The connection G PA and jobs University, page 3 in 10 innings orts. page X Audio Technics develops phono Science, page IX T h e Daily Te x a n Power outage shuts down Austin Bv PAUL BA R TO N, DAVID ELLIOT and FRANK JA N N U ZI D aily Texan S t a f f Virtually all ol T rav is ( 'o u n tv a nd por lions o f lo u r s u r r o u n d in g co u n ties were w ith o u t p o w e r for three and a hall hours T h u rs d a y night w h e n a station br e a k e r b e ­ tw e e n Austin and B a strop blew Austin Police D e p a r t m e n t s p o k e s m e n r e ­ p orted no injuries as a result o f the black out P o w e r went ou t at 7 . 2 6 p m , kn o ck in g o ut signal traveling co n d itio n s lor A u stin m otorists lights and caus ing d a n g e r o u s Area h osp itals c o p e d with the p o w e r tail ure by using b a c k - u p g e n e r a to r s. s,ud I trry the D e p a r tm e n t ol T o d d , s p o k e s m a n for Pu blic Safety Ju d y S m ith, s p o k e s w o m a n for Seton H o s p ita l, said " W e re d oing fine at the m o m e n t W e h ave e m e r g e n c y po w er as do all of the h o sp itals in to w n W e re making sure the patients are c o m f o rt a b l e Austin M a y o r Ron M u llen ' a i d 100 c ,si tors w ere safelv e v a c u a te d from B rack en ridge Hospital 1 he I niver sity was one of the tew areas o f C entral the b l a c k o u t, b e c a u s e the University g enerates m u c h i >1 its ow n p o w er l e x a s not severely hit b \ " f ver v thin g w en t fine at the University a s p o k e s m a n for the I I Police p r o p e r . ' ' T here was a delayed D e p a r tm e n t said b a l l g a m e field, b ecau se t h e y 'r e on cits ligh ting , and Balc on es Re searc h C enter and M a rried Student Ho usin g w ere out at D isc h -F alk f i r e m e n w ere kept busy an sw ering calls fro m p eo p le trapped in elevator i >wr i vs n an d answering reports of fires started b> k ero sen e lights A tw o alarm lire gutted a m o b e home at 1602 K Barton Springe R o a d w h en r e o d e n ; Jo e C o n n e ll left a lit k e r o se n e lain; television set while he carried an oth er lam p to a n eighbor ■ * A tr a n s f o rm e r ca u g h t fire at i 7r K B, trop R oad but w a ' q u i c k ] , hr ugh: co ntro l by f irefig hters, f ire Depart nerit i t >n Ja m e s Hendrix í'ommy V said See B l a c k o u t , p. 2 A m a n u s in g a k e r o s e n e l a m p in his m o b i l e h o m e at 1 6 0 2 - k B a r t o n S p r i n g s R o a d c a u s e s a b l a / e w h i c h f i r e f ig h t e r s q u ick ly e x t in g u i s h d u r i n g t h e b l a c k o u t I r a H i i p i l e s up at L a m a r B o u l e v a r d a n d \N c si f i f t h S treet a IT ti(>h Ma/is/i, Ddi!\ / . \ j r sr. Dean approves full-time salaries for government TAs this summer By FRANK JA N N U ZI Daily Texan S t a f f Salar ies for s u m m e r te a c h in g a s sista n ts in the D e p a r tm e n t ol G o v e r n m e n t will r e m a i n at $ 1 , 8 0 0 , the d e a n of the C o lleg e o f L ib era l Arts a n n o u n c e d T h u r s d a y . have to be c a n c e le d b e c a u s e ot lack o f t u n d s King w r o t e . I h o p e that e n r o l l m e n t p rojectio ns for the se co nd s u m m e r se ss io n arc high, so that we will be able to cancel c o u rses now p l a n n e d in E ng lis h and f oreign la n g u a g e s to handle the higher- t h a n - e x p e e t e d n u m b e r o f p r o \ isional ad m ittecs Robert King ap p r o v e d the fu ll-tim e sa laries with the prov ision King was not av ailab le ¡or c o m m e n t I hursday that g o v e r n m e n t T A s next s u m m e r only be ap p o i n t e d half-tim e C n u d d e said he w a s “ h a p p y that King had ap p ro v ed full-time “ Y ou h ave p e r su a d e d m e that, e v e n th o u g h no binding c o m m i t ­ m ents were m a d e , the T A s in the D e p a r t m e n t o f G o v e r n m e n t had g en u in e ex p e c t a t i o n s o f b e i n g ap p o in te d f u l l - t i m e , ” King w rote in a letter to C h a rle s C n u d d e , c h a i r m a n of the D e p a r tm e n t o f G o v e r n ­ m en t, Thursday King said W e d n e s d a y he p lan n ed to hire g o v e r n m e n t T A s part time to help finance ex tra T A s for o v e r lo a d e d E nglish a n d fo reign lan gu ag e co u rses pay tor g o v e r n m e n t T As “ D ean King was f l e x i b l e , " said C n u d d e . add ing he felt the d ean had been “ pro fes sio n al a n d n o n - c o n fr o n la tio n a l " in his h an d lin g ot the pay qu es tio n C n u d d e a n n o u n c e d the pay raise at a m eetin g with In s I \ s Thurs day afte rn o o n . He said they r e sp o n d e d to the salary n e w s with c h e e r s . " King wrote C n u d d e that payin g the f u ll- tim e rate for g o v e r n m e n t T A s will ca use a “ serious shortfall o f f un ds for the s u m m e r l e a c h ­ ing n eed s o f the c o l l e g e " and that s o m e s e c o n d se ssio n c o urses may E m e rs o n N io u . g o v e r n m e n t 1 \ . said “ I’m . very, veiy happy I V N io u said C n u d d e and Clift M o r g a n . about the o u t c o m e w ere resp o n s ib le for ge tting the full-tim e pay reinstated U n iv e rsity 's investm ents in South A frica could be elim inated bv state legislation By D A V I D E L L I O I Daily I exan Staff I his is the last o f a thr e e - p a r t s e n t ' \ meric an u n i­ \ u s t i n in e x a m i n in g in v e s t m e n ts bv vers ities and the I niversity at the R ep u b lic of S o u th Africa. A lth ou gh I T S v s t e m of ficials sa j if , h ave n e v e r co n s id e re d divesting t e r n 's S outh African h o l d i n g ' state ecis no n may one day req uire th em to do so the s\* Bills that w o u ld re quire tht Sysu-n divest — or to not invest an\ additional tu nds in c o m p a n i e s d ealin g in S outh — will not he c o n s i d e re d until the I eg is l u r e 's next r eg ular sessio n in 19X5 \ t r , \ H ouse co ncurren t r e v lution passed during the lm al d a y s of the last m/ ssu n ca lls for the creatio n o f the Joint C o nn nice on South A frican In v estm en t I he . »nm it tec will ir funds in ' the n< to d e e m e d r* Meanw are work speed up ( T rev o r vice prcw sponsor a r e g e n t ' to he w ill then bring a the I niversity C o u n Pearl m an . w h o 'a i d . The p r o b le m find to o many peop agree w ith the polici c o m p a n i e s , invest wher \> n. S tu dents aid W ed n es d ay v tall a s k in g I It the hill p a s s e ■ a sim ilar prop»>- f ro m Sou ;! ’hat wt ie v o n this c a n Re d w a r d ' h a ' ol the Soutl lany p eo p le va> it's a Afru e r v o u v.ir: e e l t h e b< merit' T h .s past se s s io HB 6 2 9 e v e r r eac h e d th« “ ! hat ' p r o c r e s ' in itse Store owners face business losses as summer begins, students leave By DELLA DE LAFUENTE D aily Texan S t a f f As the s u m m e r se aso n u n fold s, stud e n ts rem ainin g in A ustin tor the s u m m e r will be out in the m a r k e tp la c e using w h a t e v e r b u y ­ ing po w e r they p o s s e s s , a sh o p o w n e r on G u a d a l u p e S tre et said T hursday Reports fro m the resea rch d e p a r t m e n t at the A ustin C h a m b e r o f C o m m e r c e in dicate that du rin g the s u m m e r m o n th s A u stin is faced with e s c a la tin g u n e m p l o y m e n t be* cause both co l l e g e and high school stud e nts flood the j o b m ark et H o w e v e r , b usine ss o w n e r s on G u a d a l u p e do not believe f e w e r tobs for stu d e n ts n e c ­ essarily m ean s f ew er pr ofits for s t o r e o w n ers. B u sin esses on G u a d a l u p e g en erate th eir profits from the co lle g e c o m m u n i t y . and the s u m m e r m o n t h s , w h e n atten du rin g d an ce at the U niversity d e c r e a s e s , s o m e area m erchants tace loss es tem po rarily C o o k ie B a u m c l. o w n e r of M s Britto ns. Brittons and C o o k i e ' s C o n f e c t i o n e r y , said. “ It alw ay s affe cts the bu sin e sse s on the Drag m the s u m m e r t i m e b ecau se th ere are less students But o u r sa les are a h e a d ot Iasi year at this time. " said. store, Cindy B e rk o w i t z , m a n a g e r lor T a r i n g 's “ B u s in ess University area tapers o f f a little bit. but w e are |ust as active ov er the s u m m e r . You can feel it that o ne week that they really a r e n 't a r o u n d , hut as soon as they get hack b usin e ss is b o o m ing a g a i n . " G erald M a t th e w s , president of the I m versity C o - O p , ' a i d that alth o u g h it is too in the m o n th to fell, it ap p e a r s that early s u m m e r textb oo k sales increased slightly ov er last y ear Kent R e d d in g , m a n a g e r of B e v o s Btxik stor e, said t extb oo k sa les went well and “ probably better than we e x p e c t e d for su m trier school S ales are p robably up 150 per cent “ Thin gs look gen erally stable for bust nes ses on G u a d a l u p e , and m o st sh o po w tie rs do not fore see a vast d e c r e a s e in profits Chu c k M ye rs o! H astin g s R e c o rd s and Tape's said. “ As soon as se henil started and ev er y o n e c a m e back , w e had an i m m ed iate p ick up in sales the store the its is stabilizing M ye rs said sales b ecau s e ol influx of “ a m uch y o u n g e r c r o w d O v e r a l l , o rien tces and high school kids that norm ally do n t s o n x d o w n here are c o m i n g in th e store So what are s u m m e r stu d e n ts , parents Ire shm en o n e n t e e s and visitors to Austin buy ing this s u m m e r ’ I noticed this y ear, and I b eg an to no tice it last y ear, that no lo nger is there that trendy P olo look a n y m o r e . ' B e rk ow itz “ They (girls) are m u c h m ore im ag inativ e this year, and they want outfits that arc m ore c o m p lete M ye rs said his e x p e r ie n c e at H astings has been that as the s u m m e r go es on students begin to run out of money b ecau se most 't u d e n t s r eceive funds tro m h o m e , c o n s e ­ quently c au s in g a d r o p in sales the the f o r r e m a i n d e r o f s u m m e r ’, st o r c o w n e r s a g ree, sales should he stable and will probably begin to taper off in A u g ­ ust. fo llo w ed hv a big rise in sales before the tall s e m ester B u s i n e s s s e e m s slow a s L a u r a P e t r ie b r o w s e s t h e e m p ty aisles at the I n iv e r s ity ( <>-()p. 22 46 G u a d a l u p e s t Patt\ W oad Daih I < xan Staff PA t.l * U i l D VI! V I l \ A \ fR ID A Y, JUNE 10, 1983 I i, ^ - t^emhlt-d w ith mcticulou* cure Centurion M Ntsnmt B AMATA Hunv '< U'( tion A best prices on ill hit vcle ucct ssorics including: b e s t jntoia bikes U’- >h'\ A "v r\ it t .iff the difference” ^Im m igration law AH phases Lobor Cert,hR I >11 ICiOl 5 POPÍ ORN. Her expires June 30, 1910 CLASSIFIED HOT LINE 471-5244 • W SKg V ‘ v t S v y a y/r BONANZA SIRLOIN PIT 2815 G U A D A L U P E 478-3560 Summer ’83 Group Programs H i 10 tin : t* r tin < • >un I'lm,,; ( c n le r is offering several program s for persons interested i i V. !h and developm ent. I he groups listed below are open to regis- ' i I i lo llm en t tor these program s is free and can be m ade directly tli d i d oil hog C enter. W est M all O ffice B u ild in g 303, 471-3515, betw een 9 A M and ’ I ' M M o n d a y through I ridav 81 I! D I N G s i l l I S I J ( \1 Mi'iid.n . M I'M 1 .rnnu June l.Ath (Sse-.siom) STUD1-N I S W11 if W A! C'O HOl 1C PARÍ N t D t V E L O P IN G A S S E R T IV E B E H A V IO R W edrifstLivs. - 4 I'M starttnj; |unt* l^th (4 sessions) E A T IN G D IS O R D E R S (Binge-Purge Syndrome) Thursdays 1 5 I ’M starling lurte Ihtli (7 sessions) Bt I M l )M AM> I > AI > - I'M AM A D U LT N O W ! VS. J.u - 2 t PM .Ortintf fum' |Stbt4>.'sst«*is> T U R N IN G YO U R W O R S T E N E M Y IN T O Y O U R B EST FR IE N D : A G R O U P O N SELF- C R IT IC IS M ! hursdtivs. 1-5 I’M starting junc lM h (b sessions) 4 y COUNSELING-PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES CENTER West Mall Office Bldg. 471-3515 r 4 T h e Da i l y T e x a n Permanent Staff Editor Manaqtnq t Mi >< Assistant M.maq n<) £ Moi . Editorial P age t Odor News Editor Associate N e n s Fdrtor Unrvefsity Edrtor Special P ag e Editor News Assignm eru E f t • Sports Editor Images Features Editor Associate images Features Edtlor Entertainment Editor Images Entertainment Features Assignments Editor Graphics Editor Photo Editor Roger Campbell Mark Stutz Mike Alexieh Suzanne M chei Scott Williams Chris Boyd Paul de la Gar/a Kelley Shannon Lisa Br.ivvn-Hichau Carol Peoples Jim m y Munoz Robert Smith Barbara Paulsen Richard Goldsmith Cathy Ragland Darby Smothefman E dna Jam andre Bobby Malish Issue Staff Debbie Fi N e * .writers Della de Lafuente Judy War >-'man Fian» lannuzi B elt’ Anne i norms David Elliot lilt Davis C irtene Bean Peggie l ase; Tom Labinski, Paul Barton Bnan Zabcik Herb Booth Natalie Wyrick Fred Burk Editorial Assistants Entertainment Assistants Sport1, Make up Editor Sports Assistants Make up Editors Wire Editor Copy Editors Artists Photographer; Bill Dean Henry Cobb Kyle Davies Mu hael Saenz Jay Bernanke ,arr.e P kering Stan Roberts Marty Yost Mary Gaii Hamilton G W Babb Naras Eechambadi John White Jill Khiew Karen Rappaport Sam Hurt, le e Coliison Steve George Bob Malish Jim Sigmon Advertising Staff Tom Bielefeldt Leigh Anr Bint t aura Dickerson Debbie Fletcher Greg Payne Ja n e Porter Maria Press Doug Rapier Linda Salsburg Jim Sweeney Sherri Winer The Daily Texan a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin is published by Texas Student Public ations Drawer D. University Station Austin TX 78712 7209 The Daily Texan pub1 >hed Monday Tuesday W ednesday Thursday and Friday except holiday and exam periods Second c'ass postage paid at Austin TX 787-10 News contributions wit be a. c ep'ed by telephone >471 4591) at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 136i Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in T S P Building 3 200 (471 5244¡ The nationa advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students 1633 W est Central Street Evanston Illinois 60201 C M P S 1680 North Vine. Suite 900 Hol'ywood CA 90028 American Passa g e 600 Third Avenue W est Seattle W A 98119 The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press the South­ west Journai sm Congress the Texas Daily Newspaper Association and American Newspaper Publishers Association Columbia Scholastic Press Association Copyright 1983 Texas Student Publications The Daily Texan Sub scrip tio n Rate s One Semester (Fa# or Spring) Two Semesters (Fad and Spring) Summer Session One Year (Fall. Spring and Summ er) $24 00 48 00 15 60 60 00 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications P O Box D, P U B NO 146440 Austin TX 78712-7209 or to T S P Building C3 200 70%. (m ore th a n 33,000 parsons) students U n iv e rsity liv e in o ff-c a m p u s h o m e s a n d a p a r t ­ ments thro u g h o u t the Austin a re a l SOUtCE: TH. Univ*r*fty Morfc*«. 1911 Blackout Continued from p. I Fire Department district mana ger, said, ‘’I ’ve worked tor the city for 25 years, and I've never seen anything like it He said no reserves had to he called up to cope with the blackout Ander son said emergency personnel had to communicate on lout channel radios because the pow er shortage disrupted then tele­ phone communication Mullen urged Austin residents to conserve water, because pumps were operating at only 25 percent of capability and reset voirs were at SO percent ol ca pacity. For most of the period be­ tween 7:30 and 10 p m . the city was largely without the ability to pump drinking water City Man ager Nicholas Mcis/.er said it was fortunate the blackout did not come at a time oi peak water demand Normal water and electrical service was restored to most of Austin by I I p.m., Chuck Harri- son, Austin emergency manage­ ment director, said John German, assistant city manager, said power was re­ stored when lines were rerouted around the burned out Austrop station breaker Flights into Rob­ ert Mueller Airport continued to be diverted to San Antonio until 9:40 p.m. Mullen, operating from the Austin Emergency Operations Center in the Brown Building. 708 Colorado St.. read periodic statements to various news me­ dia, including the C B S and A B C new s networks A Low er Colorado River A u ­ thority spokesman said “ W e arc- generating power. The problem is w ith the C ity of Austin W e re helping their bur den.” them with Citizens reacted calmly to the " It 's crisis, city officials said great to see that kind of coopera­ tion among our citizens,” M u l­ len said Meis/er said the c ity’s major concern during the blackout was “ W e need the water situation bat kup power at water treatment plants. ” Meis/er said “ W e need to give that top priority.” A spokesman at Bergstrom A ir Force Base said, “ w e’ve got our candles out and w e’re sitting tight Birthday celebrants stuck at the Headliners Club on the 20th floor of American Bank Tower did not let the power outage spoil their evening just ate green salads by candle light and it.” one party- laughed about “ W e goer said “ Everybody was just fine,” said host John Sharkey T w e n ty e m p lo ye es c ity manned phone hanks at the city electric department as thousands of Austin reported power outages. “ I ’ve worked here four years and never seen anything like this before,” said Dennis Mahm. city utility em­ residents ployee. Because city radio stations and television stations were not operating during the early part of the blackout, the city contacted The Associated Press and United Press International to put word of the blackout on their state wire networks so residents could be informed of the situation from radio stations in nearby cities. Emergency Medical Service personnel received a report that a pregnant woman delivering a baby was trapped in an elevator on the 2()th flixtr in a downtown bank tower. Police, armed with axes and lirst-aid kits, climbed 14 floors of the American Bank Tower before learning that the reports were false. % UCCESS Ipokeni I HERE INTENSIVE REVIEW A LANGUAGE REVIEW FOR FOREIGN STUDENTS AND PROFESSIONALS WHO HAVE PREVIOUSLY STUDIED ENGLISH rOR TOEFL. VQE, ECFMG DAILY CONVERSATION VOCABULARY . PREPARE • MASTER • EXPAND • IMPROVE . REINFORCE GRAMMAR READING, NOTE-TAKING S f a * M - K H P U I N EDUCATIONAL CENTERS T E S T P R E P A R A T IO N S P E C IA L IS T S S IN C E 1938 Demonstration and Testing Sessions June 28th, 30th, and July 6th from 10 am to 12 noon _____ 1801 LAVACA AUSTIN, TX. 78701 (512) 472-8085 11617 N. CENTRAL EXPRESSWAY DALLAS, TX 75243 CLASS STARTS JUN E 27th \ PRINT SALE! 20% OFF ALL PRINTS & POSTERS Come by soon, get a change of scene and save 20% Thru Saturday June 18th T h e ü n i c o r n A Gift Store as L nique as its \ ame! 2021 G u a d a lu p e 477-0719 SELECTED GROUPS OF NAME BRAND SHOES - THIS SEASON S STYLES AND COLORS REG.VALUES 69.00-79.00 50.25-68.25 40.25-49.25 34.25-29.25 28.25-33.25 up to 27.25 ALL SALES FINAL, PLEASE (Not all stock included) 4 UNIVERSITY AROUND CAMPUS Enrollment figures cause GPA requirements to vary By B E T H A N N E L O O M IS Daily Texan S ta ff Enrollment demands are the major causes for varying GPA requirements in the I m versity's schools and colleges, the vice president for student aftairs said Tuesday "The primary reason for the differences is enrollment pressures, such as demand and space,” Ronald Brown said Spokesmen for the colleges said high GPAs are necessary tor job competition, al though other factors are important “ Most employers are interested in the G PA of the student, said Nclda Lillie, de­ gree plan evaluator II for undergraduate ar chitectural students However, many em ployers comment that it is obvious which students have had work experience, she said Nearly all nursing graduates find jobs, said a degree evaluator lor the School of Nursing “ There is a nursing shortage.” she said Lorrin Kennamer. dean of the College of Education, said. “ If you get a teaching cer­ tificate, you can get a |ob " The college has an enrollment of 2.048. However, some public school systems hire based on a p p lic a n ts ' GPAs. Kennamer said. Even before entering the job market, GPAs are important In many colleges, s tu ­ dents must meet special requirements, be­ sides those set by the Office of Admissions The College of Pharmacy, with 576 s tu ­ dents. evaluates students by pharmacy en­ trance exam scores, interviews and GPAs. said a spokesman for the college. Charles Sorber, associate dean for aca­ demic affairs of the College of Engineering, said. “ Generally speaking, in a tight mar­ ket. almost all employers put more empha­ sis on G P A ." I he college h a s an enroll­ ment of 5.797. In the College ol Business Administra­ tion. students begin as pre-business majors Cathey Eves-Ringstaff. assistant to the dean of undergraduate altairs for the col - lege, said students must have completed nine of I I specific subset courses with a G PA trom 2 5 to 3 m for happy hour and discussion. L E C T U R E S Center for Fusion Engineering will sponsor an energy seminar at 10 a m Mon­ day in Robert Lee Moore Hall 11 204 The guest speaker is Keith Thomassen from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, who will discuss “ Upgrades to MFTF-B for Fusion Technology Development A N N O U N C E M E N T S Students United for the Elimination of Rape will accept applications for volunteer escorts through June 17 Applications can be picked up at the Texas Union Student Activ itics Center University Folk Dance Society will sponsor a free beginners class in interna­ tional dance and Scottish country dance at 8 p m Friday in Goldsmith Hall 105 A workshop on traditional West Texas square dancing will be at noon Saturday in the Texas Union Quadrangle Room For more information, call 478-8‘XX) POLICE REPORT In the period beginning 3 p.m. Wednesday and ending 3 p.m. Thurs­ day, the University Police Department reported the following incidents: Theft: A non student was arrested lor the class A thett of a professor's purse with contents valued at S I 48 from Painter Hall and charged with the class B theft trom the Experimental Suence Building of a billfold owned by a I I employee, valued at $7. A I I employee reported the theft of two wall telephones valued at $60, from an ele vator in the basement of the Middle Fast Collection Library of the Main Building A I T staff member reported the theft of a purse and contents, valued at $121. from Mary 1 Gearing Hall Contents included eight I T keys and a checkbook containing $28 A UT student reported the theft of a Fran/ Model LM-4 metronome, valued at $50, from the Music Recital Hall A U I student reported the theft of an American Flyer three-speed bicycle from the stairwell of the Jester Center service drive Honorary society chooses University professor Dewars' research has helped UT gain international recognition in theoretical chemistry y C A R L E N E B E A N ally Texan S taff The National Academy of Sciences has eeted Michael Dewar, professor of chem- trv, as a member of the prestigious honor ■y society . Dewar, considered an international au lority on theoretical organic chemistry , as one of 60 scientists elected April 26 at le N A S ’ annual meeting in Washington e )oins 15 other U T professors as mem- írs of the NAS Dewar said his main objective in his re- larch is to try “ to tind out how chemical ¡actions take place ... and to develop theo­ retical methods tor doing that by using a computer John White, chairman of the Department of Chemistry . said Dewar has "helped us to achieve international recognition in theoret ical chemistry His election to the National Academy of Sciences is long overdue “ UT Dewar said. is about average aimmg the bigger universities, but could do with more members.” He added, “ the more members you have, the more pull you have in getting others elected " Dewar said candidates lor membership are nominated and voted upon by current members IXw ar. formerly a British citi/en. said he probably would have been elected to the NAS long ago, it he were American He did not apply lor American uti/enship unti! two years ago \Mien Dewar i' not in the chemistry lab. he can be found working on his computer His research has led to explanations of why enzymes work efficiently and why certain chemical reactions produce light His pro­ cedures are now used in many industrial processes, including development of new drugs, organic metals, semi-conductors and explosives In 198 2. Dewar received the Davy Medal of the Renal Society in London, the British equivalent of the National Academy of S. enees in America He is one of only six American chemists to win the award in the past 40 years IX’war is also a Fellow of thi Royal Society and a Fellow of the Amen can Academy of Arts and Sciences A member of the UT Austin tacultv since 1 96 3, Dewar was bom in India and eduvat ed in England He obtained his degrees, in­ cluding a Doctor ot Philosophy, from Ox ford I Diversity From 1951 to 1 95 9. he w a s professor ot chemistry and head of the chemistry depart ment at Queen Marv College. I niversity ot London THf DAILV ÍEXA N F RIDAY, JUNE 1Ü, 1 % i PACE 3 Credit union members seek more board input By J l l I D \ \ IS Doth lexan Staff I mversity Federal Credit Union mem- hcr- are attempting to gain a stronger voice on the credit union board bv supporting tw> non faculty candidates m an upcoming board election, representatives of the I ni­ versity Employees I mon said 1 uesday The 1 FT believes the candidates it is supporting will be more sensitive to the credit union members needs. I FT offi cials satd The two candidates are David F.s>.amilla a I IT graduate, and Bill Bingham. Plan II senior I I faculty, staff and graduate students are eligible to be members of the credit un­ ion "There's usually no election (of credit union board members i,' E-suamilla said "The board just renominates each other This is the first time credit union mem­ bers have petitionee i< nave their names on the ball"¡ Escamilla said Bingham said. Ihe main two things we re concerned with are the ^red11 union s attitude toward the members and that tht vredit union put' toe much burden >n smai accounts \Ne want to try to alert people to the changes so they can put pressure on the board." Bingham said People do not voice their complaints because they believe no one is listening, he said. Bonnie Keyes said the complaints n elude: members are not allowed to attend board meetings member ate barged a ' * service charge if their account' go below $3(HI and member arc charced A tor ha. irig their baiance read over the telephone t >camilla aid the need for more member participation m dec ision making was one of the reason' he dec ided to seek a position on A lot of their general policies the board he close *ff avenue' lor member input said I Burtoi E u b a n k s , credit union presi­ ! certainly leel that the board is dent said conscious of the members' needs Ihe growth of the union is bound to be indicative that 'tic policies an pretty well received, be said Eubanks said he could not comment on whether the credit union would expand to serve Tic entire student bodv He said the student bodv is too big to be served by the credit union E u b a n k s also said Rising costs have made ' necessary to have service charges Gur fe e s on chec 1 ing account' are com­ he parable >r es than other' in Austin said Its not inflation or the economy." itncr unions I ,e talked to . : N Kc *cs have h..' the problems we ve had It wouidt t bother people so much if it ^ut the aüectei bur ier >t it. service charges is being put on the m em bers w ho can least afford it Kcvc- 'aid -c1 >nc L- am a 'aid the credit unmr noard is trv • . t rur the uni >r kc a pr v ate bank A' a c -iterative. the union should listen i" the input ot ah ofits members, he said 1 they think i credit union board members i do a marvelous job in terms of o4 meeting the (.r anee- but not in ten needs of the members Dean appoints Foss psychology chairman Bv P E G G I E I ANFR Dail\ lexan Staff Robert K ing. dean ot the College of L ib eral Arts, ha' appointed Donald Foss a' chairman of the Department ot Psychology effective Sept. I . Kin. said Wednt'dax “ Dr. Foss was the consensus candidate for the position I feel that the department will be in good hands and that he will continue to follow ir the footsteps of the past excellent chair men Foss, who specializes in the psychology of language, cognitive processes and appli cations of experimental psychology, wil replace John Loehlm “ Mr. Loehlin did a very fine job at chairman, and the department was run very smoothly under his direction.' king said 'W e are linking forward to workine witi Mr. Foil** King said that rum m arct lepar?nm is such as the psvcholocv department take' varied management skills because of the di- versitv of programs “ We have people who run rats, siudv you just name it. the people s emotions psychology department does ¡t King said Foss research involve' studying the de- 'ign i»f computer' that are ' user friendly The research I am doing is by no means trv ing to dc'igr a computer.' Fos' said “ What I am trv mg to do is to Thursdav design a way to communicate to people who have never U'ed a computer before The be't wav to learn how to do so is by relating the proces' to something that thev uireadv kn >w about In order to aid them in teaming about a computer we try to relate computer terms to things iike filing cabi­ nets. typewriters and things like these that are more familiar to them F o " 'aid hi' intere't lie' mainly in an­ swering the question, "How do people learn and understand ’ " "If some of our research is fruitful and successful, he said, "it is possible that it could be used by the people who design the software and the manuals for computer in­ struction He said hs. ha' been working w th under graduate and graduate students on the com­ puter project "They have been helpful in running subject', providing idea' and infor­ mation and also ana v zing data, he said Patrons lose on counterfeit UTTM tickets Bv F KF 1) B l K K F Daily lexan Staff Because ot recent incident' of ticket counterfeiting concert-goers should he wan when purcha'ing tickets from sources >thcr than I I Iicketmaster outlet' the di­ re c to r ot the Frank Erwin Center said Thursday The quality of counterfeit' is much higher than it used to be.' Dean Justice said I hough most people cannot easily recog­ nize the bogus tickets, trained ticket-takers ai the Erwin C enter and at other buildings served by l T I M can. Justice said He said bearers of the fake tickets will be turned awav at the door Justice 'aid advanced photocopying equipment makes n possible to create real­ istic mutations but added all counterfeits spotted at the Erwin Center were "poor at­ tempt' Justice would not point out specific differences be tween tfie real and counterfeit ticket' For sec unty reasons. Justice said he is worried about report' of an organized group ot counterfeiters Pa- t’ons at several Journey concert' have been victimized bv counterfeiters recent months, he said in ■A 1 seun in ( ha’ • »tte. N C . was re­ cently > it by counterfeiters Paul Buck. Charlotte C. I'cun director said Thursday thev first the problem when a girl who bought her ticket at a local school attempted to bus an additional ticket at the box office The two tickets were different shades of blue re Undercover police checked every ticket, and 250 of the takes were confiscated, Buck s a id O n iv one ot the bogus tickets was successfully used "Y o u (ticket buyers) have to keep a strict lookout at all times. Buck said Justice agrees B u v where you're sure, and be careful, he 'aid. emphasizing the onlv place to be sure i' a UTT M outlet Justice said because the Erwin Center has no responsibility to honor counterfeit tick ets. “ It's the patron who ends up losing whatever they paid Dewar ...elected to National Acadt ntv of Sciences. Campbell suggests changing method of editor selection By D A V ID E L L I O T Daily Texan S taff Officer elections and recognition of for­ mer general manager Loyd Edmonds domi­ nated the first meeting of the newly elected Texas Student Publications Board T h u ’ sdav night The board also heard a proposal from Daily Texan editor Roger Campbell, who suggested the current methtxi of selecting the newspaper s editor be reconsidered He requested the board put the proposal on the agenda for discussion at its July meeting There’s not another college newspaper in the country that has their editor elected. Campbell told the board "Other college editors think it's sillv Professional editors think it's silly Isn't it wrong to have an editor who is aiso a politician.’” Campbell declined to discuss alternative proposals for selecting the edttoi 1 will not talk about my plan until it's time, he said Campbell cited two reasons for changing the election system low grades candidates for editor might incur during a campaign and high campaign expenses Board reaction to Campbell s proposal was mixed The arguments that were put forth seem to carry very little weight." said Student'' Association President Mitch Kreindlet a non-voting member of the board " T h e edi tor need' to be responsible t> the students because it is a student publication The edi tor need' to get out around ^ampu'. meet 'tudent groups, talk to 'tudents I SP Board President Steve Ruelner w h o wa' re-elected Thursdav night, disagreed " I think it's something that need' careful I agree 'tudv, but 1 think it's a good idea I'm not com with many things he savs pleteiy convinced the board would make a better choice than the student FhkIv But I think it's something the board will ast fa vorablv on Other officers elected were Lauren Peters, secretary. Steve Rudner and I auren Peters. Executive Committee members, and Rix belle Biaschke Marlin Gibson and F red Barbee. Review Committee members The board also unveiled a portrait ot Lovd Edmonds, in commemoration of Ed moods' 26 vcar' as general manager " I n der hi' management. T Sp 'aw many ereat change' and tarne through them all with great success. Rudner'aid Nancy Green, TSP general manager, an ttounced that a requc't to increa'e the num­ ber of TSP parking spaces ha' been for warded to I T Prc'ident Peter Pawn Green's proposal would make available all of the parking space' between 24th Street and 26th Streei on Whitis Avenue bv re- mo\ ing the parking meters Beltin’ it out Duke Willoughby of Segutn and other members of Boys afternoon. Several hundred high school boys stayed in Jester Jim Sigmon. Daily Texan St alt State perform at the University's Main Building Thursdav Center for the week-long event. EDITORIALS T h e Da i l y T e x a n K DI TORI A L B O AR D Roger Ca^pDfc Editor Chris Boyd Editoria Page Editor Column, sis Dar Uiftwicr Peter Zavaiefta Richard Sa^tpvx T m Mart>fxJa>e Ma^ne* R S o w v / Te a Goo0w*r' Bin Dear Tracy Duva Da¡e MaMor Editona: Researcher Richard Sampsor Editona Assistants Scott Cobb JC <*' •- % Efc,a"3 -a' V *hQ®G i T ~ jtrtOCl UT should sponsor child care Residents of L I married student housing have been concerned recently vcith the growing problem of child molestation Tw o incidents have been investigated b\ University and Austin police departments, and other incidents have been left unreported On May 1 6 a public meeting was held in the com munity room of the Colorado Apartments where resi dents and police officers discussed the problem and how to deal with it lítese incidents are only the most recent signs of a long standing problem Similar public meetings have been held before, and the increase of suefi crime out side the University area has been noted U T police officer W illie I isdale said that there have been efforts to prevent this but that “ it's been difficult to get people involved until something has happened, and then it s too late Parents, of course, should protect their children and should educate them about how to avoid abuse by strangers But children, especially of school age. can not be watched constantly by their parents There are concrete programs that could help Police programs and area patrols should be in creased to protect the University community against such violence. Also, police need to get out of their cars A poten tial rapist is not going to be scared by a police car's quick dash in and out of the parking lots Although these incidents involving children have not been publicized, they are at least as serious and reprehensible as rape of adults, so they deserve the same amount of police and I iniversity attention I he limited budget excuse is a flimsy one. because gary a means of jm>Ik mg drall registration Editorial Hoard D o you think the S o lo mon amendment will prevail' bowman I think it will pass because il i founded in legislation It is founded in the ( (institution It is illegal not to register lor the dralt Even if there are a majority of people who are against it iri society, o eca sionally these laws are good on the basis of it being right by legislation So I think f can see it passing Editonal Hoard Do you think the Solo mon amendment discriminates against ccr tain groups! bowman The Solomon amendment dis criminates against people whose beliefs don’t allow them to participate in wartime activities And despite the lact they say that if you are a conscientious objector you can state that at the draft time to some people I hey know at that is a [>oint of hypocrisy that time that they cariT participate in the war like to add ' bowman I have spoken for wfiy I thought why it was not so bad of an idea But 1 don’t know if we should use the col leges to jHilice draft registration Educators are having a hard enough time educating, and here we are telling them to be Secret Service agents We don t use Social Securi ty benefits to police like that, and that's a direct government function True enough, education is also a direct government tunc II we tion, but we need to be consistent aren’t going to use Social Security benefits to police draft registration, (hen neither In tu Id we use finant ial aid bowman /s an advertising marketing ¡un ior. Editorial board is there anything you d rate issues! Richard Palmer Palmer: I don’t think so I think that these two issues are separate issues and that a person shouldn’t be denied their chance to obtain financial aid because of a moral choice like draft registration, which already has pretty still [xmulties Editorial board Why are they two sepa­ Palmer Education is not something that a person gains whether they fight for their country or arc willing to register lor it, you know, support its government and its poli­ cies Education has nothing to do with the government Education is learning, is im­ It’s not having your edu­ proving yoursell cation for the government, or because of the government. Editorial board Is draft registration nec­ essary? Palmer Yes It's probably necessary in the event that the country needs to defend itscll It’s necessary from the standpoint ol the country being ready for whatever it’s going into It's necessary for that country's defense, the country being prepared lor the threat that they have to face If it’s the Unit­ ed States versus Russia, or communism or whatever Editonal board Do you think the Solo­ mon amendment will prevail ’ Palmer With the current conservative I ’m swing in the nation, it’s very possible not in favor of it, but I think it's very possi­ ble because our country's gotten more con­ servative in the last couple of years. Editorial Board: Do you think the Solo­ mon amendment would discriminate against certain groups? Palmer: Yes, definitely I mean. I ’m a middle class person. I don’t have financial aid. My parents are lucky enough to sup­ port me through school without having to get financial aid. Other people won’t. Peo­ ple who can’t afford it — those are the peo­ ple that are going to be hurting. The people who don’t believe that they should have to register and are not able to totally support themselves through college shouldn’t be denied that education just be­ cause they can’t afford to go to college. Editorial Board: Is there anything you’d like to add? Palmer: it’s a moral issue, and people shouldn’t be denied a chance at the educa­ tion our country is famous for just because they don’t have enough money to have that education and they don’t believe in support­ ing the government’s armed forces.________ Palmer is an RTEsenior. who said they wouldn’t Editorial board Do you think the Sole mon amendment will pass ’ Brooks I really don t But there seems t be a lot of controversy over it There's a injunction against it right now in the court and they said that the congressmen’s office were inundated with protests against it. so can't really see that it will pass Editorial board Would the Solomo amendment discriminate against certai groups? brooks I don’t believe so, because fi nancial aid is based on the need, and the should consider the colleges you’re talkin; about. Tuition here isn’t that expensive Even if their parents are considered well off, if the>'ve got three kids in school they're still going to need financial aid don't really think it’s going to be that dis criminatory. If there's a draft, everybody’ going to have to sign up, anyway. And thi number that's not going to sign up is s< small anyway. Brooks is a French senior Editor's note: Soapbox is a weekly ct umn appearing every Friday where st dents, faculty and staff respond to quc tions about a major issue. The questioi are posed by the Editorial Board. Those interviewed will be asked come to the Texan office, where will thi first answer an impartial question, thi elaborate further. Although those interviewed will be to the topic beforehand, they won’t kno the questions until the actual interview. If you’re interested in participating future Soapbox columns, contact edit» Roger Campbell at 471-4591. Lisa Brooks Brooks: Yes. Editorial Board: W hy? brooks: I think it should be held back, if you’re willing to pay taxpayers’ money and the government’s money. Financial aid is a privilege. So, if you’re going to receive the privilege of financial aid, you should accept the responsibility of being a citizen of the country. When you apply for financial aid, it is on the basis of need. I feel that if you’re will­ ing to accept money from the government, you should be willing to defend the coun­ try. Editonal Board: Is draft registration nec­ essary? Brooks: I think so. I think there are a lot of college age students, or even not college students, just people of Army age, who wouldn’t. But then again, my generation hasn't re­ ally been threatened by war. I think if our country ever was threatened, a lot of people would be willing to sign up, even those Kandy Bowman Bowman I i .in see the h;isr. lor holding n against the students who haven i regís lered, but I ’m not sure that the basis is right Legislatively speaking, it is correct because they have broken the law, but as tar as others, i don’t think you can hold it from them lor simply making a moral judg men I I hey say. I’ve got to register lor the I hey are draft so I ran get financial aid using an unlair background there, bul ai the same tune I can see that they could be cor rect in doing it Editorial Board Why, at times, would it be considered corree i ' bowman it I were the government, I would have (rouble financing someone’s education to serve them il they weren't willing to serve me to register lor the drall Editorial Board Is drall registration nee essary' bowman I think the idea of having an active count of how many people we would have for the military is necessary Dralt FIRING LINE M C C relates to bad news While we applaud your vigilance in drawing attention to Austin’s recent invita­ tion to the capitalist whoredogs of Silicon Valley, we would be remiss in our sacred duty as loyal Austinites were we to over­ look these additional cataclysmic conse­ quences of M C C ’s imminent invasion of this hallowed ground. Item: Top administration officials are scrambling to cover up the recent intelli­ gence reports out of Galveston of the rede­ ployment of the Soviet submarine-based nuclear arsenal to the coastal waters of Tex­ as in the last two weeks. Item: Did M CC czar Bobby " R a y ’’ In­ man know about the telephone company ‘‘involvement,’’ when hapless Spectracide spokesman and prominent radio personality Dewey Compton and his family "crashed" en route from Waco to Wichita Falls in their unarmed private aircraft. Item: Is it a coincidence that M CC select­ ed Austin as its home immediately follow­ ing the recent display of grotesque abstract "a rt” on the greens of the fine arts com­ plex, in lieu of traditional statuary depicting small people and animals? Us? We like vanilla wafers better than silicon wafers. Save our aquifer! Dirk Heinen Frank Lee Graduate School of Business Nuke name change wrong If we bad no other way of know ing, we’d realize that 1984 is nearly upon us by notic­ ing that over the past months the South Texas Nuclear Project has become the plain old South Texas Project. Is this because they’ve decided to take away the nuclear reactor and install a coal-burner in its place? No, it's because certain persons have decided that if "nuclear" is out of the name, "nuclear" will be out of our minds. As journalists, you should be especially wary of being used as the instrument of anyone’s manipulating or brainwashing Yet, this is exactly the function you are performing by succumbing to this " S T P " doublespeak and, by repeated printing, reinforcing it. The STNP doesn’t become radiation-free because it’s called the ST P anymore than a government agency protects the environ­ ment because it's called the Environmental Protection Agency. Let’s see in your next story a return to the original name and accu­ rate descriptor — STNP! No excuse for Tower hazard Problems at the University involve all of us. The consensus of the Physical Plant is that things cannot get worse; they can only get better. Elowever, this is not true, for the problem is spreading to include others as we read in the June 2 issue of The Daily Texan concerning UT Tower satety as re­ ported by Jill Davis. One must conclude and give a service man’s response, "no ex­ cuse . ’' Money may be a problem but not a lack of it. All around campus we see it literally flushed down the drain. It is also a sad situ­ ation when our president with a detail to be done, bypasses all his colleagues down to someone at the so-called bottom of the to­ tem pole with a request for the chore to be done. It only takes 51 percent of the voters to choose the governor who appoints the Uni­ versity administrators, leaving the other 49 percent to fly kites. So we all fly kites, keep paying for University oil at a price of retail, not wholesale. John Ring land Physics graduate Elmer E Hansen U T staff White firm on teacher pay increases T H f U A I t y Í 1 KAN f RJ O A y |t Nf 1 fj j PAGE Í ontint ■st ion a qui -aid By JUDY WARD Daily lexan Staff W hile no! setting a date fo r a special lev aid islative session. G ov M ark W hite Thursday he is organizing a group of key topics to be dealt w ith if he decides lo call one I he bhlh session of (hi Ix g iv la lu rc ad joum ed May M) w ithout solving three <■! what W hite considers to be fe x a v most crucial problem s financing of p u b lk schools. funds for the Texa1- hm ploym ent Com m ission and a possible quarantine of Texas cattle “ I'm going to try and set then it at orderly fashion so that we can m axim ize the w ork we are going to accom plish W hite said during a news conference W hite said he is hopeful that only one to deal special session w ill he necessarc with these problems “ I d rather them be able to do it all at one tim e, he said It may take tw o W hite said cooperation Irom legislators would be crucial in dealing w ith ail the is sues during one special session W hite said he is anxious to learn the re suits of a study to be done by a special com m ittee on education Members w ill be announced next week he v iid f fie result- of the study art likely to how th* need lor action by a spec lal session. W hite said White said I think y o u 'll lin d there is action that r ta n be taken before the tw o -\e a r m tertr vs hue said the sessions, tic is still extrem ely eon cerned with the need for teacher pay in creases He has proposed a plan l<> raise teacher salaries 12 percent in each of the next tw o years A ll that does is bring them up t bit behind vis-a sis a state em ployee years ago White -aid ttle I The issue of public education rcfo m cannot go much longer w ithout bt in: a dressed W hite said If we were to tail at this time be an c our lack o f dedication to the suf ject ter. W hite said it would he a traredy in­ Hut W h ite said teacher salarie t< >ta pa* » to be < >ne p< >r?n >n ■ •’ ceHence appei td i•- “ We shouldn't let the strengtf of ore p rinciple be the difference (ir achíes mg ed (»ov. N lark W h ite speaks at press ((inferen ce I hursdav and re e m ­ phasizes his co m m itm en t to a teacher pay raise. 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Whole Earth Provision Co. 2410 San Antonio 478-1577 8068 Research 458 - 6333 n w * “ * M M i r r ~ i '- — r r — iiif— — -• - PAGE S/THE DAILY TEXAN/FRIDAY, JUNE 10,1983 WORLD & NATION Thatcher wins election United Press International LONDON Prime M inister M argaret I hatcher won a landslide re-election victory Thursday, quadrupling her majority in Par­ liament with a new m andate to continue Conservative policies for another five-year term The victory gave the C onservative Party the largest majority in Parliam ent since L a­ bor s c o r e d a landslide win in 1945. with a 186 parliam entary majority “ It has been a rather exciting evening for some of u s . ' T hatcher Naid at a celebration in her home district of Finchley and Friem Bamet in north London " I approach this second term of office with a great sense o f responsibility and a great sense o f humility I hope that w e ’ll have another historic victory and be re­ elected for the third tim e ." W ith 566 districts counted, the C onserv­ ative Party captured 349 o f the 650-seat House of C om m ons, the Labor Party won 196 and the Social D em ocrat-L iberal A lli­ ance. 1 7. M mor parties captured four seats Com puter predictions indicated T hatch­ e r's majority over all other parties would range between 130 and 138 seats The m a­ jority had been 35 seats The C onservatives received roughly 11 million votes, or 42 percent, to L abor’s 7.5 m illion, or 31 percent, its lowest vote total since 1918. The A lliance got 6 5 m illion votes, or 26 percent O ther parties got 1 percent. The Conservative Party held its heartland districts in southern and central England and captured seats in the traditional Labor strongholds in the north and west The newly form ed “ A llian ce" received more votes than expected but won few seats because o f the C onservative onslaught Almost all o f the Alliance m em bers of Parliament suffered hum iliating defeat, in­ cluding two ol its tounding leaders — S h ir­ ley W illiam s and W illiam Rogers Only parly leader Roy Jenkins and form er foreign secretary Dr David Owen won. Labor leader Michael Foot conceded de­ teat 4V; hours after the polls closed. “ The next general election starts n o w .” said Foot, whose poor perform ance as party leader heightened speculation he would be replaced. “ I concede that this is going to be the result and it c a n ’t be changed n o w .” Deputy Labor Party leader Denis Healey said the voting “ has put Britain at the m er­ cy of the most reactionary, right-w ing, e x ­ treme governm ent in her h isto ry .” Jenkins, who narrow ly won re-election to his seat, claim ed the Alliance will be a force in the future even though the two- year-old party o f Labor defectors faired poorly in attaining Parliam ent seats. He called the close popular vote betw een Labor and the Alliance a “ b re ak th ro u g h '’ that “ shows a large part o f the people want som ething n e w .” Voting was heavy throughout the coun­ try. Encouraged by generally good w eather, about 32 m illion people cast ballots, nearly 80 percent o f the 42.7 m illion eligible. B ritain's electoral system gives a C om ­ mons seat to the leading vote-w inner in each district The leader o f the party with the m ost seats in the body becom es prime m inister and runs the governm ent T hatcher, who becam e B ritain's first wom an prim e m inister in May 1979. called the election 11 m onths early in hopes of gaining a bigger mandate Votes were laboriously counted by hand, district by district. No voting m achines were used. During the day stock m arkets boom ed on expectation o f a C onservative w in. and the pound s value clim bed against foreign c u r­ rencies The only incident m arring the vote was in Northern Ireland where the extrem ist Irish National L iberation Arm y said it was responsible for blow ing up a gas tanker truck near a voting station. No one was hurt. Despite record unem ploym ent o f more than 13 percent, despite still-painful effects of a recession, every opinion poll since the cam paign began 29 days ago predicted the Conservatives would rom p hom e. Some o f their support cam e from distaste for L ab o r’s far-left party platform , and many voted for T h atch er’s party as the less­ er o f tw o evils. But Thatcher and her supporters waged a vigorous, energetic and effective cam paign. Labor was never able to ignite voters on any issue and all but destroyed its chances through leadership squabbles over its poli­ cies for ditching B ritain’s nuclear arm s and pulling out o f the European C om m on M ar­ ket. By contrast. B ritain's victory in the Falk- lands w ar last year gave T h atch er’s “ Iron L ady'' image a glow o f resolute leadership which she and her cam paign advertisers successfully exploited. Reagan admits plan flawed 1983 The N ew York Times H O PK IN S. M inn. — President Reagan acknow ledged Thursday his proposal to have teachers paid and prom oted on the ba­ sis of merit would cost more m oney, but he said school system s should pay for the pro­ gram by cutting other program s of “ m uch lower p rio rity .” He did not specify what these low -priori­ ty school program s were. Speaking in a M inneapolis suburb at a forum sponsored by the National C om m is­ sion on E xcellence in E ducation, Reagan again appealed for steps to im prove educa­ tional quality w ithout increasing federal spending, asserting education spending had “ nearly d oub led ” in the last 20 years, after taking account o f inflation. “ You have to say, ‘Is just purely money an answ er, or do n 't we have to look deeper for some of the answers to the problem s we have in ed­ ucation?” ’ His com m ents on teacher salaries cam e at one of a series of education-related appear­ ances planned by the W hite House to allow him to seize the initiative in the grow ing national debate over the quality o f teaching and schools The political im portance o f the debate was underscored T hursday when form er Vice President W alter F. M óndale held a news conference Thursday m orning in M in­ neapolis, accusing Reagan o f trying to “ w hitew ash his record” on education. M óndale, a leading contender for the Dem ocratic nom ination, term ed R eagan's call for m erit salary increases for teachers “ a sideshow ” to divert attention from his cutbacks in school aid. “ H e’s willing to fight to the death on M X , but he w o n ’t lift a finger for ed u ca tio n ,” M óndale said, refer­ ring to the MX m issile. M óndale did not respond to questions about where he stood on the issue o f m erit pay increases. W hite House officials ac­ know ledged they had picked the m erit pay issue precisely because it is opposed strong­ ly by, am ong others, the N ational E duca­ tion A ssociation, which has endorsed M on- d a le 's candidacy. “ T eachers w ho grade students ought to be able to grade each o th e r,” said R eagan, who sat in shirtsleeves because o f the heat. “ And how else do you provide an incentive for attracting the best and the brightest into teaching as a profession unless they can see a future more than just a salary scale that is laid out for the rest o f their lives and careers no m atter how good they m ight b e ? ” Am ong these are the proposals to in­ lengthen teacher salaries and crease the school year. Others appearing with Reagan at the com m ission forum T hursday raised the question o f the need for more federal help. “ W here do we obtain those additional dollars ’” asked Robert H aderlein. a form er chairm an o f the National School Boards Association. “ This whole question o f cost in educa­ tion, I think th ere’s a lot o f m isunderstand­ ing about it,” R eagan said. “ I recognize it would cost more for this. At the sam e tim e, I believe that if such a plan is instituted, then in budgeting you take care o f that and at the sam e tim e possibly see w hether there are other things o f m uch low er p rio rity .” He disputed the argum ent that m ore m on­ ey was being spent for the m ilitary than for education, asserting that in 1982 “ the total budget for national defense was $179 bil­ lion” w hereas “ it was $215 billion for ed u ­ c atio n .” The Reagan adm inistration has cut back on education program s. A ccording to the adm inistration’s proposed budget for 1984, federal education outlays for 1981 were $15 billion, com pared to $14.4 billion estim ated for this year and a proposed $13.5 billion next year. NEWS IN BRIEF From Tetan news services South Africa hangs nationalists amid protests JO H A N N E SB U R G , South Africa — the hanging Black nationalists protested T hursday of three African National C o n ­ gress guerrillas, vowing the white-ruled South African governm ent would pav for the “ c rim e.” Heavily armed police ringed the prison where the men — described bv their law yer as “ very brave and in high spirits” — died in a line beside two com ­ mon murderers Thelle Simon M ogoerane. 23. Jerry Sem ano M osololi. 25, and M arcus Thabo M otaung, 27, had been on death row since August 1982, after being found guilty o f bom bing and sabotage at­ t a c k s in which four police officers died In Sow eto, the tow nship o f 1.2 million blacks fringe, church bells on Johannesburg's tolled the news of the hangings, the first in four years o f ANC m ilitant action NATO ministers meet PARIS — NA TO interm ediate-range missiles foreign m inisters Thursday strongly endorsed the deploym ent o f U .S . in western Europe but insisted on a continued search for an arms agreem ent with M os­ cow, officials said The foreign m inisters of the N A TO Council reaffirm ed their backing for the double-track plan at their last m eet­ ing before the scheduled start o f the instal­ lation of 572 Pershing-2 and land-based cruise m issiles in D ecem ber. W hile public statem ents focused on the unity o f the 16 NATO nations over the m issile installation, the foreign m inisters debated a proposal to thrust disarm am ent to the forefront, confer­ ence sources said. Quakes hit Japan T O K Y O — Tw o m ajor earthquakes rum ­ bled across northern Japan within m inutes o f each other T hursday, spreading panic am ong residents recovering from a quake that killed nearly 100 people two weeks ago. O fficials issued tidal wave warnings along the Japanese coast, where sea water levels rose about 2 feet, but the warnings were lifted an hour later. Japan’s m eteoro­ logical agency said both quakes were cen ­ tered in the Sea o f Japan about 62 miles off Akita on the northern island of Honshu. Nuke to stay open W A SH IN G T O N — A split Nuclear R eg­ ulatory C om m ission Thursday allowed the Indian Point atom ic plants 24 miles north o f New York City to stay open, as new plans to protect 2 88,(XX) area residents are tested in the next two m onths. V oting, 3-2, to keep the plants operating, the NRC cited a Federal Em ergency M anagem ent Agency report that said substantial progress had been made in solving problem s with em er­ gency evacuation plans at the Hudson River site The m anagem ent agency, how ever, had said it could not grant final approval o f the off-site planning until a full-scale test is conducted at troubled W estchester County facility in about 60 days the MX vote postponed W A SH IN G TO N — House Speaker Thom as O ’Neill Thursday agreed to post­ pone a vote on the M X m issile until after the July 4 recess at the request o f liberals w ho want President Reagan to further e x ­ plain his new arm s control proposals Lib­ eral D em ocrats who oppose M X, led by M assachusetts Reps. Nicholas M avroules and Edward M arkey, persuaded O ’Neill and A rm ed Services Com m ittee Chairm an M elvin Price, D -Ill., to make MX the last m ajor item o f consideration in the defense authorization bill. Utah woman injured SALT LA K E CITY — A front-end load­ e r, driven by National G uardsm en helping U tah residents clean up from last w eek’s floods, sm ashed into a car Thursday, criti­ cally injuring a w om an standing by the side o f the road. The accident was the latest tragedy in a season o f disaster whose ef­ fects geologists predict may last a decade. Flooding conditions have been blam ed for m ore than $200 m illion in dam ages suffered by this spring. City crew s m anned flooded stream banks in three o f the sta te ’s most populated areas, but officials were hopeful State Street m ight becom e a street again this w eek throughout Utah com m unities Policemen sentenced D A LL A S — A federal judge Thursday sentenced three form er New O rleans police­ m en to five years in prison without parole ‘‘fo r beating and torturing w itnesses” dur- ing investigation o f a fellow officer’s slay­ ing. John M cK enzie, 40, a form er sergeant, and form er detectives Dale Bonura and Ste­ phen Farrar, both 34, received five-year terms for th eir felony conspiracy convic­ tions and m axim um one-year terms for vio­ lating the civil rights o f Robert Davis The conspiracy sentences were half the m axi­ m um sentence, and the prison terms will run concu rrently. Stocks stage rally NEW YORK — The stock market snapped a two-day losing streak Thursday with a narrow gain in a late rally paced by transportation, high-technology and gold- mining issues. The D ow Jones industrial average managed to gain 3 .5 0 to 1,189.00. It fell 9.41 Tuesday and 28 points over the previous two session s to a seven-week low. Zambian President Kaunda (I) with Presidents Shagari of Nigeria (c) and Moi of Kenya before OAU summit. Call for bomb at African summit United Press International the fram ework o f a com m u n ity .” United Press International ADDIS A B A B A , Ethiopia — A top leader of the O rganization oi A frican Unity urged African states T hursday to develop nuclear arm s and form a m utual defense pact to fend off aggression from South A fri­ ca and other sources. Libyan leader Col. M oam m ar K hadafy s hasty departure from the O A U ’s first sum ­ mit in two years, m eanw hile, raised fears he would retaliate by stirring up new trou­ ble in Chad and other spots in Africa. Secretary-G eneral Edem Kodjo, speak­ ing T hursday during the first full w orking session o f the O A U ’s 19th sum m it, said A f­ rican countries should not stand by as South Africa develops its own atom ic bom b. “ Let us not be told especially about de­ nuclearizing A frica when South A frica al­ ready has a nuclear arsen a l,” Kodjo said. “ Against whom is it m anufacturing its atomic bom b?” he said. “ Against us, o f course, and the duty o f the African states that can, is to resolutely em bark on the nu­ clear path Such will be easily done w ithin OAU sources said only South A frica and Libya have nuclear capabilities in A frica, although France has prom ised M orocco its own nuclear pow er station. South A frica has long denied it has any military capabilities in the nuclear field but reportedly cooperates with Israel in nuclear technology. Kodjo also nam ed nam ed Israel, N A TO and W arsaw Pact countries as potential in­ vaders against whom A frica is now d e ­ fenseless. “ Believe m e, A frica, for her security, for the survival o f her population, is com ­ m ended to give herself the m eans to deter external aggression and the only way is to set up the A frican defense c o m m u n ity ,” he said. So far, A frican m ilitary cooperation has to an O A U peace-keeping lim ited been force sent to Chad last year. K hadafy, in North Y em en Thursday trying to settle a feud with Palestinian lead­ er Yasser A rafat, had com e to the sum m it confident he would be elected chairm an, a position he was prom ised at the O A U sum ­ mit in Nairobi in 1981. But his rejection was sealed by tw o failed tries to hold a sum m it in Tripoli last July and N ovem ber, which featured a fiery speech by K hadafy in w hich he prom ised to redraw the national boundaries o f A frica, delegates said. The post went instead to Ethiopian leader Col. M engistu Haile M ariam . Besides being denied the chairm anship, Khadafy also was ignored when he protest­ ed the seating o f a pro-w estern delegation from Chad. “ Col. K hadafy will not take this hum ilia­ tio n .” said one black A frican delegate who wished not to be nam ed. “ He will re a c t.” The m ajor likely trouble spot is Chad, which borders Libya. Libya occupies a piece o f Chad and has made known its de­ signs on the rest o f the country. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and husband Denis leave polling place. U n ite d P re ss In te rn a tio n a l Arafat, Khadafy agree, attempt to close ranks United Press International lighting against Israel Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and L i­ by a’s M oam m ar K hadafy agreed in Yemen Thursday to stop their war o f words and move tow ard a settlem ent aimed at uniting the Arab confrontation with the Yem eni news agency said Israel, Khadafy and Arafat made surprise visits to the Yem eni capital o f Sanaa but appar­ ently did not m eet, the SABA news agency said. But Yem eni President Abdullah Saleh told the agency he m ediated a settlem ent betw een the tw o men to halt “ O ur efforts have resulted in an agree­ ment inform ation cam paigns be­ tw een Libya and the Palestine Liberation O rganization and do everything possible to make the two leaderships m e e t," Saleh told the agency. “ E verybody should shoulder his respon­ sibility and forget d isp u tes,” Saleh said Saleh said he and Khadafy agreed to urge Arab states “ to end their m inor differences and start im m ediate action to rally their powers to fight the Israeli enem y which is supported by im perialism .” Hours before K hadafy's arrival in Sanaa. Libya accused Arafat o f personally m aster­ m inding the attem pted assassination Sun­ day o f the Libyan charge d ’affaires in Beirut. A rafat, on a tour aim ed at winning sup­ port in his battle to keep control of the PLC), has accused Khadafy o f inciting a re­ bellion in his m ainstream Fatah guerrilla o r­ ganization. C alling him an “ an t” that should go back to its “ h o le .” Arafat has threatened to “ cut off the ton g u e” of Khadafy it he did not stop m eddling in PLO affairs. In Q atar, Arafat claim ed W ednesday to have the insurrection in L ebanon's eastern Bekaa Valley “ 100 percent under c o n tro l.” PLO dissidents have dem anded that Arafat adopt m ore hardline policies and renew Saudi radio said Khadafy Hew Ihursday to Jeddah. Saudi Arabia, and met King Fahd in a visit apparently aim ed at closing a split among Arab leaders over the PLO and the L ebancse-lsraeli troop w ithdraw al ac c o rd . “ I will discuss the dangers confronting the Arab nation and necessary m eans t<> unite Arab ra n k s,” Khadatv told the Iraqi News Agency it a decisive phase and we must close ranks t< face the A m erican-supported Z ionist posi tio n .” “ We are on the eve The L ebanese m ilitary prosecutor charged Kaled Osm an A lwan, 21 w th try ing to kill Libyan C harge d 'affaires \b del Kader G houka at a Beirut hotel I he diplom at w a s shot six tim es Sundav but was recovering from his w o u n d s The official L ibyan pr e s s ag en cy . J A N -V terrorist to charged W ednesday that A rafat’s apparatus had entrusted one of its thug^ gun down G houka Alwan told Lebanese prosecutor Assaad G erm anos his order to shoot G houka came from a military officer ol the pro-Syrian National Progressive Socialist Partv But the party ha s denied the gunm an w a s a m em ber. Relations betw een Aratat and many Arab leaders, particularly K hadatv. have been strained since the PLO was defeated bv Is rael last sum m er in Lebanon because o f a lack o f m aterial Arab support Arafat greatly resented Khadatv s call on the PLO leadership and several thousand guerrillas under Israeli siege in Beirut to “ com m it suicide ” rather than the country leave Aratat said in Q atar that “ only w a r” could change the situation in the M iddle East, but he denied a report m ore PLO guerrillas were being moved to Lebanon to confront Israeli forces Senate, House deadlocked over 1984 budget proposal ' 1983 The New York Times fiscal year say W A SH IN G T O N — House and Senate m em bers w ho are writing a budget for the 1984 their com prom ise spending plan will increase m ilitary e x ­ penditures by 5 percent after making up for the effects o f inflation, about half what President Reagan has requested. The lower figure reflects the w idespread belief on C apitol Hill that R eagan’s propos­ al would give the Pentagon more money than it needs and aggravate the problem of rising budget deficits. The budget conference has talked for two days about m ilitary figures and has yet to ratify a form al agreem ent. Law m akers say the com prom ise will be made final only af­ ter the conference also agrees on figures for tw o other key areas, taxes and dom estic spending. “ W e ’re just posturing at the m o m e n t,” said Rep. Les A spin, D -W is., who is a m em ber o f the budget conference. “ W hen we cut a deal it’s got to be a package d e a l." In dollar term s, the Senate proposes m ili­ tary spending authority o f $270.6 billion, and the House $263.8 billion, for a differ­ ence o f $6.8 billion. The House says its figure adds up to a 4 percent increase on top o f inflation, but the nonpartisan C ongres­ sional Budget O ffice calculated the increase at less than 3 percent. In a long day o f frequently interrupted m eetings, the conferees also searched for com prom ises on the rest o f the budget. The senators stressed that because their proposed budget passed by only one vote, they had very little leeway for concessions. House m em bers replied that if they com pro­ m ised too m uch, their coalition would also be in jeopardy G iven the difficult prospect facing any budget on the House and Senate floor, a group of D em ocrats are exploring a propos­ al would freeze all expenditures at 1983 levels, and allow only for inflation Rep. Richard A. G ephardt. D-.Mo., noted that because Reagan seem ed to op­ pose any budget this year, there is a need tor “ new ideas ' that m ight appeal to the W hite House He said the freeze proposal might be ottered next week if D em ócrata leaders approved. In the area o f taxes, the House calls lor $30 billion in revenue and the Senate for $9 billion. Rep. Leon E. Panetta o f C alifornia, an influential Dem ocrat in the conference, estim ated the final figure would be $10 bil lion to $15 billion D om estic spending rem ains the most d if­ ficult hurdle, because the House called for $33 billion more than R eagan’s request and the Senate allotted an increase of onlv $12.6 billion. Despite these obstacles, the m ood o f the budget conference has been upbeat. The only discordant note has been struck by House R epublicans, who share R eagan’s distaste tor both budgets, and vow to up­ hold any vetoes he might cast on future spending bills. It appears, said Rep. Jam es R. Jones, D -O kla., chairm an o f the House Budget C om m ittee, that House R epublicans c o n ­ tinue to stonew all and just be obstructionist and carry out W hite House orders. ” Senate Republican leaders are far less e n ­ thusiastic about R eagan's veto strategy than their House counterparts and their resent m ent spurted out Thursday as the Senate began consideration o f a $14,8 billion sup­ plem ental appropriation bill for the current fiscal year. Merrill Lynch will help sell Austin’s percentage of STP By H E R B B O O T H Daily Texan Staff The city financial director received permission from City Council Thursday to negotiate with M errill Lynch Capital Markets to enlist its services to help sell Austin s share of the South Texas Project. Philip Scheps proposed a four-step plan for the city's contract with Merrill Lynch: • M em ll Lynch will develop a list of potential buyers and will organize a comprehensive marketing effort that must be approved by the city prior to implementation • Merrill Lynch would be paid on a contingent fee basis, with the fee paid only if a sale is realized. The fee w ill be 0.4 percent of the sale price. • Merrill Lynch w ill be paid for reasonable out-of-pocket ex­ penses — mainly travel. • Merrill Lynch w ill coordinate with the City Council and the director of the city’s utilities before making any contacts on behalf of Austin. Mayor Ron Mullen and City Council member Mark Spaeth raised objections to the amount of money Austin might have to pay the financial firm. “ We don’t know if there’s a ghost of a chance of getting a sale," Scheps said. “ What we would like to do now is to explore in detail each of the possibilities.” Scheps said M errill Lynch would not be able to collect a fee if the company did not participate in the negotiations “ For instance, if the city was already negotiating with Houston Lighting and Power, we would reserve the right to tell Merrill Lynch that we didn’t need any help in those specific negotiations." Scheps said. He said if M errill Lynch were to contact the city with a possible lead on selling its 16 percent share of ST P and Austin were to approve the plan, then M errill Lynch would be able to proceed with negotiations and be eligible for a fee Mullen opted for a plan that would require M errill Lynch to present its proposals to City Council at a later date. “ They ought to lay out their proposals in a work plan, maybe lay out a brochure," Mullen said. “ And at that time present their ideas.” CHARGE IT! U m Your V IS A or MasterCard Taxan W ant-Ads! Call 471-5244 PRESENTS COUDI WOtKSHOP 302 W t 5th Ot lOVQCü 475-2500 Showtimes 9 00 Sun thru Thurs $5 8 30& 1 1 OOFn.&Sot $7 0P6N STAG€ • MON. Si FfiOM TVS "LUHATS HAPPENING" SHIRL6V H6MPHILI WITH JON UfiVMflN RONlATOUf Make it a dandy day for Dad! Firemen bring light to Council Chambers after blackout. Patty Wood, Daily Texan Staff Texas Jersey . . .9.95 Orange V-neck, 50/50 cotton/poly, 3/ a sleeves. Hook'em Horns/Bevo reg. 12.95 design in white. SHOWN Mesh Jersey . . .7.95 Burnt Orange, 100% nylon, choice of 2 designs: Hook'em Horns/Bevo, reg. 10.75 or Texas with Longhorn, Long Sleeve T-Shirt . 5.95 50/50 cotton/poly. In beige with o r a n g e H o o k 'e m Horns or Longhorn on chest pocket, reg. 8.95 White G olf Shirt. 10.95 Short sleeve, 4 button collar, 50/50 cotton/poly, with Burnt orange shoulder stripes, collar & Longhorn 18.95 on left chest. Sizes and quantities may be limited on some items. Sale ends 6/11/83 LONGHORN COUNTRY - FIRST LEVEL MAJORING IN SERVICE SINCE 1896 Enjoy Buffet Today! All The Pizza, Salad and S p ag h etti you can e a t For Only $ a 39 Tuesday Night Buffet Luncheon Buffet M onday - Friday 11:00 to 2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Pina inn THE DAILY TEXAN/FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1983PAGE 7 Cablevision awaits rate hike approval By D K B H IK F E T T F R M A N D a ily I exan S ta f f July I Austin ( ablevision ( ity Council approval of a rate increase for K5 percent of its subscribers is awaiting I he increase, amounting to $2 75 per customer, is expected to be approved before next year I he council has hired Don Smith as city cable communications officer to regulate ( ablevision the cable industry in Austin filed the letter of intent May 20. Smith said Thursday I rider the proposal, the city has T5 days to approve the rate hike I he Austin ( able Commission created by the council, recommended Wednesday it suspend Austin ( ablevision’s rate hike re quest for 150 days, said Abel Rui/ a staff member of the Office of Cable Commum cations Assistant City Attorney Richard Balough said. “ The City Council will have to take formal action on the moratorium prior to If the extension is approved the city plans to hire a cable rate consultant to make recommendations to the city The request will then he presented to the city in a public hearing Die city charter says any franchise holding company agrees to cover consulting fe es m their contract Balough said Although Smith is still negotiating terms with ( ablevision. “ ( ablevision will pay for the consultant Balough said We re going t< enforce the franchise Phil Kriudsen. Austin ( ablevision direc tor of operations, said he anticipates pas sage of the rate hike by the council C apital costs of rebuilding the ..able system day to day business and the need have mack the in for more personnel crease absolutely necessary Knudsen said Otherwise. Austin ( ablevision cannot ful fill the franc hise he said its service promises made in Smith said until the commission analyzes a consultant s report it would be too early to know whether the commission would recommend the rate hike to the council Austin Cablevision offers subscribers several packages If the company can dem­ onstrate its need for more money to the council, then the rate hike may possibly said Brenda Trainor. re­ be approved. search coordinator for the Office of Cable Communications Knudsen said I fie monthly bill for ap­ proximately 85 percent of Cablevisior's subscribers will increase from S24 20 to $26 20 The majority of subscribers have ex­ panded service which includes all channels plus H BO and Cinemax. he said In the east campus area, approximately 55 to 65 percent of the dwelling units are subscribing he said Knudsen said be did not know exactly how many I T students would be affected bv the increase Council gives Meiszer vote of confidence By P A U L B A R T O N D aily Texan S ta ff City Manager Nicholas Meis/er received a unanimous vote of confidence from the Austin City Council Thursday, following an executive session lasting almost two hours. Mayor Ron Mullen announced that coun cil members used the executive session to discuss with Meis/er how thcv would like to see the city managed Also discussed during the closed-door meeting was the performance of city staff the mayor said The council expects a “ change of attitude among some city em­ ployees. he said "W e expect our stall to be profession at," said Mullen, explaining there have been problems in the past with city employ­ ees who "hold things up instead of coop­ erating with the public “ We want every body in the c it v to real i/t we re servants of the people and that we re here to help Mullen said It - a new day in Austin Ihe ( its Council also held a public hear ing on proposed changes to the city charter Representatives of several groups spoke in support of electing City Council mem bers from single member districts instead of at large Establishing single member d¡s tricts is the primary goal of a charter revi sion commission Gabe Gutierrez, one of 11 petrple up pointed to the commission last week, said it was important "to eliminate the possibility of tactionali/ing the community" during the charter revision process To avoid that problem. Gutierrez said the council should instruct the commission t< concentrate first on determining how many council members will be elected from sin­ gle member districts and how many will continue to be elected at large Following a relerendum on that. Gutier re/ said the commission would concentrate on drawing the districts Ihe only person t< speak against single­ member district' wa' 91 year-old Harry Nolen the oldest living lonner City Coun­ cil member Single member district' permit the big developer to elect a man from his district and control him throughout ho term of off­ ice. Nolen said Nolen said there is n< way to establish single-member district' that are honest and w ithout controversy The only thing that will aime Iroin the plan is making council members easier to control, he said Somebod) behind this thing wants to get the finger in somebody’s eve “ B eat the Sommer B la h s” Visit The College Ministry Program at First United Methodist Church 12th & Lavaca 478-5684 Colege Class Beach Retreat June 24-26 Port Aransas Sunday Schedule: 8:30 A.M. Morning Worship 9:45 A.M. Colege Class 10:55 A.M. Morning Worship REDUCTIONS » ALL SALES FINAL * NO REFUND or EXCHANGES 75 % R E P A IR E D BACK PACKS Only * 1 0 * * PATRICK STABIL (THE SOCCER SHOE) SHORTS • SHIRTS • SWEATS (Slight Imperfections! $2— . 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Don WhMa 92S-1504 447-4611 444-4455 MAJORING IN SERVICE SINCE 1896 PACE 8/THE DAILY TEXAN/FRIDAY, |UNE 10,1983 SPORTS Longhorns beat Bates doubles-in winning run; Schiraldi strikes out 11 in relief By ED C O M B S Daily Texan S ta ff O M A H A . Neb — Texas' Calvin Schiraldi and Alabama’s I)a\ id Magadan may be teammates in the future, but they didn't treat each other that way in the Long horns’ 10-inmng. 6-4 win Thursday night. Schiraldi and Magadan were both drafted by the New York Mets. The first time they faced each other. Magadan tied the game at 4-4 with his ninth home run of the season. in an elimination game at 5 10 p m Texas lumped ahead with runs in the first and third inning. Freshman second baseman Bill Bates led off the game with a walk and moved to second on an error by pitcher Dean Hayes. Doug Hodo then singled off Hayes' leg. and Bates moved to third Jose Tolentino hit a sacrifice fly to center field, scoring Bates and tving Keith Moreland’s school R B I record at 72. It’s my first fault (that the game went into extra innings)," Schiraldi said “ I'm the one that gave up the run. The fielders didn't do anything. Bates also scored Texas’ second run With one out in the third, he tripled to deep center field and scored on Mike Brumley s single. " I feel like I vindicated myself.” He vindicated himself the second time they met. when Schiraldi struck out Maga dan with the winning run on second and two out in the bottom of the ninth. “ Schiraldi challenged him .” Alabama coach Barry Shollenberger said “ G ive the guy credit He had to have some nerve to go in there and challenge the best hitter in col­ legiate baseball." Schiraldi. 14-2. pitched the tmal 5' < inn­ ings. striking out 11. The victory assured Texas. 64-14, a berth in the championship game and no worse than a second-place finish in the C W S . Texas plays Michigan at 8:10 p.m. Friday, while Alabama plays Arizona State Longhorn Steve Labay struggled through the first four innings but held Alabama scoreless until the fifth inning. Alabam a’s Fermin Lake led off by ripping a single to left field Lake scored when T e x a s right Loy misplaced Dee fielder Darren Sm ithey’s bloop double. Craig Shipley singled up the middle, driving in Snuthey and tying the game at two. Brett Elbin followed with a single that sent Shipley to third Elbin moved up to second on another error by Loy Labay then intentionally walked Maga dan to load the bases. Rob Skates hit a fly ball left field, scoring Shipley and knocking Labay out o f the game. Schiraldi inning with a came in and ended the to Alabama, advance in CWS UT golfers trail by nine at NCAAs By STAN R O B E R T S Daily Texan S taff The Texas golf team rallied in second round action ot the N C A A men’s cham­ pionship Thursday, posting a score ol 290 a nine stroke improvement over its play in W e d n e s d a y 's opening round. However, at the halfway point of the tournament at San Joaquin Country Club in Fresno, Calif., Coach Jimmy Clayton's squad faces more of an uphill battle than it did before the second round. Second ranked Oklahoma State, the only team to defeat the Longhorns this spring, fired a four under par 284 to take a one stroke lead over North Carolina. And. in doing so. the Cowboys stretched a three stroke advantage over top-ranked Texas to nine. The seventh-place Longhorns were paced by Paul Thomas, whose 68 w as highlighted b\ I I one putt greens Mark Brooks shot a 72 and B ill Tanner a 74 Branded Chamblee and Ronnie McDougal each shot a 76, with only one o f those scores counting toward the team total. U C L A is m third place, four strokes out ol the lead at 584. first round leader Fresno State is at 586. and defending national champion Houston and third ranked Texas A & M are at 590 and 593, respectively U T ’s Bryan Burrows, shown here trying to stop this ball, later scored winning run in Texas’ 6-4 victory Thursday. strikeout. 1 hen came the first rain delay. When the game resumed, Texas catcher Je ff Hearron lined a single to right field and Loy followed with a walk Johnny Sutton stroked a single to score Hearron and move Loy to third Sutton then got caught in a run down when he tried to steal second, allowing Loy to score from third and give Texas a 4-3 lead. Then came the second rain delay. This time it took a little longer for the trailing team to tie the game. Schiraldi had retired all five batters he faced between the rain delays, and it appeared he would con­ tinue his dominance. But Magadan, who was 0-2 against left- handed Labay, led off the eighth with a game-tying home run. Scales followed with a double before Schiraldi ended the threat by striking out the next three batters. In the top of the tenth. Bates w a s in the middle of another Texas rally. He drove in Bryan Burrows for the winning run with a double o ff Troy Brauchle Bates scored an insurance run on Brum ley’s single. United Press International Knepper lifts Astros over Giants United Press International Boh Knepper fired a two-hitter and drove home a run with his first career triple Thursday night to lead the Houston Astros to their fifth consecutive victory, a 3-0 tri­ umph over the San Francisco Giants The Astros completed a three-game sweep of the Giants, who lost their fourth straight game. Knepper. 2-8. walked fixe but allowed only one runner to reach second and tied a career high with 10 strikeouts in posting his second complete game and shutout o f the season. The only hits off Knepper w'ere a single by Tom O ’Malley in the fifth and a single by Johnnie LeMaster in the eighth. In Atlanta, Steve Yeager bounced a bases-loaded double over first baseman Chris Chambliss' glove with one out in the eighth inning to drive in (hrce runs and give the Los Angeles Dodgers a 4-2 victory over the Braves. Dave Stewart, 5-1, pitched the final three innings to earn the victory . Bob Dernier singled home Pete Rose from second base with tw'o out in the bot­ tom of the I Ith inning, lifting the Phillies to a 6-5 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals in Philadelphia. Ron Reed, 3-1, the fourth Philadelphia pitcher, gained the victory . Tony Pena drove in three runs and pitch­ er Larry M cW illiam s knocked in a pair of runs to lead the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 6-3 victory' over the Expos in Montreal. The Pirates jumped on loser Steve Rog ers, 7-3, for two runs in the first inning. Lee Mazzilli and Johnny Ra\ singled and Jason Thompson walked to load the bases and Dave Parker singled M a//il!i home. Ray was thrown out at the plate when M ike Easier hit into a fielder’s choice, but Pena singled Thompson home to make it 2-0 M cW illiam s completed his third game o f the year and raised his record to 7-3 In Cincinnati. Bruce Hereini pitched a seven-hitter and knocked in two runs with a double to help the Reds snap a four-game losing streak with an 8-1 victory over the San Diego Padres. In Chicago, Bob Bailor doubled in Mike Jorgensen and Danny Heep with two out in the 11th inning to give the New York Mets to a 6-4 triumph over Chicago that snapped the Cubs' winning streak at seven games. In American League action. Rookie Leo Hernandez, drove in four runs with a home run and a single and Ken Singleton added a two-run homer, enabling the Orioles to sur vive a club record six errors and defeat the Milwaukee Brewers. 10-7, to sweep their three-game series in Baltimore. Hernandez capped a seven-run first in­ ning w ith a three-run homer oft Jim Slaton, who had replaced starter Jerry Augustine, 2-2. Augustine was tagged for five hits and six runs while retiring one of seven batters. M ike Boddicker. 4-2. who lasted five innings and gave up five unearned runs, was the winner and Tippy Martinez came on to record his eighth save over the Iasi 21 innings The si\ errors tied a club record set May Id, 1974 against Boston In Kansas City, Pat Sheridan's suicide squeeze hunt in the eighth inning lifted the Royals to a 6 5 victory over the Minnesota Twins and enabled the Rovals to complete a sweep ot their three game ser íes Rick Lysander. 1 6, took the loss for the Tw ins B ill Castro hurled five inning' ot middle relief to boost his record to i -0 with Dan Quisenberry hurling the ninth for his i sih save Kirk Gibson s bases-loaded triple highlighted a six run. inning mil Lance Parrish had a two-run homer, diving the Detroit rigers an 8 2 victory over the Red Sox tor a sweep of their lour game series in Boston fifth It was the first time since Id ” ; the I lgcrs have swept a four game scries in Bostor Dan Petry went the distance lor his see ond complete game, scattering live hits to improve his record to 6-3 In Oakland. Vkayne G ro ss homered to support the combined six-hit pitching of Tom Underwood and Steve Baker Thursday night to lead the Oakland A s to a 3-1 v icto- ry over the Toronto Blue Javs I he A s scored twice in the fourth inning off loser Jim Clancy, 5-5, on w a lk s to Jeff Burroughs and G ro ss and R B I singles bv B ill Almon and Tony Phillqo BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... WANT ADS...471-5244 B EA T T H E R U S H Padres third baseman Luis Salazar tags Reds’ Paul Householder in rundown between third and home Thursday. f nited Press International DANIEL E. THORNTON ATTORNEY AT LAW CRIMINAL LAW AVAILABLE FOR JAIL CALLS M E M B E R S T A T E BAR OF TEXAS Austin, Texas (512)452-8731 TONIGHT - TEDDY BOYS SAT - MORRIS CODE SUN - W.C. CLARK BLUES REVIEW 75 0 L o n e S ta r L o n g n e ck s *015 E. 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M-F ALL DAY SAT.-SUN. expira* June 12 lexas Union W , { Jmon Run to The Castilian STILL LIMITED SPACE AVAILABLE FOR FALL/SPRING SEMESTERS STOP BY FOR A TOUR TODAY cfke Castigan 478-9811 • 2323 San Antonio SPORTSWIRE From staff and wire reports L O N D O N McEnroe, Lendl criticize Vilas’ suspension T ennis stars John M cE nroe and Ivan 1-end dc nounced Thursday the d ecision to ban G u illerm o V ilas from the port for one year V ilas who has career earn in gs of more than 54 mil I ton wa- fennis banned W ednesday by the M en s International P r o f e s s io n C o u n cil, which a lso fined him S20.00Ü The ban on the A rgentine star w as the strictest penalty ever irr> posed on a player by the MITPC V ilas is still able to take part in e x h i b i t i o n s arid W ( I t< nimamc nts M cE n roe said the tennis authorities w ere wrung to ban V ilas the w o rld 's N o 5 play er, tor receivin g illegal guarantee at a tournam ent in R otterd am . N etherlands “ It is rid icu lou s to ban one player for what ha- been going or in the g am e for a s long as it has been p ro fe ssio n a l, 3 player in the w orld. said Lendi the N The A rgentine has 30 d ay s to appeal the d ecision M IP T Í adm im trator M arsh all H apper said The R otterd am organ izers were found guilty of m aking illegal pay m en ts and w ere fined $ 1 0 .(XX) Kelly signs pact with Houston Gam biers H O U S T O N — F orm er U niversity o f M iam i quarterback Jim Kt ly, a first-round draft choice of the B u ffa lo B ills , signed an estim ated $ 3 .5 m illion contract with the H ouston G am b lers of the United State- F ootb all L e a g u e . In ad d ition , the G a m b lers signed K e l l y - room m ate of three y e a r s at M iam i, running back M ark R u sh , w ho w as a fourth-round choice o f the N ation al F ootb all L e a g u e ’ s M in nesota V ikin gs The G a m b le rs m ade form er T e x a s linebacker Kiki D eA y aia their first sign ee T u e sd a y , tw o m onths after form ation of the franchise which will begin play next M arch. K e lly , a reco rd -setting p asser at M iam i, reportedly received a Si m illion bonu s and $ 5 0 0 ,0 0 0 a year for five season s G a m b le rs principal ow ner Jerry A rg o v itz . a form er plavers agent announced the sign in g and com pared it to Jo e Nam ath s signing w ith the N ew Y ork Je ts o f the upstart A m erican Football L eagu e G a m b le rs o ffic ia ls w ould not d isclo se term s of the contract but The Buffalo News quoted an N F L source who called K e lly 's c announce the appointm ent There have been rep o n s that G arvey will announce his resignation from the NF1 PA Sunday at all aw ards banquet in ( hicago The Boston Globe reported that G ene I pshaw o f the L o s A n geles ed pri sident for the past three y ears, will sue R aider . the ur lor tem porarily G arvey The Globe s a id G arvey departure from the union which he ha­ led since 19 'o wa m otivated by family and pervwia! reasons n it pressu re f rom the union D uring hi- tenure G arvey brought the N F l.P A into the AF1 -C ID Í fie In 1982 he led the union s I 6(k) m em b ers on a 57-day strike strike ended when the union signed a four year $1 3 billion agree m ent with NFL ow ners Chicago names Loughery as head coach CHIC A G O K evin L ou gh ery sign ed a three-year contrast to l< use strong d efcn -. to co ach the C h ic a g o B u ll- and -aid he hopt g u id e them into the play of: Loughery had a .e a r rem aining on hi- $2(X).(XXi contract with the Atlanta H aw k- when he signed with the Hulls fo r a reported $250.(100 a year Loughery rep lace s Paul W esthead who w as fired last month He inherit- a 2 * 54 team that su ffered it second-w orst season last year The Ha; - have m ade the p lay o ff- once in the l ast six years From soach m g against lo he im provem ent defensively ence the B u lls) I can say there definitely need- l oughery said at a new s co n fe r­ Bull- general m anager R o d T h om s a ,d Loughery was chosen oe a good g am e ..ar d e¿, with, people Th om w a- an cau -c he is co ach and a m otivator wh a--istant eoa-h unde- L „ t her\ w in *he A BA New York Nets the top d efen sive coach in the N B A American cyclists compete in Austin area The Pan A m erican Selectio n ka«.e- begin Friday and continue tor tw o w eeks ending Jurn 21 Ra^er- receiving the fastest tim es will represent the I mted S l a t e - ir the IX Pan A m erican G am es in ( ara- c a s . V en ezu ela, Aug 13-28 T im e trial- include the K y le race 9 a m Friday in Kvi e 25 m iles south of A ustin, and the San Antonio race. 1 :3 0 p m Sunday There will be other race- throughout the week O v e r 6 0 < »- lists , including the U S racing team and many O ly m ­ In four se a so n s at M iam i. K e lly , 2 3 , o f East Brady Pa passed t r pic h opefu l-, are stay ,ng in D obie C enter a sch ool record o f 5 .2 2 8 yards and 31 touchdow ns H e had a 54 co m pletion percentage M o re sports, p. 14 Slew O ’ G old, son of Triple Crown winner Seattle Slew, holds inside post position for Satu rd ay’s Belmont Stakes. United Press International Slew O ’ Gold favorite at Belmont United Press International N EW Y O R K S le w O ' G o ld , the f a ­ vorite tor S a tu rd a y 's 1 15th B elm ont S ta k e s, T h u rsd ay drew the N o 1 post position for the third jew el o f thoroughbred ra c in g ’ s T riple C row n On the 10th anniversary o f S e cre ta ria t’ s 31 -length B elm on t trium ph. Slew O ’ G o ld , son o f 1^77 f ripie C row n winner Seattle Siew . w as picked as the 2-1 tavorite. C a v e ­ at. the secon d choice at 5 -2 , drew the N o. 7 post I In inside post may not be preferable for Slew O ’ G o ld , w ho cam e from the m iddle o f the track to win the recent Peter Pan S ta k e s by 12 len gth s, g o in g I 1/* m iles in a stak es-reco rd Sid W atters Jr. w as not d ism a y ed . 1 :4 6 .8 . But T rainer “ I think h e ’ s a s fit as he can be right n o w ,” said W atters, w ho w atched his h an d som e bay colt w ork six fu rlon gs in a brisk 1 :1 1 .2 with jo c k e y A n gel C o rd ero this w eek. “ If h e ’ s not read y now , he sure w o n ’ t be by S a tu r d a y .” W atters w as sure the w eather w ould not m ake a d ifferen ce to Slew O ’ G o ld , who won the Peter Pan in the mud. P reakness ch am pion D eputed T estam o- n v. w hose endurance is q u estio n able for the grueling I'/:-m ile B e lm on t, w as listed as the 8-1, tou n h ch o ice after draw in g the 14 post H igh H o n o rs, a strong can didate for an upset, is listed as 6-1 and has the eighth post positio n . T ab bed at 15-1 alo n g with C urrent H ope were M e g atu m . co m in g out o f the N o. 2 post and D ix ielan d B an d , the P en nsylvania Derby ch am pion w ho drew the 11th p o s i­ tion. / / SUMMER FUNn adidas Mr • " * ' « • 0 i l a h | h i a i M | 15% OFF HHM Y-M ONMY CHOOSEFVOM "AMOAS, DOLPHIN 477-6443 2416 GUADALUPE *1295 A V A J L A B lf IN T A N 01 B U I T H E J O C K S H O P THE POSSE 'Orive Thru Service' Rio G r a n d e at 24th 478-6583 16 gal. 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OR LIGHT 12 N R B o M w SHINER BOCK 6 N R BofHes 7 » ML / 3 w M L » 750 ML. 9.99 750 ML. 7*99 4.99 750 ML. 9.99 1.75 LT. 17.99 1.75 LT. 6.69 1.75 LT. 16.69 1.75 LT. 7.99 1.75 LT. 9.99 1.75 LT. 9.79 7 5 0 ML. 5.99 7 5 0 ML. 5.48 750 ML 4.48 750 ML. 6.38 a 5.99 7 5 0 ML 3.79 lt 6.48 l t . 4.89 l t . 4.99 12 PACK 4.49 12 PACK 4.79 12 PACK 3.59 6 PACK 2.1 9 w MEDIA BLASTS B \ RAY Y DOYAG A Daily Texan S ta ff T he R it/ goes b a ck to m ovies Renovation taking place at A u stin 's R it/ Theatre will transform the current music show case back into its original function — a m ovie theater. I he R it/' m anagem ent re­ cently bought out a film house in Fort W orth and transferred the th ea ter’s m ovie equipm ent and seats to The Rit/.. The new movie house will include both 16 and .bm iti projectors and will show retrospec­ tive t i h i i s . I he theater should begin opera­ ting m July 1 he R it/ will feature occasion­ al music concerts. El P aso b a n s ro c k c o n ce rts 1 he afterm ath o f The Clash concert in El Paso last m onth has prom pted the city to ban all “ haul ro c k " concerts from the C iv­ ic Centet I heater. The director o f the Civic Ccntci announced W ednesday that because of extensive dam age to the c en ter's facili­ t i e s incuri d from four different rock con­ certs over the past two years, the city will mi longer accept bookings for rock groups which attract "d e stru ctiv e, spaced-out, ob­ n o x io u s" audiences. In a recent perform - fm ce by the C lash, the audience tore out a V entilator grill, slam m ed a m agnetic door ¡¡holder into a w all, dam aged sliding seats find burned holes in the theater's chairs and % carpets. Hie C ivic C enter also announced the form ation o f a com m ittee to determ ine ivhethcr future soft rock m usic acts are suit­ a b le for the theater. M eanw hile, the Civic t enter T heater will continue to feature fine «rts fare EM I re le ases cheap digital disk The British record label EMI is releas­ ing the first 45 digital disk. Side one is playable on any conventional audio unit and features C h r i s Sievey & the Fleshies per­ form ing "C am o u flag e ” The flipside fea­ tures the sam e num ber, except if you plug it i to i Sinclair /.X81 com puter the lyrics o f x song pop up on your video screen. Also on side tw o is a video gam e called "F ly in g T rains." devised by Chris Sievey, that is operable on either the Sinclair or Spectrum Í X hom e com puters. How much does the Jisk cost? low sum o f $2.15. DGA p u sh in g m inority hiring incredibly I he Two recent class-action, federal discrim ­ ination suits by the D irectors Guild o f A m erica has pushed som e o f H ollyw ood’s m ajor and m inor studios to begin talks over hiring practices for m inorities and wom en. M inority m em bers holding guild m em ber­ ship have been hired for less than 5 percent of all film w ork in the country. W om en and m inority m em bers, how ever, com prise 10 percent of the guild The studios may be quite receptive to the D G A 's dem ands be­ cause the studios are fearful of a major backlash by the press oxer the lack of m i­ nority representation in feature films. N ear rio t o v e r ‘J e d i ’ thought A sell-out ‘Return o f the J c d i" crowd in Beach Haven Park, a suburb o f Atlantic C ity, staged a near-riot May 31 when they m istakenly the projectionist was playing the w rong reels. As the second reel started, shouting some patrons began "w ro n g reel, wrong r e e l." The film was stopped and after checking to see that reels were m proper order, was re-started. This iction, how ever, did not seem to satiate the crowds Som e patrons began throw ing bot­ tles at the screen, while others, trying to take m atters into their own hands, clim bed mto the projectionist’s booth. Police even­ tually restored order, and all 500 patrons were either given a full refund or passes for a future show The theater still insists the film had been correctly In other " J e d i" new s, a 35m m print o f the 1dm was stolen from a South C arolina theater. This could mean the print will be on videotape much sooner than Lucasfilm Productions had in m ind. G eorge Lucas probably isn’t spending sleepless nights over the theft; " J e d i’s " 12-day take o f $72 m illion should keep him sm iling for quite a while. C B S program s C hinese TV run A m erican television view ers may still be com plaining about the poor quality o f net­ work program m ing, but C hina is apparently f ascinated enough by our culture to air even some o f C B S ' rejected pilots In an agree­ m ent signed last w eek, CBS Broadcast In­ ternational w ill supply Chinese Central T elevision with 64 hours o f program m ing, starting in O ctober. As part o f the agree­ m ent, C C T V w ill get som e o f the CBS pilot show s w hich have never been aired on A m erican television. The CBS show s will broadcast daily in C hina from 8 to 9 p .m ., follow ing the C CTV news. CBS will also to 10 unspecified sell com m ercial com panies and will split take with C C T V . C B S will program sports, new s, sitcom s and variety entertainm ent that is e x ­ pected to be w atched by over 400 m illion C hinese. L en n on ’s jo u rn a l m issing tim e the Four o f five diaries kept by John Lennon that w ere stolen and then recovered last m onth w ere finally returned to Y oko Ono. Fred S eam an, a form er L ennon em ployee, pleaded guilty to the theft o f four of the diaries. But the fifth volum e o f the journal was not in S e a m a n 's possession at the time he was arrested by police. H ow ever, all five volum es w ere reported stolen on the sam e day. K Liberty Lunch: sitting on coveted grounds By RUSSELL SC O TT Daily Texan S taff Liberty Lunch. 405 W Second S t.. is like an old greasy steam locom otive in an age o f stream lined bullet trains. As m usic establishm ents on Sixth Street becom e slicker, four blocks to the south " th e L unch” chugs along, clam oring to its ow n rhythm anud the tim e-w orn rails of the M issouri Pacific Railroad sw itching yard and its surrounding w arehouse district. flashier and m ore sterile, The c lu b ’s history is long and varied. C irca 1942 the name Liberty Lunch was given to the small cafe in patriotic support o f A m erica’s W orld W ar II l iberty Bond program W hat is now the outdoor stage was a lum ber yard glue house. In the 1950s the cafe tailed. T enants, including a tam ale factory and a flea m arket, conducted busi­ the c a fe ’s the confines o f ness within scarred brick walls. Now a bastion for artis­ try as diverse as jaz z, reggae, traditional black blues. C hicano m usic and experim en­ tal com edy, " th e L unch” is threatened by the very foundations that support its quaint, creaky structure. lovers have The City o f Austin ow ns the soil that thousands ot m usic trodden through years of dancing and m errim ent. And it is the City o f A ustin that wants to build a new city hall com plex on the three and one-half blocks o f property it ow ns in and around Liberty Lunch. A nother chapter o f Austin grow th be­ Jim Sigm on, D aily Texan S ta ll gins. O ther, now fam iliar stories deal with this sam e issue: old and established vs new and progressive; East Austin vs. the U ni­ versity; west cam pus vs. the condom ini­ um s. and the A rm adillo W orld H eadquar­ ters vs the bulldozers o f developers. fact T he the city ow ns Liberty L u n ch 's land may be a m ixed blessing. that Public outcry has little effect on private d e ­ velopers who are concerned only with their own interests But city politicians will have to listen to their constituency. Liberty Lunch m anager Mark P rat/ c o n ­ trasts his c lu b 's dilem m a to that o f the A r­ m adillo W orld H eadquarters, dem olished in "T h e difference betw een us and the 1981 A rm adillo is that the city d id n ’t ow n the the property that the A rm adillo was on. There were a lot o f people in city governm ent that would have liked to have saved it. I think the only thing that can keep this place going is general public interest in the idea that another music hall is unw illingly going to go dow n the tubes. One thing people need to be aware o f is that this place is definitely in danger, and anyone who is politically aware at all should contact the city govern­ ment if they want to see us survive here. " W hile the new m unicipal com plex is not even on the drafting table yet, city officials are aware there m ay be an alternative to dem olition — if the public wants one. Jo ­ seph M orahan, the c ity ’s assistant director o f public w orks, adm its " I think it (the three and one-half block land parcel) will have to be a part o f the com plex in some form or another. W hat will stay or go is part o f the next planning phase, and there will be opportunity for public input in those d e ­ c isio n s." Planners will save an historical landm ark directly to the east o f Liberty Lunch, but says M orahan, "A n y th in g else may or may not be there after it’s all said and d o n e ." W hether any effort that develops to save Liberty Lunch grow s into a full-blow n bat­ tle or peters out after a quick skirm ish, the fight will be a litm us test o f the c ity 's sup­ posedly intelligent and sensitive growth policies. Union offers critics’ picks REEL TO REEL By JO H N STO K ES D aily Texan S ta ff " I f you had to choose 10 film s which you would take with you to a desert island, what w ould they b e ? ” to the classic “ desert One hundred tw enty-five film critics re ­ islan d " sponded query in a recent issue o f the film publica­ tion Sight and Sound W hile som e o f the choices were predictable — O rson W elles’ "C itiz en K ane” received the most votes — a few surprises turned up; Alfred H itch­ c o ck ’s " V e r tig o ,” instance, placed ninth. for the University Being offered at is a course with the deceptive title o f “ History in o f Russian and East European F ilm " w hich the 15 film s receiving the most votes are being show n. If y o u ’re enrolled in the course, all the better. If not, d o n ’t despair: the T exas U n­ ion scheduled 11 o f these film s as part o f its sum m er series. U nfortunately, three o f these have already been shown: the afore­ m entioned "C itiz e n K a n e ," Jean R enoir's " T h e Rules o f the G a m e " (ranked second) and Buster K eaton’s “ The G e n era l" (ranked 10th). The good news is that both “ Citizen K a n e " and "R u le s o f the G a m e " will be show n at C inem aT exas next week The schedule o f film s this series, along with their rankings in the poll, is as follow s: in ■ M onday: " T h e M agnificent Amber- s o n s ," O rson W elles (8). ■ W ednesday: " T h e Third M a n ." Carol Reed (15). ley Donen (4). ■ June 19: "S in g in g in the R a m .” Stan­ ■ June 19 & 20 " T h e Seven S am u rai" (uncut version), Akira K urosaw a (3) ■ June 22: " T h e S e a rch e rs." John Ford ( 1 1 ). ■ June 27: " L ’A v v e n tu ra." M ichelan­ gelo A ntonioni (7). ■ June 29: " 8 '/2 . ’’ Federico Fellini (5) ■ July 4-6: "2 0 0 1 : A Space O d y s se y ," Stanley K ubrick (12) For the curious, the w inners in the poll not being shown are E isenstein’s " B a ttle ­ ship P otem kin" (6), Andrei T arkovsky’s "A n d rei R o u b lev " (13) and S troheim 's " G re e d ” (14). Finally, there are some films the Union will be show ing which som e believe should be on the list, am ong them " T h e Seventh S e a l," " L a S tra d a ," " C a sa b la n c a .” " 4 0 0 B lo w s" and "G ran d Illu sio n ." C heck the U nion’s schedule and choose the 10 or more film s y o u ’d m ost like to see. film ’s original uncut version), it recalls H ollyw ood at its most epic — but goes Hol­ lywood one better by m anaging to sustain the integrity o f its them e throughout the film. That them e tries to reconcile justifiable com m unal fury — war and w arriors — with the decency o f civilized individuals. By the end o f the m ovie, the initially tim id villag­ ers are operating in a concerted hoard to impale the hated brigands one by one on sharpened sticks. " T h e Seven S a m u rai" urges a war cry, then asks one to let it die in the throat. " S a m u ra i" has been definitive in the his­ tory o f adventure film s. Sam Peckinpah has acknow ledged it as the source for his use of slow m otion in " T h e W ild B u n c h ." The film is a direct precedent for G eorge L ucas’ " S ta r W ars" saga, an influence perhaps ac­ (with knowledged by L u cas’ Francis Ford C oppola) o f U .S. distribution o f K urosaw a's 1981 film , " K a g e m u s h a ." financing A scene from the St. Edw ard's T heatre production o f ‘The Good Doctor' NIGHTWATCH By C A TH Y RAGLAND and DA RBY SM OTHERM AN " Please send m e evenings and w e ek ­ ends, ’' - The G ang o f Four. Those o f you who spent part o f last w eekend at the N ight Life, like we did, will probably agree the c lu b ’»' grand re­ opening w as a huge success I he Standing W aves sounded tighter than ever; M ax and the M ake-U ps were better than ever; it was a treat seeing Patrick Keel on stage again; and the new m usic videos added still anoth er feature to the c lu b ’s seemingly endless and alw ays exciting brand ol entertainm ent recent LP, outdoor music And if you h av en 't been out to A ustin's new est hotspot. The M eadow s, this w eekend offers you at least three gixxl reasons to head on over To be gin w ith, the B52s and the B lasters will undoubtedly blow everyone away Friday night. T h a t's right, that wacky, spaced-out and group o f aliens from Athens, Cía A m erica's hottest rockabilly sensation from LA will be together on the same bill Also on the sam e stage, though it may seem too gixxi to be true, will be everybody’s favor­ the J itte r s , along with D avid Bean ite o f Judys fam e It’ll be interesting to see what h e 's been up to since the band's heart breaking dem ise Show tim e is set for 6 p.m The second reason is none other than U2 on Saturday I his group ot Irish song­ sters has been sw eeping the country with their spirited, heartfelt m usic, and the " W a r ." has b and's m ost If received well deserved critical acclaim you h a v en ’t seen this band perform before, be prepared for som ething really special The show will begin at 8 p m and plan on getting there early enough to catch The from W ales A larm , a band originally whose opening gig will maik their tirst ap­ pearance in the United States The band is gaining popularity in the U K , where they have a single clim bing the British Hot 100 Chart Reason No 3 is “ deh reggae m usic m o n ” with P re ss u re topping the bill and additional music by I he R a ft, J u d a s S t a r r , I r ib a n a and T he T rinidad Steel Band on Sunday To assure plenty of play­ ing tim e for each o f the bands, the music will start at 4 p in. and continue well into the night The cover is a mere $3, but check this: you can get in absolutely free with a ticket stub from either the B 52’s or U2 You can t beat that price anywhere! So, a f­ ter spending the w eekend basking in the sun, take this opportunity to kick off your shoes and cool o ff with some o f A ustin’s finest reggae sounds. If m usic and the outdoors d o n ’t sound like a w elcom e com bination, then you may want to check in on Steve G oodm an and N anci G riffith at Soap Creek Sahxin on either Friday or Saturday night Gixxlman is touring in support of his new LP " A rtis­ tic H air” and the sedating if you sounds o f an all acoustic set of m usic, then this may be your best bet Hoot Night at Soap C reek Saloon continues every Sunday this m onth with the vibrant and highly orig­ inal folk tunes provided by Nanci Griffith A dditionally. Roky Erickson is still a p ­ pearing every W ednesday in June as are The Lotions on each Tuesday like the Still not satisfied? W ell, grab a pardner and shuffle on over to Liberty Lunch Sun­ day night for the W estern Sw ingfest 1983 featuring im m ortal Texas Playboys T here a in ’t nobody that can play country sw ing like these good 'ol boys. O pening the show for the Playboys will be Al Dressen and the Sw in g Review. There will be two show s, 5:30 and 9 p.m . favorites sharing In case sw ing a in ’t your thing, but blues is your bag, then Antone s is the place to take it and shake it this weekend. Last Fri­ day we incorrectly stated Johnny Reno and T he Sax M aniacs would appear. N ev­ er too proud to admit our m istakes, we send out sincere apologies to all the nice people at A ntone’s and are happy to announce Johnny Reno will appear — for sure — on Friday. Saturday m ight seem like down- hom e night at Antone s with two of Aus*- the bill tin ’s all-tim e A ngela S treh li, our lucky c ity ’s own bluesy m am a, will fire it up and surely keep everybody c o o k in ’ along with Twine Time D J. Paul Ray and The Raytones. Sunday night will see Duke Tom ato doing some lean, m ean rhythm and blues Boogie dow n. And to start the week off right on M onday, Angela will be back along with L ew is and T he Legends. To top it all off, that m ighty tight w om an. Koko Taylor, will be in tow n Tuesday to sing her heart out and let us all know what them ol' blues are really about. A lso on T uesday, at 6th Street Live, Flo­ ra Purim and Airto M oriera will most likely satisfy anyone whose lean m ore tow ard the jazzy side of life tastes A fter all this, if you still c a n ’t find any­ thing to do Friday night, check out The Su pern atural Fam ily Band at the Dam Sa loon. O r perhaps the ballet is where you’d rather be If so, the Austin Civic Ballet will be sponsoring Ballet Under the Stars Fri day and Saturday at the Zilker Hillside The atre. We hear that picnic baskets and kids are the thing to bring, admission is tree, the perform ances begin at 8:30 p m U2 plays the Meadows Saturday night the Austin skies w ill be filled with the em otionally charged m usic o f Ireland’s U 2. Originally formed by four high school b oys, U 2 ’s sound has grown and matured since its highly acclaim ed 1981 album 'B o y .' Still continuing with its direct and con scien tiou s approach to life and m usic, U2 has won the hearts and souls o f audiences w orldw ide. The M eadow s is on 1H 35 near the South C ongress Avenue exit. ‘Seven Samurai’: adventurous masterpiece returns T oshiro M ifune plays K ikuchiyo, the aspiring sam urai, in ‘Seven Sam urai.' enigm atic in their blend o f courtliness, gal­ lantry and capacity for unrepentent vio­ lence. " T h e Seven S am u rai” boasts a m ajestic script em bracing several subplots and ac­ cessory personalities. Film ed in black and white in 1954, and m ore than three hours the long (the V arsity’s current print is St. Edward’s theater group delivers healthy ‘Doctor’ REEL TO REEL By M ICHAEL SAENZ Daily Texan S ta ff “ The Seven S am u rai" ; directed by Akira K urosaw a; w ith T osh iro M ifune, T akashi Shim ura and Seiji M iyagushi; in Japanese with English su btitles; at the Varsity Theatre. It would be hard to im agine a m ovie — including "R e tu rn o f the J e d i" — more able to transport its audience to another world than " T h e Seven S a m u ra i." The film , universally regarded since its 1954 d e ­ but as director Akira K urosaw a’s m aster­ piece, offers Am erican audiences at least three layers o f disbelief, each o f which it m asterfully proceeds to suspend. Set in 16th century Japan " T h e Seven S am u rai" centers about the fate o f a poor village annually plundered by brigands. Its chief characters, o f course, are the defend­ ers hired by the town — a band o f warriors O N STAGE By M ARILYN RU CK ER D aily Texan S taff “ The G ood D octor" ; by Neil Sim on; with Flora Plum b and Jam es Daniels; at 8 p .m . T uesdays through Satu rd ays until June 19; a t St. E d w ard ’s U niversity T he­ atre. St E dw ard’s U n iv ersity 's sum m er the­ ater series got o ff to an excellent start with its first perform ance o f " T h e G ood D oc­ to r" Tuesday. The cast succeeded in bring­ ing out both the hum or and poignancy of this Neil Simon play about everyday R us­ sian life. A few of the scenes, such as "T h e S n e e z e ," seem ed to last too long for their own good, but for the m ost part the show was well planned and perform ed. The play is com posed o f a series o f acts that are each a com plete short story. Jam es D aniels, playing the w riter w ho narrates each episode and, in one o f the vignettes, an adulterer, stood out as a fine actor. W hen he was on stage the energy o f all the perform ers was high and the play moved along nicely. W hen he left, the perform ­ ance som etim es lim ped but was usually saved by the skill o f Scott A llen, who was form idable as a m inister o f parks and a re­ tired m ilitary officer. Lending vigor too was the perform ance o f Maia Forstchen, w ho did a rem arkable job as the nervous young actress in " T h e A u d itio n ." Flora Plum b, who along with D aniels is a guest artist in the sum m er series, was w on­ derful w henever she appeared on stage — w hich was not as often as one would wish. She has a lovely singing voice, as dem on strated in a duet she perform ed with D aniels during the first act. W ith these com petent perform ers, the brilliant w riting o f Neil Sim on is properly brought to life. " T h e S ed u ctio n " — in w hich D aniels plays a rascal w ho seduces other m en ’s w ives, using the unw itting hus­ bands as liaisons — was beautifully and im pressive sm txxhly perform ed. Equally was the m eeting o f the old man and w om an played by Plum b and D aniels in " T o o Late For H a p p in e ss." A llen and M att Lagan delivered the m ost com ic perform ance o f the evening, w hen, in " A Q uiet W a r ," they argued for dear life over w hat com poses the w o rld 's best possible lunch. T he St. E dw ard’s com pany has presented an entertaining, solid show , with m any m ore good m om ents than slow ones. One hopes the rest o f this su m m er's series will continue to be as im pressive. Toback 4 manhandles9 Kinski REEL TO REEL By SAM HO D aily Texan S taff “ Exposed” ; directed by James Toback; with Natassia Kinski and Rudolf Nureyev; at the Vil­ lage Cinema 4. Rating: ir In this age of the child-woman, when Brooke Shields sells jeans and goes to Princeton while Jodie Poster goes to Yale and dodges maniacs, N a ­ tassia Kinski may be the ultimate child-woman. Kinski's child like quality makes her a filmmaker s dream For central to all narrative arts is the notion of change; in a temporal passage, characters must undergo it Kinski, the child-wom an as tabula rasa. lends herself naturally to portraying such transfor­ mations by virtue of a moldability that can make the most incredible changes look convincing. In “ Exposed this pliability is used to depict the story of a woman whose life is shaped by the men around her. Kinski is Elizabeth Carlson, a farm girl from Wisconsin who dreams of becoming a concert pianist in New York. To fulfill her dream, she leaves her English professor and lover, who tries desperately to possess and dominate her. Fleeing to New York, she is quickly disillusioned and settles for a job as a waitress. But sh e's discovered by an Avedon-like photographer who turns her into an international cover girl Bored with her glamorous, lonely profession, she is suddenly swept off her feet by a violinist who moonlights as an anti-terror- ist. She is so in love with him she agrees to help him track down an terrorist, who turns out to be another charismatic man who orders his groupie assassins about with an irresistible stare Through these adventures, Elizabeth comes of age, confronting such profundities as love, death and the power that comes with it. and art James Toback must be an ambitious filmmaker To secure full artistic freedom, Toback wrote, pro­ duced and directed “ E xposed” himself U nfor­ filmmaker is also an tunately. Toback Trying to be both innovative and profound, he has written his scenario with total disregard for narra­ tive unity The only link between the film 's various parts is the phvsical presence of Kinski, whose international inept sensuality is wasted on a futile attempt to blend eroticism with intelligence In one pseudo erotic scene, Toback has Kinski disco dance alone in her apartment in quasi masturbatory poses as ludicrous as they are revolting As a director, Toback has little sense of cinemat ic rhythm The film moves sluggishly And his frequent use of long takes and slow pans is not supported by an effective rapport between the char acters and the cam era As a result, the dialogues in “ E x p o s e d " sound like soliloquies whose sole in tent is to showcase Toback s reactionary and pre tentious world view In c in e m a's post modernist era, many lesser di rectors have relied on self-reflexivity as a license guaranteeing artfulness In an attempt to accom plish cinematic self awareness, Toback c a s t s him self as Kinski's English professor With a suppos edly self-mocking but actually narcissistic manner, he tries to impress Kinski by quoting Goethe and reading lines such as “ the western world is break ing down, the only routes of escape are art and romantic love ' ’ Passing off his existential angst as mating calls, Toback relegates Kinski to an object of lust And this sexist attitude is expressed by every male in the film. In another pseudo-erotic moment, the violin ist literally plays Kinski as an instrument, running his bow acrosss her body as part of an attempt to seduce her. Sadly, Kinski's character appears to enjoy it. This treatment of women in “ E xposed” repre­ sents a male wish-fulfillment frequent in recent films. Actresses like Kinski. Debra Winger (in “ Urban C o w b o y ” and “ An Officer and a G entle ­ m a n ” ) and Jennifer Beal (in “ Flashdance” ) invari­ ably play strong and independent wom en who eventually succumb to the domination o f men Not accidentally, these actresses all carry dark features and masculine personalities, much like the fem m es fatales o f post-World War II film n o n Whereas the male faction in the 1440s and 1950s dealt with the threatening rise o f feminine rights by casting w o m ­ en as conniving tem ptresses, the l9X0s evidences the appearance o f strong women who long for m a­ ch o subjugation Perhaps the child-woman phe­ nomenon o f our time is a disguised manifestation of the attitude that the ideal female is one who remains yet to be shaped C om edy television star Shirley Hemphill Comedienne wins workshop laughs O N STAGE By KARLA TA Y LO R and KEVIN R U NY O N Daily Texan Staff Shirley Hemphill; Comedy Workshop; through Sunday. In a town brimming with options for ntertair ment, Austin s Comedy Workshop |V> St , offers a less-than-usual alternative a r, + ast tor stand up comedy The workshop pr rum for local and national comedian their material in a nightclub atmosphere j I present . n W Tuesday s three act show opened with Austin comedian Ron La íouf La fr u í ipenirig stint designed as a crowd warm up hard!, had the audi ence in a fever pitch He showed boldness, though in trying to energize a bland crowd His erratic material ranged from blase airplane jokes to fair impressions La T o u t's performance was tin. weal to overcom e the audience s apathy A stronger delivery followed with the second act, Jon Hay man This native New Yorker livened the pace with his Yankee and ethnic humor The stirred enthusiasm more experienced Havman the audience his through his sharp, witty ad libbing demonstrated keen pr te' sionalism interaction with Nor did Shirley Hemphill, the show's top-billed celebrity attraction, disappoint the audience A vet eran of the television shows “ W hat's H appening’ and “ One in a Million, she illustrated solid c mic ability Bantering with her audience rather than us ing prepared lines. Hemphill cajoled them mis chievously She toyed with the sacred topic' of love, families and relationships Flaying match maker from the stage, she fixed up total strangers At times, she seemed to lose the crowd's attention by dragging out this ploy She did. however ap peal to her audience with her clever dialogue The whole show was entertaining, but marred bv the comics' habitual use of prolanity The enter tamers needed to distinguish between profanity as a comedy t(X )l and a performing crutch 2915 G uadalupe 474-5314 Fr & Sot Angela StreM Band and Roomful of Blues • East Coast R & B. H a p p y H o u r m u sic b y D a n n y F r e e m a n & K a i K a z a n o f f Happy Hour 6-8 M-F Buffet served 6 pm-2 am Fri. & 9-2 am Sat. BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... WANT ADS...471 -5244 GREEKS PIZZERIA H ave you h a d a piece today? FREE D ELIVERY includes downtown 8 " , 1 2 " , & 1 6 " Pi z z a s 4 7 4-4 4 33 J'rifZ fk *¿> i t H e cH tt‘r any size p a r ty H d if fe r e n t t y p e s o f S a n d w ic h e s ! ■'yf 2814 Nueces, on the drag Adjacent to McDonalds near 29th i Guadalupe FREE P I Z Z A ! with Medium or Large Pizza ordered get one 8 2 -item p-zza of y o u r choice / offer p e r order E R L O O N W A T A F I R S T P R P R O D U C T N E S E T R E C O R D S I O N S D N E W O R D E R GAME ROOM IN TOWN!! A u a í c h a S e t t HAPPY HOUR 12 NOON TIL 2 AM 7 DAYS A WEEK 250 Beer, Wine & $2. Pitchers fb&td $1. Import Bottled Beer! Moosehead • Molson • Heinekin 26th & the DRAG openioam-4AM S U N D A Y • J U N E • 19 A T N I G H T L I F E F O R M E R L Y C L U B F O O T O N L Y T E X A S A P P E A R A N C E IN AUSTIN: HASTINGS O N THE DRAG - HASTINGS O N ANDERSON TREASURED TRACS - INNER SANCTUM - WATERLOO RECORDS - NIGHTLIFE BOX OFFICE (FORMERLY CLUB FOOT). Proudly Present The 2nd Annual HOTTER THAN JULY FESTIVAL June 19th, 1983 Auditorium Shores 12:00 Noon till 6:00 p.m. Continuous live entertainm ent featuring: The Hot Contem porary J a z z Sounds of fB E E fA L L The H igh E n erg y M usic o f BLUE MIST Grammy A w ard W inner JOE SIMON and Simon the Clown Beer, S o ft Drinks and Food Available • No Coolers, Please FREE ADMISSION All P ro c e e d s B e n e fit H u sto n I illo ts o n College oustin A R M Y * NAY Y J PAG E 12/THE D A IL Y TEXAN TKIDAY, |UNt 10, 1SHJ U c ? H H V • • • • • • • • • • • • • t o n i g h t a n d Sa t u r d a y STEVE GO O DM AN with N A N C I GRIFFITH FERRARI ITALIAN ■ r e s t a u r a n t ! 340 0 N. L A M A R SUN THRU THURS 1 1 A M TO 11 PM 452-3771 FRI & SAT 11 A M TO 12 PM * ^\utc ¿ Sfiec¿&¿& Offering A Complete Italian Menu * DINNERS Spaghetti Baked Lasagna Ravioli Manicotti Canelloni V eal Parm igiana Fettucini Alfedo STROMBOLLI SUBMARINES Steak, onion, cheese C old Cut Eggplant M e a t Ball Sausage Steamboat |fg M ( 403 E SIXTH 478 2912 ) M p H 5 th Anniversary Tonite! Big Party With 14Kjust $3.50 Saturday The return of PRESSURE R eg ga e $3.50 BEER WINE KEG SPECIAL: KEGS BUDW EISER Michelob_______________________ (i b gai.) 4 4 . 9 5 (16 gal.) 3 9 . 9 5 Coors & Coors Lite pk & deposit) 2 . 3 5 N E W FRO M G ERM ANY: H EW N IN C ER N E W FRO M C A N A D A : O'KEEFE (6Pk) 3 . 6 9 ,6 Pk, 4 . 4 9 BEST B.B.Q. IN TO W N BRISKET RIBS 705 W. 29th 5.30 (lb.) 2.70 (lb.) MOST OF PEEWEE’S CUSTOMERS ARE OUT TO LUNCH. Y o u c a n s e e th at d a z e d lo o k in th e ir e y e s w h ile t h e y re s ittin g t h e r e w a itin g to d ig in to a b ig p la t e o f P e e w e e s m o u th w a te r in m e s q u it e s m o k e d b a r b e q u e T h e y r a v e a b o u t th e t e n d e r b r is k e t a n d h a m w ith P e e w e e s s p e c i a l b a r b e q u e s a u c e A n d t h o s e b ig , m e a ty ribs a r e enough to d r iv e a n y o n e a little c r a z y G uess that's w h y m o s t o f P e e w e e s c u s t o m e r s are out 719 CongroM Avonuo • 472-5411 to lunch. Even at d in n e r N o th in g fan cy, just go o d barbeque. 1400 Barton Springs Road behind the Mobil station 473-8675 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT ALL UTTM OUTLETS P ark in g av*il» b l» in ih# LITTLEFIELD GARAGE • 508 BRAZOS Friday George Ensle and Ramblers " C A F E A N D B A Hi Located in the Texas Union, main level M f U U D L l E a g le Ladies night, ladies get in free and first drink free Gold Rush Mountain Band M en $3.00 tom orrow Cripple Creek Su n d a y a fter the lake p a r t y with Extreme Heat $3.00 cover, no dress code, w om en in bath in g suits free S I . 25 frozen m a rga rita s 5337 Highway 290 W 892-2151 GENERAL CINEMA THEATRES 3-00 I f i . W W SUN AHOtlDArS FM ATIN tt SHOW ONIV I Cindhi. ±r% A f t MON THRU SAT A ll SHOWS BOOR! 6PM JED I NO BARGAIN MAIINII HIIDRIN i Under 12) S2 SO AUIIMIS \ r l~ HIGHLAND MALLCT * # A 451-7326 HIGHLAND M A U BLVD. I Hum i f t ile * Be*41 i 12 - 2 :3 0 - 5:00 7 :3 0 - 10 :0 0 - 12:30 In 70m m D o lb y S te m o MAN WITH TWO HEADS 12:15-2:15-4:15 6:15-8:15-10:15 CAPITAL PLAZA c,,riPfflA 452-7646 1-35 of CAMERON RD. RICHARD GERE in BREATHLESS 12:20-2 20-4 20 6 20-8 20 10:10 !R, “ O C T O P IS S Y ” (PG) 12 - 2 : 3 0 - 5:00 7 :3 0 - 10:00 “A BOY AND HIS DOG” 2:00-4 00-6:00 8 0 0 - 1 0 0 0 Starring 11 Christine Craig Us OPENS 8 0 0 STARTS DUSK A U S T I N 6 featuring . . . J O H N HOLMES G E O R G IN A S P E L V IN S E R E N A 5 1 2 T H O M P S O N o ff 1 8 3 1 Ml. So . of M O N T O P O L I S P H O N E : 3 8 5 - 6 3 2 * 2 4 H O U R A D U L T T H E A T R E C O M P L E X V I D E O TAPE RENTALS & SALES L A R G E S T S E L E C T I O N - L O W E S T P R I C E S UP TO « M O V E S ON SEPARATE 9 0 C B B FOR THE PHCE OF F IL T H Y R I C H E X T R E M E S L A D I E S N IG H T A U N T P E G S W E D I S H E R O T I C A A L L M A L E C A S T T H E 'v a r s i t y 2402 G UADALUPE 474-435' ONE WEEK ONLY WEEKDAYS: 7:30 TH E G R E A T E ST H U M A N SPE C TA C LE O F A L L TIM E ! SAT/SUN: (2:30) 7:30 TH E F I R S T T IM E E V E R - U N C U T VERS ION AKIRA KUROSAWA'S MASTERPIECE ilB M E lS E jK E W M UNIVERSAL AMUSEMENT ADULT THEATRES rue Finest In Adult Motion Picture Emenoirvnrni BR/DGETTE MONET r n x PLUS: OLYMPIC FEV ER X MARILYN CHAM BERS is f e a t u rin g J O H N C H O L M E S Also Sltrrma L IS A D E L E E U W % 1 I j f V * V PLUS: HONEYMOON HAVEN X M a tin e e s Daily N o O n e Under 18 Adm itted Late S h o w s Friday & Saturday Sundays Open Noon Please B ung I 0 s R eqaidless 01 Age L BU Y, SELL, RENT, TRADE... W ANT AD S...471 -5244 DAN AYKROYD EDDIE MURPHY They’re not just getting rich... They're getting even. FOX TRIPLEXLEX» M »p 1 2 :4 5 -2 :3 0 -5 :1 5 -7 :4 5 -1 0 :1 5 -1 2 :1 5 amc THEATRES P---- TIMES SH O W N FO R TODAY ONL Y ( a a a a Mm T W I L IT E P R IC E S M O N -S A T S U N D A Y A N D H O L ID A Y S . L I M I T E D T O S E A T IN G A L L S H O W S B E F O R E 6 : 0 0 P M . 1 f t S H O W O N L Y # A K a a NORTHCROSS 6 < ^ L M O R T H C R O S 8 M A L L 4 7 a NOERSON 8 B U R N I T P S Y C H O I I 12 15-2 30-5:00 12 00 7:30-9:55-12:15 r=•> |R| T IM E B A N D IT S (12:30-2:45-5:00 *2.00) R o y S c h a id e r BLUE TMI SCBffN 1: ,12.30-3:00-5.3 SCREEN 2 '2 00 4 30 $2 Pol |K¡ IN D E R M alcolm M cD ow all 0 *2.00)-8:00-10:15 ,00)-7 00-9 30-11:45 SPACEHUNTER (3 -D ) P G (1:30-3 45-6:00 *2.00)- 815 10:15 F L A S H D A N C E (12:45-2:45-5:00 7:15-9:30 1 *2.00)- r=i |R| 4 1 J 1 1 1 I I A Q U A R IU S 4 r F L A S H D A N C E r=r-i |R| (12:45-3:00-5:30 7:45-9:55 *2.00)- ^ 4 4 4 -3 2 2 2 ’ *oo » rl* a *4Nt | RETURN OF THE IE D I Special Engaqement N o passes o i discounts p Q 10:30-1:15-4:00-7:00-9:45 B R E A T H L E S S (12:45-3:00-5:30 *2 00)- 7:45-9:55 r^T; I K THE MAN WITH TW O B R A M f r—, [Rj (12:30-2:30-5:45 la *2.00)- 8.00-10:15 II A M E R IC A N A ^ 4 5 3 -6 6 4 1 2200 H A N C O C K D R . , W A R G A M E S 7 0 M M 6-Track Dolby Stereo P Q ¡12:00 2 30-5:00 $2 501-7:30-9:55-12:15 II SO UTH W OOD 2 w, ’... .. ..... L 4 4 2 - 2 3 3 3 148* W. 08M W HIT* $ 4 0 0 A L L M O V I E S $ 4 0 0 1 E X C L U D IN G M ID N IG H T S H O W S ■ S W O R D to* STONE 12:00-2:15-445-7:00-9:30 (IQ] M Y T U T O R 1:00-3:15-5:30-7^5-9:55 [ft] f j g f i* V x u e rtU la te $ k o u * M id n ig h t S B ty M ti ¡ T i f f ? Ivjiu o x ^ an d S a tm d a q _ _ ^ ! l. ^ ll h e - J r i T s R R R i t f N IG H T OF THS L IV IN G D E A D « S H O W Y O U R K -C A R D s a b c< - u DLLIC TH U NDCR P|MN f l O Y D 'S TM« WAUL » FRIDAY TM t 13H iM (3>0 ) ■ (S. ; * , « ™ “ .‘ I ” o a , “ o m t M t k l j y i t i l M t W . O A D W * . . ! . » ■ S H O W Y O U R K -C A R D M T U R D A V NIG HT F I V I R « uÜS }|1* 12,15 l , „ « 5 » CHINESE KUNG FU s p ir it u a l k u n g fu O T IC n « « n w S0UTHW00D 2 1 2 :3 0 a.i SATURDAY ONLY A Film Dy P A O LO & VITTO RIO TAVIAN I Mtrmcrra -IS- Lapy/iqni R subtitled P R E S ID IO T H E A T R E S 2 7 0 0 A n d e r s o n 4 5 1 - 8 3 5 2 19*3 uraietMitists Classics A« (ujf's Hew/ec United Artists Classics EXCLUSIVE! 1:35-3:45 5:55-8:05-10:15 Soim-Nc-ri tuniTv business. REBEL Drioe-ln 6 9 0 2 B u r le s o n R o a d R a d io S o u n d S y s t e m 3 8 5 -7 2 1 7 P rivac y of Y o u r A u to X X X O rigin al U n cu t ; -viAMU'JNT PICTURES PRESENTS AN AARIJN RUSSO PRODUCTION A LANDIS, FOLSEY FILM d a n av k r o y d ed d ii m r p h y trading p lace s r a lp h B ellam y DON AMECHE: DENHOLM ELL I0TT ANO JAMIE LEE CURTIS MUSIC BY ELMER BERNSTE N : Xt JJTIVE PROOUCER GEORGE FOLSEY JR WRITTEN BY TIMOTHY HARRIS & HERSCHEL WEINGR00 PRODUCED B\ AARON RUSLO DIRECTED BY JOHN LANDIS A PARAMOUNT PICTURE - ZSZ « • ® R IT S 22 YEARS LATER. AND NORMAN BATES IS COMING HOME RTCHI R E S T R I C T E D “ S i r R U«W> IMIQUI4I5 » c c o a r « « * i » c u n i ! o i r o u t t c u M o i r a A UNIVERSAL-OAK PICTURE ; 196? Universal C ity Studios Inc (•»* industries SATURDAY, JUN E 11 Return of THE OICKS OFFENDERS BURN CENTER CATERED FULL BAR 12:15-2:30-5:00- 7:30-9:55-12:15 742B Ban Whila 444-055? 320 E. SIXTH 479-0054 PRESIDIO THEATRES 12:30-2:40-4:50- 7:20-9:40-12:00 BRUNCH Saturday and Sunday 11am to 4 pm Three blocks south o f 45th street on Duval. 4206 Duval 458-3168 $2.50 ALL S H O W S B E F O R E 6 P M 1 M O N TH R U FRI SAT /S U N 1ST S H O W O N L Y . FOX TRIPLEX 4 5 4 2 7 1 1 6 7 5 7 A IR P O R T B L V D | Something Wicked This Way Comes w 5 :4 5 -7 :4 5 -9 :4 5 Trading Places 1 2 :4 5 -2 :30 -5 :15 -7 :4 5 10:15-12:15 C h a in H eat j« ) 5 :0 0 -7 :1 5 -9 :3 0 MANN 3 WESTCATE 892 2775 4 60 S W E S T G A T E B L Blue Thunder («) 5 :1 5 -7 :3 0 -9 :4 5 Trading Places 1 2 :4 5 -2 :30 -5 :15 -7 :4 5 10:15-12:15 A free press: Your key to freedom. EMERALDS C0C0MUTS IO T M t, W . L V M N VdOMERS COTTON CUOTHCS I £ HOW yverjS Cotton <■ RpyoN S H r »TS r V > BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... WANT ADS...471 -5244 PRESIDIO THEATRES AUSTIN James Bond's all firm a( tion high FSYCMBS I Ik? Xight oft lie Sin Kiting Stars TOPUSSY P G V I L L A G E 4 2700 A N O f RSON • 451 «352 VutiMia 1 :3 5 - 3 4 5 - 5 : 5 5 - 8 0 5 - 1 0 15 •a ■ 5 0 0 -7 :3 0 -1 0 0 0 -1 2 :2 0 12:00-2.30- . a | L 1 2 :3 0 - 2 4 0 - 4 :5 0 -7 :2 0 -9 :4 0 -1 2 :0 0 WALT D IS N EY'S fu ll length Animated W arGam es A different kind of game. Limited Engagement B A R & G R IL L Space H u n te r (pg> 5 :1 5 -7 :1 5 -9 :1 5 1 2 0 0 - 2 : 3 0 - 4 : 4 5 - 7 0 0 - 9 : 1 5 V I L L A G E 4 2700 A N D !« S O N • 451 «35 2 G 12:20-2:30- 4 4 0 -8 5 0 -9 0 0 L A K E H I L L S 242S «EN WHITE * 444-0552 L A K E H I L L S 2 4 2 * l i N W HITE «444-045? 1 2 : 3 5 - 3 0 0 - 5 :2 5 -7 :5 0 -1 0 :1 5 -1 2 :1 5 PG fttDNl&HT HORROR SHOW B IB IG m S C IG G N 8 A PROVOCATIVE NEW FILM from the director ol Return ot the Secaucus Seven “ ★ ★ ★ 12 ★ T h is e n tra n cin g com edy proves ha rd to resist. A w a rm ly re fresh in g m ovie)’ k a t h i r r n I j r r \ / M 1 O R K /> 111 > N T H 1- H a r the 2HAfiK)T j< IMtM ^ A SEX ROMP ! Re» Reed V I L L A G E A 2700 AND ERSO N • 451 *3 5 2 1: 3 0 - 3 :3 0 - 5 :3 0 - 7 : 3 0 -« : 3 0 R 2 6 t h Week! I D U S T I N H O rrW A N Tootsie 1 2 0 0 -2 3 0 - 5 0 0 -7 0 0 -1 0 0 0 2 .3 0 -5 :0 0 - 7 3 0 -1 0 :0 0 R I V E R S I D E 1 *3 *« IV E « S ID E • 441 568« Discount Matinees Monday-Friday for shows starting before 6 PM. R I V E R S I D E 19 30 R IVIR S1DI * 4 4 1 S689 S3 ADMISSION P!a> Coca Cola TREASURE TOPS Wm Presidio Theatre Tickets! ! I t ! L o c a l H er o 5 :4 5-7 :5 0 -9 :5 5 PG 5:00-7:05-9:10 A ll S h o w s $ 2 E Com ing June 24 to Village & Lakehills ‘The Survivors” with Robin Williams Based on a true story PR iny talk and fast food.. Barbara Hershey 1 1 : 0 0 LATE SHOWS 1 I T A M I X Y K U B R IC K • a j t F riday & Saturday B urdine H all 1.75 UT ID 11:45 2.25 N o n -U T Genuinely sparkling a mixture of style and chic hanky pánky Every shot seems to be designed to delight the audience it s a glittering toy of a movie mfhfi M.4QV ■'* Diva is not only the most purely pleasurable movie to open here this year but surely one of the finest films to arrive from France in a decade See it immediately f . V ffi; ] V .v ’i; ¿ * ‘ .V »- {• •: K **. f . * ‘ 1, 1 f'0’ - » V*• * ■- / ’ / 11:15 R M E A T B A L L S Friday & Saturday 6 & 11:45 Union Theatre 1 75 UT ID, 2.25 Non-UT . V / *—í' y a / t k *\ n f l U A M A N ESCAPED Sunday O nly, Batts Hall A uditorium , 7:30, 1.75 UT ID _____ 2.25 N o n-U T Friday & Saturday 9 1 5 |S u n d a y Batts Hall 1 75 UT ID, 2.25 Non-UT Batts Hall 9:30 “ A P P A L L IN G L Y F U N N Y ! (‘G A T E S O» HE A V E N ' BRINGS US VITAL NFWS f RO M THE HF A RT IF 'H i nf.ART OF ’ H f COUNTRY 'G A TE S OF H E A V E N tt»r Untof address tn r only aumenttc S ta ir <* -A S T U N N IN G INSPIRE T FILM ' ' v f -A W ONDERFX.il MOVIE T Ingm ar Bergman's Classic F re n c h w ith s u b title s Friday & S aturday Union T heatre 3:50 4 9:35 1.75 U T iP ______________ 2.25 N o n -U T | ?- j f y ¿ "SlDE-SPLIJTM FUNNY!" _ ¡M i* W E D FIUF flTK " A m AND FUNNY fllM" D r v jr tyfloir * ¡T it e Yl .r Union Theatre 1.75 UT ID . -V' T. • , ... • T Friday & Saturday 2 A 7:45 2.25 N o n -U T J. t t h e - ' S e v e n t h - —$58l_ m _ 1 i v m,; r'‘.Íy Fridoy, Saturday & Sunday Burdine Hall 1.75 UT ID 7:30 2.25 N on-U T Gates of Heaven Friday & Saturday Batts Hell, 7:30 2.25 N on-U T 1.75 UT ID A « V • v . • v . . . . A": l e » i ...in k jn fU A W C IS FOUD C O fF O L A r i t f t N i t • C h i E W ’ ü 0 9^ Mua.in N. J ld d ^ ld lliO f ) t h e ■«**£!!!* * * • * tu»*1 ■ X.W'-0 - S u nd ay O nly 5:15 Union T heatre 1.75 UT ID, 2.25 N on-U T Friday, S aturday A Sunday Burdine Hall 9:30 1.75 UT ID, 2.25 Non-UT t 1.75 UT ID 2.25 Non-UT 2 A 7 - 3 0 J T V * SAMUEL G O L D W Y N CO M P A N Y « « « , * GILBERT D € G O LD S C H M ID T PIERRE M O N O Y C L A U O tA C A R D IN A LE - C U O G O L D S M IT H - THE GIFT __________« M IC H E L L A N G r* _________ »|A£QUES M A N C O S M fNZO H O N T A C N A M C E C lf MAGNET a K N M C U T K T A ÍM IIA U M N T ■ . . . -------n a i T D M . - i y u f l i i i a a t n --------- . . n «. r e ««SC A t mm o m , . MICHEL LANG Wh* m * mmmm t. V M S a TEAZOL) . QANSLGAUGRT u.H E L E N E «LEHIANNmOV HADEL B N I RUIS LWkA(««AISI LASE* HLMS(«OME) c >«BI na SAP4UBL GOEOwrm* CO#M.r WEEKDAYS: 7:00,9:30 SAT/SUN: (2:00,4:00) 6:00,8:00, 10:00 VARSITY 2402 G u a d a lu p e 474-4351 IP H R E R B B S O IP H R E R B B S O Milwaukee I YOU'! HR i S«igie»on (8) SB He! New Jersey W ashington 4 10 0 1 13 0 C ontal DMMon 286 254 353 071 205 369 Tampa Bay C h tca g o M ich ig a n B irm ing h am 10 9 8 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 O aklan d Los A n g e les D enver A rizona 7 7 6 4 7 0 7 0 8 0 10 0 Saturday! Qo t m (Al Timas COD 714 295 271 643 346 208 571 315 269 500 259 250 m 5 00 273 248 5 00 224 266 4 29 205 235 286 223 338 Boston at B irm ing h am 7 30 p m W ashington at A rizona 8 30 p m Sunday ■ Gamas M ichig a n at Los A ng e les 3 p m P hilad e lph ia at New Jersey 12 3 0 p m Tampa Bay at C h ica g o 12 30 p m M onday! Gama Denver at O a klan d 8 p m Friday, Juna 17 A nzona at Denver 6 p m C h ica g o at B irm ing h am 7 p m i os A ng e les at N ew Jersey 8 p m Sunday, Juna 19 Tam pa Bay at B oston 12 30 p m Monday, Juna 20 Oak and at P hilad e lph ia 8 p m W ashington at M ichig a n 8 p m HORSE RACING (jockey Samyn now on two horsst) The flald for Saturday’s running of ths 1 Vir-mHe Balmont S250. OOO-added. Stakas: P P H o ras....................... Jock ay 5 6 7 8 H igh Honors 9 Current H ope 1 Slew 0 G old 2 M egaturn B alboa Native 3 4 W hite B irch B arberstow n El C uba n aso Caveat A C o rde ro RHernandez SHawley JC rug ue t FToro No boy LPincay JVeiasquez ASohs 10 P nncilian E M aple W Passm ore 11 D ixieland Band 12 C anadian F actor G S tahlbaum JLSam yn 13 Law Talk DM iller 14 D e pu ted Testam ony JLSam yn 15 Au Point Odds 2-1 15-1 12-1 20-1 12-1 20 1 5-2 6-1 15-1 35 1 15-1 20-1 20-1 30 1 O w n ers by post p ositio n 1 Equuse q u ity Stable 2 John Peace 3 Robert H S preen 4 P M B rant 5 Beil B loodstock 6 J J G onzales 7 A ug u st B elm ont IV 8 D aniel M G albrea th 9 Ryans H ead Farm 10 B irchm m ster 11 Mrs B aya rd Sharp 12 Frank S tronach 13 B uckram Oak Farm 14 Bonita Farm 15 S now berry Farm Trainers 1 Sid W atters Jr 2 R ichard N iem m ski 3, D W ayne Lukas 4 Leroy Jolley 5 Tom Bel. II 6 8 B arrera 7 W oo­ dy S tephens 8, Lou Rondm ello 9 Roger Laurin 10 W ayne Ja m tg a a rd 11 Charles Peoples 12 P hillip E ngland 13 Len Inter io 14 Bui B oniface 15, Jam es Maloney All ca rry 126 p o u nd s G ross $358 500 with 15 starters Value $215 100 S econd $78 870 W eights value to w inner Third $43 020 Post tim e Television 4 35 p m CDT C B S 4 p m C 0 T TRANSACTIONS Thursday’s Sports Transactions By United Press International Basetoal B altim ore A n n o u n ce d sig ning o l right h a n d e d pitcher W ayne W ilson, the Club s to p d ra ft ptck tn this week s am ateur free a g e n t dra ff New York (A l i W aived p itche r Rick Reuschei P ittsb u rg h S igned nine p laye rs a nd sent the m to B radenton Fia to awan as srgnm ent p itch e rs Stan Pansier a nd Rich a rd S anveur ca tch e rs D a vid Han a nd Ja m es Eurton outlie riers Larry Johnson C u rl Thurston a nd Thad Sterne a nd third base m e n P erry Franklin a nd John ny Cor tez A tlanta S igned Mike Fratello to a three year co n tra ct as co a ch C h ic a g o t, o ug he ry c o a c h a nd sig n e d him to a 3 year co n tra ct N a m e d Kevin M a rq ue tte Colaga N a m e d Rick M ajerus Das ke tb a ii co a c h a nd assistant athle tic d ire c tor a n d sig n e d him to a multi year co n tra ct A p p o in te d M ary AI ice Hill as a th le tic d ire ctor re p la c in g G ene B ou rd et w h o retired San D ie g o State U C L A A n n o u n ce d B o b F ischer re sig n e d as athle tic d ire ctor FoOttMÉ B altim ore W aived q u a rte rb a ck D avid H um m g u a rd Jim M oore and kicke r Larry Vernon C le ve la n d A nn o un ced s ig n in g of run n ing b a c k D in o Hall a nd c o rn e rb a c k s Law re n ce Jo hn son and Larry B raziel waived ru n nin g b a c k Carm e N orris fu llb a ck Tom M urray a nd w id e re ceiver S 'eve Forsythe D enver S igned free a ge nt tig h t end D o na ld B arnett H ouston (U S F l) S igned q u a rte rb a ck Jim KeMy to an estim a te d $3 5 m illion five year c o n tra c t N ew York je t s S igned running back John ny H e ctor to a series of 1 year con tra cts W a sh ing ton tree a gent w id e re ce ivers Stan Rome and Mike Fisher S ig ne d (USFL) Soccer P ittsb u rg h IM ISL) S ig ne d forw a rd Paul C h ild to a 2-year c o n tra e M ONEY LEADERS Money Leaders By United Press International PGA GOLF 1. L an n y W adkm s $261 4 99 2 Hal Sul ton $ 26 0 174 3 Ben C renshaw $242 219 4 Tom Kite $212 862 5 G i1 M orgar $204 172 6 Fuzzy Z o eiler $180 554 7 C alvin P eeie $178 539 8 Ray Floyd $156 485 9 David G raham $150 179 10 Fre d C o u p le s $147 880 LPGA GOLF 1 A m y A lco tt $102 550 2. K athy Whit w orth $ 93 631 3. A lice M iller $93 537 4 Patty S heehan 89 092 5 N a ncy I opez $86 448 6 Pat B radley $83 278 7, Beth D am ei $ 78 6 49 8 Paula Stacy $ 76.783 9 Jan S tephenson $75 854 JoAnne C a rte r $72 544 '0 MEN’S TENNIS (Assn. of Tennis Professionals) 1 Iv a n L e n d l C z e c h o s lo v a k ia $ 548 438 2 G uillerm o Vilas A rg e ' tina $ 373 8 59 3 John M cE nroe $336 813 4 Y anm ck Noah France $246 306 5 Mats W nander S weden $225 169 6 Tomas Smid, C ze cho sia va kia $192 240 7. Briar T eacher $164 343 8 Kevin Curren South A frica $157 3 16 9 jo s e H.queras Spa.' $149 8 75 10, Steve Denton $ 136.816 WOMEN'S TENNIS 1 M artina N avratilova $327 0 00 2 Chris Evert lo yd $14 8 600 3 A ndrea Jaeger $111 137 4 Sylvia H a nika West G erm a ny $100 550 5 Pam Shriver $93 3 00 6 W endy Turnbull A ustralia $90 722 7 Be! tina B unge $ 8 ' 962 8 Haría Mandlrk >h C z e c h o s lo v a k ia 9 A n d re a Ternesvar H u ng a ry $54 225 10 Tracy A ustin $53 9 50 $58 6 75 3 NASCAR 1 Ekibby AHison $ 258 8 00 2 D a n e W a ü rip $ 25 3 3 80 R ic h a rd P e’ ty $188 500 4 C a 'e Y arb o ro u g f $ '7 9 086 5 Nee B onnett $174 0 2 0 6 H arry G ant $ ’ 72 525 7 D a le Fa rn ha rd t $149 8 56 8 Bill Joe Ruttm an $136 8 10 10 B u d d y B aker $115 590 f 'lio tt $ 14 9 690 9 3. Rick M ears $135 101 CART 1 Tom Sneva $370 331 2 A' U nser Sr 4 $188 611 G eoft B ra bh am $ ’ 02 170 5 Teo Fabi $86 072 6 P a n ch o C arter $ f t 0 18 ? G ordo n Jo h n co ck $76 9 92 8 K evin Co ga; $74 519 9 H o w d y H olm es $ 63 6 ’ 5 10 AI U nser Jr $68 623 PBA BOWLING 1 E a r'A n th o n y $127 6 05 2 !o m M iiton $78 723 3 Jo e Betardr $57 155 4 D or G en a io $56 4 65 5 Mike D urbin $50 4 75 6 Pete W eber $ 50 0 60 7 M arshal Hoi m an $4 7 585 8 G ary DtCk.nson $46 643 9 H enry G on za lez $46 4 48 10 Tom Baker $45 495 J O C K E Y S THOROUGHBRED RACING (Compiled by DaNy Racing Form) C h ris M c C a rro n 1 $3 8 55 293 2. Lafitt Ptncay $3 702 346 3 E d d ie D eia ho u ssaye $3,2 93 159 4 Ang.- C o rd ero $2 8 39 314 5 Jornje V elasquez $2 726 703 6 Pa! Day $2 359 6 03 7 Pa: V alenzuela $1 937 590 8 R o bb ie Davis $ ' 877 4 58 9 Ron A iva re d o $1 7 7 2 9 6 ' 10 Sandy H a w le y $1 688 362 TRAINERS 1 C harles W ittingham $ ’ 800 3 60 2 Laza ro B arrera $1 773 560 3 Wayne Lukas $1 494 556 4 Jack Van B e rg $1 451 129 Jo h n G o s d e n $1 0 79 800 6 H e ctor Palm a $881 910 7 B o b b y F ra n ke 1 $868 945 8 F ra n k. Broth e rs $852 6 40 9 Jerry F anning $842 429 10 M icha el S ed la cek $840.5577 5 HORSES - 1 Sunny s Halo $671 190 2 E n n s Isle $490 6 50 3. Bates M otel $468 9 00 4 M arfa $399 544 5 D e pu ted Testa r-ony $343 860 6 S w in g T Dawn - $ 2 7 6 .3 ' i 8 $293 500 7 D esert W iis t c a p a d e $ 2 6 9 544 A . gam e* $262 175 10 P rincess R ooney $252 773 HARNESS RACING (Compiled by U S. Trotting Assn ) J o h n C a m p . e 1 < D R IV E R S $2 4 8 7 8 0 ' $2 2 4 2 0 1 3 $ 1 193 766 $1 171 863 5 Catellc 6 John P atterson $1 Fihon $1 077 054 E $1 0 5 7 745 $ 1 0 3 2 5 30 10 Wi 9 2 W illia n M i c h e - ‘ i {;■ ■ ■ .- , •. 4 C a rrti - e A p r.a t •• $1 135 85 Ma 121 594 Jam es Mar R e ie a n O a ig n e a u 'l iiam G itm ou! $ f8 9 8 09 NASL NORTH AMERICAN SOCCER LEAGUE By United Press International (Thursday night's game not included) Eastern Toronto N ew York M om rea C h ic a g o Tam pa Bay Tulsa Ft L a u d e fd a ie Team A m e rica W L GF GA BP Pts. 63 2 2 12 21 60 2 7 12 18 10 20 2> ’ ■ 27 10 12 9 7 3 7 2 4 6 3 3 Southern 3 6 16 22 14 32 J 6 4 4 W estern 14 e t 1 6 4 19 14 8 3 V ancouver G o ld e n B ay S eattle D iego 8 10 7 13 3 12 (T earns get si» points for wim ing In regulation Hme or overtime bul only four points for winning a game decided by shootout. A bonus point is awarded for each goal scored up to a maximum of three per game exdudbtg overtimes and shootouts.) Wednesday s Results Toronto 2 M ontreal l V ancouver 2 C h ica g o Ü T . sa 2 Fort i a u d e rd a le l( o t) New York 1 San D iego 0 (o!) Thursday 's Gome Tam pa B ay at Team A m e rica 7 p m COT Friday’s Games No G am es S ch e d u le d ) PGA Goif Results By United Press International $ 4 5 0,00 0 Westchester Classic At Harrison, N.Y., June 10 (Par 71) G ary H a llb e rg C h ip B eck F j/ z y 2oe¡¡er D a vid P eoples B o b G tlde r Seve Bat este ro s Jay Haas Ja ck Renner K eith F e rg us G ib b y G i'b e rt B ru ce F leisher M ike M cC u llo u g h M ike R eid M ark R e d N ick P rice Thom as G ary G re g P ow ers Jim N e lfo rd G ltl M o rg an F re d C o u p le s F rank C onn o r C raig Stadter M ark M cC um b e r P ayne S tew art B ill M u rch iso n D onnie H a m m o n d Lonm e C le m e n te E d Fton Bob B oyd Jim A ib us T o m e K ite J C Snead W ayne Levi M ark Hayes Pat M G ow an M ike D c a.d J e tt SJuman irge Burns M cN ulty M a i' V an ce Heafner R oger Ma ’ rue L a r r y W jd kir-s G ary H a 'be- g C u itis S tran g e Dan H a ild erson P eter Ja cob sen TzezaChung Cl D an Pont A nd y Bean M ike Per k Jim Thorpe Jim B oores Je rry Pale 35 32 67 35 3 3 6 8 8 8 3 6-32 6 8 3 4-34 6 9 36 3 3 6 9 34 3 5 70 3 6 -3 4 70 3 6-34 70 3 6 -3 4 70 3 5 -3 5 70 3 6-34 3 6-34 70 3 4-37 — 7 35-36— 7 3 6-35— 7 34-37 37 34 3 9-32 - 3 6 -3 5 - 3 6 -3 5 - 3 5 -3 6 - 3 7 -3 4 3 6 -3 5 39 32 38-33- 35 3 6 35 36 3 7 -3 5 - 36 3 6 38 34 3 7 -3 5 36 3 6 3 7 -3 5 - 3 5 -3 7 - 3 2 -4 0 - 3 6 36 3 5 -3 7 - 4 0-32 36-36- 3 6 -3 6 3 7 -3 5 36 36- 3 7 - 3 5 - 40-32 35-37 37-35- 4 0-32 3S-37-. 34-38- 38 35- 3 9 -3 4 38 3 5 36 36 3 7-36- 36 37 40-33- BUY. SELL. RENT. TRADE... WANT ADS...471 -5244 PAGE 14/THE D A IL Y TEXAN FRIDAY, |UNE 10, 10» i SPORTSRECORD NL NATIO NA L I EAG UE By U ntied P ress Inte^wrtional East W L Pet G 8 San Diego V mfetuSCC Ctncmnat) Berer, A Totals Pittsburgh M ontreal 35 6 13 6 Totals 37 3 10 3 202 020 000— 6 100 100 100- 3 IP H R ER 8 8 SO Pittsburgh Montreal AL A M E R IC A N LEAG UE By U m ted P res a International 'W e s t coast gam es not included) East W L Pet GB NEW YORK ab r h bi CHICAGO ato r h bi W est ‘0 0 26 28 4 72 14 404 3 ’ 5 9 Thursday s Resutts Friday s G am es (AN T.m es CDT) Totals New York Chicago 41 6 9 6 Totals 42 4 15 3 000 0 00 040 02—6 100 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 — 4 Baitm New IP H R ER B 8 SO New York Chicago S aturday s G am es SAN DIEGO ato r h bi CINCINNATI ab r h bi MILWAUKEE ato r h bi BALTIMORE ab r h bi Totals San Diego Cincinnati 33 1 7 1 Totals 33 8 13 8 0 00 0 00 100— 1 0 20 112 02»— 8 Ttls Milwaukee Baltimore 36 7 7 7 TBs 38 10 15 10 030 120 100— 7 720 000 10x— 10 3 2 3 M 3 5 1 MINNESOTA Ha! ’ er ri is no 2b H ro e K tb Bush dh B'wr pr Ward if Gtti 3b Bf-r sKy cf autfner c I ngte ph Gagness M»tcn¡¡ ph Totals Minnesota Kansas City KANSAS CITY ab r h bi ato r h tx 0 Wilson " 3 0 0 0 5 0 1 JLWsh! 4 0 0 0 0 4 0 i i o 4 1 3 0 White 2b 4 4 t 2 2 McRae dh 3 2 3 1 0 0 0 0 CncocnprO 1 0 0 4 1 2 1 AiKens 1b 3 1 1 0 3 1 0 0 Smpsn 1b 0 0 0 0 Otis cl 4 0 2 2 3 1 0 0 Sherdan rt 3 1 0 1 3 0 1 1 ' 0 0 0 Slaught c 3 0 0 1 Pryor3b 3 0 3 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 i 34 5 9 5 Totals 30 6 10 6 300 2 00 0 0 0 - 5 031 001 0 1 * —6 ' yvve a nning RBi 4 Minnesota 2 Kansas City 1 LOB Shendan (2) V ■ - - sola 5 Kansas McRae Aikens 3B Ward (10) SB W ilson2(27) S ST City 6 28 Otis HR S'augh! Gagne P ry o r Bush (4i Sheridan IP H R E R B B S O Minnesota Kansas City tstrofW 1-0) Qutsenbnrry ( S 1Í Creei u tch e d 1 pitched to 2 batte , 2 32 A T o 3 batti s m 8th >6 869 0 0 rs m 4tt Lysande' DETROIT Whiiker 2b T rammil ss Gibson If Parrish dh Grubb rf Wilson rt ¡each 1b Lemon cf Faheyc 8 ' > e n s 3 b Totals Detroit Boston f BOSTON ab r h bi •to r h bi 4 1 1 0 Rerrty2b 4 0 0 0 4 2 2 1 Miller 2 0 0 0 4 1 1 3 R 'celf 4 0 0 0 5 1 1 2 Evans rf 3 1 1 0 ' 1 Boggs 3b 3 1 1 0 i ' 2 0 0 0 Y sirm Sk dh 4 0 1 2 4 0 1 1 Stapitn 1b 4 0 1 0 ’ 0 Newm a n c 2 0 0 0 < ss 3 1 1 0 H o flrr an 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 29 2 5 2 200 060 0 0 0 - 8 000 200 0 0 0 - 2 i 0 0 Ü Jurak S 35 8 9 8 Totals ................ . . . ' . r i i fne-win «mg RBI J* Detr »t 2 Boston 1 LOB Detroit 6 Boston 5 B Boggs Leach Evans Gibson, G ru tu W’ ’aker, lem on HR Pamsh 4) SB BroO kens(5) Trammell (2) 3B IP H R E R B B S O 9 5 2 2 4 1 Detroit Petry (W 6-3 Boston Eckersley 'L 4-3) Aponte 4 2-3 5 1 1-3 2 3 0 h BP -by Petr/ iNewman) 7 2 35 A — 6 2 1 3 3 0 8 0 0 8 0 0 18.904 USFL UNITE D S TA TE S FOOTBALL LEAGUE By U nited P res s International Atlantic Division P hilad e lph ia 12 Ü ' ' W L T Pet. PF PA 857 299 158 643 306 259 2 0 9 5 0 Thursday s Results Friday's G am es (AN Tim es COT) 7-5) at a ? 1) 2 4 40 (Puieo i 2 M r* U n ­ m a n 1 11 Saturday s G am es Montreal al Mr*a Pittsburgh at Phi SAN FRANCISCO ato r h bi HOUSTON ab r h bi o n g b d rt > Maily if i o s San Franosc Krukow i L 3*4 Houston Totals San Francisco Houston 28 0 2 0 Totals 28 3 7 3 000 000 000—0 210 000 00»—3 IP H R E R B B S O PITTSBURGH MONTREAL ab r h bi DOUBLE DEAL iV A N F . Roses only $1°° w /c o u p o n Lim it o n e d o z e n Cash and Carry 7 D 1 I ¡ M EZU ZO S K O S H E R . J U S T AR- ■ RIVED FROM ISRAEL, ■ H A N D W R I T T E N , IN I BEAUTIFUL WOODEN | I CASES. 472-3900 I 20% OFF a n y p la n ts y o u b u y w /c o u p o n DOBIE MALL L o w er Level 21 si & G u a d a lu p e 4 7 4 -7 7 1 9 C h a b a d H o u k i- l. u lia v iU h •Jew mb Si i l d r n t I e n t e r a t L I '2101 S u e c e s 472 3 m ) FREE MEDICAL CARE FOR SKIN INFECTIONS If you have a cut, an insect bite, burn, or other skin conditions that are IN F E C T E D (pus and or drainage) and would like free medical care plus a financial incentive, contact Biom edical Research Group, Inc., at 4 5 1 -7 1 7 9 (Donald R Mehlisch. M.D., D.D.S.) M o n .-S a t. 10 -9 E x p ire s A u g u s t 15th, 1983 SHOE SHOP We m ake and repair boots belts shoes leather goods SHEEPSKIN COW & CALF • SADDLES * ENGLISH WESTERN Capitol Saddlery Austin, Texas 1614 Lavaca 478-9309 M AKE YO UR FATHER’S DAY A little lime, some salt and America's number one imported canned beer, Tecate. W e've put our best cantilevered chair and ottoman on sale for the occasion1 It's constructed in Finland for pure comfort, and comes upholstered in genuine leather or natural linen Bentwood frame in laminated beech Altogether it's a look that blends in anywhere. As shown, Leather chair Matching ottoman Lmen canvas chair Matching ottoman reg. SALE $399 $499 149 199 299 389 119 159 Or save money on an original Pawley's Island hammock It's the most relaxing gift you can find for a busy man. Hand-woven of the best cotton twill cordage and comes w ith stretchers and all the tackle needed for hanging. Get ready for June 19th at Storehouse1 Small Medium Large (Big enough for two!) reg. SALE $69.95 74.95 79.95 $89.95 94.95 99.95 storehouse 2402 Highland Mall, 459-3161 (Mon.-Sat.10-9) © 1982 Cibco Importing Co., Inc. The Woodlands, Texas 77380 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 471 -5244 / 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday TSP Building 3.200 / 2500 Whitis Condominium Owner’s Home & Duplex Owners If you worry about the hassles of keeping your property leased and well kept; you should worry no longer W e at C. L. R e e v e s R e a l E s ta te specialize in property man­ agement. Give us a call and let us help you get the hassles out of owmnq property. Call 447-8303 and a$k for Connie today I ORANGE TREE OPEN 2:30-5:00 FRIDAY 10:00-1:00 SATURDAY #37 at 2529 Rio Grande Location Got-Grills cos Efficiency, 1 aid 2 bedroom units avail­ able for previewing Prices from $52,500 to $122,500 Joano Franklin 327-1165 Fran Morrow 459-4759 MARSH & BOX CO. 4 7 2 -1 0 0 0 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Consecutivo Day Rates 15 w o rd minim um $ 27 Eoch w o rd 1 Hme $ * 8 Eoch w o rd 3 times $ 59 Eoch w o rd 5 times $ 97 Eoch w o rd 10 times $ 6 46 1 col a 1 inch 1 tim e $ 6 23 1 col * 1 inch 2 9 times $ 5 90 1 co l * 1 mch 10 o r m ore times $1 0 0 c harge to change copy tw o words may be all capital letters 25 c for eoch odd* tvonol w o rd *n capítol letters M astercard and Visa accepted 20% DISCOUNT an all classified advertising placed m person o nd p re p a id (cosh or check only — no credit cords) T$P Building, Room 3 2 0 0 2 5 0 0 WKrtts M o n d a y through Fndoy 8 a m -4 3 0 p m DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d a y Tex an . . . . Friday 11 a.m . To- d a y Texen . . .M o n d a y 11 a.m . W odnooday T .x a n .Tuesday 11 a.m . Th u rs d ay T .x a n W adn— d a y 11 a.m . F rid ay T .x a n . . . Thursday 11 a.m . In th e eve n t o f errors m o d . In an a d ­ vertisem ent, Imma di e t . notice mu*» bo g ir a n — th a publishers a ra re ­ incorrect lo r o n ly O N I sponsible InaarHon. AN claim * lo r od|ustments sho uld b a m a d . not la ta r than N d a y s a lta r publication. Advertising p r o p o y m .n l n on -refu n d o b le . FOR SALE A u to s f o r S a le L&M V O LK S W ÍR K S N e w ond used V W p o m Re built engines $ 6 9 9 installed exchange W e buy VWs, any condition 2 5 1 -2 2 6 5 1974 D O DG E C o l' $12 0 0 oc best o ffe r Reliable G re a t mileoge, g o o d cond itio n new ports Call 476-2 9 0 1 evenings a fte r 5 3 0 p m 1977 D O D G E Aspen low m ileage $ 2 2 0 0 0 0 CaH 3 4 5 7 6 8 7 aher 3 o'clock in excellent condition and weekends 1966 V W Bug Rebuilt engine runs greal mspec t.on Sticker $ 5 7 5 0 0 4 5 4 -2 8 7 4 ________________ 68 C O U G A R N e w tires b attery ra d io re b u il' « " gine fro n t end H o lly co rb u ra to r Specia1 ign.tion (optionol). A /C some dents 9 4 ,0 0 0 miles Evenings 8 3 6 ^ 7^8 o rig in a l o w n e r FOR SALE A u to s f o r S a le 80 M O N Z A . H a tc h txx k 4 vpeeu A '' PS A M EM stereo 33 0 0 0 miles N e w rodtafs $ 3 3 9 5 2 8 2 136? evenings N f W V W Robbrf C onvertible 5 0 0 miles w arranty $10 750, 4 7 8 7 0 7 8 o r 4 7 7 2136______________ 197? V W SEDAN g o o d condition excellent ,oten- or stee* radial* A M /F M 45 ¡ 4 343 1975 A M C M A T A D O R 4 d o o r runs Needs w o 'i g o o d engine $ 3 0 0 4 5 4 2 8 8 2 1977 TOYOTA CocoHo SR5 Liftback A.r Rodtois A M Tm ra d io recent funeup $ 2 5 0 0 0 G f*rm 45 1751_______________________________________ 1978 F A iR M O N T PS PB 4D 4c y M ay sticker 84 piates A M /F M $ 2 2 0 0 4 7 6 -8 3 6 6 CONVERTIBLE — '71 Super Beetle UT o range N e w engine -ntenor, front end tires $ 2 8 0 0 4 7 6 74?8 w ee*e n d v eventng 8 3 8 3 4 7 7 weekdays 19 78 FORD C onner M U S T S ÍlT T m m E DlATEL i ' 5 speed 5 3 ,0 0 0 m4e$ $ 2 6 0 0 0 0 or fees? offer H urry I6 tfi and San A nto mo 4 4 ? 4141 or 4 7 4 5 3 8 8 cam per tires, new / W Sirocco AC A M /F m tape 4 speed 1977 $ 2 6 0 0 Coil 3 2 7 5017 or 4 4 4 8851_____________ 79 7 28 oa d e d excellent condition M ust see to appreciate $ 5 2 5 0 471 4 0 9 5 or 2 8 2 3521 ah«r 5 pm 1981 C H fV fT T E 4 d o o r 4 spited A C A M -F M Mice b o * Excellent m otor ' all 9 2 6 9614 evenings weekends 1978 CORVETTE, block, leather seats, all pow e- A M /F M cassette cruise air T-top $8 0 0 0 Cali A rm ando 4 7 5 -2 0 2 0 4 4 4 0 9 3 6 1971 V O LV O w agon, huge c argo a re c runs grea» rebuil» engme $ 1 1 5 0 0 0 best offer 4 7 6 9 0 3 2 1977 G R A N D Pnx SJ Til» cruise' p o w e r AC, A M Fm , new hres very reliable $ 2 8 0 0 negotiable 4 5 3 -5 4 3 3 after 8 p m CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE B orgain plus, com pletely fur ntshed one b e d ro o m condos W alk to UT campus Parking, Security, Pool $ 5 7 ,0 0 0 C U E S R E A L T O R S 346-2193 OPEN HOUSE 7 B locks fro m com pus S tu d to /1 b a th Flat F e a tu rin g g o urm e» kitc h e n wift- m tc ro w a v e d is h w a s h e r a M u r p h y b e d ce»fing fans toeuz zi a n d w a s h e r o n d d ry e r FO R SALE $ 4 2 .7 7 * C a * 4 8 2 0 6 6 9 9 o m 6 p m OPEN HOUSE 7 B lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s 2 Bedroom Split-level Condom inium F O R SALE $ 6 3 ,6 6 5 C all 4 8 2 -0 6 6 9 9 a m -6 p m UT C O N D O Huge 2BR — Close $ 8? 5 0 0 3 4 5 5 2 9 7 or 451 2 2 4 ? CASS to campus UT C O N D O 1BR plus ioh Hear* o f UT Wes» cam­ pus $ 4 9 9 0 0 3 4 5 5 2 9 7 or 451 2 2 42 CASS 3 0 0 0 G U A D A URE W alk o r shuttle to com pus $ 3 9 9 0 0 assum ab'e 4 7 4 2142 9 2 6 *661 4 5 4 -0 5 9 5 ________ ____________________________ EFFICIENCY C O N D O neor 6th $tree* Pecan Squore shuttle Qo»e* nice n e ig h b o rh o o d $310 plus E Jim, 4 8 0 9 ’ 9 UT C O N D O 1 bedroom plus toft H eart o f VYes* Compus $ 4 9 9 0 0 45 2 2 4 2 Ask CASS 345 5 2 9 7 _________________________________________ ENFIELD C O N D O $52 5 0 0 45 2 2 4 2 Ask to r CASS 3 4 5 5 2 9 7 tw e bed ro o m on shuttle C O N D O EFFICIENCY on Town lo k e — p ootode — buit* ms — super buy — pnm e to ca h o r — $34 9 5 0 Cot Ann K ' gem onn Reart* 8 9 ? 3 735 28? 5015_____________________________________ G O O D L O C A T IO N fo r college student 3BR 2B a lots o f closet space com m unity po o 1 ond d u b house 2 8 2 -1 8 7 3 2 8 2 - 0 2 4 9 4 8 0 3 Vucca M.« G reensiope A reo $ 5 5 .0 0 0 BE A for blocks to compos $ 71.5( R N fS M fD 2BR /B A v 4 o m .< Hot t o t Security h , of: Dav«d 4 79 8 292 $ 6 9 ,5 0 0 PERFECT lo r y o u T u T T ^ 3 / 2 / 2 p o o tennis 8 7 % V A Ow 'ft agen* 44 1212 'o t o peym em $4 9». FOR SALE M o to r c y c le s fo r S a fe p a r k A N »W M E R f N c p e d o • 3 ,/u k ..tke rt#v* $ 3 9 9 w rxjsxen locks B 4 6 ? 9 5 0 7 __________________ 9 8 0 F$50 Cal __ ’ 9 7 9 Su/u» OS 550l D*g*to eodou» STEAt * ru»s« toe d*spKjy C ieor dented tonk S y Xx A h e ' 10 pmt 4 72 1722 time 9 8 h Q N D A CM 400E 3 4 0 0 mtie*. Bes» ahe* 4 4 5 6 4 / 0 Or ndfh*eid Cai Rodney 4 5 4 7 5 0 0 ______ '9 7 9 SUZUKI T$ 185 N e w batte*-» ed a e a r 3 0 0 m^es $ 6 0 0 00 4 .7 2 3 9 3 5 '. e m e nctutí Bicycles for S o le ___ ,x *c o x r < * i L- BtC 7C iE 5 B t C Y a fV A * $ 30 Student drkCOunh o r new > speed ,e r\ mownto*r bAes S o j** Sourt 1st 4 44 0 8 0 5 b*< ,t ,e-. 7 7 5 4 8 26 $ i 75 o ' oei* offe- 4 '4 9 5 2 //O M A N 'S ier-ve' ■ ¿¿e< toffy *estoa 4 4 0 0 5 Stereos fo r Sale PIONEER V3V T jt» E f S o n , fu % cr-jlo t o - 1 8 0 0 0 « 7 * 5 4 * .-■[ A j w a lH to *o y-.-xe- vpeoxx , Aí¡ u . ft H A N D S O M E PANASO NIC ( A ¿50C Bxor i t t,ox J 7 i o c Cat 4 ’ 4 9 4 9 / Of xt.m* '•A N A S O N tC ¿ f ~ f v * f x/- 6 5 0 0 f«-jf Exc*H«nt ' fjufJft.Cff $ 7 5 .0 0 4 "4 94 V; a r,, !2 x.o*n N f fN ;7v $ 50: and Adven* $ 2 5 0 sterec spea* er neb fo r saie .fke re w Tom A o fie y 4 : 6 3 36 RECENTLY PURCHASED systen N .» -. amp ona ■*abie Keahsbe t'uner JVC tape der-k Hitoct e q u a i!/e f 55 s p e a k e r $856 4 7 7 -4 2 5 9 ahe* 0 0 p m . IKE NE W Techn«ci 30 wa tw o derks tr^ftr 4 Keep Hying 37 7 960 (.'banned d»grta' ^ M usical fo r Sale AU$T*N $ BES’ veiectior of sr*ee* mus»' and books 6 ' v?es* ? 9 tr 4 77 5 0 0 5 ' jO O O BEGINNERS gufto* s,r *ng N e w strings strap p-- * r4 44 34 J>e as o 6 to e d $ 4 R A N G months okJ O N y $ 9 5 5 Sal 2 8 8 32 sate ? i * e i e '" .' d-»--* Jus* s 2 -STRING A vorez gu»to' w*rt sot* ■ * ♦- nice $ 2 0 0 oes o ffer k eep »'-y»ng 327 96C .ase M o b ile H o m es fo r Sale M O B iL f HO M E err J T ho» 4 5 2 8 8 6 Ahe* 5 pm 4 58 48 34 Ask far jm 9 8 0 F l t £ TW O O O 4 x 6 0 2BR ifeA apphances dishwasrier dispose C A 'C h storage shed porch, Motxie Home f'orS Aswmabie $ 86 moo# A vanaoie 8 '8 3 4 74 795 '9 7 9 LANCER 4 » 8 ’Orge to* near So'jthwes* exas Siote Jn-ve*'s»*y * S or M a r os 7BR 2Ba a 'p o *- 2 decks C A /C H divnw oshe' dispose1 g o rd e r w in d o w circle m trn *r C onventiona »oor $ 4 2 ,0 0 0 512 6 9 6 3 9 2 4 anytim e 8 ? 6 5 5 3 3 6 9 G a r a g e Sales CHURCH YARD/BAKE SALE Gt-.'t/x jc/pf'cmce'. ' ottimc, mi*celiaxi«- seiectuu gito B cards N e v 'u * Gifts 4 ‘ S Congress 44 4 38<4 4 »-*06T Mew trom pot-ne and ''uOde** o r E tryrier $ DOC DC 4 7 6 5 4 6 5 U’N i N f j Four Choi's $ 3 5 O v e o c f cxj* dresse* $ 6 5 0C oak ches* tab.e W a rd ro b e $ 9 5 0C 63 0 8 6 ’ W C Q u A i '"¥ H ercuior sota-: gn oe*ge strtped $ 2 0 5 X m ,- * 34* M UST SELL' N e w t, purchased A.nc 3 0 0 bass and Spectra 3"s0 t *0' bass 4 4 5 5 7 8 5 ode C >ra> $: : TEAR Tom e E Pets fo r Sale kREE k ’TENS »#•> pioyf j 3 4 6 9 8 2 2 Hom es fo r Sale A d city ne*ghtx>« pOfntmen» on« y $ 3BR. 2Ba part»aH Austin 4 - 4 / 4 BEE “ O : f»-. vjtxnt. -r, #»no Avanobie now R¡e 'tg g e c g o o d E ven.ngj, 4 4 3 871'' or 4 7 3 -8 9 0 6 TVPEWRITER ElEC T R K off»ce m ode $ ‘ $>0 Bc^t-. excellent FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS C O N D O M I N I U M S Because West campus has always been your first choice. C o m e JtM .u\er the luxury, convenience and investm ent advantages of i beautiful ne >r tw o -B ed r > im. flat or studi* co nd om iniu m at Chelsea C on do m in ium s Enjoy superb liv in g j u s t a few blocks west it campus A vailab ility is lim ited and early interest i' advised. First u n it' available tor Fall Semester 1985. Project Location 2Sth and San G ab riel 1000 West 25th St. A ustin, Texas 78705 Sales O ffice 807 West 25th St. A ustin, Texas 78705 (5 1 2 )4 7 2 -8 6 0 5 A n o th e r tine student com m unity from B L Turlington & A sso ciate s. Inc . developers f í.r u ix O ndom tntum s, G ra h a m PI. n a m inium s, N t C o m e r ( o n d o m im u m s an d t e n f e n m a : Cx>nd< m inium . C h else a C o n d o m in iu m , i. a B L Turlington &t A sso cia te s, Inc D ev elo pm en t u a sso ciatio n with i. ivde R L lttlefu i 9 0 1 W 2 4 24th SI Cam pus Area Listings Summer T o m G r e e n 2 - 1 C ro ix 2 -2 Furn. B u e n a V is ta 2 -2 Furn. O r a n g e Tree Eff. Furn. O v e rlo o k 1-1 Pre-Lease San G ab riéTW esT 1 -1 G u a d a lu p e S q u a re 1-1 Furn. 476-2673 W H p r y , . v h o v e 1 5 c o r o o m r- , r-r s ’ps s’e 5 i 300 ( ortoom r 0rr s OS’ yPO1 , - orr-es condos Lindo Ingram's me m -e * \ > e r v o ’>'n I f ’h ’ * r pr . r • D o m i n i o n ( o m lo g n i n i u m s • — ------- Two Blocks from U. T. Amenities: * Security System w Telephone Intercom System * Pool. Spa Sundeck * Microwave Refrigerator * Wet Bars * Ceiling Fans * Built-in Desk and Bookcases MODEL OPEN DAILY 10-6 Priced in the Spit's 1 * Amendiet: Mkrowaves 3 Ceiling Fans tAifykdindf MlfituRtlu. Stackable Washer/Dryer Security Gates ON Shuttle Route 7 % FINANCING NOW AVAILABLE MODEL OPEN DAILY 1 0 - 6 1 * I E’a.vtos ---------- Z U * 1 476-2673 £ °>2p0\ /m m / 5 Blocks to UT 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 On 45th St in Hyde Park T h e M o s t E x c lu s iv e C a m p u s C o n d o m in iu m Only a Select Group Can Still Live in this Luxurious Community PRICED FROM $130s • n o w J 9 14 19 24 * f--------------------- i 7 12 17 3 8 13 18 22 -----------------— -m R A W (M inim um Ad-15 W ords, MINIMUM A D - 15 WORDS Per Word ................ S .33 .................... X7 To O rd e r Y our Ad, M a il #ns C oup on to Texan W a n t Ads, P O Box D Austin. TX 78712 S., 471-5244 Check Enclosed fo r $ C harge my VISA M a sterC ard # __________ Exp Date .er l.M 1.17 1.XS 1.33 1X3 1.S4 1.41 1.71 1X3 l .M SAVE 20%! Place your ad at the TSP Business Office, 25th & vVhitis, pay cash (or check) and ge» a 20% Discount PAGE 16/THE DAILY TEXAN/FRIDAY, |UNE 10,1983 FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS Miscellaneous for Sale MICROFICHE READER ExceHen 251-744? FURNISHED DUPLEXES SUMMER SUBLET 1 b duplex ER shuttle washer hug# bockyord $210 * E mthly 4/8 5392 471 3919 Soroh BR DUPLEX to sublease $260/mo neqatfobíe No deposit Avatlabi© June 15 Aug 15 Come by 3807 Ave H 4 8 pm EFFICIENCY $225 UT SHUTTLE BUS 4558 AVE A HUNTINGTON VILLA APTS. 454-8903 FURNISHIO APARTMENTS FURNISHED MARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMI NTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS- FURNISHED APARTMÍÑTS S 3 - ALL BILLS PAID IBR's A N D EFFICIENCIES Available at The Peppertree laundry facilrtie», appliance», 3 blocks From sFiuffie stop between Speedway ond Duval a* 304 E 34th Rents ranging from $ 2 6 5 $345 448-APTS SPI 445 6 62 9 5 BLOCKS WEST UT Large efficiency paneled living room, kitchen qos stove refrigerator walk in closet, laundry $210 $ 2 4 0 * E Red O ak Apartments. 2104 Son Gobnei FLEUR DE LIS APTS. 404 E 30TH leost on apoftmeni ©tar compus now ond hove o pkxe reserved faf Fa# Summer Tjfes o*odobk I, 2, or 3 bedroom apartment* Contact Jerome Cox, 472-6515 C&M&dct ST. MORITZ APTS. 3 BLOCKS TO CAMPUS 1 BLOCK TO SHUTTLE A f t f o . N O W LEASING OLD M AIN AportmwiU 2503 Pearl Efficiencies four blocks UT shuttle M l 9 5 454 8031 N O W PREI EASING (or summer & fatl 1BR. 45th and Duval Spanish Oaks Aportments CA. CH. gas and water paid On shuttle and city bus Summer rotes $250 467 0698 WALK TO campus Summer rates now Shuttle front door Lora© ©fhoency $225, 2 2 eWtctency $355 Furnished or unfurnished 472-2147 — Sum m er Rates — SUMMER RATES FOR SUMMER ONLY SUMMER AND FALL LEASES FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS "FURNISHED APARTMTÑtT O ne and two bedrooms, pool, patio, ond balconies. We’ll Make Ton A Deal. Best Summer Rates in Town ★ Summer Housing As Low As ★ ★ $120 Per Session a Check These Features And Sign Up Todav — 4 spacious floor nlanc spacious floor plans -Fully equipped Kitchens -Walk-m closets -Garage parking available -Panoramic view -3 blocks to campus * ~ Pool -Sundeck -Floor parties •Exercise room Laundry facilities — C able TV hook-ups T ri Towers Has I t AH Together For th e UT Man And Woman 476-7636 8 0 1 W . 8 4 th St. ( I f ) / vVcdgcnltxi / 2802 N u e c e s 3 Blocks to Campus Yesterday’s Memories Brought to Life for the Way you Live Today EfT, 1, 2-2, & 1 Bedrooms w Study Available Conveniently Located at 2bth Street & Nueces • 1 Block to W C Shuttle • C e ilin g F an s • S e c u rity G a te s n • . , • Pool & Hot Tub • Covered Parking • And M uch More P r i C e d f r ° m $ 4 7 , 5 0 0 ★ 2 8 r t \ 9 , f • V • • 2 7 t h \ U n i v . o f z ▲ ▲ ▲ \ ’D enote s W.C. Shuttle Stop. Model Open 10-6 D aily 478-2782 Marketing Agent (ierald Thibodeaux VILLA SOLANO APTS. Summer Special • 1BR Furn.$270 • 2BR Fum. $350 • Shuttle Comer • Intramural Fields Across Street 51st & Guadalupe 451-4349 TRI-TOWERS 801 W. 2 4 T H ST. A U S T IN , T E X A S 78705 (512) 476-7639 w 5 A STEP ABOVE FOR THE DISCRIMINATING MAN & WOMAN RESERVE YOUR SPACE FOR FALL & SPRING ALL THE AMENITIES T H E a p a r 2124 Burton Drive “SUPER” Summer R ates • Efficiency $235 • 1 BR Furn. $270 • 2BR Furn. $370-$400 • Large Pool — Patio ¿V* • Luxury Club Room • 2 Shuttle Routes • Furnished or Unfurnished A # \ v O ^ T 444-7880 Davis & A ssociates M anagem ent Co. Circle Villa Apts. Summer Special 1 BR $240-$270 Unfum. PIms E 1 BR $270-5300 Fum. Plus E 2BR $310 Unfum. Plus E Shuttle Bus 2323 Town Lake Circle 442-4967 TRI-TOWERS I I m m 801 W. 2 4 T H ST ., A U ST IN , TEXAS 78705 (512) 476-7639 s o l w . A STEP ABOVE FOR THE DISCRIMINATING MAN & WOMAN REDUCED RATES FOR SUMMER ALL THE AMENITIES SUMMER STUDENTS SPACE AVAILABLE $200 OFF SUMMER SESSION. CONVENIENT. POOL Ml AMIGO APTS. 4S0SDUVM 454-4799 FURNISHED APARTMENTS y M IIIIM IH IIIIIIIIIIIIIIH IIIIIIIIIIIlliiiiiin iiiiii^ I MARK XX 1 | — Summer Special — ¡ • 1BR Furn. $250 • 2BR Furn. $330 I • Shuttle 2 Biles. I I • Nice P ool-Patío ¡ ¡ 3 15 Guadalupe *! j | 467-8726 ñ m i i i i i i h i in n iiiiiiiii, iiiiiiim iii,! El Campo 1 Bedroom 1 Bath 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Grab Hold o f These FANTASTIC DOLLAR SAVINGS 305 W. 39th $255 + E $335 + E 3704 Speedway $245 $345 1 Bedroom 1 Bath 2 Bedroom 1 Bath n a g 452-8537 454-7015 B Dotado 1 Bedroom 1 Bath La Pax 1 Bedroom 1 Bath 2 Bedroom 1 Bath 3501 Speedway $230 240 401 W. 39th $255 $355 + E 472-4893 451-4255 A O Com plaxm t L o c a te d o n I F S H U T T L E FREE APARTMENT LOCATING A L L O V E R AUSTIN A PA RTM ENTS DU PLEXES T O W N H O U SE S RESID EN C ES lust One Call and You're Home Free" J OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! WORTH 1 C~ NORTHWEST *0UTH 1 r \ 443-2212 458-6111 345-6350 N IH fc_______ J [ 3435 GHEYSTOME DR J L i g g i RIVERSIDE DR J [ More Service More Selection, and Free Transportation PAUL S. ME1SLER PROPERTIES Continental Apts. Fantastic Summer Rate 2 Bedroom Furnished...$350 • Nice Pool • Shuttle Corner 451-7718 910 E. 40th Walk ©r Shuttle t© Campus! Special Summer Rates Apartments Act III Act IV Act VI Act VIII Act IX Act X Three Oaks Ptcan Square Westerner Rio N ueces 4312 Speedway 3311 Red River 2801 Hemphill 2808 Whitis 2803 Hemphill 301 W. 29th 409 W. 38th 506 W. 37th 2806 Hemphill 600 W 26th Condominiums 2000 Whltls 3000 Guadalupe Padgett Company 453-0540 474-8125 476-0411 474-5650 476-0411 474-5650 453-3383 459-1597 472-0649 474-0971 454-4621 454-4621 Main Office 4 5 4 -4 6 2 1 Tanglewood North 1 Apartments — Summer Specials — We Pay All Your Air Conditioning I I I J j | 1 Bedroom Furnished $290-$300 | 2 Bedroom Furnished $390-$430 | Shuttle Bus at Your Front Door y I ! I 1020 E. 45th 452-0060 Professionally Managed by Da vis & Assoc. H O M E . Been lo o k in g for a place to h an g your hat? At D u v a l Villa A p a r t m e n t s , o u r e x t e n s i v e r e n o v a t i o n s , n o w in p r o g r e s s , will o f f e r a w o n d e r f u l re t r e a t : s p a c i o u s U d o r p í a n s ; n e w d e s i g n e r tile, c a r p e t , a n d m i n i - b l i n d s ; r e d e s i g n e d k i t c h e n s a n d b a t h s ; l o a d s (if b o o k c a s e s , c l o s e t s , a n d c a b i n e t s C o n v e n i e n t l y l o c a t e d in H v d e P a r k , w e ' r e c l o s e t o c a m p u s , p o p u l a r r e s t a u r a n t s , s h o p p i n g , a n d s h u t t l e b u s . \ \ Avoid the Last Minute Rush — Prime Locations Available Willowcreek Apts. 1911 Willowcreek SUPER SUMMER SPECIALS 444-0010 444-0014 Unfurnished — Furnished Large Apartments 1 Bedroom Furnished $270-$288 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Furn. $370-$380 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Furn. $330 • All Bills Paid • 1BR Furn. $330 • 2BR Furn. $400 • Nice Pool-Patio • Walk to Campus 1300W. 24th 474-6500 NEWLY REMODELED campos on shuttle Efficiencies $215- $ 2 3 0 t E, 1 bedrooms S 2 6 5 -S 2 8 5 + E 'ocotod m small, quiet complex 451-8532, 4 4 2 -4 0 7 6 Quiet on shuttle. Convenient to shop­ ping. Pool. O ne ond two bedrooms. Come unfurnished. Beqinmnq under $300 EL PO SADO APARTMENTS 1105 Clayton Lane 453-7914 EXCLUSIVE UT ‘1-1 3000 Guodalupe $32500pkjieMncify '7-1 2220 laon $383 plus electricity ‘1-1 701 W«t 25th. $325 plus electncib "Efficiency 1BA 630 Maiden Lone $210 plus electricity SEfSoencyl&A210W 38th $250 ASP HARRIS0N-PEARS0N 472-6201 MESQUITE TREE APARTMENTS SUMMER RATES 1BR apartments, dose to campus Fully fur nished, frost free refrigerators, self cleaning ovens, dishwashers, study desks, resident man­ ager #301 2410 Longview 4 7 8 -2 3 5 7 ALL BILLS PAID EFFICIENCY $260 In Hyde Park, close to campus & shuttle Pool, fully carpeted, draped, and beoutifully pan­ eled All buih-in lotchen, CA/CH 458-4511 4 0 0 0 Avenue A, 458-4511 CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC 451-6533 PR ELEA SIN G FOR FALL SALADO APTS. 'N e w carpet, ceiling fan, completely furnished, fireplace 'Covered parking, sundeck, close to campus, only 5 blocks away 'Right behind Raymond"s Drugs 'Foil ond Spnng Rale $ 5 6 0 + E 'Coll anytime, 4 7 4 -9 5 3 0 or 4 4 4 -2 7 5 0 38TH 302 West 38fh, near shuffle All sizes avail­ able, Furnished/unfurnished Gas/wafer paid Swimming pool Summer fun From $195 453 -4 0 0 2 WEST 26TH 910 West 26th Nice community Efficiencies, on shufffe Gas, water paid $ 2 4 0 + E 477- 2160 W A R W IC K APARTMENTS SU M M ER IBR'S $275 + E! Carpeted, Ceiling Fans AC, Dishwashers, Disposals, much, much morel ‘Landscaped Complex With Quiet Atmos­ phere "Sundeck and Pool with Water Fall "Walking Distance to Campus, Shuttle, Shoal Creek Park. — Also O N E 2-2 Available (375 + E) — 2907 West Ave. (off W. 29th) 477-1630 $200-$225 PLUS E SUMMER RATES We ore looking for quiet, conscientious non smoking students interested in o lorge efficiency or IBR 2 locations Near cam puVHyde Pork CA/CH loundry deodbolts 458-2488 800 W. 25th St. 476-4060 S U M M E R RATES 2502 Nueces BROWNLEE Dormitory, $195 ABP. 476-4226 2800 Rio Grande IBR's $225. + Utilities 477-6560. 2200 Nueces 1 BR $270 479-8175 108 PLACE Furnished Efficiency & 1BR Apartments ‘Dishwasher/disposal "Swimming pool ■Patio/lounge/borbeque 'Individuo! storage ‘Bookshelves 'V ? Block IF shuttle 'Laundry Facilities ‘Resident Manager Eff $ 23 0 + E 1 BR $28 5 * E 452-1419 108 W 45th 453-2771 N O W LEASING 5 BLOCKS WEST UT C ASBAH APTS. 2 2 0 0 SAN GABRIEL 478-5588 444-2750 •2 BR 2 BA •DW, DISPO SAL 'CA/CH, Ceiling Fon 'Laundry Facilities 'Courtyard with Bar-B-Q Pit 'Furnished, all electric 'Covered Parking 'Spacious, Fully Carpeted 'Summer Rates $37 5 + E "Fall/Spnng $ 5 0 0 * E "W C Bus Route Luxury efficiency Buill-ins, double bed’, loundry Wolr-oos paid 105 E. 31st MANAGER #103 477-4005 1717 ENFIELD RD. (ON SHUTTLE) Luxury efficiency ond IBR M ANAGER #113 478-9767 1708 Guadalupe Large efficiencies $325.00 ABP available now 478-3533 VIEWPOINT APTS 2518 Leon Efficiencies $260.00 pool, laundry, Manager, Apt. 116 478-3533,476-7205 1904 San Gabriel One Bedroom Pool $285.00 phis electncPy 478-3533 SUMMER RATES Small, attractively furnished and designed apartment-west campus $285-$340 ♦ E 451 8122 Westworld Real Estate 1515 PALMA PLAZA, 1 block to UT shuttle bus, on EnhekJ Rd Large 2 BR's and efficiencies, water poid $250-$395/mo One year lease 397-2576, M-F, 8am-5pm F y R N I| H E D A ^ ^ E N T S F U R H IS H i D * ^ ^ ^ T S Free Apartment Locating V l v J “ íéFM i " Northwest V 451-2223 8501 B Burnet Rd , AVALON APTS 3 2 N D AT IH35 SU M M ER RATES EFFICIENCY - $ 22 5 1 B R - $ 2 4 5 W ALK EAST C A M P U S O N SITE LAUNDRY 4 73 2446 205 W 20lh 1 block from campus Efficiencies and rooms, ABP $250 $285 One yeor lease 397 2576, M-F 8om 5pm FANTASTIC LOCATION — 1 block UT Qu7*y clean 2 2 pool sundeck, laundry Summec $450 plus E Great Oak, 2900 Swisher. 477-3388 472-2097 FURNISHED EEFJCIENCY~Í907 San Gobnei. $220/monlti plus E Call Bruhl Blood Real*or», 345-5442 _____________ WEST CAMPUS large 2BR in 4-plex Available June I Within walking distance $450 • E Ken McWilliams, 327 5000 After 6 pm, 478-2410 FREE LOCATING Service, Condos Apartments - Houses Duplexes Dorms All Areas AJI Pnces Habitat Hunters, 474 1532 ENFIELD ROAD Large 2Br1 b] T ! P 80- T ^ <^ 7 ify Quiet pool, courtyard, on shuttle, close to downtown/MoPoc 477 1303, 258 5065 MATURE STUDENT Large, clean, quiet efficiency on shuttle $235 Popolo Village Apartments 111 W 38th #303 910 WEST 26th Nice community, efficiency, 2 blocks from campus, on shuttle, gas/water poxj $240 - E 477-2160 302 W 38th All sizes, furnished/unfurnished Near shuttle Gas/water poid 453 4002 303 WEST 40th Large 2-1. All appliances, pool and laundry $335 00 Call 458-1634, 478 3533 QUIET 1BR on IF shuttle near compus $235 * E 478-6148 ____________ $225 00 I BR STUDY area, covered parking 10 mm walk to Student Union 2812 Nueces 476- 5465 CA.C.H SKANSEN APTS Alpine design, 1-1, CA/Ch. vault­ ed ceilings, ceiling Ions, porches, balconies, low summer rent Coll 453 4784 for oppomtment, leave message 4205 Speedway SHANTI APTS Beautiful tropic environment, pool, sundeck, palm trees lBdrm(s| 5 ovailoble for sum mer 476-0391 PLEASANT FURNISHED efficiency on shuttle 4503 Speedway $230/month Water paid 385 3346 doys 327 5020 nights WALK UT SUMMER ONLY Spacious 2-1, CA/ CH, dishwasher, disposal patio, pool, laundry, pleosant 452 1658 478 3303 NEAR DOWNTOW N, UT. on shTfli~Water gas paid Good condition Efficiency and 1 BR From $215 1211 WestAStreei 474 1107 after 5pm LAW SCHOOL efficiency 8uilt ms attic fan, sun deck bills divided $250/summer $350/foll 926 7243 OLD MAIN Apartments 2503 Peorf Efficiencies Four blocks UT shuttle M F 9 5 926 7453 ABP CH/CA, 2BR $425/monfh Quiet retreat for serious graduate student No pets pool, walking distance to UT, across from Hemphill Park 3011 Whitis. 477-1734 SUPER SUMMER Rotes' 1 room efficiency $219 50 i 1 BR studio w/ceilmg fan, close to compus, $255 ■ E Sun West Aportments, 404 W 35th 451 9595 451 2986, 345 0 7 7? EFFICIENCY 3 blocks to compus $l40/monlh ABP Call Bob or Kelli at 454 6633 SUBLEASE THROUGH July Nice large quiet IBR UTorea Walk or shuttle 4 74 2700 QUIET GARAGE apartment — near Law School — lorge study/bedroom — small kitchen — both $3 20/month — utilities paid — will consider only very responsible person Coll Donno, 472 9012 LG EFFICIENCY UT shuttle or walk Summer rote $220 • E 472 2294 1 BEDROOM apt Pool UT shuttle or walk $22S * E 472 8420 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS T H E A R C H W A Y Efficiency Apartments • Central Heat & A/C • Carpet • Full Kitchen • $198/mo. 2506 M anor Rd. 478-3622 THE THREE ELM APARTMENTS Large 2-2 available now Small, quiet complex w/pool 400 W 35th $ 37 5 • E Call Steve at 4 7 8 -7 7 5 0 or 452 -6 0 2 4 2505 ENFIELD IO N SHUTTLE) Efficiency ond IBR, loundry, pool. MANAGER #1 478-2775 CAMBRIDGE TOWER 2-2, ABP. security system, swimming pool, wolk to compus. $1000 July 1 Ruth, 451-5214 451 1345 NEWLY REMODELED 2 bedroom on shuttle Only $345 plus bills or $415 all bills paid Pool, loundry walk to shopping, Cameron Troce, 1200 E 52nd (Exit 51st, Cameron Roodl Bryan 480-9191 453- 6239 UT CONVENIENCE Small complex, lorge units, 2BR-2BA 2220 Leon $385 ♦ Electricity Hom- son Pearson 472-6201 SPACIOUS EFFICIENCIES, 1 & 2 bedrooms Con­ venient north-central location, furnished & unfur- mshed $245 $380 - E 453-7514 442 4076 2BR, NORTH of campus $350, gos cooking, hot water, A/C poid by complex Agent 472-7201 QUIET IBR on IF shuttle neor compus $235 * f 478-6148 EFFICIENCY CONVENIENT to UT 3 blocks from shuttle Quiet neighborhood at East 32nd and la- toyette 45? 6329 offer 5 30 p m Ask for Rondy 1708 PATTON LANE Unfurnished efficiencies. CA/CH Gos and water paid Pool and laundry room Quiet location, $230/month 928-1128 929-3253 C°mpus Walk ’° UT Efficiency and IBR $245-5260 1008 W 25th 451-6533, Central “ropertie$, Inc 2BR GARAGE apartment, (qu,et area) close to r r u i w s r ” 04 s°n ,3io' FURNISHED APARTMENTS TWO MONTHS FREE RENT River Hills presents Our EARLY BIRD SPECIAL!* If y o u 're staying in Austin this Su m m e r you sho uld be taking advantage of the Best Deal in Town. W e have Eff., 1, 2, 3, & 4 Bed ro om s available for o c c u p a n ­ cy Today. Prices starting at $260. 4 sw im m ing pools, 4 Laundries, Sauna, 2 Shuttle Bus Routes, Convenient to S h o p p in g & Enter­ tainment and Cable T.V. is Optional. So, w h v l o o k a n y m o r e ? M a k e y o u r s e l f a t h o n u DUVAL VILLA APARTMENTS \ u s i m , 4 >01 | ) u \ .iI , l c \ . i s 7 S 7 s 4 3 1 - 2 3 4 ’. 2 Large Pools Open Mon.-Fri. 9-6/Sat. 10-5/Sun. 1-5 River H ills Apt. Professionally Managed bv Davis Assoc. 1601 Royal Crest 4 4 4 - 7 7 9 7 for further information stop or < all AH referentes will he < het ked r i v e r h i l l s 1601 r o y a l c r # s t 4 4 4 - 7 7 9 7 CONDOS FOR RENT ROOMS ROOM AND BOARD ROOMMATES TYPING THE DAÍLY TEXAN/FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1 0 8 1 PAGE 17 TYPING SERVICES NEAR UT lo w School on shuttle, targe IB» m small • E 474 quiet to m p le. Pool & laundry $ 2 7 5 1240 4 4 2 4 0 7 6 ____________ w e l c o m e d unfurnished apartments TARRYTOW N POOL, loundry, lhuttt* targ * 2B» , E 2 6 0 6 fnSd 4 7 4 $ 4 2 0 • M B R $ 3 2 0 I & 1 badroom oportmanh m N O W I EASING Copitol Plazo orao N ,c . ground! and pool on yhuttl»'out* 4 5 8 4521 Í 0 ! S . B ? , Summ* ' H»c«>ls Aportmant, Martina from $225/m o n th O v « , 150 to choota from M fv K » S 3 4 3 -0 2 7 0 Haagarty Property M en ag e IB» uportmenh available W alk,n a ’ distante U Í 9 9 7 5 ^ «Hike» Howell Properties 4 77 UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES DUPLEX 2 BR - 1 BA Duplex Oltorf-Burleson Rd a re a Fireplace, w asher/dryer connections, gas a p ­ pliances, privacy, fenced yard, car port w /storage $ 4 0 5 /m o n fh Call Connie! C.L. Reeves Real Estate 447-8303 W ALK TO UT LAW SCHOOL C h a rm in g 2BR-BA, w o o d floors, mock fire p lace, attic fon, stove a n d re fn g e ra to r Lots of trees A v a ila b le now w in d o w s an d big $ 6 0 0 0 0 C in d y 4 7 4 - 0 6 3 4 NO R TH UT, Summer only Cheap rent Large 2-1 la rg e 11, rear unit, $195, $ 3 5 0 G reat shape great shape Call Stan or John, 4 7 7 -7 6 7 6 or 4 5 4 6 6 3 3 LUXURY DUPLEX, 2BR/1WBA, 2 story Seton Hos pttal orea N o pets $ 6 7 5 0 0 /m o $ 2 5 0 0 0 d e p o s it 12 month lease 4 5 8 - 2 3 6 3 ACROSS FROM tennis courts N e a r UT lo rg e 2-1, appliances furnished $ 5 7 5 9 2 8 4 9 2 5 or 4 7 2 0 4 6 4 NEAR SHUTTLE Southeast 2 -2 , corpets, dropes, patio water paid N o pets $ 4 0 0 1900A Valle» Hill 4 4 2 8 3 7 7 , 2 8 2 -0 9 3 5 DUPLEXES! GREAT for roommates From $ 4 1 0 / month 3BR 2BA contemporary Close to UT AH appliances, 3 4 5 -0 2 7 0 Heoqarty Property M a n ­ agement CONDOS FOR RENT CENTRALLY LOCATED LUXURY C O N D O M IN I U M NEAR H A N C O C K CENTER 1-1, appliances, CA /C H , W /D connections, carpet, ceiling fon, fire place, adequate storage From $ 2 9 5 ASI C om pa­ ny 3 4 5 -9 6 4 3 MOVE IN TODAY OR PRE-LEASE FOR FALL 2 B R - I B A t o w n h o u s e o n shuttle ro u te B ire p la ce , w a s h e r d r y e r c o n n e c t io n s. g a s a p p lia n c e s, e a r t h t o n e ca rp e ts, 2 l a r g e su n d e c k s, o n e c a r g a r a g e $ 5 4 0 / m o n t h R o o m m a t e s Call Connie! C.L. Reeves Real Estate 447-8303 2 I NEW . quiet near Town la k e turnished Short/ long term lease $ 6 2 5 0 0 negoitoble 4 78 8 0 9 6 4 7 8 2 6 2 3 . O N E BDR Unfr condo Two blks from downtown/ Town la k e Swimming pool Gas and water paid 4 5 2 $ 3 8 5 00/m onth Coll Patty 9 6 9 2 4 7 6 2 6 7 3 SUM MER RATES 2 4 0 4 Longview # 1 0 6 Appli including microwave and ceilma anees furnished fon $ 3 9 5 4 5 4 8301 ENFIELD EXQUISiTE targe 2 2 patio, ceiling fon, b o o l coses lots of windows shuttle $ 8 0 0 Aqeni 47 2 -7 2 0 1 PRELEASE FOR August N ear UT tanury 1-1 condo Ceiling fans washer/dryer wiH take 2 students $ 4 7 5 Agent 4 7 2 7201 M A U N A KAI Condominiums Furnished efficien cies with pool and loundry Wolk to UT O nly two • E 4 0 5 E 31st Street left for summer $ 2 2 5 4 7 2 -2 1 4 7 WALK TO campus 1 and 2 bedrooms Fully equipped Jacuzzi, elevator Saltillo tile decks 34 5 -1 5 5 2 , 4 7 2 0 9 8 7 UNFURNISHED HOUSES TWO BLOCKS-LAW SCHOOL FOUR BEDROOMS Featuring a la rg e o ld h o m e with A C /C H , gas kitchen includes appliances, sunny breakfast room , p lan t ro o m o n d d en W a s h e r/D ry e r connections, plenty o f storage space N o pets 926-7243 AVAILABLE N O W two and three bedroom older homes apartments Call now for 24 hour informo hon 452 5 9 7 9 R O O M Y 2BR IBA House 6 Blocks north of UT at 6 0 3 ' 2 Hams $ 5 0 0 /m o rent for summer $ 5 2 5 / one year thereafter Fronk Carneo, 4 5 4 9218 Evenings RESTORED 1 890‘S house on Swedish Hill 9 0 2 East 14th 2BR 1 Bath $ 4 7 5 0 0 4 5 8 -6 3 1 0 C A M E R O N R O A D shuttle stop 2 Br "Tba" Refr.geT ator, stove, carport, fenced yard, totally redeco rated available 8 /1 0 Couple preferred $ 4 4 5 926-5811 after 5 p m MISCELLANEOUS FOR RENT FROZEN MARGARITA, cocktail machines for large parties M argaritaville Jay Brim at 4 5 4 9 7 2 4 Nights. 8 3 7 - 0 8 9 0 8 3 7 3 9 0 4 EURNISHED BOYS W alking d ata n te UT $185 $ 2 0 5 ABP Howe» Properties 4 77 9 9 2 5 PRIVATE ST U D fN T R O O M S /C O ED SPEClA SUMMER DISCO UN TS/?U R N lSH ED BIUS PL lO C A T iO N /$ 2 C X j 145 KITCHEN/EXCELLENT CALI D O N 4 7 7 1529 TAOS CO ED Dorm across the street from UT N o w leasing for summer 4 74 6 9 0 5 W A N TE D O N E female student to share home with North Austin fomtfy Kitchen and loundry privileges $ 2 0 0 0 0 / mo W ill hold for fall with deposit 4 5 8 6 4 2 0 UT f f M A l f wanted to rent room m South. Austin $115/mo Washer Dryer CoH Softy 4 4 4 6 4 6 0 w a l k / u t f u r n i s h e d rooms, older dupw » also one side available $ !3 3 /$ 1 9 5 eoch Mature s« rious students Lease deposit 5 0 7 W 18»h 4 / 8 3 7 9 5 ÍRAVIS HEIGHTS Nice home M ature non • deposit 4 4 2 9391 Nice smoker quiet $175 location Avoiloble June August SHA*RE LARGE old 3 bedroom home 3 blocks from compos $ 3 0 0 / month Call Bob or Ketti 4 5 4 6 6 3 3 CO-OP HOUSING CO-OP LIVING AT IT S BEST W s w im m in g Y o u c o n tro l y o u r o w n Irving « p a c e Air 19 c o n d rtio n tn g H o m e -c o o k e d m e a ls a w e e k a n d an th a t s h a re s e d u c a tio n a l c o m m u n ity tu n as w e ll as w o rk G o o d p n e e s lo r s u m m e r a n d f a ! p o o l CALL 4 7 6 -5 6 7 8 or com e b y 1906 P e a rl. College Houses Co-ops HEALTH ORIENTED co-ed co-op w /w ndeck and pool Has female vaconcies House of Commons 2610 Rio Grande 4 7 6 7 9 0 5 LAUREL HOUSE C O O P has summer & fall vacon cies Two blocks from UT campus Self-governed 44 private rooms furnished C A/C H , 17 prepared meals per week. 24 hour kitchen access, mi crowove, cable TV, sundeck. free parking Come by 1905 Nueces or CoH 4 7 8 0 4 70 TAOS WILL be a Coop this foil Coed AC wtdes creen cable TV, 19 homecooked meo Is a week, sundeck. Across the street from UT Call 4 74 6 9 0 5 or come by 2612 G uadalupe for a tour V C O O P MORE than a cheop ploce to !»ve 1919 Robbms PI Drop by around 7 for supper or call 4 7 4 -7 7 6 7 S A N D IA C O -O P Beautiful. campus $ 2 4 0 $ 2 6 0 (ABP 4 7 3 8 5 1 3 .4 7 4 -2 0 0 2 ipooous HoK block includes some food- STILL L O O K IN G for summer or fall housing? ICC C O -O P S have fem ale/m ole vacancies for $217 and up Pnce includes F O O D /R O O M /U T IL IT IE S and m ore1 For more information coll 4 76 1957 or visit our office at 510 W 23rd ROYAL C O -O P Summer vacancies Singles and doubles Vegetarian Call 4 78 0 8 8 0 or come by 1805 Peed S A N D IA C O -O P Beautiful. spacious Haff-block campus W e prefer mature nonsmoker Reason able Available August beyond 4 7 3 8513 4 7 4 2 0 0 2 ROOMS ROOMS ROOMS SUMMER RATES a s m At TAOS, luxury and convenience combine. All bills paid, of course DOUBLE S206/SINGLE $270 per session “QUESTION: A quiz before school s ta rts 7 Yes read on W hat hou sin g features are m ost stu d e n ts lo o kin g fo r7" t. A rooftop sundeck for tanning and planning 1 Widescreen cable TV for relief from the books 3. A location across from campus with free parking 4. A coeducational environment j l . A refrigerator in a w ry room 4. You guessed it1 All of the above NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR SUMMER AND FALL! 2612 Guadalupe 474-6905 At Last... YOU CAN > > M M f R ro o m m ai. HEIR townhouse in Norik- Aushn WJi shore b ed 'o p » Re- ' $ 5 2 5 0 a t Sue 4 5 8 5 5 0 6 . m e -e .itk .e e * e d * r t to< 2 2 ? F ,1 r ) t N ' j t ,» ta 2 6 » , BA - o ru jo levf»,--itate ferry.ee *tuder-' -ove to a m p u i a • ■ e ie .t r , A*sei 6 u " ' a * t y -n 4 8 2 W ' $ 2 5 0 0290 I f M A i F Í O O M M A T f n o r sm oke- n e e d e d - ■ » W-it-.. w aliin g -j-sion- e UT $ 2 5 0 n, u-11- 4 77 '.8 JO furnished - - F E M A lf w A N Tf 0 Z-' - r BR , a n d je t a n F o . fall $ 7 5 0 ' *, jn iitie-. 4 n e a r 2 6 # j s ' , A B SEN TEE H O U S E M A T f o . p e rs r,. n iq - "- - j r t u n g l -p ie . Sm ot u n i ro o m Pah.,, » * d -,n of -jgh* ,ui» N o peta N o tvsm afe . BR ter 1.l e u - 4 5 4 4 9 6 2 Mortkm ohe. 5 U O p m W O R K IN G S E M I V E G G iT V . to sho.« 7BR house wifk »ees Juf» 4 9 8 2 svets p e rv o r Dove 454 rT s p O n SIBLE Ñ O N S M O K Ñ O vtudem wanted to shore 4BR 2 Botk house m N Austu '■'/ ut.i- N e .i ta ■' » shuttle Peks ohowed $ 7 5 0 t« s CoH M or» 4 5 8 6 0 2 7 - Utilities * f M A i f r-tCJUuf n e o . cam pus $ 1 / 5 N '. sm iAnng Pets P-efe y .o d work-na 4 7 6 8 3 6 6 3NE OR two female roommates 1 frorr cam pus eos» g o ng shore 3BR h-m se tae » pensive 4 74 7 7 9 8 Lejug three b f EMAI t t OR 7BR fun opt bilis $ 4 9 50 A BP thru summer 5 blocks frow compus Laundr» fociirt.es M o rta 4 ,'6 6315 note 4 pruj.-e 3BR 2 BA HOUSE ta shore off B.odie io n e $ 45 '1 uti Responsible grod student p refe” ed mo Hector 2 8 7 7 8 4 0 fE M A .E HOUSEMATE 3 2 Juf» South on shuttle nor> smoker bifh tynn 4 5 8 6 3 5 4 / 8 8 3 4 !, eventngi $ 2 0 0 FEMALE p Fom A /C . corpet $ -9 0 4 6 3 6 N o pen SM O KJN G 'o o m rrs jie 4 ? houwt 4 bttts 4 6 7 ?1?7 4 73 FE M A if RCXÚMMATE wanted to sho'e 3 bed room house with 2 girk 4 5 2 84 8 ? T W O B O R N -A G A IN g«rh Apxjrtment o r RC ■ 3 electricrty Irma 44 7 1313 !9 RO O M M ATE NEEDED »mmed*crtefy $ 2 0 0 per month ptvs ’ 3 b»Hs Call 4 54 8021 and keep trymg or come by 308 Bentwood off A»rpon Btvd and 35 R E S P O N S ÍB ÍT HOUSEMATE need ed ~b 7 end of h utilities prefer o June, 2 qu»et graduate student |esp an or o rc h tH K tjrg Cal! Roland 4 6 7 8 3 3 4 fry e venings duplex, IF. $140 T4EAT STUDIOUS roommate needed to share 4 oedroom opartmen* off R-vervtde $ 35 0 0 plus electricity 4 4 3 - :4 2 4 FEMALE R O O M M A T E 3-2 d u p e * spacious SR 3 b»Hs 4 4 5 0 4 0 RC, Riverside W /D $155 0 0 ‘«ave messoge M /F H O U S E M A TE Spocous 4 2 W /D Q w e ' to UT Prefer student neighborhood $185 0 0 4 bills 4 4 3 - 7 6 8 9 afternoons 10 mm N O N S M O K IN G HOUSEMATE fJT Wished 2-1 house neor Intromurah $172 5 0 ♦ 9 b.Hs Kevm 46 7 9 5 79 oke» 2 p m to shore R O O M M A TE W ANTED •mrr.ed*atei r C iear sponsible female to shore 2 2 in Enfield a reo G reoi com ply, mce pool $ 7 2 7 5 0 plus Z bills 472 7287 3BR-3B API NR shuttle Al opplKjnces $ 1 5 0 /mo • E N o hassles easygoing 44? 9 8 5 2 CoH o kef noons W EST CAMPUS $ 185.00 ABP pancy Upper division N e e Furmshffd ampie Teresa 4 7 4 8^82 trnmed»ate occu­ libera! reiponsible QUIET n e a t /oom m ate Shore classy Fnheid du plex M ale or female $!0C half b»!ls Rick 4 77- 0 7 0 2 ________________ f EMALE HOUSEMATE wanted 3 ' Pork orea $ 2 2 5 2 4 0 aftef 6 p m P»!k Co 1 Frances 4 54 r H ^ n ian d " f r e m e S i e t U d & T O o A 7 4 4 $ 4 2 0 pen ScrXAUAH ROOMMATES 473-2800 S V S t a r t h e r e . .. / R p o r n t t i A t C K l c t w c r k ............ 2 8 1 3 H it t ( i t u n d t • # CLEAN R E S F ^ N S IB IE ro o m m a te to sh a re n ew c o n d o ER shuttle 28 R 2B A m ic ro w a v e h o t tub souna etc $ 3 0 0 • ? E 4 7 / 4 7 7 4 / 2 F EM A L E H O U S E M A T £ $ w o n te d non 1 smokers 2 0 min fro m com pus 3 B » 2B A BR j n f jr rushed $ 1 5 0 ■ ‘ o utilities C o * 2 5 8 - 8 0 0 6 N O N S M O K IN G IE M A IE to sh o re iw o b e d ro o m d u p le . W /D South N o shuttle 4 4 1 4 5 0 7 C H R IS T IA N M A L E w h o is resp o n sib le studious conscientious rie o n n e e d e d to sh o re t a 'g e fu ll, furnished 4BR 3B A house w ith W / D fo r sum m er a n d /O f sprin g A BP N e a r CR CoH 9 2 8 2 3 6 5 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D M a le or fe m a le N o sm okers O n 2 6 th across fro m la w schoo! 4 7 7 8 6 2 4 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D l o r ~ 2 T h o u s e $ 1 7 i/m o rent plus V j bffts Easy access to 1-3 5 o n d cam p u s I T * 1 K ,rn 4 ^ ^ 9 8 a fte r 5 p m RaJL *T E N E E D E D to sh a re th re e b e d r o o rr . h o m e m H ill C o u n try $ 5 0 (X ) d ep o sit m o- $ 2 0 u 0 0 m onth plus *2 elec t K evin a t H 2 8 8 1 0 0 7 a fte r 6 W A N T E D M A L E P ool, h ot tub rm c ro w o ve ro o m m a te fo r lu xury c o n d o fuMy furnished on CR ro u te Sum m er o n ly R e a s o n a b le 3 2 7 shuttle 8 5 3 5 U R G E N T 1 /2 h o u sem ates n e e d e d to sh o re 4 B D 2 8 A fo r sum m er $ 1 3 0 0 0 o r $1 10 0 0 * bills 4 4 ? 4 1 2 7 R E S P O N S IB L E FE M A L E ro o m m a te to sh a re 2 n e a r cam p u s sum m er o n ly N o sm oktng $ 1 6 5 A 6 P 4 7 9 - 8 6 3 8 k e e p trying M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d to shore la rg e qcwet 1-1 w ith w h ite m a le C A /C H , W /D , all fcnlls a n d tele p h o n e p a id N o n sm oker, n o drugs $ 2 0 5 0 0 / m o n th 8 3 5 6 4 1 9 G W M T O sh a re luxury Enfield to w n h o u s e Beaut* fully furnished M a tu re student o r y o u n g p ro fe s y o n a l p re fe rre d M u st b e c lea n re s p o n s iv e n on sm oker C oll 4 7 7 - 7 6 5 8 N E E D 3 rd p ers o n in c o m fo rta b le o ld e r h o m e up stairs, m a n y w in d o w s 6 blocks ca m p u s $ 1 5 5 bills 4 7 6 - 1 7 9 4 M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d to r 2BR IB A p t o n RC ro u te $ 1 8 5 • E 4 4 3 4 4 1 a fte r 5 p m FEM A LE R O O M M A T E H eig h ts $ 2 0 0 0 0 h E $ 1 0 0 0 0 d ep o sit 4 4 2 1 4 0 2 after 6 0 0 p m d u p lex 2-1'*? Travis LIBERAL N O N S M O K IN G ro o m m a te n e e d e d fo r sum m er S h a re 3 - 2 house w / 2 m ales $ 1 4 5 * N e a r IF fields 4 6 7 8 3 1 6 3 b M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d to shore b e d ro o m in w c c o n d o Pool. H o t tub $ 1 6 0 'm o 4 7 4 0 8 4 9 W A N T E D FAIRLY lib e ral, n e a t but n ot p e rfe c t up p er division o r g ra d student to sh a re ch o rm m g C larksville d u p lex $ 1 5 0 0 0 3 b ilk 4 7 8 6 6 4 7 m o rn in g s o n d a fte r 10 p.m • O W N R O O M m 3 b d rm house fe m a le n ea t a n d like cats $ ! 5 0 /m o n t h 4 5 8 8 7 3 3 IF shuttle M u s t b e * pills N E W C O N D O m a le fo r furn ish ed ¡oft lib e ral, juc cu z i sundeck, m ic ro w a v e shuttle $ 2 0 0 2 E 4 4 7 8 8 3 2 • FEM A LE R O O M M A T E S p o a o u s 3 bdr d u p le» n utilities L o ca te d b e tw e e - - $ 1 5 0 /m o Rent 2 4 th St 2 9 th St 4 7 6 - 7 1 6 2 even ing s H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D fo r ta rg e N o rth Austir 4 u *i¡ihei N e a ' h o m e 4BR 2 ? B A $ 1 7 0 -tn o CR 9 2 8 1 0 3 4 - FEM A LE T O sh are co n d o , N o rth w e s t lo c a tio n 2 2 z utilities 4 5 2 Pool H o ttu b C lu b h ou s e $ 3 0 0 0 0 2 8 6 6 LOST& FOUND t ‘ fes 4 7 2 6 8 5 5 LOST D O G , a# w hit* A u q ^ or 4 7 9 -0 4 9 7 anytime 4 7 5 5 4 3 3 8 0 0 - 5 0 0 REWARD LOST S TO tE N bnefcate on 2 7 # Street Con torneo mportont N avo to to C<*y and G nm et Coon ty p a p e n P le a » colí Julie c o lie rt 4 0 9 8 2 5 - 2 4 1 8 N o Queshonq Avked LtaST SMALL Reword C o 1- 4 7 8 0 7 9 4 evenings turquo-ve and gold e o r-n q j RESUMES one or tw o d ay service with or without pictures 2707 Hemphill Park Just North al 27m al Guadalupe 472-3210 472-7677 SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES Tickets • Tickets • Tickets H o w d o y o u s to p th e m ? TYPING PRINTING B INDING The C o m plete P ro fe ttto n o l FULL TIME TYPING SERVICE 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 H E M P H IU . PR _______ P le n ty o f P a rk in g TYPING E / DEANNE Spe. tolizmg ni a g o "•< Reoionabie rotas 44 7 7 2 8 * -' -BM Covrackmg Satar KA’ Hf'S O U '' Y 1 »pe drseartotions # « » « «go- ond p»oiasuonoi »ef#.encas ovonctote 15 yaon e«penance 28? 6 *3 9 P RO FESStO NAl TYPIST Act-» « rnrmce fastlun- oraund These*- drsvedahonv prof^vviona* '© p o m , etr Badxjro IuHm 4 5 3 5124 W O O D S TYPING Service wn«r you won* * done r»gr\t 2 2 0 0 Guadalupe ude entrance 4 72 6 3 0 2 r / PfNG TU TQ R lN G proofreockng >0 yean ex penence former college teocher M A *r Enghsh See your grades go up 2 7 6 7771 F Ar Ty S W O RD Processing Terrr papers profes stona 'epoch dtMWhrtions R.ck up 'ush service hL mtdnigh* 3 4 5 4 2 6 9 YES we type FRESHMAN THEMES So flort oat wifk pood prodes YP< n G - PROOF *N G Stenograph y nonpareil "e leneri statist ports ^>eses monuvr'-ifAs resumes ca kega medico South Joe 44 7 2 5 5 2 FAST octurate reasonable Excellent TYPING spelling grammar Resume speciolut Candy 4 5 1 9 5 9 6 W ORD PROCESSING T Y P IN G « my S O U - h AUSTiN hom»e Ten yeors secretoria^ experience m er.gineermg and accounting ftetds THeses disse^ law review manuvr'iph ,,7*ions technical reports resumes etc Millie 4 4 8 3 9 5 9 PROFESSIONAL TYPING $! 2 5 'page or $1 50 le ga Rushers welcome Condoce 451 4 8 8 5 452 9 3 7 3 ______________________________________ ’Y P IN G $ 1 0 0 per poge Sa^s PROEESStONAi tocfton guaranteed Extra charge for pickup ond delivery 4 4 5 -0 K )8 459-1091 It's sim p le *V irntaitiog if) a $wnm st »ortiLng Contract a t The Castilian? $3 5 .0 0 p a r l e M ioe a» $5 0 .0 0 v i 0°íie Castigan 4 7 8 -9 8 1 1 2323 Son Antonio St. j m PUTERZED r /P ! N o Fast occurate ao»» rhgngat e .p e -a n c a d CoF Morgore* 83? 244C NEED A P.JÍ* O h e fe.-rr UT oree N . w o#.-g Mjt C o F 4 77 19*5 5 0 4 w , Am M a s te r T y p is t r w < ofRfMjiUwuted I YfMng ’t w r . A F F O C 0 A M J I X F f r W O f t D P K O C C S S I M G M S U M i S Tarm e t m a n . Oh i mrH M o n t t l m i M r< A U w M rtd L e A o k li *Aa8 # M tnmemrSdnm 4 7 J -0 ÍS J T Y P I N G S E R V IC E 4 4 3 - 4 4 3 3 T f C S INC 1 0 0 5 E ST ELM O TYPING AND WORDPROCESSING aP w o f k d o n e using F r e e c h e c k i spe*l ng a n d g ra m m a r-c h e c k in g s o ft w o re 472-1686 FAST SERVICE typing Engksh $ 1 0 0 poga Spar u 'to ia r Portuguaw. $ 25 pooe «<,<*. 452 6 7 2 6 P R O O R E A D IN G ’ U TO R IN G $IC /h o «r tmmoc' Jirtte typing of ttaavi .aporta p o p an $ 35 poge jp S at /Jto- rvj od M oude Cordwet- Pk D 4 79 8 9 0 9 F-iPf Rif N C E D Trptfe m N o »# A user nome WA V p e term p a p e n -jrttaocta en 8 3 6 4 9 7 : je r v < e M o n u ic n p ta Y P IN O T X tA L IT Y tanr po p e-. Chorta a'id tabw . etr J T -B 6 A MS route IB M Seie- »• - it 4 7 7 5 1 3 9 9 om thatav fo p turno»»- 9 pw t »Pi n O $ 0 0 PAGE aod $ 25 16m W m - P-o*muono. eepene- ed typn- 4 7 7 5 4 5 6 'm a r U l o m oui p a g e Cal L yn r 4 4 7 1 5 5 2 o r I b v Seie-.-- la x e AUSTIN N E iG h B O R H O O O h tp in G SER 20 .e o n o* acódeme »ypmg V erpenence $ pope Col Pa* at 4 ! 4 S48fc nsh«pk ---ct-r-, very oWrochve co«c 8 ?2 'yp-s- tuto, writing os Signmenta Bo* 2 3 ' 4 5 0 2 S Congress Aus*-- T* 7 8 7 4 5 ________ Y O l f e e 1 *o s . e acz#oc*ve B w o u ld . r to eo r- m oney ■ - our spore tim e o> o ta a n -o - m o d e w e I help you g e* started 4 5 9 8 2 0 MUSICAL INSTRUCTION E X P E R IE N C E P IA N O /G U IT A R g - '.ie -s -a d v a n c e c U T d e g -e e Atae 4 0 8 ? teo ch e - be z d .it 4 5 9 PRIVATE V O C E p»onc an d muvc th eo ry nstrU{ hons ciasnco o r p o p u *o ' C a í 3 2 7 - 5 8 3 4 F e r fo rm o n ce apportunrties fo r PHOTOS PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 m i n u t a M trv tc a M O N - F S I 1 0 - 6 S A T 10 - 2 4 7 7 5 5 5 5 THE THIRD EYE 2 5 3 0 G U A D A L U P E M AINTAIN THE VALUE OF YOUR C O N D O M IN IU M 5AVE-A-DAY HOME CLEANERS condominium SPECIALISTS Bv APPOINTMENT 47S-82’3 PHO NE A NS W E RING e m r e Onlv $ 5 0 0 o rnonth Coil 4 7 7 1915 -0 30am - 5 3 0 p m 7W G BROTHERS M- .-ng Reovonabte atei u jr e c Lor.a io n g d iv to -r- 4 7 2 2 9 8 in FURNITURf M O V IN G P-ote red" ♦ranspor^ ,ri my 'yeve kjrge cargc vqt Three yecr expe*tenre 44? 9 3 0 2 K IR r S P H O T O G R A P m y -■ ,,- 1. Ora» photos portfolios Please crH 4 / 9 86 7 t'jm-i:, portroi* acr U-* rrt ; w ertdings c i -■ es-.m# . ’ N O R M A N ’S J A N ’ ’ 0 » . A . S e n rv e s 3 y - i profeta s*or»a e x p e 'te r.'.e Aportnkenth small offices ouf kpeciolty 5 0 0 9 0 0 4 5 2 9 9 5 ? ^ ousehokJs offices pianov. D f A . M O V I N G L oco o n d k>ng drstonr.e F ries* service — re a s o n - at>*e 'a te s 4 '6 H i R O O F iN G A N D seo mi#*-. 4 5 3 3 2 2 6 est«mate$ TUTORING MATH TUTOR Ov«t 8 year» of prolaaasooal ear rfrr *■ kelpiaf I T •i«4rnti aalu tfce GRADE I Straggling7 F metre! e d o a t h e la s t ? Sa t aff or row k* for mppoimtmemt ACr 311*912 4fj#i sajy ««aj*«t« «Tarja» t t 0 3MM3 m u te i f i * J *4 M 7 w j « s t jw>*j#j rm jaz«i¡ w tt j# ja i n o t i n i ( m m m c n em 3 0 2 t m m u n w m t i? h 1 « t e s t a e m 3 1* * t a r m a is j r a z a s t j # j * u i i N i g £ » •» . t r u n * i Msi i I M 3 I » urns i i IM S 195 * Aar rkw » # . . I * ilw ea > » ■ It . lee le lr I S n * 7 W e b to o n • 1 * 1 r»M . * i fcl> rere» e L o n « t n t t M H f |~TTr » Pat Lacei Totonno Service 4S 8 S O M 4177 7 0 0 3 $ 0 4 a 24»h S t' O m c » 3 u p s .o -'» fro m In n e r S o n rtu rr r U 'O R I N O p ro o fra o d i E N G l lS H See v p m c od 2 3 y e o -t e * p e -ie n c « a g e Englisr M o-rrte C o -c tw e ‘ #h D 4 7 9 8 9 0 9 $ 1 0 / h o u r 'eochmg col- .E A R N N T E N S IV E E^g„vr .. »'om«d Bnttsh T O E.F * !©och«* en ce Vw 4 5 4 ¿ 1 2 5 pro*ess»onoHy years expen TRAVEL vACA I O N ’N beouhtu ' ooi Coioroóc ^4od•r^ X. cab'r $ >. W* 4 ■’ > ' 4 aAe- 5 $ 5 . y e n d a l June 4 5 4 5 1 3 3 k k . » » k A k k j in n a n n a . Here For The Summer? We'll Be Here Too Telephone Counseling 4 7 1 -CALL anytime ROOMS ROOMS STAYING IN AUSTIN THIS SU M M ER? ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD FOR $600 A DAY Now when you sign up for a SUMMER MEAL PLAN at The C astilian,you c a n eat as much as you like at lunch and dinner Monday through Friday through­ out each summer session for only $168 per session! At last... delicious piping hot meals for only six bucks a day. The Castilian is so convenient you won't have to run home everytime you're hungry. O r spend a lot of time at fast food restaurants. No more cooking or arguing about whose food is whose ... or whose turn it is to do the dishes! Look into a Castilian meal plan for economical, convenient and delicious eating! For More Information Call 01IG Cflsftiiflu 478-9811 2323 San Antonio St. STOP BY FOR A TOUR TODAY! THE • PLACE • TO • BE 01>e Caspian $394.00 per six week session (double occupancy) 15 meals per week Contract can be prorated as to move-in date STOP BY FOR A TOUR TODAY 478-9811 • 2323 San Antonio St. College Houses Proudly Announces the launching of a New Housing Co-operative this Fall, Taos Co-op Room & Board Rates Doubles S259 Singles S359 • S e l* g o v e r n m e n t ^ ^ ■ A C • A l 1 bills paid S u n d e c k 1 9 m e a i s w k R e f r i g e r a t o r s in e a c h r oo m A c r o s s the street trom c a m p u s St u d y r o o m s Co ed W i d e s c r e e n TV NOW ITASIM, FOR FALL Beam down for a tour today1 2612 Guadalupe 474 6905 THE COLLEGE HOUSES, INC Housing for People. Not Profit. PAGfc 18/THt DAILY ILXAN/FRIDAY, )UNE 10, 1983 SCIENCE Hormone tests predict cancer By D EBBIE FETTER M AN Daily Texan S ta ff The presence or absence of a certain hor­ mone can help doctors determine the prog­ nosis of breast cancer patients before they are treated, a cancer researcher said Mon­ day. Progesterone hormone-receptor tests can predict the behavior and aggressiveness of breast cancer. Researchers are evaluating the effectiveness of the tests, which have been in practice for about five years Dr. Gary Gross, training to be a clinical oncologist at the UT Health Science Center in San Antonio, explained “ a hormone re­ ceptor is a location on the cell’s surface that can recognize the chemical makeup of a hormone and cause the cell to react . ” Researchers analyzing the results of the hormone-receptor tests have discovered if the hormone is present, then the patient's prospects are favorable. If the hormone is absent, the patient is less likely to survive. The body produces specific concentra­ tions of progesterone in the blotnistream Endocrine therapy, the catch-all phrase for hormone-receptor tests, uses high levels of progesterone to block the body's own hor­ mones and prevent uncontrolled cancer growth Dr. William McGuire, chief of medical oncology at the UT Health Science Center in San Antonio, established the use of hor­ mone receptors as standard practice among oncologists when he was working on breast cancer. "The initial treatment has less severe aft­ ereffects than chemotherapy," said Gross. Gross and his assistants are analyzing the long-term effects of hormone treatment. Researchers studied the past and present medical histories of those patients who received progesterone-receptor treatments. Gross said Fifty-six percent of the patients who had progesterone present in their bloodstream and then had the endocrine therapy, lost the progesterone hormone when the biopsies were repeated. Gross said Gross added the researchers tried, but could not connect the loss of progesterone receptors to the size of the initial tumor, pre- and post-menopause and the spread of lymph-glands Gross said he plans to find out why the progesterone receptors disappeared and if their loss is such a bad thing The Health Science Center will be in­ volved in a multi-institutional group to con­ tinue cancer research. Gross said many medical centers regionally divided through out the country will combine their informa­ tion to get faster results In the past, the results of tests have been inconsistent. Comparing the histories of patients, Gross said, has been the key to the success of the research team "The breakthrough has been developing a consistent evaluation of tests," Gross said. A 2.8 billion mile phone call for 50 cents?; Pioneer 10 to send back signal from Pluto United Press International C L E V E L A N D — America's loneliest piece of hardware, the Pioneer 10 space­ craft, will have a nationwide telephone au­ dience Monday. That’s the day the craft passes the orbit of Pluto, 2.8 billion miles from the Earth. T R W Inc., which built Pioneer 10 for the National Aeronautics and Space Adminis­ tration, is offering callers a chance to listen to its transmissions for 50 cents. Launched in 1972, Pioneer’s primary mission was photographing Jupiter 21 months later, but the craft is still perform­ ing flawlessly. Those calling a special number, 1-900- 410-4111, from 4 a.m. to 7 p.m. CDT, will hear a narrator give a brief description of Pioneer 10 and then signals from the craft, which take more than four hours to reach Earth. T R W said the signals, which sound like Morse code, are actually too last to be heard by the human ear, but they will be slowed electronically. N ASA has offered a similar service to allow callers to hear radio conversations on several recent space shuttle flights Pioneer 10 aimed its antenna toward Earth Thursday and transmitted a picture of a bright star six trillion miles away. Scientists said the photograph of Altair — 10 times as bright as the sun — was beamed 2.8 billion miles to Earth in an ex­ ercise to check the accuracy of Pioneer's camera equipment before it passes the last known planet on Monday to travel virtually forever through the universe. Pioneer, launched more than 11 years ago, was nearing the far end of the orbit of the Neptune — presently the outermost planet — when it shot the picture which won't be released until Monday. The photograph of Altair was not expect­ ed to be much better than those taken from Earth, N A SA spokesman Pete Waller said. "Bu t the real significance of the picture is the distance it travelled from Pioneer back to Earth," Waller said. " I t ’s a well- known star because it's so bright — about 10 times brighter than our sun — but the picture won’t show much detail " Pioneer 10 will pass within a few trillion miles of Altair in 227 years. Waller said, a relatively short distance in space time. At that time. Pioneer will have traveled about 50 trillion miles since leaving Earth. N ASA has plotted a trajectory for Pio­ neer covering the next 800,000 years. Waller said Senior scientists tracking prog­ ress of the unmanned probe said there is no reason to think it won’t continue its explo­ ration at least that long. Earth could lose communication with the ship sometime during the early 21st centu­ ry, said project director Richard Fimmel, but Pioneer will continue its tourney unless it is damaged, which is not likely. It carries on board a greeting from Earth to anv intelligent life that might find the spacecraft. The gold plaque describes Earth's location and includes a depiction of a man and a woman PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz THIS IS THE LAST DAY OF SCHOOL RISHT ? I WAS AFRAID THIS WOULD HAPPEN... f SUDDENLY I’M \ I UilDE A W A K E ! ) NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 29.77 ^ 29.77 30 00 -10-83 (V . S E A T T L E STOW N E W Y O R K F A IR | r *’ | m * — by jo h n n y h a r t mellow- ¿ra m by; stive 90 90 UP I W E A T H E R F O T O C A S T I It will be partly cloudy Friday with the high in the upper 80s There will be a 20 percent chance of thunderstorms Fnday mght w ith the low in the lower 70s. Wind will be from the southeast at 10 to 15 mph It will be partly cloudly Saturday morning, with the high near 90 Nationally, the weather will be generally fair with sunny to partly cloudy skies ACROSS 1 Old sayings 5 Fiber 9 Gardened 14 Space 15 Black: poet. 16 Like a sheep 17 Fat 18 Length unit 19 Seed cover and 20 -----of It" 22 Kit — 23 Wrong 24 Cavities 25 Scratch 28 Got back 32 Talk publicly 33 Outmoded 34 Mouths: anat 35 Countenance 36 Irrigate 37 Ripped 38 Mischief deity 45 Fruit 46 Establishes 49 Berating 53 Deer 54 Mineral suff 55 Always 56 Honor 57 Fragrance 58 FDR s mother 59 Small cnange 60 Clan 61 Snooty one DOWN 1 Season 2 "Weill": Ir 3 Existed 4 A — — of affairs 5 Prior to 6 Cut short 7 Grime 8 Explosive 9 Turned 10 Opposed 11 Osculate 39 More delicate 12 Inner pref 40 Begat 41 Put back 43 Cure 44 War deity 13 Adminis­ trator 21 Expectation 22 Fruit drink THURSDAY’S PUZZLE SOLVED 3 3 3 3 acataos □□□□ 3 3 3 3 333011 □ □ □ □ z o a a a o B a a a a n u a 3 3 3 3 3 3 OQ OQ aO O O 0 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 33330(3 3 3 3 3 3 3(033 3 S Q Q 0 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 Q C 3 3 3 0 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3(3 D 33 3aa 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 0 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 Q 3 □ 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 03(03 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 24 Dwindle 25 Until now 2 wds 26 Container 27 Dashes 28 Ranked 29 Irish poet 40 Half: pref 42 Gossip 43 Waterways 45 Hint: 2 wds. 46 Structure 47 Conveyance 48 My Name Is — ’’ Thomas — 30 Went wrong 31 Fine and — 33 Europeans 36 Cables 37 Eternal 39 Woods 49 Lie at anchor 50 Tsar 51 Roman tyrant 52 Seize 54 Beam source BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed HOP EVERYTHING' weVC GOT A SPECIAL NCW5 6UUCT1N 1 1HC FA0VUW6 %(M T PIARIC6 Of ELVIS PR65L6Y HA9C 9C£N P E O A R L P 'BLATANT. GROTCiKJUC FOR&eRtCiY" r~h * AFTER MAMY HOURS Of IN1EN5WE CHEMICAL. ANALYSIS OF THE AAPE.R u s e ? in t h e 2 0 -ye.A R -ap piARies, m s c ie n t is t s conclusion : issoep IT'S OFFICIAL me s or H A Z Z A R P " lijU /trp STATIONERY W l T O . SHE Cl At .. RAT RACE By LEE COLLISON & D.B. WILLIAMS Portable phono Mister Disc is a newl) marketed portable phonograph produced by Audio Techniea and is designed for college students. It measures 11Vi inches long, is battery-operated and plays full-size LPs and 45s. Plastic seals used to fight cavities By N A TA LIE W Y R ICK Daily Texan S ta ff The latest weapon in the war against cav­ ities is plastic. Sealing the top of a tooth with plastic is the "single best prevention against tooth decay," said John Novak, associate profes­ sor at the UT Dental Branch in Houston. "The idea of sealing the back teeth with plastic has been around since 1965,” he said, "B u t 1 didn’t do it until now because the materials wouldn't stay on." The enamel-colored sealing exists $15 to $20 per tooth, which is halt the cost of a silver filling and a third the cost of a stain­ less steel crown. Novak said "Sealing is very economical because you don't have to d rill," Novak said. "There’s no anesthesia involved, and it’s quick. Just clean the tooth and put on the plastic." Novak said the sealing lasts from two to five years without replacement and can be removed or resealed as long as no decay is present. Although a filling will last a lifetime, "sealants don’t require any reduction of the tooth as crowns or silver fillings do," No­ vak said. Sealing can be done on any tooth, but Novak sard it is most effective on molars because they are more prone to cavities than other teeth. Molars' deep pits and grooves are hard for a toothbrush to reach but can be protected by the plastic, he said. The first permanent "six-year" molars are the most susceptible to decay, Novak said. Adult teeth can be sealed with plastic, but the procedure is usually done with younger patients, Novak said. Sealing teeth when they're young prevents cavities from developing in permanent teeth. Sealing a tooth doesn’t mean the end of brushing, but brushing "has a minimal ef­ fect on how long the sealant lasts, so don't worry about that (brushing taking off the sealant)," Novak said. MISCELLANEOUS HELP WANTED HELP WANTED FAST CASH W e loan on most anything of val­ ue. W e buy, sell gold and silver. 5134 Burnet Road 454-0459 5195 Hwy. 290 W. 892-0019 HELP WANTED SE C R E T A R Y (P A R T T IM E) THre* yeorc raloted experience "reining and/or expeoence wodung witE oato entry terminals CRT" ext-emeiy useful and ofaiMy to do ¡tgtit booxkeetxng "ypmg at east 50wpm with no more than hve enwv as accredited by any Texas Employment Commission poor to applying Past experience working with mente heatib c ents n.ghiv useful. Twenty hourvweex Von- day-Enday Sobry S423 SO month, to be naeosed after 6 months employment Apply before fidoy mre 0, 5pm Aus­ tin Trows Co Mental Heoith, Vental Retardation Center '430 CoHiet or col 477 ■ 2166 IE0E! VOLUNTEERS! HIGHLAND LAKES MUSIC FESTIVAL JULY 1,2,3,4 Lifeguards, concession help secunty/porking ticket-takers. ticket sellers Excellent Benefits T H E G R E A T E S T JU L Y 4TH F U N Coll 2 6 6 - 2 8 2 2 266-1196 Executive director for non-profit orgamiation Beginning as soon os possible afte' June 23, JR83 Masters degree or equivalent Strong monogement stalls and the ability to work with volunteers and protessKmci staff -eqcired Knowteoge experience and advococy sxilis r the held of mentol retorao- hon desirable Sobry $ 7 500 Applications available at me Association for Retarded Chzens — Austin 2818 San Gobnei Austin, TX 78705 'etephone #4 6-7044 Applications Must be received by June 3 783 APARTMENT MANAGER Responsible, need, courteous, m ech a n ically in­ clin ed a n d m otivated co u p le n eed ed b eg in ­ ning Ju ly 1st to m a n a g e 2 9 unit aportm ent com p lex on shuttle route at 108 W 45th >n e x c h a n g e fo r furnished 1BR aportm ent and m odest s a la ry Se n d resum e to 108 W 4 5th, A p artm e n t 101 or coll 452-1419 o r 4 5 3 ? T 7 ; fo r in terview a pp oin tm en t INSTANT CASH & BONUS !f yog need cosh *h4e you re m sc hoc/ w*y not donote plas­ mo? Yog con donate twice >n o seven day penod, and receive S8 on yoor first donation ond S '1 on your second donation within the some week. Every tenth donation you recede o $5 bongs — pigs with this ad, yog will 'ececve a S2 bonus on voor hrsi visit So help others while helping yourse# Must have va&d I D ond some proof of Austin residence Coll 474-7941 AitfUn Plasmo Center 2800 Guadalupe PART TIME runner Hours 9-2 pm Downtown lo­ cation. Must have own transportation. W ill reim­ burse 20c/mile $3 50/hour Contact Micheile Groff, 472-9231__________________________________ COOK. E X P E R IE N C E D line and prep, PT/FT, Hill Country Inn, 3437 Bee Coves Rood 327 9770 DESK CLERK motel, part time, 9pm-7am every other mght Also 2pm-9pm 6 days Applicant must be available through summer and fall semesters. Must be personable neat appeonng, some col­ lege experience in dealing with public, depend­ able Ideal for law student Apply in person morn­ ings W est W ind Motel, IH-35 and Airport Blvd O FF-SH O RE O H tobs N o experience necessary M ony positions available For information, 1-312- 888-4347 ext. E-1114 AIR C O N D IT IO N IN G contractor needs part time estimator 4-5 hours/dav Some technical knowl­ edge required For more information call Hender­ son Heating and Air Conditioning, 837-5511 O FF-SH O RE OIL JO B S N o experience necessary M an y positions available Coll refundable 312- 888 4347 EXT E 1114 M ALE/FEM ALE live in couple to manage/maintain 3 Point Venture townhome on lake Travis for the summer Room, board plus salary Send resume, references, and recent photo to M. Mandula, 8705 Katy Freew ay #200, Houston, TX 77024 713-467 3846.____________________________________ Q U IC K IN C O M E 1 Easy-to-sell weight loss product Proven medically safe and effective 836-2243 BABYSITTER N E E D E D for 2 boys ages 3 and 15 mos Occasionol days and evenings. $2/hr. 346- 3389______________________________________________ P E R S O N A L CARE assistant (Must be UT student) N eeded for male and female d*sabled UT students for fall semester, 1983 Apply Student Health Cen ­ ter Rooom 339, or coll Sherry Allen, 471-4955, extension 166 for appointment PART TIME radio announcer, some expeirnce re­ quired Send tapes and resume to Mike Richard­ son, P O Box 1208, Austin, TX 78767 EO E M A D D O G ond Bean s is looking for full time kitch­ en help M-F days Apply tn person, 512 W 24th after 4 p.m STUDENT APAR T M EN T manager for a 26-unit UT complex Rent and phone *ree P O Box D-2, Aus­ tin, TX 78712 H O U S E K E E P E R N O RTH West Hills, M W-F. six hours $65 00 weekly References, transportation required After 5 p m 345-1368 PART TIME CREDIT clerk 8 30-5 30 Saturdays only Call Nancy Kelley, Yanngs Downtown 476- 6511,_______________________________________________ BABYSITTER N E E D E D for newborn and 6 yr old, 4-5 evemngs/month References required 443- 5194 P O O L M A IN T E N A N C E person wanted, 21 years or older, mside and outside work. Call 327-9129 SiTTER W A N T E D In my home for 3 year old. 11 15-1 15, M-F ending July 8 References required O n shuttle $2 50/hour 452 4975 F O O T G E A R PART time soles Must be energetic and outgoing Retail experience o must Gary, 472 7478 ___________________________ W A N T E D SA L E S P E R S O N to work 24-40 hours a week Prefer someone with retail and design or architectural experience Apply at Storehouse, up­ per level, Highland Moll, 459-3161 SUBSTITUTE TEACHER, occasional mornings. C o ­ operative daycare near University Train to be teacher for foil 474-5101 E X PER IEN C ED IN F A N T care worker Afternoons, Austin N e w Learning Center 454-7031 D IS H W A S H E R PREP P E R S O N M-T-W-F. 10 3 pm The G reat Juan Gonzalez, across from 35th St. Safew ay FULL TIME housekeeper for summer, child care for two children References call Larry, 345-8977, 477-1312__________________________________________ BABYSITTER FO R 2 delightful girfs, ages 4 years & 20 months. Call 346-5109 R A M A D A IN N Capital now occeptmg applications for maintenance person Experience in painting, carpeting, electrical, and plumbing preferred. A p ­ ply in person. 300 E 11th Street S E C R E T A R Y II (Part time) 3 years re!ated experience, typing at least 50 wpm with no more than 5 errors as accredited by any Texas Employment Commission pnor to applying. Training and/or expenence working with data entry terminal (CRT) highly desired Ability to handle meticulous, voluminous, mundane, alphabetical fil­ ing with extreme occuracy Twenty hours/week Mondoy-Fn- day Salary $423.50/month, to be mcreosed after 6 months of employment Apply before Fridav June 10, 5pm Aushrv Travis Co Mental Health/Mental Retardation Center 1430 Colber or caU 447-2166 {EOE} T ELEPH O N E SO LIC ITO R S evenings, 6-9 N o ex­ perience necessary W e tram $3.50 t bonus Lorry 258-1549___________________________________ W A R M , RELIABLE person for light cleaning, iron­ ing for M onday, Tuesday, W ednesday, Fnday Sat­ urday mornings ond Friday evenings. Salary plus room/board in house with pool. References re­ quired O w n transportation preferred 346-5109 T A K IN G A P P LIC A T IO N S for salespersons Joseph M en s Shop, 609 Congress 472-1215 CLERK TYPIST, 20 hrs/wk, flexible begin July 1. $443/mo Occupational Therapy Dept M R Cli­ ents 926-2410 Extensions 377, 264 N E E D BABYSITTER for boy 9 years old and girl 7 years Must be patient and creative Must have own car and be willing to transport children occa­ sionally Hours will vary but approx 20-25 hours/ week, 8 m the morning to 1 in the afternoon N ear UT $3/hour. 4 5 8 -8 4 6 9 _____________ N E E D FRIENDLY and intelligent people to clean residence in Austin Hours flexible, but must be able to work some mornings $4 25/hour and up Cherry Street Cleaning Company after 4 pm 453-1339 B .C . Need A Job? Look In The Help Wanted Section Of The Daily Texan Classifieds. ligion Tpeech speei •ess press pr< [ly assembly i idress redj igion >ch sp< press issemb] fdress red] feligion rel >eech spee< ís s press pr< [y assembly A free press Your key to freedom.