e Da iiy T e x a n Vol. 81, No. 73 (USPS 146-440) S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The Uni versi ty of Texas a t Austin Thursday, January 14, 1982 fwenty-Five Cents Blizzard strangles UT, state By CARMEN HILL and STEVE VINSON Daily Texan Staff The frozen lump that was Austin skidded to a halt Wednesday, as two inches of snow closed down businesses, schools, the University, city and the county. UT offices — closed by noon Wednes­ day — will open at 1 p.m Thursday, Registrar Albert Meerzo said Wednes­ day night. Adds and drops will be de­ layed until 1 p.m., he said Wednesday’s scheduled City Council meeting was postponed until 1 p.m. Thursday, and city, Travis County and state employ­ ees from most departments were sent home. ______ Related «tori— , Pag»> 2 A 3 Weather forecasters called Wednes­ day night for a warming trend through the rest of this week, with 40 degree temperatures Thursday melting accu­ mulations of snow nd ice. All but a skeletal crew ot UT employ­ ees were gone by noon Wednesday and shuttle buses ended service at about 1 p.m in the University's first shutdown in almost a decade. UT President Peter Flawn said he made the decision Wednesday morning so staff and stu­ dents could get home with minimum difficulty. UT police and maintenance employ­ ees remained on campus, however, dealing with problems such as stranded shuttle bus riders and broken water pipes. The Student Health Center also remained open for emergencies, al­ though scheduled appointments were canceled. UT police Sgt Bob Young said shut­ ting down the shuttle bus system result­ ed in police having to drive many stu­ dents home or back to their cars. Despite the unusual weather, Aus­ tin’s two-inch snowfall was far from a record The heaviest snowfall ever re­ corded in Austin was a 9.7-inch blizzard in November 1937. Snow and travel throughout the state, with the heaviest accumulations in the Waco area Waco was expecting up to a foot of snow, and IH 35 north of Waco was at times com­ pletely blocked by stalled cars. ice disrupted Up to six inches of snow fell in the Concho Valley area near San Angelo. North Texas’ Lone Star Gas Co. con tin- ued to curtail service to industrial cus­ tomers. Most Austin businesses closed early, sending thousands of workers home to fight the ice, snow and an early rush hour. Between weather and the unusual­ ly heavy volume of cars on the road, traffic crawled, and many Austinites found themselves stranded. Yellow Cab Co. reported a two- to three-hour wait for a cab. Austin police would not even estimate the number of traffic acci­ dents that occurred Wednesday and advised drivers who were involved in minor accidents to continue on their way and report the accident in a few days. Austin Independent School District children, who were sent home early Monday and skipped school Tuesday, returned to school Wednesday only to be dismissed early again, when snow began to blanket school grounds. School buses took high school and junior high school students home around noon and returned to pick up elementary school children at 2 p.m. AISD Superintendent John Ellis an­ nounced late Wednesday that all Austin schools would be closed Thursday. Classes are to resume Friday, cancel­ ing a previously scheduled day off for students. Most Austin streets verged on being impassable, and the Austin Emergency Center urged everyone not to use roads except in emergencies. At the peak of the snow storm, around noon, traffic was at a virtual standstill throughout the city Robert Mueller Airport re­ mained open, while the Austin Transit System buses were 10 minutes behind schedule, according to a spokesman. The City Department of Streets and Bridges continued to sand as much roadway as possible, and the state high­ way department closed off the upper deck of IH 35 and the Highway 183 over­ pass over North Lamar Boulevard. Gas and electricity — in short supply when Monday's temperatures sank to a record-breaking 11 degrees — were available to almost all Austin residents. Neither the City Electric Utility nor Southern Union Gas Co reported prob­ lems m delivery of services. The Austin Fire Department reported no unusual number of fires. “ We’ve had a lot of people calling in with broken water pipes And a lot of people are calling us for rides 1 don’t know what they think the rest of the city is going to do with fire protection while we’re off playing taxi,” said fire Lt Jim Wash­ burn^ ____ ____________________ With reports from Sylvia Wysocki and Hector Cantu Rescue worker pulls body out of frozen Potomac River after Air Florida Jet crashed Into a bridge after taking off from Washington National Airport (left photo). Cara, hit by Jet, sit on 14th Street Bridge as workers go through wreckage (above photo). The 737 jet crashed on takeoff Wednesday afternoon. Related photo, Page 3. UPI Telephotos Jet crashes in Washington; 74 missing WASHINGTON (U PI) - An Air Florida jet carrying 79 people into a snow-filled sky slammed into a bridge packed with commuters Wednesday and plunged into the icy Potomac River. Authorities said all but five were lost and presumed dead. Three motorists on the bridge died in the tragedy, said Washington Mayor Marion Barry. A passenger list released early Thursday by Air Florida showed 74 pas­ sengers — including three infants — and five crewmembers. There were five known survivors at Washington area hospitals. District of Columbia police spokes­ man G.W Hankins said although a handful of passengers survived, it was assumed most were trapped in the sub­ merged plane. Hankins said at least three — and perhaps as many as 10 — people aboard Air Florida flight 90 bound for Tampa and Fort Lauderdale lived through the crash. Asked if the rest were presumed dead, Hankins said, “ I ’m afraid so. That’s the assumption — that most of the people were still in their seat belts from take-off procedure and are still in the plane. ” The U.S. Park Police said there were at least 16 known survivors — from pas­ sengers and from those in cars on the busy 14th Street Bridge. The capital’s first major snowstorm of the year sent thousands of government workers home early. This was the first fatal crash at the National Airport in 31 years and the first commercial crash in the nation since 1979. Federal safety officials had no imme­ diate idea of what caused the crash, but said air traffic control was not part of the problem. More than 1,200 controll­ ers went on strike last summer and were fired. Air Florida said the plane, a Boeing 737, was carrying 74 passengers and a crew of five on a flight originating in Washington. Eyewitness Arthur Coleman, who was on the bridge when the plane crashed into it, said, “ I looked over in the water and I saw people scattered all in the water.’’ Rescue workers struggled with sub­ freezing temperatures in the bone-chill­ ing water, bathed in the harsh light from lamps carried bv helicopters, a large white yacht and emergency vehi­ cles parked on the bridge deck The plane crashed only seconds after leaving the north end of the main Na­ tional Airport runway at 3 p.m. CST. The runway, which handles one flight every 90 seconds during peak hours, aims directly at the bridge about a mile .a wav Jets customarily roar over the heavi­ ly used bridge at an altitude of about 500 feet — low enough to rattle the windows of passing cars. The plane sheared the tops off cars of commuters trying to get home during the snowstorm. Government employees had been sent home early because of the weather and the bridge was packed when the plane hit. Heroism and deep tragedy marked the minutes and hours after the crash. Salvation Army Maj. Harold Ander­ son, who visited the crash scene, said one man was seen under the ice trying frantically to get out, but by the time the ice was broken he was dead A stewardess from the plane was pulled from the water by a man who shed bis heavy coat and plunged into the Potomac. A second tragedy struck the nation's capital within an hour of the air crash. At least three people were killed and several injured in the derailment of a subway train near the Smithsonian In­ stitution station. The Washington D C. Fire Department was bearing the brunt of both rescue efforts. President-elect of shuttle union dismissed By DAVID ELLIOT and DAVID WOODRUFF Daily Texan Staff The president-elect of the UT shuttle bus drivers’ union, scheduled to take office Thursday, was fired Tuesday for contractual violations dating back to last spring, a bus company spokesman said. Under a point-penalty system, driver Ruth Simms was penalized Tuesday for driving a bus to vote in a city election last May. Since October, she accumulated 16 points, including 11 in the last week, for tardiness and for entering a restricted area, a Transportation Enterprises Inc spokesman said Wednesday. She was terminated because her work record was “ not acceptable," said Louis Divino, manager of the Austin branch of T EI An employee who accu­ mulates 15 points on the system implemented in October as part of the bus drivers’ new contract may be dismissed. Simms, a member of Amalgamated Transit Un­ ion Local 1549, was assessed points for several rea­ sons: • Simms accumulated five points for tardiness during the fall semester, Simms and Divino said in separate interviews. • Simms was assessed three points Friday for be­ ing in an “ unauthorized section’’ of the T EI build­ ing. Divmo said Divino and Simms agree Simms had an 8 a.m. appointment with Divino Friday to discuss union business. Simms said she arrived at the T EI building at 8 a m and found the gates to the building looked After standing in mid-30 degree weather waiting for Divino, Simms said she entered the building “ through an upstairs door" which led into an open area, called a reception area by Simms and a central reservations office by Divino. In any case, Divino said the area is off limits to drivers. Simms said she remembers Divino, who was 20 minutes late to the meeting, telling her, “ I can’t help it if my car didn’t start. That still doesn’t give you a right to go into unauthorized areas ” Divino said. “ She had a number of options. She could have blown me off because I was late, or she could have gotten a cup of coffee from U-Totem. or whatever.’’ Simms said, “ When you’re late, it’s unreasonable to expect someone to wait for you in 35-degree weather.” • Monday, Simms was penalized two points for arriving at work 20 minutes late. “ It was the cold­ est day in 31 years, and my car wouldn’t start. I told them I was trying to get there ' • By Tuesday, the day of her firing, Simms had accumulated 10 points since the system was imple­ mented in October. When she failed to arrive at work on time, she was assessed an additional three points. “ The points I got Tuesday morning were right. I messed up,” she said. But, she said, the points assessed for entering the restricted area Friday and being 20 minutes late on Monday because of car trouble were not justified • While glancing through Simms’ file “ on Tues­ day or Monday, I can’t remember, 1 saw a major work infraction that had occurred earlier and decid­ ed to assess her points for it,” Divino said. The infraction, which occurred last May, involved Simms using a T EI bus to vote in the City Council mayoral runoffs. Simms was given a five- day suspension for the infraction. Divino said, “ Under the terms of the contract, I could have terminated her on the spot for either taking the bus for her own use or being in the office where she wasn’t supposed to be. ” “ I think termination is unreasonable, I ’m going to fight it, and I think the union is behind me,” Simms said. “ I ’ve never doubted that they are perfectly willing to destroy our (the union's) activities any way they can. ” New add/drop schedule moves starting time back High court dismisses appeal UT professor wins free speech defense By MEG BROOKS Centralized adds and drops at the Frank Erwin Center will not begin until 1 p.m. Thursday but will re­ main open for an additional hour, as a result of the University’s early closing Wednesday. All students who were scheduled to enter the Erwin Center from 8:30 a m. to 12:30 p.m. on Thursday will be allowed entrance at or after 1 p.m. along with the students who were scheduled at that time. Students scheduled for adds and drops on Friday will follow the reg­ ular timetable. The last group of students will be admitted at 5 p.m. but the Erwin Center will not close until 6 p.m “ to let everyone finish up,” said UT Re­ gistrar Albert Meerzo Spring courses may be added or dropped at a time specified by the first three letters of each student s last name To gain admittance, a fee receipt and a photo ID must be presented at the Arena West Ter­ race doors. Students cannot enter the building before the scheduled time, but can enter any time after Refund and add bills will be mailed during February Courses must be dropped before Feb 2 to qualify for a refund Students must report to Service Building One at 24th Street and San Jacinto Boulevard to obtain parking permits. The office is open from 7:45 a.m. to 4 45 p.m Students must bring a fee receipt. Permits from the fall semester are still valid, but students can purchase permits at the parking office throughout the se­ mester. Students can have IDs validated from 1 to 5 p.m. Thursday and 8:30 a m. to 5 p.m. Friday at the Erwin Center. IDs can also be validated from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday at Gregory Gym 200 Students who require new IDs must go to Gregory Gym. Thursday 1 00 AAA - HAR 1 30 HAS - HOC 2 QOHOV - JAR 2 30 JAS KAU * - ) v 300K A V 3 30 KOW LED 4 00 L E E - L E X FrMay 5 00 LEY - MAQ 9 00 MAR McR 9 30 McS MOO 10:00 MOR - NOV 10 30 NO W -PER 11 OOPES-RAH 11:30 RAI - RO C 12 00 ROD - SCO 12 30SCH-S1L I O O S i M - S T O 1 3 0 S T E -T ID 2 00 TIE - VIK 2 30 VIL WER 3 00 WES • WIS 3 30 WIT - VAR 4 00 VAS - Z By MICHELLE LOCKE-CHAMBERLAIN Daily Texan Staff The U.S. Supreme Court voted 8-0 to toss a free speech case out of court Wednesday, leaving intact a previous ruling won by UT professor Sanford Levinson that prohibits private colleges from banning non-student political activity on campus. “ I am very, very pleased and not at all surprised,” Levinson said. said W'ednesday. Previous to the court’s decision to throw out an appeal filed by the New Jersey state attorney, the Supreme Court of New Jersey had ruled that Princeton University could not refuse the right of free speech to non-students even though the Princeton campus is private property. The court termed the Princeton case hypothetical because the university relaxed restrictions against non-students’ politi­ cal activity on campus following student and faculty outcry concerning the case. Justice William Brennan did not take part in the vote. Levinson, former professor of law at Princeton, became in­ volved in the free speech brouhaha in 1978 when he represented Chris Schmid, a U.S. Labor Party member, who was prosecut­ ed and fined for trespassing after distributing campaign litera­ ture on campus without obtaining permission from university officials. Schmid appealed the conviction and lost at every level of the New Jersey state courts until the state Supreme Court deci­ sion, said Douglas Laycock, UT professor of law who worked with Levinson on the case. Gerald Kamensky, a New Jersey attorney, also represented Schmid. The state court decision, which overturned Schmid’s convic­ tion because it “ interfered with Schmid's reasonable efforts to communicate his political views to those present on campus,” was appealed by the New Jersey state attorney, Laycock said. Following the appeal, the state attorney filed a brief stating it was inappropriate for a state agency to criticize a state court. “ They first took a stand and then became neutral,” Laycock Levinson said he had not expected the U.S. Supreme Court to try the case on its merits because his arguments were based on the premise that the case was debatable and did not fall under the Supreme Court s jurisdiction. “ It would have been nice (if the case had been affirmed by its merits) but it’s certainly not a disappointment,” he said. Both professors said Wednesday’s ruling would have little or no effect on the University, unlike the University of Missouri free speech decision last December that mandated the rewrit­ ing of UT’s rules prohibiting religious worship on campus. No­ tices of the revamped rules were sent out Monday stating that religious groups may air their views on campus provided they are a student-sponsored organization. In the Missouri case, university officials banned members of Cornerstone, a registered organization of evangelists, from us­ ing classrooms to hold scripture readings and discussions The university policy was upheld in district court but reversed by the 8th U S Circuit Court of Appeals Subsequently, the Su­ preme Court affirmed the circuit court's ruling The two cases do have in common the notion that once a university campus is opened up to most kinds of free speech, then they can’t pick and choose the particular speech they want to censor,” Laycock said Surprise snowfall slows Drag trade Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, January 14,1982mWEEKEND Sharpen your abilities in the five major REVIEW test areas. . Twenty two class hours with 5 expert instructors. CLASS WILL BE HELD FEB. 5-7 $150; ENROLLMENT LIMITED Make Your Own M usic. ^ H IT A C H I RENT STEREO $ 9 Q 0 0 per semester RENT IT. THEN IF YOU UKE *229” LESS 1 0 * FOR CASH MOOR SOT-921 IH Similor to Mwstrotion F M /A M • Cassette • A u tom atic record ch anger 2234 GUADALUPE • 476-3525 4930 BURNET ROAD • 454-6731 Th e Du ly Texan PERMANENT STAFF . . . . . Assistant Managing Editors E d i t o r .................................. John Schwartz Mark Dooley . Managing Editor . . Reid Associate Managing Editor. Lay manee Jay . . Hamlin, Gardner Selby, David Teece Assistant to the E d itor...................William Booth New» E d i t o r ...................... Robert Davila News Assignments E d it o r ................. Jodi Hooker . Tina Romero, . Brian Sippie, Dong McLeod, Mark Stall Features E d itor..................... Diana Moore Sports E d it o r .................. Roger Campbell General Reporters. . Associate Sports E d i t o r ................ David McNabb Senior Sportsw riters.........................Steve Cam pbell, Charlie McCoy, David Spangler, Satie Woodbnmt Entertainm ent E d it o r ...................... Cindy WMaer Associate Entertainm ent E d i t o r ..................................Chris Jordan Photo E d i t o r ...................Kevin Vandivier Associate Photo E d i t o r ..................Satan Ailen-Camp Richard Steinberg . C.R. Frink im ages Editor. Associate Im ages Editor Graphics E d ito r ..................... Alex Plain ISSUE STAFF Associate News E d ito rs Je n n ife r Bird, R ich ard Goldsm ith News A ssistants H erb Booth, Meg Brooks. H ector C antu, David Lindsey, Steve Levine, G e rry Gam e! David Woodruff N ew sw riters Carm en Hill, Brenda K opycinski. Lynn E asley. M ichelle L ocke-C ham berlain, David Elliot M ichael Godwin I^iuri Nelson E ditorial A ssistant E n tertainm ent A ssistant Sports M ake-up E d ito r Sports A ssistan ts Suzanne Michel B rad Townsend. N ancy Gay, Jo e R eistroffer Make-up E d ito r Wire E d ito r Copy E d ito rs B rian Dunbar M artin Torres Peggy Southall, Mona Cuenod. Zoe D rake. Kelly Budd A rtists Photographer M ichael Fry, Sam H urt Joni Bam off TEXAN ADVERTISING STAFF Calise B urchette. Doug C am pbell. Joel C arter, Kim ie Cunningham , Cindy F iler Cathy Giddings, Claudia G raves, Mike U ttm a n , Cheryl Luedecke, M arianne Newton Ken Grays. J a y Zorn The Daily Texan, a student new spaper at The U niversity of Texas a t Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, Draw er D, U niversity Station, Austin. TX 78712-7209 The Daily Texan is published Monday. Tuesday, W ednesday. Thursday and Friday, except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid a t Austin, TX 78710 News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), a t the edito rial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122( or at the news lab o rato ry 'C om m unica­ tion Building A4 1361 Inquiries concerning delivery and c lassified advertising should be m ade in TSP Building 3 200 ( 471-5244) The national advertising rep re se n ta tiv e of The Daily T exan is C om m unications and A dvertising Services to Students. 1633 West Central S treet, E vanston, Illinois 60201. phone (800 1 323-4044 toll free The Daily Texan subscribes to United P ress International and New York Times News Service The Texan is a m em ber of the Associated C ollegiate P re ss , the South­ west Journalism C ongress, the Texas Daily New spaper A ssociation and Am erican New spaper Publishers A ssociation Copyright 1981 Texas Student Publications THE DAILY TEXAN SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Sem ester (F a ll o r Spring I............................................................... $20 00 40 oo Two Sem esters (F all and Spring) Sum m er S e s s io n ............................................................... 13 00 One Y ear (F all, Spring and S u m m e r ) ................................................................................ 50 00 Send orders and ad d ress changes to Texas Student Publications, P.O Box D, Aus­ PU B NO 146440 tin. TX 78712-7209, or to TSP Building C3.200 By STEVE LEVINE and MARK STUTZ Students and m erchants alike expressed m ixed reac­ tions to the sudden snowfall c ity th at p a ra ly zed som e Wednesday morning, enjoying the chance to be a kid again and others exp ress­ ing a ' what can I do?” atti­ tude. the “ I think it’s just g rea t,” said Sam Kendrick, an educa­ tion student, as he threw a friend. “ I snowball at his m issed last Thanksgiving it because I w as driving home, so I ’m not going to w aste my chances this tim e.” Kendrick’s friend, Kevin Kellogg, w as a little less im ­ the snowfall. pressed with “ I ’m fro m C o n n e c tic u t, where w e have four to five feet of snow on the ground a l­ ready. We did see a cop wipe out in front of B ellm ont Hall. That w as kind of entertain­ ing.” Snow two to three inches deep blanketed the campus. Two students from Taiwan — Roy Chang, a graduate stu­ dent, and Chi-Kai King, a nat­ ural scien ces junior — w ere also having a good tim e out in the snow. “ We cam e out just for the fun,” King said as he slid down the West Mall. “ We don’t get to see it too often, so we didn’t want to w aste the opportunity.” B u sin esses along the Drag were not as im pressed with the snow, esp ecially after the U niversity announced a cam ­ pus close-down at 11 a.m . After the shutdown. Kevin Harvey of H arvey’s Heroes & Sari Siegman and Cynthia Cantey battle Wednesday’s winter weather. Jonl Bamoff, TSP Staff least said, “ At Subs they could have waited until after­ noon; people are going to dis­ appear if not im m ediately, sooner.” University Co-Op m anage­ ment hesitated at first, but decided to close at 1:30 p.m. Saigon E ggrolls, Handwiches and Long Beach Eggrolls all said they would keep their stands in front of the Co-Op open until their regular 5 p.m. closing tim e. “ P eople like m e think this is just ridiculous,” said Steve Brooks at the Handwich fac­ tory Business has been bad for three days, he said. “This snow hasn't helped any." W o rk er s a t O s h m a n ’s Sporting Goods and Cochran’s Bookstore said business was actually up at their establish­ m ents. “ We've sold every pair of gloves we had. even if they didn't fit the person buying th em ,” said salesm an Tam ­ my Kenimer at Oshman’s. “ People would com e in here to get warm, and th ey’d end up buying som ething." Joe Kennan, assistant m an­ ager of W allace’s Bookstore, said, “ We’re all from Chica­ go, w e’ll be here until G p.m. ” Next door, at Berkm an’s, assistant m anager Dennis Redman said, “ We re here; where could w e g o 0” Reynolds-Penland assistant sn ow b all m anager R uss H allm ark w atched figh ts, slipping pedestrians and slid­ ing traffic through his front window. He w as w aiting for from clo sin g company headquarters in Dal­ las. in stru ction s “ It w ouldn’t bother m e to said, “al­ stay op en ,” he though I really don’t think we'll do much business.” Reynolds-Penland was closed by 1:30 p.m. Texas Union Meal Plans S p rin g 1982 mushroom quiche Les Amis Cafe S a n \ n t o n i o 2 l i l t T h e Texas U nion, the com m un ity center o f the University o f T exas cam pus, offers fo u r p ro g ram s fo r contract meals each sem ester. T he meal plan p rog ram is a unique concept in that it o ffe rs studen ts, faculty an d s ta ff som e real cost-saving o p tio n s along with unparalleled variety an d convenience. A dvantages to P articipating in the Program H ow m uch tim e do you spend sh o p p in g fo r food, cooking and cleaning up? Alm ost 15 extra h o u rs per week can be yours th at you can spend on studying o r on o th er activities. Plus you have the added convenience o f eating right on cam pus w here you spend m ost o f your day. You m ay not have access to cooking facilities. You m ay not know how , or you m ay hate to co ok. You m ay be housed in a residence hall w ithout a meal co n tract. You m ay be spending so m uch o f y our tim e in the library, a la b o ra to ry , or in rehearsals th at you end up eating ju n k or sk ip p in g m eals. Your eating schedule m ay be unique in th at you m ay not have use for three daily m eals. O u r expanded serv­ ing tim es, the m ultiple-m eal o p tio n s, plus the fact that o u r eatin g these facilities are right on cam p u s, alleviate all p ro b lem s. G ood Food at a G ood Price T he T exas U nion Dining Services has a fairly strong rep u tatio n on cam p u s fo r serving good foo d . W e o p erate 15 food facilities in th e T exas Union building an d a ro u n d cam pus th at include ca feteria, fast food facilities and a fo rm al restau ran t, as well as a com plete catering service th at p rovides banquet facilities for m a jo r U niversity functions. W e’re concerned about what we serve a n d how we serve it. O u r cook s an d fo o d productio n sta ff like w hat they do, have a vast am o u n t o f restau ran t experience, an d m ak e ju st about everything fro m scratch , every day. They like to be innovative and spice m eals up with a gourm et touch. W e w o u ld n ’t serve anyth ing th at we felt was not very tasty, un h ealth y , or just plain blah. W e buy the highest quality m eats an d p ro d u ce available from the sam e places as your favorite re sta u ra n t. W e’re cheaper th an resta u ra n ts because we d o n ’t m ak e a p ro fit. The plan is o ffered strictly as a service. A lth o u g h food prices have been going up steadily, the meal plan price w o n ’t change d uring the sem ester, even though price increases m ay occur on certain item s that people who a re n ’t on the p lan w ould have to pay. The Plans Option A — 19 meals per week — o ffers com plete service for every m eal served per week, including brunch and dinner on S a tu rd a y s and Sundays. Option B — 14 meals per week — ap p eals to the diner w ho needs m o re flexibility and provides any 14 o f the 19 meals served each week. Option C — 8 meals per week — is ideal fo r those who will trav el o r be o u t o f tow n on w eekends, o fferin g any 8 o f the 19 m eals served each week Option D — 5 meals per week — is designed for the com m uter stu d e n t o r o th er persons not rem ain ing on cam pus. This plan p erm its any 5 o f the 19 m eals served per week. W hen the Plans are Valid M ea ls w ill be served from M o n d ay , Ja n u a ry 18 through F ri­ day, May 14. M eals will not be served over Spring B reak, M arch 1 3 - 2 1 . T here are 108 to tal M eal P lan serving days C ost o f the P lans (in c lu d e s sales tax and $6 00 d isco u nt for full paym ent) O PTIO N A: O PTIO N B: OPTIO N C: OPTIO N D: (M ond ay 19 meals per week - F riday, b re a k fa s t/lu n c h /d in n e r; S atu rd ay - S unday, brunch an d d inner) — $587.00 14 meals per week (any 14 o f the 19 meals served) - 8 meals per week (any 8 o f the 19 meals served) — $439,00 5 meals per week (any 5 o f the 19 meals served) — $331.00 $562.00 Paym ent T h e fu ll paym en t can be m ade at the b eginning or in acco r­ d a n ce w ith a set paym ent schedule sp read o u t over the course o f th e sem ester. Paym ents also can be ch arg ed on VISA or M a ste rC a rd credit cards. T here is a $6.00 d iscount for full p a y m e n t. %» H ow the M eal Plan W orks The Meal Plan is a sem ester-long co ntract in w hich the Texas U nion provides a specified num ber o f m eals each week fo r p a r­ ticipants at a disco u n t. T he m ore meals per week c o n tracted — the greater the d isc o u n t. W e arrived at the d isco u n t th ro u g h a num ber o f factors. O ne o f these factors is because we can cou nt on you to eat with us each week on a regu lar basis, we ju st produce m ore food with the sam e o verhead a n d pass on the savings to you. A lso, there are tim es when you m ay have to there because o f p ersonal reasons. miss a meal here o r A lthough it’s to y o u r ad v an tag e to m ake every m eal, we can ac­ count for the fact th at things ju st com e up . T his “ m issed m eal” factor fu rth er increases the discount. T hen we increase the discount even fa rth e r — ju st to m ake the M eal P lan P ro ­ gram a good deal. These factors add up to a huge d isco u n t — up to 50 percent — d ependin g upon how m any m eals per week for which y o u ’ve c o n tra c te d . Because o f the way th e M eal Plan w orks, we have set fair a n d clear guidelines on how th e plan is used. F or instance, foo d canno t be given aw ay to o th ers, or taken out o f the dining areas. Also, no m ore th a n tw o o f any one item (with a few exceptions) can be p urch ased on the meal plan. P articipan ts are issued a m eal plan punch card. T h ere are three cards — each good for a p o rtio n o f the sem ester. You receive all these cards when you purchase the meal plan. If you choose to pay in installm ents, you will receive one card g o o d fo r each paym ent period. T he card is presented with a U T ID at the cashier stations to be pun ch ed after you have g o tten y o u r food. There is a specific m o n etary food allow ance fo r b re a k fa st, lunch, and dinner. Y ou can have any c o m b in atio n o f item s available up to the m o n etary lim it. If the total a m o u n t o f food exceeds the lim it, the d ifference m ust be paid in cash. T he m ax ­ im um value o f the plan is $2.45 for b reak fast, $3.95 for lunch, $4.50 for dinner, and $3.45 for weekend b ru n ch , including sales tax. Sp ecial Features M any food areas are available at specified tim es fo r M eal Plan diners, including lunch in the Union B allroom , S u n d ay brunch and dinner in the S anta Rita R estaurant and w eekend lunches at the G arden Grille. The flexible o p tion p ro g ram enables one to eat any o f the m eals at any o f the specified lo cations during a given week. The Varsity C a feteria will feature seconds on a selected entree at dinner. D inner on S undays at the Food M all in th e U nion will be on an all-you-can-eat meal with m ore lim ited selection o f item s. L ocation and H ours of the M eals Meal Plan p articip an ts have the op tion o f eating eith er at the Varsity C afeteria (M o n d ay - Friday) or in the T exas U nion Building (M onday - S unday). Plan Full Price (includes $6.0 0 discount) By Jan. 18 By Feb. 22 By April 5 $237.00 $227.00 $178.00 $134.00 $160.00 $154.00 $121.00 $ 92.00 $587.00 $562.00 $439.00 $331.00 Paym ent Plan $196.00 $187.00 $147.00 $111.00 léxdsU nonu The Varsity C afeteria B reakfast, lunch, and dinner — M onday th rough F riday — are all served at the V arsity C afeteria located ju st o f f the c o r­ ner o f 21st Street and Speedw ay, aojecent to M oore-H ill Residence H all. “ T he V arsity” is a full service food facility o pening each day at 7 a.m . for b reak fast a:id closing at 7:15 p .m . after the dinner ho u r. As a part o f T exas U nion Dining Services, the V arsity also houses o u r Bakery P ro d u ctio n D ep artm en t, producing to p -q u ality , fresh baked breads, cookies, pies, do u g h n u ts and cakes for all o f o u r eating facilities on cam pus. T he Varsity C afeteria is unique in that it is right in the m iddle o f the M en’s Residence Halls com plex an d across from Jester C enter. It also is ju st dow n the street from the P erry-C asteneda L ibrary. In ad d itio n to the daily variety o f p u p u lar food item s, the Varsity also offers som e grille favorites such as h am burgers and cheeseburgers. M eals are not served on w eekends at the V arsity. T ex a s U nion Building is o u r special “ old B reakfast, lunch and dinner are offered M onday thro ugh Friday, and b ru n ch an d dinner on S atu rd ay an d S unday, in the T exas U nion Building (located on the west side o f cam ­ pus next to the A cadem ic C enter). B reakfast and din ner are available M onday - Friday in the F ood M all at “ A dds N D ro p s " , o u r m ain cafeteria line o ffering a variety o f fresh hot foods with a d ifferent m enu each day. O pen M onday th ro u g h F riday are three o th er food areas ad jacen t to “ A dds N D ro p s” : “ E lectives” fav o rites” co u n te r featuring barbecue, chicken fried steak and M exican food every day. T he “ P izzadeli” and “ Steer H ere” o ffer pizza, deli sandw iches, gourm et baked po tato es, fish platters an d gourm et burgers. All o f these facilities lead into the 40 A cres Dining R oom , a q u iet, carpeted dining area. Lunch is served in the U nion B allroom only, M onday - F riday, which features an all-you-can-eat salad bar, hot soup and fresh- m ade sandw iches. W eekend m eals (brunch and dinner) are served prim arily at the “ A dds N D ro p s” cafeteria line in the Food M all, how ever, p articipants have an o p tion o f having lunch or dinner at the G arden G rille, located ju st o f f the F ood M all and serving a wide selection o f burgers, steaks an d o th er grill item s. In a d d itio n , p articipants can apply their m eal plan m em bership tow ard din n er, T uesday - S unday, in the S anta Rita R estaurant as well as S unday brunch. The S anta R ita R estaurant is a m ore form al facility offering w aiter service. W hat the MeaLs Include Any co m b in atio n o f m enu items offered in each food facility is available in the Meal Plan at each area with the follow ing stipulations: 1 N o m ore th an tw o o f the sam e item are allow ed on the meal plan, except for cooked eggs. 2. A lcoholic beverages are not available on the Meal Plan. 3. The value o f food item s purchased on the M eal Plan cannot exceed the per-m eal allow ance; the difference m ust be paid in cash. H ow to Purchase a M eal Plan In person — A ny o f the M eal P lans can be purchased in person in the Texas U nion In fo rm atio n L obby, 9 a.m . - 4:30 p.m ., Ja n u a ry 13 16 and 18 - 22, and in the T exas Union Check (.ash in g O ffice, 9 - 1 1 a.m . and 1 - 4 p .m ., Ja n u a ry 23 T e b ru a r y 12 Meal P lans will be discounted each day for meals m issed due to late purchase th rough Ja n u ary 29. Subsequent m eal plan paym ents are m ade at the Check C ashing O ffice. 9 a.m . - 4 p.m . P aym ents m ay also be m ailed to the address below Further Information For m ore in fo rm atio n , call 471-5651, or write: Texas U nion Meal P lans T he U niversity o f Texas at A ustin A ustin, TX 78712 AGreatTasting Beer for Those with Greatlaste. T r a f f ic TICKETS $45 UN J P. OR MUNICIPAL COURT) D.W.I. (Guilty plea Misdemeanor)................................ $150. D.W.I. (Jury Trial Misdemeanor)...................................$450. OCCUPATIONAL DRIVERS LICENSE............................$100. RON SHORTES 255-4440 M6 E. Mam St Round Rock TX 78664 24 hours a day Need help w ith reading, w ritin g , m ath, study skills, gra du ate school exam prep? RASSL has gro up and self- paced, in dividu alized pro gra m s - and th e y 're free. A332 Jester ... 471-3614. T t'f0 . /Onu o-ve°<'y V °°tSí c O oOC SgSS» 1 A « n o I> c D o n e m g In c Thursday, January 14, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN World & National Page 3 in Brief From Texan news services Philippine* bars press SINGAPORE — The Philippine government blocked the distribution this week of foreign newspapers and magazines that carried accounts of die disappearance of a divorced ath­ lete who secretly married a daugh­ ter of President Ferdinand E. Mar­ cos on Dec, 4. The publications, among them Tim e, Newsweek, The International Herald Tri­ bune, Asia Week and The F a r Eastern Econom ic Review, all reported that 32-year-old Tommy Manotoc, an amateur golfer and professional basketball coach, was last seen Dec. 29 driving away from a Manila restaurant after dining there with Imee Marcos, the presi­ dent’s daughter. Rebellion escalates PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - A top Haitian general took personal command Wednesday of troops fighting a band of at least 39 exile invaders seeking to topple the re­ gime of President Jean-Claude Du- | valier. Air force planes flew sup­ plies and reinforcements to the government troops battling exiles who landed Tuesday on Tortuga Is­ land, five miles off Haiti’s north i coast, government and diplomatic sources said, ha New York, a Hai­ tian exile group called for all Hai­ tian opposition groups to support ef­ forts the 24-year “dicatorship" of Duvalier and his father the late President Francois ‘’Papa Doc,” Martial law «ates to overthrow WARSAW, Poland - Poland’s military rulers met with Solidarity members Wednesday, but the un­ ion’s underground leadership called on Poles to turn off their lights for 15 minutes in a silent protest mark­ ing the first month of martial law. In a stunning embarrassment to the government, a senior Solidarity of­ ficial brought before foreign corre­ spondents to express approval of the martial law regime, suddenly re­ tracted earlier statements of sup­ port, saying he had been coerced • making them. >rm searches OK'd WASHINGTON * The Supreme Court ruled 9-3 Wednesday that it was all right for a police officer who accompanied an arrested college student to his dormitory room and saw drugs inside to search the room without a warrant. The decision said the policeman’s need to ensure his own safety gave him a right to “remain literally at (the arrested student's) elbow at all times,” also giving him a right to seize illegal drugs discovered hi plain view in the room. Pill linkad to daaths WASHINGTON - The powerful sleeping pill reported to have been used by Supreme Court Justice Wil­ liam Rehnquist should be curbed be­ cause it is dangerous, addictive ami recklessly prescribed, a health group said Wednesday. The Health Research Group said the drug, Pla- cidyi, was linked to more than 300 deaths through abuse in 1980, plus numerous Incidents requiring emer­ gency room treatment, according to figures from the government’s Drug Abuse Warning Network. Roosavalt uaod tapa , NEW YORK — President Frank­ lin D. Roosevelt used a secret de­ vice to record conversations in the Oval Office over an 11-week period in the fall of 1940, A m erican H eri­ tage magazine said Wednesday, MThe magazine released excerpts of the secretly recorded Oval Office conversations hi which Roosevelt discussed the possibility of spread­ ing a rumor mat Wendell Willkie, the GOP presidential candidate in 1940, was having an extra-marital affair. Rapa trial continuas PITTSBURGH - A female sixth grade teacher accused of rape gave police a statement admitting she had sex with two boys because she was afraid of force and blackmail, a detective testified Wednesday. The prosecution rested its case on the second day of the trial of Kathleen Harden. 31, after her police state­ ment was read into the record by Sgt. Paul Wolf, a detective on the Allegheny County Rape Squad. AT&T causes stock fall NEW YORK - Stocks skidded to a 2Va month low Wednesday in mod­ erate trading when an early rally collapsed under the weight of inves­ tor concerns about the AT&T anti­ trust settlement and the deepening recession. The Dow Jones industrial average, up about 5 points at the outset after falling 2.76 points Tues­ day, plunged 8.75 paints to 838.95, the lowest level since it finished at 832.95 last Oct. 2» and close to its 1981 low of 82101 on Sept 25. The NYSE index dropped 0 82 to 66.63 and the price of an average share decreased 35 cents U.S., Egypt to push Israeli negotiations CAIRO, E gypt — S e c re ta ry of State Alexander M. Haig J r . said Wednesday a fte r conferring with P resid en t Hosni Mubarak that he had now the Egyptian lead er’s agreem en t fo r an intensified effort in com ing m onths to ach iev e a breakthrough in the negotiations with Israel for P alestin ian self-ru le in the West Bank and G aza Strip. In a 90-minute m eeting at M ubarak’s o ffice in Oruba P a la c e , Haig w as re­ ported to have told him that the United States believed that E gyp t and Israel had spent enough tim e ov er the past 20 months inconclusively discussing the is­ sues and he was ready to give his atten ­ tion to helping them a c c e le ra te th eir e f­ forts for an accord . “Our view is that we w elcom e the participation of S e c re ta ry Haig in the process because we fe e l that it will push forward the negotiations for the autonom y,” K am al H assan Ali, E g y p t's foreign m inister, said to re p o rters la t­ er. Haig flies to Isra e l on Thursday to confer with P rim e M inister M enachem Begin and Foreign M in ister Yitzhak Sham ir for th eir reactio n to his plans for pushing the negotiations forward Assuming that th e Isra e lis a g re e, he must then must decide w hether to de­ vote a con sid erable portion of his tim e in the near future to M iddle E a s t nego­ tiations or w hether he will appoint a special negotiator to do m ost of the instructions work, while Haig gives from Washington. Haig, speaking to rep o rte rs, said he had received “ the very firm and cle a r com m itm ent of P resid en t M ubarak to intensify our e ffo rts in the period ahead to achieve progress on autonom y and to work in con cert for broadening of the peace process with a view towards a lasting, ju st p eace in the reg io n .” He said he hoped ‘‘to ach iev e a g re a t­ e r momentum with the resu lts of a breakthrough in the period ahead and I hope this will be p o ssib le .” The Isra e lis and E gyp tian s have been negotiating for a broadly worded d ecla­ ration of principles that would outline the duties and resp on sib ilities of a so- called that self-governing auth ority would be elected by the P alestin ian s living in the W est Bank of the Jo rd an R iv er and the G aza Strip, a re a s occu­ pied by Israel sin ce the six-day 1967 war. Israel and E gyp t have been in funda­ m ental d isagreem en t sin ce the negotia­ tions began in M ay 1979 following the first phase of the putting into e ffe c t of the E gyp tian -Israeli p eace treaty. The ch ief ob stacle has been over d iffering interpretations of the self-governing au­ thority itself. The Egyptians believe the body should have about 120 m em b ers and have ad m inistrative, leg islativ e and ju d icial authority for running the W est Bank and Gaza Strip. The Isra e lis, con­ cerned that this might lead to m ore in­ dependence than they a re willing to concede, want the body lim ited to about 15 m em b ers who have only ad m in istra­ tive responsibility. The Israe lis a re due to com p lete their withdrawal from the Sinai on April 25 and the A m ericans believe that in the the three months rem aining before E gyp tian -Israeli p eace tre a ty is firm ly in p lace with the la st pullback of I s ­ rae lis land from occupied E gyptian there is an opportunity for m ore activ e negotiations for a P alestin ian self-ru le agreem ent. Both the peace treaty and the autono­ my talks were agreed to in outline form a t Camp David in Sep tem b er 1978. The Egyptians and Isra e lis also d isa­ gree on the future secu rity a rran g e ­ m ents for the P alestin ian a re a , with the Egyptians wanting the Isra e li m ilitary and police presence and duties to be very lim ited. T here is also a m a jo r d if­ feren ce over whether E a s t Je ru sa le m should be included as part of the W est Bank and its Arab resid ents perm itted to vote for the ruling authority. The E gyptians claim that sin ce E a s t Je ru sa le m , like the W est Bank, was controlled by Jord an prior to 1967, it should be treated the sam e as the W est Isra e lis, having annexed Bank. The E a s t Je ru sa le m , have refused to in­ clude it in the negotiations and have said that Arab resid ents should not be allowed to vote in the W est Bank negoti­ ations. Follow ing the m eeting with M ubarak, A m erican and Egyptian o ffic ia ls m et to go over in detail the E gyp tian position on the contentious issues, so that Haig would have a c le a r idea in his own mind on w here Cairo stood. T he A m erican s will do the sam e with the Isra e lis, o ffi­ cials with Haig said. T h ere is no inten­ tion on this trip, they said, to introduce any new A m erican plan, although A m erican suggestions for com p rom ises have been subm itted e arlie r. Both Haig and Egyptian o ffic ia ls said that th ere was no intention to set a deadline or targ et date for concluding the negotiations and Egyptian o fficia ls went out of their way to say they fe lt no sense of particular urgency. Search fo r survivors UPI Telephoto Rescue workers are forced to use rowboats and maneuver through ice to reach the wreckage of the Air Florida 737 that slammed Into the 14th Street in Washington Wednesday. Fuselage Bridge wreckage Is shown in the lower right of the photo, the wlngtlp Is Just above the boatmen. Ford, UA W cut contract talks D E T R O IT (U P I) — Ford M otor Co. broke off early c o n tra c t talks with the United Auto W orkers W ednesday, apparently m iffed a t the short notice it was given of a G eneral M otors- approved plan linking co n tra c t con cessions to cuts in c a r p ric­ es. P e te r P estillo . F o rd 's v ice president for labor relatio n s, said the au to m aker would resum e bargaining with the union T hu rs­ day afternoon following a m eeting of the com pany’s board of d irecto rs. P estillo said the com pany would use the tim e to study a plan presented to it by the union that has alread y been adopted by GM. U sually during negotiations, each com pany receiv es propos­ als from the union at the sam e tim e. But UAW P resid en t Douglas F r a s e r said the union had no obligation to tell Ford of the plan e a rlie r sin ce the au tom aker did not help develop the concept. G M 's approval of the proposal will help the UAW in its dealings with Ford, he added. ‘‘I t ’s a bargaining advantage, we think. W e’ll find out la te r o n ,” F r a s e r said M eanw hile. F r a s e r said the union w as “ dism ayed, disturbed and shocked ’’ bv con cessions proposals m ade by GM W ednes­ day but acknow ledged the o ffe rs w ere p art of the bargaining process. The union lead er said follow ing a bargaining session with GM that the No. 1 au to m ak er's proposals involve con cessions “ everyw here dollar figure. in the union c o n tra ct, but he refused to rev eal a “ It's a helluva lot bigger than a b read b o x," he said The historic proposal adopted by GM on Tuesday — the s e c ­ ond day of early co n tra c t talks with the auto industry — c a lls for the autom aker to give c a r buyers re b a te s equal to the amount of concessions m ade by the union. GM had been discussing the plan with the union sin ce No­ vem ber. Ford did not get d etails of the plan until GM Chairm an R oger Sm ith was announcing his com pany’s ag reem en t to go along with it. Ford ju st Tuesday announced its own re b ate program involv­ ing selected m odels. Industry ob servers said the com pany probably would not have gone ahead with the re b a te s if it had known the union proposal w as in the w orks. “ An intelligent, prudent m an doesn’t a g re e to a plan he doesn’t un d erstan d /' P e stillo told rep o rters. But he said Ford o ffic ia ls w ere not angry with the UAW. “ Those who get angry in this business lose th e ir judgm ent and that 's the last thing we need. " he said. The union has set a Ja n . 23 deadline fo r the conclusion of early bargaining. At that tim e, a settle m e n t o r s ta tu j report will be presented to the UAW s Ford and G M cou ncils in Wash­ ington. The groups eith e r will approve a c o n tra c t o r give the union further instructions on how to proceed. White House employs polygraphs to trace, stop leaks WASHINGTON (U P I) — P resid en t R e a g a n ’s w ar on leaks took an e lectrify in g tw ist W ednesday with m em bers of the P en tag o n ’s top b ra ss taking lie de­ te cto r te sts in an e ffo rt to nail down who is passing out ad m inistration se c re ts. The White House also said that, in addition to new controls over s e c re t inform ation announced T ues­ day, from now on all C abinet o ffic e rs and top White House aides will have to c le a r any television appear­ an ce with a special coordinator. Although R e a g a n ’s new national secu rity ad viser, W illiam C lark, prepared the order to staunch leaks, deputy press se c re ta ry L a rry Speakes said “ it re ­ fle c ts the views of the president ... to stem the flow of inform ation that can be h a r m f u l/’ Speakes said the presid ent was not initially aw are of the polygraph program a t the P entagon — in itia t­ ed by Deputy D efense S e cre ta ry F ran k C arlu cci — but had been advised of it. A story about m ilita ry spending plans last week provoked the frontal a tta ck on leaks a t the P en ta ­ gon, w here a spokesm an said W ednesday, “ P oly­ graphs have been and a re being ad m in iste re d .” The spokesm an said C arlu cci had voluntarily tak­ en a lie d etecto r test The leak-plugging effo rt was ordered a fte r the Washington P ost reported the m ain d etails of a c la s ­ sified document presented to the P en tag o n 's De­ fense R eso u rces Board. The document estim ated R e a g a n 's m assiv e de­ fense buildup would cost $750 billion m ore than the $1.5 trillion already p ro jected for the next five y ears. The spokesm an said about 25 people took p art in the m eeting, m ost of them a ssista n t or deputy a s s is t­ ant defense s e c re ta rie s. About half of the people who w ere at the m eeting had volunteered to take the lie d etecto r te sts, P en ta­ gon sou rces said. So far, one source said, “ Nobody is holding b a c k /' In an a ttem p t to dampen con cern , the ad m in istra­ tion is seeking to shut off news sou rces, Speakes said, “ T h e re 's no plan on the p art of this governm ent to in crease classified inform ation and the fre e flow of in fo rm ation .” Although leaks concerning R e a g a n 's 1983 spending and tax options have upset the president, Speakes insisted that “ for the m ost part the budget is not c la s sifie d .” * He stressed the key concern was that som e recen t leaks “did not allow us to conduct foreign policy in an ord erly m a n n e r.” in wrhich classified In addition to s tric tu re s announced Tuesday, re ­ quiring advance c le a ra n ce for m eeting with rep ort­ ers is dicussed, Speakes said C abinet o ffic e rs and top R eagan aides will c le a r their appearan ces on television with a White House coordinator. inform ation But he insisted, “ We re not tryin g to shut down public d e b a te ." In announcing the new m oves to block leaks Tues­ day, White House com m unications d irecto r David G ergen said, “ T here has been a virtual hem orrhage of leaks in foreign policy. ' G ergen — who briefed rep o rters under ground rules that he not be identified - also said Reagan “ has been concerned about leaks not only in the na­ tional secu rity end but e lse w h e re ." Association re-evaluates undergraduate studies * 1982 The New York Times BOSTON — P ro claim in g that under­ graduate education in the nation had be­ com e fragm ented and overspecialized and had lost its sen se of c iv ic purpose, the A ssociation of A m erican Colleges has announced a th ree-y ear program to reassess the b ach e lo r’s d egree. Mark H. Curtis, the president of the association, said a t the group’s annual convention here that the study would a t­ tem pt to “ revive a consensus among faculty, deans, presidents and tru stees on the meaning and purpose of b a c ­ calau reate degrees Curtis said a panel com posed of 17 professors, deans and university p re si­ dents would also try to d efine what lev ­ els of knowledge w ere needed for un­ dergraduate study and would publish c rite ria for assessin g the quality of c o l­ lege education. The findings of the study co m m ittee will not be binding on any of the 575 public and private colleges and univer­ sitie s that belong to the association. But William R. O ’Connell J r , a v ice p re si­ dent of the organization, said he hoped its recom m endations would be used by som e of the professional and regional institutions of groups higher learning that a ccre d it O ’Connell said the review co m m itte e would not s ta rt with any assum ptions about what the b ach elo r's d eg ree should be. But in a panel discussion h ere, one of the m em bers of the co m m itte e , Charles M uscatine, a professor of E nglish at the U niversity of C alifornia, B erk eley , sug­ gested that curren t requ irem en ts for a bachelor's degree teach students little m ore than how to take notes, m em orize fa c ts for exam inations and deal with the re g is tra r’s office. “ Ninety percent of all cou rses teach the sam e skills over and over, note-tak­ ing and m em orization,” said M usca­ tine. “ T hat is a very narrow range of skills to be teaching at such exp e n se .” The cu rren t b accalau reate d egree, he added, “ is a m arvelous convenience for a m ed iocre society, putting passive a c ­ cep tan ce ahead of questioning and pro­ pagating the dangerous myth that te ch ­ nical skills are m ore im portant than eth ical reasoning.” M uscatine suggested the com m ittee ought to re-exam ine som e of the m ost b asic assum ptions of liberal a rts pro­ gram s, including the concept of the stu­ dent undergraduate m a jo r and the breakdown of fields into the hum ani­ ties, the social scien ces and the natural scien ces. Instead, he said, “ we need to shift our em phasis from a narrow concern with su b je ct m atter to em phasis on pro­ c e s s " The key goal of education should be the teaching of “ inform ed decision m aking which recognizes is a m oral and ethical com ponent to lif e .” there One possible new approach, M usca­ tine said, would be to divide the c u rric ­ ulum into investigative skills, gathering d ata, interview ing and laboratory e x ­ p erim ents and integrativ e skills. The la tte r would include w riting and speak­ ing Colleges should place much m ore e m ­ phasis on teaching logic and giving stu­ dents a histo rical and th eo retical p er­ to view any sp ective problem from which Storms paralyze America, Europe By United Press International New storm s assau lted the South Wednesday as it struggled from the frozen shack les of a ra re snow and ice storm that paralyzed c itie s and towns from T e x as to G eorgia. Thou­ sands shivered without e le c tric ity and the death toll clim bed p ast 160. The storm s, team ing up with the cold est w eather of the 20th century, w ere blam ed for at least 167 deaths sin ce last weekend. Seven-inch snows and thin cru sts of ice rendered ill-equipped D ixie citie s helpless as the second wave of storm s moved into som e areas. S ta te s of em erg en cy w ere declared by gov er­ nors of A labam a and Louisiana. The hardest freeze in five y ears showed 84 p ercent of F lo rid a 's $1.29 billion citru s crop dam aged, costing grow ers — and u ltim ately consu m ers — $500 m illion The freeze prom ised a near-im m ed iate in crease in super­ m ark et p rices. The Florida Crop R e ­ porting S e rv ic e ’s survey said 30 p er­ cen t of the crop was frozen solid. In Europe, the death toll clim bed to at le a st 50 and d am ages mounted into the tens of m illions of d ollars Wednesday from a freak w inter that has brought killing cold, lethal sm og, av alan ch es and devasting floods to the continent W'arsaw Radio reported fra n tic e f ­ forts by thousands of w orkers had failed to dislodge m ountains of ice blocking the Vistula R iv er and W ar­ the saw floodw aters covering m ore than 160 square m iles of farm land threatened by itse lf was E u rop e's known death toll was at least 50 and w eather bureaus fo re ca st no drop in sub-A rctic tem p eratu res before the weekend T here was no firm e stim a te of the devastation wreaked by the harsh w inter on fa rm ­ ers, hom eowners and businessm en. The fo restry s erv ice in Baden- W uerttem berg, W est G erm any, said heavy snow falls and ice has caused $20 million in dam age to tre e s in the Black F o rest. Much of the southern United S tates was shut down by the powerful snow, ice and sleet storm that swept into the a rea Tuesday afternoon The halls industry, education of com m erce, and governm ent w ere m ostly vacan t Wednesday from points in T e x as to Georgia as the scrap e-aw ay and di­ gout began in freezing tem p eratu res. The w eatherm an offered alm ost no hope for im m ed iate relief. Freezing tem peratu res w ere expected to m ain ­ tain their southern grip throughout the week. F o r e c a s te r s warned of new storm s taking aim from the southern half of M ississippi and northern Loui­ siana and G eorgia A tlanta, in the h eart of D ixie, was locked in by 2 inches of icy snow that made travel dangerous At least 10 deaths appeared to be w e ath er-relat­ ed. auth orities said When em ployers turned out th eir w orkers early as snow appeared Tuesday, icy snow- made the c ity ’s expressw ays look like lengthy bum per c a r playgrounds be­ fore exasperated m otorists gave up the fight “ It was one big parking lo t," said David Vesey, who recen tly moved to Atlanta from C hicago. It w asn't re­ ally a w eather problem It w as a tr a f ­ fic problem . No o n e ’s going any­ where I t ’s really infuriating ’ Even the c e le b ra te d tria l of Wavne W illiam s, accused of killing two of the 28 young A tlanta blacks slain in nearly a tw o-year span, was forced to re c e ss becau se of the snow and sleet storm . About 150 National Guardsm en pa­ trolled A tlanta with 67 4-w heel-drive v eh icles to assist stranded citizen s. New storm s also swept into the N ortheast and Mid A tlantic. The Na­ tional W eather S erv ice posted storm w arnings for up to 8 inches of snow from South ( arolina to eastern Penn­ sylvania to southeast New York. Snow began falling in the predawn hours in Pennsylvania and by mid­ m orning in Washington, M aryland, V irginia and New York City W orkers in Washington w ere in many governm ent ag en cies re ­ leased from their desks before the norm al closing tim e. Up to 2 inches of snow fell in Virginia by midday, clo s ­ ing numerous schools and businesses Fou r inches of snow fell in B a lti­ m ore and foiled a bank ro bbery a t­ tem pt. P o lice arrested two m en a fte r one of the suspects asked a fe m a le o ffic e r to help him fre e a getaw ay c a r n ear the M aryland N ational Bank in Tim onium . Seven inches of snow fe ll during the night in cen tral Indiana but no m a jo r road closin gs w ere reported . Thousands of sou thern ers shivered in freezin g te m p e ratu re s b e ca u se of downed power lines — about 250,000 in A labam a alone Gov. F o b Ja m e s d eclared a s ta te of e m e rg e n cy . Na­ tional Guard a rm o rie s w ere set up as the tem p orary sh e lte rs sta te throughout Page 4 Clark appointment: finally a wise move T he N ew . Y o r k T im e s sa id in an e d i ­ toria l W ed n esd a y , Ja n . 6, 1982: It is high tim e that President Reagan got someone in his inner circle to coor­ dinate foreign policy full time. William Clark com es to the job with only a year’s experience in world affairs, as deputy secretary of state; he will not have much independent knowledge or sensitivity about the advice flowing to the president. But unlike Richard Allen, he has a long association with Reagan and is promised regular access to the Oval Office. Important conflicts can now come to Reagan in timely fashion and the president has a new chance to impose his priorities on the cap ital’s most powerful bureaucracies. With a better White House operation, it is conceivable that Reagan would have been spared the AWACS imbro­ glio. He might have learned earlier that delay on arm s control was damaging the western alliance. He would have de­ veloped a policy on the Palestinian question and made his meetings with Begin and Sadat more fruitful. He might have done less fuming over E l Salvador and emerged with a less belli­ cose reputation. And he might now be determining whether he can really a f­ ford an all-out arm s race with the Sovi­ et Union. One new aide cannot compensate for this president’s obvious inexperience in foreign affairs. But Reagan is com- mendably attempting a difficult mid­ term correction. The job of national security adviser has been reinvented in each adm inistra­ tion But in 30 years, no president got by with the sort of low-level functionary that Allen becam e. It is a fact of life that even strong secretaries of state cannot control m ilitary, economic and intelligence policies, all of which cruci­ ally impinge on diplomacy. The strong­ er the Cabinet heads, the fiercer their rivalries. Only a full-time White House official can keep the departments in line — and then only if he has the confidence and the ear of the commander in chief. Reagan wanted no super secretary of state, like Henry Kissinger, or second secretary, like Zbigniew Brzezinski. But they performed only as their presi­ dents wanted. By downgrading Allen’s office, Reagan did very little to still the jealousies of Secretary Haig and only increased the confusion and conflict all around. Had Allen been judged adequate for the job as now redefined, he might have survived even his failure of judgment about that stray $1,000 and other con­ tacts with form er foreign clients. But the president needed something more, and therefore someone else, from the start. ® 1982 The New York Times Editorials THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, January 14, 1982 Ignorance is not an excuse You m ig h t h av e a lre a d y read the co lu m n on this page by M a tt W eitz. He w ro te it th e day the R e a g a n a d m in istra tio n announced th at the I R S would hav e to g ra n t ta x exem p tion s to r a c is t schools. M a tt’s re a c tio n w as only slig h tly le ss re stra in e d than the next d a y ’s X p u Y ork T im e s e d ito ria l, which said , “ T h e R eag an a d m in is tra tio n is picking the p o ck et of every A m e rica n ta x p a y e r to su b sid ize ra c is m in ed u catio n . " L a te r that d ay M r. R eag an told us th a t th e re had been a m isu n ­ d erstan d in g : “ I a m u n alte rab ly opposed to r a c ia l d iscrim in a tio n in any fo rm ’ H e said the IR S w as not th e proper in stru m en t fo r co m b attin g r a c is m — and called fo r le g is la tio n th at would deny exem p tion s w h ile leav in g I R S ’s “ a d m in is tra tiv e f i a t ” out o f it. So we w ithheld M a t t’s colum n, thinking th a t R eag an had rig h ted the wrong and should be le ft alone, o r even co n g ratu la ted . B ut then m o re s to r ie s c a m e o v er th e w ire show ing R e a g a n had been lobbied to g ra n t the e x e m p tio n s by South C arolina c o n s e rv a ­ tives Strorn T hu rm on d and C a rro l C a m p b e ll. R eag an m a d e his s ta te m e n t a fte r co n su ltin g with S am u el P i ­ e r c e , the only b la ck C ab in et m e m b e r (w hom R ea g an h as m is ta k ­ en in the p ast fo r a v isitin g m a y o r) and o th e r b lack a d m in is tra ­ tion o ffic ia ls . B u t he w as also c a r e fu l to m e e t with Thurm ond and C am p bell. If R ea g an r e a lly intended fo r le g is la tio n to take the p la c e of I R S ’s “ a d m in is tra tiv e f i a t ,” why d id n’t he su g g est the le g isla tio n a t the s a m e tim e he curbed the I R S ? As it stan d s, r a c is t sch o o ls a re e lig ib le fo r e xem p tio n s until the new leg isla tio n ca n be passed — if it e v e r is. It has b e co m e fa sh io n a b le to c a ll p e rso n s o r law s th at m a k e no d istin ction a s to r a c e “ co lo r-b lin d .” R on ald R e ag an s e e m s to be “ co lo r blind, " but in a d iffe ren t sen se — he h as a blind spot ab ou t b lack s and th e ir p ro b lem s. A m an who ca n ignore th a t kind of problem in h is youth can rem ain in s e n s itiv e all his life — and th at see m s to be R e a g a n ’s problem today. “ I would not know ing­ ly co n trib u te to an y org anization th a t su p p o rts d is c rim in a tio n ” he said. T he k ey word is “ know ingly.” B ut ig n o ran ce of d iscrim in a tio n is no e x c u s e . B y plead ing igno­ ra n c e — and by say in g he is being m isu n d erstoo d — R e a g a n hopes to exp lain aw a y his a tte m p t to su b v e rt the few a d v a n ce s this cou ntry h a s m a d e in elim in a tin g r a c e d iscrim in a tio n . John Schwartz edge city TRIN ITY (U P I) — A Texan who claim s to have already discov­ ered the Ark of the Covenant, the resting place of Noah’s Ark and the true site of the Tower of Babel has lowered his goals — he’s going underground in search of evidence leading to the Lost Conti­ nent of Atlantis. So far we’ve found some pretty good drawings and w ritings,” said Tom Crotser, a Denton native who heads the Institute for Restoring Ancient History International. Crotser’s alleged discovery of the resting place of Noah’s Ark was featured in the 1974 Sunn Classic film “ In Search of Noah’s Ark ’ Jerem iah I nterman, a professor of religion at Wichita State University, said C rotser’s claim s are “a hoax. " ( rotser said he was not bothered by criticism and planned to release photographs of the Ark “pretty soon." No room at the inn This is an unusual letter. This is in support of the proposition to allow landlords the right to discrim inate against persons on the basis of their sexual preference. F irst of all, I do not endorse the Austin Citizens for Decency (or rather inde- ( encyi and I am not against people with unconventional sexual preferences. I am for the landlords' right to control their property and to discriminate (choose) on any basis (rational or irrational) who will and who will not rent property from them. The opponents of this proposition (and obviously opponents of individuals’ right wr and cont A his her property) state that this amendment is forcing some- morality upon ail of us. In reality the opponents are the ones who are . r< ng their morality upon us by forcing landlords to accept someone else’s • ws (under threat by the government) on how to control their property. If wrality is to be valid, then it must involve a choice and be accepted voluntarily. Opposing this amendment would put landlords in an amoral position. As Thomas You v-iil do me the justice to rem em ber, tii u 1 have always strenuously supported the right of every man to his opinion ... who denies to another this right, makes a slave of himself to his present m e stated in his Age of Reason opinion, because he precludes himself the right of changing it.” So vote in sell-defense of individual rights and liberty. Vote for the right of landlords to discriminate. Bonzo goes to college (tax-exempt) By MATT WEITZ _ Ronald Reagan, the issue of the Libyan hit squad apparently as stale for him as a Dunkin’ Do-nut, has a new diversion and is pursuing it with the same rugged zest that he usually reserves for vacations and naps; small m atter to Ron that the result of his new project may very well be the dismantling of 30 y ears’ effort in the field of civil rights. I'm referring to his reversal of an 11-year-old federal policy which denied tax-exempt status to private schools that practice racial discrimination. This allows two academ ic aberrations of fundamentalist bent — Bob Jones University and Goldsboro Christian Schools — to come in out of the hard fiscal rain of Reaganomics and enter the coziness of an IR S tax shelter. If tfce vigor displayed in this effort is equivalent to that applied to his six-figure vacation jaunts we can only brace ourselves, tensely awaiting a sustained assault on the anti-discriminatory legislation that some people were silly enough to die for. The ram ifications of his actions were shown to me rather vividly this past weekend as I innocently sat watching TV. The screen flickered a horrible pale blue accompaniment to the voice of the chancellor of Bob Jones University as he de­ fended his school’s policy of no interracial dating or “ intermin­ gling." After that the news crew moved into B JU ’s clean and well-lit cafeteria to talk with the students. They were a well- dressed and well-fed lot, gold earrings and perfect teeth glint­ ing in the cam era lights. One girl in particular stands out. As did all of her schoolmates who were interviewed, she thought it was high time that the federal goverment got in step with the Lord. "I don't believe in intermingling,’’ she said. “ I believe white should have white and black should have black ...” The reporter was a bit surprised. “ It says that in the B ib le?” “ Uuuhhhhh ...” Uh-oh. B etter think about this one; the re­ porter, however, was insistent. “Could you tell me w h e r e in the Bible it says th at?” “ Umm ... I couldn’t quote you a specific verse ...” A quick cut back to the chancellor: “ I believe,” he pontifi­ cated, “ that God made man to dwell in different p laces.” All well and good ... but what places did he mean for us to dwell in? How shall we decide? What signs should we look for? White should have white, and black should have black, and the whites shall have the suburbs and the towers of m etal and glass where the money is made and distributed? While to the blacks fall the warped fram e houses of Houston’s Fifth Ward and the unemployment lines? God intended for all the Spanish sur­ names in Los Angeles and Austin to be found on the E a s t Side? Please, I just ate. Sm all wonder that the whites should attribute this distribu­ tion of wealth to divine intent, eh? But the question is neither religious nor economic. Actually, it’s no question at all — ju st another case of Ronnie-baby show­ ing his true spots, spots which compel him to corrode the framework of human rights in this country to bankroll an insti­ tution like Bob Jones University which serves only the upper strata of our population. It is irrelevant that those who are thereby served are white, black, Christian, or Druid. The relevance lies in the fact that American private schooling enables our national elite to pursue education according to their own discriminating taste. While this certainly is their right, it is a right they need no help in exercising, particularly from our national government. Whether that undeserved help goes to Boston bigots or segrega­ tionist religous nutbars may affect our outrage but not the ju stice of the situation. Ronald Reagan has once again demonstrated that in his ef­ forts to put the American house in order he is concerned only with the upper floors — a divided attention that the televised interviews at Bob Jones University only underscored. Abraham Lincoln said that a house divided against itself can­ not stand The adm inistration’s short-sightedness lies not so much in their policies as in their vision: they do not see that the house will fall on them as well as us.________________ W eitz is a T ex an co lu m n ist. ? House sweet it is Concerning the “ F a ir ” Housing Ordinance election THIS COMING SATUR­ DAY: there is something inherently unfair about denying a person a place to live on the basis of what he or she might do in the privacy of the home. Whatever your exual preference or orientation, remember that you can be legally denied hous­ ing on that basis alone if this ordinance passes Even if you are the “ straightest” •h'l'osexual around, it a group of bisexuals or gays want to start an enclave (or a if you willi they could deny you and your friends housing on the i,.pie too. the right tc secx housing without artificial constraints hardly consti- utes a privilege; what it does do is further that insidious disease called BIGO- i R Y (sorry, folks> so radically inculcated by the “ genteel” class in the 19th L... century — and this is the umbrella which so unfortunately shelters racism and its not so benign offspring. Please don’t push this society into the backwoods any more than it already is — vote AGAINST the ordinance on Saturday. Phil R eece Austin Bill Courtney Art * Sanction* censured After the flagrant violations of human rights experienced in Poland recently and the subsequent efforts of the U.S. to ameliorate the situation through eco­ nomic reprisals against the Soviet Union, I was shocked and dismayed to read the following headline on the front page of the Jan. 12 T ex a n : “ NATO countries to sa n ctio n Soviets.” It is disturbing that our supposed allies would “ endorse” and “ give approval” to the Soviets' actions, especially after we had asked them to join us in imposing sanctions against Russia. The next thing you know, NATO members will be “ publicly c en so r in g Solidarity,” as have the Hungarians, ac­ cording to Nancy Bedford’s article, ‘‘Hungary benefits from second economy,” on page 4 of the same issue. I hope your readers will join me in censuring all such "sanctioning’ and “ censorship.” Ja m e s Robertson Physics Frats on the moon Some fraternities have a lot to learn if they ever want to get what they caii “ fair p ress” from the T ex a n , or from any other paper for that m atter. Case in point: “ On the night of” Dec. 3, 1981, some fraternity members, or pledges, or whomever, were having a good time watching (and participating in) mooning and streaking on 24th Street. I was there watching too, until police arrived and I then began taking pictures, After two or three shots of the action, I found a hand on ray cam era that was not my own. and I was surrounded by angry fraternity members. They were all verbally abusing me for what they presumed would be a scandal for them if it hit the press. Under threat of physical abuse, I left the immediate area where one person was being taken into custody. Soon the whole event was over, and the police handled it very well. It’s unfortunate, though, that this negative attitude toward the press caused these fraternity members to behave in a way that leads m e to conclude: “ YOU D ESER V E WHAT YOU G E T .” When will fraternities begin to behave in a way that creates good impressions? The potential is there, because one member, a little less drunk and more rational, took the time to peacably ask m e who I was and why I was there. He also got my name, phone number and the fact that I was not a T ex a n photographer. I wish there were more fraternity m em bers like him! I hope that fraternities get my point and do not mistake this letter as more “ bad p ress.” It’s meant to be honest and caring advice. Andrew A. Wier RTF Giving him the business Referring to John Schwartz’s Jan. 12 editorial: I feel that he is the victim of gross disinformation. First, he is in error when he states the recessions “ are berry, berry good to big business.” General Motors, McDonnell Douglas, Lockheed and International Harvester are just a few of the h u n d red s o í big businesses that are floundering, leading to the economic misfortune of millions erf Americans. Furthermore, many of these companies derive the majority of their sales from defense expenditures: Lockheed, Grumman and McDonnell Douglas to name just a few. Let’s face it John, only a very nearsighted person could neglect these facts. Ja m e s McCown Business by Garry Trudeau DOONESBURY GOSH, I'M AWFULLY SORRY YOU'RE LEAVING THE TEAM, SLACKMEYER ME TOO, MR PRE5 CENT, BUT I'M AFRAID THE 316 an IN SALARY FINALLY CAUGHT UP WTTH M E .. A AS YOU KNOW. SIR, i'62,000 ' L JUST DOESNT go a s fa r as 1 y IT USED TO. PERSONALLY, I'M ' WHUNG TO MAKE THE SAC- \ * h RJFtCD BUT rrs JUST NOT FAIR 70 MY FAMILY. besides, s ir , m s hour GREAT NEW TAX BREAKS THAT MAKE IT SO IRRESIS- VBLE TO G£T BACK INTO A HIGH BRACKET1 AFRAID SO, SIR. YOU'VE BEE, BEE,. HOISTED BY MADE IT FUN MY OWN P E ' TO BE RICH TARD, EH? AGAIN' NRC begins probe of pumps at STNP By DOUGLAS McLEOD Daily Texan S taff The Nuclear Regulatory Commis­ sion began investigating allegations Wednesday that faulty pumps may have knowingly been shipped to sev­ eral nuclear power plants under con­ struction, including the South Texas Nuclear Project. The beleaguered STNP received and installed some of the 52 pumps shipped “ over a period of several years," from Hayward Tyler Pump Co. in Burlington, Vt., said Graham Painter, spokesman for Houston Lighting & Power Co. and managing partner in the project. “ Allegations were made that the pump manufacturer knowingly shipped faulty pumps to ST N P,” he said interview telephone in a Wednesday. A congressional subcommittee on regulatory oversight, headed by U.S. Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass, is in­ vestigating the charges. Five former employees of the Hayward Tyler Pump Co., who left after a dispute concerning shortcuts in procedures, told Markey about the allegedly faulty shipments. Along with the STNP. the faulty pumps may also have been shipped to the Comanche Peak project west of Fort Worth, as well as to other nuclear the country. projects Two units at Three Mile Island, Pa. throughout were included in the shipments ac­ cording to a company brochure ob­ tained by United Press Internation­ al. Austin owns 16 percent of the nu­ clear project, although voters chose to sell Austin's share last fall. It is not known if the pumps are indeed faulty. “ There have been allegations made; the investigation is not complete,” Painter said. “ We don’t know yet whether the allega­ tions have merit or not." Thursday, January 14, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEX AIN U Hage b Computation Center Short Courses The Computation Center is offering a series of free non-credit short courses for all faculty, staff, and students of the University. These courses will meet in the Computation Center, Room 8 (except A G L courses, which meet in E N S 529). Courses meet for the number of hours indicated next to the title of the course (see below). Courses listed more than once are the same course repeated for your convenience. Because of limited space, those registering for any of the A G L courses should register with the receptionist in COM 5 (471-3242). General Courses Introduction to th« Computation Confer (2 hours) Introduction to the Computation Center (2 hours) Introduction to Computing (2 hours) Introduction to Computing (2 hours) Introduction to Graphics at U.T. (2 hours) Introduction to Text Processing at U.T. (2 hours) Introduction to Statistical Packages (2 hours) Introduction to Database Systems (2 hours) 10am to Noon 1pm to 3pm 1pm to 3pm 10am to Noon 3pm to 5pm 1pm to 3pm 3pm to 5pm 10am to Noon Jan 19 Jan 20 ion 19 Jon 20 Jan 19 Jan 21 Jan 20 Jan 21 Cyber Courses Introduction to the Cybers (6 hours) Introduction to the Cybers (6 hours) Introduction to Edit (4 hours) Introduction to Edit (4 hours) Beginning SPSS (6 hours) Intermediate SPSS (6 hours) Advanced SPSS (4 hours) Introduction to System 2000 (12 hours) Cyber Control Command Marcos (4 hours) Zeta Plotting (4 hours) Introduction to the Dec-20 (4 hours) Introduction to the Dec-20 (4 hours) TECO (4 hours) TECO (4 hours) Text Formatting with RUNOFF (4 hours) Introduction to SCRIBE (4 hours) Introduction to DEC Edit (4 hours) Introduction to DEC Edit (4 hours) Biomedical Statistical Package (BMDP) (4 hours) DEC-20 Courses IBM Courses 10am to Noon Jan 25,27,29 Feb 23,25 and M ar 2 3pm to 5pm 3pm to 5pm 3pm to 5pm 1 pm to 3pm 1pm to 3pm 1 pm to 3pm 3pm to 5pm 3pm to 5pm Feb 2,4 Mar 1,3 Feb 8,10,12 Feb 15,17,19 Feb 22,24,24 Feb 15,17,19,22,24,24 Feb 8,10,12 10am to Noon Feb 9,11 1pm to 3pm Jan 25,27,29 10am to Noon Feb 23,25 and Mar 2 1pm to 3pm Feb 1,3,5 10am to Noon Mar 1,3,5 10am to Noon Feb 8,10 10am to Noon Feb 15,17,19 10am to Noon Feb 1,3 3pm to 5pm 3pm to 5pm Mar 9,11 Mar 8,10 3pm to 5pm Jon 25,27,29 8am to 10am Mar 4,9,11 3pm to 5pm Feb 1,3,5 10am to Noon Mar 4,9,11 1pm to 3pm Feb. 2,4 8am to 10am Feb 8,10,12 10am to Noon Feb 22,24 1pm to 3pm 3pm to 5pm 1pm to 3pm Feb 23,25 and M ar 2,4,9,11 M ar 23,25 Feb 9,11,14,18 AGL COURSES Tour of the Advanced Graphics tab (2 hours) Image Processing Tools (IPT) (2 hours) Easy Display/Control of 3-D Data (2 hours) 3pm to Spm 3pm to 5pm 3pm to 5pm Jan 21 Jan 24 Jan 28 Texas Union information desk on the Union Build­ ing ground floor. Escort back in service Housing talk Thursday A forum on the proposed amendment to Aus­ tin’s Fair Housing Ordinance will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday in Townes Hall 124. Three UT School of Law professors and the campaign direc­ tor for Citizens for a United Austin will discuss the political, social and legal implications of the proposed amendment to be considered in a Satur­ day referendum. The forum is sponsored by Law Students for Human Rights. Marvin Prevost, coordinator of the forum, said Wednesday he was trying to get a spokesman from Austin Citizens for Decency. The Campus Escort Service, which transports female students around the University area, has resumed operations for the spring semester. The escort service van, which has a flashing blue light on top, is driven by a UT police guard. The service operates from 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. Sun­ day through Thursday and from 8 p.m. to mid­ night Friday and Saturday. The route takes about 15 minutes to complete. The van stops at Jester Center, the Littlefield Fountain, the Castilian, the Academic Center and Main Building, Carothers and Kinsolving dormi­ tories, the Scottish Rite Dormitory, the Robert Lee Moore Hall bus zone on 26th Street and the Texas Memorial Museum. Annual Shoe Sal Starts Tomorrow Wolverine* 6 Western Wellington 89°- 59o-5 d Wellington Steel toe 59°-° 09°- 5 2 0-6 39°-? 9 Vibram 51u cher 39°-° s & s d V ib ra m b lu e h e r , Rockports 69°-? ide. 1 buck Lt. Weight Whole Earth Shoes d Bullh id e 46*° d Ultra lite 49*-° 3 9 o_o 0 1 o f D a u g h t e r s 2 2 °? Q. C lo g 3 2 *® J 9 °_° ; 39°-* 2 9 9 Moc toe Oxford 4 ^ 0° 2 0 °s Wolverine. 9 W alking S h o e op 3 1 00 Introduction to the IBM 370 /15 8 (4 hours) Introduction to the IBM 3 70/158 (4 hours) Introduction to XEDIT (4 hours) Introduction to XEDIT (4 hours) Introduction to EXEC2 (4 hours) Text Processing on the IBM (4 hours) Advanced XEDIT and EXEC2 (4 hours) Statistical Analysis System (14 hours) SAS/GRAPH (4 hours) Query By Example (QBE) (8 hours) Ultralite Pro Spec. Running Shoe zo^ Asolo U ikm gBoots 133§? d Yukon oi ROLL ON REGU LAR. O R U N SC E N T E O Ultra Ban Anti-Perspirant.»< « $ 1 4 8 MO Me 99° , * 1 2 9 69' 69' S p 3 S-|97 52 German Choc. Cookies:1,v Peanut Butter 8 1 Jelly I BAM A >10/ JAR o 7QC 14 OZ f s | J7 Bathroom Refills 01XIX 3 0/ IM CT no Baked Beans BUSHIEST Three Bean Salad READ Lasagna WEIGHT WATCHCNS FROZEN 12 7% OZ J% 01 CAN *300 CAN 1 FOU« l O O k i e S - H S GOOOCOOKIf l«0!<• Fried Chicken Entree fSSST Dark Meat Entree SWMSO» >IU« Refresho B a r s r r BIROS EYE FROZfN PASTA 10 OZ CORN & BEANS OR BROCCOLI & CARROTS II 4 99' 79' 70' S | 69 M 4 3 9 4 < M ” 95* Borden Orange Juice PURE SIPPIN PAK 3-PACK SILVER VALLEY MARGARINE 16-OUNCE CARTON 3 * .1 “ TEXAS RUBY RED GRAPEFRUIT » 3i1°° 1 8 , . J 2 9 9 PO U N D 39° 049 6 IN POT Tangerines SW E E T JU IC Y E A SY TO PEEL Fancy Mum s Ficus Benjamina 5-CUTTING A S S T O CO LO RS 3 P U N T S P ER 6-IN C H POT $ 4 9 9 COUPON MR COFFEE , i t F l l T E R S « U 1 - 100 C T . R E G 9 9 C Limit 1 please Addition*!* r t g u lu puce Coupon good T h u n . Jan 14 thru W ed J tn 20 O N E C O U P O N P E R C U S T O M E R [ Ü D COUPON Kitchen Sink Set 5 PC . REG *3 99 Limit 1 pleese Additional* ragular price Caupon good Thurs. Jan 14 thru W ad Jan 2 0 O N E C O U P O N P E R C U S T O M E R ETChI c o u p o n CASUAL SLIDE WOMEN S TAN. BONE 5 to M REG $4 99 c o u p o n ALADDIN #865 VACUUM Thermo Bottle JUodcfin W/HANOLE. REG $4 49 limit 1 plea*e Additional* regulai puce Coupon good T hur*. Jan 14 thru W ed Jan 20 O N E C O U P O N P E R C U S T O M E R — — BJ5B) COUPON TUCKER LAUNDRY BASKET BUSHEL, R E G $1 9 9 Lim it-1 plea** Additional* regular price Coupon good Thur* Jan 14 thru W ad Jan 20 O N E C O U P O N P E R C U S T O M E R — _ I M ) COUPON M I I § NOTT WNtTI •> G.E.. 4-PACK ! h[Xj Light Bulbs IN S ID E FRO ST DR SO FT W H IT f IN SIDE FROST OR SOFT WHITE 60 75-100 WATT J j i i i i i i lim it 1. pleasj Additional* ragular price Coupon good Th ur*. J an 14 d ue W ad Jan 2 0 O N E C O U P O N P E R C U S T O M E R — - J 0 I u V . _ ------ lrrmt-1 pleasa Additional* tegular pnce Coupon good Thur* Jen !4 ttn Wed J, 20 ONE CO UPON PER C U S T O M E R ______ SW ING-A-W AY Can Opener #407 121 REG $3 34 Limit-1 pleaie Additional* regular price Coupon good Thur* . Jan 14 thru W e d . Jan 20 O N E C O U P O N P E R C U S T O M E R COUPON Stackable Organizer I ASSTD COLORS REG $1.59 .. ____ Limit-1 pleasa Additional* ragular price Coupon good T h urs. J tn 14 thru Wod Jan 20 O N E C O U P O N P E R C U S T O M E R _______ Prices Good Thursday Thru Wednesday, January 14-20 AUSTIN in: N ic e ! LIMIT RIGHTS RESERVED COUPON SU PER SEA L CLEAR PITCHER REG $3 49 lin vt l, please Additional* ragular price Coupon good Thurs . Jan 14 thru W ad Jan 20 — O N E C O U P O N P E R C U S T O M E R - J a J IM ) COUPON Styling Aids LARGE SE LECT IO N OF TIP T O P ST Y LIN G A ID S REG $1 29-$4 00 ........................................... 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( J E f i S .Thursday, January 14. 1982 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Sports Aaron, Robinson elected to Hall I Texas’ rout of Houston proves they’re for real NEW YORK (UPI) - Hank A ar­ on and F rank Robinson, two of base­ ball s all-time home run hitters were elected to the Hall of F am e Wednesday by the Baseball W riters Association of America, but Juan Marichal, a pitcher who often struck them out, yissed election by just seven votes. the MVP Award Aaron, baseball’s all-tim e home run king with 755 career blasts, and Robinson, the only player ever to win in both leagues, became only the 12th and 13tn players selected in their first year of eligibility, exclusive of the five named in the first election in 1936 Aaron received 406 votes, the sec­ ond-highest total ever, and m issed by only nine votes of being the first unanimous selection. He had the second-best election percentage in the history of the balloting. Only Willie Mays, with 409 votes out of a possible 432 in 1979, received m ore votes and only Ty Cobb, with a per centage of 98.2 in 1936, had a higher percentage. Aaron finished with a percentage of 97.8. Robinson, currently the m anager of the San Francisco G iants and baseball's first black m anager, was named on 370 ballots out of 415 cast by the BBWAA m em bers for a per centage of 89.1. To gain election, a player needed to be mentioned on 75 percent (312 votes) of the ballots. Aaron and Robinson will be in­ ducted into the Hall of F am e in Coo- perstown, N.Y., on Sunday, August 1 Marichal, a sta r pitcher for the Giants, received 305 votes in his second year on the ballot, a gain of 72 from last year, but was seven votes shy of election with 73.4 p er­ cent. No other candidate cam e close, although several made im portant gains. Shortstop Luis Aparicio, a team m ate of Robinson s with Balti­ more during the mid-1960s, made the biggest gain, receiving 174 votes com pared to 48 last year. Slugger Harmon Killebrew, with 246 votes, gained seven votes and finished in fourth place. the Rounding out top 10 vote- getters w ere relief pitcher Hoyt Wilhelm (236), pitcher Don Drys- dale (233), first basem an Gil Hod­ ges (205), Aparicio, pitcher Jim Bunning (138) and second basem an Red Schoendienst (135). A heavy snowfall in Atlanta p re­ vented Aaron, currently in the front office with the B raves’ organiza­ tion, from attending the morning news conference, but Robinson flew in from his home in California and summed up his c a re e r in virtually one word: intensity. to do “ I don't see anyone playing in the m ajor leagues today who combines both the talent and the intensity that I had," Robinson said. “ I always the best. I knew 1 tried couldn’t alw ays be the best, but I tried to be. I expect that of my play­ ers today and of my kids. My wife says 1 shouldn’t expect that of my children but I don’t think th a t’s ask­ ing too m uch.’’ Robinson said if he had to pick one highlight from his career, it would be the thrill of winning the Most Valuable P layer Award in both leagues. Robinson was MVP in the National League with Cincinnati in 1961 and also received that aw ard in the A m erican League with Balti­ in 1966, when he won the more Triple Crown. Robinson said he learned at a very early age to be an intense com ­ petitor. ‘‘I had to be that intense to be a good p layer,’’ Robinson said. "I wanted to be a com plete player. A lot of it com es from my back­ ground. I had very good coaching at Immigration Matters Student visas Tourist visas Investor status Corporation transfers Temporary workers F ian cee visas School approvals (1-20) Exchange students Lab o r C e rtifica tion s-Perm a n en t Asylum R elative visas Deportation Exclusion Orphan petitions M edical graduates R efugee docum ents Citizenship Temporary Skilled/Professional Jones and Bennett ATTORNEYS AT LAW SE HABLA ESPAÑOL PH 512-476-0672 208 WESTGATE BLDG 1122 COLORADO AUSTIN, TX 78701 PLACE YOUR WANT ADS IN PERSON AND SAVE sell it rent if buy if find if in the Texan Classifieds JOINT INSTITUTE OF A D V A N C E M E N T O F FLIGHT SCIENCES NASA-langley Research Confer George Washington University EDUCATION AND RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIES A n u m b e r of R ese arch S c h o la r A ss is ta n ts h ip s in A e ro a co u stics, A e r o n a u tic s , E n v ir o n m e n ­ tal M o d e lin g , M a t e r ia ls S cie n ce and S t r u c ­ tures and D y n a m ic s are a v a ila b le for the 1982 sp rin g and fa ll se m esters and the 1983 sp rin g se m e ste r to q u a lifie d students seeking an o u t­ sta n d in g o pp ortunity for g ra d u a te study and re s e a r c h leading to the degrees of M a s t e r of Scie n ce and Doctor of Science. Stipends are 510,000/year for M S p r o g r a m and $11,000/year for D Sc p ro g ra m . F o r f u r th e r in fo rm a tio n and a p p lic a tio n , co m p lete the fo r m below and re tu rn to: Prof. J .L . W h itesides, J I A F S - G W U , M S 169, N A S A - L R C , H am p to n , V A 23665. The GWU is an E E / A A Institution. N a m e A d dress D e g ree/ M a jo r/ D ate A w a rd e d A rea of Interest _____ UPI Telephoto Sluggers join the elite chosen in first year of eligibility. the am ateu r level and you had to fight for your territory or be pushed into the background I felt I had to prove m yself at all tim es. ’’ Although Robinson adm itted he had g rea t respect for M arichal, he stopped short of saying that he was the toughest pitcher he ever faced. “ I ’m not surprised that M arichal is not up here with me today," said Robinson “ I ’ve been around base­ ball to surprise me. I think M arichal was a for anything long too fine pitcher and I think, in tim e, he will be inducted into the Hall of Fame. D rysdale was probably the toughest pitcher for me to hit and there was another guy I had a lot of trouble with whose nam e may raise a few eyebrow s — Pete Richert. "I had a lot of trouble with him because I stood fairly close to the plate and he was a left-hander who would throw fastball after fastball very close to me. 1 never adjusted to him quite enough to get the bat on the ball consistently." AUSTIN'S IT8 2 COAT SI C l I & MCTC U O C I I: sue SC JAN. 14-17 PALMER AUDITORIUM H i m 290 CASI MANOR,TEXAS American Quarter Horse Racing EVENTS: JANUARY JUBILEE DERBY WINTER CHAMPIONSHIPS DATE: SATURDAY, JANUARY 16th POST TIME: 12:00 N. ADMISSION: $3.00 VIDEO RERUNS B-B-Q BEER Rtcording: 272-4J42 Further Info: 272-5SI1 By SUSIE W O O D H A M S Daily Texan Staff HOUSTON — Now to figure out if that was, in fact, the real Houston basketball team playing the real Texas team Tuesday night in Hofheinz Pavilion For starters, when the Cougars outshot Texas (38 field goals com pared to 31 for the Longhorns) and still lost, 95-83, before a sell­ out home crowd, you know that it was no ordinary game. Houston was ranked 12th and owned a 10-game winning streak before Tues­ day’s clash and the “ Sultans of Slam ” had posted 62 dunks in 12 gam es. In a word, aw e­ some. So what happened? “ We ju st didn’t play,” Cougar senior guard Lvnden Rose said m inutes afte r Houston lost to undefeated, but barely ranked Texas (18th), which now owns first place in the Southwest Conference with an 11-0 overall m ark. “ Tonight Texas Lutheran College could have beaten us. And th a t’s not taking anything away from Texas. They ask you about a turning point, well, I can tell you when it happened, the first five seconds. We just were not ready today.” Texas, on the other hand, walked into Hof­ heinz Pavilion knowing it had better be ready to go if it wanted anyone to believe its 10-0 sta rt (best since 1948-49) w asn’t just a fluke. The Longhorns tell you that yes, Houston’s a pretty good team , but don’t underrate Tex­ as. sophomore “ We a re m ore m ature, confident and play m ore consistently,” forward Mike Wacker said, com paring this team to last y e a r’s team. “ Basically, the difference between this y e a r’s team and last y ea r’s team is the people we have to play against everyday in practice. They a re a lot b etter.” Houston shot just 16.7 percent of its free throws in the first half, whereas, Texas hit 80 percent. T exas’ hot shooting made the differ­ ence in the 42-37 halftim e score. Everyone in Hofheinz Pavilion could tell that of all Cougars, sophomore sensation 7- foot center Akeem Abdul Olajuwon had bet­ ter stay late after practice to help his cause. Olajuwon was 0-6 at the line for the night. “ I really think Akeem has a lot to le arn ,” Texas forward Virdell Howland said. “ H e’s real good inside, but he s got a lot to work on. His free throws are pretty bad.” And while Olajuwon was experiencing an off night with his free-throw shooting, the en­ tire Cougar team was having trouble in other areas, including protecting the baseline from Wacker. “ One of the best things they do is overload to one side and then kick it off to the open m an,’’ Cougar guard Rodney P ark er said. “ That man was Wacker and he was hot (32 points, 9 of 14 field goals). We didn’t protect the baseline very w ell.-' Meanwhile, Texas was doing a nice job shutting down junior guard Rob Williams. “ Every tim e I ’d go to the middle, they’d col­ lapse on m e,” Williams said. “ I took some shots I normally don’t take and missed them I don’t feel as though I was forcing my shots.” Hitting only 4 of 14 from the field and scor­ ing just 10 points, Williams conceded that he was having a bad time. And while Cougar coach Guy Lewis said his whole team was having a lousy night, Texas shouldn’t be tak­ en lightly nor should Houston be w ritten off. “ Like the old sage from the Ozarks (Ar­ kansas coach Eddie Sutton) says, one loss doesn’t make a season,’’’ Lewis said. “ Texas is a much, much b etter team (than last year) and deserved to win. This is the worst de­ fense we have played in some tim e. I wish I could have changed the dates of the game, but we will probably see som e m ore losses if we play anywhere like we did tonight.” The Longhorns say they a re n ’t suprised in the least that they’re off to such a good sta rt A win Saturday, in Austin, over Arkansas could give them the recognition they think they’re worthy of in the polls. It will undoubt­ edly be the biggest challenge of the early season now that Houston's out of the way. “ We have to forget the Houston gam e right after we walk out of this locker room ,” freshm an guard Jack Worthington said min­ utes after the win. Shoe Shop Rua* SHEEPSKIN C O W & CALF W e m ak e a n d repair boots shoes belts leath er goods ★ SADDLES ★ ENGLISH W ESTERN Fine h aircu ts by design 478-6754 2408 San Gabrial ^ ___________ 1614 Lavaca Capitol Saddlery Austin, Texas 4 7 8 -9 3 0 9 ** Check into p* p* the official approved Student Health Insurance by This plan is underw ritten of Keystone Life Insurance Co. Texas, P.O. Box 892, Carrollton, Texas 75006. □ Only $73 for the fall and summer sem ester □ 24 hour medical coverage □ World wide Up t o $20,000 i n m a j o r m e d i c a l b e n e f i t s Enroll today Call or visit the Student Health Center or Travis Eckert Agency 505 W. 14th 472-6969 Page 10 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, January 14,1982 earn cash ” ! Sports wire B y United P re se International You can u v f a Ufa by be- M f a Wood plasma donor. H tokos only 1H boon, and you can donato ovary 77 hours. You will rocoivo $1.00 for your first donation and $10.00 for a socond dona­ tion in tbo samo weak. AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, 510 West 29th Phone 477 Moors: Mon. I Thors. I a m .4 p.m., Toos. & Fri I s.m.-7:30 p.m. W a n t to talk w ith so m e o n e a bout a stu d y p r o b le m ? R A S S L h a s a d v is o r s a v a ila b le for d ro p -in co u n se lin g, 10:00-5:00, M o n d a y th ro u g h F r id a y . A332 Jeste r, 471-3614. Delaney selected top AFC rookie NEW YORK — Joe D elaney, the Kansas City C hiefs’ running back who gained over 1,000 yards despite starting the season as a backup, Wednesday w as named U P I’s AFC Rookie of the Y ear for 1981. Delaney, the C hiefs’ second-round draft choice from North­ w est Louisiana, m ade his first start for Kansas City in the sixth gam e of the season after Ted McKnight suffered an injury and promptly rushed for m ore than 100 yards against Oakland. The 5-10, 186-pound D elaney w ent on to accum ulate 1,121 yards and finished third am ong AFC rushers behind Houston’s Earl Campbell and San D iego’s Chuck Muncie. Delaney received 37 votes from U P I’s panel of 56 pro football w riters, four from each conference city, to beat out Cincinnati wide receiver Cris Collinsworth, who had the 19 rem aining votes. Delaney set four C hiefs’ records in his rookie season, includ­ ing the single-season rushing mark, form erly held by Mike Gar­ rett (1,087 yards in 1967). WSU terms probation 'severe' WICHITA, Kan. — Wichita State officials say they think the NCAA is punishing the university m ore severely because of its “ bad boy’’ im age as the m ost penalized school in history. In announcing a three-year probation against the school’s basketball program, the NCAA adm itted that Wichita S tate’s past history was taken into account. But U niversity President Clark Ahlberg said that reputation is undeserved. Although WSU has been punished a record six tim es by the NCAA, Ahlberg said Tuesday that two of those w ere the result of the school reporting its own infractions to the NCAA. “ Our efforts at self-reporting have only served to further tarnish our reputation,’’ he said. Two other NCAA penalties resulted from relatively minor infractions involving single players rather than entire coaching staffs, Ahlberg said. He complained that the NCAA was looking only at the total number of infractions against the school and not whether they had been severe. The rule infractions investigated by the NCAA, beginning with a prelim inary inquiry in early 1980, w ere divided equally between the tenures of form er WSU coach Harry Miller and present coach Gene Smithson. McEnroe, Connors take Masters wins NEW YORK — While top seed Ivan Lendl was put to a stern test, John M cEnroe and Jim m y Connors tuned up for their next confrontation by scoring straight-sets v ictories Wednesday in opening-round play of the $400,000 M asters Championship. McEnroe took the first three gam es and went on to defeat R oscoe Tanner 6-3, 6-2 in the final m atch of the program after Connors opened the d a y’s proceedings by sw eeping through the last five gam es to defeat Eliot T eltscher 7-5, 6-1. Lendl, given the No. 1 seed by virtue of finishing first in the 1981 Grand P rix point standings, found h im self on the defensive for m ost of the first tw o sets before com ing on strong in the final set for a 4-6, 7-5, 6-2 victory over V itas Gerulaitis. In the other opening-day m atch, Guillerm o V ilas took advan­ tage of a nervous Jose-Luis Clerc to d efeat his Argentine rival 6-1, 7-5. Mississippi upsets Kentucky, 67-65 OXFORD, M iss. — Carlos Clark scored 23 points to lead M ississippi to a 67-65 upset victory over the sixth-ranked Ken­ tucky W ildcats in Southeastern Conference basketball Wednes­ day night. the R ebels beat K entu cky for the first tim e since the 1973-74 season. Ole Miss upped its record to 7-6 overall and 2-3 in the SEC. Sean Tuohy, who dished out 8 assists, chipped in with 15 points and Eric Laird had 12 more for the Rebels. Mississippi, which shot a blistering 64 percent from the field in the game, jumped out to an early 10-point lead in the first half and took a 34-23 advantage at the intermission. With 10:48 left in the gam e, Clark hit a 16-foot jum per to give Ole Miss its biggest lead of the night, 48-35. The Wildcats nar­ rowed the margin to two points with 1:25 rem aining, but the Rebels hit several free throws to ensure the victory. Guard Jim M aster led Kentucky with 20 points before fouling out late in the gam e. Derrick Hord added 18 for the W ildcats. Kentucky drops to 9-3 and 2-2 in the conference. No. 10 Arkansas edges TCU, 62-59 FORT WORTH — Scott Hastings scored 23 points Wednesday night, including three free throws down the stretch, to give No. 10 Arkansas a tougher than expected 62-59 decision over T exas Christian. Despite falling behind 10-2, TCU rallied to a 52-49 lead with six minutes to play. But a 3-point play by Brad F reiss tied it and with four minutes to play Hastings hit a free throw that put the Razorbacks in front for good. Hastings scored his te a m ’s only points during the final three m inutes and his two foul shots with five seconds to go boosted Arkansas' lead to 5 points. Arkansas held TCU sco reless during the final 5:01 of the first half and during the opening 2:07 of the second half. Arkansas is 2-1 in thp Southwest Conference and 11-1 overall, having lost only to T exas Tech. TCU is 1-2 and 6-7. Doug Arnold paced the Horned Frogs with 17 points and D ar­ Clark hit 11 field goals and one foul shot to lead all scorers as rell Browder added 14. AUDIO CONCEPTS in DOBIE MALL GARAGE SALE! presents a Over 10 years have past since we've been at Doble. M a n y one of a kind, discontinued, and unique home & car sereo com ­ ponents. Turntables, amps, preamps, phono cart, tapes, records, cabinets, spk stands, etc. Y A M A H A B A N G and O L U F S E N C A R V E R T O L K A U D I O S H E R W O O D B O ST O N A C O U S T I C A D V E N T M A G N E P A N W A K A M I C H I A I W A M I C R O A C O U S T I C S M I L L E R and K R E I S E L Don't M iss Out!! No reasonable offer refused M any items at or below dealer cost 2021 Guadalupe 478-7421 M-F 10-7 Sat. 10-5 Dobie M all store only! Sports Record NBA N A T IO N A L B A S K E T B A L L A 8 S O C . By United Proa* Intamatkmal E xte rn C o n t e t n c i Atlantic Division Boston Philadelphia New York Washington New Jersey . W L Pet. . 27 8 .771 — QB 26 10 722 . 18 18 .500 441 400 15 19 14 21 9 C i m 13 Milwaukee Indiana Atlanta Chicago D e tro it.............. . . Cleveland . Central Division 25 11 17 18 486 485 16 17 429 15 20 417 15 21 . 6 29 .171 ........... . . . 694 — 7 Vt 7 te 9 10 18V? W M tern C onteranca M k tw M t Division San Antonio........... D e n v e r ................ H o u s t o n .............. Utah Kansas C it y ........... Dallas W L Pci. QB 23 11 18 18 16 19 12 22 13 23 10 25 676 — 500 6 7Vi 457 11 353 11 361 286 m Pacific Division Los Angeles ........... Seattle Phoenix................. Golden State Portland San Diego . . . 26 10 .722 — 22 11 20 14 19 15 19 15 10 25 667 588 559 559 286 2>* 5 6 6 15Vi Wadnesday’i R m u Its Boston 116. Atlanta 95 Milwaukee 111. Philadelphia 107 San Diego 105, Dallas 102 Kansas City 117, Cleveland 104 Indiana at Seattle, night Denver at Golden State, night Thursday’s Q a m n (All T lm M C B T ) Chicago at New Jersey, 6:35 p.m. Washington at Detroit, 7:05 p.m Portland at Houston, 7:10 p.m New York at Phoenix, 9 30 p.m Friday's Qamoa Los Angeles at Indiana Atlanta at Philadelphia Chicago at Washington Boston at Milwaukee Houston at San Antonio New Jersey at Kansas City Dallas at Denver Cleveland at San Diego New York at Golden State Utah at Seattle Johnson 3 9-9 15 Brewer 14 2-2 30 C L E V E L A N D (104) Carr 4 3-7 11, R. Laimbeer 4 8-9 17, Houston 4 2-2 10, Restam 3 1-2 7, Wilker- son 3 t-2 7, Silas 1 0-0 2, Herron 0 0-0 0. Dillard 2 1-2 5 Totals 38 27-35 104 K A N 8 A 8 C IT Y (117) King 3 4-4 10, E Johnson 5 2-3 12, S. Johnson 7 1-2 15. Drew 3 1-2 7, Woodson 7 2-5 76. Douglas 2 0-0 4, Grundfeld 6 6-6 18, Loder 11 3-6 25, Ford 2 2-2 6. Lambert 2 0-0 4. Totals 48 21-30 117. C lo v o t e n d Kanaa* City 18 33 32 21— 104 28 38 22 27— 117 Three point goals — Laimbeer Fouled out — S Johnson Total fouls — Cleveland 3 1. Kansas City 3 1. A — 7.884 S A N D IE Q O (108) Brooks 9 1-2 19, Bryant 5 5-6 15. White­ head 6 4-6 16, P Smith 9 2-2 20, Taylor 2 5-5 9. Williams 3 2-2 8, Chambers 7 1-1 15 Douglas 0 0-0 0, J. Smith 1 1-2 3, Bro­ gan 0 0 - 0 0 Totals 42 21-26 105. D A L L A 8 (102) Bristow 1 1-2 3. Vincent 12 1-2 25, Nim- phcis 4 0-0 8, Davis 2 2-2 6, Turner 6 1-1 13. Spanarkel 0 7 9 7, Cooper 4 1-2 9, Blackman 10 5-6 25, Lloyd 2 2-2 6. Totals 41 20-25 102 S a n D t e g o ........... 27 25 28 25— 105 O a l l M ................. 31 36 14 21— 102 Technicals — P. Smith, Silas. Total fouls — San Diego 26, Dallas 25. A — 6.116. M IL W A U K E E (111) Ma Johnson 8 3-4 19, Mi. Johnson 3 1-1 7 Lanier 7 7-10 21, Moncriet 10 6-6 26, Buckner 2 0-2 4, Lister 0 0-2 0, Winters 9 3-4 22. Catchings 2 0-0 4, May 4 0 - 1 8 Totals 45 20-30 111. P H IL A D E L P H IA (107) Erving 10 5-6 25. C. Jones 3 2-4 3, Cure- ton 6 0-0 12. Hollins 5 2-4 12, Cheeks 6 3- 4 15 Mix 3 11 1 1 17. Richardson 1 2-2 4. O Johnson 0 0-0 0. Edwards 5 4-4 14, Totals 39 29-35 107 Milwaukee Philadelphia 32 25 25 20— 111 27 32 27 21— 107 Thiee-pomt goal— Winters Fouled out — None Total louls— Milwaukee 26, Philadel­ phia 24 Technicals— Buckner, Philadel­ phia coach Cunningham, Milwaukee (zone) A — 2,844 A TLA N TA (95) Drew 15 5-5 35, Roundfield 4 3-3 11, Hawes 2 0-0 04, Johnson 4 3-4 11, Matthews 5 0 -0 10, Rollins 4 4-5 12, Spar­ row 5 0-0 10, McMillien 1 0-0 2, Macklin 0 0-0 0 Totals 40 15-17 95, Your School Supply Headquarters Welcomes You! B O S T O N (116) McHale 12 4-4 28, Bird 12 4-5 28, Parish 10 4-5 24, Archibald 6 3-4 15, Ford 2 0-0 04, Robey 0 0-0 0, Henderson 3 4-4 10, Bradley 0 0-0 0, Carr 2 2-2 7, Fernsten 0 0- 0 00 Totals 47 21-24 116. Atlanta Boaton 29 31 24 11— 95 34 2 5 25 32— 118 Three-point goal — Carr. Fouled out — None. Total fouls — Atlanta 27, Boston 17. Technical — Atlanta coach loughery A — 15.320 Top 20 NEW Y O R K (UPi) — The United Press International Board ot Coaches Top 20 col­ lege basketball ratings (first-place votes and won-lost records in parentheses) . . .630 1 North Carolina (42) (11-0) 529 2 Virginia (12-1) 3 Missouri (11-0) 488 4. DePaul (1 2 -1 ).......................... 475 5 lowa ( 1 0 - 1 ) .............................412 6 Kentucky ( 9 - 2 ) .......................330 7 Georgetown (13-2)....................318 8 San Francisco (13-1). 243 9 Minnesota ( 9 - 2 ) .......................218 196 10 A rka nsas(10-1) . 185 11 Idaho (13-0). 12 Houston (11-1) 179 13 Louisville (9-3)......................... 135 111 14 Oregon St (10-2) 107 15 North Carolina State (12-1) . 16 Alabama (11-1) 75 17 Wichita St ( 1 1 - 3 ) ..................... 56 18 Texas (1 0 - 0 ) ...........................52 45 19 Tulsa (9-2) 44 20 Kansas 3t (10-2) Note: By agreement with the National Association of Basketball C o a c h M of the Untied States, teams on probation by the N C A A are Ineligible for Top 20 and national championship consideration by the UPI Board of Coach M . ThOM teams on probation for tbs 1960-81 M a so n are: Arkansas State, New Mexico, Texas Christian, UCLA. . . . Basketball SouthwMt Conference By United Press International . . Taxaa Houston Texas A&M Arkansas . Texas Tech Baylor TCU . . . Rice . , S M U Con tar anca All O a m M W L Pet. W L Pet. 11 0 1.000 0 1.000 .667 .846 .667 692 917 .667 714 .500 .667 500 .333 462 000 600 384 .000 Wedneaday’e R m u H Arkansas 62, TCU 59 A R K A N S A S (62) Freiss 5 1-2 11, Peterson 1 0-0 2, Hast­ ings 9 5-10 23. Walker 4 0-0 8. Brown 4 0- 0 8 RobettBOn 3 0-0 6 . Norton 2 0-1 4. Skulman 0 0-0 0, Kelly 0 0-0 0. Shively 0 0 - 0 0 Totals 28 6-13 62. T E X A S C H R I8 T IA N (59) Stephen 5 0-0 10, Arnold 8 1-2 17, Christensen 1 2-3 4. Luke 0 0-0 0, Browder 6 2-2 14, Baker 6 1-1 13, CucmellaO 1-2 1, Nu« 0 0 - 0 0 Totals 26 7-10 59. Halftime — Arkansas 31, TCU 25 Fouled out — Walker Total louls — Arkansas 14. TCU 15 Technicals — Robertson, Walker. A — 5,241 NO RTH C A R O L IN A (61) Doherty 1 ' -2 3. Worthy 1 6 -10 8 . Per- kir-.s 5 3 3 13. Black 3 5-5 11. Jordan 9 2-2 20 Braddock 1 2-2 4. Brust 0 0-0 0. Barlow 0 0-0 0, Peterson 1 0-0 2, Exum 0 0-0 0, Robinson 0 0-0 0. Brownlee 0 0-0 0. Mak- konen 0 0-0 0 Totals 21 19-24 61 NO RTH C A R O L IN A 8TATE (41) Parzych 2 0-0 4. Bailey 2 1-2 5, Nevitt 2 1 2 5. Whittenburg 7 4 6 18, Lowe 2 2-2 6 , McQueen 0 0-0 0, Proctor 0 0-0 0. Thomp­ son 1 0-0 2, Gannon 0 0-0 0, Warren 0 0-0 0 ChariesO 1-2 1 rotals 16 9-14 41 Halttime— North Carolina 23. North Caro­ na State 19 Fouled out— None Total ’ uls— North Carolina 11, North Carolina State 17 A — 12.400 IOW A ST ATE (55) Estes 3 2-2 8 , Stevens 0 0-0 0, Warrick 1 4-6 6 . Harris 7 4-5 18. Falenschek 6 0-0 12 Beene 2 4-7 8 , Allen 0 0-0 0, Kunnert 1 1-1 3 Totals 20 15-21 55. K A N S A S ST ATE (75) Nealy 1 3-6 5, Reed 7 0-0 14, Craft 3 3-4 9. Adams 9 7-7 25, Galvao 3 1-17, Janko- vich 5 0-0 10, Waikins 0 0-0 0, Rorabaugh 1 2 4 4 Degner 0 1 -2 1 Totals 29 17-24 75 Halttime— Kansas State 37, lowa State 24 Fouled out- Stevens Total fou ls-low a State 22, Kansas State 19. A — 11.220. Hockey NA TIO N AL H O C K E Y L E A G U E By United PreM International Wate* C onteranca Patrick Division W L NY Islanders 25 11 Philadelphia. 25 15 NY Rangers 20 18 Pittsburgh 19 18 Washington .12 26 T 5 1 5 6 5 Pta. 55 51 45 44 29 OF QA 177 140 165 154 158 168 170 169 161 184 Buffalo . . 25 11 Boston 25 12 Montreal 22 10 Quebec. . 23 15 10 23 Hartford Adam * Division 58 55 55 51 29 8 5 11 5 9 Campbell C onteranca Norris Division W L St. Louis . 20 19 15 14 Minnesota. 17 17 Chicago. . Winnipeg . 16 20 Toronto 13 19 12 25 Detroit . . T 4 14 9 9 11 6 Pta. 44 44 43 41 37 30 176 135 177 144 200 128 203 174 143 188 OF Q A 161 170 173 151 187 187 169 196 180 194 142 181 8myth* Division 62 38 36 31 26 Edmonton. 27 10 14 19 Calgary Vancouver 14 22 Los Angeles 13 25 Colorado . 10 28 252 171 171 197 149 164 173 211 124 202 (Top four In aech division qualify lor 8 10 8 5 6 Stanley Cup playoff*.) Wadnesday’* R m u IU Edmonton 6 , Washington 6 , tie Buffalo 6 . Chicago 2 Toronto 2. Colorado 1 Winnipeg 5, Pittsburgh 1 N Y. Rangers 2, Minnesota 0 Quebec at St. Louis, night Calgary at Vancouver, night Thursday’* O a m M (All T lm M C S T ) N Y. Islanders at Boston, 6 35 p.m. Edmonton at Philadelphia, 6:35 p.m. Colorado at Detroit. 6 35 p.m. Los Angeles at Calgary, 8 35 p.m. Friday’* O a m M Toronto at Buffalo N V Rangers at Winnipeg Los Angeles at Vancouver National League H O U ST O N (UPI) — The Houston Astros chose three San Jacinto Junior College players Wednesday in the regular phase of the major league baseball draft The athletes from San Jacinto were taken n later rounds They were infielder Orlando and right handed Denis ot Miami Fla pitchers Tim Englund of Richardson, Tex­ as and Haro11 Stewart of Crockett. Texas The eight selections Wednesday gave the Astros a total of 11 draftees in two days. Of those seven were right handed Ditchers, two outfielders and two infielders The others selected Wednesday were ‘ rst b a se m a n Jett Brow n, C o sta Mesa.Calit and Orange Coast College, pitcher Andre Eli, San Diego, C a lit, and San Diego City College, pitcher Jeff Schas- sier Francis Marion College pitcher Sam Moore, Walters State Community College, outfielder Keith Morin Middlesex Com m u­ nity College, WIDE LOAD A lthough ou r C h u .ig o - stvle <ÜXp dish pizza a n ild n e v e r be considered fast tcxxl, C.iHians’ delivery setvu e should be rem em bered as the fastest w ay to curb an appe­ tite If’you’re in o u r delivers area, call us. W ell hit the ground running to deliver the gixxls, g o o d ’n hot and loaded w ith all the best ingredients. H e re ’s w hat w e’re driving at: To ask for a lot at t on an s. is not too m uch to ask. N o r is it to o m uch to ask us to get the load out and deliver it No waiting line for entering Supplies. come on in! We are ready to serve you!