T h e Da il y T e x a n S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The U n i v e r s i t y of Texas a t A u s t i n Forty-Two Pages Vol. 79, No. 69 Copyright 1979, Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved (USPS 146-440) Austin, Texas, Tuesday, December 11, 1979 XI 9CW x°9 %o*a tnxT30 i °TR •pax Fifteen Cents and Editorial 471-4591 ly Advertising: 471-1865 ind Classified: 471-5244 2,000 students, parents protest forced busing proposal and ERNESTINA ROMERO Dally Texan Staff More than 2,000 Austin students and parents Monday erupted over the issue of impending busing which could affect 15,000 students. Stating they were “ unalterably op­ posed to forced busing of children,” anti-busing groups were the most dramatic with a staged “ walk out” in the middle of a public school board meeting at Austin High School. Dr. Pete Werner, spokesman for Concerned Parents of Austin, told the board the group would encourage “ massive peaceful civil disobedience” if a final plan proved to be “ inequitable and divisive.” Som e groups and in d iv id u a ls , however, said they accepted the court’s order to desegregate as law, and were hoping for the smoothest transition possible. “ I don’t see how you can stand here and ridicule these people (the school board) for trying their best to imple­ ment the law,” Tim Tees, student coun­ cil vice president at Austin High School, told the crowd. Earlier Monday, approximately 500 parents and students rallied outside the AISD Carruth Administration Building in drizzling rain, chanting “ Hell, no, we won’t go,” and waving signs proclaim­ ing “ Bus the 5th Circuit.” Dr. Bruce Murray, pastor of Crest- view Baptist Church, urged the school board to fight busing further in the courts and to drop all plans for forced busing. “ We are not subjects of the courts, and are angered by the social ex­ perimentation being forced on our c h ild re n in the guise of equal educational opportunity,” Murray said as the crowd cheered. Most of the protesters were students from Anglo-dominated Anderson High School. Anderson student body president Mike Farley said many students and parents in the Anderson district do not believe busing will achieve desegregation. Farley also charged that groups such as the NAACP, one of the minority in- tervenors in the lawsuit against the school district, have “ brainwashed” some blacks. “ They (the N AACP) don’t represent the people they claim to represent,” he said. Portia Watson, a black woman, echoed that sentiment at the meeting with board members Monday night. “ I would like to invite those groups who say they represent our community to come out and talk to us, and see how we really feel about this (busing),” Watson said. Approximately 70 people spoke at the night public meeting, many asking the board specific questions about extra­ curricular activities, special education students, finances, busing of high school seniors and consequences of disobeying the court order. The group was told that if the board did not implement its own plan, the courts would step in and implement one of their own or one submitted by a minority intervenor. One citizen asked the board members to resign “ en masse,” to which trustee W ill Davis replied, “ unequivocably no.” After the rally Monday afternoon, AISD Superintendent Dr. Jack Davidson talked with Anderson students, nodding in agreement with many of their anti­ busing statements. “ In the nine years of litigation, I have not favored busing. I don’t believe in busing as a way of integrating,” David­ son told the students. Davidson also charged that the minority plaintiffs (the NAACP and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund) were only interested in racial balance, mistakenly believing “ artificial integration” would result in better education for minority students. “ We have to forget all the legal mum­ ble jumble and remember what’s going to happen to the students in this process,” he said. A committee of Austin high school students also met Monday and formed recommendations to give to the board, including exclusion of seniors from bus­ ing plans, a more gradual implementa­ tion of a plan, “ dry runs” and “ open houses” to fam iliarize parents and students with new bus routes and schools and the creation of transition committees at schools. Tuesday Foggy, foggy n ig h t. . . Fog and occasional light rain should prevail through Tuesday night. Southerly winds should turn gusty from the north, with a 30 percent chance of rain through Tuesday night. Tuesday’s high temperature should reach the low 70s, followed by an overnight low in the mid-40s Tuesday night. ‘Trekkies’ to the core. . . KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — Star Trek fans Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Young refused to let labor pains stop them from seeing “ Star Trek — The Motion Picture,” which opened recently at local theaters. Mrs. Bonnie Young said they were worried because the infant was two weeks overdue. But they did not want the child’s delivery to thwart their plans to attend the premier. The Youngs dashed out of the theater when Mrs. Young’s contractions were being timed at 6 minutes apart. Anderson High School students protest proposed busing plans Kwong Hui, Dally Texan Staff Hostage allowed television interview Marine says ‘everybody’s OK’; captives being treated well ®1979 New York Times N EW YO RK — A captive Marine cor­ poral, sitting in front of a picture of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, said in a televised interview Monday that all was well with the 50 hostages in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, and he provided a few glimpses of their daily routine. questions. He said that no one he knew was being “ brainwashed.” Chancellor, the anchor man, noted in a commentary that the hostages had been kept against their will for five weeks and that any statement should be seen in that light. Gallegos, who was previously heard in Related stories, photo, Page 3 The Marine, Cpl. William Gallegos, 22, from Pueblo. Colo., was selected by his captors for an interview with NBC- TV. An excerpt from the interview was broadcast on the NBC Nightly News with John Chancellor. “ The students here have really been good to us,” Gallegos said, as he faced the Iranian camera crew provided for the NBC interviewers, George Lewis and Fred Francis. “ It ’s hard to believe, I know. We haven’t been asked any questions as to what we were doing here, what really our job was.” He said the only questions asked of him were his name, his position in the embassy “ and that’s it.” “ And then we were taken to our little cubicles and nobody’s been m is­ treated,” he added. “ All of us can see each other. Everybody’s O K.” The young Marine looked well but did not seem at ease as he replied to a taped interview with one of the cap­ tors last month, conceded that the wrists of the hostages were loosely tied with cloth. But he insisted that he and the others were allowed daily exercise. They were permitted to receive mail and make telephone calls to their families, he said, but the mail was cen­ sored. He said they were being kept in the dark about what was going on out­ side and were not allowed to talk with one another. “ We’re getting enough food to eat,” he said. “ The cleanliness is really great. You know, they come and clean up and clean clothes, everything we need, everything, toothbrushes, combs.” “ Everybody here wants to go home,” he continued. “ I don’t know what negotiations are toward this, what’s happening between Iranian students and the American government. I know they keep telling us that they want the shah to return to Iran and we’ll be released.” The word was, he said, that if the shah was not sent back, the hostages will be put on trial. “ I don’t know what would happen after that,” he added, “ but I hope . . . I ’m leaving it up to my country, my peo­ ple. I have faith in them.” The broadcast was watched by the corporal’s parents, Richard and Teresa Gallegos. “ I bet you he’s lost 25 pounds,” his father said. Mrs. Gallegos said her son seemed nervous. “ He’s not much for smiling,” she said. “ He seems to be under con­ trol.” N BC said that, lik e the other networks, it had rejected the captors’ demands that written questions be sub­ mitted in advance. NBC said it had successfully insisted on full editorial control of the taped session, held inside the embassy in the morning and transmitted promptly to New York A ll th ree n etw orks had been negotiating with the captors since last Saturday, an NBC spokesman said. He added that the students agreed to a for­ mula under which the two NBC reporters in Tehran were ushered into the embassy and provided with an Ira ­ nian camera crew to film the question- and-answer session as well as a state­ ment from the captors. An NBC producer, Walter Millis, did the editing in Tehran. Both CBS-TV and ABC-TV said they had rejected the terms offered by the Iranians because they feared that they were being manipulated to provide the captors with a forum. South Texas Nuclear Project NRC investigating alleged harassment By DAVID REAL City Reporter Four Nuclear Regulatory Commis­ sion inspectors have begun an investiga­ tion into alleged instances of harass­ ment and intimidation of quality control inspectors by construction personnel at the South Texas Nuclear Project. The inspection is a major NRC effort to thoroughly investigate past alleged instances of friction between quality control inspectors and construction per­ sonnel, said William C. Seidle. an NRC regional chief But Seidle denied there were any new allegations of intimidation. “ There really isn’t anything new that we’re looking at in regard to in­ timidation,” Seidle said. “ It was decid­ ed that we would take another look at it — perhaps we missed something If there is, we’ll take appropriate action If not, we won’t.” Seidle refused to specify the *'xact nature of the two-week-old investiga­ tion. He said a complete report would be made available in late January “ Once and for all, we’d like to be able to say that there is, or is not, a problem," Seidle said. “ There has been a lot of publicity and maybe we can justify going back to investigate and determine if there’s anything to it. “ This concerns us and we want to satisfy ourselves whether there is a problem or not,” he said. “ If it means talking to more people we’ll do it.” R .L Hancock, director of the Austin ele ctric department, said friction between the inspectors and construction workers would not surprise him. “ I don t think there’s any doubt that there’s ill feeling between quality con­ trol inspectors and the construction people.” he said “ I've never been on a job where there wasn’t. If you don’t, somebody’s not doing their job. I guess it’s a matter of degree.” City Council member Lee Cooke said the NRC investigation is timed well with the city’s audit of the nuclear pro­ ject. Cooke said the two reports would reveal if any immoral or unethical business practices had occurred. “ All that (report conclusions) is sup­ posedly coming to a focal point in a January time frame,” Cooke said. “ If both reports come out terrible, it might cause me to capitulate in my support of STNP ” Council member Richard Goodman said continuing reports of inspector in­ timidation and harassment are “ bother­ some.” “ There have been very persistent reports about the situation and that’s what leaves me to believe they're true,” Goodman said “ I would hope the NRC investigation is more comprehensive than their previous checks into the situation In the previous reports, it looks like they glossed over it “ I ’m opposed to the South Texas Nuclear Project, but if it’s going to be built, they had better have top quality control inspectors.” Publication focus of tenure evaluations (Editor’s Note: This is the second in a three-part series examining the tenure system, the possible need for reform and proposed improvements.) By JENNY ABDO and ROBERT W IEDEMER Dally Texan Staff Too much emphasis on publication and not enough on teaching, the two most important elements in granting tenure, lie at the crux of the controversy between critics and supporters of the system. Although many students view effective teaching as the main criterion for evaluating a faculty member, many of those who evaluate faculty for tenure give more weight to publishing than teaching. Critics argue that one reason for weighing publication more heavily than teaching is the d ifficulty in evaluating teaching, and the main reason for the dif­ ficulty in reviewing teaching performance is the un­ reliability of student evaluations. “ Some student evaluations are fabricated, non­ etheless, I think we should have them.” said Michael Mewshaw, an associate professor of English. University President Peter Flawn said, “ I weigh stu­ dent evaluations heavily. I find records incomplete if professors continuously do not have them " Flawn said he has discussed making a University- wide requirement of student evaluations with the Deans’ Council, but would not say if he was in favor of making the evaluations mandatory. “ Publication is definitely the most important factor in deciding tenure.” said Karl Schmitt, chairman of the Department of Government. Rory Coker, a professor of physics, said a good physicist is evaluated by how well he researches. “ You don’t tell how good a physicist a person is by how he teaches elementary physics,” Coker said Frank Wright, director of Texas Association of College Teachers, said he is convinced that good teachers research. He admitted, “ when publication tends to override teaching, that also becomes a problem.” In agreement with Wright, K arl Galinsky, chairman of a University Faculty Senate tenure committee, said teaching and publication is a difficult balance to main­ tain. In the College of Liberal Arts “ teaching and publication are weighed equally,” he added. Graduate students are aware that there is a growing emphasis on publication, said Art Souther, a University graduate student in psychology. “ Publishing has become so important to getting tenure that a lot of graduate students try to publish before they are hired so they can have an advantage in getting a teaching position,” Souther said. Many critics, both inside and outsiae academia, ques­ tion the value of what is published believing it is often “ just digging up bones from one grave and burying them in another.” “ Most of what is published isn’t worth reading,” Souther said. Part of the contradiction over the issue of publishing is the short period of time a faculty member has to research before he is evaluated for tenure — the probationary period is six years. During this period tenure candidates are expected to develop and teach new courses and publish books and ar­ ticles. Some members of the faculty think this is too much to require from one person in six years. John Weinstock, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts, said he would be in favor of extending the probationary period one or two years. “ You’ve only got six years, really five if you want to publish anything before the end of your probation, and that is not much time considering the amount of work that is required,” Weinstock said. There is no set amount of material one must publish to get tenure, Schmitt, said and although it varies within departments one book and a few articles are a minimum in the government department. Galinsky said the probationary period should be lengthened since institutions “ expect an awful lot from people.” “ Some people need a longer time to get their feet on the ground. I am ir favor of extending the probationary period to 10 years. But some can hack it after four or five years. I would be reluctant to get rid of some after six years,” Galinsky said. If tenure is denied neither the dean nor the University president is required to give a written explanation. Rep. Frank Gaston, R-Dallas, and author of two House bills to abolish tenure, said written explanations for termination are necessary, especially if the negative decision was based on reasons other than his work. Flawn agreed saying, “ Reasons are advantageous to the individual if the University does not tenure the facul­ ty member because of financial exigencies .” The University Senate Faculty has proposed legisla­ tion to the University Council that would require deans to give written reasons for termination, but makes the requirement optional for the president. Flawn declined comment on how he will rule if such legislation is passed by the University Council. Some professors question whether the administration should have the authority to overrule the department’s recommendations. Neil Richardson, a professor of political science at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, who was denied tenure by the University last year, said the tenure system at the University is unpredictable. ’ Recommendations are taken less seriously at UT At Wisconsin during the last 15 years, only one person who has been recommended for tenure by the department has not been promoted,” Richardson said Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, December 11, 1979 PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Are you considering Abortion? Confidential Free Pregnancy Testing & Referrals Fo r information call PROBLEM PREGNANCY of AUSTIN (512) 474-9930 600 W. 28th, No. 101 Austin, Texas 78705 NOTICE ALL UT STUDENTS, STAFF & FACULTY I f you are leaving Austin this month: To be eligible for a patronage refund ( if one is paid) for the fiscal year ending 6/30/80. Your Co- cash register receipts must be turned in to the ( Co-Op by that date. You can use the mail, but you may find it more convenient to drop them by the ticket window on the Second level of the Main Store or the Co-Op East before you leave Austin for the holidays. HAPPY HOLIDAYS & HAVE A GREAT 80 Union audit brings changes Old accounting process inadequate By DIANNA HUNT University Reporter An internal audit of the Tex­ as Union has resulted in changes in the Union’s ac­ counting and cash control procedures, James Colvin, vice president for business af­ fairs, said Monday. The audit, which was com­ pleted Oct. 23 by the Universi­ ty Office of Internal Audits, indicated that inventory security and some deposit and purchasing procedures were inadequate to meet University accounting guidelines, Colvin said. Daily deposits were not kept for all cash transactions, leav­ ing insufficient “ audit trails.” Colvin said. This made errors hard to find, he said. U n io n ’ s Colvin said that because of the f o r m e r procedures it is impossible to determ in e w h e th e r any m on ey v e n d in g fro m machines or inventory from the food storeroom was miss­ ing Union Director Frank Bar­ tow, who last spring requested the investigation, said the deposit problem stemmed from the change emptied from the Union vending machines. Every week the Union emp­ ties approximately $4,000 in quarters from the building s vending machines. Instead of carrying 10,000 quarters to the bursar’s office for deposit and then later re c e iv in g d a ily change allotments, the Union often took its change from the ven­ ding quarters, Bartow said. “ The bursar’s office didn’t it was want them, and easier,” Bartow said. H o w e ve r, the Union s change fund has been in­ creased, and daily deposits are now made, Bartow said. In addition, Bartow said he has requested the vending contract be changed so that the vending operator would take the quarters. Security measures on the D in in g food S e r v ic e storeroom have also been tightened, and the number of Union workers who retain keys to the storeroom has been reduced, Bartow said. Previously, all the food ser­ vice supervisors had keys to the storeroom, Bartow said. Purchasing procedures have also been changed, with written purchase orders now required, Bartow said. The audit found that “ the U n io n ’s reco rds do not provide adequate evidence that items... are procured on a competitive basis.” Tow-away zones UTPD impounding more cars By JO E TEDINO Police Reporter University police Monday stiffened their towing policy and began impoun­ ding all cars parked in tow-away zones. The department impounded 12 cars Monday from the parking lot south of Je ste r dormitory, a considerably higher daily rate than the 40 that were towed during the entire month of November. Many of the illegally parked cars had “ C” parking permits and were parked in spaces reserved for either “ A ” or “ F ” permit holders, said Chief Donald Cannon. The areas are clearly marked tow-away zones, he added. In contrast to the old procedure whereby cars would not be towed from the zones if empty spaces were available, the department will now im­ pound any car parked in a tow-away zone, Cannon said. According to an order issued by Can­ non, “ Vehicles will only be impounded when (they) are in violation by in­ terfering with the movement of vehicular or pedestrian traffic, (park­ ed) where tow-away signs are posted, or . . . adjacent to yellow-painted curbs or pavements ” Tow-away zones also include spaces reserved for faculty, staff or student permit holders. Previously, UTPD would only tow il­ legally parked cars if the car was obstructing traffic or if the owner had outstanding traffic fines totalling more than $25. But an increase in violators has forc­ ed the police to take stiffer action. “ There are just too many violators on campus,” Adm inistrator R .R . Ravenburg said. The need to tow more illegally park­ ed cars arose from “ increased com­ plaints from registered perm it holders” who could not park in their designated areas because of violators, Cannon said. Both the UTPD and the Traffic and Parking Committee had been receiving additional complaints from faculty and staff, he said. Affidavit: Walls claims not contacted By DIANE BALLARD University Reporter University football player Herkie Walls said Monday he has not been contacted to sign an affidavit admitting to cheating on a lab report, although the Longhorn athletic counselor said last week he “ assumed’’ Walls would sign one. “ No one’s talked about it to me,” Walls said. “ I ’ll just go to class Wednesday and get everything cleared up then.” Walls was at his home in Garland last week when four other freshmen football players in his physical science class signed statements testifying they had plagiarized class lab reports. The players received an automatic “ F ” in the class as a result of the incident. Fred Acorn, Rick Benson, T .J. Dilworth and Carl Robinson had signed the statements at a Wednesday meeting with course instructor Corinne Manogue, course supervisor Dr. Robert Lit­ tle and athletic counselor Joe Eivens. Walls did not attend the meeting, Eivens said later. Eivens declined further comment on the incident. The failing grades will not affect the players’ eligibility to play in the Dec. 22 Sun Bowl against the University of Washington because a player’s eligibility is declared each semester, according to National Collegiate Athletic Association policy. Failing grades in the physical science class will not affect the players’ full athletic scholarships for the spring semester if they pass six credit hours this semester, according to Universi­ ty policy. For the fun-loving saucy girl shirred front gow n by Formfit Rogers In blue flam e or Am erican Beauty rose ... shirred front gown that gathers as you like it, slit front in P-S-M, 18.00 L ja fu T U j'A 2406 G U A D A L U P E «ON-THE-DRAG / MORE DOLLARS FOR SCHOLARS CHECK US OUT TEXAS TEXTBOOKS is p a y in g the highest p ric e s in to w n f o r te x tb o o k s NOW ! And d o n 't f o r g e t to buy y o u r C h r i s t m a s presents w h e re you get the best price s on T-Shirts, shorts, s w e a ts h irts , and o the r UT S p e c ia lty items. m V fS A * TEXAS TEXTBOOKS 1st Floor Castilian 2323 San Antonio 478-9833 2 4 th S t. ★ Free P arking ★ Texas Textbooks g a r D SANTA CLAUS ¡S COMING TO TAN! CHRISTMAS SPECIAL $15 ( live someone a tan for c hristmas. You can with thi Ianii|ueChristm as Special.a 10-visit membership tor onlv $15 Lmique is the great new w av to look young and healthy all vear round.So it you know som eonewho's been dreaming of a brown Christmas, A giv e a Tanique C hristmas Special Gift Certificate. Remember, our tans fit all si/es and shapes! The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published bv Texas Student Publications Drawer D. University Station. Austin. TX 78712 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday, and Fri­ day except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin. Tex News contributions will be accepted by telephone 1471-4591 ), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A 4 136> Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in T SP Building 3 200 (471-52441 and display advertising in T SP Building 3.210 1471-1865. The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students. 6330 N Pulaski. Chicago. IL 60646 The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journalism Congress, the Texas Daily Newspaper Association, and American Newspaper Publishers Association Copyright 1979 Texas Student Publications T H E D A IL Y T EX A N SU BSC R IPT IO N R A T ES One Semester (F a ll or Springi 1979-80 By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within USA Two Semesters i Fall and Spring I 1979-80 By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within U S A *16 00 17.00 *29 00 31 00 Summer Session 1980 By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within U S A Send orders and address changes to T E X A S ST U D EN T PU BLIC A TIO N S. P O Box P U B NO 146440 D Austin. Texas 78712. or to T SP Building, C3 200 *10 50 11 00 ................. ®t)E C fjrtétm as &toeater $ 5 ,0 0 o ft Great Gift for that special guy or gal. Beautiful 100% orlon Burnt Orange. 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Charles Leutwyler Jewelers M F M B tR ik th R H l.\ G t M S f X I l t I Y | . l b MA>r»RtMAKC.E AND \ l**A 2$ 10 G u a d a lu p e • 4 l uM om er p a r k in g « 1 th e back,door, A C C E P T E D off N*n A n to n i.* Street Ayatollahs clash; tension mounts... *1979 The New York Times T E H R A N , Iran — D is s id e n t A y a to lla h M o h a m m a d K a z e m Shariat-M adari Monday resisted pressure from Ayatollah Ruhollah K h o m e in i an d m u c h o f t h e re volu tio n a ry and r e lig io u s e s ­ tablishment to dissolve his Moslem in th e P e o p le s P a r ty , a c t iv e takeover of Tabriz, “We cannot announce the party is annulled,” Shariat-Madari said. “ To­ day it is the turn of the Moslem People’s Party, tomorrow it is the turn of other parties. “They want to make all these par­ ties step aside in order to have one solitary party and we will not accept th e n o r m a lly e n ig m a t i c i t . ” a y a t o l l a h d e c l a r e d in u n ­ characteristically direct language. the nation’s T h e stu b b o r n c o n f r o n t a t io n between two m ost respected religious and p olitical figures grew more bitter Monday as Khomeini, for his part, denounced those involved in the Tabriz uprising as “corrupt” and “against Islam .” THE REVOLT IN the Azerbaijan region is one of the m ost serious prob lem s fa ced Khomeini. The clash of the two re lig io u s le a d e r s th rea ten s the theological underpinnings of the revolution, because of the large size of the Azerbaijani population and its role, and because the revolt could spread to other ethnic minorities. that h ave y et In Tabriz itself, pro-government forces retook the radio and television station, which had been held by Azer­ baijani Turks loyal to Shariat-Madari who have mounted protests against the new constitution which m akes Khomeini the nation’s all-powerful leader, or Faghi, for life. It was not, however, to whom the soldiers in control of the broadcast center were loyal as they were m ostly local Azaris. im m ediately known A government peace mission, led by Economic Minister Abolhassan Bani-Sadr and Ayatollah Mahdavi- Kanyi, director of the powerful K om iteh s, a rr iv e d , but the in ­ surgents refused to talk to them because the group contained no representatives of Shariat-Madari as had originally been agreed. The peacem akers refused to talk to the Moslem P eople’s Party, and m et only with Islamic Republic Party, the sem i-official organization loyal to Khomeini. Another government p eace m is­ sion arrived in Kurdistan Monday afternoon, and late Monday night was in a negotiating session with the Kurdish leaders, who mounted an arm ed revolt in their drive for regional authority late last summer. A cease-fire agreem ent stopping that insurrection is running out of time. THE UNREST IN Tabriz, which began with demonstrations and a boycott of the referendum following Shariat-Madari’s reservation about the constitutional provisions creating the Faghi, turned into a full-scale up­ rising after a crowd in the holy city of Qom attacked Shariat-Madari’s house and a guard on his roof was killed. One im m ediate problem for the government is that the Azerbaijanis might make common cause with the neighbors in the northwestern area, the Kurds. Shariat-Madari has in a sense raised that possibility by say­ ing that if the Kurds gain autonomy, the Azerbaijanis should get the sam e deal. Sheik Ezzedein Hosseini, the K u rd ish r e lig io u s le a d e r h as reciprocated by sending a m essage expressing the hope that all people gain their “ national and religious rights.” A rebellion by both groups would severely strain the arm y, which has still not pulled itself together from the dem oralizing e ffe c ts of the revolution. During the Kurdish revolt this summer, the army units sim ply retreated to their barracks and when the ideologically more enthusiastic Pastaran, or revolutionary guards, took their place in the unfamiliar m oun tain the K urdish guerrillas badly mauled them. terrain , IN ADDITION, many of the army officers are reluctant to lead their men against fellow Iranians, having recently seen their form er superiors executed for doing the sam e thing Tuesday, December 11. 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 3 a a .in England DOVER, England (UPI) — Immigration officials detained a young Iranian for questioning by police Monday in connection with the assassination in Paris of a nephew of the shah of Iran. Immigration officials said the man was being detained in connection with im ­ migration entry qualifications. They said he would be questioned by police. Police sources said detectives would question the man about the murder of Prince Shahryar Shafik, gunned down outside the home of his mother. P rincess Ashraf, in Paris last Friday Neither police nor immigration officials disclosed the m an's identity. ...in Tehran TEHRAN, Iran (UPI) — Associated Press correspondent Alexander Efty was told Monday he is being expelled from Iran for “ provocative and utterly false” reporting of events in the country. The Ministry of National Guidance announced that Efty, who arrived in Iran two weeks ago to report on events surrounding the occupation of the U.S. E m ­ bassy, was being expelled for violating the regulations for foreign journalists and for “ resorting to the transm ission of provocative and utterly false n ew s.” Efty spent Sunday and Monday in the northwestern city of Tabriz covering the fighting for control of the city ’s radio and television sttion. At one point he was pulled away from the telephone by demonstrators as he was dictating a report on Sunday evening’s fighting to the Associated P ress bureau in Tehran. AP bureau chief George Higgins said Efty has been told to leave the country as soon as possible. Keith Fuller, president and general manager of the AP, said in New York, “ The Associated Press has no reason to question the accuracy of the reports by Efty, but will arrange for his withdrawal and seek im m ediate accreditation for a replacem ent.” ...In Texas SAN ANTONIO (UPI) — F ive Iranian students propped a large picture of the Ayatollah Ruhallah Khomeini at the top of the steps of city hall Monday and vowed a sit-in and fast until deposed Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi is returned to Iran for trial. “ We will stay as long as we su rvive,” said Mohsen Towlait, 22. One police officer kept watch over the group, protected by foul weather jackets against fog and drizzle and seated one behind the other on the east steps of the city hall. There was no m ove by city officials to halt the sit-in. The demonstration was taking place downtown about five m iles from where the shah is being protected by heavy m ilitary guard at Lackland Air Force Base and where the city has denied a parade permit for a larger dem onstra­ tion. Towlait said the five students had decided to drink only tea once a day during the sit-in and would go home each night and return each morning. He said they would have w itnesses to prove they w ere not eating and a doctor to check their health periodically. An attorney for the Iranians, Louis Linden, said as part of his appeal of denial of the parade perm its he planned to go before a special session of the City Council on Tuesday seeking reversal of the decision by City Manager Tom Huebner. City Attorney Jane Macon said the council could m ake an im m ediate decision on the appeal or take the m atter under advisem ent. Anti-Iranian sentiment has run high in San Antonio since the taking of 50 American hostages, and one elderly woman leaving city hall scolded the five for protesting. 'SRHTOBt TRIED San A ntonio protesters UPI Telephoto against the revolutionaries who are now in power. An ethnic revolt could also spread to other m inorities who spill over Ir a n ’s b o r d e r s , th e Baluchi’s who have already shown signs of resistance to the constitu­ tion, the Turkomans and the Arabs in the oil province of Khuzestan. in c lu d in g The Azerbaijani uprising is par­ ticularly serious not only because they are the nation’s largest ethnic minority but because of the role they play in Iranian society. There are about 5 million Azerbaijanis who are ethnically and linguistically related to Turks, in the two provinces that make up the Azerbaijan region, but twice that many or more — perhaps a third of the total population — is spread throughout the country. The Kurds, with their bandoliers of am ­ munition and fierce reputation are sort of perennial rebels, but are largely isolated in the rem ote moun­ tains and play little role in the larger society. News Capsules By United Press International Leftists attack Salvadoran ‘p ro peace ' m arch SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Leftists wielding clubs and hurling gasoline bombs attacked a “pro peace” march by 10,000 women in San Salvador Monday and beat up some of the demonstrators, witnesses said. The witnesses said the women, members of the “Pro Peace Com­ m ittee” formed by housewives, professionals and office workers, were attacked by leftist youths screaming insults and brandishing clubs in downtown San Salvador. Police said 15 gasoline bombs were thrown at the marchers, but no one was injured by the explosions. The three-mile march started at 2 p.m. Monday (3 p.m. EST) from the Cuscatlan Park to downtown San Salvador, witnesses said. But leftist youths broke through the ranks at some downtown street corners and beat up some of the women, they said. It was not immediately known if the women were seriously injured. The women said they were demanding peace, that they wanted to “work in peace” and wanted “an end to terrorism, violence and anarchy.” At least 30 persons have been killed — the majority by lef­ tists — since the junta took over after the Oct. 15 ouster of President Carlos Romero. C ourt to hear $105 m llliom lan d settlem ent case WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court Monday agreed to review the biggest court settlement ever won by an American Indian tribe — $105 million to the Sioux Nation for government seizure of South Dakota’s gold-rich Black Hills. . The justices will hear the government’s challenge to a U.S. Court of Claims ruling in June that 7 million acres of Sioux land were con­ fiscated without “just compensation” while prospectors were swar­ ming over the Black Hills in the 1870s. The high court also, in a single opinion issued Monday, ruled un­ animously the United Mine Workers international and regional unions could not be held financially liable for losses a coal mine company suf­ fered when locals called wildcat strikes. Chavez seeks Texas s u p p o rt fo r lettuce boyco tt SAN ANTONIO — Cesar Chavez, leader of the strife-ridden United Farmworkers Union, Monday opened a three-city tour of Texas seeking support for his latest boycott of non-union lettuce. At midday Chavez led a group of “ human billboards” at Military Plaza and later attended a fund-raising event in the city. He was scheduled to lead a picket line in Houston Tuesday and meet with the Harris County AFL-CIO Building Trades Council Wednesday. Thursday a meeting was set with Dallas area labor leaders and Fri­ day he was to meet in Dallas with the Texas Christian Conference. He was scheduled to finish his tour at a rally Friday of UFW members at San Juan in the Lower Rio Grande Valley. Stock m arket posts 0.68 gain DOW JONES A V E RA GE 30 I n d u s t r i a l s Closed at 833.87 NEW YORK — Precious metals, takeover stocks gambling and the best gains Monday, scored while the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, after showing modest declines early in the session, closed at 833.87 with a token gain of 0.68. The trading pace slowed con­ siderably as 32.3 million shares changed hands, compared with Friday’s turnover of 42.4 million. Gains outnumbered declines 828- 692, with 413 unchanged. Social Security tax cuts 50-cent gas tax bill introduced WASHINGTON (U PI) — Conceding som e people will have to m ove closer to their jobs if his plan is adopted, Rep. John Anderson, R-Ill., introduced a bill Monday to raise the federal gasoline tax 50 cents and return most of it in lower Social Security taxes. “This is a dram atic way to im m ediately reduce de­ mand and I think to send a very important signal to OPEC . . that this country m eans business,” said Anderson, a m oderate seeking the GOP presidential nomination. . Anderson acknowledged his plan might be unpopular at first glance and could “sweep m e right out of conten­ tion, according to som e people.” But he said it actually would result in savings for m ost taxpayers — $626 in take-home pay for the average fam ily. The administration is known to be considering a 50- cent tax increase or rationing as a m eans of cutting oil imports, but has not said what it would do with the revenues. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-M ass., said last weekend he opposes a gasoline surtax. Anderson, who said he hopes the House Ways and Means Com m ittee will consider the bill soon, said his package would result in a 10 percent reduction in im ­ ported oil. Under the plan, the em ployee’s payroll tax rate would drop from the current 6.13 percent to 3 percent and the em ployer’s rate would drop from 6.13 percent to 5 per­ cent. A worker earning the minimum w age of $6,200 a year would get a $194 annual tax reduction and would realize a net gain by driving fewer than 5,720 m iles a year in a car getting 15 m iles per gallon. Anderson’s analysis said poor people generally drive few er m iles to work. ‘We have no choice. Either we tax ourselves by means of a gasoline tax, or OPEC will tax us in the form of higher and higher prices for crude oil.’ A fam ily with a $20,000 incom e — the estim ated average in 1980 — would get $626 in annual tax savings and would have a net gain if it drives few er than 17,780 m iles a year. Elderly and disabled Social Security recipients would get $120 a year in extra benefits and would get a net gain by driving few er than 3.600 m iles a year. “ I am under no illusions regarding the popularity of this tax,” Anderson told a news conference. ” . . . but higher gasoline prices in this country are unavoidable. We have no choice. Either we tax ourselves by means of a gasoline tax, or OPEC will tax us in the form of higher and higher prices for crude o il.” “Some people are going to have to m ov e,” he said. “ Some people are going to have to live closer to work than they do now. We can’t continue to subsidize forever this scarce resource for people who want to drive 50 and 100 m iles a day to and from their h om es.” The tax would net the government $55 billion a year, to be offset by $46 billion in lower payroll taxes, $5 billion in tax credits for businesses that depend on gas­ oline or d iesel use and $4 billion in higher Social Security benefits. Marine defends U.S. naval base SAN JUAN, Puerto R ico (UPI) - The Navy said Monday one Marine guard defended the R oosevelt Roads Naval Base from gunmen who stalked the compound, fired at a patrol car, then fl­ ed. Sunday’s attack, which forced the Navy to close the base for two hours, was the second attack on U.S. m ilitary targets in Puerto R ico in the past week. Terrorists seeking independence for the U.S. com m onwealth fired on a busload of Navy personnel near San Juan seven days ago, killing two sailors and wounding 10 others. The Navy said the Marine guard, un­ hurt in Sunday’s attack, m anaged to fire a shot at the assailants and chase them over an 8-foot fence as they fled the base. Rear Adm. Arthur K. Knoizen warned all unauthorized civilians to stay clear of the base, headquarters of the Carib­ bean F leet, because of possible harm from armed guards. A Navy spokesman said the shooting broke out at 6:40 p.m. Sunday when Lance Corporal Christopher J. Pruitt, 21, of Las Vegas, was patrolling the perim eter of the base near Runway No. NATO ministers of defense debate western missile might BRUSSELS, Belgium (U PI) — NATO defense m inisters agreed Monday they m ust keep up with the Soviet Union’s grow­ ing military strength, but they shied away from endorsing the deployment of new medium-range nuclear m issiles in western Europe. At a m eeting of the “ Eurogroup” — which does not include France and Iceland — on the eve of the NATO council winter session, the m inisters expressed concern over the im balance of forces caused by the Soviet Union’s deployment of SS-20 medium-range m issiles pointed at western Europe. A communique said the m inisters “ reaffirmed the need for the alliance to m aintain an adequate defense capability both in the interest of deterrence and of providing a sufficient basis from which com plem entary m easures of arm s control can be pursued.” But the communique did not go further into the issue of modernizing the West s present European-based m issiles whose range falls short of the Soviet Union. The issue has turned into a national controversy in the Netherlands, where a m ajority of Parliam ent voted against any decision to m anufacture or deploy the new m issiles. In Belgium the decision is still in doubt. During a closed-door session, British Defense Minister Fran­ cis Pym made a strong plea in favor of approval by the Euro­ pean NATO m em bers of the proposed modernization, con­ ference sources said. Pym told his fellow m inisters that the proposal to deploy 572 American-made medium-range m issiles in Europe is clear proof of the U.S. com m itm m ent toward the defense of Europe, the sources said. Under present NATO plans, 108 Pershing II m issiles and 96 cruise m issiles would be stationed in West Germany, while 160 cruise m issiles would be deployed in Britain, 112 in Italy and 48 each in Holland and Belgium A decision on modernization is scheduled to be taken at a joint session of NATO defense and foreign m inisters on Wednesday Dutch D efense Minister Willem Scholten said his government “does not want to underestim ate the seriousness of the Soviet threat” but feels the alliance should m eet it by negotiating new arms control agreem ents He said the Dutch Cabinet will m eet Tuesday in The Hague to take its final decision once Prim e Minister Dries van Agt has returned from consultations with Chancellor Helmut Schmidt in Bonn. Belgian Minister Jose D esm arets said his government also will decide its position on the m issiles by Wednesday. 2. “ Two shots went through his pickup truck, breaking the windshield and rear window,” the Navy spokesman said. The spokesman said Pruitt, who did not know from which direction the shots cam e, began to hunt for the assailants and spotted two suspects running acrosá a field. “ He did manage to fire one shot at them but no effect was noticed,” the spokesman said. The Navy said that security patrols at Roosevelt Roads, a major air base and Naval station, had been doubled since last w eek’s bus attack. A contingent of 60 Marines reinforced the local gar­ rison. the Navy said. While the identity of the assailants was not known, the N avy has been under heavy criticism from pro-independence groups for using the island of Vieques as a firing range. Early this year 21 people w ere arrested and convicted of trespassing on naval property in a dem onstration on Vieques to stop m aneuvers there. One of th o se s e n te n c e d , Angel Rodriguez Cristobal, died in federal prison last month in Tallahassee. Fla. Prison authorities said he com m itted suicide but leftist independence leaders charged he was murdered The three terrorist groups that took responsibility for attacking the Navy bus last ween said they w ere retaliating his death. Indecision leaves high court to scalpers Jirin g line EDITORIALS Korea needs orderly transition SEOUL Has the chill of repression alread y snuffed out this autum n s “ Seoul sp rin g ” ? The a u th o rita ria n spirit of the slain Park Chung-hee seem s to carry on in the recent actions of some of his heirs Their behavior adds weight to the case for urgent constitutional reform and early elections. What ch an ce re m a in s for a m o re open political system depends on w hether the newly chosen president, Choi Kyu-hah, can regain the momentum of a once- promising transition process. into President Choi was designated last week to fill out the rem ainder of the late president’s term Formally, he is arm ed with all the powers his predecessor had the a u to c ra tic Yushm w ritten Constitution In practice, the m artial law provisions also give considerable authority to the m ilitary leaders And although Choi has presented him self as a conciliator most notably by rescin­ ding the hated Em ergency D ecree No. 9 the m ilitary chiefs have been reso r­ ting m ore and more to repression Scores of new political prisoners were taken just as the government planned the release of some of those it inherited. If he can be bold enough, Choi’s acces­ sion provides a chance to recapture the optimism of a few weeks back. the transition THE MAIN ISSUE now is the length toward a different of system Choi could legally hold office until 1984, but has said he will resign and call elections once a new constitution is ready. It will be ready, he pledges, “ as soon as realistically possible.” But no One knows whether he means months or years. The leaders of the opposition New D emocratic Party want general elections soon Having outpolled the government party just last year, they the d isa rra y hope to cap italize on am ong P a rk th e assassination. For the sam e reasons, the leader of the governing Democratic Republican P arty , Kim Jon Pil, has spoken of an interim regim e lasting up to two years. lo y a lis ts s in c e The debate really concerns the con­ ditions under which the constitution is to be rew ritten Most South Korean in­ stitutions are now dominated by Park loyalists. While the government has to give the opposition equal agreed rep resen tatio n on the com m ission rew riting the constitution, the require­ th a t the com m ission ac t un­ m ent a n im o u s ly c r e a t e s an e n o rm o u s obstacle to reform Outside Parliam ent the m artial law authorities have recent­ ly created a clim ate that is clearly calculated to inhibit the discussion of what the new ch arter should contain. STABILITY AS WELL AS democracy would seem to require that the con­ stitutional debate be as broad as possi­ ble. President P a rk ’s dem ise a t the hands of his own security chief showed the danger of isolation If President Choi wants reform , the present cir­ cum stances offer a unique opportunity for orderly change. That opportunity will not last indefinitely. ®1979 New York Times 1______ By R u»»*ll B a k » r Bob Woodward and Scott Armstrong have peeped under the olack robe of the Suprem e Court, and a dismaying sight it is as they tell it in “ The B reth ren .” 1 have always imagined the chief justice calling his colleagues to order with som e som ber phrase like, “A r m a v i r u m q u e cano, troiae gui p r i m u s a b o ris," or “E x e u n t o m n c s . " To which one of the dissenters might rep ly, “ The countervailing precedent of Shecter v. U.S. Chicken defies c e r­ tio ra ri,” or words to that effect. T hereafter, I thought, debate m ust reach plateaus of a wisdom to dazzle the H arvard faculty: “ As Chief Justice Marshall wrote for the m inority in Dred Scott v. Con­ solida ted P isto n ...” “ Begging to disagree with my recon­ dite brother, I hold the Frankfurter opi­ nion in Whimsy v Persiflage to be ab­ solutely on the habeas corpus in the absence of any evidence that duces tecum was beyond the purview WELL, IT'S NOT LIKE that at all, a c c o r d i n g t o W o o d w a r d a n d Armstrong All it is is nine elderly gents acting pretty much the way any other nine aging men might act if they had to agree on five or six decisions a week. Suppose, for instance, that Ju stice Brennan posts a note on the bulletin board suggesting that the whole court go to the Washington Redskins gam e on th e Su nda y. J u s t i c e Whi t e s e e s proposal and, being a form er football star, telephones Justice Blackmun “ H a rry ,” he may say, “ I think we ought to go along with Brennan on this Redskins decision. Why don’t you try to get Burger line up Powell and Stevens so we can get a m ajority for going to the g am e?” to Justice Blackmun (hypothetically): “ F in d y o u r s e l f a n o t h e r s to o g e , Whizzer. Where were you last October when I needed your vote to get us a trip to the World Series?” White “ You’re against Brennan and me on the Redskins proposal?” Blackmun: “ And w hat’s m ore I ’m taking Powell and Stevens with m e.” JUSTICE WHITE ASKS Ju stic e Stevens to m eet him at the w ater cooler. He knows Stevens is a hockey nut. “ Ted,” he says, “ if you vote with Brennan and m e on the R edskins m atter, I ’ll fix you up with good seats for the Stanley Cup finals.” M eanwhile, J u s tic e B rennan has been having coffee with Justice Rehn- quist in the cafeteria It is heavy going. Justice Rehnquist likes the Redskins, but he likes policemen even more. He is afraid the police will be offended if they have to ask ex tra men to work the stadium on a Sunday to provide added security for the Suprem e Court. “ I understand how you feel, Bill,” says Justice Brennan “ I t’s a m atter of principle. Let me buy you a piece of blueberry pie.” “ I ’ll buy,” says Ju stice Rehnquist. “ Don’t be silly,” says Justice Bren­ nan “ W hat's a piece of pie between two friends? Which rem inds me, I thought your dissent on the proposal for the court the basketball championship playoffs was the finest legal prose I've read since Justice language Holmes was maki ng to attend the sing. Brennan, White, Stevens and Rehn­ quist now form a football bloc, but they still need a fifth justice to get to the game. They consult their law clerks about the possibility of getting Justice M arshall on their side. Their law clerks know all. What’s more, half of them tell all to any newspaper reporters who bother to ask. “ M arshall? You m ust be kidding," says one of the best informed law clerks. “ M arshall’s so lazy he won’t even get off the couch on Sunday after­ noon to turn on the Redskins.” “ Maybe v e can get the Chief,” says Brennan “ B etter sound him out delicately,” says a law clerk. “ If he gets the idea you need his vote, he'll insist that you let him w rite the m ajority opinion.” Groans arise from the entire com­ pany at this literary prospect, since it is widely rumored that Chief Justice Burger doesn’t know a tight end from a w rit of mandamus, not to mention the buck lateral. Delicately. Brennan approaches the Chief. “ How’re you planning to vote on this Redskins thing9” he asks. “ I ’ll wait to see how the law clerks vote and then vote the other w ay,” says the chief justice. law clerks can vote, the Before however, the clock strikes 5 p.m., scattering all of them to cocktails with Washington’s most affluent lawyer- lobbyists, whose firm s they hope to join next year There, most of them are able to cadge tickets to the Redskins gam e on Sunday. ®1979 New York Times The Academia Waltz by Berke Breathed Y6S ACPA&L NWU tf you sn¿¿ am ) rovm m tttti c m w e s n tm - m i tir e /A m ... AUYiAsr u n o s ? \ A Mlik£iUM.. U5U... 1 M of- am w cñi PMMO im .sm ifl# AHP m w me 6» //•> a m a t m i ) u r n m / m ^ _ —tn m i. OHPAPPK. umiHo/e sm etñ m K /J &IYI//0 H/M SUCH 6€CC YAlSTttRtfT m a y m one , ORúAsnmmu. 6emoiowtrtm „ AMKtiZLDOtoV TAKE ST6ve m i TO 6E miMHUY wooto Hbtm7. / m w h a v HHA*. NON SO OFF wat m r n i m 6 /D W UKE a t o m ofHonmn. T h e Da il y T e x a n Issue Editor News Assistants Editorial Assistant Entertainment Assistant Assistant Sports Editor Sports Assistant Make-up Editor Wire Editor.................... Copy Editors..................... Artists Photographers ......................................Thomas J. Baker Paula Angerstein. Ernestina Romero, Robert Wiedemer ..............................................Julie Shaver .......................................... Randy Ormsby .............. ........................... Jimmy Burch .............................Reid Laymance ..............................................Vicki Totten ....................................... Gary Fendler Nicholas Chriss. Laurel Baker Berke Breathed. Key Wilde, Sam Hurt, Scott Rieser Harley Soltes Kwortfc Hui THE DAILY TEXAN Tuesday, December 11, 1979 Page 4 z rm&ow, \ f/Mxmccm\ makes me cur to i 6 E A G'PRiCiCUS, : IN C O M P E IE tfT , fo a m ü «Aar pERSamt, just am it s m A hAUUCVS, WsmsfiKmtsftc WL tmm'joefy A uthors of ‘K itty T o rtu re ’ defend book After reading Davis T ucker’s review and the useless, bor­ ing letters about my book, “ K itty T orture,” I cannot believe all those im precatory labels apply to me: “ self-proclaimed hum orist,” “ demented, “ useless, bored type” and by im­ plication, “ abnorm al.” Goodness. Such flattery. Contrary to the le tte rs’ prejudicial postulations, Bosco da Gama and I are not m aniacal adolescent cat haters who spend every moment pouncing on helpless kitties. We also do not roller skate, disco or own Cutlasses or cam els; and we are probably older and sm a rte r, and certainly w ittier, than either the reviewer or the letter w riters. The above statem ent also applies to whoever produced that morbid “ cat-h ater’s delight” phrase. Cat haters do not have enough experience with furry felines to appreciate “ K itty T orture” fully. In a truly postliterate m anner they will laugh at the pictures and m iss the rest. One m ust know and have cats to see the logic and humor of the book. But do people realize this? No. Instead, I am indicted by some bozo review er (albeit mondo/gonzo) and condemned by self- righteous animal lovers. During my life, my family had about 40 cats, with up to 20 a t one tim e — all of whom died natural deaths or were run over by someone else’s car. Right now, we have three cats and they get better treatm ent than I do. The g reat American “ hum orist,” Ambrose Bierce, defined “ cat in his “ Devil’s D istionary” as a “ soft, indestructible autom aton provided by nature to be kicked when things go wrong in the domestic c irc le .” Does this definition m ake Bierce insensitive, demented, useless and mindless? I don’t believe it does. Only mindless people call other people mindless. My point, then, is — you can ’t judge an author by his book. You obnoxious letter-w riting, kitty-torture haters might be mildly surprised if you m et me, but probably not. You m ight not like my book, but I don’t care. So sue me. D.S. Phantom Author of “Kitty Torture” Oh. ho! The ire of ihe anim al lovers has been loosed upon my head. If th a t’s the case, in these jingoistic tim es I ’d better make a few points perfectly clear and end with a question. 1) No anim als were harm ed. That disclaim er precedes the text of the book. 2) Yes, I have booted my cats around from tim e to tim e. (It sure beats the hell out of battered wives and param ours.) I have also burned ant beds with gasoline, a great Texan childhood pastime. 3) Any truly creative anim al torm enter does not need our book He or she already enjoys cockfighting, bettas, pit bulls and foo foo dogs. (See “ Canine Sexualis,” Black Bottom Press. 1969.) 4) Our pam phlet sends noted veterinarians into throes of ecstatic laughter. 5) I am not a “ self-proclaimed hum orist.” I am a “ noted C entral Texas H um orist” and was so deemed by my m en­ tors. Travis Redfish and Big Boy Medlin. If we are awful, so be it. Keep them cards and letters com ­ ing. And to close, as a fellow biologist, M arjorie, if you are truly “ norm al,” will you wash my car? Bosco da Gama Author of “Kitty Torture” P ublisher of book refutes criticisms As editors of S & S Press and publisher of “ Kitty Torture, " I feel compelled to reply to the several irate letters in Thursday’s Daily Texan . Though the le tte r w riters were no doubt well-meaning, this sort of well-meaning behavior is the sam e type that purged H u c k le b e r r y Finn from some library shelves in the 1960s because the book contained the word, “ nigger” ; the sam e well-meaning behavior that in­ vaded the Texas state textbook hearings in 1978 and banned Shirley Jackson’s short story, “ The L ottery,” from 11th grade texts because it contained violence, though a condem­ nation of such violence was Jack son 's point; the sam e well- meaning behavior that caused church groups to protest “ The Life of B rian,” though they had not even seen the movie. I am sure the w riters of the letters likewise have not seen "K itty T orture.” This is not to imply that “ Kitty T orture” ranks as great literature. But it does have two qualities that all works of literature contain: it moves the reader to great emotions, as “ K itty T orture” certainly has done for the letter w riters; it provides a form of emotional release for the reader (and often for the w riter). Many tim es people have the desire to inflict physical punishm ent on th e ir ca ts for feline transgressions; however, reasonable restraint intervenes to prevent such harsh and brutal action. “ Kitty T orture.” then, serves as an emotional release because it illustrates those things many people have wanted to do. The book provides this release without the person carrying out the evil deed. This brings us to another point — restrain t The authors of any work cannot be held responsible for the lack of discipline on the part of their readers. This has been proven in court. K oiak" did not make Ronnv Zamora kill his neighbor in Florida. Neither did “ Kitty T orture” m ake m e go out and torture my cats. So, should Das K a p ita l be banned because it propounds communism? Should Allen G insberg’s poetry be banned because he is a homosexual? Should Thomas Paine writings be banned because he did not believe th at Jesus was the son of God? I think not. But where are we to draw the line between right and wrong, good and bad and who will we get to make that decision? The Dallas Film Review Commission? If it is true that many perverts stalk the UT cam pus (and I am willing to believe that), their states of mind are not my responsibility or the responsibility of Phantom and da Gama. Even the slightest hint that we should be held responsible for others’ actions, or that alleged responsibility should keep us from producing “ Kitty Torture,” is to me a subtle, though real, threat of censorship, and as a publisher and, more im­ portantly, as an American, I will have nothing of it. D.W. Skrabanek S & S Press L onghorn team called ‘disrespectful' Where the hell was the Longhorn basketball team last F ri­ day night (when we played Vermont)? As the fans stood a t attention to the strains of our national anthem, it was painfully cbvious that our team w a s n ’t on the court. The presence of the Vermont team , standing silently, honoring the flag and country, m ade our team ’s dis­ respect all the m ore em barrassing. Although it is possible that the team stood a t attention in the locker room, is it too much to ask that the Longhorns honor our country where their fans can see them? Tim DeRosa Sophomore M ichener art collection should be sold Now that the Micheners have had their ego boost and their charitable tax deduction, I submit that we should junk their collection of 20th century American paintings. L et’s sell the whole thing on the open m arket and buy a really first-class collection. Instead of a clutter of bad paintings by bad a r­ tists,and minor works by good ones, why not purchase 15 or 20 m ajor works by the best American painters? You know, people like Johns, Ryman, Pollack, F. Stella, Marden, Ad the Reinhardt, Raushenburg Lewis, Rothko. Think of benefits. Art studets could study exam ples of good art at their convenience. The Michener gallery would have more space to present a rt in a clearer and m ore intim ate manner. But mainly, for the first time, U.T. could have something really first ra te to show for all its money and effort. Is such a thing possible a t U.T.? G. A. McAlmon Accounting M ale dancers deserve critical review When I saw the Dec. 10 I m a g e s cover, I groaned, expec­ ting the accompanying article to enthusiastically support this “ new, cute, liberating” phenomenon — m ale dancers. Instead, I was w arm ed and surprised by Anne Telford's more critical report of the club, the dancers and the audience. She put my own feeling of worrying into well- chosen words, and I thank her for that. Perhaps UT women will stop and think before they visit this club. The issue is not simply one of watching male bodies gyrate to liven up one’s beer. To patronize this club is to mimic “ m ale” patterm s of exploitation — through view­ ing the dancers as objects, not people with feelings. It is also to admit to one’s own high level of sexual repression — why else the need to trade “ money for skin?” As Anne Telford so correctly notes, this is “ regression, not “ liberation.” Thanks, Anne, you hit it right on the head! Claire McAdams D epartm ent of Sociology Letters & columns The D aily T e x a n e n c o u r a g e s its r e a d e r s to s u b m it gu e s t c o lu m n s or le tte r s to the e d ito r on a n y su b je ct. C o lu m n s and le tte r s m u s t be ip. good ta ste , a c c u ra te , f r e e f r o m libel, m a lic e and p e rso n a l c o n tr o v e rs y . S ince w e r e c e iv e m a n y m o r e co n trib u tio n s tha n can be prin te d daily, le tte r s a nd c o lu m n s m a y be e d ite d fo r b re v ity and clarity. C olum ns sh ould be 70 ty p e d lines (60 c h a r a c te r lines) or less a nd trip le -sp a c e d ; lette rs, 20 t y p e d lines. A ll m a te r ia l s u b m i t t e d f o r p u b lic a tio n on the editorial p a g e s mu s r in c lu d e the a u th o r's n a m e , c o lle g e s ta tu s and telephone n u m b e r . Mail c o lu m n s a nd le tte rs to the E d ito r, The Daily Texan , PO B o x D, A u stin . T e x a s 78712, or d ro p th e m b y the T e x a s S t u d e n t P ublications B u ild in g at the c o rn e r o f 25th S t r e e t and W hitts A v e n u e th e b a s e m e n t o f f i c e s o f Sexist language ‘inaccurate’ word triv ia liz in g se x ism By Karp n K — gan Popular discourse on the m erits of the ' chairperson'’ versus the word chairm an" has become practically b an al. By in language, the mass media has blurred th e in v o lv e d . Fem inists who oppose the use of the generic “ m an” are not m erely quibbl­ ing over semantics. They are challeng­ in g l i n g u i s t i c b a s is of o u r predominantly male-oriented culture. i m p o r ta n t i s s u e s th e That language and culture are in­ tim ately related is hardly disputable. Anthropologist linguist Edward Sapir believed that language is a powerful tool in shaping perception. Sapir and his colleague, Benjamin Whorf, formulated a hypothesis of linguistic relativity that has remained a compelling theory in its field. Whether we accept their extrem e view that language determ ines how we think, we can a t le a st a g ree with p h ilo s o p h e r and lin g u is t Ludw ig W ittgenstein that reality is mediated for us through language. If our language does have a sexist bias, there follow vast implications about our culture’s structuring of reality. In other words, to s e x i s m dynamically perpetuate a sexist socie­ ty l a n g u a g e s e r v e s in WHAT ARE SOME OF the most serious sexist biases in our language, and how can we begin to elim inate them ? The aforem entioned generic “ m an ,” including the generic “ he,” constitute pervasive instances of the male-orientation of our language. Casey Miller and Kate Swift, in their book “ Words and Women,” delineate both the inaccuracy of generic “ m an” and its exclusionary power. The pronoun “ he” can mean either “ he” or “ he or she” ; the term “ m an” can either include or exclude women. Alma G raham , a prom inent lexicographer, points out the absudity of using “ m an” to m ean either a m ale person or the human race: “ If you hav e a group, h a lf of w hose m em bers are A’s and half of whose m em bers are B’s, and you call the group C, then A’s and B’s m ay be equal m em bers of group C. But if you call the group A, there is no way that B ’s can be equal to the A’s within it. The A’s will always be the rule and the B’s will always be the exception — the sub­ group, the species, the outsiders.” Since is both a su b se t of and “ m a le ’’ equivalent to the term for the whole set (m an), the m ale becomes the norm in our language. r e f e r r e d This male-as-norm bias is also seen in like m ankind, congressm an, words forefathers, stew ardess, usherette, one- m a n -s h o w , m a ilm a n , n e w s m a n , freshman, “ the brotherhood of m an,” businessman, “ the man in the s tre e t,” etc. Also babies and an im als a re g e n e r a lly to a s “ h e . ” E lim inating the sex ist bias of the generic man and sim ilar words is not difficult, but requires deliberate effort. F o r “ m a n ” a n d “ m a n k i n d , ” “ hum anity” or “ humankind” can be substituted. “ Person” can be affixed to occupations that require no sex iden­ tification. Endings like “ e tte ” and “ ess” on job titles should be dropped because they unnecessarily differen­ tiate sex. Babies can be described in the plural, or individually as “ he” or “ she.” Animals can become “ its .” As for the generic pronoun “ he,” Miller and Swift o ffe r fo r ‘its alteration: “ she or he” alternated with “ he or she,” sentences recast to avoid the third person pronoun entirely and sentences phrased in the plural (using the neutral “ they” rather than the sex­ ist generic “ he” ). th r e e p o s s ib ilitie s SEVERAL OTHER INSTANCES of sexism in the English language have been cited by various w riters. Titles perpetuate a double standard — “ M r.” denotes nothing about m arital status, while “ M iss” and “ M rs.” pinpoint it ex­ actly. Prescribing name change for a m arried woman subsumes her identity under her husband’s name. Legitimizing children by having them take their father’s nam es reflects in language the c u ltu ra l m a le -b ia s. A tte m p tin g to elim inate m ale su p rem ist nam ing, women have begun to insist on Ms., or no title at all; they have begun to take back they have questioned the patriarchial foundations of child naming. their birth names; In the realm of connotative meaning, sexual stereotypes dominate. Words like “ m asculine” and “ feminine” do not th e s a m e a s “ m a le ” and m e a n “ fem ale” ; instead, they impose a whole range of stereotypic characteristics. Miller and Swift note the detrim ental effects on both men and women of the sex role identifications: “ Man is strong and courageous” and “ Woman is weak and passive.” In addition, there are more derogatory sexual slang term s for women than for men. As Allen Pace Nilsen points out, women are often iden­ tified with food (dish, sugar, sweetie- pie) and with pet-type anim als (kitten, lam b, chick), all connoting bunny, passivity. V arda One, in her book “ Manglish,” notes the doublethink in o u r la n g u a g e : W om en w ho a r e aggressive are called “ pushy"; men are called “ go-getters.” language A FULL ACCOUNT of linguistic sex­ ism is yet to be made. The effect of an individual sexist word or phrase by is pro b ab ly not sig n ific a n t. itse lf However, users of a that posits woman as “ the O ther” (male-as- norm syndrome) and constantly refers term s (semantic to her in negative polarization) m ust be seriously affected by that usage. What is needed is more aw areness both in the public sphere and i n d i v i d u a l c o m m u n i c a t i o n . in A c a d e m ic ia n s a n d p u r is ts h av e protested that fem inists are attem pting to create an Orwellian “newspeak” that will shock the foundations of linguistic aesthetics. On the contrary, eliminating sexism in language will allow greater a c c u ra c y and u n d e rsta n d in g , not thought control. And m ore important than whether “ he or she” is aesthetical­ ly pleasing is the political question in­ volved. the linguistic counterpart to social equality is the elimination of sex­ ism in language. According to Joan K. M archal, librarian at Brooklyn College, language change, if perm itted to dawdle along with popular usage, is conser­ vative if not reactionary. But, as she says, “ Women have decided, quite simply that that pace is not fast enough. We know that any genuine change in our status in society is inextricably tied to change in our language. And with that knowledge comes the conviction that we can increase that ra te of change.” K e e g an is a c o l u m n i s t f o r the A u s t i n A m e r i c a n - S t a t e s m a n ’s “N e i g h b o r ” section. Tuesday, December 11, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 5 Embassy seizure American anger offset by crisis By Tura Campanolla If the seizure of the American E m ­ bassy in Tehran constitutes the gravest threat to world peace since the Cuban m issile crisis of 1962, then it m ust mean that for 17 years the honor of no group of people has been offended, no innocent people have been abused, no lives have been lost, no lack of communication has ensued and there never have been in all that tim e feelings of ourtrage, fru stra­ tion, abandonment or tragedy. More precisely however, these wrongs have not been felt by Americans at the hands of others during this time. The V ietnam w ar, the continued m aintenance of the s ta te of South Africa, the killing of American college the stu dents by A m erican m ilitia, struggles of people on practically every continent for national independence or homeland, the starvation of millions were (and are) somehow minor events in comparison to what has happened over the past month. I would m ake my argum ent ridiculous by trying to list all th e fa m ilie s, a ll the b e le a g u e re d leaders, all the relatively unim portant people who must have thought for the duration of y e a r s , not days, “ Why doesn’t someone do som ething?” Or do only Americans cling to the belief that because we are the strongest nation on earth there should necessarily be a per­ sonal justice and revenge for us . . . when it does not seem to exist for anyone else. The fact that it may not ex­ ist for us either is a scary proposition. WHAT SETS THE EVENTS of the past four weeks in bold relief to the nor­ mal ups and downs of the past 17 years (884 weeks) is that once again U.S. leadership and m edia are speaking the grim, ominous and em otive language of war. We have newly catalogued Iranian students no differently from the way we singled out Japanese Am ericans for concentration cam ps when Japan a t­ the tacked P e a rl H arbor. Woe nationals (or descendents) of a country who are in the U.S. when their (form er) country dares to oppose or insult the U .S.; these people a re helpless. to The angry reaction of Am ericans at this time could teach us a valuable lesson. While some of us talk of war because one of our em bassies was taken and another burned, how would we feel if our homes had been burned or our itself country taken from us? How would we feel if through repeated effort we could not yet rid ourselves of an op­ pressive government? Indeed, what must it feel like to be oppressed when the U N. and entire industrialized world not only does not side with us, but barely notices? OUR PRESIDENT’S m o ther, an enlightened, hum anitarian woman who has served in the Peace Corps, would pay someone to kill Khomeini, she said jokingly to the press. She, and others, feel that he has wronged our country that much. Are we surprised that the Iranians want the shah extradited, not so much to kill him as to gain possession of the wealth he has bled form that country? Can it be that these Iranians, and other people on this earth today, feel an anger g reater in dimension than any we have had cause to feel, and they have suffered it longer? These are indeed the most threatening tim es to world peace in a long tim e because we are being asked to endow the demands and reactions of others an ounce of validity._________________ C a m p a n e l l a is w i t h School o f Public Affairs. t h e L B J Eye-catching newspaper compositon necessary to hold readers ’ attention By Julie Ryan in "R ecently, I read a column the Fort Worth Star- T e l e g r a m , (Sunday, Nov. 4) in which free-lance w riter Bob R ay Sanders pans the “ c o sm e tic ” m ake-up of many newspapers. He spoke out against such things as colored headlines, color picures, the use of m ore photographs and the varied type and column widths, saying that as a result, the real news receives casually w ritten, “ token” coverage, and that the writing has no “ depth,” or is “overplayed” by the media. As one involved in the make-up of a newspaper, I ’d like to say, “ So w h at!?” R ather than a negative trend, I see the emphasis on a pap er’s make-up as necessary. If it w eren’t for the eye­ catching composition of the page, few people would even bother to read the articles, let alone ponder their literary value. R eaders today are easily bored and turned off by total black and white, serious, words-only newspapers with endless pages of formidable columns. The people of the 1970s are more sophisticated: they want to be entertained while they read the daily fare of rapes, m urders, foreign m ilitary movements and inflated prices. Innately, the re a d e r’s eye will follow design patterns, and most everyone would rath er look at a picture than read two columns of black characters. R eaders look for catchy headlines, easy to follow arrangem ents of articles and a pleas­ ing a rtistic display. E’er instance, if there is no heavy artwork or ad copy a t the edge of the page, your eye tends to wander right off into space — and no wonder you lose interest. A cor­ rectly “ fram ed” page will hold your attention, focusing it only on that page. Varied headlines and column sizes add aesthetic value and give each article its own identity; each article will stand out, rath er than become lost in a black sea of words that all look alike. SANDERS ALSO CRITICIZES the types of articles - he felt that stories about charities and special interest events (e.g. stock shows and debutantes) should give way to more serious “ issues.” Well, I think a paper made of 100 percent serious news would be downright depressing. Human interest stories are necessary. They let the reader empathize with the subjects of the stories, and often they provide humor or show concern for good causes. In today’s society, where everything is becoming so impersonal and technological, people need to see the human side of life: how we help each other, if some group or other helps local people, etc. Human interest articles are often just plain fun. In September, many T e x a n readers complained about the amount of coverage on the Salvation Sandwich ven­ dor. The stories showed one m an ’s struggle to fight the UT System ’s red tape — something probably everyone related with the University can identify with. Granted, the situation was not as vital as the hostages in Iran, but nevertheless, it was perti­ nent to campus life, and it presented some lighter reading (as com pared to the area stabbings, robberies and tax problems, or the national energy crisis, or runaway inflation). A steady diet of pure “ heavies” would gradually alienate readers. A few hap­ pier. or even just less serious, stories make the daily news a bit more palatable. So, big deal if a newspaper writes about society parties or purely local events! Such coverage shows the shows the breadth of the paper’s interest, and if nothing else, the them atic variey and artistic make-up improve readership. Even if the articles have limited appeal, a newspaper has a responsibility to provide something for all types of readers. the “ blandness” of Mr. Sanders disapproves of the newswriting of today’s papers. But if the writing were not bland, it might no longer be news wr i ti ng . The essential aim of news stories is to provide straightforw ard, unbiased facts and information — a style that is innately bland. If you want to be entertained by lively prose, turn to another section, with its lighter subjects and fancier appearance. HE ALSO OBJECTS to modern sports w riters’ playing “ both fan and om niscient wizard.” When you read a lively sports ac­ count in which you can tell the w riter is enthusiastic and in­ volved, don’t you feel more like you're there? I think the action definitely seem s more real. I also think that in part, the w riter should sound like he knows it all — after all, th a t’s his job. A good combination of enthusiasm and pure knowledge make for a readable, yet factual sports coverage. So, one morning when you wake up to a green T e xa n headline, think about it: The staff isn’t neglecting true news, it ’s just trying to make it easier to face. _ R y a n is an editorial a ssi st ant f o r The Daily Texan. on THE FIRST DM OP c m s r n i x , n v true love D I A M O N D ! ! Fr o m GAVE TO n £ ___ a GLOW STONE JEWELERS, ^ FINANCING AVAILABLE JF ON THAT SPECIAL HOUDAV G ET-TOGETHER, UsHEN YOU GET T O G ETH ER UITH S P eO R L FRIENDS, W UON'T WANT TO SERVE AN CRDWAW SEER.. I DON'T THINK THOSE COMMERCIALS a r e SINCERE' <•////> 't - / z _ - * K, Shah on way to bigger, better life in By Jo— ph J. Ted 1 no Coming back from my final assign­ e e . of the sem ester late last night, I agged down a Yellow cab near the ipitol and jumped in. The driver, look- the g ra th e r pale and ashen edawn hours, had a large grin spread :ross his face. “ W hat’s up?” I casually asked. “ Oh, nothing m uch.” “ How come you’re sm iling?” “ No reason. I ju st love w orking ghts,” he replied, still smiling. “ Well, I never really cared much for ght work m yself,” I said, continuing e sm all talk. “ I always feel so washed ,t as the sun rises over the horizon. Tt of like a dirty dish towel. If you i o w what I mean “ Yeah. You pick up a different kind of rt at night,” he said, “ but other things ake up for that lousy feeling you get in e m orning.” “ Oh, like w hat?” “WELL, FOR INSTANCE, my last re w as the shah of Iran,” he told me that ridiculous grin returned to his outh. Being the objective, inquisitive and >rt reporter I was taught to be, I ickly followed up his statem ent with a m ark designed to gain his trust and ep him talking. “ What are you, some id of a nu t?” I ’m serious,” he continued, "I just . him out a t the Greyhound station lere he boarded a bus for El P aso.’ “ What was he doing in town ..What did he look like...W here did you pick him up.. .Where the hell is he going?” I scream ed, my brain working a mile a minute over this information given to m e by a half-crazed acid-head. “ He was real friendly and he didn't even look sick. N either did the blonde he was with — she was fine. She had real good looking ...” “ Where did he get in?” I interrupted. “ Well, I picked him up at the airport and he said he wanted to go to the bus station. I couldn’t figure why he’d get off a plane and get on a bus for El Paso. You’d think he would have ju st flown — ” “ RIGHT. So what was going on?” I asked, as he started going off on another tangent. “ He said he flew in from San Antonio and was going to, uh, le t’s see where did that woman say they were going. Oh yeah. E stes P a rk .” “ Colorado? What’s he going to do up there?” the way “ Yeah he’s going all to Colorado and he’s doing it little by little. After they get to El Paso, they’re gonna fly to Albuquerque. From there they’ll take Amtrak into Colorado. The shah said the State D epartm ent thought he would be safer if he and his girlfriend rode public transportation. But don’t say nothing. I ’m sworn to secrecy.” “ Oh don't worry about m e .” For­ tunately. my ride was just about over, but I asked one more question before I got out “One last thing,” 1 said to the cabbie. “ Do you have any idea what the shah is going to do in E stes P a rk ? ” “ Sure, he’s going to be a ski instruc­ to r ^ _______________________________ is a T e x a n r e p o r t e r . P e r h a p s w e ’v e been w o rk i ng h i m too hard. T e d i n o AT G IV E -flM W STEREO, u e 'Pe SLASHING prices TO SHOU/ SCO GOT THE TRUE. X W S SPIRIT' m m m ™ o O OTp iffiV USE 1 Page 6 □ T H E D A I L Y T E X A N □ Tuesday, December 11, 1979 Sliced pair. IS karat split gold shanks hold ten diamonds in a variation on the brilliant classic fishtail style. I he < enter stone is a one-half carat brilliant cut, together with accessory gems for a three-fourths carat total weight. I ngagement ring, $1,950, Wedding ring, 562 5. t h e S h e f t a l l CO. JEWELERS GEMOLOGISTS M e m b e r A merit a n G e n t Society 2 2 1 6 (.u a d a lu p e (in the >.o n e b lo ck .is I he C o -o p ), AllaniJale Village, Vi'estgale M a il a n d H ig h la n d M a ll M l n o / o r h a n k . irds a n d Sheftal! P ictu re d larger than a ctu a l size. charge. audio-technica A T 6002 autocleanica^, reg. $10.99 NOW ONLY *7.99 automatic record cleaner set includes AT improved Record Care Formula 180mm (7 1/8 ) i ° l r ^ R fc C O R D S U R F A C E - -CUTTING JO IN T S GRO UND TER M IN A L H E IG H T A D J U S T M l N T S C R E W (O P P O S IT E S I D E ) I Cleans record as it plays, reduces record & stylus wear & im proves sound quality. V i * a & M a » l » r C h a r g W « lc o m * iverttitci (Za-Ofi free 1 hr. parking * w /$ 3 .0 0 purcha purchase r O £ > c L 4> _ -3 if Court to review death sentence From staff and wire reports The U S Supreme Court Monday agreed to review the Tex­ as death penalty requirement that excludes prospective jurors who say their deliberations would be affected by possible imposition of the death penalty. More than 100 death row inmates could be affected by the case, an appeal from inmate Randall Dale Adams, and another case before the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, Burns v Esteliet. challenging the Texas statute, said Dr. Robert Hardgrave. University professor of government. Adams was convicted and sentenced to death for killing a Dallas policeman last fall. Adams is challenging the exclu­ sion of nine potential jurors who said possible imposition of the death penalty could have affected their decision in the case. In a sim ilar case, the 24 5th Circuit judges are scheduled Jan. 28 to hear Jam es Burns’ argument that a jury that con­ victed him last spring of an Odessa murder was stacked against him because four potential jurors were excluded from hearing his case. At issue, Hardgrave said, is whether the Texas statute con­ forms with the so-called Witherspoon rule established by a 1988 Supreme Court decision, which says that jurors may be excluded only if they are irrevocably opposed to the death penalty. The Texas statute — “ a much lower standard” — states that a “ person may be excluded from jury service if his op­ position to the death penalty would affect his deliberations on an issue of fact,” Hardgrave said. The Witherspoon rule states that prospective jurors cannot be excluded simply because they “ may have conscientious or religious scruples against the death penalty,” Hardgrave explained. For that reason, the justices’ decision may alter the Texas law, he said. hr MAKE IT WITH JUAREZ TEQUILA i M P O R U D & B O m t D BY U O u a A JA LISC O S A ST LOUIS M0 80 PROOF GOLD OR SIL V ER Campus News in Brief Archery Club meeting scheduled The UT Archery Club will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the archery range at Anna Hiss Gym. A N N O U N C E M E N T S S T U D E N T S F O R A L I B E R T A R I A N S O C IE T Y will sell buttons a! their table on the West Mall. S IQ M A TA U D E L T A will show a film in con­ nection with the collection of staple foods for Caritas at 8 p m. Tuesday in Academic Center 2' Basil Rathbone and Frederic March star in the film "A Christmas Carol.” T E X A S U N IO N R E C R E A T IO N C E N T E R will offer bowling and pool for half price all day Tuesday M E E T IN G S B E L L Y D A N C E C L U B will meet at 7 30 p m Tuesday in Bellmont Hall 502A This is City Council the last meeting of the semester For in­ formation, call Meg at 476-3788 Everyone is welcome O R G A N IZ A T IO N OF A R A B S T U D E N T S will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Education Building 166. P 8 I C H I will meet to elect next year's officers at 5 p m Tuesday in the graduate student lounge on the third floor of Mezes Hall Dr Christine Banks, of the Graduate School ot Business, will speak on "The F'eid ot industrial Psychology" L E C T U R E 8 D E P A R T M E N T OF G E O L O G Y will sponsor lectures by masters degree candidates at 1 p m Tuesday in Geology Building 100 Bill Bath will speak on "Fluvial Controls on Loci ot Erosion and Deposition in an Alluvial Valley, Palo Duro Canyon, Tex­ as " Richard Hulbert will speak on Multivanate Study on Pleistocene and Recent Rabbits." D E P A R T M E N T O F A R T A N D T H E U N IV E R S IT Y P U B L IC L E C T U R E S C O M M IT T E E will sponsor a lecture by Herbert Ferber, abstract expressions! and sculptor, on "The Schism Between Artist and Audience" at 9 a m. Tuesday in Art Building 1.110 D E P A R T M E N T OF A N T H R O P O L O G Y A N O L A T I N T H E I N S T I T U T E O F A M E R IC A N S T U D IE S will sponsor a lecture by Professor Richard Adams on "Report on a Trip to Nicaragua" at 4 p.m Tuesday in Burdme Hall 136. D E P A R T M E N T OF A S T R O N O M Y will spon­ sor a lecture by Dr. Helene Dtckel, of the University of Illinois, on "The Structure and Evolution of the W3 Molecular Cloud" at 4 pm Tuesday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 15.216B Water study up for vote BY GARDNER SELBY Daily Texan Staff City Council Thursday is expected to ap­ prove the appropriation of $100,000 toward participation in the Nationwide Urban Runoff Program because Austin represents “ a uni­ que opportunity for such study,” a city engineer said Monday. “ This program would never have been possible, if it weren't for public demand on a national scale for pollution studies,” Charles Graves, Austin director of engineering, said. City funds will be combined with a promis­ ed $300,000 from the Environmental Protec­ tion Agency to fund the three-year study on urban runoff — basically pollutants that leak into a natural water environment — Graves said. “ Because Austin represents a large en­ vironm entally sensitive area, with the watershed divided into three parts — Travis Lake, Austin Lake and Town Lake — each body of water is exposed to a higher degree of urban runoff, and we can analyze the different areas for environmental effects,” he said. Required filters in Austin are designed to “ detain all additional water, making the runoff as pure as the water was before (in its natural state.)” The first phase of the study, aimed at hiring consultants and making a contract work schedule, should be completed by Feb. 29, Graves said. “ It has not been proven yet that construc­ tion of streets contributes to significantly contaminating the environment. We need to determine levels of effect,” he said. E P A requires that the city also create a citizens consultant group consisting of representatives from four areas — private groups, public interests, economic interests and public officials — to be selected by the council. “ This (project) gives the city a chance to show some leadership in this area,” he add­ ed. Union to hold runoff election The Austin shuttle bus drivers’ union, Local 1549, will hold a presidential runoff vote Tuesday and Wednesday. P re s id e n tia l candidates John Lipscombe and incum­ bent W alter Dressier each received 34 votes in Friday balloting. Officers elected are Janet Adams, vice president; Lynn V in eyard , tre a s u re r; Bob D a v i d s o n , f i n a n c i a l secretary; and Ruth Simms, recording secretary. A l m o s t a l l of the a p ­ p r o x i m a t e l y 75 u n i o n members turned out for the first election since a contract was signed with Transporta­ tion E n t e r p r is e s in February. In c . D re s s ie r said he feels relations with T E I have im­ proved since the contract was signed. He said the most im­ portant part of his job is to en­ f orce the pr ov i si o ns for drivers’ grievances with the company. Lipscombe said he thinks more contact between the un­ ion and T E I is needed in solv­ ing everyday problems. He said he believes the company has made moves toward more contact with the union, but they have not been heeded effectively. W £ from * J L ¿ T H E v i k i n g p r e s s -gv Dol/sjL *3uiCG factory R estau ran t and A lte rn a tiv e Gifts Out* blin k o f f I K s h u ttle f 15th & A\»-. A 151-8319 "The horror! The horror!” G reat X m a s G ift precision haircuts practical prices 478-6754 2408 San Gabriel BOOKS, only $2! At your local book store or from S & S Press T-SHIRTS, only $6! white — S, M, L S & S Press POB 5931 Austin, Tx. 78731 XMAS DISCOUNT SALE SHIGEKO’S IMPORTS Lacquerware Pottery Oriental Screens Gifts 100 West North Loop (200 yds. West of E. 53rd St. A Ave. F) 10% Discount With This A d Volum e Discounts on Special Items v T h e C h ild re n 's T h e a tre by F ranz B o n n F a csim ile editions of 19th c e n tu ry pop-up books, designed in G e rm a n y . $7.95 each DRAGONS bv Peter Hogarth with I al Clery a liv e ly history o f the enchanted dragon, from art, fa iry tales, fo lk lo re and legend; la vish ly illustrated. $16.95 a special C hristm as gift to our custom ers: a Co-Op B ooks I-shirt or book bag F R E E u $2 0.00 p u rc h a se. fpirrT) - 4 % tSA' f l B ! Ü Kr<*«* Parking * 53.(K) Purchase 4 SALE 20% off All Jewelry All Xmas Cards All Week Open until 10:00 Unicorn “ Gallery and Gift Shop in Dobie M all Mon-Sat IO-9 477-0719 Nations pledge U.S. support PARIS f r o m 20 (UPI) - In twin trium phs for W ashington, m i n i s t e r s i n ­ dustrialized nations Monday imports decided to cut oil soon er than planned and throw their support behind the United States in its crisis with Iran. D elegates at the ministerial session of the International E n e r g y A g en cy v o ted to im ports to 24.6 reduce oil million barrels by 1985 — 1.4 million barrels less than the original ceiling of 26 million barrels set last May. The additional cut was ap­ proved at the request of the United States whose delega­ tion. led by Energy Secretary Charles Duncan, less and less oil will be available on world markets as produc­ ing nations carry out their threat to cut back on their fears non-renewable oil riches. Between 1980 and 1985. U.S. import levels for crude oil will fa ll from 8.3891 m illlio n barrels a day to 8.3838. a drop of 0.0053. The m o v e by th e n on ­ com m u n ist in d u stria lized countries cam e just one week before the Dec. 17 start of the C a r a c a s m e e tin g of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which is expected to decree new oil price increases and produc­ tion levels. IEA sources said the new cutback was designed to im ­ press on the OPEC countries the determination of western nations to save energy, thus fo r e sta llin g a sse r tio n s by many oil countries that their exports are being wasted by consuming nations. Downtown goals report issued By DAVID REAL City Reporter The Austin Planning Commission Monday released a report identifying six major goals in a rejuvenated down­ town revitalization project blueprint prepared by citizen groups. In addition to the main goals, the report broadly outlined alm ost 40 in­ term ediate objectives in the central city area. The Planning Commission recommendations completed the two- month first phase of a five-part study to design a central city development plan by April. Planning C om m ission Chairman Miguel Guerrero said the second phase of the plan, if approved by the City Council, would concentrate on an analysis of the existing conditions in the central city. The plan would rely h eavily on econom ic market surveys conducted by American City Corp., which presented its controversial revitalization plan earlier this year, Guerrero added. “ If the ACC people did nothing else, (they) gave us a lot of information to work with and (they) created a lot of interest,” he said. “ It’s a good start. A good 30 to 40 percent of the work has been done. We just need to get it com ­ piled.” Guerrero said he was excited about developing the revitalization plan. “ It’s coming together. It has a little more of a handle to it,” he said. “ This is my city. This is my home. I’ve lived h ere a ll m y lif e and d ow n tow n revitalization has com e up three to four tim es in the past 20 years. “ I’d hate to see all this work, tim e and money go to waste. I’d like to see this thing continue.” Guerrero said the Planning Commis­ sion report specifically stated: • Austin’s central area should retain its d istin c tiv e c h a r a c te r . V aried physical and social elem ents should be preserved and improved to enhance the image of the area, the report says. • Transportation planning should stim ulate and reinforce downtown development. The report suggested a centralized m ass transit system should link other forms of public and private citywide transportation. • Housing supplies for a variety of needs, incomes and lifestyles should be expanded. • Downtown economic and em ploy­ ment opportunities, joint public and private ventures, should be increased. including • A d o w n to w n M o d el E n e r g y Development Demonstration District should be organized in the central city to establish energy-conscious design, construction and retrofit criteria. • N e a r b y r e s i d e n t s a n d neighborhoods should be protected from property tax increases and other adverse impacts from revitalization projects. Guerrero urged the council to en­ courage active participation of the private sector and sensitive develop­ m en t n e a r a d ja c e n t r e s i d e n t i a l neighborhoods. C M A Building remodeling under way BY G A R D N ER SE L B Y Daily T exan Staff Partial remodeling of Communication Building A began last week, promising faculty and staff m ore space but cutting the size of the student study area to one third its present size, the dean of communication said Monday. “The dean’s staff has been situated on three separate floors, but this construction will get all of us on one floor (the fourth floor),” Dean Robert Jefferey said. The student lounge will be moved to the third floor to make room for the additional dean’s space, and improved lighting will be added to the new lounge. The fifth floor student study area, the former Communication Library, will be converted to a new study area one-third the size of the present area. The Lady Bird Johnson room, a part of the existing study area, will be extended and 12 new “ faculty workspaces” and three classroom s will be constructed on the fifth level, Jefferey said. Deciding who will receive the new workspaces will be “ my Christmas chore,” he said, adding that the $97,000 project should be completed by the first week of February. IM M IG RATIO N ASSISTANCE • Relative Perm anent Resident Visas Labor Certifications • N aturalizatio ns • V isa Extensions Practical Training Paul Parsons A ttorn ey at L a w (512) 477-7887 M e m b e r A s s o c ia tio n o f I m m ig r a tio n a n d N a tio n a lity L a w y e r s ______ A Good Place To Study Drop by Hillel this w eek to study in a relaxed, friendly atmosphere Coffee & Donuts 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. 7:00-10:00 p.m. H illel Campus Jewish C enter 2105 San Antonio 4 76 -0 1 25 » n » n » n » n r?n TTn M O N O G R A M S SAY A LOT. A monogrammed bath set from Scherts & More will say a lot of good things about you— whether you buy it for yourself or as a gift for someone else. Towels, robes, casual clothes, accessories— we can monogram just about anything in the store—and we can do it fast. Scherts & More is more than you thought it was. Check us out! SCH ERTS • More Dobie Mall • 2021 Guadalupe ♦ 477-2652 Tuesday, December 11, 1979 D TH E DAILY T EX A N □ Page 7 avE Blue Chip Soap Gift Boxed $10.00 set nmmm Football Soap Gift Boxed $4.95 ¡ Executive Washroom Key Soap 3 j| Gift Boxed a $5.25 Penguin Double Old Fashion Glasses | Set of Six, $16.00 m . Penguin & Alligator Cocktail Napkins 99'pkg. Nylon Checkbook Covers in four rainbow colors $4.50 & jj » We’re Ready For Christmas! The Whirl Twirl suspends in air 4 shapes $5.00 and $6.00 Inter-Office Airmail Note Paper It Flies! $3.50 pkg. ¡ Stanley Stemmer ¡ Wine Glass Holder I $8.95 Library Magazine Rack $18.95 \ JW ÍK & v s JBfit ARE W 3 *5 5 52SS V isa & M a s ts rC h a rg e W elcom e 1 hr. parking w/$3.00 purchase Fraa 1 hr. parking 1 L . * f u i / n n n u r f k n t a w /$3.00 purchase T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Tuesday, December 11, 1979 Page 8 DePaul nudges Longhorns Last minute burst gives Demons 66-60 win F rom S ta ff and W ire R e p o rts The Texas Longhorns surprised just about everyone in Chicago but themselves Monday night, leading the 10th ranked D ePaul Blue Demons on three separate occasions before falling, 66-60. The Longhorns, using a revamped lineup that included 6-7 sophomore Henry Johnson, were in the game until the final 32 seconds, trailing by just two, 62-60 With DePaul utiliz­ ing a stall, Texas’ John Danks fouled Clyde Bradshaw, sending the Blue Demon guard to the line for a one- on-one. Bradshaw connected on the first half but his second attempt missed and Johnson pulled down the rebound. The Longhorns went down the floor and and set up a play, with senior Ron Baxter, who led all scorers with 21 points, shooting from the top of the key. B A X T E R ’S SHOT bounced out to DePaul’s Terry Cummings, who was fouled by Texas’ Rob Cun­ ningham on his layup try. The basket counted and the freshman from Chicago hit the free throw, closing out the three point play. Cummings’ were the final points of the game. "W e didn’t play as well as we’d liked to,’’ DePaul coach Ray Meyer said. "W e didn’t get a good game out of (M ark) Aguirre. They spread us out and played us one-on-one which was tough to handle.” Aguirre, one of the nation’s top freshmen a vear ago, scored 20 points on the night, six below his average coming into the game. “Mark is like a faucet, he turns it on and off,” Meyer said “They (Texas) gave us everything we wanted and more. I was afraid if Texas got the lead, they would pull the ball out (and stall). They hit some fine shots and Baxter's a real fine player,” Meyer added. CUMMINGS, ONE OF the most sought after high school players coming out of the Chicago area a year ago, added 16 points as the win was DePaul’s second without a loss this season, and its 30th straight win at home. It also marked Meyer’s 599th career victory of his 38- year career. ‘‘Even if you win 2,000 they don’t get any easier. We’re just taking them one at a time,” Meyer said. "Cummings loked good in spots and (Skip) Dillard came off the bench and hit 4-of-7 at the end of the second half.” The loss was Texas’ first of 1979-80 as the Longhorns had reeled off wins over N o rth w estern S ta te of Louisiana, Harvard and Vermont. T EXA S TOOK A 38-37 lead in the opening minute of the second half, but a basket by Aguirre, who scored the Blue Demons’ first 11 points of the second half, gave DePaul a 39-38 lead it never relinquished. DePaul opened up a quick 12-6 lead early in the first half, and Tex­ as narrowed the lead to 12-8 at 14:46. The Longhorns took their first lead of the night, 16-15, at 11:35 when Johnson scored on a fast break layup, getting the pass from Danks. The Blue Demons regained the lead, 17-16 when freshman Teddy Grubbs hit a 15-foot jump shot at 11:28. Texas got the lead right back when Johnson connected from 13 feet out, giving the Longhorns a 18- 17 lead. But baskets by Cummings, Grubbs and an Aguirre free throw after a technical foul on Texas coach Abe Lemons gave DePaul a 22-18 lead. Trailing 37-36 with a 1:50 left in the first half. Texas had two op­ portunities to grab the lead at half time Baxter failed to get the ball in­ bounds before the five seconds elapsed, and the Longhorns missed a jump shot that would have given them a 38-37 lead. The first half ended with DePaul leading 37-36, and the Blue Demons extended that lead, with Aguirre's help, in the opening minutes of the second half. Aguirre scored 11 straight points, but Baxter answered with six points for Texas, and DePaul led 48-42. Texas guard George Turner, who finished the night with 12 points, 10 of those coming in the second half, hit a driving slam dunk, cutting the lead to four, 48-44. The Longhorns pulled to within two points on four different oc­ casions, the last of which came at 2:52 when Turner hit a 25-foot jump shot, making the score 62-60. JmUPl T eiephotc DePaul’s James Mitchem and Texas' Henry Johnson battle for loose ball In DePaul’s 66-60 win Monday night. Oilers net tie for first, whip Steelers, 20-17 HOUSTON ( U P I ) Dan Pastorini fired a 25-yard touchdown pass to Ken Burrough and the Houston Oilers, embarrassed by P i t t s b u r g h in t h r e e previous meetings, held off the fast-dosing Steelers Monday night for a bruis­ ing 20-17 victory over the defending Super Bowl champions The victory moved the O ilers into a tie with Pittsburgh for the AFC Central Division lead. Both teams are 11-4 but the Oilers need a victory over Philadelphia coupled with a Pittsburgh loss to Buffalo Sunday to keep the Steelers from winning their sixth straight division title. The Steelers staged a late comeback, scoring on wi de r e c e i v e r L y n n Swann's 9-yard reverse with 6:46 to play and John Stallworth’s 34-yard scor­ ing reception from Terry Bradshaw with 78 seconds left A Pittsburgh onsides kick following Stallworth’s touchdown was caught after one bounce by the Steelers’ Larry Anderson but side judge Willie Spencer ruled the ball had not gone the required 10 yards needed to allow Pittsburgh to gain posses­ sion Television replays clearly showed otherwise. Toni Fritsch kicked field goals of 24 and 36 yards and P a s t o r i m ' s T D pass boosted Houston to a 13-3 lead early in the fourth quarter U ntil the final minutes, Pittsburgh was limited to a 37-yard field goal by Matt Bahr early in the third quarter The v i c t o r y was Houston’s first in the Astrodome against the (See O IL E R S , Page 9.) SI/l/C teams baffle experts once again Most of the “ experts" associated with Southwest Conference football 1979 might agree on one thing — it seems they were looking in a mirror The SWC season looked all too much like the previous six since 1973, as once again the preseason favorite did not win the title. The Texas Longhorns were the odds on favorite. They weren’t supposed to run away with the SWC crown, but the Horns were picked to bring it back to Austin When all was said and done, the Houston Cougars finished with a share of the SWC title and a trip to the Cotton Bowl, the third tune in four years the Cougars have done both. But 1979 belonged to three teams — the Arkansas Razorbacks, the Baylor Bears and the TCU Horned Frogs. P IC K E D TO finish sixth by Dave Campbell’s Texas Foot- ball, Lou Holtz and his Hogs had one big “ I told you so” waiting for Campbell and his group of frustrated football fanatics when Nov. 24 rolled around. The Razorbacks had lost their entire starting backfield and almost half of their defense to graduation. When that happens to a coach, he’s not supposed to share the conference title and make an appearance in one of college football’s major bowls. I guess they don’t get T exas Football in the hills of Arkan sas. They must read A rka nsas Football instead. The Hogs rolled up a 10-1 record, and if it hadn’t been for a 13- 10 loss to Houson on Oct. 27, Holtz and his Razorbacks would have had their first Cotton Bowl appearance since 1976. BU T T H E Razorbacks will settle for a share of the title and a trip to New Orleans to face No. 1 Alabama New Y ear’s Day in the Sugar Bowl. And of all people to thank for that opportunity, Arkansas must send thank you cards to College Station. Texas A&M, picked to be in the thick of things back in August, fizzled out in the usual A&M fashion. However, this season the Aggies didn’t wait for week seven, they got a head start by los­ ing two of their first three. Enough about the Aggies; they beat Texas and down College Station way that makes the season. The Razorbacks won 10 r i l l : » games ‘‘without any stars,” Holtz said. Even without any stars, three players could have gotten the nod for best supporting actor — quarterback Kevin Scanlon or freshmen running backs Gary Anderson and Darryl Bowles. ARKANSAS accounted for over 350 yards total offense every Saturday afternoon this fall. Scanlon led the SWC in passing and Anderson and Bowles combined for more than 1,500 yards rushing. Not bad for a team without any stars. In Waco, it wasn’t quite 1974 again, but for a while “ Sick ’em Bears” could be heard a long way. Eight weeks into the season, Coach Grant Teaff had taken the same team that finshed 1978 at 3-8 and had them playing 6-2 football. And he did it without even swallowing a worm. bob gennarelli 1 l| Up until Nov. 10, Baylor’s chances for an SWC title were as good as Texas’, Arkansas’ and Houston’s. But the Bears blew a 17-point halftime lead against the Razorbacks, settling for a 7-4 season and a Peach Bowl invitation with Clemson. That Peach Bowl invite is the biggest thing to hit Waco since those bumper stickers of “ I Believe” fame in 1974. TH E B EA R S accomplished things rather quietly and s >dued in 1979, much like a Saturday night in Waco. First they knocked off Texas A&M, then Texas Tech, then SMU, and before anyone realized it, Baylor was tied for the SWC lead. The Bears were afraid the bowls might pass up a 7-4 team because of the reputation Baylor fans have. You know, “ they’ll come to town with the 10 Commandments in one hand and a $10 bill in the other, and not break either.” But with the excitement that’s been generated in Waco (and it doesn't take much to do that) those Baylor fans might just hit Atlanta and think about breaking a 20. One might think, “ How is TCU a surprise team, finishing 2-8- 1?” That’s a good question, but if anyone followed TCU in 1979, and there are a few who did, the Horned Frogs proved that F A. Dry has them pointed in the right direction. FIR ST O FF, the Frogs could have and should have beaten Arkansas. The Razorbacks trailed 13-6 at the half, and if it wasn’t for an Ish Ordonez field goal with four seconds remain­ ing, the Hogs would be 9-2 and heading for E l Paso (the Sun Bowl) instead of New Orleans. Then there was TCU’s 16-3 loss to Baylor, where the Bears’ only touchdown of the afternoon came on a Howard Fields in­ terception late in the fourth quarter. And the Froggies held Tex­ as Tech and James Hadnot to three points one November Satur­ day, earning a 3-3 tie. In short, TCU has finally found a defense. Now if its offense can catch up, the Frogs could be a team to watch for in the 1980s. H O W EVER, with the surprises must come the disap­ pointments. And the SWC had its share in 1979. W e ve already talked about the Aggies, so let’s put them to rest. But all eyes have to turn to SMU and Texas Tech. The Ponies, with their phenomenal freshman class, were some people’s preseason pick to sneak away with the SWC crown. However, injuries hit SMU, causing the Mustangs to finish a disappointing 5-6. Tech opened the season with a tough 21-7 loss to No. 3 USC, and the Red Raiders never recovered. When Rex Dockery’s miracle 7-4 team of 1978 finished 1979, they did so with a 3-6-2 record, hardly worthy of any bowl honors that Raider fans talk­ ed about before the season. So if the experts remember one glaring thing about SWC foot­ ball in the 1970s, it w ill be — it was hard time picking a winner. But if it’s good enough for the coaches and players, why not the forecasters. W ait’ll next year. » r r » r r » n F aculty-G raduate Lox & Bagel Lunch Wed., Dec. 12th at Noon Speaker: Dr. Leyb Gretsky "Yiddish Curses H illel Campus Jewish C enter ¿ 0 . 2105 San Antonio 476-0125 $2.00 with Activity Card Others $2.50 » n » n » n » n » n » n G uaranteed Lowest Prices DELUXE POLYESTER •Full F our P ly -7 R ib T re a d A78-13 W hitew all E78-14 F78-14 2 3 “ G78-14 G78-15 2 8 96 4 115 84 H78-14 H78 15 3CT 4 123. 88 L78-15 3 2 9’ 4/131.64 A full four ply oolyester tire with p re m iu m seven rib tre a d long lasting and dependable rated 100 BC under the u nifo rm tire q u a lit y grading act for 30,000 test track miles. 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December 11, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 ‘"'Say "Merry Christmas" on •Kodak „ Film Cardinals’ Anderson Sports Shorts breaks rookie mark Royal declares refunds Texas Athletic Director Darrell Royal said M onday th at b e c a u s e of m e c h a n ic a l problems in the Dec. 1 closed circuit telecast of footbal game, anyone still holding ticket stubs may receive a full refund. the Texas-Texas A&M Those with stubs can present them at the Bellm ont Hall ticket windows or can mail the stubs to the ticket office for the full refund. Jabbar receives honor NEW YORK (IJPI) — Kareem Abdul- Jabbar of the Los Angeles Lakers, who shot .712 from the field in four gam es, has been selected as the NBA’s player of the week for the period ending Dec. 9. lead For the week, the Lakers’ center hit on 52 of 73 shots from the field to take over the NBA in field goal percentage. He averaged 28.3 points and 10.7 rebounds with 26 assists and 16 blocked shots. In Sunday’s vic­ tory over Denver, Abdul-Jabbar was 15-for-18 the field with nine rebounds, nine from assists and six blocked shots. Carr, Lanier fined NEW YORK (U PI) - M L. Carr of the Boston Celtics and the Detroit P iston’s Bob Lanier each have been fined $1,500 by NBA Commissioner Larry O’Brien for separate in­ cidents in recent gam es. O'Brien fined Carr for com m ittin g a flagrant foul when Carr deliberately elbowed Scott Wedman during a gam e on Dec. 2, knocking the Kings' forward to the floor. Lanier was penalized for punching Boston’s in the Dec. 4 gam e at Cedric Maxwell Detroit. Denver’s Lytle injured DENVER (U PI) — Running back Rob Ly­ tle of the Denver Broncos underwent surgery to repair ligam ent damage to his left knee Monday and will m iss the team ’s final gam e of the season next Monday against the San Diego Chargers. Coach Red Miller said Lytle will be replac­ ed by seven-year veteran Otis Armstrong. Lytle was injured during Denver’s 28-23 loss to Seattle Saturday. Branson honored DALLAS (U P I) — SMU’s Brad Branson M o n d a y w a s n a m e d th e S o u t h w e s t Conference’s first player of the week in the young basketball season owing to his efforts in SMU victories over Texas Lutheran, Kan­ sas and Colorado. Branson, a 6-10 senior, hit 62.2 percent from the field, connected on 11 of 14 free throws and grabbed 24 rebounds to help the Mustangs em erge on top in the matchups. Branson was the unanimous choice of the conference for the honor, followed by Arkan­ sa s’ U.S. Reed. Griffin, lllini down TCU Reed leads Hogs to O T win By United Press International FORT WORTH - F o r t Worth native Jam es Griffin blew back into town Monday with the University of Illinois long enough to lead the lllini with 19 points and a 79-64 vic­ tory over T exas C hristian University. Illinois moved out to an ear­ ly 13 point advantage and fre­ quently used a stall offense to keep the non-conference gam e out of reach. The visitors, 3-1, shot a torrid 57 percent from the field and rolled off 8 straight points to open the game. Jon Mansbury cam e off the bench for TCU to hit 16 points while Deckery Johnson and Darrell Browder hit 13 and 12 respectively for TCU. ★ ★ ★ LITTLE ROCK - Arkan­ sa s’ U.S. Reed scored five points in overtim e and Alan Zahn b l o c k e d a s h o t t o preserve a one-point Arkansas lead against an Athletes in Ac­ tion team packed with former Razorbacks for a 68-67 victory Monday night. Regulation tim e ended with the score knotted at 57 after Arkansas’ Keith Hilliard m is­ sed the front end of a one-and- one with five seconds rem ain­ ing. Arkansas w ent ahead with 4:11 left in overtim e on two free throws by freshman C a r e y K e l l y a f t e r AIA D errick Ja ck so n tied the count at 61. AIA fought back to 66-65 and had a chance to go ahead when form er R azorback Jim m y Counce made a steal on the press and appeared to be driv­ ing for an easy layup. But Zahn cam e across to block the shot, recovered the rebound and drew a foul, converting both free throws. Zahn’s free throws gave the Razorbacks a 68-65 lead. A d u n k by A I A ’ s R a l p h Drollinger ended the scoring. Tulane 56, R ice 53 NEW ORLEANS - Micah Blount tipped in a shot with five m inutes to play to help T u lan e def eat R i c e 56-53 Saturday night. R ice held the lead at 46-45 with 7:30 to play and Tulane took over the lead, 51-50 on Blount’s shot, before going into a 5-minute stall. Ke n n y Aus t i n w a s top scorer for Rice, hitting 20 points including 14 in the first half. Ricky P ierce added 10 points. A&M 71, Sam Houston 47 COLLEGE STATION - Rynn wri ght and V ernon Smith combined for 31 points Monday night, propelling Tex­ as A&M to a 71-47 basketball victory over previously un­ beaten Sam Houston State. Wright scored 17 and Smith had 14 as the Aggies posted their fourth straight victory in running their season record to 5-2. Sam Houston State is now 6-1. ®1979 New York Times NEW YORK — When Gil Brandt, the vice president for personnel development of the Dallas Cowboys, arrived in Miami for the last winter, a University of Super Bowl Miami student was at the airport to m eet him and drive him to the hotel. The driver's name was familiar: Ottis Jerom e Anderson, who just happened to be, in the opinion of the Cow­ the se co n d -h ig h e st-ra ted p la y er boys, available in the professional football draft. Brandt is still surprised at what Anderson has done with the St. Louis Cardinals in the season since then. When Lou Saban, now the Army football coach, first coached Anderson at the Univer­ sity of Miami, he saw a running back capable of joining the great runners he had coached — Cookie Gilchrist, Floyd Little, even O.J. Simpson, a coaching experience that Saban called “ the great privilege.’’ in AT FIRST, Saban will quickly say that he has not been surprised at all by what has happened: that Anderson has becom e the the National Football leading rusher League (depending on how Houston’s Earl Campbell did against Pittsburgh), with 1,566 yards; that he has rushed for 100 yards or more in nine gam es, a record for a rookie, and that Anderson has broken the rookie record for the m ost yards gained in a season, eclipsing Campbell’s 1,450 yards last year. But then Saban admits that it has been a lit­ tle surprising after all. “ I’m surprised h e’s come on as quickly as he has,” Saban said. BRANDT SAW Anderson in the Cardinals’ first preseason gam e this year, against Atlan­ ta, when Anderson’s 80-yard touchdown run was called back because of a holding penalty. “Not only did he avoid tack les,” Brandt said, “ but he made them m iss tackles.” That did not prepare Brandt for what happened in the first gam e of the regular season, against the Cowboys. Anderson gain­ ed 193 yards, the highest total for any back against D allas this season, and ran 76 yards for a touchdown, the longest run from scrim ­ mage that any Cowboy team has given up. Oilers . . . “ I honestly didn’t realize how good he w as,” Brandt said. Saban said he knew how good Anderson COULD be. He just didn’t know how good he WOULD be. “ For youngsters today,” Saban said, “ work is a nasty word, you know. We said to him, ‘You’ve got the tools; you’ve got the equipment. All you’ve got to do is work at it.’ I think he’s learned to work. There was a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.” He gained 1,266 yards in his senior season to break Chuck Forem an’s Miami record, and he becam e the eighth choice in the pro draft. Saban, who helped Sim pson becom e a successful professional after early frustra­ tion in Buffalo, said Anderson does things that coaches cannot take credit for. “ H E C O U L D run on the total surface of his feet,” Saban said, “ which gives him great traction. He just had that. A lot of backs like to run on the top of their toes. He can stop on a dime, change direction, switch fields. “And when it com es to backs, the things that separate one from the other is the en­ durance, the stamina to keep going. Almost every week, h e’s done a good job.” That is what has particularly impressed Brandt, especially the way the Cardinals’ season has gone. The offensive line has not played as a unit this season. Dan Dierdorf, the tackle whom National Conference players have picked as the top lineman for the last three years, had knee surgery following the second gam e of the season, against the Giants. Tom Banks, the center who has been a Pro Bowl starter for four straight seasons, and Bob Young, a left guard who started in the Pro Bowl last season, have been injured. Keith Wortman, a guard, will m iss the gam e this week because of a knee injury. “ T h at t e ll s you h e ’s a c c o m p lis h e d something on his own,” Brandt said. "I'm sure he is going to be one of the great runners in our league in the next six or seven gam es,” Brandt said. “ H e’s going to be the Franco Harris-type of guy. Eight years from now he’ll be in the top five or six in the history of the league.” has 1,613 yards for the season. Campbell carried the Oilers the length of the field late in the fourth quarter and the Oilers, on Rob Carpenter’s 4- yard touchdown run, moved to a 20-10 lead. Pastorini, who completed in o n l y 4 - o f - 1 6 p a s s e s Pittsburgh’s 38-7 win the se­ cond gam e of this season, passed for 170 yards on 10-of- 16 attem pts. (Continued from Page 8.) Steelers since 1971 and the first in the O ilers’ last four gam es against Pittsburgh. In the th ree m e e tin g s, Pittsburgh had won by a com ­ bined score of 85-15. la s t The two team s m et in the AFC championship gam e last season and the Oilers were t h e d r u b b e d 3 4 - 5 . B u t possibility exists again for a rematch if Houston qualifies as a wild card entry instead of as division champions. O ilers’ running back Earl Campbell rushed for 109 yards on 32 carries to m ove back into the NFL rushing lead. He V O L K S W A G E N R E P A IR (J> THE BUG CORNER, INC. PHONE (512) 452-0654 1509 NORTH ST. AUSTIN, TEXAS This year, make sure you have plenty of Kodak film on hand to capture those special holiday moments in pictures. Whether you own a conventional cam era, a m ovie cam era, or a Kodak instant cam era, there’s a Kodak film that can bring back the g o o d times in beautiful color. So be sure to have plenty of Kodak film on hand for the holidays. H | ^ VISA & M a.ferC harg. W elcom e Kodak] ™ cP<«£ 1 hr. free parking ' — w /$ 3 .0 0 purchase *- M BICYCLES M T V F 1 0 - 6 T h * 1 0 - 9 S a t tO - 5 2 .4 0 4 S A N G A B L I C L . S T - 4 7 7 - 6 8 4 6 NOTICE ALL UT STUDENTS, STAFF & FACULTY If you are leaving Austin this month: T o b e e lig ib le for a p a tr o n a g e refund ( if o n e is Dai d) for the f is c a l y e a r en d ing 6 /3 0/80 . Y our Co- Dp ca sh r e g is t e r r e c e ip ts m u st b e turned in to the Co-Op by that d a te. You ca n u se th e m a il, but you m a y find it m o r e c o n v e n ie n t to drop th e m by th e tic k e t w in dow on the S econ d le v e l of th e Main S tore or the Co-Op E a st b efo re you le a v e A ustin fo r the h o lid a y s. HAPPY HOLIDAYS & HAVE A GREAT ’80 Enorm ous selection of w arm ups for men and w om en, from $19.95. Choose from Cal Sport, W inning Ways, Bassett, A d id a s , Jelenk, Speedo, Pierre Cardin, Jaguar. R ooster Andrews 3901 Guadalupe Anderson Lane at Shoal Creek Open 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. Get your locks off at Kick •*dh#n Gmfdmn fhaddtng w « c a r r y J h t r m o < h 2 4 )4 G U A DA LU PE 4 7 6 -69 60 U p a n f á ! 9 - 6 n m gt d o o r to Y a r m g * Call 471-5244 to place a Classified Ad in The Daily Texan U -S T O R E Se lf-Sto rage R o o m s Rent b y M o n th 8710 Burnet Rd. X » JB0 JW* jaw Wf, W \ W 5 « 5 JW5 W f « 3 W5 1 ENTERTAINMENT THE DAILY TEXAN Tuesday, December 11, 1979 Page 10 Forbert follow-up disappoints ‘Phoenix’ flies high, ‘R e g g a e ’ danceable “Jackrabbit Slim” ; Steve Forbert; CBS Records. By RANDY O R M S B Y S tev e F o r b e r t’s second Jackrabbit Slim ,” album. ends with these two lines: " I t ’s often said that life is s tra n g e /O h , yes, but c o m ­ p ared to w h a t to W ell, c o m p a re d this alburn, Steve, life is as or­ dinary as Bowling for Dollars. It seems very strange that Forbert, coming right off the enormous critical success of his first album, ‘‘Alive on A rriv al,” would choose to record his second album with nono of the people who con­ tributed so much to that first album, especially producer Steve Burgh The most impressive aspect of that first album was its honest simplicity Most of the cuts featured little more than F orbert’s rasping voice and ballsy guitar and harm onica playing, along with lyrics just this side of Springsteen. BUT ON “ J a c k r a b b i t Slim ,” producer John Simon e v i d e n t l y d e c i d e d t h a t F orbert couldn't stand on his own young feet. Almost every cut is gussied up with slick studio hack work and some of the most repulsive and in­ trusive all-girl backing vocals ever recorded. But even th a t's not enough. Simon throws in, on top of this gooey mess, horn c h a rts g u aranteed to send you lurching for the ‘‘re ­ je c t’’ lever on your turntable. Song after song is absolutely ruined by Simon’s heavy hand. On l y a b o u t t h r e e s o n g s somehow managed to escape with Forbert's delicate style m ore or less intact, and, of course, they’re the standouts he r e in Love With You,’’ is this album ’s rom an­ tic, realistic ballad. I t’s the only song on the first side not f l a t t e n e d by S i m o n ’s “sw eetening.” “I ’m The second side fares much better It features three songs with snatches of F o rb ert’s g re a t h arm o nica, th e only the entire album. three on “ Complications” is a reggae- influenced Ray Davies slice- of-life rant. “ Sadly Sorta Like a Soap O pera,” is a queer lit­ tle m asterpiece that features the odd combination of a real s o a p o p e r a o r g a n a n d F orb ert’s bluesy harmonica. The last song on the album, “ J a n u a r y 23-30, 1 9 7 8 ,’’ provides the album ’s most ironic com m ent: “/ a i n ’t no saint a nd I d o n ’t p r e te n d to b e /B u t I hope you all fo u n d a fr ie n d in m e . " indeed Those of us who, from the first album, thought we had found a very special friend in Steve F orbert can only feel bitter disappoint­ ment and a sad sense of loss upon hearing this album. “ P h o e n i x ” ; Da n Fogelberg; Epic Records. By G R E G K R ETH Dan Fogelberg s latest is arguably his best album to date, even better than his team -up with near-classic Tim Weisberg on “ Twin Sons Of Different M others.” is obvious on Weisberg is again present, at least in spirit, and his in­ the fluence flugelhorn solo on “ Longer.” And “Wishing On The Moon,” though different from “ Power Of Gold," moves with the sam e style. If any singles c o m e f r o m t h e a l b u m , “ Wishing On The Moon” is a sure bet. “ Tullamore Dew” is the in­ tro, a beautifully quiet piece with Fogelberg on the guitars and harpsichord sound of the Prophet 5 synthesizer. Then you're thrown into the title track, an upbeat song with ex­ the vocals on cellent harm onies, especially in the upper range. Fogelberg does all the album, and does them much better than he has in the past. Most Fogelberg fans hold his lyrics dearest to heart. “Phoenix” is not as good as “ N etherlands” or “ Captured Angel,” but one piece, “ Gypsy Wind,” stands out: “A n d I th e w a y s / T h e w on d e r at l o v e s t r a n d s m e a n d e r / T h r o u g h o u r close a nd d is ta n t d a y s / T h e b l o o d p a s s i o n t h i r s t y p l a y s / B u r n s o u r s o u ls /A n d c h a s e s reason f a r a w a y ... ” o f o f t h e u s e o f “ H eart H otels” shows a new addition to Fogelberg’s songs, the saxophone. The song also shows his m aturity in s t r i n g arrangem ents and production. The strings tensely build up in then suddenly volume, and quiet down for the vocals, totally drawing the listener’s attention. As usual in a Fogelberg al bum, th e re a r e b a lla d s aplenty. But he jum ps into a more up beat, alm ost hard rock sound for the title track, “ Wishing On The Moon,” and “Face The F ire .” But all is not perfect. Apart from “Gypsy Wind” o r“ Face the F ire ,” the lyrics are not too hot; “ Longer” is just plain lousy. Fogelberg has yet to m aster the use of either slide or pedal guitars, and it shows. Like I said, the ballads are many, and they also are too much alike. And while Andy i s a s t e a d y N e w m a r k drum m er, he’s not nearly as forceful as Jim Keltner was on “ Twin Sons Of Different M others.” So Dan Fogelberg has yet to make the “perfect album .” But then, who has? “ Reggae In America” ; Lion Zion; House of Natty Records. By G R EG KRETH “ Reggae j u s t t h a t , In A m erica” p u r e , is un- aldulterated reggae, that kind of bumpy, dancing Latin beat with the trebly, T elecaster­ like guitars and stacatto brass parts. Lion Zion said he doesn’t want to be compared with Bob Marley. T hat’s good, because h e ’s not. But then, I barely classify Marley as reggae, at least the kind of reggae m ade by P e te r Tosh, Jim m y Cliff or Desmond D ekker and the Aces (who, by the way, are c r e d i t e d wi t h f i r s t “ r e g g a e ” s o n g , “ T h e Israelites” ). Bob M arley is somehow more serious, m ore soulful, m ore . . . angry. t h e “Reggae In A m erica,” as well as much of the work by Tosh, et al, can be classified alm ost as Mexican salsa, a c o m b i n a t i o n of soul and m ariachi. The brass parts are always in thirds, as are the vocal harmonies, and by some unwritten rule, the beat never changes. But I like the album, despite its repetitiveness. The tunes are catchy and in a nice com ­ fortable range, the kind you can sing on the way to classes or hom e from a m idnight movie. The lyrics, while not “fine a r t,” still manage to hit home: "So yo ur house w a s built upon a r e v o lu tio n /B y bla c k and w h ite w h o d ied this n a tio n / B u t to m a k e t h o s e w h o t h e r e a r e s a y / y o u ’v e l o s t y o u r w a y / A n d m u s t re tu r n in t i m e / ’’ " Y o u ’v e tu r n e d a w a y f r o m t h e t o l i s t e n i n g p e o p le /S o they ta lk to yo u w ith f r e e d o m rig hts a n d b o m b s / N o w that the t i m e is n e a r / T h a t s o m e h a v e f e a r e d / A n d w h ere the d a w n ’s e a rly lig h t? " is If you’re into reggae, this album 's for you. Or even if you’re not, and you find it in a cutout section someday, spend two bucks and give it a listen. g Great Christmas Values! Selection of Blouses & Skirts $095 only O each while supplies last v a lu e s up to $39.00 o ffe r good through Dec 15 r. Kj VISA S MasterCharge w 1 W e lc o m e A\ppaiP©ll Slnop First level 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 free 1 hr. parking*^ r ” w /$ 3 .0 0 p u rchase White Christmas? c A n ound toWrj T i i A t t r l f i i i ' t * Aroundtown Aroundtown list of Austin. list of Austin Tuesday’s a rts ana en tertain­ ment activities in and around is a is a n n l n f l r » i n • i r l o A n r A m t V i n < t r An exhibit of the works of H. Rider Haggard, the English adventure w riter, is on view at the H arry Ransom Center through Dec. 21. The exhibit, titled “ King Solomon’s Mines and She,” features more than 70 t o i t e m s p e r t a i n i n g Haggard’s works. A o n e - m a n s h o w of lithographs is at the Galerie Ravel. 1210 W. Fifth St. The exhibit runs through Dec. 31. Auditions for Henrik Ibsen’s Ghosts a re being held a t Theatre in the Rye from 6-8 p.m. Call 472-9733 for more in­ formation. Z a c h a r y S c o tt T h e a t r e C enter is holding auditions for an upcoming production of The Lark at Mary Ireland G raves Dougherty Cultural Ar t s C e n te r, 1110 B a rto n Springs Road, from 7-10 p.m. lectures on “ Black History in Texas” at 10:30 a.m. in the New Orleans Ada Simonds Club Mercantile. Tickets are $1.50 at the door. A free dramatic reading of P am G em s’ one-act play, “ G u i n e v e r e , ” w i l l be presented at 8 p.m. in the UT D r a m a Bui l di n g T h e a t r e Room. “A Christmas Carol,” the f i l m B a s i l s t a r r i n g R a t h b o n e a n d F r e d e r i c March, is being shown at 8 p.m. in the Academic Center Auditorium. The screening is free, but donations of staple foods for CARITAS will be accepted. Laguna Gloria is hosting an exhibition titled “ Dan Flavin: L i g h t F l u o r e s c e n t Installations,” through Jan. 27. A U STIN ’S FINEST GAME ROOM Tonight LEWIS A N D THC LECENDS longest H appy Hour in Town Double Shots — 2 for 1 — 11 am -8 pm NEVER A COVER C H A R G E NOTICE TO OUR READERS: On Wednesday, December 12, we will publish the final edition of T h e D a i l y T e x a n for the Fall Semester. Texan publication will resume on Humbug! when they seo my terrific tan When I head home for the holidays. I’ll bo looking for a tan Christmas And I'll also be looking at friend s faces in December' I m not going to tell them that I cheated at Sundance r that I only spend a few' minutes a week in * private tanning booths to keep my tan It s irtable and eac h visit costs less than lunch Tanning Salon one of Sundanc tely safe and con comple bac l can hardly v\ait Wf1 le tf e ground has been turning white. I’ve been mg brown And when my friends see me they II turn geeen tui In Rivertowne Mall 2 0 1 1-M East Riverside Austin 441-1783 Open 9 til 9 MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1980. SUNDNNJCE TANNING SA LO N S Meanwhile, the entire staff of The Daily Texan wishes you a Happy and Enjoyable Holiday Season. Niel Diamond brings 'Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show ’ to the Special Events Center at 8 p.m. Friday. The $15 and $12.50 tickets are sold out, but som e $10 tickets remain. Tickets are available at the S E C box office. Co-Op announces contest winners Liz Gold won first prize in the first University Co-Op poetry contest, the Co-Op announced Wednesday. Gold received a $50 gift certificate from the Co-Op book departm ent. Mary Kaznowski and Cathy Downs took second and third prizes of $25 and $10 gift certificates in the competition. The contest, which was sponsored by the Co-Op and the D epartm ent of English, drew approxim ately 100 entries between Sept. 15 and Dec. 1. The contest was announced in T he D aily T e xa n. A sim ilar contest will be held in the spring. Interested per­ sons may contact David Noah a t the Co-Op book departm ent, 476-7211. - w - - w - M u v k v d r i c k « Tree House t v n m i . r ” Tonight EXTREME HEAT 2 for 1, 10-12 502 Dawson Rd. ^C IR C LE STEREO^ 1 C A N REPAIR PROMPTLY S ojinuL N O MATTER WHERE YO U BO UG HT IT IN OR OUT OF WARRANTY CIRCLE STEREO, INC. 1^7 476-0947 V 1211 Red River Tuesday & Wednesday N ight Special C a tfish & Bailed S h rim p ALL Y O U C A N KAT! 5-10 P M $ 5 9 5 Served With Salad Bar, Beans, French Fries A Hush Puppies N o w Serving Cocktails! THE BRANDING IRON I 6 VS M ile» Pa st O a k H ill on H w y . 71 W est 2 6 3 - 2 8 2 7 " - - — *9.00 CASH” *9.00 DOLLARS CASH! r1 I I I | You can seve a life by be I ing a blood plasmo donor. It only takes 1't Hours, | ond you can donate every | 7? hours. I You will receive S I. 00 for first donation ond your I S 10 00 for o second dona 5 tion in the same week 5 If you bring this od in with I you, you will receive a * S I.00 bonus otter your f first donation I I I I AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, INC. I 510 West 29th Phone 4 7 7 -3 7 3 5 m Hoots: Mea i Thors. • o ja -6 p j a . Tees. & Erl I am .-2-JI |Ma ABT production routine Tuesday, December 11, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 11 UTKXAX M M M F U X The Beatles in Help! Directed by Richard Lester Released in 1965 In Color Sock it to me! The FUN Com pany, a group of young actors who perform for children, will pre­ sent ‘Bringing in Christm as: A Yuletlde Revue,’ Friday through Dec. 22, at Zachary Scott Theatre. The show com bines music, mime and dram a and should appeal to kids of all ages. Perform ances are at 8 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and 2:15 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Tickets are $2.50 for adults and $1.75 for children. Call Zachary Scott at 476-0541 for reservations. Today at 3, 7 & 9 p.m. Union Theater $1.50 with UT ID NEW WAVE TONIGHT STANDING WAVES COMING THURSDAY BILLY JOE SHAVER Victor Culver and Jeanne McRee, who tried their best to punch some life into Hall’s d e a d ly ja z z choreography. This piece is reminiscent of the cheap LA choreography seen on televi­ sion variety shows. t r i t e Even the performances of Hall’s best dancers cannot camouflage blatant problems D a te d and r e d u n d a n t choreography is a major fac­ tor that restrains the com­ pany from pushing over the hump of mediocrity. Other factors are more obtuse: Why does Hall continue to jam hordes of people (21 dancers at one point) onto the tiny Ar­ madillo stage? Why does he show us his male dancers at their worst, giving them material they don’t unders­ tand and cannot handle? Why do we see the same dancers having the same difficulties they’ve had for years? More importantly, when will ABT deliver something besides a predictably un­ polished performance? R E B E L Drive-In x 385-7217 6902 Burleson Road New Cine-fi So u n d System Privacy of Your Auto XXX Original Uncut Note: Theatre sound operates through your car radio If your car has no radio, bring a portable Sweet Cakes OPENS 6:30 STARTS 7:00 I JENMFER WELLES By K A T H Y S A M O N Predictability must be an element Austin Ballet Theatre is comfortable with because the company never strays from a recipe format — even the years have not tampered with The Stanley Hall For­ mula. The formula is relatively simple and consists of two basic parts: several ballet pieces and a crowd-pleaser. The crowd-pleaser last Sun­ day at Armadillo was the highlight of the show. An up­ dated version of a piece premiering in 1973, “ Hags” is a witty, humorous hodgepodge of A m e ric a n a . B e c a u s e p r o j e c t i o n d r a m a t i c supersedes serious technical expertise, H a ll’s company performs as a polished, confi­ dent unit in this piece. Marc Friedman especially has the vigor and dramatic skills of a natural comic. BUT BEYOND this, ABT tiptoes through murky waters. Speculations about the inter­ nal problems this company or any other ballet company faces (management, artistic control, finances, rehearsals, etc. ) could be considered. But these are not issues that members of the audience should deal with. The finished product itself is of impor­ tance, and unfortunately, this production (like many of the others) resembled a “ perfor­ mance in progress.” As usual, an ABT perfor­ mance is kept floating by a few exceptional dancers — the kind of dancers who distract an audience from a fumbling, shaky corps. Opening the show was “ Les (The Skaters),” Patineurs and although the program reads “ choreography by Stanley Hall,’ the piece was originally conceived by Sir Frederick Ashtm. A standout performance was delivered by Shelley Graham, whose clean, confident technique is match­ ed by few others in the com­ pany. Serene and assured, Graham and her partner, Greg Easley, have an impec­ cable stage presence; they don’t shout their ability, it simply unfolds. Also delivering excellent performances were Brantly Bright and Lynne Grossman in the "Snow Scene” (from “ The Nutcracker” ). At first glance, Bright seems to be a fragile, delicate girl with her slight frame and huge eyes. But the illusion is dispelled when she moves, for what has developed is a mature, confi­ dent technician who never relinquishes a cool, electric hold on an audience. LYNNE GROSSMAN is also one of H a l l ’s strongest dancers. An elegant dancer, she has a fresh, natural quali­ ty of movement that com­ plements the long flowing lines of her body. Hopefully she will gain more prominent roles. “ Jazz Opus I ” is worth noting for the enthusiasm of WE'RE GETTING A JUMP ON OUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING.' 1H€ VJMKITY • • • 474 43b) • • • JOHN WATERS' C O M IN G THURSDAY Christmas Special * CARTOONS 5|c S t IT S A WONDERFUL LIFE 8:15 plus MDesperate Living 6:35 plus fla m in g o s 10:00 TONIGHT ONLY $1.50 FIRST MATINEE SHOWING ONLY / I All Seats C A PITA L P L A Z A 452-7646 I H 35 NORTH * 1.50 1:30- 5:25-9:30 All Shows “Foul Play” 3:30- 7:35 Heaven Can Wait” MERICAN MULTI CINEMA T IM E S S H O W N F O R T O D A Y O N L Y A D U U S 0 0 STUDENTS & SR C IT IZEN S W IT H AMC CARD S 2 50 TIA/I I I TC C U A I U it- 1 r A — * * i i v r v * <» | . , 1 V g g T W P SP E C IA L E N G A G E M E N T S EXC LU D ED T W I LITE S H O W LIM ITED TO SE A T IN G Matinees Daily No One Under 18 Admitted Late Shows Friday & Saturday. Sundays Open Noon Please Bring I.D.’s Regardless Of Age T W I N D R IV E -I N Show t o w n U S A U3 * CW». BO X OFFICE OPEN 6:00 ! Q * 4 ★ ★ » ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ SN p r e s e n t s TONIGHT ONLY! RUSS MEYER'S A PAEAN TO A FAR-GONE ERA YOU'VE HEARD * OUTRAGEOUS SPOOF OF SEX-PLOITATION * 4 4 3 “/r* m y 4 4 + h a p p e n in g Q . ABOUT IT. . . * . q S ? NOW > 4 * * Music JE E > 6 . J and , m ik -fre a k in g o u t ! ” 4 r y n , j 4 Z-Man tsm & m r Alarm Clock "T h e Master's M a sterpiece” — £d Lowry JESTER AUD. at 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Only $1.25 & & & ANO SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER ...CATCH THEM TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST TIME! fPGl A R E Y O U R E A D Y F O R A G O O D T IM E ? BILL MURRAY IM E A T B A I SHOW TOW N - WEST "SEX EDUCATION” —PLUS- HIGH SCHOOL GIRL" y TWIN DRIVE-IN SouThsidE A 7 1 0 fc Ben W h ile ♦ 4 4 4 -2 2 9 6 BOX-OFFICE OPEN 6:00 WALK OF THE DEAD ...yowl! never want to be alone aqain! - P L U S - U ____ In A HELL P I ocyumi Our GALAXY «DEMON SOUTHSIDE - SOUTH "FORBIDDEN DREAMS" -P L U S - "TEENAGERS" the original.. M A S H Elliott Kellerman Sutherland Gould Donald Sally -- j ... g___ .. npujjwj J Robert ¡Duvall ■ MIDNIGHTER a \ An epic fantasy of peace and magic. \ RAI [>H BAKSHI F IL M WIZARDS K MIDNIGHTER Page 12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, December 11, 1979 71 l i t P W A G O N I I R m ile a g e 345 8602 45V S486 lo a d e d , low FURNISHID APARTMINTS C l A '>SIP I f D A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S 15 w o rd m in im u m S IS E a c h w o r d I t im e $ 34 ft a c h w o r d 3 tim e *! * 42 E a c h w o r d 5 tim e s s 68 E a r n w o rd 10 tim e s $4 TO V cot Y coi x I In c h 2-9 tim e s *4 24 i col x I Iru h 10 o r m o re tim e s S4 01 * 1 in ch t t im e . S T U O E N T / F A C U L T Y / S T A F f R A T E S S VI 0 w o rd m in im u m , e ach d a y s 0 / E a c h a d d itio n a l w o rd e ac h d a y s2 40 1 col x I mr.h e a r n d a y jtu d e n ts , fa c u lty an d sta tt m u l l pro y n t a c u r r e n t I D a nd p a y In a d va n c e t ' . P B u ild in g 1200 ( 25th K W h ltl* ) y. to 4 30 p rn M o n d a y V o m 8 a m throug h F r id a y D IA D IIN I SCMEDlUf M o n d a y Toiian 2 OO p m M o n d a y 1 I 0 0 a tn fu o td a y T exan W e d n e s d a y to R o n I t 0 0 a m T vexd ay T h u rtd n y ToRan W e d n e s d a y 1 I 0 0 a m Friday Frid ay ToRan Thu rsd ay 1 1 0 0 a m In lh« «veril of orrori m ad• in on adwor iiiontonl, im m ediate notke m utt bo given a * tbo publiehert aro rexaontible for only p N t incorrott insertion An rlolm i for ad |u«Vmonl« »r ¿ultl bo m ado nof lafor iban 30 dayi a flor publication AUTOS FOR SALE 1 9 '/ P l y m o u t h good, economical 3345 e v e n in g s t d r y , s is o R u m t r a n s p o r ta tio n 327 1976 P C )N T IA ( G r a n d L e M a n s V e r y c le a n 2 door, l a n d a u , P S, P B , tilt, A C , b u c k e t scats w ith con so le , A M 8 tr a c k i n t e r io r , s te re o S ilv e r , t i m e S2500 A f te r 5 w e e k d a y s , a n y w ee k en d s 444 OOB’> t e d v e l v e t y f O R V t . T T I 1980 r e g i s t e r e d a u to m a tic c ount I 478 S564 B r a n d n e w , u n S t a n d a r d 1 4 8 e n g i n e , a ll o th e r o p tio n s W ill dls 4 d 0 0 f IV 8 0 C H E W C I T A T I O N h a tih b a c k 4 c y lin d e r , 4 speed A C , PS, P H , r a d io B e a u tifu l m e ta llic b lu e O n ly «00 m ile s 458 6796 IV79 ( O R V I I T f W h ite w ith re d le a th e r in te r io r A lm o s t n e w o n ly 2,000 m ite s ! A s k in g S12. 200 478 5664 I o u r d o o r 1980 C H E V Y C I T A I IO N h a tc h b a c k p o p u la r o p tio n s B r a n d new U n r e y is ie r e d M u s t sell S400 d ls i o u n t1 4 /8 5564 M l R C Ü R Y 1951 s e d a n C a ll 472 7463 lo r s a l * $700 1971 V W 412 a u to m a tic , AC A M P M , r e a r d e fro s t, n e w r a d ia ls , r e g u la r gas, g rod m p g S1650 478 89 II) 1971 D O D G f 4 d o o r, P S P B A i n e w lire s , t e g u l a r g a s 471 4231 ( W ) , J46 2 4 i i . , ( H ) , M a l t ■ _ 79 W H IT E D A T S U N 210 4 door A T , AC, H t r a c k 6500 m ile s , S5050 447 0549 7 30 4 to, 816 7.162 w e e k e n d s 1970 O L D S M O B I L f D E L T A 88 G ood c o n d itio n , $700 C a ll K a tie , 443 9687 M U M S E L I M a t 128 S po rt SI 100 C a ll 458 2687, I n r ¡que I 1974, H A i I P R I C E 4 V W m a g s w ith steel r a d ia ls a n d lugs G o o d r ic h B R 6 0 x I3's 6000 miles $200 c as h 2700 Nueces N o 204 C h ris 472-0600 l TO L A N D A U n o n s m o k e r , a tto r n e y 's 75 p o w e r c a t -e a ts w in d o w s PS, P B A M I M ta p e $ 1400 472 4244 4 door lo a d e d AC 1972 O P I I. 1900 R u n s good $550 ty p e w r ite r i x c a c u tiv t M o d e l C i e lle n l < o n d ltlo n $285 474 1064 I B M f 68 D A T S U N 2000 ( p o r ts ta r 6 speed, 30 m p g e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n $3200 282 1890 lo h n a u to m a th 197! I I M A N S PS P B A t A M S o m e d e n ts , ru n s g r e a t $650 444 ss70, S te v e FOR SALE M o to rc y c l*-F o r Sole I 9 & S U Z U K I G S 425, u n d e r w a i i a n ty . 1100 m ile s $1600 o r b e s t o tte r C a ll 444 9357 / J H O N D A 5 00 4 lu g g a g e 2 h e lm e ts W in d s h ie ld l ik e n e w $950 471 5151 e x t 148 8 5 45! 7179 a f t e r 6. ___________ i a t k 1 6 .0 0 0 m i l e s 1978 X S 4 0 0 i H R I S T M A S S P E C I A L l ow m ile a g e , r u n t g r e a t a n d 5 a m a h a a m is e r on gas A s s u m e lo an an d la k e up p a y m e n ts no e q u ity r e q u ir e d S975 837 3500 M p P t D P U C M M a x i W o n In c o n te s t, n q v e r r id d e n C h e a p C a ll S k ip 447 9389 4 7 } -6623. I A D Y S E L L IN G 1978 S u zu k i 1500 m ile s H o r to n N o e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n I1 3 H $850 TS 250 1919 Bicycle-For S a l* B l c Y C L f 3 -S P f E D $S0 A tte . 4 0 0451 Í8 0 2 K e e p tr y in g C en E X C E L L E N T C O N D I T I O N tu t ion 10 s p ee d T h re e m o n th s nld S I4 0 471-2560 26 B R O W N S C H W IN N V a t s p e e d B ic y c le $85 4 7 2 - 3 f t l. ty 27 in c h 10 t O U R 6 1 C Y C L I S one f r a m e p a r ts f r a m e h y h f sea t $150 M o tab o v a n e 25 b a g f e n d e i S w a t e r b o ttle $200 477 7047 S tereo -F o r S a l* T w o E C l 3 O N K V O T x )500 r e c e iv e r w a v s p e a k e r s w i t h c ro s s o v e t E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n 472 9209 R E I i t o r i i i 4 c h a n n e l S a n t u i $300 443 6072 S T E R E O S O N Y A M F M t a s s e t'c w ith ( a r r * r d tu r n t a b le G r e a t bus $150 474 9 ->86 a tte i 2 30 M u s ic a l-F o r S a l* T H E S T R IN G . S H O P D is c o u n t s on h m gs new a n d used g u ita r s 911 W 24th 476 842! A U S T IN S B L S ' s e le c tio n o f song books a n d s h e e t m u s ic W e s e t1 b e g in n e r g u ita r s a ls o A lp h a M u s k c e n te r 611 W 29th 477 5009 U N C L E S A M S u s ed r e c o r d s Boy s ell h a d e D o w n to w n f le a M a r k e t 601 l ast *-6 476- 5th F r id a y S a tu r d a y S u n d a y 8348 __________ V E N T U R A A C O U S T I C g u i t a r $10 0 r e c e n tly p u r c h a s e d a t S t r a it ’ s R uss, h o m e 478 1445, n ig h ts 478-5712 s te e l s tr in g v e r y Y A M A H A G U I T A R good c o n d itio n N e w h a r d s h e ll c a s e $160 best o tte i 452 7972 461 3276 la c k s A M P E X A M P good A¡so B u n d y f lu te w ith e le c tr ic p ic k u p an d c o re M a k e o tter 447 5 1 '' J e rrs to n e tw o xe n e w B A L D W I N C O N S O L A p .a n o m a h o g a n y fin is h C a ll 453-2132 or 454- 8631 x 143 P *f»-F o r S a l* A K C G O L D E N r e t r i e v e r p u p p .e s Shots and w o r m e d R e d u c e d to r q u ic k s a le O b e d ie n c e b a c k g r o u n d G r e a ' Ch? ist- m a s g ifts $40 454 8168 471 5844 H o m * i - F o r S a l* H i n c t M T T t M C t a i l * W a t before iho «m w at « * • ea»» by y or city 1 * 6 6 by n tg h l Two Hvmij k )i koporato tho iiiirfy ham rho lore d io owl ba th u n to t on Iho morn hoot w n i l a n i boa fc v i» f atoa wotk*hop a d t o e m b a tk * a a f « « lu x it a if ta g * Viere» from tb o m a tto t bodroom to w ith m rtttng to w m g room livin g , im g c h nlot afwify a n d kitxhani Haatod ot tp ttnkiot ay*rom 4 cat parking Im t ,< ooaxtWo location 10 m invtoo horn ' on ono h o t t otero o> atona p rop o rry 10 OOO fo t oRtfwarvo abo w ing ta a lo rt d to w A mao/ or tanteo Daft any 'im n a t 1-4013 or (loo/ton o» 4 7 7 -5 9 1 4 C O M P A N Y , R E A L T O R S * JEAN* OWENS B etter m s FOR SAU 1 ■FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHm m w ’Rv-i i FURNISHED APARTMENTS 1 1FURNISHED APARTMENTS 1 1FURNISHED APARTMENTS1 1FURNISHED APARTMENTS H o m e s - F o r S a l * 2B R , S T U D Y , 2 8 A h o m e W a lk to r a m pus T o ta lly r e m o d e le d F ir e p la c e . C a ll V ir g in ia C h a n d le r , G r a y a n d C o m p a n y 345 7100, 451 2455 fir e p la c e , pool, 3 2 N W H I L L S to n d o , b a lc o n y , a ll a p p lia n c e s , e x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tio n , fin a n c in g a v a ila b le . $53,500 P h o n e 146 7545 o r 327 4473 I M O B I L E H O M E B R , k itc h e n a r e a $6800 f i r m c a ll 836 3835 no a n s w e r , r a i l 836-8239 fc x c e lle n f r o n d ltlo n 2 liv in g r oom , If la r g e b a th , h u g e M i t c e l l a n * o u ( - F o r S a l e E s ta b lis h e d 1945 N E L S O N " » G I F T S In d ia n L a r g e s t i e w e try 4502 S outh C o n g re s s 444 3814 C losed M o n d a y s r e s e r v a tio n -.e le c tio n P A K O D R U M p r i n t d r y e r , $ 5 0 , n e g o tia b le , 4 y e a r o ld Z e n ith A lle g r o ste re o . $40, m a ttr e s s , box s p rin g s , $25 451 8356 2 3 C H A N N E L L a f a y e t i e C B T w l n a n t e n n a s E x t e r n a l 4 w a y m e te r C o m p le te p a c k a g e , $65 o r o ffe r 452-8411 C O T T O N B O W L tic k e ts (4 ) 30 y a r d lin e, r o w 15, M a k e o ff e r 454-9437, G a r y . I I I / T H I N G a t T h e B a r a a r A N T t O U l f u r a n d w o o l c o a ts , V in t a g e R o o m r h i n e s t o n e s a n d g l o v e s a r id h a t s , b r o o c h c , F in e v in ta g e a p p a r e l fo r th e - r a r # b lac k v e lv e ts , w in te r h o lid a y s su its, fla n n e l s h irts a n d tu x e d o s T h e B a / a a r , 2404 G u a d a lu p e 478 3636 fo r” p a c k i n g C A R D B O A R D B O X E S hooks, c lo th e s , etc 25' a nd 50‘ C a ll 472- 7463 F O L D I N G R O L L A W A Y bed fo r ¿ a fir Inr ludes t r a m e a n d m a ttr e s s . $25. 476 1275. 14 K A R A T G O L D r in g R u b y w ith 8 d ia m o lt o f s g fr o u n d in g SI50 4 7 1 2560 8 0 " C O U C H , e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , $50. D in e tte set w ith 2 c h a ir s , p e r fe c t fo r a p a r t m e n t, $25 C ash o n ly 444-3963 S T U D Y ” D E S K , 7 d r a w e r s , $45, S o lid p in e b o o k s h e lf, s ta in e d w a ln u t , S' x 6' i ' , $125 441 4377 N E 11 D I A M O N D tix - s e c tio n 2, r o w 5, C a ll 441 0665 COMPACT SANYO refrigerator • ex- c e llo n t c o n d itio n U n d e r w a r r a n t y W ith f i r m W ill fr e e z e r c o m p R r tm e n t d e liv e r A u s tin a r e a C a ll M a r k S lo v a k , 4 /1 4 4/8 , 477 8276 $85 P I O N f F R 300 2 s p e a k e r tu r n ta b le , a m p $325 P o r ta b le G E P e rt*-! t c o n d itio n c o lo r T V E x c e lle n t p ic t u r e $135. 447- 8145 N e e d C h r l * t m a s m o n e y i o R s a le S o fa , b ra n d n e w i o n C H B e ig e w ith c r e a m c o lo r M o v in g . $300 445 0366 f A R E f o r 5 0 % A m e r li a n A ir w a y s E x p ir e s 15th, fo r $25 e a c h 4/7-6471 d i s c o u n t c o u p o n s ■■; We buy jewelry, estate iewelry, diamonds, and old gold. Highest cash prices paid. C A P IT O L D IA M O N D SHOP 4018 N. L a m a r C O M P L E T E SKI O U T F I T A lm o s t n e w , u s e d th r e e tim e s N ó r d ic a S p a ld in y short c ir c u i t boots, s ire 10 ski$, 1 8 0 c m w ith lo t k G T b in d in g s , S co tt S pun a lu m in u m poles, 127 c m C o m b in a tio n s k i lot k s 125 ta k e s a ll see on c a m ­ pus a t B E B 709N or < *11 443 89.12 A S S O R T M E N T 2BR, duplex $250 IBR and study - $200 2BR - $200 E fficie n cy & Kitchen $150 4BR 2BA $600 L o c a tio n s , R e d R iv e r , S an G a b r ie l. S an A n to n io , e tc U t ilit ie s a n d fu rn is h in g s v a r ia b le A ll u n its a r e in s m a ll, o ld e r b u ild in g s w i t h D e p o s its SI0O p e rs o n L e a s e s e m e s te r o r lo n g e r R e q u ir e m a t u r e , c le a n -c u t stu d e n ts w ith r e fe r e n c e s a n d n o pets J a c k J en n in g s 474 *898 b e tw e e n t a n d 4 p m C o n s o lid a te d R e a lt y . t h a n s ix a p a r t m e n t s f e w e r Cascades Special Spring Leasing • 1, 2 & 3 BRs • 2 Pools • Clubhouse • Beautiful Grounds 1221 Algarita See Lisa Ritchie for details 444-4483 476-2633 BARRY G ILUN G W ATE R M A N A G E M E N T CO. JZ. CQIlsn v i * Pr e- l easi ng for Spring • 2 lig h t e d te n n is c o u rts • p u t tin g g re e n s • s h u ttle b us sto p s • t h r e e pools 1, 2 , 3 , & 4 BR S • e x e rc is e r o o m s /s a u n a s • f u r n is h e d /u n f u r n is h e d • f r e e c a b le T V 2 01 Burton Dr. 4 4 7 -4 1 3 0 UT AREA PRELEASING FOR JAN. 1 — Shuttle Corner — VILLA ARCOS APTS. 1 BR tu rn . $230 476-5674. Gas, W ater, T V Cable Pd. EL DORADO APTS. 1 BR tu rn . $210 472-4893. Gas & W a te r Pd. MARK-EMBERS ATPS. 1 BR tu rn . $220 477-6477. Gas, W ater, TV Cable Pd. MARK XX APTS. 1 BR tu rn . $220 451-2621. Gas, W a te r, TV Cable Pd. CONTINENTAL APTS. 2 BR tu rn . $290 451-7718. Gas, W ater, T V Cable Pd. LA CANADA APTS. 1 BR tu rn . $280 472-1598. A ll B ills Paid. VILLA SOLANO 1 BR tu rn . $220 454-3270. Gas, W a te r Pd. EL CAMPO APTS. 1 BR tu rn . $210 452-8537. Gas, W ater, TV Cable Pd. • i * w o o ó w a r ó ApARtments Geared to student living Leasing now for spring ( Lease o p t i o n a l ) 1 BR, 2 BR, 3 BR 24 hour professional student oriented on-site management, maintenance & security Rentals from $245 1722 E. WOODWARD 444-7556B i i m i i m a Leasing for Spring | v K Cloisters • A ll Bills Paid • S huffle Bus • 2 Pools • 1 & 2 BR s Racquet Club • Townhouses • Shuttle Bus • Tennis Courts • Pool, Clubhouse 1201 Town Creek 4 4 2 -6 3 3 3 1720 S. Lakeshore 4 4 4 - 2882 The Landing Timbercreek • A ll Bills Paid • Reasonable Rates • Shuffle Bus • Clubhouse, Pool • All Bills Paid • Fireplaces • Pool, Clubhouse • Luxurious Atmosphere 1 | 1 1 1 50 0 E. Riverside 4 4 4 -1 4 5 8 614 S. 1st 444-6138 $175*5210 - fu lly c a r p e te d , L a r g e one b e d ro o m w a lk -in c lo s e t, c a b le T V , d is p o s a l, s w im ­ m in g pool, w a t e r a n d gas fu r n is h e d . W a lk in g d is ta n c e U T No c h ild r e n , pets. F O U N T A IN T E R R A C E A P T 5 610 W 30th N o 134 m g r 477-8858 W A R W I C K A P T S . in m o d e rn , b e a u t if u lly N o w a v a ila b le la n d s c a p e d c o m p le x w ith pool, w a t e r f a l l an d s u n d e c k , w a lk in g d is ta n c e to c a m ­ pus T a s t e f u lly fu rn is h e d , Ib e d r o o m a n d la r g e e f f i c ie n c y . A ll u n its h a v e fu ll k itc h e n a n d la r g e c lo s e ts C a ll 477-1630 a fte r 7 p m o r go by on w e e k e n d , 2909 W e s t A v e . 108 P L A C E F U R N I S H E D E F F I C I E N C Y A P T S . • D is h w a s h e r /d is p o s a l • S w im m in g pool • P a t io / b a r b e c u e • In d i v i d u a l s to ra g e •B o o k s h e lv e s ’ > b lo c k to s h u ttle bus •C a b le T V • L a u n d r y f a c ilitie s • R e s id e n t m a n a g e r Leasing for spring $185/mo & E 108 W. 45th 452-1419 453-2771 I D E A L FOR F A M I L Y L a r g e 2 B R , 1 1 a b a t h s t u d i o . A l l a p p lia n c e s , c a r p e t, s h u ttle . 1919 Burton 444-1846 105 E . 31st S T R E E T (w alk to UT) L u x u r y e ffic ie n c y , d is h w a s h e r, disp osa l, la u n d r y , w a te r - g a s h e a t d o u b le be d, p a id . S I80 plus E . M a n a g e r N o. 103, 477- 4005 1717 E N F I E L D RD. E ffic ie n c y a n d on e b e d ro o m . M a n a g e r N o . 113, 478-9767. 2505 E N F I E L D RD. o n e b e d ro o m , la u n d r y , pool M a n a g e r N o 1, 478-2775. V E R Y L A R G E E F F I C I E N C Y 32ND S T R E E T - $195 S hag c a r p e t, w a lk -in clo s e ts , b u ilt-in S e p a r a t e b e d r o o m w ith a p p lia n c e s q u e en s ize bed C A C H N o pets o r c h ild r e n W a te r , c a b le p a id 202 E 32nd 474-6380 451-6533 C e n tr a l P r o p e r tie s , In c . T BR $215 H y d e P a r k a r e a . N o w le a s in g fo r s p rin g s e m e s te r C lose to c a m p u s a n d s h u ttle F u l l y b u s c a r p e te d A ll b u ilt-in k itc h e n V e r y la rg e c lo s e ts a n d b u i l t - i n b o o k s h e lv e s C A C H N o p e ts , no c h ild r e n . G a s , w a t e r , c a b le p a id . B e a u t i f u l l y p a n e l e d 4307 A v e A 459-1053 451-6533 C e n tr a l P r o p e r tie s , In c . 1 BR - $219 H y d e P a r k a n a A v a ila b le now a n d le a s ­ fo r s p rin g s e m e s te r On s h u ttle . ing Pool S c re e n doors, L o ts of g la s s . F u lly c a rp e te d C A /C H . N o pets o r c h ild r e n . W a te r , c a b le p a id . 4209 S p e e d w a y 452-6648 451-6533 C e n tr a l P r o p e r tie s , In c . $219 * E F F I C I E N C Y A L L B I L L S P A I D H y d e P a r k a r e a . L a r g e a p ts . F u l l y c a r p e te d C A /C H . A ll b u ilt-in k itc h e n s C o n v e n ie n t to c a m p u s . N o w le a s in g fo r s p rin g s e m e s te r . N o c h ild r e n o r pets. 4000 A v e . A 452-5247 451-6533 C e n tr a l P r o p e r tie s , In c . E F F I C I E N C Y A N D 1 BR $175-5219 H y d e P a r k a r e a . N o w le a s in g fo r s p rin g s e m e s te r. C lo s e to c a m p u s . B e a u tifu ljy F u lly c a r p e te d . A ll b u ilt-in p a n e le d k itc h e n . C A C H . 4200 A v e A 451-6966 451-6533 C e n tr a l P r o p e r tie s , Inc B E E H I V E APTS. 4209 A V E . B U n e x p e c t e d v a c a n c y . A vailable Jan. 1st. Furnished efficiency $195. 453-6892 453-0298 Manager Apt. 106 A V A L O N APTS. 32nd at 1-35 Efficiency - $165 plus E 1 Br - $195 plus E & G Walk UT. St. David's 472-7604 ABP L a r g e , I B R , c a r p e t , d i s ­ hwasher, disposal, C A/CH Shuttle or walk UT. $280. 2212 San G a b rie l 474-7732 E F F I C I E N C I E S $219 A L L B I L L S P A I D N o w le a s in g fo r s p r in g s e m e s te r C lose fu lly to c a m p u s B e a u tifu lly p a n e le d , c a r p e te d A ll b u ilt in k itc h e n . C A /C H . 4200 A v e A 451-6966 451-6533 C e n tr a l P r o p e r tie s , In c . 1 8. 2 B R A P A R T M E N T S fu r n is h e d an d u n fu rn is h e d f r o m $215. 1919 B u rto n D r . 444 1346 9 7 M - F , 9-6 S a t., 12-6 S un. I I N O R T H C E N T R A L . 451-6306, $175 F le m in g , N ic h o ls , R o le y , In c . 478- 0911, 442-4807. FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS "WE'VE GOT 'EM " • FREE • Apartments • Houses • Duplexes 4501 Guadalupe (S u ite 1 0 1 ) 4 5 8 -5 3 0 1 Q a ijw o o d - J jü c a iif x A Don't be up the creek. Rent now. Willowcreek. O ne or tw o bedroom a p artm en ts furnished or unfurnished From $2 2 0 - $3 3 0 plus E. N O W PRELEASING FOR J A N . I Willowcreek 1911 W illow creek Dr. (Arbor Apts. 1 Christmas Special Rates • 1 & 2 Bedrooms • 1st Stop on UT Shuttle • Pool Come by for details 1500 Royal Crest ¡4 4 4 -7 5 1 6 476-2633 BARRY G IUJNG W ATER M A N A G E M E N T CO. ^ • : . : - : < - : - x - x - > x - X W ' X ^ x * ^ : í ^ ^ s s ^ í S ¥ í A ;í X ’X « X ' t ' X " X W í X ;x - x - X K < ! í X : í X¿x * X ' X * X ' X - x *x d $200 R e a l W o r ld P r o p e r tie s 443-2212 l U M A t f f W N I C E . p u i> t . 2-1 W e s t S t. Jo h n S2>5 plus e le c tr ic ity 45a 8091 a f t e r 6 i 444-0010 444-0014 O N E B E D R O O M a v a ila b le now w ith C H a ir a n d a ll a p p lia n c e s 1919 B u rto n , 444-1846 _ :-X C A S A B L A N C A A p a r tm e n ts , e f f ic ie n ­ cies, one a n d tw o b e d ro o m s . C lose to c a m p u s , n e a r s h u ttle bus. 474-5550. TYP IN G ROOMMATES ROOMMATES ROOM AND BOARD WANTED PERSONAL R E S P O N S I B L E F E M A L E S h a r e b e a u tifu l 2B R d u p le x South F ire p la c e , glass enclosed t e r r a r iu m , bar, y a rd s k y lig h ts . *185, ' 2 b ills 441-7056 TW O L I B E R A L UT s tu d e n ts need p e r­ son to s h a re spacious 3BR 2BA d u p le x . R iv e rs id e , 1 2 b lo ck SR $110 m o n th plus e le c tr ic ity 441-8853 M A L E H O U S E M A T E n e e d e d O w n fu rn is h e d house, 5510 In p a r tly ro o m M a n o r Rd C a ll 928-3511. C LO S E TO ca m p u s L a rg e fu rn is h e d 3B R house, W /D , dogs $125 plus ' 4 b ills . 472-7461 ___________________ _ G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T . C o m fo rta b le , c o n v e n ie n t, re m o d e le d house C ity bus w a lk ' 3 b ills . M u s t see! 474-0117. to U .T , s h u ttle $ !3 0 /m o n th , R E S P O N S IB L E , N E A T , fu n fe m a le s tu ­ d e n t to s h a re cu te 2-1 on RC s ta rtin g J a n u a ry 1st $160, ' 2 E F u rn is h e d ( e x ­ c e p t b e d ro o m ). P re fe r 23 y e a rs o r o ld e r 441-4105 N E E D A G O O D ro o m m a te ? 27 y e a rs, lib e r a l, re sp o n sib le , o u tg o in g g ra d seeks ro o m in house w ith M F fo r now o r s p r ­ le a ve in g te rm . C a ll me, 441-5052, o r ____ m essage, 282-4208. M A L E R O O M M A T E needed im m e d ia te ly to sh a re n ic e ly fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t clo se to c a m p u s Keep c a llin g , A n d y , 474 8450 E A S Y G O IN G L I B E R A L M / F . L a rg e 3BR 2BA V illa g e G re e n A p a rtm e n ts $113, 1 1 e le c tr ic ity . G a ry , 471-4271, 928- 3736 _____________ M A L E R O O M M A T E needed fo r s p rin g . 1BR a p a rtm e n t $107.50 a m o n th plus e le c tr ic ity . P re fe r ne a t, re s p o n s ib le , n o n s m o k e r. T h re e b lo c k s fro m s h u ttle . 458-9054. N O N S M O K IN G H O U S E M A T E w a n te d . in P r e f e r m a tu r e p e rs o n h u m a n itie s , a r ts or c o m m u n ic a tio n s . F ire p la c e , la rg e y a rd . Q u ie t s tre e t n e a r ca m p u s , $140, 1 2 b ills A lle n , 474-9955 2-5 p .m . W e e kd a ys, 451-2819. in te r e s te d L I B E R A L M A L E ro o m m a te w a n te d fo r s p rin g to s h a re 2BR s tu d io a p a rtm e n t. IF sh u ttle , $122.5 0 /m o n th plus '/a b ills . M u s t see to a p p re c ia te . 454-0860. m a l e TO Share 2BR, 2B A a p a rtm e n t. 441-7994 1 N E E D a p a rtm e n t a n d ro o m m a te by J a n u a ry . I a m g ra d m u s ic m a jo r . P re fe r sta b le , n o n s m o k in g g a y . $175 o r less. Ja c k , (713) 722-2616.__________________ F E M A L E S H A R E 2 B R /2 B A a p a rtm e n t. W .C . ro u te , $85 p lu s e l e c t r ic i t y . No d e p o sit. D e c e m b e r fre e ! 478-7930. N E E D F E M A L E f o r 3 rd b e d ro o m in tw o s to ry tow n h o u se . M u s t ha v e o w n b e d ro o m fu r n it u r e $ 9 5 /m o n th , 1 j b ills . C a ll 474-5330. J u d ith o r M a d d ie . r o o m m a te H E L P 1 N E E D fe m a le fo r s p rin g . S h a re 2 1 d u p le x N ic e On s h u ttle $155 p lu s Vi b ills C a ll 445-7381 _ _ M A L E TO s h a re nice 2/1 a p a rtm e n t ne a r I F $135. 459-8831, B illy . M u s t p a r ­ ty-___________________________ L I B E R A L R O O M M A T E . Q u ie t a re a . 3-1, h a rd w o o d flo o rs , g reenh ouse. P e ts O K . $140, 1 3 b ills . D a v id , 451-5578. G O R G E O U S T O W N L a k e a p a rtm e n t. W a n te d : p ro g re s s iv e p e rson, in s tr u c to r o r g ra d u a te s tu d e n t. $182.50 A B P 447- 8710. ______________ _____ D E C E M B E R R E N T fre e . M a le , n o n ­ sm o k in g lo c m m a te , 2BR, l ' i B A s tu d io . R iv e rs id e , fu rn is h e d . $145, 1 2 E. 447-5099, P a u l. C O - E D D O R M n e x t t o c a m p u s . R e m od eled , n e w fu rn is h in g s , re c re a tio n a r e a , s u n d e c k , w id e s c r e e n T V , r e fr ig e ra to r s , no m eals, 24 hou r s e c u r i­ ty Taos, 2612 G u a d a lu p e , 474-6905 $155 A B P . F u rn is h e d ro o m - 27th and W h itis . A v a ila b le Dec. 1. 474-7266 a fte r 5. G O O D A L L W O O T E N - q u ie t, t h ir d flo o r ro o m fo r tw o w ith p r iv a te b ath. $120. C a ll 478-3548 ______ F É M A L É 7 S U B L E A S E d o u b le r o o m $145 In clu d e s e v e r y th in g b u t m e a ls . A fte r 12 noon, 478-4366 S P R IN G S E M E S T E R P r iv a te ro o m s a v a ila b le in s tu d e n t o w n e d /o p e ra te d h o u s e . N e a r C R s h u t t l e G r a d s p r e fe rre d . $110 p lu s u t ilit ie s . 453-8843. R O O M FO R re n t. Bed and hea t p r o v id ­ ed 29th and S alado. C a ll T o m , 476-7580. P R IV A T E R O O M , fu rn is h e d 3 B R -2 B A house. L o c a tio n N E A u s tin Close CR s h u ttle . A B P . F o r d e ta ils , 451-8829 S T U D E N T S - R E A S O N A B L E H o u se ­ k e e p in g ro o m s. C o n v e n ie n t U n iv e r s ity 1906 San G a b rie l. D e posit. S llO /m o n th . 476-4770. 478J078. __ TA O S V A C A N C Y fo r s p rin g se m e s te r, $145, m o n th . C a ll B illy a t 472-0571. S P R IN G S E M E S T E R re n ta ls $105-$Í30 t o c a m p u s , k i t c h e n A B P . C lo s e p r iv ile g e s , fu rn is h e d , C A /C H , co-ed. 477- _____ 1205.2411 R io G ra n d e N E E D T O S U B L E T p r iv a te or d o u b le ro o m , Taos D o rm . C a ll soon. M ic h a e l, 478-6489 P R IV A T E R O O M a v a ila b le a t Taos d o r ­ m it o r y . R e fr ig e ra to r , H .B O. F o r in f o r ­ m a tio n , c a ll 477-8963. fro m c a m p u s G O O D A L L W O O T E N on G u a d a lu p e ro o m , a cro ss p r i v a t e b a t h , - r e f r i g e r a t o r f l o o r . $12 0/m onth. 474-4567. - b a lc o n y . 5 th f u r n i s h e d - d o u b le f u l l y SPRI NG AT T HE A R K one Our hundred-m ember coed cooperative has vacan­ cies fo r w o m e n . N in ete en home-cooked meals, s w im ­ ming pool, attached park. We live and work together to save m o n e y and e n j o y s ch o ol. Private rooms, varied social and educational pro gra m s. Join us! Call 476-5678 or come to 2000 Pearl, only a short walk fr o m campus. OR - S P R I N G A T C O L L E G E HOUSE The so la riz e d co-op a t 707 W. 21st St. has a fe w v a ca n cie s s t ill fo r w o m e n You w ill lik e o u r s m a ll su ite liv in g a rra n g e m e n ts and o u r new c o m p u te r co-op C a ll 476- 5678 o r c o m e by S A V E $100. Food, s e c u rity , pool. F o r in ­ fo rm a tio n c a ll S y lv ia , 477-4280 C A S T IL IA N V A C A N C Y , save $100! S p r­ in g sem e ste r, g re a t food. H u r r y ! C a ll 478-6797. liv in g and R O Y A L CO-OP - s p rin g v a ca n cie s. M a le a n d fe m a le dou bles. Q u ie t n e ig h b o rh o o d , b e a u tifu l house, g re a t food. C a ll 478 088C F O R ~ S P R IN G s e m e s te r, n ic e ro o m , food, la u n d e re tte , s e c u rity , a t Contessa C a ll a t 472-2013^ S A V E O N E h u n d re d d o lla rs , Contessa, d o u b le ro o m , food, la u n d r y . 476-6503. RO O M S A V A I L A B L E s p rin g se m e s te r 7585 F in e e x c lu s iv e l i v i n g ._______ in Contessa fo r In fo r m a tio n c a ll 476- C A S T I L I A N S U B L E A S E s p r i n g se m e s te r. Best ro o m m a te you c o u ld ask f o r ! C a ll J u lie , 477-8880 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d a t C ontessa W est. J a n u a ry -M a y . 478-7414. C a ll befo re D e c e m b e r 20th. C A SA L A T IN A - spa cio u s c o o p e ra tiv e house has la rg e ro o m s a v a ila b le to r fe m a le s . $174 in c lu d e s a ll fo o d /e x p e n se s 478-6763. ___ C O N T E S S A V A C A N C Y a v a ila b le s p rin g se m e ste r fo r re s p o n s ib le m a le . 474-4430 D O B IE S U B L E A S IN G a d o u b le ro o m fo r fe m a le fo r s p rin g s e m e s te r a t d is c o u n t ra te Leslie, 477-9819 P R IV A T E R O O M open fo r fe m a le at Contessa d o rm , s p rin g se m e s te r, food, pool, sundeck, close to c a m p u s . C a ll Jeanne, 476-2257. K eep t r y i n g . C O N T E S S A V A C A N C Y ( fe m a le ) Good food, pool, s e c u rity . C a ll 476-4648 In ­ q u ire a bo ut No. 204 C A S T IL IA N S U IT E . 2 v a c a n c ie s fo r su b ­ lease in s p rin g , 1980. C a ll 477-4072 o r 478- ____________________________ 2614. C A S T I L I A N V A C A N C Y f o r s p r in g se m e s te r. Pool, g a m e ro o m , clo se to ca m p u s . P hone 474-5206. O N E OR TW O fe m a le s to sublease a D o b le side s u ite fo r s p rin g s e m e ste r. If in te re s te d c a ll 474-0745, 478-8237. S P A C E $659.50 M a rg u e r ite , 471-4977. IN S m ith , a w o m e n 's co-op. f o r s e m e s te r. C a ll S h a ro n , PUBLIC NOTICES A NOTICE TO OUR READERS: The D a ily T e x a n a d v e rtis in g d e p a rtm e n t m a k e s e v e ry e f fo r t to screen a ll a d v e rtis in g to p re v e n t fa ls e o r d e c e p tiv e a d v e rtis in g fro m a p p e a r in g in y o u r n e w s p a p e r H o w e ve r, th e Y u le tid e season often fin d s stu d e n ts s h o rt of C h ris tm a s cash and lo o k in g fo r q u ic k w a ys to e a rn big m oney. The B e tte r B u siness B u re a u has a le rte d o u r re a d e rs to be w a ry of ads w h ic h o ffe r la rg e s a la rie s fo r do in g s im p le w o rk a t hom e. T h e th e m e s of such schem es m a y v a r y , such as: c lip p in g a r tic le s fr o m new sp a p e rs, s tu ffin g o r a d d re s s in g enve lopes, o r ta k in g phone m essages a t hom e. H o w e ve r, th e r ip - o ffs h a v e one th in g y o u m u s t b u y in c o m m o n : s o m e th in g b e fo re yo u c a n b e g in w o rk . F o r a fee, u s u a lly f r o m $5.00 to $20.00, y o u a re r e q u ire d to p u rc h a se in s tru c tio n s o r a s ta rt-u p k it to begin th e business a t hom e O u r re a d e rs a re r e m in d e d th a t if th e y a n s w e r such an ad, th e y a re m o re lik e ly to lose m o n e y th a n to m a k e It. F o r m o re in fo r m a tio n , c a ll the A u s tin B e tte r B u siness B u re a u at 476-6943 fo r a fre e p a m p h le t e n title d , ''T ip s on W o rk -A t-H o m e S c h e m e s ." Th« Doily T««on C la » jfi*d Advertising Deportment UNFURNISHED HOUSES U N F U R N IS H E D 3*1. $300 N e a r c a m ­ pus. A v a ila b le now . C a ll M a r k fr o m 10 to noon a t 474-6898. S P A C IO U S 2 ( 3 ) - l near c a m p u s . $250 A v a ila b le D e c e m b e r 15th. 451-4771. K e ep __ ______________ t r y in g . 2BR, T b a , a ll a p p lia n c e s in c lu d in g W /D , g a ra g e , fenced y a r d $30 0/m onth. S h e ry l B a rn e s, 258-0813, 453-2683, 471-4811. FURNISftED HOUSES J A N U A R Y R E N T A L . T w o houses, 2114 L eo na S treet. ____ r o o m s G R E A T L O C A T I O N a v a ila b le in la rg e 3BR house Id e a l fo r co u p le o r tw o in d iv id u a ls . 706 W . 25th. 345 5580, 4 7 6 -5 4 1 2 . K e e p t r y i n g . $116.5 0 /m o n th . t w o ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD The Castilian is the place to live • Vi block from campus • Color TV lounges • Weekly maid service • 19 or 15 meo I plan • Social activities • Saunas, pool, recreation room • Fully fumisbad with paid utilities • Covered parking The Castilian 2 3 2 3 San Antonio St. 4 7 8 - 9 8 1 1 L im ite d s p a ce is a v a ila b le f o t th e S p rin g te rm in th re e o f the m o s t c o n v e n ie n t re s id e n c e s in th e U n iv e rs ity o f T exas area. Located at 2 7 0 6 Nueces, three blocks from campus and on a shuttle bus stop. Nineteen delicious meals per w eek, maid service, parking, swim m ing pool, lounges, many extras. Coed. 4 7 7 9 7 6 6 . 2 7 0 7 Rio G rande. Convenient to sorori­ ty houses and sh o p p in g , p arkin g on premises, maid service, nineteen meals per l o u n g e s , w e e k , pool , s u n d e c k s and kitchenettes in each suite. All wom en. 4 76 - 4 6 4 8 2 7 0 0 Nueces, on the shuttle bus route. Small and quiet, frills housing. M e a ls served at the no Contessa, maid service and parking included. All private rooms. Coed. 4 7 2 -7 8 5 0 . 3R D R O O M M A T E needed fo r nice 3BR house, seven m ile s n o rth of ca m p u s . 837- 4820 S H A R E N IC E 3 BR house nea r ca m p u s w ith fe m a le stu d e n t. *120 m o n th , s p lit u t i l i t i es 472-51 19 C L E A N , S E M I L I B E R A L n a tiv e T e xa n to share 3B R , 3BA lu x u ry c o n d o m in iu m , * 175, 1 3 b ills No pets E n g in e e rs , un­ d e rg ra d s p re fe rre d R ic k , 454-7366 R E S P O N S IB L E P E R S O N needed s h a r­ ing 2BR house, seven m ile s east- c a m ­ pus O n ly neat, non -sm o kin g , c o n s c ie n ­ tio u s and v e ry r e lia b le in q u ire please. S165, share u t ilit ie s B ria n . 926-0487. F E M A L E TO sh a re 2B R , 1BA fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t F re e s e c u rity de p o sit. * 180 A B P Julie,. 445-0288 I ' l l pay you $50 to M A L E R O O M M A T E a ssu m e le ase. F u r n is h e d ! N ic e ! 'a R iv e rs id e S h u ttle $102 5 0 /m o n th , N o r­ m an, 443-1192. lo v e ly W est A u s tin F E M A L E S F O R h o u s e . S u n n y , q u i e t , r e m o d e le d , hardw oods. No s m o k in g , no pets. 453- 0352, 472-7365. _ _ _ _ _ _ N E E D E D R E L IA B L E ^ nea t n o n s m o k e r fo r n o rth d u p le x . $125 p lu s ’ 2 b ills . C a ll 837-5644 N O N S M O K IN G , F E M A L E ro o m m a te needed b e g in n in g 1-1. L a rg e 3-2 stu d io . W a lk to ca m p u s . B e a u tifu l a p a rtm e n t G re a t lo c a tio n C a ll J u d y a fte r 5, 478- 3674 ____________ S E M I L I B E R A L m a le s h a re 2-1, V illa g e G len $165, '/j E M r. C ro c k e tt, 447-4130. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E IB A . $100, V2 b ills , WC sh u ttle . N o ra C a ro l, 472-2554, 472-7554 - 2BR. M A L E TO s h a re 2BR, 2B A u n fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t, RC. Q uiet a re a . $145, ’ 2 E. 444-0270 H O U S E M A T E FO R H yd e P a rk house S e m ifu rn is h e d , $150, 2 b ills . C om e by 4411 Ave. O, 452-3201. R O O M M A T E L I B E R A L , s tu d io u s , fe m a le , n o n s m o k e r S h are 2BR, 1BA. $127.50, Va e le c tr ic ity , J a n u a ry . Rose, 475-7838, 454 2479. N E A T , M A L E n o n s m o k in g hou se m a te needed to s h a re la rg e , p a r tly fu rn is h e d 2BR, 1BA. T h re e m ile s n o rth . 458-2734 a fte r 6 p.m . L I B E R A L F E M A L E , s h a re 3BR house ne a r ca m p u s. W asher, fire p la c e . $108, 1 3 b ills . 474-2369 S T U D O U S F E M A L E n o n s m o k e r to sh a re 2BR, 2B A a p a rtm e n t. $135 plu s e le c tr ic ity . D ia n e , 441-2313. R E S P O N S IB L E F E M A L E n o n s m o k e r sh a re ’/a house, $185 p lu s u tilitie s No pets. F ir e p la c e . A i r p o r t B lv d ., C R . A lic e , 451-494C M A L E TO s h a re 2 8 R , 2B A m o b ile hom e $165 A B P 7901 E. Ben W h ite 385-5006. K eep try in g . _____ M A L E /F E M A L E - a v a ila b le J a n u a ry 1st, 2BR fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t, one b lo c k RC. A ll gas, w a te r, c a b le paid T w o hum ong ous pools w hen s p rin g r o lls in. $165, Va E. No tobacco, pets Dan, a n y t im e b e fo re D ec. 18th. 445-0678. R E S P O N S IB L E F E M A L E , n o n sm o ke r, la rg e house on W est 6th. $95 plus V3 b ills . 472-1172 P IN A C O L A D A S ? W a lk in g in the r a in ? S tu d y in g a t m id n ig h t? I h a v e a 3BR c o n ­ do. R ick, 454-7366 Q U IE T L I B E R A L to Share nice 2BR 2BA. S p rin g $137.50 plu s '/a e le c tr ic ity . Close U T . K a re n , 478-6778 f e m a le needed F E M A L E W A N T E D S h a re 2BR, 2B A W est L a k e H ills d u p le x. W /D , fire p la c e , sund eck w ith v ie w 15 m in u te s to c a m ­ pus. $192.50 p lu s Vi b ills . E v e n in g s , 327- 1578 N E E D TW O ho u se m a te s to share 4B R house n o rth F ire p la c e , y a rd , $165, ’ 3 u tilitie s . C a ll 837-8958 3B R C O N D O M IN IU M , fu rn is h e d , S .E . A u s tin , nea r s h u ttle . A m m a le la w s tu ­ den t, need co n d o m a te s. $175, A B P 447- 7604 M A L E W A N T E D fo r p a r t ia lly fu rn is h e d 3B R , 2B A house across f r o m la w school. $135, Vs b ills . S ta rt J a n u a ry . 477-0949. 3R D R O O M M A T E needed Share 2-2 a p a rtm e n t. F u rn is h e d S R /R C s h u ttle . $125/m onth, 1 3 b ills . C a ll 444-8427 F E M A L E C H R IS T IA N fo r 2BR, 2W B A , tw o s to ry c o n d o m in iu m w ith fire p la c e , pool, g a ra g e . 454-5305. __ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d fo r n ice 2B R -1BA a p a rtm e n t. On N R , own ro o m , $115/m onth p lu s Vi E. 444-2420. ___ fe m a le ro o m m a te L O O K IN G FO R to sh a re b ra n d new a p a rtm e n t. C a ll L y n n , 459-4451. M A L E N O N S M O K IN G ro o m m a te need ed C lose to ca m p u s , s h u ttle . $130 A B P . __ _________________ 477-0875. __ _ _ ____________ S H A R E B E A U T IF U L 3B R , 2BA f u r ­ nished c o n d o m in iu m N o rth w e s t A u s tin . $150 A B P 345-0794 a fte r 2 F E M A L E W A N T E D L u x u r y 1BR a p a r t ­ m e n t. F ire p la c e , b a lc o n y , v ie w , s h u ttle . $150 A B P . M elody^452-34521 F E M A L E , N O N S M O K IN G , studio us, 1- 1 80 R ent $133.50, Vi b ills . 2B R , 1 BA , IF s h u ttle 451-3886. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d 2B R , 2B A fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t. RC s h u ttle $150, Vs E 443-61VL F I N A N C I A L L Y D E P E N D A B L E r o o m ­ m a te fo r la rg e b e d ro o m in 2BR 2B A 4- ple x, South L a m a r $107.50, " 2 E . Joe, 444-5507 N E E D L I B E R A L g ra d s tu d e n t to s h a re 2 B R -2 B A a p a r t m e n t N o n -s m o k e r $137.50, Vi e le c tr ic b ill. Pool and ra c q u e t- / a ll. 385-2186 a f te r 6 p.m Q Ü T e t T R E S P Ó N S IB L E g ra d u a te s tu ­ d e n t p r e f e r r e d to s h a r e h o u s e $150 m o n th . 454-8073 a fte r 6 F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E s h a re p le a s a n t 3BR house tw o b lo c k s fr o m s h u ttle . 1.5 m ile s fro m ca m p u s . Q u ie t n e ig h b o rh o o d . G ra d u a te stu d e n t, n o n s m o k e r p r e fe rre d , $111, Va b ills . L iz , C a ro le , 454-8168 5:30- 7:30 p .m . __________________ to P e r u v i a n F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w o m a n w illin g te a ch Spanish and sh a re c u ltu r e . 1 B R a p a rtm e n t close to ca m p u s . $140 A B P . 478-4631, 477-6158. Needed by 1-1. N E E D " F E M A L E c o n s e rv a tiv e , re s p o n ­ sib le , n o n s m o k e r fo r tw o b e d ro o m , one b a th a p a rtm e n t. CR sh u t tle. '*58-9012.__ N O N S M O K I N G M A L E r o o m m a t e w a n te d S hare 2BR a p a rtm e n t near E n ­ fie ld s h u ttle $90, ourself the cheerful atmosphere and nriifc^itmal ser\ ice offered \o u r T Y P IN G and fur all (!()PY I NG needs. 504 W. 24th 477-6671 "High#*! Quolity Absolutely Guaranteed** WOODS y p i n g s e r v i c e Vhen you w an t it done right 472-6302 00 Guadalupe, side entrance Y P IN G : T H E S E S , d is s e rta tio n s , te rm apers, re p o rts , etc. E x p e rie n c e d , IB M e le c tric . N e a r N o rth c ro s s M a ll. 458- P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IS T w i t h e x ­ perie nce and k n o w -h o w . D is s e rta tio n s , theses, p ro fe s s io n a l re p o rts , e tc. B a r ­ bara T ullo s , 453-5124. N E A T , A C C U R A T E and p ro m p t ty p in g , theses m y s p e c ia lty . R e a so n a b le ra te s . C all 447-2868 _______ C A L L D e A n n * a t 474-1563 8-5 M -F o r 345- 1244, 453-0234 w e e ke n d s and e v e n in g s . N o rm a lly 1-day s e rv ic e . _____________ T Y P IN G , A L L fie ld s in c lu d in g scie nce and m ost fo re ig n la ng u a g e s, tr a n s c r ip ­ tion, d r a ftin g . 477-1768, 472-4196 P R O F E S S IO N A L Q U A L IT Y t y p in g . S a tis fa c tio n g u a ra n te e d C a m p u s p ic k ­ up and d e liv e r y . IB M C o rre c tin g S elec­ t r ic Helen, 836-3562 RESUMES w ith or w ith o u t pictures 2 Day Service 2707 Hemphill Park N o rth o f 2 7 th a t G u a d a lu p e i-3 2 10 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 ¡ O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IS T w it h e x - ie n ce D is s e rta tio n s , theses, re p o rts I le g a l d o c u m e n ts . C a ll D o ttie B e ll, j-0754 __________ 'O M P T E F F I C I E N T 'ie n c e d v ic e a v a ila b le . R e asonable II 258-9521 o r 836-3459 t y p in g . E x - In d iv id u a ls /b u s in e s s e s . R ush ra te s . P IN G - B Y ex-sch o o l te a c h e r. A c ­ a te, d e p e n d a b le , re a so n a b le . G e n e ra l je rs , theses, s i d o u b le space page. -8160. O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IN G - te c h n ic a l/ t is tic a l, e x p e rie n c e on IB M C o rre c- g S e le c t r i c . P i c k - u p / d e l i v e r y lila b le . R e a so n a b le ra te s . 451-4449 W S C H O O L s p e c ia lis t. A lso theses, ¡ s e r t a t l o n s . S p e e d , a c c u r a c y jr a n te e d IB M C o rre c tin g S e le c tric . s. F o w le r, 327-0109. ■ M A K E y o u r w o rd s lo o k good. T y p - a n d p ro o fin g , 80“/p a g e . E liz a b e th , -4080, 476-9718 P E R IE N C E D . A C C U R A T E II do ty p in g a t hom e. C a ll 441-8959. ty p is t. E 'S T Y P IN G S e rv ic e N o rth lo c a tio n . 0 a m -10 00 p m 452-6312. sure w e DO type FRESHMAN THEMES why Mt start out with |wd iradas 2707 Hemphill Jutt North of 27th o t Guadoiupo j t r t i i n 472-7677 TRAVEL 5 E S H IP S ! S A IL IN G e x p e d itio n s ! p e rie n c e S u m m e r, c a re e r G ood E u ro p e ' South P a c ific , B a h a m a s, 1 Send $4 95 fo r a p p lic a tio n , in fo r - n, to C ru is e w o rld 189, Box S a c ra m e n to , Ca 95860 iobs 3 IN G F O R P h ila d e lp h ia 2 1st, lin g J a n u a ry 3 rd N eed r id e r to d r iv in g , gas 444-4789 a fte r 5 P^m T R A N S P O R T p e o p le -p e ts -o b ie c ts m W a s h in g to n , D C. D ec. 21-27. s8.__ _ _ _ _ _ IN TO P h o e n ix by a ir . L e a v e 12-21 • tu r n 12-30 T r a v e l in tw in e ng ine f t w ith e x p e rie n c e d p ilo t S h are ses. 443-0156 IÍINGSGATE 2 BR-2 BATH UNF. *275 & E. 2005 W illow Creek 44 7 -6 6 9 6 M - F 9-6 SAT 10-4 C a ll o r w r ite f o r in fo rm a tio n , o r ju s t c o m e o n by. Tuesday, December 11. 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 13 c u r re n c y C LASS R IN G S gold le w e lry , o ld po ck e t w a tc h e s s ta m p s w a n te d H ig h p ric e s p a id P io n e e r C o in C o m ­ pan y, 5555 N o rth L a m a r, B ld g C- 113 in C o m m e rc e P a rk , 451-3607 je w e lry S V Y IN G W O R L D gold g o ld s c ra p gold old coins a n tiq u e s p o c k e t w a tc h e s P a y in g f a ir m a r k e t p r ic e C a p ito l C oin Co 3004 G u a d a lu p e , 472- 1676 P h ilip N o hra , ow ner. S T A M P S W A N T E D . W e b u y s ta m p c o lle c tio n s , a c c u m u la tio n s , o ld le tte rs w ith s ta m p s or p o s tm a rk s D e a to n 's S ta m p Shop, 206 W 13th. 474-9525 T A L E N T E D PE R S O N S in m u s ic , d an ce o r c o m e d y fo r T uesday n ig h t c o n te s t. Cash p ris e s ! See W a yn e a t R o c k y R a c ­ coon's, T in n in F o rd Rd. V I S I T I N G P R O F E S S O R a n d f a m i ly w a n t to re n t 3B R fu rn is h e d hou se ne a r c a m p u s J a n u a ry th ro u g h J u ly , p o s s ib ly lo n g e r 471-3807, 8 a m .-2 p .m . G O L D B A N D S , class rin g s g o ld m o u n ­ tin g s F a ir p ric e paid 345 5 0 8 8 . _______ ...................... N E E D S U G A R B ow l tic k e ts C a ll 478- 3086 a fte r 5 00 p m . Needed im m e d ia te ­ l y B A S E B A L L C A R D c o lle c tio n s C o lle c to r w a n ts to b u y base ba'I c a rd s , p la s tic s ta tu e s of b a s e b a ll p la y e rs , n o n -s p o rts c a rd s , e tc . C a ll Don, 442 1460_ e v e n in g s, w e e k e n d s , n o w o r a f t e r C h r is t m a s bre a k . MISCELLANEOUS N E E D E X T R A M O N E Y ? WORK D UR IN G T H E HO LID A YS ! We ha v e m a n y s h o rt te rm a s s ig n m e n ts the th a t co u ld keep you busy d u r in g v a c a tio n W e o ffe r s k ille d and u n s k ille d c le ric a l and in d u s tria l jobs. C a ll o r c o m e by 9-11 a .m ., 1-3 p .m M o n d a y - F r id a y . We a ls o h a v e e ve n in g & w e e ke n d w o rk VOLT T E M P O R A R Y S E R V IC E 1507 G u a d a lu p e 472-6916 E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F r e e p re g n a n c y te s tin g and r e fe r r a ls . 474- 9930 ______________ C H R IS T M A S M O N E Y . S ell y o u r s p o rts e q u ip m e n t now . Q u a lity e q u ip m e n t at re a s o n a b le p ric e s , in s ta n t R e p la y , 5256 B u rn e t Rd a t N o rth Loop 451-8081 10 a .m .-5 p .m . T u e s d a y -S a tu rd a y . FOR RENT P E C A N G R O V E RV P A R K D o w n to w n - n e a r p a rk , pool, la k e , h ik e a n d b ik e t r a i l , s e r v ic e s , b u s lin e s U tilitie s , m a in te n a n c e , s e c u rity , b a th houses, 1518 B a rto n S p rin g s n e a r Z ilk e r . 472-1067. la u n d r o m a ts f u rn is h e d M IN I- S T O R A G E S O U T H . C o n c r e te b lo c k c o n s tru c tio n $12.50 up m o n th ly . 4 4 4 -2 4 1 1, W o o d l a n d 's A A A M i n i W arehouse . th re e S M A L L A N D b lo ck s fr o m c a m p u s. S lO /m o n th a n d up. C a ll 477-1630 a f te r 7 p m ., w e ekends. la rg e s to re ro o m s , B .C . O S A K A O R I E N T A L M a s s a g e 24 hours 7 da y s a w eek $5 00 d is c o u n t w ith th is ad. 11812 N L a m a r ______________ D E A R J A Y H A W K , I s t ill m is s you but h o p e th e S o u th a g r e e s w i t h y o u . N o rth e rn G ir l. ______________ C L E M E T F R O M c a r n iv a l n ig h t a t Soap Creek Saloon, g iv e C a ro ly n a c a ll LOST & FOUND LOST W E D N E S D A Y m o rn in g on s ix th flo o r of P C L • b ro w n w a lle t and blue checkb ook G e ra rd 476-9583, 385-6942 L O S T: ON SR bus o r G a rris o n H a ll - n a v y blu e fo ld in g u m b r e lla w ith w ooden h an d le C a ll 445-2166. TUTORING H E L P 1 N E E D m a th tu to r fo r he lp in basic business s ta tis tic s 928-0266, 476- 6461 e x t 5311 A sk fo r A l. SERVICES A R T 'S M O V IN G and H a u lin g : any area 24 hours, 7 d a ys. 447-9384, 477- 3249. R E M O D E L S A D D IT IO N S , e x p e rie n c e d w ith re fe re n c e s P h one D a v id S ta rk, 451 - _____ _____ 4632 ( n o t A N Y T R E E c u t a n d h a u le d f a l l i n g ) , $75 p lu s d a n g e r o u s w h e n m ile a g e and d u m p fee. I r e ta in wood L ig h t n a u lm g 327 5603 e v e n in g s._______ P E T E R P A N N u rs e ry , 1700W 32nd Age 0-13 years, b a la n c e d m e a ls, preschoo l and Spanish cla sses. D is c o u n t fo r tw o or m o re c h ild re n a tte n d in g . Open fro m 7 a m -6 p.m W e a re s ta te lic e n s e d 452- ___________ 0907, 837-3977. H U M O R O U S C A R D S b y G e o r g e . M essage in y o u r w o rd s w ith o r ig in a l a r t designed fo r r e c ip ie n t N e x t d a y se rv ic e , $5 C olor $10. 444-3400 P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y COUNSELING, REFERRALS & F R E E PREGNANCY TESTING Texas P ro b le m P re g n a n c y , 600 W. 28th, S uite 101. M -F , 7:30-5 30. 474-9930 F R E E P R E G N A N C Y TESTS C ounseling on a ll p re g n a n c y a lte rn a f iv e s , b i r t h c o n t r o l m e th o d s a n d w o m e n 's h e a lth c o n c e rn s . W a lk -In basis, M o n .-F ri. 9-5, W o m e n 's R e fe r r a l C e nte r, 1800B L a v a c a , 476-6878 Casually You Creative Outdoor Portraits Save Vi Now Royce Studios 2470 Guadalupe 472-4219 SERVICES 3 Vie s t a n d a r d b o n d copies g r a d sch o o l g u o ra n to e o n fO O % A 2 5 % c o f fo n C o lla tio n - b in d in g S o il s e r v ic e S t a p l in g a v a i la b le k i n k o s 2 2 0 0 G u a d a lu p e n e x t fo H a m b u rg e rs by G o u rm e t 4 7 6 -4 6 5 4 MOVING HAULING Student Rates • ap artm en t* • dorm * • *m al! h o u tt* BOB'S VAN 7 to 7 everyday 458-1433 G in n y 's C o p y in g S ervic e T h e s o t, D is s e rta tio n s a n d P ro fo s s io n a l R e p o rts. 44 Dobie M all 47 6-9 171 SERVICES Your U ltim ate Choice DECEMBER ACCOUNTING GRADUATES WHY SHOULD YOU COME TO M. DAVID LOWE? Y o u m a y h a v e a lre a d y re c e iv e d s e v e ra l good o ffe rs th ro u g h ca m p u s r e c r u itin g , b u t m a y be w o n d e rin g if you h a v e e x p lo re d a ll the possible o p tio n s a v a ila b le to you In to d a y 's a c tiv e m a rk e t. W e a t M . D a v id Low e can help E v e ry y e a r w e place h u n d re d s of c o lle g e g ra d u a te s in a ll d is c ip lin e s . Som e see la rg e th e m s e lv e s o rg a n iz a tio n , w h ile o th e rs p re fe r the b r o a d e x p o s u re a n d t r a c k v is ib ilit y o ffe re d by m e d iu m and s m a ll c o m p a n ie s w h ic h d o n o t r e c ru rt on ca m p u s We t y p ic a lly re p re s e n t y o u r in te re s ts , re g a rd le s s ot the p a th you choose in a fa s t F o r f u r t h e r In fo rm a tio n please c a ll C la u d ia R ic h a rd s o n o r B ill W a rn c k e at (713) 658-9898. ALL FEES ASSUMED BY CLIENT COMPANIES NEVER A CONTRACT TO SION 497 Hewtton Natural G ot Building 1200 TravN (713) * 3 * -9 * 9 * Classifieds Continued On Next Page SERVICES SERVICES INSTANT PHOTOS ' f o r PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS jM M O N - SAT 1 0 - 6 THE THIRD EYE — 2530 GUADALUPE b y Johnny h a rt / / • / / # * ir by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds TA N K B FNAM ARA Y. ry Page 14 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, December 11, 1979 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED H y a u r a o o a t o v i, d a p ra t a a d , • » « * " ' ataap tHa f a b t a C l i n k a * A u t t in m a r b a m bia M haip. T r a a t m a n t H ira a t o , thaa a w h a rnaat t im p la a n lr y t t k a r ia b o t a d ta fa ly o n " * * " * 7 a v a iu o t io n , T h k o p p o r t u n it y h o a a d o U a A m to t o t t in g p t a t a d u r a t r a q u ir a d b y < " • f t d a tai L o w ' a g o r d i n g th a d a t a t a p m a n l at p a w m a d k a t ia n t f a t r o m p ía la in fo r m o tia o amé *• Hod out * * * P A R T - T I M E J O B $5.25 P E R H O U R F le x i b le sc h e d u le s Profit P l a n A v a i l a b l e C a ll between 10 a m. a n d 3 p.m. only ! 459-3440 ext. 444 P A R T T I M E A D V E R T I S I N G S A L E S N e e d s a l e s p e r s o n * fo r U T m o s i m agazine and U nive rsity Directory ad space sa le s H alf-tim e c o m m issio n sales Sates and advertising experience or training preferred Send letter outlin­ ing personal background, work history and training to A D V E R T I S I N G D IR E C T O R T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L IC A T IO N S P O B O X D Austin, Texas 78712 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED H O L I D A Y P O S I T I O N S A V A I L A B L E E a r n *420 pi i s, over x m a s B r e a k ! Positions available beginning Dec. 20th W ork through Jan. 12th. Call for inter­ view im m ediately Flexible schedules available tor holiday activities M u st oe 18 or over 459-3440, ext 205 P A R T T IM E W O R K J U N IO R S , S E N IO R S G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S Starting t3 50/Hour E v e n in gs O nly Work as credit authorizer 5 30 p m -9 00 p m Alternate nights M o nd ay-Saturd ay P reviou s credit experience helpful but not necessary M u st have at least 12 month continuous availability. A pply to M r Young. 3rd floor Y a n n g 's , 506 C ongress 476-6511. C L E R K III 30 hours week M o nd a E r iday P erfo rm s general secretarial duties T yping 50 60 wpm, shorthand and/or speedwriting between 60 and 80 wpm desirable Abiii- *y to speak, write, and und erstan d Spanish desirable Salary $567/month A pply at Austin M ental Health M ental Retardation, 1430 Collier, 78704, or call 447 4141 E O E E M P L O Y M E N T T R A iN lN f . C L E R K I full time position requiring the follow­ ing hrs 8 30-5.30 M -F and som e Sa tu r­ days M u st be able to type approx 50 w p m Previou s office experience re­ quired M u st be able to file accurately, m ust be able to establish and organize priorities and work without direct super vision M u st be able to com m unicate effectively with employees, m anagers and applicants Apply Personnel Office, U nive rsity Co-Op. E O.E N O W H I R I N G S C H O O L B U S D R I V E R S Reliable women and men needed M u st be available 6 15 a m. 8 45 a m. and/or 2 p m 4 30 p m Starting pay *4.20 per hour A pply North 5901 Guadalupe, 452- 5007, Central, 1315 W Sfh, 474 5773, South, 3300 Jones Rd . 892-2620 A T T E N T I O N G O O D D R I V E R S E a r n m oney w hile you see A u stin R ew ard in g |Ob with pleasant w orking conditions if you are over 21 and respon­ sible, ap p ly: T ran sp o rtation E n t e r ­ prises, me 1135 Gunter *3 74/hour to start 928 2801 B I O M E D I C A L T E C H N I C I A N Part-tim e position open for Jr. or Sr fam iliar with optical and quantitative clinical equipm ent Will train, hours flexible, m ust own reliable transporta­ tion, start at $5 00/hr , 385-6232. C H R I S T M A S M O N E Y $5 P E R H O U R F U L L O R P A R T - T I M E 2200 G ua da lu pe Suite 223 N E E D StF F n U S typists Full or part time Begin now or January. Inform al office - near U /T 451-0406^ _ “| C O M P U T E R P R O G R A M M E R A S S I S T A N T I U T A U S T I N 25 hours week iob available W orking hours flexible High school completion required No experience required for graduate student, 2 years experience or fram ing irt computer p ro gram m in g re­ quired for others P re fe r com puter fram ing in newspaper work with P D P -11 computer equipm ent Exten sive benefits package Salary S478 a month Posting No 12-6 10-9336 To apply come by: Office of Person ne’ Services 2613 Wichita Austin, T X An E q u al Opportunity/ A ffirm ative Action Em p lo yer A L L Y O U F O L K S that need e x tra money car sell flowers with The O riginal Flow er People Paid daily 288-1102 W A Ft P E R S O N S W A N T E D a T T h e Back Room A pply between noon and 5:00 441- 4677 ____________________ N O W A C C E P T IN G applications for s p r ­ ing rush positions. Apply at the U n ive rsi­ ty Co-Op, 2246 Guadalupe E.O E S A L E $ P A R T - T I M E . E a r n T io O - S500/month E v e n in g sales. Professional appearance, good com m unication skills. For interview, call Larry, 258 0685 A N O T H E R R A W Deal, l l i 0 W ~ ó t t T s L needs kitchen help, d ishw ash ing and food prep, m o r n in g s / n ig h t s, S3.00 m inim u m start. A pply in person. P A R T - T IM E C O O K to prepare evening m eals for bachelor, eat dinner with him, w ash dishes, stay after d inner for d r ir ,k s -c o n v e r s a t io n , a n d d a te on weekends. Only single women please Photo, address, and phone number, first letter please Write to Post Office Box 18153, Austin, Texas, 78760 C A M B R I D G E T O W E R Inter­ viewing for door person (hours 4 p m.- m id n ig h t, F r id a y S u n d a y ). G a r a g e attendant (M -F, 8-5) Contact Business Office, 10-12 noon. 1801 Lavaca is now A ID E W A N T E D for two year old class in m am stream ing preschool, 7 45-11 45. Call 477-9632 for interview. Start at the beginning of the sem ester P R E S C H O O L A I D E . MornTng 8-12 30 Start Jan u ary. C a r needed 327-1376 evenings F a n ta s tic L I T T L E E X P E R I I N C E t ip s ! P a y ! S 1600 $3800 s u m m e r . Thousands needed Casinos, restaurant, ranches, cruisers, rafting, etc. Send S4 95 fo r a p p lic a tio n , in fo rm ation , referrals Lakew orld 189, Box 60129, Sacram ento Ca 95860. N E E D S O M E O N E to watch 10 and 8 year olds Part-tim e evenings 6-9 472- 0966, 447 2892 TW O P A R T T IM E security officers, Tri Towers North, 801 W 24th Night work only. Apply in person. B rin g recent photo for file with ap p lication All applicants considered for employment will be checked through local police files. If you qualify, contact Director of Security F e rris H olm es after 5 p.m. No phone calls. N IG H T W O R K cleaning and sweeping parking iots M u st have good driving record Part-tim e positions weekends 10 p.m -6 a m *4.05/hour starting. Apply at 7524 N L a m a r No. 1. P A R T - T I M E _ “ R E C E P T I O N I S T secretary needed for real estate develop­ ment firm H ours 2-6 p.m. M -F , 11 a.m.-7 p m Saturday Start S3 75/hour Apply 8017 Gessner D r at the leasing office. E X C E L L E Ñ T P O S IT IO N open ca s h i er7 hostess. Full-tim e evening shift. Call Bob R oss or Henrietta, 476-6171. Villa Capri Restaurant, 2400 IH35. L O C A L B U S I N E S S expanding. Now in­ terview ing Succe ss-orien ted people Call 474-5613 or 458-4486 evenings. HELP W A N T E D HELP WANTED MANAGEMENT TRAINEES S e e k i n g a g g r e s s i v e , c a r e e r - o r i e n t e d A m e r i c a n M u l t i C i n e m a — R a p i d l y e x p a n d i n g n ational m u lt i p le theatre chain, A u s t i n a n d H o u sto n o p e n i n g s C o lle g e d e g r e e require d, B B A or retail ex p e r ie n c e p r e f e r r e d i n ­ d i v i d u a l s , sh o u ld en jo y c o n ta ct with the public. D u tie s inclu de m a r k e t i n g , perso nnel a nd f i n a n c i a l m a n a g e ­ ment. W e e k e n d a n d e v e n i n g hou rs. R e lo c a ti o n a c o n ­ sid eratio n. S a l a r y open. L i b e r a l benefits, in c lu d i n g m a ­ jor m e d ica l, dental, life, pension a n d thrift p la n T w o y e a r t r a i n i n g p r o g r a m , Sr. M a n a g e m e n t potential C O N T A C T : M r. G a rn e r A t 4 5 4 -8 5 6 4 M o n d a y -F rid a y b e tw e e n 1 a n d 4 p.m. HAVE YOU THOUGHT OF REAL ESTATE AS A CAREER? There is a lot of difference in just trying the real estate business and really choosing real estate as a career. Real Estate can be the most enjoyable, ex­ citing, and lucrative vocation in the world, or, It can be the m ost frustrating and confusing experience you can imagine. W hy do so m any people fail in real estate? Sim ply, because they don't know in the beginning what is required of them to be successful and they don't choose a com pany which is com m itted to helping them be successful. The Deanie O w ens Com pany, R E A L T O R S , Better Hom es and Gardens, is committed to selecting intelligent, am bitious and hard working oeople; then, we m ake a solemn com m itm ent to give these people the finest training and continuing support possible W E A R E G R O W IN G .. We will have offices in Tarrytown, in the F a n e s School District on Bee C ave Road, in South Austin at in the Round Rock School D istrict on Research Blvd., in North Westgate all open and aggre ssively doing business by Austin at Quail Creek Fe b ru ary 1, 1980 G R O W W IT H U S A S A C A R E E R P R O F E S S IO N A L ! I F YO U A R E I N T E R E S T E D IN K N O W IN G M O R E A B O U T H O W TO G E T IN T O R E A L E S T A T E A N D A B O U T H O W TO B E S U C C E S S F U L O N C E Y O U 'R E IN T O IT, T H E N C A L L F O R A N A P P O I N T M E N T T O D A Y SO W E C A N C O M P L E T E L Y IN F O R M Y O U A B O U T W H A T Y O U W I L L H A V E TO D O A N D W H A T W E W I L L D O F O R YO U. in Northwest Hills, Call 258-2225 Today A sk for Albert Gore or E a rl Tischofer B etter Trae Homes, a JL a n d G a r d e n s DEANIE OW ENS C O R U W M Y . R E A L T O R S ® F U L L - O R part-time Couples and in­ dividuals for business of your own Local A m w ay distributor trains you for splen­ did opportunity. Phone 458-4486 or 474- 5613 after six. F R E E H A IR C U T S for women Bevels wedges, and long layered cuts only Call H air Naturally, 453-6694 or 443-1578 N E E D M A T U R E , responsible person to care for seven year old boy in northwest area M u st have own transportation F ive days/week, 2:30-7 p.m. (flexible) 346-2129 after 3 p.m T H E R E D Tom ato Restaurant accep­ ting applications and hiring for semester break and next sem ester All positions. A p p ly in p e rson , 1601 G uad alupe, between 4:30-5 30. N IG H T S E C U R I T Y (o ffice 7 N eat appearance No experience necessary. Will train N igh t and weekend duty, 7- hour shifts, 35-40 hours/week Apply in person, A ustin Hilton Inn. P A R T - T I M E I N S T R U C T O R S T o r acrobatics, w o m e n's exercise, arts and crafts Call H ancock Recreation Center, 454-5151. W A N T E D F O R The Omelettry, part-, full-time breakfast cook evenings and weekends Call or come by between 9 a m.-12 noon M - F 453-5062 M A T U R E S A L E S P E R S O N for ladies' shop Full- or part-time. A pply in person, M a in Street, H ighland M all. COU N T E R A T T E N D A N T f or~dryciea n- ing substation in Southwest Austin. 7 30 a m .-ll 30 a.m., five days/week M aster Valet Cleaners, 2403 Lake Austin Blvd B A B Y S IT T E R A F T E R 1-1-80, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. M u st have own t r a n s p o r t a t io n N o r t h w e s t H i l l s References. 345-7551. P A R T - T IM E A N D full-time distributors needed for exciting new product. M u st be f r i e n d l y a n d o u t g o in g , n e a t appearance, w illing to work hard. O p­ p o rtu n ity to b u ild and grow with d ynam ic young com pany. Call 836-3860 12 noon-4 p.m. W A N T E D F O O D w aitperson. Night shift. Exp e rien ce necessary. Apply 4 30- 6 00 p.m., Capitol O yster Bar. Monday, Tuesday and W ednesday. P A R T - T IM E M A IN T E N A N C E person. E x p e rie n c e d , f a m ilia r with sm a ll appliances. Fle xib le afternoon hours, own transportation. 451-4119. P A R T - T IM E A S S IS T A N T to interior designer. V a rio u s responsibilities. Fle xi­ ble hours, transportation necessary Will train. O pportunity for advancem ent For in t e r v ie w c a l l C o n n ie , 346-0739 Decorating Den. P A R T - T I M E R E N T A L and se rv ic e agents for car rental company. Apply in person, 2204 Airport. c a r e P A R T - T IM E S T O C K clerk and cashier needed for the holidays. A pply in person, Sage Liquor, 6501 Airport. N U R S E R y T d a y n e e d s en thusiastic te a c h e r's aide with ex­ perience or train in g in Child Develop­ ment. M -F, 7:30-3:30. Start at S3/h0ur. 444 7870. H O U S E S IT T E R , "teen sitte r" needed 12/22-1/4. S alary plus expenses to right person, couple (mature, responsible, references). Details, 926-9321 evenings. N E E D S O M E O N E to c a r e lo T T n f a n t weekdays. West A ustin area Y our home or ours, starting Jan uary. 459-5264. M A D D O G and B ean s is now accepting applications for kitchen help. Apply in person, 512 W. 24th, from 4-6 p.m. E X P E R I E N C E C H I L O " care workers needed at M a r y Lee School, south cam ­ pus. M u st be at least 21 ye ars of age Full time and part time work available. Call O'Quinn, 444-7435. H A M B U R G E R S B Y Gourmet*!now tak­ ing applications for m anagem ent and general help p osition s at all three locations: Anderson Lane, South Lam ar, and Guadalupe S3.10-S3.50 to start. Call 477-3422 for appointment. M I L T O 'S P IZ Z A P u b needs part time and full time d elivery and counter help. Apply in person, 2909 Guadalupe. MUSICAL INSTRUCTION P IA N O L E S S O N S . All levels. Exp e rien c­ ed, qualified teacher. Fo r information, phone 451-3549. Efx P E R I E N C E D P I A N O / G U I T A R teacher. B eginners-advanced UT m usic degree. After 2 p.m. 459-4082, 476-4407 Earn Christmas Money Now! in o Í N O S a 5 You can m ake $4.00-$5.00 per hour delivering pizzas Great evening part-time job W ork in your ow n neighborhood Free m eals A p p ly after 4:00 p.m. • 4115 Guadalupe 458-9101 • 2011 E. Riverside 447-6681 • 404 W. 26th 476-7181 • 1110 West Lynn 474-7676 Geologist presented merit award F o r m e r U n i v e r s i t y professor Creighton A. Burk has been presented this year’s Human Needs Award from the American Association of Petroleum Geologists. Burk, who was placed on perm anent d isability after suffering a m assive cerebral h em orrh age in May 1978, served as chairman of the Department of Marine Studies and director of the Marine Sciences Institute. The annual award is given to a geologist w hose con­ in research, ad­ tributions teaching and m inistration, sc ie n tific leadership have benefitted the standard of liv­ ing worldwide or in the United States. R o s s S h ip m a n , o n e o f Burk’s former colleagues and n o w v i c e p r e s i d e n t o f research in Marine Studies at the University, said Burk’s work both worldwide and at the U n iv e r sity m ade him deserving of the award. “ Burk was very instrumen­ tal in securing the research in vessel F r e d H. M o o r e Novem ber of last year,” said S h ip m a n , w ho s e r v e d as a s s o c ia t e d ire cto r of the Marine Sciences Institute un­ ‘‘The F r e d H. der Burk. M o o r e 1 6 5 - f o o t geophysical research vessel it’s the most advanced and its kind at an v e s s e l of academ ic in the U .S .” institution is a B u rk ’s m ost sig n ific a n t achievem ents, Shipman said, were in the field of worldwide ketonics — the study of con­ tinental drifts and the way the earth evolved. ‘‘He published a landmark volum e with Charles Drake of D artm outh on continental sh elves,” Shipman said. ‘‘It was an extrem ely important work and becam e a basis for study on continental drifts.” Burk has also published two volum es concerning his work in Alaska and the Aleutian islands, where he did research on continental shelves for his doctoral degree. Burk began teaching at the in 1975 and was University n a m ed c h a ir m a n of th e D e p a r t m e n t o f M a r i n e Sciences when it was organiz­ ed in 1976. Iran lectures scheduled The Organization of Arab S tu d en ts is sp on sorin g a “ teach-in” on Iran at 6 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday in BEB 164. f r o m The m eetings will feature s p e a k e r s t h e R ev o lu tio n a r y C om m unist Youth Brigade, the Organiza­ tion of Arab Students and two la w y e r s, D avid S titt, an RCYB m em ber, said. Immediate O penings! WEEKEND PRODUCTION WORK All Shifts Available Work weekend shift in production at Motorola. Attractive pay and excellent corporate benefits in­ cluding insurance, generous vacations and holi­ days, educational assistance, and credit union. W EEKEN D SH IF T S • Twenty hour weekend schedule — work six­ teen hours weekend, four during the week. • Twenty-four hour weekend schedule — work twelve hours twelve hours Saturday and Sunday. Motorola’s location on Ed Bluestein Blvd. (Hwy. 183) four miles south of the Hwy. 183 and 290 in­ tersection affords an easy commute from Austin neighborhoods. Please apply in person 8 a.m. — 4 p.m. MOTOROLA, INC. Semiconductor Group M O S Integrated Circuits Division 3501 Ed Bluestein Blvd., Dept. DT Austin, Texas 78721 • (512)928-6868 An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer M OTOROLA INC. Semiconductor Group M O S Integrated Circuits Division M Ladies cl( > s r Gentleman of taste? Need to be well-dressed? Small budget? Come see me — you’ll be glad you did. 1 0 % discount w ith thit a d m i Forest P la ta •- 12591 Research Blvd (H w y 183) VISA’ One Blo< k N orth of 1 I Tuesday Saturday 10-5 / / JOYCf WON T T ill v \ 258 8239 la y a w a y s W elcom e Shoe Shop We make and RUG5 SHEEPSKIN COW & CALF ★ SADDLES ★ E N G L IS H W EST ER N Capitol Saddlery VISA" 1 6 1 4 L a v a c a Austin, Texas 4 7 8 - 9 3 0 9 THE ARMY WILL HELP FINANCE YOUR EDUCATION — IN JUST 2 YEARS. Making it in c o lltg a ? Then hang in there. But ...if yeu’ve already decided to leave be­ cause of financial pressures, the Army can Italp. Now, If you qualify, the Army’s new 2 Year Enlistment will offar: • A $2,000 Education Bonus. • 75% of tuition paid for approvod college or vocational courses taken during your off-duty fime. • An Educational Savings Plan so you may raturn to college later. Saund good? Chock it out. The Arm y's new 2 Year Enlistment with Education Bonus. C all Army Oppartunifias at 4 4 V 1601 1900 last Oltorf St. Ask for SFC Pat Wha Ian Your Colloga Representative Information on Officor Programs also available Join the people erfw’ve joined the Army. A * ( < u l OtfwrtnuMy Ln>lo>it STUDY TRANSPORTATION AT PRINCETON MSE, MPA, MUP and Ph.D. Degrees. A ll Admitted Students Receive Financial Aid- Fellowships or Research A sslstan tshlp s up to S 11,400 per Year. Graduatc FieWs of Study C iv il Engineering ■ Urban Planning . Public Affairs Computer Science . Statistics . Mechanical Engineering . Energy Operations Research . Economics . Environmental Studies . Architecture . Sociology Write to : Professor Alain L. Kornhauser Director, Transportation Program Princeton University. Princeton, NJ 68544 O r call : 600-452-4057 FREE IQ TEST THE AUSTIN TEST CENTRE offers for a lim ited tim e free intelligen ce and p erson ality tests. Y our IQ . p erson ality an d aptitu de determ ine your future. Know . them. No obligations. 2804 Rio Grande Austin, Texas k p i i i i w i t i 'i i h \ i h t ‘ f lis t i n ( h u r t h t >f S c i p n h r l r t j f ) MJMUWWI J J L X X A - X J L - jL CHRISTMAS SALE OFF 10% - 30% Jewelry ALL WITH STUDENT ID •A * \ effective through December 15th Sterling Silver & Goldplated Florentine Charms suitable for engraving reg. $2.50 now 75* ! * I Sterling Silver Charms reg. $3.00 now50* Walnut Drops for Sororities reg. $5.50 now’2#* Silver & Gold Plated Key Chains reg. $4.50 now *2” with enamelled crest reg. $1.00 now50' with gold or silver plated crest reg. $5.00 nowT° Bookmarkers with Sorority Letters reg. $1.00 now 50* CHAINS EARRINGS BRACELETS LOOSE DIAMONDS UNIVERSITY Keepsake DIAM OND CENTER UPPER LEVEL/DOBIE MALL 477-9943 MEN'S & LADIES' RINGS' STICK PINS FREE PARKING IN DOBIE GARAGE KEEPSAKE WEDDING SETS NOT INCLUDED f f t < < < < W* wouldn't be surprised H Stanley found the trussing Livingstone reefk our Classified Ads. Just about everything is there I TEXAN CLASSIFIED 471-5244 I j VISA A MasterCharge Welcome Class Rings First Level Free 1 hr. parking w /$ 3 .0 0 purchase ACADEMY'S PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE A few years ago a little boy wrote a letter to Santa Claus and this is how it went: (W Please Wiby »nft. a 3ajg.a>re U / rtu* 4* j&m iu "th%x ^ Still today, adults and children alike shop ACAD EM Y for Christmas gifts because they are cheaper. Choose from 3 0 0 0 pair of SHIRTS Short or long sleeves W estern, dress or sport shirts $ £ 9 8 a n d up C hoose from 2000 B O M B E R TYPE JACKETS For m en or boys 144 4 a n d up C hoo se from 3000 pair of JEANS For m en or w o m e n Choose from 1000 1 0 0 % D O W N FILLED VESTS *I6*6 C hoose from the largest assortm ent of BACK PACKS 3000 to choose from N ylon or C an vas W ith or W ithout Frames 2 88 a n d up C h o o se from | r J assortment of th biggest $ 0 8 8 SLEEPING BAGS a n d up Sm all, M e d iu m , Large a n d X -Large Vi price ACADEMY 4 Big Stores to Serve You The M ost Interesting Store Open All Day Sunday 1 0 % Discount to Retired Senior Citizens ... 4103 N. IH 35 8103 N. Research Blvd. 603 E. Ben W hite Blvd. q 6601 Burnet Rd. P age 28 Choose from the largest assortment of TENTS Sm all, medium, large an d extra large * 1288■ a n d up Just received another carload of SOFT LUGGAGE At 50% OFF A repeat of a sell out 1000 M e n 's GRUEN D IG IT A L W R IST W A TCH ES V a lu e s from $ 1 2 5 .0 0 to $ 2 2 5 .0 0 Super Special $29 95 C ho ose from 2 0 0 0 pair of IN SU LA TED C O V E R A L L S OR S N O W M O B IL E SU IT S *2A88 a n d up Choose from 5000 pair of BOOTS Rubber, leather or cahvas a n d u p e i l s e L by o t o h P There's more to exam week than final exams ... and our adver­ tisers prove it with gift ideas for holiday shopping, food ideas tor late-night study breaks, and entertainment ideas for celebrating when it's all over. Good luck! Advertising Supplement to The Daily Texan Dec. II, 1979 Staying up Late? So are we. Free Delivery With Finals just around the corner we know y o u ’ll be doing a lot of late night studying. D om ino’s is open 4:00 pm to 12 Sun. thru Thurs. and 4:00 pm till 1:00 am Fri. and Sat. Domino s has a HOT ONE to rekindle the mental energy you've been burning up on books. So if you get hungry for a HOT ONE . . . just call Dom ino's Pizza. We're only a phone call away. Domino's delivers a HOT delicious New York style pizza with the very best of your favorite ingredients covered with lots of buttery cheese and spicy sauce w ithin 30 m inutes or less. We accept checks of purchase of Pizza with a vaiid Texas D river’s License. We reserve the right to lim it our delivery area. Check the phone book for the D om ino’s nearest you. j $ 2 . ó o o ñ 1 ¡3 ITEM OR MORE 16 PIZZA ANY HOT DELICIOUS ANY $.50 orr HOT DELICIOUS PIZZA FREE TH ICK CRUST ONE COUPON PER PIZZA ONE COUPON PER PIZZA Nam e______ Address____________ Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ T o v a > d a fe co u p o n . 3 ease f i l l o u t E x p ir e s 12 31 79 Name_______ Address!—._________ Phone T o v a lú a t e c o u p o n p le a s * f i l l Out E x p ré s 12 31 79 with anv P'zza you order ONE COUPON PER PIZZA N am e_ ______________ _ Ad d re ss _____________ Phone ___________ To va sate coup e- p ease f ill o u t E x p ir e s ' 2 31 79 Name Address. Phone — JL ~ o *a a a -e co u p o n p ease f o u * E x p -e s '2 3 ' 79 ^ ¡$2.oo otf ANY HOT 18" ! IVEGE DELUXE 1 I ONE COUPON PER PIZZA Page 2 ATTENTION, $TUDENT$! IT'$ TIME TO $ELL YOUR BOOK$ BUT. . . DON'T BE $HEEPISH ABOUT IT - w«V Did you k n o w th ere ar e $ o m e u n i v e r $ i t i e $ t h a t h a v e only one bo ok $to re to Serve th eir S t u d e n t S ? T h e $ e $ t u d e n t $ h a v e no choice t h e y line up to bu y their bookS a t th e b e g i n n i n g of each S e m e $ t e r , a n d t h e y line up a g a i n to Sell their bookS a t th e e n d of each S e m e S te r . T h a t i $ n ' t th e ca $ e here in A u S ti n . You DO h a v e a choice. At W a l l a c e ' S Book Store w e try to p a y th e h i g h e $ t priceS p o $ $ i b l e for y ou r bookS, a n d our a p p r a i S a l is fa S t ! You don t h a v e to be he rd ed a r o u n d like a bunch of S he e p, w i t h no fr e e d o m of choice a S to w h e r e you can g e t the b e $ t price for y o ur bookS. So, d o n ' t feel Sheepish a b o u t it — check u $ ou t be for e you Sell your bo ok $. You m i g h t be p l e a $ a n t l y $ u r p r i $ e d . Since you do h a v e f r e e d o m of choice, d o e S n ' t it S e e m fo o li $ h not to exerciSe it? uiñURce/ VISA' 2244 Guadalupe YOUR BOOK STORE — A N D MORE STORE T H E ULTIMATE EYEWEAR EXPERIENCE 60% OFF ONE W EEK O NLY PLAYBOY SunRl»Hf oftn fK>n A opt* GIVENCHY S s f a t e ; P p,e"eca,a,n - -------- — i4K S & ef! OPTICAL CO, CUNUSUAL E Y E W E A R ) # 6 Jatfenon Square, 36fh aod Jefferson • Austin, Texas • 431 -1210 »«rian t t c a polo * sa MANAGEMENT Level Entry Responsibility Experience Leadership Good Pay P e r s o n n e l , f i n a n c i a l a n d m a i n t e n a n c e m a n a g e m e n t openings are now available. If your goal is to become a professional, you owe it to yourself not to overlook a n y oppor­ tunity that will help you reach that goal. The sa la r y starts at over $13,000 with 30 d a y s of paid vacation annually. M e d ica l and dental cove ra ge is provided. Post-graduate study oppor­ tunities are excellent along with som e of the best retirement benefits anywhere. The N a v y is one of the few e m ploye rs that gives an officer a vast am ount of responsibility e arly in his career. F r o m the time you are com m issioned, you a ssu m e the responsibility of a leader and begin to direct others in a variety of jobs. If you have or will soon have a B S / B A degree and have not yet reached your 27th birthday, you owe it to yourself to check out the m an a ge m e n t opportunities the N a v y has for you. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John Sondergaard GBEB Placement Office _December 10-13 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Page 26 CLASSROOM BUILDINGS ACA AHG ART ARX BAT BBC BEB BEL BEN BIO BTL BUR CAL CBC CCB CMA CSC DOB ECJ EDA EDB ENS EPS ESB FAB GAR GEA GEO GOL GRE G R G GSB HBC Undergraduate Library and Academic Center Anna Hiss Gymnasium Art Building Architecture Annex (E26) Batts Hall Baptist Bible Chair Business Administration-Economics Building L. Theo Bellmont Hall Benedict Hall Biological Laboratories Battle Hall Burdine Hall Calhoun Hall Catholic Bible Chair Church o f Christ Bible Chair Communication Building (academic) Catholic Student Center Dobie Center Ernest Cockrell. Jr., Hall Education Annex Education Building Engineermg-Science Building E. P. Schoch Laboratories Experimental Science Building Erne Arts Library and Administration Building Garrison Hall Mary E. Gearing Hall Geology Building Goldsmith Hal] (formerly Architecture Building) Gregory Gymnasium Geography Building Graduate School o f Business Building Hillel Bible Chair Nursing Building (1700 Red River) T. S. Painter Hall Parlin Hall J. T. Patterson Laboratories Building Presbyterian Bible Chair Petroleum Engineering Building Pharmacy Building Russell A. Steindam Hall Recital Hall HMA Hogg Memorial Auditorium HRC Harry Ransom Center JES Beauford H. Jester Center LBC Lutheran Bible Chair LBJ Lyndon B. Johnson Library LTH Laboratory Theater MBE Music Building East MEZ Mezes Hall MUS Music Building NUR PA I PAR PAT PBC PEB PHR RAS REH RLM Robert Lee Moore Hall RRN SRH SSB SUT SWB TAY TBC WAG Waggener Hall WCH Will C. Hogg Building WEL Robert A. Welch Hall WIN F Loren Winship Drama Building WOH Wooldridge Hall WRW W R. Woolrich Laboratories Rifle Range Sid Richardson Hall Student Services Building Sutton Hall School o f Social Work Building Taylor Hall Texas Bible Chair is Having a i Christmas Party? § The Texas Cattle Company! at 1914 Guadalupe “on the drag’’ can cater your party with the “most wanted barbecue in Austin.” Now until Christmas, parties of 20 or more will receive a 10% discount! Call today! 477-7810 IS Merry Christmas from all the folks at the Cattle Co.! Final Examination Schedule-Fall Semester, 1979 Friday, Decem ber 14-Saturday,December 15 Monday, December 17-Thursday, December 20 INDEX TO EXAM INATION PERIO D S 7-10 p.m Tuesday, December 18 T T H 7:30-9 M W F 8 M W F 9 T T H 9-10:30 M W F 10 T T H 10:30-12 M W F 11 M W F 12 T T H 12-1:30 M W F 1 T T H 1:30-3 M W F 2 M W F 3 T T H 3-4:30 M W F 4 T T H 4:30-6 M W F 5 M onday evenings T uesday evenings Wednesday evenings Thursday evenings Friday evenings Thursday, December 20 Friday, December 14 Saturday. December 15 9-12 a m 9-12 a.m. 9-12 a m M onday, December 17 9-12 a.m. Tuesday, December 18 9-12 a m Saturday, December 15 2-5 p.m. Wednesday, December 19 9-12 a m Monday, December 17 Tuesday, December 18 2-5 p.m 2-5 p.m. Friday, December 14 Saturday, December 15 Thursday. December 20 2-5 p.m. 7-10 p.m 2-5 p.m Wednesday, December 19 2-5 p.m Friday, December 14 Thursday, December 20 Fnd ay, December 14 7-10 p.m. 7-10 p.m. 7-10 p.m. M onday, December 17 7-10 p.m Tuesday, December 18 7-10 p m Wednesday, December 19 7-10 p.m. 7-10 p m Thursday, December 20 Fnday, December 14 7-10 p m. Classes meeting at times which are not listed in the above index will have their final exam inations scheduled with those classes meeting at the time most nearly corresponding to the unindcxed class time. For example, a class meeting W F I -3 30 will have its examination scheduled with those classes meeting M W F 1. Specific questions Soap Creek Saloon ■ C O M IN G THIS M O N TH — THURSDAY, 12/13 BILLY JOE SHAVER 11 11306 N. U M A R TUESDAY, 12/18 ELVIN BISHOP hi . ANJ !f lYEAR'S EVE: CRANIUM SAVAGES IW ED ./T H U R Sl ■ 12/19-20 I DELBERT McCLINTON ftin.ncno NAVY OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST. Nellie Shy olw o ys hod to serve the boss coffee ond lough or his bod jokes Dur now no matter whar your college major, rheres o place for you in rodoy s N a vy . os on officer And you II share equal opportunity with men in pay. duty assignments ond benefits Pur your education to work live in your o w n ap a rrm e n r an d spend 30 days o year seeing rhe world or our expense Y O M GOMÉ-4 IONGW4Y NÍNV concerning examination scheduling should be directed to the Official Publications office. GRADE REPO RTING SCHED ULE F O R E X A ^ N A T I O N O N :- G R A D E S H E E T S A R E D U E IN T H E D E P A R T M E N T A L O F F I C E B Y 9 00 A M O N Friday, December 14 Saturday, December 15 Monday, December 17 Tuesday, December 18 Wednesday, December 19 Thursday. December 20 „ Tuesday, December 18 Wednesday. December 19 Fnday. December 21 Saturday. December 22— Saturday. December 22** Saturday, December 22— sheets for classes having scheduled meeting times but which indicated “ no examination will be due at the same time they would have been due had examinations been scheduled -Grade sheets for classes w,th no scheduled meeting day/time are due in the departmental offices by 9 a m., Monday, December 17 •Grade request cards for all Degree Candidates are to be returned to the Academic Deans before 1 p.m., Fnday, December 21 - G r a d e sheets wh.ch are due on Saturday. December 22, should be delivered d.rectly l° office w,ll be open from 8 a m. to 12 noon for the proces.mg of grades Building I (southeast comer of the ground floor) This *;f“ trar s ° mcc- - G ra d e s not reported before 12 noon, Saturday. December 22. w,H not appear on the official grade reports, which are tentat.vely scheduled to be d.stnbuted to s.udents deans, and departments on Wednesday. December 26 W e ve m is s e d you! B u t we h o p e to see you so o n — b e c a u se we kn ow you need us to help you get in great sh a p e fo r the h o lid a y fun, food and festivities ahead. A n d , h e r e s a n e x t r a i n c e n t i v e t o c o m e now — a very s p e cia l fo r-m em b ers h o m e o n ly price: Holiday. , * 9 « p. rmon,hfor o p e c i a l ® com plete 4-m onth program Hurry, this offer ends December 29, 1979 at noon. P b D o n t m is s th e D e c e m b e r 2 9 th d e a d lin e as a s p e c ia l s e rv ic e to y o u re sig n spec ial to y o u r M a s te r C h a r g e " or V IS A J c a rd ' just ca ll an d c h a r g e yo u r Elaine Powers Figure Salons f Idine Powers f i g u r e S a lo n s In, For more information: John Sondergaard GBEB Placement Office December 10-13 9 a .m .-2 p.m. AU? T I N S 0 U t h 1922 E. Rivarsidt 444-26.3 Townlaka Plaza AUSTIN NORTH 5 5 9 5 Saltona» 451-6417 Ba|tonts p|ala Page 3 northcro// matt 2525 W. Anderson Ln. Open M onday through Saturday 10 A M to 9 :30 PM r 4 «• i í r 4 rjlOlr i 4• 4 * 4' 4" 4 .4' PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE ALL MEN'S AND W OMEN'S O OFF SP € **Y foP-JJStV iH SALE GOOD THROUGH SAT , DEC. 15 WITH VALID U.T. STUDENT I.D. u l i a r i s VISA* Northcross M all 453-2720 Open Mon.-Sat. 10-9 4 4 CHRISTMAS SPECIAL! 1 5 % OFF ANY SER V IC E INCLUDING CUTS, STYLES, P E R M S, AND W EAVES. Coupon exp ires D ec. 31, 1979 N orthcross M all next to F rost Bros. Open M on.-Sat. 10-8 459-7611 Notfhcross M all 453- HAIRSTYUNG FOR WOMEN AND MEN Pago 4 t k | H L O Iff TllO^i Restaurant & Bar RUDOLPH GOT HIS RED NOSE FROM HAPPY HOUR AT CARLOS & TIO'S Bring in your friends and we'll put red noses on them, too. HAPPY HOUR Mon-Fri 3-7 Hi-balls & Margaritas $| oo Mondays Pitcher Micheiob $1 oo M m Fn 10:30 a.m-lOHK) p.m. Sot until 11:00 p.m. W E D N ES D A Y December 19, 7-10 p.m. (Classes meeting W evenings) G rad e reports for these c la ss e s a re due in the departmental office by 9 a.m. Saturday, December 22. 389 3911 37*K 23980 ANT euR 212 2*015 ANT BUR 208 51865 ARC SUT 302 51925 ARC 380 GCL 105 2 87 50 E PAP 101 37*P eee 255 386K 2 62 CO ECC 065 35 E0A 383 ECB 558 06070 EOC 385G EC8 370 29360 ETS 37* *58C0 GEC 3*8 311 50 GRG 339 *22 95 PIC 35820 GAL 51060 PHR 51065 PHR *9890 PHY 50015 PHY 56635 S W 630 A BUR 130 09750 SE0 380G Ece 10* 09755 SEO 38GG Ece 23* eup 13* 39035 see 160K WEL 230* RLP 6116 37* BUR 216 167 P 167P BUR 216 RLP *102 10 3 P 103N RLP 510* 39 *K J ES A 2 15 A GEC 100 GRG 316 TH U RSD AY December 20, 9-12 a.m. (Classes meeting M W F 8) G rade reports for these c la ss e s a re due in the departmental office by 9 a.m. Saturday, December 22. eee 166 ese 161 see 155 WEL 22*6 ete 51 311 00910 ACC 00915 ACC 311 00920 ACC 31 1 365 01520 ACC 01860 ACS 3*8 51875 ARC 278K GEC 110 32 3 K TAY 139 11265 ARE 323K 11270 ARE EC J 1.21* 11315 ARE 36 2 EC J 5. *10 110*0 ASE TAY 315 388C JE S A 1 21 A *0*60 AST 301 Gs e 220* 02665 B C 32* Gse 1216 02855 B L 323 029 30 B L 366 Gse 1218 206 *1*15 BIC W t L 222* *1715 0CT *19 P E L 2310 2*555 C C 306 W J G *20 2*630 C C 336 WAG *20 122 05 C t EC J 1.20 2 12210 C E ECO 1.202 ECO 1.20* 12235 C E 12255 C E ECO 3.306 12**0 C E ECO 5 .*10 12*65 C E T £ Y 317 127 75 C E WPW 113 12780 C E EC J 7.205 *3735 CH WfcL 1316 1 81 55 DRP RA S 212 182 CO DRP RAS 218 26*70 E PAR 301 2 6*80 e P £ 3 10* 2 65 CO E PAR 105 26515 E PAR 206 PAO 306 26520 c PAP 2 0 * 2 73 30 E 27365 E PAR 303 27685 E PAR 101 2 7895 E P AR 201 279C* e PAR 203 2 /9C5 E 1 TO CAI 32 3K 323k 331 3*1 36 3 375 397K 397L 610B 605 A 605 A 306 306 306 306 306 306C 307 308 31*K 31*K 3 1 * K PAR 1 E S P 223 E N S 302 WtL 2312 RLP *102 TAY 217 ppe 311 P A I 302 HEL 2308 Gs e 2210 eee 251 e t e 266 ece 52* e c e 558 ece 370 ece 3 30 A ec e 278 ece * i 6 A WtL 3502 Ece 10* ece 151 e e n 212 PE l *28 BEN 318 PCZ 208 PAR 208 PAR 308 FAR 30* P A I 2*8 GEC 111 GEC 112 GEC 13* 31*K 318 32 IK 325 335K WRW 102 *35 L 3831 306 311 319 302 339K 27925 E 12955 E E 1 3065 E E 13125 E E 1 31 70 E E I 3185 E E 1 3530 E E I 38 CO e p 1 3855 E P 13920 E P 25805 ECC 261 10 ECC 261 85 ECC 38*1 05296 EOC 632E 05330 EDC 632E 05685 EOC 370S 06855 EDP 332S 0 71 CO EOP *81 07101 EOP *81 072 6* EOP 389H ec e *26 389H ece *5* 07275 EDP 01990 FIN 35* 357 02065 FIN 02160 FIN 371 29920 FR *06 29925 FR *06 *06 2 99 30 FR 30025 FR *07 *08K 3C0*5 FR 312K 30125 FR 30160 FR 312L *5590 GEC *16L *28 *5730 GEC 368 *5835 GEC *58*0 GEC 368 *59C5 GEO 38 3 P WtL 2256 b e c 152 301 31*95 GER 301 315C0 GER see 253 31510 GER BLR 108 *06 *06 B UR 008 31515 GER eus 108 *06 31520 GER BUR 108 *07 31555 GER *08K 31625 GER BUR 108 *08K 31626 GER BUR 108 P A I **2 32635 GCV 310L 202K *6*15 H E GE A 105 *66e5 H E ese 333 320 CPA «2320 *67 C5 h e 322 23* *6755 H E GE * * J 3 363 07650 HEO BEL 202 315 K WAG 101 33710 HIS 315L HHC *252 3 37 50 HIS 320 ete 251 3*620 I s 361 02385 INS eee 15* 528*5 J BUR 216 31* BEP 59 506 25120 LAT 251 80 LA T 311 ete 16* 2 52 05 LA T 31 2 P WAG 201 * 7765 p 603 A *8005 P 305G *8010 P 305G Ese 115 808 P *8325 P eee ISO 308 e *8330 N ete 150 *8335 P 8088 ete ISO *83*0 P e Le 150 808 B *8520 P 316K WEL 1308 * 8 5 * 5 W p i p 5 10* 316L *8755 M 37* BIC 112 *8880 P BIC 112 393C 1*625 P E 32* TAY 212 326 1*6*5 P E RLP 610* 326 1*650 P E WEL 230* 335 1*680 P E RLP 710* Gs e 121* 036 80 PAN 336 316 *2180 PIC ACA 21 *2375 PIC BIC 391 3B* 612A 19155 PUS HCH 202 PUS 200 19350 "US 330 J 09315 PEO 330 B E L 2«2 15670 PEN 368 B E L 329 536*5 PHR 32 3* M l* 106 50655 PHR BUR 212 3 2 5 k 366 T 50995 PHR BUR 130 WCP 1* AP T 1102 5 1 0 C 0 P h R PHY 5 0 0 2 5 3 7 7 3 5 P S Y 3 8 * 6 0 RUS 09 6 90 SEO 0 32 30 S TA 0 3 3 6 0 s t a * 3 3 3 5 zco 366 T 305 309 * 0 6 371 30 9 31 0 3 9 0 K BU R 130 BAT 7 BE N 222 PAR 103 ece 2 8 * PRN GCL 105 W E L 23 0 2 TH U RSD AY December 20, 2-5 p.m. (Classes meeting M W F 3) G rad e reports for these c la ss e s a re due in the departmental office by 9 a.m. Saturday, December 22. 01030 ACC 01035 ACC 016C5 ACC 11385 ARE 11025 ASE *0 5 C 0 AST 00380 B A 0 0 * C5 B A 0 0 *6 0 B A 0 0 * 9 0 B A 02 7 CO B C * 1 0 1 5 B IC * 1 0 2 0 B IC * 1 0 2 5 B IC * 1 0 3 0 B IC *1 0 J5 B IC * 1 3 6 5 B IO * 1 3 7 0 b IC *1 3 7 5 B IC * 1 3 8 0 B IC *1 3 8 5 B IC * 1 8 5 5 BCT *1 9 6 0 BCT * * 6 3 0 C s **7 35 C s ** 7 90 c s *4 7 9 5 c s * 4 9 4 0 c s * 50C0 c s 05065 C F E * 3 5 10 CH 2 70 75 E 27095 E 271 10 E 271 15 E 271 30 E 271 35 E 271 *0 E 2 7150 E 280 75 e 28085 E 2 8090 E 2 8055 E 28105 E 28115 E 28120 E 281 30 E 1 3390 E E 13*5 5 E E I 35*0 E E 13835 E p 13880 E P A I 2 1 A ete 253 311 BfcP 151 311 380K B E B 35* 38*N TAY 317 388 P WRW 113 301 R LP 5 1 0 * GSe 220 « 282S ece 458 383T 2 te 56 386T 388T Gse 2210 cse *1 8 0 32* 3 0 1 P W -L 222 * 301 P w ; L 22 2 * J0 1 P WEL 222 * 301 p WEL 222* 301 P WEL 2 2 2 * 303 WEL 1316 WEL 1316 303 303 WEL 1316 W.-L 1316 303 W tL 1316 303 * 7 * 1 WEL 230* * 8 * L WEL 230 * 301 J c S P i I 2*8 *1 0 PA I 2 43 *1 0 P A J 243 *1 0 * * 2 360 PA I ese 333 381K ece 284 36 I E 603 A R L P 6104 PAR 206 306 PAR 306 306 FAR 105 306 PAR 303 306 306 PAR 101 306 o t n 10 * PAR 208 306 306 PAR K a n ­ d a h a r R e d a n d b la c k t u n ic « r a p , m a tc h in g H a re m p a n t* s n a p a t th e a n k le s. Northcross M a ll 459-3022 All major credit cards accepted - r r CPETJPj RñNCHj G ifts For S pecial P eople an d S pecial P e ts OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 6 a Christmas dea! Aquariums Parakeets Wild Bird Feeders Dog Sweaters & Hats Hamsters in Cages Cat Trees & Toys _Gift Certifica tes University of Texas DOG JACKETS \Narm- Ups WINNING WAYS INS. HANCOCK SHOPPING CENTER 4 3 9 - 7 0 0 0 NORTHCROSS MALI 4 5 9 - 3 1 1 3 tv. A l h l e t e * s ^ia.Fooi NORTHCROSS MALL 4 5 8 -3 4 5 4 5* entertaining ideas from a superb collectio n o f Sven jensen glassware, at m o d e ra te prices. rummonds northcross mall • 458-1 arwoo NORTHCROSS M A L L N E X T TO FROST BROS. DIAMOND EARRINGS 1 /1 6 ct. 1 /8 ct. 1 /5 ct. 1 /4 ct. 1 /3 ct. 1 /2 ct. 3 / 4 ct. 1 ct. Sugg. Ret.» 120 Sugg. Ket. * 180 Sugg. Ret, * 280 Sugg. Ret, * 360 Sugg. Ret. * HO Sugg. Ret. * 700 Sugg. Ret. *1 100 Sugg. Ret. *1680 * 54 1 81 ’126 *162 *198 *315 *549 *839 Page 5 FRIDAY December 14, 9-12 a.m. (Classes meeting MWF 9) fo r th e se G ra d e r e p o r ts the in c l a s s e s a r e due departmental office by 9 a.m. Tuesday, December 18. 0 0 9 2 5 ACC 0 0 9 3 0 ACC o i o a o ACC 0 1 3 92 ACC 0 1 5 2 5 ACC 0 1 6 4 0 ACC 018 80 ACS 2 34 35 APS 2 3 5 1 0 A*S 2 3 8 4 0 ANT 2 3 8 7 5 ANT 2 3 9 4 0 ANT 2 3 9 4 5 ANT 2 3 9 5 0 ANT 359 70 A A A 5 1 5 8 0 A R C 5 1 6 7 0 ARC 5 1 9 2 8 ARC 5 1 9 5 5 ARC 1 1 3 5 0 ARE 311 311 312 362 365 3811* 383 3 10 325 3 2 5 * 3 3 6 L 38 3 * 38 3* 3 8 3 * 506 6 1 8 R A GAR 1 4 3 5 * 380 380 378 e e e 255 PAP 104 HAG 214 euR 130 155 e Ee 354 e e e 3134 G s e e e e 358 GPG 312 GAR 311 GAR 309 Ee e 46 8 JE S A3 03A R l * 6 11 2 e E e 560 8 t N 222 PAR 310 GAR 1 e e e 524 1 1 4 0 5 ARE 165 00 ARH 1 6 5 8 3 ARH 1 0 7 7 5 ASE 1 0 8 3 0 ASE 1 08 SO ASE 1 0 9 7 0 ASE U 9 e o ASE 4 05 75 AST 4 0 6 35 AST 0 0 3 0 5 B A 0 0 3 1 0 B A 0 0 3 6 5 B A 0 0 3 7 3 B A 0 0 4 8 0 B A 0 0 4 9 5 B A 0 2 6 7 0 B C 0 2 8 É 0 B L 0 2 9 3 5 B L 5 7 4 8 5 B IB 5 7 5 2 0 8 I B 5 7 5 4 0 B IB 4 1 0 6 5 B I C 4 1 0 7 0 B IC 4 1 0 7 5 B IC 4 1 0 8 0 B I C 4 1 0 8 5 B I C 4 U 9 0 B IC 4 1 1 9 5 B IC 4 12 CO B I C 368 32 7 L 382 302 32 7 3 6 7 * 38 0 P 3 80 C 3 0 9 L 3 8 0 L 3 8 0 * 38 0 * 38 I T 28 2 S 3 88T 3 89 T 324 32 3 366 301 302 304 302 302 302 302 302 303 303 30 3 712 6 1216 1218 EC J 5 . 4 1 6 F A e 220 4 F A e 220 4 5 10 4 R l * BUR 134 ese 137 P L * 6 1 2 6 ENS 402 ES P 333 P l * Gse G se e Ee 56 Gs e 221 0 es e 554 BEe 458 e t e 154 GCL 105 B t B 151 c c e eec Te c HRW 102 WPH 102 WRW 102 WPW 102 HRW 102 WCH 14 WCF 14 WCH 14 4 1 2 0 5 B IC 4 1 2 1 0 B IC 4 1 3 9 0 B I C 4 1 3 9 5 B I C 4 1 4 C 0 B I C 4 1 4 0 5 B I C 4 1 4 1 0 B I C 4 1 8 0 5 BCT 2 4 5 6 0 c c 2 4 6 C 0 c c 2 4 6 3 5 c c 121 95 C E 1 2 2 2 5 C E 1 2 3 2 5 C E 1 2 3 3 0 C £ 1 2 3 4 5 C E 1 2 4 2 0 C E 1 24 35 C E 1 2 5 8 5 C E 1 2 6 C 0 C E 4 4 8 CO C S 4 3 9 2 5 CH 4 3 9 5 5 CH 4 4 3 1 0 CH 1 1 7 3 0 CHE 1 1 7 3 5 C h e 1 1 8 2 5 CHE 1 1 9 6 5 CHE 3 6 1 2 0 CHI 3 6 1 2 1 CHI 3 03 3 03 3 04 304 304 304 304 330 306 309 336 321 329 354 3 54 3 56 358 362N 3 9 1 P 3 9 2 L 318 313N 314 N 391 4 5 3 4 53 372 387 * 5 06 5 06 HCF 14 HCH 14 WEL 1308 H t L 1308 HEL 1308 WEL 1308 WtL 1308 WEL 2 316 GRG 316 WAG 208 GRG 316 EC J 1 . 2 1 4 EC J 5 . 4 1 0 EC J 1 . 2 0 4 GEC 111 SUT 101 R L* 5 116 524 E c e EC J E102 EC J 3 . 3 0 2 GEC 104 J E S A l 21 A WtL 2 31 2 WEL 5 2 2 0 BUR 220 euR 220 ese 254 RAS 218 B tN 204 BAT 318 5 2 1 8 5 C R P 1 82 05 OR* 1 8 3 3 0 OR* 2 6 5 4 0 E 2 6 5 5 0 E 2 6 5 5 5 E 2 7 3 7 5 E 2 7 3 8 5 E 2 7 6 2 5 € 2 7 8 6 0 c 2 7 9 3 5 E 2 7 9 4 0 E 232 eo E 2 8 3 C 0 E 2 8 3 9 5 E 2 8 5 C 0 E 2 8 5 6 5 E 2 3 6 1 0 E 1 2 9 4 0 E E 1 3140 E £ 1 32 70 E E 1 3 4 C 0 E E l 3500 E E 138 85 E ¥ 1 3 9 2 5 E Y 1 3 9 6 5 E ¥ 2 5 8 1 5 ECC 2 5 8 1 6 ECC 2 5 3 1 7 ECC 2 5 8 2 0 ECC 3 8 4 6 0 5 A 31 2 * 306 306 306 307 307 308 3 1 2 * 3 14* 31 4 * 3 1 4 L 317 321 32 5 * 338 348 411 32 5 * 3 4 5 * 3 6 0 * 3 8 1 J 3 14 3 19 382 302 302 3 02 302 JfcS A 30 5 A RAS 317 RAS 211 GAR 200 164 B t e e s e 351 eee 257 BEe 362 PAR 103 PAR 306 PAR 303 BUR 116 PAR 204 e e e 355 PAR 208 GAR 311 PAR 105 PAR 304 p ee 311 8EN 116 RAS 212 eic 301 ENS 109 i 4 1 TA Y ENS 302 ENS 431 ACA 21 es e 51 eee 152 Bll R 106 25945 ECC 2 59 5 0 ECC 25955 ECC 2 60 70 ECC 260 75 ECC 26175 ECC 05725 EOC 05893 EDC 06795 EOP 068 CO EOF 06865 EOP 06965 EOP 0 6970 EOP 070 30 ECP 070 85 EOP 291 85 ETS 2 9475 ELS 0 1995 FIN 020 70 F IN 02135 FIN 02165 F IN 022 CO FIN 022 4 0 F IN 2 9910 FR 2 9935 FR 29940 FR 2 9945 FR 29946 FR 30050 FR 300 51 FR 303 303 303 321 322 383* 370S 384P 310 310 332S 280E 280E 381 381 310 301 354 357 3fa 7 371 376 39 3 604 406 406 406 406 408* 408* s s e 301 eee 253 Gse 2202 eEe 166 GAR 109 e at 101 ECU 4 i 6 A e c e 238 E ce 240 E ce 426 E ce 284 E ce 418 E ce 330A E ce 454 E ce 278 GAR 7 GCL 307 112 e i c JfcS A215A JES A3 15 A WAG 101 J t S A217A J - S A307A GAR 203 e ¿ b 265 eee 157 *¿2 208 e se 459 BEN 132 e se i6 5 301 30 FR 30180 FR 30220 FR 3 02 30 FR 3 02 4 5 FR 302 55 FR 303 CO FR 30345 FR 45225 GEO 452 30 GEC 45235 GEC 45 2 4 0 GEC 45245 GEC 45250 GEC 4 54 30 GEC 45980 GEC 4 6010 GEC 315C5 GER 31525 GER 31530 GER 31627 GER 31640 GER 31665 GER 31690 GER 31735 GER 24865 GK 248 9 0 G* 249C0 G* 24915 G* 32640 GCV 312* e se 361 BAT 115 312* 3211 *EZ 428 324* e se 460 BEN 304 324L 324* e se 363 376* e a t 102 390* BAT 217 401 P A I 442 P A 1 442 401 401 P A I 442 PAI 442 401 P A I 442 401 401 P A I 442 405 ENS 145 391 WEL 2302 3 9 1 E WEL 2306 604 40 b 406 408* 310 312* 312L 328 506 312 324 365 3 1 J L eEe 158 B LR 108 euR 108 euR 108 eup 1 .2 e tR 112 b u r 112 WAG 308 WEL 2310 BAT 110 PAR 210 PAR 210 e c b 370 R E M E M B E R M E ' I SPENT ALL LAST SUM M ER HOLDING OUT A D R E S S IN AN AD FOR T E X A S B Y D E S I G N . 1 JU S T STOOD T H E R E , DAY A F T E R DAY, M Y A R M S A C H I N G . N A K E D AS A JA YB IR D . BOV, I T 'S TO UGH FINDING M E A N I N G F U L EMPLOYMENT IN AU STIN / TO ADD TO THIS CONFUSION, TH EY TOLD M F I COULD WEAR COTTON ALL YEAR LONG IN TEXAS. THEY FORGOT TO T E L L M E COTTON COMES IN BULKY SW E A T E R S . I ALMOST FROZE TO DEATH IN THAT SKIM PY SUNDRESS YESTERDAY, THEY MOVED THEIR SHOP INTO TOWN. SO D O M E A FAVOR GO OVER TH ER E AND G E T THOSE PEOPLE TO C L E A N UP THEIR ACT T E X A S B Y D E S IG N 2 7 0 0 W EST A N D E R S O N * VILLAGE. N EA R V IL L A G E G N E M A 12 (NEXT TO HOBBY SHO P; HS1-05I3 SHAWL SALE POP CHRISTMAS Orfv ING-. DEC. I2>h +o DEC. 23rnd. O N L Y * 7 0 0 i ( W H E N Y O U ' R E N O T S U R E I P Y O U R S I S T E R W E A R S 4 S I Z E ' O o r 1 2 , A S H A W L M A K E S A G R E A T G H F T 1 EGG ROLL STAND 478-0354 2717 GUADALUPE 11:00-9:00 Dally Excellent Chinese Food a' Prices Every one Can Afford Please B rin g C o u p o n s 1 Egg Roll 1 Egg Roll | 1 Egg Roll Mushroom Fried Rice Chicken Fried Rice | Shrimp Fried Rice 0NLY$1m Expires Dmc. 22, 197 9 o n l y M ” I o n l y M ” Expires Dec. 22, 1 9 7 9 | Expires Dec. 22, 197 9 3 Egg Rolls 3 Beef Egg Rolls $ t s t Limit 12 $1 " Limit 12 M " Limit 12 Expires Dec. 22, 19 7 9 Expires Dec. 22, 197 9 Expires Dec 22, 197 9 ■ Ü I I 3 Shrimp Egg Rolls (¡ g m i n i n l i i f V w ^LITTLE*»» J | K>103iul| JbVfQtE XA i Buy one, get one for 99c Order any Pizza Hut* pizza and get perv*s;t N ot valid with other the next smaller size regular for 99c Same number oUoDp.ncs please Thick n Chewy or Thin n Crispy'*'pizza O n e coupon per customer c o u p o n s or discounts R l y / ú l through 12 17 rants show n below O^er g ood at participat- mg P iz za Hut* restau- 4iut C Copyf gfii ’ 9'S Pur,-. Casr .at-ue • 2C ;« 1212 S lom a r 21 10 E. River*,d* 1902 W Ben White 441-0829 441-0195 444-6004 lO M R e in li 454-2477 717A , Bt n, i l h't# 6444 Burnet Rd 8500 N. Lamar 1811 Gu adalu pe 44 7' 7109 454-4141 836-2230 476-0631 Page 6 c c E E c 1 6 3 75 ARH 1 6 3 80 ARH 1 6 3 8 8 ARH ARH 1 6 5 C 3 1 6 5 70 ARH 1 0 7 8 5 A S E 1 0 9 C 5 A S E 1 0 9 6 0 A S E B A 0 0 3 5 5 B A 0 0 * 5 0 B A 0 0 * 5 5 B L 0 2 8 8 5 * 0 9 1 5 B I C * 0 9 2 0 B I C B I C * 0 9 2 5 * 0 9 3 0 B I C * 0 9 35 B I C 2 * 7 3 5 C C 1 2 2 C J C e 1 2 2 15 C E 1 2 5 9 0 C E 1 2 6 2 5 C E 1 2 7 6 5 C E * * 9 1 0 S * 5 0 0 5 s * * 1 35 CH * * 1 * 0 CH 1 1 8 5 0 CHE 1 1 9 5 5 CHE 3 6 1 2 5 C H I 1 8 3 * 0 D R K 2 6 7 5 0 2 6 7 6 0 2 6 7 8 5 2 6 8 CO £ 2 6 8 2 0 E 2 7 * 2 5 E 2 7 7 7* E 2 7 7 9 0 E 2 7 8 * 5 E 2 78 75 E 2 7 9 9 0 E 2 7 9 9 5 E 2 8 0 C 0 E 2 8 2 1 5 E 2 8 * C5 E 2 8 * 5 0 E £ 2 8 5 e 0 6 2 3 6 1 5 2 86 35 E 2 9 9 3 5 E E E 1 3 0 0 5 1 3 1 8 0 E £ 1 31 90 E E 1 3 2 35 E E 1 3 2 50 E e 1 3 5 1 5 E E 1 3 5 6 5 E E E ¥ 1 3 8 1 5 1 3 9 C 0 E ¥ E ¥ 1 * 0 C 0 2 5 8 70 E C C 2 5 8 7 5 E CC 2 6 0 C 5 E C C E CC 2 6 0 1 0 2 6 0 5 3 c C C 2 6 0 8 5 E CC 2 6 1 2 0 E CC 2 6 2 3 5 E CC 0 5 3 7 5 E DC 0 6 8 5 0 E O P 0 6 8 9 0 E D P 0 7 * C O EOP 2 95 35 E U S r US 2 9 5 6 0 0 2 0 1 0 F I N 0 2 0 1 1 F I N 0 2 0 1 2 F I N 0 2 0 9 0 F I N 0 2 0 9 5 f i n 0 2 2 70 F I K 2 99 75 F R F R 2 9 9 S 0 2 9 9 8 5 F R 1 . 2 0 * 2 3 1 2 1 2 1 6 2 2 2 * 2 2 2 * 2 2 2 * 2 2 2 * 2 2 2 * 3 0 1 ART 1 1 0 2 ART 3 0 1 1 1 0 2 3 0 2 F A B 2 2 0 * 33 I K APT 1 1 2 0 3 7 2 A n T 1 1 1 0 3 0 2 GEC 1 1 1 3 6 8 C * 3 1 E NS 3 8 0 P E N S * 3 1 2 8 1 S GS B 2 2 0 2 3 B 6 T BE B * 5 8 B E B 56 3 8 6 T 32 3 G o B 3 0 1 L M . L 3 0 1 L WcL 3 0 1 L ME L 3 0 1 L ME L W - l 3 0 1L 3 8 0 MAG 2 0 8 3 2 1 cC J 32 3 K ME L EC J 5 . * 1 8 3 9 1 S 2 J 7 T A Y 3 9 6 L 3 9 7 6 3 7 E NS 3 * 7 Wc l 2 3 0 8 R L K 51 18 3 8 2 * 5 5 M E L 2 2 5 6 M . L * 5 5 2 2 5 6 TA Y 3 7 6 1 3 9 T AY 3 8 5 J 1 * 1 * 1 2 K R L k 5 1 2 0 3 1 3 K BUR 2 0 8 3 0 6 3 5 * B E E PAR 2 0 8 3 0 6 e f.B 3 5 1 3 0 6 3 0 6 B E B J 5 5 3 0 6 2 5 9 B E B P A R 2 0 * 3 0 7 P AP 3 1 0 1 J 3 3 1 0 É C B 2 7 8 PAR 2 0 6 3 1 2 L B E e 3 1 2 N 2 6 1 3 1 * K BUR 1 1 6 3 1 * K 2 0 1 p a r GA P 3 1 * K 1 0 9 ece 3 3 0A 3 1 * L 3 2 1 MAC 2 1 * PA P 3 2 3 L 1 0 5 PAR 3 0 * 3 * 0 3 * 8 HPC * 2 5 2 3 * 9 N 2 2 * 6 MEL PA P 39 2 L 3 0 2 3 1 0 R L K > 1 0 * MRW 1 0 2 3 3 5 k J fc -A A 2 1 7 A * 3 5 L E S B 3 3 8 3 3 8 K R L R * I J 2 R L R 5 1 1 8 38 2 L T A Y 3 8 5 J 3 0 6 B E B 5 2 etB 1 6 6 3 1 * 3 8 5 J 1 A Y : * i 3 0 2 1 3 1 6 M L GAR 3 0 2 1 3 0 3 JfcS A 2 1 5 A p r p 5 5 * 3 0 3 B E B 3 2 0 K 1 5 3 P AR 3 2 * 2 0 3 3 5 7 K R I R 6 1 0 * e t e 2 5 1 E CB * 5 * ece 5 5 8 E C B * 16 A * 6 8 E L E 2 2 * 6 M E L PAR 3 0 8 P M * * 2 WAG 101 G S B R 8 N B E B 1 6 1 * 5 9 B E E B E B 2 6 5 Be N 1 3 2 R t 7 * 2 8 3 8 7 L 3 3 2 S 3 3 2 E 3 3 2 S 1 9 6 3 6 1 3 6 1 3 5 * 3 5 * 3 5 * 3 5 7 3 5 7 3 9 7 * 0 6 * 0 6 * 0 6 1 2 1 8 3 > 3 1 * 1 3 0 0 3 5 3 0 0 6 5 3 0 1 1 5 3 01 A G t C G E C G E C B E L B E L B E L B E L M EL M E L M EL M EL M EL M £ L M EL 1 5 7 1 1 5 2 2 * 6 301 21 1 5 8 * 6 0 2 5 5 1 05 101 210 A 2 3 2 0 7 1 30 3 0 2 1 2 1 * 112 I O C 100 100 3 28 3 2 8 3 2 8 3 2 8 3 5 0 2 3 5 0 2 3 5 0 2 3 5 0 2 1 3 0 8 1 3 0 8 1 3 0 8 PAT PAINTER’S HAIRSTYLING CENTER MEN WOMEN CHILDREN £ ^ e d k e n 3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU 454-0484 6009 Burnet 258-9533 13216-B Pond Spring* Rd. 454-3676 1011 E. 41 tt ACROSS FROM SEARS AUTO PARTS — WITH THIS COUPON — 1 for $9 or 2 for $16 Shampoo, Condition, Haircut, Blow Dry or Set $5 off on permanent*, frosting, or «traightener LOOK EXTRA NICE FOR THE HOLIDAYS OFFER G O O D THROUGH 12-31-79 OPEN MON.-SAT. (LO N G HA IR SUGHTLY H IG H f t ) Holiday Entertainment THE LOTIONS STEVE F R O M H O U (Album R«l«aM Party) E X T R S M I HEAT EXP LO SIV ES THE LOTIONS EXTREME HEAT Dec 11 Dec 12, 13 Dec 14, 15 Dec 17 Dec 18 Dec 19 Dec 20, 21, 22 TOWNES V A N Z A N D T Dec 24, 25, 26 CLOSED Dec 27 Dec 28, 29 MOTHER OF PEARL Dec 31 THE SC A N N ERS NSW Y E A R 'S EVE with CHRISTOPHER CRO SS CLOSED WILLIS A LA N R A M S E Y E X P LO SIV ES Jan 1, 2 Jan 3 Jan 4, 5 RESTAURANT-BAR 403 E. SIXTH CLEAN YOUR formal wear for upcoming party time. Kelly Smith Cleaners 511 W. 19th DECEMBER 1979 Live Rock & Roll o s 26 28 2 9 30 Call 472-3131 for home pid'-up and delivery HAPPY HOUR " 8PM Mon Fri with Bobby Doyl« on P ia n o FRI SAT Ü . S. Kids 6 jjf ~ .1015 C I T Y 8 j 15 13 i f f » 22 21 ENGLAND Crystal Image E N G L A N D *^ 3 4 5 SPECIAL BLEND J* I* C < L¿ Vz r ^ 18 17 FIREWATER 19 V 23 LIC 24 LIC 25 LIC L. 30 * 3 , 26 England 27 Sweet 28 29 tbriar * NEW YEAR'S EVE SPECIAL: TOO SMOOTH & Skunks M e COPY SHOP 415 W. 15th Street • 474-7992 For only 2h c a copy. The C o p y Shop will give you ail the clear crisp copies you need. Their location on 15th Street is convenient to the Uni­ versity, the Capitol, an d downtown. If you need o ne copy, or a dozen, a n d don't want to spend a tot of time or money, com e to The C o p y Shop íhis a d entries the bearer to an unlimited num- oer of copies for 2/$C each. Offer expires D ec 15, 1979. Free parking in the rear. cTc The Texas Cattle Company 1914 Guadalupe “ on the drag” 477-7810 announces our “ Bring your Nose out of the Books” Coupon Specials Rib Dinner and choice of two fixin’s (Potato Salad, Beans, Cole Slaw) and sm all drink $909 W (reg. $3.79) Link Sausage Dinner and choice of two fixin’s (Potato Salad, Beans, Cole Slaw) and sm all drink •39 s2 (reg.$2.89) Two Meat Dinner Your choice of any two meats two fixin’s and sm all drink $34 >9 (reg. $4.09) 03410 STA 03415 STA 42615 ZCC 42965 ZCC 43205 ZCC 310 310 314K 330 3641 J E S <2156 GAR 109 WRW 102 E S e 333 W t l 2316 T U ESD A Y December 18, 7-10 p.m. (Classes meeting T evenings; TTH 7:30-9 a.m.) G rade reports for these in the c la ss e s a re due departmental office by 9 a.m. Saturday, December 22. 009C0 00901 009C2 009C5 01060 2 34 60 23950 240 35 51790 02910 57505 41710 42025 ACC ACC ACC ACC ACC APS ANT ANT ARC I B 616 BCT OCT 311 311 311 311 31 1 320 391 3944 36 2 L 32 3 317W 419 394 c s e 1218 W t l 1316 GS8 1216 W t l 2246 e t e 155 B£e 52 BCR 220 e i R 116 G C l 105 RUN H ec E S e 137 W E l 2256 12130 12375 12560 12567 12568 051 C5 43555 4 39*5 43920 441 50 11865 28495 28745 28925 12930 12955 1296C 12965 129 70 12975 12980 12985 13160 133 65 13465 13520 I 3523 1 3850 13915 258C0 2 5930 065 50 C E C E C E C E C E CEE CH CH CH CH CHE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E € P ECC ECC FDA 31 OK 357 387R 3884 3884 385 301 412K 412K 369 379 32 5 3744 3921 20 2 212 212 212 212 212 212 212 232 360 K 374K 3824 3824 311 319 302 302 383 EC J EC J EC J PKR PhD ECe H4 A W t l W t l P A I W»W PAR P AR PAR EC J GEC GCC Gt C GtC GEC GEC GEC R14 TAV WRW TAY TAY R 1 4 R 1 4 Bee B ¿ e cCB 1.204 1 .2 1 4 3 .3 0 2 102 102 240 2312 2 312 302 102 101 200 206 1 .2 0 2 130 ICO 100 100 100 100 ICO 3104 139 113 317 317 6104 7 104 161 59 524 r CEC* 1979 AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA O v e r t u r e to L a F o rz a del D e s tin o Verdi A n c ie n t A ir s and D an ce s S u it e N o . 2 Respighi S y m p h o n y N o . 4 It a lia n C a p rie c io It a lie n Tchaikovsky C o n c e r to fo r S t r in g Bass Koussevitzky Gary Karr, String Baas F rid a y , Decem ber 14 / M u n icip a l A u d ito riu m / 8 p.m. Tick e t sales begin F rid a y , Decem ber 7 Hogg Box O ffic e / 10-6 weekdays 83,00 w ith (.F t , ID s (N o fee receipts) Sponsored by the Cultural Entertainment Com m ittee o f the T exas Union 05360 EOC 06045 EOC 06095 EOC 06995 EDP 0 71 50 EOP 0 72 15 EDP 072 60 EDP 02060 P IN 29905 PR 33415 GC V 31210 GRG 4 6530 H E 46755 H e 46835 H E 47060 H E 36290 HEB 341 95 H I S 52840 J 36575 J A P 55425 I S 352 65 U N 35300 L I N 144 62 P E 145 55 P E 147 CO P E 15015 P E 03683 PAN 09460 PED 507C2 PHR 50703 PHR 50935 PHR 51085 PHR 49880 PHY 37797 P S V 38085 PSY 38185 PSY 02525 R E 56580 S w 096 75 SED 09825 SED 38885 s e e 39015 s e e 03355 STA 03440 STA 3 75 45 T C 4 32 JO ZCC ECE 284 332S E c e 3 30 A 385G 389K e c e 238 380 P E c e 418 38 2 e c e 468 384 E c e 278 389H E c e 416A 354 8 EB 166 301 PAR 204 381 l p i j q 1 1 2 385 GRG 424 205 W E I 3502 126 GEA 114 2 42 1B GEA 127 27 5A P A I 412 322 PAR 304 398T GAR 203 312 CPA *311 PAR 208 361 3821 HRC 4102 PAR 210 39 3 PAP 310 396 TAY 300 201G 3 1 1 G ENS 302 335 W E I 2304 379P ENS 302 336 a s e 265 395 B E L 850 133K euR 216 13 3K e iR 216 3 6 3 k B UR 208 3681 CUR 212 10 3 P T AY 315 31 9 K B t N 422 394 P E Z 208 396 P E Z 428 358 e t e 151 310 R I P 5116 371 E c e 426 E c e 454 393 32 3 e c b 104 3891 8 1 R 136 309 W c L 2224 c s e 2204 310 659A PAR 308 384L WEL 2302 W ED N ESD A Y December 19, 9-12 a.m. (Classes meeting M W F 12) G rade reports for these cla sse s a re due in the departmental office by 9 a.m. Saturday, December 22. 00980 009 35 01425 01850 52540 23445 24345 23725 23760 35975 51725 51730 51935 11275 113 CO 1 6325 16330 16335 16340 16345 16350 163 55 16360 16365 163 70 ACC ACC ACC ACS ADV APS ANS ANT ANT ARA ARC ARC ARC ARE ARE ARH ARH ARH ARH ARH ARH ARH ARH ARH ARH 311 311 363 320 342 J 310 361 302 3201 506 355 856 A 380 323K 345 301 301 301 301 301 301 301 301 301 301 e c e BtN B E e e s e B E E PAR ART e i R PAR R l 4 G C l G C l E c e W C l EC J ART APT ART ART ART ART ART ART ART ART 256 2 22 51 362 150 104 1110 136 101 5116 307 105 426 2312 1 ,2 1 4 1102 1102 1102 1102 1102 1102 1 1 0 2 11 0 2 1 10 2 1 1 0 2 USEMENT R E S tertainm ent HOLIDAY SCHEDULE *Su b iect to H old overs WEEK OF DECEMBER 14TH WEEK OF DECEMBER 2 1ST WEEK OF DECEMBER 28TH "BANGCOCK CONNECTION' MIX BUSINESS WITH PLEASURE?... plus "S u g a r Britches" ■ MIND BLOWERS Storing m flR Y STUART 2130 S Congress 442-5719 O P E N I I A M 2224 GU A D A LUPE • 477-1964 O P E N I I A M M atinees Daily No One Under 18 Admitted Late Shows Friday & Saturday. Sundays Open Noon Please Bring I.D.’s Regardless Of Age coast to coast Jj| carnalHy% X m plus X - _ _ _ _ _ J “Every Chance I Get!” LAURA’S GERARD MINIANO S ULTIMATE TRIP Written, Produced and Directed by G E R A R D D A M I A N O M [> v l 2224 G U A D A L U P E • 477 1964 O P E N I I A M "F PI r jn 1 I :or Love or easure" , 2130 S Congress 442-5719 O P E N H a m . ..always becomes her reality. E Starring SIEGRUN THEI^^Tur^I ! T " “.......— ymmmmmrni j / ■ 2224 G U A D A L U P E • 477 1964 PE N I A M NEW YEAR'S EVE Ópen: 11 a.m. Close: 2 a.m. NEW YEAR'S DAY: — Open: 1 p.m. Close: 11:30 p.m. Sensational Ja n in e " 2130 S Congress 442-5719 _________ O P E N a m XM AS EVE XM AS DAY Open: Noon Close: 11 p.m. - Open: 2 p.m. Close: 11 p.m. P a g e 22 3 2 6 * 5 GCV 3 2 6 50 GCV 3 3 0 3 5 GCV 3 32 55 GCV 3 0 9 5 0 GRG 3 0 9 55 GRG 3 0 9 6 0 GRG 3 0 9 6 5 GRG 3 0 9 70 GRG 3 1 0 9 0 GRG 3 1 1 3 0 GRG * 6 6 2 0 H E * 6 6 90 H E * 6 7 * 0 H E * 6 7 7 5 H E * 7 0 1 5 H E * 7 0 2 0 H E * 7 0 8 5 H E 3 62 50 HEB 3 6 2 6 5 HEB 0 7 6 1 0 HEO 3 3 6 7 5 H IS 3 3 7 5 5 H I S 3 3 8 2 3 H IS 3 3 8 * 0 H IS 3 * 0 1 5 H IS 3 * 0 8 5 H I S 3 * 6 2 5 I S 3 0 5 1 0 I TL 3 0 5 1 5 I T l 3 0 5 * 0 I T L 5 2 7 9 0 5 2 7 9 5 5 2 9 0 5 3 6 5 6 0 J A P 5 5 * 1 5 L S 5 5 * 8 5 L S 5 5 5 2 5 I S 2 5 1 2 5 L A T 3 5 0 3 5 U N 3 5 1 * 0 U N J J J H PC * 2 5 2 RLW 6 i 0 * e e e 150 e u fl 136 3 1 0 L 3 1 0 L 3 1 2 L 3 3 6 L 3 0 1 K WEL 2 3 0 8 3 0 1 K WEL 2 3 0 8 30 IK WEL ¿ 3 0 8 3 0 1 K WEL 2 30 8 3 0 IK WEL 2 3C 8 RLW 5 1 2 * 3 1 9 3 3 * WAG * 2 0 3 11 GEA 105 3 2 0 GAR 111 GAR 2 01 2 2 * 3 33 GEA 127 GEA 11* 6 6 8 8 2 6 8 K P A I * 1 2 GAR 2 1 5 RLW 6 1 1 6 EAT 10* B EL 2 0 2 B Ee 2 6 2 WEL 2 2 * 6 WcZ 2 1 0 3 7 6 5 0 6 5 0 7 3 3 3 3 0 5 K 3 1 5 L 3 3 1 J 3 3 * W JE S A 3 1 7 A 3 66 N 3 8 3 L 3 2 0 6 0 * * 0 6 3 1 2 K 3 12 3 12 3 2 1W CWA A 2 320 5 0 6 3 8 2 1 3 8 5 T 3 8 6 5 0 6 3 0 6 3 7 2 L b e n 2 1 2 eA T 101 e uR 136 BAT 3 0 7 e e e 2 6 * BEN 130 RLW 6 1 1 8 RLW 6 1 2 0 RLW 6 1 2 2 HRC * 2 5 6 H PC * 1 0 2 PAR 308 GAR 3 PAR 2 06 e e e 3 65 3 5 2 7 0 L I N * 7 7 3 5 P * 7 7 7 5 W * 7 9 2 0 w * 7 9 2 5 W * 7 9 8 0 P * 8 0 1 7 P * 8 0 2 0 P * 8 1 2 0 N * 3 1 2 5 P * 8 1 3 0 I» * 8 1 3 5 P * 8 1 3 7 P * 8 1 3 8 P * 8 1 * 0 P * 8 1 A 5 P * 8 1 5 0 P * 8 1 5 5 P * 8 3 2 0 P * 8 * 2 5 P * 8 * * 8 P * 8 5 5 0 P * 8 5 6 5 P * 8 6 C 0 P * 8 6 3 0 P * 8 6 5 0 P * 8 6 6 0 P * 8 6 8 5 P * 8 7 1 5 P * 8 7 * 5 P 1 * 3 5 0 N E 1 * 3 5 5 P t 1 * 3 6 0 P e 1 * 5 1 0 P E 1 * 5 6 0 W E 1 * 6 7 0 P c 1 * 7 5 0 H E 1 * 7 7 0 P £ 1 * 9 * 0 P E 5 7 2 1 0 P S 0 3 6 5 * WAN 3 9 3 3 0 1 6 0 3 A 6 0 3 B 6 0 3 8 3 0 * E 3 0 5 G 3 0 5 G 6 0 8 A 8 0 8 A 8 0 8 A 8 0 8 A 8 0 8 A 8 0 8 A 8 0 8 A 8 0 8 A 8 0 8 A 8 0 8 A 8 0 8 A 6 0 8 E A 6 0 8 6 A 3 1 6 1 3 1 8 W * 2 7 K * 2 7 1 i * 0 L 3 6 1 3 6 2 K 6 6 5 A 3 7 3 K 2 0 I G 2 0 1G 2 01 G 3 1 1 3 1 9 3 2 8 3 3 7 3 3 9 3 6 5 L 3 2 8 3 3 5 B A T 2 1 5 T A Y 3 1 7 W E L 2 2 2 * WPW 1 1 3 EC J 1 . 2 0 2 T O Y 2 1 7 C A L 1 0 0 E c e i o * W c L 3 5 0 2 W E L 3 5 0 2 W E I 3 5 0 2 W E I 3 5 0 2 ece 2 5 9 e s e 259 A R T 1 102 A R T 1 1 0 2 A R T 1 102 < PT 1 10 2 R IW 5 11 8 T A Y 139 e t e 2 5 1 B EE 266 G E C 10* Wl L 1 31 6 B E e 161 T A Y 2 0 7 R LW 6 1 2 * R L w 7 1 1 6 R iw 7 1 1 8 R L w 5 1 2 0 T A Y 3 0 0 T A Y 3 0 8 T A Y 3 0 * W ¿ I 2 2 5 6 G E C 112 G A R 5 T A Y 137 T A Y 2 06 T A Y 315 R A S 310 e e e 2 6 i it s coming... out of the night V a glowing 0 3 7 5 5 WAN 0 3 8 C 5 WAN 3 5 * 8 5 WES 1 5* CO WET 0 * * 3 0 WKT 1 9 0 * 5 WLS 1 9 0 5 0 w us 1 9 0 5 1 WllS 192 GO WLS 192 95 WLS 1 9 3 5 5 WLS 1 9 5 * 5 WLS 1 96 75 WLS 5 7 3 6 5 N S 3 2 1 1 0 NCR 0 3 0 70 0 A 0 31 15 G A 0 9 2 35 PEO 0 9 2 * 0 PEO 0 9 2 * 5 PEO 1 5 5 3 5 PEN 1 5 5 8 5 PEN 1 56 50 PEN 1 5 7 1 5 PEN 3 70 75 P H I 3 7 0 76 P H I 371 10 PHL 3 7 1 3 0 PH L 5 C 6 7 0 PH R 5 1 0 2 5 PH R 5 1 0 7 5 5 1 1 5 5 P H R 5 1 1 6 0 PH R PH R P c i £C J 9 . 2 3 6 e c e 59 3 57 2 1 0 WEL 2 30* e t e 370 3 8 0 362 3 6 0 3 6 0 6 0 5 A WCH 2 11 6 0 5 A WCH 2 21 6 0 5 A WLS 105 6 1 2 4 WCH 2 0 2 221 J WCH 2 1 9 3 3 0 J WUS 2 0 0 3 79 K WLS 106 3 8 * J WCH 2 1 7 a 3 2 9 RAS 3 1 2 PAR 132 B E e 5 56 B E e 552 e e i 2 * 2 B EL 2 * 2 e t i 2*2 RPN eEN 318 e c l 2 0* ENS 3 *0 PAR 1 GAR 3 13 WAG 201 PAR 2 01 euR 2 16 GRG * 2* R L W * 1 0 2 BUR 2 2 * BUR 2 2* 3 10 3 2 6 3 6 5 3 8 3 312 3 1 2 313 318 3 3 3 3 6 7 3 6 8 K 573W 3 73 N * 0 6 3 0 * 361 3 25 K 32 5 K 3 25 K PHY 111 0 37 6 K 3 35 335 386 3 89 1 3 1 2 k 301 3 02 K 3 15 3 6 9 3 17 3 19K 3 * 2 K ART e uR 212 R l W 5 1 2 2 RlW 6 1 1 * PAR 301 B E L 32d PAR 2 0 3 BEN 202 eufl 2 0 9 b u r 2 0 9 eEN 302 rlw 7.20 PA R 3 02 C W A A 5 1 3 * R I W 7 12 2 RAS 3 13 RAS 315 * 9 * 7 0 * 9 5 . 0 PHY PHY 5 C 0 7 5 5 02 30 PHY 3 7 7 5 5 PSY 3 77 85 PSY 3 7 8 00 PSY 3 79 55 PSY 5 3 * 0 5 RTF 5 3 * 1 0 RTF 5 3 6 5 5 RTF 5 3 7 C 0 R TF 3 8 * 8 5 RLS 5 6 5 6 5 S h 3 10 .‘ 5 A 20 S w 6 3 0 A ¿‘itT 30 S W 3b I L 5'c*7 10 S w 381 L 5 6 7 1 5 S w 381 W RLW 7 1 2 * 5 6 8 30 S h 3 89 K RLW 511* 5 6 8 3 5 S w 3 9 0 n RLW 7 1 1 * 5 6 8 7 0 S N 3 9 7 1 RLW 5 1 2 6 3 8 8 05 s e e 3 02 CbC 1 00 3 9 8 3 5 s e e 3 0 8 e A T 7 5 * 0 2 5 SPE 3 1 3 L eee 52 5*1 85 SPE 3*1 CWA A 311 2 3 9 8 e s s f n 3 12 1 b a t 232 * 0 1 2 5 s p n 3 7 6 L B AT 1 05 0 32 35 STA 3 0 9 RAS 213 0 3 2 * 0 S T a 309 PA 1 302 0 33 65 s t a eee 15 3 3 1 0 0 3 * 50 STA 3 3 3 ART 1 12 0 3 75 20 T C 6 5 9 A EnS 532 * 2 6 * 5 31 6 K z e e 2 * 8 f a i *2 6 5 0 2CC * 2 6 5 5 2CC * 2 6 60 2CC * 2 6 6 5 2CC *2 8 5 5 2CC *2 9 C 0 2CC * 2 9 0 5 2CC * 2 9 1 0 zee * 2 9 1 5 z ee * 3 1 * 0 z ee *31 *5 zee * 3 1 5 0 zee *31 55 z ee * 3 1 6 0 zee * 3 3 1 5 z ee 316K 316K 316K 31 6K 325 325 325 325 325 36 5 N 365N 365 N 365N 365 N 3851 P A i 2*8 PA I 2*8 P A I 2*8 P A I 2 *8 e s e 115 ese 115 £se 115 E s e 115 ese 115 HW A HW A H P A H P A H P A e e e 3 59 F R ID A Y December 14, 2-5 p.m. (Classes meeting TTH 1:30-3) G rade reports for these c la sse s are due in the departmental office by 9 a.m. Tuesday, December 18. 0 1 0 1 0 A C C 0 1 0 1 5 A C C O H I O A C C 0 1 2 6 5 A C C 0 1 3 2 5 A C C 3 1 1 3 1 1 3 1 2 3 2 9 3 6 0 J c S A 3 1 5 A J S S A 2 1 7 A P A R 2 0 3 I C O G £ C G C l 1 0 5 0 1 * 2 0 ACC 0 1 5 9 3 ACC 0 1 6 7 5 ACC 0 1 6 8 0 ACC 5 2 5 5 5 AO V 5 7 0 6 5 AFS 5 708 0 AFS 2 3 * 5 0 AWS 2 3* 5 5 AWS 2 * 3 9 5 ANS 2 3 8 2 5 ANT 2 38 70 ANT 2 3 9 2 5 ANT 2 3 9 6 5 ANT 2 * 0 C 5 ANT 2 * 0 30 ANT 1 6 3 9 5 ARH 1 6 5 1 5 A R M 1 6 5 * 0 ARH 166 07 ARH 1 0 8 75 ASE * 0 * 9 0 AST * 0 6 55 AS T 8 A 0 0 3 9 5 0 0 * 2 0 B A 0 0 * 2 5 a a 0 0 * * 0 B A 0 0 5 C 5 B A 0 2 8 9 5 B L 0 2 9 2 0 B L 0 2 9 2 5 B L 0 2 9 * 0 8 L * 1 3 1 5 B I O 362 37 * 38 3 K M l 3* 5 J 62 OA 66 6 A 32 0 3 20 361 3 2 * 1 * 3 2 1 38 0K 38 8 391 39 3 302 33 5K 362 388 36 5 301 38 3 38 2 T 3 8 *T 38 * T 38 5 T 3 89 T 32 3 361 36 3 36 6 30 3 1 30 E s e 22 3 e t e 35* te e 152 eee 55 * e c e 10* RAS 21 2 RAS 21 9 W £ l 1 3 16 CAL RLW 5 1 2 0 RLW 51 1 8 C LP 22 * RLW 6 1 1 6 RLW 5 1 1 6 RLW 51 2 * RLW 5 1 22 ART 1120 ART 11 1 0 FAe 2 2 0 * Gse 2 2 0 2 EC J U 2 0 * ECO 1 . 2 0 2 RLW 61 1 8 e e e *5 8 e e e 56 e .e 56 3 BEB 25 6 B t P 26 0 RRN J E S A 3 17 A WCH 1* Gse 12 1* 3 5 02 WCL This Sale starring Chain Conneree Satinly Good / n o w s h o w i n g a t t h e \ DAILY 20.99 NEAR ) YOU BE HAIR FREE FOR THE HOLIDAYS Perm anently shaped with m edically approved electrolysis ím m m m w m . ,, ■ m m m. Bette Pritchett, Owner For Free Booklet or Complimentary Consultation Day or Evening Call 477-4070 UNIVERSITY ELECTROLYSIS 600 W. 28th Suite 205 Classical lioi'thovf*: S M i i p h o n i N o . 6 " I ’j s l o r a l " JO H N W 0 U A M S Casteinuovo-TedrKn Guitar Concerto Op. 99 Dodgson (*uitar Concerto No. 2 Arnold Serenade for Guitar & String* ENGLISH CHAM BUR ( >RCHE s TR A SIR CHARLES GROV ES Michel Legrand The Umbrellas of Cherbourg"Suite Theme and Variations Irom The Go Between 18into* Orcftwslra I Mulish ( hamhtTOrchestra Michael I i Im iii I liornas G l.K W (,()| | I) MOZARI I 111 ( O M P l | | i IM \N() SON VI \S ZUBIN MEHTA BRAHMS SYMPHONY No 2 NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC 3 RECORD SET RENATA SCOTTO r u c t INI MADAMA BUTTERFLY PLACIDO DOMINGO W1XELL/KN1GHT ANDREOLU PH1LH ARMONIA ORCHLS IKA LOR1N MAAZEL (5 iniconosiT RltCC .FRO RAIMONDI Ml >/ AN I IXJN GIOVANNI BfcRC.A\ZA • I E KAN W A • MOM K VAN DAM.KINC.-MAC URIJY-RII ( , ( | ORCHESTRA ANIHHONUS IH I PARK t IO K IN MAAZFI R a PINCHAS ZU KERM A N C LAU D E BOLLING Piano Compose» SUITE FOR VIOLIN and JA Z Z PIANO I 2 RECORD SET 5.77I'HIC 1 IN |»I 1< B I S K U N III»: A M O V I I l"N The Entire Catalog Of ColuniWa Masterworks Is NowOn Sale! 4-RECORD SET SPECIALLY PRICE D ATRIBUTE TO E. 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Hiil/i I in »/„*„ W /V ,„,I4 ,/unJ /*,, u nu 4h\ M R \ ZORIN \ ■ m M 3.99 1731 W l l l l Of) |*.\4*l Ik H >K I | | S a l e P r i c e s G o o d T h r o u g h D e c e m b e r J 4 th S o r ry, N o t A l l T i t l e s A r e A v a i l a b l e in C a s s e t t e . vhert* The- M u sk M ean s A s Muc h T o I s a s It Dues T o Y< A n d Y o u r C o m p le ir S atisfaction is O u r Guarantee 2310 Guadalupe On the Drag Page 7 * 1 3 2 0 B I C * 1 3 2 5 e i c * 1 3 3 0 B I C * 1 3 3 5 8 1 0 B C T * 1 8 8 0 B C T * 2 0 0 5 c e 1 2 1 2 5 1 2 3 * 0 C E C E 1 2 * * 5 1 2 * 9 5 E C 1 2 5 7 0 C E c s * * 6 3 5 * < • 6 * 0 c s * * 6 5 0 c s c s * * 6 5 5 c s * * 9 8 5 * 5 0 3 0 C s C H * 3 9 * 0 * 3 9 * 5 C H 1 i . 7 * 0 C H E 1 1 7 * 5 C H E 1 1 9 6 0 C H E 3 6 1 3 0 C H I 2 6 9 3 0 2 6 9 5 5 2 6 9 6 5 2 6 9 7 0 2 7 0 C 0 2 7 7 35 2 8 0 5 0 2 8 0 5 5 2 8 * 1 0 2 8 5 9 0 2 0 6 2 5 2 8 8 6 0 1 3 0 1 0 1 3 0 1 5 1 3 1 5 5 1 3 5 2 5 1 3 6 C 3 1 3 8 2 5 1 3 9 * 0 1 3 9 * 5 I * 0 2 5 2 5 9 C 5 2 5 9 C 6 2 6 0 2 5 2 6 0 3 0 E E c E c E E E E E t E E E c E E E E E £ E E K E K E K E K E C C E C C E C C E C C 2 6 0 6 5 2 6 1 3 0 2 6 1 9 0 2 6 1 9 5 E C C E C C E C C c C C 3 0 3 3 0 3 3 0 3 3 0 3 2 7 3 K 2 9 3 2 0 2 3 5 * 3 6 7 T 3 7 7 K 3 9 0 L * 0 * * 0 * * 0 * * 0 * 3 8 0 K 3 8 6 1 1 1 3 P 1 1 3 P * 5 3 * 5 3 3 8 6 K 3 2 5 k 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 0 8 Q 3 1 * K 3 1 * K 3 2 1 3 * 2 3 * 8 3 8 3 L 3 2 1 3 2 1 3 3 1 3 8 2 N 3 9 6 K 3 0 6 3 1 9 3 3 9 3 9 * G 3 0 2 3 0 2 3 0 3 3 0 3 3 2 0 L 3 6 6 3 8 5 K 3 8 6 W t L W E L W L L W E L t s e E S B W . L t a y E C J E C J Ef tS P A I P A I P A I P A I 3 5 0 2 3 5 0 2 3 5 0 2 3 s 0 2 1 37 l 3 7 1 3 0 8 1 3 9 1 . 2 1 * 7 . 2 0 0 i * 5 3 J 2 3 0 2 3 0 2 3 0 2 2 5 3 e t e 2 5 9 E f t S 1 0 9 Ef tS 6 3 7 G C C 1 1 1 G L C 1 1 1 t a y 1 3 7 6 1 2 0 3 0 6 3 0 3 1 0 5 r l k P A R P A P P A R P A R B E B P A R P A R P A P G S B e t e P A R P A R B E B e s b B E B B t l E f t S G E C G E C r l k R L K A C A B l B S U T W A G E S B B t e f i E e Bel ? 1 0 1 1 6 * 2 0 * 1 3 0 1 2 2 1 0 3 6 2 2 0 6 1 0 3 1 6 1 3 3 3 3 1 1 2 0 2 * 3 1 1 0 * 1 1 2 6 1 2 2 6 1 2 * 2 1 5 2 1 0 1 2 0 1 1 1 5 5 1 '* 5 9 5 1 0 5 6 9 5 0 5 7 2 0 0 5 7 5 0 0 5 9 2 0 0 6 0 5 5 0 6 6 2 0 0 6 8 3 0 0 6 8 3 5 0 6 9 C 0 0 6 9 1 5 0 6 9 3 5 0 7 0 1 0 0 7 0 6 5 0 7 0 9 5 E D C t O C E D C E D C E D C E D P E O P E D P E D P E D P E D P E C P E C P E O P 0 7 2 5 5 E O P 0 7 2 9 5 E D P 2 9 1 B O C I S 2 9 2 35 t r s 2 9 3 * 5 E T S 0 2 1 1 5 F I f t F I f t 0 2 1 8 0 0 2 1 5 0 F I N 0 2 2 1 7 F I f t F P 3 0 0 9 5 F R 3 0 1 0 5 3 0 2 9 * F R F R 3 0 2 5 5 3 0 7 5 5 * 5 * 9 0 G S G E C G E R G K G C v G C V G C V G C v G C V G C V 3 1 7 2 5 2 * 9 * 0 3 2 8 50 3 3 0 9 0 3 3 0 9 5 3 3 1 C O 3 3 1 C 5 3 3 1 1 0 3 3 1 , 5 G C v 3 3 1 2 0 G O V 3 3 1 2 5 G C V 3 3 1 30 G C V 3 31 3 5 G C V 3 3 2 C O G C V * 6 5 2 0 H E * 6 5 7 0 E H * 6 6 9 5 H E * 6 7 3 0 H E * 6 8 5 0 H E 0 7 6 8 5 H E D 3 3 7 3 0 1H I S 3 3 7 3 5 H I S 3 3 7 5 5 H I S 3 7 0 S 3 7 O S 3 7 1 3 8 * P 3 0 5 G 3 3 2 E 3 3 2 E 3 3 2 E 3 3 2 S 3 6 2 T 3 6 7 3 8 0 P 3 8 1 3 3 1 3 8 6 f t 3 8 9 H 3 0 1 3 2 0 3 7 * 3 5 7 3 7 * 3 7 5 3 7 8 3 1 O K 3 1 O L 3 7 1 L 3 7 1 L 3 2 1 3 1 2 K 3 1 5 K 3 8 3 3 1 O L 3 1 2 L 3 1 2 1 3 1 2 L 3 1 2 L 3 1 2 L 3 1 2 L 3 1 2 L 3 1 2 L 3 1 2 L 3 1 2 L 3 2 0 K 3 0 * * 0 7 A I 2 2 1 3 2 2 3 * 8 3 7 6 3 1 5 K 3 1 5 K 3 2 0 L e c e 2 7 8 E C B 2 8 * e c b E C P E C B E C B E C B E C B E c e B E f t 3 3 0 A 5 2 * * 1 6 A * 2 6 2 * 0 2 3 8 3 7 0 2 2 2 * 5 * E C B E C B E C C E C P J c S J E S B U R e ¿ e B E B B E B WA G B c L B t 8 K E Z B E N P A R P A R A S T 5 5 8 * 1 8 * 6 8 A 3 0 5 A A 3 3 3 A 2 2 0 1 5 3 2 6 5 1 6 6 1 0 1 2 0 * 1 1 2 * 2 8 1 3 2 2 0 8 3 0 * W t L B U R W A G J E S G A R G A R G A R G A P G A P 1 1 0 2 2 2 2 * 1 0 8 2 3 8 A 1 2 1 A 1 1 1 1 1 G A R 1 G A R 1 G a R 1 1 g a r 1 G A R R L K W E L G E A R L K C K A G E A B E L e A T B E B B I C * 1 0 2 2 3 1 2 1 0 5 7 1 1 6 A 2 3 2 0 1 1 * ,2 * 2 11 5 0 11 1 2 111 7 2 6 6 * 1C6H 3 0 8 102 111 1 0 * 3 0 2 2 2 C * 7 1 0 * 6 1 0 * 2 3 0 * 2 1 3 2 2 1 8 7 1 1 8 3 0 0 3 0 * 3 0 8 3 1 6 5 1 0 * 3 1 7 1 * 1 1 5 5 3 2 8 2 2 5 6 2 3 1 0 3 3 9 < , 0 H I S 3 * 1 5 5 H I S I K S 0 2 3 9 5 I S 5 5 * 7 0 I S 5 5 5 C 5 L S 5 5 5 1 0 L A S 3 * 8 1 0 L i f t 3 5 1 C O L i f t 3 5 2 * 0 * 7 8 7 0 * 7 8 7 5 * 7 8 9 0 * 7 8 0 5 * 8 0 7 0 * 8 5 35 * 8 9 2 0 1 * 3 * 5 1 * * * 0 1 * 5 0 5 1 * 6 2 0 1 * 8 9 5 1 5 0 2 5 1 5 1 5 5 0 3 6 7 0 K A f t 0 3 7 1 0 K A N * 2 3 0 5 K I C * 2 3 1 0 K I C 0 * 3 5 5 K K T 0 * 3 6 0 K K T 0 * 3 6 5 K K T 0 * 3 7 0 K K T 0 * 3 7 5 K K T 0 * 3 8 0 K K T 0 * 3 8 5 K K T 0 * 3 5 0 K K T 0 * 3 5 5 K K T 0 * * C 0 K K T 0 * * C 5 K K T 0 * * 1 0 K K T 0 * * * 7 K K T 0 * * 6 5 K K T 0 * 5 0 0 K K T * 7 * 2 0 K N S 3 5 6 1 5 K S K 1 9 * * 0 K U S 1 9 7 C 0 K U S 1 9 7 0 5 K L S 1 9 7 3 7 K U S * 7 2 3 5 N T S 3 5 8 C O C A L 1 5 5 3 0 P E N 1 5 5 5 0 P E f t 3 5 2 L 3 9 2 3 9 5 3 8 * K 1 8 6 1 8 6 3 6 6 3 0 6 3 8 7 6 0 3 A 6 0 3 A 6 0 3 A 6 0 3 A 3 0 5 G 3 1 6 K 3 9 * L 2 0 1 G 2 0 1 G 2 0 8 G 3 2 0 3 5 3 3 7 9 K 3 9 0 R 3 3 5 3 3 6 2 6 1 K 2 6 1 K 3 3 7 3 3 7 3 3 7 3 3 7 3 3 7 3 3 7 3 3 7 3 3 7 3 3 7 3 3 7 3 3 7 3 3 7 3 6 0 3 7 0 3 7 2 * * 0 3 2 2 * 6 * A 6 8 7 A 6 8 7 A 6 8 8 A 3 9 0 3 7 2 3 0 2 2 2 * G A R G A R e c e H P C P A P P A R G A R FtP P A P G s e R L K R L K W E I R A S G S e R L K T A Y T A Y T A Y G R S R L K T A Y T A Y s e e e t c W E I W c l H K A H K A H K A H K A H K A H K A H K A H K A H K A H K A H K A H K A ; w a g , e e e e E e , r l k ■ ! E C A ; w c h f E C A 1 K U S i W C H P A I ; R L K 5 P A I B U R i j o o u p e n 3 7 0 7 0 P H L 3 7 1 9 0 P H L 5 0 6 2 8 P H R 5 0 8 9 5 P H R 5 1 0 * 0 P H R 5 1 0 * 5 P H R 5 1 1 6 5 P H R 5 1 2 3 7 P H R 5 1 3 3 5 P H R * 9 6 8 5 P H Y 5 C 0 2 0 P H Y 5 0 0 7 0 P H Y 5 0 1 8 5 P H Y 5 0 3 2 0 P H Y 5 0 3 3 0 P H Y 3 7 8 C O P S Y 3 7 9 C 5 P S Y 3 7 9 C 6 P S Y 3 7 9 6 5 P S Y 3 7 9 6 6 P S Y 3 8 1 7 5 P S Y 0 2 5 3 0 R E 5 3 * 2 3 R T F 5 3 * 6 5 R T F 5 3 5 C 5 R T F 5 6 7 * 5 S h 5 6 8 8 0 _ _ S h 3 8 8 6 0 S C C 3 8 8 6 5 S C C 3 8 9 1 5 S C C 3 8 9 6 5 S C C 5 3 9 9 5 S P E 5 * 0 2 0 S P E 5 * 1 5 0 S P E 5 * 2 3 5 S F E 0 3 3 1 5 S T A 0 3 3 2 0 S T A 0 3 * 2 0 S T A 0 3 5 C 5 S T A . 3 7 * 9 5 T C T R 0 * 0 C 3 2 5 6 0 5 U C / C C * 2 7 9 5 Z C C * 2 8 0 5 Z C C * 2 8 1 0 * 2 8 1 5 * 2 9 7 0 * 3 1 1 5 * 3 1 2 0 * 3 1 2 5 * 3 1 3 0 * 3 1 3 5 Z C C Z C C Z C C Z C C Z C C Z C C Z C C 6 1 O C A 3 2 9 L 3 1 3 K 3 5 9 1 6 7 K 1 6 7 K 3 7 * K 3 8 3 R 2 9 6 A 3 0 3 K 1 0 * 6 0 9 8 1 3 3 6 K 3 8 7 K 3 8 7 K 3 2 I K 3 5 2 3 5 2 3 6 * 3 6 * 3 9 * K 3 5 8 3 3 7 3 5 0 6 6 3 K A 6 8 2 L 3 9 7 L 3 1 7 L 3 1 8 3 3 3 K 3 6 6 3 1 1 K 3 1 3 3 2 * K 3 6 7 3 0 9 3 0 9 W E L g s b B I C G E A r l k R L K W A G R L K R L K WPW E f t S T A Y R L K T a y R L K e c e B L R eef t K £ Z K L Z B E N B e e C K A B U R C K A R L K s e e P A R 22*6 1212 3 0 1 1 2 7 7 1 2 2 7 1 2 2 * 2 0 5 1 2 6 7 1 2 * 102 3 0 2 3 1 5 5 1 1 * 2 1 7 7 1 1 8 2 6 1 212 116 2 0 8 2 1 0 212 1 5 1 # 3 1 1 2 2 1 6 A 5 1 3 * 6 1 1 * 2 5 1 2 0 1 2 * 8 1 3 6 7 1 1 * P A I B L R r l k e e e eee b = b eee G a r J E S s e e e e e W A G W E L C A L S U P b u r e u R e u R R L K H R C H R C H R C H R C H R C 3 6 3 3 6 * 1 5 8 1 5 7 1 0 9 A 2 1 5 A 1 5 * 2 5 3 3 0 8 2 3 0 8 100 1 3 0 1 3 0 1 3 0 1 3 0 7 1 2 0 * 2 5 2 * 2 5 2 * 2 5 2 * 2 5 2 * 2 5 2 Z C C W E L 2 3 0 2 * 3 2 8 6 3 8 * L FRIDAY December 14, 7-10 p.m. (Classes meeting MWF 4,5; F evenings) G rade rep o rts for th e se c l a s s e s a re due th e departmental office by 9 a.m. Tuesday, December 18. in 1 1 0 1 0 A S E * 1 8 2 5 B C T 2 * 7 * 0 C C * 6 2 5 0 C 0 E 1 2 * 8 0 C 1 2 5 * 2 C E 1 2 5 * 3 C E « * 7 1 5 C S * * 7 2 0 C S * « 7 2 5 C S « « 7 3 5 C S t E t E E « * 7 h 0 C S * * 9 9 5 C S 2 7 2 6 0 2 7 2 6 5 2 7 6 2 0 2 8 1 5 0 2 8 1 5 5 1 3 2 3 0 E E E 1 3 5 1 8 t E K 1 3 8 * 5 E D A 0 6 * 9 5 E D C 0 5 * 5 5 0 5 6 * 0 E D C E D C 0 5 6 5 0 E D C 0 5 8 C 0 0 5 8 5 5 E D C 0 5 9 1 0 E D C E D C 0 5 9 6 0 E D P 0 6 9 C 5 0 7 0 5 5 E D P 0 7 0 9 0 E O P 3 0 0 2 0 F R « 5 8 7 5 G E C * 5 8 8 0 G E C 2 * 9 7 0 G K * 7 0 9 5 H E L S 5 5 * 5 0 L i f t 3 5 1 7 5 L i f t 3 5 2 8 5 3 8 5 P 3 * 9 3 8 0 3 9 * 1 7 7 K 3 8 5 K 3 8 5 K * 0 * G * 0 * G * 0 * G * 0 * G * 0 * G 3 8 0 L 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 0 8 3 1 * K 3 1 * K 3 * 5 K 3 8 2 K 3 0 6 3 8 0 G 6 6 7 S 3 7 3 E 3 7 0 E 3 7 1 3 8 2 E 3 6 * P 3 8 * P 1 6 2 3 8 1 3 8 1 * 0 6 3 8 3 3 8 3 3 9 0 3 7 8 K 3 8 * K 1 8 0 K 3 9 3 T A Y e i c W A G G l « E C J E C J E C J W ; L W c L Wf cL W C L W t L W t L 3 1 7 3 0 1 2 0 8 1 1 * e 2 2 6 1 . 2 1 * 1 . 2 1 * 2 2 * 6 2 2 * 6 2 2 * 6 2 2 * 6 2 2 * 6 2 3 C * P A R 1 0 5 P A R 1 0 * P A P 2 0 1 P A R 3 0 1 P A R 2 1 0 1 . 2 0 * 1 3 7 1 * 1 3 3 0 A e : j T A V T a y 2 8 * 3 7 0 3 7 0 E C B E C B e c e E C B E C B 5 2 * e c e * 5 * E C B * 2 6 E C B * 6 8 B E B 1 5 0 E C 8 E C B B A T G E C G E C W A G P A I H P C P A P P A R 2 7 8 2 * 0 1 1 5 1 0 * 1 1 1 3 0 0 * 0 * * 1 0 6 H 1 0 2 3 0 2 1 * * * 5 1 * * 5 0 1 * 9 3 0 * 9 3 * 0 0 9 3 7 0 0 9 * * 5 * 9 7 1 0 K E K E K E P S P E D P E D P H Y P H Y 2 0 1 G 2 0 1 G 3 6 * L 3 0 * 3 5 2 K 3 9 5 3 0 3 K T A Y T a y t a y W E L A h G B E L P A 1 3 0 0 3 0 8 2 1 7 2 2 5 6 3 9 8 5 0 2 * 8 2 C C A 3 1 1 2 A 5 1 3 * 1 5 1 1 6 6 2 3 1 6 1 2 1 6 1 0 * 2 2 8 * 1 6 A 5 5 0 * 1 8 1 5 * 2 0 8 S E O S E C S E D S E O S E D S E D S C C S P E S P E S T A S T A 3 0 3 L 3 7 1 3 7 2 3 8 3 3 8 3 3 8 6 3 8 7 3 8 9 K 3 9 1 K * 9 7 3 0 0 9 6 9 5 0 9 7 2 0 0 9 7 7 0 0 9 7 7 5 0 9 7 9 5 0 9 8 1 0 3 9 0 1 0 5 * 3 6 0 5 * 3 7 0 0 3 3 * 5 0 3 * 3 5 * 3 2 * 2 W t L E C B E C B E C B E C B E C B B E f i B U R C K A 3 9 3 C C K A 3 0 9 8 s e 3 1 0 B E B 3 8 1 K W E L SATURDAY December 15, 9-12 a.m. (Classes meeting TTH 9-10:30) G rade rep o rts for th e se th e c l a s s e s a r e due departmental office by 9 a.m. Wednesday, December 19. 0 0 9 3 5 0 0 9 * 0 in A C C A C C A C C A C C A C C A C C A C C A C C A C C A C C A C S A O V A O V A P S A N T A f t T A N T A f t T A f t T A f t T A N T 0 0 9 * 5 0 1 1 2 5 0 1 2 1 5 0 1 3 8 5 0 1 3 9 5 0 1 6 6 0 0 1 7 0 5 0 1 7 3 0 0 1 8 6 5 5 2 5 5 0 5 2 6 1 5 5 7 0 7 5 2 3 7 5 0 2 3 7 6 5 2 3 8 3 0 2 3 8 0 5 2 3 8 9 5 2 3 9 3 0 2 * 0 1 0 3 1 1 3 1 1 3 1 1 3 2 6 3 2 7 3 6 1 3 6 2 3 8 2 K 3 8 * 3 8 6 K 3 6 9 3 * * K 3 7 0 J 6 6 6 A 3 0 7 3 2 l L 3 2 * 1 3 5 3 3 6 0 K 3 8 0 K 3 9 1 B E B B E B B E B B A T W A G J E S B E B B E E B E B B E B B E B C K A C K A B A S R L K B E B G P G P A P G A P B E B B E B 3 6 1 3 5 5 3 5 1 7 1 0 1 A 3 1 5 A 3 5 * 3 6 * 3 6 3 3 6 6 3 6 2 A 2 3 2 0 A 3 1 1 2 3 1 2 7 1 2 * 1 5 3 3 1 6 1 0 5 1 0 9 2 5 7 2 6 2 BLIMPIE A long distance call has a way of making you feel close to someone you can ’t be with. And i you call between 11 p.m. and 8 a.m., any day of the week, you get the lowest rate possible. One minute anywhere in the continental Say _ United States costs just good night SiC*. the One-Plus way. € i When you can ’t hug i A V l / l f r *> * M w J l 1 ( 1 • hea r someone with long distance. someone, you can ' Y Y s * / ' “ ' 1 ' . s ' Y Y r - - y ^ ■ ?/ s r y s í Y - Y; > ■ \ Y - / / 's s s m R E S T Y BRAIN! STO P B Y FOR COFFEE AND A SNACK DURING YOUR S T U D Y B R E A K ” O N THE D R A G 2120 Guadalupe Call Ah ea d 474-1864 il 8 8 4 , 6 R t S S A K C W * 0 4 4 8 8 '6 % ) 3 i Austin Arm y-Navy Store Mon.-Sat. 9-6 Sundays 10-6 LEVI'S Always the lowest prices in town!! - Cords — Straight - Boot Cut - Regular Boll - Studont Cot _ Big Bolls LEVI'S JACKETS now in stock Nocona & Levi's Boots now at V Í OFF rotular príco — oil sizes and widths in stock , « J LEVI S shirts at *3.99 (values to *15.00) — 2000 long sleeve W e're on sale every day!! 412 Congress Se Habla Español Am erican Express & 9 VTSA' mmtm y r House orjERns 3 locations open on Sundays from 10-6 now until Christmas Northcross Mall Hancock Center Spring Town Center (San Marcos) M a n y items on sale every day! Lowest prices and w idest selection in tow n I Come in and see us for your Christmas shopping needs. Am erican Express Ruge 21 n c Kool 3 Vi eKonomiKal KwiKly but Karefully done Kwality Kopies Kinko's COPIES — PHOTOS 2200 Guadalupe Plaxa No. 11 476-4654 G C V GCW GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GRC GRG GRG H E H E MED H I S H I S H I S H I S H I S H i s I s J J J I s L S I S L S LAS I AS L I N L I N L I N L I N ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ 3 3 0 3 0 3 3 1 9 0 3 3 2 8 5 3 3 3 C 5 3 3 3 1 0 3 3 3 7 0 3 35 CO 3 1 3 n 3 1 0 1 0 3 1 1 7 0 4 6 5 1 5 4 6 7 80 0 7 6 0 5 3 3 6 8 0 3 3 8 4 5 3 3 9 8 5 3 3 9 7 0 3 3 9 7 5 3 4 0 2 0 3 4 5 8 5 5 2 8 3 0 5 2 9 C 0 5 3 1 2 5 5 5 3 6 5 5 5 4 2 0 5 5 5 4 0 5 5 5 6 5 3 4 7 70 3 4 7 9 5 3 5 0 6 5 3 5 1 2 5 3 5 2 35 3 5 2 8 0 4 7 8 0 5 4 7 8 1 0 4 8 0 30 4 8 4 70 4 8 5 2 5 4 8 5 75 4 86 75 4 8 7 8 5 1 4 3 9 0 1 4 3 9 5 312L 3 1 2 1 3 4 4 350K 35 2 W 3 7 0 L 3 9 1 K 3 2 7 E 3 0 5 3 6 2 K 3 0 4 3 3 3 3 2 3 3 0 6 K 3 3 6 L 3 5 3 3 5 6 K 3 5 6 N 3 6 6 N 3 2 0 3 1 2 3 2 1 L 3 8 0 3 4 0 38 2 L 3 8 7 38 8 K 32 4 L 3 5 5 3 0 6 3 5 0 3 8 7 3 9 3 6 0 3 A 6 0 3 A 3 0 5 G 6 0 8 E e 3 1 6 K 31 8 8 3 6 0 R 3 7 8 K 2 0 1G 2 0 1 G WkL P A I P A I GRG 8 Ee WAG GRG PAR WRW GRG BUR BUR B E L GAP R L w BE 8 ece BUR GAR P A I RLW RLW C W A Ec e HRC HPC WEZ BUR J E S PAR PAR P A R BEN PAR G s e B E e E C B ece GAR EC J BE e TA Y TA Y 2 2 4 6 4 4 2 2 4 8 4 2 4 161 2 0 1 4 2 4 1 0 5 102 3 1 6 1 3 6 2 2 4 202 201 4 1 0 2 166 1 5 3 112 111 2 4 8 5 1 2 4 6 1 1 6 A 5 2 2 2 2 8 4 4 2 5 6 4 1 0 6 H 210 2 0 8 A 3 0 3 A 20 3 3 0 2 210 1 3 2 3 01 1 2 1 4 2 5 5 5 5 8 2 6 1 1 0 9 1 . 2 0 4 3 5 4 3 0 8 3 0 4 1 4 4 6 5 ¥ E 1 4 4 9 5 P £ 1 4 6 75 ¥ E 1 4 7 C 5 ¥ E 1 4 7 7 5 ¥ £ 1 4 8 4 5 ¥ E 1 4 9 C 5 ¥ £ 1 4 9 9 5 W E 1 5 0 70 P E 1 5 1 1 0 ¥ E 5 7 1 5 5 P S s 5 7 2 CO 0 3 6 6 0 wan 0 3 6 5 0 WAN 4 2 2 2 5 w i c 4 2 4 1 5 WIC 0 4 4 4 0 HKT 0 4 4 5 5 WKT 1 9 1 4 5 WUS 1 9 1 3 0 W(_s 1 9 1 5 5 WUS 1 9 3 0 5 WUS 1 9 3 2 5 WUS 1 9 4 5 0 WUS 1 9 5 3 5 WUS 1 9 6 5 0 WUS 1 9 6 8 0 WUS 5 7 3 6 0 N S 0 9 4 CO PEO 1 5 6 1 0 PEN 1 5 7 2 0 PEN 3 7 0 9 0 P H I 371 85 PHU 3 7 2 2 0 PHU 5 0 8 0 5 PHR 5 1 0 8 0 PHR 4 9 7 C 0 PHY 5 C 0 4 0 PHY 5 C 0 4 5 PHY 5 0 0 5 0 PHY 5 01 3 0 PHY 5 C 3 4 0 PHY 3 7 6 8 5 PS Y 202 2 0 8 G 3 2 8 3 3 6 3 3 9 4 4 5 3 6 0 K 3 7 4 L 3 8 3 C 38 5 J 201 210 3 3 5 3 3 6 4 2 9 3 8 8 k 3 6 0 3 7 0 41 l A 4 1 1 A 4 1 1 A 2 2 1 J 2 2 6 J 2 6 9 L 3 7 9 k 3 81 38 5 3 2 6 3 7 6 3 3 1 3 8 3 3 1 2 3 2 9 k 3 4 7 3 4 6 36 8 L 3 0 3 K 3 0 5 3 0 5 3 0 5 3 2 6 3 8 9 K 3 01 R I W 7 1 0 4 T A Y 3 C 0 R A S 2 1 2 T A Y 1 39 T AY 3 1 7 BUR 13 4 TA Y ¿ 0 7 TAY 1 37 T A Y 2 1 2 E N S 3 4 0 R A S 3 1 7 R A S 2 1 8 W E I 2 3 0 8 i 5 i flee E S B 2 2 3 RLW 6 1 1 8 R A S 2 1 3 B E E 52 WCH 2 2 1 WCh 2 0 2 WCH 2 1 1 WCH 2 1 9 " B E 2 1 2 8 weE 2 1 3 4 E C A F 1 7 BT L 1 1 3 e u 101 R A S 3 1 0 B E L 2 0 4 E N S 3 0 2 R IW 7 1 2 0 GEA 1 0 5 PA R 2 0 1 PA R 3 0 6 e s e 1 15 RLW 6 1 0 4 WEL 3 5 0 2 W E I 2 3 0 4 WEL 2 3 0 4 WEL 2 3 0 4 RLW 6 1 2 3 RLW 6 1 2 6 BAT 7 3 7 7 2 0 P S Y 3 7 8 2 0 P S Y 3 7 8 6 5 P S Y 3 7 8 8 5 P S Y 5 3 5 1 0 RTF 3 8 5 1 0 RUS 5 6 6 CO S W 5 6 7 2 5 S W 5 6 7 3 5 S W 5 6 7 9 5 S W 3 3 8 1 5 SCC 3 8 8 9 0 SCC 3 8 9 1 0 SCC 3 8 9 5 7 SCC 3 8 9 7 5 SCC 5 4 2 7 0 SP E 3 9 9 5 0 SPN 4 0 0 1 5 SPN 4 0 0 2 5 SF N 4 0 0 7 5 SPN 4 0 1 8 0 SPN 0 3 2 70 STA 0 3 3 6 5 S T A 3 7 4 7 5 T C 3 7 5 5 0 T C 2 5 6 4 0 U C 4 2 6 1 0 ZCC 4 2 9 9 0 ZCC 4 3 0 1 0 ZCC 4 3 0 6 5 ZCC 4 3 0 7 0 ZCO 4 3 0 7 5 ZCC 4 3 0 8 0 ZCC 4 3 0 8 5 ZCC 3 0 8 32 8 K 3 4 2 3 4 5 3 6 5 2 2 8 A 3 1 2 3 8 1W 6 8 2 L 3 8 5 W 3 0 2 3 2 4 K 3 3 3 K 352W 3 7 9 W 3 7 1 3 1 5 N 32 5L 3 2 6 K 3 4 6 385W 3 0 9 3 1 0 3 0 1 6 5 9 A 3 6 6 3 1 1 K 3 5 3 3 5 4 3 6 5 L 3 6 5 L 36 5 L 3 6 5 L 3 6 5 L B E e CAL WEL S L T C W A PA R GAR B t e a c e RLW ART S I C GAR B E e NfcZ RLW BAT BAT BAT B l E BAT J E S J E S R t e GAR e e e RLW E ¿ e e c e WEL WE L W E L 1 5 5 100 1 3 0 8 101 A 311 2 102 3 1 3 3 6 4 4 5 9 5 1 2 6 1102 3 0 1 1 1 6 1 4 2 8 6 1 2 4 102 101 2 02 3 5 1 2 1 7 A 2 1 7 A A 3 1 5 A 4 6 0 2 0 3 3 6 2 6 1 2 2 1 3 7 51 2 3 1 2 2 3 1 2 2 3 1 2 2 3 1 2 2 3 1 2 W E L WEL TUESDAY December 18, 2-5 p.m. (Classes meeting M W F 1) G rade re p o rts for these in the c l a s s e s a re due G O O D N E W S FOR G R A D U A T IN G S E N IO R S I From the Ex-Students' Association, who brought you Senior Send-Off, scholarships, career contacts, the Washington Internship Program, and more. Support these programs and get many more benefits bv transferring your $10 UT Property Deposit to the Ex- Students' Association for a One Year's Membership. Stop by the A lum ni Center and join usl Scott Aston, IF C Vicki Behrend, at-large John Berry, O D K Beth Bone, at-large Clare Buie, O m bu dsm an M a rk Cassidy, Senior Cabinet John Craddock, Friars Gary Farmer, C o w b o y s Neal Framer, A P O Beth Frerking, Daily Texan M in d y Gholston, Rou nd-U p Queen Jay Gribble, at-large Billy Haehnel, Longhorn Band Karen Irion, Graduate Students Lindsey Lee, at-large Vick* M cC a n se , O range Jackets Dan Neal, at-large Joanie Powell, at-large Sally Richards, at-large Steve Sm ith, Texas Union Rob W alters, M ortar Board Kathy Tally, co-chair Billy Rodriguez, co-chair The Student Involvem ent Com m ittee ‘Your membership will actually begin at the time that the property deposit is transferred ... approximately 90 days after you graduate. Page 20 departmental office by 9 a.m. Saturday, December 22. 0 1 0 C 0 ACC 0 1 O C 5 ACC O i l C5 ACC 0 1 6 8 5 ACC 0 1 6 9 5 ACC 2 3 4 4 0 AWS 2 34 70 AWS 2 3 7 3 5 ANT 2 3 7 9 0 ANT 2 3 7 9 5 ANT 2 3 9 5 5 ANT 2 4 0 CO ANT 5 1 7 1 0 ARC 5 1 8 C 5 ARC 5 2 0 2 5 ARC 1 1 2 5 0 ARE 1 6 5 5 5 ARH 1 0 8 2 0 A S E 1 0 8 6 0 A S E 1 0 9 6 5 AS E 4 . 7 49 5 A S T 4 0 7 1 0 A S T 0 2 6 9 0 8 C 0 2 8 9 0 B L 0 2 9 6 0 8 L 5 7 5 1 5 B I B 4 0 9 9 0 B I C 4 0 9 5 5 B I C 4 1 0 C 0 B I C 4 1 0 0 5 B I C 4 1 0 1 0 B I O 4 1 1 4 0 B I C 4 1 1 4 5 B I C 4 1 1 5 0 B I C 4 1 1 5 5 B I O 4 1 1 6 0 B I C 4 1 4 2 0 B I C 4 1 6 2 5 BCT * 1 7 2 5 BCT 2 4 5 1 5 2 4 5 2 0 2 4 5 3 0 2 4 5 3 5 2 4 5 8 5 2 4 6 6 0 2 4 6 9 0 2 4 6 9 5 2 4 7 CO 2 4 7 C 5 1 2 1 8 5 1 2 2 4 0 1 2 3 3 5 1 2 3 e 5 1 2 5 C 5 1 2 5 1 5 1 2 5 5 0 1 2 5 53 4 6 9 70 4 4 2 1 5 CH 1 1 7 2 0 CH E 3 11 3 1 1 3 1 2 3 8 4 3 8 4 3 1 0 3 21 3 0 2 3 2 2 3 2 2 L 3 91 3 9 1 3 4 8 5 6 3 6 8 7 3 2 9 3 6 4 3 2 1 36 I K 3 8 0 P 3 0 1 3 9 2 F 3 2 4 3 2 3 3 7 2 3 0 1 3 0 1 W 3 0 1W 3 0 1W 30 I W 3 0 1 W 3 0 2 3 0 2 3 0 2 3 0 2 3 0 2 206 3 1 1 L 3 2 1 3 0 3 3 0 3 3 0 3 3 0 3 3 0 6 3 3 6 35 2 3 5 2 3 5 2 3 5 2 3 1 1 S 3 31 3 5 4 3 5 7 3 7 7 K 3 8 0 N 386W 3 8 7 L 3 7 2 3 8 1 W 3 3 2 J E S WEL WEL B t e b e e s e e b e e e i R e s e PL w RLW RLW GCL G C l G C l EC J p a e WRW E N S T AY B E B RLW e s e WEL RS N e e c ART APT ART ART APT B I C e i c e i c e i c e i c WLL GE A GEA PAR PAR PAR P AP PAR PAP P A R PA P P A R P A P G i C EC J ART EC J EC J T AY RLW E C J e e e WEL RLW A 3 17 A 2 3 0 4 2 3 1 2 1 6 5 1 6 4 52 16 6 1 3 4 1 6 6 5 1 2 0 5 1 2 2 5 1 2 4 1 05 3 3 7 3 0 7 3 . 3 0 6 2 2 0 4 1 1 3 6 3 7 2 1 7 1 5 1 6 1 1 6 1 55 2 2 4 6 11 0 2 11 02 11 0 2 11 0 2 11 0 2 112 112 112 112 1 1 2 2 2 2 4 1 2 7 1 2 7 2 0 3 2 0 3 2 0 3 2 0 3 3 0 1 3 0 1 2 0 3 2 0 3 2 0 3 2 0 3 111 1 . 2 0 4 1 1 2 0 1 . 2 1 4 5 . 4 1 0 2 0 7 6 1 1 8 7 . 2 0 8 1 5 4 3 4 0 2 7 1 0 4 E E 1 1 7 2 5 CHE 1 8 5 9 0 DRW 2 6 8 8 0 E 2 6 8 8 5 E 2 6 8 9 0 E 2 6 8 9 1 E 2 6 9 1 0 E 2 6 9 2 0 E 2 6 9 2 5 E 2 6 9 6 5 E 2 7 4 3 5 E 2 7 4 6 5 £ 2 70 55 E 2 8 0 2 5 E c 2 8 0 3 5 E 2 8 6 2 0 E 2 88 3 0 E 2 8 8 5 5 E 2 8 9 1 5 F 13 1 35 1 31 50 1 32 65 1 3 4 C 5 1 3 6 8 5 1 3 9 C 5 1 3 9 3 5 1 4 0 J 5 2 5 7 9 5 ECO 2 5 8 9 5 E C C 2 5 8 9 6 ECC 2 5 9 C O E C C 2 6 0 2 0 ECC 2 6 0 6 0 ECC 0 5 5 6 0 E O C 0 5 6 6 5 EDC 0 6 8 9 5 E O P 0 6 9 0 5 E O P 0 7 1 6 0 E O P 2 9 2 2 0 E T S 2 9 2 8 0 E T S 2 9 6 8 7 t U S 2 9 5 1 0 E U S 2 9 5 5 0 E L S 0 2 0 2 0 F I N 0 2 0 2 5 F I N 0 2 0 3 0 F I N 0 2 0 3 5 F I N 0 2 0 6 0 F I N 0 2 0 6 5 F I N 0 2 0 5 0 F I N 0 2 0 5 2 F I N 0 2 1 1 0 F I N 2 9 9 9 0 F R 2 9 9 9 5 F R 3 CO CO FR 3 0 0 70 F R 3 0 1 50 F R 3 j l 70 F R 3 0 2 6 0 F R 3 0 2 6 5 F R 3 0 2 7 0 F R 4 5 2 85 G E C 4 5 2 9 0 G E C 4 5 2 9 5 G E C 4 5 3 C 0 G E C 4 5 3 1 0 G E C 4 5 6 8 5 G E C 4 5 7 5 0 G E C 4 5 7 5 1 G E C 4 5 8 0 5 G E C 4 5 8 5 5 G E C 4 5 9 4 5 G E C 4 6 1 CO G E C 4 6 1 1 0 G E C 3 1 5 7 0 G E R 3 1 5 7 5 G E R 3 1 6 2 0 G E R 3 1 6 5 5 G E R 3 1 6 8 5 G E R 3 1 7 1 0 G E R 3 1 7 4 0 G E R 3 5 0 6 7 0 A 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 0 7 3 0 7 3 1 2 L 3 1 4 K 31 a k 3 1 4 K 3 4 8 3 79 W 3 8 2 J 32 5 3 3 1 3 41 3 6 0 N 3 8 0 K 3 1 4 3 1 9 3 8 6 K 3 0 1 L 3 0 2 3 0 2 3 0 2 3 0 3 3 2 0 L 3 7 0 E 3 7 0 E 3 3 2 S 3 8 0 G 3 8 2 K 3 1 8 3 7 A 361 3 6 1 3 6 1 3 5 4 3 5 4 3 5 4 3 5 4 3 5 4 3 5 4 3 5 4 3 5 4 3 5 7 4 0 6 4 0 6 4 0 6 4 0 8 K 3 1 2 K 3 1 2 L 3 2 4 K 324W 3 4 0 L 4 0 1 4 0 1 4 0 1 4 0 1 3 0 3 3 2 1 3 2 8 K 3 2 8 K 36 OK 3 8 0 K 3 8 9 k 3 9 5 W 3 9 6 4 0 6 4 0 6 4 0 7 3 1 0 3 1 2 K 3 1 4 K 3 5 6 e E L R A S PAR PAP B E e e e e e e e e e e PAR GAR e c e PA P e e e B U R p i . R e u R PAR e c e PAR PAR ART e s e G s e G t C TAY R A S e s e T A Y ee e R A S e e e GAR WAC B E N E C P e c e e c e E c e e c e GAR e A r e c e WAG S u T PUR b u r 2 0 4 2 1 8 1J1 3 0 6 51 59 2 5 7 2 6 2 2 0 4 200 2 6 4 3 0 8 2 6 6 1 1 6 I I A. 1 1 6 1 2 6 1 2 0 8 n o 1 1 1 0 2 2 3 1 2 1 4 112 1 4 1 2 1 2 l i 5 2 1 7 1 5 3 2 1 3 1 5 2 1 2 1 4 2 22 2.84 6 6 8 4 5 4 2 7 8 6 2 4 2 1 5 3 1 8 5 6 101 1 0 1 1 0 6 1 0 6 b u r e u R e u R b u r B U R PUR W C L P A R P E N WE Z e r e E c e e c e b e n e s e e c e H k c HPC HPC HRC WEL P A S GEC GEC E N S E N S WEL RL W RLW 1 0 6 1 06 1 0 6 1 0 6 1 J 6 1 0 6 2 3 C 8 2 0 6 1 1 6 4 2 8 2 4 0 h 16 A 2 6 5 13 2 1 5 8 6 2 6 4 2 5 2 4 2 5 2 4 2 5 2 4 2 5 2 3 5 0 2 211 1 0 4 1 0 4 1 0 9 1 4 5 2 3 0 6 6 1 2 0 6 1 2 2 1 0 8 1 0 8 e u R B L R B U R e u R BUR e u R e e e 1 0 8 1 1 2 112 112 3 5 8 M oped M a rk e t 5341 CAM ERO N RD. 458-1321 1806 SAN ANTONIO ST. 478-2192 _Chef_Salad 35 9 80 1 1 2 * 5 1 1 3 5 5 1 1 3 9 0 162 60 1 6 * C 0 1 6 * C 5 1 6 * 1 0 1 6 * 1 5 16*20 1 6 * 2 5 1 6 * 3 0 1 6 * 3 5 1 6 * * 0 1 6 5 6 0 1 6 6 0 5 108 70 10 8 80 1 0 9 9 0 1 1 0 3 0 * 0 * 6 5 * 3 5 70 * 0 7 2 0 ARA ARE ARE ARE ARM ARM ARH ARM ARH ARH ARH ARH ARH ARH ARH ARH A S E A S E A S E A S E A S T A S T A S T * 1 2 k 202 3 7 9 385 3 01 3 0 3 303 3 03 303 3 03 30 3 3 0 3 30 3 303 367 387 3 6 3 1 3 6 6 K 3 82 C 3 88 C 301 3 09 3 9 6 e t e p * i EC J EKS WEL ART ART ART ART ART APT ART ART ART ART ART WEI EAS R I P EKS WEI R I P R L P 365 302 1. 2 1* 1 *5 2 2 * 6 1120 1120 1120 1120 1120 1120 1120 1120 1120 12 0 6 C 12 0 6 C 2 2 5 6 6 3 7 6 1 1 * 3 * 0 130 8 7 1 1 * 5 1 1 6 0 0 3 9 5 0 0 *10 0 0 * 1 5 0 0 * 3 0 0 0 * 7 5 0 2 7 * 0 0 2 8 6 5 0 2 9 5 5 0 2 9 6 5 5 7 * 5 0 5 7 5 6 5 5 75 75 * 1 0 9 0 * 1 0 5 5 * 1 1 CO * 1 1 0 5 * 1 1 1 0 * 1 2 1 5 * 1 2 2 0 * 1 2 2 5 * 1 2 3 0 * 1 2 3 5 * 1 8 5 0 A A A A A C L L L B i a B I B B I B B I C B I C B I C B I C B I C B I C B I C B I C B I C B I O BCT 382T 3 8 * T 3 8 * T 3 8 5 T 3 8 8 T 3 6 1 32 3 3 7 0 3 8 0 301 305 317W 302 302 302 30 2 3 02 3 03 3 03 303 303 303 3 6 5 *> BEe et e eEP eEe G s e ece WEL R R K J ES eec cce CCP ese ese E S E E s e E s e A C A A C A A C A A C A A C A WEL 56 * 5 8 563 256 2210 6 7 350 2 A 3 1 7 A 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 21 21 21 21 21 2 3 0 2 BCT BC T C C * 1 9 5 5 * 1 9 6 5 2 * 5 C5 2 * 5 * 0 2 * 5 6 5 2 * 6 * 0 2 * 7 1 5 2 * 7 2 0 121 35 1 22 70 1 2 2 8 0 1 2 * 3 0 125 30 1 2 6 8 5 2 5 * * 5 * * 6 6 5 * * 6 70 * * 6 75 * * 6 80 * * 9 0 5 0 5 0 8 0 * 3 5 3 5 C F E CH HISTORY TEST! Q. W h a t 19th century European prophet said, " a chicken in every pot an d a m oped in every g a r a g e ? " A. For this an sw er an d a n y others you m ay have concerning mopeds, call the m oped experts at: M A K E YOUR CHRISTM AS T R E E $ LAST A L L Y E A R YO UR DOLLAR CONTRIBUTION GOES OUT 100% Boys Clubs of Austin Central Texas Youth Ranch ig Brothers Po|ice Litt|e League Rape Crisis Center Youth Appreciation Week East Austin Optimists Little League Young Texan & Texanne Program Girl Scouts 55S? - M A N Y , m a n y m o re ... TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION 2800 N. LA M A R AVAILABLE NO W Come Early For Best Choice w SPONSORED BY PHI G A M M A DELTA The Posse 24th and Rio Grande 478-6583 Under new management from the same folks who made the Posse East so obscure. We welcome as patrons: IZOD, GDI, SLOB, DA, VIP, MF, DJ, BPOE, and Erotics H a p p y Hour 3-7 Daily All D ay W e d n e sd ay Come in and try one of our specials! The Sheriff The Deputy The Sub Order of N achos BO'S FUN SHOP CHRISTMAS & NEW YEAR'S SALE Deck the halls with Bo's Fun Shop gugsj Ha ha ha ha ho ha ha ha ha Give your friend a big surprise bag, SHa ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ■ Don we now our funny face masks Jj Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha u ' v ile it lasts ¡Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha." Bo has some of the most unusual gifts and novelty items in town. They m ake great stocking stuffers. W hy not give a friend a g a g gift for not a lot of m oney? A N D GET THIS.... With the purchase of $5.00 and* this coupon, you will receive a free gift (good through 12/25/79). 2100 E. Riverside Dr. 4 4 4 -6 9 5 4 Page 9 4 3 9 7 5 CH 4 4 0 6 5 CH 441 30 CH 4 4 2 2 5 CH 1 1 6 9 0 CHE 1 1 8 C 0 CHE 5 2 1 4 5 CRP 1 8 1 8 0 DRP 1 86 35 ORP 2 6 4 5 5 E 2 6 5 6 5 E 2 65 70 £ 2 6 5 75 E 2 6 5 85 E 2 66 CO E 2 6 6 G1 E 2 6 6 1 0 E 2 7635 E 2 79 50 £ 2 8 4 3 0 E 2 8 4 4 5 E 2 3 7 1 0 E 2 8 7 9 5 E 2 8 9 2 0 E 2 90 CO E 2 9 0 1 5 E 1 2 9 3 5 E E 1 3 1 1 0 E E 1 31 75 E E 1 3 3 2 5 E E 1 3 3 4 0 E E 1 35 35 E E 1 3 8 C 5 E P 1 38 60 E P 1 4 0 30 E P 2 5 0 2 5 e c c 2 5 8 2 6 E C C 2 5 8 2 7 E C C 2 5 8 3 0 E C C 2 5 9 6 0 E CC 2 5 9 6 5 E CC 2 6 0 8 0 E C C 2 6 1 CO E C C 2 6 2 1 0 E C C 0 6 5 C 5 EOA 0 6 5 1 0 EOA 0 5 7 1 5 EOC 0 5 7 2 9 EOC 0 5 8 6 5 EDC 0 6 8 6 0 EDP 0 6 9 9 0 EDP 0 7 1 9 0 EOP 0 7 1 9 5 EOP 0 7 2 2 0 EOP 072 70 EOP 291 70 E T S 2 9 1 9 0 E T S 2 9 2 1 0 E T S 2 9 2 9 5 E T S 2 9 4 10 E US 0 1 9 8 5 F I h 0 2 0 7 5 FI h 0 21 75 F I N 0 2 2 6 0 F I N 3 0 0 8 5 F R 3 02 35 F P 3 33 50 F R 4 5 6 9 0 G E C 4 5 7 5 5 GEC 6 1 8 B 353 3 5 4 L 3 8 2 L 317 3 6 0 36 9 K 2 0 5 3 7 8 306 3 06 3 0 6 3 0 6 3 06 3 06 3 0 6 3 0 6 308 31 4K 32 IK 3 2 1 1 3 6 4 P 3 7 6 1 3 9 2 L 3 9 5 1 3 9 6 1 2 02 3 2 3 3 3 5 K 3 5 1 K 3 5 1 1 3 8 1 k 3 06 311 3 95 3 0 2 302 3 0 2 3 02 3 03 303 32 3K 3 2 9 38 7 L 6 8 2 H 3 8 2 P 3 7 0 S 371 3 8 2 S 332 S 3 8 0 P 3 8 2 1 184 3 8 4 3 89H 301 3 1 0 318 3 7 4 301 354 3 57 3 7 4 3 9 7 3 1 0 K 3 2 4 K 3 9 0 P 4 2 2 K 3 3 5 1 . 2 0 2 b u r BUR 2 0 8 c . c 100 134 R I P 7 11 0 B E L 2 4 2 E h S 4 0 2 SUT 302 RAS 3 10 RAS 218 PAR 208 BEB 2 5 3 e c e 2 6 5 e e e 157 e t e 158 BEB 165 GAR 111 PAP 3 03 PAR 1 03 PAR 301 PAR 308 PAR 204 PAP 304 PAR 101 PAR 102 PAR 302 PAR 310 c C J T A Y 317 E S B 2 23 P E E 311 BUR 130 T A Y 2 0 7 ECB 104 WRW 113 R L P 6 1 1 2 e e e 1 66 e t e 154 e ^e 554 MEL 1 31 6 GAR 1 B Ee 261 e t h 2 2 2 B t e 51 e e e 4 5 9 e c e 370 E c e 238 e c e 4 2 6 BUR 2 16 E c e 4 1 6 A E C B 2 4 0 E c e 2 7 8 E c e 2 8 4 e c e 4 5 4 e c e 4 1 8 E CB 3 30 A BLR 216 ECB 5 5 8 G«G 3 16 RLP 5 1 1 4 PAR 104 WEL 2 3 0 4 WEL 2 3 0 8 e t e 1 61 e t e 152 101 SUT BAT 318 B A T 105 P A I 248 EC J 1 . 2 0 4 4 5 9 1 5 GEC 4 5 9 4 0 GEC 4 5 9 8 5 GEO 4 5 9 8 6 G E C 4 5 9 9 0 GEC 4 6 0 C 0 GEC 4 6 0 9 5 GEC 3 1 7 C 5 GER 3 2 6 5 5 GCV 3 2 6 6 0 GOV 3 2 6 6 5 GCV 3 2 6 7 0 GCV 3 2 6 7 5 GCV 3 2 6 8 0 GCV 3 2 6 8 5 GCV 3 2 6 9 0 GCV 3 2 6 5 5 GCV 3 2 7 C 0 GCV 3 3 2 7 0 GCV 3 3 3 2 5 GCV 3 3 4 5 5 GCV 3 1 0 C 5 GRG 3 1 0 8 5 GRG 4 6 4 80 H 4 6 6 3 0 H 4 6 8 1 0 H 4 6 8 4 0 H 4 6 8 55 H 4 6 9 5 5 H 4 6 9 6 0 M 3 3 7 6 0 H I S 3 3 8 C 0 H I S 3 3 8 5 0 H I S 5 2 8 C 0 J 5 2 8 0 5 5 2 8 5 5 5 2 8 6 5 5 2 9 2 5 5 2 9 3 0 5 2 9 3 5 5 2 9 5 0 5 5 4 C 0 5 5 4 5 5 5 5 4 9 0 3 4 7 6 5 L AS 3 5 0 4 5 I I K 3 5 1 C 5 L I h 3 5 1 1 0 L I h 3 5 3 C 5 L I h 4 7 7 4 0 P 4 7 7 8 5 P 4 7 7 9 0 P 4 8 0 2 5 N 4 8 9 2 5 P 1 4 3 6 5 1 4 3 7 0 1 4 3 75 1 4 5 1 5 I 4 6 1 0 1 4 6 3Q 1 4 6 8 5 1 4 7 5 5 1 4 9 1 0 1 5 0 1 0 1 5 0 6 5 1 5 1 6 5 571 93 0 3 6 8 5 P A N 0 3 7 4 5 P A N 3 8 5 P 3 8 8 L 3 91 3 91 391 3 9 1 C 3 9 4 K 3 1 4 K 3 1 0 1 3 1 0 L 3 1 0 L 3 1 0 L 3 1 0 L 3 1 0 L 3 1 0 L 3 1 0 L 3 1 0 L 3 1 0 L 3 3 9 P 3 5 6 L 3 91 K 3 05 3 1 6 2 0 3 212K 342 3 4 4 6 4 6 A 3 5 5 361 3 1 5 L 3 2 0 R 3 4 0 P 3 12 3 12 3 20R 3 2 0 R 3 2 4 3 2 4 3 25 32 5 K 3 82 L 3 8 4 K 3 8 5 T 3 2 4 L 3 06 3 1 5 3 2 1 1 3 9 6 301 6 0 3 A 6 0 3 A 3 05 G 3 9 4 P 2 0 1 G 201G 2 0 1G 311 3 2 0 3 24 3 35 3 38 36 0 L 3 7 9 P 38 3 P 3 9 1 C 201 336 3 37 P E L R L P RLP R I P TAY T A Y RLP euR BUR BUR e u R BUR BLR BUR BUR BUR BLR BUR BUR GEC GSB BUR GAR GEA GEA GEA E s e PA I W F • G c - HP A B t L GAR R L P R L P C PA C PA GC L GCL GAR C P A HRC HRC HRC GAR PAR PAR PAP PAR E s e G t C PA I GS B RLP TAY T A Y T A Y TA Y TAY RL P RAS R L P E h S TA Y T A Y TAY RAS GSB GS B 2 3 0 2 5 1 2 6 7 1 1 6 7 1 1 6 141 137 6 1 2 4 108 1 06 106 106 106 136 106 106 106 106 106 220 111 2202 112 311 105 114 100 137 4 1 2 2 3 1 6 127 328 309 6 1 2 2 6 1 2 0 A 4 2 0 4 A 4 2 0 4 3 0 7 3 07 7 A 3 1 2 0 4 2 5 0 4 1 0 6 H 4 2 5 6 109 206 203 2 34 2 1 0 115 112 4 4 2 1212 5 1 1 6 3 3 0 304 308 315 212 7 1 0 4 2 1 3 6 1 0 4 4 3 1 139 139 2 1 7 211 1 2 1 4 2 2 0 4 r ~ * V lC T O R IN O X S w iss A rm y IdNiVES COME. B 't L BROWSE AMONG TUOOSANPS O F WOtt-TO fcoote .TOOLS, < IDEAS FOR PRACTICAL SURVIVAL INTODAVS WORLD N o w 2 Locat/ons / WHOLE EARTH PROVISION COMPANY 2410 S a n A n t o n io 24in s a u &6fc& R e s e a r c h 4 7 6 - 1 5 7 7 " f n q A q q e b m 0 3 7 75 0 37 95 L 53 90 421 85 4 2 3 1 5 4 2 3 5 5 0 4 2 50 0 4 2 55 0 4 2 60 0 42 65 0 42 70 0 4 2 75 0 42 8 J 0 42 85 0 4 2 90 0 4 4 2 0 0 4 4 3 5 191 40 1 9 3 1 5 1 9 3 2 0 1 9 6 95 4 7 2 4 5 5 6 3 6 5 0 9 2 1 0 0 9 2 50 0 92 55 0 9 2 6 0 1 5 6 75 1 5 7 1 0 3 7 0 8 0 3 7 1 1 5 3 7 1 2 5 371 35 5 0 7 1 5 5 1 1 5 0 4 9 4 7 5 5 0 1 4 5 5 0 1 5 0 5 3 1 9 5 5 0 2 55 5 0 2 6 5 5 34 3 5 3 9 2 6 3 3 7 7 6 0 3 7 8 1 5 3 70 25 3 7 8 4 0 3 7 9 1 0 5 3 5 3 3 5 35 35 3 8 4 8 0 5 6 5 70 5 6 6 1 0 5 6 7 C5 5 6 7 5 0 5 6 7 6 0 3 8 8 4 0 3 8 9 4 0 5 4 0 35 5 4 2 75 5 4 3 9 0 4 0 0 C 0 4 3 0 3 0 0 32 45 0 3 2 50 0 3 3 7 3 0 3 3 7 5 3 7 4 80 2 5 6 8 5 4 2 7 7 0 4 2 7 7 5 4 2 7 8 0 4 2 7 8 5 4 2 7 9 0 4 3 0 6 0 PAN PAN PET PI C P I C P I C PKT PKT PKT PKT PKT PKT PKT PKT PKT PKT PKT P L S PUS PUS PUS NTR P A PED PEO PEO PEO PEh PEN PHL PHL PHL PHL PHR PHR PHY PHY PHY PHY PHY PHY PHY PCR PSY PSY PSY PSY PSY RTF RTF R I S S fa S M S fa S M S fa SCC SCC SFE SPE SPE SFN SPN STA STA STA STA T C U C ZCC 2CC 2CC ZCC ZCC ZCC 3 7 4 3 7 6 321 316 362 3 8 0 P 3 37 3 3 7 3 3 7 337 3 37 3 37 33 7 3 37 3 37 338 360 4 1 1 A 32 5 L 2 2 6 J 6 8 7 A 3 9 0 3 8 8 K 3 2 1L 3 2 5 k 3 2 5 K 3 2 5 K 3 6 9 3 8 3 3 12 3 13 3 1 7 K 3 18 341 3 7 3 P 301 1 2 7 P 12 7 P 341 3 7 3 3 7 5 S 3 9 4 T 3 7 5 317 328K 332 3 3 7 3 5 4 K 365 365 308 3 1 0 32 3 K 3 8 1 L 38 3L 3 8 3 P 3 08 3 46 3 1 5 S 3 7 3 3 9 4 K 32 2K 32 6 L 3 0 9 309 310 3 10 301 3 88 320 3 2 0 320 3 2 0 3 2 0 3 62 B LB HRC EC J fa R fa e i c WEL J E S J E S J E S J E S J E S J E S J E S JfcS J E S WCH ART WCH PUS wee P EE G R G GSB e t B B t L B E L B E L BLR ENS W E l G C L GAR a h t B I C BUR R L P P L P RLP G t C RLP RLP RLP BAT BEB G S e GAR P E Z s s e C P A CP A PAR PAR e : e B t B RLP P A R C A L GRC PAR RLP RLP BEB BAT J E S J E S PAR W AC RLP G S e E hS E h S E hS E hS E h S RLP 2 55 4 2 5 2 9 . 2 3 6 102 301 2 3 1 0 A 1 21 A A 121 A A 121 A A 121 A A l 2 1 A A 1 21 A A 1 2 1 A A 121 A A 1 21 A 14 1 1 1 0 221 105 2 1 3 4 2 1 0 6 312 22 02 153 202 202 202 136 532 2 3 1 2 105 313 1 12 0 11 2 2 2 4 51 J 4 6 1 1 3 6 1 1 6 104 5 1 1 8 5 1 2 4 5 1 1 6 115 52 2 2 1 8 2 1 3 202 301 A 5 1 3 4 A 5 1 3 4 104 1 251 2 5 9 6 1 2 6 306 130 4 2 4 203 7 1 2 6 7 120 164 U l A2 1 5 A A 2 1 7A 201 214 5 1 2 2 2202 3 J2 302 302 3 32 3 02 5 1 2 0 S A T U R D A Y December 15, 2-5 p.m. (Classes meeting M W F 11) G rad e rep orts for these io the c l a s s e s are due 311 311 312 3 8 1 P 3 8 4 3 8 0 6 0 2 A 3 10 R L P 7 1 0 4 WAG 4 2 0 WAG 2 14 e e e 4 6 0 GSe 1 2 1 2 G s e 3 1 3 4 RAS 2 1 8 GAR 311 BUR 136 3 0 2 3 7 2 K GCL 3 0 7 36 2 L BUR 116 3 3 7 K ART 1 1 2 0 3 5 4 K F i e 2 2 0 4 3 6 3 AP T 1 1 1 0 311 GEC 1 11 T A Y 1 37 3 6 6 L 3 8 4 P E h S 4 3 1 E h S 4 0 2 3 8 6 P 301 A 1 2 1 A J E S 3 03 EC J 1 . 2 0 2 BEB 166 32 5 B e e 4 5 8 3BON e E N 2 2 2 2 S 2 S BEB 56 3 8 3 T G s e 2 2 0 4 3 2 4 3 2 3 WEI 2 2 4 6 c c e 301 301 T E C 302 c c e 3 0 4 E E C 3 0 1 K 302 E hS 301 K 302 E h S 3 0 1 K E h S 3 0 2 30 IK E h S 3 02 3 0 1 K 302 E h S 30 I P WEL 1 30 8 3 0 1 P WEL 1 308 30 IP WEL 1 308 3 0 1 P WEL 1 30 8 3 0 1 P WEL 1 308 3 1 1 L PAR 20 3 PAP 2 0 3 321 3 0 6 e ¿ e 161 3 06 PAR 104 GAR 201 3 31 e t e 161 P A R 104 EC J 1 . 2 0 4 p t e b e e E C J 3 . 4 0 2 EC J 3 . 3 0 2 E C J 7 . 2 0 8 WAG 101 departmental office by 9 a.m. Wednesday, December 19. 0 0 9 70 ACC 0 0 9 75 ACC 0 1 0 9 0 ACC 0 1 6 5 0 ACC 0 1 7 C 0 ACC 0 1 8 7 0 ACS 5 7 0 4 5 AF S 2 34 30 APS 2 3 7 2 0 ANT 5 1 8 6 0 ARC 1 1 3 2 0 ARE 1 6 5 2 0 ARH 1 6 5 3 5 ARH 1 6 5 4 5 ARH 1 0 8 C 5 ASE 1 0 8 85 ASE 1 1 0 C 5 ASE 1 1 0 1 5 ASE 4 0 4 8 0 AST 4 0 5 30 AS T 4 0 5 95 AST 0 0 3 2 5 B A 0 0 3 75 B A 0 0 4 C 0 B A 0 2 6 80 B C 0 2 8 3 0 B L 5 7 5 0 5 B I B 5 7 5 1 0 B I B 5 75 30 B I B 5 7 5 5 5 B I B 4 0 8 90 a i c 4 0 8 9 5 B I C 4 09 CO B I C 4 C 9 C 5 B I C 4 0 9 1 0 B I C 4 0 9 6 5 B I G 4 0 9 7 0 B I C 4 0 9 7 5 B I C 4 0 9 80 B I C 4 0 9 8 5 B I O 4 1 6 2 0 BCT 4 1 7 2 0 BCT 2 45 75 c c 2 4 5 8 0 C C 2 4 6 1 5 c c 2 4 6 50 c c 2 4 6 5 5 c c 122 50 C E 1 2 2 6 0 C E 124 50 C E 1 2 4 6 0 C E 1 2 5 2 0 C E 1 2 5 5 5 C E 4 4 7 5 0 C S 4 4 7 5 5 C S 4 4 7 6 0 C S 4 4 7 6 5 C S 4 4 7 70 c s 4 4 9 75 c s 4 5 0 1 5 c s 4 3 5 4 5 CH 4 3 7 2 5 C H 442 35 CH 1 1 7 7 0 Che 1 1 7 7 5 CHE 1 1 9 70 CHE 1 8 3 0 0 ORP 1 8 3 3 5 ORP 1 8 3 4 5 DRP 1 8 4 3 5 O R P 1 8 5 2 5 ORP 2 6 4 3 5 £ 2 6 7 C 5 E 2 6 7 1 0 E 2 6 7 1 5 £ 2 6 7 4 3 E 2 7 4 1 0 E 2 7 4 1 5 E 2 7 8 4 0 E 2 7 8 7 0 E 2 7 9 8 0 E WAG 101 WAG 101 WAG 131 4 1 0 WAC 101 3 7 5 4 5 9 e t e B t e 259 3 8 3 C 301 H P A 61 0 A WE L 1 3 1 6 3 8 6 J WE L 2 2 5 6 4 5 4 RAS 3 10 4 5 4 R A S 3 10 3 9 0 145 E hS 2 0 8 R A S 3 12 R A S 212 3 1 2 K GEA 105 3 1 4 32 OK P AS 313 R A S 3 17 e c e 4 5 4 e e e 3 55 s e e 351 e . e 354 PAP 101 PAP 308 PAR 103 PAR 105 e c e e c e 3 3 6 336 3 35 341 3 6 9 1 3 7 4 K 3 81 P 3 8 7 P 4 1 0 306 3 06 3 07 3 0 7 3 1 2 L 3 1 2 P 3 1 4 K 4 1 0 4 1 0 4 1 0 361 J 6 0 3 A 33CA 2 84 306 3 0 6 311 154 you don' t hove to be in Son Juon to get o Son Juon Freeze! f\¿ ila m a ñ tg f jjn Serving 11 a .m .-12 a.m. fri, sai 11 a .m .-2 a.m. Serving mon-thwrt 1 ) a.m. . 12 a .m. 311 W 6th The Old Pecan $t. Cafe C o ntin ental Ste aks. French Cuisine. C o ck ta ils. C o u rty a rd & E x quisite Pastries. Hours: 11 till Midnight. Weekends till 2 a.m. 310 East 6th Sr. THE CONTINENTAL CLUB Presents in December Tu ai.l )th Wed. 12th Thur». 13th Fri. 14th Sat. 15th Sun. 16th Mon. 17th Tue». 18 th Wed. 19th Thur.. 20th Fri. 2 l»t Sat. 22nd Sun. 23rd Mon. 24th Tue». 25th Wed. 26»h Thur*. 27th Fri. 28th Sat. 29th Sun. 30th Mon. 31 »t TH*SKUNKS LEWIS and the LEGENDS THE SKYSCRAPERS THE BIZARROS THE EXPLOSIVES TALEWIND LEWIS and tho LEGENDS ROCKY HILL THE EXPLOSIVES TERMINAL MIND THE BIZARROS OPEN DATE — C A U FOR INFO TALEWIND ROKY ERIKSON MIDNIGHT ANGELS THE SKYSCRAPERS THE SKUNKS THE BIZARROS VAN WILKS and TOOLS THE WOMACK BROTHERS NEW YEARS EVE ROKY ERIKSON AND THE EXPLOSIVES Happy Hour 2:30-7 p.m. A L W A Y S 50' Lone Star 1315 S. Congress 442-9904 Page 10 016C5 ACC 0159 2 ACC 0 1 6 2 5 ACC 0 1 6 5 5 ACC 0 1 7 1 0 ACC 0 1 7 1 5 ACC 0 1 7 3 5 ACC 5 2 6 2 0 AOV 5 7 0 5 0 AFS 5 7 0 6 0 AFS 2 3 6 8 0 APS 2 3 6 9 5 APS 2 3 5 2 0 APS 2 3 5 3 5 APS 2 6 3 9 0 ANS 2 3 7 1 5 A M 2 3 8 6 5 A M 2 3 8 8 0 ANT 359 5 5 ARA 1 1 2 5 5 ARE 1 6 3 9 0 ARH 165 2 5 ARH 1656 5 ARH 165 7 5 ARH 107 8 0 ASE 108 55 ASE 6 0 6 7 5 AST 6 0 5 9 0 AST 6 0 6 CO AST 6 0 6 3 0 AST A 003 6 5 0 0 3 9 0 6 A A 0 0 6 3 5 8 0 0 6 6 5 8 A 0 0 6 6 5 8 A 0 2 7 1 5 B C c 027 JO B e i 0287 5 5 75 CO b i b 6 0 9 6 0 BIC 6 0 9 6 5 BIC 6 0 9 5 0 BIC 6 0 9 5 5 BIC 6 0 9 6 0 BIC 6 1 1 1 5 BIO 6 U 2 0 BIO 6 1 1 2 5 BIC 6 1 1 3 0 BIC 6 1 1 3 5 BIC 6 1 2 6 5 BIC 6 1 2 7 0 BIC 6 1 2 7 5 BIC 6 1 2 8 0 BIC 6 1 2 8 5 BIC 617C5 BCT 6 1 8 6 5 BCT 6 1 8 7 5 BCT 6 1 9 9 5 BCT 2 6 5 CO C C 2 66 75 2 66 80 121 6 5 121 70 1 2 3 5 0 126 5 5 126 70 125 6 5 I 2 5 e 0 12620 6 6 8 1 0 669 J5 6 6 9 6 5 0 5 0 5 0 CFE 6 3 5 6 0 CH 6 3 5 6 5 CH 6 3 9 7 0 CH 6 6 0 5 0 CH 6 6 0 5 5 CH 6 6 1 7 0 CH 6 6 3 8 3 CH 117C5 CHE 117C7 CHE 1 1 8 7 0 CHE 11 8 8 5 CHE 1 1 9 5 0 CHE 181 85 OFP 186 6 5 ORP 2 6 6 2 5 2 6 6 6 5 266 75 2 66 85 2 7 5 6 5 2 82 55 286C0 2 86 80 285 22 2 86 70 237C0 2 3 7 3 5 2 8 7 9 0 1 30C0 1313 0 13165 1 32 75 1 3385 I 3610 135 10 1 3560 138 10 1 3 9 3 0 1 3995 160 35 2 5 8 5 0 ECC 2585 2 ECC 2 5 8 5 5 ECC 2 59 55 ECC 2 5 9 9 0 l CC 2 6 0 5 5 ECC 2 6 1 1 3 ECC 261 1 5 ECC 26 2 C 5 ECC 0 5 7 - 5 EDC 0 6 8 7 5 EDP 068 80 EOP 0 6 9 7 5 EOP 0 7 0 3 5 EOP 0 7 2 C5 EOP 291 75 ETS 2 9 3 5 0 ETS 2 9 6 9 5 EUS 2 9 5 CO ECS 020C0 FIN 0 2 0 8 5 FI N 0 2 1 5 5 F I H 021 3 5 FI N 022 7 5 FIM 3 3 0 9 0 FP 301 CO FR 303 15 F s 307C5 G 30 7 0 6 G 307 07 G 337C8 G 30 7 3 9 G 3 0 7 1 0 G 30711 G 36 2 37 2 K 3 8 0 k 382 386 386 386K 3 70 J 6 1 1 A 620 A 322 326 356 371 361 302 329 350L 380K 235K 302 339K 368 37 2 302 362 301 326 352K 380K 28 1S 382T 385T 386T 387T 32 5 361 32 3 301 301 P 301 P 30 I P 301 P 30 I P 302 302 302 302 302 303 303 303 303 303 317 662 P 370P 38 7 L 301 362 362 211K 21 1 K 356 373 376 385 L 3 9 1 1 J96L 318 360 372 321 302 302 61 8 A 339K 339L 370 392R 322 32 2 379 386 38 5 J 205 378 e»03 A 306 306 306 307 31 6L 321 325 3 2 5 * 360K 363K 372c 376L 318 325 336K 365K 360L 362K 38 i K 385 J 306 319 36 5 J 397 302 302 302 303 303 32 8 352P 355 387K 371 332 S 332S 380E 381 386 301 376 361 361 356 357 370 375 397 3 1 0 * 310C 381 613 6 1 3 613 613 613 613 613 WAG 216 BEE 251 JfcS A3 17 A BEe 363 BEe 158 eEe 265 BEL 262 CPA A5136 RAS 312 RAS 211 GAP 309 WAG 201 BEB 153 eEe 362 A R T 1206C BIC 112 BLR 208 BUR 220 RCP 7116 ECJ 1 . 2 0 2 A R T 1110 A P T 1120 F i e 2206 A P T 1 2060 ECJ 1 . 2 1 6 ENS 637 WCH 16 BUR 212 RCP 5116 RIP 7118 Gse 2206 BEe 658 BEe 56 BEB 563 GSe 1216 GSe 2202 G s e 2116 GCC 105 cce GEC 100 GEC 100 GEC 100 GEC 100 GEC 100 CUR 116 eup l i t BuP 1 . 6 BUR 116 eUR 116 eec 328 8 c l 328 BEC 328 BEC 328 e E l 328 ESe 3 3 3 RCP 5122 WEC 2256 WEI 2256 PA I 302 P A I 302 PAP 201 GCC 112 GEC 112 ECe 370 BUR 108 ENS 631 EC J 7 . 2 0 8 ECJ 5 . 6 1 8 EC J 7 . 2 0 2 GAP 109 BEe 5 5 6 TAV 315 ECe 626 BEe 150 pee 3 i i PPN WEC 1316 RIP 5120 W£C 2252 R L P 5118 TAV 217 ENS 109 GlC 106 T A V 161 EPS 360 RAS 315 RAS 313 PAR 308 GAP 200 eEe 266 PAP J33 PAR 206 ECB 3 3 0 a PAP 106 PAR 103 PAP 310 PAR 206 PAR 101 PAR 306 PAP 208 BUR 216 GCC 307 **PW 1 1 3 Gse 1212 B£e 556 GtC 111 ENS 532 ENS 360 SUP 130 P A R 1 ENS 360 EPS 6 0 2 RCP 5106 GSB 2218 e i p 106 eee 256 A C A 21 BEe 156 6£e 161 J t S A 3 03 A BEB 365 ECE 238 ECB 260 ECB 668 e r e 656 E C e 2 7 8 ECe 6 1 6 A BE* 2 2 2 C * A A 3112 Bee 166 P A R 105 ■AG 131 JES A2 1 5 A s s e 3 o i HRC 6252 e : e 157 BEC 165 • 1 1 238 eAT 105 H*A ►•PA HP A HP A HP A HR A HR A HRA HRA HRA HRA HRA HRA HRA HRA HRA HRA HRA HRA HRA HRA HRA CRA A2320 PIR 7112 eee 253 3071 2 G S 613 307 1 5 G S 613 3 072 0 G S 613 3 0 7 2 5 G S 6 13 3 0 7 3 0 G S 613 307 35 G S 613 3C760 G S 613 30765 G S 613 3 0 7 5 0 G S 613 30755 G S 613 3 0 7 6 0 G S 613 30765 G S 6 13 3 0 7 7 0 G S 613 30775 G S 6 13 307 80 G S 613 307 e5 G S 613 307 50 G S 613 653C5 GEC 303 6 5 8 6 5 GEC 3 8 0 * 391 0 660 0 5 GEC 6 6 0 1 5 GEC 3 9 1G 8 1 * 7112 3 2 7 1 0 GCV 3 10 L WEL 2226 3271 5 GCV 3101 WEL 2226 3 2 7 2 0 GCV 310 L W£L 2226 327 2 5 GCV 310L WEL 2226 327 30 GCV 310L WEL 222 6 327 3 5 GCV 310L WEL 2226 3 2 7 6 0 GCV 310L WEL 2226 327 6 5 GCV 3 1 OL WEL 2226 3 2 7 5 0 GCV 310L WEL 2226 3275 5 GCV 310L WEL 22 26 A U S T I N B9 L L E T TH&3 T K E ti/n m u n c M PRE • REGISTRATION S P R IN G T E R M C LA S S ES POP. IN SALLEJ J A I I MODERN TAP EXE.POSE children +hrw adults beiynmrKj-thru advanced P EC 10 21 dUAforv b a U it J h to lte h h o o i W K J e a t Z 3wt W W 5 7 b c v itrtv u i C o rn e r d v u d n U A f a i l o ritu hc adsvuo/i SCHOOL OF MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY LIMITED NUMBER OF OPENINGS AVAILABLE APPIYNQW Student openings in the Harns Hospital School of Medical Technology are now available for the January 1980 pro gram Applicants for this 12-month program must hold a Bachelor s Degree in either Biology or Chemistry For more information about this exciting career learning opportunity call Ms. June Lynch, 817/334-6816 2 4 0 5 San Antonio 474-7812 Open Mon-Fri , ; 3 0 - 3 : 3 ° "H id d m n in th • Tr— s Bm hind Y a r in g 't " Take a Study Break Visit Barbara and Jane's for a Delicious Home-Cooked M eal I COCe o s O O OS i: 2120 E. Rivenide Dr, 11 F O R M E N ladies Dance 1 1 j> 4 p.m .-2 a.m . Tues.-Fri. Sat. 8 p .m .-2 a.m . Sun 6 p.m-2 a.m . 0 F O R W O M E N Malo Dancors 11:30 a .m .-4 p.m. Tuet.-FriJ Mon. 11 a .m .-2 a.m . Sat. 2-8 p.m. 1 E X A M S P E C IA L { | Happy Hour 2 for 1 W o - * --------------- 4-7 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 1 F re e B e e r w/u r m SO* Boor • • > » o o o e o o o e T H E J u i c e ■ \ f a c t o r y ¿ la sta u ra n i TAKE A BREAK with AUSTIN’S FINEST FOOD Holiday Gift Alternatives O n e b lock o f f I F s h u tt le on 15th & A v e . A 4 5 4 - 8 3 4 9 1 0 a .m . to 9 p .m . 7 d a y s a week THE BEST CHRISTMAS GIFTING * * $ j)p r FREE M O N O G R A M On M en's or Ladies' Robe or Solid Shirt in Our Stock * * ? " • * 1 2 /2 4 /7 9 r . !25M OFF A N Y SUIT in Stock at Full Retail i Mp4 f t 1 2 / 2 4 / 7 9 50% OFF A N Y BEIT G ood W ith Purchase of A n y Full R etail Slacks fxplros 1 2 / 2 4 / 7 9 Page 19 3810 MEDICAL PKWY • 454-4956 GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GCV GRG GRG H t H E H E H E M I S H I S H I S H I S H I S H I S 1 s I s J L I 6 L I S LI N 328 I S 32820 32825 32830 328 35 32840 32925 32930 32935 32940 32945 32950 32955 32960 32965 329 70 33195 3 32C5 332 35 310 75 311 35 46585 46625 46785 46860 3 37 75 33855 33885 3 38 90 33950 33985 34595 346 * 5 53035 35090 351 35 3 j 2 '05 4 7840 47845 4 78 50 47855 46055 310L 310L 310L 310 L 310L 3101 312L 3121 312L 312 L 312 L 312 L 312 L 312L 312L 312L 31 2L 320L 3271 31 OK 335 207 L A 311 333 646 A 315L 34 OP 344P 345 J 353*» 35 7P 320 320 360 306 3647* 381“ 6033 603 A 603 A 603A 305G 8U« eL« BUR et« BUB b u b B A T b a t BAT BAT BAT PAT BAT BAT BAT eAT P A I RLP BUB R L “ e£B G c A ACA BLB P A I e t e T A V G A B G A B G A B WPW R I P G S e P I C JES 61P P A R BAS BUB B L P WEL RLP 106 106 106 106 106 106 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 302 4102 220 5116 161 127 21 216 412 150 317 7 1 309 102 4102 22 02 112 A217A 257 103 213 136 6104 2308 5104 14415 14420 14425 145 70 14655 14650 14785 14835 15160 03640 037 CO 03760 03785 0 38 CO 354 75 3 54 50 423 CO 42410 04425 193 30 19540 19715 35725 357 65 09320 37045 371 CO 37210 3 72 25 50625 509 50 51055 49515 502 CO 502 85 37810 37895 02516 046 35 5 34 35 53525 565 90 p E p E P E H E P E " E P E P E p e P A N P A N P A N P A N P A N P E S PES PI C P IC PKT PCS PUS P L S C A L C A L PEO PHL PHI PHL PHL PHB PHR PHB PHY PHY PHY PSY PSY R E «ES RTF RTF s * 2 0 IG 201G 2 0 1 G 319 326 335 340k 3 4 4 3 9 1C 32 5 336 370 374 376 361 362 361 388 338 226 J 379K 6 8 8 # 307 372 330 301 312 340 34 8 JlOK 366 P 369P 302K 341 38 1 P 323 350K 358 32 5 360 J 365 311 TAY T A Y TAY JES TAY RLP EC J euR RLP et e B t l BEE e t e P A I RLP eee PAR TAY JES WC F p u s “US RLP GAR BEL G C l HRC PAR G A R BEe RLP WEL RLP RLP etN P A I RSN B. B B l C CPA RLP 300 304 308 A 317 A 206 7104 1 . 2 0 2 134 5120 166 328 255 354 442 4102 554 203 207 A 12 1A 202 106 105 5116 111 242 105 4252 104 111 14 262 5122 1316 5118 6116 2 2 2 248 161 112 #3112 5124 56825 3 39CO 38953 540 30 4 0 1 . 0 032 55 03320 034C5 035C0 03993 42691 43035 43050 4 3095 431 CO 431 10 S W SCC SCC SPE s p n STA STA STA STA TR 2CC ZCC ZCC ZCC ZCC ZCC 38 7 k 329 349K 315P 367K 309 309 310 380 350 316K 35 7 36 5 L 365 L 365 L 3651 eEL BEB b ce ese BAT WAG J . S BcB RLP GSe e i c TAY WAG WAS WAG WAG 202 355 351 115 101 201 A 215 A 254 5120 2218 301 139 214 214 214 214 MONDAY December 17, 7-10 p.m. (Classes meeting M evenings) G rade rep orts for th e se c l a s s e s a re due th e departmental office by 9 a.m. Friday, December 21. in 01055 0 1 1 2 0 23515 23983 51850 51855 0 2 7 . 0 57560 575 30 4 18 26 42030 12523 ACC ACC APS ANT ARC ARC 8 C B I B B I B BCT BCT C E 311 312 355 389K 366 P 370K 324 304 317 W 349 394 381 P BLB 161 BEe 155 GSe 1218 BUR 220 GCL 307 GCL 105 GSe 4180 cce L EC euR 134 BUR 134 ECJ 1.204 BEE 153 eEB 255 e t e 261 ECe 416A ECB 238 ECe 240 ECB 278 ECe <<18 e t E 166 BUP 106 BLR 212 2 73C0 E 27 520 E 291 70 E 06575 EDA 06028 EOC 0 7 0 / 5 EOP 0 71 70 EDP 072 CO EOP 02130 F I N 32870 GCV 33436 GCV 33965 H I S 340 75 H I S 52835 J 25265 LAT 03675 PAN 03725 P A N 49875 PHY 37710 PSY 37745 PSY 38555 RUS 09780 SEO 09850 SEO 39070 SCC 306 307 314K 383 385G 381 3821 384 357 310L 383K 35 5 N GSe 1213 383 312 390 335 336 103P 301 309 391 383 393 396P TUESDAY December 18, 9-12 a.m. (Classes meeting TTH 10:30-12) G rade rep orts for th e se c l a s s e s a re due th e departmental office by 9 a.m. Saturday, December 22. eEe 358 BUR 130 BEe 359 BEe 151 GSB 2210 BUR 224 GSB 1216 Bt e 52 BcB 358 ECe 330A ECe 416A BUR 203 in 00960 ACC 00965 ACC 01065 ACC 01130 ACC 01220 ACC 311 311 311 326 32 7 WAG 420 GSB 2210 BEe 355 JES A1 21 A ECe 104 AGINE! “ AN AFTER-CHRISTMAS SALE ^.BEFORE CHRISTMAS! IN PROGRESS yacaéüattA, 2222 GUADALUPE " G et rid of the chore of Christm as shopping. That's right, Christm as shopping doesn t have to be a chore. Because you don t have to do the shopping. Just give me the list of gifts you need. I’ll drive all over town, if need be, and buy exactly what you want. Hard to believe? Just try out my service. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call me at, 451-7201 e.t.c. elim in ate triv ia l cliores R E B E L Drine-Jn x 6902 B u rle so n R o ad New C ine-fi S o u n d S y ste m 385-7217 Privacy of You r A u to XXX Original Uncut N ote T h ea tre o p e ra te s th ro u g h y our car radio If y our car has no radio, bring a p o rtable so u n d Start# 1 2 / 1 2 J O H N N Y PU TS T H E " W A D D " TO M IS S J O N E S . . .! J O H N C . i i o i v i i s So hot you'll melt in your ’" " T H E CHINA C K T SELLING YOUR BOOKS? LOOKING FOR HIGHER PRICES? TEXAS TEXTBOOKS offers the highest prices and quick, convenient service. A sk a friend who has sold books to us or bought books from us. A friend won't lie to you. Anybody can buy an ad. Com e over and sell your books and then tell your friends about how much you got for your books. Don’t forget to come and buy your books from us next spring. W e also have som e wonderful Christmas presents at the best prices in town- such as T-shirts, caps, jackets, and other UT Specialty Items. W e w ant to thank those of you w ho have been dealing with T E X A S TEXTB O O K S- w e know you will be back, but rem em ber to tell your friends about us. Thanks again. W e will be open 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. until finals are over TEXAS TEXTBOOKS, INC 478-9833 1 $t Floor Castilian Corner of 24th & San Antonio St. 24th St. ★ T EX A S TEXT BO O K S •< ★ Free Parking ip 3 > 3 © 3 o «*> ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ W S4' P a g e 18 28135i £ 23155 > E 282 75i E 2 36 fcCl E 28675' E 2 86 50i t 28805 E 28930 E 12950 E E 1 31 15 E E 133 30 E E 134 55 E E 134 50 E E 13595 E E 1 3870 E R 138 55 E R 1 3975 E p 2584 0 ECC 25861 ECC 258 62 ECC 25865 ECC 25995 ECC 26125 ECC 26135 ECC 261 80 ECC 2 42 45 ECC 06885 E 0 P 071 15 EOP 29195 E T S 29215 E T S 2 93 CO E T S 29505 ECS 02005 F I N 02140 F I N 022 C5 F IN 0 2225 F IN 02265 F IN 29915 FR 29965 FR 299 70 FR 299 71 FR 299 72 FR 3 CO 60 FR 30080 FR 30120 FR 3 0140 FR 302 50 FR 302 60 FR 30343 FR 45615 GEC 4 5760 GEC 45825 GEC 4 58 t j GEC 45895 GEC 461 30 GEC 461 35 GEC 461 40 GEC 31545 GER 31550 GER 31610 GER 31633 GER 31650 GER 316 75 GER 31755 GER 31820 GER 24895 GK 32760 GCV 329 75 GCV 3 32 50 GCV 33320 GCV 30920 GRG 3 0925 GRG 30929 GRG 30930 GRG 309 34 GRG 33935 GRG 30940 GRG 30945 GRG 46565 H E 465 75 H E 46710 H £ 4 7010 H 6 362 75 HEB 07615 HE0 364 35 H IN 33715 H I S 33805 H I S 33810 H I S 33860 H I S 33935 H IS 33955 H IS 34040 H I S 30525 I TL 30535 I TL 30550 I T L 52825 J 52895 J 52910 J 52915 J 5 30 50 J 53145 J 55390 L S 55395 L S 5 54 60 I S 2 5135 LAT 2 52 CO CAT 35070 L IN 35071 L IN 35075 L IN 35150 L IN 478 15 * 4 7820 R 4 79 30 P. 47935 P 48035 P 483C0 P 483C5 P 4 8310 P 48315 P 48365 P 48370 X lP 48375 I* 4 8 3 e0 48445 P 4 84 65 P 4 85 30 P 4 8613 P 486 35 P 48665 P 4 86 95 P 4 8720 P 48721 P 48780 P 4 88C0 P 4 8820 P 14615 P E 14710 P £ 14970 P E 15045 R E 15055 ► E 15120 p E 03630 PAN 03665 RAN 03695 RAN 03736 RAN PASI 206 e c e 1 558 ft si 306 PAPi 201 GAR1 313 PAPl 204 ftP 208 PAP1 310 RAS 213 R L R 5104 TAY 139 e t e 251 P L R 51 16 ENS 109 TAY 317 WAN 102 ENS 431 GEC 100 E E e 253 e t e 152 GAP 1 e c e 5i, e . e 266 E E B 157 E E E 362 B E E 266 EC E 370 e c e 278 B E E 52 GRG 424 ECE 240 HRC 4252 E ^ e 155 J E S A 3 15 A A215A J t S GAR 109 G SE 2 2 0 2 e£N 132 E E N 116 BE'- 212 B tN 318 e e e 158 B E e 165 eAT 105 BEN 304 e E e 365 e e e 265 e t e 364 e * r 1 J2 eAT 7 GEC 112 ÍA Y 207 ENS 532 TAY 141 e i c 301 e i c 301 E IC 3 J 1 BUR 108 euR 108 BUR 108 BUR 108 EUR 112 euR 112 eAT 115 EAT 20 2 GAR 203 BUR 216 B E e 151 HRC 4252 e s e 223 ART 1102 ART 1102 AWT 1102 ART 1102 ART 1102 ART 1102 ART 1102 ART 1132 314L 314L 314L 358K 360K 360R 379 392L 411 323 3 5 1 X 369 380L 395 R 311 314 384L 302 302 302 302 303 362 R 368 384K 392 R 3 32S 3821 310 318 374 361 354 36 7 376 380 397 604 406 406 406 406 408 K 610 612 312 K 324L 32 4 R 3 90L 416R 3 3 6 k 365N 380L 3 8 3 1 398T 398T 398T 406 406 407 40 8 K 310 312K 361 K 389K 319 310L 312L 336 R 356K 3 0 1C 3 0 1C 301C 301C 301C 301 C 301C 301C 407 A I GRG 316 407B GEA 114 322 WCH 14 368 R L R 5122 41 2 K R L R 5124 333 e£ L 204 406 R L R 6116 315K PAR 1 32 1R MEL 2308 GAP 7 322R 3 4 1 K PAP 304 35 IN CAL 130 355F W E I 2312 e c e 59 3 72P p.i 210 406 407 PH 208 eAT 302 312L R L R 6 11 8 312 R IR 6120 3 2 1L 322 CRA A5134 R IR 6 1 2 2 322 CR* A3 11 2 36 3 386K R L R 5114 382 L HRC 4250 382 L HPC 4102 384K HRC 4106H 506 WAG 208 3121 WAG 308 SUT 101 306 306 REE 428 306 E c e 524 PAR 210 373 603A WEL 2224 603A WWW 113 6038 BUR 130 PA I 442 6 03 B 305G BUR 134 808 A e s e 115 808 A E s e 115 808 A e s e 115 808 A E s e 115 808B P A I 248 P A I 248 8088 P A I 248 8088 8088 .248 P A I 608 E * PAP 303 311 B E e 361 316K e c e 261 427K P A ! 302 427 L WEL 2304 34 3 K E s e 137 362 K GAR 3 665 A R IR 7116 665 A R IR 6124 377K RLR 5118 680C A RLR 7118 383C 320 336 3661 380C 381 C 38 7 C 32 5 335 336 337 e e e 259 TAY 217 RAS 211 GAR 309 TAY 315 RLR 7114 ENS 340 J t S e e e 255 WEE 3502 GAR 5 A217A * 1 8 2 0 8CT * 1 8 8 5 BCT * 2 0 1 0 8CT 121 / 5 C E 121 80 c e 121 90 C E 12565 c e 4 39 30 CH 4 39 35 CH 4 3950 CH 117 CO CHE 1 1795 CHE 52155 CRP 2 70C5 E 2 70 20 E 27025 E 2 70 30 E 2 70 35 E 27045 c 2 7055 ¡ 2 75 es E 27805 E 2 7890 E 28065 E 2 8066 E 2 80 70 E 23205 E 2 8560 E 285 75 c 299C0 £ 340 1731 193K 2 1 1 k 2 1 1 k 3 1 1 S 387R 1 13P 113P 11 3 P 322 357 6 8 0 * 306 306 306 306 306 306 306 307 310 312R 314K 314K 314K 3141 337 338 392L WEL 2308 2 0900 E 1 32 6 J E E WcL 2256 WEL 2256 1 3*1 5 e e E C J 3 .3 0 2 . 3. 306 1 3 4 2 J E E E C J 3 .3 0 2 . 3 . 306 1 35 77 E £ 13635 £ ¿ MRM 102 TAY 21 r 1 38 10 E R W cl 2306 1 3 9 .0 t R WEL 2310 1 39 70 E R R IR 5120 25910 ECC E C J 1 .2 0 2 2 6035 ECC E C J 1 .2 0 4 05793 EOC 05860 E DC SUT 302 PAR 2 J4 06110 EOC S E E 351 06925 EOP PAR 200 07025 EDP 0 70 70 EOP B E E 266 PAR 105 07097 EOP PAR 20 6 0 7098 EOP PAR 306 071 45 EOP PAR 303 0 7410 EOP PAR 308 2 92 30 E T S p a r 1 295 40 EUS PAR 203 02120 F IN PAR 301 022 35 F IN PAR 201 300 C 5 FR PAR 304 30010 FR PAR 104 30040 FR e t e 161 3 )0 7 5 FR PAR 103 30155 FR 301 75 FR PAR 101 ENS 105 R I P 6104 394N 339 362 K 36 3 N WWW 1 1 J 394 L N S 109 396R E n S 4 )1 306 p a 1 248 314 TAY 317 384K R l R 5122 302 GSB 2210 30 3 GSB 2218 E c e 240 371 382S EC E 238 396 E C E 454 36 3 E C E 4 1 6A e c e 104 4 8 0 p e c e 270 381 481 EC E 524 e c e 130* 481 ee e 370 382 397 ECP 558 320 J t S 361 GAR 201 357 BE B 150 390 B t 8 155 406 e£N 212 406 P tN 310 e t N 132 407 408K Be Í 251 312K R t Z 428 P i t 157 3121 *30 3 A The Daily Texan will cease publication with the Wednesday, December 12th, issue and resume publication with the Monday, January 7th, issue. HALF THE STORY. 0 3 7 e0 RAN 35460 R ES 1 53 60 RET I 5 3 e 5 RET 4 2215 R IC 42285 R1C 042 95 RKT 043 CO RKT 043C5 RKT 0 4310 RKT 04315 RKT 04320 RKT 0 4325 RKT 0 4330 RKT 04335 RKT 04340 RKT 0 4 3 *5 RKT 0 435a RKT 189 75 RUS 18980 R LS 18985 R LS 1 39 90 R LS 192 70 R LS 194 05 RUS 19445 R LS 19450 RUS 194 85 R LS 196 70 RUS 4 72 30 NTR 03090 C A 357 80 CAC 09305 PE0 155 90 PEN 15595 PEN 156C0 PEN 15605 PEN 15620 PEN 15621 PEN 15728 PEN 37055 PHL 37120 PHL 37165 PHL 374 305 301 320 325 360 337 337 337 337 337 337 337 337 337 337 337 337 302 L 302 L 302L 3021 3 1 3 J 3 5 * 366 368 L 2691 384 J 380K 305 372 360 430 430 430 430 362 362 384 305 313 320K GAR 111 R LR 6104 e c R 224 E C J 1 .2 1 4 G tC 104 BUR 208 BUR 136 EUR 106 BUR 106 BUR 106 BUR 106 BLR 106 E LR 106 euR 106 ecR 106 BUR 106 EUR 106 EUR 106 R LS 250 R LS 200 RUS 200 R LS 200 RUS 105 WCH 219 RUS 106 wCh 211 R eE 2134 WCH 20 2 W c l 2310 e t e 553 e e e 59 AHG 39 E E E 153 B E e *53 e E e 153 B E e 153 ecR 220 BUR 220 WEL 2302 PAR 301 IC 4 E c e ECE 4 1 6 A 327 345 465N 373K 280R 303L 6 0 9 A I 352K 389K 317 384R 326 322K 363 J 406 311 3 7 ie O PHL 50745 PHR 50940 PHR 511C5 PHR 51185 PHR 49720 PHY 5 C 0 1 5 PHY 50215 PHY 50345 PHY 37765 PSY 3 80 30 PSY 04645 R ES 53345 RTF 53495 RTF 38465 R LS 56585 S ta 56625 S w 630A 38820 s e e 38855 s e e 38895 s e e 38930 s e e 54015 SP E 54155 SPE 542 80 SPE 39895 SFN 4 3045 SPN 401C0 SPN 032 75 STA 0 32 60 STA 0 33 90 STA 0 3 *8 0 STA 36935 SWA 375C0 T C 3 75 35 T C 25625 U C * 2 9 2 5 z ee * 2 9 7 5 zee * 3 3 2 0 z ee 302 317K 32 5 L 343 313 332 378 312 L 327 3641 309 309 310 362 312K 301 659A 358 325 351 385 L 8 £ e 554 G S e 1 2 1 4 e i c U 2 4102 RLR 7124 e E L 3 2 8 e s e 333 f»LK 7120 RLR 6114 GAR 200 i o 4 e c e RRN C*t 42320 C M 43112 PAR 102 J E S 4 3 0 3 * J t S 430 9* G C t 105 B E e 254 * C 4 21 GAR 215 R I P 5120 s s e 301 R O 7122 e4T 3 1a B * T 101 BAT 307 J E S 43174 e e e 363 B E e 150 H*G 201 BEN 204 J E S 43054 J c S 43074 G4R 2 o 1 e e e 257 G t * 127 « E L 2306 *121 A SATURD AY December 15, 7-10 p.m. (Classes meeting M W F 2) G rade reports for these c la ss e s are due in the departmental office by 9 a.m. Wednesday, December 19. 0 1020 ACC 311 ee e 166 01025 ACC 311 G se 1218 01115 ACC 312 J E S 01615 ACC 3 8 0 k e e e 264 0 1720 ACC 385 e t e 354 23505 AKS 325 GAR 311 2 3740 ANT 302 EUR 134 2 3745 ANT 304 BUR 106 24045 ANT 394 R PAP 101 11360 ARE 3T9K NRW 113 16567 a r h 370 ART 1110 24210 ARY 301 BUR 106 108 <5 ASE 167R TAY 315 I 09 C 0 ASE 167R TAY 137 109 30 ASE 370K P ER 5104 109 35 ASE 370L TAY 1*1 109 95 A SE 382R TAY 207 11035 ASE 388C ENS 637 4 0495 AST 301 R IR 4102 4 06 40 AST 381 RLR 5116 * 0 6 42 AST 381 RLR 5118 00315 B A 380R B E e 458 00320 B A 380R B e e 56 00330 B A 380N B e e 563 003 70 8 A 38 IT ee e 256 02695 8 C 324 G se 2204 029C0 B I 323 GAR 1 * 1 3 4 0 B I C 303 WEL 2246 * 1 3 4 5 B IC 303 WEL 2246 * 1 3 5 0 B IC 303 WEL 2246 *1 3 5 5 B IC 303 W c l 2246 * 1 3 6 0 B IC 303 WEL 2246 When You Hove Something Very Special You d Like Duplicated, i * - Come to When you ve written or collected something special, it deserves to look os good os It reads You deserve more than just copies — you deserve the best. And you con get it or Ginny's. At Ginny's, manuscripts drawings poetry, music, posters, color photos & slides can be copied or low prices, when you need them W e also stock a variety of white and colorful papers ond con bind your materials into attractive volumes So come to Ginny s and see what w e hove to offer 44 Dobie Moll _ . 0 _ 4 7 6 ’ t 1 71 ^ a.m.-10 p.m. M-F, f a.m.-5 p.m. Sat. |0 a.m..5 p.m. Sunday (for t»H sarvica} free parking • xerox copies • color copies • bookbinding • offset printing THE SECOND OWNER USE YOUR X-MAS CENTS FOR CLEAN PREVIOUSLY OWNED MERCHANDISE m o r AND MERCHANDISE OF ALL KINDS._______ wines. I here’s tw o halves to every story. A n d we < ould w rite a book about the novel new Katz s D eli & Bar. O u r lunches are fabled. O u r dinners legendary. Lunches like N ew Y o rk Corned Beef, Pastram i and T u rkey sandwiches or salad platters. D in ner selec­ tions like P rim e R ib , Yankee Pot Roast or endcrloin Steak. And cocktails, beers and I o get the full story, try K a tz ’s for lunch and dinner. You II like the ending. Corner of 21st and Guadalupe Across from Dobie Mall 477-5854 We accept Visa and Master Charge. OUR X-MAS LAY-AWAY WILL HOLD ANY ITEM. ONLY A SMALL DEPOSIT REQUIRED. 618 West 6th 472-2037 Open 11 a.m. til 4 a.m . M o n - Sa H ap p y H ou r 5 til 7 p .m . P a g e 11 33355 FR * 5 9 9 * GEC <-5995 GEC 31585 GER 31660 GLR 25835 G* 2 *9 6 5 G* 32855 GCV 31110 GRG 31165 GRG *6 7 3 5 H E 37655 HED 33690 H IS 33830 H IS 3 *1 7 0 H IS 3 *17 5 H IS J 5 2850 J 5 3 0 *0 JA P 36505 5 5 * * 5 I S 55* 75 L S 555C0 L S 35120 L I * 3 51*5 L I * 35260 L I * * 7 8 9 0 F *7 8 95 F *7 9 6 5 F *7 9 9 5 F * 8 0 9 0 F * 8* C5 F * 8 * 1 0 F * 9 * 1 5 F * 9 * 2 0 F * 8 * 5 5 F *8 5 CO F * d 5 15 F * 9 5 * 0 F * 8 5 6 0 F * 9 5 9 5 F * 8 6 25 F 1*6 35 F ¿ 1 *6 9 5 F E 1 *98 0 F £ 366S 15035 F c 379N 15050 F E 38 1 P 0 3 6 *5 f a n 325 038 70 f a n 385 3 6*55 F£ S 3 0 1 k * 2 2 9 0 F IC 160K 19258 F c S 313 I 93£0 F L S 3 3 * 1 9*1 0 F L S 35* 19655 F L S 381 0 3 1 .0 0 A 322 3 5 7 *0 CAL 312K 15615 PEN 361 15730 PEN 387 37150 PHL 318 3 72 5C PHL 366K 50890 PMR 357 51030 PHR 167F 167F 51035 P h R 51050 PHR 1 6 ? F 51055 PHR 16 7 F *9 5 2 0 PHY 302K 5 0 2 C5 PHY 3*1 5 3350 PHY 389L 39283 PCR 396K 1 77*0 PSY 309 37870 PSY 3*2 5 3 *9 0 RTF 360 J 56650 S m 2 *3 56655 S * 2*3 56660 S 6 2 *3 56665 S M 2 *3 5 6 7 *0 s a 56770 S a 56805 s a 56820 S a 32250 SCt 3 90*0 SCC 39055 see 5 *3 3 5 S F E 3 99 *5 SPN *0 2 0 3 SPN 03325 STA 68 2 L 3 8 5 k 385 F 306 F 373 395 K 3961 386N 31 2 l 396K 309 310 6 5 9 * 320 320 320 320 321 321 321 321 321 3821 0>*25 STA 37555 T c * 2 8 2 0 2CC *2825 2CC * 2 8 3 0 2CC *2 8 3 5 2CC * 2 8 * 5 ZCC * 2 8 5 0 z e e *2 8 5 5 2CC * 2 8 6 0 2CC *2 8 6 5 z e e * 32*5 z e e 3967 391 391 *06 310 502 390 310L 326K 3601 32 2 363 309K 332N 397K 397K 3 1* 360 *1 2K 3 8 * * 385T 186 3 * * K 372 F 391 60 3 A 603A F-.Z 208 GcC 10* G tC 10* BLR 108 euR i o s WAG 208 WAG 308 CFA A2320 GRG * 2 * GPG 316 GE * 105 B E L 20* WAC 101 GAR 111 GAR 339 GAR 200 w a 230 * P A I * * 2 R l f 5 12 * HRC *256 HSC *102 PAR 210 ese 152 e t e 253 e e e s i R L F 710* wCF 1* 6030 ACA 21 3 0 *E WEL 2312 WfcL 2 22 * 305G 8088 G tC 100 80RB GEC 100 8080 GEC 100 8080 ICC GEC 608 E J» eLR 238 311 GEC 112 316 R I F 6116 316K E C J 1 .2 1 * 3161 e s e 115 325 BLR 22* *2 7 K WEL 1316 32* 3 3 5 TAY 212 TAY 139 EN S *0 2 WRa 113 ENS 3*0 B E B 153 B l B 358 B L R 212 GEC 111 aCH 211 F L S 105 WLH 219 PTL 113 B E e 255 BUR 212 P t e 311 pse 311 HRC *2 52 GAR 201 BUR 130 R L F 6126 R L F 6126 R L F 6118 R l f 6118 ENS 302 HEL 3502 R I F 6120 F E Z 208 BEe 151 G SB 1216 PA I * * 2 R IF 6122 R L F 6 i 2* R I F 7116 R I F 7119 GAR 203 R l f 7120 R L F 7122 e t e 158 GAR 201 R L F 7126 R LF 7126 e e e 265 ese 363 F E E 208 GCL 105 WEL 1308 PAR 310 ESP 333 ESe 333 ESB 333 E S e 333 P A I 302 PA I 302 P A 1 302 P A I 302 P A I 3 3 2 w EL 2302 M O N D A Y December 17, 9-12 a.m. • Classes meeting M W F 10) G ra d e re p o rts for these c la s s e s a re due the in departmental office by 9 a.m. Irid a v , December 21. 009 50 00955 01085 0 1 * C 0 018 75 5 7 0 *0 2 3 * 75 ¿ 3 * 8 5 2 3 5 * 2 2 36 s5 23710 2 38 00 360C0 1 1 2 3 5 1 1 3 2 5 11330 1 6 2 6 5 162 70 16275 162 80 16 2 85 I 62 SO 16295 1 63 CO 163CS 1 6 3 1 0 16315 16320 1 6 * s 5 16510 1 3 8 3 5 108 6 5 1 0 9 *0 109 85 ACC ACC ACC ACC ACS AFS A 7*$ APS A FS A A T A A T ANT ASA ARE ARE ARE a r h SRh A S H ARM ARH A R H a r h A R H A R H A R H A R H ARH ARH ARH A SE ASE ASE ASE P a g e 12 311 3 1 1 312 362 380 602 A 32 2 32 3 372 101 302 32 3* 380* 329 36 3 33*N 301 301 301 301 301 301 301 301 301 301 301 301 30 3 332 32 7 362 * 376* 382C RAS c¿c G t C 8 1 8 ese RAS BE* ORO R l* R l f ■ i l E c e S IF ECO TAY r l f ART AST A-T AST A * T ART A * T ART AST ART ART ART ART F e e ART RLF 8 i ? tNS 213 112 1 11 151 313A 2 1 8 116 316 51 I* a 102 1316 52a 512& 1 .2 1A 1 3? ?112 1102 1102 1 102 1102 1102 1102 1102 1 102 1102 1102 1102 11C2 1120 22GA 1 1 1 0 5120 251 1A5 V * i IN JI M C h inese R estaurant W eekday Lunch S p ecials 2007 E . R iversid e 447-1520 u I Cheated...!” MINI M N MINI MINI M IV M N M N MIM M N M N I he Place fur the C ustom Face ÍT1GRL6 HORfTlfln c o s m E T i c s FREE GIFT WITH ANY *5M PURCHASE Valid Only a t R ivertow ne Mall w ith coupon 2007 E . Riverside 443-1116 f NIAI IMIAI NIAI N IAI fMIAJ fMKAI f\|IAI NIAI NIAf Austin’s Finest Game Room Dec 11 Dec 12 Dec 13 Dec 14 De< 15 Dec 16 De< 17 Dec 18 Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 24 Dec 25 Dec 26 Dec 27 Dec 28 Dec 29 Dec 30 Dec 31 LEWIS AND THE LEGENDS OMAR AND THE HOWLERS OMAR AND THE HOWLERS DAN AND DAVE RICK STEIN REVUE KENNETH fHREADGILL ALVIN CROW TALE WIND OMAR AND THE HOWLERS OMAR AND THE HOWLERS DAN AND DAVE ALVLN CROW ALVIN CROW RICK STEIN REVUE RICK STEIN REVUE M IKE DAVIS AND THE HEART OF TEXAS RHYTHM BOYS SLOW MOTION CALL THE CLUB FOR BAND STEVE FROMHOL2 KENNETH THREADGILL OMAR AND THE HOWLERS i AOLK BUY ONE SANDWICH GET ONE AT »/2 PRICE <\ a l i d Only With Coupon) -005 E a s t Riverside Dr. 443-5566 The Afro-A m erican P la y ers, Inc. Interim Theater U pcom ing Productions: New Y e a rs Eve Celebration T H E ISLA N D and S IZ W EB A N S I IS D EA D " By Athol Fugard. Scheduled to open on Jan. 3. 1980. Longest Happy Hoar to Town Double Shots — I For 1 — U am • 8 pm NEVER A COVER CHARGE SUNDNNJCE t a n n in g s a l o n s << and I’m glad I did!”’ AUSTIN WORLD OF ARCHERY PRO SHOP INDOOR R ANG E 443-8345 2011 E. R IV E R SID E DR. o ff ANY HOT DELICIOUS 3 ITEM S OR M ORE 16” PIZZA (one coupon per person) Hot Delicious New York Style Pizza. Others Promise Good Pizza We Deliver. Name __ Address Phone No. 447-6681 2011 E . R iversid e _2V??MOW/V ¡/y STEREO ACRO SS A M E R IC A *A *f f— ^ (— i . r S a v e - E m GO O D TILL 12/23 7jj\--------------------- r ® ---------------------------------- ----- W P I O M E E R speakers TS-W6 b e st STEREO SYSTEM deal in t o w n — \ YOUR CHOICE 00 1 5 With Coupon TILL 12/2 3 10 m FREE ALBUMS fi'TILLl • 12/23) V — / ' XWfj WfTM THIS C O U PO N \\ . . With Any Completa stereo System Purchate SOUND WAREHOUSE V y — Rocohftr i Tun table ftpwiker, STUDIO 44. EXPANDO SPEAKER STANDS HEADPHONES by SONIC AM/FM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO 30 Watt Car Booster Amp ¿73 YOUR CHOICE iQO *10 “BETTER SOUND REG. $19.95 > i HOLD 150 LBS. Qw * 4 "UNREAL" SAVINGS • With Coupon TUI 11/23 4901 BURNET RD. 451-7304 MON.-SAT. 10-9 srrero ac ro ss America \ NEXT TO CfOUOD WAREHOUSE) QLM 32 MKIIf CARTRIDGE MFG. LIST $49.95 r * YOUR CHOICE *3000 NICE GIFT !A . With Coupon Till 12/23 2007-B E. Riverside Dr. 443-4535 Saturday — 25' highballs & beer from 8 p.m. ’til 10 p.m. & RIVERTOWNE FLORIST 10% OFF ALL ITEMS IN STORE (excluding wire orders) Please present coupon. Share the Sebring Secret m ^ We’re Worth Every Dollar T Sebring. FREE BRUSH With Hair Design (Please present coupon) 2007-E E. Riverside 447-4155 MR. ADAM’S DELI F o r your holiday p artie s CATER with us from 10 people on up DELI Dine In — Carry Out 441-6559 7 Days a Week DISCOVERY RECORDS Dan Fogelberg’s newest record “Phoenix” Reg. 8.98 list LP or tape SALE 5.98 (Must present coupon) Tuesday - m ost highballs & beer 10* for first hour, then increase by 25* every hour ’til midnight Wednesday - 75' most drinks and beer Thursday — m ost highballs and beer 25' from 9 p.m. ’til 11 p.m. P riday — m ost highballs and beer 25' from 8 p.m. til 11 p.m. 00 OFF ANY ONE PAIR OF JEANS ALTITUDES JEAN STORE • Excluding Sale Items • Excluding Children's Sizes • Offer Valid only with coupon 2007 E. Riverside 447-5841 AUSTIN DANCE STUDIO Spring Registration Jan. 3, 4, 5 Dance Classes Begin Jan. 7 Ballet — Jazz — Tap 2013 E. R iverside 442-5710 COPPER DOLLAR FREE BAR DRINK Please present Texas Driver’s License (one per person, please) 2007-B E. Riverside 443-2232 2015 E. Riverside 444-0661 j j I Dr. Michael Defiel General Dentistry 2009-B E. Riverside 442-3166 1 ' Merle Norman • Back Room The Acropolis • Lin Hai Sundance Tanning Salon Domino’s Pizza Austin World of Archery Afro-American Players, Inc. | Page 13 NOW IS THE TIME TO SELL US BACK THOSE USED BOOKS - WE PAY THE HIGHEST PRICES! Does that textbook REALLY cost $15.95? Well, that depends: But ... if the book is used again, vou sell it to us at Buy Backs and receive *8.00 *1 if the book you buy is used: in your pocket! So actually you only spend $7 9 5 ( ’15.95 - *8.00 - *7.95) Although the University Co-Op buys back books all year long, NOW is the best time for you to sell your books. Books requested for next sem ester will be bought back for one half new price as long as stock is needed. Hurry and Get That Extra Cash for Christmas! publisher raises the price of your book between the tim e you buy it and the time you sell it, you’ll get even more money back. PlUS . . . if the 4 11» j I M ( >/( ■ (III(111 fii TEXTBOOK BUY BACKS Basement Page 14 Pege IB