection. For more than thirty years Argentina has been in a state of insurrection. The parallel is not with any country in Europe, as Argentine writers sometimes say. The parallel is with Haiti, after the slave rebellion of Toussaint: a barbarous colonial society similarly made, similarly parasitic on a removed civilization, and incapable of regenerating itself because slavery provided the only pattern of human behavior, and to be a man meant only to be able to assuage that pam about the other, to be like a master. Sim ilar paragraphs sweep over the pages of this collection, disturbing the reader and forcing confrontations. Naipaul sifts through cultures, comparing social constructs, observing governments and leaders, focusing upon the eyes and the hearts of the forlorn citizens of these nations. As in his novels. Naipaul strikes at the center in these essays — at the emotions of people, at the roots of civilizations. His is definitely a subjective view: Naipaul selects, he paints pictures of a world in flux, stammering toward corrup­ tion The events and the characters he en­ counters seem to be drawn from the pages of a novel rather than from the everyday. In “ Eva Peron.” Naipaul finds Argen­ tina in the mid-Seventies as a nation direc­ tionless. w ithering under the straw benevolency of the returned, aged Juan Peron and the sanctity of the deceased Eva. Inflation runs at 60 percent. Banks offer 24 percent interest. Torture has become a “ necessary instrument” of the bureaucracy. The police kamikaze about the streets of Buenos Aires in white Ford Falcons — the “ killer cars.” It's “ a collective refusal to see,” Naipual writes. “ There is no history in Argentina There are no archives; there are only graffiti and polemics and school lessons ” This becomes a repeated and terrifying refrain in the collection. In “ A New King for the Congo,” Naipaul examines the rise of Joseph Mobutu — from journalist to T H E LO N G H O R N B IA T H LO N army sergeant to colonel to head of state. Here again he writes: The past has vanished. F'acts in a book cannot give people a sense of history, where so lit­ tle has changed, where bush and river are so overwhelming . . . As observed by Naipaul. Zaire is a nation on the edge: without industry, roads, buildings, and transportation systems near collapse, while the people, following Mobutu, trust solely in the future. No one remembers events that occurred prior to the revolution in 1960. In the book’s first essay, “ Michael X and the Black Power Killings in Trinidad,” Naipaul describes the rise and fall of a black “ revolutionary.” A self-proclaimed redeemer, Michael Malik spent spent some years in Great Britain before retur­ ning to his native Trinidad There he es­ tablishes an “ agricultural commune,” a front for political forays into the cities and countryside. But this was a campaign doomed from its inception: finally it sank into a mire of intrigue and murder. As he had in Argentina and Zaire, Naipaul uncovers people in Trinidad floating in time, unable to separate the realities of their lives from the fictions they conjure in their minds. For Naipaul, Michael Malik was “ a man led to lunacy bv all the ideas he had been given of who he was.” One intriguing question remains: when will the next Naipaul novel appear and will its setting be Argentina, its plot evoking memories of the Perons? From the m aterial developed in these essays, Naipaul has already culled two novels — “ Guerillas” from “ Michael X ” and “ A Bend in the R iver” from “ A King for the Congo.” Logically, an "E v a Peron” novel should soon be completed. The four essays bound within the covers of “ The Return of Eva Peron” — the one left unmentioned here delves into the vi­ sion and art of Joseph Conrad — outline the shadowy7 hinterlands, the vast ex­ panses of interior and exterior societies and their people. These essays do not pur­ port to be history or sociology; rather they are fragm ents, bits of reportage, speculations, subjective renderings of ob­ jective reality. What Naipaul has done in “ Eva Peron” is to open doors for his readers, to open these worlds to them ★ ★ ★ “.Jambeaux, ” by Laurence Gonzales; Harcourt Brace Jovanovich; $9.95. B y C h ris W alters “ Jambeaux” is a savvy, hellbent, tightly controlled explosion of a book. It takes you on a fast ride through old territory — the rise of a rock ‘n’ roll band — and lights it up more with a vivid brilliance the other attempts along these lines have fallen short of. The appearance of any novel this good is nothing to sneeze at, but there hasn t been a great novel about rock since Harlan Ellison’s “ Spider Kiss” came out over 20 years ago, and the ones that qualify even as decent tries don’t require all the fingers of one hand to count. That fact makes “ Jam beaux” something of an event. The story it tells is a typical one — a Texas band named — you guessed it — Jambeaux achieves huge success with heavy emotional and physical casualties incurred along the way. The story’s hook is the unique vision of the band’s leader, Page, a Vietnam vet who believes that war was the most important thing to happen to rock n’ roll since the Beatles: “Finally Page had to evolve his own brand of music, and when it all shook down there was precious little war im­ agery left in it. That had been boiled off to the crystal distillation of joy and fear War to Page was no metaphor. It was the thing itself, everything else just resembled it a little . . .Vietnam was the adolescence of Rock and Roll, the point where it passed childhood and started to grow hair and get ugly and uncontrollable . . .they were right, our parents, who told us not to listen to that music, it was evil, it made us kill.” "Crystal distillation of joy and fear” is an apt description of Gonzales’ prose. He writes with one ear tuned to the frenzied surge of great rock n’ roll and the other poised for the sound of incoming artillery. At its best, his writing is a literary analogue to Duane Allman and E ric Clap­ ton’s guitar playing on “ Layla.” He has all the novelistic talents in generous quan­ tities — a good ear for dialogue, a sharp descriptive eye, and a knack for colorfully intense metaphors — and applies them with unflagging energy to a world that en­ compasses sleazy Gulf Coast bars at one end and sleek, womb-like recording studios that smell of money spent and money in gestation. The things that happen in the dredges form the book’s most entertaining and tell­ ing passages. There is a great scene in which Page sees a girl jerking off her date from the stage of a Galveston bar and offers them $20 if they’ll ‘‘do the crocodile rock right there on the floor.” The couple obliges, and Page, disgusted with the crowd's non-existent opinion of themselves and the hackneyed songs he’s forced to play to satisfy their boogie-lust, drops two tens on the man’s pumping backside as he staggers out. When he returns for the next set, he assaults them with the most frantic songs he can think, then lashes out at the owners of the club who cheat musicians of their wages, nam­ ing names and raging at the mob that runs the Gulf Coast operation. This culminates in an emotionally complex, horribly violent scene when the mob’s men come gunning for them and the band rips them to shreds. The book becomes more predictable in its last third or so, as Jambeaux follows the fam iliar path of enormous success and the self-indulgence and alienation that come with it. It ’s therefore no surprise that Gonzales includes a fatal episode at an arena concert, but his prelude to it is a beautifully captured moment of rock ‘n’ roll ecstasy: “The golden bell of the saxophone emitted shapes with such fluency that the effect was like watching someone blow molten copper bubbles from a pipe. Butch shifted his stance and em­ bouchure and another series of notes came out, this time with angles to them, fracturing prismatically in the spotlights, transuranium mutations, undiscovered jewels, stones blown out as if by an explosion from within the ore itself. The intersecting fields of light carved the bell of the horn into a bladed shape, and the whole instru­ ment seemed to change it form as he played the magic morphology. " After such an ethereal setup, the violence that follows is alm ost un­ bearable: “ Page saw the first foot go onto the girl’s neck and he didn’t need to see anymore, his stomach lurched against his ribs and his initial instinct was to jump off the stage to help, but that would have been suicide.” Anyone who has been to a con­ cert that almost teetered out of control knows the horror of this situation Gon­ zales' depiction of it rings true because he is able to evoke so well what Robert Fripp calls the "vam piric relationship between audience and performer” . “ Jambeaux” isn’t without flaws, the central one being that the crummy lyrics Gonzales has written for his fictional band undermine his claims for their greatness. And it would nice to see a writer invent a story about someone like Je rry Lee Lewis, whose career has seen valleys and peaks and more valleys. Still, Page’s narrative voice never loses its urgent drive, it holds the book together in the more predictable passages. That voice is one shared by the hero of James Crumley’s great detective novel "The Last Good Kiss, a voice which suggests that the men who fought in Vietnam, having survived the worst experience their era had to offer, know better than anyone else how the stakes of living have been changed by that war, and are the best equipped to deal with them “ Jambeaux” is thick with the sound of wars waged by people against themselves and their peers. r> SATURDAY, M AY 3, 1980 8:30 a.m. TEXAS SWIM CENTER 3 Mile RUN & Quarter Mile SWIM OR 6 m i. R U N It's the logging (3 miles) and swimming (8 lengths or 400 m eters) or just plain iogginq (6 miles) around U T's beautiful campus. Contestants will be assigned to heats and starting times by age groups. Awards will be given fcr males and females in each group. Tim es will be certified on request, and official times will be posted There will be refreshments and tim e for a refreshing swim for all contestants after the com ­ petition ends To enter, complete the entry form below and send it and your check (payable to the Longhorn Aquatic Club) to The University of Texas, TSC, Austin, T X 78705. Registration packets, complete with T-shirts and instructions, m ay be picked up at the Texas Swim Center between 2 and 7 p.m. Frid ay, M ay 2, and between 7 and 8 a m. Saturday, M a y 3. 1111■ PLEASE PRINT LAST N A M E FIRST N A M E LONGHORN BIATHLON (CNT*YFO*M) Texas S w im C enter 1900 Red R iver Austin, TX 78705 471-7433 UT ID NO SEX AGE STREET ADDRESS T-SHIRT SIZE: ADULT or CHILD XL CITY M ZIP ENTRY FEE ENCLOSED: A d u lt w /S o u v e n ir T-shirt $5.50 S tu d e n t w / S o u v e n ir T-Shirt $4.00 Sp ecial entry w / n o T-Shirt $1.50 RUN ONLY EVENT ENTERED: RUN/SWIM fu rth e r s ta le th a t 1 a m in p ro p e r p h y s ic a l co n d itio n t j p a r tic ip a te in th is r a c e T h is e n tr y is in v a lid u n le ss signed by e n tr a n t If e n tr a n t is u n d e r e ig h te e n (18) y e a r s of age. p a re n t or g u a r d ia n m u st sign e n tr y ^ S ig n a t u r e ———— Date >*■ -.i, r ,» /yS A 3E3 * • 13 i «VMM m tm **.*.* ftc A O u u it r r i - - w Apr' tp r * i uu l Km. * • _ jm 9 PLASIM TRAckiNq viiNyl relentless drive that The Motors attained on an earlier song, “ You Beat the Hell Outta Me.” However, here the momentum is all carried on the lower end of the register — drum, bass and low-mixed guitar — creating the sort of dense, creepy texture characteristic of Willy DeVille’s work on the “ Cruising” soundtrack. In the lyrics, the sub­ urbanite n arrator of the song finds precarious safety by blocking the reality of inner-city life from his mind, and “ T h e A g e o f P l a s t i c ” ; T h e B u g g i e s ; Rec or ds ). By Scott Bowles ( I s l a n d CBS, as you’ve no doubt noticed, is giving a big push to the Bruce Wooley and the Cam era Club album And if you’ve heard the record, you probably know there are only two good songs on the album: “ Video Killed the Radio S tar” and “ Clean, Clean.” Wooley used to be a m em ber of the Buggies, and while with them, co-wrote those two songs. And surprise, sur­ prise, those are just about the only good songs on the Buggies’ debut LP. The Buggies are a little cleverer than Wooley. They give both those songs heavily electronic renditions and the ap­ proach is far more sensible. On “Video,” the high-tech production seems more in keeping with an anthem about the emergence of a new medium; on “Clean, Clean,” all the electronic gee-gaws and the snotty sensibility of the vocals seem more threatening than Wooley’s straight­ ahead rocking. But while the Buggies are cleverer than Wooley, they’re still not especially clever. The tricks they use to a good advantage on the two strong cuts are overused by the end of the album, and as a result, the Buggies come off overbearingly cute. The only other song of much interest here is “ Living in the Age of P lastic,” a song that really isn’t that good It is silly and playful and extrem ely upbeat though, so it at least isn’t boring Which is m ore than can be said for most the rest of the album. The other songs are plagued with terrible hooks, an over-indulgence of synthesized goop and a lot of pseudo- modernistic them atic m aterial. The Buggies seem to use all this futuristic drivel not to create something new, but to give them a context in which they can safely act smdely above everything The Buggies come off like spoiled brats playing with their new C hristm as toys. For their mutual benefit, they and Wooley should have stuck together; between them, they might be able to do three good cuts, as it follows "Tenem ent Steps,” the song is all the more powerful. in this genre, “ Nightm are Zero” is a nuclear holocaust song, but un­ like most the song doesn t harp on mankind's folly, but rather depicts the self-centered panic of the narrator. This cut is probably the finest produced number on the album, with a church-like organ which seems to be welling up from the bottom of the mix es­ pecially effective. Though “ Tenement Steps” is a terrific album, I have no doubts but that it will die a quick death. (It’s been off that rack in the back in Inner Sanctum for a couple of weeks now.) The Motors are obviously a studio band who can’t tour to support the record. Virgin’s not pushing the album and their aforementioned slickness has soured them in most critics’ eyes. Oh well. Pose is more important than content. Long live the Plasm atics. ROBIN Quiet Storm Special Guests Keith & Darrell Thursday, May 1, 8 PM $ 8 .0 0 , $ 7 .0 0 ’Cruism” ’Let Me Be The Clock’ ’Tears of a Clown’ Tickets on s a le at SEC S a tu rd a y , A p ril 12, 8 A M N o lines or lists prior to 11 PM , A p ril 11 N o C a m e ra s CHARGE-A-TICKET Austin 477-6060 S a n M arco s 392-2751 T em p le 774-9176 K ille e n 526-2881 Ph o n e orders a ccep ted b egin nin g 9 A M , A p ril 12 M a il O rd er: P.O . Box 2929 Austin, TX 78769 A dd $1 c o n v e n ie n c e ch arg e to a ll p h on e and m ail ordersQDTHE ufMKmsitK o f m o ts at *im tr«| JPflCML EKEW 5 CEWEfl “T e n e m e n t S t e p s ” ; T he M otors; (V irgin R ec o rd s). By Scott Bowles A year or year and a half ago, there was an interview in M elody M a k e r with Sean Tyla, who was grousing about the demise of the Tyla Gang in the face of encroaching new wave commercialism. The person he was grousing the most about was his fellow Ducks Deluxe alum, Nick Garvey. Garvey was a sell-out. His new group, The Motors, produced slick music under the guise of new wave, and he was therefore a contemptible sell-out. Since The Motors don’t sell all that many records, the reason they are generally disliked comes down to their slickness. Garvey and Andy McMaster have the capacity of playing several instruments apiece with above-average ability. Somehow, in some people’s minds, when a new wave act attains this level of musical competency, that group is inherently intellectually bankrupt. Which is a lot of crap. If you follow that reasoning, The Plasmatics, the new wave’s version of Kiss, are one of in­ tellectually honest bands around; they’re certainly among the most musically inept. So with that off my chest, here’s a couple of sweeping statements: around, and far. • l.The Motors are one of the best new wave acts • 2.“Tenement Steps’’ is the best album of the year so The Motors seem to be improving through attrition. With Bram Tchaikovsky dropping out after “Approved by The Motors” to pursue a solo career as a vacuous pop per­ former, the group’s down to basically just Garvey and McMaster, although they did hire Rockpile drummer Terry Williams and bassist Martin Ace to play on the album. But gone with Tchaikovsky are the last illusions of being just another power pop band. With “Tenement Steps,” The Motors culminate a maturation process that has continued steadily since their first album, and use the sound they have been developing as a social statement. The Motors are basically a wall-of-sound band. Only their (and co-producer Jimmy Iovine’s) use of the technique is far more oppresive than Phil Spector ever dreamed. Most of the songs begin with a fast, steady bass and drum line, onto which a guitar line is mixed, then another guitar and then a keyboard or two, each progressively higher in the mix. By the time the vocals finally enter, the cut has already reached a crescendo, which will usually continue unabated for the duration of the song. The intricately textured pattern of rhythms The Motors lay down behind each song is compelling, yet the unrelentingness of it tends to exhaust the listener. The sound is alluring, yet grating. And that sound is used as a metaphor for modern urban existence. The tempo is extremely fast, yet never so out of control that it’s frenetic. The sound is tempting, yet once a song is entered, it surrounds and towers over you and is inescapable. The music is highly organized confu­ sion. And that sound is the jumping off point for the best album on this theme of urban existence since Alan Price’s “Metropolitan Man.” The album opens with “ Love and Loneliness,” a song depicting the deterioration of a relationship after the in­ flux of m aterialistic comforts. The couple rem ains together — there never seems to be any question of break­ ing up — yet they are m erely maintaining an appearance and going through the motions and as a result, are more isolated than before they were together. Sure, that sounds like the sort of garbage th at’s the domain of Jackson Browne and his ilk, but the song is done without the nauseating self-pity and narcissism on usually finds on this sort of thing. Obviously, it’s the second side which m akes the album. The title track leads off the side and is chocked full of violent vignettes of inner-city living conditions. The chorus repeats “ Tenement steps, cem ented” in an odd beat and a minor key which makes it all very grating horrifying. The next cut, “ Slum People,” has the sort of fierce, 14 Photos by Karen Hurley Marilyn French: Truth in fiction kills myths that ‘w om en’s ’ novels uphold By Vikki Barnaart "The Women's Room” has especially become well- known as a manifesto for the generation of women who were housewives rearing babies in the Fifties and early Sixties. Marilyn French, who has also authored "The Bleeding Heart,” talked at some length last Thursday night about the conventions of "women’s ” books. French pointed out that certain conventions were scrupulously followed in women’s books The first con­ vention was that “women’s work is not legitimate subject matter for serious literature” — only when it was comic could it be mentioned The second convention was that men must be central to the women’s lives: "They can be selfish, hollow or wooden, but they must be there ” The last convention is the notion of the happily-ever-after en­ ding for women If the work were shared by men and women, it would not be undervalued as much, and it would be easier. T h e p r o b l e m . M y ra b e g a n f i r m l y , “is th a t t h e s e w o m e n think too m u c h a b o u t m e n . I m e a n , th e ir m e n a r e e v e r y t h i n g to them . I f m e n t h in k t h e y a r e a t t r a c t i v e , t h e y a r e ; i f th e y don't, t h e y ' r e not. T h e y g i v e men the p o w e r to d e t e r m i n e t h e i r i d e n ­ tities, t h e i r v a lu e s , to a c c e p t o r r e j e c t t h e m . T h e y h a v e not s e l v e s — "The Women’s Room" Like Myra, the central charactar in "The Women’s Room ," French sees that men are always central to women's lives in literature. She commented that women always find happiness by being centered in others, usual­ ly their husbands. “The Women's Room is different from most of the women's literature because French dealt with "women’s work" on a day-to-day level She talked about women "scraping shit out of diaper with a kitchen knife, finding places where string beans are two cents less a pound, learning to wake up at the sound of a cough, spending one’s intelligence in figuring the most efficient, least time-consuming way to iron men’s white shirts or to wash and wax the kitchen floor, or take care of the house and kids and work at the same time . . . ” French sees women's work as tedious and undervalued in our society; it is undervalued because it is unpaid, and it is unpaid because to pay women for thei work would be to make it marketable and valuable. Women would not longer constitute a huge labor force, the economy would have to change. Because of that, it is not suitable work of fiction. The occupation, she comments, of half the taken seriously. But world’s population cannot be living. women’s work Someone has to do the dishes, that’s all there is to it. The problem, she points out, is our society’s view of the work. is necessary and central to " ...their m e n a r e every th in g to them . I f m e n think they a r e a t r r a c t i v e , they a r e ; i f they they a r e n ' t . They give on't, m e n the p o w e r to d e t e r m i n e their id en tities, their v a l u e s , to a c c e p t or r e j e c t them . They h a v e not s e l v e s The women in novels are only allowed the choice of a career or a family, and there is never any question of do­ ing both Happiness, of course, resides in dependence on a male, and therefore, the crisis in literature for women usually merely involves choosing the right man. If the heroine should choose a career, the last scene is of her left alone “with the Manhattan skyline and a huge desk as compensation for lost love.” “ T h e p r o b l e m w ith th e g r e a t l i t e r a t u r e o f th e p a s t is that it d o e s n ' t tell you how to liv e w ith r e a l e n ­ ding s. In th e g r e a t lit e r a t u r e o f th e p a s t , y o u e i t h e r g et m a r r i e d a n d liv e h a p p i ly e v e r a f t e r , o r y ou d ie. B ut th e f a c t is, n e i t h e r is w h a t a c t u a l l y h a p p e n s . Oh, you d o d ie, but nei e r at th e right t im e , n e v e r with g r e a t l a n g u a g e f l o a t i n g a ll a r o u n d you, a n d a w h o le t h e a t e r f u ll o f w i t n e s s e s to y o u r a g o n y . W hat a c t u a l l y h a p p e n s is that you d o g e t m a r r i e d , o r y ou don 't, a n d you don ’t liv e h a p p ily e v e r a f t e r , but you d o live. A nd th a t's th e p r o b l e m . I m e a n , t h in k a b o u t i t .” — The Women’s Room The conventions French is talking about reflect values of the society that produces them, and in that way, they are damaging. She comments that "a rt provides cultural modes and ideals, but art doesn't consider that conse­ quence. Conventions equal moral standards.” The conventions of this sort of literature are conven­ tions that falsify experience, that set up unrealistic ex­ pectations for the women who read these books. The hap­ py ending motif makes women expect that if they marry the right man. have children, then they should be happy. It doesn't take into consideration anything between. Literary notions are insidious, says French. Women who do not find happiness in marriage and children blame themselves; after all. the women in the books are happy with their lives. French is interested in breaking the rules of “ women’s novels for those reasons; she is interested in presenting the truth, rather than the myths of society. There are no happy endings in her two books, but there are survivors. All I c a n d o is talk , ta lk , ta lk , W ell, I will d o w h a t I ca n . I will ta lk , t a lk , ta lk, I will tell you th e r e s t o f w h a t I kn ow , t a k e it to a s m u c h o f an e n d a s it h a s . It is not o v e r .. . But I a m f i n i t e . ” — “ The Women’s Room French speaks from experience. She does what she can to^ell the truth as she knows it. * * * i + * ♦ ♦ ★ * * * ★ * * ★ * * * ♦ ♦ ★ ★ * ♦ * * + * ♦ * * + ‘Stardate’ : radio’s astronomical reporter By Patrick Jankow ski Have you seen the stars tonight? Before venturing into the night, tune to KUT-FM at 9 p.m. You might hear what phenomenon to expect in the night sky, or maybe why stars twinkle, or perhaps a mo­ ment in the history of astronomy. The program you will be listening to is called “ Stardate.” The UT McDonald Observatory produces “ Stardate” and sends it to approximately 1,000 subscribers across the nation. A Spanish version called “ Astrofecha” reaches 80 of those stations. Since the program began over two and a half years ago, producer and writer Deborah Byrd has scripted nearly a thousand different “ Stardate" programs, with every one covering a different topic. Writing these programs re­ quires much effort on her part; she reads half a dozen different magazines and journals, skims shelves of books and attends all the University seminars on astronomy. In preparing the scripts, she works every day of the year be­ ing “ always aware of the program and working on ideas all waking hours of the day,” she said. Although she explains the technical parts on a very sim ­ ple level, Byrd always sends the finished scripts to two astronomers to check for errors. Harlan Smith, director of the McDonald Observatory, and David Slavsky, an assistant astronomy instructor, scrutinize each day’s program before approving it for broadcast They general­ ly agree on all script changes, except they occasionally differ over m atters still disputed in astronomy, such as the age of the universe. When that happens, she takes Smith’s word because he is the director of the obser­ vatory, Byrd said. After Byrd prepares the script and checks it with Smith and Slavsky, she delivers it to Joel Block, the announcer for “ Stardate." At his studio, called “ The Production Block,” he and Byrd record the programs on tape. Byrd says that Block interprets the scripts well, putting the right emphasis where it is needed And in two and a half years of taping, Block has learned a lot about astronomy; he has become, in one fan's words, “ the perfect celestial reporter,” Bvrd said After taping a week s worth of programs, Byrd delivers the tape to the Longhorn Radio Network, which makes 1,- 000 copies and sends them out to the program 's sub­ scribers two or three weeks before the day they must run, she said. A massive campaign which involved mailing more than 3,400 samples of the program to radio stations across the country has added over 700 new subscribers to Stardate’s subscription list since the fall. Although the program received a $146,000 grant from the National Science Foun dation to continue the program through July 1981, the sudden influx of radio stations has taxed “ Stardate’s ” budget Byrd had planned for a gradual increase in the number of stations carrying the program, but already they have reached the level set to be reached by December. 1980 Byrd hopes to cut costs by sending out only one tape for the entire month rather than separate tapes each week She also hopes to improve the quality of the program, and she wants to be more selective about which stations recieve “ Stardate Because the program is free, many small-town stations subscribe to “ Stardate,” but Byrd hopes to target the program at stations in larger cities with big audiences, she said. Besides being broadcast on KUT-FM, KCSW also broadcasts “ Stardate" at 7 45 p.m. daily in Austin. MOTH® „ . 1907 E Riverside dusrn 44 3 1695 Live Rock 'n Roll This W e e k M onday LIGHTNING Tuesday-Saturday RAGE Sunday HEYOKA ( Ladies A d m itte d Free Sunday Through Thursday) MON-TUES Beer Bash N ig h t $2 Cover All The Micnelob you can drink 8-12 WEDNESDAY Ladies N igh t V2 price drinks THURSDAY Live rock 'n roll FRIDAY No Cover for those 20 or older or w ith UT ID SUNDAY Ladies N igh t Free drinks for unescorted ladies 9 -1 2 ELI'S 6 5 2 8 N . LAMAR 4 5 3 -9 2 0 5 WOULD YOU BELIEVE TEN UNIQUE OMELETTES, GINGER BREAD AND WHOLE WHEAT PANCAKES, COLD AND HOT SOUP DU JOUR, SANDWICHES AND SALADS, HERBAL TEAS, HOMEMADE PIES AND CAKES. WITH NOTHING OVER $3.25 AND NOV FULLY AIH CONDITIONED s V C A S IO F -2 0 0 C 71 9 8 SALE 21 98 reliable ultra precise W atch it highly sophisticated and simple to use Its features include • water resistant • shock resistant (under normal use) • accuracy 10 sec per mo (normal use) • regular watch mode — hr., mo , min.. sec am /p m , month, date, day • Stop watch mode — measuring capacity 69 min., 69 sec 9 9 /1 0 0 of a second measuring modes: norm al/nat/lap time 1 st - 2nd place times, Sportinq Feet THE FORUM 2 0 0 0 E Bee Cave Rd 32 7 2409 OOBIE MALL 2021 Guadalupe 472 8 6 1 0 A vintage clothing andcollectables n i l - n n i fg ; Scherts & More 1979 SHOW YOUR ROOTS! Accessories for Native Sons & Daughters SCHERTS More ' s*3 A € ---- Dobie Mall • 2021 Guadalupe • 477-2652 M .... WM I l\ I I I H H I I k l I 11.1. tin h i m . IH 11 \l II OH IIIWlHi i r tin omu 11 ini on \ n in) un ? m m. im V If 4811 BURNET 453-5062 5 0 H W.2>U ^ bLuuJ>enrvv>JL H > G ) - t t U O Mxmdau^ ihjvuu Sakxxchj^ t/~U 1922 The only era of inexpensive broadcasting takes off. However, this form of cheap entertainment nears its end when AT&T announces that it will place its broadcasting facilities at the disposal of anyone will­ ing to contract for them and pay the fee. It’s called "toll broadcasting,” but that euphemism doesn’t fool anyone. The first com m ercial goes on the air Aug. 22 for an apartm ent project on Long Island. Most commen­ tators are indignant toward the new form of funding, little hew and cry since nearly but they raise everyone considers im practical. Despite the extensive promotion efforts on behalf of AT&T, the total revenue for "toll broadcasting” dur­ ing August and Septem ber amounts to a paltry $550. selling airtim e NBC institutes two separate program s — its " r e d ” and "blue ("b lu e ” later to become ABC) networks, a s its first rival, the Columbia Broadcasting System , arrives on the scene. The Federal Radio Commission, precursor of the Federal Communications Com m is­ sion, is formed. And, m ost portentiously, Philo T. Farnsworth applies for a patent on his device for “ electronic” television. The regular series takes off at NBC, launched by the compone humor of “ Amos n’ Andy.” Other pop­ ular series follow, such a s "T h e G oldbergs,” whose ch aracters enter the everyday vernacular of the American public The collapse of vaudeville brings the perform ers into the radio studio, such a s A1 Jolson. the Marx Brothers and Fanny Brice a s “ Baby Snooks.” First demonstration of FM for the press by Edwin Armstrong The Mercury Theatre of the Air broadcasts a radio play based on H G. Wells’ “ War of the Worlds” and sends residents of New Je rse y and Long Island into a panic when they m istake it for an actual news report. A patent is granted to Vladim ir Zworykin for iconoscope-kinescope tubes, foreruners of the pic­ 1927 1929 1930 1935 1938 1939 [ , Guglielmo Marconi sends w ireless m essages on family estate near Bologna, Italy. Marconi takes his transmitting set to England after the Italian government seem s uninterested in his in­ vention. The next year he form s his own company in i London. 1895 1896 1899 In October, Marconi visits the United States at the request of the New York Herald to transm it a minute-by-minute account of the boating Cup Race. The Herald rushes the results of the tournament into print even before the boats return to dock. Marconi incorporates an American subsidiary of his company (later to become RCA) and w ireless fever sweeps the land. 1907 The word "televisio n ” first used in Scientific American. Lee de Forest, after perfecting electronic vacuum tube am plification, begins broadcasts in New York with his Radio Telephone Company. B roadcasts from the Eiffel Tower and the stage of the Metropolitan Opera House follow during the next few vears. 1920 The idea of regular broadcast program m ing begins to take hold in. of all places, Pittsburgh. An am ateur w ireless enthusiast, Frank Conrad, who regularly broadcasts "con certs of m usic” from a Victrola pull­ ed up to his transm itting set, constructs a 100-watt transm itter on top of the Westinghouse works in E a st Pittsburgh. KDKA, the first licensed “ station” in the country, takes to the air on Nov. 2 with the broadcasting of election returns between presidential candidates Warren G. Harding and Ja m e s Cox. Datelines for the Wasteland 4 ( V » » '" «^ V «* ■ i ■ I i W ^ V bowl m atch between M iami and Washington arrives on time. The W atergate hearings give P B S unprecedented ratings. Com m erical networks provide over 300 hours of program m ing and suffer losses of over $7 million. P B S, however, m akes a cool million in con­ tributions from view ers. 1974 Coast-to-coast streaking inaugurated at the Academy Awards presentation when a backstage technician bares it all and ste als the limelight from David Niven. is In Florida, telling view ers that if violence is what they want on their TV screen s, violence is what they’ll get, talk-show h ostess Chris Chubbuck in- terupts her morning show, takes a gun out of her shopping bag and blows her brains out on the air. An estim ated 110 million view ers watch the Nixon resignation — a record for a single quarter-hour and for a nation’s patience. 1975 1976 Sony’s B e ta m a x hom e video recordin g and playback equipment goes on the m arket. To the tune of $1 million, B arb ara W alters m oves from the coffee klatsch am biance of the "T o d ay ” show to ABC News with the kind of hype and hoopla that only the m edia can bestow on them selves. The M artian landscape debuts on the boob tube. 1977 R oots’ breaks all the records and boosts ABC into first place for the first tim e in TV history. NBC bags the 1980 Sum m er Olympics for a record $85 million, hoping to halt its sagging ratings. David F ro st begins his serie s of syndicated inter­ views with Nixon, and the results are sedating, to say the least. 1978 They said it would never happen, but CBS acquires the rights to that venerable behemoth, "G one with the Wind, for 20 y ears and for only a record $35 million. “ Ja w s ,” however, edges the Civil War epic a s the biggest m ovie draw er in TV history. Chronology by Gary Reese Art by Key Wilde ture tube, in his "electron ic television.” RCA-NBC inaugurates its first regularly scheduled telecasts on May 1 with the broadcast of the opening cerem onies at the New York World’s F air. Roosevelt becomes the first president to appear on TV RCA attem pts to expand its audience to at least 25,000 viewers in the New York area by cutting the the FCC hats all prices on com m ercial operation” of television until industry its TV sets. But, standards can be set. M eanw hile, o v er at C B S, P e te r G o ld m ark dem onstrates his system for color television. The FCC finally gives broadcasters the go ahead for television, but by the end of the year, with the na­ tion hurrying towards war, any widespread expan­ sion of television facilities has to be postponed We re the One, we re the Two ... The Suprem e Court orders NBC to sell one of its networks. NBC "B lue is reconstitued a s the Am erican Broad­ casting Company. P M radio m akes a bow. but no one is sure exactly where During the next few years, the FCC continues to shift the allocated frequency band for FM stations, finally settling between 88 and 108 MHz. 1940 1941 1943 1945 1948 7 hat s awfully big of you... RCA develops a 16- inch picture tube, the first m etal kinescope, and offers to disclose its industry secrets so that other m anufacturers can begin production of TV sets. Who said vaudeville ever died? NBC launches Milton Berle, “ Mr. Television, in an hour-long program , thus saddling audiences with that enter­ tainment brontosaurus, the variety hour, for the next three decades. I he tail that wags the dog: Philadelphia becomes the site of the GOP presidential convention by virtue of its telecable hook-up to New York Citv 1952 1 m not a crook (Part 1): Television sw ells to comic heights a s vice-presidential hopeful Richard Nixon explains away his cam paign slush fund while a cardboard cutout of his wife, P at, blankly follows the proceedings. Most people have since forgotten that the darling little spaniel. Checkers, cam e from the Lone Star State. In the legislative branch. Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn dem onstrates his respect for par­ ticipatory dem ocracy when he bans all radio and television coverage of House com m ittees. Film of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II on June 2 is flown to A m erica and shown the sam e day, a breathtaking record for the tim es. The first noncommerical television station in the nation, KUHT, takes to the air in Houston. The Army-McCarthy hearings in the Senate are carried live by ABC-TV. The power of TV is fully it caps the fortunes of the demonstrated when cap ital’s number one red-baiter. 1955 Eisenhower allow s the first presidential con­ ference to be telecast, but on film and subject first to review by the White House. The biggest quiz show boom in TV’s history takes off with the debut of "T h e $64,000 Question ” TV Westerns. Hollywood releases its pre-1948 film s and m ovies glut the airw aves, causing TV production to drop and dooming the prom ising live television dram a series which were then standard fare. Don t hold your breath ... Tobacco advertisers say that a recent report by the Am erican Cancer Society will have little effect on cigarette adver- l ‘.ising. 1959 1 know the answer, but could you repeat the i question? Astronom ical winnings of quiz show con- t estants — som e of them topping six figures — v r o m p t investigations f rigging. Networks prom ise y y 1953 1954 1956 1957 to do penance by creating public service budgets. One of the first and the longest surviving effects of this is “ CBS R ep orts,” which first a irs during this season. “It was my mascara that cost me Illinois!” The first Kennedy-Nixon debate on Oct. 3 draw s the biggest TV audience ever. “Doncha mess with Elliot Ness...” "T h e Un­ touchables” leads the way to precedented high in TV violence, causing Senator Thom as Dodd to call for the first congressional investigation into the effects of TV program m ing. T elstar ushers in the era of global TV. John Glenn’s orbital space flight is televised live and seen by 135 million viewers. 1960 1962 1963 I have a dream... The March on Washington, culminating with Martin Luther King’s ringing oratory, is the highlight of this y e a r’s sum m er program m ing. The Kennedy assassin ation is the occasion of the heaviest TV coverage of any one event in its history — four continuous days, from Friday to Monday, of uninterrupted nation-wide telecasts. The Fab Four m ake their bow on “ The Ed Sullivan Show and the m usic scene in A m erica is never quite the sam e. Roper reseachers report that television is un­ questionably the nation’s m ajor source of news Is anybody out there watching? More than 300 stations get fallout shelters supplied by the federal government for their transm itter engineers. Ranger 7 sends back close-up pictures of the moon into the bedrooms of the nation. Television enters its m ost blistering political period a s it questions the credibility of the White House over the conflict in Southeast Asia. CBS presi­ dent Fred Friendly resigns over the network’s deci­ sion to halt coverage of Senate hearings on the Viet­ nam War. 1964 1964 1966 1968 The year of political assassin ation s clim axes with the off-cam era m urder of Sen ato r R obert F Kennedy in the kitchen of the A m bassador Hotel in downtown Los Angeles. TV grants R F K its m ost ex­ tensive coverage since the assassin ation of President Kennedy. Great moments you didn't see on TV- NBC breaks away from the N F L playoff gam e at 6:00 p m Sunday, Nov. 25. with the TV movie, "H eid i,” and m isses an astounding defeat of the Je ts when the R aiders score two touchdowns in the last nine seconds of the gam e. N eedless to say, viewer re ac­ tion insures that it will never happen again One giant step... Hardly lapidary words, but viewers around the world watch with fascination as the first man steps out onto the moon. CBS fires the Sm others Brothers after continuous haggling over censorship of the program by the network and its affiliates. Johnny Carson draw s his largest audience ever when Tiny Tim and M iss Vicky take their m utable vows on Dec. 17. The year begins without a light a s cigarette ad ver­ The FCC refuses to investigate allogations of dis­ tortion in CBS R ep orts’ "T h e Selling of the Pen­ tagon.” FCC Com m issioner Nicholas Johnson, a ss a ils the administration for trying to turn public broadcasting into a dom estic Voice of Am erica. Nixon slash es appropriations for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. E stim ate s of world wide audience for the Munich Olympics indicate that it m ay have drawn over a billion viewers. 1973 "I’m not a crook, I’m a foot ball coach: Signed sealed and delivered, the Nixon play for the Super­ 1969 1971 1972 "Cheyenne” becom es the first of an avalanche of tising gets the final thumbs down. V ■ *«■»» ■*»"■» ■■ •* ' -y — y - -y - y - y - y :: 18 Television’s winds of change o Art by Sam Hurt By P unch S h a w The Video Revolution You have probably read that phrase before. It has become a rather tired prophecy over the years. I can remem ber the first time I read a wild-eyed, revolutionary vision It predicted that home video recorders would be alm ost as common as television sets within a year That was 1967. You have probably read the sam e sort of predictions about quadraphonic audio system s, vid«io discs and large screen television sets. Each new piece of technology has set off its own wave of rash predictions. For years. The wait, however, may be over. Home video cassette recorders can now be found in more than a million American homes. Video discs have been successfully test-marketed in Atlanta and Seattle, and other video technologies (large screen TVs, stereo sound, voice-activated channel changing, etc.) seem s to be coming on at a good pace. j r ut, our preoccupation with this new hardware, significant though it is, m ay be distracting us from the true locus of the video revolution — com m er­ cial network programming. The current television schedule is a sham bles. Shows pop in and out of the schedule ("T h e A ssociates” is a good exam ple) and time and night changes on the regulars are common "Th e Best of Saturday Night L iv e " was brought on a s mid-season replacement, did okay on Wednesday night, but was then moved to Friday and bombed. Program s which seem s to be sure fire winners ("M ork and "S k a g ,” for instance) are inexplicably and Mindy diving down the porcelain convenience. The networks have responded by throwing a wide range of programm ing at the public in hopes of hitting a winner. They have given us television of the past in the form of un­ wanted variety shows like "The Tim Conway Show” and "Pink Lady” and televison of the future (at least I think that’s the problem with "United S ta te s.” ) These frequent program and schedule changes seem to have disrupted viewing patterns and scattered the audience to such an ex­ tent that it has become even more difficult to know what the viewers truly want. The Nielsens have been full of flukes this season. "Th e Dukes of H azzard,” for exam ple has m anaged to top the ratings because of a large and con­ sistent juvenile audience. Other program s underscore this shift from adult programm ing, where the ratings m ay be poor, to the more secure, lowest common denominator , "se x and car cra sh " shows. Even televison producers seem to be registering some dissatisfaction with the current quality of programm ing. With an increasingly united voice, they have been com ­ plaining to the networks about the amount of tim es they are given to develop their program s. They have also ex­ pressed dism ay at the glut of cheap gam e shows currently ............................................... occupying the prime tim e a cce ss period (a time that originally given back to local stations to encourage local production). The king of tastelessn ess, Chuck B arris (creator of "Th e Dating G am e,” "T h e Gong Show” and the "$1.98 Beauty Contest” ), among others, has shut down production for a year because of this surfeit of trash. From the chaos of the last couple of seasons, however, three programm ing trends have emerged. • Television news has suddenly become a hot item. • The soap opera form at has m ade deep inroads into prim e time. • The classic situation comedy m ay be on its last legs. Another prediction that has been around for a while suggests that, eventually, the television networks will be broadcasting mostly news and live events. Entertainm ent program m ing will come from other sources. A couple of m ajor steps in that direction have aleady been taken. The networks have long wanted to expand their evening new scasts. They, like many of their viewers, recognize that a half hour cannot do justice to the events of the day. Local affiliates have prevented any expansion because it would mean a loss of local revenue. ABC decided to take something of a backdoor approach to the problem and now we have "N ightline” each weeknight after the local news. This 20-minute new scast, born of and concerned prim arily with the Iran crisis, indicates the public’s in­ terest in information program m ing and, though it’s too early to tell, it could also increase audiences for local news programming. Another information indication of this hunger for programm ing is reflected in the continuing popularity of "60 M inutes." It consistently finishes in the top five of the Nielsens and has spawned some less-successful im itators "P rim e Tim e Sunday") But it does seem to in­ ("20/20. dicate increased interest in TV journalism . It is further encouraging that as it becomes more popular, it gets better. Dan R ather’s venture into Afghanistan disguised as a rebel is nothing less than a milestone in television journalism . > * hese changes in program m ing and viewing patterns are paving the way for som e truly revolutionary ap p roach es to television news. This sum m er, Ted Turner will launch his Cable News Network (CNN) — a 24-hour news station to be offered to cable system s. Video presentation of printed news has already begun in Britain and, if these other efforts continue to succeed, will probably be available here in a few years. If viewers respond to these new news technologies a s they have to program s like "60 M inutes,” then it seem s safe to assum e that the competitive p ressures of these other news services will force the network news divisions to m ake changes of revolutionary proportions. In entertainment program m ing, the changes are going to come much more slowly but the earliest signs of a shift are there. Since the birth of the medium, the situation comedy, or sit-com, has dominated television. Lucille Ball defined the style in 1951 with " I Love Lu cy" and the sit-com has been the predominant program type and ratings winner ever since. This season, the sit-com, in its classical form, m ay be playing its swan song. "L avern e and Shirley,” a tribute to (if not a theft of) the "L u c y " style of comedy, has finished in the low fifties of the ratings a couple of tim es this season. (Th at’s out of about 65 program s for the week.) "H appy D ay s,” which usually finishes near the top, has dipped down into the low twenties and thirties. CBS based its new season last Septem ber on a brace of half-hour com edies which were intentionally sim ilar to the many successful program s offered by ABC. Most, like "The L ast R eso rt,” died a quick and critically gory death. This suggests that viewers are not only rejecting this program m ing type, but also that as cable and new technologies expand viewing choices, low quality program s, such a s those previously mentioned, will not find an audience. ^ j r he program m ing that has sur­ vived the turmoil of the last few seasons is pointing to the growth of the soap opera a s the m ainstay of television, day and night. " D a lla s " is the m ost obvious exam ple, but it is not the only indicator. A few weeks ago I saw a "M *A *S *H ” in prim e time. At one point Ja m ie F a rr entered Harry M organ’s office. No big deal, except that I noticed there were four paintings hanging on the office wall — paintings I had seen Harry Morgan do in reruns of shows several seasons old. This is one tiny exam ple of how "M *A *S *H ” m aintains a thread of continuity that is not found in less popular comedies. The program gives the viewer a consistency that the schedule a s a whole seem s to be m issing. Its focus on character, internally motivated plots and treatm ent of controversial and intim ate problem s make it much more akin to The Guiding Light than " I Love Lucy.” Televi­ sion comedy seem s to be making a gradual shift away from the cartoon-like ch aracters and settings of the classic sit-com to the humor of realistic ch aracters in realistic situations. ' It seem s apparent that television is beginning a radical shift. The winds of change have caused som e desperate program m ing m oves at the networks. Shows like "T h a t’s Incredible,” "P in k Lady,” “ United S ta te s" and "B uck Rogers in the 25th Century” indicate that the networks are scram bling without any real direction to their program m ing search. But a s they continue to search, our range of choices continues to expand and we occasionally get a gem like "T en Speed and Brown Shoe.” And, a s far as the video revolution is concerned, that is what is im por­ tant. If we m ake a success of VCRs, cable and video discs without having an im pact on com m ercial network program m ing, then we will have won a battle and lost the war. 19 < lAZVM I'# ! A F A S H IO N O UTLET Mm I found it at Crazy Joe's! This silk western shirt and cham bray flounce skirt by Ralph Lauren sell for $39 and $38 at most department stores. At C razy joe's, the price is $24.99 each. W h y shop anyw here else? p n a s Q , P resents * Tonight * K L B J-F M Welcomes ... SPYRO GYRA Extreme Heat * Wednesday * DOC AND MERLE WATSON Norman and Nancy Blake * Friday ★ FLORA PURIM Passenger * Saturday * An Evening w ith ... SONNY ROLLINS ★ Wednesday, April 30th ★ MARIA MULDAUR * Thursday, M ay 1 * An Evening w ith ... JACK DE JOHNETTE The A rm adillo B eer Garden now open daily m records- ON SALE Various U.S. Now Wave Tommy Tutone Koi k a f f i Van Wilkes Bitty Joe! Pretenders Stiff Little Rogers Elvis Costado Von Halen Fabulous Tkunderbirds Michael Franks lOcc Black Sabbath Oaf Leppard Scott Jarrett Journey Bob Soger Joan Arma trading Ian Hunter Grace Slick Rrofall Sharp Cuts Tommy Tut one Bombay Tears Glass House* Pretenders Nobody's Heroes GenfapB Van Halen 11 What the Word One Bod Habit took Hoar Heaven end Hell rough the OnThr at Rhyme Without I Departure Against the Wind Stoppin' Out (7 LP) Welcome to the Chib (2 IP) Night or Reason 3.tf 3. ft 4.Pf 4.ff 4.ff 4.ff 4.ff 5.4f 5.71 5.71 5.4f 5.4t 5.4t 5.4f 5.71 5.ff 5.ft 4.ff 7.ff 4.ff 5.10 i ! i! m m m ;*:* V 4 m. 5/4 iw i 4/21 4/23 4/25 4/24 4/24 4/27 4/30 5/1 5/2 5/2 T I C K E T S Spyru Gyra Doc I. Merle Watson Flora Purim Sonny Rollins Horry Chapin 5HYSICS (THU) 2:45 O © © W R IT E ON (TUE) O © ©W ORDSMITH (FRI) 2:50 O © © IM A G E S AND THINGS (THU) 3:00 O © PETTICOAT JUNCTION (MON-THU) © © MOVIE O ® CROSS-WITS O ® ONE DAY AT A TIME (R) Q © © IN S ID E / OUT (MON) Q © © M A T H MATTERS (TUE) O © ©1CAN DO (WED) O © 8 ADVENTURES OF MILO AND MAISIE (FRI) © CÍJ © © QD © E D G E OF NIGHT © ® CARTOONS O f f i ©BREAKTHROUGH (THU) O © © F A M ILIE S OF THE WORLD (MON) Q © 8 SHORT STORY (TUE) O © ( I EQUAL JUSTICE UNDER THE LAW (WEO) O © © A M E R IC A N SCRAPBOOK (FRI) © © THE MUNSTERS (MON-THU) O ® JOKER’S WILD (MON) O © PETTICOAT JUNCTION (TUE-FRI) O ® WOOOY WOODPECKER Q © © W R IT E ON (TUE) © © © FO OTSTEPS (THU) Q © © G R E A T DECISIONS (FRI) © © TO BE ANNOUNCED © © BANANA SPLITS © ® BUGS BUNNY AND FRIENDS f f i ©BEW ITCHED CD © EL CIELO ES PARA TODOS O © © G A T H E R ROUND (MON) O © ©C A N DO (TUE) Q © ©ADVENTURES OF MILO ANO MAISIE (WED) • O © HOGAN'S HEROES O © GILUGAN'S ISLAND 6 TIME WAS: THE 1970S (TUE) 6 MOVIE (WED) O ® f f i ® MARY TYLER MOORE O © © M IS T E R ROGERS (R) © © BEVERLY HILLBILLIES © ® BUGS BUNNY AND PORKY PK3 f f l © G E T SMART f f l ® SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN © © © ® GILUGAN'S ISLAND O ® MY THREE SONS (MON) Q ® BEWITCHED (TUE-FRI) 6 MOVIE (THU) 6 HOLLYWOOO (FRI) O ® BOB NEWHART Q © © E LE C TR IC COMPANY (R)(MON. WED. FRI) Q © © V IL L A ALEGRE (R) (TUE) O © (© KH A N DU (THU) © © ANDY GRIFFITH 3:10 3:15 3:30 3:45 4:00 4:30 24 APRIL 21, 1900 DAYTIME MOVIES „ ^ CD © "El Potro Sahraj*" Gaston Santos, Carman Montejo _ _ 12:30 © ® AAVfc Bad Man s River (1972) Lm Van Onef, Gina Loilobrtgi- da A Mexican revolutionary hires the four most wanted men in the West to destroy a government arsenal 8:30 O (HD "The Alien Factor" 6 The Cheap Detective’ (1978) Peter Falk, Ann-Margret. False iden­ tities, murders, old flames and unscrupulous villains hamper a 1930s detective s daily routine as he is drawn into a succession of bizarre cases (PG-1 hr , 32 min.) 3:00 5.-00 EVENING 0.-00 © © © O ® © ® © ® © C D © ® NEWS _ © CliZOOM (R) © C D BEWITCHED Darrin's day begins with a splash and ends up with unwanted cash © © NEWLYWED GAME 6:30 O © O ® © ® TIC TAC DOUGH © 33) JOKER’S WILD 6 ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL GYMNASTIC8 INVITATIONAL (PART I) The top male and female gymnasts from countries around the world show their skills and prowess in this international competition O (D P M MAGAZINE © © 8 MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT BOB ROSS PRESENTS * |^ | f | .4 * SUNDAY BUFFET 11 A M tít 2.-00 PM Bob Says: “Help yourself to” • Out DELICIOUS Soup and Array of Salads from our Bountiful "Soup and Salad Bar" • A VARIETY OF "EN TREES" Including our regular Standing Round of Beef", featured every Sunday! • Home made Desserts from our own bake shop, including: OW Fashion Fruit Cobbler, Mocha Angle Food Cake, 7 layer cake, • A Medley of Vegetables • Coffee or Tea .................... * 0 C liikta, I I « I Under S3 25 B everag e & Hom e M ad e D essert Included V / a n 476^ 171^ ^ monday television © (2) MATCH GAME © (Ti A 0A M -12 Malloy and Reed cope with mini-skirted hitchhikers who steal cars © © P-M. MAGAZINE P M Magazine sees James Avery's Jewelry and meets "Quick-Draw" Diane © GDHAPPY DAY8 AGAIN Hoping for more privacy. Richie moves in with his brother, only to discover it s not the paradise he expected GD 3D HOGAR, DULCE HOGAR 7.-00 © 32) HAPPY DAY8 AGAIN After outwitting the Malachi Brothers, Fonzie proposes to Pinky (Part 3) © © © (3D WKRP IN CINCINNATI WKRP’s first increase in populari­ ty ratings in seven years causes Andy to take a hard look at himself and his staff (R) © ® © ® LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE A crippling accident takes away the once-happy Mr Edwards’ (Victor French) pride in him­ self and will to live (R) © © ® P O U T rrH O N 80: PRIMARY ELECTIONS Candidates in the local San Antonio races debate the issues © ® © 3® © (DTHAT’8 in c r e d ib le Stories on the bizarre house of a haunted heiress, a woman who predicts earthquakes, a former Mr America and a shark-catching dog are featured © ® GUNSMOKE Private detectives use Kitty and the daughter of an outlaw as lures to trap the girl's fugitive father GD 3D LOS RIC08 TAMBIEN LLORAN 10 CAPITAL 10,000 7:30 © 32) RIVER PARADE Hosts Larry Hichtchew and Mary Denman. © © O (2D t h e 8TOCKARD CHANNING SHOW Tempers flare when Brad sees Susan out after she told him she was too tired to accept his dinner invitation 6 LEGENDS: HUMPHREY BOGART The much-praised actor’s career is traced through footage from his films and his personal life CD © CHESPiRrro 10 ENERGY EFFICIENCY IN THE HOME 8:00 O © O G2D M* A* S* H A clumsy foot soldier brings a much-needed boost of morale to the war-weary 4077th. (R) O ® © ® NBC MOVIE "The Great Cash Giveaway Getaway" (Premiere) George Hamilton, Albert Salmi. Two 15-year-olds are chased by the police and a drug smuggler after they try to give away $250.000 in drug profit money they found 6 MOVIE Heaven Can W ait" (1978) Warren Beatty, Julie Christie After a pro football star's life is prematurely claimed by an inept angel, the man is given the body of a millionaire industrialist to continue living in. (PG-1 hr., 41 min.) © © ® J A M E S MICHENER’S WORLD "S ports In America: Women In S ports" James Michener explores past and present roles of women athletes with tennis pro Chris Evert Lloyd, golfer Nancy Lopez and auto racer Janet Guthrie © ® © 3® 0D QDMOVIE W aikiki” (Premiere) Dack Rambo, Steve Marachuk. Two private detectives stalk through Hawaii in search of a murderous duo whose next intended victim is a policewoman. © ® THE HARVEST "Unification Of The Family’’ 10 ACC SPOTLIGHT 8:30 © © O ® FLO When Flo tries to make Les a hero after he saved Farley from choking. Les disappears GD © ESTA NOCHE ES OLGA 10 ESPIRITU DE AZTLAN 9:00 © 32) TO BE ANNOUNCED 8 © O ® LQU GRANT Lou puts the Trib editors on the trail of a iong-unsolved murder involving names from Hollywood’s golden days. (R) © © ®AM ERICAN SHORT STORY "The Blue Hotel" by Stephen Crane An alien arrives in a Nebraska frontier town expecting to find the Wild West Ultimately, he foresees and wills his own death. (R) © ® MOVIE ★★ "Kings Of The Sun" (1963) Yul Brynner, George Chakiris A Mayan leader brings his surviving tribesmen to America and encounters savage Indians. GD © LA OTRA MUJER 10 CUEARUGHT WAITER 10 CAPITAL EYE 9:30 10:00 IH35 AT MANOR RD R E S T AUR AN T 0 ® © © 0 ® 0 ® © ® © ® © ® © ® f f l ® NEWS 6 THE CANDID CANDID CAMERA Host Allen Funt introduces uncen­ sored film clips of various people’s unpredictable reactions when they are "caught in the act of being themselves" in zany situations © © ® D *C K CAVETT "Catholic Church Today" Guests Msgr Eugene Clark. Mrs Sidney Callahan, James Kavanaugh, James Hitch­ cock. (Part 1 of 3) GD © UNA MUJER MARCADA © ® MOVIE (CONT’D) 10:15 10:30 © © O ® I D ® TONIGHT Guest host Richard Dawson Guests Shecky Greene. Sandy Duncan, Bill Anderson, Steve Allen Q © HARRY 0 A woman hires Harry to find her missing brother, who is AWOL and mixed up in a drug-smuggling caper. 6 MOVIE “F.I.S.T.” (1978) Sylvester Stallone. Peter Boyle A working- class man rises from a position as a local union organizer to attain incredible power and prestige as America's labor kingpin. (PG-2 hrs., 25 min.) © CD CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS © © 1CAPTIO NED ABC NEWS © ® © (DABC NEWS © ® M * A * 8 * H Frank throws his back out and applies for a Purple Heart while Hawkeye mourns the loss of a friend and sends an underage soldier home GD © 24 HORAS 10:50 © ® © ® BARN EY MILLER The already married Fish falls for the mother of a young pickpocket. (R) 11:00 O ® MOVIE A A "Come Live With M e" (1941) Hedy Lamarr, James Stewart To avoid deportation, a lovely alien decides to wed a total stranger O © ® B O S TO N MARATHON ’80 Coverage of the 84th anniversary of the oldest foot race in the United States is presented. Anchors are Bud Collins, Kathy Switzer and Larry Rawson. © ® MOVIE * * * "The Real Glory” (1939) Gary Cooper, David Niven A m ilitary doctor aids in medical and political areas in the Philip­ pines following the Spanish-American War © © STARSKY AND HUTCH GD © REPORTER 41 11:25 © ® © ® P O L IC E WOMAN Pepper’s uncle becomes involved in a case of modern-day cattle rustling GD © MOVIE ‘Una Gringuita En Mexico” Antonio Badu, Martha Roth. 11:40 © © MCCLOUD McCloud suspects his hat is a link to something valuable when it becomes the object of repeated theft attempts 12:00 © © O ® S3 ® TOMORROW Guest: Werner Erhard, founder of EST. (R) © © ABC NEWS 12:20 © ® BARNEY MILLER The already married Fish falls for the mother of a young pickpocket (R) © ® P T L CLUB Q ® NEWS 12:55 © ® POLICE WOMAN Pepper s uncle becomes involved in a case of modern-day cattle rustling. © ® TODAY’S WOMAN © ® © ® © ® NEWS © ® NEWSWATCH PRESENTS © © PTL CLUB © © N E W S 11:20 11:30 12:35 12:45 12:58 1:00 1:30 1:40 2:40 A t last! A shoe fo r ' < * walking w om en/ Step into the new V usque ".o ik in g Shoe a n d fee! ft e Snug so the heel won t slip But w id e w here your toes like sf -e o d A cushiony e a th e ' nsoie breathes com fort Wh fo p r ch full groc e a t her repels w o t ei A d the sc or supports /ou on yc *e our Vasque hiking boots « p a th Choose from an oxford or ch u kka HER GEAR 3 2 n d at Guadalupe ■ 1/2 dozen of our jumbo Gulf shrimp dipped in our special beer batter & deep fried to perfection. Baked potato with all the trimmings. Large dinner salad or our famous Canadian cheese soup. Choice of beverage. 5.9 5 p e r person Sunday, Monday, & Tuesday evenings. S h e n a n i g a n S 414 Barton Spnngs at S. First, 476-4838. DAYTIME SPECIAL 4:00 6 TIME WAS: THE 1970S Dick Cavett concludes the documentary series with a look at the decade which included the Watergate break-in, the American Bicentennial celebration and such trends as jogging and disco DAYTIME MOVIES CD® 8:30 “Una Gringuita En Mexico" Antonio Badu, Martha Roth. 12:30 CD CD * + “The Fifth Day Of Peace" (1972) Richard Johnson, Franco Nero. The fate of a pair of German POWs is decided in the final days of World War II. 3:00 0 © W /i "The Fantastic Invasion Of Planet Earth” (1970) Michael Cole, Deborah Walley. A young married couple faced with the imminent birth of their first child, charter a plane and become trapped in a bubble from outer space "They Went That-A-Way And That-A-Way" (1978) Tim Conway, 6 Chuck McCann Two hopelessly inept policemen are sent to prison to conduct an undercover search for a cache of stolen money. (PG-1 hr., 36 min.) 5:00 EVENING 6:00 0 ® 0 I I ) O ® Q ® © ® € D d m ® news 0 CD DZOom (R) © ® - BEWITCHED Samantha comes up with the idea to win the account of Mother Flanagan's Irish Stew © ® NEWLYWED GAME 6:30 O ® O (X) S3 GD TIC TAC DOUGH 0 33) JOKER'S WILD 0 (3D P.M. MAGAZINE 0 © ® M A C N E IL / LEHRER REPORT © ® HOLLYWOOD SQUARES © ® ADAM -12 Malloy and Reed search tor a child whose disappear­ ance becomes increasingly serious. © ® P . M . MAGAZINE P M Magazine visits Robert Guillaume and takes a look at some rope-skipping stunts 0 0 GDHAPPY DAYS AGAIN Richie is driven to see a psychiatrist after reading a book on abnormal psychology. CD ® Y AHORA.. QUE? 740 0 3 2 ) 0 ® S 3 ® SPEAK UP AMEP' 4 The people of America give u bizarre - on the issues and their opinions - humorous, aerlou' events of the day. Mar joe Gorin»- , Herb Brooks and Felicia Jeter host O H O 3 THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE Animat­ ed, based on the fairy tale by C.S. Lewis Four children step through a closet wardrobe into Narnia. a strange and wintery land ruled by an ice- hearted witch. (Part 1) (R) 6 MOVIE "Moment By Moment" (1978) John Travolta, Lily Tomlin. A sophisticated and wealthy Southern California housewife falls in love with a young drifter after she discovers her husband's infidelity. (R-1 hr., 45 min.) O (D ®POLITfTHO N '80: PRIMARY ELECTIONS Candidates in the local San Antonio races debate the issues © ® © ® GO ® H A P P Y DAYS. Richie's behavior takes a bizarre turn after he is named "King of the Sorority Girls.” (R) © ® GUNSMOKE An assistant attorney general uses Matt s friend­ ship for an outlaw to further his political career CD ® LOS RICOS TAMBIEN LLORAN 10 SUPREME COURT 7:30 © ® © ® 0D ® LAVERNE & SHIRLEY The girls try to patch up a feud between Lenny and Squiggy. (R) CD ® SUPER ESTELAR MUSICAL 10 INSURANCE 8:00 O ® O ® f f i ® THE BIG SHOW Hosts: Steve Allen and Sarah Purcell Guests Linda Fratianne, Sid Caesar, Juliet Prowse, Gallagher, David Copperfield, Georgia Engel, Meadowlark Lemon and the Buck­ et eers, Rula Lenska O Í D O ® MOVIE "Portrait Of A Rebel Margaret Sanger” (Prem­ iere) Bonnie Franklin, David Dukes The tempestuous life of Margaret Sanger, the controversial woman's rights activist who established the first birth control clinic, is dramatized Q © ® N O V A "A Whisper From Space” The most recent theories and new questions that have been raised about microwave signals and their relation to the origins of the universe are examined (CC)(R) © ® © ® ED ® THREE'S COMPANY Both Jack and Ralph Furley try out their recent assertiveness training on the girls (R) 0 ® MARY TYLER MOORE When Rhoda's parents visit Minneapolis, her mother confides that their marriage is on the rocks. CD ® IRIS CHACON 10 ALTERNATIVE VIEWS: BIG BUSINESS AND YOU 8:30 © ® © ® QD ® T A X I A very heavy woman Alex once dated shows up at the garage months later and pounds lighter (R) QD ® BOB NEWHART Emily is forced to handle threats from angry parents in an educational crisis at her school. 9:00 6 MOVIE "A Man, A Woman And A Bank" (1979) Donald Sutherland, Brooke Adams Two clever con artists join forces and wits to master­ mind the robbery of a bank by using a sophisticated computer. (P G -1 hr., 41 min.) O © (D a u s t in CITY LIMITS "Partners in rhyme" Moe Bandy and Joe Stampley perform hard-core honky-tonk and Marty Robbins sings some old and new classics. f f i ( £ © ® QD GDHART TO HART The Harts travel to Monte Carlo for the wedding of a friend whom they learn Is being blackmailed into the marriage (R) “How To Succeed In Business Without Really © ® MOVIE Trying" (1967) Robert Morse, Michele Lee A window cleaner works his way to the top of a company with the help of a book, a girl and a gift of gab CD ® LA OTRA MUJER 10 HELP US SAVE OUR CHILDREN 9:30 O ® O ® 6 3 ® UNITED STATES After a fight, Richard leaves and goes to a motel, where he is visited by Libby, Donna and a friend. 10:00 o ® 0 n o ® o ® © ( X © ® © ® © im ® n e w s APRIL 22. 1980 O © ® D IC K CAVETT "Catholic Church Today Guests Msgr Eugene Clark, Mrs. Sidney Callahan, James Kavanaugh, James Hitch­ cock (Part 2 of 3) CD ® UNA MUJER MARCADA © ® MOVIE (CONT'D) 10:15 10:30 0 3 5 ) 0 3 3 ) 0 ® 0 G D S 3 ® NEWS SPECIAL Results of Pennsylvania primary are presented O © DCAPTIO NED ABC NEWS © (3D © 13 © JiABC NEWS CD ® 24 HORAS the 10:45 6 MOVIE "They Went That-A-Way And That-A-Way" (1978) Tim Conway. Chuck McCann Two hopelessly inept policemen are sent to prison to conduct an undercover search for a cache of stolen money (PG-1 hr.. 36 min ) 10:50 © X © 3 )8 0 A P Jessica chooses between Chester and Det Donohue, Benson and the Tate men try to rescue Billy from the Sun Cult and Jodie is forced to make a choree between his daughter and Alice m © ® 8TARSKY AND HUTCH 1140 S3 a TONIGHT Guest host Richard Dawson Guests 0 35 O I Judy Collins, Orson Bean. Maxine Fabe 0 (TJ BARNABY JONES Barnaby is hired by a millionaire to d is c o v e r which member of the man's staff is trying to kill him (R) f j (2) MOVIE * * "The Kissing Bandit (1949) Frank Sinatra, Kathryn Grayson The Kissing Bandit's meek son develops a crush on the gover­ nor's daughter O © ® B IL L MOYERS’ JOURNAL "R eporter's Notebook Big Busi­ ness Day" A coalition of citizens' groups question the responsibility of big business in over 100 cities and Bill Moyers interviews Malcolm Forbes C D ® REPORTER 41 11:20 - P f i l l ■’ i '■ 'Y.' Úd, ■ ?„ i W ff , • ■ jém tin i ffin eU <£aeUeb dancing daily 6 ^2 am. no. 1 ¡ ■ r \ a L\ (Jhow bar ^ lounge •mixed drinks stage and runvvfe^ * special nites 6 2 9 % ¿ B e n at south 1st__________ W Businessm an’s M atinee 2 p.m. Happy Hour 4-7 p.m. Open 2 p m - 2 am daily 3 5 0 0 G uadalupe ij? O ^S()O T H eQ ^E j 4 5 3 - 9831 2 dance floors Exciting light show U N E S C O R T E D L A D I E S s e a t e d at th e b a r Special Prices „ HAPPY HOUR 2 00-9 00 ' ' 7 Days a Week ‘¿ u /n d tu j f t la iu k u f ^ jU O A € to y Burgers & Beer - 8:30 6:30 All you can eat and drink ^Guys 3.50 Gals 2 5 0 ^ Naughty Nighty Contest cash prizes Men’s Sexy Legs Contest D r i n k i I for 1 Sexy Buns Contest cash prizes .A. A . V ^ J J A A C L qj^ • v j u d c u j Rock ’n Roll N ig h t tasco NEWYORK STYLE w i t h A TOUCH OF dfedfyWIt G A M E RO O M - Pool, pinball & electric parties A PR IL 23, 1900 1 0 3 0 O 52) O GE) ID ( D W O M EN LIK E US B etty R oilin interview s three couples w ith d iffe re n t ba ckg ro u n d s and ap proa ches to m arriage D A YTIM E S P E C IA L D AYTIM E M O VIES CD (JD 8:30 "Un N ovio Para L a u ra " Lolita Torres, F rancisco Alvarez f f l ® "W h e re The Lions R ule" D ocum entary 3 3 0 O © A * "In va d e rs From M a rs " (1953) Helene C arter, A rth u r Franz E arth is thre a te n e d by po w erful spaceships and e g h t-fo o t-ta ll space beings 4 "H ea ven Can W a it" (1978) W arren Beatty, Julie C hristie A fter a p ro fo o tb a ll s ta r's life is prem aturely claim ed by an riept angel, the man is giver, the body of a m illionaire indu strialist to con tin ue living in (PG-1 hr , 41 mtn ) 1 2 3 0 4 3 0 EVENING 8:00 Q Q D © © © ® © ® © ® © Q D C D ® n e w s 4 H O LLYW O O D Host David Sheehan explores Dinah S hore s career as a talk show hostess, the re turn of Redd Foxx to ne tw ork television and fu tu re film -p ro d u cin g possibilities for actress Jacqueline Bisset O © (D S C H O O L t a l k (D ® BEW ITC HED Sam and D arrin find tha t all tha t g litte rs may not be gold © 5® NEW LYW ED Q AM E THE CONTINENTAL l c l u b ! l l l l 6:30 O GD O ® ID GD TIC TAC DOUGH © (ED JO K E R ’S W ILD 4 B A S K E TB A LL: G REATEST SPO RTS R IVALR IES Players fro m the B oston C eltics and the Los Angeles Lakers recall the ir classic on -th e - c o u rt rivalry in a co m b in a tio n of action foo ta g e and interview s hosted by form er C eltic fo rw a rd Tom Heinsohn Q CD P M . M AG AZIN E O © (D M AC N E1L / LEHRER REPORT © S ' THE PRICE IS RIGHT © (D A D A M -12 A rash of bu rglaries in a w ealthy n e ig hborhoo d b a f­ fles M alloy and Reed © 5® P .M . M A G A ZIN E P.M. M agazine takes a look at the second N oah’s A rk and visits the tow n that w ent on a diet © GDHAPPY DAYS A G A IN Richie w ins a da te to esco rt a H ollyw ood starle t to the sch o o l's victo ry dance CD GD M l SEC RETARIA 7 3 0 © © S 3 ® r e a l p e o p l e R eports on a c ou ple w ho are bo th having sex change op eratio ns. Las Vegas ga m blers, people w ith unusual nam es and dizzy TV w eather re p o rts are featured 0 © © ® TH E LIO N , THE W ITC H A N D THE W ARDRO BE Aslan, a p roud and no ble lion, and the children w ork tog ethe r against the w itch to brin g w arm th to the icy fantasy land. (P art 2) (R) © ® B ILLY G R AH AM S PE C IA L A biog raph ica l do cum en tary on the life and career of the fam ed evangelist Dr Billy G raham is presented. (P art 1) 4 M O VIE "T h e C heap D e te ctiv e " (1978) Peter Falk, A n n-M arg ret. False identities, m urders, old flam es and unscrupulous villains ham per a 1930s d e te ctive 's daily ro utine as he is draw n in to a succession of bizarre cases (P G -1 hr., 32 m in.) O © ® P O LITT TH O N '8 0 : PR IM AR Y ELE C TIO N 8 C and id ates in the local San A n to n io races de b a te the issues © ® © 5® f f l ® 0 G H T IS ENOUGH A fte r breaking a chain letter, N icholas feels tha t he is guilty w hen Tom m y is rushed to the hospital fo r em ergency surgery. (CC) (R) © ® G U N SM O KE A fug itive assum es the id e n tity of anothe r man a fte r the other has a p pare ntly been fatally b itte n by a ra ttle snake © dD L 0 8 RICOS TA M B IE N LLO R AN 10 A LTER N ATIVE VIEW S: TH E LABO R M O VEM EN T TO DAY dig them and the people endangered by living near them , is presented © ® M O V IE it i t * "G e ró n im o ” (1962) C huck C onnors, K am ala Devi. R ebelling against the greed and tyra nny of an Indian agent, G erónim o declares w ar on the U S © dD LA OTRA M UJER 10 DIFFERENT APPR O AC H S D © ® © ® © 1 0 3 0 O © 4 ALBU Q U ER Q U E JO U R N AL G Y M N ASTIC S IN V ITA TIO N A L (P A R T I) The to p male and fem ale gym nasts fro m cou n trie s around the w orld show their skills and prow ess in this internation al com p e titio n . © (ID U NA M UJER M AR C AD A n e w s € D ® G ® f © © ® ® ® ® f l © ® M O VIE (C O N T D ) 10:15 10:30 O SD © ® © ® TO N IG H T Guest host R ichard D awson Guests D ebralee S cott, R obert G oulet. © © O ® N BA B AS K E TB ALL © ® f f l ® A B C NEW S © G® M *A *S *H W hen Frank leave, H awkeye and T rapp er find it m eans do uble d u ty fo r them and invent a way to make him stay. © dD 24 HORAS threate ns to 10:50 © ® © ® L O V E BO AT "T h e D ecisio n" D ebbie Allen; "P o o r Little Rich G irl" M aren Jensen, D ennis Cole; “ Love Me. Love M y D og” Gene Rayburn, Fannie Flagg (R) 11:00 4 M O VIE “ Heaven Can W a it" (1978) W arren Beatty, Julie C hristie. A fte r a p ro fo o tb a ll sta r's life is prem aturely claim ed by an inept angel, the man is given the body o f a m illiona ire in d u stria list to con tin ue living in. (P G -1 hr., 41 m in.) Q © ® D IC K C AVE 11 "C a th o lic C hurch To day” Guests: Msgr. Eugene C lark, M rs. Sidney Callahan, Jam es Kavanaugh, Jam es H itch­ cock. (P art 3 of 3) f f l ® M O VIE AA-W "B M ust D ie” (1 973) D arren M cG avin, P atricia Neal P olitical assassination and business tu rm o il co m p lica te the life of a H ungarian living in S outh A m erica © d® STAR SKY AN D HUTCH © dD M l D ULCE CHAR YTIN © dD REPORTER 41 7:30 8 3 0 11:20 11:30 ★ ★ © (3 ) © ® © ® d i f p r e n t s t r o k e s © © O ® C BS M O VIE ★ “ A C ircle Of C h ild re n ” (1977) Jane A lexander. Rachel R oberts An a fflue nt s u b u rb a n ite feeling bo red by her life and her m a rriage becom es a volun teer at a school fo r e m o tio n ­ ally distu rb e d children. (R) O © QDTHE SHAKESPEARE P LA Y 8 "H e n ry V " David G w illim p o r­ trays H enry V in this play focu sin g on H enry as the ideal w a rrio r-kin g and c e le b ra tin g h is reign as a G olden Age in English history. © ® © G® f f l (D C H A R L IE ’S A N G ELS An e x-c o n v ic t seeking revenge on Kelly kidna ps her and tries to tu rn her in to a heroin ad d ict (R) © ® M AR Y TYLER M OO RE M ary organizes a p o ker p a rty to co m ­ pensate fo r Lo u's spoiled trip to Las Vegas. 10 W ALTER C R O N KfTE: C H ALLEN G E OF THE 80’S 8:30 © dD H APPY D A Y 8 A G A IN Richie volunteers to forego a rock con cert date to run his fa th e r’s ha rdw are s to re for the first tim e © ® f f l ® H E LLO , LARRY R uthie falls fo r a rock star w ho in turn falls fo r Diane and persuades her to m eet him in San Francisco (Part 1) 4 M O VIE "G uyana, C ult Of The D a m n e d " (1980) S tuart W hitm an, Gene Barry. The shocking 1978 m ass suicide con d u cte d by alm ost a thousand devoted follow ers o f cult leader Jim Jones is re -crea ted (R-1 hr., 22 m in.) © ® BO B NEW HART B ob gives up his practice becom e a professor at a sm all college in Oregon. © dD FAN TASTIC O in C hicago to 9 3 0 © (BP © GD f f l ® Q u in c y W hen fou r prisoners die in a jail fire, Q uincy sets out to prove the blaze was lit to cove r up a m urder (R) © ® © G® © GDABC NEW S C LO SEU P "T h e U ranium F a c to r" A look at uranium , focusing on the m ines w here it is found, the people who © © ® C A P T IO N E D A BC NEW S © dD M O VIE "N a cid a Para A m a r" Ana Luisa Peluffo, W olf R ubinsky. 1 2 3 0 © dD © ® © ® TO M O RRO W Guests: Dana M ontana, the ow ner o f a m ale stripte ase club and Larry Slade, one of her perform ers; a s tro l­ oger Linda G oodm an (R) © ® © ® B A R E T T A Tony tries to convince a man w ho d o e sn 't w ant to get involved to provide in fo rm a tio n ab out the m u rder of an im p o rta n t conventioneer. (R) © d® A BC NEW S 12:20 © d® LOVE B O A T "T h e D ecision” D ebbie Alien; "P o o r L ittle Rich G irl” M aren Jensen, D ennis Cole; "L o v e Me, Love My D o g " Gene Rayburn, Fannie Flagg. (R) © ® PTL C LU B © ® M ARY TYLER MOORE © ® TO O AY’S W O M AN 0 ® 0 ® f f l ® C D ® NEW S © ® P T L C LU B 12:30 12:58 1 3 0 1:10 1:30 © ® N EW 8 © d® B A R E ! IA Tony trie s to convince a m an w ho doesn ’t w ant to get involved to pro vid e in fo rm a tio n ab o u t the m u rder o f an im p o rta n t con vention eer (R) 442-9904 1315 S. Congress PUT YOUR SCIENTIFIC ( ENGINEERING DEGREE TO WORK If you a degree candidate who would like to embark on a future oriented scientific or engineering career then consider the United Stater. Air Force It s one o f the finest opportunities in the nation Completion of our three m onth Officer Training School lets you an officer's commission and launches you into a career that's geared for tom orrow O ur equipment is among the finest, our w orking con ditions are excellent and out benefits package unmatched For Y o u r P erso nal In te rv ie w , C o n ta c t D ave D im e g o , 4 4 2 -8 8 8 3 1 9 0 0 W . O lto rf, S u ite 101 A u s tin , TX 7 8 7 4 1 A g re a t w a y o f Me by M the CREEK Now serving a down home b re a k fa st from 10 to 2 on Sundays only. Featuring a wide variety of omelettes & eggs. All the steak you can eat TOP SIRLOIN Only $9.25 a person i between 5 p.m. & 10 p.m. on Wed. & Sat.) We have burgers beyond your im agination and cold draft beer. 1 500 Spyglass 327-2013 Open Mon.-Sat. Closed Sundays tonight AUSTIN ALL-STARS$l Cover fues STEVIE V A U G H A N w/DOUBLE TROUBLE wed EXTREME HEAT Ladies Free! thurt BETO Y LOS F A I R L A N E S hi STEVIE V A U G H A N w/DOUBLE TROUBLE to t ERIC JOHNSON GROUP Se r v in g l u n c h i i :3o-3 HAPPY HOUR 11:30 a.m.-9 p.m. R E S T A U R A N T - B A R DAYTIME MOVIES CD 5® 8:30 " N a c id a P a r a A m a r ” A n a L u is a P e lu ffo , W o lf R u b in s k y . 12:30 ( D ® * A " D o n 't P u s h , I’ll C h a r g e W h e n R e a d y ” (1 9 6 9 ) E n z o C e r u s i- c o , S u e L y o n . A n Ita lia n P O W s o m e h o w g e t s d r a fte d in to th e U n ite d S t a t e s A rm y . 0 53) s p a c e c r a ft fro m th e p la n e t H y d ra la n d s in a r e m o te a re a o f th e e a rth " S t a r P ilo t " (1 9 7 0 ) K irk M o r r is , G o r d o n M itc h e ll A s m a ll 6 " T h e B u g s B u n n y / R o a d R u n n e r M o v ie " (1 9 7 8 ) A n im a te d N ew fo o ta g e is c o m b in e d w ith c la s s ic c a r to o n s h o r ts to p r e s e n t th e fu rth e r m is a d v e n tu r e s o f th e m is c h ie v o u s ra b b it, th e e v e r - s p e e d y b ird a n d th e ir fr ie n d s (G -1 h r., 2 3 m in .) 3:00 4:30 EVENING 6:00 © < 3 ) © 5 3 ) © ® 0 ® © ® f f l CD© CD n ew s 6 STANDING ROOM ONLY: PRESTO CHANGO. ITS MAGICI R a y ­ m o n d B u rr p la y s h o s t to s e v e ra l o f th e w o r ld 's m o s t n o te d illu s io n is ts , w h o c o m b in e fe a ts o f m a g ic a n d t r ic k e r y w ith c o m ic o v e rto n e s O