Vol. 87, No. 181 1 Section The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Friday, July 15,1988 250 Council cancels mass burn disposal project By GARRY LEA VELL Daily Texan Staff After spending more than $20 million and almost a decade of commitment to a mass bum plant, the City Council voted 5-2 Thursday to cancel the waste disposal project. Opponents of the $71.5 million facility cited both economic and environmental concerns for stopping the project. "We don't have any money," said Coun- cilmember Max Nofziger. "Even if we were all in favor and this was not a divisive issue in the community, we should not do it," he said. City staff told the council that $15 million worth of revenue bonds have been issued to date for the plant with the city's addi­ tional liability potentially ranging from $6 million to $9 million dollars. Pro-cancellation coundlmembers said they hope to recoup part of the city's in­ vestment by selling equipment already pur­ chased for the facility, including a $17 mil­ lion boiler. "At minimum, we can get nine to $12 million [back] on this project," said Coun- cilmember George Humphrey, who intro­ duced the ordinance to kill mass bum. Coundlmembers Smoot Carl-Mitchell and Charles Urdy, both of whom voted to keep the plant, said the cancellation would be a black eye for the dty in August when it must lobby for its new bond rating. "From a business point of view, this is not only irresponsible, it is totally insane," Urdy said. Urdy predicted a lowered rating because of the rity's wavering on the issue and in­ ability to stick with its plan. "They [bond houses] are going to be con­ cerned we don't know what we are doing, and we are dead set on proving to them that we don't," he said. Carl-Mitchell called the project's aban­ donment an "economic disaster" and said it would eventually force the dty to "be­ come captive to the private landfill opera­ tors." He added that the plan submitted by the rity's Solid Waste Task Force in the early '80s called for a three-tiered effort of land­ fill, recycling and a waste-to-energy plant. Going forward with the project would in­ crease the life expectancy of the rity's land­ fill, a "priceless resource," by 108 years, he said. But without mass bum, he said, recycling would not solve the solid waste dilemma and he was pessimistic about the issue's fu­ ture. "I think you are dreaming if you think another landfill is going to be permitted in this community," he said. "We ought to get out of the solid waste business if we cancel this project." Urdy's primary objection centered around the lack of an alternative plan "on the table" for the rity's future waste dispos­ al needs. But Mayor Pro Tern Sally Shipman, who originally supported the plant, presented a seven-step plan for proceeding after the mass bum cancellation. She called for an inventory of the solid waste program, including the remaining commitments to the mass bum project and the potential revenue from equipment al­ ready purchased. Additionally, she suggested instructing the newly formed Solid Waste Advisory Comission to plan a short-term and long­ term strategy and report quarterly to the council with a final report in 18 months. Shipman, who joined Carl-Mitchell and Nofziger on an East.Coast tour of mass bum and recycling facilities last month, said her findings on the trip influenced her derision. "Most of those [mass bum] plants are en- ergy producers that are not meant to be solely trash disposers," Shipman said. Humphrey's original motion included an audit of the rity's municipal waste stream and the preparation of plans for a recycling- compost facility. He withdrew those items at the request of councilmembers who wanted to gather more information on the issues. However, Mayor Lee Cooke did not agree with continuing the same process that has been going on for eight years to identify a solid waste solution. "I think we may have to look at working with the private sector in garbage pickup and recycling rather than going through an­ other bureaucratic, argumentative govern­ ment process that is going to come up with the same solutions," he said. Homeless occupy vacant building I U.S., Iran debate as inquiry goes on I f JUNO A WOO Daily Texan Staff UT officials are "closely monitor­ ing" a group of homeless people who broke into and set up house­ keeping in a University-owned Blackland building Thursday as part of a nationwide day of action for in­ creased low-cost housing. rotaittfi mdoHw l cu s on 3. About 80 slogan-chanting home­ less and their supporters marched through the East Austin neighbor­ hood, then pried boards reading "UT Property — No Trespassing" off one of 17 vacant houses that the city has recommended destroying. Three Street People's Advisory Council members — selected by takeover organizers to represent all of Austin's homeless — promptly moved in with two mattresses, a portable toilet, a welcome mat, a jar of flowers and Homer the Goose — flte SPAC mascot "kidnapped" ear­ lier this year to publicize problems of the homeless. James Williams, Brian Joyce and Ron North, said they intend to stay in the four-room house indefinitely, and plan a house-warming Satur­ day. They said they should be allowed to stay in the house because the University has not used it. "It says on the Statue of Liberty, 'Give us your tired, your hungry, your poor.' But it should say at the bottom, in fine print, 'But don't ex­ pect us to feed them, or give them houses, and don't expect us to help them find work,' " Joyce said. Ed Sharpe, UT vice president for administration, pointed out that the University plans to help the city convert some Blackland property into low-cost housing and said the University "is not going to get into the policy of being a landlord." While saying they want to avoid a confrontation with the three men, UT officials indicated they will re­ claim the house after an unspecified period of time. Sharpe said the men are "obvi­ ously not authorized to go on Uni­ they are versity property, and breaking the law." "W e are closely monitoring the situation," he sakl. "We will give reasonable notice, and the individu­ als will be given ample opportunity to vacate the area, before any action is taken." Sharpe would not say when the University will ask the men to leave or how it plans to remove them. UT police officers periodically drove by the house near Disch-Falk Field. UT Police Lt. Ronald Thomas said the administration has not in­ structed police to take any action. The takeover, and its national counterparts in more than 60 U.S. cities including Fort Worth and Dal­ las, were designed to help propel the newly introduced Affordable Housing Act through Congress. Associated Press UNITED NATIONS — Iran said Thursday the USS Vincennes did not warn an Iranian airliner before shooting it down, but Vice Presi­ dent George Bush responded in the Security Council that the war­ ship fired in self-defense. Foreign Minister Ali-Akbar Velayati of Iran called the destruc­ tion of the airliner and the 290 ci­ vilians aboard July 3 "the most in­ humane military attack in the history of civilian aviation ... a bar­ baric massacre." Bush said Iran should not have sent the Airbus into a Persian Gulf battle zone. The Vincennes and the USS Elmer Montgomery had skirmished with Iranian attack boats just before the jetliner en­ tered the area. The vice president, who said he was delivering "the free world's case," called the destruction of the airliner a "terrible human trage­ dy" but said the United States has a "legal right" to protect Persian Gulf shipping lanes. "We have made it clear that we will keep the gulf open, no matter what the threat," he said. "We will not alter our course." Velayati read a purported tran­ script of a communication be­ tween Iran Air Flight 655, flying from a military-civilian airport at Bandar Abbas, Iran, across the Strait of Hormuz to Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, and the Bandar Abbas control tower just before the attack. He said the tower told the pilot "Have a nice day," he replied, "Thank you. Good day," and the controller answered, "Good day." the The United States says Airbus A300 did not respond to re­ peated questioning by the Vinc­ ennes about its identity and the cruiser's captain believed it was an Iranian F-14 fighter transmitting ambiguous signals and descend­ ing in attack pattern. In a detailed, two-hour speech, Velayati said the Airbus never heard warnings from the Vinc­ ennes, the plane transmitted only unambiguous civilian signals, it remained in the recognized inter­ national air corridor and was climbing when the missiles were fired. "Every available evidence ... shows that the pilot of the airliner did not receive any warning," he told the 15-member council. Convoy passes border Veterans’ peace group en route to Nicaragua Patrol agents and Laredo police af­ ter Customs refused to let the con­ voy cross the border. Associated Press LAREDO — The persistent Veter­ ans' Peace Convoy went through one Mexican customs station Thurs­ day after crossing the Rio Grande with 14 trucks and a school bus in defiance of a U.S. trade embargo with Nicaragua. "They're on their way south," said Tom Hansen, a spokesman for the group that opposes U.S. policies toward Nicaragua's leftist Sandinis- ta government. Convoy members were later de­ layed at a secondary customs area after Mexican authorities discovered firecrackers in one of the vehicles, an official said. On at least three separate occa­ sions, the U.S. Treasury Depart­ ment has blocked the group's trucks from leaving the United States, con­ tending that taking the vehicles to Nicaragua would violate a 3-year- old trade embargo. The government maintains the food and medical supplies qualify as humanitarian aid exempt from the Nicaraguan Trade Control Regula­ tions, but that the vehicles are not humanitarian aid. Convoy members disagree. Eight "convoyistas" were arrest­ ed Saturday in a tense confrontation with U.S. Customs officials, Border One of the eight was rearrested early Monday and charged with blocking traffic at the same bridge when Customs again refused to let him cross. Later Monday, however, the group said it started crossing vehi­ cles and finally drove the last one across Wednesday. The group said the first 11 passed without question, while the last four were told to pro­ vide personal and vehicle identifica­ tion. "A very funny thing that hap­ pened was that different officials, police and border and treasury offi­ cials ran into us in Laredo and dif­ ferent places and advised us to go one at a time late at night," said convoy Jay Singer. "And so we tried it and it worked." spokesman "They mace' us, they arrest us, they break our windows, they im­ pound our vehicles — and then all of a sudden they let us pass," said convoy coordinator Raul Valdez, 40, of Austin. Valdez said he drove "Pathfin­ der," the lead convoy vehicle, di­ rectly past U.S. Customs officials and paid his 75-cent bridge toll at 10:30 p.m. Tuesday. Daniel Byram/Daily Texan Staff Honratett activists carrying a cage with thair mascot, Homer the Goose, march toward Bl ck mdhou ing. The $15-billion-a-year, five-year program was introduced Thursday by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass. It would fund grants for afford­ able housing by doubling the cur­ rent cigarette tax and by modifying laws on inherited capital assets and the alternative minimum tax. Texas legislators contacted Thurs­ day said they had not seen the bill yet and could not comment on it. But at least one city politician sup­ ported the demonstrators. Mayor Pro Tern Sally Shipman told the ac­ tivists, "We were here exactly one year ago and had a housing confer­ ence. Here we are at the same spot and nothing has changed. "I think it is a sad state that the people who are homeless, and the people who care about the home­ less, literally have to take to the streets to get the government to rec­ ognize that something can be done," she said. Shipman is a key link on the Council for the Blackland Neighbor­ hood Association, which has long protested UT acquisition of the low- income area where the University has bought 16 blocks of Blackland since 1981. The administration plans to acquire the entire neighbor­ hood. Blackland residents discovered last week that the rity's Housing and Community Services Depart­ ment, at the University's request, recommended more than a dozen houses in June for demolition — in­ cluding the one the activists occu­ pied. "We're very distressed," said John Henneberger, project develop­ er for the Blackland Community De­ velopment Corporation. "We believe the city has listed some units that are in excellent shape to be tom down," he said. The corporation has asked the University to wait before destroying the houses, Henneburger said. Paula Phillips, director of the Housing and Community Services Department, said the houses slated for demolition were chosen because it would not be cost-effective to re­ novate them. Bill Taylor, UT assistant vice pres­ ident for business affairs, said the University was willing to have the houses re-evaluated. T o d a y : Mexican opposition cites fraud, calls for protests Q H m t itw H b — A House committee issues a number of revisions to the 1966 tax 3 reform biH. including a few more nods to special interests Associated Press Thooa «dio eon, toooh — The University played host to a dialogue on good teach­ 5 ing and a recognition of good teachers from around the state UgMfc camera, coolda Insanely — The greatest movie lush since W.C. Fields went to the big happy hour in the sky is back and apparently just as good in Arthur 2: On the 9 Rock». W K A T H B R I N D E X % rnm atavie «reotirer — Coming this summer to theaters near you — Mr KWlMr, Pmt 37: High» in the 90» Re­ turn. This partly doudy. hot thrlMar carves out Ms own place in toe Oeato-toy-Fower- Too H si of Fima. Cringe as foe needy vfegin survives. «tolo Via. sea-crazed loans fol victim to toe lows in too 70s. (have too classic "aoiMbwoot «rinds at World & Nation I0>1f mptr aeons toot mods a «toóla generaran araareny m ss aaeroarc Around Campus . . . . . . . Classifieds Com ics.......................... Editorials....................... Entertainment................... S p o rts.......................... Stale A Loca University....................... 13 10 . . 13 4 9 . . 8 . 6 3 A MEXICO CITY — The opposition on Thursday refused to recognize the official returns pro­ claiming Carlos Salinas de Gortari winner of the presidential election and pledged a nationwide protest campaign. Final results made public Wednesday night by the Federal Election Commission, a week after the polls closed, gave Salinas the victory by the slimmest margin in the 59 years the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, has controlled Mex­ ico. The opposition also won Senate seats for the first time, taking four out of 64. Ths PRI-dominated election commission said Salmas received 9.64 million votes, or 50.36 per­ cent, far below the 70 percent level that was the minimpm victory level for die governing party presidential candidate in the it Cuauhtemoc Cardenas of the leftist National Democratic Front was second with 5.96 million, or 31.12 percent; and Manuel Clouthier of the conservative National Action Party was third with 3.27 million votes or 17.07 percent. Two minor candidates accounted for the rest of the vote. Of 38 million registered voters, 50.3 percent cast ballots, the commission said. Government and party officials initially described the turnout as larger than the 75 percent in 1982 and blamed a he« j turnout for the slow vote count. Cardenas, 54, son of the late President Lazaro Cardenas, is one of the most revered Mexican leaders. He announced plans to tour the country next week after calling his supjporters to a pro­ test march Saturday in the downtown Zocalo plaza. He said he would target regions where he con­ siders "fraud was the most brutal and ran roughshod on our party members. " Cardenas broke from the PRI last year and united the normally fragmented left to trap ahead of the conservative National Action Party as one of the country's groups. largest opposition Clouthier, 54, planned to start his protest ral­ lies Thursday afternoon in Guadalajara, Mexi­ co's second-largest city, then tour northern Mex­ ico, where his party has its strongholds, until July 23. Opposition representatives on the commission accused it of fraud and said the release of totals was delayed so they could be doctored. "It appears that there are two Mexicos," said Jorge Amador, a National Democratic Front sup­ porter on the commission. He said there is a modem Mexico where the federal electoral code is respected, honest results are posted and the victorious candidate is Carde­ nas, and a second, backward Mexico "in which the federal electoral code is not known, is not applied" and the popular will is thwarted. Amador's aides carried into the commission boxes of ballots, some of them partially burned and others he said they found iii the streets. / Page 2/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday. July 15,1988 T h e Da ily Te x a n Group finds new ‘clothing optional’ home Ptn w nu l Staff E d it .....................................................................................................................................................Miku Godwin Managing Editor............................................................................................................................ Kevin McHargua A ocu Managing E d ito rs ................................... Karen Adams, Steve Dobbins, Mike Fanwn, Tanya Voss Siva Vaidhyanathan News Editor Associate News E d ito rs ......................................................................................Cheryl Laird. Denms McCarthy John Council, Mike Enckson, Jim Greer, General noport o n Garry Lea veil. Greg Pertiski, Junda Woo Spftfixl Pages Editor.......................................................................................................................... Jeenne Acton Associate E d ito rs ......................................................................................................Mark Grayson, Tom Phüpott Entertainment Editor....................................................................................................................... Steve Crawford Associate Entertainment E ditor................................................................................................................... Walker General Entertainment Reporter J °* S i™ Sports E d ito r........................................................................................................................................ Steve Davis Associate Sports E d ito r .............................................................................................................. **efTy G®™ nder General Sports R eporter.................................................................................................................Clarence Hill Photo Editor............................................................................................................................................ Allen Brook Associate Photo Editor....................................................................... Images Editor Associate Images E d ito rs ...........................................................................................060 Cohen, Lee Nichols University Editor...................................................................................................................................... '*oe Yonan Art D irecto r..........................................................................................................................................Ashley Bogle Bret Bloomquist Associate Art Director News Assistants......................... Sports Assistant Entertainment Writer Entertainment Assistant Editorial Columnist Editorial Assistant Makeup Editor Wire E d ito r................................. Copy E d ito rs ............................. Photographer Graphics Assistant Comic Strip Cartoonists Local D is p la y ...................... Classified Display Classified Telephone Sales Classified Telephone Service Issue Staff .................................................................... Chris Ware John Clark, Andres Eguiguren, Jim Kennett, Will Kitts, Gregg Watkins .................................................................Paul Hammons ............................................................... Sean Walsh ................................................................Carol Huneke Ralph Tomlinson, Greg Weiner ............................................................Dee Ann Bullard .............................................................................. Leigh Floyd ........................................................................Kevin Hargus Joseph Abbott. Robert Duggan, Bryan Leake, Anand Pardhanani .........................................................................Frank Ordohez ........................................................................ Kathy Strong Susan Boren, Tom King, Robert Rodriguez, Martin Wagner Advertising ........................... Deborah Bannworth, Ann del Llano, Betty Ellis John Farris, David Hamlin, Denise Johnson Beth Mitchell, Natalie Niesner, Gina Padilla. Chris Wilson Leslie Kuykendall, Ricardo R. Fernandez, Shameem Patel ...................................Pam Banks, Alan Fineman, Melanie Neel, Martin Pellinat. Juanda Powell, Victoria Woo ............................................Melinda Deflerson, Melanie McCall. Susan Fleishaker, Una McGeehan The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis, Austin, TX 78705 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4.136) For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865 For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471 -8900 For classified word advertising, call 471 -5244. Entire contents copyright 1988 Texas Student Publications. The Daly Texan Mel Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring) Two Semesters (Fall and Spring).................................................................................................................. 55-00 Summer Session One Year (Fall, Spring and Summer) *0 0 75 00 J To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471 -5083. Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P O Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209, or to TSP Building C3.200. or call 471 -5083. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to TSP, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209. INSTANT CASH * ad B oaaa If you need ca*h to help you out while unending college, why not donate blood plawna? With this ad you’ll receive a *2 bonus on your first visit. So help others while helping your­ self Must have valid ID and proof of Austin residence. Draw­ ing held once a month for two $25 bonuses. Call 474-7941. Mon -Fri. 9-5 A u t l a P laeuia C ra te r 2800 Guadalupe ROSES *6" one dozen cash n carry T F FIESTA FLOWERS 3830 N. Lamar 453-7619 By WILL KITTS Daily Texan Staff Paint-splattered sawhorses, ragged scraps of plywood and assorted other debris dot the grass by the small, kidney-shaped pool at the Camer­ on Hill Apartments. Terry Blum, head of an Austin naturist group, has persuaded the owner of the complex to switch over to a "clothing optional" policy, and points to the renovation with a pleased chuckle. He can hardly get the words out quickly enough. "The owner had pretty much given up on making money here, and was getting ready to John board the place up. This complex was only half­ occupied, and only half of them were paying rent," he said. Now, each of the 44 units will be repainted and carpeted and will have a dishwasher in­ stalled. A hot tub and volleyball area will be added later, as well as a security fence "to keep out crime and the so-called 'gawker,' " Blum said. The $70,000 cost will raise rent $50 a unit. The New Manor Apartments had been home to the naturists from 1977 until last month, when the owner decided to convert to a "family envi­ ronment," effectively evicting them. Blum said he considered about 30 other com­ plexes before deciding on Cameron Hill, which was chosen for its central courtyard layout. He then managed to make a believer of the owner. "He's a little bit nervous right now, but I'm pretty confident we'll fill the place up in the next couple of m onths," Blum said. "And he may start another complex if this one fills up." Twenty people, most of whom lived at New Manor, are waiting for the apartments to be fin­ ished now, he said. A large yellow beach towel lettered "This Is Nudist Country" adorns the living-room wall of Blum's apartment, one of four that has been completed. He popped a 12-minute video into the VCR. "This will tell you something about our life­ style," he said. Blum insisted that the naturist philosphy is centered on freedom, not sexuality. "Aside from the fact that we don't wear clothes, we're pretty normal people," he said. Blum said the management has arranged for free rent in other complexes for present Camer­ on Hill tenants, and will not charge them for July if they move out by next Monday. "They're mak­ ing it as easy as possible for them. Things are going smooth." And no one has complained to him, he said. But outside Blum's apartment, the rosy picture he painted of the transition began to fade. Cloe Rea, who just moved in two doors down from Blum, said people moving out have already called her obscene names. "They think [nudism] is real evil and disgust­ ing, but we don't do all kinds of weird things in front of each other," Rea said. Rea, who has practiced casual nudism but never lived in a naturist community, admitted she feels somewhat uncomfortable with the abrupt takeover. "It bothers me that some of the children have to leave," she said somberly. Some families who must now find new homes have been at Cameron Hill for only a short while. Samuel Ybarra, 62, has lived at the apartments since April, and signed a lease through Septem­ ber. "I don't feel too good because 1 got to pay somebody to move me. I've got some pretty big, heavy things." Ybarra said that will cost him $150, plus charges to have his phone and utilities switched to his new apartment. Appearing resigned to his fate, Ybarra said he has found a new apartment on his own, without any help from Cameron Hill management. William Templeton, 37, echoed Ybarra's feel­ ings, only with more vehemence. "We've only been here a month, and now it's time to move again." Templeton said he and his family learned about the nudist group through rumors and a television newscast, and were not told they had to move out until Wednesday. "They're really not doing anything for us — they got us in a jam." The renovation continues. The aroma of fresh paint is in the air and workmen shuffled be­ tween open rooms, installing new doorknobs and laying down carpet. Blum plans a grand opening for the first week­ end in August, replete with fireworks and a live band. Now people interested in "clothing op­ tional" living have a new option. Those not interested will go elsewhere. Austin police expand elementary anti-drug education By JIM GREER Daily Texan Staff "A lot of kids have the idea it's not going to hurt to try drugs one time, but one time can hurt you or kill you," said Michael Rech, one of seven Austin police officers who teach an anti-drug education pro­ gram to Austin elementary school students. Senior Sgt. Rennie Dunn, who coordinates the anti-drug education program, said the Austin Police De­ partment has expanded Project DARE — Drug Abuse Resistance Education — to all 60 Austin Inde­ pendent School District elementary schools for the upcoming school year after a successful pilot program at 20 schools last year. Rech said he and four other offi­ cers trained for two weeks this June in Los Angeles. The creators of DARE patterned their curriculum after the California r ib 's program. The five new instructors have joined the two officers who admin­ istered DARE last year to teach the anti-drug lessons to Fulmore Junior High summer school students and gain experience for the upcoming fall semester, he said. "It's such a great learning experi­ ence for us trying to do manage­ ment techniques and learn how to do the lessons — definitely a chal­ lenge," Rech said. The program will primarily focus on fifth-graders for the upcoming year, but instructors will also teach about six sixth-grade classes, he said. The seven instructors will teach DARE to the students as a 17-week substance abuse course designed to discuss drugs and other social is­ sues in weekly hourlong sessions. Course topics include how to con­ trol pressure from gang members, peer pressure, self esteem, support groups, consequences of decision making and role-playing, Dunn said. Parents, students and teachers the pro­ were enthusiastic with gram's results during its first year, Dunn said. Senior Patrol Officer Leslie York, who taught the program at five ele­ mentary schools last year, said his emphasis on consequences received positive responses from students. "The program went trem endous­ ly well considering it was the first time something like this has been tried in Austin," he said at a DARE graduation ceremony earlier this summer. « 4 1 ^ X 1 4 ; . . ND .... . ¡tí ÉÉT|Y A page 6 story Thursday incor­ rectly reported that John Berger had been indicted Tuesday. In fact, he was indicted Wednesday. The Texan regrets the error. 2X< COPIES July 11—17 k m k o 's the copy center 476-4654 476-3242 339-1191 2346 Guadalupe 2917 M edical Arts 9029 Research (814x11, white 20# bond, auto-fed. at participating locations) qnans fO/zz a DORM ROOM DELIVERY MEDIUM TH IN PIZZA ONE TOPPING *5.50 TWO SODAS Good with coupon only One coupon per pirn Good at all j V Conans locations M Exp. 7/31/M J r j Y A R I N G ’ S S H O E 1 Pair 2 Pair ' IMMIGRATION H-l Work Visas for professionals Labor Certifications for Post-doctoral Research Associates and Faculty PACI PARSONS p c . Attorney at Law Board Certified Immigration é Nationality Law Tombs Board of Legal Specialisation 477-71 704 Rio Grande .__________ WISDOM TEETH If you need the removal of wisdom teeth... CALL i É b io m e d ic a l RESEARCH G R O U P ! at 451-0411 Financial Inoani v Ptowdad For Your Opvuon On a Pain MadfcaUon Mon.-Fri $30-430 • Perry Ellis • Liz Claiborne • Nickels • Van Eli • Nina • and more Holiday's Dow Jones NkutrW Average: UP9.25U) 2,113.62 Volume: 172.41 million shares W orld & N ation Friday, July 15,1988 Page 3 Carter called upon to unify Democrats Associated Press Jesse Jackson asked former Presi­ dent Carter on Thursday to play peacemaker in his pre-convention dispute with Michael Dukakis, say­ ing, "I simply want respect and re­ sponsibility" after the long run for the Democratic presidential nomi­ nation. Jackson did not specify any issues he wanted Carter to mediate. He said he was not seeking "a personal apology" for Dukakis' failure to no­ tify him before word got out that Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen had been picked for the vice presidential slot on the ticket. While there is plenty of time to settle matters before the convention opens next Monday, Jackson's com­ plaints could wind up threatening efforts by Dukakis and Democratic Party leaders to stage a unified, har­ monious party meeting. Vice President George Bush nee­ dled Dukakis from afar, saying he thought the governor could have shown "a little more sensitivity" toward his rival in the manner in which he announced his choice of Bentsen. In Chicago, at a news conference before boarding a bus caravan for the convention, Jackson said he would "exercise all of our rights" at the four-day meeting, and added it's an "open question" whether he will challenge Bentsen's nomination in Atlanta. Dukakis, his nomination assured, spent the day working on state budget problems and burnishing his credentials as a governor who cracks down on drugs. The Massa­ chusetts governor visited two state troopers shot during an undercover drug operation and signed a state law requiring tougher sentences for cocaine dealers. Bentsen spent the day in the Sen­ ate. He told reporters that easing the tension with Jackson was "Gov­ ernor Dukakis' responsibility." Bert Lance, who has advised Jack­ son during the presidential cam­ paign, said he believed Dukakis' ri­ val would eventually support the party ticket. "It's in the best interest of Jesse Jackson, in my opinion, to see a Democrat elected in Novem­ ber," said Lance, who once served as Carter's federal budget director. Carter declined comment on Jack­ son's statements, and Dukakis' aides sought to minimize the dis­ pute, saying the Massachusetts gov­ ernor would probably meet with Jackson when both men arrived in Atlanta. Democratic Party officials held a symbolic ribbon-cutting ceremony to mark the transformation of the Omni hall into a convention city, complete with a huge movable po­ dium in pastel shades — designed to be more pleasing to the eye than the traditional red, white and blue. Black members of Congress pre­ dicted boisterous protests at the convention over what they see as a snub to Jackson. Romancing the storm A squadron of the French Republican Mounted Guard parades down the flag-lined Champs Elysees in Paris, followed by gendarmerie mo- Associated Press torcycles and light tanks. The parade Thursday celebrated Bastille Day, the anniversary of the 1789 fall of the Paris fortress. Homeless, supporters rally nationwide Associated Press Homeless people and their advocates occupied houses, filed lawsuits, erected prefabricated structures and marched through the streets Thursday as they tried to rally support. In Philadelphia, the homeless occupied 13 empty government-owned homes, de­ manding ownership of the houses and federal money to rehabilitate them. "As these homes are stabilized, we're going to plan more takeovers," said Janis Du raid, administrative assistant for the National Union of the Homeless. The occupation was part of Homeless Action Day, a protest that organizers said involved at least 60 cities nationwide. The chief sponsor was the Community for Creative Non-Violence in Washing­ ton, D.C. In Nashville, Tenn., some 50 hom eless people and supporters marched in 90-de­ gree weather, carrying signs bearing such messages as "Street people are peo­ ple." is the "Homelessness the 1980s," said Steve Johnston of the Ten­ nessee Hunger Coalition, which orga­ nized the Nashville demonstrators. issue of Sixty people signed up to vote at a spe­ cial table arranged by the coalition to reg­ ister the homeless, who often are denied their right to vote because they can't list a permanent residence, activists said. Among those registering was Ronald Dized, a construction worker w ho used to be homeless. He said he took the day off to participate in the march. "I'm not really all that far out of the mud, but I can still see a little bit better than some of these people," he said. "I'd be less than I am if I didn't support this. I've been through it, I know w hat it's like to w ant a hom e." New Jersey's homeless their counterparts nationwide by erecting tent cities and filing a lawsuit against N ew ­ ark's H ousing Authority. joined About 100 people dem onstrated at Newark City Hall in support of the class- action lawsuit filed Thursday in state Su­ perior Court, said David Burgess, one of the leaders of the Newark Coalition for Low-Income Housing. The Housing Authority dem olishes low-income units without replacing them, contrary to federal law, Burgess said. Housing Authority Executive Director Milton Buck denied Burgess' charges and said the authority would fight the law­ suit. He said the federal governm ent has not yet established regulations to im ple­ m ent the policy, enacted by Congress this year, that ensures one new unit built for each that is destroyed. In New York City, a vigil continued for the 44th day at City Hall Park and won support from several legislators and ad ­ vocacy groups for their dem and that Mayor Ed Koch provide more housing. Armenians strike, press for return of region Associated Press MOSCOW — Armenians stayed away from work by the thousands Thursday and held a giant rally to press for the transfer to their repub­ lic of a mountain enclave that has been part of neighboring Azerbaijan since 1923. "The people are still not prepared to work," said a Communist Party worker in the disputed Caucasus re- Sion of Nagorno-Karabakh, which as been disrupted by strikes for two months. Three-quarters of the territory's 160,000 residents are eth­ nic Armenians. In Moscow, police arrested 15 protesters who unfurled the Latvian flag and several protest banners near the Kremlin. They were dem­ onstrating on behalf of Baltic na­ tionalities and Ukrainians as well as Armenians. The party worker in Nagorno- Karabakh said paramilitary police were deployed in rural areas. In Moscow, Foreign Ministry spokes­ man Vadim Perfilyev told reporters the situation was tense in the re­ gion, which is about the size of Del­ aware. A resident of Stepanakert, the ter­ ritorial capital, said people were suf­ fering because of the job actions re­ sulting from months of ethnic turmoil over the region's fate. "Our situation is very bad be­ cause the strike is continuing. No one is working," said the resident, a woman who hung up the phone be- ProtMters gather near the Lenin Library in Moscow to press for the return of Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia. fore giving her name. She said Nagorno-Karabakh resi­ dents had to rely on food produced locally. "We aren't receiving food from Azerbaijan or Armenia," she said, but "we get some potatoes from the Stepanakert area." Rem Ananikyan, deputy chief of said by the republic's official news agency Armenpress, telephone from Yerevan, capital of Armenia, that more than 200,000 people ral­ lied Wednesday night and at least one more mass demonstration was planned. Armenians have defied Azerbai­ jan and central authorities all the way up to Mikhail Gorbachev with a 5-m onth-old campaign to annex Na­ gorno-Karabakh. Despite its pre­ ponderance of Arm enians, most of the region w hom are Christians, was assigned to predom inantly Moslem Azerbaijan in 1923. ocaine-related bombing kills 4 Detroit residents Associated Press DETROIT — Rival drug dealers apparently firebombed a suspected crack house Thursday, killing four innocent residents of the duplex, of­ ficials and neighbors said. Six other people were injured, and the flames spread to an adjacent duplex occupied by two families who escaped. Residents cm the narrow, tree-lined street on the city's near north side said crack cocaine was sold and used for years at one of the building's two units. But the four victims had nothing to do with the illegal drug, said Doretha Harrison, 20, who lived next door. "They just drank," she said. "They'd fuss about the ? wine and where to get money for wine." The victims, one or two of whom were women, weren't related, Harrison said, adding that she didn't know their names. Police and fire officials said littie about the fire, the deadliest in Detroit since three firefighters died March 12,1987, while battling a deliberately set blaze at an abandoned warehouse. "All the witnesses that were interviewed have indicated there was a firebombing," said a police arson inspector who wouldn't give his name. No arrests were made, said Officer John Leavens, a department spokesman. The four victims were burned beyond identifi­ cation, said a homicide officer who also refused to give his name. "We don't even know their sex," he said. Six people were taken to Detroit Receiving Hospital, Leavens said, adding that their names and conditions were not immediately available. He said he could not confirm whether they were crack dealers or users. However, neighbors said they were certain that rival crack dealers had set the fire. "They did their business right outside," Harri­ son said. "From what I'd heard, they'd been ar­ guing earlier [Wednesday] about money, and they said they'd be back later to settle it." Her mother, Doretha Thompson, said police made several arrests at the duplex three or four months ago, and the unit was boarded up. "We were really happy," Thompson said. "Then, a month and a half later, [crack dealing] started again." Otto Cureton, who lived with his girlfriend and two daughters on the other side of the du­ plex where the Thompson family lived, said the sound of breaking glass awakened him shortly after 3 a.m. He said he went outside, saw the fire and five men running away. Crack had been dealt from the burned-out du­ plex "on and off" for four years, Cureton said. "Different crews would come in and deal." He agreed with Harrison that an argument among crack dealers on Wednesday had prompted threats of violence. Like Harrison, Cureton said he knew the vic­ tims only casually. He said he and "Mike," a man in his early 30s, argued all year long about basketball. "He was a Lakers fan and I was a Pistons fan." Panel reworks 1986 tax code Associated Press WASHINGTON — The House Ways and Means Committee approved a fat bill Thursday correcting er­ rors in the 1986 tax overhaul after tacking on a fistful of special-interest benefits and the tax increases to pay for them. Recipients of special tax cuts would range from schools that benefit from scholarships granted in the name of Christa McAuliffe, the N ew Hampshire teacher who died in the Challenger space shuttle dis­ aster, to football fans who contribute to scholarships at their alma mater. Committee staff estimated the bill would provide $7.1 billion of tax cuts over the next three years and raise an equal amount to finance them. The bill, approved on a 33-3 vote behind closed doors, now goes to the House, but the presidential election campaign could prevent it from becoming law this year. Some lawm akers have questioned w hether Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of Texas, chairm an of the Senate Finance Committee, w ho has been tapped to run for vice president, will w ant to get involved with the bill later this sum m er. Also, Reagan adm inistration oppo­ sition to some of the money-raising parts of the bill dims chances of enactm ent. The House bill originally was introduced to fix mis­ takes that crept into the big 1986 tax-overhaul legisla­ tion. Those errors, such as w rong legal citations, are so num erous and so complex that congressional staffers wrote a 446-page book explaining them. Since this is the only tax bill with a chance of pass­ ing Congress this year, lawm akers know that if they expect to get a tax provision enacted this year, it will have to be attached to this m easure. One other factor — the budget crunch — is playing a big role in the drafting of the bill. Because of the deficit-reduction agreem ent betw een President Reagan and Congress last December, every tax-reduc­ ing provision m ust be offset by a tax increase. Some of the dozens of provisions in the bill would: ■ Renew at a reduced level the tax exclusion for assistance. Only educational em ployer-provided $1,500 of such aid per year could avoid tax. ■ Extend several expiring provisions, including credits for research and experim entation and for ow n­ ers of low-income rental housing. ■ Relieve farmers from a 1987 requirem ent that they pay tax on off-road diesel fuel and then apply for a refund. ■ Allow owners of m utual fund shares to deduct certain fund expenses without regard to the usual 2 percent floor under miscellaneous deductions. ■ Remove some tax benefits from single-prem ium life insurance policies. ■ Raise taxes on various corporations, including those that own parts of other corporations and de­ fense contractors. ■ Allow an 80 percent deduction for contributions to college athletic scholarship funds when such "gifts" guarantee a fan the privilege of buying a game ticket. ■ Impose a tax of $2.67 on a pound of pipe tobacco; that is equivalent to the existing 16-cent-a-pack tax on cigarettes. Associated P ress Reagan tours farms hit hard by drought MARION, 111. — President Reagan, lending moral support to drought-stricken farmers while Congress mulls financial relief, said Thursday the governm ent m ust act quickly to help America cope with the "w orst natural dis­ aster since the Dust Bowl of the 1930s." He prom ised farmers that "we will do everything that we can." At the same time, he called on Congress to act quickly on a pack­ age of legislation aimed at making emergency federal aid available to farmers. Reagan, w ho returned to the White House in early evening, used his tour to announce that he was sending Agriculture Secretary Richard Lyng on a tour of several states hit hard by the dry spell. PITTSBURGH — A Judge apologizes to lawyer federal judge apologized Thursday to a lawyer he had scolded and threat­ ened with jail w hen she insisted on using her m aiden nam e and the courtesy title "M s." in court. "I have always referred to m ar­ ried w om en by their married name. This is the way my genera­ tion was taught," said Senior U.S. District Judge H ubert Teitelbaum, 73. "I recognize your right to be ad ­ dressed in any m anner in which you see fit, and I apologize for my com m ents and the resulting situa­ tio n /’ the judge told Barbara Wol- vovitz and three other attorneys involved in the trial of a race dis­ crimination suit against PPG In­ dustries Inc. On July 8, Teitelbaum told Wol- vovitz, whose husband is U niver­ sity of Pittsburgh law professor Jules Lobel: "From here on, in this courtroom you will use Mrs. Lo­ bel. That's your nam e." Poll: Race even in Texas NEW YORK — Gov. Michael Dukakis pulled even with Vice President George Bush in Texas after naming Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of Texas as his Democratic run­ ning mate, CBS N ew s reported Thursday night. The poll of 580 registered voters on Tuesday and W ednesday found 48 percent supporting Du­ kakis to 44 percent for Bush. The margin of error was plus or minus four percentage points, making the race a dead heat. Polls that were taken before Du­ kakis selected Bentsen on Tues­ day have found a big Bush lead in Texas, but show ed the lead nar­ rowing to a dead heat if Bentsen were chosen. The CBS poll con­ firmed that outcome. The Texans also said they fa­ vored Bentsen for re-election to the Senate over Republican Rep. Beau Boulter, 64-20. But 61 per­ cent said Bentsen should w ith­ draw from the Senate race now if he is to run for vice president. Woman pleads innocent to leaving baby on plane REDWOOD CITY, Calif. — A New York City wom an who is accused of giving birth in an air­ liner restroom and leaving her newborn daughter in a mass of blood-soaked towels pleaded in­ nocent Thursday to a charge of child endangerm ent. Christina Marie Locasto, 24, appeared in San Mateo County Municipal Court. Earlier Thursday, Locasto had been booked for investigation of attem pted m urder. "To prove attem pted m urder we have to prove beyond a rea­ sonable doubt an intent to kill, that by her act she intended that the child would die," said Assist­ ant District Attorney Stephen Wagstaffe. "But the evidence now before us does not establish that. Locasto was being held on $50,000 bail. Her husband, Louis, 26, who traveled with her and their 3-year-old daughter, Janine, was not arrested and apparently d idn't know his wife was preg­ nant, Dow said. Liberia foils coup attempt MONROVIA, Liberia — The president of Liberia deployed nearly 1,000 troops in northern Li­ beria on Thursday after announc­ ing that his forces had quashed a coup attempt by his former sec­ ond-in-command . Troops also set up roadblocks and surrounded key cities in the northern Nimba County, accord­ ing to travelers from the region. The pre-dawn coup attempt was said to have occurred in the coun­ ty, 350 miles north of Monrovia. Page 4/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, July 15,1988 E d it o r ia l s Viewpoint opinions expressed in The D eity Texan are those of the editor and the writer ol the article They are not necessarily the opinions of the University a d ­ ministration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Stu­ dent Publications Board of Operating Trustees Opin­ ions expressed m Second Opinion and staff or guest columns are those of the writer H o m e Im pr o v e m e n t UT shouldn't 'challenge' Blackland's homeless Nobody likes seeing the misery-scarred faces of the homeless people who line many Aus­ tin streets begging for money. They present decent people with a moral dilemma: Should we give them pocket change, which they may spend on drugs or alcohol, or simply walk past them, and tell ourselves that our little bit of money won't r help them improve their living conditions anyway? Neither option does much to help them. Before homeless people can have a hope of rising from their squalor — by becoming responsible, working citizens — they need places to live. And that's just what a group of Austin's homeless would like to find in the several UT-owned vacant houses in the East Austin Blackland neighborhood. This presents the University with the opportunity both to improve its tarnished reputation in Blackland and to help the Austin community. But the official UT goal seems to be to avoid conflict and make am­ biguous comments rather than to help the communi­ ty's homeless. Lewis Wright, UT assistant vice president for ad­ ministration, told the Austin American-Statesman Wednesday that "we do not want a conflict." He added, however, that "we don't believe the University can go beyond some period of time — and how long that is, I'm not prepared to say — and allow a group that is trespassing to continue that without challenge." But the University has already said that the city can use the land for its own purposes for at least 10 years; and the city has agreed to convert some of the houses into low-income housing. Where is the potential for conflict? And why should the University "challenge" homeless people looking for a place to live — especially when it isn't looking to use the land for 10 years anyway? The University has an opportunity most decent people would love to have: the opportunity to help, in a real way, homeless people. And it can do it with little or no money. It should. — Tom Philpott A m e n d in g H is W a y s Clements' lack of vision intensifies education crisis Like other demagogues, Bill Clements often stoops to frightening people with a political bugbear that has little to do with the issue at hand. In this case, he's trying to scare conservative Texans into thinking that (yikes!) state judicial activ­ ism is about to invade the schools of Texas, and turn them into a huge, centralized system. Recently, while addressing a meeting of the Texas Association of School Administrators, Gov. Clements reiterated his plans to seek a state constitutional amendment to ensure that the Legislature, not the state courts, resolves the school-finance issue. That issue came to the fore after a district judge, Harley Clark of Austin, ruled that the present system of state funding for schools violates the state consti­ tution because it discriminates against property-poor districts. Clark gave the state a deadline of Sept. 1,1989, for reform to take place. Otherwise, the judge would make the changes himself. "To ensure that Judge Clark's court, or any court for that matter, stays out of the Legislature's domain, I support a constitutional amendm ent reaffirming the responsibility of legislators and local school districts to provide for public education," Clements said in response. "In effect, the judge is assuming the Legislature's responsibilities. And that is just what Texans will not tolerate," he continued. Why would any district judge want to tangle with such a mess and invoke the wrath of Gov. Clements himself? The reason is simple. To make sure that the Legis­ lature and the governor do resolve the finance issue. The only reason such a ruling is necessary is that the Legislature hasn't done so yet. Even Clements doesn't try to hide this fact, but rather admits it openly: "Has the Legislature solved every problem? No. Has the Legislature removed all the inequities? No." While the governor continues to suggest that the Legislature has done a good job so far of improving education, it shouldn't quit now. The judge's deadline allows the Legislature to take up this issue during its next session and solve the problem itself. It also gives legislators an even stronger motivation to tackle the issue. In other words, the judge is simply doing his part to maintain the checks and balances that keep the branches of state government accountable between elections. If Clements' amendment were to succeed, it would violate the state's separation of powers by removing the courts' power to see that justice is done in the educational system. Texas' already overloaded constitution (nearly 300 amendments so far) doesn't need enlarging. Clements could solve the problem himself by putting a little of the energy he has expended in his plans for a constitutional amendm ent into actually fighting for the necessary legislation. The way for the governor and the Legislature to banish the specter of judicial activism is not to elimi­ nate court power, but simply to live up to their re­ sponsibilities. — Mark Grayson From bad to verse "We can't make it rain, but we can help to ease the pain." — President Reagan, speaking to a group of farmers about the drought. — Associated Press «1 f t . QP 4V - t o § Suddenly, the captain's brand new Ae< > dir defense system came al/VE- 4 Multi-party system no cure for numbing election year F or those disparaged voters who just can't make that ever-so-tough choice be­ tween Dukakis and Bush, here's G reg Weiner TEXAN COLUMNIST peace of mind: Eugene McCarthy is running for president. Again. That's right — for the fifth time, the American electorate can "go clean with Gene," who recently accepted the helm of the Consum­ er Party. For others, Lyndon LaRouche has got some awfully scary news. He's ready and able to combat "the brutal assault on justice through the KGB-directed police- state tactics of the Democratic Par­ ty elites." That veteran of the "jus­ tice" system is running as well. And for you lost sheep of the right, making his um pteenth ap­ pearance on the campaign trail — you guessed it — Harold Stassen is at it again. Through their third party candi­ dacies, these brave men are find­ ing audiences to hear their stale cry — America's two-party system must come to an end. Despite their claims that the dual-party system is the enemy of democracy, if these political mis­ fits are truly interested in popular sovereignty, their overweight platform baggage and wake up to reality: The multi-party program they advocate will only yank government further from the hands of the people. they'll drop Consider the voting public to­ day. Even in the best of years, can­ trouble getting a didates have mere half of the electorate to be­ come informed enough to vote responsibly. interested and If the public has to choose be­ tween a whole slew of contenders, fewer voters will participate, and those who do will be less informed about the candidates. Real issues will take back seat to flashy adver- tising and fiery stump speeches. And if a few out-of-whack, dis­ satisfied voters turn out en masse, their few million votes can heavily influence the election. Furthermore, if McCarthy and company are worried about the nation's liberal agenda, and Stas­ sen about the conservative, they ought to join forces with the major advocates of those philosophies. LaRouche, for his part, has enough trouble staying out of pris­ on; perhaps he should found a Criminal's Party. McCarthy's platform doesn't have a hope for survival. But Du­ kakis shares his fundamental liber­ al ideals. The Democratic pick will have a much easier job putting those ideals to practice if McCar­ thy's voters help him out in No­ vember. The same holds for conservative contenders like Libertarian Ron Paul, whose arch-conservative in­ terests would be best served by a George Bush presidency. Paul ex­ pects to pile up one or two million votes in the election — which would seriously erode Bush's al­ ready unstable support base. Paul and the rest of the third- party candidates are acting out a boring remake of history with their vote-splitting antics. Ameri­ ca's past is filled with accounts of vote-splitting third party incidents which the course of progress. radically changed With his infamous 1968 conten­ tion, Eugene McCarthy himself was responsible for sapping Dem­ ocrat Hubert Hum phrey's support base. As a result, Richard Nixon was coronated, and a new era in the American conservatism — very one McCarthy laments — was bom. This year's election is likely to be won by a hair's breadth, and a well-run third-party campaign could easily gamer enough sup­ port to determine the race's out­ come. A few third-party voters would choose the president for the rest of the country. The outlook of extremist voters always tends to be myopic: If my liberal can 't win, McCarthy voters seemed to say in '68, nobody's liberal candidate is going to win. candidate In McCarthy's ideal multi-party system, each candidate gets equal publicity, equal consideration and therefore a respectable piece of the electoral pie. Given those condi­ tions, no candidate is likely to receive a majority of votes. In that scenario, the Constitu­ tion prescribes that the election be thrown into the House of Repre­ sentatives, where the president is likely to be chosen by political finagling rather than the will of the people. Those multi-party systems only bring less voter participation, up­ grade the role of hack pols and give extremist voters almost sin­ gle-handed control over elections. Running on a third-party ticket and calling it the pinnacle of de­ mocracy is naive. If the current trend continues, American elec­ tions will soon become the chaotic spectacles seen in Third World ba­ nana republics today. Weiner is a government junior. Panama needs civ il rule The Pentagon, the Central Intelligence Agency and bureaucrats are the ones that, in reality, design U.S. foreign policy. These three "power factors" remain in office for a long time Jbecause they do not need to submit every four years to elections. For many years, they have supported "strong­ man" governments, believing that a military system creates a stable environment for U.S. interests. Today, when history has demonstrated that this policy is wrong, the American people must under­ stand this if they want to solve our "common" prob­ lems. The American perception of my country and our relationships must change to create a stable de­ mocracy in Panama, because we aren't a canal, we aren't a military base. We are people. In Panama, a country of 2 million people, three military dictators, with the U.S. decision-makers' supports, created an army of 25,000 (one soldier for every 80 citizens). It is ironic that this interest in cre­ ating "stability" has instead produced instability. General Manuel Antonio Noriega, the focus of at­ tention in the problems, is not the source of the cri­ sis. The "militarization" of Panama is the source. Under a military regime Panama has had eight presidents during the last nine years. But they al­ ways are puppet presidents because the fight for power in my country is the fight to occupy the com- - mand of the Panama Defense Forces. Just as Nork a replaced General Omar Torn jos Herrera as head of PDF, Noriega's officers will take his place. Furthermore, we may never know the price paid by Panamanians during the last 20 years as a result of his human rights abuses, and we may never know the costs to U.S. lives caused by his drug trafficking. But the evidence is dear that these crimes against Panama and the United States were committed With the knowledge of U.S. decision-makers. Since 1966, Noriega has worked for the CIA, who ignore I his criminal activities in exchange for information. The military fiasco and the drug trafficking en­ terprise teach us all that a civilian government is the route to stability, because history proves that the "strongman governments" are strong for corruption and for killing their own people. Jaime Abad Special Student Pentagon purchases cut to the heart of needed social spending n p he recent Defense Department scandal provides the perfect op- I J L portunity to say "I told you this would happen." After all, President Eisen­ hower warned of the political might of the military-industrial complex in his farewell address in 1961. So let's skip the I told you so and move to the more relevant question: Can we (in­ deed can ttte world) afford the massive arms buildup of the past decade? Even without die corruption in the pro­ curement process, the cost of the arms mce is too p a t . ft has forced us to choose between social spending and military in­ vestment. All Americans have donated a bit of their welfare to the armed forces. Ralph Tom linson TEXAN COLUMNIST for President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative. The "education" candidate, George Bush, was probably in the men's HHH room at the time. Congress saved some of the student aid. ■BMBB But the Joint Chiefs of Staff prefer the green of dollar bills to khaki and stand vj ready for the next budget war. And people with guns usually get what they want. and oveml cuts in student aid totaling | $2.3 bflton. Those budget dollars danced ll^ in y e e m to ^ D r iin se D e p a ili^ il spend ft. Defense spending means around Texas residents could register for 12 aedft- Program $300 billion per year. More than 75 arittfew the same price.I fill tlw B W fM M I hours at the ■ Stand's annu­ According to Ruth Once they get it, they know how to al report, titled World Military and Social Expenditures, 1987-1988, the fuel burned by the Pentagon in a single year could propel the nation's public transit systems for 22 years. But the dollars consumed by the Penta­ gon are only one-third erf the military waste. The world's military expenditures devoured $1.8 million a minute, or about $930 billion. For the price of one Trident submarine, we could establish a universal five-year children's immunization p ro p u n for six diseases and save 1 million future world citizens every year. One less nudear test could provide enough to train 40,iDO com­ munity health workers in the Third World. Money that finds its way to the Henlo­ gon not only evaporates as fast as whfekey in die liquor cabinet of a teen-ager's fa­ ther, ft seldom finds its way bade to the open market. Few defense doUars go for consiuwabhr products, the driving force in a capitalist economy. If we ever consume nuclear mis­ siles and bombs, more than our economy will suffer. Pentagon officials often speak of more bang for the buck. While they were off banging, somebody stole our bucks. Now that the FBI has shined their flashlight on the dark side of the Defense Department, it's time to pull out the public searchlight and evaluate the basis of our defense spending. Aircraft carriers float to the mind of most analysts first, but carriers are only the most visible cettuKte in the Navy's budget. The recently recommisaioned World War D battleships serve only as ex­ pensive flaghoideis. Battleships are not the only refics re- msining mam Wocid War m Manned bombers became obsolete the moment Hit­ ler launched the first V-l rocket. & atfMfie is a one-shot botribersffthout a pilot. Missiles eliminate the need to ex­ pose a pilot to enemy fire, and losing a missile is less expensive than losing a bomber and trained pilot. During the Viet­ nam war, the flight path of each bomber was programmed into an on-board com­ puter. The computer told the plane where to fly, where to drop the bombs and how to return home. The pilot was just along for the ride. Society cannot afford every toy in the Pentagon's wishbook. As we investigate the Pentagon's purchasing procedures, we need to evaluate what our doUars btfy. Recent breakthroughs in arms negotia­ tions with the Soviet Union indicate Gar* bechev's recognition of the cost of the aims race to Soviet society. And the Sovi­ ets have been better fortunetetters than the United SUtes at least once before re­ member Sputnik? — ' t i f H '— Tomlinson is a gottemment setrise•hHBE99S| T h e DailV T e x a n Friday, July 15,1908 Pag 5 U niversity Panel discusses teaching Award winners say success, self-esteem related By JOHN CLARK Daily Texan Staff A panel of seven top Texas teach­ ers shared their ideas about self and student motivation with UT stu­ dents and faculty members during a forum on teaching excellence Thurs­ day. Winners of the Texas Excellence Award for Outstanding High School Teachers, who constituted the panel, answered questions on a variety of topics including class­ room management, involvement in students' lives and effective teach­ ing methods A selection committee, made up of administrators and faculty mem­ bers from across the state, chose the winners horn a field of more than 300 candidates submitted by public high school principals. When one student asked why all of the winners are women, Norma Silva, a history teacher from Lyn­ don Baines Johnson High School, replied, "We are representatives of the school system, it's just a coinci­ dence that we are all female." All of the panelists agreed that the key to motivating students in­ volves facilitating the learning pro­ cess to build up their self-esteem. Anita Arnold, an English teacher from Thomas Jefferson High School in San Antonio, said she made read­ ing exciting to her senior English students by allowing them to write reports on their favorite rock bands. "They did primary research by at­ tending concerts and writing their own impressions," she said. Donna Mullens, a drama teacher from Andress High School in El Paso, stressed the necessity of a re­ laxed atmosphere in which students can "release their anxieties." The panelists also noted other keys to good teaching: A continual desire by teachers to learn them­ selves and the need to pay attention to all of the students' needs. Panel members differed over the degree to which teachers should be­ come involved with students, with the special education teachers pro­ moting a higher level of personal in­ volvement than the other teachers. Diann Stansberry, a special edu­ cation teacher from Justin F. Kim­ ball High School in Dallas, said she encouraged her students to call her at home. But Frances Hillyer, an English teacher from The Episcopal School in Dallas, stressed the im­ portance of developing a personal life apart from school. Denise Batto, moderator and president of the UT Student Educa­ tion Council and special education senior, said the comments of the teachers will benefit the UT educa­ tion students who attended. "I hope this will help other future educators gain insight into teaching from some of the most outstanding teachers from across Texas," she said. The panelists also included world history teacher Carole Buchanan from Lake Highlands High School in Richardson and Hilda Ramirez- Powell, a special education teacher from Deer Park High School near Houston. The College of Education and the UT Ex-Students' Association co­ sponsored the forum. UTSEDS sponsors space exhibit By ANDRES EGUIGUREN Daily Texan Staff July 16-24 is National Space Week, and the tho ug hts of UT Stu­ dents for the Exploration & Devel­ opm ent of Space have turned to the exploration of Jupiter and space sci­ ence fiction, Saturday, UTSEDS will sponsor an exhibit on Jupiter at Discovery Hall, a children's m useum , with presentations at 2 and 4 p.m. And in a separate event, the Mars Colonization Special Interest G roup of UTSEDS will hold a panel discus­ sion titled "Exploration of Space — From Fiction to Science" M onday at 7 p.m . at Burdine A uditorium . Patrick Holland, UTSEDS presi­ dent, said the Discovery Hall exhibit will include films, slides, a com put­ er sim ulation of a m oon landing, a solar sail exhibit to dem onstrate propulsion, an d a m odel of an ac­ tive volcano from one of the planet's moons. Terry Zim m erm an, UTSEDS vice president, said m em bers will be present to answ er questions. He said he hopes the exhibits will get children thinking about "how you would go about developing a space m ission." A model of a spaceship that may explore Jupiter, designed by m em ­ bers of UTSEDS, will be included in the exhibit. Holland said UTSEDS members have been working on this latter project since November. At the end of the m onth, they will enter their design in a com petition sponsored by Space Calendar, a West Coast pub­ lication. Zim merm an said members devel­ oped the design with many differ­ ent considerations in mind. A Jupi­ ter mission would be much longer than a moon mission — anyw here from 3-4 years to 9-10 years accord­ ing to Zim merm an. Members also considered Jupi­ ter's radiation and the logistics of a "split m ission," w here not all the com ponents leave Earth at the sam e time, w hen they developed the de­ sign. Holland said the design address­ es not only the engineering prob­ lems, but also the psychological and im plications of such a ecological long trip. The science fiction panel will also address space exploration, but in a different form — that of fiction be­ coming technology. Carol Stepp, UTSEDS treasurer and organizer of the panel discus­ sion, said panel m em bers will ad ­ dress how science fiction has come true in space exploration and travel — "how the fiction in science fiction has become science." Stepp said authors like Isaac Asi­ mov, Robert Heinlein and A rthur C. Clarke have envisioned fantastic things in their writings that have now become commonplace. Stepp said because of the subject m atter's richness, only five or six questions from a list of 17 will be addressed to the panel. Genetic engineering, artificial in­ telligence and the commercializa­ tion of space are am ong the subjects to be discussed, she said. Panel mem bers will include Har­ lan Smith, director of the McDonald Observatory and a UT professor of astronom y; Edward N ather, profes­ sor of astronom y; Steve Jackson, president of Steve Jackson Games; and John Strickland, chairm an of the Austin Space Frontier Society. You’re sill the one for me James McCaine, graduate student in Community and Regional Planning, finds what he called a cool spot,’ a Frank Ordoñez/Daily Texan Staff Hogg Auditorium window ledge, to read William Faulk- ner’s The Unvanquished. ”--'T The Association of C ontinuing Legal Education Ad­ m inistrators will appoint the director of the UT Office of Continuing Legal Education as president of the or­ ganization during the group's m eeting July 31-Aug. 3. Donna Passons, the association's appointee, said she will lead the association's board of directors. "The association is an organization which w orks to prom ote higher-quality continuing education," she said. "The association's m eetings are a forum for differ­ ent schools to discuss and exchange ideas." The UT School of Law m aintains one of the largest collegiate CLE program s in the United States. The association offers m ore than two dozen educa­ tional program s to practicing attorneys on a diversity of topics — such as tax, m ortgage lending, securities regu­ lation, and oil and gas. ■ ■ ■ A UT associate professor in the departm ents of Hom e Economics and Psychology received the 1988 James D. Moran Memorial Research Award. Harold G rotevant, a m em ber of the UT faculty since 1977, received the aw ard for research in family relations and child developm ent during the American Home Economics Association's annual m eeting this year in Baltimore. C urrently, G rotevant is researching the adoptive pro­ cess and how adoptive children and families are affect- ed. "W e just began our second year of the study and are heavily into the data collection phase — collecting the data and preparing it for analysis," Grotevant said. Men at its June 9 meeting. The regents appointed John Fainter, Texas secretary of state from 1983 to 1984, to the council. Fainter begins his four-year term on the advisory council Sept. 1. James Vick, chairm an of the nine-m em ber board, said UT President William C unningham consults the board on issues ranging from the price of athletic tick­ ets to the academic progress of UT athletes. "The board serves as an advisory body to the presi­ dent on policy regarding m en's athletics," he said. Fainter replaces H oward Richards, a former UT re­ gent, Vick said. this year. Richards' term as a m em ber of the council expires ■ ■ ■ Two national reports on journalism education have listed the UT D epartm ent of Journalism as one of the country's best. The Gannett Center Journal and the Dow Jones N ew s­ paper Fund both recognized the journalism departm ent for its facilities and faculty. The Dow Jones N ew spaper Fund listed the Universi­ ty as one of seven "Journalism Ivys" that was found to have the m ost competitive entrance requirem ents in the country. The Gannett Center Journal listed the University am ong 11 schools. "The journalism program at Texas is vast like the Lone Star state, and can offer its students almost any professional preparation they might w ant," the G an­ nett report states. The UT System Board of Regents appointed a new m em ber to the UT Intercollegiate Athletics Council for Compiled by Greg Perliski, Daily Texan Staff Asking for a jury trial can help keep you in the driver’s seat. Miller & Herring, Lawyers forTrafiic Tickets For free information, call 477-3221. Fixed $100 fee. 706 W. MLK Blvd., Suite 11 Visa/Mastercard accepted Suir bar licensed, no legal sp ec u la tio n I f you ’re looking for... An A lternative to A bortion ... The Edna Gladney Center can help Enrichment activities Private accredited hospital Professional counseling Career development opportunities Attractive modern apartments Secure landscaped campus Cost based on ability to pay Licensed adoption agency Call night or day for further information: 926-3304 in Fort Worth, 429-1461 in the Dallas metro area, and 1-800-772-2740, from else­ where in Texas; 1-800-433-2922, National-Toll Free. ALETAS Happy Hour 3 to 7 p.m. $1 .0 0 Margaritas & Free Botana! a a t f s j i Weekend Special: 2 Tacos or Enchiladas, a V2 Order of Fajitas, Rice and Beans only $4.95 pn-sun. 1907 Guadalupe • Open til 1:00 Fri. & Sat. • 479-0940 Remember Lunch Specials Starting at $2.99! A SUCH ft D€fil! 15 WORDS FOR 4 DAVS ^ ■ O N L Y ■ 00* CALL Applies to ads In m erchandise and transporta- Itio n categories, priced at $500 and under. Pri- I vate party ads o n lf lH H H H B B H H H 471-5244 D€TftllS T f i Y UNCLASSIFIED AD 1 v A L 11 w HOTLINE! , B U Y , SELL, RENT, TRADE... W A N T ADS...471 -5244 NEED TO DOCTOR YOUR MCAT SCORE? If your MCAT score needs a shot in the arm, come to the experts in test preparation—Stanley H. Kaplan. Our test-taking techniques and educational review will help you be in top condition test day. We’ll not only sharpen your scientific knowledge, but your read­ ing, problem-solving, and essay-writing skills too. Summer courses are registering now. So call the best in test prep—Kaplan. And get an MC I score that you deserve. 1KAPLAN STAHL f H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL GNTER LTD. DON’T COMPETE WITH A KAPLAN STUDENT-BE ONE Don't w ait until the Last Minute — classes starting now fo r— 9/17/88 MCAT CaN 472-8085 es Hm s 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1:30 Open 11:00 am Mon-Sat Open Sun 4 pm Happy Hour Mon-Sat 5-7 TICKET DISM ISSAL ONLY $15.00 NEAR CAMPUS N0TESTS REGISTER BY PHONE (Don't lorgrf to bnog Ihu coupon .n * you) Budget Driving School 454-5077 4314 Medicol Paricway t ; T # is R * € « * * a * U I / H I •M m * Friday, July 15,1988 Page 6 State & Local T h e Da ily T ex a n Bentsen pullout would give GOP seat Associated Press State law allows Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen to appear on the Texas ballot as a candidate for both vice president and re- election to the Senate, giving him a chance to protect his Senate seat from the Republicans at least for the time being. "I can't get off the ticket in Texas. That's the way the is written/' Bentsen said. “If I was to step off the tick­ et, that would forfeit it to the Republican challenger, and I can't do that." law Bentsen's bid for a fourth Senate term is being challenged by Republican Rep. Beau Boulter, a two-term conservative from Amarillo, who has been fighting an uphill battle in the race. Boulter is making as much as he can of Bentsen's dual candidacy, declaring, “It's wrong. It's unethical. And it's going to raise questions this cam- paign." throughout Michael Dukakis, the expected Demo- I can’t get off the ticket in Texas. That’s the way the law is written.’ — Sen. Uoyd Bentsen cratic presidential nom inee, picked Bentsen on Tuesday to be his running mate. That put Bentsen in a two-race cam­ paign that's allowed under a 1959 state law written for then-Sen. Lyndon John­ son, who wanted it so he could run for both re-election and the White House. His presidential bid failed, but he became John Kennedy's vice president and later became president after Kennedy was as­ sassinated. Texas Secretary of State Jack Rains, the state's chief election officer, says with­ drawal by Bentsen now would give the to Republican Boulter. Senate race Bentsen could remove his name from the Senate ballot before Sept. 6, but the Dem­ ocrats could not replace him. If Bentsen wins both elections, he would have to choose one post or the other. If he gave up his Senate seat, as expected, Republican Gov. Bill Clements would name an interim senator and then call a special election to pick someone to complete the six-year term. The special election, Rains said, would be a “Florida scramble." “Everyone just goes out and tees it up," he said. Interest is already high and rising. On Tuesday, Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby said he would "certainly seriously consider" running if such a special election takes place. Other possible candidates include Agri­ culture Commissioner Jim Hightower and U.S. Reps. John Bryant, D-Dallas, and Mike Andrews, D-Houston. Lawmakers try to reform Medicaid funding By JOHN COUNCIL Daily Texan Staff Eight members of the Texas Legislature announced Thursday they will combine efforts to fight inadequacies in state Medi­ caid funding for rural hospitals. The members of the new Rural Health Caucus, headed by Sen. Richard Ander­ son, D-Marshall, say that big city area hospitals receive a considerably larger amount of state reimbursement funds for the same services small-town hospitals peform. "Today, if you're treated for pneumo­ nia in one Houston hospital under the guidelines, that hospital can bill and col­ lect over $7,800," Anderson said. "But if you're treated for the same illness in At­ lanta, Texas, that hospital is limited to only $2,400." The caucus intends to raise the state's standard dollar amount for rural hospitals from its present base of $1,200 to $1,500, which is the amount that state funds back up federal Medicare funding. Raising the standard dollar amount for rural hospitals would require $6.9 million that is available from the Department of Human Services. The DHS came under fire from legisla­ tors, some of whom called the department "stingy," after a $141 million surplus was discovered in its budget. Other members of the rural caucus in­ clude Sen. Bob Glasgow, D-Stephenville; Sen. John Montford, D-Lubbock; Rep. Richard Williamson, D-Weatherford; Sen. Kent Caperton, D-Bryan; Sen. Ted Lyon, D-Rockwall; Rep. Jim Rudd, D-Brown- field; Rep. Mike McKinney, D-Centerville; and Rep. Stan Schlueter, D-Killeen. The caucus hopes to gain the support of other legislators in urban areas, Anderson said. Schlueter said that hospital care in his rural district should be a stay-at-home sit­ uation, so residents do not have to look elsewhere for acceptable facilities. He said many people from his district travel to cities for hospital care. "We can offset that indigent health care problem ... by improving medical care in the rural areas," Schlueter said. Anderson said 42 hospitals have closed in Texas, most of them in rural areas. Not only are the closings a severe prob­ lem for health care in those areas, but it also stagnates the potential for business development, he said. "Business is not going to locate unless they can at least access primary medical care in an area," Anderson said. Local economies improving, comptroller says By JOHN COUNCIL Daily Texan Staff City economies are taking a swing for the better, according to a report released this week by state Comptroller Bob Bul­ lock. The report shows that as of July, local tax payments increased to $61 million — a jump of 14.3 percent over last July's pay­ ment of $53 million. "The gaining strength in our state econ­ omy is being reflected on a local level, and local governments can continue to expect a steady increase in their share of sales tax collections," Bullock said. This is the second report from Bullock this year indicating promise for the Texas economy. Last month he issued a report predict­ ing that Texans might not see any new taxes in 1990 because of increasing sales tax revenues. Statewide, monthly payments to date for this tax period increased 10.8 percent — from $475 million in 1987 to $527 mil­ lion in 1988, Bullock said. Topping the scales was Houston, which handed in a check to the comptroller's off­ ice of over $10 million, up 17.5 percent over last year's payment of $8.5 million. Bullock has credited Texas' economic improvement to the stabilization of the oil industry, which is especially apparent in Houston, he said. Austin turned in a check to the comp­ troller's office totaling nearly $3 million, up 16.5 percent from last year's July pay­ ment of $2.3 million. BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471 -5244 NEW STUDENTS’ EDITION New Students’ Edition I New Students’ ! New Students' New >***dents'f Edit New Í Edit New á . New Stul Hits’ Edit The largest freshman class ever is scheduled to arrive this August at the UT campus. New students and transfer students will be anxious to find out all about the University and the Austin area. The Daily Texan’s New Students’ Edition is the best way to reach this market with the information about your business and what you have got to offer. Mailed to new students on August 10 and inserted in the August 30 edition of The Daily Texan, this section will contain information about the campus, the city of Austin, UT sports, and local entertainment and housing. The New Students' Edition is your best buy this fall. Over 48,000 students and 17,000 faculty and staff will be reading The Daily Texan. Put your advertising where the market is. N ew Students' Edition Advertising Deadline: July 25 Mailed to new students August 10 Distributed in the Texan August 30 Call your advertising representative today. THE DAILY TEXAN 471-1865 i A Carry OPEN LA TE TILL 8:00! Roses $8.95 dozen Casa Verde Florist 451-0691 faota| 41at S t. Baity «p acto TO JJIIH IIIIIIIIIH IM M IM IM IIIH IIIIIH IM IH IIIIM M IIIIIU IM IIIH li * FR EE INITIAL LE G A L CONSULTATION IMMIGRATION ASSISTANCE • Immgraton Am tSUPO t • Lagtazabon a Ratabva PaMona • labor O b fc ta o n * • 3rd 4 8lfi Prataranca Petftont a vtaa Procaaamg • T«mporary Wort Pannts a Intracompany Tranalataa» a Naturalization a DaponaBon Prooaadnga Gloria Lee Vera Attorney at Lew 443-4788 2512 S 51*35, S ir 100. AuMkv TX 7*704 LICENSED BY THE TEXAS SUPREME COURT SINCE ItT t NotcartaadbythaTaaaaBflotlaBatSpadtazatan jm m iiiH m iH H H w m H iiHi HM iiH M w n it w t ii m H H m T GET RID of that TICKET at DARBY’S dt$d$dic Al#£ dam 4 0 0 tf Im in f ( W O ettus ttetp (wtOBOétUtf* ** Wed. end Thurs. -> 6 pm-0:3O or Saturday -> 8 am-3:30 NOPre-ragMraaon—JuetShowlIp 400QMadical Pkwy. $15 with ad e i pupil per coupon 453-82600 without ad $22 e exp. 8X31/88 EYE I aco, swoum oa cautnNO? You may qualify for FREE MEDICAL CARE through a medication study by In corqunction wNh private M.D.’s For more informe i cell: 3 4 3 -9 7 2 0 M on.-flrlfc*M :30 Town Lake View Pool Private Balconies Utfities Paid Furnished Rooms Free Parking A Free Cable TV. $5.72 f t l v t t S I D Y G U A t V I f t » Tours M y 1001 S.IH-1 5 andWwfStfeDr. h In memory off... Frank Ordoñez/Daily Texan Staff A statue of an Army nurse currently on display on the ground floor af the Travis County Courthouse is attracting attention to the plight of female Vietnam veterans. Phyllis Peters, a former Army nurse who served in Vietnam, said she and other mem­ bers of the Vietnam Women's Memorial Project hope the statue will bring attention to women who served in the Vietnam conflict. "We've been the invisible veterans all along," she said. The 3-foot statue is a replica of a lifesize statue the group wants to erect near the Vietnam Veterans' Memorial in Washington, D.C. "We stood beside the men in Vietnam, now we want to stand beside them at the wall," Peters said. Group members also hope to have enough people sign a petition designed to show U.S. Rep. J.J. "Jake" Pickle, D-Austin, the group has grassroots support. Members want Pickle to co-sponsor a bill before the U.S. House of Representatives au­ thorizing placement of the statue by the me­ morial wall. Among those who have signed the peti­ tion are Austin Mayor Lee Cooke and Travis County Sheriff Doyne Bailey. The statue will be on display all day Friday. — M ike Erickson . „ - V * * 14k W edding B ands tliat are m ade to fit com fortably year, a f te r year, after year Comfortable Fit Wedding Bands are W ^ designed with you in mind. Heavier than most wedding bands and contoured to fit your finger, these solid gold bands >50 are available in various widths, plain I P (ishown) or millgrain styling and 14k or 18k white or yellow gold. Don't forget, we carry an incredible selection of loose diamonds at our everyday low price. ■a rwr mu.*; 4* ; • 3 8th & L am ar • 451-9292 O pen 10-6 M on-Sat, til 8 T h u rs T h e Da il y T e x a n Friday, July 15,1®8H Page 7 Sports 30 local hopefuls try for Olympics By CLARENCE E. HILL JR. Daily Texan Staff When the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials begin Friday in Indi­ anapolis, one group of athletes will have a uniquely burnt orange fla­ vor. Current and former Texas ath­ letes and several imports, who moved to Austin to train, are among a throng of 30 tracksters who will be journeying to Indy to vie for berths on the track and field team that will represent the United States in the upcoming Summer Olympic Games in Seoul, South Korea. And although all will surely not make the team, Texas men's and women's track coach John Millar said the strong contingent tells a lot about the UT track program. "The main emphasis of our pro­ gram here is to develop national- or international-caliber athletes," Mil­ lar said. "The group going to the tri­ als is just evidence of us working toward that end." Athletes with the best chances of making the men's squad are Eric Metcalf in the long jump, James Lott in the high jump, John Tillman in the triple jump, Rusty Hunter in the decathlon, Harry Green the 10,000-meter run and Doug Tollson in the 5,000. in Metcalf is ranked among the top five long jumpers in the United States and has jumped a season best of 27 feet, 8% inches. Carl Lewis and Larry Myricks are the only U.S. athletes who have jumped farther in 1988. Lott has been the most con­ sistent high jumper in the country this year and is expected to make the team. Lott has won seven of 10 meets and is ranked second among high jumpers in the U.S. according to Track and Field Magazine. Tillman, one of many athletes who didn't at­ tend Texas but moved from Tennes­ see to Austin to train, is one of the hottest triple jumpers in the country and is also ranked in the top 10. Tollson, a graduate assistant on Local Athletes a t the Trials ....................... 5 ,000 ........................................... 100.200 Tony Jones Jason Leach........................................................... 100 Sean Kelly.............................................................. 800 Doug ToNson..................................................5.0 Jeff Canada Harry G reen...................................................... 10,000 Craig Einspaar................................................... 10.000 Jon S helton..............................................High Jump James Lott................................................... High Jump Eric Metcalf Long Jump John Tillm an...........................................Triple Jump Triple Jump Johnny Washington Decathlon Rusty Hunter Cahette Guidry.......................... 100.200. Long Jump Dawn Sowell.................................................. 100,200 Barbara Flowers ................................................. 400 Leslie Hardifon........................................................400 Tara Arnold ................................................. 800 Karol Davidson........................................................800 Florence W alker.....................................................800 Benita Brown...........................................100 Hurdles Lavonna Martin....................................... 100 Hi Trina Leopold.....................................................3,000 Anne Schweitzer................................................. 5,000 Brenda Webb 5.000 ................................................10.000 Susan Shun Phyliss Bluntson High Jump Angie B radburn......................................... High Jump ........................................... Triple Jump Terri Turner Javelin Niki Nye . the Longhorn staff, is one of the m ost accom plished distance runners in the country. Only a few women athletes have legitimate shots at making the team, including NCAA Indoor and SWC champion Carlette Guidry in the sprints, Karol Davidson in the 800, Brenda Webb in the 10,000, and 1984 Olympic medalist Benita Brown and Lavonna Martin in the hurdles. But Millar refuses to let the small number take any luster off the ac­ complishments of the athletes. "There are a lot of athletes who didn't make the trials," Millar said. "This meet is as good as they come. Only the best in the U.S. will be there." Brown and Martin are both grad­ uates of Tennessee, who moved to Austin to train with former Tennes­ see coach and current Texas and Olympic team coach Terry Craw­ ford. Guidry, who faces very stiff com­ petition in the 100 and 200, has an outside chance at making one of the relay teams. Ballesteros tops wind to take lead in Open Associated Press LYTHAM, England — Despite taking two penalty shots, Seve Bal­ lesteros extracted a 67 from cold, wet, gusty winds and established a two-stroke lead Thursday in the 117th British Open Golf Champion­ ship. "A terrific round. That's a fantas­ tic score under these conditions," Jack Nicklaus said. "Incredible," added Nick Price. That terrific, incredible round left him two shots ahead of two unlikely challengers, American Brad Faxon, a non-winner in five years on the U.S. tour, and Australian Wayne Grady. A pair of Australians, Peter Sen­ ior and 43-year-old journeyman Noel Ratcliffe, and the South Afri­ can Price were tied with American Don Pooley at 70, 1 under par and three back of Ballesteros. South African David Frost, David Russell of Scotland and New Zea­ land's Bob Charles, who won the British Open here in 1963, were tied with Americans Jay Haas and Bob Tway at 71. Defending champion Nick Faldo of England also had a 71, but a dis­ appointing one. He was tied for the lead with five holes to play, then dropped four shots to par, inluding a double bogey on the 17th. Ballesteros also had late trouble, but he had enough of a cushion to save his lead. "I feel I played the first 13 holes the best that I can play," said Bal­ lesteros, twice the winner of this title and a two-time Masters cham­ pion, who played the front nine in 30 and could have done even better had he not missed a four-foot birdie putt on the eighth hole. "On the back, it is very tough. 1 made a few mistakes, but it's so tough you expect to make mis­ takes," said Ballesteros, who won his first major title on the same Roy­ al Lytham and St. Annes Golf Club course in 1979. At that time, Ballesteros made The Great Escape, coming out of al- most-constant trouble to score pars, even birdies, once making birdie from a parking lot, in a come-from- behind final round. This time, an older, more experi­ enced, more conservative Ballest­ eros took a more conventional route. Wind-blown drives got him deep into the bushes twice on the back nine, cm the 14th and 18th, and he took unplayable lies rather than try to hack it mit. "Even Daniel Boone couldn't play from there," Ballesteros said. Each drop led to a one-putt bo­ gey "Definitely, it was very difficult to shoot 4 under in these conditions, but the way I played I don't deserve any worse," he said. The conditions were terrible. It was cold. It was windy. It was wet. Still, a record, opening-day gal­ lery of 35,191 flocked to the humps and hollows and the damp dunes of this course on England's west coast which has been a burying ground of American hopes. A U.S. citizen has not won at Lyt- ham-St. Annes since Bobby Jones acquired the title in 1926. And the 47-man American field — playi: in the gale force winds, occasional driving rain and tem­ peratures low enough to send the players burrowing into sweaters, ski-caps and foul-weather gear — did little to indicate that the history of frustration would be changed. Faxon was the best American with his 69. Pooley, playing in his first British Open championship, birdied the last hole for a 70 while Tway, Bean and Haas each matched par 71. PGA champion Larry Nelson was at 2-under-par through 13 holes, then bogeyed four of the last five, a stretch called by Michael Bonallack, secretary of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews, "proba­ bly the most difficult finish we have." Nelson had a 73. So did Ben Crenshaw. Fuzzy Zoeller and Craig Stadler were one shot better at 72. Tom Watson shot 74 with 40 on the back. Ray Floyd took 76. Nicklaus had a 75 and was pleased. At one point, it appeared he would be unable to play. "At 6:30 this morning I was lying on the bathroom floor wondering if I'd make it," said Nicklaus, who re­ covered from severe stomach trou­ ble just in time to make his early- morning starting time. U.S. Open champion Curtis Strange struggled to a 79 that in­ cluded two double bogeys and a 43 on the back. "No excuses," he said. "I just didn't hit very many good shots and the wind magnifies your mistakes." Ballesteros, meanwhile, didn't need excuses in a complete effort in which he used 12 of his 14 dubs. He hit short irons to within two feet of the wind-whipped flags on the first two holes and birdied both. A 15-foot putt on the next made it a birdi -birdi -birdie start. He two-putted for birdie on the sixth and seventh, both down-wind par-5s, and turned in 30. Genrid Young in action: Doing what ha does bast, Young staais second base in an earty-season game against the Cincinnati Reds. Associated Press YOUNG GUN Astros9 base-stealing prodigy already established By CLARENCE E. HILL JR. Daily Texan Staff While broadcasting Saturday's game between the Houston Astros and the New York Mets, veteran NBC sportcaster Vin Scully, after look­ ing at the top of the Astro lineup, came to the conclusion that "this game could have been played in Williamsport instead of the Astro­ dome." That's Williamsport, Pa., as in the home of the Little League World Series. The thing that prompted Scully to make that remark was the leadoff hitter for the Astros, Gerald Young, whose youthful appearance would fit in perfect­ ly against Taiwan or Korea. But as Scully and many people are quickly finding out, with Young looks are deceiving. All it takes is one glimpse of him running down a fly or diving into second after a stolen base and you realize that he is right where he belongs. Young was called up from the Astros' Triple A affiliate in Tucson, Ariz., a year ago when center fielder Billy Hatcher was placed on the disabled list a week before the All-Star game. When Hatcher returned to the lineup later in the sea­ son he was moved to left field. Young had made it known he was in the bigs to stay. He hit only .204 in his first 13 games but bat­ ted .350 the rest of the way to finish with a .321 average — the highest among National League rookies with more than 150 at bats. The 23-year- old, who placed fifth in the Rookie of Year vot­ ing for the National League, did more in his ma­ jor league debut than either he or the Astros expected. "I had a good year," Young said. "It was like a dream come true. Coming up your first year and hitting over .300, that was just unbelievable." Young surprised everyone with his hitting, as he had never hit above .300 in four minor league seasons, but it was his fielding and base stealing that won him respect around the league and a slot in the Astros outfield. 1988 hasn't been as kind to the center fielder at the plate — he was batting only .260 when play resumed Thursday after the All-Star break — but Young is still thought of as the man who makes the Astro lineup go. "Young is a great guy to hit behind," said Houston second baseman and 1987 Astro MVP Bill Doran, who bats in the No. 2 slot. "He is not See Young, page 8 Astros continue hot streak with victory over Phillies Associated Press PHILADELPHIA — Rafael Ramirez lined a one-out single in the top of the ninth inning to score Billy Hatcher as the Houston Astros defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 7- 5 Thursday night and won their fourth straight game. Buddy Bell flied out to open the ninth against Kent Tekulve, 2-6, but Hatcher then doubled to center and Ramirez singled for his seventh game-winning hit of the season. Bill Doran walked with the bases loaded to drive in the final run. Juan Agosto, 7-0, worked two innings. Dave Smith allowed the Phillies to load the bases with one out in the bottom of the ninth but retired Chris James and Luis Aguayo to earn his 15th save. In the sixth, Mike Schmidt led off with his seventh hooter of the year and 537th career homer, moving him past Mickey Mantle and into seventh place on the all-time list. Reggie Jackson is sixth with 563. Houston jumped on Phillies start­ er Shane Rawley for five runs in the first inning as Rawley did not retire a batter. Gerald Young walked, Doran singled and Kevin Bass walked to load the bases, with Young scoring on a wild pitch. Glenn Davis then walked and Bell followed with his eighth career grand slam and first honter of the season. The Phillies scored in the bottom of the first when Juan Samuel hit his seventh honter of the season off Houston starter Mike Scott, making his first start since June 21 after being on the disabled list with a strained left hamstring. ■ Pirates 9, Giants 2 — In Pitts­ burgh, Brian Fisher pitched 5V6 shutout innings in relief of the in­ jured John Smiley and Darnell Coles and Andy Van Slyke drove in four runs each as the Pirates defeated San Francisco for their season-high sixth straight victory. Coles hit a three-run double in the fourth inning and Van Slyke had a pair of two-run triples as the Pirates ended San Francisco's five- game winning streak. Fisher, 5-6, pitching in relief for the first time since July 1,1987, won for the first time since May 21 by allowing four hits and no runs after replacing Smiley at the start of the second. Smiley, who has won six in a row, allowed two runs and two hits in the first before complaining of inflamaiatfoit in the joints of the fingers on his pitching hand. ■ Dodgers H Cvtbs 0-3 — In Chicago, tick Gibson had his first in the National Los Angeles p it — -— — ■— # f JIP the Cubs and giving the Dodgers a doubleheader sweep. In the first game, Tim Leary, pre­ viously 0-5 against the Cubs, pitched seven shutout innings and drove in the only run. Gibson, who signed with the Dodgers as a free agent last winter after nine seasons with the Detroit Tigers, had the ninth two-homer game of his career. He has 17 home runs this season. Brian Holton, 4-2, gained the vic­ tory in relief of Shawn Hillegas, al­ lowing two hits and one run in 2VS innings. Jay Howell pitched the fi­ nal two innings for his ninth save. Leary, 8-6, allowed seven hits, walked one and struck out six in the opener. Alejandro Pena pitched two hitless innings and struck out three, gaining his seventh save. ■ Expos 1, Reds 0 — In Montreal, Luis Rivera tripled home Rex Hudler in the 10th inning as the Ex­ pos defeated Cincinnati for their eighth straight victory. Cincinnati starter Danny Jackson, 10-5, threw a wild pitch on the third strike, allowing Hudler to get to first. Rivera hit the next pitch into right-center field. Jeff Parrett, 10-2, replaced Expos the starter Pascual Perez after eighth inning and retired all six batters he faced. Perez allowed three hits, walked one and struck out four. Jackson gave up six hits, walked none and struck out eight. ■ Mets 9, Braves 8 — In Atlanta, Kevin McReynolds drove in four runs with five hits and Darryl Strawberry scored the winning run on left fielder Ken Griffey's fielding error in the 11th inning as New York defeated the Braves. The win snapped a three-game losing streak for the Mets, who blew an 8-3 lead. It was the fourth loss in a row for Atlanta. McReynolds also had a three-run homer, two doubles and two singles in the game, and threw out two runners, one at home and one at third, from his left field position. ■ Padres 3, Cardinals 1 — In St. Louis, Andy Hawkins pitched a six- hitter for his first career victory at Busch Stadium as San Diego defeat­ ed St. Louis to send the Cardinals to their seventh straight loss. Hawkins, 9-7, walked two and struck out three fo;* his fourth com­ plete fame of the season. Jose DeLeon, 5-7, gave up only three hits in eight innings and struck out seven, but allowed a run to score on a wild pitch. Seve Balesteros overcame tou< i conditions to take a first-round lead. - r — — Seve Ballesteros Brad Faxon Wayne Grady Peter Senior Noel Ratclitte Nick Price Don Pooley Andy Bean Nick Faldo BobTway David Russell David Frost Jay Haas Bob Charles Howard Clark Gary Koch Mark Jamas Andrew Sharbome Paul Aznger taeoAoki Craig Stadter Scoff Varpiank Wayne Riley ••• - ■»* *- rnwp WMon Fuzzy Zoelsr Eduardo Romero Greg Bruckner Gary Player Gordon Brand . Jr ChipBsck David A Ruase* Andrew Magaa Larry Mize Joes MenaOtezabai Sandy Lyte 30- 37—67 34-35—69 33- 36—69 34- 3 6 - 7 0 33- 37— 70 34-3 6 - 7 0 34- 36— 70 33-38— 71 33- 3 8 -7 1 35-36— 71 34-37— 71 32-3 9 -7 1 3 5 3 6 — 71 34-37— 71 34- 37— 71 33-38—71 33-38—71 34-37— 71 36-3 6 - 7 2 3 5 3 6 -7 2 33-39—72 3537— 72 3 2-40-72 34 38 72 3537— 72 3 5 3 7 -7 2 3537—72 31-41—72 34 38—72 33-39-72 33-39-72 36-36-72 33-39- 72 3537—72 3 5 3 8 -7 3 34-39 73 Bernhard L anger Lanny Wadkins Gordon Brand Fred Couples Paul Broadhurst Tommy Armour III Larry Nelson . Ron Commans Roger Chapman Mark McNulty Ben Crenshaw Brian Marchbank Peter Mitchell Payne Stewart Corey Pavtn Derrick Cooper Tom Watson Chm-Sheng Hsteh a-Trevor Foster Sam Torrance Hubert Green Joe Higgins Paul Kent Ronan Rafferty Johan Rystrom Alberto Binaghi Robert Lea Chnsty O'Connor, Jr Mark O’Meara A C Nash Michael Smith Kan Brown Joee Rivero Lae Trevino CadMaaon Andrew Chandler ___ 3 5 3 7 -7 3 34-39-73 37-36—73 39-34—73 33-40-73 35-38-73 33-40-73 32-41—73 33-40—73 33-40-73 34-39-73 34-39-73 3 5 3 8 -7 3 33-40-73 38-36-74 3 5 3 9 -7 4 34-40-74 3 5 3 8 -7 4 34-40-74 3 5 3 9 -7 4 3 5 3 8 -7 4 3 5 3 9 -7 4 33-41—74 32-42-74 33-41—74 3 5 3 8 -7 4 37-38-75 37-38-75 3 5 4 0 -7 5 34-41-75 3 5 3 8 -7 5 37-38-75 33-42-75 37-38-75 37-38-75 3 5 3 8 -7 5 Page 8/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, July 15, 1988 Brewers down Rangers Associated Press ARLINGTON — Robin Yount went 3 for 4 and scored two runs as the Milwaukee Brewers boosted their record to 6-1 on their current road trip with a 6-2 victory over the Texas Rangers. Bill Wegman, 9-6, allowed five hits in six innings and improved to 5-1 in his last eight starts since com­ ing off the disabled list June 7. Rangers starter Charlie Hough, 8- 10, saw his lifetime record against the Brewers fall to 1-9. The Brewers grabbed a 3-0 lead in the second. Jim Adduci drove in one run with a groundout and Charlie O'Brien knocked in two more with a single. Milwaukee boosted its lead to 4-1 in the third when former El Paso Di­ ablo Billy Jo Robidoux's single drove in Yount. It was Robidoux's first RBI of the season, breaking a string of 70 consecutive at-bats without driv­ ing in a run. ■ Angels 2, Tigers 0 — In Ana­ heim, Kirk McCaskill pitched a four- hitter for his fifth straight victory as California beat Detroit, running the Angels' winning six games. streak to McCaskill, 7-5, walked three and struck out six for his second shutout of the season. He has won his last four starts, the first time he's had such a streak since June 11-25, 1986. California remained the hottest .. team in the major leagues, winning for the 18th time in 24 games by scratching out a pair of runs against Jack Morris, 7-10. ■ Yankees 7, White Sox 5 — In New York, Don Mattingly, Jack Clark and Gary Ward drove in two runs each, helping the Yankees to a victory over Chicago. Mattingly contributed an RBI sin­ gle and his seventh home run of the season to the Yankees' attack. Clark and Ward both had two-run dou­ bles that helped the Yankees over­ come three White Sox homers. John Candelaria, 10-5, lasted into the sixth inning, allowing homers by Steve Lyons, Gary Redus and Greg Walker. Cecilio G uante pitched the ninth for his 10th save. ■ Twins 8-1, Orioles 2-7 — In Bal­ timore, Gene Larkin's bases-loaded triple keyed a six-run fifth inning for Minnesota in the nightcap of a dou­ bleheader, leading the Twins to an 8-2 victory over the Orioles that broke a five-game losing streak. Fred Lynn and Eddie Murray each homered twice in the first game as Baltimore stretched its win­ ning streak to three games with a 7- 1 victory. The Twins reached starter Jay Tibbs, 4-6, John Habyan and Mark Thurmond for eight extra-base hits — seven doubles and Larkin's triple. ■ Mariners 3, Indians 1 — In Seattle, Mark Langston pitched a four-hitter for his fourth complete game of the season as the Mariners »at Cleveland. Langston, 7-8, got only his sec­ ond win in his last eight starts. The left-hander struck out eight without a walk. He retired 17 consecutive batters in one span before Julio Franco singled in the ninth. Cleveland starter Greg Swindell, 10-8, suffered his seventh straight loss. Swindell, a former Longhorn, struck out eight and walked one while pitching his sixth complete game. ■ Blue Jays 7, Athletics 1 — In Oakland, Toronto's Ernie Whitt had a tie-breaking single and Fred McGriff followed with a homer in the third inning as the Blue Jays beat the Athletics. Mike Flanagan, 9-6, pitched a six- hitter for his first complete game since late last season, when he was with Baltimore. The A's Bob Welch, 10-6, gave up nine hits and five runs in 7V.j innings in suffering his sec­ ond straight defeat. ■ Royals-Red Sox ppd., rain — In Boston, the game between the Red Sox and Kansas City was postponed because of rain and rescheduled as part of a twi-night doubleheader Friday. Donnie H» and Kenny WNams watch Jack Clark’s hit bounce. Associated Press Triple jumper (w)raps various talents together By ROB WALKER Daily Texan Staff Imagination. Confidence. Persis­ tence. these words To John Tillman, have special meaning. In many ways he has built his life around what each word means to him — seeing past the surface, believing in himself and never giving up. On July 15 and 16, Tillman will compete in the Olympic trials in In­ dianapolis, where he said his chanc­ es are “quite good" for qualifying in the triple jump. Wayne Pate, Tillman's longtime coach and friend, said that “John is probably one of the top five in the nation right now, and the team takes the top three, so we just have to hope he's not in that bottom two." Tillman has also developed inter­ ests and abilities outside of athlet­ ics. A talented rap artist, he hopes to have signed a recording contract by the end of the summer. Several record companies have already ex­ pressed an interest in him. In addi- ** SAVE 20 - 70% tion, Tillman is seeking his masters in business administration at the University. Although many try to pigeonhole him and label him either as an ath­ lete singing rap music or as a musi­ cian trying out for the Olympics, Tillman denies any emphasis on ei­ ther of his abilties. two distinct “I see them [music and athletics] as talents," he ex­ plained. "Just two different ways that I, John Tillman, express myself. I don't refer to myself as either an athlete or a musician. I'm just hap­ py to have talent in both, and I'm just working to develop both of them as much as I can. “But the Olympics will have passed next season and we'll see how the music business is going. And academics are really important to me, but I'm in there not just to get grades but to learn something. Right now, I guess, I'm more estab­ lished in athletics. If things go well in the music business, then maybe some people will say 'He just does track on the side.' " Tillman's athletic feats are partic­ ularly impressive in light of his small-town past. Bom and raised in Waxhaw, N.C., Tillman began triple jumping in his mother's gar­ den. In light of his athletic prowess and the notoriety it has already earned him, some will inevitably be skeptical of his motives for moving into the recording arena. Keir Worthy, Tillman's manager, said he sees no basis for this skepti­ cism. He points out that while some athletes, like Carl Lewis, go into en­ tertainment after their athletic feats have made them famous, “John doesn't have to do that. He's a very serious guy." Worthy's description applies both to the reaction that Tillman searches for and to the underlying forces that motivate him. He said that he writes many of his songs with a world-ori­ ented perspective, and feels that re­ ally can make a difference. “I feel like there's a lot of good music out there, a lot of good art­ ists. Especially in rap, there are art­ ists who have been around a while, and some who haven't been. To me, that music touches a lot of people who could really benefit from a good message. “I try to write emotions," he add­ ed. “I don't want to write just a sen­ tence, or a paragraph, I want to get some feeling down there." As for the forces that originally drove him, Tillman said he could not fully explain the sources of his ambitions. “That's hard to say. I've never been able to appreciate being called average in anything," he said. "If there's something that I want to do, I just devote myself to doing it. I like to rise above just the average. I always have wanted to do the best that I could do. I've never really put any limits on myself, or said, 'Well, that's for someone else.' “In my songs I sometimes say, you know, it's an attitude that car­ ries over in life. It's not just in one area. If you're a good athlete, you should learn to put that same dedi­ cation into whatever else you can do." And, he admits, "I like competi­ tion. But more than competing against the next man, I like to get the best out of John Tillman." Things have not always come easy for Tillman, however, who claimed he was “kind of at the bot­ tom of the barrel" when he started. He made attempts at baseball, bas­ ketball and football before discover­ ing his talent in the triple jump, an ability he says he is still developing. Far from seeing his diversity as something that might spread him k S7VD0/T SPECIAL SUPERCUTS-Style Makes the Difference too thin, lillman feels that each tal­ ent strengthens the other. “I think the fact that 1 do both of them gives me a unique view of each," he said. “In athletics, a lot of the motivational songs that I've written, I use them when I'm really down. You know, I'll just think of some of the lines that I've written and that kind of picks me up. And those times when I'm writing, a lot of the experiences that I've had in athletics, I'll draw on those to write. “Sometimes I'll write a song and I'll come back a week later or two, three weeks later, and I'll listen to it or I'll look at it. And it's incredible how much you learn about yourself from what you say in your songs sometimes. So, I wouldn't label myself either way. “I'd like to do it all," he added. "1 want to do it all. But I know that 1 can't put 100 percent effort into ev­ erything and expect to come out. I really don't believe in half-step- PinR/But Tillman was unable to elabo­ rate further when asked if he could describe himself. “Not in a sentence," he laughed. "There may be a lot of sentences that would apply, but 1 think that you would have to know me to un­ derstand. ... I don't know who would know me well enough to be able to say all that I stand for. I'm still learning about myself." Young Continued from page 7 doing as well as last year, but he put up unbelievable numbers. He is pa­ tient and he does get on base whether it's with a hit or a walk. “He has only been here a year, and he's done more than expected." That is what makes everything so incredible, and to Young the All- Star break represents sort of a one- year anniversary of his ascension to the Astros. "I still think of this as my rookie year," Young said. "I have a lot to leam and a lot of adjustments to make. I came up about this time last year so I am about a year old base­ ball-wise. "My hitting is not where it was last year, but I think things are start­ ing to come around." Before last weekend's series against the Mets, Young had only six hits in his last 33 at bats. In the final game of the series which marked the end to the first half of the season, he had four hits and two steals to show flashes of his 1987 brilliance. Young was so impressive in the game against the Mets that New York pitcher David Cone compared him to another legendary hitter and base stealer. "Young was hitting like Ty Cobb," Cone said. "He just had my number all day. It's bad enough when he's at the plate, but when he gets on base he's really dangerous." Speed kills, and in reference to the Astros' burner, that's an under­ statement. He was at his best against Cone on July 10 as he frus­ trated the rookie pitcher into mak­ ing two mistakes that led to runs in the first and third innings. ■ After leading off the game with a single, Young moved to second when Cone threw errantly to first on a pickoff attempt. Young then stole third and scored on single by Terry Puhl. ■ In the third inning Young dou­ bled and stole third, increasing his league-leading to 48. theft Cone, then preoccupied with the jit­ tery runner at third, committed a balk which enabled Young to score. total Cone was obviously awed by the o u tfie ld e r's perform ance, but Young maintained that he was only doing what he's paid to do. “What I did today was just part of being a base stealer," Young said. "Your job is to get the pitchers anx­ ious into making mistakes. Defense and stealing are things that I don't worry about." Young has a history of improving from year to year and even month to month throughout the course of his baseball career. He increased his batting average in each of his last four seasons in pro ball, hitting .212 in 1984, .255 in 1985, .280 in 1986 and .290 (at Tuc­ son) and .321 (with Houston) in 1987. If Young duplicates his flair for progression in 1988, Scully might not be far off when he mentions an Astros game in the same breath with the World Series. But this time we know he won't be talking about Williamsport. GYM EVERY WOMAN’S CONCERN C o n f i d e n t i a l . P r o f e s s i o n a l R e p r o d u c t i v e C a r e No Chrome No Contracts 4121 Guadalupe Next door to Austin Barbell Co Open Every Day 459-9174 • 1 i t ' t 1 ’ l > O l i . l l i t V I I ’ M l l i O • 1 *i ( > M c i n l ' i t ' n n . i i i t v. ( i a i i i s t I m o • M m >r 11< o i %c r v u < s • B 1 T 1 I ) < < M l I I I > I • 1 ’ «11 i l o s t REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES I • ' ' 1 5 8 8 2 7 4 mow | I! h I A/e*v Location BIG DOG SUNGLASSES DOBIE M AIL 2 n d F lo o r 2021 G u a d a lu p e 476-0171 co u po n ROFFLER SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN SHAMPOO * _ CUT § E BLOW DRY V S w rv lc e » p w l o r m e d b v i'jp«rv1v^d itudenN1 53.19 B u rn e t 4 5 8 2 6 2 0 FRIDAY I I SATURDAY I I FREE BEER 9 to 12 PM I B I SUNDAY NEW MANAGEMENT/STAFF W E S T EN D 727 W.23RD \R \ o l . > U.K. F O R \\)\ [ O M , H O R N S ' \ I; > 11111 M M ) !K il ■ '■ , ! i t !' O o I V \ \] ; I' M Let SUPERCUTS treat you to a spea I $6 SUPERCUT1-. That's $2 off our regularly $8-priced SUPERCUT™. And, asa bonus,you can get a shampoo for only $1. Good only at these locations: Park Green Center at Riverside and Pleasant Valley 3025 Guodalup at 30lh & Guadalupe Valid through July 22 Not good wih any cA m oB»r DOMINO'S PIZZA DELIVERS >, THE BEST PIZZA DEALS! | $5.51 Any medium (12") pizza with your favorite topping only $5.51 plus tax. Please mention coupon when ordering. One coupon per order. Expires 7/31/88 476-7181 447-6681 l 404 W. 26tf\St. | 474-7676 458-9101 ¡ 4115 Guadalupe - 913 N. Lamar 1931E. Oltort DT Ad 638 Ic a n c u n I for $309** por porteo s M ate, Howto* Dopamm, Teca* Cm Hotel Á Mr REED TRAVEL torm ertylM V » !■ * < * . c « e « R t o * a m o < g i d * M i d c ^ ^ changed ournamo. VoulRndlw «ame taco* In Ríe ramo ptaoo, oMwtng the bad hovel package* In town. 468-18 * T h e Da il y T ex a n A rts & E ntertainm ent Laughter rocks this ‘Arthur,’ too Friday, July 15 ,198 8 P a g e 9 By SEAN WALSH Daily Texan Staff The jokes keep pace with the rap­ id flow of alcohol and money in Ar­ thur 2 On the Rocks, making the sequel at least as impressive as the original, Arthur. For On the Rocks, the original cast remains intact, most notably Dud­ ley Moore as Arthur Bach and Liza Minnelli as Linda Morolla Bach'. Even Sir John Gielgud, winner of the 1981 best supporting actor Oscar for his role as Hobson, Arthur's for­ mer butler, makes a ghostly cameo appearance. The only newcomer in On the Rocks is Arthur's butler, Fairchild, who is played by Paul Benedict (bet­ ter known as "Bentley" on the long- running sitcom The Jeffersons). Un­ like the acerbic Hobson, who died at the end of Arthur, Fairchild has no sense of humor. He takes every­ thing Arthur says with such a stone face, one wonders what he's doing off Mount Rushmore. Set four years later, the sequel has a simple plot: If Arthur refuses to leave Linda and marry his ex-fian- cee, he will lose $750 million be­ c a u se of le g a l maneuvering by Susan's power- hungry and revenge-minded father, Bert Johnson (played again by Ste­ phen Elliott). fa n c y so m e Moore reprises Arthur's role with the same hysterical insobriety found in the original movie, establishing him as the best comedic actor ever to shake rocks in scotch. When Arthur (glass in hand) con­ fronts Susan's father, who is shoot­ ing clay pigeons over the Hudson off his multimillion-dollar yacht, Bert notes sarcastically that Arthur still hasn't given up drinking. And Arthur in Bert's straight and sterile face, "I would if they could find a quicker way to get the stuff in m e." laughingly responds Lovable DucRey Moore raises his glass to toast the rescue of his sag ing career by Arthur 2 On the Rocks. Arthur's departure from his $750 million forces him into hanging out at cheap bars and working for hour­ ly wages at a hardware store. Still, he refuses to leave Linda and marry Susan in order to get his money back, especially after meeting Susan at her workplace and recalling how painfully boring she is. Susan professes her undying love and physical attraction to an antago­ nized Arthur and queries, "W e were happy, weren't w e?" To which Arthur retorts, "Y es, and then we m et." In light of Moore's flawless role reprisal, Liza Minelli, sporting a new hairdo and elegant clothes, looks less energetic, as if four years of being married has drained the spunk she possessed in Arthur. Al­ though in a backseat role, even Ralph (again, Barney Martin), Lin­ da's beer-guzzling father, out-acts Minelli. Thankfully, there's a new twist to the thematic premise of On the Rocks, and it's not a lime wedge. Ar­ thur becomes a teetotaler who doesn't sneak a drink, and is still funny. Huge limos, elegant hallways and a grandiose bathroom complete with model train and basketball court help retain the overly elabo­ rate look established in the original movie. And, like Arthur, the sequel has its share of well-spaced sen­ tim entality, but doesn't detract from the comedy. the sunshine The sheer amount of time be­ tween the two films (seven years) allows for the humor to seem just as innovative. The audience is ready for another drink of M oore's abili­ ties. , . . In short, On the Rocks . well, to borrow Dudley Moore's infamous understatement at the end of Arthur when he contemplates life on a yacht: "It doesn't suck." A rthur 2 On the Rocks, at Capital Plaza, 1-35 at Cameron Road; Aro- bor 4, 10000 Research Blvd.; West- gate 8, South Lamar Boulevard at Ben White Boulevard. THE V M R 9 I T Y T H £ 4 T R £ 2402 GUADALUPE 474-4351 A crazy Greek wrth a gun and a romantic spy on the nm. For Katherine, the summer's justbegun... T o n i q h t The True Blue ite írie v e r» i o h n D G ' o h o m J O G » » * * * ' A With TK* Weyowtm & The Quitter* Bod M uttra Goose ★ * S o m c w h ( w i w r n n u p to w n a n d d o w n to w n . h « í» t ¡ n a n d hull, d u s k a n d d a w n lies Texas Union 24Tfr & G u a d a lu p e Texas Union 24th & Guadalupe Tonight & Saturday The Lounge Lizards It \buvc Seen One Ghost.. \ou Haven’t Seen Them All. BEETLE- 1U1CE w sm44-%40-(5:23)-7:35-9:4S-12:10 i i m r i m m i r i i h i i i i i i h i i i i i i i i i i h i i i i i i h i i i i i i i i ; EH '^¿47 NORTHCROSS MALL ANDERSON & BURNET D O L B Y S T E R E O I N T O P F O U R A U D I T O R I U M S COMING TO AMERICA IB OMiwotammi lM4-2J4-<4JS)-7 S F IQ A IM B A ÍIM M T 1 * 3 WILLOW m ttlS-<*JQ -7«M i«-12*S THE DEAD POOL ® l:!0-3:30-(5:45)-4:05-10:15-12:15 BAMBI m 12:24-2:20-(4:45)-7:15-9:15-11:25 ««NT BIG gglN O RA SM S l:00-3:20-(5:J5)-7-JO-7-J5-lJ.-00 BUU DURHAM ® 12:30-2:50-(5:23)-7:55-10:10-12:30 BIG BUSINESS m 12:24-2:34-(4J5)-7:15-»:2S-11:35 GREAT OUTDOORS m 12 JO-3:10-(SH»)-7:2S-9:3S-11 AS REDHEAT ® 12r40-3:00-(S:2S)-7:3M M5-1 1JS RAMBOIII ® Tilt Titt TiTt friM SCHOOL DAZE ® 2:15-5:30-7:45-10*3 COLORS is 2:34-S:15-7M4-10:10 STAND A DELIVER Km 2>45-5:J0-7i35-10:15 S O U T H W O O D 2 1433W.BCMWMTC MOONSTRUCK K ! 3*0-3:13-7i44-0»43 IIJ 0 IATTBMRS MOT MCU4 BB PHANTASM II OS lM44cl3-(5.3R) R O ltilU fc H m m » m IB M M l (M R) rocky homor ® ywpnwww________ í n ñ n n T T T iT T iT T H T T T i n r ' ' i i i T r T T T i i i i , i i i |T ' r i i , i ; i i i : ' n ' T i m n f 7 C H IN IS C m \ 'ir'!11!' TIT ttt EIGHTH HAPPINESS iistiSSc K M « i' Ú 4 i * * 4 4 U - - - » l l i . - Friday, July 15,1988 Page 10 C lassified A dvertising T h e Da il y T e x a n VISA/MasterCard Accepted For Word Ads, call 471 -5244/For Display ads, call 471 -8900/8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitis Avenue VISA/MasterCard Accepted TRANSPORTATION REAL ESTATE SALES RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 70— Motorcycles 150 — Acreage-Lots 350 — Rental Services 360— Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 1 Ac. FREE Colo. Mtns. Free Service ftpt. Hunt ing w ith C on d o/ P oo l n e a r UT. C am pe r O K o n lot 150 days/yr. at Forest Lakes w ith fishing lake, ski area, d u b house n e a r D u rango. M a k e offer. C has. 1 2 3 9 M a in Av., D u ran go , C O 81301 o r call m e 3 0 3 -2 4 7 -8 5 1 5 8-6 MERCHANDISE 200 — Furniture- Household BUY O R SELL good used furniture. L & E Furniture. O pen 10om-6pm. Closed M ondays. 11423 North Lamar, (in the co- op). 8 36 -6 6 4 7. 8 -4 N _________________ N E W C O W H ID E rug. $ 4 5 0 value v il sell for $150. G orgeous condition and ties chic. 4 76 -8 5 5 0. 7-14_________________ M APLE FRAM E twin bed, Feather mat­ tress, $75. Entertainment center, $100. Pioneer C D player, $150. 8 34-9423. 7- 14__________________________________ LIV IN G R O O M FURNITUREI Coffee table, octagonal table, end tobies. AN $140 O B O Coll M oan 3 45-8990. 7-15 FULL SIZE sleeper sofa, brow n tweed: $75. 2-pi#ce brow n and loveseat, beige: $75. 476-7481, Grant. 7-18 M O V IN G , M U ST se l al sofo. $180 Coll 4 5 4 -3 0 5 2 oftar 5:30pm. 7-18 210 — Stereo-TV 8-3B PIO N EER SX -20 2 receiver: $ 7 5 Hitachi D-E1 cassette deck: $75. 2 speaker» $30/poir. 476-7481, Grant. 7-18 F r e e G i f t s C a l l C r y s t a l 4 7 7 - f i P T S 715 W. 6th FREE [Leasing Service] # Í Condcw e Apartment* House* • Duplexes It’» * jungle out there. Leave the hunting to us! 482-8651 í 503 W. 30th habitat hantews, M o lo f M M r t n w n t H u n S n g ? R k 'u a fb M I d l e f i t a i l f t r i > pit ma m a . e l | TNC AHAHTMKNT DOCTOR I L - 4 9 5 - 9 0 M . » 360 — Fum. Apts. One Block From Campus J i ? ! s i b ; '4 i s i b ; S P E C IA L $250 • On Shuttle • Fully Furnished • Security • Pool R i o N u e c e s 26th @ Mueces (600 W. 26th) 4 7 4 -0 9 7 1 4 5 4 - 4 6 2 1 « o m r M t n _______________ • Otorgad by Iba word. 15 word mini­ mum. Sat in 5 pi type only. Rotar ora for conMCufta doy». Eocti word 1 lim a .................$ 3 2 Eocbword 3 lim a » ............ .87 Eoch word 5 lim a » ..............$1.30 .............. $2.20 Eocbword 10 tima» Eadi word 15 lima» .............. $2.55 Eoch word 20 U rna».............. $2.80 per inirtiofi $1.00 chorga to dtonga copy, fait two word» may bo a l capital letter» 25< for each addÍNonol word in capital lattara. Modarcord and Vaa occaptad. cuasmto U H W M T B _________________ *Otaryod by It* lina. Ona column inch minimum. A voM da in 5 to 14 pt. typa. 1 col. x 1 inch 1 Tana.............. $5.00 W O W A N O U N I A O D IA O U N IS C N IO U U M o n d a y ...................Friday 11am T u o sd a y ............... M o n d a y 11am W ednesday..............Tuejday 11am T hu rsd ay........... W adnaiday 11am F r id a y ..................Thunday 11am T O P L A C I A W O O D O ft U N I A O C A L L : 471-5244_______ C L A S M F IIO D U P L A V A O B A T IS ____________ * Otorgad by Iho column inch. Ona col­ umn inch minimum. A voriaty of typa foca» and liza» and bordan ovodobta Summar Rola» Juno 1-Augud 31 1 lo 49 column incha» Par Month ............. $5.00 Par Column Inch O rar 50 col. in. par month, col for rola». C L A S M N ID D IS P L A Y D IA O U N I S C H ID U ll M ond a y............ W adnaiday, 4 p.m T uaido y................ Thundoy, 4 p.m. W adnaadoy...............Friday, 4 pm Thunday.................Monday, 4 pm F riday................... Tuai doy, 4 pm T O P L A C I A C L A S M N ID D IS P L A Y A D , C A LL: 471-8900________ In tha ovant of atron moda in on od- yartbamant, nohca mud ba n by 11 a m tha tint doy, at tha pubtahan ora raipo bh for only O N E « corroe! imarlion. A l doirra for odjudmants should ba moda not latar Ihon 30 doy» oftar publication. Pro-paid U b racary* erad» dip if raquadad at lima of cancel­ lation, ond if amount axcaod» $2.00. Sip mud bo pnaiantad for o roordar within 90 day» to ba void. Credit dip» ora non-tromfambla. CLASSIFICATIONS TRANSPORTATION 10— Miac. Autos 20 — Sports-Foraign Autos 30— Trucks-Vans 4 0 — Vehicles to T rod* 50 — Sdrvfcd-ftdpolr M — Parts-Accdssortds 70 — M oto yd ds •0 — B k yd d s 90 — V a h id * Ldo stetg 100— V oM d o s W ontdd REAL ESTATE SALES 110— Sarvkas 120— H ousas 130— fow n Ml M 140— MoDWd H om as Lots 150— Acraaga Lots 160— Duptaxas- 170— W ontad 100— Loons MERCHANDISE 190— AppNoncas 200— Fum ttura-Hou sah o ld 210— Staroo-TV 220— Com puters- 230— Photo-Comaros 240— Boots 250— M u sk o l Instrumonts 260— H obM as 270— M ochlnaty- 200— Sportlng-Com plng 290— Fum Huro-AppNanca Iquipm ant » * —« R V lllU I 300— O o roga ftuouw ogs 310 — Troda 320— W anted to Buy MERCHANDISE 3 3 0 -P a ts 340— Misc. RENTAL 350— Ranted Sarvkas 360— Turn. Apts. 370— Unf. Apts. 300— Turn, duplexes 390— Unf. Duplexes 400— Condos-Tow nhousas 410— Fum. H ousas 420-U n * . H ousas 425 — Room s 430— Room -Board 435— C o-ops 450— M obBe Hornee Lots 460— Business Rentals 470— Resorts 400— Storage Space 490— W anted to Rent-Lease 500— M k c ANNOUNCEM ENTS 510— Im artalnw isnt-Tlckats 520 — Parse a< 530— Travai- TronsportaHon 540- L o s t A Pound 550— Lkonsod ChMd Caro - 9 8 5 570— M usk M usician s EDUCATIONAL 500— M usical In str uction 590— Tutoring 600— In struction W ontod 610— M lsc Instruction SERVICES 620— Logoi S arvk as 630— Com putar Son deas 650— M ovfng-H ou Wng 670— Painting SERVICES 600— Office 690— Rental Iq u ipm ant 700— Fum ltura R apo k 710— AppUonca Repair 720— Stereo-TV Repair 730— H ome Repair 740— B k y d e Repair 7 5 0 - Typing 760— Misc. Sa rvkas EMPLOYMENT 770 — Im p loyiiien t A gen d as 700— Em ploym ent Sarvkas 790— Port time M M — G eneral Help W anted 010— O ffice-O erkal 620— Accounting- Bookkeeping 030— Adm kdsttaH va- 050— Retail Technical 070— M e dkal 000— Professional 090— C lubs-Rastaurants 900— Dom estlc-H o u sohold 910— Positions W anted 920— W ork W anted BU SINESS 930— Business O pportunities 940— O pportunities W anted T5P Budding, Room 3.200 2 5 0 0 W hite M onday through Friday 8om -4:30pm TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. Autos 10 — Misc. Autos 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 1985 N IS S A N SEN T RA Deluxe, red, 4- door, loaded. M ust see. $4800. 448- 2661. 8-12__________________________ 1985 SC IR O C C O . Super nice, looded Kamei XL sport pockoge, $ 8 0 0 0 value, asking only $ 5700. 8 3 5 -9 0 9 8.8-12 1973 SUPERBEATLE, dependable trans­ portation, spirited performance. $995. 9 26 -8 9 7 7.8-12 ______________________ 8 6 SUBARU XT A M /FM cassette, looded, beautiful, $ 8,50 0 negotiable. CaN Lou, 3 2 8 -7 7 4 4 or 3 8 5 -3 6 0 8. 8-12_________ 1966 V W convertible, fully restored. Red in color, m oa wheels, excelent condi- tion. 1 -2 9 5 -2 0 7 5 . M onchoco oreo 8-17 1977 280Z, runs good. Must socnhce. Best offer Com e and see. 445-6176 8- __ 12 1985 SU BA R U G L A l power, A M /FM cassette, low mleoge, excelent condi­ tion. C o l Goyte, 442-3621. 7 20 7-21C 1972 M G M idget. G reat condition, new brakes, recent point job, goof tires, wool seat covers. Alpine stereo optional. $2000. C o l 4 78 -5 0 6 3.8-12 ___________ 1981 H O N D A Accord with broken head gasket. M ust sell. M ake offer, 454-9139. 1984 N IS S A N Sentro. 2-door, 5-speed, stereo, great condition. $2850. 8 34 - 9 4 4 9 .7 -2 1___________________________ 1982 D A T SU N 310G X 5-speed, AC, A M / FM cassette, pow er steering, g >d con­ dition. After 6pm, 4 4 7- 7 9 C A P R I. Cleon car, V-6, AM /FM , A C 4-speed. $1595. Robin, 3 43-0557. 8- 12__________________________________ M U ST SELL 1974 V W Dasher. Runs good. G reat stereo. $ 2 5 0 0 8 0 . Mr. Canon, 4 7 7 -6 6 2 9 ,4 7 8 -2 6 6 7 .7 -2 2 7 7 C O NVERTIBLE FIAT Spider. Great shape. C o l now, 444-1469. Alberto. 8- 5__________________ 1 98 4 M IT S U B IS H I T R E D IA turbo. M aroon, 4 door, loaded. $ 5000. 3 46 - 7 6 4 7 .7 -2 9__________________________ 84 RX-7 M A Z D A D IS , sports cor. W orth $7,400 wont 6,500. Sunroof/ m oon- roof. 4 4 2 -9 3 5 2. M ust sel. 8-2_________ 1972 B M W 2002. A C sunroof with de­ flector, reor defroster, afloys, radiáis. Quick, derm, dependable, $2,500. Scott, 8 3 7 -2 6 8 8 .8 -3 _______________________ 1984 V W SC IR O C C O A C A M /FM cas­ sette, 2 w ay sunroof, leather interior. Great condition. $ 4 5 0 0 Scott 4 82 -0 2 5 2. 7-13________________________________ '8 5 T R A N S A M . Very deon, T-tops, load­ ed. $8,500. Leave m iwog» at 2 63 - 2908.7-1 5___________________________ 1972 Porsche 914. Beautiful and re la b k $3800. C o l Jeff, 4 79-8616.7-15 75 TO YO TA C O R O LLA . 4-speed, great, not a looker. $ 7 5 0 O BO . 499 -8 5 5 6,38 6 -1 70 0 .7 -1 5 runs Jim 1976 V O LV O 2 4 4 0 1 excelent condlion original owner. I speed, A C AM /FM . $2,450/ negotiable. 345-1029 evenings ________ ^ v o l k s w a g e n j e t t a g l 5- sunroof, AM /FM , cosn tts, a l $11,500. Su»on. 4 42 -9 6 0 3.7-15 ^ M 1988 1974 M E R C ED ES 280. 4 door, automat­ ic, air conditioned. Looks and runs great $40 0 0. 2 8 2 -5 4 7 0 evenings. Days, 4 43 - 2001 oefc for Bernia. 8-12______________ 1968 K A R M A N Ghra Coupe. M echani- excele n t. a ly sound. Body/interior $ 22 0 0 .3 2 0 -8 0 6 1 .8 -1 2 _______________ 7 3 M A Z D A RX2 4-speed, runs great, $ 700. Joe 4 4 4 -4 4 7 2 , evenings. 7-15 ALPH AA U T0 T IN T IN G 2 5 O FF when you mention ad. 3M Brand Scratch Resistent Film, Guaranteed • 1 2 1 H l l l c r o f t ( # M 1 ) H o u s t o n (713) 270-8468 •81 BUKK Century, AT, PS/PB, AM /FM , tires, 6 0,00 0 miles, $ 2350. Coll 3 2 3 -2 7 9 7.8-12 ___________ lette, new 1975 FO RD T O R IN O . G o od student cor. H g h mileoge. Run» good. $525. 4 47 - . Leave M e u o ge 8-12 TO<Ét dÍsm1ssÁl DEFENSIVE DRIVING $15 1st Ticket 472-6666 House of Tutors (located in West Campus) ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ AUTOMOBILES We Buy Your Car O r Truck Running O r Not. 2 5 1 - 2 8 8 1 A fter 5 :0 0 p.m.: 2 4 4 - 1 4 7 7 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 1981 O L D S O M E G A , 5 7,00 0 miles, ex o d kn t condition. $2,100. 4 5 2 -7 5 3 6. 8- 12__________________________________ 1976 O L D S DELTA 88. AT, AC, PS/PB, A M /FM , negotiable runs great. $650. 4 69-9408; 4-12. 8-3__________________ 6 7 M U ST A N G 6-cylinder, automatic, new point, new engine, restored to ong- inoL $ 3500, negohoble. 4 77 -9 4 2 0 .7 -1 4 84 PO N T IA C Sunbird Gold. Standard. M ileoge 23,000, AC. CaN 4 48 -4 0 8 5. $3800.7-15_________________________ *86 REG AL Limited. Loaded. Excellent condffon. Unleniled mileoge. W arranty M e . 17,000 mile». M ust sed. 250- 8 2 0 5 .8 1 2 ___________________________ L IN C O L N T O W N C A R S: leather interior, m eonroof, series, 1984- $7500; 1983-$6750. After 6 p.m. 3 43 - 0 45 4 .8 -1 2 signature 1957 CH EVY 2-door, runs great, looks sharp. $ 5,00 0 negotiable. 8 92 -3 5 7 3. 8-12_________________________________ 1976 C A M A R O V8. N ew tires, A C AM/ F M stereo, great condition. Best offer. $1500, coll Am y. 4 79 -6 9 5 8 .8 -1 2 1982 CHEVROLET C ITA TIO N . N ew bat­ tery, runs wed, body dam oge. G ood first cor. $ 3 5 0 .4 5 8 -9 7 2 5 7-14_____________ C LA SSIC 1965 M ustang coupe. Collec­ tor'» car, 2 8 9 automatic, green ond running condition. Redoble. $3,000. 458 -9 7 2 5.7-15 ______________________ FOR SALE. V W Superbeette, 1974. O ne r, good C o l 441441-0234. 8-12 conation. $1750 o r best offer. 1985 CHEVROLET Cavalier, 4-door, block, AC, Sony A M /FM cosselte, 6 8 K, excellent condition. $34 0 0. 4 5 4 -8 5 3 5. 8-12________________________________ 1979 CU TLASS SUPREM E. Excellent run­ ning condbion. Must sel. Best offer over $1,700. Cad Lysa, 328-5131 days. 8-12 1978 D A T SU N F-10 Runs good. $500. C o l Frank at 454 -9 1 8 0 between 7-9:30 pm 8-12 1983 Datsun 2 0 0 SX Hatchback. Great oolege car. SG L pockoge, loaded. A l­ pine. Negotiable. M ust sed. 2 80 -3 1 5 4.8- 7 3 CADILLAC, looded, leather interior, new tires, battery, alternator. $959. 459-1979, leave m essage to M ich a e l 7- 2 0 __________________________________ M U ST SELL! 8 5 M ustang convertible new tire», dean, $ 8 9 0 0 o r offer. 331-4607 8-12________________________________ ALL O R IG IN A L 1962 Chevy pickup. New D6Q, CEFDij inffifiO»! wB twO 6nOe. corb. $ 12 0 0.4 76 -2 4 49 .7 -2 1 20— Sports-Foreign Autos 79 SC IR O C C O 4-speed, air, low mles, Pioneer system, m oonroof, fo g Kgfos. 4 7 8 -4 0 3 4 offer 6.8-12________________ '6 7 BUG. Great condition, high perform ­ ance engine, $ 9 0 0 o r best offer. 4 4 3 - 7895.8-12___________________________ FO R SALE; 1986 H onda CRX, excelent condition, 3 4,00 0 tales, AC, automatic casMrte player, $6500. Dick, 388-1366. 8-12________________________________ 8 6 RX7 TIN TED gkxs, excelent condi­ tion, low mileage, $9,700. 2 4 4 -0 7 6 0, gvgningi ond w ttlg n d i 8-12 1973 V O LV O 142 Reliable. Beet offer 3 22-0358, Jerry. 8-12 _________ 1983 V O LV O D l w agon. A C A M / ffiL 5 - speed, cruise, 8 2 K mile», tintad gfou, $7,800. C o l 1-285-4238.8-12_________ 1984 SU BARU G l W agon, y ffd k , excel­ lent plush intonor, p o se r windows/ mir­ rors, new Mrchetn v W R negotiate. 4 72 - 9911.8-12____________________________ 1976 A LFA R O M E O Spyder. Ivory, 1 RebuR engine. him * Io n seals, re c o n k $ 1 5 0 0 .3 3 1 -4 8 6 0 .8 -1 2 1980 M ERCU RY CAPRI. 2-door, 4-speed. A C A M /FM tape, 7OK, runs good. $ 2,00 0 negotiable. 4 7 2 -9 4 8 4, Randy. 8-12 low 1979 FO RD Fairmont. Runs good, , mdes, AT, PB, PS. CaN 346-5051 A ny- ■ 1 2 RED H O T borgoinsl Drug d b o o k planes rs p o d. burptus. Your ar I Buyers Guide. 0) 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext. |9413.7-25 com, Your a re a S - 1957 PLYM OUTH. L o o k Great. $1500 0 8 0 . C o l to se a Robert. 477-1854. 8- 12___________________________________ *87 N E W Yorker Turbo, sNver/faiue, loor; sefl. s L leather seeds. Uhe new, mu y >11 ^ 00 .32 8 -2 75 8 .8 -1 2 _________ FO R SALE; 1941 antique Chevrolet-spe­ cial deluxe. 7 5.00 0 miUs, black. 2-door. E m h n l beauty and co ndbioa $ 3 5 0 0 .1 3 2 7 -4 9 2 0; 9 28 -6 5 9 0. 8-12__________ A S S U M E L O A N on 1987 Escort W ogorv Ex talent condition. 2 80 -3 8 4 2.8-12 19R6 0 0 0 G E 6 0 0 Convertifal*. Beautiful I rior. A l a tat murt see to ap- w h ik J T O Q U EST Conrignotewt Cantor. W M licensed t a l your cor or buy it far c a sk 5 2 6 E. Oborf. 4 4 5 -0 5 8 3 7-221 7 5 FO R D LTD. Runs w el. dependable. < 6 0 0 .4 5 9 -7 3 3 8 ; 4 7 7 -2 6 2 7 7 -22 7 4 VW . Excelent condWory rebuff en­ grio. $ 2000. 4 59 -7 3 3 8; 4 7 7 -2 6 2 7 7- 7 4 V O LV O W agon, $ 8 0 0 .'6 8 Kharm on G k e , $1200. 'i f i Ramblar O neer sta- I flee w agon, $700. A l in go o d ce ndWon. 3 71 -3 2 4 1 19R1 FO R D ESCO RT N e w tires, run* wefl, M ia , 4 7 8 - Í3 4 4 , 346-9812 before 5pm. 7 -2 9 , 19B7 N IS S A N SEN T RA X£. 4 door, 5- EM Clarion riera, A C 15,000 mflea. W M r room condtaon. $65O0/oHer. ■ B m a i - 2 ____________ Koran, *B2 P O N T IA C Phoenix. 4 - r a e e d . ^ H rene very w e l Leaded. $20 0 0. O M M 452-68318-1 WI9 O L D S O M E G A AT, A C PS/PB, A M /FM . M u # rd t nma gre a t $1,000. 4 4 9 -9 4 0 8 ; 4 -1 2 . 8 * EeM 1983 M A Z D A RX-7, 5-speed, A / C sun­ roof, great cart $ 59 5 0. Auto Trend», 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rd. 4 5 0 0 1 2 8 .8-12N 1980 H O N O A A ccord 4D R for sale. $ 800. N eeds repair. C o l Jun o r O w e, 4 76 -3 4 3 9. Magotieble. 7 -2 0 __________ 1983 CHEVROLET C A M A R O . 5-speed. A / C stereo.' 3 9,00 0 mfles. 1 owner. Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rd. 450 -0 1 2 8 8-12N _______________________________ 1979 H O N O A PRELUOE. 5-speed. A / C power sunroof. G reat condttion $ 22 5 0. Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet, 450-0128. 8-12N _______________________________ 1984 R ED H ondo CRX. A ir conditioned, A M / FM radio, 43K , w e l maintained, second owner, car service every 3K. $ 4 5 0 0 negotiable. Cafl Jun, 4 76-3439. 7 -2 0 _______________________________ 1981 C A M A R O Z28. E» ce ls nr c ¡di Loa d e d need to see to oppred a to. $4, 7 9 5 .4 4 4 -1 4 6 3 ,4 4 4 -9 3 1 4 .7 -2 0 1976 M G M IDG ET. Radi 4-speed, stereo, 5 8,00 0 original mile». $1950. Auto Trenrk 6 7 2 4 Burnet 4 5 0 0 1 2 8 .8-12N $1200. 1971 V W Squaraback W agon, automatic transmireon, A M /FM co a d to stereo, 2 0 M PG . d e a n . 4 9 9 -8 1 1 1 7 -2 0 1974 D A T SU N 2602, 4npeed, A / C Super deon, super condHion. $24 5 0. Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rd. 450-0128. 8-12N 1983 A LFA R O M E O G TV6 Excele n t oom M on, low m lee M u d tel. $6500. 469-9251, evenings. 7-21 1 9 *4 SU BA R U HATCHBACK, A C fxcaflsta. a» 70— Motorcycles I $ 2 ^ 5 0 .4 5 4 -7 0 3 7 . 120 — Houses 300 — Garage- H O N D A . 4 5 9 -3 3 1 1 Full Selection of Motorcycles & Scooters Check on Our '87 C L O SIO U T WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6 5 0 9 N . L A M A R TJ's S A L E S & SERVICE ★ B U Y t b S E L L A T R A D E * USED BIKES & SCOOTERS COMPLETE SERVICE SHOP----- FROM FLATS TO TUNE-UPS TO OVERHAULS REGISTERED TECHNICIAN SUPER PRICES O N PARTS & ACCESSORIES 6721 N O RTH LA M AR 2 blocks south of Air­ port Turn on Raymond 4 5 3 -6 2 5 5 Dependable 1980 Yamaha Stored for 3 yean. Very low $ 2 0 0 obo Helen, 346-1184. 7-2 0 I. mop mil*». H O N D A M A G N A V 65 1200 mile», 1 owner. Alarm, windshield. 3 Shoei hel­ mets. Sacrifice $2900. 335-7411 7-18 80 — Bicycles 75 B IK E S $25 a n d U P 2 A u stin Location s Norlh-54th & Airport (Safeway) South-S lam o r & Ottorf (Safeway) EVERY SATURDAY 9-5 A U S T IN B IC Y C L E SA LV A G E 928-4900 ’87 MOUNTAIN mg&l BINE CL0SC0UT! fwhUe thev lostl B H H H I BUCK’S BIKES 4 6 1 3 S p r t n a d a l* 9 2 8 -2 8 1 0 VBA.MC.Am t«P. OUcovw Welcome ♦ umsi * N ISH IK I 12-SPEED 22', excellent condi- hon C o l Jome», 469-9479. $150 7-14 M O U N T A IN BIKE. M ongoose, chrome moly frame, 18 speed, $ 2 5 0 O B O 441- 9 3 8 8 after 5pm. 7-14 BEAUTIFUL RED Bionchi Board 10 speed 19", brand new condition. Vicki, 335- 6123 or 328-1330. $250. 7-20 REAL ESTATE SALES , goroge, fire- UT SHUTTLE bus route. 3-1, I cnon plot w ood floors. Quiet, charming old neighborhood off Riverside Drive. $52,000. Call ow ner 4 42-2990. 7-15 130 — Condos - Townhousos UT's Best Addresses $27,000 - $115,000 Centenniol: largest, plushed 2/2 - 2 poncing 2 terraces. . .Helen the Croix: 3 available, 2/2's & 2/1, fi­ nancing even a D ad can lo v e l..................... Suson O range Tree: 2/2V5, Com er Unit, Excel­ lent ow ner Carry! Hancock Place: Return to the 1940's - Lots o f Chorm l .Cynthia Hyde Pork; a Staoll 1/1, fans, minis, culel O nly $27,000 N W H is: 3/2V5I Very large, Tennis Jerry South: 0-dow nl 9 V j% Assumption, too Perfect.......................... Jerry W est End Properties ★ 472-1000 ^ CAMBRIDGE TOWER BUSY PROFESSOR, move up to se­ cure, conveniently located near UT, prestigious living. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Just tided. Just right. MALUE 327-4151/327-0250 GRAY & CO. 7-15 1 Acre FREE Colo. Mtns. with Condo/Pool near UT. Camper O K on lot 150 days/yr at Foreri Lakes with fishing lake, ski area, club house near Durango. Make offer. Chas. 1239 Main Av., Durango, C O 81301 or col me 303-247-8515. EN FIELD A R EA condos. 1, 2 ,3 bedroom s. M a n y to choose from. C 8 P . 451-5253. 7 -2 0H ___________________________ 1, 2, 3 B E D R O O M S. Enfield - W est Com - pus.CBJ>. 4 5 1 -5 2 5 3 .7-20H ___________ O V E R LO O K IN G D O W N T O W N . 2 2 ». You w on't befievet A l opptonco* V ary I.C J.P . 4 5 1 -5 2 5 3 .7-20H LUXURY C O N O O 3 block» from campus. 1BR, faff, ffreptoce. W asher/dryer. 5e- curity. Price negotiable, 3 35 -0 9 9 9.7-18 PRICED T O t e l O ne bedroom com er unR, 2 blocks west of campus. Super ct. 713- M f f i f f i l l H R M 4 7 3 -2 2 7 2 780-4149.7-15 M A N C H A C A BETW EEN Lomor/Ben Vffflto, 2-2. 1100 iq ff. M any ow ner imp rave xiarta. Foo t «reei, I ocre pork. Direct bu» rauta to UT (10 Huntaet) N on- q w jM a a , 9 V 5 % assumpflon. PI $707. M u risa ta A A 5 -4 82 9 .7 -2 1 _____________ lo se Your Housing Search T e x a n C l a s s i f i e c b 220 — Computers- Equipment I W ILL pick up and pay top cash for used or broken IBM or Apple computers, drtve», monitors, pnnters, ports efc. G ary 4 4 5 -6 6 7 2 7-25B____________________ KA YPR O II Portable computer. Total soft­ ware. Like new C PM based Perfect for «tudents $ 4 9 5 335-7411. 7-15_________ JET CO M PU TERS free floppy disk Soles/ service/training. Low pnces. W ord pro­ cessing ond rentals. Call 346-2914. 7-2 7 250 — Musical Instruments FENDER BASS/guitar cobmet - 2 15" A l­ pine speokers - $110. Yam aho fret!ess bass - natural w ood - $350. C o l Julio eves 4 7 2 -2 9 7 0 7-14_________________ 280 — Sporting- Camping Equip. BUY O R SELL USED SPORTS EQUIPMENT Bicycles, weight equipment, water sports, etc. Everything balf-pnce — up to 7 0 % off new price SPORTS & FITNESS RESALE/CONSIGNMENT 458-9153 7-29B W ATER SK IIN G barefoot boom for sale + free barefoot lessons $ 2 5 0 O B O C a l Kevin at 346-1184 7-21 Rummage Sales THOUSANDS OF BARGAINS at this house/yard sale. • Nic. L-Aap»d iota • lowing madon»» • C o tiM tan»» • O ia n 6 SmoH Qppkmcii • Jmtttkry • OoDwb • much more 9-4 pm Saturday 4003 Ave. B For more mformohon 451*7493 7-15 M O N D O SALEH Men'», w om an's vin 17(55 dothm g 2 0 's fu n k -8 0 's junk. Nuw ning, Soturday-Sunday, 7om-2pm. Fre* cofre* 7-15 320 — Wanted to Buy or Rent W ant to buy- used M ac single-sidad < tam al disk drive. 476-2195 7-14 340 — Misc.________ H O T PO IN T A/C. Uses 110V Used 3 month $100. Staro piays perfect, 3 0 tapes $ 4 0 .4 5 9 -1 56 6 .7 -1 4 RENTAL 350 — Rental Services 8-6 S E R V IC E A Hugo SoiocHon of ICES A L L ALL LOCATIONS AUSTIN HOUSING LEASING 454-5177 FREE LsssiffiO Service • Rueaide/Oltorf^^^^H • S Ausbn • Campus • N Austin • 1 7 IM W. 4 4 8 4 1 8 1 mi r nPert J B G o i m M r FREE LO C A T O R S ER V IC E I b i im x s < i ! h o m p » , > :i J r — Í I/ . . ' Í 1 8625 TBANSDOflTATION ID — MtoCeAiAos I I I I D — tO e t C e o gh t Bee* O la— sdt H MINI BLINDS AUTO TINT ¡ $ 2 0 o r r l S l O O f f I § ; m m wmSmte tSeMimSt, a p t» 7 0 % e ir Can . . . . 1 I § " >«61 — a P t o a fa tt B S M • N a M a to ta M a I | MOTOnCYCUESl I WANTKO fm N*et f» Btaopa i Mffiw, Tap c e k p S f lt a r y M F É M N É f t lt a «•4844822 C m O I O m FREE TIRE BALANCE! >8ñlh Th* Ad 6 TSvw PurchaM MOTOffCYQE PARTS SALES4SBMCE (N*rlUn4 AUSTIN aCLE SALVAGE 4628 lumaf fed. . . 453-9809 M U C H A N M S I 2 4 0 -B e a ts RUNAROtfT • 18 FOOTPOURVMNNS MARK’S THE A0VANTAQE8 BOAT RENTALS L a k e T ra vis L e isu re THE OPTIONS • P * 0 W * P C K -U 9 SO M C * FROM «HOUR— O A Tl • POHTOOR ROATS • PARTY RARQE • CONffiCTmON RKf R0AT • 20 FOOT RUPRA COM# fl KMvor Required) • H RN RM O H A RV n * • LUXURY YACHT C H A RV M * Aflffi6RT.H 0m 8.CTC. • O O M P IflC C U ffiO M ST O e O • O B IIÉ Á R 9 H O M I • CA3RRM0 AtMSA CorDfiod iron-ótwkef) • PHOiMhl IG6 A MBMHS • 1KI (ARROMO • RRRORTRRRTAi - Cabina. Condea. and luaury Ukabanr Hortaaa Mxffir. fw ya n # 261-5859 " t T T * AwpAeflv T O U ffiffi 14066R66M RK cTTmTf fficM gra Hffifcaraa THREE OAKS APARTMENTS • FROM $200 • 1 Bdr/1 Ba • Furnished • Laundry Room • PRELEASE FOR SUMMER • PRELEASE FOR FALL LOW RATES! 451-5840 409W.38tfcSl ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ UNEXPECTED VACANCIES W e 'r e lo o sin g n o w fo r J u n a -A u g u * '8 8 . • 4105 Sp a a d w o y 1 $175. Saa #103 or col 451-4919 or 478-7355. • 104 E. 32nd: Efficiency $175; 2 ML $275. Saa Monoaar apt. #103 or cdl 476-5940 or 478-7355. a 4100 Ava. A Smofl 1 badraoma $175. Saa Monogar apt. #103 or cel 451-1084 or 478-7355 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 8 -K M ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ SU C A SA Apartments Student Special Now Leasing for FaH & Spring On Shuffta, Wol to Wal carpal1 in doaats, dohwohar & tw im mmg pool 2 laundry pfonfy of parking, «Mida gai grlfi boric cabla paid. Fal & Spring Rafai 1 BR — $295 2 BR — $415 3 BR — $575 Fumahad Come by and see us! 203 W. 39fls or col 451-2268 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 8-12A ALL M IL S PA ID 3-2 V} 1300 »q. ff Weta Campu» area. W aff to cam aui. W C toutfle Central m. 474-7732. 7 -2 8 A O N E B E D R O O M O n * bato $425/ mortal 44)1 Guadalupe tall C o l 251- 7 6 7 8 7 -22C ! $ 1 7 5 : A B P ! i 2 B L O C K S U T i M \ M Y H I M O D H i I ) ; Í D O R M S I I I I M ! l ( 11 N ( I I S 476-1957/474-2365 Now pre-leasing for fall, loo! EFFICIENCY $199 N o w le a sin g for sum m tr and fall. C lean, quita, w ell m aintained apart­ ment. W a lk o r shuttle to UT. Fully cor- peted a n d draped, queen size bed and w alk-in closet W ate r paid 2 0 2 E 3 2 n d St 4 7 8 -7 1 2 5 ,4 5 1 -6 5 3 3 C E N T R A L PR O PER TIES INC. 8-31A 1 BEDROOM $225 Now leasing for summer and foil. Quiet aportment in Hyde Pork. Built-in desk with bookshelves Lots of closets, carpeted, draped, gas/water paid. 4307 Ave A 451-6966,451-6533. C E N T R A L PRO PERTIES IN C . 8-31A ALL BILLS PAID $245 N o w leasing for summer and fall. Large clean efficiency in H yde Park. N e a r shuttle, carpet­ ed, draped, walk-m closet, built- in kitchen and pontry. 4 0 0 0 Ave. A , 458-4511, 4 5 1 -6 5 3 3 CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC 8 -31A Efficiency ond 2 Bedroom $199-$295 N o w le a v n g for sum m er and fad. shuffle, corpefed, draped, w aR -in closer, pool, gas/w ater paid. 4 2 0 0 A v *. A. 4 5 1 -6 9 6 6 ,4 5 1 -6 5 3 3 C E N T R A L PR O PER TIES I N C 8-31A SALADO APTS. 2704 Salado Call now for beautiful, large fully furnished 2-2, 1-1. Ceiling fans, microwave, frost free refrigera­ tors, intercom. Near campus ond shuttle. On site managers. Great rates. Preleasing for summer ond fall. 474-5723 - 444-2750 7-21A SPECIAL LARGE deon 2-2, CA/CM, fore, opplionce», p o o l wndeck. 30RV Red River, $ 4 5 0 4 5 0 0 477-3388. 478- 5 73 9 8 -10C_________________________ C A M B R ID G E TO W ERS Fumehed effi­ ciency m eleg onr Inside parking 2 4 hour security N ear Urw er- 282 siiy/Capeo! $395. a l M b poet 6 2 7 5 ,4 4 3 -8 7 9 2 7 25 tughrise. HYDE PARK LUXURY M A IK E M B E R S A P A X n E N T S 31st A Speedway U rg e I B r » Furnished. 2 Ceiling Fane, Microwsves. Sliding G lass Doors, Pauae and Balconm . Vaulted Ceiling», 2 Fools. Shaded Courtyard, Covered Parking, Quiet Compie» 4 7 8 - 6 0 0 5 T a n g l e w o o d e s t a i d e a 3 Pooto a 3 laundry Rooma a ShuOto of Front Dow a Moor Goff Courae GAS & WATER PAD 1403 Norwaff Lana 4 7 2 - 9 6 1 4 D avis it Associates BEST DEAL IN WEST CAMPUS! • W a lk to Cam pus • Ceiling Fans • M icrow aves • Large 1 & 2 Bedroom s ONLY 3 1 BD R’S LEFT 479-6105 Longhaven Apartments 9 1 6 W . 2 3 r d # 1 0 2 ALL BILLS PAID Summer Rates Eff. 1 B R Sm. 2 BR Summer Full $ 2 9 5 $ 3 3 0 W alk or shuttle to campus, C A/CH , remodeled, convenient to everything. 2212 San Gabriel 474-7732 Preleasing for Fall ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ■ f t ONE-HALF BLOCK UT LAW SCHOOL ALL BILLS PAID Two bedroom/two bath somll quiet property. Tree shaded balconies on courtyard. New carpet, appliances, and paint. Huge bedrooms. M oder­ ate prices. Now preleasing for rail. 476-5631 8-31A FRONTIER APTS.-$210 SUMMER RATES AIL YEAR! 4111 AVE. A: Large efficiences. O n shuttle & city bus. Quiet com ­ plex, C A C H , G & W and baste TV cable paid 462-0930, 323-5982 8-311 Three Friends Apt. 1010 W 23rd * ftorgom leases AvoW for fo* * Furnished or Onturrushed * Large 1 Br 830 h * Other 1 ftr Ava*i Also * Wofk to UT or Coprtoi * Recently re modeled loundry tocdffies bofto 7 -2 8A * Wofof i Got Fo*d 4 7 4 -44 18, 4 7 8 - 5 4 6 7 8-5V ★ WEST CAMPUS ★ Furnished Efficiencies on W /C shuttle 910 W. 26th St. $ 2 5 0 -2 7 5 / m o n th - Fall/Sprin g Bort qua grid - laun d ry room - C o ke m och ín * - sem ettar ports*» ★ Call 478-1350 ★ N EW LY REFURBISH ED IM oportrrwnh « qutot complex in H yd * Park. W a fo n d * Hi* to campu». $175 wm m *r, $ 24 0 faH/tpnng N ow prelaoung for f a l 4 74-7853; 469-0071. 7-22 ★ W ALK TO C AM PU S ★ A V A L O N APTS 32nd at IH35 LARGE 2 Sdr/2 to. 1 tor/to. t t« LOW rata, low dtpoW ■ C»4ng font, wdk-m cfoM»» on sta laundry t managw Squ»aky d»an SwdL wot tcxnpl»» V»»y conrenwnl to EoX Campus 9-1N 459-9898 476-3629 258-2176 8-31N TELLURIDE APARTM ENTS, 4100 A v*. C Cfoan, quita 1 BR. 1 BR with loft Prefa o i» or m ov* in today! 453-0461. 7-18 RENTAL 360 — Fum. Apt*. , b q Merry Christa** From m T h e A s h fo r d m h . Chaparosa Apartments 3110 Red River C L O S E T O U . T . — ❖ — Small, quiet, quality complex 2 blocks from Law, on shuttle; attrac­ tively furnished, with pool, laundry, and all bills paid. Efficiency to 3BR 474-1902 ★ ALL B ILLS P A D ★ Bring this ad and recew* your Chnta mas BO N U S when sagnmg • » mo leas* 2 4 0 6 L * O n (W eta Cam pu*) « 7 6 *9 1 5 V W E ST C A M P U S STUDENTS WELCOME! V NORTH C A M P U S STUDENTS V' WELCOME! ^ 3 J M A fU CXXA PTl 3815G uodolupe 112BR* M ove In Today 1 459-1604 V f la M a a e Sla^C^BweSSupe M o v In Today 1 4514492 Ooqééb^qéqI Loro* 2 fefei • -- 6---* M semrvw ewe eCPOT/i i c u m f1 0 l* 4 M v A a jm m o oi A M f t M t S ^ e r-l-i- a re-- »_ nantaaaa ra a e 4524447 («Mu U m tii ▼ r io Norm Apartm ents Quita tiring 459-9131 4320Duval t m ^ e m e e i R n f t 4 / t l k N W S S o o Is 1 9 2 2 2 .4 5 th 4 B 4 M 9 Timbenveod Apartment» Large iff. Prom $250 1000 W. 20th 479-1123 La Canada ApaitMMits Al Ban Paid MktoOngm 477-3619 OHkelMSW.MXi Chesiocgncs ^ A L o m o r 4774119 Om*e1382W.24Hi iA B B M ill m m r n n • NoHMN • Pod 476-4992 KBS N* Ornado Di^om at Apartmants Walk to Campus Ifl0422d Mgr. Api» 266 Saleca Aifertm— ti “Sledeet ReedyH M o v In Today 4774C19 om** ism w.tdflh Chimneys Apto. 474-4992 Otte* ek Qarém Oré* 2222 Ho Oronda • M iA m l r M 9 8to8t §8^1 8bIi5 • b O fiiR N b tMÉNffiOffiNildd • Mmoprmtto RINTAL RINTAL RINTAL RINTAL RINTAL R IN T A L 360— Turn. Apt*. 360— Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 370— Unf. Apt*. 370— Unt.Aptx. 370— Unf. Apis. HE D A ILY TEXAN/Friday, Ju!y 15,1988/PaQe11 R IN T A L s s m em 370— Unf. Apis. 5 Blocks West U T larga, quiat immocukita orta badroom afftciancas. Kitchan, walk in dosate, laundry, gas hoat cooking, watar/gas fumishad. Ow nar manogad. Summar— $225. Fall— $249. Rad O ak Apartments, 2104 San Gabriel. 476-7916. 8-31H LARGE C LE A N efficiency. Quiet mature individual. N o pets. Privacy bedroom di­ vider. Waft-in dosel, dishwasher, laun­ dry. 474-1212.6-23C W EST 22nd STREET, ajiet areal Orderly community. Spacious IBR. Bright, carpet­ ed, laundry, pool. Runners, cyclists, triath­ letes welcome. Train with resident com­ petitors. Starting $255, G & W paid. Scott Webster, 474-2215, Jack Jennings, 4 7 4 -6 8 9 6 7-15H CLEAN, QUIET efficiency apartment on UT shuttle route. Fully furnished with on­ site manager, laundry facilities and paid coble.CoM255-6786, 450-1147 7-18 370— Unf. Apts. John Barkley Company U . T . A R E A Q U A R T E R S Unique, qffordable houses, duplexes, and apartments; M ost with wood floors, fans, lots of windows, m any trees. Historic charm, attractively re­ done, responsibly managed 1906 Naacan: 1/1 S ; T.V. f r o m $ 5 . 7 2 d a y M l l K I ' M R I V E R S I D E Q U A R T E R S Tours Daily 1001 S. IH -3 5 and Riverside Dr. 444-3611 E N G U S H A I R E APARTMENTS Now Leasing for Summer Preleasing for Fall! Rent specials* Efficiencies M ’s 2-2’s Townhouses starting at: $199 $229 $299 $329 <* with a 9 mo lease. Shorter leases a lso available.) Amenities include: Fitness Center, Racquet- ball Courts, Tennis Courts, Basketball Courts, and more! Conveniently located on the UT shuttle and city bus routes between Riverside and Oltorf. 1919 Burton Dr. 440-1331 $ 1 0 0 D e p o s i t PRE-LEASE S U M M E R / F A L L FURNISHED & UNFURNISHED LARGE EFFICIENCIES^ BR. • Oiahw. hor/Orapoe • Mterewore optional) o IndMdud Sioioyi a • Laundry Fodtlo i a On IF Shuttle a Hyd* Pork Area a Aeróte from city pork a Rarétent Manager From $190/Month 108 P U C E APARTMENTS 108 W. 45th Street 452-1419 it no arwwor 385-2211,4 5 3 -2 7 7 1 7-151 WARWICK APTS. 2907 West Avenue Great deals on 2-2,1-1, and efficiencies for summer and fail. Fully furnished with all amenities. Pool, deck, cov­ ered parking available. Close to campus and shuttle. O n site m ancf ement. 474-7426 - 444-2750 7-21A THE QUIET ALTERNATIVE $100 Dapoafc 3 biocb tram UT, 1-1, Eft from $200. Fumáhod, pad, on-iift monagor and momlaoonca. FOUNTAIN TERRACE APARTMENTS 610 W . 30th 477-8858 8-10C H O C K T O UT. Loro* I or 2 badroom apartment, Ctefing far», storage ciosat, bUh-m boctohterei. Quwt mature indi­ vidual No pal». 422-1212 7-26C Spacious 2B/2B units 4 blocks west o f U T Ceiling fans, bal­ conies. covered parking, fur­ ft w/all amenities nished $21 S/m o + E (2 per apt ) 1906 PeaH 4 7 6 -5 6 7 8 SANDPIPER 2810 Rio Grande Beautifully furnished large 2-2. Microwave, ceiling fans, frost free refrigerator, intercom, pool, deck, covered parking. On site management. Close to campus and shuttle. Super rates for sum­ mer and fall. 4 74 - 2 5 4 2 - 444-2750 7-21A Hit Your Snooze Button Because you're only 1 block from the UT Campus in this fully furnished 1-1. Includes washer/ dryer, microwave, ceiling fans, ond covered parking. Co! II 322- 9887 for leasing information. 3 7-15V WEST CAMPUS EFFICIENCIES 910 W 26th St $175-$200/m onth summar rata $ 2 50/month-FaH/Spring Barbeque grid, laundry room, Coke machine, semester parlies. CALL 478-1350 7-18C MESQUITE TREE APARTMENTS O it badroom famáhod nptiitatanl, Clow to campus, noar i tel or, AC, caftna fan. Laundry facfttiat and hot tub. Walar and bade T.V. cabla paid. No patel Hwidant managar #301, 2410 Longviaw St. For info. 478-2357. UNITS AVAILABLE NOWI wad 8-121 1 BEDROOM $220 Now leasing for summer and fall. Secluded, quiet complex in park- like setting. Nicely furnished, car­ peted, and draped. Gas/wafer paid. 609 E. 45th Street. 452- 1823,451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. 8-9A $210 - $225# SPECIAL RATES furnished efficiency near M opoc/Bar­ ton Springs CA/CH. W ater paid. Laundry facilities. Short loose. . 328-6705 _ Foil leasing on efficiencies, 1 bedrooms, 2 bedrooms, fumished/unfumishod. Convenient to Hancock Center, Seton, UT and Hyde Padc Vj block to thuMo ond city busline All appli­ ances, pool and laundry room. Gas and wa­ ter paid. 302 W. 38th 453-4002 7-20 7-22C ★ Two Bedroom ★ Summer Rata $330 Walk to Campus, small quiet complex, coding fans, pool. Cavalier Apts. 307 E 31st 476-6225 473-2513 474-7732 7 -29A QUALITY APARTMENT behind Victooon home in Hyde Park. Cent-ol heat/air $29 5 John Sanford, 454-6633, 458- 9000. 7-19__________________________ HYDE PARK/UT - Nke new large I bed­ room, fenced, W /D included $395/ A BP 32 3 -9 0 8 5 7-19V________________ PRIVATE EFFCIENCY Garden, carport, near law school Available immediately Sub-let $250/neg 4 7 9 -8 2 5 3 Furnished or unfurnished. 7-15 REDUCED FALL rotes for qualifying tenants. 1 ft 2 bedroom furnished aport- ments Small, quiet complex, perfect for graduate students. Free cable. Pool, C A / CH, laundry, Shanti Apts 3 30 4 Red River, 4 7 6 8 47 4 8-10_______________ furnished/unfurnished. AN SPA C IO U S EFFICIENCY Hyde Pork shut- appli­ H ances, mimblinds, pool. $200, gas/water paid. 2 weeks free. Pre-lease or move-in today 4 5 9 -4 9 7 7 305 W 35th St 7-26 W ALK TO C A M P U S FALL LEASING AT SU M M E R RATES. LARGE O N E BED R O O M $ 2 7 5 T W O B E D R O O M TW O BATH EFFICIENCY $ 27 5 LARGE EFFI­ CIEN CIES $195 P H O N E 322 -0 3 7 4 7- 28C________________________________ EFFICIENCY A N D one bedroom. $250. Carpeted, stove, refrigerator, window AC, trees, water paid. 1008 West 25th; 1009 West 25Vi. 451-6533. 7 29A 4 BLO C KS W EST UT-large clean effi- ciency. Water/gas, furnished. Gas heat/ cooking. $215-$229 476-7916. 7-29A GREAT PRICES! Walk to campus! Pool, furnished one bedroom - $ 2 5 0 summer; $310 fall! Must see - Apartment Finders Service 458-1213. 8-1A_______________ CENTRALIZED! GREAT Hyde Park loco hon Waft-m closets, ceiling fans, pool, some covered parking. Spocious 1-1, fur­ nished or unfurnished. Start $30 0 Apartment Finders Service 458-1213. 8- 1A CLO SE TO UT north. Efficiencies, $165- 2BR, $250- $185 1BR, $185 $ 22 5 $39 0 4 04 E 31st 477-2214, 453-8812, 452-4516.8-2L C LEA N CARPETED o n * badroom. Quiat motera individuóte, CA/CH Near RR shunto N o pets. 422-1212. 7-25C PRIVATE SMALL cottage w/kitchenette off potto $250, bills paid. AC, 207 E. 35th 472 1282 N earU T 7-20 RINTAL 370— Unf. Apts. ■ E W S ! H Efficiencies start | at IS125Ü (July & August special offer for UT people). • Phone 8t electric installation F R E E !! • 1. 2 & 3 Bdrm s • O n U T Shuttle also available • Two Pools • Ceiling Fans C a l l N o w ! 4 4 4 - 4 4 8 5 Ji* C a s c a d e s Town Lake Circle Apartments 2409 Town Lake Circle 4 4 7-5 9 71 1 - 1 $ 289/m onth 2-2 $350/m onth June, July & August: $ 5 0 off every unit! . $ 1 0 0 refundable deposit C a n be made in 4 paym ents of $25 each * Shuttle b u s city bus « S h o p p in g St entertainment * L au ndry room * Pool * W D connections * Special prices on selected units Being only a freshman, Tony was unaware of what Oak Lodge Apartments has to offer . . . W , ■ « c . > P.iu n k ApOrkmrenlq flaACft P - , L «nkq 1 Seinnar It ft ki-va High quality living! • FBEEphcnt hook-up e FRE£ «tectncRy connacOon * T¥f0tenffiicourts e Ejr*»mte|r tttonfabte 1 B rs * Sotvttno ooofl! # Dfacsunfa to GoUan Lile. 16. Gatt i Conm nd Partomtanca ft loti mora! What’s your excuse? TWO POOLS • WATER VOLLEYBALL TWO HOT TUBS • CEILING FANS a ON SHUTTLE a FIREPLACES FREE L A U N D R Y 4 4 0 -0 1 1 8 2317 Pleasant Valley Rd. M 2 4 0 0 W K K E R S H A M L N . « -. .3 8 5 - 2 0 4 4 , „oom om m m ouum um $*r AHtnMMTHOMtntcts 2505 Longview THC ADDRESS IN WEST CAM PUS # Efficiencies • 1 B d /I Ba. • 2 Bd72 kj. A it km H rnm Management Community 2406 * 2501 Manor HO SUMMEH FALi VH L E A S f S2 SS *3 0 0 * 2 * 4 > SfcjUar* n.mnam Jum io mura. rurrwrwo , r i m.W 4 CXXvoor aundry f .lPb.i Marwe*> . Sacur«Y PatroAad • --o' Landacapad Pror Manapad Oy Hapancy PrqparlHa me We’re C rushing Our C om petition TAKE A LOOK AT THIS! Summer and Fall rents start at 1 9 5 ! ! z at 1 m y o n P a s s y o u will h a v e * fa mm'"' * y o u d e s e r v e ' XT *X- • V < - % <, A A . V M*1 i *Qr won t ias* O' 4 5 4 - 2 1 5 7 By offering the best specials in town! A.B.P. or free rent. Choose the one that best fits your needs at O U > U la H * C APARTMENT H O M ES 1SO O B ro a d m o o r 4 8 4 -B S S T , > t e i ■CLASS I ACTS! H O U STO N 2801 HemphM Park — 472-8398 BRANDYW IN E 2804 WMtt, A r e - 4 7 2 - 7 0 4 9 DALLAS 2803 H em ph# Park — 472-8398 W ILSHIRE 301 W 29th — 472-7049 Low Summer Rates! F ro m * 1 9 5 - $ 2 5 0 ED PADGETT CO. J 4 5 4 - 4 6 2 1 STUDENT SU M M ER LEA SIN G * Special * a Lorge Efficiency rtfw iy u un _ l i i a AN Appliances w/mini blind* e O n RR Shuttle a Quiet complex a laundry facilities Water Wheel Apt. 921E. 44th Mgt. #20 4 371-0160 8-9V QUIET COMPLEX Large 2 Bedroom 14* Shuttle t* Hardwood Boor* 2 second floor v* Great for Students 9-2L Available 7/17 345-7232 8-10V HALF MONTH'S RENT FREE! Large 1-1 in small, quiet complex near RR. New point, flooring, and corpet. From $235. 467-6508 7-15 ZILKER AREA Efficiency, $175; 1 BR $250, 2 BR $275, Pool & Laundry on site. 447-7525 or 440-0944 7-22L T R O PIC A N A APARTM ENTS Extra large 1-1't ond 2-2'» start at $375. Pool, laun­ dry, ER shuttle. 2 6 0 6 Enfield #6. 474- 6354, or 474-1100. 7-28V ____________ EXTRA LARGE 1-1 in four-plex. Central air ond heat, ceiling fans. 3 00 6 Speedway. x rate. Lot* of window, $35 Chobm ft >tes, 476-5394. C h n , 451-4565. 7-271 LARGE EFFICIENCY 38th ft Ave 8. Sap- erate kitchen, large datet, coin laundry. $175/mo. + alec till Sept. then $225/ mo. + ek Ann Miller, monogtr-bro- ker, 452-4212.7-29 RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. J R I D U S N W Windjammer Apts. H M V M ii as. ml e * stemming pools « OnUTShutBs * O n*» toa 442-5333 .. N o e * * * * • The Briars Apts e c S * to UT Shuttle Mpuas „ — N an fa tfa rtatfffS I Sherri: i -w,.. 451-4S41 ♦ ♦ ♦ $ # ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ « d & V IL L A V I TA da oo rated 1-fa aiaitels lor «address In Weal Campual Taate- Htisfeal oourt and otganaed social ac-|| Himiim. Your homo m Parades! M I I m i taunt— ^ « t e a r V Heam Apartments Only $1y5/mon. $99 deposit. Sm. 1-1, ( u-cooking, dose to shuttle. LAKE AUSTIN BLVD A R E A 495-9271 8-31V ” $49 TOTAL MOVE-IN Convenient Hyde Park A rea. Large 1-1. 4 5 8 -2 9 9 0 8-31V • $50 MOVE-IN • NO DEPOSIT FOR STUDENTS New complex, deaigner unih, from $240. 660 iq fl 1-1 - $299, 918 iq. ft. 2-1 - $400. Near Shuttie. • Properties One A 836-0727 w B-3C Hyde Park - IF Shuttle L A R G E afficfancias with walk-in d o- safi L A U N D R Y V ER Y Quiat G R E A T Rotasl C o l M IK E 2 -6 p-m. o r l a o v msaaogs: ★ 3 2 3 - 6 5 2 6 # S a q uo io Aportm anH - 3 0 1 W . 3 8th St. 8-12N ★ STUDENTS ★ e 1-1, 750 teuore aat. $260. e 2-11025 to ft. $350. Ip month', rent $70 Low depoair Extra Large Apartment Prompt Maintenance, very dean NR Shuttle But Swimming Pool Netey Decorated A nica small quiet community. BRO O KH O LLO W APARTMENTS 1414 A rana Dr. ★ 4 4 5 -5 6 5 5 ★ • 9 9 1835 Burton Dr 4 4 2 - 6 7 8 9 $ 2 0 0 SU M M ER RATE • 2703 MO CRANK: aMaanda, '31 • 2*00 HO CRANK: V-la $150 n — r/3200ML Motel I» motel. • 250SSAH G AW L l-1^ed $150 — iiar/$200fal MorUh la « oa k 331-4019 8-10C Northwest Hills Capá Ltete IdateaAa n m monm nee. rtew ry rernocseiea. Tennis, pool, du bhouM . PineleoiinQ summer fon. O n Sh u tH a Advantage Properties 452-0103 7-151 OFF CAMPUS ON/OFF SHUTTLE LUXURY a E C O N O M Y a SECURITY 2-2 roommate plan $325 Huga damy 38R townhouta $589 Co l for mom. Kodish Properties 4 4 7 -3 4 7 2 7-28V ★ LOFT ★ S pM rtmrcom. mkrowove, m o iM Ere- pfocs, ceiling font, W/D connoctien* pool, jocuaxi, unit. Porting from $260. ADVANTAGE 443-3000 * * * * * * 8-31L □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ KINGSGATE APARTMENTS * Voriobly sized Apt from efficiences to 2-2's □ Featuring e Ofymptc sized pool e Roquet bol court e Club room e only $50 depout e on Shuffle Reasonably paced $195-$310 2005 WiHow Creek Dr. 447-6696 LOCATION LOCATION AH bid, paid downtown, n *o r UT and Capitol. O idor building, renovated w M i, largo room , ond plonty o f om bianco 1 more reaw n to lire lhairel W o h are lh * b te l rawdonh onywhore. C o l owmor «#« 474-4848 fo r a chano to oxpononca» conreniant living at an affordoblo p ric o .' Call u, on wookonrfa too, w * wM bo glad 4 tohalpyo u. 7-27A 8-11N HEMPHILL PARK. Lovely, redecorated, 1 badroom, walking dteonca UT. Firw- ploco, hordwooaa, coifing fan. $4 00. 507 W . 33rd. 459-5841. 7-22_________ CAMERON ROAD area thuflU , 2-1, AC. carpal, opptoncoa, carport, $29 5 . W *al W orld Root Edate. 451-8122 7-25A Rent S pocial 195.0011 LARGE affidoncma in Hyda Rartr area e AM oppkonoH s Pool • Ore • Laundry • G o, ft W ater paid H y d * P ork P tac* 4400 Are I. Man w #113 7-15N Perfect Location V a ry nica 1920's com plax w /lo p o o l lo cated h a lf w a y b *fw * * n UT a nd A C C 5 b lo c k , to both. 2 m inute* fro m dow ntow n. Q u ite and w*N m aintainad. 1- 1't a v o ila b l* 7 -15-8 8 . P rkas ra g * fro m $ 2 8 5 -5 3 3 5 plus. atedñcR y. H o i w a te r p aid . CaN Rfa ^ H oum A portm onls 4 7 2 -1238. SMALL QUIET COMPLEX SHORT WALK TO SHUTTLE Etevan unit com plax has lo rg a 2-1 w ilh w /d conn adions fo r $ 3 5 0 /m o . In m in i c o n d itio n w ilh a ll gas appKanca*. 1203 W. 49th A n n e , M o n o g e r/A g e n t 327-5 332 7-151 UT Area Walk/Shuttle * mca, cteon qumt 1-1 * coiling tons a CA/CH a axtro dosot qxxa a potto $225 plus alactricity 1801 Manor Rd. 499-0639,339-7893 8-3V ★ WEST CA M PU S# 1 - 1 ...................................................$ 2 2 0 2 - 1 ................................................... $ 2 8 0 3 - 1 ................................................... $ 3 3 0 * Pool! Water/Gas paid. • B & G Properties 459-0156 346-0410 7-21C VERY NICE 1 badroom and studio apart- «nh. W ait Campus. Summar $ 250- teD S300-S355 Ca« 4 8 0 0 9 7 6 . _______________________ $285, 7-27C LIMITED OFFER! $2 9 5 . $50 dapote. Clore to «hítete. Cottonw ood AportmanH 928-2581. 8-5 m 2-2 fo r te l • CHERRYWOOD EFFICIENCY. ALL BILLS PAID, STOVE, REFRIGERATOR, AC, $295 . 1406-8 CONCORDIA CENTU- RtO N PROPERTIES, 345-6599 7-29C CENTRAL IZEDI GREAT Hyde Pork loco- tion. W oft-m d o re ti, coifing font, p o o l m ow corerad parking Sp rréhod o r gnfumdhad. Start $300. A portinont Findar, Soroca 458-1213. 8- 1A __________________ 1-1, K»r- W ALK TO compuv Big 1-1, and 2-2, P ool ownar pay, mo# M h. Call M ark 478 -6 7 7 6 4 9 5 -9015. 7-15___________ HYDE PARK cottage 4413B Avenue A appfc- Hardw ood Boon, m iniblind, o n co , $300 - b * 459-0017 8-5A EXTRA LARGE 4BR. w afting dteonca to co m p u ,. W ill occom m odot# 4-5 rtu d a n t, 1800 tq ft. 2811 Safado. $795. 837-5368, 258-7817 7-15___________ NEW EFFICIENCY W UBA noar UT an RR ahítete, caftng fan, corered parking C o l now 444-1012. 8-12_____________ FOUR-PLEX Vary ptearent, w a l k*pM

175/mo., A S P 4 7 2 -2 2 2 2 .8 3 C N E A R UT Law Sch ool o n RR shuttle. Fur­ nished room s $150 to $ 2 2 5 ABP1 C A / C H -sh o r e bath. 3310 Red River, 476- 3 63 4 8 -3 N R O O M S FO R rent in fufhr town house off Ruttand. $195 eoch plus shore bills. 3 3 5 -7 7 6 8 7-15____________ ALL BILLS Paid! N ext to UT. Quiet, shody street. Prom $125. M ust see. 472-3611 472 -42 05 . 7-15N____________________ G A R A G E A P A RT M E N T, hardwoods, refrigerator, private bath, entrance. N o kitchen Quiet indtvktool. N o pets 422-1212 8 -8 N ______________ ceiling fon, M A TU RE N O N - S M O K E R . Private room. Shore kitchen. Quiet, pettesi, half block UT $120-$240/m o. Lease Share bids. 4 72-5646. 8-12N 435 — Co-ops 2fct St. Co-op 707 W. 21st Great student housing for Fall! 3 blocks from U.T. Fum. singles and doubles 17 nutritious meals/week Swimming pool, darkroom, etc. $310 fo r D o u b le find, food 6 M ia ) $399 fo r S in g le fine!, food a M ia ) C a U 4 7 6 -1 8 5 7 Now! For a great summer! $ 2 6 9 double $ 3 6 9 single All bills paid 17 home-cooked meals, week On the drag 476-5678 474-6905 +♦• • • W . ' : P ' O i - s s i * ■, : J " ' ' ' , Í , • • ; a v e - P> i n t m . j • X . * 1 ‘ » C ||fR1AH ^ ■ S w d f ar 1*4792.1M S IHf WRfft CÓMMKW0K m is m g jM s e JT n ' I * 1 ■ " .. •ftfiw n iiiin g 1* * • H m i * TABC cracks down on tax dodgers AMQfiitBfj Pn EL PASO — Liquor-tax dodgers who drive across the Rio Grande and past the Texas Alcoholic Bever­ age Commission booths can find they've uncorked a big bottle of trouble. People trying to avoid paying tax­ es on Mexican-bought beer, wine and liquor can be fined up to $1,000 or jailed up to a year. They can also have their car confiscated. It's all for trying to avoid a tax that amounts to 94 cents for a case of beer, 61 cents for a fifth of wine or a six-pack of beer and $1.10 for a quart of liquor. Those taxes added up to about ‘W. áre going to per* form sporwflc 24-hour watches to catch the > evaders. We are warning them not to run by our tax booths because we’l catch them.’ — Ruben Pena, Texat Alcoholic Beverage Commisi Ion $600,000 collected last year at the three bridges in El Paso carrying traffic from Mexico, said Ruben Pena, assistant director of the com­ mission's ports of entry in Laredo. Pena was in El Paso earlier this week to help start up an aggressive enforcement program designed to catch liquor-tax scofflaws. He said better enforcement might bring in up to $60,000 more in taxes each year. "We are going to perform sporad­ ic 24-hour watches to catch these evaders," Pena said while visiting El Paso to help implement the en­ forcement program that began Tuesday. "We are warning them not to run by our tax booths because we'll catch them." Between 1 and 4 p.m. Tuesday, 75 people declared liquor to U.S. Customs after crossing the Cordova Bridge east of downtown El Paso. Nine tried to drive past the TABC booths about 100 yards past the Customs booths, and they were nabbed, Pena said. Customs inspectors helped com­ mission inspectors detect which cars were carrying liquor by using hand signals, Pena said. Of the nine vehicles stopped, sev­ en were from Texas and two were from out of state. State residents are issued a citation to appear before a justice of the peace and face fines of $100 to $1,000 or up to a year in jail. First RepublicBank officials meet to discuss debts Associated Press DALLAS — Owners of First RepublicBank Corp. bonds met privately with senior officers of the ailing bank holding company Thursday in an apparent attempt to determine the fate of debt holdings threatened by federal regulators. A spokesman for First RepublicBank, which posted a $1.5 billion loss in the first quarter and was the object of several potential buyout offers, said a meeting between bondholders and man­ agement concluded Thursday afternoon. Company spokesman Joe Bowles refused to comment on who participated in the meeting or what resulted from the talks. Don Phelps, spokesman for Irving Trust Co. in New York, confirmed that a meeting took place Thursday but also declined to comment. Two suits filed by bondholders in June accuse the bank holding company and the Federal De­ posit Insurance Corp. of improperly trying to wipe them out. First RepublicBank has about $1 billion in debt, much of it held by insurance companies and pension funds that support some of the country's largest banks. MTrust, a subsidiary of MCorp in Dallas that manages outside investors' bonds, filed suit in a Dallas state court seeking to sto] First Republic­ Bank from wiping out a class of bonds worth $35 million. In Houston, the holder of $55 million in First RepublicBank's notes, American General Insur­ ance Co., sued the FDIC. That suit would undo the transaction in which the FDIC made itself first in line to claim First RepublicBank's assets. During the rescue of another bank, First City Bancorporation of Texas Inc., bondholders near­ ly killed a $1.5 billion aid package when Wall Street speculators bought the low-cost notes and tried to force more money out of the FDIC, offi­ cials said. The FDIC and First City's buyers compro­ mised rather than force the company into bank­ ruptcy, officials said. - "The difficulty with bondholders at First City has clearly affected the FDIC's thinking," said W. Mike Baggett, a Dallas attorney representing MTrust. The FDIC stipulated it would not guarantee debtholders of First RepublicBank when it backed the bank's depositors after a run in March. Dallas S&L company to acquire thrifts, experts say Associated Press day. FORT WORTH — Under the government's blueprint for cleaning up the nation's troubled thrift industry, several Texas thrifts will be put in the hands of a Dallas-based savings and loan association, industry experts say. Metropolitan Financial Savings and Loan As­ sociation will acquire several thrifts under the Southwest Plan, according to experts, and three such transactions have been approved so far. Roger Martin, a member of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, said regulators have been in­ volved in serious talks with officials of Metropol­ itan Financial, which had assets of $832 million and regulatory capital of 5.1 percent March 31. However, Martin did not say that Metropoli­ tan Financial's proposal to participate in the Southwest Plan will be approved by regulators. Metropolitan Financial executives have been talking with regulators for about three months, • Robert Stallings, president and chief executive , officer of Metropolitan Financial, told the Fort - Worth Star-Telegram in a story published Thurs­ "We've been involved in a series of discus­ sions involving a number of different possible acquisition groups," said Stallings, who served from October 1982 to December 1987 as execu­ tive vice president and chief operating officer of Murray Savings Association in Dallas. Stallings said negotiations were continuing. Some experts expect a deal to be announced soon, perhaps as early as next week. Two industry experts, who requested ano­ nymity, said they expect Metropolitan Financial to be approved this month as a thrift acquirer under the Southwest Plan. Frank Anderson, senior vice president with D. Latin & Co., said earlier this week he believes Metropolitan will be approved under the gov­ ernment plan. "The only question is when and which thrifts it will be buying," Anderson said. In addition to Metropolitan Financial, Martin said regulators have been talking with a number of institutions, including Olney Savings Associa­ tion of Olney. Wade Fikes, president and chief operating of­ ficer of Olney Savings, confirmed his company's interest in participating in the Southwest Plan, but declined to say more. Olney Savings Association, located about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, had assets of $1.36 billion and regulatory capital of 2.2 percent March 31. Since 1980, it has acquired about a dozen smaller Texas thrifts or branch operations. World Savings and Loan Association, head­ quartered in Oakland, Calif., and owned by Golden West Financial Corp., discussed with the bank board a plan to acquire Texas thrifts, Mar­ tin said. Golden West has assets of $14 billion and its largest individual shareholders are Marion San­ dler, president and chief executive officer of Western Savings, and her husband, Herbert. "We're very interested in expanding in Texas through the Southwest Plan," Sandler said. The cost of the Southwest Plan, which is tar­ geted at 146 insolvent and ailing institutions, has risen to $15.2 billion from $7 billion, bank board Chairman Danny Wall told the Senate Banking Committee last week. Around Campus is a daily col­ umn listing University-related ac­ tivities sponsored by academic de­ partments, student services and registered student organizations. To appear in Around Campus, or­ ganizations must be registered with the Office of Student Activities. Announcements must be submitted on die correct form, available in The Daily Texan office, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions to conform to style rules, although no significant changes will be made. MEET1NQS The Gay and Lesbian Students' Association will meet for happy hour from 4:30 to 6 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Building Cactus Cafe. All ages are welcome. UTSEDS will hold an informal get-together at 5 p.m. Friday at a round table at the Texas Union Building Armadeli. Everyone is wel­ come. Central America Peace Initiative will meet to put up posters for the CAPI benefit at 6 p.m. Sunday in front of the Texas Union Building. Students Older than Average will meet from 5 to 7 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Building Battle Oaks Room. SOTA is a social and support group for students 23 and older. PERFORMANCES Theatre Collective will sponsor a performance of Deathtrap by Ira Lev­ in at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday in the Utopia Theatre, Education An­ nex F50. Tickets are $4 for students, ACOT and senior citizens and $6 for the general public. For reservations, call 477-4312. Society chairman. Audience partici­ pation will be encouraged. Admis­ sion is free. For more information, call Carol Stepp at 471-6493 or 458- 9459. LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS The Mars Colonization Special Interest Group of UTSEDS will pres­ ent a panel, "Exploration of Space — From Fiction to Science," at 7 p.m. Monday in Burdine Hall 106. Scheduled panelists, all well-versed in science fiction, are: Harlan Smith, McDonald Observatory director and UT professor of astronomy; Edward Nather, UT professor of astronomy; Steve Jackson, president of Steve Jackson Games and designer of Generic Universal Role-Playing Sys­ tem and other games; and John Strickland, Austin Space Frontier OTHER The University Folk Dance Soci­ ety will sponsor free folk dancing from 8 to 11 p.m. Friday in the Tex­ as Union Building Tower Room. Learn Greek dances. No experience necessary. For more information, call Melissa at 471-5985. The University Underwater Soci­ ety will sponsor a Friday night dive at Windy Point on Lake Travis. Meet for car pooling at 6 p.m. in the parking lot diagonally across from Robert Lee Moore Hall. Everyone is welcome. sexlife THE Da ily TEXAN/Friday, July 15.1968/Page 13 ACROSS 1 Resorts 5 Wound 9 Utilizers 14 FHnfl 15 Mexican food 16 Sprite 17 Solo number 18 Thorough 20 Fruit source 22 Synchi «teed 23 Alder: Scot. 24 Omega 25 Abrupt 26 Fuel 27 Debatable 28 Greek letter 31 Pool shot 34 Bequeaths 35 Negative 36 Region 37 Reduced 38 Glaswegian 39 Young pet 40 Sounds 41 Religious art 42 Rathe bird 43 Toppers 44 Exhaust 45 Assemblies 47 Carry 48 Neighborhood si rSudden pain 53 Ruby-glass pigment 55 Of speeches 57 Heraldic bearing 58 Part of TNT 59 Declaim 60 Jacket type 61 Place 62 Machine gun PMVNMM PUZZLB 90LVSO sue m a s asn as □so asas naraan □an nassaaasas u sss ana ssaasa aninss raranan sasa oas asna □sa snaas asan sansnssasans sn a ss aaasa araran ssa ssa aaarara a asaasa aaa aasoaanssa sasa □ssao asas □aaa L E A R IR IE IS IT IS ] 63 Scoot DOWN 1 — Flow: UK naval base 2 Kitchen tool 3 Easterner 4 — of David 5 Ship areas 6 Burdened 7 Pine 8 Scarf 9 End results 10 Hindu guitar 11 Being 12 Cleave 13 Ovule 19 Support 21 Squad 25 Fish 26 Now part of India 27 Arachnids 29 Binge 30 Column 31 Land point 32 — lily 33 Cast off 34 Craves 37 Yachtsman 38 Drink 40 All to ------- 41 Summon 44 Moody 46 During: pref. 47 Forsake 48 1492 ship 49 Mentor 50 Catkin 51 Weight units • 52 Legal paper 53 Kind of pop singing 54 Obligation 56 US tax org. 7-15-88 © 1988 United Feature Syndicate SIR,, THERE'S A LOT OF grumbling FROM THE STAFF OVER YOUR C PROPOSED DRUG IKNOW. I'M BEGINNING TO HAVE SOME SECOND THOUGHTS MYSELF. CANT WE TELL JUST BY OBSERVING PEOPLE WHETHER, THEY'RE USING CO­ CAINE? iQ D GC l - > a: GC o m ■ - v NOT REALLY, SIR... WHY NOT? WELL, TO START WITH, CORE DOESN'T SPEECH YOUR IMPAIR. m g j g j g j g j a FROM NOW ON, WUR E\/EW WAKING THOUGHT WILL F0CUC ON ML... I WILL WHAT 0JA5 YOUR NAMt Red Sox make manager switch BOSTON — The Boston Red Sox, the to keep pace struggling American League East after having been picked by many to win the di­ v is io n , J o h n McNamara Thursday as play was to resume after the All-Star break. fire d M a n a g e r in Third-base coach Joe Morgan was named interim manager. The abrupt announcement was made as team members and coaches began arriving at Fenway Park for the first of a four-game series with the Kansas City Royals. Morgan, 57, said he had no ad­ vance notice of the decision, which the team said was made by Mrs. Jean R. Yawkey, president of the Red Sox, and delivered by General Manager Lou Gorman. "Lou Gorman came up to me and said, 'W e're going to make a mana­ gerial change. You're going to be the new manager,' " Morgan said. McNamara is the sixth manager fired this season and the third in the seven-team AL East. Morgan said he didn't have a chance to talk to McNamara before the man who had managed the team for 3V£ years left the ballpark. McNamara, 56, was named the team's 36th manager Oct. 18, 1984, and compiled a 297-273 record. He took the team to the 1986 World Se­ ries, won by the New York Mets in seven games. "I never wanted to take over an­ other man's job in mid-stream, but the chance is here now, a chance I the had figured had gone by boards," said Morgan, who for eight years managed the Red Sox Triple-A team in Pawtucket, R.I. "I figure that at my age and after 12 years in Triple-A that I probably would never manage in the big leagues." Morgan, who joined the Red Sox in 1985 as first-base coach, said he had been given no guarantees be­ yond this season, but added "the word interim never entered my vo­ cabulary." The decision comes as the Red Sox begin the second half of their season with a 43-42 record tied for fourth place with the Milwaukee in the AL East, nine games behind De­ troit. "It's easier to change leadership than change the entire 24-man roster," said Haywood Sullivan, co­ owner of the team. Lady Horns sponsor sale Daily Texan Staff The women's athletic depart­ ment will hold a garage sale from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday in the tunnel under L. Theo Bellmont Hall. Items from all women's sports were donated. Game uniforms from past basketball seasons, basketballs, cans of tennis balls, team sweats, T-shirts and other novelty items will be sold. A bucket of eight tennis balls will cost 50 cents, T-shirts will cost $2-3 and jerseys will cost $5. Proceeds from the sale will be used for women's athletic schol­ arships. 11 p i l l » ' ..... ; • - ....................... T • Scott p Fishel ph A gosto p Puhl rt 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 8 7 1 6 8 A g u a yo 3b Oaulton c Je ltz ss Rawiey p H arris p G G ross if B edrosn p T otala 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 38 5 10 5 500 000 002—7 101 001 200—8 Crews JHowell S,9 Chicago Schiraldi 1,4-8 DiPino Lancaster Gossage 0 2 0 2 2 2 4 2-3 1 1- 3 2 1 0 0 4 0 2 0 0 0 4 0 2 0 WP -Gossage B K — JHowell T— 2 49 A—34.031 G am e W inning RBI — Ram irez (7) E— D oran L O & H ouston 14 P hilad e lph ia 10 2 B B H atcher B ig g io 3B Harris S am uel HR Bell (1) S am ­ uel (7). S chm idt (7) S B G Young (48) S S cott 2 IP H R E R B B S O Expos 1, Reds 0 CMCMNAT1 MONTREAL M a jo r L e a g u e S t a n d in g s AM ERICAN LEAGUE E ast D M rto n W L Pet. QB Houston a*a-sa--- « « x i til AM* -- n » ii mvwon w 52 50 45 43 45 43 29 54 48 46 42 41 40 35 34 36 43 42 44 46 60 605 581 511 506 506 483 326 2 8 8 V? 8v2 1 0 '* 2 4 '* L Pet. GB 607 — 5 552 7 529 477 1 1 ',* 466 12’ * 13 460 18’* 398 35 39 41 46 47 47 53 H ouston Scott A gosto W.7-0 DSmith S,15 ■we-»-- «-»..» i n H Q I ^ n i Rawley Harris Ruttin Tekulve L.2-6 B edrosn Detroit New York M ilw aukee Boston C leveland Toronto B altim ore O akland M innesota K ansas C ity C alifornia C h ica g o Texas Seattle Page 1 4 /T H E D A IL Y T E X A N /F rid ay, July 1 5 ,1 9 8 8 SERVICES SERVICES EMPLOYMENT 750 — Typing 760 — Misc. S«rvlc«s 800 — G eneral Help Wanted Associated Press TUTORING Tutoring available to help you with your term papers, thesis, etc. Tutoring at all levels available. Leave message for M. (512) 237- Du Mont: 5263. If I do not return your call in 24 hours, leave message at: (512) 237- 4155. 7-15 SISTER STELLA - H oly woman, advice on a ll problems, personal & business. Help w ith m arriage & love. O vercom e your enemies, and remove bad luck. C all 447-5331. 4704 S. Congress. 7-21B NOTARY PUBLIC 409 W est 29th. Locot- ed one block east o f G uadalupe. Robert Young 472-3034, 8-5 p.m. 7-258 EMPLOYMENT 7 9 0 — P a r t t im e A M A T E U R P H O T O G R A P H E R S Phototech is accepting applications fo r part-tim e p arty photographers. W orking mostly nights and w eek­ ends. Successful applicants w ill be neat in appearance and person­ able, have quality 35m m SLR cam­ era and dependable car. Call M - TH, 474-4897. 8-9 Teller Part-time teller. Hrs. 11 am - 3 pm M-F. Experi­ ence only. Apply Bank of Austin 2508 Guadalupe between 9 am - 4 pm. r 7-12 ★ Burger King ★ now hiring, day & evening shifts available. Experi­ ence preferred, not re­ quired. Apply in person 2- 5 pm, Dobie Mail location only. EOE, M /F. 1 7-12 CAMPAIGN FOR CLEAN WATER Sane our groundwater wMo you hdp build o •bang Seteiiidx grateroot i water poM on lobby. Loam Irio ftmdrawng t conyoign monogomont teali io PROTECT E*wonfs Aquifer STOf portado poeorang Got tough on poftuten . Got dotted now in a co- raor dial mata» o dMrtancofl Hours 1:30 -10 pm. Co» CLEAN WATEt ACTION 474-0605 7-15 $10.50 TO START Sum m er jo bs a v a ila b le fo r co lle g e students. Flexible hours. Advancement program s a v a ila b le . Earn m oney w h ile re ce ivin g g o o d w o rk e x p e ri­ ence. C a ll betw e en 10 am - 5 pm. 4 5 4 -1 0 0 0 . 7-25L Need Sharp Individual wdh prof— farWl atMud and appearance to be orvsrte manager of small W ert Austin apartment community. Compensation pack­ age includes: efficiency apartment, urithes, plus smol salary and commiaions. Bring or moil resume to: MJ 11940 JoHyviHe Rd 12017 Austin, Texas 78750 8-10 ftony i ools. Casting info. (1) 805 -68 7-60 00 Ext. TV-9413. 7-25 810 — Office- Clerical Part time secretarial help. Office hours between 9 am and 4 pm week days. Min. 4 hour block $5/ hr. Typing required, contact us be­ tween 8:30 & 10 am. Screening in­ cludes personnel test and personal interview. T. E. Wiley Co. 1506 W . 6th 7-15 NEAR CAMPUS. FuH/part tim e. BOOK­ KEEPER (We Train) TYPIST (45 + wpm). RUNNER (Your Cor). O DD JOBS. A ppli­ 7- cation 9om -4pm , 408 W . 17th St 22C TEMPORARY TYPIST posistion fo r insur- artce » agency. Accuracy a must. C all Pat, -2911. 7-15 4 4 5 ______________________________ NEED PART TIME typist to transcribe from cassettes. $4 /h r. C oll 327-4220 fo r interview. 7-15 820 — Accounting- Bookkeeping Part time clerical position. A p p ro x i­ mately 10-15 hrs/week, $ 3 .7 5 /h r. O ffice experience required, p eo­ ple skills important. A va ila b le fo r training immediately, start position in August. M a il resum é/letter o r d ro p o ff at Kaplan Educational Center 1904 Guadalupe, 7 8 7 0 5 7-18 A C C O U N T IN G ASSISTANT fo r re ta il store. Full tim a p o sitio n responsible p rim a rily fo r A /P . Requires 10-key, c a lc u la to r s kill, expe rience w ith p e r­ sonal com puter h e lp fu l. N onsm oker p re fe rre d . N e a r UT cam pus. A p p ly at: Whole Earth Provision Co. 2410 San Antonio St. 476-4811 7-19 A FUN JOB Average $8 -I- per hour showing Christ­ mas decor and gifts. Call 482-1004. 8-31D N O W HIRING FORA VARIETY OF FALL SEMESTER POSITIONS The Texas Union is interviewing from 9 am to 11 am in room 4.410 of the Union Building. No phone calls accepted. The Texas Union is an EEO/AA employer. CAREGIVER W ANTED fo r baby and 4 year old. 3-4 afternoons/w eek during July and August. G ood so lo ry M ust have cor, references. 263 -22 98 7-15_______ SERVICE STATION atiendont fo r fu ll ser­ vice station. Must be self- m otivated. Ap­ ply Cusack's M obil 6 00 0 Cameron Rood. 7-15______________________________ OFFICE EMPLOYEE needed. G ood per­ sonality and excelent phone skills. $5.50/hr. Co» Rodney. 443-2992. 7-25 W ANTED STUDENT nonsmoker to w ork part tim e fo r light bookkeeping and sec­ re ta ria l services. Contact John a t Austin Spa ond Deck Company, 469 -30 84. 7- TELEMARKETING POSITIONS available near campus. Evening shifts only. $5- $10 hour. C all PBC M arketing 477- 3808. 8-9__________________________ HOUSEKEEPER/PERSON Friday needed ’* day p er w eek. H ousekeeping, grocery sh&pping, errands, etc. $ 4 /h r 346 -19 84.7 -19_____________________ NEED DEPENDABLE runner. M ust have ow n transportation, some o ffice w ork. Please co t to discuss hours and a va ila b ili­ ty C a l Patrie, 4 5 4 -4 6 9 9 7-20H _______ 8 0 0 — G eneral Halp Wanted GREENPEACE Be a feature act in Ronald Reagans worst nightmare! Work with Greenpeace, educate and protest about toxic waste, acid rain, and nu­ clear testing as member canvass staff. Hours 2-10 pm. Benefits. Call Terry. At <74-J ”7' AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight attend­ ants, Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service. Listings. Solanas to S50K. Entry level positions. Coll 805- 687-6000 Ext. A-9413.9-23 GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040- S59,23Q/yr Now Hiring Your Aroo. 805-687-6000 Ext R-9413 for currort Federal Lid. 9-23 OVERSEAS JOBS. Also 1,000 N ow H iringl 3 9 + openings! (1) 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext. Q J- 9 4 1 3 .7 -1 9 __ AV O N IS Looking fo r three people to take orders. $30 tree m ake-up m free training. 335-9712, Sherrie. 7-20L FLEXIBLE OPPORTUNITY FOR STUOENT WITH TEXAS REAL ESTATE LICENSE AS SELF MOTIVATED LEASING AGENT. PRIVATE OFFICE. NEAR CAMPUS, G O O D INCOM E POTENTIAL CALL DUSTY HALL STEP ONE PROPERTIES, 331-0117.7-15C lu ll/part-tim e. G oin NEAR CAMPUS, book ng experience. TYPIST (45 + wpm). RUNNER (your cor). OOD JOBS. Applications 9am -4pm ...408 W . 17th. 8- 2N 840 — Sales ORDER TAKERS Salary/Commission Full/Part-time No experience necessary 472-2536 7-15 7-29 SALES PERSON in high volume music business. Enthusiastic, comission basis. Extremely high potential. Experience prefered. 451-4414. 7-21 850 - Retail T-SHIRTS PLUS is occepting application fo r reta il soles. Evenings ond weekends $4 /h r. Bjjj, 327-4331. 7-20___________ 880 — Professional Full Time Houseparenfs/Relief Energetic, wholesom e indrridw al fo r resi­ dential treatm ent center w ith 8 tr oubled adolescents. N eed both live-in and shift workers. M ust have sincere interest in teenogen , a b iftiy to m odel appropriate life sk is , strong sense o f responsibility 6 dedication. Experience & degree pre­ ferred. The Settlem ent Home, 1600 Pey­ ton G in Rd. 836-2150. 7-15 SMALL PSYCHOLOGICAL CONSULTING FIRM N ikJi Cliunt Strvicts Monogor, 30 houfi wooldy. Must bo writing to mako cold coil ond dovolop/implomonf moritsf rmorch plom. Strong wnting/ipoofang drill and nx- pononco in idM/morinling raepjirad. Rdt* wont colog» court* w otk n»»dod. 477-1390 9 am -12 pm. 7-15 8 9 0 — Clubs- Restaurants i 111 n i Hours IQ om -lpm . G uar anteed B l l i l l M onth w ith commission. If intererted, c o l 3 4 6 -73 60 to schadule interview . 7-27 ■ . AA IEZIA HIRING door parsons and watfpanons. Apply in person Friday, be­ tween 12pm-3pm of 6th and Rad Rivar. 7-15 9 0 0 — Domestic* Household Mother — professional, Single happy responsible female seeks I student, for care of dot |hter, age 7, Before/after school and occasional business travel. Meal preparation, very light house­ keeping, and errands for room/ board/gas. Non-smoking 263- 9553. Elizabeth. 7-19 FREELANCE GRAPHIC a u rtra to n and m echanical engineer draftsman. Must be creative, fa rt, wrth rtrong ideas. 459- 8 8 8 8 7-25_________________________ CARE TAKER Lonp term car* taker for child in a no mim- Hiy hORW / ÍV 0 ¡n OT C y k ü NEED OPEN m inded guys w ith no in h k i- hons. G ood 3 ltN mmdod guy ■ood \ookr f ond w4twg to. foam hÓygg / Engfah / «forá making phrtMopiry NigMCM) fto- N o nxpontnco necessary. g * „ ^ / / $ 2 5 0 , Da 474 -64 81.8 -5 C a l before 6 p je . PSYCHIATRIC COMMUNITY hoseeíÜf! O ak H I is hiring port-lim o a n O H ^ H counselors. 2pm 6pm. M on-Sat. 7-15 J 2 8 8 - 2 6 8 7 ^ H B 2 0 -2 5 YAROWORK. HOUSECLEAMNG, iron­ in g , h o u rs /w e e k . P r io negotiable, able. 476-1343 7-181 per week / flexible schedule 2 mornings / 480-5679 daytime. 7-22 NEED STUDENT pert time M-W to to­ ponees X) yeer old boy. Need car, pro- tor sducrtfen ■ d o r X 7554 7-15 • R e t u r n t t t e m • G o p fe « f i t t i n g • ü B w f f ln in g • t a u r C o p B i « O t e « ( M g C u t e ■ L o c a te d « U o o o t n V i t e j t ■ 6406 North ÍH 35 #2190 A C A D E M IC T Y P IN G S E R V IC E th St. 5 0 4 W . 24 41 477 -8 1 rsumes, Term Papers, Re rtions Bnefs Divsertc s. n o tice $ 2 /p p . w /2 4 h r Camp» I 11 • Next door to A Open 8 a.i Pickup 4 O * SartO n. to 1 tvery e e 4 Bean's tb n ta h t Available America's Oldest-Largest PROFESSIONAL RESUME SERVICE JOB WINNING! RESUMES $ V Export Design • Typing Printing WhUe You Walt • Job BM um evlet»'» Appttcoltora • Mollino Campaign# Sf 171'# • Mmtary ConveWon# • Business PtooosaH ft Reports • Free Intervtew/Ufertme Updotag Central South North Wert M ic e 1 *M - NsMoswM* 1)00 Quodcrtupe #10) 2219 W. ften WMe #» 991) Bumet #20) M U Bee Cave* M . Ué-9477 129-792» SPEEDWAY TYPING me .. WWgWwSf a itew éM Ib a u h é é 469-5653 Doble MaH #27 (2nd floor) RartongVoUoM OotwGomge H u t, Accurate, D»jw»rtafc WOODS TYPING W O RD PR O C ES SIN G 472-6302 2200 GUADALUPE (side entrance i When You Want It Done Right House of TYPING & RESUMES O P E N 7 D A Y S SUN-THUBS T IL M ID N IG H T 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 8 1 3 W . 2 4 fti (T ri-T o w e rs ) THE STUDENT'S TYPIST Expert Word Processing for all your needs Free Consultation For Dissertation or Thesis Preparation Quofty, Guarantied Work at keasonabh Pncm Call Ann a t 282-6044 o r Karan a t 282-6253 UNIVERSITY TYPING 473-2948 $2/pg. RUSH JOBS WELCOME. 7 days a week. Resumes $9. UT area near 30th and Guadalupe. *••$2.00 OFF WITH THIS AD*” WORD PROCESSING Specialize in the- Much experience w ith Bs/dssjertal* graduate school regulations. Pat EHtson. 474-1868.7-21 W ORD PROCESSING/typing. Theses, dissertations, legal reports. Q uality w ork a t reasonable prices. Barbara Tullos, 4 5 3 -5 1 2 4 .7-29L____________________ MILLIE'S W ORD Processing. Papers, theses, dissertations, mahouts, transcrip­ tion, proofreading. 15 years experience. South Austin 280 -63 04 8-3 ASAP TYPING /W ord processing, papers, theses, dissertation, maüouts, w ith a per­ sonal touch. $1.60/page Candace 451- 4 8 8 5 .8 -3 __________________________ FELIX W ORD processing. $1.35 per page. Free campus pick-up/ delivery. Katessfona! quality guaranteed. 482- 8 75 1.7-22_________________________ TYPING/W ORD processing. Papers, theses, resumes. Fast, accurate, neat. $10/hour. 467 -09 94. 7-15____________ 760 — Misc. Services $ 1 1 0 I pay cash for old high school rings. Paying up to $110 (men's), up to $35 (lady's). Also buy 10k, 14k & 18k gold jewelry. Any condition. James Lewis 458- 2639, (Mon-Fri). 8-39 $$$ CASH FOR $$$ $$$ THE NEW YEAR $$$ SSS WE PAY TOP DOLLAR $$$ Don't give your valuables owoyl We pay mase fair cams, jewelry, gold, rtc Testas Inter­ national Goto Inc 30th t N lomar. 320- 0191 30th & N. Lamar 320-0191 7-208 SISTER RUTH Spiritualist, reader and advisor, cord and pclm. Advises all af­ fairs of life. Past, present, Allure. June special: $40 reading, $20. 454-3283 7-288 TAROT READINGS S aaaal rtroduckwy roll. i---- 4P wng N r n n . 4 4 9 -4 4 4 7 . 7 fl U s * You Y IS A o r tito ftirC o rd to c h a ra * v a u rT *x a n W i t M i l C o l4 7 1 -5 3 4 4 4 4 2 3 3 2 2 0 0 6 2 1 0 4 3 1 1-3 2-3 Rawley p itch e d to 5 b atters in the 1 st WP Rawley H am s T 3 06 A 24 302 Dodgers 1, Cubs 0 First Gama LOSANGELS CHICAGO ab r h bi D unston ss 5 0 1 0 Palm eir if 3 0 1 0 D aw son rf 1 0 0 0 S n d b rg 2b 4 0 1 0 G ra ce 1 b 4 0 1 0 Law 3b 4 0 0 0 JD a vis c 4 0 1 0 S u n d b rg c 3 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 M uphry ph D M rtnz cf 4 0 1 0 S utcliffe o 3 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 i r h b i 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 t 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 4 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 0 36 1 9 1 Totola 33 0 7 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 1 0 00 000 0 0 0 -0 G am e W inning RBI E G ra ce DP C h ic a g o 1 uO B Los A ng e les 10 C hi Leary ( ' i ca g o 7 26- S cio scia 3B D awson IP H RER B8 SO 7 2 9 7 0 9 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 2 6 3 4 Dodgers 6, Cubs 3 SocondGams LOSANGELS CHICAGO Dunston ss P alm en tf V arsho rt S n d b rg 2b G ra ce l b D M rtnz cf T rillo 3b S u n d b rg c S chiraldi b DiP ino p ato r h bi 5 1 2 0 4 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 2 2 3 5 1 2 2 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 M u o hry ph L an castr p 0 0 0 0 Daw son ph 4 0 0 0 G o ssa g e p 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 36 • 9 • Totals ab rh bi 5 1 1 0 4 1 1 0 5 1 3 1 3 0 1 1 4 0 1 1 4 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 37 3 9 3 301 0 0 0 0 2 0 -6 002 0 1 0 0 0 0 -3 Sax 2b H eep 1b S tu b bs 1 b G ib son It M arshal rf S helby c f S cio scia c Ham ltn 3b APena p A ndesn ss Leary p W oodsn 3b Totala Loa Angola» Chicago Leary W, 8-6 APena S 7 Chicago S utcliffe 1,7.7 T— 2 49 Sax 20 H eep 1b JG onzIz pr S cioscia c G ib son If M arshal rf Shelby c f W oodsn 3b C rews p S tubbs 1 b D em psv c JH ow eii p A ndesn ss H illegas p Holton p Ham ltn 3b Totola Los Angoioi Chicago Game Winning RBI — Heep (1) E—Stubbs LO B — Los Angeles 7 Chicago 12 2B Mar Shall HR—Marshall (11). Gibson 2 (17) S B - S a x 2 (23) Varsho 2 (2) 8» H RER 88 SO Lo s AnosAss Hillegas Ftolton W 4-2 2 2-3 5 2 1-3 2 2 1 2 1 1 2 i 3 T h u rsd a y's G am a* B altim ore 7. M innesota 1. 1st gam e M innesota 8 Baltim ore 2 2 nd gam e New York 7. C h ica g o 5 Kansas C ity at Boston p p d M ilw aukee 6, Texas 2 Seattle 3. C le ve lan d i C alifornia 2, D etroit 0 Toronto 7, O akland 1 rain Friday s G a m ** Kansas C ity (S a berhagen 10-7 a nd L e ib ra n d t 5-10) at Boston (C lem ens 12-5 and Sm ithson 3-3). 2 4 05 p m C h ica g o (M cD ow ell 4-6) at N ew York (R hoden 4-6) 6 30 p m p m M innesota ( le a 5-4) at Baltim ore (B allard 4-6). 7 05 p m M ilw aukee (H igu e ra 6-5) at Texas (G uzm an 9-6) 7 35 Cle ve lan d (Farrell 9-6) at Seattle (M oore 4-9) 9 05 p m D etroit (A le xan d er 8-4) at C alifornia (W itt 6-9). 9 35 p m Toronto (K e y 5-1) at O akland (Stew art 12-7) 9 35 p m NATIONAL LEAGUE East DMrton W L Pet. GB New York P ittsb u rg h M ontreal C h ica go St Louis P hilad e lph ia Los A ng e les San F ra n cisco H ouston C in cin na ti San D iego Atlanta 54 50 46 45 38 36 West Division 34 37 41 42 49 50 36 40 43 46 49 55 614 575 529 517 437 4 19 581 535 511 477 449 353 _ 3 ' * 7 ’* 8 ' * 1 5 '* 17 — 4 6 9 1 1 '* 19’* W L Pet. GB 50 46 45 42 40 30 Thursday's Gamas Los A n g e le s 1, C h ica g o 0 1 st gam e Los A n g e le s 6. C h ica g o 3. 2nd gam e M ontreal 1, C in cin na ti 0. 10 innings P ittsb u rg h 9 San Fran cisco 2 H ouston 7 P hilad e lph ia 5 New York 9, A tlanta 8 11 in ning s San D ie g o 3 St Louis 1 Friday’» Gamas Los A ng e les (H ershiser 13-4) at C h ic a g o (M a d d u x 15-3). C in cin na ti (R ip 9-4) at M ontreal (D op son 2-5). 6 35 p m H ouston (D eshaies 5-6) at P hilad e lph ia (K G ro ss 8-5). San F ra n cisco (D ow ns 8-7) at P ittsb u rg h (W alk 10-4). New York (C one 9-2) at A tlanta (Z Sm ith 4-6). 6 40 p m San D ie g o (R asm ussen 7-6) at St Louis (Tu d or 4-4) 3 05 p m 6 35 p m 6 35 p m 7 35 p m B o x S c o r e s Astros 7, Phillies 5 PHILA HOUSTON GYoung ct Doran 2b Bass rf DSmith p GDavis 1 b Bell 3b BHatchr It Ramirz ss Biggio c a b rh b i 2 1 0 0 5 1 1 1 5 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 2 0 5 1 2 4 5 1 4 0 5 1 2 1 MYong ph Tekulve p 5 0 3 0 Samuel 2b M Thm p cf Hayes 1 b Schmdt 3b CJam es rf Bradley If Ruffin p ato r h bi 5 2 3 2 5 0 2 1 4 0 0 0 4 1 2 2 5 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 call the T E X A N classified HOTLINE 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 1 R U N Y O U R CAR o r TRUCK CLASSIFIED AD UNTIL IT S E L I S I f o r o n l y S 1 Q 5 0 * , , v . r , , f •* ■ A , : > : . s : J . M i ' 1 C ü : A ■' j ? . 7 ; ” p ¡ * • t • - ; * * ! u n i L . ___________________ _____________________ 000 000 000 0 -0 000 000 000 1—1 Twins 8, Orioles 2 SooondQome Puckett ct Hrbek 1b Gaetti 3b Newmn 3b Larkin dh Laudner c Gagne ss Lmbrdz 2b Tolrta Mmoooto Brttonore CRipkn ss 4 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 Murray dh Traber 1b 2 0 0 0 Sheets rl 1 0 0 0 Kennedyc 3 0 1 0 Schu 3b 4 0 1 0 BRipkn 2b 4 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 4 2 3 2 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 28 1 8 1 Totola 38 711 7 100 000 00 0 -1 311 200 00a—7 Game Winning RBI — Lynn (4) E—Gaetti, Davidson DP-Minnesota 1, Baltimore 3 LOB— Minnesota 7. Baltimore 7 2B— Traber. Gerhart HR—Lynn 2 (17) Murray 2 (14) SB—Gerhart (2) S F - CRipken tp H RER ee 80 Blyteven L7-8 Winn Boddickr W.5-11 7 0 6 0 0 1 2 2 larton by Boddicker WP Winn 2 HBP T—2 14 Moses ct Gagne ss Gladden it Hrbek dh Larkin ib Torve 1b Bush rt Davidsn rf Harper c Lmbrdz 2b Newmn 3b ToM» BALTIMORE r t r h k l Staneek 11 5 2 2 0 CRipkn ss 5 0 2 0 4 1 2 1 Murray dh Tettleton c 5 0 0 0 4 2 2 3 Gerhart cf Traber ib 1 0 0 0 Lynn rl 2 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 Osuiak rf 4 1 2 3 4 0 1 1 3 1 1 0 Schu 3b BRtpfcn 2b a b rh b i 4 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 4 1 1 1 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 2 0 0 1 2 0 0 1 3 • Totola 31 2 0 2 001 000 10 0 -0 001 100 0 0 0 -2 G am e Winning RBI LO B - Minnesota 7 Baltimore 5 2 8 G ladden 2 Lynn Moses Harper 2. l omoardozzi Schu lark m 3 8 - Larkin H R Tettteton(7) SB Bush (6) SF BRipken Larkin (4) 8» H R8t ee 80 AAndeson W 6-6 Berenguer 6 0 2 0 2 0 1 2 0 0 Tibbs L 4-6 Habyan Thurmond Aase 4 2 3 9 1 1 1 3 3 2 0 1 7 0 1 0 7 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 2 1 1 1 HBP Trabar by AAnder»on G ladden by Tibbs WP Tibbs T 2 49 A -29 578 Red us it Lyons 3b K Wilms rt Boston ph Caidemdh Gailgfw ct Paaquart GWafcr ib Hill 2b Mannq ss Karkovicc Baines pn Salase ToMa Chicago N ow Y orti r tr h b l RHndsn H 5 1 1 3 ftndiph 2b 5 1 1 1 4 0 2 0 Mtngty lb JClark dh 1 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 Wtnfteid rl G W ard ct 3 0 0 0 Staoght c 1 0 0 0 Vrtar da 30 4 2 2 1 Santana ss 4 0 1 0 4 1 1 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * r h t o 3 1 1 0 3 1 0 0 4 2 2 2 3 1 1 2 3 0 0 0 4 0 1 2 4 0 1 0 4 2 2 1 4 0 1 0 38 8 11 8 Tototo 32 7 8 7 130 001 0 0 0 -8 3 2 0 101 00a— 7 Game Winning REM — jC lark (14) E—Velarde Manrique DP Chicago 1 New York 1 lO B -C h c a g o 8 New York 5 28—GWard JClark Bee ton HR— Lyons (4). Radus (5) Mattmgiy (7) GWaNtar (7), Valarde (2) S~ RHanderson 8» H R ER ee eo RaussL.6-6 Long Roaanbarg Brttigar Now V arti Canchare W 10-5 Hudson Righatti Guanta S . 10 1 2 - 3 4 1-3 2 5 2 2-3 1-3 1 5 5 4 2 0 0 0 0 7 3 0 1 5 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 4 4 0 1 Candaiana pitched to 1 batter in the 6th BK—Reuss. Guante T—2 49 A—28.284 Mariners 3, Indians 1 CLEVBJbM) SEATTLE rtb rh b l 4 1 2 1 Reynids 2b 3 0 0 0 Quinns dh 1 0 0 0 Brantlay M Brtbom ib 4 0 0 0 Vahe c 3 0 0 0 Rabb rl 3 0 0 0 Prertoy 3b 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 C oftod 3 0 0 0 MDtaz ss 3 0 1 0 r tr h b l 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 4 2 2 1 4 0 1 0 3 1 1 0 4 0 1 2 3 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 80 1 4 1 Tototo 32 8 0 3 Franco 2b Francon if ZuveUaph C a n ard Kittle dh Snyder if Jacoby 3b RW agtnu Ramo» ib AHanaonc Tatoto Ctotrotond •ortMa Gwne Winning RBI— Rabb(1) LOB Cleveland 2. Seattle 6 2B—VaNe Rabb Qui­ nones HR—Brantley (14). Franco^9) 001 000 0 0 0 -1 100 300 00»—8 h Rm ee eo 9 4 3 3 1 1 1 0 8 8 Larkin ss Daniels It Sabo 3b ONeili rf EDavis cf Esasky 1 b BDiaz c Wnghm pr Reed c Tredwy 2b DJacksn p Totola ONixon cf Rames If Galarrg 1 b Brooks rf ab rh bi 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 Wailach 3b Santoven c 4 0 0 0 Hudler 2b 3 0 1 0 Rivera ss 0 0 0 0 Perez p 0 0 0 0 TJones ph 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 Parrett p 32 0 3 0 Totrti ab rh bi 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 4 1 0 0 4 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 38 1 • 1 One out when winning run scored Game Winning RBI — Rivera (4) E—Rivera 2 DP Montreal 1 LOB- Cincinnati 3 Mon­ treal 6 2B ONeili 38— Rivera SB- -Hudter (8) H R I 1 É R B B 8 0 DJackson 1.10-5 9 1-3 6 1 Perez Parren W 10-2 WP DJa ckson T 2 20 A 28 813 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Mets 9, Braves 8 NEWYORK ATLANTA Gant 2b Oberkft 3b GPerry 1b DMrphy rl Griffey 11 Thomas ss DJam es ct Virgil c r t r h M 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 5 1 1 0 5 4 3 0 6 3 5 4 4 1 2 2 5 0 2 1 Mahler p 6 0 2 1 Oiwtne p Runge ph 2 0 0 0 Fhjieo p 0 0 0 0 Smmns ph 1 0 0 0 Giavme or 0 0 0 0 Alvarez p 0 0 0 0 Morrsn ph 45 9 IS 8 Totrt» abrhbi 5 0 3 2 5 2 2 0 5 2 2 2 5 1 1 3 5 0 1 0 5 1 1 1 4 2 2 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 38 8 13 8 Game Winning RBI - None E—Backman Gant. Griffey DP—New York 2. Atlanta 2 LOB- New York 11. Atlanta 7 2B—Oberktet! Strawberry 2 McReynokJs 2 OJames GPerry Gant H R OMurphy (14). HJohnson (17) McReynotds (12). Thomas (8) GPerry (6) SB- Strawberry (19) Wilson (9) S Darting Mahler Virgil SF -Gant H R ER B 8 SO 5 1-3 10 0 2-3 2 0 1 3 1 1 3 1 4 3 8 3 2 2 7 0 1 0 0 5 3 0 1 7 0 1 0 0 5 3 0 1 3 1 l 1 0 1 0 2 4 3 0 1 0 1 1 0 3 2 WP McDowell BK -M ahier PB— Virgil T— 3:47 A — 11 805 Brewers 6, Rangers 2 MLWAUKEE TEXAS r tr h b l 4 1 1 1 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 2 3 0 3 1 1 2 3 1 1 0 5 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 MStaniy c 2 0 1 2 McDwef cl Espy 11 Fletchr ss OBnen 1b Incvgk dh Sierra rt F*etr»lli c Buechie 3b Wilkrsn 2b a b rh b i 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 4 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 2 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 31 2 8 2 081 001 001—8 010 010 0 0 0 -2 Tototo 81 8 7 8 Tototo Gome Winning RBI — Adduci (1) E—Garvtnar Sierra DP—Milwaukee 1 LOB— Milwaukee 10. Texas 5 2B—OBnen Yount SB—Yount (13) Hamilton (3) S— Sveum Gantner SF—Robidoux m h re r ee eo 1 0 0 1 1 0 6 1 3 6 1 2 5 0 0 5 2-3 5 0 0 2 1-3 1 1 2 0 0 5 0 0 1 1 1 5 0 0 Mohorcic pitched to 1 batter m the 6th Wegman pitched HBP—Espy by Wegman Moktor by Mohorcic. Sorhoff by to 1 batter m the 7th Williams W P - Hcxjgh T—2 54 A— 26.526 Orioles 7, Twins 1 Dykstra ct Leach p M yers p Bckrrm 2b M a g ad n 1 b S trwbry rl M cR yids It HJohsn 3b Carter c Elster ss Darling o M cC lure p Mazzilti oh M cD w ll o W ilson ct Now York Now Yorti Darting McClure McDwll Leach W 3-1 Myers S 14 ASonto Mahler Otwme Puteo Alvarez L 3-3 Montor dh Gantnr 2b Surhoff 3b Yount cf Robidx ib Sveum ss Adduci if Hamiltn rl COBnen c Mfcmukoe To m s 0 2 3 3 0 0 000 0 1 - 0 300 121 0 1 0 0 0 - 8 Yankees 7, White Sox 5 CMCAOO NEWYORK Davidsn If Bush rf R rh N 2 1 1 0 4 0 1 0 Gerhart If Lynncf a b rh W 4 3 3 0 5 2 3 4 WP—SwindoN T—2 08 A— 8.277 Balfour Class Ring Sale Celebrate Tradition with a Balfour Class Ring! Houn Mon-Fri 8:30-5:90 8m t l(h00-2.40 Up to $66 O ff $40 D&pomit Required D eedline: Set 7/16/88 2304 G u ad alu p e 47 6 787 Balfoui; No one remembers in so many ways. TEXAS UNION FILMS ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Schedule of Films for July 15 - September 4 min. 9:00 p.m. AthmeemgaupplmimnltoltmOeafTi Thursday, July 28 WALKABOUT (1071) D. Nicholas Roeg; Jenny Agutter, Lucien John. Two European children abandoned in the Australian outback are found by a young aborigine boy - and the three enjoy life in an unspoiled, primitive world - until civilization rears its ugly head and detroys their private, fragile world. This film beautifully details the rites of passage with a rare purity of vision. PG 88 min. 7:00 p.m. BEDAZZLED (1967) D. Stanley Donen; Dudley Moore, Raquel Welch. Dudley Moore stars in this devil may care update of the Faust legend. An unhappy short order cook receives seven wishes from Satan; he soon becomes a fly, a rock star, an intellectual, and a nun. Raquel Welch, meanwhile is the personification of lust in this witty, funny satire. PG. 107 Tuesday, July 19 THE BIG SLEEP (1946) D. Howard Hawks; Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall. Pnvate eye Phillip Marlowe is hired to protect General Sternwood's wild young daughter from her own indiscretions, and finds several murders later that he has fallen in love with her younger sister A hard, fast, tough film that offers up the perfect blend of suspense, violence, smoky sex and sheer fun — so raoid-fire and complicated in detail that even the author of the novel claimed he wasn't sure *who done it." NR 114 min. 7:00 p.m. EL AMOR BRUJO (1986) D Carlos Saura; Antonio Gades, Christina Hoyes. Saura conludes his dance trilogy with this story of gypsy lovers who resort to sorcery to eliminate the ghostly presence of the woman’s dead husband. Spanish w/subtitles PG 100 mm 9:15 p.m. VIRIDIANA (1961) D. Luis Buñuel; Silvia Pinal, Fernando Rey A neo- Sadean parable about the perils of purity in an impure world, this scabrous black comedy tells of Viridiana, a novice nun who comes to live with her uncle, a man of very peculiar habits who dies in the most sordid of circum­ stances. The charitable woman then opens his house to a grotesque assortment of beggars, lepers, etc who enthusiastically abuse her hospital­ ity. A celebrated and scandalous film that was immediately banned by the Franco regime when it was released Spanish w/ subtitles NR 90 min. Hogg auditorium. 7 00 pm. THE SEVENTH SEAL (1957) D Ingmar Bergman The acclaimed film about life vs. death set in medieval times An international classic Swedish w/ subtitles. 95 mm. NR Hogg auditorium 9 00 p m. Wednesday, July 20 THE BIG SLEEP (1946) D. Howard Hawks, Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall Private eye Phillip Marlowe is hired to protect General Sternwood's wild young daughter from her own indiscretions and finds several murders later that he has fallen m love with her younger sister A hard, fast, tough film that offers up the perfect blend of suspense violence, smoky sex and sheer fun — so rapid-fire and complicated in detail that even the author of the novel claimed he wasn't sure “who done it ’ NR 114 mm 7.00 p.m. JIMI HENDRIX With Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Peter Townshend. JIMI HENDRIX is a skillfully woven biography of the great black musician who died tragically at 27. In addition to the personal and professional insights that are shown, there is, of course, his music. R. 102 min. Hogg auditorium. 11:40 MONA LISA (1986)m D. Neil Jordan; Bob Hoskins, Cathy Tyson. Bob Hoskins plays George, a smalltime hood who becomes the driver and unlikely knight errant for an edgy black prostitute. Pugnacious, boorish and naively romantic, the stubby George falls hard for his gangly dark princess, only to be drawn into the dark and sleazy porno underworld at her request. This fool's quest leads him through the seamiest precincts of London's vice rackets on a devious trail of blackmail, terror and disillusion. Set to the kitsch romanticism of Nat King Cole's theme song, the film creates a gaudy, tawdry dreamworld pitched cannily betwen pulp and poetry, where dreams are cheap and fairy tales don't quite come true. This is a beautiful, heartbreaking gem of a movie, one of the best to come out in a long, long time. NR. 100 min. Hogg auditorium. 7.30 p.m. Sunday, July 24 REAR WINDOW (1954) D Alfred Hitchcock; James Stewart, Grace Kelly. This gripping Hitchcock film is set wholly within the spatial limits of a news photographer's apartment as he sits confined to his room by a broken leg. Bored and losing patience with his confinement, the journalist picks up his binoculars and watches the world as it is played out below him in the courtyard, and across from him in his neighbor’s apartments. When he thinks he sees a murder committed in the room across the way, the plot escalates even further. Within this tight structural framework, Hitchcock relies largely on a tightly constructed script and impeccable acting to propel the plot forward - the result is one of Hitchcock's best - sexy, voyeuristic, en­ grossing NR. 112 min. 2 & 7:00 p.m. FIVE CORNERS (1987) D. Tony Bill; Jodie Foster, Tim Robbins, John Turturro. It is 1964 in the Southest Bronx - America is on the cusp of social change - the neighborhood girls are sniffing glue, and the local former street brawler has adopted Martin Luther King Jr.’s, doctrine of non violence — this film, an urban American Grafitti of sorts, is an explosive look at the darker side of life which expertly reveals the seething unrest lying underneath the glossy veneer of 1950's nostalgia. John Turturro gives an impeccable performance as the neighborhood pyscho who sees the world with a glaring, burning righteousness that dares the world not to see him. R. 92 min. 4:30 EL AMOR BRUJO (1986) D Carlos Saura: Antonio Gades Christina Hoyes Saura conludes his dance trilogy w.th this story o? gypsy lovers who resort to sorcery to eliminate the ghostly presence of the woman's dead husband Spanish w/ subtitles PG 100 min 9 1 5 p m & 9:15p.m. VIRIDIANA (1961) D Luis Buñuel; Silvia Pinal Fernando Rey. A neo Sadean parable about the penis of purity m an impure word, this scabrous black comedy tells of Viridiana, a novice nun who comes to ve with her uncle, a man of very peculiar habits who dies in the most sord!d of circum­ stances The charitable woman then opens his house to a grotesque assortment of beggars, lepers, etc woo enthusiastically abuse nor hospital ity A celebrated and scandalous film that was immediately banned by the Franco regime when it was released Span sh w subtitles NR 90 mm. Hogg auditorium 7 00 p m. THE SEVENTH SEAL (1957) D.Ingmar Bergman The acclaimed film abo-t life vs death set in medieval times. A" nternational classic. Swedish w subtitles 95 mm NR Hogg auditorium 9 00 p.m Thursday, July 21 chiirtil. HliltiM "A f i a it « a iv ii...! till reaiM i i n w ilt H im m l i l i u m léiatitv an il l i I i i l ' ‘Tht 1117 C i ih i film m n l i l i t i kit. F u tiv il'i Emity l l i f i i i M itic tm . Wisti You Were Herei * v * ' r * ■< * w * t A -I FW IZ V 4 M i 1 * * x * w ^.l£.P Mf *a/’~ WISH YOU WERE HERE (1987) D. David Leland; Emily Lloyd, Tom Bell. A refreshing comedy about a spirited 15 year odl girl who, smarting from her mother's untimely death and her suffocating environment in a tiny seaside village, sets out on a course to shock and disrupt everyone and everything. Foul mouthed and full of mischief, she succeeds in confounding everyone from the pious woman at the beauty shop to her psychiatrist who becomes unhinged at her saucy language and sexual frankness. A fresh departure from the tedious coming of age movies now being churned out by Hollywood. NR. 81 min. 35mm Hogg auditorium. 7:00 p.m. THE FAMILY (1988) D. Ettore Scola; Vittorio Gassman, Fanny Ardant An endearing, affectionate tale which chronicles four generations of an Italian middle-class family — without ever leaving the family’s Rome apartment. We follow Carlo, the narrator, from childhood to old age, and along the way we meet Beatrice, his sensible and decent wife, and the restless, energetic Adriana who is not only Beatrice’s sister but Carlo’s first love. Eccentric aunts, uncles gone astray and impertinent children all people the corridors of Carlo's genealogy. It is a family of artists and a family of spinsters and fools, and it is in the drama of the everyday and in the wonderful candor in which the characters reveal themselves that this film draws its special power Italian w/ subtitles. PG. 127 min. 35mm Hogg auditorium. and warmth. Austin Premier. 8:45 p.m. SUBWAY (1985) D. Luc Bresson; Christopher Lambert, Isabelle Adjani. A high glitz thriller set in the arcades, tunnels and platforms of the Paris Metro. Beneath neon lights, theives, bums, musicians and bull artists make a life for In this context, a daredevil themselves while escaping the transit police. ripoff artist has a romantic tryst with a kxored rich lady. R. 104 min. 35mm Hogg auditorium. 11:00 p.m. Friday & Saturday July 29 & 30 REPULSION (1965) D. Roman Polanski; Catherine Deneuve, Ian Hendry. A young manicurist is tortured by her conflicting feelings of hatred and desire for men. Plagued by waking nightmares — her mental torment builds to a frenzied crescendo of murdrous rage. NR. 105 min. 7:30 p.m. MOONSTRUCK (1987) D. Norman Jewison; Cher, Nicholas Cage, Danny Aiello. A sophisticated romantic comedy about the loves, jealousies and en­ tanglements of an eccentric Italian American family in Brooklyn who all believe they're in control of their lives until a mischievous moon appears over New York and illuminates new passions in all of them. Cher plays the widow Loretta who, in trying to mend the bad blood between her dowdy fiance and his family, falls in love with his brother, a hot headed, passionate, opera- loving baker. Their sizzling encounter allows her to play out her wildest dreams- but then she must face the consequences. Their involvement serves as backdrop for the rest of this film - a profoundly moving look at the exhiliration and heartache that comes from falling ( and staying) in love. PG. 102 min. 9:30 p.m. HEAVY METAL D. Gerald Potterton. Taken from the popular fantasy magazine of the same name, this anthology weaves together impressive animation, music from top rock groups and imaginative stories encompass­ ing science fiction, sword and sorcery, humor and sex. NR. 92 min. 11:35 p.m. WISH YOU WERE HERE (1987) D. David Leland; Emily Uoyd, Tom Bell. A refreshing comedy about a spirited 15 year odl girl who, smarting from her mother's untimely death and her suffocating environment in a tiny seaside village, sets out on a course to shock and disrupt everyone and everything. Foul mouthed and full of mischief, she succeeds in confounding everyone from the pious woman at the beauty shop to her psychiatrist who becomes unhinged at her saucy language and sexual frankness. A fresh departure from the tedious coming of age movies now being churned out by Hollywood. NR. 81 mm. Hogg auditorium 7:30 p.m. Monday, July 25 Tuesday, July 26 General Information There are no double features on this schedule; admission is charged for each feature film. All information is subject to change without notice. Please refer to the film ad in The Daily Texan for changes and additions. The Texas Union Theater is located on the second level of the Texas Union. Films at Hogg are designated so. Tickets go on sale approximately 30 minutes before showtime. Tickets are $2.50 for students, faculty and staff, $3.00 for the general public, and $1.50 for children under 12 years old. First run, very long, or unusually expensive films are $3.00 and $3.50, respectively. A current U.T. ID is required for each ticket purchased at the U.T. admission price. IDs will be checked at time of purchase. Friday & Saturday July 15 &16 ERENDIRA (1983) D. Ruy Guerra. Guerra’s tough, flamboyant style is the perfect vehicle for this film adaptation of a Gabriel Garcia Marquez work. The story tells of a beautiful 14-year-old girl who, after accidently burning down her grandmother’s mansion, must use her 'only asset* to pay back the old lady. Selling her body across the length and breadth of a vast desert region, Erendira becomes the center of a fantastic caravan, a shrine to commerce and carnality, attracting devotees by the hundreds, with snake-charmers, gamblers, and musicians in their wake NR Spanish w/ subtitles. 103 min. 7:30 p.m. THE 19TH INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF ANIMATION (1988) A hugely entertaining collection of 20 pnze winning animation shorts carefully chosen from over 750 titles screened at festivals around the world. The titles range from Academy Award winning ‘ CHARADE* and Zagreb Grand Pnze Winner •JUMPING* to the much touted Walt Disney Production ’VINCENT*.. and many more fantastic animation treats and feats you won't want to miss' Total running time. 112 min. NR. 9:30 p.m. ^ "R IO TO U SLY F U N N Y . SUPERB ENTERTAINMENT V S a n F ra n c is c o C h ro n ic le T H E 1 9 th IN T E R N A T IO N A L TO U R N E E OF ONE OF THE M O S T H O N O R E D A N D ENTERTAINING A N I M A T E D FEATURES E V E R 1 REEFER MADNESS PLUS MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR (1936) D Louis Gasmer; Dave O’ Bnen, Dorothy Short In the 30's, one of the favonte themes of 'poverty row' exploitation films was the evils of the 'devil's weed’ - manjuana. and this film set out to show how a young man s life soon becomes a mghftnare when he succombs to the dreaded substance •Reefer Madness’ was seen as tight drama in its day, warning the audience of how marijuana was destroying the lives of amenca's young people; today it's seen as pure campy melodrama all the way — completely hilanous by today's standards Must be seen to be believed NR 65 mm PLUS MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR (1966) The Beatles star in this famed film version of their hit album, with all the musical originality and excitement intact Within the framework of the 'Magical Mystery' bus tour, the many songs that are pari of the Beaties'own mystique come to life PG 60 mm 11 35pm THE UNTOUCHABLES (1987) D Bnan De Palma, Kevin Costner, Sean Connery, Robert De Niro Blood and alcohol flowed freely in Pnhibtion-era Chicago and out of this violent time rose an incorruptible band of lawmen known as the Untouchables Kevin Costner is Eliot Ness, the fearless Treasury agent who leads the deadly crusade against Al Capone's ruthless syndicate, Sean Connery is the two fisted Insh cop who becomes the group's mentor This is truly an incredible film that is at once raw and ferocious, yet elegant and haunting in its beauty and intensity. R 119 mm. 35mm Hogg auditorium 7 30 pm SUSPECT (1987) D Peter Yates: Cher, Dennis Quaid Avery business like Cher is a Washington public defender who takes on the case of a hulking, silent Vietnam vet accused of murder Dennis Quaid, in his most self assured performance to date, is the juror who improperly help6 her defend her client A superbly entertaining thriller — filled with plenty of insinuating mside- Washmgton talk, and enough dark shadows and directorial tncks to keep the audience on the edge of its seat R 82 mm Hogg auditonum 9 45 pm BREATHLESS (1959) D Jean Luc Godard, Jean-Paul Belmondo & Jean Seberg. One of most important films of the French New Wave. A small time hood on the run meets and is betrayed by an American girl in Paris Note­ worthy for its improvisational style and use of jumpcuts French w sutitles NR. 90 mm Hogg auditonum 11:25 p m Sunday, July 17 THE WIZARD OF OZ (1939) D Victor Fleming; Judy Garland, Ray Bolger This incredible movie, which we all grew up with in a yearly ntual of seeing it on T V., is of course a whole new experience on film where it can be shown on the big screen as it was meant to be. With its lavish sets, its grand scale and unforgettable score - this film about Dorothy and her companions to Oz is the fantasy tale of our time. 102 min. NR. 2 & 7:00 p m. THE 19TH INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF ANIMATION see July 15 descnption. 4 & 9:00 p m. THE UNTOUCHABLES see July 15 descnption. Hogg auditonum. 3 47:30 p.m. SUSPECT see July 15 descnption. H o g g auditonum 5:15 p m. 4 9:40 p.m. Monday, July 18 THE WIZARD OF OZ (1939) D. Victor Fleming; Judy Garland, Ray Bolger. This incredible movie, which we all grew up with in a yearly ntual of seeing it on T V., is of course a whole new experience on film where it can be shown on the big screen as it was meant to be. With its lavish sets, its grand scale and unforgettable score - this film about Dorothy and her companions to Oz is the fantasy tale of our time. 102 mm. NR. 7:00 p.m. THE BIG SLEEP see July 19 description. 9:00 p m. I I I ! 1 W O l l l I) V I H I H K I H I I) Friday & Saturday July 22 & 23 REAR WINDOW (1954) D. Alfred Hitchcock. James Stewart, Grace Kelly This gripping Hitchcock film is set wholly within the spatial limits of a news photographer's apartment as he sits confined to his room by a broken leg Bored and losing patience with his confinement, the journalist picks up his binoculars and watches the world as it is played out below him in the courtyard, and across from him in his neighbor's apartments When he thinks he sees a murder committed in the room across the way, the plot escalates even further. Within this tight structural framework, Hitchcock relies largely on a tightly constructed script and impeccable acting to propel the plot forward - the result is one of Hitchcock's best sexy, voyeuristic, en­ grossing. NR. 112 mm. 7:30 p.m. FIVE CORNERS (1987) D. Tony Bill; Jodie Foster, Tim Robbins, John Turturro. It is 1964 in the Southest Bronx - America is on the cusp of social change - the neighborhood girls are sniffing glue, and the local former street brawler has adopted Martin Luthier King Jr's, doctrine of non violence — this film, an urban Amencan Grafitti of sorts, is an explosive look at the darker side of life which expertly reveals the seething unrest lying underneath the glossy veneer of 1950’s nostalgia. John Turturro gives an impeccable performance as the neighborhood pyscho who sees the world with a glaring, burning righteousness that dares the world not to see him. R 92 min 9 40 In LOVE AND DEATH (1975) D. Woody Allen; Woody Allen, Diane Keaton 1812 Russia, a man condemned reviews the follies of his life Woody Allen's personal fantasia inspired by War and Peace , Ingmar Bergman and S J Perelman. fiR 85 mm. 11:25 p.m. BEDAZZLED see July 28 description. 9:15 p.m Wednesday, July 27 THE FOUNTAINHEAD (1949) D. King Vidor; Gary Cooper, Patricia Neal This movie is perfect for those who love deep thinking and lots of hidden meanings based as it is on Ayn Rand’s philosophical novel of the same name. Set in the milieu of pure modern architecture, the story deals with an idealistic young architect who cannot and will not cope with the compromises of big business and instead sets out to defy all conventional standards of the day. This film was an obsession of King Vidor's - and his personal fascintaion with the work is felt in the emotion and power of the film. NR. 114 min 7 00 SUBWAY (1985) D Luc Bresson; Christopher Lambert, Isabelle Adjani. A high glitz thriller set in the arcades, tunnels and platforms of the Pans Metro. Beneath neon lights, theives, bums, musicians and bull artists make a life for In this context, a daredevil themselves while escaping the transit police. ripoff artist has a romantic tryst with a bored rich lady. R. 104 min. 35mm Hogg auditorium. 11:00 p.m. Sunday, July 31 WISH YOU WERE HERE see July 29 description. Hogg auditorium. 3 4 7:30 p.m. THE FAMILY see July 29 description. Hogg auditonum. 5 4 9:15 p.m. MOONSTRUCK (1987) D. Norman Jewison, Cher, Nicholas Cage, Danny Aiello. A sophisticated romantic comedy about the loves, jealousies and en­ tanglements of an eccentric Italian American family in Brooklyn who all believe they're in control of their lives until a mischievous moon appears over New York and illuminates new passions in all of them. Cher plays the widow Loretta who, in trying to mend the bad blood between her dowdy fiance and his family, falls in love with his brother, a hot headed, passionate, opera- | loving baker. Their sizzling encounter allows her to play out her wildest dreams- but then she must face the consequences. Their involvement serves as backdrop for the rest of this film - a profoundly moving look at the exhiliration and heartache that comes from falling ( and staying) in love. PG. 102 mm. 2 4 7:00 p.m,. HEAVY METAL D. Gerald Potterton. Taken from the popular fantasy magazine of the same name, this anthology weaves together impressive I animation, music from top rock groups and imaginative stories encompass- I mg science fiction, sword and sorcery, humor and sex. NR. 92 min. 4 & 9:00 UNIO UCII \BI IS THE U NTO U CH ABLES see July 15 descnption. Hogg auditorium. 7:00 p.m. R U L ES OF THE G A M E (1939) D. Jean Renoir. Marcel Dalio, Nora Gregor. Renoir protrays foe erode charades of the French leisure dase before Worts War II «td satirizes «te mores and manners of a decadent society near coUapse. NR. French w/subtitles. 110 min. Hogg auditorium. 9:20 p.m. THE LO NELY PA SSIO N OF JUDITH HEARNE (1987) D Jack Clayton; Mflqgia Smitft, Bob Hoskins. A bittersweet love story about an Irish spinster looking for a companion and an expatriot Irishman looking for an easy buck. Bob Hoskins, who has turned in impeccable performances in such diverse films as Mona Lisa, and the recent smash hit, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, comes through wilh yet another perfect characterization here in this finely wrought personal film. R, 110 min. Hogg auditorium. 9 35 p.m Monday, August 1 TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN (1969) D. Woody Allen; Woody Allen, Janet Margolin. A social misfit becomes a bungling crook in this, Woody Allen's first feature as director, writer and star. PG. 85 min. 7:00 p.m. BLACK ORPHEUS (1958) D. Marcel Camus; Breno Mello, Marpessa Dawn. Against a background of the Carnaval in Rio de Janiero, this film retells the classic legend of Orpheus and Eurydice when a black tram driver accidently kills his girlfriend and .after seeking her in the nether regions, kills himself to be with her. Portuguese w/subtitles. NR. 103 min. 8:45 p.m. SNEAK PREVIEW From the director of Z. see Texan for details. Hogg auditorium.7 00 p.m. NO WAY OUT (1987) D. Roger Donaldson; Kevin Costner, Gene Hackman, Sean Young. This tense and timely thriller is set in the inner reaches of the Pentagon, where a group of troubled characters learn that deception can easily become their only means of survival. Lt. Commander Tom Farrell has just arrived on staff, and is given 48 hours to find and silence the witness to a brutal crime that must be covered up. Only Farrell already knows that the witness he is looking for is himself., and there is noway out of the trapin which he is caught. R. 114 min. Hogg auditorium. 9:20 p.m. Tuesday, August 2 TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN (1969) D. Woody Allen; Woody Allen, Janet Margolin. A social misfit becomes a bungling crook in this, Woody Allen’s first feature as director, writer and star. PG. 85 min. 7:00 p.m. BLACK ORPHEUS (1958) D. Marcel Camus; Breno Mello, Marpessa Dawn. Against a background of the Carnaval in Rio de Janiero, this film retells the classic legend of Orpheus and Eurydice when a black tram driver accidently kills his girlfriend and .after seeking her in the nether regions, kills himself to be with her. Portuguese w/ subtitles. NR. 103 min. 9:00 p.m. PARIS, TEXAS (1984) D. Wim Wenders; Harry Dean Stanton, Nastassja Kinski. A heartbroken man tries to piece the fragments of his life back together as he travels searching for his time-lost wife and son. Brilliant per­ formance and exquisite photography set the tone for this raw, emotional story of people in search of themselves. R. 150 min. Hogg auditorium. 7:00 p.m. August 5 & 6 THE PRINCESS BRIDE (1987) D. Rob Reiner; Mandy Patinkin, Billy Crystal. Based on the William Goldman novel, this charming film is a comic fairy-tale adventure that offers up everything from evil princes to klutsy wizards to beautiful, untouched maidens. A heartwarming, funny, romantic tale that will get you to believe that there may be such a thing as true love after all. PG-13. 98 min. 7:30 p.m. THE MISSION (1986) D. Roland Joffe; Robert DeNiro, Jeremy Irons. Deep in the jungles of South America, two men bring civilization to a native tribe. No, after years of struggle together, they find themselves on opposite sides in a dramatic fight for the native’s independence - one man will trust int he power of prayer, the other will believe in the might of the sword. A superbly acted, visually stunning account of the Jesuit Missionary's efforts to preserve for the native Indians a sanctuary from the ravages of rapidly increasing Spanish and Portuguese colonialism. 128 min. PG. 9:30 p.m. A CLOCKWORK ORANGE (1971) D. Stanley Kubrick; Malcolm McDowell, Patrick Magee. In a future Britain of desolation and brutality, a ruthless gang leader named Alex is reconditioned by society after a lifetime of the old 'Ultra- Violence*. Sent to prison for murder, he emerges perhaps more de­ humanized and ultimately more dangerous than ever. Kubnck explores the fine line between art and insanity, passion and violence in this disturbing movie filmed with Kubrick's unique style that is quite startling and brilliant. R. 137 min. 11:45 p.m. SLAMDANCE (1987) D. Wayne Wang; Tom Hulee, Mary Elizabeth Mas­ trantonio, Adam Ant A Los Angeles underground artist becomes unwillingly entangled in the police investigation of a brutal murder. A tension filled thriller featuring performances from two of today’s brightest young stars - Tom Hulee, who gave us one of the most lively and original performance in recent memory in Amadeus, and Ms Mastrantonio, Tom Cruise’s tough, practical girlfriend in The Color of Money. R. 110 min. Hogg auditorium. 7:30 p.m. • t . J k V ; . ' Wednesday, August 10 ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST ‘(1975) D. Milos Forman; Jack Nicholson, Louis Fletcher. A free-spirited, free-thinking immoralist impris­ oned for rape is transferred for observation to a state mental hospital. There, he tries to teach the other patients to assert themselves, and to learn to fly a little even though they are bound physically to this institution. The chilling, strong willed Nurse Ratched, however, is always there to thwart his efforts and to quench the spirits of the people he is trying to incite. A powerful adaptation of the Ken Kesey novel. R. 134 min. 7:00 p.m. SIDDH ARTHA (1973) D. Conrad Rooks; Shashi Kapoor, Simi Garewai. The first Hermen Hesse novel to be brought to the screen was filmed on location in India and tells the epic story of a man’s search for self through realms of experience of the flesh and of the spirit. R. 86 min. 9:25 p.m. Thursday, August 11 PIERROT LE FOU (1965) D. Jean Luc Godard; Jean Paul Belmondo, Anna Karina. This extremely rare Godard film has just emerged from years out of circulation. Ferdinand and Marianne are a pair of lovers who escape to the south of France, running away from their lives in Paris. There, they achieve some sense of isolation, but Marianne is soon drawn back to her past in­ volvement with gangsters and the tranquility ends there. Answering her call for help, Ferdinand runs to help her only to find himself embroiled in a shootout and betrayed by his lover. The dark underworld into which the two have been drawn ruins their chances of ever returning to their former ties, and self destruction may be the only way out As in BREATHLESS, Godard uses the gangster genre to explore his own pnvate obsessions with illusion and reality, action and contemplation. French w/ subtitles. NR. 112 min. 7:00 p.m. THE GRADUATE (1967) D. Mike Nichols; Dustin Hoffman, Anne Bancroft A wealthy young Californian graduates from college and then has to figure out what to do with his life - but first he is drawn into an affair with his father’s friend's wife, only to fall in love with her daughter. A lushly filmed movie whose impeccable cinematic technique perfectly captures the mindset of its characters and the anythmg-goes mood of the late sixties in which the story is set NR. 105 mm. 9:20 p.m. DRAGON CHOW (1988) D. Jan Schutte; Bhasker, Ric Young. There are over4 million foreigners living in West Germany, and this pristine, disraming film tells the story of one of them— a young Pakistani refugee named Shezad. The title comes from Weimer slang and is the name for the roses peddled in bars to boozers as peace offerings for their wives. This is Shezad's job when we meet him, but he is soon thrown out of the bar for his peddling and winds up witii an illegal kitchen job where he meets a tense stricken-looking Chinese waiter with whom he joins forces to open up a Pakistani restaurant Thus is the stage for Shezad’s rise and eventual fall. Woven throughout this setting, however, is the true subtext of the film which looks at the bewilder­ ing world these immigrants have entered— a cold and alienating Germany characterized by a sense of isoaltion and order. The sad tale of the waiflike Shezad suggests the larger loss which is Germany’s. German w. subtitles. 75 min. 35mm. Hogg auditorium. 7:30 p.m. SCHOOL DAZE (1988) D. Spike Lee; with Spike Lee. Spike Lee follows up his hit film, 'SHE’S GOTTA HAVE IT’ ,with this film set in an all black middle class college in the South. There, the student body is split between the dark skinned 'Jigaboos' who want to make the school divest itself of its South Africa holdings, and the lighter skinned, more affluent 'Wannabees* (as in, wannabee white) who only want to gather around the frat house, Gamma Phi Gamma, have a good time, and land that high paying job. Spike Lee is Half Pint, a Jigaboo aspiring to Gamma Phi Gamma status — . The conflicts between these two groups are fought out verbally, in an assortment of dance numbers, and of course comically, all of which bear the inimitable stamp of the young director as again he uses humor and light to look at the lives of blacks in America today. R. 110 mm. Hogg auditorium. 9:15 p.m. BLISS D Ray Lawrence; Barry Otto, Lynette Curran. A parable-type of film about modern life with large doses of black humor mixed with the bizarre. The story begins when an average advertising executive drops dead of a heart attack. However, four minutes later, he's revived and his life becomes a nightmare vision of suburbia lunacy. The LA.TIMES called it, 'a free­ wheeling and superbly sustained odyssey as distinctly surreal and satirical as that of ‘BRAZIL’ *.R 112 min. Hogg auditorium. 11:25 p.m. DIVA (1982) D Jean-Jacques Beineix; Fredenc Andrei, Roland Bertin. A mail earner becomes entangled in a web of murder, passion and mtngue when his obsession with a magnificent opera diva leads him to tape her in concert so as to capture her for himself - this act leads him both into her world of beauty, music and mystery while also embroiling him in a world of underground crime and violence A stunning film shot with extraordinary visual style. R French w/subtitles 123 mm. 7:30 p.m. SPIRITS OF THE DEAD (1969) D. Federico Fellini, Louis Malle, Roger Vadim; Bngitte Bardot, Jane Fonda 3 tales of Edgar Allen Poe come to life in this trilogy of the macabre Roger Vadim directs Jane Fonda as a de­ bauched Countess who incurs revenge from the grave, Louis Malle’s film tells what happens when a cruel, evil man comes face to face with himself, and Fellini’s 'TOBY DAMMIT* features Terence Stamp as a self indulgent, dissipated actor who comes to Italy to star in the first 'religious Western*., and soon learns the truth of the saying, ‘ Never bet the devil your head.* R 118 mm. 9 40 p m LAST TANGO IN PARIS see SEPTEMBER 1 description 11 50 p.m. 44 REMARKABLE... A PRAISEWORTHY FILM THAT DEEPLY MOVED ME!’ - N o r m a Me L a m Scoop M A N H A T T A N ARTS f e Mama. T u rn s 100 w i t h < h ' r a l d i n r C h a p l i n . A m p a r o M u n o / . I « i l i a n d o I .. ( i o n i c / w r i t t e n a n d d i r e c t e d h \ < a r los S a u r a \ \ I M I H Wl \ HI I I \ - d MAMA TURNS 100 (1979) D. Carlos Saura; Geraldine Chaplin, Amparo Munoz. The old lady keeps having fits that are supposed to be terminal— and all her children are doing their best to help her die — but the trouble is that Mama knows what they’re up to and she refuses to go down for the count and she pulls right on through to her 100th birthday. In this glorious film, we have some of the most delicious characters to come to screen in a long time — Mama is feisty, funny and irrepressible, even in the face of her family's murderous intents, her son Fernando is a genuine nut, who, his head stuffed with religiousity, keeps running along the ground with a glider on his back trying to get a lift off, and granddaughter Victona looks innocent and acts bizarre conducting mysterious rituals with raw eggs in her bedroom. This is a remarkable, exuberant film delightfully lorded over by the ebullient grande dame of the title as she tnumphantly approaches her own centennial celebration. Spanish w/ subtitles. 98 min. 35mm Austin Premier. Hogg auditorium. 9:40 p.m. DIVA (1982) D. Jean-Jacques Beineix; Frederic Andrei, Roland Bertm. A mail carrier becomes entangled in a web of murder, passion and intrigue when his obsession with a magnificent opera diva leads him to tape her in concert so as to capture her for himself - this act leads him both into her world of beauty, music and mystery while also embroiling him in a world of underground crime and violence. A stunning film shot with extraordinary visual style. R. French w/subtitles. 123 min. Hogg auditorium.11:30 p.m. Sunday, August 7 THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. MATTHEW (1964) D Pier Paolo Pasolini; Enrique Irazoqui, Margherita Caruso. A powerful, semi-documen­ tary style film which used no professional actors in its recreation of the most well-known of the Gospels. NR. Italian w/ subtitles. 136 min. 2 & 7:00 p.m. THE PRINCESS BRIDE see August 5 desc on. 5 & 9:30 p.m. SLAMDANCE (1987) D. Wayne Wang; Tom Hulee, Mary Elizabeth Mas­ trantonio, Adam Ant A Los Angeles underground artist becomes unwillingly entangled in the police investigation of a brutal murder. A tension filled thriller featuring performances from two of today's brightest young stars - Tom Hulee, who gave us one of the most lively and onginal performance in recent memory in Amadeus, and Ms Mastrantonio, Tom Cruise's tough, practical girlfriend in The Color of Money. R. 110min. Hogg auditorium. 3 87:30 p.m MAMA TURNS 100 (1979) D. Carlos Saura; Geraldine Chaplin, Amparo Munoz. The old lady keeps having fits that are supposed to be terminal— and all her children are doing their best to help her die — but the trouble is that Mama knows what they're up to and she refuses to go down for the count and she pulls right on through to her 100th birthday. In this glorious film, we have some of the most delicious characters to come to screen in a long time — Mama is feisty, funny and irrepressible, even in the face of her family's murderous intents, her son Fernando is a genuine nut, who, his head stuffed with religiousity, keep6 running along the ground with a glider on his back trying to get a lift off, and granddaughter Victoria looks innocent and acts bizarre conducting mysterious ntuals with raw eggs in her bedroom. This is a remarkable, exuberant film delightfully lorded over by the ebullient grande dame of the title as she triumphantly approaches her own centennial celebration. Spanish w/ subtitles. 98 min. 35mm Austin Premier. Hogg auditorium. 5:15 &9:40 p.m. Monday, August 8 THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. MATTHEW (1964) D. Pier Paolo Pasolini; Enrique Irazoqui, Margherita Caruso. A powerful, semi-documen­ tary style film which used no professional actors in its recreation of the most well-known of the Gospels. NR. Italian w/ subtitles. 136 min. 7:00 p.m. THE PRINCESS BRIDE see August 5 description. 9.30 p.m. Tuesday, August 9 ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST *(1975) D. Milos Forman, Jack Nicholson, Louis Fletcher. A free-spirited, free-tiinlong immoral t impris­ oned for rape is transferred for observation to a state mental hospital. There, he tries to teach the other patients to assert themselves, and to team to fly a little even trough they are bound physically to this institution. Thechiing, strong wilted Nune Ratohed, however, is always there to tiw art his efforts and to quench die spirits of the people he is trying to incite. A powerful ftptofeon of the Ken Kesey novel. R. 134 min. 7:00p.m. 8IOOHARTHA (1973) D. Conrad Rooks; Shashi Kapoor, Simi Garewai. The first Harmen Hesse novel to be brought to the screen was filmed on location in fiiáa and tals ttw epic story of a man's search for self through realms of aRporionoa of tie flash and of tie spirit R. 86min. 925 p.m. : i __ OAsan _ NO WAY OUT (1987) D. Roger Donaldson; Kevin Costner, Gene Hackman, Sean Young. This tense and timely thriller is set in the inner reaches of the Pentagon, where a group of troubled characters learn that deception can easily become their only means of survival. Lt. Commander Tom Farrell has just arrived on staff, and is given 48 hours to find and silence the witness to a brutal crime that must be covered up. Only Farrell already knows that the witness he is looking for is himself..and there is noway out of the trapin which he is caught R. 114 min. Hogg auditorium. 9:45 p.m. Wednesday, August 3 DUCK SOUP (1933) D. Leo McCarey; The Marx Brothers. An incompetent becomes President of Fredonia and declares war on his scheming neigh­ bors. The most satisfying, undiluted and beloved of the Marx Brothers films - a comedic romp taking us through some of their best known sequences: the lemonade stand, the Paul Revere parody, the mirror scene, and the final battle scene that has been imitated by everyone from Woody Allen to Mad Magazine. NR. 68 mm. 7:00 p.m. WÍTHNAJL AND I (1987) D. Bruce Robinson; Paul McGann, Richard E. Grant The 60's are viewed from today's perspective in this offbeat British comedy-drama which traces an inseperable pair of hippie actors as they take off for a country holiday on the estate of Withnail’s flamboyant Uncle Monty - one of the funniest characters to appear on screen in years. An astonish­ ingly refreshing and accomplished comedy. R. 104 min. 8:30 p.m. NO WAY OUT (1987) D. Roger Donaldson; Kevin Costner, Gene Hackman, Sean Young. This tense and timely thriller is set in the inner reaches of the Pentagon, where a group of troubled characters learn that deception can easily become their only means of survival. Lt. Commander Tom Farrell has just arnved on staff, and is given 48 hours to find and silence the witness to a brutal crime that must be covered up. Only Farrell already knows that the witness he is looking for is himself, .and there is no way out of the trap in which he is caught R. 114 min. Hogg auditorium. 7:00 p.m. PARIS, TEXAS (1984) D. Wim Wenders; Harry Dean Stanton, Nastassja Kinski. A heartbroken man tries to piece the fragments of his life back together as he travels searching for his time-lost wife and son. Brilliant per­ formance and exquisite photography set the tone for this raw, emotional story of people in search of themselves. R. 150 min. Hogg auditorium. 9:15 p.m. Thursday, August 4 DUCK SOUP(1933) D. Leo McCarey; The Marx Brothers. An incompetent becomes President of Fredonia and declares war on his scheming neigh­ bors. The most satisfying, undiluted and beloved of the Marx Brothers films - a comedic romp taking us through some of their best known sequences: the lemonade stand, the Paul Revere parody, the mirror scene, and the final battle scene that has been imitated by everyone from Woody Allen to Mad Magazine. NR. 68 min. 7:00 p.m. WITHNAIL AND I (1987) D. Bruce Robinson; Paul McGann, Richard E. Grant The 60 s are viewed from today’s perspective in this oflbeat British comedy-drama which traces an inseperable pair of hippie actors as they take off for a country holiday on the estate of Withnail's flamboyant Uncle Monty - one of the funniest characters to appear on screen in years. An astonish­ ingly refreshing and accomplished comedy. R. 104 min. 8:25 p.m. THE MISSION (1986) D. Roland Joffe; Robert DeNiro, Jeremy Irons. Deep in the jungles of South America, two men bring civilization to a native tribe. No, after years of struggle together, they find themselves on opposite sides in a dramatic fight for the native's independence - one man will trust int he power of prayer, the other will believe in the might of the sword. A superbly acted, visualiy stunning account of the Jesuit Missionary's efforts to preserve for the native Indians a sanctuary from the ravages of rapidly increasing Spanish and Portuguese colonialism. 128 min. PG. 1020 p.m. SLAMDANCE (1987) D. Wayne Wang; Tom Hulee, Mary Elizabeth Mas- trantonio, Adam Ant A Los Angeles underground artist becomes unwillingly entangled in the police investigation of a brutal murder. A tension filled thriller featuring performances from two of today's brightest young stars - Tom Hulee, who gave us one of the most lively and original performance in recent memory in Amadeus, and Ms Mastrantonio, Tom Cruise's tough, practical girlfriend in The Color of Money. R. 110 min. 35mm Hogg auditorium. 7:00 p.m. MAMA TURNS 100 (1979) D. Carlos Saura; Geraldine Chaplin, Amparo Munoz. The old lady keeps having fits that are supposed to be terminal— and afl her children are doing their best to help her die — but the trouble is that Mama knows what they Ye up to and she refuses to go down for the count and she puls right on through to her 100th birthday, h this glorious Nm, we have some of die most delicious characters to come to screen in a long lime - Mama is feisty, funny and irrepressible, even in tie face of her family’s murderous intents, her son Fernando is a genuine nut who, his heed stuffed with refcgosrty, keeps running along the ground w ill a gkder on hie back trying to get a fift off, and gmdgaughtor Victoria looks innocent and acts bizane conducting mysterious rituals w it) raw eggs in her bedroom. This to a remarkable, axuberwit film lorded over by tw ebuKent grande dame of tw Me as aha triumphantly approaches her own cenlonniel celebration. Span­ ishes subfiles. Qtrwn. 36mm Hogg auditorium. Auetta Prouder. 920 pim. PIERROT LE FOU (1965) D. Jean Luc Godard; Jean Paul Belmondo, Anna Karina This extremely rare Godard film has just emerged from years out of circulation. Ferdinand and Mananne are a pair of lovers who escape to the south of France, running away from their lives in Paris. There, they achieve some sense of isolation, but Mananne is soon drawn back to her past in­ volvement with gangsters and the tranquility ends there. Answenng her call for help, Ferdinand runs to help her only to find himself embroiled in a shootout and betrayed by his lover. The dark underworld into which the two have been drawn rums their chances of ever returning to their former ties, and self destruction may be the only way out As in BREATHLESS, Godard uses the gangster genre to explore his own pnvate obsessions with illusion and reality, action and contemplation. French w/ subtitles. NR. 112 mm. 7:30 p.m THE GRADUATE (1967) D. Mike Nichols; Dustin Hoffman, Anne Bancroft A wealthy young Californian graduates from college and then has to figure out what to do with his life - but first he is drawn into an affair with his father's friend's wife, only to fall in love with her daughter. A lushly filmed movie whose impeccable cinematic technique perfectly captures the mindset of its characters and the anythmg-goes mood of the late sixties in which the story is set NR. 105 mm. 9:40 p.m. PIERROT LE FOU see August 12 descnption. 730 p m THE GRADUATE see August 12 descnption. 9:15 p.m. SEMESTER BREAK MONDAY AUGUST15 through SUNDAY AUGUST 28. A DAY AT THE RACES (1937) D. Sam Wood; The Marx Brothers, Maureen O'Sullivan. Groucho is Dr. Quackenbush who is accidentally put in charge of a sanitarium for nch hypochondriacs. When he gets involved with a demented duo from the track, the comic race is on! NR 109 mm. 7 00 p.m - I ANIMAL FARM (1955) D John Halas, Joy Batchelor A unique animated feature adapted from George Orwell's classic political satire. Tired of their f cruel master’s oppression, form animals stage a revolt, setting up a new society on the farm which soon turns into a dictatorship run by the pigs whose , slogan is, ‘ All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.'A fascinating look at the nature of totalitanan dictatorships. NR. 75 min. 9:00 p.m. MANHATTAN (1979) D Woody Allen; Woody Allen, Diane Keaton Woody Allen plays a TV comedy wnter searching for the perfect romance, the ideal life, and his own self in this wonderful film that is both a ly ncal ode to New York City (which is lovingly filmed here in a breathtakingly beautiful black and white style) and also something of a summation of the director's views on the world and life in general. Andrew Sams calls it *A masterpiece that has become a film for the ages by not seeking to be a film of the moment.' PG 96 min. 10:30 p.m. Tuesday, August 30 MANHATTAN (1979) D. Woody Allen; Woody Allen, Diane Keaton. Woody Allen plays a TV comedy writer searching for the perfect romance, the ideal life, and his own self in this wonderful film that is both a lyrical ode to New York City (which is lovingly filmed here in a breathtakingly beautiful black and white style) and also something of a summation of the director's views on the world and life in general. Andrew Sarris calls it "A masterpiece that has become a film for the ages by not seeking to be a film of the moment.* PG 96 min. 7:00p.m ANIMAL FARM see August 29 description 9:00 p.m. A DAY AT THE RACES see August 29 description 10:30 p.m. Wednesday, August 31 MANHATTAN (1979) D. Woody Allen; Woody Allen, Diane Keaton. Woody Allen plays a TV comedy writer searching for the perfect romance, the ideal life, and his own self in this wonderful film that is both a lyrical ode to New York City (which is lovingly filmed here in a breathtakingly beautiful black and white style) and also something of a summation of the director's views on the world and life in general. Andrew Sarris calls it *A masterpiece that has become a film for the ages by not seeking to be a film of the moment.* PG 96 min. 7:00p.m. ANIMAL FARM see August 29 description 9:00 p.m. A DAY AT THE RACES see August 29 description 10:30 p.m. Thursday, September 1 LAST TANGO M PARIS (1972) D. Bernardo Bertolucci; Marlon Brando, Maria Schneider. Controversial for its frank, and often brutal depiction of sexuality, LAST TANGO is a contemporary masterpiece that stars Marlon Brando as a middle age man coming to terms with the more primal nature of human relationships. French w/subtile*. R. 129 mm. 7:00 p.m. SPIRITS OF THE DEAD (1969) D. Federico Fellini, Louis Malle. Roger Vadim; Bngitte Bardot Jane Fonda. 3 teles of Edgar Alen Poe come to life in this trilogy of the macabre: Roger Vadim directs Jane Fonda as a de­ bauched Countess who incurs revenge from the grava, Louis Malle's Bm Isis what happens when a cruel, evil man comes face to face with hfepseK, and FeKni's *TOBY DAMMIT features Terence Stamp as a self indulgent dissipated actor who comes to Itely tostar in the first *raiigious Western', and soon teams the ruth of toe say ing. *Nevar bet toe devfl your head.' R. 118 min. 930 pin. 8HASKLR. RJC YOUNG - BUDDY UZZAMAN »• ' - JAN SCHUTTE DRAGON CHOW (1988) D Jan Schutte, Bhasker, Ric Young There are over 4 million foreigners living m West Germany, and this pristine, disraming film tells the story of one of them— a young Pakistani refugee named Shezad The title comes from Weimer slang and is the name for the roses peddled in bars to boozers as peace offerings for their wives This is Shezad's job when we meet him, but he is soon thrown out of the bar for his peddling and winds up with an illegal kitchen job where he meets a tense stncken-lookmg Chinese waiter with whom he joins forces to open up a Pakistani restaurant Thus is the stage for Shezad's nse and eventual fall Woven throughout this setting, however, is the true subtext of the film which looks at the bewilder­ ing world these immigrants have entered— a cold and alienating Germany characterized by a sense of isoaltion and order The sad tale of the waiflike Shezad suggests the larger loss which is Germany's German w subtitles. 75 mm. 35mm AUSTIN PREMIER Hogg auditorium 7:30 p.m. SCHOOL DAZE (1988) D. Spike Lee, with Spike Lee Spike Lee follows up his hit film, 'SHE'S GOTTA HAVE IT*, with this film set in an all black middle class college in the South There, the student body is split between the dark skinned 'Jigaboos' who want to make the school divest itself of its South Africa holdings, and the lighter skinned, more affluent 'Wannabees* (as in, wannabee white) who only want to gather around the frat house, Gamma Phi Gamma, have a good time, and land that high paying job. Spike Lee is Half Pint, a Jigaboo aspiring to Gamma Phi Gamma status — . The conflicts between these two groups are fought out verbally, in an assortment of dance numbers, and of course comically, all of which bear the inimitable stamp of the young director as again he uses humor and light to look at the lives of blacks in America today. R. 110 min. Hogg auditorium. 9:15 p.m. BUSS D. Ray Lawrence; Barry Otto, Lynette Curran. A parable-type of film about modern life with large doses of black humor mixed with the bizarre. The story begins when an average advertising executive drops dead of a heart attack. However, four minutes later, he's revived and his life becomes a nightmare vision of suburbia lunacy. The LA.TIMES called it, 'a free­ wheeling and superbly sustained odyssey as distinctly surreal and satirical as that of 'BRAZIL'*.R 112 mm. 35mm Hogg auditonum. 11:30 p.m. Sunday, September 4 DIVA see SEPTEMBER 2 description 7:00 p.m. LAST TANGO IN PARIS see SEPTEMBER 1 descnption .9:20 p.m. DRAGON CHOW (1988) D. Jan Schutte; Bhasker, Ric Young. There are over 4 million foreigners living in West Germany, and this pristine, disraming film tells the story of one of them— a young Pakistani refugee named Shezad. The title comes from Weimer slang and is the name for the roses peddled in bars to boozers as peace offerings for their wives. This is Shezad’s job when we meet him, but he is soon thrown out of the bar for his peddling and winds up with an illegal kitchen job where he meets a tense stricken-looking Chinese waiter with whom he joins forces to open up a Pakistani restaurant Thus is the stage for Shezad's rise and eventual fall. Woven throughout this setting, however, is the true subtext of the film which looks at the bewilder­ ing world these immigrants have entered— a cold and alienating Germany characterized by a sense of isoaltion and order. The sad tale of the waifliks Shezad suggests the larger loss which is Germany's. German w. subtitles. 75 min. 35mm. AUSTIN PREMIER Hogg auditorium. 730 p.m. SCHOOL DAZE see SEPTEMBÉR1 description 930 p.m STARS AND BARS (1988) D. Pat O’Connor, Daniel Day Lewis, Laurie Met­ calf, Martha Plimpton. An English art expert living in New York runs into a cast of eccentrics when he's sent on a mission to obtain a long lost Renoir painting. The screenplay is written by William Boyd, the author of the novel of the same name, and of the newly released and widely acclaimed book about i n am huainaa* The New Confessions. R. 96 min.