w ’ *„ s y i - i • l s s e x i l *- ? t ? 9 f 8 X 0 9 • • <• o *• i w * r a v y n ' 0 M ^ WddDa il y T exan 3 y i J W 3 Vol. 85, No. 165 T h e student n ew sp a p er of T he University of T ex as at A u s tin Tuesday, June 24 1986 25C Reagan denied address Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Reagan asked Monday to address the House on the eve of its vote on his request for aid to Nicaraguan rebels, but House Speak­ er Thomas O'Neill denied the request, saying it would be an unorthodox p roced u re," virtually unprecedent­ ed in peacetime Presidential aide Larry Speakes said Reagan was "deeply disappointed" he would not be accorded the opportunity to make a final appeal for his $1(X) million aid package, scheduled for a House vote W ednesday. Speakes said White H ouse chief of staff Donald Re­ gan had called O'Neill Monday afternoon to ask if the president might deliver a speech to the chamber Tues­ day before leaving for a speech in Las Vegas and a week s vacation at his California ranch. O'Neill offered the president an opportunity to ap­ pear before a joint session of Congress, which he said would be more appropnate. The speaker said that in so doing, he was continuing "m y practice of supporting any presidential request to address a joint session of the Congress I offered President Reagan the opportu nity to do so tomorrow (Tuesday), just as I have done upon every such presidential request." Asked why Reagan would not accept O'Neill s offer to permit the president's appearance before a joint ses sion of Congress, Speakes said: "The Senate is occu­ pied with the tax bill The House of Representatives is working on it (the contTa aid plan), and that's who we want to speak to ." In his statement, O'Neill said, "I was told bv Mr Reagan that the W'hite House did not want the presi dent to address a joint session, that the W hite House wants the president to appear before a regular meeting of the House. In 1969, President Nixon appeared sequentially before both Houses on the eve of the Viet­ nam War protests to thank members for supporting his conduct on the war " Having the president appear before onlv one House to lobby for a legislative proposal would be u n p re ce­ dented O 'N eill said T h e onlv justification tor such an unorthodox procedure would be if the president would use the occasion to participate in open dialogue with members ot the bodv A iormal address should properly be made before a joint session ” My offer for a joint session r e m a in s open ,' he said. On W ednesday, the Housl1 votes on contra aid for the third time this year. If the House passes contra aid in any form, the Senate will have to act on the matter Since future congressional action must occur in both houses, I believe that the proper forum for an address is the traditional joint session Informed congressional aides M onday agreed that the W hite House still lacks the votes to get the aid program approved. Two aides, who aski*d not te» be identified, predicted the H ouse would approve a pro­ posal by Rep. Dave McCurdv, D-Okla. to give $30 mil­ lion in so-called hum anitarian aid now, but require a second vote after Oct. 1 on $70 million in military aid The adm inistration strongly opposes the requirem ent for a second vote, which M cCurdv savs would allow more time for negotiations aimed at a peaceful end to the conflict. Presidential addresses to a single house or the C on­ gress are extrem ely rare Speakes said his research showed onlv a half-dozen or so cases in w huh a p r e s i ­ dent had gone before the H ouse. Most of the cases he cited involved cases in which L S. troops were in com ­ bat The spokesm an said that W hite House researchers learned that, although addresses to joint sessions of Congress are traditional, previou- examples ot speech­ es to a single cham ber include President Thom as Jef­ ferson speaking on the subject of the Barbarv pirates, w hich M arines w*ere sent to subdue. James Madison on the War of 1812; W oodrow W ilson during V\orid War I and in 1919, the vear of the signing of the Ireatv ot Versailles ending the war and establishing the League of Nations and N ixon's speech on ending the war in Indochina The House vote on aid to the rebel counterrevolu­ tionaries known as contras is exjsected to be very close Speakes said Mondav the W hite House was -.till a few votes short ot victory Sj^eakes said O Neill a steadfast opponent ot Reagan on the issue, declined the president s request in a tele­ phone conversation with Reagan saving he did not want the issue politicized Pulled over J rn Hayes flanked by Austin police prepares to wheel Gmse'f into his van Hayes director of handi- capoed services at the University of Texas at Arling­ ton s wheeling from Aust.n to Arlington on a fund- ra smg trip to benefit the handicapped Though Hayes Carlos Moreno/Daily Texan Staff was sent off earlier Monday by Gov Mark White, po­ lice knew nothing about H ayes’ journey and pulled him over on Interstate 35 Hayes had to wait about 1 2 hours before a Department of Public Safety officer escorted him beyond the Austin city limits. H ouston co n to r also considered for SDI re s e a rc h B y LO RRA M E CAOERAARTOR1 Datfy Texan Staff Hie Balcones Research Center i s not the onlv Texas institution being considered tor more involvement in SDI research The Houston Area Research Center a private research tacilitv which brings to­ gether professors from T e x a s A itM Lm ver sitv, Rice University the Lniversitv ot H ouston-Universitv Park and the Universi­ ty ot Texas has also been touted as a possi­ ble research center bv Sen Phil Gramm, R- Texas Gramm and Lt Gen James Abraham the director of the Strategic Defense son Initiative O rganization visited the HARc in The Wood lands north ot Houston Fn- dav Gramm said $8, million was spt-p? m 1 have no Texas last vear on SDI research doubt that the HARC can plav a role in SDI he said Despite Gramm s eagerness to prom* tt T e x a s facilities as ideal tor ^DI research I think it w * uld be a bit prem ature to sav that our role Aould be increasing in the near future lane Arm strong a spokes­ said woman tor the HARC There have been several SDI related contracts researched at facility ano there are a tew more under consideration bv the SDI program Armstrong said tht Facilities such as the HARC and Balcone­ are seen as ideal bv scientists who support the SDI program and w ho are unable to perform the classified research on their re­ spective uimpuMS There is a teelm c that classified work should not be d one on cam pus said Rob­ ert Haynes chairm an of Rict - S p a a Phvs- i c s and Astrt m \ Departm ent The unHersitv doesn t take anv official the question cam» up ?arch Council said anv Id do independent clas- am pus it it did not in on-cam pus schedule " position bat vs he; tht L n iv ersitv Rt tacultv membt r ce sified re sea ret off terteri with hi- Havnt s said V\ hile Gramm and \rrah n- >n were visiting HARC, professors from Houston. Rice and Texas A&M who oppose univ er­ sity participation in M i developm ent held a press conference to dispute tht belief tí it SDI i- looked upon tavor ibiv bv the entire scientific i .immunity Donald Clayton, professor of astrophv- sic- at Rice Lniversitv', said M onday more th.m half the tacultv in the Space Physics and Astronomy Department h a v e -ig n e d a petition refusing ti participate in SDI re­ search S D: an t work even its proponents dt t even pretend that it - designed to protect citie- instead of just missile bases, it dt tie- the anti-ballistic missile treaty, it's , np :f\ moraUv in co rrect," tii C la .to n said. , » r ,ir . . e 1 ho-e involved w ith SDI re-earch at Bal- cone- disagreed ! am very much for that (university m- think SDI is interesting, ap- -aid John Gullv, deputy volvementi phcable research director of the C enter for Electromechanics at the BRC. i think one of the reasons we have uni- v ersities is so people can disagree with one another and if som eone on the faculty says he does not w’ish to be involved with SDI on w hatever grounds, then I d on't have anv problem with th a t," Gully said. Henry Ryiander, UT professor of engi­ neering and another SDI contractor, said, "1 disagree that star wars will cause an in- cr ise in nuclear proliferation, but of course I’m not opposed to nuclear pow er to begin with. I think it's a very broadening program. V\hat happens to what we develop after here depends on who gets it — industry or d e fen se /' today WEATHER d ssr sÉéss M l shows: W» a '©cent USA Tooav survey • '-os mat 96 percent of us prefer clear s*«es to -a,r In Aust.n a $ma segneni of me USA veartiaro n e *or * avcxl pac y c •ouOy sx*es Tuesday But ran poses a sma ttweat mere is oniy a 20 pe'cent chance Of atte'noon or evening munoe'showers An atteroor htgt m me cm 90s * pro­ vide a QOOC opportunity to enpy van; la •ce cream (me flavor 'a - *eo * 's' m po> s across tne USA) Ano e me nrgnt t>me ow drops to me o * 70s the rna?oi> fy of us wi be watering te e . son tne u^A s *avc' le even • g acuv •» r-or spec; a wea’re ' mac- of fne USA '• 16 snades o? g*ay e-m ncompreOeositXe symbots designed to a d easy under- standing p ease tun to page 15 INDEX A 'O u r d C a m p u s C!ass*f’eos Comics Editor.a¡s Entertainment Spons State ano coca University Wond and Nation ’ 5 12 15 4 10 9 Attorney claims prisons have not been improved From staff and ware reports HOUSTON - The Texas prison system should be held in contempt because it is not living up to court- ordered reforms designed to im­ prove inmates' living conditions, an attorney said Monday "They have persistently violated the court o rd er," said William Ben­ nett Turner, an attorney for the in­ mates. "It's a sad record ." Turner and attorneys for the state returned to court in a hearing to determine if the state should be held in contem pt of the sweeping reforms ordered by U.S. District Judge William W ayne Justice. The hearing is expected to contin­ ue through the week. In 1981, Justice ruled that condi­ tions in the Texas Department of Corrections violated the U.S. Con­ stitution prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment. intended TDC officials in May 1985 signed to end an agreement courtroom battles in the lawsuit, filed in 1972 by inmate David Ruiz. But Turner later filed a contempt motion claiming the state has failed to live up to many of the promises it made to improve living conditions for prisoners. The motion claims seven areas of non-compliance, including a failure to fully separate violent and non-vi­ olent inmates, a lack of basic neces­ sities such as showers and outdoor recreation yards for high-security inmates, and an inadequate medical staff. Turner and the state arrived at a tenative settlement on the contempt motion but Attorney General Jim Mattox decided to fight it after the Board of Corrections voted not to settle out of court Although prison officials conced­ ed they had not yet complied with all the mandated reforms, they said improvements have been made "W e have done an absolutely fan­ tastic job of complying with court ord ers," TDC Board Chairman A1 Hughes said after Monday m orn­ ing's heanng. Hughes, who voted to settle the contempt motion out of court, has tremendous called crapshoot" for the state. fight the "a F. Scott M cCown, an assistant to Mattox, said the state is working hard to comply, but added that some changes take more time than others to implement. A lack of money and other factors the process, slowed have also McCown said. "It's a tremendous m anagem ent problem ," said McCown. "Only four years, I don't much like that sound. That's a long time — four years," Justice said. Turner blamed lack of compliance in some cases on politics and incom­ petence. He said the prison system should be fined if found in con­ tempt and some prisoners should receive money if it is determined they have been denied certain privi­ leges ordered by the court. Employers can dismiss AIDS carriers Justice Department says fear of contagion legitimate cause Associated Press W ASH IN GTO N An em ployer can fire a carrier of the AIDS viru- without violating a law protecting the handicapped from discrim ina­ tion if the dismissal is based on tear that the disease otherw ise would spread in the workplace the lustice Department h a s concluded An AIDS-infected worker would have no recourse under the Rehabil­ itation Act of 1973 unles- the em ­ ployer used fear of contagion onlv as a pretext to fire, transfer or de­ mote the w orker, the O ffice of I egal Counsel said in a 49-page opinion Section 504 o f that law prohibits discrim ination on the b a s i s of han­ dicap in any program or activit\ that receives federal financial assistance. The opinion made public Mondav said that section "simply does not reach decisions based on tear ot contagion — whether reasonable or not — as long as it is not in truth a pretext for discrimination on ac­ count of handicap." The opinion w'as written bv A s ­ sistant Attorney General Charles Cooper, who heads the Office of Le­ gal Counsel, a division of the Justice Department. "A n employer, for example, who makes hiring decisions based on an unreasonable concern about conta­ gion is no different from an em ploy­ er whose hiring decisions rest on any other unreasonable basis that lies outside Section 504's limited reach said C ooper's opinion At a news conference, Cooper said m e d K .il data suggests that onlv about one of e\ ery 100 people c a m ing the ARTS viru- actually suffers the effects ot the disease The vast majority of people w ho can com m unicate the AIDs virus are not them selves affected at all bv the disease said Cooper Thev are simply earners of it; thev are not handicapped; they don't have the disease. C ooper said of those vs ho test positively to the presence ot the AIDS v i r u s in their bodies but do not display sym ptom s iett Levi, executiv e director of the National Gav and Lesbian Task Force, which h a s 7.tkXt m em bers, said, The decision seems to be based on politics and fear, not on good law or good public health. is not The Public Health Service says transmittable in the The Justice that that AIDS through casual contact or workplace D epartm ent specter as a possibility. 1 ev i said clearly raises things, Cooper's Among other opinion concluded is much scientific doubt on how AIDS is spread. there that If a person is dismissed from a job or excluded from a federal program solely because* he s u f f e r s from the effects of AIDS, his dismissal would be illegal — if he is otherw ise quali­ fied for the position, the opinion s a i d . But if the person was excluded because of concern bv the em ployer that he would spread the disease, it said on the other hand, the dism iss­ al generally would represent no vio­ la turn of lectio n 504 Marvin Goldstein, an attorney who advises corporate clients on how to deal with em ployees who are A ID / victims, criticized the Jus­ tice IV partm ent opinion. "T o sav it's not illegal to term i­ nate an individual because of fear of contagion, but it's illegal to term i­ nate because a person has the dis­ ease is a distinction without m ean­ said Goldstein. "W h at this has ing dime is to confuse ... everybod y." Acquired im mune deficiency syn­ drome the virus that attacks the body's immune system s, is spread am ong male hom osexuals during sexual contact intravenous drug users and recipients of transfusions of contaminated blood. The Public Health Service said recently that by the year 1991, more than 50,000 people a vear will be com ing down with the disease, tor which there is no cure. The Centers for Disease Control said last November that "th e kind of non-sexual person-to-person con­ tact that generally occurs among workers and clients or consum ers in the workplace does not pose a risk for transm ission." But in regard to the CDC conclu­ sions, the Justice Department legal opinion said only that "it has been that conclusions of suggested this character are too sw eeping." ... The opinion goes on to cite the views of several researchers w ho say it is impossible to rule out the possibility that AIDS is spread by means other than those identified to date. C ooper's decision said that "th e state of medical knowledge con­ (the w'av AIDS spreads) cerning is still in an earlv stage of develop­ ment, and the mechanisms of the disease's transmission are not fully understood." Chuck Kline, Department of Health and Human Services spokes­ the agency was still man, said the Justice Department studying opinion and would have no imme­ diate com m ent. Kline said about a dozen complaints have been filed under Section 504 by employees with AIDS. "A fter carefully examining these difficult questions," Cooper said, "w e have concluded that Section 504 prohibits discrimination based on the disabling effects that AIDS and related conditions may have on their victims. an "B y contrast, we have concluded real o r th at in d iv id u a l's perceived ability to transmit the dis­ ease to others is not a handicap within the meaning of the statu te," said Cooper's opinion. High court to consider Texaco bond Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court said Monday it will consider forcing Texaco Inc. to post a potentially ruinous $12 billion bond while appealing a muítibillion-dollar judgment won in Texas by Pennzoil Co. The justices agreed to review a ruling that Tex­ aco need only put $1 billion in security, a re­ quirement the corporation satisfied by pledging stock in its Canadian subsidiary. The court's decision is expected sometime in 1987. A state court jury in Texas last year found that Texaco improperly interfered with Pennzoil's planned acquisition of an interest in Gettv Oil Co. The jury awarded Pennzoil $11.1 billion against Texaco. "W e're p leased ," said Joe Jamail, a lawyer for Pennzoil. ' W e've felt all along we were going to win that point." But John O M ahoney, a Texaco spokesman, said the corporation was confident it would pre­ vail in the Supreme Court and also would suc­ ceed in reversing the state court damage judg­ ment. Arguments are scheduled July 31 in Houston on Texaco's appeal of the jury verdict. Texas, like most states, requires the losing side in such cases to post bond to protect the winning side. Texas law requires a bond posted equal to the judgment before the losing side may appeal. But lawyers for Texaco succeeded in having U.S. District Judge Charles Brieant in White Plains, N.A ., enjoin the $12 billion bond. Brieant ruled that such a high bond effectively denied Texaco the right to appeal. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the injunction, ruling last February that the huge bond amount "lacks any rational basis, since it would destroy Texaco and render its right of ap­ peal in Texas an exercise in futility." The injunction remains in effect, but interest on the jury award continues to grow — at about $3 million a day. In seeking Supreme Court review, lawyers for Pennzoil said the case represents "an unprece­ dented intrusion by a federal court into ongoing court proceedings." Lawyers for Texaco urged the justices to reject the appeal, arguing that "such a narrow and un­ usual case" should not win Supreme Court re­ view. i Page 2/The Daily Texan/Tuesday, June 24, 1986 GAO faults military supply security, records Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Pentagon is los­ ing millions of dollars worth of equipment each year because of poor security and record-keeping, but the inventory system is so huge it is difficult to determine the seri­ ousness of the problem, the General Ac­ counting Office said Monday. The report by the congressional investi­ gative agency was made public at a news conference by Sen. Pete Wilson, R-Calif., who said he will soon chair a series of hear­ ings by an Armed Services Committee pan­ el to examine the problem. ‘It’s time to give higher priority to the management of the sup­ ply system’ — Sen. Pete Wilson, R-Calif. The Defense Department buys millions of different items each year, ranging from ships and tanks down to bolts and pencils. There are more than 500 major supply cen­ ters in the United States and 250 overseas. The study said more than 300 previous reports by both the GAO and the Pentagon itself have spotlighted problems in the in­ ventory system, but the problems remain. “It's time to give higher priority to the management of the supply system, to in­ crease its productivity, thereby strengthen­ ing our forces while saving money," Wil­ son said. Glenn Flood, a Pentagon spokesman, said the Defense Department had not seen the report and thus would have no com­ ment. The report said: ■ The Army is losing ammunition, rock­ ets, grenades and bulk explosives, but be­ cause controls over the items are so inade­ quate, it is difficult to know if the a r m s have been stolen or are simplv lost some­ where within the vast system ■ The Army is often unable to figure out what repair parts it needs where, meaning that items are shipped back and forth. The GAO said Army bases in Europe s e n t back 574 truckloads of spare parts during a n 18- month period ending in December Many of the items in the trucks were not cata­ loged, so they could not be screened to be sent to places where they were needed. ■ An Air Force purchasing unit in Sacra­ mento, Calif., bought radios in response to a requisition from an Air Force base in Great Britain Of the 280 radios reported ^hipped onlv 144 m ade it to I ngland, a n d the service cannot account for the rest. But the FBI told the Air Force that an alleged drug smuggler had been discovered to have 10 to 12 of the units ■ G A O in v e s tig a to rs m a d e u n a n ­ nounced night visits to tv\o Air Force b a s e s in West G ermany. At both the H ah n and Bitburg bases, the report "aid, the investí could gators were not discovered and have easily rem oved anv thing that could be carried bv hand Drug dealers’ wealth taints governments Associated Press MEXICO CITY — In Colombia, major drug trafficking families of­ fered to pay the nation's $12.5 bil­ lion foreign debt and bring home their enormous fortunes if the gov­ ernment would give them immuni­ ty from extradition to the United States. In Bolivia, the cocaine mafia fi­ nanced a successful military take­ over of the government. Now in Panama, the military chief who serves as the power be­ hind the scenes is the target of charges of major involvement in the drug trade and related money laun­ dering. With enormous amounts of mon­ ey available, drug traffickers can easily bribe people from low-paid police on patrol to people in the top seats of power. They are known to operate in tiny Caribbean islands like the Turks and Caicos and in such major nations as Mexico and Peru. "It has had an enormous impact on Bahamian society," Prime Minis­ ter Lynden Pindíing, who has weathered a major drug corruption scandal, once told The Associated Press. "Why work for $3 an hour when you can make $10,000 in one night?" A top Mexican official, who gen­ erally speaks to reporters only on condition of anonymity, said dou­ bling or tripling salaries would not be enough to avert the temptation offered by drug traffickers who can outpay the government. He also said even the prospect of jail sentences may not be enough to counter the incentive of the huge bribes available to officials willing to cooperate with the illegal trade. U.S. officials have expressed con­ cern repeatedly about the threat to the stability of civilian governments and military institutions posed by the sumptuously rich traffickers in cocaine, marijuana and heroin. "Your institutions, your honor and the freedom of your societies are at stake," Elliott Abrams, assist­ ant secretary of state for inter-Amer­ ican affairs, told military officials graduating this month from the Inter-American Defense College in Washington. His remarks came a day after NBC News and The N ew York Times reported that Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega, chief of the Pana­ in­ manian Defense Forces, was volved in m oney laundering a nd the d ru g trade. Noriega has repeat­ edly d enied the allegations. The military long has been the d o m in a n t political force in Panama, a strategic country at the so uthe rn tip of Central America w here the allegations had been circulating for m ore th a n a year. Following the new attention from the U nited States, Panam anian o p ­ position leaders called for an inves­ tigation or Noriega's im m ediate re­ m o v a l . But little indication the o p p o sitio n w as strong eno u g h to force such a move. leaders have said they are worried by the potential or real influence of the d ru g trade on their governm ents. M any Latin th e r e w a s “ For us, the Venezuelans, d rug is a problem which trafficking threaten s the security of the state, in the first place because narcotics traf­ ficking is an economic p o w e r of im ­ pressive m a g n itu d e ," said Vladimir G essen, president of V enezuela's congressional subcom m ittee against dru g abuse. Interior Minister F ern and o Bar- thelem y of Bolivia said cocaine traf­ fickers could acquire political p o w e r financing political cam paigns by the a nd bribing officials. D uring 1985 Bolivian presidential c a m ­ paign, candidates said thev rejected contributions from kn o w n traffick­ ers. Gen. Luis Garcia Meza a n d Col. Luis Arce G omez led the 1980 mili­ tary c ou p in Bolivia that, according to evidence p resented bv the U S. D rug E nforcem ent A dm inistration, was financed bv the cocaine matia. Arce G om ez, w h o became the inte­ rior minister in the since d e p o se d go ve rn m e n t, n ow is u n d e r indict­ m ent in Miami on cocaine traffick­ ing charges. Justice Minister Rodrigo Lara Bonilla of Colombia w as assa ssin a t­ ed on A p nl 30, 1984, atter claiming that at least six m em bers of C o n ­ gress h ad ties to the d ru g trade an d that the nation's wealthy d ru g traf­ fickers had infiltrated activities from professional sports to industry. Reagan The offer to pay the C olom bian foreign debt was made twice and re­ jected by the go v ern m e n t each time. administration officials also have charged the leftist g o v e r n ­ m ents in Cuba and N icaragua h ave ties to the d ru g trade, while o th ers the U .S .-su p p o rte d have accused Contra rebels of the sam e thing. Star’s funeral Assoc >ated Press Frie n d s of U n ive rsity of M aryland b a sk e tb a ll star Len B ia s carry his ca sket from the c o lle g e ch a p e l after a private funeral M o n d a y B ia s father J a m e s fourth from left follow s the c a sket B ia s died T h u rsd a y m orning of c a rd ia c arrest S e e story p a g e 9 Shultz says Marcos welcome to leave U.S Associated Press SINGAPORE - G eorge Shultz m a d e clear Monday that the United States w ould like 1 erdi nand Marcos to live elsew here, a n d aides said the secretary of state will tell the new Philippine governm ent financial help is on the w a\ “ Marcos has on a n u m b e r of occasions ex­ pressed his desire to leave the United States a n d we d on 't have any desire to have in our country people w h o d o n 't w an t to be there," Shultz told reporters traveling with him in A s i a . “So u n d e r the circumstances, w e 'd |ust a s soon he leave it he w ants to leave." H e a dd e d, how ever, that no o ther nation had agreed to take Marcos, w h o tied to Hawaii on Feb. 26 after 20 years as president of the Philip­ pines. Shultz did not re sp o n d directly to a w eek en d report in the Baltimore S u n that Marcos had t e m to r \ But his re been asked to leave I s marks reflected continuing im patience m tin Reagan adm inistration with Marcos supp ort for de m onstrations against the g ov ernm ent of I ’r e s i den t Corazon Aquino W hen a m ilita r)-civilian uprising drove him out of the Philippines Marcos said he would remain in Hawaii temporarily while seeking a perm anent ho m e in a n o th e r countrs Panama and Singapore were m e n tion e d as possible ha v e n s , but n either agreed to accept him Aquino, w ho came to p ow er after Marcos fled has accused him of financing d em onstrations against her governm ent Shultz is to arrive in Manila on Tuesday after a stop in Brunei. Officials traveling with him o n the five-nation Asian trip said the secretan of state v\ ill a n n o u iu e later this wet k m Manila tha a S2tM milium installment of L s aid has beei cleared tor delivery to the Philippines W ashington pledged m April ti speed u p th grant which is part of a $5Ut million aid pac Gig for thw \ ear I he a n n o u n c e m e n t apparently has been timet to cointide with the visit u Manila so h» vai present tangible evidence of I S s u p p o r t to Aquino s go\ ernm ent ^hultz repeated his \iew that Marios conduc of the governm ent over tw o decades led to th« Philippines' current economic problems I he secretary w ould not comment on d e m o n stratum" bv Marcos loyalists or a m role the tor mer president might hav. in them but concedec that he is apparentlv a problem Insurance ruling sa ves governm ent m illions of dollars A CCA/si D r/sr r- Associated Press WASHINGTON — Saving the govern­ ment hundreds of millions of dollars, the Supreme Court said Monday that tax-ex­ empt charitable organizations must pay tax­ es on the sale of group insurance to their members. In a 6-1 ruling involving the nation's larg­ est lawyers' group, the justices said such organizations must pay taxes on income earned by selling insurance to members. Also, the members may not escape paying taxes by claiming part of their premiums as charitable deductions, the court said. Thousands of non-profit organizations engage in providing group insurance to members, the court was told. The Reagan administration said hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenue were at stake. In other action, the court: ■ Rejected an appeal by air traffic con­ trollers fired by the g o v e rn m e n t for an ille­ gal strike in 1981. The controllers argued they have a n g h t to their old jobs ■ Cleared the way for an un usual disci­ plinary investigation of U.S. District Judge Alcee H astings of Miami, acquitted in 1983 of charges that he solicited a $150,000 bribe. ■ Agreed to decide, in a Reagan a dm inis­ tration bid to reinstate a Texas m a n 's d ru g conviction, w h e th e r police may enter fenced-in property an d look into a barn w ithout getting a court search warrant. ■ Upheld Florida m u rd e re r Willie Jasper D a rd e n 's conviction a n d d e a th sentence d e ­ spite a prosecutor's rem ark that D arden w as "an animal" w h o deserv e d to have his face "blow n off" by the victim. In the tax-exemption case, the court ruled the American Bar E n do w m ent, against which advances legal research a n d seeks to im prove the adm inistration of justice bv making grants to other charitable and e d u ­ cational organizations. The g ro u p 's 31 t),t.XX) m em bers are all lawyers w h o belong to the American Bar Association. In his opinion for the court, Justice Thur- good Marshall noted that in 1969 Congress passed a tax reform law that requires chari­ table g ro u p s to pay taxes on "unrelated trade or busin ess" that they conduct. "This case presents an example of precisely the sort of unfair com petition that Congress intended to p re v e n t," he said. "If ABE's m em bers may d e d u ct part of their prem iu m paym ents as a charitable contri­ bution, the effective cost of ABE's in su r­ ance will be lower than the cost of co m p e t­ ing policies that do not offer tax benefits." He a d d e d , "The u n d isp u te d facts ... sim­ plv will not support the inference that the div idends ABF. receives arc charitable con ­ tributions from it" m em bers rather than profits from its insurance program The e n d o w m e n t h a s provided group in surance tor ABA m em bers since 1955. otter­ ing life, health, accident and disability cov­ insurance erage un derw ritten by major firms. The Internal R evenue Service calculated the e n d o w m e n t's insurance dividends to be $19 million for 1979 through 1981 The m oney p a y s tor education projects Each person m ust agree to allow the e n ­ d o w m e n t to use the dividends, su rre n d e r­ ing any claim to receive the money indivi­ dually. Purchasers of the insurance w ere told w hat portion of the m oney is spent for tax- exem pt causes a nd , correspondingly, w hat percentage ot m em bers prem ium s should Ix- tax deductible 1 he IRs assessed the e n d o w m e n t some y i million in back taxes and the endow ment paid the monev and then sued tor a refund M onday's ruling overturned a federal appeals court decision in tavor ot the or- ga ni/.ation. In other developm ents, the court ■ I pheld bv an 8-1 vote Maine s ban on importing live baitfish into the s t a t e ■ Gave s t a t e s greater latitude in d e ter­ mining which poor people qualify for M edi­ caid assistance ■ Upheld a decision forcing North C arli- ria to get federal approval for all changes, dating back to 196s, in the wav superior court judges are elected in 40 of the state's 100 counties new s in brief From Texan news sen/ices OPEC leaders gather in hopes of oil-limiting agreement BRIONI, Yugoslavia — Ahmed Zaki Yamani, the oil minister of Saudi Arabia and an OPEC kingpin, said Monday he expects the cartel to move closer this week to an agreement on limiting oil production. But expectations were not high that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries would fully resolve the differences on production that have led to a crip­ pling price slump. Without explicitly saying so, Yamani implied he did not foresee a final agreement at the OPEC meeting that begins W ednesday. Other ministers made similar re­ marks as they arrived on this resort island. The cartel is trying for the third time in four months to agree on an overall oil production ceiling and quotas for each member. Oil prices held to a narrow range in trading in ad­ vance of the meeting. West Texas Intermediate crude, the most widely traded U.S. oil, was up 6 cents at $13.1)7 a barrel in contracts for August delivery at the close of Monday's session on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Weinberger blasts attempts to cut SOI WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Caspar Wein­ berger said Monday that members of Congress trying to cut spending for Strategic Defense Initiative anti­ missile research are engaged in a short-sighted attempt "to strangle the program in its cradle." Weinberger's comments, in a speech to the private Space Foundation, came as the Democratic-controlled House Armed Services Committee prepared to meet later this week to write its version of the next year's defense budget. The Republican-run Senate Armed Services Commit­ tee late last week approved a proposed Pentagon budg­ et that would reduce fiscal 1987 spending for the anti­ missile program. Quake rocks Tokyo and central Japan TOKYO — A strong earthquake rocked Tokyo and the central Japan area just before noon Tuesday, but there was no immediate report of casualties or damage. The Central Meterological Agency said the quake registered a preliminary reading of 6.9 on the open- ended Richter scale, a severe earthquake capable of ex­ tensive damage near the epicenter, which it said was below the Pacific off the coast of Chiba and east of Tokyo. The meterological agency issued a tsunami, or tidal wave, warning for the entire coastal region of eastern japan. Soviet brings letter from Gorbachev WASHINGTON — New Soviet Ambassador Yuri Dubinin presented President Reagan on Monday with a personal letter from Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, the White House said. There was no discussion in Gorbachev's letter ot a date for a summit meeting between the Soviet leader and the president, said a senior White House official who spoke only on condition of anonym ity. Dubinin's meeting, to formally present diplomatic credentials, came as White House officials were watch­ ing for any signs of progress toward a U.S.-Soviet sum­ mit this year. Senate passes tax bill amendment WASHINGTON — On the eve of a vote on a land­ mark tax-revision plan, the Senate agreed Monday to prohibit using a temporary revenue increase from the bill to reduce the federal deficit. By voice vote, senators accepted an amendment by Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., chairman of the Budget Committee, designed to "smooth out" the revenue ups and downs during the next 5W years. That amendment meets President Reagan's demand that any tax plan be "revenue neutral" — bring in the same amount as pres­ ent law. The Daily Texan/Tuesday, June 24, 1986/Page 3 South Africa dismisses charges in treason case Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Africa W ithout explana­ tion, prosecutors d rop ped charges M onday against the last four d efen d an ts in a treason case anti-apartheid actixisis originally were charged in the case, and M onday's action app eared to mark the total collapse of the case Sixteen Michael Imber, Natal province attorney general, gave no reason for d ro p p in g charges against rho /im ile Ckjweta, president of the South African Allied Workers Union, an d union leaders Sisa N)ikaleni, Sam Kikmi and Isaac Ngcobo. They w ere accused of high treason for allegedv furth ering the African National Congress guerrilla campaign against President P W Botha s governm ent 1 he treason trial began in October in Pietermar it/b u rg in Natal province Charges were d ro p p e d in N ovem ber against the 12 other activists arrested in Mav 1985, including top leaders of the United Democratic Front anti-apartheid coalition In other actions Mondav ■ The gov ern m ent said two unexploded land m i n e s w ere found on rural r o a d s ■ A pro-governm ent n e w s p a p e r sdld the nationwide state of emergence imposed lune 12 will continue al­ tho ug h tough new securitv m easures have been ap proved and President Botha is expected to sign t h e m into law this week ■ S e w s week co rrespon dent Richard Maiming w .¡-» told to leave South Africa He was the second foreign journalist ordered out u n d e r the em ergent v ■ An Anglican priest in a white parish said he fao - prosecution if he does not evict blacks w ho took refuge in his church after their shacks were b u rn e d dovvt at the Crossroads squatter cam p outside c apt I own ■ Two blacks were b urned to death bv other blacks, raising to 57 the n u m b e r of people killed since the dec­ laration of emergency, the Bureau of Information re­ ported Monday. More than 1,800 people have been killed in nearly two years of racial v iolence. I he Bureau of Information, the only source of official data u n d e r the state of em ergency, said the mines were found Sunday on farm roads in northern Natal and deto nated safely bv bomb experts The African N ation­ al Congress h a s claimed responsibility previously tor planting mines in farming areas of Transvaal Province, north of Natal, that killed several whites and blac ks in recent m onths In Johannesburg, the ( itizen n e w s p a p e r said officials feel unrest h a s dim inished u n d e r the state of e m e r g e n ­ ce a n d it should be continued indefinitely It attributed the report to gov ernm ent sources it did not name New securitv laws — o ne allowing detention w ithout trial for 180 days and a n o th e r authorizing broad police* pow ers in designated "u n re st areas" —- probably will be held in reserve until after the emergency is lifted, the C itizen said. G o vern m en t officials said one reason they i m p o s e d the emergency w a s because opposition to t h e bills in I irliam ent s I n d i a n and mixed-race cham bers p re v e n t­ ed passage in time for Ju ne 16 t h e l o t h a n n i v e r s a r y of Mchkív ri ots m t h e b l a c k Soweto t o w n s h i p I he hills were app ro v e d Friday bv the President's C ouih .I, which o appoin ted bv Botha and can overrule Parliament M anning an American apparently was ordered to eav e be*.ause of a Vew siveek cov er storv cailed South Africa s Civil War Presidential commission suggests military reform begin in Congress I he emergence has im posed u n p re c e d en ted restric­ 1986 The New York Times tions on loumalists y j P ro testers burn factory Associated Press Black sm oke pours from a chemical factory in Phuket, Thailand. Monday after it was set ablaze by protesters. Demonstrators on the resort island claimed the plant would pollute the environment and hurt tourism. Film industry fights video piracy HOI I X W O O D — A few w eeks ago W arner Brothers placed an unusual advertisem ent in Vanetv, the movie trade paper. "Warning! W'arner industry's Bros and Cobra declare war on video piracv." leading I he advertisem ent w arned w ould-be video pirates that each p n n t of the studio's new Sylvester Stallone movie Cobra * a m e d a secret marking code. Pirated videocassettes could n ow be traced back to a single pn nt and a single theater out of the more than 2,000 thea ters that w ere runn in g the movie. it was a new w eapo n in a w ar in which the A m encan industry low** SI billion a vear The o p p o n e n ts range from the proprietors of a huge laboratory hidden in thr N etherlands to people w ho take a v ideo camera inti a theater and -hoot the movie off the screen. \lmo>t every blockbuster movie — and that in- i ludes Cobra show s up in Thailand within four days of its opening in American theaters " said Will Nix, director of anti-piracy for the Motion Picture Associa­ tion of America (MPAA), the leader of the industry's war on piracv I he first cassette w e were able to track effectively was Rockv IV. It w ent from the United States to Ihailand where copies with local subtitles were Nent to Malaysia and Singapore From there, said Nix the cassettes w en t to Jordan, then to Turkey, where they were resubtitled in Turkish and sent on to i urkish workers in Germany. Xccording to Richard Bloeser, a former FBI agent w ho heads the MP.AA's Film Secuntv Office, piracv can * Proken dow n into tour categories: the illegal dupli- o:nc * f new motion pictures before or immediately after they reach theaters; illegal duplication of legiti­ mate videocassettes by video retailers; using videocas­ settes w ithout authorization in bars, hotels, retaurants, hospitals or prisons, and the u n a u th o n z e d interception of pay-television signals throu gh satellite dishes. By the end of the year, such pay-television services as H o m e Box Office and the Disnev C hannel will have taken care of the fourth problem bv scrambling their p ro g ra m ­ ming to p ut it out of reach Some videocassette com panies are atte m p tin g to make the illegal duplication of cassettes more difficult with a system called Macrovision, which distorts the sound a n d picture of copies. Embassy, which u sed M a­ crovision expenm entally on The Cotton Club, calls the results "iffy Although Macrovision m av deter con­ sum ers an d m om -and -p op retailers from copying cas­ settes, it is easily overcome bv professionals. In 1981, slightlv more than one million videocassette recorders were sold in America In 1985, VCRs sold at the rate of nearly a million a m onth. W orldwide, there are now 90 million households with VCR's waiting to be pro gra m m ed w ith legitimate or illegitimate tapes. In that same period of time, the .Motion Picture A sso­ ciation has tripled its e xpenditures to w ard com bating piracy to $15 million a year. It no w has active enforce­ m ent efforts in 35 countries a nd is lobbying for law s to protect intellectual property in a n o th e r 20 countries. The association has ban ded together with film p ro d u c ­ ers inside each country to exert p ressu re on legislatures and to educate the police into taking copyright theft more seriously, to give seminars, an d to inspect the secuntv of film a n d video laboratories. 7/ \mjww PREG’AV/vp 5G*LJ7W PREGÍ/f/n PREGWi Nancy is..., And you might be. If there s a chance Cad us Vite care about you. • Free Testing • Results While You iAteft • Confidentiality 24 HOUR HOTLINE 454-2622 R I S I S R H G N A N C Y F.NTER 3810 Medical Parkway Suite 203 T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff Editor Managing Editor Associate M anaging Editors News Editor Associate News Editor News Assignm ents Editor Associate Editors Editorial Features Editor Graphics Editor Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Genera) Sports Reporter Entertainm ent Editor Entertainm ent Associate Editor Special Pages Editor images Editor Associate images Editors Photo Editors Genera) Reporters Around Campus Editor Felicia David N attier Tim McOougalf Martha Ashe David Gadbois Brian Zabctk Kyle Pope Tracy Duncan Dan Jester Matthew Matejowsky Todd Pratt Patrien M urray M arti Greene Tom Clemens Ed Shugert Howard Decker Kathy Me Tee Kenny Korman M ichael W halen Trtsh Berrong Chnsty Moore. Chns Ware Moms Goen Ara mend ia Lisa Baker Don Brown Lorraine Cademarton. 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Debbie York Mary Tarpey Rita DeW itt M iles Mathis Kevin Sherwood Jeff Famey Harry Garuba Display Advertising Lon Ruszkowski Dorothy Adams Jeff WaMace Debbie Bannworth Malcolm Gluckman Jeanne Hill June Serber Denise Johnson Chnsta Johnson Patrick Moms Edy Finfer Kay Carpenter Shameem Patel Tammy Haiovsky The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440) a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin is published by Texas Student Publications Drawer D University Station Austin TX 78713-7209 The Daily Texan is published Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday and Friday except holiday ano exam penods Second class postaos paid at Austin TX 78710 News contributions win be accepted by telephone (471 -4591), at the adrtonai off*» (Texas Student P u b lic a tio n s Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 136) inquines concerning local national and classified display advertising should be directed to 512 471-1865 Classi­ fied word advertising questions should be directed to 512 471-5244 Entire contents copyright 1986 Texas Student Publications The My Texan Subscription Ratea One Semester (Fan or Spring) Two Semesters (Fa* and Spring) Summer Session One Year (Fa*. 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Committee : . n. and ap- A lthough al! m em bers of Con­ gress have* not em braced the Par- karvt commission rt om m t ndations in full both houses have- agreed to consider a tw o - w a r budget starting as earlv as next v ear The sav s interim com mission report a tw o-vear a p prop riatio n for Associated Press Military W ASHINGTON re form must in*.lude changes on C api­ as well as at the Pentagon tol Hill to minimize congressional in­ fighting that plays havoc with de fensr sp ending plans a pre-ident..; panel said Monday tcKus how ever I he national defense* program long term vi d e p e n d s cm steadv sion it it is to meet our long term set untv needs effective I v C o n g r e s is mvopic sional and misdirected said a re p* rt is sued bv the President s Blue Ribbor t omm ission on IV fenst Manage ment h eaded bv former deputy d< tense secretary David Packard President Reagan and kev Hous e and se n a te committees have al ready en do rsed m a m prov moms t the report which had been issued in tw o prctvious drafts since Feb 2 A final version was presen president last w r t k and s leased to the public at tb lune or in earlv lub. te’ the be re* nd *> Among the panels ret, turns ■ Stn i cthc r : . th< c harnnan *>t the- Runt C luc*t th« head o! a pant ! of th * senu r fuors trom each of the a rm e d - the president vices w ho adv ¡st defense >t N!al ser on ■ App*nntn e r : > provurt th rou gh out an undersecretary of m ent t / a : defense tor acquisition to overset the- developm ent and productior nt w e a p o n s armed forces ■ \ppointm e n* * t an * ve-. „ ’.v. within e*iK h e >t the services to dire*t weapems p rocurem ent a n d pnsiu*. turn in that branch the ■ Preparation by the' presider : in consultation with the National the Mint Security Council ehicts of a tive ve-ar military plan up o n w hich annual defense budg and WE RENT, SERVICE, SELL: • TYPEWRITERS • PERSONAL COMPUTERS • SUPPLIES 450-1925 AL’S TYPEWRITERS A M M O U T O U R S U M M E R RATES es /inns M edical Hair C enter I otal Hair Restoration ¥ As Seen “ 0 '2tV20" 24th A San Antonio O pen f * * r y N ig h t U n til 1 JO O p e n 11:0 0 am M o n -S a t O p e n Sun 3:00pm H a p p y H o u r M o n -F ri 5-7 And R epla cem ents Park St. David Prof. Bldg. 800 K. 30th a t Red Riv e r 472-6777 Me care - We can help Suite 210 KEYBOARDING CLASSES ON MICROCOMPUTERS Day and evening classes in Keyboarding on Microcom­ puters will begin Monday, June 30, at The University of Texas. Students age 10 and up may enroll in these sum­ mer classes. Classes will be in the Education Annex Building, Room 1.102, 20th and Trinity Streets. Stu­ dents may register in the Education Building, Corner of MLK and Speedway Streets, Room 374, from 8:30 a.m. to noon and from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. It is not necessary to be enrolled in the University to register for these classes. Tuition is $80 for 20 hours of instruction. Beginners can expect to learn to operate the alphabetic keyboard by touch and develop a keyboard­ ing speed to between 25 and 45 words per minute. For registration information, call 471-4080, and ask for Bet­ ty Shepperd. Page 4/The Daily Texan/Tuesday, June 24,1986 ecftorials Opinions expressed in T h* M y T t u n are those of the editor or the writer of the ante e and are not necessarily those of the University administration the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees via Sf viewpoint Buildings and food Weak arguments and ideas that miss F unny how when ideological extrem ists try to defend unusually weak but politically "co rrect” candidates for federal judgeships, they gloss over the part about being unusually weak. That's certainly w hat's happening in the case of Daniel M anion, a conservative w hom President Reagan has nom inated for a seat on the 7th U .S. Circuit Court of Appeals. 1 m entioned M anion in an editorial last week as an exam ple of bad Reagan nom inees. The N ew R epublic points out that M anion has never handled a case involving a constitu­ tional issue. In fact, h e's never published a legal paper or article. Still, conservatives are unhappy with the U .S. Senate for stalling on M anion's confirm ation. In the June 20 issue of William Buckley's N a­ tional R eview , M aggie G allagher accuses M anion's Senate opponents of "conjuring up a collection of pseudo-scandals so num erous as to defy effective refutatio n ." Actually, G allagher does bring up som e good exam ples of senators using bad strategy in opposing M anion. U .S. Sen. Joseph Biden, D- Delaware, told M anion: "I think you are a decent and honorable man, but I do not think I can vote for you because of your political v iew s." So much for Joseph Biden. Also, it seem s that som e critics accused M anion of writing an ap­ proving letter to a library affiliated with the John Birch Society, when all he wrote was a thank-you note for a letter consoling M anion on the death of his father, a form er leader of the Birch society. If that's the only letter the critics are talking about, that qualifies as a hatchet job. So G allagher m akes a convincing case against the argum ents M anion's Senate op ponents have been using — at least, the argum ents she m entions. But she forgot one. M anion still hasn't handled a case involving a constitutional issue, and he still hasn't published a legal paper or article. M anion's critics may be using lousy argum ents, but that d oesn't make M anion any m ore qualified for the job. W hile w e're on the subject of bad argum ents, the sam e issue of the N ational R ev iew includes an article called "K rem lin L obbv," about the similarity betw een liberal D em ocrats' positions on 18 defense and for­ eign policy issues and Soviet leader Mikhail G orbachev's position on the sam e issues. The article includes a chart com paring President Reagan's views (that's the litm us test, you know) side by side with House Speaker Tip O 'N eill's and G orbachev's views. The author, Dinesh D 'Souza, ex­ plains: "F o r simplicity, the chart uses Tip O 'N eill to em body the liberal Democratic v iew ." (You're right, Dinesh. That is sim ple.) D'Souza concludes that the chart "sh o w s a practical correspondence between the objectives of Soviet foreign policy and the recom m enda­ tions of the liberal wing of the Dem ocratic P arty ." Now, about those issues. It seem s that President Reagan was in favor of deploying Pershings and cruise m issiles in W estern Europe, while O 'N eill and Gorbachev were against that. Also, Reagan is in favor of building the MX missile and the B -l bom ber, while O 'N eill and Gorbachev are against it. G ranted, O 'N eill's opposition to some U .S. defense projects is inter­ esting and all, but, well, I always figured G orbachev would be against U.S. defense projects. (I can 't speak for O 'N eill, but for the record, I am strongly opposed to the Soviet Union building more MiGs I'm sure President Reagan is too.) Also, President Reagan is in favor of U .S. trade sanctions against the Soviets, while O 'N eill is against them. And — get this — G orbachev is against them. So D 'Souza is right. O 'N eill and Gorbachev do agree on a lot of U.S. foreign policy and defense m atters Now, if only we could find some proof that O 'N eill and G orbachev use the sam e reasoning, the point m ight even be relevant. It looks like the publishers of The W ashington M onthly found a way to make the shuttle explosion work for them. An ad in the Jun e issue displays a W ashington M onthly from April 1980, an issue which featured a cover story on the dangers of the space shuttle design. In large, bold letters, the ad proudly declares: "N A SA 's failure surprised The N ew York Tim es and The W ashington Post, Time, N ew sw eek , and the three television netw orks. It didn't surprise u s." The ad continues: "Six years before the fatal launching of the C hal­ lenger, The W ashington M onthly was questioning the space shuttle's safety. Gregg Easterbrook wrote, 'Efere's the plan. Suppose one of the solid-fueled boosters fails. The plan is, you d ie.' " Sounds like an im pressive journalistic piece. Still, running an ad that stops just short of saying, "S e e , we told you the shuttle was going to blow u p " ju st d o esn 't make me want to buy the m agazine. Oh well. W e all need m oney. 1 suppose that if The W ashington M onthly sells just one m agazine subscription because of the ad, then the shuttle astronauts will not have died in vain. The Texas Legislature has passed its share of pointless bills, but see if you can rem em ber any that tops this one. Florida passed a bill earlier this month that extends the sales tax to illegal drugs. And it's not the first state to do so, either. An article in the June 20 Wall S treet Jo u rn a l reports Georgia and South Carolina already tax illegal drugs. M innesota will start taxing drugs in August. And in Arizona, the Jo u rn a l reported, drug dealers have to register with the state and then buy luxury-tax stam ps. So far, no one has. Actually, state officials have realized the drug dealers may not follow the new laws, thereby proving they are sm arter than the chairs they sit in. The officials just w anted new charges to throw at dealers w hen they get caught. Plus, the state can make a little m oney on the side. You know, this just might stop drug trafficking dead in its tracks. But on the off chance that it d o esn 't, people in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, M innesota and Arizona might w ant to find out how much time their legislatures spend on these laws. — D avid N ather «a Hart: putting more beef on the bun T here's an obvious tem ptation to dism iss Sen. Gary H art's eye-catching series of three the Georgetow n School of Foreign Service as an o s­ however w ere e u s i h brushed aside because Hart was not well known ti» p r e s s them when M ondale unloaded on him foreign-policy lectures at JACK GERMOND and JULES w rrcovER THE BALTLML W EVENING S LN This time around however Hart has tht name recognition and front running standing that assure his ideas will rcceivi i more s, n< > u s listening And the fast remains ¡hat a full 1s months before the next president ¡al elei ti.M vear, he is putting those ideas , • tht ? • • . ¡m, tor others to shi>ot at Hart s method of lupitaii. nc. i " » t- • ; tentatious bit of credentials-polishing in ad­ vance of his planned cam paign for the 1988 Dem ocratic presidential nom ination. But it is a tem ptation that deserves resisting The lectures go on for 54 single-spaced print­ ed pages, com plete with footnotes citing the kinds of sources that warm the h e a r t s of college professors — from Jefferson to de Tocqueville to Clausewitz and, som ew hat im modestlv, a military' reform er named Gary 1 lart I'hev ad\ o- cate basic changes in the wav the United States conducts foreign policy, from w hat Hart views as stale and outm oded ngiditv to what he pro­ poses as "enlightened engagem ent He argues that the country must move from its earliest isolationism , later W ilsonian ideal­ ism and post-W orld War II singlem inded con­ tainm ent policy against the Soviet Union to a much broader, more flexible policy that deals with the world as it is today. That world, he argues, is one in which the two superpow ers no longer can alw ays have their way and in which other, less militarilv powerful nations must be dealt with on terms of new econom ic realities Rather than attem pting to b i a k or ignore re alitv with the old, narrow containm ent police or fall back into isolationism while --till nursing the scars of V ietnam , Hart suggests the United States must be It must he says — "selectively internationalist involve itself w hen and w here American power and prestige can make a different e w here sik h use is consistent with Ameican values and as the American people art. when it has public support at home 'G aree' G aree1 as at a political ralle The Hart formula for enlightened en gage­ ment' is spelled out at length in the fields of diplomacy militare power and international econom ics and it is distinctly not the sort of stuff that will get \ou up out of \our chair and chanting But the lectures can have an im portant impact on the dialogue of the 1988 presidential cam- paign because thee not only set out Hart s i d e a s but also should be a prod to other contenders in both parties to lae out their ideas of what American foreign police in the rest of this ven­ ture and bevond should he f ou ein bet how ever that the Hart lectures will be dismissed be mane particularle backers of other 19HS presidential hopefuls as no more than a transparent anticipation be Hurt that W alter M ondale's 1UM cheap shot at him W here s the b e e t’ will continue to plague him. and hence an equalle transparent attempt to diffuse it early It would be naive to believe there esas no elem ent ol t hi - purely political factor in Hart s lectures and tbs’ meatv wav thee were laid out 1 lart wants to be president and he is well aware that in advance of that race tin> he had Laid out various detailed proposals rhose new ideas w hi US S running s t a t u s he inherited Kennedv LxA himself out t ' I I nlike h interesting in itself the Republican I’urtv Vu« I Bush who h a s thrown hims sundrv conservativt groups n litical support on the right H relativelv aUx>t from various tions He has voted more on I previouslv but he h a s eonsg rather lottv approach to fetue- Contm uing to shun politic. I’ \< t ee m o n ev o r e s t a b lis h has d o n e s u c h th in g s a sal t h in k tan k to slew o t h e r L V m o c r a t n can. n u * s o t n c i d e n t a l h : ¡ like to claim a s thi I his ro u te t o till W h b e in g a d e a d e n d Bu: t lates s er i o u s d e b a t í .\ * isivar m a jo r p a r t ie s n it will hav< h o g c a l li n g th. r not tor V iurv Hart pol i tis at p r s n e s s /w v I rü'u: i \ '< hi - pe name* k fas - thai Immigration rules threaten civil liberties ¥ he immigration r a i d s co n ­ ducted the recently Southw est pose challeng­ ing questions FRANK PALOMINO GUESI COI I \1\M the Chicano for in \i com m unity and Am erican society country which in general. A espouses dem ocratic principles cannot sit idlv by as its citizens are being subjected to discriminatory and unwarranted searches based solelv on color and ethnicity This foolhardy attem pt to solve the immigration problem is only a "quick fix" method to divert the public from the real im migration issues at hand. Before we can even attem pt to solve this problem , we must first do away with the biases and myths w'hich revolve around im ­ migration: 1. The use of the words "illeg al" and of course, the racist "w e t­ back ," is detrim ental in getting to the root of the problem . They only cause prejudice and help little People are not "illeg al" or "w e t" — just undocum ented. 2. The belief that undocum ent­ ed workers are "taking our jo bs" is a myth used by politicians and businesses to relieve them selves of the blam e for our society's un­ em p lo y m en t p ro b lem s. How many of us were actually heading down to the Valley or to California this sum m er to pick fruit for less than minimum w age? We have to demand that our leaders stop us­ ing undocum ented w orkers as / / B . g agri-businesses in the southwest have h i s t o r i ­ cally contracted and brought Mexican work­ ers, both documented and illegal, because they offer cheap labor. This tradition continues today. ^ ^ scapegoats 3. M exican im migrants hav e not been solely responsible tor their presence in the United States Big agri-businesses in the southw est have historic ally contracted and brought M exican workers, both docum ented and illegal, because they offer cheap labor This tradi­ tion continues today After all, a s Jam es Cockcroft points out in ( iut- la w s m the Promised I and, " A la­ borer without ri g h t s is an em ploy­ e r 's d ream t r u e ." Bv co m e keeping these workers illegal, big agri-businesses maintain a pool of labor they can import and deport at will. Com m on sense tells us that undocum ented workers w'lll be the last to complain about low wages and miserable working conditions. 4 Undocum ented workers are not free-loading off of the I S I hese laborers rarelv take advan­ tage of the programs that thev help support with t h e t a x e s thev pa\ thev provide a large am ount ot cheap l a bo r w'hic h actuallv b e n e f i t s our economv f urtherm ore 3 a s has I h e conflict betw een t h e L hi cano community and the undtxu- mented worker h a s always been sensationalized t he sterotvpe ot the undocum ented worker .is a drunkard and a troub­ lemaker These are |ust tabnca tions used to rallv support within t h e Chicano com m unity for immi gration laws which do not solve the problem 6 The theory that illegal im m i­ gration is detrim ental to the C hi- cano community is, at best doubt U n d o cu m e n te d w o rk ers ful usually buy prixlucts from small rarely Chicano businesses and oust Chícanos from jobs It is big business w'ho hire those willing to work for lower wages 7. The theory of a M exican inva­ sion does not coincide with the facts. Most illegals are young, sin gle males — hardly a m ass exodus of people. This is yet another pub­ lic relations ruse to inspire fear and hatred against workers who are only a sym ptom , and not the cause, of illegal lm igration. 8. The theory that the United States is helping to advance M exi­ co's econom y is yet another mvth for m< I hi- can be blamed business interests wf- ploit men and worn and the Mexican PR! : . w hich continuously /en s of their rightfu L 5 role in bringinc co s present coftdttM be denied even bv I a ru V l t l Me x i d not rv sp. A morn .in titi/e n s • lot tv trn ked i nt o believ nc that tht mi migrants are the only one- to blame for the immigration prob­ I he problem s units lie deep lem in big b u s i n e s s lust for cheap la I his latest bor and super profits wave of deportations is ¡u-t a wav of taking pressure off of them I he Chicano community obvi­ ously has a vested interest in unit­ ing to tight this overt discrim ina­ tion It cannot allow the INS and its the governm ent rights so big business can get off clean. Arrests of American citizens is an insult to our rights and our decent, v V\ e do not want interrogated, dragged off or smelled illegal looking to violate to be the In all, immigration laws in further have onlv succeeded eroding our civil rights and fur­ ther threatening our democracy IXi som ething but. bv God, don't make it worse any thing P alom ino is an eilucation sen - Scrapping SALT will strengthen the U.S.'s bargaining position T he 22nd Am endm ent to erated the arms control process, prompting the Soviets to offer two than a new proposals week. the Constitution limits the time a president may spend in office to eight years. This PATRICK MURRAY TEXAN C O L U M N IST less in is usually seen as a check on pres­ idential power; however, it also gives the president a certain free­ dom to make politically risky deci­ sions he might otherwise choose to ignore. Such is the case with Reagan's decision to scrap SALT II. The reasons immediate for scrapping the treaty are obvious. Negotiated in 1979 and never rati­ fied by the Senate, SALT exists as it a impedes the progress of any more meaningful arm s control or arm s treaties. The Senate reduction fiction. As fiction, legal Armed Services Comm ittee even agreed, in 1979, that the treaty was not in the best interests of U.S. national security. Repeated Soviet violations of SALT further remove the treaty from the realm of fact, and even fiction — giving it the air of fantasy. The Ameri­ cans and Europeans who contin­ ue take this illusion of bilateral arms control as reality propose that we ignore Soviet deploym ent of the SS-25, and other elements of Soviet reality that directly con­ tradict the SALT illusion. They play a dangerous gam e that not only undercuts allied unity but further impedes prospects for real arms control progress. Even the limited dismantling of weapons systems by the Soviets, purport­ edly to meet SALT guidelines, have not so much to do with a desire to conform to treaty specifi­ cations as with the scheduled dis­ mantling of obsolete weapons. The less immediate, and more far-reaching results of Reagan's decision are certain to have an im­ portant impact on American poli­ tics. It is this fact that underscores the farsightedness of his decision. Given the present popularity of the Republican Party and that cer­ tain freedom the 22nd Am end­ less than political ment gives Reagan, it would be irre­ nothing sponsibility not to address the is­ sue here and now. The scrapping of SALT does not, as some would suggest, indicate that Reagan is abandoning arm s control. If an y­ thing it suggests that he intends to pursue it with a new vigor. That point, at least, should be clearest of all. The arm s control proposals tabled by Reagan in the past few months offer a more concrete ba­ sis for effective arms limitations than any part of the treaty. And if the scrapping of SALT would lead to a spiraling new arms race, that certainly has not happened in the the past week. Reagan's an ­ nouncement may have even accel­ Of course, what Reagan does next will determine whether his move was one of folly, or strategic and political insight. But at the very least this decision highlights the best elements the administra­ tion has shown over the past six years: shrewdness, political cour­ age, and a w Jlingness to deal responsibly with delicate issues that may appear unpopular in the short run. The decision to scrap SALT, while risky at best, will leave Reagan's successor in the Oval Office an arm s control policy based on fact, not fantasy. H ope­ fully the president will capitalize on the initiative he now- posseses, and will not, in the words of Zbig­ niew Brzezinski, former national for President security adviser Carter, "bequeath to his successor unresolved strategic and geopoliti­ cal dilemmas which his successor will not be able to deal with be­ cause he will inevitably be politi­ cally w eaker.” These words have a peculiar ring of wisdom to them. Almost the same fate befell former Presi­ dent Carter when he entered the White House in 1976. M urray is a journalism junior. Tort reform will help U.S. insurance crisis F lorida recently passed the most radical insurance leg­ islation in the nation, tying limits in jury dam age aw ards to a CINDY NOBUTT TEXAN COLUMNIST IN HIS RELENTLESS EFFORT TO STOP DRUG TRAFFICKING, SENATOR JESSE HELMS HAS STUMBLED UPON A SENIOR GOVERNMENT OFFICIAL WHO IS DEEPLY INVOLVED IN PROMOTING THE USE OF AN ADDICTIVE SUBSTANCE THAT HAS CAUSED THE DEATH OF UNTOLD MILLIONS... The Daily Texan/Tuesday, June 24, 1986/Page 5 SENATOR JESSE HELMS 4(1 per cent rollback in commercial insurance prem ium s In Califor­ nia, voters overwhelm ingly ap­ proved a proposition to limit non­ economic dam age aw ards. These a c t io n s attem pt to address the “li­ ability crisis" that has lately been given so much attention. The inability' of Farm Aid II to obtain liability coverage for Me­ morial Stadium, forcing the event to move to South Park Meadows, bnngs the cnsis home to Austin­ ites The issue is pertinent to stu ­ dents many of whom will have to obtain liability coverage in their chosen fields and all of w hom face the prospect of one dav being the defendant or plaintiff in a law suit O utrageous prem ium s or an in- abihtx to obtain coverage have caused num erous services, profes­ sionals m anufacturers and local governm ents to operate without insurance or close down rather than risk a suit stupendous jury settlem ents h a \e gone beyond reasonable com pensation tor dam ­ ages to award sometimes millions of dollars for pain and suffering' and puniti\e dam ages In addition the v ulpability of some of the par­ ties brought to suit is question­ It seems in this issue ever- able bod\ fault law yers |unes and the public and all suffer from the cnsis insurers is at limit restrict As ever\ state legislature and C o n g r e s s struggle with the issue President Reagan has launched his own crusade His involvement might provide enough m om en­ tum tor changes in the legal tort ii\ il iusticei s\ stem to be made at a national level On April V Kt agan sent proposals to C o n ­ gress that would limit non-eco- nemit dam age aw ards in personal suits m u m law suits against m anufacturers federal contractors and the governm ent and c o n tin g e n t fet*s Reagan does not tie such lim­ its and restrictions to lower premi um rates as Florida has done However most ot his proposals are sound and regulation ot the in dustrv can alw ays be done at a lat­ er date Om adm inistration proposal ,i defendant to be w'ould allow l i a b l e onl\ tor his share ot .hel d damages in case s where others are also responsible Currently joint .md several liability as t is called can result in th« least responsible pavn . tin entire urv award lawyers \ o n economic damages both aw ards for pain and suffering and ter punitive damages which ar« hkt t i n e s levied against a de It ndant for negligence have risen drasbkallv in recent vears Once national standards are set or lim ts at the state level insurance companies mav be able to avoid the uncertainty- that now p l a g u e s them over how m am gigantic set­ t l e m e n t s the future mav hold and they would not be able to justify not lowenng rates However thev mav trv \ recent Wall ''tn'et tournal arti­ cle reports that insurers cntiei/e the Flonda legislation as setting a bad precedent tor dealing with the liability ensis In opposing rate rollbacks thev sav it is impossible tt predic t how muc h w ill be sav ed in system changes and when those- savings might tv telt Yet insurance com- from legal c l a i m s premises panies' justifications for charging high premium s or dropping what they consider high risk groups al­ together are based on similarly They unsupportable have no idea if or when large suits will be filed against their clients. Professionals, services and munic­ ipalities have seen their premiums raised up to 10 times, even though they have never had a suit brought against them At least six companies have stopped writing new commercial insurance policies in Florida w hile they study the repercussions of the new legislation Their action may be something of a 'bargain­ ing chip of the last resort as thev lobby against similar proposals in other states But it could backfire on them The Flonda law' also con­ tains a provision to facilitate self- insurance trusts and if many pro­ fessions or local governm ents take advantage of this provision busi­ ness that companies give up now in the sixth largest insurance m ar­ ket could be lost to them for ginv.1 If it is true that industries insur­ ers and lawyers are only con­ cerned about profits, it is also true that the greed thev exhibit is a trait shared by manv Am encans While true victims of corporate or gov ­ ernm ent negligence and w rongdo­ ing deserve com pensation for damages thev suffer, the current propensity to sue anyone m argin­ ally responsible tor an accident or m isfortune borders on the ludi­ crous That cases s u c h a s the handgun manufacturer sued tor a m urder in w huh a gun it made was used or the tobacco companv sued in the death of a man who sm oked ciga­ rettes all his life were brought to court at all dem onstrates that soci- etv has gone to tar in its attem pt to spread blame anv and the consequences unappropnate activity In communist countnc-s citizens tear should their neighbors or associates bear report ill-w ill them In the I nited States it seems profes­ sionals and businesses art- increas- mglv distrustful ot anyone or anv group for tear ot litigation Doc­ tors art- afraid to practice m anu­ facturers are atraid to market new products perhaps valuable m edi­ c i n e s will never he used because ot inability to obtain liability co\ erage due to the uncertamtv of possible though thev mav be* tested sate and effec- tiv e lav%suits even I rue t h e insurance industry is t c s u s i n g i t s resources on pushing through tort reform tor i t s ow n in­ terests but that doesn t change the fact that reform ls needed The public should scrutinize their tac­ t i c s and caretullv analvze all the facts Texans should be* especially watchful when the 1987 legisla­ ture gears session Care needs to be taken so that no re­ forms are made that limit the right or ability of people to go to court to seek redress for »n|unes But p r in c ip le s of fairness and justice for all s i d e s concerned should |oin with pragmatism and common sense* in guiding the current de­ bate over how to resolve the crisis into X oblitt / > I Jtin Am erican stu d ­ i o senior ine Senator's facts not right Reputation to kill (“ A viable + - sys­ tem, lin n g Line, Monday)? No. Jake, I believe you m isinterpreted mv letter The onlv thing I want to kill is needless spending bv the Student G overn­ ment of my tuition monies. In vour letter \o u state “Senator Borskv and I cosponsored and subm itted a valid bill This max be true, but why in the heck did you withdraw it7 And if you did not withdraw it, whv was there an article on the front page of the Texan claiming vou did? I made no foolish prediction about S tu­ dents Association senators or bills," I merely read the facts and stated the obvi­ ous Anv high school government student can tell you, if you care to ask them Mr. Foley, that once a senator submits a bill for approval, he should back it all the way. In my letter I merely speculated that my hard-earned tuition, most of which is a student services fee, should not go toward funding political lessons for student sena­ tors. I have no qualm whatsoever that your + /- system is viable, I just want to know why you pulled a bill after submission. In conclusion, get your facts straight be­ fore you either: submit a bill, or attempt a scathing reply in the pages of a student newspaper. Charles Statman Economics/government Free speech is the issue Tim Reilly ("Texan free speech focus ig­ nores apartheid," Texan, June 18) really seems to think that free speech is not an issue on campus, that only apartheid is. American men fight for female prerogatives A recent Texan editorial ha" KIMBERLY WILSON C.ITNI COLUMNIST brought ti> mv attention the existence ot an op pressed group that ha- beei larce the have made liberation lv bypassed b\ movement" of the past few dec ades W hile other segnn nt" of our "cKietv "lgnifkunt progress in their efforts to become tho mam equal participant" stream of American culture tho group continue" to b e denied rights and opportunities manv that other Amencans t o r I am not referring u granted women, black" homosexual" or the handicapped but to men take in the that "exes Since the special p r o : t-rns men face have been almom completely ignored b\ the popular press 1 d* cided to visit s u"ar Marsha * the LT Sociology Departm ent in order to gain some m-ight h i » vva" able to provide me v% ith some statistic" that reveal shocking in­ equities between in term" of their economic status 1 iv erage ma n learned the inc nu earns 38 percent n o n than the average woman VVh t i male college graduate earns an av erage income of SU • a female college graduatt e a r n s ,ol graduate can e x­ pect to earn 521 800 pe r year we that mu"t agree with Marshall The feminization of poverty m "o nou" But although the effects of these economic disparities have been studied in terms of women what are the effects on m en7 p e r v< A life of enforced affluence may not appear to be* a problem but consider the follow mg 1. Men are systematically d e­ nied a wide range of experience that an im poverished condition provides and are thu" prevented from developing a r t i s t i c soul" It necessity is the m other o t invention w hat can we call the fa­ th er7 Venture Capital"* Men are their that denied sense of quiet desperation that provides a rich s o u r c e of creative inspiration to other g r o u p s in cur society 2 Many men admit to feelings of guilt and to the- loss of their self­ esteem because of the economic inequities thev are powerless to rest -y e home hav e said that it can be lonely at the top 3. \ steady diet of rich foods pi "os known health nsks, espe- lallv to men w ith their com pan- fragile cardiovascular sys­ tiveh. tems An affluent lifestyle has been the death of manv men who might have been saved had thev net to ct nsume a m oderate diet of sur- - beans and boiled cabbage, i- following a sensible pro- wl gr.*.m ot light housekeeping. the opportunity 4iven It be i mes clear that the tvpical- iffluent lifestyle of the A m en­ me o a threat to hi" physical md intellectual developm ent. The seventy ot the problem becomes e v e n more apparent when we nsidt r ne plight of the average man after a div orce Although the courts have up- ht d the r ight of men to contribute to the support of their own chil­ dren in 59 percent of cases, onlv “ 1 percent of these men were able to overcome the social pressures that discourage men from contrib­ uting even token sums of monev to their children’s support. Onlv 28 percent wt re successful in their attem pts to pav the full am ounts m andated b\ the courts. The prac­ tice ot paving alimonv has become increasingly rare and as a result the efforts of men to achieve eco­ n o m i c parity with their former spouses have been further under­ In only 13 percent of di­ mined v o r c e cases were men successful in paying alimony to their ex- wives and the total am ount paid averaged $3,000 in 1983. Obvious­ ly, this is not going to make a sig­ nificant dent in the average m an's income. This fact is clearly illus­ trated by statistics which show* that the standard of living of the divorced man usually nses more that 40 percent in the first year fol­ lowing th divorce, while the stan­ dard of living of his ex-wife drops by more than 70 percent. The opportunities for men to make a full contribution to society have also been limited by cultural expectations. A married woman who is em ployed full-time outside the home usually performs an ad ­ ditional 25-35 hours of labor w ith­ in the hom e each week. The aver­ age m am ed man does only 10-12 hours of work in the home. It is not enough to simply recog­ nize these inequities in our soci­ ety Men look to the successful struggles of other oppressed groups in order to provide them ­ selves with guidance and direc­ tion liberation move­ ment. their for We m ust undertake legal re­ forms to redress public policies that discriminate against men. We need affirmative action program s that will give preference in hiring to men in the fields of clerical work, nursing and prim ary educa­ tion. This would do much to miti­ gate the problem of male afflu­ ence. Divorced men should be aw arded custody of their depend­ ent children w henever possible. This would also help to reduce their standard of living to accept­ able levels. It will not be easy to effect these reforms. If m en desire to become equal partners, they will have to debunk the myth of inferior male stamina. It is widely believed by people of both genders that men are biologically limited by being bom with fewer hours in the dav than women Some radical groups have even gone so far as to sug­ gest that men will require estro­ gen horm one therapy in order to overcome this supposed genetic handicap. However, it seems rea­ sonable to assum e that men have been limited bv cultural stereo­ types rather than their chrom o­ somes. By building their self-es­ teem th e ir consum ption of m ulti-vitam in supplem ents, men should be able to prove that they can function in a variety of roles w ithout becom­ ing disonented or fatigued. Then we shall see this myth for w hat it is — the propaganda of female supremacists intent on jealously guarding their traditional preroga­ tives. in c re a s in g an d Men will also have to contend with the ugly connotations that have been attached to the term “M en's Liberation" from the out­ set of the m ovem ent. The very m ention of it tends to conjure up images of scrawnv, shrill-voiced pinkos whining for the right to lounge about the house in their pajamas while watching daytime television. A small minority has given a bad nam e to the entire cause. In reality , men only w ant to enjoy the opportunities that w om ­ en have always had — which have not included the leisure to indulge in indiscriminate telvision view­ ing. However, the negative image of the M en's Liberation Move­ ment, no m atter how* undeserved, constitutes a very real stum bling block in the mind of the average homophobic American. This im­ age can only be eradicated by disassociating the m ovem ent from any suggestion that it m ight bene­ fit men. In the interest of good public relations, it may be neces­ sary to disguise the issues by re­ nam ing the m ovem ent “Femin­ ism .'' Wilson is an English junior. port free speech strongly, they may be u n ­ knowingly inviting such violence. To those who support divestm ent, I say, support free speech as well. The m am age of these two issues will have a greater impact on the University than either one alone. Ronald Schneider Graduate student in phvsics Children have 'want' In his column (“10-year-olds produce evidence of continuing business influ­ ence," Texan, June 20) Patrick Shuey com­ ments on what he perceives to be "busi- ness-onented" children. While a class trip to a local mall instead of a park or museum indicates a prefer­ ence for a business-created environment, the preference for business itself is not ap­ parent. What is apparent is Mr. Shuey's misun­ derstanding of this phenomenon. He states that malls "provide a very lim­ ited worldview compared to museums and parks." Whose world is he referring to? The “real world" in which those kids are growing up is one of consumption. Children of such tender years do not have an "(obviously whetted) business taste," they have an obviously whetted taste for all the gnarly stuff down at the super­ slick, squeaky-clean mall. To construe this trip as anything other the manifestation of successful bottom- line motivated Madison Avenue business principles effectuated by the modem mind of "free enterprise" is ridiculous. Ten-year-olds have about as much inter­ est in business as they do in brussels sprouts and lima beans. What they have is "want" and the place to satisfy "want" is the mall. Mr. Shuey can sure bet that “those of a business bent can be reassured." John Cogan Law Pom debate irrelevant W hether pornography is “beneficial" or “destructive" to individuals is irrelevant to the question of censuring it. Either view* assum es that hum ans are merely autom atons who respond to to stimuli in predictable patterns. That anyone with an education living in a pluralistic society can hold either view is the real horror. This nation was founded on the princi­ ples of individual freedom and dignity. Adults, who are responsible for their own actions, must be able to express any of their ideas, no matter how repugnent, in such a society. If exceptions are made to the freedom of ideas, then there will be no great dam to hold back the flood of statism. Wayne Joubert ("Pom leads to weird sex," Firing Line, June 16) mentions that the High Court has declared that "ob­ scene" material is not protected by the First Amendment. It is interesting to note, though, that the most rabid anti-pom activists are in the same camp with those who clamor for judges who strictly interpret the constitu­ tion rather than legislating. Churches can tell people what to think — that's what they exist for. They have only this authority within their congrega­ tions, though. Governments should not be allowed to exercise such power. The "evil empire" that the new right is fighting so vigorously does so routinely. Jim Glynn Physics ntfuffsjofíts* This seems a little strange if he's serious about opposing apartheid by supporting divestment. Let's consider an elementary chain of thought: ■ In spite of many years of effort by the Steve Biko committee and others, the Board of Regents has steadfastly opposed divestment and has made it equally clear they would rather hear as few proponents as possible concerning the issue. ■ In order to convince the regents that divesting is the proper thing to do, those supporting divestment feel they must con­ vince as many people as possible to sup­ port such a goal and do so in a manner that will put pressure on the regents. Hence, large rallies in a place which the regents cannot ignore with lots of student and public support. ■ In order to have large rallies, those supporting LT divestm ent should be sup porting the free speech movement here on campus, because it will allow them to speak freely on an issue that they feel is im portant rather than worry about getting arrested because their rallv was too long or not reaching enough people because the present free speech areas may be too small or too “out of the w av.” It seems to me that those supporting divestm ent in South Africa would be 100 percent serious about supporting free speech as a tool to further their cause, if no other reason than that supporting free speech could prevent possible violence that could result from UTPD enforcing current University regulations. After all, many of these protesters claim to be non-violent, but if they don't su p ­ Fountain Monday She and others have nine days to pass out 200,000 samples of the new product. Exchange program recom m ended versify Page 6/The Daily Texan/Tuesday, June 24, 1986 Library to computerize system By MICKY INOUE Daily Texan Staff The University is developing a c om pu ter catalog system for its li­ braries as part of a UT System-wide library e n h a n c e m e n t program, said Linda Beaupré, associate director of general libraries. The University currently has a "prim itive” on-line catalog svstem which " d o e s n 't have all the features that we are going to h ave," Beaupre said. Eventually all information in the library system will be available through the c om puter, she said. Susan Phillips, assistant director for bibliographic control, said the current system provides onlv the title a nd a u th o r of an article in the library. The terminals for the c u r­ rent system are located at the Perrv- C astaneda, e n g in e e n n g and science libranes, she said. "The libranes will still have to use the card catalog" because the c o m ­ pu ter system will not be available immediately, Phillips said Recently acquired material will be available on the com p uter sooner, and older material will gradually be included into the system, she said. The co m pu ter catalog will e v e n tu ­ ally be able to tell in which library matenal is located, w h e th e r or not it is checked out, and if so, w hen the matenal is d ue back, she said. Beaupre said a database for the autom ation program is being devel­ op ed a m ong the UT cam pus librar­ ies, but other U T b r a n c h e s eventual­ ly will have access to the Austin computer. Reciprocal access will also be available later, she said, but right now, we are concerned about (the Austin) c a m p u s," The com pu ter will focus on cata­ logs. A lthough more information and possibly some books will be available on is that all b o o k s will ' highly unlikely be on the com puter, Beaupre s a i d the com puter, it The c o m p u te r terminals will be available in all cam p us l i b r a r i e s each having access to information from all other libraries on cam pus Beaupre said Library users will have access to all library records no matter which library you are in. she said. The co m p uter ha rd w a re will be in the administrative data process divi­ sion which will be linked to the sys­ tem in the Peter T Flawn Academic Center. Those with an account for the Academic C enter com p uter will be able to use their terminal tor ac­ c e s s to the library com p uter said 'eventually W ayne Perrvman, head libranan for the acquisition and serials d e ­ partment, reaching changes will be m ade in the acquisition process including expanded information cm inventory control. A u^er vul l be able to find which bvK'ks are available and w hich books are on ord er he said tar- 1 think it's going to hav» a posi­ tive effect he said But the new svstem will not mean one copv of a N>ok can serve the entire cam pus Perrym an Some libraries will still have to d u ­ plicate materials to serve the cam ­ pus he said said dents because of the » on tinued dev aluation of th» pos» felt like 'one of the guvs By JOHN CLARK Daily Texan Staff Now is a great time to study in Mexico, according to E.V Niemever, program specialist tor the International Office. That is w hy he is puzzled that no stu den ts have signed u p for a L I exchange prog ram with the prestí gious Instituto Tecnológico v de I s t u d i o s Superiores de Monterrey, better kn ow n as Monterrev 11 k universitv He said stu d y in g in Mexico is inexpensive for s t u ­ Information on the I I C exchange program h a s been available to stu d e n ts since April but no inquines havt been m ade about the program Stu dents hav» not show n great interest after we publish m atenal on th» availability of program s to study abroad he said UT s t u d e n t s generallv are not inclined to put in a year abroad tow ard their degree plan student, s a i d Laurie Spradlin, Latin-American studies graduar» it is im portant to sp e n d time a b r o a d Most people are prettv ethnocentric but a semester n another country »an o pen vour e v e s and giv»> v o u a different perspective on the world s h e said Spradlin participated in the L T exchang» p r o g r a m \u to n o m o is during the spring l MM semester at the Universitv »it N u ev o I eon w hich is also in Monterrev She said the onlv wav to reallv learn a language is to become im m ersed in a foreign culture Niemever said TI C is one ot th» top private mstitu I h»- largest c a m p u s i,s m Mon tions in I atin America terrev with 10,(XX) stu dents but them are 2^ »am puses throug ho ut Mexico According to a TtC brochum there are 300 foreign students from T d i f f e r e n t » o u n t n e s at the Monterrev Uvation I’aul Walla»»- an A u s t i n v » mmunitv v ollegi I K m the s u n 1 n»-r t of friendlv people them h<- - They have a real o p e n attitudt t o w a r d s Xie» neat said Niemever said Amen».as • flue; « terrev Monterrev ha- been »alud ttu sit\ in the United states because V m - .an nflu»m« so strong there di > I he »itv is onlv ! > m lies tr»>:r lar» -t - ‘ . -« ,.;?u Mt LI h a s been involved m an » u h a n g t pn-grarr. w :n the Autonomous I niversitv »»t N uevo 1 » » n on»» N n iv -a . Nine stud en ts have gon» t»> Mont» rrev Mexican student has come to th» I m v e r s •% ¡nder the program • Students interested in a tte n d u n 11 ( s i t i e s m the LI exchang» program ■ Niemever at the International O f t u « ais»> o t t e r s exchange p r o g r a m s wet l i ma Peru Ni»1 Paulo Brazil Nk» Freiburg and W urzburg West Germany tti« r a n i v »*r FALL REGISTRATION CALENDAR JUNE 2 5 FALL REGISTRATION FOR CONTINUING AND READMITTED STUDENTS JULY 9 DEADLINE FOR REVISIONS TO PREVIOUSLY SUBMITTED FALL COURSE REQUESTS (SEE YOUR DEAN FOR MORE INFORMATION] Soapbox blues Kelly Parmelly, a junior at Westwood High School, rests on a box of laundry detergent samples near Littlefield Carlos Moreno Daily Texan Staff ‘Worm’ programs threaten computers By BEAU BARTON Daily Texan Staff C o m p u te r users in Austin are finding that picking u p free pro­ gram s can be h a z a rd o u s to their com puters. An outbreak of " w o r m " pro­ gram s on c o m p u te r bulletin boards in other cities has caused expensive dam a g e and loss of inform ation to hom e com puters. The w orm program s, som etimes left on the boards u n d e r the guise of other program s, erase disk m em ory in the c om p uters that pick them up a n d can destroy entire bulletin boards. "Th is is pu re d e v io u sn e ss," said Tom Clark, publisher of The Com­ puter Street Journal. Bulletin boards are electronic ver­ sions of the familiar cork bulletin boards. By using a m o d e m — a d e ­ vice that allows com pu ters to com ­ m unicate over telep ho ne lines — a c o m p u te r user can gain access to bulletin boards a n d post messages or pro gram s tor o thers to use. to p revent W orm program s originally were from developed being stolen. If an unautho rized c o m p u te r copied a file protected with a worm, its m em ory w ould be files erased. More than 100 bulletin boards o p ­ erate in Austin and are susceptible to w orm s, said Michael Fabri/io, preside n t of the Universitv Macin­ tosh Users Group. Free programs are som etim es left on the boards and problem s occur w hen users post w orm s on a board that system operators d o n 't check, said Vance Strickland, com puter program m ing assistant at the I 1 Com p utatio n Center "The problem is there's no s ta n ­ said dardization of bulletin boards Strickland, com puter science junior Most bulletin b o a r d s check pro gram s before they post them, he said. "T here are people out there w ho do take ad vantage of you bv doing things 'i on hav t like this, Whv? people who enjoy h urting others said Morgan Watkins, m a n a g e r of the UI M icrocomputer Su pp ort G roup k lark said the best w ay to avoid t h e program s is to know the w o rm s' file n am es so they w on 't accidental­ ly be used ' There's nothing you could reallv do about it it you d id n 't know the file n a m e ," he s a i d Watkins said the C o m p u ta tio n Center h a s not had problems with w orm program s. \nv software we use is accessi­ ble to all facultv and stu d e n ts w ith a valid ID. We have a lot of software that is o p e n but we re verv careful to check all of it he said. Watk i l l s s a i d the center t e s t s p ro ­ g r a m s on d u m m y disks before thev are m oved into the L I c om puter. t abrizio, engineering sop ho m ore to keep w arned c o m p u te r users vopies of program s. It might not be a problem it you kept a copv of ev erything, he said . 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KAPLAN JULY 16 FALL REGISTRATION FOR CONTINUING AND READMITTED STUDENTS PREPARE FOR AUGUST 13 PAYMENT DEADLINE FOR STUDENTS WHO SUBMITTED COURSE REQUEST FORMS FOR THE FALL SEMESTER JULY 2 3 FALL FEE BILLS WILL BE MAILED TO STUDENTS GRE MCAT LSAT 8/2/86 9/13/86 9/27/86 README FREE I N T R O D U C T O R Y S E S S I O N S CLASSES NOW FORMING ¿KAPLAN STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD United Bank Mall, Lower Level • 1904 Guadalupe, Suite F Austin, Texas 78705-5607 (512) 472-8085 AUGUST 26 NEW AND READMITTED STUDENTS REGISTRATION AT THE ERWIN CENTER AUGUST 2 7 LATE REGISTRATION AT ERWIN CENTER — $ 2 5 LATE FEE AUGUST 2 8 CENTRALIZED DROP/ADD AT ERWIN CENTER NOTE: TO STUDENTS WHO HAVE NOT REGISTERED FOR FALL 1 9 8 6 IF YOU ARE ENROLLED IN UT THIS SUM MER (OR WERE ENROLLED LAST SPRING) AND PLAN TO ATTEND UT THIS FALL. YOU M UST SUBMIT A COURSE REQUEST FORM ON JUNE 2 5 OR JULY 16. STUDENTS WHO FAIL TO REGISTER ON ONE OF THESE DATES WILL NOT HAVE ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY TO REGISTER UNTIL AUGUST 2 7 AND WILL INCUR A $ 2 5 LATE FEE. The Daily Texan/Tuesday June 24. 1986/Page 7 Leaders discuss regional primary By SEAN S. PRICE Daily Texan Staff State Dem ocratic and G O P party leaders politely b u tted h ead s M on­ day before the H ouse C om m ittee on abo u t w h e th e r Texas Elections should participate in a so u th ern "S u p er T u esd ay " p residential pri­ m ary. The p ro p o sed ch ange w ould m ove th e Texas p rim ary from the first S aturday in M ay to the second T uesday in M arch, closer to im p o rt­ an t contests Iowa an d New H am pshire. Tw elve so u th ern states already have m ad e th e m ove in "I do not believe th at candid ates from eith er party ad d re ss Texas is­ sues because we are so late," said state Dem ocratic C hairm an Bob Slagle. "A n d it's rare th at Texas is in a position of being decisive bv being late. I d o n 't think it m atters if you d ress in a black tie or blue jeans if the ball is o v er." H ow ever, state R epublican C hair­ m an G eorge Strake said the cost of such a prim ary w ould be "a n y ­ w here from $10 m illion to S ll m il­ lion." Strake, a form er Texas secretary of state, said o ne of th e proposals w ould add an additio n al prim arv, leaving voters to face at least four elections in six m o n th s. "1 also know th at th e m ore elec­ tions there are the less tu rn o u t there seem s to b e," Strake said. "I know for a that p eo p le becom e confused and even d isinterested w hen it seem s like th e re 's an elec­ tion every tim e you tu rn aro u n d . fact "W e w ould advocate consolidat­ ing elections rath er th an m ultiply­ ing elections," Strake said. Strake said including Texas in a prim ary along w ith 12 o th er states w ould dim inish the sta te 's im por­ tance in selecting p residential nom i­ nees. "Texas is of such a size that its very size alone will com m and n a­ tional m edia atten tio n a n d national c an d id ates," Strake said "O u r po­ tential w eight w ould be diluted bv the fact th at we w ould be included w ith southern sta te s." so m any o th er Strake said he also q u estioned w h e th e r Texas has m uch in com ­ m on w ith o th er so u th ern states. "It seem s to m e th at o u r issues are u n iq u e, o u r issues are differ­ e n t," Strake said. Slagle said that he w as not wor­ ried a b o u t Texas being "drowned o u t" by th e rest of the South. "F act of th e m atter is, Texas is the th ird largest state in the union (in p o p u la tio n ) an d has tremendous im pact on both p arties," Slagle said. "I'm n o t w orried that Florida, Ala­ bam a, G eorgia or Louisiana will cause p eople not to pay attention to u s." Slagle said several w estern states — inclu d in g California — are plan­ n ing to m ove th eir prim aries to the first S atu rd ay in M ay a n d , if the L egislature d o es not m ove the pri­ m ary d a te u p , Texas risks being ig­ nored by can d id ates busy courting those states. Slagle said so far, most of the p o w er in selecting presidential can­ d id a te s has gone to states that " w o u ld n 't m ake a good commis­ sio n er's precinct in Dallas County or H a m s C o u n ty ." "T he arrogance of voters in N ew H am p sh ire has g o tten to be of rath er asto u n d in g proportions for p eople w h o rep resen t nothing but rocks," Slagle said. A bill th at w ould have moved the p rim ary d ate to M arch passed both h o u ses of the last Legislature but did not m ake it out of conference com m ittee before the session end­ ed. State Sen. John Traeger, D- Segum , told the committee if the next L egislature doesn't pass the p roposal it will have "some apolo­ to th e rest of the gies S o u th ." to m ake I th in k w e 'd be leaving ourselves o u t in th e cold if on May 5 w e came to vote a n d every other southern state h ad already ex p ressed their said T raeger, who is also votes, chairm an of th e S o u th ern Legisla­ tive C om m ittee. The co m m ittee has been a vocal su p p o rte r for an all-so u th ern prima- rv. T raeger said four so u th e rn states — Texas, A rkansas, N orth Carolina a n d W est Virginia — have yet to join the so u th e rn prim ary. Farm Aid still lacks insurance coverage By FELICIA ARAMENDIA Daiiy Texan Staff liabihtv Relocating the Farm Aid II concert to S outhpark M eadow s has not se- cured the event but Willie N elson "aid M on day the g ro u p has assurances the necessary coverage will be available in time for the July 4 fund-raiser insurance tor N elson and Jim Hightower, T ex a s a g ric u ltu re c o m m is s io n e r m et Mondav w ith reporte rs to a n sw e r questions abo ut th» event, includ ing it" site change loading bullfrogs i n t o a It s hk» It 's hard to get every ­ wheelbarrow one in at High the same tim» tower said We couldn't get that une final bullfrog m the insur ance »omparue" Farm Aid an nounced Fridav the concert site was changed from L I Memorial Stadi uni to Sou th park M< adow" tv e a u se underw riters w ho had agreed to in "lire the event at a a>st ot $20ri,(MMt ha» ked out II organizers S outhpark M eadows has been tin site ot NeKon s tw o revent Fourth ot Juk Picnic's Nelson "jid planning an event and booking the act" be tori getting insurant «■ i" not unusual It " a lot t .oier to get tht ac tS than th» insurance Had we waited t f ¡rm Vid 11 w t in ( h am patgn he wiuildn t have gotten anv a>. ?" s a i d V\« g o ! u "tn a n « o two hetor* - d a v - - and I labilitv ihsuran» t tor I arm Had I *., >st >" there w» rt no tlaims f !. j against th* group N e l­ son said nor ha" hi" own band ever had insurant;» problems We plav m ore than 200 d ay s a year and I can 't recall a single claim on u s," he said if Nelson said he d o e sn 't know the insurance industry is balking at u n derw riting Farm Aid II a s a way to gain publicity tor it" cause. "I think all the n atio n 's farm ers It that s are being th ro w n in there w hat thev r»‘ trying to d o this is a prettv crude way to do it, ht- said We kept m eeting everv d em and that thev w anted H ightow er said the reason and thev kept making more Sluggish tu kets sales also were part »>f the site change I he the The tact main thing Nelson said that we hadn t sold a lot »>f tickets at that point was an o th e r thing for insurance was "< ’Id ot the About 2b ¡ I I 1 ticke t" have been 000 printed Nelson said the Sou th park M ead­ ows site was not available when plan" tor Farm Aid II began 1 think 1 would have liked to play there originally 1 think most people would rather be at a place he said like Southpark M eadow s If will be a picnic atm»‘s p h e n and it " in gcK*d shape Financtallv i" a l»»t more thi- economical location We com*' out with a profit if w e "ell M tick­ et" Nelson "aid \t the stadium w t would h a v e lost nionev on ticket ".iles even selling 7b iXX) tickets he \id I h e format tor tht NSb f u n d - r a ­ iser will he the sanu as for the first 1 a rm llto n e - in pledge" and d o n a tion s trom concert viewers corporate donations and p o st-pro duction a» »ount for m o s t of the monev raised a g r e e m e n ts s a id Carlos Moreno Daily Texan Staff Jtm Hightower and Wiüe Nelson discuss the Farm Aid site change Monday. l e v a " \ i d f u n d s m WHh " a i d t h a n $170,000 H i g h t o w e r h a s in received mor» Ihe first Fart pro <\ t w a s to "»t u p a c risis hotline t r tarn fa m l i e s w h i c h makes legal financial a n d me ntal health a s s i st ­ a n t referrals a n d directs farmers to food p a nt ri es a n d oth»‘r forms ot e m e r g e n c y relief We m ade »ight or nine m illion (dollar"» last vear N elson said "If vs e did that w ell it w »»uld be great " the concert \hh»>ugh he said w»>uld not be held if liability in su r­ ance is not available, organ izers are planning full-tilt for the Juiv 4 fu n d ­ raiser C oncert goers will be able to take ice chests and alcoholic beverages in plastic containers into the park, but no «.an" or g l a s s containers will be a llo w ed. Tickets are available in A ustin at Sham rock Ticket Service, or m av be charged to M aster C ard or Visa bv calling 4b2-0303 White urges federal participation in war on drugs By SEAN S PRICE Da t Texan Sta*4 VN AC O c u>\ Mark White -.¡¡d Mondav hi has been a ^ u n d the v ongrcss»onal Border Cauvu> ha-- m.tdt int a , i m \ 1 federal funding ter policing tin- K r d e r •> d r a g tr i f t u a t o p priority I he war on drug'' i.in onlv be w o n bv a m a­ . ft rt and a significant mcre®>e t r o r n the federal governm ent via\ f> tilt leva'- Police \ v"tHia un cooperat »t m assistant» Whitt sa i V tion m Wav. ! he Congressional Border C aucus i" a group of to n g re s sm e n from border district" According to the Iexas D epartm ent of Publu s atet. '*x drug death" are reported in Texas each vear and 14 M ; Iexari" txxorm dri.g .¡ser" a n n u a lh i H*" report" the "treet value of d rug" seized m to tn re a se d from $A4 million ir the state $4 '5 million in WH5 C l e ar k t items t he d r u g p r ob le m is ten- great an d tiH- ie sourc ef ul tor L v j " a n d o t he r tht border "tate- to com bat alo n e," W hite said. W hite "aid that over a four-day period last fall, the Texas A rm \ N ational G uard discovered sev­ eral East Texas m ariiuana fields valued at m ore than $700 0(H) i am also urging C o n g ress to tu n d a proposal ■ i w N ational G uard aircraft, radar and person- nel t, h e l p detect an d a p p re h e n d low -flving air- eratt m aking nightly run" of illegal d ru g s ,’ W h ite said S *so BASEMENT BOOK SALE 400 COPIES Health & Fitness Books 1.99 1000 HARDBACK Fiction & Non-Fiction Books 990 500 PAPERBACK Mysteries 790 500 Academic & Trade PAPERBACKS 990 Gire me a break! The best days are those that start with a good break, Every weekday morning from 7:30 until 10:30, the Texas Union will feature a summer breakfast including hot muffins and croissants, fresh fruit salads, cold juices, special coffees and herbal tea. Direct yourself to the Union Patio where you will be waited on -- no lines to com plicate the early morning. You'll be able to say “good morning" with a good conscience. f t T e x a s U nio n D ining S e r v ic e s THEBE IS MONEY O T SAT.BB Are you willing to work for your money? We offer UT student* the XXBKVT EAT- I N S PART-TIME JOB OH CAMPTT8 You need a car and a lot of ambitious en­ ergy (eyecare) OPTICAL CENTER & MLK & Guadalupe in United Bank Mall Bausch & Lomb Frames & Lenses (single visio plastic) $49.00 $59.00 per pair complete Bifocals Tints, Scratch Resistant Coatings, UV Absorbtive Coatings— Additional charge $69.00 Applications available in TSP 3.210. Our part-time salespeople malte $750- $1000 per month and morel! 471-1865 COMING SOON! New Location at 2439 E. Riverside in Crossroads Shopping Center UNIVERSITY CO-OP m 2246 Guadalupe Phone 476-7211 Free Parking 23rd & San Antonio w $3 Purchase TEXTBOOKS • LOWER LEVEL MasterCard Page 8/The Daily Texan/Tuesday, June 24, 1986 Budget cuts affect projects Low-income housing residents to pay bills By DAW) ELDRIDGE Daily Texan Staff Tenants in Austin's low-income housing projects are going to have to start paying their own electric bills because of cuts federal funds. in John Moore, city electric utility di­ rector, told Austin's Electric Utility Commission about the sw itchover Monday. Austin housing projects are being converted from mass metered sys­ tems — in which the Austin Hous­ ing Authority paid the electric bill for an entire project — to individu­ ally metered systems. Under the new system , each tenant will receive a monthly allow ­ ance from the housing authority to help pay the bill. Fred Fuchs, an at­ torney with the Legal Aid Society, told the com m issioners the allow ­ ances local housing authorities set for electricity use are not enough to pay for tenants' monthly bill. "T h e allow ances are never suffi­ I haven't seen a case yet the allow ances are suffi­ cient. where cien t," said Fuchs. In addition, som e of the estim at­ ed 400 tenants in the affected proj­ ects — Bouldin O aks, Shadow bend, Manchaca II and Coronado Hills — may be required to pav a deposit for the city's electric service. Sue Ann Craddock, spokesw om ­ an for the city utility's custom er ser­ vice office, said about 60 of the tenants had records of delinquent paym ents or non-pavm ent for pre­ vious addresses. "W e mav require a deposit of $40 to $60 depending on the num ber of bedroom s, and w hether or not the a ir -c o n d itio n e d ," ap artm en t is Craddock said. Commissioner Bill Oakey asked Moore if the city could waive a $100 fee the utility is charging the Austin Housing Authority for each new in­ dividual electric meter. "T h e city has all these committees working on affordable housing, and this is part of those issues," Oakey said. C om m ission ch airm an M erle Moden said he sympathized with Oakey's efforts to help the AHA and the residents of the housing projects, but said there was no pre­ cedent for waiving such a fee. Under the new resolution, resi­ dents in the four projects would receive a $10 allowance for an effi­ for a one-bedroom ciency, $12 apartment and $15 for a two-bed­ room apartment. Cuts hurt MHMR compliance By JEFF STEWART Daily T exa n Staff The Texas D epartm ent of M ental Health and Mental Retardation is suffering the effects of state budget cuts in its attem pt to comply with federal court m andates, departm ent officials said Monday The m andates, which cam e in the form of a court- approved consent decree, are the result of a class-action suit brought against MHMR in the mid-1970s. The decree in the suit, which was filed on behalf of MHMR client Robert Jenkins, called for im provem ents in physical facilities, outpatient program s and direct care arrangem ents w ithin the departm ent, and made provisions for biannual reviews to verify compliance. The most recent report by the court-authorized re­ view panel cited progress in most of the mandated areas, but expressed concern that current and future state budgets may prove insufficient for continued compliance. MHMR officials echo these concerns. "T o do all that we feel is required to comply, we really need a budget in crease," said Roger Bateman ot Corpus C hnsti, an MHM R board m em ber. "W e are going to stay in business and w e're going to comply. The question is: 'A re the trade-offs acceptable?' " The result of the original m andate included increases in the num ber of direct care staff m em bers — used to determ ine staff-to-patient ratios — as well as more fre­ quent transfers of clients into the com m unity. Both changes involve budgetary increases, said departm ent spokesm an Bob Good. Because the court has mandated an increase in staff size, the state mental health system must com ply regardless of cost. "T h e court has said that the inability of the state to provide a sufficient budget is not reason enough for failure to co m p ly ," Good said. "T h e TDM HM R has the same problem s as anv state agency. (The budget) is going to impact severely on this agency and on its abili­ ty to com p ly." Bateman said, "T h e departm ent staff has studied how to comply and at the same time cut the budget 1 think some of the alternatives could be called draconi­ a n ." Montie and the bear Associated Press Flea market employee Montie Townsend Jr. takes his store’s stuffed brown bear for a walk along an Am anllo home on his walk, but he did get a lot of cunous looks. thoroughfare Monday The bear didn t find a new Austinite charged in ‘boat accident’ death By DON D. BROWN Daily T exa n Staff An Austin man w ho reported his business partner m issing after a June 6 "boatin g accid en t" was ar­ rested and charged with m urder M onday in the death of the m issing man, w hose body was found float­ ing in Lake Travis M onday m orn­ ing. arrested Roland E. Lawson of 107 E. Long- spur Blvd. was and charged with first-degree m urder in the death of Elvin Pollock, 4 9 , w hose address was not m ade pub­ lic. Bail was set at $35,000. The two men co-owned an Austin Honda dealership. Lake patrol officers found Pol­ lock's body, with a single gunshot wound to the head floating near W indy Point at about 4 a m Mon day. Ropes, a 15-pound rovk and an anchor were tied to the bod\ Offi- rials said the bods had been in the water since June r» the result of An autopsv performed Mondas afternoon showed Pollock's death was t hi* gunshot w ound, which was m ade bv a bullet from a small-caliber gun Fhi caliber sit the gun has not been determined detective m for the ! Vpart investigation sheriff s Jam ie Page charge of Travis Counts ment Lt. Pollock m issing June 6 after the two were involved in a "boatin g acci­ dent on Lake Travis intensive the departm ent con ­ Page said three-day an ducted sears h tor the body but was u nsuc­ cessful He said officials assumed Pollock could not swim well be- sause he lost an arm in a motorcycle as s ident \t ths' time of the accident, Law ­ s o n told officials he and Pollock had gone to t e s t a new 16-foot boat He said the boat had been experiencing f ue l and engine problems near Win- dv Point He said the boat caught t i r e at dusk and the tw o jum ped • PIZZA • SODAS • SALADS Free Deliver) Area Call 442-1491 T W A F F L E C O N E S B L U E B E L L IC E C R E A M FREE SANDWICH Buv a medium ot laiqe and receive a small sa n d w ich free I m u t e d D e l iv e r y A r e a I V I i v e r i c s S t a r t 4 p m _____ ____________ 616 E . O lto rf L IT T L E T U C K 'S H t , One. C k l One F R E E ! ! 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A n d e rs o n Ln. 452-8697 Across from F a n d a n g o 's offer good w/coupon only EXP. 7/2/86 FOR THE MOST EXCITING PLUNGE YOU’LL EVER TAKE 2 FOR 1 PADI OPEN WATER CERTIFICATION COURSE • Private Professional Training • Free Scuba Orientation FOR A LIFETIME OF ADVENTURE MplVMé/2f/Sé 45* /wfBtmes Bwum* 203 W. U S A DR. (Hoar Highland Mall) GM Steakhouse Hang around with Pancho at GM and get a beef fajita dinner with drink for $3 .6 9 , or get a chicken fajita dinner with drink for $3.99 with this coupon. 1905 Ouadalupa open 7am-9pm Mon.-Sun. Mp. 7/1/56 in orders 476-0755 467-0059 'le sf ch00M0buigmr in town' The Daily Texan/Tuesday June 24 1986 Page 9 Astros need late inning heroics in 7-6 win Associated Press HOUSTON — Glenn Davis hit a two-run homer in the bottom of the ninth inning Monday night to pow­ er Houston to a 7-6 victory over the Cincinnati Reds as the Astros snapped a four-game losing streak. Davis' home run, his 15th, came after Phil Gamer led off the innmg with a single off Ted Power, 3-5. Larry Andersen, 1-0, got the victory in relief. Run-sconng singles in the ninth by Buddy Bell and Tony Perez had given the Reds a 6-5 lead Jose Cruz and Kevin Bass drove in two runs each in support of Astro rookie starting pitcher Jim Deshaies ■ Giants 18, Padres 1 — In San Francisco, Mike LaCoss drove in four runs with a double and a three- run homer while pitching a three- hitter as the Giants extended their winning streak to five games with a romp over San Diego. LaCoss, 7-2, doubled in a run in | the third and hit his first career ho­ mer in the eighth off Dane lorg, a ! reserve outfielder who pitched the final inning after San Francisco had raked three Padres pitchers The Giants established season highs for runs and hits (21) v\hile shredding a tour-game Padres win­ ning streak ■ Expos 5, Mets 4 In New >ork, rookie Andres Galarraga sin­ gled home the go-ahead run with two out in the 10th inning as Mon­ treal beat the M e t s the Herm Winningham started w inning rallv w ith a single, v\ as xai nficed to second b\ George VVnght and went to third on a flv ball to deep center field b\ Mike Fitzger­ ald Mets reliever jesse Orosco, 3-4 was ahead of (..atarraga 0-2 before giving up the w inning hit ■ Cardinals 2, Pirates 1 — In St Louis, Tom Herr who went 3- for*5, singled home the winning run with the bases loaded in the 11th inning as the Cardinals rapped 15 hits in their victory over Pittsburgh. Herr, who had a double and four singles, drove home both runs a s St. Louis won its fourth consecutive game, matching its season high Terry Pendleton opened the C ar­ dinal 11th with a single off Pat Clements, 0-3, the fourth Pirates pitcher After Andv Van Slykt* popped out, Vince Coleman and loading the Ozzie Smith walked, bases. That brought up Herr, who bounced a single to left on a 1-1 pitch. ■ Phillies 19, Cubs 1 In Phila­ delphia, juan Samuel hit two three- run homers and drove in six runs as the Phillies set a National League record with 15 extra base hits. Shane Rawley scattered six Chicago hits in the rout of the fifth place Cubs Rich Schu had four hits, four RBI and scored three runs for the Phil­ lies. Thev set a club record with 11 doubles among their 20 hits. Mike Schmidt and Milt Thompson also homered ■ Angels 6, Rangers 4 In \rl ington, Don Sutton won his 301 st career game and Doug DeCinces homered the Rangers 11-game home w inning streak a s California beat ending Texas button 6-5, who beat the Rangers last Wednesday for ho VX'th victo r\ , gav e up six hits He left after gi\ - tng up a three-run homer to Pete O'Bnen with no outs m the sixth The victory moved the Angels within one game of first-place T e x a s in the American League West ■ Yankees 11, Red Sox 3 Ir Boston Mike Pagliarulo homered doubled twice and drove in three runs, and Dave Winheld broke out of a slump with a pair ot double- and a single keying a season-high that powered New 19-hit attack Aork to a victory over the Red Sox 1 he Yankees swept in a three- Houston s Billy Doran steals second base in the Astros’ victory over Cincinnati Monday in the Astrodome. game series with Boston in New \o rk last week moved within five games ot the Xmerican 1 eague East- leading Red Sox Boston has j0st three ot its last four games all at home. Oakland, with a 28-43 record, is four the American League record for consecutive road defeats Danny Darwin, 4-3, pitched 736 innings and gave up three runs on 10 hits. Cooper's home run was the 1,000th hit of his career. Riles added RBI singles, Milwaukee over the Blue Jays. leading losses trom Associated Press ■ Rovals 6, A's 3 — In Kansas City George Brett and Lonnie s mith drove in two run- apiece to lead the Royals past Oakland h an d­ ing th' A s their Oth consecutive road defeat Steve Balbom hit his 15th home run of the vear and second in two games for the Royals. Danny Jack­ son, 44, went six innings and gave up six hits for the victory. ■ Brewers 5, Blue Jays 3 — In To­ ronto Cecil Cooper hit a two-run homer and Ben Oglivie and Ernest ■ White Sox 11, Twins 2 — In Chicago, Greg Walker hit a grand slam and a run-scoring single and Ron Kittle homered twice, backing Joe Cowley's two-hit pitching victo­ ry. Presence of cocaine investigated in Bias death Associated Press UPPER MARLBORO Md nary investigation indicates involved in the death ot Len Bia- prosecutor said Monday A prelimi­ that tiKaine was a -tate Arthur Marshall state s attorney for Prime George s C ountv said he w as com meed that cocaine vs as present in the dormitory riH'm when* Bia- collapsed early Thursday m orn­ ing, just two day s atter he was selected b\ the Boston Celtics as the second ptaver taken in the NBA draft Marshall said field t e s t s shovsed that a glas sine envelope found in the car of the 22-vear old University of Maryland basketball star contained cocaine He said the test while not admissible as evidence in court, is usually a<. curate Marshall also said he h a s been told that tract's of cocaine were found in a urine sam­ ple tested at the hospital w here Bias was pro­ nounced dead last Thursday. The prosecutor said, however that he doesn t know what caused B u i s death and doesn t know it cocaine was t> conti bi.ting factor Marshall said he will go ahead w ith a crinu nal investigation into Bias death and will be­ gin presenting evidence to the grand |u n |ul% 1 I he investigation w ill focu- on whi -op- plied illegal drup- and who used them a- Bia- hi- teammate- and fnend- -p< nt the ear ly morning hours celebrating Marshal! -aid at a news conference It the state medical examiner determines that cocaine was responsible tor the ..irdia^ the prosecutor said ll i- possible that arrest he might bnng manslaughter charges against the person who supplied the drugs Marshall conferred Monday with Man Goldstein a law yer vs hi' repre-ents Dav id two teammates who Gregg and Terry Long were w ith Bias in the dorm room the morning he died. Goldstein said Long and Gregg will appear before the grand |urv it they are issued sub- poenaes and will te-tifv if they are granted immunity He would not s a v whether thev will testify voluntarily Marshall sai d he i- not prepared to grant mmunitv to anyone-vet but that he wants to talk to the two players and has discussed it with ( ioldstein. He said police are trying to locate Brian fribble a longtime friend of Bias, and Trib­ ble - roommate Mark Fobbs. Some of Bias' teammates have said that he and Tnbble drove to northeast Washington several hours before his death A police official acknowl­ edged that there were reports that Bias had been seen early that morning in an area known for it- on-the-street drug sales. Marshall described Tnbble as "a man who h a s been around tor some time on the cam- pus He -aid Tnbble has a criminal record involving minor theft, but di>es not have any recorded involvement with drugs. Marshall -aid there may have been a delay of 15 to 30 minutes before an ambulance was called, but that he doesn't know if a delay contributed to Bias' death. He confirmed that the room was unusually neat, saying that everything was in place, all the beds made and "not a beer bottle to be found" when the room was checked. "I don't think there is any question that the room where Bias died was sanitized," he said. Drug paraphernalia were found in a gar­ bage bin outside the dorm, Marshall said. He said University of Maryland officials have not been as cooperative as law enforce­ ment officials would like them to be." Marshall said he wants to talk to Lefty Dnesell about a meeting the Maryland basket­ ball coach had with his team hours after Bias died. There have been reports that Driesell in­ structed the plavers how to respond to ques­ tions from police and reporters. Curren upset, as Wimbledon Becker wins play begins Associated Press WIMBLEDON, England — O ne year later but -i\ rounds earlier, former Longhorn Kev­ in Curren lost to another West German on Wimbledon - grass courts Monday. Eric lelen, a 21-year-old soldier in the West German Army, took advantage of the 11th- seeded American s erratic serving on the fast but slippery courts in prevailing 6-4, 6-7, 2-6, 6-4 12-10 in an opening-day match that lasted 3 hours. 15 minutes. It was a West German who beat the South African-born C urren in his last match at Wim­ bledon — the 1483 men's championship, in w hich he was blasted off court bv Boris Beck­ er. Jelen credited Becker with helping him gain the upset. He said Becker practiced with him last week and had given him some tips on Cur- ren's liking for passing shots down the line. 1 knew that if 1 plaved well I had a small chance, said the West German, who was plaving for only for the third time on grass. "But I can't believe that I won the match." Curren served 20 double-faults the match including tour in one game and three in another. in Curren dropped the first set before taking the next two, including the second-set tie- break bv 7-4. But jelen won the first four games of the fourth set, then increased his lead to 5-1 before Curren fought back by win­ ning three consecutive games. Jelen then held at love to tie the match at two sets apiece and set up the decisive fifth set. Curren held his serve through the first nine games of the final set, moving to a 5-4 lead. He reached match point three times on Jelen's serve in the 10th game, only to be repelled each time. Then the West German broke Curren in the 13th game, edging ahead 7-6. But Curren broke right back, and w hen he held his own service, he had an 8-7 lead. had moved into the second round and Curren had become the first seeded player to fall. "I had my chances," Curren said. "I think he played better than I did. He caught me off guard a little bit and I wasn't as sharp as I'd hoped to be." T was impressed with the way he played," Curren said of Jalen, who is ranked 32nd in the world — 19 places below Curren. "He volleyed with a lot of authority. He's a strong boy with a lot of ability." Becker, seeded fourth, crushed Eduardo Bengoechea of Argentina 6-4, 6-2, 6-1, just be­ fore a heavy rain interrupted play. He started right where he left off a year ago, booming 10 aces in overwhelming his Argentine foe who is ranked 105th in the world, 99 places behind the redhaired, 18- year-old West German. "I only have to go six more matches (to retain the title), and there are lots of other players who have the same goal," Becker said. "But I was pretty confident today." Only 19 of the 64 scheduled matches were completed, with another 16 suspended by the rain. The matches on all courts were suspended by the weather, with the exception of Centre Court, where second-seeded Mats Wilander of Sweden defeated American*Scott Davis 7-6, 6-4, 6-4. Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia, the No. 1 seed, was leading Leonardo Lavalle of Mexico 7-6, 1-0 on Court 1 when rain stopped play. After a long delay, the match was suspended. Other first-day winners in men's play be­ fore the rains fell at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club included Americans Paul Annacone, Jay Lapidus, Marcel Freeman and Tom Gullikson; Andrew Castle of Britain. Among the 29 matches that were scheduled but never began were those involving die two No. 3 seeds — Connors, seeking his third Wimbledon men's singles tide, and Czecho­ slovakia's Hana Mandlikova. The two then held service until the 21st game, when Jelen, jumping on Curren's sec­ ond serve, broke the big right-hander. And when Jelen held at love in the 22nd game, he The women's top seeds, No. 1 Martina Navratilova and No. 2 Chris Evert Lloyd, ate scheduled to begin play on Tuesday, tradi­ tional "Ladies Day" at Wimbledon. The harder they fall Steve Cruz of Fort Worth knocked down Ireland s Barry McGuigan twice in the 15th round Monday night in Las Vegas on his way to claiming the WBA featherweight title on a unanimous decision. McGuigan, a 5-1 pre-fight favorite, was also knocked down in the 10th round. He was taken to a hospital as a precaution after complaining of headaches in his dressing room. Associated Press Tom Clemons Injustice shown in Bias reports L en Bias was buried Monday morning in College Park, Maryland. It's unfortunate that they couldn't have buned his clean reputation with him. Bias, the All-Atlantic Coast Con­ ference forward from the Universi­ ty of Maryland, was drafted sec­ ond overall in last Tuesday's NBA draft by the World Champion Bos­ ton Celtics. He had dominated the ACC for the past two years, becoming the ACC Player of the Year this year, beating out the first pick in the draft. North Carolina's Brad Daugherty Bias was the guiding force of Maryland's team, almost single-handedly propelling them into the NCAÁ tournament The NBA was next for Bias; his future success was almost guaranteed However, his untimely death on Thursday morning canceled all of those plans He died at 7 50 a m Austin time of what was then called an apparent heart attack That was it, a simple, natural and not unrealistic heart attack People die of heart attacks all the time Admittedly, the tact that Bias — called the best athlete in the draft bv Celtics president Red Auerbach died ot one v>as •'hix'kmg but not unheard ot Unfortunately soon atter his death the inevitable question was asked Could drugs have been in­ volved in the Bias d ea th 7 The a n ­ swer, most thought, was no Bv all reports, Bias was not a drug user the stones of the c m u m Then stances ot his death began to come in The reports all said the same thing a possibi!it\ of cocaine in Bias system existed Bias reputa­ tion began its dowmsard slide Suddenly Ten Bias the basketball star became Ten Bias the dead u>- caine user 1 he tact Bias vs a s dead and the sports world had lost a talent real lv didn t matter atter that Amen- «.a s gimme dirt mentalitx erupt­ ed W h \ became the big question and it it w a s cocaine that killed Bias all the easier to explain Those connected with the im es tigation into Bias death have come out ot the woodwork with all sorts of reports ot cocaine that might have been could have and been in his system Nothing de fimtive or concrete mind vou but plenty of insinuation It Bias were alive and tould hear the ru m o rs floating around he sureh would sue tor slander Did cocaine cause the death of Len Bias’ The autops\ tsn t com­ pleted yet and won't be tor a tew days But it doesn t matter any­ more The seed of doubt h a s been placed in the public s mind Bias I can be found clean and still be considered bv mans "that drug- using basketball player " Consider too, if drugs did not kill Len Bias but if thev re found in his svstem, he will still be consid­ ered by many an addict Whether he used them once or 20 times won t matter, his reputation will always be tarnished with that stig­ ma of "drug user " And with that stigma attached, all that Len Bias ever accom­ plished on the basketball court will be forgotten His style, finesse and skill will be lost All that will be remembered is how he died, on drugs, in his dorm room To do this to Bias' or anyone's reputation is an injustice. Many in the media, by simply doing their job, are smearing the reputation of a man who cannot defend himself, and doing it with information that hasn't been proven factual yet. If it is true, after the autopsy is released, that Bias' death was in­ deed caused by cocaine then that should be duly noted but not dwelled on. The memories we have of Bias should be of his abili­ ty and nothing else. One of the great qualities in sports is your ability to redeem yourself. As an athlete, you are only as good or as bad as your last performance. As a basketball player, you may play terribly in the first half, but you can always play well in the second half and all is forgotten. A good performance can be remem­ bered, a bad performance is histo­ ry- Bias' chances at a second-half comeback are over. What should be remembered about Bias is his talent, his ability and his perfor­ mances. How he died or what he did off the court should not be im­ portant. Making a spectacle out of Len Bias' death will not provide any answers as to why he died. And that is really whiat we look for when someone's death seems as senseless as his did. & entertainment Page 10/The Daily Texan/Tuesday, June 24, 1986 Dylan, Petty compress rock history Sold-out show uneven but good despite sound problems By KATHY McTEE Daily Texan Staff Boy, it's tough being an icon. At least one could assume as much af­ ter seeing Bob Dylan's performance Saturday night at the Frank C. Erwin, Jr. Special Events Center. Dylan and his new cohorts, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, put on a damn good — albeit wildly une­ ven — rock show, but the man from Minnesota left a lingering question: just who is this "Bob Dylan"? Perhaps the better question, or at least the one that applies to this eve­ ning of music would be "who are he?" Dylan has been the countrified heir of Woody G.; the original rock 'n' roll beat poet in dark shades and black jeans, and a Judeo-Christian m ystic/m ystery m an. Saturday night, a sold-out crowd at the Erwin Center caught momentary glim pses of all of these Dylan faces, but to the frustration of some (and admittedly, Bob, to the delight of many) these personas took a back seat to Dylan The Rock Star. Tom Petty and his band, especial­ ly guitarist Mike Campbell and key­ boardist Benmont Tench, sustained the show 's m om entum . Petty has evolved into a master of arena rock — he clow ns around, performs "the hits" and exaggerates song endings, but his theatrics aren't phony. Petty exudes warmth — and Saturday night, after Dylan's rather icy op en ­ ing set, that friendliness was esp e­ cially pleasant. N o one expects Dylan to shake hands with the front row and rattle off "It's really great to be here" though, patter. Saturday night, Dylan barely acknow leged the crowd, except to express his dislike of critics. His vocals, too, were bare­ ly decipherable during many of his electric numbers — he couldn't com pete with the wall of sound cre­ ated by three guitars and four excel­ lent backup singers. In the first set, with Dylan backed magical minutes. But Hard Ram and It A in't Me, Babe moved only a por­ tion of the crowd — many sat wait­ ing for "the rock and roll to start again," others )ust talked loudly, waiting for the theme from Band of the H and The a rrangem ent of the show, w hich had Dylan and Petty p e r­ forming together and alone, ad ded variety to the typical rock show for­ mat. But the ev ening's magical high points, such as Dylan's and Petty's d u e t on I've Forgot M ore Than You'll Ever K now , from Self Por­ trait, were interspersed with some just plain b o n n g stretches. At times, Petty a n d his band o u t­ played the Z im m er Man — certain­ ly, the so u n d w’as better on the songs they perform ed w itho ut him — but they d id n't, c ouldn't, steal the show from him. Despite p ro b ­ lems with sound, and a voice that just isn't w hat it once was, Dylan asserted the fact that he's not a has- been yet. The problem w asn't with Dylan's playing or singing — it's that Dylan himself is such a m om e ntou s figure in A m en can cultural history that his mere presence is anticlimacfic e s ­ pecially in a basketball arena Ih i s 7 rue C o n fe ssio n s to u r rol! historv com presses rock n Dylan begat the B v r d s w h o begat Tom Petty The H e a tb re a k ers a m a /in g cover of the B v r d s s> ) ou Want To Be a R i\k and Ri4l Star intimated this But du ring the last set Saturdav night w h e n Dylan an no un ced how h onored he w as to be playing with Petty and launched into / ike A Rolling Stone and later K nixkin O n H eaven s LX>or any lingering do u b ts about his m vsten o u s , cham eleon like nature didn t matter an \ more The man himself luckilv will always be a mystery his songs speak for them selves Bob Dylan: from folk prince to beat poet/god to would-be king of rock. u p by Petty and the Heartbreakers, w onderful s o n g s like P ositively 4th Street were marred by indecipher­ able vocals. Shot o f Love. in fact, from the third of Dylan's "C h ris ­ tian" LPs, was the best song of that first set W hen Dylan came out on stage with just his harmonica and acous­ tic guitar, and began To Ramona, he was that countrified kid again, that black-jeaned poet, if |ust for twenty Queen of gloom abandons punk-era ideals By KENNETH KORMAN Daily Texan Staff After 10 years, nine albums, and several musical eras since their orig­ inal incarnation, Siouxsie and the Banshees finally made their first lo­ cal appearance Fndav night at the Austin Opera H ouse. Relying heavily on matenal from their latest album Tinderbox, Sioux­ sie and the Banshees plowed through an hourlong set of their gothic, near-mystical music. Sioux­ sie' s icily removed stage presence reinforced Spin m agazine's recent description of her as the "reigning queen of gloom rock". Despite an excellent sound mix and the cooperative acoustics of the set often hall, The Banshees' dragged as they w ere caught in a sort of musical catch-22: though they have a responsibility to th e m ­ selves to play their latest material, it unfortunately d o e sn 't m easure up to their best. But if they em phasized their older songs, they might be seen as taking the "easy wav out Predictably, the band opted for the former, saving the earlv singles for last. S p e llb o u n d Arabian N ights, H a p p v H ouse and Israel, all from the Banshees' s i n g l e s collec­ lim e came at tion Once Upon A the very en d of the set. The crowd m ade it plain that these songs were w h at they came to hear. terminal ennui. Siouxsie and the Banshees suffer from that dreaded disease that has infected so many English bands of late Ihe band looked truly bored most of the time only changing their facial expres­ s i o n s when som ething h a p p e n e d to arouse their anger And Siouxsie did get angry At one point in the show som eone in front of the stage com mited an u n ­ know n infraction of her rules, and she sent an oversized roadie into the crowd after him It was then that she ad dre sse d the crowd with two simple and charm ing w ords pricks." These w o rd s "s tu p id would not have left such a d e e p im­ pression had they not been the only intelligible thing she said all night 1 his little incident illustrates quite clearly how punk attitudes have changed over the past decade In the mid-to-late 7(1, the very idea ot send in g a goon in tor crow d control w ould have been laughable at best Audience and band were re garded as equals in a long-overdue effort to erase the tradition ot elitism in rock n' roll As one ot very few surviving bands from that era Siouxsie and the Banshees put the original punk ideals to sham e They are as re m oved from the dav-to-day realities of the people that constitute their audience a s the Rolling Stones have ever been No quantity ot m akeup and spiked hair can hide that fact from view By GREG SMITH Daily Texan Staff "We p le d g e allegiance to our fans, for which this band will al­ w ays s ta n d ." Poison promise that on their lyric sheet, and they proved it Thursday night at the Back Room. Bleached- blonde Donna from Dallas got an eyeful of their finseled-trash ward­ robe and Max-Factored good looks. the Cutlass Supreme Glen with Rocking Machine got an earful of hard-rock grungy pop. Everybody w h o show ed up got an evening of energetic entertainm ent, California glam rock style. music As described on their d ebut al­ bu m Look What the Cat Dragged In, Poison are Bret Michaels on "vo- calizin an d socializin"; Rikki Rockett with "sticks, tricks, and lipstick fix"; C.C. DeVille with "guitar-screechin' a n d hair-bleachin' and Bobby Dali, bass-rapin' a n d heart-brea- k in '." As it is w ritten in the pages of rock history, Poison is a street-lean David Lee Roth, a de-toxed Johnny T hu nders, an attractive G ene Sim­ m ons, and a bu siness-sm art Doc­ tors' Mob. The act is borrow ed, but IT’S BACK! ON STAGE! nobody seem ed disap po in ted by the unoriginality'. The b and 's e n e r­ gy sw ept through the crowd. Poison's beer also sw ept through the club. Prom ptly after the opening num ber, Michaels and Dali began distributing cases of Budweiser. Soon the crowd am assed a hard- earn e d sweat similar to the one o n ­ stage. The vocalist w orked the outer perim eter of the stage constantly, reaching out into the audience for high-fives and se nding out winks an d kisses. His axmen prowled about, coming together for a little rock-star posing, a n d then rushing to the front for backup vocals and crowd interaction. Bassist Dali knew all the moves, grabbing one en th usiast's hair for some satincal Student Kush! Day-of-show half-price balcony tickets withI.D. at Paramount only! PETER PALMER Juno 24-29onJfl CBABG -A TIC. ET: Tickets at the Paramount, Erwin Center, H.E.B. Superstores and all UTTM TlcketCenters. For group discount information, call 472-2901. (+ Tax) 4-10 pm only ♦ | ! FLYING PIZZA HOTLINE S O C I E T Y I 4 7 4 - 1 7 0 0 PHAMOBMT THEATRE for the Performing Arts 713 CongzMt Avenue * 472-5411 a* KPEZ »02 FM Sun-Thurs Fri-Sat 11:30-2am 11:30-3am Free Delivery Coupons not valid with tpockrts California glam slam band Poison assume a Twisted Sister pose. head-banging Poison are not show business stroking. For in the ego- the elevated just for them, stage is only a structural necessity and not a social barrier In the past, glam rock hasn't al­ ways been so m uch innocent *un From Little Richard's pretty face to T hu n d e rs' junkie business to Sim TUESDAY SPECIAL Med 12” w/2 Toppings Avant-garde artist Laurie Anderson is gleeful — she’s got a gold card. Laurie Anderson: art or annoyance? By ED COMBS Special to the Texan e n o u g h Sometimes it s am azing what a simple performance artist can do tw o backup with on e accompanist electronic a n d s i n g e r s gadgetrv the most d< to please m a nding jam es Bond tan For tw o h o u r s Eridav .it Palmer the obligatory A uditorium before small-but-appreciativ e crowd I au ne A nderson staggered along that fine line betw een the profound an d the pretentious b etw een thi ndicu lous and the sublime Or som ething like that You see it s not easv to figure l.aurie Anderson out Hi t imagery is hardlv sledgeham m er lit: enn tions are fairly w ell concealed com ing through more as a series of va a n y t h i n g g u e concrete Her music stands o n ;ts ow n too much t o aicuratelv cati go: performance artist i/e her a s a And v et other c l a s s i f i i a t i o n s m u c h shorter f e e l i n g s t h a n t.¡i N ou never art* really sure it \ n derson takes herself or any thing she does seriously You d o n 't know it s h e is trying to sti\ som ething of v tal im portance or sunplv stringing together a senes ot indeciphenihit psuedo- ideas intend ed message But in the end Ihe it doesn t really m atter s rarely as im portant as the perceived m essage It's not what it is h ip posed to m ean but what von think it s supp osed to m ean show d id n 't always make sen si* and cohesiveness rarelv it did it was interesting and but make you think With Anderson the audience had a chainc to leave the performance with more than approached \n d e rso n music ringing ears \t the very least \ m the stretches b o u n d n e s to g i v e one else* more room to plav at I n her n \ orded material h ence Mwter Hcartt'rcak <»/ the Brave sound track ar five album live I ive Vnderson draw s on a s diverse as William s Burroughs and William S h ak esp ean She p l a y s with sou nds the m u sn a round the instrum ents rather than ton mg tin instrum ents inte the- mu s e t U nited fitting The rt suits like* f ndav s perform range from silly to challeng they an unquestionably ance iftg but worthw hile some ot \t > a liner in a performance art pie<.e called \a tu ra i /fis.vry \n d e r s o n presented a more or le-s s i m p l i t lii : I *s; stum V\ ith ’ eg v t ■ s.m a p a re d -d o w n band the matenal didn t translate well to the concrete h a l l particularly Languagt is a Virus which was reserved tor an encore and the s m i p l i s i t i c v i s u a i s wen* sometime s < xtrarwsuis and this appro ach al a nn oying But lowed Anderson s considerable per son a l i t v to carry the s h o w Interspersing stand up comedy routines about previous lives a nd sperm w h a l e s and borderline virtu oso electronically m anipulated vi< lin snipp» ts Anderson seem ed ably to fulfill her goal of continuing a tradition of Amencan h u m o r that began with Bugs Bunnv an d I kitty Duck W hie h is saving i lot m o n s k n ig h ts In Satan s ^ * r\R e boys in m ake-up a n d tinsel hay» outraged the social norm sexually nan otk ally and religiously I he vi d e o age rendered glam s sfu s k val ue impotent the tirst time America * along with Boy a unties Georgi sang n a m e s California s p o r t i n g is now o verrun witf b a n d s liki G uns n Roses c andv an d Jetbov each one a pop outfit w eaned on thi hard nxA ot Aerosmith a nd k ls S Some 1 os A n g e l e s critics claim Pois on are the best of the glam-slatr crop, u tin g four straight sold-oui Saturdays at the 1,000-seat (. ountry Club as evidence 1 hey definitely do rock hard, but without the lyric* ot stev en I v l e r ' s d ru g ad d u tion and |\>is Simmons satamc obsessions on are a p op band that will likely follow Motley C rue s footsteps inti the arenas J A I M E ’s SPANISH VILLAGE HOME OF THE ORIGINAL MARGARITA JAIME • is having a... SUPER SUMMER SPECIAL $1.50 MARGARITAS (regularly $3.25) M ON. TUES. W ED. ALL DAY & ALL NIGHT LONG IE X I C Á ÍÍ) F_OOD HAPPY HOUR Mom Fri 4- 7 Saturday 12-5 OPEN; II AM ltPMMoa-Than UAM-llPMtrié Sat AU. MAJOR CHEWT CARDS ACCEPTED H 476-5149 002 Rad Rivar California glam quartet Poison invades the B ack Room Austin-produced comedies range liuiii lunny ‘Ion’ previews a ‘ I n n ’ n r p \ / ie u / c a frightening world By DEBORAH KELT Daily T exan Staff they're just presentin g N Chaos has come to Capitol Citv Playhouse I hey 're not going out of business, and the roof h a sn 't been blown off bv a to rn a d o or a n ything )o rk Ion, a very schizophrenic and only mildly a m using plav bv Tom White. Set 30 or 40 years in the future, Y York ton focuses on Tom and M arx, a voung couple in Megalopolis who can t seem to get anv sleep T hey've been up for 10 days straight now, and nothing seem s to help, not even pills, sex, or counting sheep. As their insomnia gets worse, their so m eone h a s lives get stranger stolen their ph on e book, their ap a rt­ m ent complex might be on tire the local pizza companv is out of p i// a and some drum major is practicing living room The whole in thing e n d s with the entire cast throwing popcorn all over the stage and audience. their 1 here is, h ow e ve r a m etho d b e ­ h in d this m a d n e s s Throughout all the running a ro u n d and confusion White attem pts to point out how ri diculous m o d e m existence van be He makes his point but his plav just isn t that funny \ >ork Ion is am using if vou like comedy ot the th re e s C o m p a m vanetv but ¡uve mle and frustrating if vou don t In one scene Marv calls information to get a phone n um ber only to find that it i" no longer tom panv polu v to cive out p h o n e num bers $ht wills again disguising her voict with a weak English accent, f a i l s g ets begins screaming and then p u t s Tom on lorn als* has little luck the ph o n e I ht- so then he begins screaming gag i" just t o o long w ind ed as are most oí tlie lokes ir \ >, rk Ion f r u s tr a te d really ttm wbai k Tom and Mary > battle w ith their landlord Ms Deimomeo is another Ih ret •> C o m p a m t h .it w ears out it" w e lw m t Whenever thi couple even l a u g h s a little tix loudly the old landlady calls up m a tizzy and tho audience is ton «ni to lorn and Marv sit through another hate Ms TYInu.niw I* ust gets a little tedious s k i t I nfortunatelv most i t tfu acfiru By JOHN ANDERSON Da: , Tetar S*aM N \th Street is h e a x rn to thi "< with a taMt for strati gu light > \" ten " a rut ! op 4* -• ,¡"U ó side t«t the "troet are lined with Hubs am bars w ho com pete non stt-p to wo< the sarru a u d ie iu i Thi xirtuallx new est m em ber ot l.*p 4- C a n g en Sixth Mrevt is C itx I lghts a dance Huh that o p e n e d May a 617 1 '"íxth St Situated ¡ust dowi the road from Í nzo " and Prima d o n n a City it I ights has taken pla^e as ;ust a nother d an ce Hut n bixth street the Although the H u t 's radio adver­ tising boasts about a light show never before seen in T e x a s th< lig h ts d idn t ight show at Cit\ seem any rmm exotu th a n the light set up that can be tou nd n any other club m the to w n l i g h t s reailiy are n othing new or un seen Said d u b m a n a g e r L a m Mor There re other . iub" in town a l e s that have lights similar to ours but what m a k e s u s unique is t h e combi nation of the light show and t h i a / » (it the d a m e floor tact In itselt The dance floor i" ginxt sized With a two tiered design the 20 tisit bv k 1 toot wxHHien dance floor is easily ont of th* largest in Austin And although a big danct thi floor is a godsend to Hubgix*rs m ftn n C B A R G A I N P R IC E T o p G a n tU! 1 2 :3 0 2 :4 5 5 :1 5 7 : 3 0 9 : 4 5 K a ra te K id II 1 2:00 2 :3 0 5.-00 7 :3 0 10HW R a w D e a l ■ ^ 12:155:009:30 Poltergeist O 2:30 7:15 »*> Academy Award w i Best Documentary! Feature HEARTS AND I MINDS 1 ~t>cruc«Mngty brKkanl 1 -Should t» Mw bt *v«ry Amanean Today «Mips Spirit» ef the leed Toniy«ol11:19pa 2JDU.T. 3JCNmU.T- 2JDU.T. IM M onU .T. fuetee MAmpA S f i r a i F t n ToAoyotTpoi 139U.T. (Mon T M lro1.lt Non U.T. Bad ‘C o ca -C o la ’ offers playgoers an evening of torturous suffering By DEBORAH KELT Daily Texan Staff It's almost a universal experience, som ething nearly e veryone has suf­ fered through. There you are, face d o w n on the linoleum after a night of beer, vodka, tequila a n d gin, re­ lieved because the torture is over But then it starts u p again, only this time there's n oth in g left in yo ur stomach; the w rithing continues N ow imagine these same sensations acted out on stage and y o u've got El Grande d e Coca-Cola, St E dw ard's n ew play the su m m e r The whole production is kind of like the dry heaves — it just w o n 't go awav for The play is set in Trupllo, H o n d u ­ ras, w h e re Pepe H ern a n d e z has pe rsu a d e d the local Coca-Cola c om ­ pany to s po nso r his small nightclub. The action begins on o p e n in g night, w h e n Pepe prou dly presents his Parada d e Estrellas, the Parade of Stars. It's a plav within a play, and it's su ppo sed to be tackv a n d stupid — but fun nv because you realize it's tacky and stupid. Unfortunately, El Grande de Coca-Cola is just tacky a n d stupid. El Grande de Coca-Cola recalls reviews everyone those musical pu ts on in high school. Everyone acts silly, you get the football coach to dress u p like a w om a n, and it's a scream because you know everyone w ho 's acting silly. It's too bad that the cast of El Grande are actors a n d not old high school chum s. The play is structured aro un d a senes of cabaret acts, w ith Pepe act­ ing as the m aster of ceremonies. The audience gets to see a ridicu­ lous imitation of Stevie W onder stum bling through the audience, an even more disturbing imitation of Charo coochv-coochving through the audience, and a n u m b e r of real­ ly d u m b magic acts, singing acts a n d gymnastic acts. But like the drv heaves, the torture ¡ust gets worse — the whole play is d o n e in S p a n ­ ish Foreign language plays are fine, as long as the audience is warned previously and is d o n e entirely in that language. But the producers of El G rande d is­ their publicity in closed nothing the production theater about the play's lack of English. What a funnv surprise, huh? The production m anages to be u n d e r ­ standable, but only by butchering the Spanish language The actors' accents are horrific, and the script actuallv creates words so that the gringos in the audience can u n d e r ­ stand "D a n g e ro so " replaces "p e li­ replaces " p r e ­ groso, g u n ta ," pseudo- Spanish word could not be created, the script ¡ust breaks dow n and throw s in good old English. W hen Pepe does his H u m p h re y Bogart im­ itation, he savs "H e re 's m iran do a ti kid" not once, but m any times, and it's pretty darn scarv. "question' and when a The final straw, or "el straw fi­ nal, is the treatm ent of w om en in t l G rande de Coca-Cola A lthough all the characters in the play are fair­ ly dim-witted, the w om en are given particularly stupid roles They gig­ gle and smile in revealing outfits while Pepe says "M agnifico" to his Chicano boy-tovs, but the sexism comes to a nauseating finish in the final scene. O ne of Pepe's p erform ­ ers gets shot out of a cannon, his bull's-eve conveniently placed over a w o m a n 's crotch. It's not just un- f u n n v , it's d e g r a d in g . P e p e 's m o th e r w ould be asham ed. T h ro u g h o u t this play, the a u d i­ ence gets to see Coca-Cola printed in every nook and cranny. It's tat­ tooed on the w o m e n 's panties, it's em blazoned on the m e n 's jackets, an d it's really disgusting. Just im ag­ least favorite Coke ad, ine vuur do n e in Spanish, or rather Span- glish, with stupid w o m e n ru n n in g aro u n d , a n d vou've got th e gist of El G rande de Coca-Cola Stay at h om e and watch som e commercials, or get reallv wasted a n d pu ke y ou r g uts out — |ust d o n 't go see this plav. El Grande de Coca-Cola, now show ing at Mary M oody Northen Theatre, St. Edward's University. For more inform ation call 448-8484. ales attributed the plainness of the sign to the Austin Historical Soci­ ety, w h o must app ro ve the design of such accoutrem ents along Sixth it looks kind of Street. Even so, shabby to boast about xour light sh o w and then hang a painting as yo ur marquee. The d u b is designed w’ith grev a n d pink w-alls and wine colored carpet, a n d it mostly looks like the inside of a w arehouse. The ceiling, which is at least 50 feet high, c o u ­ pled w'ith the naked walls and railed upstairs balconv, kind of gave me the urge to do some paclung and lifting. The club does, how ever, contain one or tw o u nu su a l a d o rn m e n ts. A grotesque, m onstrou s mirror leans on the wall and greets clubgoers as they enter the d u b . Morales savs it w as left by the previous occupants. 1 can see w*hy, it looks like so m e ­ thing out an episode of The M un- sters. The m e n 's bathroom is very regal. Obviously no exp en se w as spared in decorating it w ith co rru­ gated tin and a tin urinal that looks like it once served as a cattle d rin k ­ ing trough. Morales w'ould not sav how m uch the owner, w h o m he would not identify had invested in furnishing Citx Lights. He did sav, h ow ever that the a m o u n t wras in excess of $100,000. I guess a lot of it is in the lights It's not in the rest of the club. to the ads, All in all. City Lights is nothing special Contrary the light show is just more of the same. The music is the same as you can in anv o th er club on Sixth hear Street or in Austin. In fact, the only thing that did stand o u t about City Lights w as the girl trving to c o p u ­ late with the arc lights o n the wall facing the dance floor. But I d o n 't know if she is a featured attraction. For now, they a re n 't charging a cov­ er on w eekdays, so vou can go a n d the place out for vourself check w ithout the time. But be forew arned — vou w on t experience anvth in g vou h a ­ v en 't seen before. losing anv th in g but PRESIDIO THEATRES Cast members of N. York Ion bring their own brand of psychotic madness to the Capitol City Playhouse theater The real star of the pro­ duction is Norman Blu- mensaadt, the phone book man. Wrapped in chains and yellow pages, Blumensaadt moans and groans like a ghost out of Dickens, warning Tom and Mary to take better care of their phone book. m outh in g them in several scenes And w hen she s not trv ing to steal she's w hining on Tom " thu n d e r the teleph one like a svrupv-sw eet salesgirl at I ord and Tavlor's Michael Morrison placing Tom i" com petent e n o u g h (after all he has Marv m o u th in g hi" lines) but the real star ot the p roduction is \ o r m a n Blumensaadt the phone book man W rap ped in chains and vello* pages Blumensaadt moans and g r o a n s like a ghost out of Dick­ e r '" warning Tom a n d Marv to take better can. or their p h o n e book With bug i yes and a look ot horror Blumensaadt steals the "how m ak­ ing an otherwise lackluster comedv at least sometimes funnv 1 he set also m.ide a tiresome eve- >am and Kev nolds V\ rap sit" center race o mplete vMth Darth Vader iser tubes springing from one end in the costum ing !om and M ary's p h o n e is decked out with buttons an d gadgets, |ust likt a GI Joe walkie-talkie. But un- t r* m att v ,Y. ) rk /. >n isn't nearly as intriguing as th< "< • all of the characters wear ug v swt at clothes in drab shades of grev Tom and Marv run a round witf baggies on their feet the whole time an d Marv wears one on her head making her w hining even harder to take t thr -c: A Hopefully Capitol City will make io r k Ion s run with- it going out of business or getting root , ompletely blovx n off, but th« this crazv, ■ cha tu world at least according to I om W h ite is certain •" ng in at )ork Ion, directed by Tom V W hite the Capitol City Play­ house, 214 W. Fourth St., through Julv 12. Call 472-2966 for more in­ formation. City Lights continues dim approach to Austin nightclub scene City Lights is actually talter than this, and much, much larger than the brain of our entertainment editor. etc. size of the fliHir does! t m.ik< u p for the letdown patrons will fee I wh« n thex sts that the light show is reallx ust an o tfsh iv t of what ex ex one else in tow n airead , has Musically L itx . ights also pre sents nothing new We play most- !\ Top M dance m u s k With the drinking age c hanging from 19 we h a \e to stax in the m ainstream to tr\ to appeal to the widest range ot people 'so tar said Morales, the response has been pos- said Morales G eneral Cinem a BARGAIN MATINEES-EVERYDAY ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM $2 75 HIGHLAND MALL N1GMIANO M ALI * tV O 4 5 1 - 7 3 3 4 C O B R A . L E G A L E A G L E S 12 00 2 30-5 00-7 30 10:00 -WEBBRAW D E A L . P O L T E R G E IS T 11 *. 1 0* 1 15-8 ¿5 7 V> * AS THE MANHATTAN PROJECT to. tixe with the only problem being a lack of sufficient air conditioning The response has been enthusias- tK The onlx draw back ha" been the heat problem O th e r than that ev­ erything ha" been positixc Mor­ ales said the air conditioning prob­ lem xxould be solved in a few d a \" O n my visit to City l ights I ex­ pected to tind an exotic flashing gleaming, neon s[gn beckoning the I •sixth Mreet crow ds to enter. tnDS THURSDAY PARTING GLANCES T O D A Y : (5:30 $ 2 .7 5 ! , 7 : 3 0 , 9 : 3 0 . ►u B r A U i i r t L L A U N D R E T T t R T O D A Y : (5:15 $2.75} 7 : 1 5 ,9 :1 5 AUSTIN 6 ADULT VIDEO • 21 THOMPSON OFF 1 «3 1 MILE SO. of MONTOPOLIS Phono 3 8 5 -5 3 2 8 L t l N l t K OPEN 2 4 HOURS . . J M B M F B .... 1 / 2 P R IC K S P K C I A L S ! 1 T U E S D A Y S A N D S U N D A Y S I ADULT VIDEO S A LE S & RENTALS I I I LOW EST PRICES-MAGAZINES ■— VIDEO ,PEEPS IN A 6 CHANNEL .« THI AT RCS 1------1 1 SHORT CIRCUIT 5 : 0 0 - 7 : 0 0 - 9 : 1 5 0D searched the h o n / o n for the visual call ot the d u b \xith the light show’ that x\a" alien to Texas Instead the onlx m arking 1 tound is a logo d e ­ signed by an Austin artist and h u n g i'n the outside of the building, \lo r - CiNfMAWEsT J'30 S Core'**» • 11 « m • *42 V t S f l for S e r v i c e Rendered Pl us Sweet Ch e e k s Adults O n l y ixxx V H S Rental $2 C A W fWVllTE SHOWS A MATINEES EVERYDAY ALL SHOW* K F O H E • PH A M E R I C A N A 7200 HANCOCK DR f T0P-rm-*4S KAKATEKIDHe^ (1 »= 1 H i H - l iH .. *1 D -7.3P-t^S BACK TO SCHOOL (99-13) |1 M H I U J > » B W | Site H ill POiTfKGdSTUH 1 1 1 SiH » H WSf t e lilS-H3 . L A K E H I L L S A 2*26 6ÍN WHITÍ • 444-0552 |m n n ™ P B o y a n b - i 2 : 3 0 - 4 : 5 0 - 7 : 3 0 - 1 0 : 1 5 S p a c e O m p ÍPG) 1 2 : 0 0 - 2 : 2 5 - 4 : 5 0 - 7 : 1 5 - 9 : 4 0 B a c k j S chqqc — [ÜTÜÜ 1 : 0 0 - 3 : 1 5 - 5 : 3 0 - 7 : 4 5 - 1 0 : 0 0 MY LITTLE PO N Y 1 1 1 2 : 3 0 - 2 : 4 5 Summer Gkitdzeu j S r^rra t W I Z A R D OF 0 Z 1 0 : 0 0 - 1 0 : 3 0 - 1 2 : 3 0 Seaoon Tichatt AyaHeble At Th« Door :0 0 > 2 : 0 0 > 4 :0 0 - G : 0 0 - 8 :1 0 - 1 0 : 2 ( r.r/x ~ it m *an> S p e c ia l E f f e c t s 5 - 2 : 3 0 D - - 4 : 4 5 - 7 :0 0 - 9 :1 M i 2 : 3 0 - 3 : 0 0 - 5 : 2 0 - 7 : 5 Q - 1 0 : 1 0 B 'JtUniiíI ] IOsOP-IOeI ’SSfSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS/SSSSSSSSS* ADVANCE TICKETS MAV be p u r c h a s e d a t ANV T¡ME DURING THE BUSINESS DAY AT THE ARBOR TOUR AND L'NCOLN 3 ADULTS - 15 00 CHILDREN - 12 75 REDUCED PRICE -12 75 R e du ced pnces lor features starting at or before 6 00 p m weekdays and the first feature only on weekends at all Presidio theatres EXCEPT *TOP QUN* SEE *0 SHOWTtMES ARE FOR TODAY ONLY. 4 A N N A H A N * H E R S IS T E R S ] ■ 4 :3 0 - 7 « 5- 9 :2S B W B .L.. A !. t The Grapes o f Wrath 11:30 N I G H T \ I LEGEND 11.45 S O U T M W O O D 2 LIGINOeq] (liH »*> MONEY PIT ea (IHS-PSS-TOS-MS) H hmh l,E(iAL EAfiLErS 1 ALDA ^ I COBRA M l 5 : 1 5 - 7 : 4 5 - 1 0 : 1 0 e 1 2 : 4 5 - 3 : 0 0 —mmmusmm ^ e ^ 1 2 : 0 0 - 2 : 0 0 - 4 : 0 0 w m h h F E R R g B U ^ U ^ | M Y S F F 12 : 4 5 - 3 : 0 0 5 : 1 5 - 7 : 4 5 - 10KX) g o b b a s l 1 1 :3 0 - 1 :3 0 * ^ I B 3 : 3 0 - 5 : 3 0 - 1 0 : 3 0 llK~g.igC] I no PAseca RUTHLESS PEOPLE r . . . i t Vlsa/M astercord Accepted For Word ods call 471-5244/For Display ads call 471-1865/S a.m .-4:30 p.m. M onday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitis Ave. Viso/Mostercord Accepted P a g e 12/The D a ily T e x a n /T u e s d a y , J u n e 24, 1986 MERCHANDISE 3 3 0 — bets SERVICES 6 0 0 — O ffic e MERCHANDISE «M S CH AN0ISI RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL O A S S m K O A f lV H m S M O C o d M M l t v i D a y W M S 28 S 774 $11 7 $ 1 9 0 $2 295 $ 2 48 $ 6 85 15 word nwwnum Eoeh word 1 time Each word 3 ttmei Eoth word 5 hmet Each word 10 tune. Each word 15 limes toch word 20 ernes 1 col. * 1 mch 1 Unte $1 00 chorge to chonge copy Em two words may be a# capital tellers. 25c for eoch odd*onoi word m capítol letters. Mostorcord and Viso accepted. DEADLINE SCHEDULE Fnday llom Monday Texon Monday llom Tuesday Texan Tuesday Ham Wednesday Texon Thursday Taxor Wadnasdoy Horn THursdoy llom Enday Texon bo qhren b y 11 u a . I*se bra» d ay , as Mto pwbbd san oro ro- s p o w ib li lo r only O N I btcor- Js» eexe^s^ske shotiW l a t a d ion 30 days abas pubb ^s^s» rTS-yONI K IM fV W V V CrSOn M fl lie n , en d N am ount exceeds $2.00. SNp must be presented lo r e reorder w ithin 4 0 d ays to be valid. Credit sbps a re non- CLASSIFICATIONS TRANSPORTATION 10 — NUtc. A w to * 3 0 — S p o r ts -fo r a lg n f o t o s 3 0 — T ru c k » -V u ro 4 0 — V o M ctos fe T ra d o 3 0 — S e n d ee -O e p o lr * 0 — Ferls-A ece o so rle a 7 0 — M o to rc y c le * 0 0 — O k y d o a 4 0 — V o h ld o l o o t in g 1 0 0 — V o N d o o W o n to d REAL ESTATE SALES 1 1 0 — Sondeos 1 2 0 — Hewsos 1 3 0 — C o n d o s -T o w n h o o so* 1 4 0 — M obN o H o m o s* Lots ISO — A c to o q o -L o ts 1 6 0 — O u p lo xo s- A p o rtm e n ts 1 7 0 — W o n to d 1 0 0 — Loons MERCHANDISE 1 4 0 — AppMoncos 2 0 0 — F w m ttu re -H o u s e h o ld 2 1 0 — Slo ro o -T V 2 2 0 — C o m p u te rs * E q u ip m e n t 2 3 0 — P h o to -C o m o ro s 2 4 0 — B oots 2 5 0 — M u s ic a l In s tru m e n ts 2 6 0 — H o b b ie s 2 7 0 — M a c h in e r y - E q u ip m o n t 2 0 0 — S p o rtin g C o m p in g E q u ip m e n t 2 4 0 — F u rn itu r e -A p p lia n c e 3 0 0 — O o ro g o Rum m a g e S ales 3 1 0 — T ra d e 3 2 0 — W a n te d to B u y o r R e n t RENTAL 3 3 0 — O ontol Services 3 6 0 — F u m . A p ts. 3 7 0 — U n f. A pts. 3 0 0 — F u m . D u p le x e s 3 4 0 — U n f. D u ple x e s 4 0 0 — C o nd o s-T o w n h o u ses 4 1 0 — F u m . H o u s e s 4 2 0 — U n i. H o u ses 4 2 3 — Room s 4 3 0 — Room B o a r d 4 3 5 — C o -o p s 4 5 0 — M o M e H o m o s -L o ta 4 6 0 — B usiness R e n ta ls 4 7 0 — Resorts 4 0 0 — S to ra g e Spoce 4 4 0 — W a n te d to R e n t-L o o s e 3 0 0 — «Rise. ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 1 0 — E n te r ta ln m e n t-T k k e ts 5 2 0 — Person a ls 5 3 0 — T r a v e i- T r o n s p o rta tio n 5 4 0 - Lost A F o u n d 5 5 0 — Licen s e d C h ild C a re 5 6 0 - P u b l i c N o tic e 5 7 0 — M u s ic -M u s ic ia n s EDUCATIONAL 5 0 0 — M u s ic a l In s tru c tio n 5 4 0 — T u to rin g 6 0 0 — In s tru c tio n W a n te d 6 1 0 — M isc. In s tru c tio n SERVICES 6 2 0 — L e g a l Services 6 3 0 — C om p u te r S ervices 6 4 0 — E x te rm in a to rs 6 5 0 — M o v in g -H a u lin g 6 6 0 — S to ra g e 6 7 0 — P a in tin g § § p lg | l^wipmwfvV 7 0 0 — F u r n itu r e Rsp e ir 7 1 0 — JkppHmncm i t p o k 7 2 0 — St e r e o T V R e p a ir 7 3 0 — M e o w R e p a ir 7 4 0 — ilc y c to R e p a ir 7 5 0 — T y p in g 7 6 0 — M isc. Sondeas EMPLOYMENT 7 7 0 — Im p lo y m o n t A p a n c le s 7 0 0 — E m p lo y m e n t Sondeos 7 4 0 — F a r t lia ie 8 1 0 — O fRco Cl e r ica l 8 2 0 — A c s a u n N n g - O o o h k a e p in g 0 3 0 — A d m in is tra tiv e - 8 5 0 — R e ta il 8 7 0 — M e d ic a l 8 8 0 — P ro fe s s io n a l 8 4 0 — C lu b s -R e s to u ro o ts 4 0 0 — Oom ot t ic - H o uso h o ld 4 1 0 — P o sitio n s W a n te d 4 2 0 — W o r k W a n te d BUSINESS 4 3 0 — B usiness w p f w n w n r o t i 4 4 0 — O p p o rtu n itie s TSP Bonding, Room 3 200 2500 Whitts Monday through Endoy 8om-4 30pm 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 2 0 0 — Fum iture- Household M OVING SALE - love seal and choir tobie $35. dresrar $25 desk. $35 $K): electoc fypewntor, $75. watch Aioy 447-6801 or 458 1480 6-24 tables wrth Corona CORONA BEER chans Grao» for aportments ond patios Forcekn lop wrth Corono emblem $85 Leave messoge wrth Lorry 443 8560 6-24_____________________________ (wolnutt TRADITIONAL W OO D desk 72X36, 2 file drawers. $500, beige uphostorad highbacfc swivel chow $250 (Pad $1400) 250-0367 6-26 ANTIQUE OAK bed (twin), matching dresser wrth iwnw secretory ond night stood, $350 3-drawer dresser $15 250-0367 6-26 USED FUll-size maHress and box 2 springs, $50 Bmhm dtshwosher years old. excellent condrtior- $75 447-7019 oftor 4 30 6-26_________ FOR SALE Modem wood desk, form *a covered wit set and deliver for $90 Great for computer desk 3311808 458 2605 6-27D______________________ WATERBED queen-size soft side $250 or bes’ ofier 474-4170 ht 2 am 6-27 HEY LONGHORN fans Custom mode book cose m trodihonot UT design $ 150 Pnce negotiable Dan 474-8357 week days oftor 5pm 6-27 SOFT SIDED wotertoed Double Exceden' condrtion I wifi move rt if necessary $125 Cod John 447-6253 6-30 210 — Stereo-TV TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION RIAL ESTATE SALES 10 — Misc. Autos 20 — Sports-Foreign 80 — Bicycles 120 — Houses 1975 AMC Home*, AC, AT, stereo cos­ tana, 4 dr engine, transmission good condition but flywheel chipped $230 or bastoffor, 443-3281 6-24____________ CAR FOR sola. '73 Chrysier Newport, au­ tomatic, runs groat $800. or best oiler, 442-1078 6-25 1980 BUICK Skyford. AC, AT, 2-door 4 tires cyfcnder alt power, sunroof, new and brakes $2850 3358D Lake Austin Blvd 474-5328 6-24 1976 FORD Pinto, $250 476-8364 6- 30________________________________ 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos SLEEK A ND SPORTY 1985 Alfa Romeo graduate convertible. Excellent condi­ tion. 12,000 mile warranty remaining. $11,600. MUST SELL. 4 7 9 -6 9 9 0 . 6-24 1982 VW Rabbit Leaving country, MUST SELL Runs great, 4dr, AC, AM/FM, Ex­ cellent condition $2600neg 450-1843/ eve 6-24 '83 280ZX. extra deon, 36,000 actual miles, copper metallic, auto all options excluding T-tops, no scratches, factory tires distress sale $8950 282-9955 6- 27 Autos 1981 GLC. Excellent condition, AC, ster­ eo Asking $2200 Call 482-8599 leave message 6-27 '72 VW Type III squarebock. Just inspect­ 4-speed ed. new tires Good engine $650 Dan 472-8476 oftor 5 30 pm 6- 30_______________________________ 1984 FIERO, $6000 or best offer minor scrapes, 23,000 miles, sunroof power wirvdowvlocks, AM/FM cassette, cherry red, 452-7233, evenings, 7-1 70 — Motorcycles 1983 HONDA Urban Express Deluxe $275 Electric start Good condrtion Please call between 8 & 9 30am or 6- 12pm 474-7085 (Greg) 6-24 1975 SUZUKI GT380 good condrtion excellent transportation $395 928 0230 6-24________________________ YAMAHA 250 Good overall condition Needs some work. $200 neg Coll Keith at 479-8515 or 477-0675 6-25 SUZUKI SHUTTLE moped, 5 months old yellow, no repair record $375 Coll Meredith or Pfwl 477-8082 6-25 1981 GS-750 I'm forced to sell or get cut off from parents money 111 take any reasonable cash offer Please coll quickly Bike is perfect Can finance 472-3207 6-26______________________________ 84 HONDA MOPED Low miles Very dependable Jerry $200 482 9251 6- 27_______________________________ YAMAHA. MAXIM 650 1982 good con dition, block, with helmet, $1000 coll Tom 282-7731 after 5pm 6-27 RENTAL 350 — Rental Services TIRED0F LOOKING? FREE RENTAL HELP SUMMER RATES FALL PRE-LEASES 452-5787 ritM W SELECTORS RENTAL HOTLINE Condos • Apartments Houses • Duplexes Free Finder's Sen ice To Campus 4rea s Best Listings Call 477-5312 RENTAL 3 6 0 - F u m .A p t s . * * * * * * * * * * * * * LOWEST PROS ON QUALITY MOUNTAIN BIKES, CIUISCRS, 10-SKEDSilMX Mongoose • Dwmondbock Cenfunon • Panasonic H fL P F U l FRIINDLY SIR V tC I UT DISCOUNTS S o u th A u s tin B k y d e s * * * * 2210 S o u * 1st 444-0105 * 2 blocks North of Oftorf * * * * * * * * * * CUSTOM SCHWINN cruiser Block with alloy wheels, fat white wall tires, wide comfortable seat Like new $180 Brad 474 6696 454-1724 6-23D_________ overhauled UNIVEGA FOR sale 19" womens mixti 10-speed iomp pumps new tires, great condition $125 Sandra 467-1608 472-4039 work 6- 26_______________________________ heod 1984 BtANCHI Columbus Tretubi frame Can be equipped 59cm $250 Walker 472-0687 6-30____________________ RIAL ESTATE SALES 120 — Houses Tarrytown ^educed, $269 500 4 8R. 3 7 BA. appraised value $ 3 5 0 0 0 0 1903 Stanford Col! 499 8778 weekdays 7 9 350 — Rental Services YOU'LL LOVE IT! Towenng oaks shade this all bock charmer |ust minutes away from UT 3 BR plus study. Central heat and air. Appraised at $175,000. Please call Dagmar Ryden, 328-5300, 926-1842 RE/MAX Austin Hill Country 6-25 4 BR/2 BA 2000 sq ft home 3 blocks from campus, fenced yard hardwood Boors CA/CH comer Grande 4 ^8 -9~’ 44 6-24 lot 2911 Ro 130 — Condos - Townhouses DIRECT FROM OWNER Must veH tmmedKfiaty my $100 000 deluxe 2 2 condo way under morfce* Waft to U T Gorgeous green be* mews Perfect *or pro feisor students or tnvesfcx Con negotiate hJfry fvmtshed Col 472-8299 anytime doy or ntgN 6-24 1-1 SMALL complex jocuzzi 1st Boor washer dryer walk to campus 3-2-1 Buy down Jane Game! office 345-2100 home 345-0650 7-30 1BR WITH loft condo near UT oil appl* anees quiet secure $62 000 owner onxtouv 480-0123 2 7 new carpet • b*g loft App ENFIELD AREA 2 2 1100 sq ft AW amenities. W D 5 mtnutes UT/downtown Owner 4 79 0779 713 626-5051) $105 000 7-16___________ 2 2 ALL amenities furnished near cam pus. Capitol downtown Great security Qu»et Perfect for students 4 72 6868 7- 17________________________________ Hone Quest lo c a to r M n r ic e FREE 454-1171 Immediate Occupem 4 Preieastng tor Fail f i • 2 Z I - S Z ffllM ltlM IIIIIIIM IIIH IM IIIIIIIIIIIIIIH M ir MERCHANDISE 200 — Furniture- Household KINGSlZE WATERBED typewriter table $15 Assorted furniture and household stuff under $20 Mor shoW or Norma 480-8178 6-24 $100 Robog ♦ ♦ * * ♦ * ♦ * * * M A R K XX Leasing Now For Summer A Fall 1986 O ne Bedroom ♦ 4- 4- * Apartments 1 Bedroom From $300 * 2 Bedroom 4- 4- From $370 4- J3815 Guadalupe j 459-1664 ‘ Summer lu f e i j f * * * * * * * * * * í (TCircle Villa Apts. Leasinf For Suum t & Fail '86 MOVE IN TODAY! • 2 Bdrm 2 BA • 1 Bdrm 1 BA FURNISHED! 2323 Tows Lake Circle 4 4 9 I O O I % Continental Living Continental Apts. Close To Cam pus Convenient To Employment Shopping And Transportation • Large Furnished 2 Bdrms • Pool • Ceiling Fans M o ve In T o d a y 452-4639 or 451-8412 (CHEZLASU) Chez Jacqae, SuRoca, La Canada Apartments 1 BR Fum. $350 ABP 1 BR Fum. From $330 + E $425 ABP 2 BR Fum. MOVE IN TODAY • Nice Pools • Walk to Campus • Across the Street from Tennis Courts Office Open Daily Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. 477-3619 1302 W. 24th St. T H E > , \ ^ a p a r t m e n t s A 2124 Burton Drtve SUPER SUMMER RATES • Efficiency $280-$300 • 1 BR Furn. $310-$360 • 2 BR Furn. $400-$440 • Large Pool and Patio • Ceiling Fans 6 Microwaves Available • 2 Shuttles Routes Also Pre-Leasing For Fall 444-7880 Davis and Assoc. Management Co. VILLA SOLANO APTS. Leasing For S i n n e r & Fall ’8 6 • 1 B R F urn $330 • 2 BR Furn $425 • Shuttle at Corner 0 Intramural Fields across Street ' S u M r R a is e 600 W. 51st 451-6682 250 — Musical 360 — Fum. Apts. 3 6 0 — Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. Instruments RtCKENBACKER ELECTRIC gurtw excel •wrt coito Mm» jefl $’ 75 nc case 476- 2195. 6-70________________________ VENTURA V 6 qurto' stoef strings Good condrtion soft shell case $150 3168 (9am-Uarti¡ ¡5pm-10pm) 6-25 448 ROLAND JC 77 omphfiei w bsxfi in cho (V$ pfus Boss 7 bond equofizer pedof rarety used $?95 Dave 451 0671 6 26 SYNTHESIZER ROLAND JP 4 m excel ase manueh lent condrtion Wrtfi $295 Coi 346 4946 ahe- six at on weekends 6 26 RHYTHM COMPOSER Rofond TR 808 perfect condition great sound wrth manuets $350 Coi 346 4946 abe» s.x or on weekends 6 26 ACOUSTIC GUITAR m exceHent condi hon wrth brand new Mortin ho'd cose $150 Coll Ano o» 4 ’ 4 4652 or 4 7J 2052 6-27 280 — Sporting- Camping Equip. WARWICK APTS. 2 90 7 WEST AVE. 2-bedroom 2-bath, 1-bed­ room, and efficiency apart­ ments for rent. All apart­ ments have dishwasher, garbage disposal, & ceiling fans tn bedrooms & living rcom. W e also have bar-b- q pits, pool with cascade laundrimat, sun waterfall, decks, grounds are garden landscaped Covered park­ ing is available. ONE BLOCK FROM UT 2910 Medical Arts Spooout 2 2 at Summer Ratos AJI Bills Paid Co* Sior 4 7 6 5631 7 22 $ 2 3 0 + E. Summer Rate W e ara looking for quiet conscien hous nonsmoking students interested in o targe efficiency Two locations Hyde Park or neor compus C A CM foundry deadbolt no pels 4 58 - 2 4 8 8 __6X West Campus Savings $ 7 5 off firs* month s rant when you preleose for foil by July 30 Spooous 1-1, $ 4 6 5 -$ 4 9 5 2 1 4 $ 6 6 0 $ 7 0 0 fresh pamt and carpel microwave pool ond loti of parking Ebert Leasing 3 27 75 6 0 $295 $100 Deposit S u m m er Rates EO UNTAIN TERRACE APTS .orge Sedraor- oportmerto 65 * con be your$ 476-2035 6 25 BEER LIGHTS foi so*e R-'ces from $’ S to $20 Both domeshc and unportod CaW for 482-0388 after 5 30pm Great dorms 6 25 NEED TmE answers* *# got rfiem Prop >em Sohrers ond Schoum j Outtmes 'O' $3 $12 5 0 \ oft Kevin 838 7099 2 8pm 6 27 ANTIQUE LIBRARY table $350 N x . coucSes $ ’9 $*C En, , i. .opedios $50 $300 m - > r noo «arge cieo- 2 2 Ce spei-: 1106 w 22no 4’ 8 '9 3 2 83 ' ’ 468 P- me P-ooe'-iei 6 76 toe fix ‘ shuttle qu-e* large >ne txedraom H»DE PARK msned QOS poní poc comptet 335 me 44 . * .e A 4 3180 6 2 ’ 34 5 Guadaluftf $. 5t S. SREs*CO 44 .w . ;xa» to» ' *. . ft 7 - 445 68 . —■* -w., >» . - WEST UT campus Radwc#d wmma* - otas tff'c iKKX«e$ A vo* >-.ib*# ■ - A M o dt>hw<5$h«»'’ dtspcMO4 Fad afh #.'• i .-as avotoot»** How#’ F''op p n ti 4 a ; ? in» A-v. 9 V1 TARRYTOWN EM n»»ha- w r* - T downtOT oer — •» 4 ’ 8 EPFtOENCY ■rtiit-iQ plus 4 ends 6 1 OSt ..mg A $7*- ' itopus gos .-to monlt- 4 .1 »r — —i 8S I krt sttod $ . . «» tocfy 4 ‘ . )076 ft .4 Ere* Month Rent On Yeor Lease 4 5 2 1419 f no answer 4 5 3 2 771 108 W 45th St 7-150 CASADE SALADO APTS. 1 BR furnished 90s & water pa*o no pets swimming pool west of compus neor shuttle Summer rates ovoiobfe tease raqu-red apply «1 person 2610 and 2612 Sofodo St randeat mona ge-op» #112 477 7534 6Q 7 Large 2 Bedroom e Small complex e Woik to campus e Pocw e Newly rafurtxsheo e $ 3 70 Summer R ate CAVALIER APARTMENTS 307 E 313T 4 8 0 -9 6 3 9 47 4 -7 7 3 2 7 21 UT STUDENTS JUNE RENT FREE from compus swvmmmg 3 bfocks potrt on site foundry shuttle 'Ovrte BR $ 3 0 0 - £ to $315 - f mo 2 $341 • E. mo Casa Del Rio Apts 476-7951 3212 Red River 6 3C MESQUITE TREE APARTMENTS Ttoe bedroom Opcrtm*n*s clove *0 ompuv t - V’ tree • rtfrvgerctovs s»n «Kjning nrant drshwoshery study ratiiton' m onoge* lesxi #3«.. 2410 Longview 4 '8 7 3 5 ’ hot fofc 2 4 0 — B o a t s RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. off 1st month —Ftva Entrone*» —éffouthj Fool Wffh f ountQ* —iorga Tonmng G in 473- 8 553 44 4 - 2 7 5 0 r’l»fCOH 7 150 ALL BILLS PAID Summer Rates E^Kiencv One Bedroom Sm Tw: Bedroom $. s } • S - 8 Lrg rfirae Bedroom . . Be--'. S CA, C M «Von or Shutot • UT 2212 San G abriel ... o # * » tv , ■ A v. pre toll SPECIAL OFFER APARTMENTS FOR RENT 2200 Nueces 2 blocks horn UT Swimming Pool One bedroom S315 $325 • E 2 Bedrooms $390 $400 free May rent with one yea* ease signed now 4 ' 4 2 0 2 4 o r 4 7 6 1 9 5 7 7 UC rw.>#k* A 8P » ■ r # »'#*>• <4H GREAT DEAL now • fot# *vm* m m mr cortlroct a f -## M . an • wr*+ wqn«d now • f -n.vh#' Wt*h AC booH^v>g to**rKK+s jvoéabt* a$ . NrtAdp wwrvlnr 4 ’ 4 .3 6 5 o- 4 7 6 95 ■ #$ . b*l>'.li P»’ V- ALL BILLS PAID Efficiency, $ 2 6 5 /m o „ 1 BR, $ 3 5 0 /m o . 4 7 6 -8 9 1 5 2 4 0 8 Leon 1011 W 2 5 th O ne Block F r o r Shuttle Efficiency Duplex Par hally Furnished Gas and W ater Paid $ 2 8 5 Aqenf 4 5 1 8 2 7 1 6 3CX 302 w 38th S u n , - » t ; eas ing Fffi. »<■ , f it . 6 * L -ve'- e " " y oca* f v " sh»>d unhjrr vhqvj A fi bhxs to? appnorvces poc $-. ”>e -av w ;'»■ po>d 453 4 0 0 2 ÍX7* $44' 7Vr»Nac2 pKK M#v.♦‘■at*- i ’ 8 i 0 6 * >S A ORANl * Ky. — * ». vivid . BR • u « m a t ond podi trvg, 4 * ” v *. * . BR - * . ‘ »•»- - - * • . 6-27 HAVE FUN, go sorting 12' Sco' vjilboo' $500 Easy to so 834 6 2 ’ >eep trying, « m messoge 6-25 TWO 1985 Htfty «nndsurters for vert# 5 9m2 sorts wrth soilbogv greo’ for be ,nt*nnediot» boordso i#rs inner or 550 499 8Ü4 6 26 CLOSEST TO CAMPUS ♦ ♦ J L e c n : rio nueces: A p t s . ^ #Qlt LEASING FOf 5ÜMMEM i FALL ^ • One Dtoc* hart ,'ompus ♦ • . Sn j h e Stoos ▼ • ; ee Panon^ etto Permr • 1 B K F u m ^ • A .:m*< i jmsnec • 2 BR Fum $400 • Walk to Campus • Nice Pool & Pat» 2207 Leon 478-1781 *$eeueer Jbtoa a • Security Service A • Balcony ett» storage t ^ • Soto <3 - N-t tctto 1-Bedroom 4 J Summer Rates c $ 3 1 5 1 *474 0971 474-10041 ♦ ♦ ♦ « ♦ « ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ EFF. & 1-2-3-4 BDRM APARTMENTS Starting At $295 H v e r t M e • 5 Mm To Downtown ej • FuryUnf • Shuttle Bus • M odem • Microwaves • Lofts W/Fans • Spacious O f f o r f 4 4 4 -7 5 3 6 POINT-SOUTH APARTMENTS n t a ^ f f i c e ^ 9 1 ^ ¥ i l l o w c r o ^ W E S T C A M P IS / A 2 H drm b u r ­ n i s h e d . P r i v a t e P a rk in g Fireplaces. S u n d e c k s . a n d P r im Start At $3511 Month C a ll C a r r o ll M a n us a i 4 '1 H 4 i : V IL L A ARCOS NOW LEASING • 5be? ConuauaiT • j o c : • ;r-. ?xi Ceiliag Fora 4 7 6 -1 6 1 9 3301 Spaadway Come By T o d ay1 la u n d r y Room * . Bw ü Aspenwood A partm ents SUPER SUMMER RATES • 1 BR Furnished $300 • 2 BR Furnished $400 • Water 6 Gas Paid MOVI IN TODAY Shuttle Bus At Front Door' Intramural Fields Across Street Professionally M a n a g e d By Davis a n d Assoc n i LKASING FOR FALL 4539 Guadalupe 452-4447 D o s R i o s W a lk T o C a m p u s t Fully Furnished • Microwave • Ceiling Fans • Built in desk • Individual Washer/Dryer • Private Balcony • Covered Parking • Decorative Wallpaper 478-4271 2818 Guadalupe GARDEN GATE APARTMENTS COED NOW PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1986 / • - . * * V TVrjMacv O ieeb LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1986 Unfurnished and Furnished Large Apartments 1 Bedroom From $311 2 Bedroom/1 BA From $350 2 Bedroom/2 BA From $370 • Summer Rete* • 2 Pools • Balcoaics t View Apts. • ShattUStop • NkrovavM I CdHa| Fim Avaflabk s / > / / / i f M O V E IN TO D A Y Luxury 1BR Furnished 2222 Rio Grande 476-4992 1911 WUlowcreek Davis & Assoc. Management Co. 444-0010 444-0014 GREAT SUMMER RATES MOVE IN TODAY! Pre-Leasing For F a ll El Campo 3 0 l > W \ t r e v ! LaPaz 401 \k I s? El Dorado 3501 Spvr.lw,!', Furnished 1 Bdrm 1 Ba 2 Bdrm 1 Ba 3 Bdrm 2 Ba Unfurnished Unf $260 $270 t E Fum $280 $290 4 E Unf $355 -i- E Fum $370 t E $425 + E 472-4893 ft 452-8537 Professionally managed by Johnston Properties, Itu a m m m m s m m m m m im x a S RENTAL KINTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RfNTAL The Daily Texan/Tuesday, June 24, 1986/Page 13 370— Unf. Apta. 370— Unf. Apts. 390 — Unf. Dup4«x«s 400 — C o n d o s- 400 — Condos* 420— Unf. Houses 435 — Co-ops Tow nh_ js e s Tow nhouses UT AREA walk shuttle nice quiet CA, CH tor e**as $295 - E M o n o Rd 499 8 3 ’ 8 339 7893 ? 2 1 1801 O UA iN T 3-2 neo» 4 5*t- Guodatupe Jp sio** v $690rfofl 48C 9191 ó 2 7 iots of windows $ 5 7 O* summer ALL BILLS PAID Efficiency, $2 65/m o .; 1 BR, $ 3 50/m o. 2408 Leon O N TOWN LAKE Sign a seven month lease and gat one month free on any of our 1, 2, or 3 badroom opts Pnces from $310 to $495 ond w a pay gas ond w ater Ra­ lo* by the lake or walk m the p o rt W e re to everything! Southshore A pts, 300 E Rrvemde convenient 444-3337 8 A R G A IN RENT Sm al, quiet cample* near Sid, IH 35 on CR shut** Pool, foundry Freshly painted 1BR. only $230. 28R only $280 unfcl Fa* Fa* preleott too 1200 E 52 (one block eos» of Cam eron) 4 » ) 9191 6-27 UT W A iK , 1-1 m Victonon house, o p tio n 908 W 22, $350, 4 72 2123 7 25 UT W ALK, efficiency m 1920t 4-pie*. $315. 906 W 22,472-2123 7 25 O N E B ED R O O M aportmen* $275 turn mar $315 fdl pkn electricity 304 East 33rd (near Sp eedw ay and 33rd), see number 23 N o peh 479-6331 7 290 2505 ENFIELD 2 BR, xirrounded by Ireei courtyard pool foundry no pah $480 478 2775 (after 5 pm 6 26 1 BR ond efRciencie» UT shuttle but 35th ond Sp eedway oreo $275 $350 458 8740. 482 9305 7 16 7-80 C O N V EN IEN T TO camput Acrost from Commumcoboni Center Available o» once CoR JO E 472 9709 6 24 TEXAS ANNIVERSARY^ NO BULL SPECIAL $150 will move you in today for qualified applicants 1200 Broadmoor 454-2537 454-2538 718 H yde P a rt, small, quiet com plex, 1-1 or 2-1, for summer only or through M ay, p o d , laundry, c a r­ pet, dropes and on-wte m ana­ ger Starting from $ 335 wtth Vj month free rent ond/or free mi­ cro w ave C all Petnck & D eo man Interests, 328-4041 S U M M E R T IM E s p k ia l (2 ) courtyard s fqm tfy am nronm ant poobud* w itfi K aafad spo & rairaatvo n room quto* wda with p e n * o ra a tuke portnng ond vo kaytxill Enhr* com p la* vacuryty ond ctortwng op tional A partm ent uze andhousabrokan pats allo w ed wdb $150 pa» deposit 2 Bdrm s $ 3 5 0 1 Bdrrns trom $ 2 9 5 N O Sm m K to tuf> ra o v o n o b la ra nt 4 7 6 6 27A Mock 8 7 5 W O O D C R EE K A PT S 8 3 7 - 5 5 5 6 8 6 0 0 N . L a m o r Naieaung for Suw ar 6 M - -»urv oportmena, cx-vwu.i a . tunilad a •a Naan of north to * r w w u e awov a l m a^or S » . u r i STUOIO tiA fS WD9CX5MS $199 $295 I2 7i 1335 CASTLE H ilt! $275 tmoll efficiency Sol nBo tile breezeway boded gtost door 4 4 8 0 2 0 2 268 5521 6Q 4D _________ Efficiency aportmen» old Noute Nord wood Soo n AC dote to camput quie» neighborhood $325 47 ’ 6933 Dove 6 25____________________________________ UT W A LK Garree 1-1 in Victonon Noute 908 W 22nd $350 * E 472 2123 8 1 CENTRAl LO CATIO N Cleon furmthed ond unfumohed efhcienciet m smoll compte. Appkoncei carpel heth pomt drapes covered porting O n shuttle W atof poid $225 Vitta Properttet 4752 3453 6 30 2 M IN UTES from ZAer Port, renovated apartments storting ol $300 2 BRs ud $400 Cat 447 7525 6 26 C O N V EN IEN T D O W N 1 O W N Copeo- University neor peose Port Enfield 2 1 AC hordwood Boors $550 472 2779 6-27 EFFICIENCY N E W IY remodeled m< crowove disposal dithwoshei nvcro bhnds wo6 shuttle UT $200 summer $275 F a l 288-1652 7 ' W ALK T O campus O ne bedroom apart ment Pool oundry 'oorr water gas poto Summer rate $295 B I G Prop enset 459 0)56 7 18 380 — Furn. D u plexes N EA R . A W Khar- 2 1 C A CH CeAmg tons Sm al boc* rard Corpor- $ 5 7 5- month 345 9442 6 30 2 M CtoCOM S - $350-$405 $ 365 $4*5 ____________ 7 710 390 — Unf. D uplexes Are You Worth Your Weight? A/ Norwood Hom w vOto uni .9099 on* at OUR JpUX%W 1 CT»tí rOWr hr*» • «QMOf «O ROM» » *aghf 9 yOu vov «el CRT oO^ilWu» njl $KX a# rOM hrp m ot-0* $ IW M «rRPKr* ?4 *n 0< row» v v ’em C # l 451 1917 or tarm b> 5606 N WEST AUSTIN FOUR-PLEX C o n v a m e n t to d o w n fo w ti a n d U T 2 -1 o v e fy n e ig h b o rh io o d R o c e n fty re»x > vat»d R e E n g e ro fo r C A C H m K r o w a v e c o v 25C ©red portinq S595 476-4477 7 '5 0 A liNt'7 SUPER CLEAN UNIVERSITY AREA 404 FRANKLIN J i CA q m A 0 coectK>ns .irs/'wotNs* txj#-- />c.e ■wrw jppiiorv.es -nciudmg covwsd po*kC ijnd portung moareasxsed rcKd orvodobie now $595 6 UNIT— 3 2 Ca C h w 0 connectsans ol new une *^$xge woft-«n ,. sosen *o»ge mos**» bedroom kX*k wrt#' pr>xrtjSe bott* $ •Axsg «or Srepioce kxge pa*c cxx3 tud rro rd c overee porting A vo**ot>« $6 ' 5 marrsed oopies or yroduoAp dexes *eo-- «eoses N C pt TS 454 325C Pre-lease Fall availability Efficien­ cies, 1 bedrooms and 2 bedrooms $325-5565 all neor UT call Doug, 480-8273, 459-9095 ; b a b*odi \X X My x4*ed ap «e «Ouxvdr-* fetc'Aty onpo»" j Uro O xe •or**' ^>r»e ds- or Nor^h ^vO e Port oree -veo* -^*roxn»toX-tX F«e>d> $450 C a i Doug 400 82 ' X 459 9CS7t d K CÍN T104 "x x Je e c 7 lO C A r O N i oppworx joxtxg# $4 5C 4 v 6 1 6 -y, dwnor-A $ i^'Vvex'viN ^x-odkxoit »Ax>e<-Fts pre ' fiogex’i or»d Com K j *B R EN ” . -tup*** to ♦ex’ed Ae*owotxe pox'» 2 59 3048 7 3 W ALK ’ O ctm puL , -ex^ctó#É#tí i oro» 2 B i «rr 4 g*ex W cA o* y/k##» $5 5 f »Ya#y jx» p»Jtó N»; pe*i VkW Aiom v 459 9^00 24K) 7 ’ 4 ’ 8 KING'S ROW Beautiful 2 2 : fownhome close to campus Fireploce wet bar, built-ms, all kitchen appliances, 2 car garoge, $ 795/mo Capital Properties 458-6415 W E S T UT campus New summer rates Fumtsbed/ unfurnished 2 2 Chcwce of hoor plans Saftobke fot 14 persons h Howeii Prrjperhes $600 $1000 477 9925 6 27 P9E LEASE UN IQ UE aword winning ondo 2 2 htstonr styling, spoCKXrt, 1u*unous many extras Hyde Pari $850 458 2689 6-27 LU XU RY C O n D O m ! N u m S N EA R HA N C O C K CENTER Efficiencies and 2 bedf'Poms Apphances ftrepkace.. cetkng fans from $350 ARCH Pfaperies 467 2390 7-1 ___ SUM M ER D tSC O U N TS Grecjf iocation 2 2 Ail appftance* A 'D 750 Timber 2 R.dge $550 $750 Caí) 44 0580 C O N D O S C O N D O S and more condos West campus nodh ompfjs afi over Austin Sommer eaves *a pre eases Call University Properties 454 7065 7 3 Expo and Er A RARE EtND Co heid 2 BR w D y ered parktng, pool sauna hot tub UT City bus $800 A»-, 4 72 2267 837-3112 6-24 y 06 4405 Ave A avaii now and for foi! un»tv m»crowave cethng fans Hof *ub on UT '•oute foli ¡eases start Aug ^5 no coll 499 8844 week rent until Sept days 7-9 VERY LARGE M O D ERN • $54 5 35 ond WilUom Cannon f irepkK e poo Yhhoi J46 439Í O R A N G E TREE h q.x J fireploce R. $'200 Jim 472-4 THE P O n t e Wa T>sbed hng fc 4 96 j P A R * Complexes 482 8651 t $37 S u m m e r S grea’ po< e Gronde COvf*r*€V, pork inq 2)N0O oe*wee-' Cop v,ew iese'-veo $ 5 K -w to $4 LUXURY C O N D O M IN IU M S Located m prestigious west comput A vailable now or for fo il pre lease C o l Unrversify Prop­ erties 454 7065 7 22 FURN ISH YO UR bedroom a 3 2 condto SR shuttle pool nice ploce, non-smoker preferred $225;rnonlh Rick 443 185o 7 0 _____________________________________ 7 8 W EST C A M PU S 2706 Sofodo furnished 2 2 2 porting if ores fireploce, ceihng ton pool hot tub loundry A vailab le a l in- 8 25 8 6 $775/mo Call 453 1514 of 454 3387 References necessary 7 3 354 5 N O RTH Hilts Dnve spacious con- do 2 1 L large living and dining, rock fireplace private deck view W /D con- e- lions UT ihutfle front door $550 346 9341 328 3636 6 26_____________ 2 BR 2 BA W D m icrowave fireploce. fall spring $45C summer CoR $800 Mike 4 79 8998 6 30 C-W NHO m F 7 U N E free 2 '2 1050ft, r*r D, m icrowave fireplace ton, pool, iOcuzzi 675'm o M f 448 9522 N 346 3342 6 27 2 2 C O N O O west campus 803 W 8th * 07 San Pedro O aks $500/mo wmmer foil A vailab le tm m ediaiely Matt M cPhail 4 77-0777 345 222/ 6 27_______________________ $650. mo 410 — Furn. Houses UT AREA FoR pre-ease Spacious 2-2 Pool appliances W D $900 8 & G F perhes 459-0156 6 30 420 — Unf. Houses AVAILABLE now 1 2 3 BR houses for -ent 452 5979 24 hours! 6-27 JT RENTAi 38 L area near shuttle hordwood Bob McCormick 258 7654 evenmgs $595 é-27 very nice floors C A CH NORTH CENTRAL off 51st Street 2BR 8A refrig erator stove orpeted ertrc -arge bedrooms. 901 A aprtoi Court $465 ♦ E C o l 258 2838 6-27 N E occupancy 4-3 oider house Hardwood Boon W indow units 3 ’ rtocks west UT Sum m er rates $1000/ morfh 477-9925 6-27________________________ utilities Howel! Properties MYDE PARK 2-1 ^ange refrigerator dishwasher ceding fan A C hrepioce, arp et harefwood B o o n $620/ 'ie '■ate 451 8122 W e s t month summer //odd Rea* Estate 7-17 O N S P E E D W A Y 3 l 1^ C A /C H Fen ced bockvard Fans $695 345 9442 6-30 n v Q f P A R K You w a n t it W e h a ve »t 3- 2 2 2 2-1. 1 1 eff Houses condos, lvvtxe*e'. Call University Properties 4 54 7065 7-3__________________________________ D E S P E R A T E O W N E R S Low summer ites Cotí today for the best d eal C o i u-'-'-ven/ty Properties 454 7065 7 3 S U M M E R DEAL" 2-1 ren ovated CA/'CH w D Yautted ce«l*ngs H yd e ParV good a- ess »c shuttle $600 44’ 8941 7-7 -•y DF pARK 4908 A v e H 2 bedrooms stove and refng furnished -need mature htudents who wifi oppreoate cm orderly ' o n e $ 5 4 0 wrth yard maintained De- • $400 Outside pen considered « .enr.rigs 4 ^4 d 897 Consof*dote<3 Recftv 6-23 906 E 54th h a^T ^ o od Boon ceifing tons y-ard garage $4 75 926-1999 7.28 convenient cteon 2*1 fen ced BR. 2 BA n o rd w oo d B o o n very n*ce 7 b k * horn UT Law Scho ol Sum m er $T'D0 458 0940 482 9305 7 RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. J U S T C O M P L E T E D ! ! CLOSE TO CAMPUS/SHUTTLE BUS M O V E -I N SPECIALS w — tr *m — or narm totm t Sto len * dtveext^ • Sem es ter ieove$ • 2 0 G Sk>mm#r d*K ouni • 10 • S ta tin g a* $ 3 6 0 m ont* • 562 to 906 Scj\>ore F##* • la rg # W a il m CiOiet$ • Loundry Room • io c u tr Spo • SftCuxtfy Fotro iied SANDSTONE APTS. 2 4 0 8 M a n o r R d . 4 7 8 - 0 9 5 5 V I ' ' r / v J i t o 1940's 2-1 on quiet street, yard ook Boors, large windows. $480 1307 Kirt wood 472-2123 8-4___________________ CLARKSVILLE A REA. 1940's 2 1 CA/CH upstairs. Capitol new $550 1209 W indsor, 472-2123 8 4__________ N E W CLEA N tondscoped 2 BR/2 8A neor campus CA/CH fireploce pnvcrte ond quiet, $595, 476-0682 6 27 CO UN TRY CH ARM w ood Boors UT/Saton A re a $550 451 6125 6 26 I BR/1 BA tsord fireploce deck carport PRETTY ALL bock 1 BR/1 BA duple* with CA/CH 2909A Beanno $400 month Call 47 7 2366 6 25 ____________________ Just north of Law School 5 M ILE brte nde to UT $300 move m $440rmonth 2 BR 5 BA Vouiterj liv mg room fireploce CoR John Longs worth 345-7701 454 7253 longhorr ConsuMonts Reo hors 7 7 LARGE 3 BR. 1 BA Te*os Ave fireploce A/C ceiling tons yord neor shuttle IbOO rm o deposit 459 0227 6 27 ARCHITECTURALLY EX C EPT O Ñ aT "b r to pnvato tree covered setting C A C H dishwosh** boy windows $465 Tom 458-402) 7 8 t BR/1 BA very >orge uort walkirkg dn ♦once to UT $375 4 76 3600 or 442 9595 7 7 LARGE 11 goroge a p a r t m e n t beoutifu restored 2 biocks from UT lo w Schoo* Ce4ing t0ns W 'D $400/mo 454 674 4 home 3 2 7 ofhee 329 4203 office 5767 7-18 W A LK UT 1 BR doptex, carp*» CA CH carpo* no peh $375 3218 B Hom$ Po ri 255 4247 7-9 SPAC1CHJS CLEAN oid«< 2 I Dtmng room Po rch e s W 0 ’804 connection ACs On M S shuthe W 6th at Mopoc $600 926 1999 ? 28 P ire p lo c® PRE-LEASING fot foli Great pior' for Toonwotes 2 2'T? Shottte route near Rran investment 327 8799 7 6 flo o rs W A LK TO compos Spocious 2 1 Hard lots of w n d o w s w o o d Appikances kjnds-caped yord Gksv wo ♦#» po*d $550 V*sto Properties 4 72 3453 6 30 W A lX IN G DISTANCE to .ampus orge moda— dupto* 4 3 W D 477 5022 7 9 f replace 2 1 TRs Pi EX townhouses '•‘ear if shotne Ntce grounds poo* C A CH oil app¡< onces $395 454-9423 454 5454 6 4 b l o c k s from UT 2 appliances drapes 1901 pear* $45C SREM C G 44 5'35 445 68 6-2 ’ 400 — C o n d o s- Tow nh ouses Frw Locating S ^ m c e '■ . " < *•- • M 4M 2 MH51 303 ^ MAh h t i i ' f u T b i i i i f i f/ 3 MONTHS FREE RENT LIMITED OFFER O PEN HOUSE DAILY . u * w r v te w n h o m e s C O r v e " tor" I a m o r A n 3 *rv > n I n . IH -35 2 ' 2-2 apphonces hreptoe g o rog a poo qma* t o r $4 9 5 A RC H pR O P f R ' ES 4 '6 2 39 0 4 5 0 4 4 * * • * • * * • * • * * • * • * • • * • • • • * * • • £ £ • 0 HERITAGE C O N D O M IN IU M S . - *ur. one and Nvc baoroomi A •QvnopeP -teñom vr-m designer rrQihe one dnye- -wave genr o tr* V e c w x e and eAmg fan Sum mer spec c-is and now p re e c v n g *. - f a i 451 8 96 4 >• 4 7 9 8 "4 6 30 Condo! Condos! Condominiums!1! ■...JXPYCXA j#*scx r eac. ftedrCPQXPa, “V v* »re# temy a* ‘vt. -wt - > . 3 Easy Does It Condo Connacfton provides the ba»t service around to beip you find a condo So* e hrrve 4 pom CHoose from our wtda selection of 1 4 2 bedrooms $350 $1300 some furnished Col! 479-6618 U N fU tN fS H fD O N € for rent Qm et c M 38th St UT oreo $350/month CoR 440- 1499, after 6 pm 6-2 FO R RENT 'O of 3 badroom one both house to shore w4h 2 gto* O n RR routo C o l 479-8748 6-24____________________ 2 ls t S t. C o - o p ts o greo» pfacr* h -[ vr* ttorr •'XvU'xcjs 8 o sense r a toumty '•r*vjtV'wl AJS* ;**- r/.nj IS Ai 1 ,{ CLEAN , 1 BR houM d ote to flo p ­ ping and school» N ice pec on treed yord $325 258 2838. 258-8199 7 2 -jt 5678 « / 'r r N IC E 2-1 hom e 'q block to ah U le $550/mo 4610 A ve 8 R le o ie c a l 452- 4421 6 30______________________________ M IN U TES from UT, W O O O BR IO G E beocAtot 3-2 2 pkn rec room, AC, tom, ih ad e trees, 2 0 0 0 tq ft ceiling 1014 W eeping W illo w $525 monthly Coll 835 6059 7-2____________________ TA RR YTO W N S FIN EST home» onto dup*e«e» Luxury living m Aurtm '» moV pre»ttgKMA location C o l Um vertity Prop ertrn 454 7065 7-22__________________ PR ESTIG IO U S A D D RESSES, d o te pro* imtty to campus F rjt ckm kvmg Afford ably priced C o l Untvem ty Pnoperlie» 454-7065 7-22________________________ FO R RENT 4 bedro om», 2 both» Fenced yord C o l before 9am 272-5849 6-25 N tCE LARGE 2-1 hom e of 905 E 54lh with two Irving area» and form al dmmg Hardwood», ceiling tom, dtthw aiher fenced yard and goroge $585/m o Ccdl 453-5918 or Po p by anytim e 6-27 425 — Room s LARGE C LEA N private room, refrigero tor no kitchen pova*» entrance/both Quiet, mature mdtvtouol 2 blocks to shut­ tle no pets 474-1212 6-27 PRIVATE R O O M S for boys Shore bath with on* other person 3 blocks west UT CA/CH N o kitchen $230 A 8P H ow el Properties 477-9925 6-27_____________ G RA D N O N SM O K ER your own huge room m comfortable house High ceilings big windows Unbelievably dose 9 grads S u m m e r contract $580 $680. pro rated 472-5646 474-2002 7 3 TREE H O U SE BED RO O M , non-smoking, mature established co-ed household CR shuttle Red Rrver/46th $275/mo + 4 bids 474-8564 evenmgs 6-30 PRIVATE C LEA N 1 block from campus $150-$200 A BP Shore both kitchen 4 7 2-4 2 0 5 . Don 6 -3 0 ________________ FU RN ISH ED R O O M and both/prrvate entrone», Quiet neighborhood neor Urw eruty, oil bdh paid, 478-8850. after 3 pm. 7-2_______________________________ FREE RO O M m west Austin residence available to quiet, kberol non-smoking fem ale m exchonge for light housekeep­ ing 451-8728 ext 700, Richord 6-26 1904 N U EC ES neor comps», CA/CH, Exits poto Shore kitchen and both $250/month C all 472-7562 message 6-27 leave 430 — R o o m -B o a rd G RAD N O N SM O KER your own huge room m com fortable house High ceikngs big windows Unbekevobfy close 9 grads S u m m e r contract $580 $680. Pro-rated 472-56A6, 474-2002 7-3 435 — Co-ops ¿J||l8BIRIM«8BtlMlllt«ttl8MBRI8ltl8M8BI8BI|^¡ T H E A R K £ I S D I F F E R E N T | - # • are ou oem KTdkxdi Ar easy Z Z gcxng r#erx3Honcx >— -govprrxng com S 4 croco trom campus *oo< sur S Z Joe* ®M PC poo* •acxe 24 m roau n g — • - - A/C AftP Com# Dy for a «Our 0 0 0 0 1 $34l-mcSm0# $261 mo DoJS e Double IJU1 5 $38frmoS --- 09Srmo • ;tem eal»vAJ S C #00» or 476-567» £ = - « W P P W 57 £ t llt ltlt lllllM t t lll4 t llN lllt llt ll» lt lillt lt r > Smg0 • Double • 370 — Unf. Apts. jjS M ItilH iltlllllllllS IS IH IItlS IS IM ItllllllV I I OPS1S CO-OP | APARTMENTS 1 5 2 W rm / 2 Bath yam N C FudlOtch 5 I an , Esanbhad. 4 B to o la to U T Res | : Kjant O w nod 8 O p o ro tad A r £ £ C o m m sjn P y Not Jutt A C o m p ta x i S 1 *0 6 R e o il 47*-«a7* or 4 7 A » ie e i S S lH H tltm M tM H IIM ItlllH H H IM IIIIIIittr « • • • • • • • • • • • • • a * 2 J TAOS COOP 0 A (I a **R-goveoung inuA poWxoi »yh>9* ^ raciof rfiNKnafccxxjl co-ed communey ^ cyrty $undeck TV roorr ® f oofced fneah coxnptXRK roodr AC *■*«* ® ® c« and much more* Tour$ avoAob*# ac*v # 0 Mne a» 26^2 Guoddupe • 0 Sngle $349 (sum) OouCXe S259 ftumi 0 474-éfW or 478>ftft7R $4?9 ffoHl ’9 toome S308 *»-jH 0 0 ^ 0 • • • • • • • • • • • 0 0 0 0 0 G RAD N O N -SM O KER your own huge room m com fortable nouse High ceikngs big windows Unbekevobfy dose 9 grods Summer contract $580 $680 pro-rated 472-5646, 474-2002 7-3 N E W G U ILD Coop 23rd ond Nueces singles A BP self-governing Summer $330/mo doubles. $2 50/ mo M/F meals, W /D. 472-0352 c o l or come by 6 30____________________________________ H O USE O f C O M M O N S Vegetarian health-conscious cooperative house occeplm g oppkeotors for toll spnng 476-7905 6-24________________________ 440 — Roommates Duplex-Mate AA/F to share 2-P/2 on PV/ SR routes. Carport, ceiling fans. 444- 5385. Tom. ____________________________________ 6-24 N EED A room m ate? Call Roommate Bro ken Inc 478-5096 910 W M tK #201 __________________ 7-18 M ALE, non-smoker seeking some 1 BR condo 2 blocks campus, furnished W D $250/mo (713! 621-8412 or (713! 774-8914 7 9 LA W STUD ENT needs responsible house­ mate unique Hyde Port house 2-l1 '1, decks, 3D vouhed ceikngs mony win dowVikyfcghts, CA/CH. fireploce W /D $325/mo $200 deposit Bruce 458- 6 6 6 8 6-25_____________________________ o r DUPLEX-M ATE, M/E to shore 2-1 PV 'SR routes Carpet ceihng tons 444 5385 Tom 6-2 4 _______________________ C LEA N H O U SE 3-1 shore with one other Pe» O K $305. bike to UT By June, Pot, 451-5672 6-24 1-2 FEM ALE RO O M M A TES needed for from July ond August O ne block campus $140/month CaS 499-0231 6 26______________________________________ FEM ALE RO O M M A TE needed to shore 2-2 on PV shuttle $222/m o "2 utilities 445-6448 or collect 512-696- 9826 6-24 * H O U SEM A TE SHARE 2 BORM /2 8A be autiful quodroplax ho rb e o od Moor». lovely yord, W /D. Enkald . Peggy. 4 8 D 9361 $375/m o 6-25___________________ W A N T N O N sm oking resp o n sib le femóle to shore ntce 38R 28A hom e with lanced yard $150 depos». $282/ mo • W bdh C o l Shun, week da y and evenmgs 443 1107 282 7812. teoee meseoge 6-24 RO O M M A TES N EED ED tor 38R 28A opt $100 deposit $150--rent * VeE r xphone 928-0607 6-27_____________ RO O M M A TE N EED ED tor 2 bedroom apt $195 per month plus ‘M E C o l G eorge 458 8456 6-25 HYDE PARK, creekstde home, 2-1, CA/ CH, ceihng fans, skykte. porches W /D I- 2 people C a l N e lic 451-2784 6-26 6 26 M/F 3-1, secluded netghbortsood, sfxA lie/downtown convenience $235 + *0 biVs Patrick 445-4)33 6-26_____________ R O O M IN furnished house for rem ainder summer AC Close to campus $190/mo 479 8341/346 7939 6 30 G W M , 23 seeks non smoking roommate to share 2 2 condo in Rrverstde aneo W /D micro wove pool, tocuzzi tennis M ole or fem ale $295 - '“ 2 utilities Steve 385 4082 6 27__________________ N O N SM O K ER MATURE, female--luxury condo on Enfiefd shuttle, has everything 499 0089 6 24 N EED A fem ale roommate to share luxu ry condo, 3 BR/21// B A $315/mo ♦ t*ks M ory, 445-2340 7-24_____________ !q SHARE LARGE home m Hyde P a rt on IF 250 » ^ bAs cok 451-3647 6-25 Q UIET NON-smokmg fem óle to share furnished 1-1 apt 10 mmute walk to campus on IF route $205 ■ 2 fcxks Fo# ond Spnng 474-0863 6 30 NO N-SAAO K1N G mole for new 3-2 du pie* across Tl $200/mo 3 bibs Ask for Ron after 6 00 335 9868 6 30 N O N - SM O K IN G male for 2 - Px ntce two story aportmen» on CR Covered porting, deck, m icrowave Mocmtosh $2)0/ month 2 bills 335-9868 after 6 Ask for M ike 6-30_____________________ M ALE RO O M M A TE needed, mature stu dent/professional. Riverside orea, mu*t be honest, responsible, easygoing to shore 2 -2 i/2 duplex 250/mo rent YbtUs 389-1662 7-2 450 — Mobile Homes* Lots 460 — Business Rentals W A LK IN G D ISTAN CE UT campus - large and sm al offices ovakoble 9 -1-86 CoR Imp, 474-9875 7-17____________________ ANNOUNCEMENTS 510 — Entertainmenf- Tickets W ED D IN G /PARTY/special event* Let the O ccasional Stnngs provide music Jo o r 837 7196 or Pouio 45) 2660 7-25 DYLAN PETTY h* 5th row floor 35 00 C o l Chns 335-9775 6-25 “ C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 T O P L A C E A C L A S S I F I E D A D Break Away From The Ordinary Enjoy Condo Luxury At Affordable Prices. Spring. T h e re’s no better time to leave behind the mundane and he)7in ro enjo\ the place \ou call home. Like the larye swimming puol, hat tuh, and tanning decks. Spacious tlixir- plans with newly renovated interiors. Loads of bookcases, closets, and cabinet». A n d locations that are cloeeUo campus, popular rehtaurants, ¿ o n * * and shuttle bus. Isn’t it time you set y o u n e if ^7art from the pack? C a ll us today tor details RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. 4- SSUOwodotafM ^ I -1. calling forts ond potto H A L T R M M t S M C D 4 4 * M 0 0 con 4 S4 -4 6 2 1 X M H H i H U H H H i H i m u i n H U i t m u i . n f e r L E S I A p ertii w r la jg : Z 1 1 o n d 2 B a ck ro o m » o n S h u ttlo B u s R o u te C A L L T O D A Y 4 5 3 - 4 9 6 8 1071 C lo y to n L o n e : ; E § - Huillín . RIO HOUSE APARTMENTS • 4 blocks from UT campus • 3 blocks from ACC cam pus • Swimming poof • Reserved parties 1 h s f t e o e a p t . - $ 2 9 5 ( a l l y e a r r a t a ) 2 b a d r o o a s a p t . - $ 3 5 f t ( a l l y a a r r a t a ) 6 0 6 W. 17th 4 7 2-1238 * 4 9 2 * i § 2 Do you need an apartment DALLAS HOUSTON OMNDVMNE l i e a u M # N U n R A p r t m i t s CALL NOW FOR LOWER RATES 2 blks north ol I I .1 1 Apis Rcad\ lor im m cdiale itocupancv, V.iw p r r /f.i-int’ tur S u m n u r .1 nd h.ill Call Phil, 4 8 0 -9 3 5 8 FREE R E N T F O R O N E M O N T H FROM $295 Efficiencies and 1-1's available offering: • Large, roomy floorplan • Lots of storage • Gas and hot water paid • Close to UT and IF shuttle • Private • Wrought iron gates • Ceiling fans ^72gZg7ZgA7 4400 Avenue A 458-1985 Griffith Properly Monogement 2O', SI MMER DISCOUNTS NOW PRELEASING FOR FALL SAGEBRUSH ( )NE BEDROOMS START AT $285 I \KGK POOL ANDSUNDEUK SPACIOUS APARTMENTS CLOSE ro u e SHUTTLE CLEAN LAUNDRY ROOMS 4 7 8 - 0 9 9 2 □ 2604 M ANOR ROAD L/ \ { i* llLl ilh i Apartm ents in Hyde Park 410S Duval Au stin , Texas 78751 451-2343 M H N 1 1 A l Apartments in West Campus 2810 Salado A u stin , Texah 78705 472-3816 From rhe collection ot H utkm rrofserties R a c q u e t C lu b /C r e e k h a u s A p a r t m e n t s 360— Sum. Apts. U N C X K C T fD VA C A N C Y O n * block UT Vary larga 1 M la rg a traa (hodad yard Quta», malura individual» N o pal» 474 1212 7-9________________________________ EN G IN EER IN G SC H O O L, 1 M offtoon- cy curpatad, a t bdk poto n o pall. $225/mo AvodaM a now 926-7243 7 9________________________________________ ACT Ml, 4312 Spaadw oy ffflctoncy on ihuNa w#h loundry $255 * M b for wmmar 474-6205 453 0540 6 25 SUM M ER SPEC IA L Eff A O I, 38#i ond Spaadw oy naor srtutti* loundramot $255 pkn M b 474 6205 or 459 5825 6 25_____________________________ 2709 M a n o r Rood N tc« «fficiancy C lo ic to PortioHy fum ahad Applianc*» Corpamd N o pah $225 480 0463 451-8271 7-140________________________ W A LK UT 28R A BP oportmam AC ond caibng fort» Tarmi nag 476 5249 6 25 A VA ILA BLE IM M ED IATELY Claon ona badroom naor Urovoraty 4007 A vano* C 453 8538 451 5096 8 '2 0 CENTRAL N EA R am pul o n e badroom $250 EfSciona*» $230 N k * claon fraiN y pomtad ond raody lor m ov* m CaH W oyn* 462 9514 onvUm* 6 30D N O RTH O E cam pui 341b and Groorm 3 15 AH appfcont*s C A C H frailto pomlad $650 n o n b pbn dapon* and akbbat M -f 397 2576 6 23D E N f'E LD A REA Smoll com pl**. larga 2 1. $485 m o n* monlb » aladncity b-aiWy pomlad UT pwtMa M-f 397 2 5 76 7 20 Efbcianoai $285 N EAR UT Low School on RR srtuH* fur n*shad room »or ran* CA. CH sbora bo»bi $195 A BP 3310 Rad Rnrac 4 76 3634 7 23 O N SHUTTLE t u m m e r r a t e $235 p on» afbcjoncr naor corapui 327 5020 7 18 O N E BLO CK to , am pia* 1 I 2 ? 2 ' ^'•mphA Mark $285 mo 473 2442 4 78 !8 ?0 6 30 .am p ul Sm al ew him iiheci opartmenn ie< unfy gane poor m« > v o m . ■«*, C a í D o u g 480 82 ' ■ 4 59 909*: 360 — F u m . Apts. Hyde Park Apts. Leasing Fo r Sum m er & Fa ll ’86 • Eff F urn $2 70 • 1 B H F u r n $ 2 h • 2 B K F u n . $ 170 • i . S s i - t a u r a J* I* « • S h u t t l * it Front I h x ir 4 4 1 3 S p t * « * d w a y M O V E IN TO D A Y 458-2096 • 'u m r o r t K a tr a T H E 305 A P T S . Pr«*L«M ÍB| For S u u m t A Fall ’86 • "Large Hficient tes • $ 2 " S • I • Small Friendly i omplex • S t - j f x h u t t li* t iirnt-r Miive In Todav! 459-4977 / C iv is A Assch iates MARK EMBERS APTS a N o w L«# stng Fo r Su m m e r A Fa il • 2 P o o ls • O n IF Sh u ttle • Q u iet T rees 31st ft S p e e d w a y 477-2004 CALL TODAY HYDE PARK PRE-LEASE SUMMER RATES L a rg a a tb c ia n c .e s c k js a fo U T p o o g a s on<3 w a to r p a id g o o d shudy e r iv r o n m a n ! $ 2 7 5 $ 2 9 5 4 3 1 0 A v a B 4 5 8 8 8 9 3 6 2 ' . O t ' H C f N T«A . nee* 5 'v S e**. B» BA •«rtf** AC ond Neo* A l opp*>an4.e» 50 K B fvon* $335 • E Col 258 2038 ox *•» 5 >jpw 758 8 99 6 . sec^ser , o*w*»nafcio r $T J 7 Suxwrne# -a .x^e$ •Newel P-'ope* $ .*>«. V45. - ' ”“YVN sog e ?B« p o o Ow*%dr> AB> $ ’ 5 . 6Gb f 'vheH<: id 4^9 9 4 '8 ' M M 4 ’ f «'M G row -ar>^ A # ’ jre c one bedroom» jy-r $24c. 4 '8 •./•*•» • •— 12. 837 7458 * * * * * P * vA'a * Ra I ’ G N One jitxe «Ay «tv am $ 2 V9 ApQ-'-mNeryn «• «per do#v 4-0 ’ 932 8 3 2 3 ncAuM - «nm C> Mod ^ee Ado» 4*8 340 — Fu m . Apts. nrr fr r n T'H 1 1? A l p i n e F o r e s t S t u w e r K e n t . w — w Kumushed u r e lw V l'nfumi*h*4 a k *- ::;.*Jr *to EC7 - - . r -,1 i w ith larg e Ciuert & K .u bet k f v lancv-» a N e » i a rp at A * v it a - a k • a ito u n d ry l U c . a . ,< » ..t l'* r » -^¡ u tlir U. I T ‘ tm p iu 4 5 5 8 A v a . A m eeei 4 4 **7 » * n i i i i ! m s i i a m m r Tanglevood North Apts. Leasing For Summer & Fail Wa Pay AM Yaar A/C A Haadaf 1020 E. 4 5th 4 5 2 -0 0 6 0 WILDWOOD APARTMENTS Be as spaoai to youraaif as you are to us ’ 4 C o m a anioy Rta u x c ry y B i n r P l o u g h o 4 - ■ c t w M M . * - 3 0 GUITAR LESSONS R U , country, your choice o f fnolonot, 9 yoon rock. W M O V I n g Moving Students os Low os $39.95 10% DISCOUNT 339-6683 A n d y B uB ington. 4 5 2 -6 1 8 1 7 - 8 V K X IN /V K X A /fib d k Im ions. A A ith, b *- Sn#st m ovw -w iP i ratarancM tD prove g m w n w e lc o m e E x p e rie n c e d , instruc to r C o l C a ro l; 8 3 7 - 7 1 9 6 7 2 5 _________________________ A B LE -B O O tE D M o v a n : u m p iy A u stin j it p a t e n t R e sid e n t» !, c o m m e rc ia l, antiq u e s, pw m os le a v e m e ssa g e F ree estim a tes 4 4 1 - 2 6 2 2 7 2 P IA N O TEACHER n e e d e d t o te a c h i m o l ch d d te n p ia n o m m y h o m e . 4 7 6 - 1 3 4 3 6 - 2 4 7 5 0 *“ T V I E ffyiAlÁa, MuursTYMNGsnvicr, Word Processing—$1.65 Sure , w e ty p e FKSHMANTHEMES Why Not Start Out WHh Good Grades? 472-3210472-7677 IB M ñ r in f m g —S -2 5 p o | e b y « a rie *p g n « n c e Dl$V#itCltlOm The$e$ PR5 Term T ech rato i Resumes, Cover te rte n fre e vpeitinq check fre e pt-ry lib e r t y P o rke r 4 7 8 - 4 3 2 8 7-17 n e g a t iv e s o r L A W N S M O W E D D is c o u n t f o r UT fo c u i rates C a ll ty staff students V e ry R ichord 4 9 5 - 5 3 8 5 a n y tim e 7-1 lo w EMPLOYMENT IN S T A N T C A S H A N D B O N U S H you n e e d cash to help you out w hile attending college, why not d o n a te b oiood p la s­ ma? You can d onate twice In a 7 day p eriod —lor the let d o ­ nation receive $10, for the 2nd donation in the sam e w eek receive $12. Hus with this ad you'll receive a $2 b onu s on your your first visit. Also ask about aon u s p rogram s. So help o th ­ ers w hile helping yourseM. Must h a v e valid ID and som e Sroof of Austin residence, raw ing held on ce a month for tw o $25 b o n u ses. Call 474- 7941. italics e word processing e IBM -compatible printing • term papers. theses, dissertations resumes C A L L 459-1120 O p e n M - F . 10-5 W e e k e n d s h \ a p p o in tm e n t O v e rn ig h t se rv ic e .n a ila b le VERA TEE'S W n r i l P r i H e s s i n j j P u b l u N . i t a r s 2 0 Y e a r s l e g a l E v p e n e n c t • Term Papers • Law B rie fs • Theses • D issertations • Cover Letters • Resumes 5 1 2 E s S S t * 5 4 - 1 5 3 2 • u »< . U S E R PRINTING COPIES T YP IN G WORD PROCESSING Guaranteed Soteiocltor longhorn Copies Co located with Du Rite Dupkcofmg 2518 Guadalupe 476-4498 MBA 790 — Part Time RESUMES 2707 Hemphill Park Just N o rth o f 2 7 th of G u o d a iu p e 472-3210472-7677 C o m e a liv e 1 O p p o rtu n ity $ay$ you' C o lle g e $tudenn a n d ail ofH«r high school trav el whtie gro d $ m a ke m o n ey h o ve f a r w orkin g Earn scholarships T h ere must b e a catch* There tsi O u r n a tio n w id e hrm t$ onH looking for p e o p le w h o featty enjoy m eeting o n d talking to th e public H th at $ you a n d you a re willing to m o ke these o u tg o in g quashes p a y o ff caW 4 6 2 -1131 T Y P IN G D O N E in m y Hom e C o : 4 o 5 5 1 3 8 - d a y s o r 8 3 6 - 3 4 2 l- e v e > -ngs a n d ask f o r J o yce 6 - 2 5 LETTER PERFECT Theses D isse rta tio n s L e g a l Resumes Rush service T echnical p a p e rs 2111 Rio G ra n d e 4 7 a 2 7 4 9 p r o f e s s io n a l ■ s p o r t s o n d ' RAPID, A C C U R A T E w o rd p ro c e ssin g p o p e s P ro fe s s io n a l theses "pm le a v e m essage 7 ’ 7 senpts 4 4 8 4 1 0 6 b e f e r e p o r ts te rm N e a r c am p u s M -F Full p a rt-h m e fle x ib le hours A M P M , e v e n in g TYPIST 6 5 - W P M P R IN TE R set le a d ty p e h o t s tam p s om e m e ­ c h a n ic a l a p titu d e , w ill tr a m R U N N E R must h a v e c a r B O O K ­ KEEPER e x p e n e n c e a n d o r a c ­ c o u n tin g hours A p p ly 9 - 4 7 1 2 A E ? 6 fh 4 7 4 - 2 0 0 2 7-3 750 — Typing NEED YOUR RESUME FAST? Call us fo r an a p p o in tm e n t and w e 'll ty p e it w h ile yo u w a it. THESES, DISSERTATIONS & P.R.'S W e g u a rante e o u r g raduate sc h o o l re q u ire m e n ts . ty p in g w ill m eet 4h-HHt« 5 41 7 N o rth Lam ar n i n n v 8 / T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D S W O R K g i n n y s R U N N E R must H a ve c a r B O O K v w > . « . r , , , . 29th Street at Pearl • 476-2673 327-9202 Marketed by McIntyre Associates RENTAL 400 — Condos-Townhouses Defendant’s mother testifies in Kerrville Associated Press K ER R V ILLE — A man charged w ith organized crime was always loving and respectful and sent m o n ­ ey to his divorced m other, the w o m ­ an testified M o n d ay in his trial. Betty Vreeke said her 21-year-old son, Carlton Robert C ald w ell, had to her divorce trouble adjusting from his father. But he never un ­ derw ent any personality change be­ cause of the breakup, she said. C ald w ell, W alter W eslev Elle- bracht Sr., 55, and W alter W esley Ellebracht Jr., 33, are charged w ith violating the state's organized crime the March 1984 death of law d rifter A n th o n y Bates in The state contends the Ellebrachts took picked up hitchhikers and them to their H ill C ountry ranch w ith the promise of w o rk The d n it­ ers w ere forced to stav against tht'ir w ill, prosecutors say. The prosecution also contends that Bates was tortured to death w ith an electric cattle prod before his body was doused w ith gasoline and burned. C harred hum an bone fragments w ere found in a burned- out spot on the ranch, witnesses have testified. Tape recordings of w h at the p r i ' s - ecution s.jvs are torture sessions have been played d u n n g the trial. identified C aldw ell's O ne witness voice as being am ong those on the tapes. Vreeke, w h o testified as a defense witness as the trial s ninth week be­ gan, said she and her form er hus­ band adopted C aldw ell w hen he was 2 years old W hen the young­ ster was a teen-ager, she and her husband divorced. " H e felt responsible tor the d i­ vorce," she said of her son H er son dropped out of high school, but later passed an equiva­ lency test, she said. C aldw ell entered the A rm y for 10 months and was discharged "be­ cause there was trouble w ith adjust­ ment, she said D uring his m ilita n stint, Vreeke said her son sent her $200 a month so she w ould not have to work full time. " H e was always loving and re- spectful tii me, she said A fte r his m ilit a r y s e rv ic e C aldw ell had several |i>bs and then he started roaming, V reeke said Vreeke, w h o lives m A lam ogor­ do, \ M said her son left home in and •'he did not see Novem ber him again until M arch 14 bhe said he left home after a short visit C ald w ell was arrested in A pril. Afghans to be treated in Dallas-Fort Worth Associated Press DALLAS A y o u n g girl w ith b u r n e d feet a n d a m a n w h o lost his e y e a re a m o n g th e ^ \ f g h a n citi z e n s w h o will be s e ein g dvx to rs in this the Dallas-Fort W o rth area w ee k tor re c o n stru c tiv e s u r g e n to t h e The o p e r a tio n s will be d o n e at n< c h a r g e \ t g h a n s w h o received their injuries in their tight a g a in st th e Soviet I nion officials said It s reallv trau m atic w h a t thev v« b e e n t h r o u g h said lo h n G a v r a s p r e s id e n t of th e D allas-Fort W o rth H o s p i t a l C o u n c i l C o o r d i n a t i n g C o m m itt e e w h ic h h e l p e d a r r a n g e the m edical t r e a tm e n t The A fg h a n s will -tav in an \r 1 in g to n a p a r t m e n t co m p lex before area doctor^ begin p e r f o rm in g a m o p e r a tio n s he said Sundav C a v ra s said a n em erg enc v p h vsi cian a n d a s u r g e o n from B a n g la d e sh d e t e r m in e d at the time of tin At g h a n is ta n citizens arrival that non* of th e m n e e d e d tv' be hospitali. ed imm ediatelv A total ot 2^ \ t g h a n citizen*- ,tr rived S atu rd ay tor specialized m e d i ­ cal tr e a tm e n t w ith m o st c h ild re n in the iiro u p se n t to Victoria m svuith Texas h>r re h a b ilita tio n th e ra p v \tg h a n s w h o re fe r ti fre e d o m fig h te rs t r a m w o u n d s th e m ­ The a n s elves a*- s u f f e r in g th e v re c e iv e d in tin pa st s ^ w n r s fro m th t S o v ie t c 'u n t r v in te rp re te rs to r th e g ro u p t ’ i'o p s w h o a c c o rd in g in v a d e d to The h o s p ita l c m » rd in a tin g c o m m itte e G a v ra s h e a d s is an assoeia tio n ot s. h o s p ita ls in n o r th I« xas L .a vra s sa id th e A fg h a n s w o u ld tu b e rc u lo s is tree b le e d in g b e fo re anv sur I v g in s H e said b e c h e c k e d fo r a n e m ia a n d gerv th e e a rlie s t d a te anv o f th e m .v e u ld b* a d m itte d tv' h o s p ita ls w o u ld be l h u rs d a v a m o u n t If a p p e a rs flie r* w ill be a tre m e n d o u s re c o n s tru c tiv a o t w o r k w h e re t h « re w ill be a series o? i a\ -as said o p e ra tio n s 1 he g r o u p is a ls ,* b e in g g iv e n a litt le tim e to vorrn i at o t th e ir c u l tu n sheh k a n d a d iu s t to th e L m te d S la te s d u n n g th e ir stav at I nivers» tv A p a rtm e n ts rn r th e I n iv e rs itv v't 1 exds at \ r n g t v r hi said (.■avrjs p re d ic te d s o n n i»f tin \ ! g h a n s w o u ld In- in th e D a lla s -F o rt fo u r W o r th a n a at east m o n th s p o s s tb , as m an v as six he said three to 590 — Tutoring M A TH T U T O R 5 0 4 W 2 4 th S i O fT ic e 4 7 7 - 7 ( X I 3 ■f 1 m* k ' tut S ilL U L L ' I f u « t l , „ , * ' u«u-«t on u*»** ” i mi t»r t • tmr hv U,t jx«nlm#ru Uatx - u« WHO '+■ M-* ’MY com# s c e tc t • TT»Mi. il*4P » rn m m c m a n d S A T » Q m rnmttmm N e x t doo< to M a d Doc¡ b e a n s X C a m p u i ■ ■ ■ ■ $10/HR. $85/10 HR. ) / a TUTORING SERVICE M O C K ' L u , v l t j ' 400 — Condos- Townhouses • WORD PROCESSING • DISSERTATIONS • PAPERS • RESUMES In by 11 Out by 7 Open 'til Midnight 4 7 2 -6 6 6 6 We N ever Stop! CALL 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 T O PLACE A CLASSIFIED A D 400 — Condos- Townhouses Leasing F o r Fall We don’t care rf you paint your hair blue, rip the sleeves off your shirt or pierce your ear. But .- Itkt* your frie n d s O i to bo d ilfe ro n l from your frie n d s O r to t>«• a n yth in g at .ill B**< au se w ith e v e ry th in g w« • know about < icjareftws today th e re s o n ly one* th in g you II hr* if you start s m o k in g now A n d 1 hat s sorry S o rry you < an t g«*t up in tht* m o rn in g w ith o u t c o u g h in g your lu n g s out S o rry you ca n t c lim b a s in g le flicjht of stairs w ith o u t g e ttin g w in d ©d S orry that every tim e you light one up. your risk of heart d ise a s e goes up It you re a lre a d y a sm oker take som e tim e to stop and th in k it all th e way th ro u g h R ig h t now it s your dec ision In the lo n g run it s your life WE'RE FIGHTING FOR 'O J R LIFE American Heart Association 2 weeks off on a 9 month lease 3 weeks off on a 12 month lease 10% OFF FOR SUMMER 1900 SAN GABRIEL IS LEASING The Ultimate West Campus Lifestyle 2 B edroom /2 B ath to 4 B edroom /3 B ath 1 3 5 0 -2 7 0 0 S quare Feet Amenities include garages, wet bars, fireplaces & an intercom system $ 12 0 0-20 0 0 per month on 9 or 12 mo/lease. Come by 12-5 Friday or 9-5 Saturday and Sunday Phone 476-7620, 476-9998 or 478-3860 * * * * * ♦ * * * * * Special Rates for Summer—Preleasing for Fall Take your pick from one of these fine condom inium s. 2000 W h itis P la c e • V i block from campus • microwave • individual washer/dryer • ceiling fans • private balcony • covered parking • fully furnished * * * M 4 5 4 - 4 6 2 1 $375/mo. for Summer Salado C o n d o m in iu m s • microwave • individual washer/dryer • ceiling fans • private balcony • fully furnished • private parking • near shuttle $375/mo. for Summer 3000 Guadalupe Place o ceiling fans o private balcony o near campus o fully furnished o laundry room o private parking $275/mo. for Summer 4 5 4 - 4 6 2 1 4 5 4 - 4 6 2 1 * * * * * * ♦ * * * * ♦ * * • Furnished • Great Location • Walk to Campus • All Kitchen Appliances • Microwave • Built-in desks • Washer & Dryer • Covered Parking Cornerstone Place 24th & Rio Grande Call 4 8 0 - 0 0 6 5 Ed Padgett, Co. ♦ ♦ * * * * * * * * * * * ♦ * * EMPLOYMENT 800 — G eneral Help Wanted J 4 4 * 4 4 * * * ♦ * J * 4 4 4 4 4 CALIFORNIA FREE LANCE PHOTOGRAPHER LOOKING TO DISCOVER NEW FACES C a l l : 453-3010 N e w ly added features include: • Ita lia n C e ram ic Tile in Kitchen a n d Bath • F r e e u s e o f o u r t w o t a n n i n g b e d s Also Being Completed For Fall: • T h e r a p e u t i c M a s s a g e • C o m p l e t e s t y l i n g s a l o n w V ill< i< jeO en •14 -4 3J 2' 3' B u T O N D R V* - J r , n A T V A Warhead production at Pantex slowed by federal budget cuts Associated Press A M A R IL L O Federal budget cuts are making it tougher for the Pantex nuclear weapons plant tv* meet delivery schedules ot nuclear warheads tor the military according to a heav ilv censored transcript of congressional hearings In its Sunday editions the A m ar­ illo Globt -X t'w s which said it ob­ tained the transcript reported that 75 layoffs art* expected at the plant before Oct I Dr Richard Wagner |r an assist­ ant tor atomic energy to the secre­ tary ot Defense expressed his con­ cern about the workload at Pantex during hearings earlier this Vear be tore a subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee I here is today for the first time that I can remember in 20 years in this program no *.Luk betwet n the DOK (Department of hnergvi war head production warheads a i m i n g out the diH*r at Pantex, and the need date for the DOD (Department of Defense) deploy ments,” Wagner testified. The Department of Energy is seeking a 14 percent increase in its defense budget for fiscal 1987. Wagner also said Pantex may not be able to meet nuclear weapons de­ livery schedules if budget pressures continue or it unforeseen circum­ the G lobe-X ew s s t a n c e s develop reported The newspaper also quoted Charles Poole, who runs Pantex te r the operating contractor Mason &i Hanger-Silas Mason Co as saving he hopes the across-tht board job reductions can be made through at­ trition There are 2 's^1 people now em ploved at the plant he said I ho cutbacks are in response to the G ram m -R ud m an-H oH ings budget reduction ast the transcript shovv s It is a lean budget, Sylvester Folev |r assistant secretary for de­ fense programs told a House ap­ propriations subcommittee he said What v ou are talking about is in­ creasing the risk ” 1 am unwilling to accept any further nsk w ithout it being directed because I don't think our budget should be re­ from duced anv where we are right now Even at this level, I am uneasy further down Mj| Gen George Withers Jr a deputv assistant secretary for mili- tarv applications, told the congres­ sional subcommittee that the man- h o u r s needed to build and assemble a nuGear weapon are increasing \uclear weapons today are con- siderablv more complex and sophis­ ticated than thev were a tew vears ago owing to the necessity of put­ ting in modern use control and safe- tv feature- he said Prisoner given execution reprieve Associated Press H I \ I s \ il I i \ 3-year-old death row inmate condemned tor th« W 4» rape murder .>f a Houston travel agent received a stav ot execution Monday about 14 hours befor* tie w as s, heduled to die Ihe lexjs v ,>urt ot C rirmnal Appe als vet a ^ept 1~ hearing on Calvin William*» contention that minontv jurors wen excluded improperly trom h¡s capital mur- cier trial He had been duled tv' die before daw n 1uesdav In Apni the I S supreme L ourt ruled that pren-iu- tor*- cannot stnkv potential urors solelv b»\aus» o t nee \ttornev Craig Washington in* is iv presenting Williams s,iid pri>secutors in Williams trial excluded eight b la c k s a rid t w o Híspanles tc>r no reJM*n VN illia n is u . t s r n ic t v i u I u* vis \nd< j p a r t r r a nt • ¡t ie )u r < 2 n 3 - t r a r 'c \tru nd s \u ttic*r tie s s a id - lie h a d become }1t.r .at ion ot i Montr» s, sick at work and had gone to the apartment because it vs as closer than her own home. Evidence showed Anderson was strangled with her own pantv hose \e d Morris the a-- stan? Ham s Count) district at- tornev who prosecuted the case said the jury took only six minutes to return the death penalty Williams 19 at the time of the slaving vs as a busbov who had been out or parole tor 44 days after serving tin » tor aggravated burglary Houston police said thev identified him a- a suspect bv using a computer to match fingerprints found in the apartment In i recent interview W illia m s said he had been thinking about o’thal injection I am t no volunteer but if then - nothing I can do about it stav in. up nights wr at t s gomg ti tee in me going to happen I ve been awake Mostly 1 |ust think about ike vs} «. n thev put those needles he said The Daily Texan/Tuesday, June 24, 196^PaQe 15 V>.*' Y3u AND BJEMLL BROOK NO : SKULDU66EM ON THE M K T OF TFE CQNTRA51 tV£N AT MOMENT OFF K£ 1 BfSCAtNt l/UO COKJKA LFADFRF PUF U U V O U OVER. T'HF ZOAp :>” 20C * p vtRCrufSFRS 1 SAID, LETS PO LUNCH, COMANDANTE! BUBNO! I!. V U f N tf o ' h 5 < LU o D oc H > cc UJ > CO o O " o ■< té* a Around Campus is a daily col­ umn listing University-related ac­ tivities sponsored by academic de­ student services and partments, registered student organizations. To appear in Around Campus, or­ ganizations must be registered with the Office of Student A ctivities. Announcem ents must be subm itted on the correct form, available in The D aily Texan office, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The D aily Texan reserves the right to edit subm issions to style rules, although no significant changes w ill be made. to conform Tuesday The Baptist Student Union w ill hold dinner and Bible study for stu­ dents at 5 30 p m Tuesday at the Baptist Student Center, 2204 San Antonio St Cost is SI for dinner. United Cam puses To Prevent Nuclear W a r (U C A M ) needs pro­ duction and editing help with a vi­ deo project and will meet at 7:30 p m Tuesday in the gallerv outside the Cactus Cafe in the Texas Union Building Anyone interested in get­ ting video expenence is welcome For more information call Debbie Doughertv at 462-1354. The Chabad Jewish Student Cen­ ter will sponsor the seminars “ Laws Regarding Honoring of Verbal Commitment*., Vows and Their Dis­ solution and "Animal Soul-a Dlv Soul at 8 p m and 8:45 p.m. re­ spectively at the Chabad Jewish Stu­ dent Center 2101 Nueces St. W ednesday The Baptist Student Union w ill hold Bible *>tudv at noon Wednes­ day in the West Mall fountain area. Bring \ our own lunch Classes The Continuing Education Pro­ gram of the College of Education will hold kev boarding on Micro­ computers clas**es beginning June 30 Registration in Education Building 374 weekdays from 8a.m. to noon and from 1:30 to 4:30. Cost is $80 tor 20 hours of instruction information call Bettv For more Shepperd at 4~l-40*0. is Volunteers The Student Health Center is offer­ ing C P R classes — Heartsaver 1 and II and recertification. Call 471 -4955 ext 231 or a»me to Student Health Center to register PEANUTS H>gh Tem perate^es 9 0 g Q ‘A ’ ANAv WEATHER SERVICE F0RECA5 Sties over Austin w De parity c oudy Vesaav a th southeast a nds at 10 mpn The n*gh a De in the owe" 90s and the low w De n the ower ^0s There ¡s a 20 percent chance of afternoon or evening showers The Nahona Weather Service *orecast¿ showers r caris of me Dakotas and Minnesota Ra^r s aiso predicted for an a rea ranging from New Mexico Te*as and Ox a noma east to the Carotinas and north a ’ong the A: antic coast to Ma ne Now you're sure you didn't call an ext er mi na tor . . . ” BY CHARLES SCHULZ YE5TER1?AY V0U SA;? IT U A S T O O COLO! V\AKE JP YOUR VMNPI B.C. ITS A KtLcBK Alu fáéMT. 7H O W P tD Y V U e e r u p t^ e^ e ? BY JOHNNY HART lia . N e v e e M f e v e o o F ie e r o ie ic f i First lady says ‘crack’ nearing epidemic size among youths Vine W de Mr ated Pfes I s l O N M rs R, ac c epte ct MeC Mrs k i w a i the ir dernu pn . ort Kiwarus I t I Kmald W tilia placed Kcagan s ntxk nating a Urge fighting drug among voung the Mrs Keag. than 100 000 seven nation drug and all to a statenn House staff n nas mile?* av elt\i more ^' cities in tight against >e, according cl bv Whitt has worked vs ith I he kivs ai a national billboard Mrs Reagan *ion campaign to m- radio and teU torm people about *»tud»*nts using drugs W illiams said Mn thanked the grv»up Monday tor th« ii effort*» 1 ou represe nt the she very bt**»t ot community lit». said 'crack But much of her short message was aimed at the torm ot cocaine M rs Reagan known as said the drug w as ruining lives, tearing families apart and causing young people to commit crimes She urged adults to work against drug use among children and teen­ agers I I I the Frank t From 3 p.m. Sunday to 3 p.m. londay the University Police De­ triment reported these incidents: Assault: A l l xtatt member tiled i assault complaint at 9 4^ p m inday, citing a minor eye injury ceived while working as an usher Erwin |r Special /ents Center during a Judas Priest incert A suspect was arrested, ken to the Travis County Sheriffs epartment and charged with sim- e assault. Burglary: A non-student reported le burglary of a van parked in Lot ) between 6:30 p m. and 11:10 m. Sunday. An eight-band JV C issette player and car speakers ere taken. Theft: A non-student reported le theft of a motorcycle helmet om a motorcycle parked in Lot 80. he helmet was taken between 6:45 m. and 11:10 p.m. Sunday. TODAY'S CRO SSW O RD PUZZLE ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 1 S h o w in g Surprise 6 Reinforce 11 Overspread 14 Slow music ’ 5 Facet 16 Wmglike process Peru1» ans '8 Beef c a tte 20 Designated 22 R ushes 2 3 W e a ring Clodhoppers 25 Arum plant 78 D ashed 29 Spa- 30 cutlet 32 Day s m a rch 3a US politico 39 Tales 42 Go elsewhere 43 Uppermost branches 45 Service club 46 Magnificent 49 Height abbr 50 Horse 54 Not new 55 Have faith 56 Las 58 Czars realm 60 Previously mentioned 63 House parts 66 Politician abbr 67 Chili con — 68 Tete----- 69 Undertake 70 Booties 71 Light beam H E M l A *v q r ’v ' e R i P l p . E *R c . [h N [P . A C A *N* [ ? 0 *R tf t ’c] H AiT S] A ’B u ; b ‘'A ';L; I $ T E J T H T tc s T1A' N* h "VV gJ AV g ''A ' S [i T E L o"AwT ¡Sx s 'rj ' o'' r * DOWN 1 Eastern name 2 Mil VIP 3 Alaska city 4 Composed 5 Fence part 6 Jurisdiction 7 H i t » away* 8 Otologist s concern 9 Comp pt 10 Went away 11 Monte — 12 Tree 13 Antiquated 19 ump s call 21 - heel State 23 Fish 24 Detester 26 Same 27 Partly pref 30 Tendencies 31 — bag B A s ' e ' D >; T ' r ' 0 i T i0 0 V E A s f e R A M A VV s [ d y 'k W e ’T*m s ’m ] ' A M Cj [ n o '' r ' A ' ' r '' A ' g ' 1 's '' t 'M I [D V T til O N V dI 33 Letter 35 W hine 36 unique ones 37 Eniwetok e g 38 Grumpy 40 Specks 4 1 Disagree­ ment 44 Goggling 47 Dodges 48 Bandleader Brown 50 Sailor s cry 51 Point out 52 Misery 53 Barricade 55 Rope 57 Parts of hrs 59 Cachet 61 Tool 62 The Altar 64 Nice season 65 Asian weight ¡7— nr TO 12 13 " ,* 1 be P T K R T1 ■ 14 17 43" 125 IF _ g -------------------------------------------------------------^ 5^gHp4~~ ----------------------------------------- «5------ IF-- ■■ 1986 United Feature Syndicate BLOOM COUNTY by B erk e B reath ed -eu *m /r pkoppw «ARfNíNb «é m K? T AhTWCTKF 4HP L/MSHINb SV KIPS *IW UVF oewno* sen té* \s&x potn c MA an • Hams 5 2 1-3 0 1 2 3 5 2-3 0 12-3 11-3 6 3 3 1 1 0 0 0 3 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 7 5 1 0 1 0 0 2 1 4 0 0 0 1 3 5 2 0 1 0 0 1 2 2 1-3 1 • hed 10 3 batters m the 6th Sutton pitched to 3 A gr a re's *he 6tt F.'-.ter pitched to 1 batter in the 8th •iRi Buechete by Corbefl W P Guzm an Sutton —.' H yne McCoy F si W eke Sec end Phithos ab r h bi Third johnaon ’ 3 20 A 18 344 Giants 18, Padres 1 SANDREGO c! Gwyftñ ft Robeys 2t) Krufc ‘f Garvey 1b Manny NfKT 3t> K«m 0tJy Bo hy c Tmpit. ss .-•toddard; Thrn nd C McRy K • Hoyip TMMi SANFRAN É r l M 4 0 1 1 K ule her ct 3 0 0 0 RThpan 2b 1 0 0 0 Woo