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 T he U n i v e r s i t y of Tenas a t A u s t i n Sixteen Pages Vol. 78, No. 156 Copyright 1979, Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved (USPS 146-440) Austin, Texas. Friday, June 8 1979 Fifteen Cents News and Editorial 471-1591 0 spiay Advertising 471-1865 Business Office and Destined 471-5244 Student group criticizes Rog . By DIANNA HUNT Daily Texan Staff The Student Bar Association Thursday criticized University President Lorene Rogers' request for more candidates for dean of the University law school and su p p o rted a s e a rc h c o m m itte e s nominations. Rogers recently asked the 10-member com m ittee to expand the list of four names presented to her for consideration as law school dean. ‘‘Law students generally seem deeply perturbed at the president’s m anuever,” bar president Will Hampton said. These candidates include George Schatzki, M. Michael Sharlot and Mark Yudof, all University law professors, and Robert Mnookin, who is a professor at the University of California at Berkeley. th a t the c o m m itte e m ade a S tudents feel “ thorough and extrem ely competent analysis" of candidates, Hampton said Hampton said the statem ent was derived after speaking with numerous law students “ There is also a belief that the national stature of the school can only be enhanced by picking a dean who is not so inextricably tied to T exas,’ he said E rnest Smith, current law school dean, said he thought Rogers’ request might represent a desire for someone “ with more of a Texas background.” “ While not discounting the crucial relationship between alumni funding and faculty excellence, the students believe that the existing candidates can and will further the financial strength while building the national prestige of this law school," Hampton said. Committee m em bers have been consulting with alumni, m em bers of the State Bar of Texas and law faculty in an attem pt to draft a reply to Rogers’ re­ quest, Roy Mersky, com m ittee chairm an, said “ It is our contention to have a letter awaiting Dr Rogers upon her return," he said He declined to comment on whether the com m ittee will add can­ didates to the list Rogers is in Europe and will not return until Tues­ day Sources within the law school say a candidate reportedly under consideration is Texas Tech law school dean Frank Elliott Jr., a former t ’m versin law professor. However, Elliott said he doubted that he was under consideration “ I've not shown much interest in the position," he said. Nevertheless, he was considered the prim e can­ didate in the fall, said a source who asked to remain unidentified Other possible candidates include Morris “ Buzz" Arnold, who practiced law in Texarkana before becoming associate dean at the University of Penn­ sylvania Arnold said he had been “ quite interested" when approached by the com m ittee but had not b«*en con­ tacted by either Rogers or the I'ommittee since his initial interview, Victor Rosenblum, who is at Northwestern Unlver sity in Evanston, 111 , and University law professors Robert Hamilton and John Sutton might also be un der consideration, the sources said The com m ittee is composed of five mem bers of the law school faculty, two General Faculty members and three University law students Although the student members of the com m ittee graduated in May and are technically no longer students. Mersky said they will remain on the com m ittee until advised differently 9 £ > sV Xog *0 * i *X 9*wo ««nJoiStá President Rogers Draft bill considered Subcommittee OKs measure WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Senate arm ed services subcommittee, meeting behind closed doors, voted to re-institute registration for the m ilitary draft, Sen Sam Nunn, D-Ga., said Thursday. In a statem ent, Nunn said under term s of the proposed m easure, registration of all males between the ages of 18 and 26 would begin Jan 2, 1980, and classification would start on Jan. 1, 1981, unless the president deter­ mined classification was necessary before then The bill requires that the president submit recom m en­ dations concerning the overall m ilitary selective ser­ vice act by July 1, 1980 O pponents of the d ra ft im m e d ia te ly c r itic iz ­ ed the move. "What is particularly disturbing is the wav this is be­ said David l^andau of the American Civil ing done Liberties Union. He scored the subcommittee for meeting in secret and said the action "precludes a full national debate on the issue of the draft " Draft opponents said they expected the full Senate Armed Services Committee to act on the m atter next week when it considers the defense authorization bill The vote in the arm ed services subcommittee on man power and personnel was 4-3 Committee officials said Sens. Harry Byrd, D-Va., John Warner. R-Va . Roger Jepsen, R-Iowa, and Nunn voted in favor of the registra tion proposal while Sens John Culver. D-Iowa. William S Cohen. R-Matne, and J Jam es Exon, I) Neb . op posed the m easure “ The action flies in the face of all the evidence,*’ Lam dau said “ Neither registration or the draft is needed.” The Senate move comes on the h«?els of sim ilar action by the House Armed Services Committee which has idd*si a registration provision to a $40 billion m ilitary hardware authorization bill. The draft and registration of all 18-year-olds fof m ilitary service was scrapped in 1973 as the United States ended its participation in the Vietnam war and as * the all volunteer arm ed forces was put into effect. Debate over the effectiveness and quality of the AVF has bsl some m ilitary strategists to call for the resum p­ tion of registration and ultimately the draft West Bank Israeli settlers occupy Arab territory for first time since peace treaty signing RUJEB, Israeli-occupied West Bank (UPI) — Jewish settlers raised the Israeli flag on a thorny hilltop Thursday to found the first settlem ent in occupied Arab territory since the signing of the peace treaty with Egypt. Agriculture Minister Ariel Sharon said the move was an unequivocal ex­ pression of Israel’s right to settle in oc­ cupied Arab territory. The opposition Labor P arty deplored the establishm ent of the new outpost and said it would call an emergency debate in the Knesset (parliam ent) next week. The Peace Now movement said it would sta g e m assiv e, nationw ide protests. "This is not (Egyptian President Anwar) S adat’s affair - it is we who must settle the land of Israel," said Avraham Shevut a leader of the Gush Emunim settlem ent movement. Despite previous efforts of the m ili­ tant group to establish outposts without g o v ern m en t ap p ro v al, T h u rsd a y 's operation was carried out with the co o p eratio n of the World Z ionist Organization and the m ilitary It started just after dawn, when a civilian helicopter ferried cans of water, tents and a portable generator to a hilltop overlooking the Arab city of Nablus Dozens of bearded men with M16 rifles strapped to their backs made their way to the site through rocks and th«>rn bushes. THREE BULLDOZERS supplied by the quasi governmental Jewish Agency, an arm of the Zionist m ovem ent, cleared a rough road halfway up the hill Shevut said house trailers and pre­ fabricated buildings will be trucked in when the weekend is fimshtsl over the road “ We chose this place five years ago,” he said, recalling that a settlem ent unit of the Gush was ousted from the site because it tried take it over without government approval The latest effort won the go-ahead of P rim e M inister M enachem Begin s government Sunday despite the objec­ tion of Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan, Defense Minister Kzer W m m an and Deputy Prim e Minister Yigaei Yadin. Fhe three m inisters argued mainly th at approval should be w ithheld because the site includes 200-acres of privately owned land which was re­ quisition»^ by a m ilitary order. ON THE DAY THE ( amp David agreem ent was signed 10 months ago the gr»*up tried to take over this hillside east of the city but was removed by the army “There is a pleasant change in the at­ titude of the governm ent,” Shevut said,* The United States and Egypt have called new Israeli settlem ent* on oc­ cupied Arab land illegal 3 Friday Strike in the Valley Farmworkers in Raymondvilie, a small south Texas town, have become vocal in the past few months over wages and sanitary facilities, arousing the once calm community. See story, Page 16. Leave it to Beaver.... Tony Dow and Jerry Mathers, the lovable Wally and Beaver Cleaver of the late ’60s television series “Leave It To Beaver,” will meet for an informal talk with students in the Texas Union Tavern Patio at noon Friday. The two are in Austin performing in the play “So Long Stanley,” written by Emmy-award winning writers Bob Schiller and Bob Weiskopf, at the Country Dinner Playhouse. The “Beaver” series ran on television from 1957 to 1964 and presented the exploits of the two brothers and the trouble they frequently found themselves getting into. Although moderately successful during its seven-year run, the show has drawn a new audience by its frequent runs in syndication. The show is currently seen on cable Channel 6. Both were actors before the show, but the series served as their major breakthroughs. Both had minor careers after the show ended. The Austin Urban Survival Fair, a presentation of more than 40 comrr unity service for Saturday and Sunday at Waterloo Park, 12th and Red River The fair, sponsored by the Red Ryder Preservation Society and Soap Creek Saloon, will run Urban fair.... organizations, is scheduled streets. from 10 a.m. to dusk. Summertime.... There is a 20 percent chance of rain Friday morning and a slight chance of showers in the afternoon and evening. Skies will be partly cloudy through Saturday. The high temperature will be near 90, later cooling to the upper 70s. Winds will be southerly at tO-15 mph. Sadat votes Egyptian President Anwar Sadat casts his ballot In parliamentary elec­ tions. Sadat returned to his native village Thursday to vote in Egypt’s first election since the signing of the Israell-Egyptian peace treaty. Related story, Page 3. — UPI Telephoto DC-10s grounded around world LONDON (UPI) — Airlines around the world grounded their DC-lOs after the Federal Aviation Administration ordered the 138 U.S. DC-lOs grounded indefinitely Wednesday. It was the fourth grounding of the DC-10s since one crashed in Chicago May 25 killing 275 people in the nation’s worst air dis­ aster. In Europe DC-10s were grounded in West Germany, Britain, Spain, Finland, Sweden, Belgium, Italy, Yugoslavia, Iceland and France. THE PHILIPPINES, Japan, Malaysia and South Korea also grounded the DC-10s and Hong Kong banned them from its a ir­ port until the plane's airw orthiness certificate is reinstated. The Venezuelan International Airline grounded its five DC-10 jetliners for the second tim e since the May 25 Chicago crash, a company official said Thursday. Airlines sought alternate flights for their passengers but in some cases had to cancel service. Some airlines expressed con­ fidence in the wide-bodied jets. The Belgian Transport Ministry overruled Sabena Airlines and ordered its DC-10s grounded at the first stopover. The deci­ sion was taken “ pending more detailed information from the (FAA) concerning additional inspections the planes have to un­ dergo,” an official said. Sw issair grounded the Swiss Federal Civil Aviation office The Swiss national airline made clear it thought the grounding unnecessary and warned the public it will be forced “ to make drastic cu ts” in service. its nine DC-10s on o rd ers of Sir Freddie Laker, who initiated inexpensive trans-Atlantic flights with his Skytrain fleet of DC-10s, said in a radio inter­ view in London, “ I don’t think it’s a design fault and I don’t think it’s the fault of the airplane. “ I think this has come about by the methods used by some carriers of installing engines together with pylons with a mechanical device such as a fork lift truck,” he said “ Off the top of our heads, we think it will cost $700,000 a day” for the Laker DC-10 operation as a whole, a spokesman said Iberia’s seven DC-10s “ have all undergone the most rigorous, conscientious and in depth checks but we have not found the slightest irregularity,” a spokesman said. “ We are keeping them grounded because of caution and in wait of a final decision.” SCANDINAVIAN AIRLINE System estim ated a daily loss of about $232.000 as the result of grounding its five DC-10s The a ir­ line, which serves Sweden. Denmark and Norway, has lost 10 percent of its passenger capacity. Clements fails to act on 4 UT bills Legislation awaits governor’s signature or rejection By MARILYN HAUK Daily Texan Staff With seven days remaining to act on approximately 900 bills and resolutions, Gov. Bill Clements failed Thursday to act on four bills related to the Universi­ ty. Clements has until June 17 to sign or veto bills passed by the Legislature. If Clements takes no action on a bill or resolution by that time, it autom atically becomes law Jon Ford, Clements press secretary, said that although Clements took no ac­ tion on the appropriations bill, he will probably cut as much as $200-300 million from the $20.7 billion budget submitted by the Legislature HB 1389. allowing governing boards of higher education institutions to increase the maximum student services fee from $30 to $60. including a separate medical service fee in the student services fee, was not considered Another student services fee bill yet to be decided, SB 638, would require a student registered at two schools within the sam e college or university system to pay only one set of student services fees Also waiting for action is the foreign student tuition bill, SB 530, which would require all foreign students to pay the same tuition as non-resident students, $40 per sem ester hour f o r e i g n C u r r e n t l y s t u d e n t s pay $40 per sem ester hour, unless the student comes from a country that has a tu itio n re c ip ro c ity p ro g ra m w ith American students In accordance with the program , approxim ately 90 percent of T exas’ foreign students pay $14 per sem ester hour. Also sent to Clements for approval is a bill that would expel foreign students for crim inal offenses Those offenses include crim inal m is­ chief, reckless dam age or destruction, disorderly conduct, not, obstructing a highway, disrupting a m eeting or procession desecration of a venerated object and disruptive activities Clements filed HB 1510, a bill perm it­ ting banks to maintain unmanned teller machines at locations other than their regular place of business, without his signature "I do not wish to express an opinion on this m atter as this is a m atter the peo­ p l e of T e x a s wi l l d e c i d e f o r them selves,“ d e m e n ts said. Page i □ T H E D A I L Y T E X A N □ Friday, June 8, 19-79 "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE? H i Psalm s 2:1 and A cts 425 /# T his question is the opaning words of ths 2nd Psalm. It is askod and snswsrsd by Q od Almighty. T h s hssthsn arc rsvsaisd as those who resist and seek to get rid of G od'sLaw, and H is Ten Commandments. In other words the heathen embrace the entire human race in their fallen estate, which estate is the result of Adam's disobedience to T h e Commandment of Q od. Not only do the heathen rage, resist, and seek to get rid of God's Law, but also they resist and seek to get rid of G od's Anointed. The Lord Jesus Christ, who came from heaven to deliver man from his "estate of sin and misery." H e came down and was bom of Th e Virgin Mary, and so became G o d and man. The God-m an substituted Himself for fallen man and kept God's Commandments perfectly in his stead. Then, He again substituted for fallen man and took upon Himself the wrath rebellion and Mid curse of God's disobedience, and was put to death on The Cross. judgment upon After three days H e arose from the grave, 'T h e Mighty Conqueror" of death! H e appeared to His disciples and believing followers, and sent them to tell the world if they would repent of their sine-~dlsobedience to G o d ’s C o m ­ mandments-*'believe, accept Him as their substitute, and br­ ing forth fruit worthy of repentance, they would be recon­ ciled to God, and receive the gift of Eternal Life. This is the G ospei, this Is the G ood N ews of the grace of G od to ail men. Hear the testimony of the man G od raised up to‘‘prepare the way of The Lord” found in John 3:36: “He that beiieveth on the Son of G od hath Everlasting Life; but he that beiieveth not The Son shall not see lifr, but the wrath of G o d abideth on hlmf" If you leave this life without being reconciled to G od through Jesus Christ, then there is the “wrath of G o d ” for you to face in the nest Hfel After telling who the heathen are, and why they rage, G od points out in this Psalm the results of this rage is the visitation of G o d ’s anger and wrath, and vexation with all sorts of trouble, just such as we find plaguing the earth today. Elijah, the prophet who was taken to heaven without death, by-passing the grave, said to King Ahab: "I have not troubled Israel; but thou, and thy father's house, in that ye have forsaken The Commandments of G o d . . . ” During the past few centuries The Protestant Christian nations have been blessed above all the nations of the earth; and they have been the source of mighty blessing and ad­ vancement of other nations of the earth. Our testimony and conviction is that all these blessings are the fulfillment of promises made by G od to the nations that obey His C o m ­ mandments, T h e nation whose G od Is The Lord.” “R ighteousness exaiteth a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people!" “f w ill ca u se thee to rid e u p on the h ig h p la ce s of the earth!” T he reason our nation Is “riding so high" today is traceable to our forefathers “fear of T he L ord, and obedience to H is C om - mandments.” Such were a small percentage of the total population, yet their faith and influence laid the foundations of our great institutions, and wrote many of G o d ’s Laws upon our statute booksf The reason today we are in so m u ch trouble, crime, lawlessness, etc. is because we have forsa ken The Commandments of The Lord. In the first one of these articles the statement was made: "Our trouble, the world's trouble, is that we have a corrupt form of Christianity! A Christianity that has been shoved off Its base, off its foundation: The Law of G od .” "Righteousness exaiteth a nation, but sin is a reproach to F* O BOX 405 D EC A T U R , G EO RG IA 30031 any people!'’ If you’re ever in the dark about which pizza place to call: Remember Domino’s delivers continuously from 4-1:00 weekdays, and 4-2:00 weekends. We deliver our Pizza within thirty minutes anywhere in our delivery area. At Domino’s you get a Pizza covered with fresh ingredients, a thick french-bread-like crust, combined with nature’s best buttery cheese. Pizza and Coke! No Joke, we’ll give you two cups of ice cold Coke FREE. Just ask for your “ No Joke, Free Coke’’ when you order your Domino’s Pizza. Campus G u a d a lu p e 476-7181 • 474-7676 • 447-6681 * 458-9101 R iv e r s id e Enfield CO arto z ^ Z N O Ü Ck flL Civil disobedience planned at Glen Rose protest Sunday tty MARTHA SHERIDAN Dally Texan Staff dent. Approximately 20 Austin residents will participate in the first civil dis­ obedience action against a Texas nuclear power plant in Glen Rose Sun­ day, spokesmen said Thursday. Approximately 50 persons will occupy the site and another 100 will operate as support group members, Lewis Pitts, attorney and legal representative for the Comanche Life Force, protest organizers, said. The trespass onto Comanche Peak nuclear power plant will bring the nuclear power issue into the courts and symbolize the protesters’ last recourse in fighting nuclear power, Pitts said ‘‘It ’s all part and parcel of the same thing The plant begins operation in March 1981,” Pitts said ‘‘It ’s late enough already to fight this thing. It’s our mild way of saying (to the government) Look, Jack, you’re out of tune with what the j>eople want’.” CRIMINAL TRESPASS is a violation of Sec 30.05 of the Texas Penal Code and is a Class C misdemeanor with a $200 fine. Most Austin residents participating will act as support group members and be present while site occupiers ‘‘go over the fence” and are arrested, said Rob Bollinger, graduate microbiology stu­ “ This site is a lot closer to completion than ST N P," Bollinger said. ‘‘The people in the action symbolize that a lot of people feel the urgency is growing, as is the threat to life forces from the risks involved in the plant’s operation.” Bollinger said he does not know if any University students will act as oc­ cupiers and the decision to engage in civil disobedience is highly personal “ We’re very concerned about not an­ tagonizing anyone. It is a rational, per­ sonal decision of people who do this in order to say that construction of the site must be stopped,” Bollinger said. Jim Mikulak, Austin resident, said he feels compelled to be at the protest site. “ I ALSO F E E L drawn to doing it (civil disobedience),” Mikulak said. “ It is an act that comes from the con­ science and is not taken lightly.” Occupiers must be available for trial after the protest and the trial’s timing would make it difficult for him to be present, he said. Pitts said timing of the Comanche Peak plant occupation was not affected by Senate B ill 952, which would increase crim in al trespass on an electric generating plant to a Class B mis­ demeanor. It carries a maximum penal­ ty of a $1,000 fine and six months in prison “ The C D. (civil disobedience) was planned long before the bill came up. If it was presently in effect. I ’m not sure the bill would even affect us because the plant is not presently in operation,” Pitts said. Jim Dodds, legislative aide to bill sponsor Sen Ray Farabee, D-Witchita Falls, said it was not designed to ad­ dress n u c le a r plant p ro tes ts , “ ...although I ’m sure there’s a lot of people who don’t believe that.” Todd Samusson, Texas Mobilization spokesman, said last Saturday’s protest at the South Texas Nuclear Project did not include civil disobedience because “ it just didn't seem like it was time. “ To me, civil disobedience is essen­ tially a last resort and we hadn’t even legally demonstrated there yet,” Samusson said. Pitts said civil disobedience at Comanche Peak is justified because citizens do not have any other recourse than the court system to fight nuclear power plants. “ I'm not sure C.D. is always a last step. I think it’s the ultimate step. With an issue as grave to life on this planet as nuclear power, C.D. is necessary,” Pitts said. Campus Capsules Public buyers to attend seminar The University will host an advanced seminar Monday through Wednesday designed to boost local government ef­ ficiency. The seminar w ill be at the Joe C. Thompson Conference Center. Approximately 35 employees from local governments across the state will learn how to improve their purchasing and materials management. The Lyndon B Johnson School of Public Affairs is sponsoring the seminar, in cooperation with the Coordinating Board, Texas College and University System. Instructors include purchasing agents for local governments in Austin and San Antonio. Lynn Anderson, director of the L B J School’s Office of Conferences and Training, said the seminars are important because citizens want government costs reduced through more efficient public purchasing methods. Center offers computer courses The Computation Center is offering a series of 30 short non- credit courses designed for computer users. A complete list of courses and descriptions, as well as registration forms, is available from the receptionist in COM 5 cartoons. and from User Services, WCH 8 and HRC 3.360. Courses begin on different dates throughout the summer, starting June 18 and running through Ju ly 31. Enrollment is limited, and advance registration is required. The classes are taught by Computation Center staff and meet at the Computation Center in Room 8. The courses are free, and subjects range from general in­ troductory information to specific applications and software. ClnemaTexas hosting cartoons Cinema Texas will present “ Seven Nights of Animation,” a series of cartoon features, on Tuesdays and Thursdays through Ju ly 10 in Burdine Auditorium at 7 and 9 p.m. Admission is $1.25. The remaining programs include: • June 12, American Studio Animation of the 1930s with Daffy Duck’s first appearance, Popeye, Betty Boop and others. • June 19, American Studio Animation of the 1940s and 1950s with Bugs Bunny in “ What’s Opera. Doc?” and “ Falling Hare;” Daffy Duck in “ Plane Duck;” Superman in “ The Mummy Strikes;” plus Tweety Pie, Sylvester and many more. • June 28. Tex Avery Night, program of rarely seen Avery • Ju ly 5,“ Hollywood or Bust,” the last Je rry Lewis and Dean Martin film by Frank Tashlin, who began in cartoons; plus “ The Case of the Stuttering Pig ” and “ Porky’s Romance,” two Tashlin cartoons. • Ju ly 10, Recent American Animation: “ The Hole,” “ Frank Film ,” “ Sand,” “ Blaze Glory” and others. Flight Instruction P r i v ii t A $20 HR Solo r n v d u ; $ 31 h r D u a , 1979 Cessna Aerobat 7\ Also Instrument Instruction Sierra Sierra Aviation 327-3202 443-8436 ' niniifTiirt* i t w> t firvrm -m ¡■Hi F or a ch ange in style Ksdc n « x t d o o r to E n a l i t h t 476-6960 NUCLEAR MEDICINE TECHNOLOGY TRAINING Positions are available in the Baylor College of Medicine Nuclear Medicine Technology Program beginning September 1, 1979. This twelve month AMA approved program qualifies participants for certification In nuclear medicine technology by three certifying boards. For further information, write or call: Paul H. Murphy, Ph.D., Nuclear Medicine Service, St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital, 6720 Bertner, Houston, Texas, 77030, (713) 521-2272. The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, Drawer D, University Station, Austin, TX 78712 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday, and F ri­ day. except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin, Tex. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4581), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A 4 136i Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in TSP Building 3 200 (471-5244) and display advertising in TSP Building 3 210 (471-18651 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 ILY T EX A N SUBSCRIPTIO N R A TES Summer Session 1979 By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within U S A. .... One Semester (Fall or Spring) 1979-80 Picked up on campus — basic student fee By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within USA Two Semesters (Fall and Spring) 1979-80 $ 9.50 10 00 I 65 17 00 16 00 ....... <29 00 By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within 31 00 I S A Send orders and address changes to T EX A S STUD ENT PUBLICATIO NS, P O Box P U B NO 146440 D. Austin, Texas 78712, or to TSP Building. C3 200 JUNE FU N w ith Bass Sunjuns ... a crowd pleaser — on the beach - in town — in rain or sunshine Famous Maker "Easy Walker You can't resist Only 23.25 Availabia in brown or natural oo-tha-drag at 240# Guadalupe m | Friday, June 8. 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 3 Sadat s party expected to win Egyptian vote First democratic election held since military revolution 27 years aao CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) — Egyptians voted Thurs­ I VOted ThurS- day in the first democratic elections since the military revolution that overthrew the monarchy 27 years ago. The biggest single factor in the election — also the first since Egypt signed its controversial peace treaty with Israel — was not whether Presi­ dent Anwar Sadat’s National Democratic Party would win but Sadat’s own personal standing among the people. EACH CANDIDATE was allotted a sign - a tree, a boat a key, a camel, an umbrella or other o b iect — to hpln illitpratA vnlpr« iHonfifv tha object — to help illiterate voters identify the man or women of their choice on the balloting cards Sources from all sections of the political spec­ trum said it was a foregone conclusion the NDP would win by an overwhelming majority. to NDP candidates, Results from 10 constituencies late Thursday all went including Prim e Minister Mustafa Khalil and Interior Minister Nabawi Ismail, two of Sadat’s top aides. SADAT’S PARTY was so sure of its ground it fielded only 362 candidates, 14 less than the number of seats at stake It has left those seats to (_________... . candidates from two ‘tame opposition parties the Socialist Labor Party and Liberals the Socialist “ President Sadat is our biggest a sse t." an NDP spokesman said as more than 26,000 polling stations nationwide opened at 2 a m EST for nine hours of voting by an electorate of 11 million, in­ cluding more than a million women About 1.600 candidates from four parties and in­ dependent elements ran for the 376 seats at stake, including 30 reserved for women for the first time. A constitutional rule decreed that at least half those elected must be workers and peasants The working class in agriculture and industry accounts for more than half the country's 40 million inhabitants SOME EDGE WAS taken off the six week elec­ tion compaign when a government decree banned any criticism of the Israeli peace treaty, Egypt's strained relations with the Arab world and the nation s brand of “ socialist democracy ’* The S L f \ a left-of-center group led by former Agriculture Minister \h m « i ^Hukry. had 182 can dulates in the field The party goes along with ^ Sadat s foreign policy but feels free to criticize on domestic affairs It had 22 seats in the outgoing parliament The right-wing Socialist Liberals, with only two seats in the old house, fielded 87 candidates. It was seeking to join the NDP in a coalition. The most forceful and vociferous opposition came from the Nationalist Unionist Progressive Rally, a small pro-xSoviet group that claim s 150;- iHXi members nationwide It had two seats in the outgoing legislature and o*ed the peace treaty with Israel Flood charged with 25 counts of bribe-taking, misconduct WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House Ethics Committee Thursday filed m is­ conduct charges against Rep. Daniel J. Flood, D-Pa,, whose trial on federal bribery and perjury charges ended in a hung jury last February. The action was announced hours after the committee voted in morning ex­ ecutive session to file 25 counts of bribe­ taking and other misconduct against the veteran House member. The committee had begun a preliminary inquiry on May 2. FLOOD, WHOSE criminal case ended in a mistrial as a result of one juror is holding out against conviction, awaiting a second trial which has been d elayed by the 75-year-old con ­ gressm an’s illnesses. Flood is confined to Georgetown in Washington University Hospital awaiting surgery expected within the next few days and could not be reached directly for comment. Flood’s office issued a statement say­ ing Flood, informed of the committee's action by telephone, said he stands by a statement he made when indicted last October. AT THAT TIME THE congressman said the charges were totally untrue and his innocence would be upheld in a court of law,” Flood’s office said. Flood was tried on 11 counts charging a half-dozen alleged bribes totaling about $54,000 from persons seeking his influence in obtaining government favors. The Ethics Committee charged Flood —UPI Telephoto Rep. Daniel Flood with 24 counts of accepting bribes total­ ing more than $50,000 from 1971 to 1974 to influence government agencies and one count of giving false testimony in a federal trial in California. MANY OF THE BRIBES were alleg ed to have been funneled to Flood through his former assistant, Stephen B Elko, who became a key witness in Flood’s trial. One count charged Flood caused Elko in 1974 to demand that Robert Gennaro promise to pay $50,000 to $100,000 in return for Flood’s help in obtaining a grant from the Farm ers Home Ad- ministration for a Crestwood Hills development project. Other counts alleged Grennaro actual­ ly made payments of $2,000 and $3.000 in that year. N INE COUNTS charged Dr Mur­ dock Head in 1971-73 made payments totaling $33,000 to Flood for his in­ fluence in obtaining contracts and funds from federal agencies for the Arlie Foundation and the George Washington University Department of Medical and Public Affairs The charges said Flood was paid to use his influence with the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, the U.S. Agency for International Develop­ ment and other government agencies in exchange for the payments. Other counts charged Rabbi Lieb Pinter made a series of small payments totaling $5,500 in 1975 for Flood's in­ fluence in obtaining Labor Department and Community Services Administra­ tion c o n t r a c t s an d g r a n t s fo r organizations he was interested in Still other charges included influence payments allegedly made to obtain federal government action that would help West Coast trade schools qualify for accred itation and governm ent g ran ts and c o n tracts for can cer research. One count charged William Fred Peters paid $5,000 for Flood’s influence in persuading the Department of Hous­ ing and Urban Development to buy prefabricated homes manufactured by Sterling Homex Corp. News Capsules By United Press International Embassy relocation plans meet with outrage OTTAWA — External Affairs Minister Flora MacDonald Thursday re­ quested urgent meetings with several Arab am bassadors to discuss Canada’s decision to move its em bassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem . The decision to move the em bassy, promised by new Conservative Prime Minister Jo e Clark during the campaign for last month’s federal election, delighted Israel and outraged the Arab world. Egypt, the most moderate of the Arab states, warned it would be “ a hostile act ... with grave consequences.” The P alestine Liberation Organization was more blunt. “ The Palestinians will not permit such a step,” a senior PLO official said. Jarvis fires up for ‘third revolution' LOS ANGELES — From that astonishing man who gave us Proposition 13, would you believe a 50 percent cut in income taxes? Two thousand fans gathered in the Ambassador Hotel Wednesday night to watch Howard Ja rv is puff out a single candle symbolizing the first an­ niversary of what the 76-year-old Jarv is terms the “ Second American Revolution.” The Jarv is sights now have been turned from the drastic slash in California property taxes to a new drive to put on the ballot next year another iniative to reduce state income taxes by 50 percent. And on the basis of the recent track record of this one-time courthouse hanger-on, there are no longer any attempts to laugh it off as nonsense. Another week added to Skylab's life expectancy WASHINGTON — Air Force space trackers Thursday added another week to the expected orbital life of Skylab with the most likely date for its fall to Earth now July 16 — the 10th anniversary of the launch of the Apollo 11 lunar landing expedition. The estim ate from the North American Air Defense Command last week was that Skylab would re-enter E arth’s atmosphere around July 9. A week earlier, the estim ate was July 2. An unexpected lull in radiation outbursts from the sun is believed repon- sible for the Skylab’s added stay in orbit. The National Oceanic and At­ mospheric Administration at Boulder, Colo., reports, however, that there are indications that solar activity is now beginning to increase. U.S. links foreigners to Nicaraguan turmoil WASHINGTON — The State Department Thursday criticized human including rights violations Panamanians, were responsible for “ feeding the flam es of violence” in the rebellion-torn Central American nation. in Nicaragua but conceded foreigners, The department, fighting congressional attempts to link the situation in Nicaragua to Panama Canal treaty authorization, confirmed Nicaraguan charges foreign weapons are being smuggled across its borders — but stopped short of blaming any specific government. Stock market continues upward trend NEW YORK - Stocks scored their third consecutive gain Thursday after the government reported a slowdown in wholesale price in­ creases. Trading was the heaviest in seven months, in­ stitutions were becoming active. indicating DOW 10NES AVERAGE 30 Indsstriais closed at 836.97 T he Dow J o n e s in d u s t r ia l average gained 1.47 points to 836.97, bringing its three-day win total to 15.07 points. The closely watched ju m p e d 4.16 p o in ts a v e r a g e Wednesday. Death haunted UPI Telephoto Pope John Paul II kneels at the wail of death In the Auschwitz-Birgenau concentration camp, Poland, Thursday. Calling It the "biggest graveyard In the world," he said It was a place "to which I aa pope could not fail to come." The pontiff aleo celebrated masa with prleats who survived the campe. Women given controversial contraceptive WASHINGTON (UPI) — About 10,000 American women are being given the injectible contraceptive Depo-Provera each year despite evidence it may cause cancer in test animals, a women's group charged Thurs­ day. The National Women’s Health Network said it was es­ tablishing a registry for such women, in hopes of finding out how big the problem is and how many women have received the drug,. ONE INJECTION OF THE DRUG can prevent pregnancy for three or six months, depending on the dose. The Food and Drug Administration has not ap­ proved it as a contraceptive, but it is available to doc tors for other reasons and there have been reports over the years that some doctors continue to use it as a birth control measure. The manufacturer, the Upjohn Co , has asked the FDA to set up a scientific board of inquiry to rule on the safe­ ty of the drug as a contraceptive It issued a statement saying tests on monkeys which developed tumors appeared to be related to extremely high doses of the drug. The appearance of the carcinomas in the high dose group is not judged to be relevant to human experiences at contraceptive doses,’’ the company said It also said it continues to believe Depo-Provera “ is safe and effec­ tive when used at the recommended dosage for con traception THE WOMEN’S GROUP SAID in addition to the animal tests the drug has such side effects a s infertility, possible sterility, menstrual disorders, hair loss, sup­ pression of sex drive, weight gain and depression The group said surveys made available to the FDA in­ dicated perhaps 10,000 women per year are being given "the shot" as long-term contraceptive, and thousands more for other unauthorized uses The only approved FDA use is for relieving the suffering of women who have terminal uterine cancer It also said the drug is widely used overseas as a con­ traceptive being given to up to 5 million women in 70 ( ountries THE ORGANIZATION SAID It had evidence "the shot was being employed at Westport Free Health Clinic in Kansas City, Mo , by employees of the Kansas City Public Health Service, and at the Grady Memorial Hospital family planning clinic in Atlanta But it said use may have stopped at the Atlanta facility It also said it wants women who have received the in­ jectible contraceptive to write its registry at the National Women's Health Network, Suite 11», 2025 Eye St NW, Washington. D C 20006 Zimbabwe Rhodesia Sanctions to remain WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Carter has decided to retain U.S. economic sanctions against Zimbabwe Rhodesia for the present, congressional and administration sources said Thurs­ day, but will take another look at the possibility of ending them next fall. C a rte r h as d e sc r ib e d the new Salisbury government as “ a good first step" and officials said he would recon­ sider his decision in November, when the British government has to decide whether to renew its sanctions against Zimbabwe Rhodesia. ADMINISTRATION officials said the president’s chief advisers told him the new racially mixed government, while it represents “ a new reality,” does not meet the tests laid down in the recent Senate Case-Javits amendment The amendment would make the lift­ ing of sanctions automatic if the presi­ dent determined the Salisbury govern­ ment had been freely and fairly install­ ed, and if it has made a good faith effort to negotiate an end to the civil war. Administration officials said they ex­ pect a fierce battle on Capitol Hill on the Zimbabwe Rhodesia issue At least four pieces of legislation moving toward floor votes would supersede the Case- Javits amendment and lift the sanc­ tions, unless the president vetoed the bills to which they were attached THE SUN ATE recently voted, 75- 19, to pass a non-bindmg resolution, urg­ ing the president to lift the sanctions because the government of Bishop Abel Muzorewa had met the basic tests of the Case-Javits amendment The sanctions were imposed in 1965 by alm ost all m em bers of the United Nations on the request of Great Britain, which was trying to bring down the breakaway minority white government in its form er colony of Southern Rhodesia Because of congressional action by —UPl T®l«pholo Carter and Vance conservatives, the United States was in violation of the U N sanctions from 1971 to 1977 and continued to import Rhode­ sian chrome, which is used as an alloy In steel-making The Carter administration closed that loophole Price hike: grounds for despair Coffee roasters attribute increase to frost damage in Brazil By United Press International Three of the nation’s largest coffee roasters Thursday raised wholesale prices on ground coffee by 25 cents to $2 83 a pound in the second round of increases within a month Consumers should find the new prices hikes reflected on supermarket shelves within three to four weeks, the lag period before changes at the wholesale level are passed along to the shopper. FOLGER C O FFEE CO.; the nation’s No 2 roaster and a divi­ sion of Cincinnati-based Procter k Gamble Co., kicked off the latest price rise with the announcement it was boosting its ground coffee by 25 cents — or 10 percent — to $2 83 a pound Hills Bros, increased the whole sale price of its high-yield coffee — a direct competitor of Folger’s flaked coffee — by 20 cents to $2 28 for an 11-ounce can THE ROASTERS ATTRIBUTED the latest price moves to higher imported green coffee prices, which have climbed steadily since mid-February Reports this week of frost damage to Brazil s coffee crop have driven green coffee prices sharply higher on world markets Brazil is the world's largest coffee- producing nation General Foods Corp., the No 1 roaster based in White Plains, N Y , said it was “ studying the situation" and held the line — at least temporarily — on its Maxwell House ground coffee. Folger also lifted the list pnce of its 13-ounce can of flaked coffee by 25 cents to $2.33 Hills Bros. Coffee Inc., the No 3 roaster headquartered in San Francisco, and Coca-Cola’s Co s Food Division in Houston im­ mediately followed the Folger lead and raised their ground coffee to tile $2.83-a-pound mark. The new prices are effective immediately. A 1975 frost damaged or destroyed 73 5 percent of Brazil s coffee trees and triggered an explosion in world coffee prices that drove the U S shelf price to almost $4 a pound in 1977 AMERICANS, WHO DRINK more coffee than any other na­ tion, curbed their habit by 26 percent in 1977, however, and retail coffee prices declined sharply until the m ajor roasters broke a two-year pattern by raising prices last month Wood may provide oil (UPI) GOLDEN, Colo Ordinary wood chips left from lumber operations can be converted into crude oil and even refined into gasoline on a commercial basis, according to a study submitted to a conference at the Colorado School of Mines The report, by scientists at the University of Californias Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, said 930 pounds of wood chips can be converted into one barrel of crude oil for use in electrical generating industrial stations and boilers PR O JEC T LEA D ER Sabri Ergun said Wednesday the process mixes wood chips and water under pressure to produce a slurry The slurry is pumped under pressure into a vessel and heated to 350 degrees Celsius, which produces an oil and water mixture The equivalent of No 6 bunker oil could be produced commercially for $26 a barrel, he said, about $9 a barrel more than Arab oil It also can can be refined into gasoline and other high-grade fuels U r g u n s a i d the first barrel of oil using the wood chip process was produced May 4 at an Albany, Ore., pilot plant funded by the Department of Energy The Lawrence Berkeley lab is heading the research, with support from the B a tte ll N orthw est L a b o r a t o r ie s , University of Arizona and Stanford Research Institute. THE WOOD CHIP CRUDE oil actual­ ly is a higher quality than Alaskan crude, Ergun said, because it contains no sulfur and only traces of nitrogen. Ergun said lumber operations waste 2D percent to 60 percent of the trees they process Hus waste, and trees that aren t su itab le for lum ber, could provide the resources for the oil, he said. "There are a lot of forests in the Southeast that are neither good for paper nor for lumber,” Ergun "You can build a factory and within a 50-mile radius have 5,009 tons of wood daily.” THE DAILY TEXAN Friday, June 8, 1979 Page 4 TSXAN E D IT O R IA L S Ma B ell’s loss, public’s gain “This is a cause being tested and we are the vehi­ cle. There are a lot of allegations here and that’s all they are.” — Bell spokesman W.G. Bryant, March 4, 1977, concerning a discrimination suit filed against the company by Linda Black and Marjorie Theberge, two former University students. When Black and Theberge filed the class action suit two years ago, they alleged Bell violated the Equal Credit Opportunity act by denying them credit when they became divorced. Bryant probably never dream ­ ed those “ allegations” would lead to a settlem ent in what one Federal Trade Commission attorney recent­ ly termed “ a landm ark case.” The settlem ent is a significant victory for divorced, separated and widowed women in Texas who have been denied credit by Bell the last four years. But it has much larger implications. The fact that Ma Bell has agreed to s e ttle this case should say something BELL OFFICIALS have said repeatedly the settle­ ment does not indicate a violation of the federal credit law. Company attorney Donna Snyder said it simply saved Bell further costly litigation. Since when has the only phone company in town had to worry about litiga­ tion costs? In October 1976, for example, Bell won a case in the Texas Supreme Court against Jam es Ashley, a form er company executive, who originally sued for $29 million in 1974 A district court awarded Ashley $1.5 million, but that amount was eventually reduced to nothing by an appeals court. Bell felt legally secure enough to follow the case ail the way to the s ta te ’s highest court, regardless of financial factors Under the recent settlem ent, Bell must notify every residential custom er in Texas of the lawsuit. Phone company officials probably hope the lawsuit notices, included with each custom er’s June bill, will land in the trash can before being read. However, women affected by the suit should do more than read the notices; they should act, either by joining in the class action or opting out and filing separate suits As Black said, making such a discrim inatory policy public is more im portant than the money she will receive. O ther com panies which presently d is­ crim inate, or have in the past, will give greater weight to legal consequences of such wrongdoing the financial and All consumers deserve equal and adequate trea t­ ment for equal services or products, especially when the producer has a monopoly. Beth Frerking Synthetic oil industry essential By Laonard Silk NEW YORK - The Iranian revolu­ the utter tion has again exposed vulnerability of the United States to in­ terruptions in oil supply. The rapid run­ up in prices resulting from the subtrac­ tion of a couple of million barrels a day has still not run its course. Saudi Arabia, the reluctant dragon, has now announced that it regretfully is raising the price of its Berri-field crude to $17.87 a barrel as a means of achiev­ ing “ stability” in world oil prices before the June 26 meeting of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries And Iran itself has raised the price of its crude again WITH OTHER OPEC countries charging from $1 to $5 more than Saud* Arabia, the oil cartel has already ex­ ploited the interruption of supply from Iran to achieve the 50 percent price in­ crease that was predicted for this year. This will add about $22 billion to the United States’ oil import bill, which last year came to $43 billion, and will cost the world as a whole an extra $70 billion. Moreover, it is imposing severe pressures on both inflation and produc­ tion, threatening the United States and world economy with another siege of stagflation. The paramount issue here is how to deal with the threat of future interrup­ tions in oil supply, whether in Iran (as may happen again, with Arabs in the Persian Gulf oil center fighting govern­ ment troops, and with the Soviet Union hoping to swing Iran into its orbit) or elsewhere in the troubled Middle East, North Africa or other parts of the third world. A proposal by three leading members of Washington’s foreign policy com­ munity could provide a much greater degree of protection of the economy than is likely to result from the unaided market response to OPEC's concerted strategy and soaring prices. LLOYD CUTLER, a lawyer who has taken on various negotiating jobs for Secretary of State Cyrus R Vance; Paul R. Ignatius, president of the Air Transport Association and a former secretary of the Navy, and Eugene M. Z u c k e rt, a la w y e r and fo rm e r secretary of the Air Force, have drawn up a plan by which the United States could create a synthetic oil industry capable of producing 5 million barrels a day - about half the country’s current import requirement — within the next five to 10 years from sources such as shale, tar sands, heavy oils, coal and farm crops. In essence, the plan calls for the es­ tablishment of a government corpora­ tion to do what the U.S. government has done before in other national emergencies During World War II, the government solved critical shortages of natural rubber, aluminum and steel by building plants operated by private companies under leases or manage­ ment contracts. During the Korean war, another method was used The government entered into market-guarantee con­ tracts with private industry to build new aluminum, copper and nickel capacity. The private companies, un­ der these agreements, obtained private financing, received five-year tax amor­ tization exemptions and gave the government the option to buy, at specified or prevailing market prices, any part of the output that could not be sold to military or commercial users THE AUTHORS now propose a similar plan for energy. Through joint government-industry efforts, the na­ tion would create a synthetic oil in­ dustry in much the same way that it once created a synthetic rubber in­ dustry and doubled its non-ferrous metal capacity The government would subsidize the difference, if any, between the cost of synthetic fuel and current m arket prices, using the additional supplies to reduce imports or build up stockpiles Either way leverage of OPEC would be reduced, and this might lower world prices for the country’s remain­ ing needs the Unquestionably, the initial costs would be high. Synthetic fuels are like­ ly to cost between $5 and $10 a barrel more than imported crude for several if the world years to come. Even market price climbs enough to make the costs of synthetics competitive, private companies might be hesitant to investments take without some price guarantees, lest OPEC cut the price once new synthetic capacity has been installed The planners estimate the one-time invest­ ment c o st.a t roughly $20 billion for the risk of huge Reply to McKetta I want answers, ‘techno-god’ By David Sugarman Dr. John McKetta seems to think that he is the god of technology. The 500 high school math/science whizzes who heard him speak at the opening of the 19th annual Texas Energy Symposium must have kneeled on their calculators and drooled as he stood before them advocating lunacy. Really, doesn’t he know that such one-sided propaganda is old and ineffective? Even if our future engineers did take him to be “techno-god,” doesn’t he realize they’ll learn that nature doesn’t cause 50-90 percent of all pollution? After all, mother nature didn’t dump radioactive gases into the Sus­ there was no photochemical smog in quehanna River; modern-day southern California before Los Angeles came into being, and Lake Erie used to be a good place to fish. Man pollutes. McKETTA POINTS a finger in the wrong direction in citing the cause of our energy problems. The federal govern­ ment should take some responsibility for failing to deal with OPEC’s rising power and domestic production fall-off in the 60s and ’70s. The oil companies, through production cut­ backs, are the major cause of our current spot shortages. But the real problem is American consumption. Our energy needs have more than doubled in the last 10 years — here’s to air-conditioning and microwave ovens. Our cars and buildings are inefficiently designed. McKetta wants more energy for growth, gross national product, standard of living and all those other neat things, when what we really need is efficiency. (Why do I need a sweater In June inside the Perry-Castaneda Library?) Dr. McKetta sneered at Ralph Nader for his proposed ban on americium. He also said that rhodium and palladium are precious fuels. Obviously, McKetta has no regard for cancer and mutation. Isn’t it interesting that cancer rates have skyrocketed in the last 20 years and correlate to an increase in environmental radiation? (Or are techno-gods immune to such petty ugliness as cancer and birth defects?) HIS CILARGE that we should build 1,000 breeder reactors before the year 2000 is audacious (to put it in printable terms). Breeders burn hotter and are more likely to malfunction and meltdown than burner reactors. Breeders make Brown & Root burner reactors look safe. Bringing on line one thousand breeder reactors isn’t Russian roulette, as many would suggest; it’s a signed death warrant. Dr. McKetta wants to leave a legacy for our children and grandchildren. I am not against nuclear energy, as many would conclude. I strongly support safe fusion — the source of which is our sun. Solar energy and conservation measures are not like a field goal attempt at 98-6, as McKetta contends. It’s more like going for it on fourth and two. Why. ruin a coastal estuary in Matagorda County? Our mineral cycle need not be tainted with radioactive markings. Why call for unsafe energy forms, when we can build and plan for efficiency? Why burn West Virginia coal which has a high sulphur content, if it can be cleaned? I want answers, techno-god. I deserve them, and so do the 500 reverent high school students who heard you speak. Sugerm an is a Plan IÍ student majoring in Én- vironm ental Studies. each million barrels of synthetic capacity, or $100 billion for the propos­ ed program But the cost to taxpayers would be much less. With OPEC now free to manipulate the world oil price and arrest supplies, the program could actually mean net savings as well as far less economic vulnerability. A BILL WITH provisions similar to the authors’ plan has been introduced in Congress by Rep William S. Moorhead, D-Pa. It calls for govern­ ment measures to achieve a national goal of “at least 500,000 barrels per day of crude oil equivalent of synthetic f uel s a nd s y n t h e t i c c h e m i c a l feedstocks” within five years. The Democratic m ajority leader, Rep. James C. Wright Jr. of Texas, has said that he would favor a much larger production target for synthetic fuel. The House Banking Committee has ap­ proved the Moorhead bill by 39 to 1, which the White House also supports in principle. c1979 New York Times M y ^ N C E s r o ^ o o G , 5AID THE DISCOVERY o f f i r e m e a n t t h e EN D O F Pi l l l i f f O N E A R T H . . , WHILE MS G RE A T- GREAT- 6 REAT-6 RANDDAD . PROTESTED THE U S E ’ OP TH E S T E A M E N ­ G IN E 'T IL L THE DAT H E D I E D AND MY 6 RANDFATHER TOLD THE W R I G H T BROTHERS THAT A IR P L A N E S WOULD NEVE/^ . BE A N y THI NG B U T DEATH -TR A P S1 AND IVVlNOTONETOSREAKs A FAMILY TRADITION — NO NUKES! THEY'RE NOT SAFE NOW AND THET'RE m o t EVER G O N N A 6£. . . The Academia Waltz M l HOW g u m t o g et tow m i 7b ÓMJÜN 5K M 5 ON ToOT5 dtfWNOON. y m y u i i m s ooik io&Aujr , Of' om Atenos XT THtte \ h e y i k loot ibbek 66TKH' /-V fm H I LW M . by Berke Breathed The Javits’ Store /FAST Y&f< evyy oh w i &46Y TAKES you* ÓteAlR Li Ai OONTnf T h e D a il y T e x a n ....................................... ... Beth Frerking Editor Melissa Segrest Managing Editor...................... ■ Mark Dooley Assistant Managing Editor Harvey Neville Assistant to the Editor Charlie Rose News E d itor......................... Mark McKinnon Associate News Editor Jeff Latcham Sports Editor Manon La Nasa Arts ami Entertainment Editor ... Keith Bardin Photo Editor Anne Telford Images Editor ............................. Suzv Lampert Campus Activities Editor General R eporters.......................Alice Anderson. Marilyn Hauk, Dianna Hunt, Mary Ann Kreps, Diane Morrison. Shonda Novak. Martha Sheridan Dick Reeves ......................................... Design Consultant . 1 Issue Editor ...................... News Assistants ..... . Clara Turna Robbie Sabo. Mary Anrnf Bernal, Mary Phillips. Jenny Abdo, Robin McGlamery, Diane Ballard. Paul Wilson, Julie Shaver, Joel Williams, Mike O’Neal Blake Dominguez Kelly Cash Robert King Susie Grubbs Beverly Palmer ....... ........................Mary Wolf. Kellie Cannon. Lasa Gamache. Nicholas Chriss Scott Bieser. Joe Vissers Tim Wentworth Editorial Assistant Entertainment Assistant Assistant Sports Editor Make-up Editor Wire Editor Copy Editors Artists Photographer Copy'iQt* 1974» > > « S M M a P u t» c tto n t RaproOucMn o> m y part oí frw* pubwcaNor .* prorwMati « t v u l 9m ««pnrss Opa uaná a»c r-'MC m Tha ar« moM oí 9m mjmot o» Vm m -w o» tm ara* c * «nú ar« nal naces**»* moca oí 9m U «enuty or * Jmwntfa&on 9» Board oí R epetís, or 9m Tanas Student fNitwcakons Board o* Operafcng Truaaaaa o* 9m Oaiy Tasar ac *or . Mixing marital finances, politics The N ew York Tim es said in an editorial June I So it turns out that Marion Javits, the wife of New York’s senior senator, solicited rather than merely received a public relations account from the shah of Iran four years ago And she and the shah merely feigned a campaign to promote Iran Air when in fact she was selling the benevolence” of his regime. And the Iranians, it seems, cared little for her skill if the deal would “pour money in the pocket of Mrs. Javits.” An unseemly business. But after reading of it in Iranian documents just come to light, our in­ terest fastens more on the sociology than the politics of the arrangement. When the association, without these details, first became known in 1976, it aroused even more discussion about the in­ stitution of marriage than about the government of Iran. Liberal-minded people were far along in redefining their views of the relationships between husband and wife. They were asked, and not only by Mrs Javits, whether she was not entitled to a career and politics separate from those of her husband IT OCCURRED TO MANY, of course, that the Iranians were more interested in the name and contacts of Senator Javits than the services of his wife. But Mrs. Javits artfully played the theme of women’s liberation to an often sym­ pathetic audience. In the end, the sentiment seemed to be that she could not — yet — separate herself from so promi­ nent a figure, but many felt that society was perhaps more to blame than she. “The American public is not yet ready to accept the separate roles of a husband and wife in professional affairs when one of them happens to be a public official,” she wrote in her letter of resignation. Should we ever accept it? We would say, not very profoundly, that the professional lives of a husband and wife can be wholly separate only when they are indeed separate. So long as a man and woman share name, bed, board, friends and incomes, they represent a social and economic partnership from which there can be no occasional secessions of convenience The fact of marriage may have no professional consequence for a dairy farmer and his bus driver wife. Marriage may not m atter in the careers of an actress and her investment banker husband It strains credulity, however, when a man claim s a separate professional identity while he profits from the sale of, say, the paintings or carpentry or stock market tips of a woman who is his economic as well as social partner They benefit from a joint enterprise and are ethically responsible for it. The Javits family trades in influence and, as in any ma- and-pa store, husband and wife are contributors and beneficiaries together. Both Marion and Jacob Javits were naive, at least, to think that she could sell public influence distinct from her husband s. There should be no regret that in such a case the American public was “not yet” ready to see her as a separate individual, to be judged by separate standards. Liberation is not the antonym of responsibility. •1919 New Yack Tines Foreign language classes less popular with students By JULIE SHAVER Daily Texan Staff Fewer students are interested in taking foreign language classes because more of their tim e is spent on career and profit oriented majors, several University faculty mem bers said Thursday The number of students enrolled in foreign lan gu age c la s s e s dropped 1 4 percen t between 1974 and 1977, according to a survev released by the Modern Language Associa­ tion Enrollment in foreign language classes is “bottoming out," said Dr Jam es Holquist. chairm an of the D epartm ent of Slavic Languages Holquist and other faculty members at­ tributed the overall drop of liberal arts classes to the growing in professional interest careers. “Things can’t get much worse, but 1 don't in the se e them g ettin g m uch b etter foreseeable future,’ Holquist said The declining enrollment “ . cam e about in­ because students have becom e more terested im m ediately in finding m ajors profitable after graduation.“ said Leslie Wilson, acting chairman of the Department of Germanic Languages. But Willson also said he thinks this will change as more people realize the value of a second language. Some colleges in the University now have alternative sequences available to those not interested in learning a second language Kyle Jarrard. d e g r s e clerk for un­ dergraduates in the business college said students majoring in international business have an option of fulfilling nine hours with a foreign language “ Fifty percent choose this way instead of other business courses ' Jarrard said However some faculty members are op­ tim istic about an increase in interest toward acquiring a foreign language Willson said Harvard and Berkeley have reinstated foreign language programs after first abolishing them The positive thing about the decline (of foreign language enrollment» is that it has made colleges look at their programs and renovate and renew them, he added Associate dean of th» College of Liberal Arts, John Weinstock, said, “ People are com ing to realize it is more important to study foreign languages in this world because of the interaction between countries “The exposure to different culture helps to broaden one’s perspective,’ he added The growing amount of English spoken worldwide, as well as no direct geographical need to be bilingual, has also contributed to the decline of interest in learning a second language Holquist believes America is becoming in­ isolationist, which encourages creasingly som e individuals to remain monolingual UPI T ele p h o to Shell shock Alamo Heights Police Sgt. O.D. McKay looks over a 105-mm howitzer shell discovered in San An­ tonio. Louis Garza Jr.(l) unearthed the shell while digging up a driveway. Campus bicylists draw complaints Num erous com plaints of bicyclers riding on sidewalks are prompting campus police to enforce bicycle regulations more strictly, Officer Willie Tisdale of the crim e preven­ tion unit at the University said Thursday. “ We are going to be enfor­ cing more bicycle regulations. We hope to get signs posted because we have gotten a lot of complaints on students who are riding their bikes on the sidew alks,” Tisdale said. This practice endangers students in w h e e lc h a ir s and blind students, he said. The fine for riding on the sidewalk is $5. O T H E R v i o l a t i o n s bicyclists can be ticketed for are failure to stop at stop signs or at traffic lights, and exceeding the 15 mph speed lim it on campus. “ The bicycle rider has to comply with the sam e laws as motor vehicles,” Tisdale said. The fine for failure to stop at a stop sign is $5. The fine for speeding on a b icycle varies and is the sam e as that of speeding in a car. B esid es these violations, Tisdale said, campus police can issue tickets to people riding unregistered bikes. A CITY ordinance requires all bikes to be registered as a deterrent to theft, he said. Students can register their b icycles at Campus police headquarters, Bellmont Hall, or at any Austin fire station. “We register bicycles every Monday and Friday from 8 to noon at our head­ a m. quarters here in Bellm ont Hall. There is no cost. The only requirement is that the bike have brakes and a tail reflector.” If a campus officer stops a student with an unregistered bike, he can ask for proof of ownership either with a sales receipt or a canceled check. H ow ever, all a b ic y c le owner must show to get his bike registered is a driver’s license, Tisdale said POLICE have issued 25 to 30 tickets for bicycle violations and 47,742 auto citations since September 1978, Hay Jam es, executive assistant of parking and traffic, said The police also can impound illegally parked bicycles is The only legal place to park in the bicycle a bicycle racks, Tisdale said However, police probably will not im­ pound a bicycle unless it is creating a safety hazard “ They definitely should not be parked and chained to railings or inside of buildings because of the paraplegic students," he said, Entrances and exits also are bad places to park, he added When parking a bicycle, Tisdale said, student» should secure the bicycle carefully “ We like for students to buy a long enough chain to go through both w h eels and frame so it can be attached to a fixed object — the bicycle rack. And they should not use combination locks,” Tisdale said Professional forger gets' 8-year term A man accused of passing $20,000 in bad payroll checks in Austin during 1977 received an 8-year sentence Tues­ day in 126th District Court. George Kingstro Sr., 51, pleaded guil­ ty Friday to charges of organized criminal activity and forgery by pass­ ing. Kingstro was charged with heading a $2 million-a-year forgery operation that reportedly has operated in 32 mid western states and 98 cities since 1970. Kingstro must serve a minimum of* two and a maximum of eight years in the state penitentiary. Judge Jim Dear reminded attorneys that a plea bargaining agreement they reached would not prevent out-of-state authorities from prosecuting Kingstro But Juan Gallardo, assistant district attorney in the special crim es division, said he doubts such action will be taken. “ I simply don’t believe anyone in­ tends to prosecute tKingstro)," Gallar­ letter to the do said National Association of District At “ We sent a torn eys’ Econom ic Crim e Project (which sends bulletins to district at­ torneys throughout the nation) describ­ (K ingstro’s) organization ing how w o r k e d and n a m e s of p e r s o n s associated with it They would have contac ted us by now if they were in­ terested in pursuing an investigation ¡ that extra. cash you need could be right under your nose. into That's rig h t. Just look around and w e 'll bet you fin d a ll so rts of u n ­ wanted items that can be turned instant cash. How? By selling t h e m t h e T e x a n C lassifieds. Old cars, used s p o rtin g e q u ip ­ ment, extra fu rn itu re , overstocked m e rc h a n ­ dise, anything you don't need you can sell in the Texan Classifieds. i n Te placa your Q attifiod ad, como by tho Toxas S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s Businots Office, 25th & Whitis, 8:30 a.m . to 4 :3 0 through p.m . M onday to d ay, or coN 4 71-524 4. Don’t forget to remember Father’s Day Sunday, June 17 We have many appropriate IDEAS f r * • h r I ' u k m * * $ , f » u r , h . a Friday, June 8, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 5 S U m n tB R V K K Z r v s u » - * ■ Nr,» i * . * * * n V ' í v . i v « » m « « * m 'or-> IVi*. vx1 *•<•> xrwwxrtf, T>*r .hXja* * Bind iW* r Martfc K* l l*e Si Mt*>* anaa Chat,» Fried Chicken & Catfish Dinner 5-7 p.m . Texas U m onl Recreation C enter Monday rsoou s e n tor u w es weucu Lunch with (ha bench fiat bowfa? 6:1$ Monday Mb with of fan ■é : 8:30 PtnspbiMfl * Knock top * Tuesday Nmm Tuaaday IMatara For a dtfhrant M e t. ay tmuribf a tta ch OlOS . Loogbocsi dsKB$ipWt - g F « - < oi M For new «tudfant», faculty, and stall 7:00 Shoot Out ■Moou Dieter’s rillMrt Work pH n o * cafabas i M s t a . I 6:15 I * Thursday Moon Double Trouble Bnng a Mind an.: bowi tor L> g e that mack i Buy one Sundae get one FREE! Good for any regular two scoop sundae. a t G w y n n ' s BASKIN-ROBBINS ICE CREAM STORE 2828 Guadalupe "on the drag" £ j » n e par customer w /cou p on expires July ¡3, 1979 expira* July 13, 1979 Page 6 □ T H E D A I L Y T E X A N □ Friday, June 8. 1979 W W IW IIM IM W illlllllllWIIHIHIWIHIIHIHHHIimiHIIIWIIIHIIIIIIIIHIIII Texas Farmworkers Benefit Sun., Junu 10, 7 p.m. at liberty Lunch 405 W. 2nd *2.50 Featuring: ★ The Cobres ★ Shorty and The Corvettes ★ Maree, Alice, and Linda ★ Juan Tejeda 'A' Radiation Revue ★ Movie, Mexican Food, Door Prize All proceeds to The Raymondville Strike Defense Fund Sponsored by UT Committee for Human Rights Im illH IIIIIIIH ilU illiliilllillilillliiiliilH lliilllH llillllillllin illtlH H IIIIIIitlH iliH lif BLIMPIE BASE r SPECIAL OFFER! Spiced Ham, Cooked Salami, & Cheese Sandwich With Small Drink Only 79* With Coupon (OH* f x piros Sunday, Juna 10) 2120 Guadalupe 474-1864 WALKING 5 HOCTS CO O L, C O M F O R T A E L L E , A N O f T R A IL T E S T E D FOR D U R A B IL IT Y 100 7© COTTONS AMD G0 T T O M /P O L Y E S T E R G L E N O S M EW S $ W O M A N S * 1 0 # to * 2 Z fJ> WHOLE LARTH PROVISION COMPANY 2410 3AN ANTO NIO S T - A U 3 T 1 N - 4 7 S - I 5 7 7 PLENTY 9f PACKING THURSDAY NIGHTS C 5ATURCAY )UOnr>6i>r.u< -itiiianh mu Drag preacher recuperating from misplaced karate blow C ecil E H enninger, com m on ly known as the “ Drag preacher.” has been unofficially welcoming students to the University since 1973 This summer is the first tim e in a long while he has not been here to greet students with tracts, Bibles and “ good w ords.” He can usually be found preaching fire and brimstone on the Drag but is home recovering from sur­ gery on a ruptured colon he received while taking karate lessons. H E N N IN G E R SAID he about paying for the 3urgery. is worried “ All I have now is my Navy compen­ sation, and that’s only 20 percent of what it used to b e,” he said. “ I can use all the spiritual and finan­ cial help I can get to carry on my ministry and the spreading of the gospel. I have a wife and seven kids to Blind Commission support.” However, he added that four of his children supplement his income Henniger said part of his financial troubles are attributable to his poor health in the past. He has suffered punctured lungs, bleeding ulcers and tflyroid trouble. “ My troubles have been God’s w ill,” he said “ I’ve been too proud and boastful.” H ENN IN G EF.’S congregation does not m eet in a church, nor does he preach from a pulpit. He works for street people; for anyone who com es along. “The church isn’t a building, it’s the people If the people won’t go to church. I’ll go to where the people are. It hurts me when I see my people dis­ criminated against just because they a r e n ' t w e a r i n g something.” he said. f i n e s u i t s or Not all of the vendors who know him ascribe to his beliefs, but most think of him as a friendly guy willing to lend a hand “ He's been around for awhile now. I’ve got nothing but good things to say about him .” said Mitchell Mays, a street vendor. Henry', another familiar face on the likes the way he D rag, said he preaches “ He can baffle traffic the way he gets going. He’s a wild son of a gun.” Henninger says he should be back on the Drag soon to preach the word of God. Despite his poor health and lack of finances, he intends to be around for a long time. Audit finds accounting weak By T E R R Y H A Q E R T Y Dally Texan Staff A state auditor’s report has cited “ significant” financial accounting weaknesses at the the State Com m ission Blind and raised the question of possible conflicts of in­ terest for several com m ission members for The report’s findings, which cover the fiscal years ended Aug. 31, 1978 and 1977, have been termed “disgraceful” by Gov. Bill Clements, who also has said he will take action to im prove the com m ission s status. The report fell short of citing illegalities but question­ ed the legality of certain ac­ tions. “ Internal control over cash receipts was insufficient to reasonably assure that all c a s h r e c e i v e d w a s a p ­ p ro p ria tely d ep o sited and recorded,” according to the audit. Weaknesses listed in­ inadequate mailroom clude security, inadequate division of duties and inconsistent listings of cash receipts. Control of payroll, travel and v e h i c l e e x p e n s e s , purchases of supplies and fix­ ed assets were cited as poten­ tially ineffective. The audit also said that Burt L. R iser’s silmutaneous ser­ vice as executive director of the comm ission and treasurer of the Visual Research Foun­ dation raises legal and finan­ cial questions. A C C O R D I N G TO T H E report, Hermann Hospital Estate of Houston contributed $ 13,500 to the Visual Research Foundation in return for com ­ m issio n p aym en ts to the hospital for treatment of blind patients. John C. Wilson, the com ­ m i s s i o n ’s a s s i s t a n t a d ­ ministrator of finances, said there is nothing illegal about the action. H ow ever, S ta te Auditor George McNiel said the in­ t e r l o c k i n g d i r e c t o r a t e s “ c r e a te the p o ten tia l for di mi ni s hed a c c o u n ta b ility over commission funds and for the circulation of funds among two. three or more related or cooperating entities in ways that could result in l i mi t e d closures.” i n f o r m a t i v e d i s ­ THE AUDIT ALSO found t h e c o m m i s s i o n m a d e interest-free loans and grants out of both endowment and federal funds to the Workshop Industries of Texas Inc. The executive director, the assis­ tant director and two other em ployees of the commission are the founders of the private Workshop Industries. In D ecem ber 1978. then- Attorney General John Hill issued an opinion that there is no known constitutional provi­ sion or statute that absolutely bars officers or em ployees of a p u b l i c f r o m simultaneously managing an affiliated private, non-profit organization. e n t i t y But Hill added that “ public policy severely lim its the ability of the public entity to contract with a private entity when the sam e persons serve in management positions on both.” Student killed in crash George Willis Gibson III, a graduate business student, was killed in an auto accident at 2:30 a.m. Sunday in Louisiana. Gibson, 25, was travelling on Louisiana Farm Road 335 when the car he was riding in crashed into a tree. Gibson was dead at the scene, and four others were injured in the m is­ hap. He was a resident of Shreveport, La. Gibson received degrees from Louisiana State University and the University of Texas. He was employed by General Telephone and Electronics of Stanford, Conn. Services were held for Gibson Tuesday morning at the First United Methodist Church of Shreveport. Survivors in­ clude his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Willis Gibson, Jr., and a sister, Mary Seale Gibson, all of Shreveport. THE ROCHES Includes Hammond Sonq/Mr.Sellech The Train/The Mamed Men Rolling Stone's "N ew Artist of the Year" IN CONCERT TONIGHT AT THE ARMADILLO w/Steve Goodman & Loon Rodbono ... .. AND SALE FEATURED WITH THE BEST THIN UZZY ALBUM SINCE "JAILBREAK" BOTH $7.91 UST PttCf IF and TAFf •4.77 ONE WEEK ONLY) THIN LIZZY I pi ¡utVs S.\. til tt >*.’ fc >i -V'-Mi!» \1v Sn.th , X > A ’ K l h " V ’ >1 K, 11't !i ' 1 ( ' I U. K , U f if l i p J Black Rose iSÍMÜi On Warner Bros. Records and Tapes No. 5 Jefferson Square c a l l 452-8846 9th and Bumot “W HERE YOU OET THE BIOOEST M USIC FOR THE SM ALLEST P RIC ES" 4 5 8 -5 2 5 3 J 20% OFF from ballet to disco Step out in style B y Karavel — at 2348 Guadalupe Sale ends Saturday. O utfit shown by Danskin. G R A N D R E - O P E N I N G ! Entire Milliskin Stock from Danskin and Capezio Enti re Stock Footwear, Excluding Capezio Dance Shoes 2348 Guadalupe Store Only Austin Public Library to house STNP files By MARY ANN KREPS Daiiy Texan Staff Public documents concerning the South Texas Nuclear Project w ill be housed in the Austin-Travis County Collec­ tion of the Austin Public Library in three to four weeks. May Schmidt, librarian in charge of the documents, said Thursday At Mayor Carole McClellan s request, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has agreed to send all STNP public documents to Austin for permanent filing Until now Bay City has been the sole site of a complete file of STNP documents, although the University's Library of Engineering houses 15 to 20 volumes of the material, R L Hancock, director of electric utilities for Austin, said Thursday. T EXA S N U C LEA R PLANTS, including those under construction, are required to have public documents available at or near the plants STN P will be the only plant to have two permanent document filing locations, Schmidt said The Austin-Travis County Collection is a non­ circulating library, concentrating on Texas historical documents and collections. "W e feel this is the logical place for it (the public docu­ ment file); it is, or will be, a part of history,” Schmidt said. T H E F IL E contains the application for the operating permit filed last fall in conjunction with preliminary and final safety analysis environmental reports These in­ clude emergency plans and scientific health and safety reviews. Hancock said. He termed the documents "ex­ hausting engineering type studies ” Schmidt said the material is very technical but well- organized and indexed Although the information will be public, Todd Samusson of the Texas Mobilization for Survival, said he doubted the files would be complete. " I don’t believe that incidents that have happened in the plants are going to be found in the records," he said When asked if he thought the NRC was hiding pertinent information, Samusson responded, “ It’s possible " U N D ER TH E CODE of Federal Regulations and NRC Rules and Regulations, nuclear plant authorities must make all records and documents available to the public, Richard Balough of the city attorney s office said Thurs­ day. Yet a long list of exceptions excludes many records from public scrutiny, including records specially authorized by the NRC to be kept secret in keeping with inter-agency national defense policy, trade secrets, memorandums and personnel information. The public document file is to be funded by the city. —UPI Telephoto Strange bedfellows June Wilkinson, a former Playboy centerfold subject, established a new statistic for the Guinness Book of World Records Wednesday In Fort Worth by squeezing 25 foreign students into a double bed and then joining them. The new record — ‘Greatest Bedfull of Foreigners.’ Employee union starts drive The University of Texas Employees Union, a labor organization which claims 60 of U T’s 1.0,500 employees as members, has begun a sum m er cam paig n its membership, a spokesman said Thursday. in cre a se to The goal is to increase membership by 100 this summer, said Jim Kieke, acting presi­ dent of the American Federation of Teachers Local 3626. The drive began with a business meeting Tuesday. The union is concerned prim arily with grievances against the University, protecting staff from arbitrary firing practices, better reclassification of jobs, legal assistance for suing the University and lobbying for higher wages and increased services, Kieke said. One long-range goal of the organization, Kieke said, will be to change the state law which prohibits University staff from strik­ ing or bargaining collectively, Kieke said. Another goal is to increase wages. “ We got a 5 percent increase in wages,” Kieke said, "while local inflation has in­ creased 14 to 15 per cent. That comes out to a 9 percent decrease in salaries.” The union would also like to obtain better health, dental and pregnancy benefits, Kieke said. One aim is a Health Maintenance Organization that would provide prepaid health care with an emphasis on preventive care. The union is also forming a group to seek day-care facilities for children of employees, insurance covering children’s immunization shots and greater consideration for working mothers. The U T EU is for staff members only. Teachers are not included, because they have different interests and are often supervisors to staff. Membership dues are $24 per year Monthly meetings are held the first Tues­ day of every month at Sid Richardson Hall "F o r further information there is a 24-hour answering service at 474-8984,” Kieke added. M A R K W. SW E E N E Y D.D.S. announces the opening of his office at 2906 R E D R I V E R G E N E R A L D E N T I S T R Y 1 Block North Of The Law School 474-5625 HOURS BY A P P O I N T M E N T 'N o w featuring Chicken Soup w ith M atzo Balls every M onday a n d large Kosher Hot Dogs alw ays. B A U S C H & L O M B (Jf- Soft Contact Lenses are Available at TSO We care how you look at life. T e x a s S t a t e 13T IC A E 2200 Guadalupe S erving / ro ían y o g u rt, h o t h o m o m o d o to u p , r a to d t, a n d ro o t t a n d w k h o t ¿900-A W est Anderson Lane • Capital Plaza • W estgate Mall • 133 W OKorf at S C Services otters summer anti school break jobs to students, I rom one das assignments It» several weeks or longer S o il can earn .is m uth as s | S00 00 during June July and Vugost We specialize m office and light warehousing positions from file clerks secre taries ivpists accounting clerks, survev workers to inventors takers packers and shipping clerks Y o u van work evers dav or a lew days depending upon sour summer vacation plans t all sour nearest Norrell office I here’s to get all the tie*tails lee or never anv placement contract to sign Supplement your college expenses bv work mg when and where you want with the fastest growing tern pnrarv service in the country DM I \s Dow nlow it f si hang* Hark Mrliitcy M v i ohms Hldg Regional I Hi IK V IN l. Kit HARDSON HOUSTON NVv 'NVs Freeway Downtown/ Shell I’la/a . . SW Wrslhnmer R eg io n al/ C l 4) -42 XX (I (214» 1X0 4041 (214» S2H <760 (214) 9H<) 4195 (214» 254-9121 (214)7X1 7047 (71 })6 8 2 4 0 )| (71 I)22X X164 (71 ») 960 1060 W rathe éwer S \S AN IONIO I t PASO II I SA (71 1)960 1092 (512) X2X 2506 (9 |X ) S44 60X6 (91 H) 664 I 220 SFrMlCFf* ()l I h I S C OAST r o (;<)A $ T IN m i WHIT tí L O O K N O R R L L L OFFICII-: N E A R E S T Y O U PA(»I S A N D C A L I THE INFORMAL CLASSES REGISTRATION At the Texas Union Ballroom Box Office: Thursday, June 7, from 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday, June 8, from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, June 9, from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. At the Texas Union Program Office (4.300): Monday, June 11, from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday, June 12, from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. WZ Paym ent for classes must be m ade a t registration. M a k e checks p aya b le to The University of Texas. Bring UT I.D. for student, faculty, staff rates. An additional description of most courses, including content a n d fo rm a t, is a v a ila b le a t the Texas Union Inform ation Desk, or call 4 7 1 -5 6 5 3 or 4 7 1 -3 6 1 6 for more inform ation. Be sure before you register. Due to expenses involved in course p lann ing , N O REFUNDS w ill be authorized unless a class is cancelled due to insufficient enrollm ent. THERE WILL BE N O LATE REGISTRATION. (except Sailing, Scuba, Skydiving, an d U n d erw ate r You m ay register for someone else Photography). Bring his or her I.D., address, phone an d Social Security num ber. You MUST register IN WERSON for Sailing, Scuba Diving, Skydiving, and U n d e rw a te r Photography. NOTE: You m ay register a m a xim u m of 4 people O NLY (yourself an d 3 others). N O CLASSES w ill be held on JULY 4. A m a ke -u p d ate w ill be decided a t the first class m eeting for those classes requiring a m a ke -u p date. Aerobic D an e* A m erican Car Repair Ballet 1, II A In t. B arten din g B ask C ake Decorating Basic Scuba Diving Baskotry B eltydance, Beg. A In t. B ird w atch in g Blues H arm o nica Bridgo, Beg an d Int. C a llig ra p h y C a m e ra Basics C onv. G e rm a n Conv. Sign Language C onv. Spanish 1 C onv. Spanish II C reole C aju n Cooking D arts D efensive Driving Disco, Ballroom , C /W D a m e Exercise fo re ig n Car Repair Freehand Drawing French 1 a n d It * GeJu Guitar, Beg. Guitar, In *. Hatha Yega 1 and N Japanese ink D ra w in g Jazz 1 and tt Ki-Aifesde Kid Stuff: C ra ft Design D ra w in g for C hildren Experiences in C re ativ ity Expressive D ra m a tk s Fun w ith Science M e e t the U niversity M useum s M u s k for C hildren Kurvg Fu Lift Experience Courses: B uilding Your Solf-Esteom C om m u nicatio n Skills M a n a g in g Stress an d Tension Self-Assertion Skills Low brow Astronom y M o dern Dance M ero J a n G iants N eed lep o in t, Beg a n d A dv O k in a w a n K arate Personal Financial P lanning Personal Journals Portuguese Conversation Practical Law Russian far Fun Soiling Sign L ang uag e 1 Skin orsd Hair Care Skydiving Seme Like It CeM Tap Donee, Bag. and Int. Tofu Workshop Underwater PI telegraphy !! E A R L Y JUNE SPECIAL !! O N E L A R G E G R O U P O F D E S I G N E R S H O E S V A L U E S T O 66 25 S E L E C T F R O M F A M O U S B R A N D S SU C H AS S.R.O., N IC K E L S , JO A N 8. D A V ID B A R E T R A P S A N D M O R E (Not all stock included) on-the-drag at 2406 Guadlupe Page 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, June 8. 1979 * 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 I CLEARANCE SALE I 1 5 % .o5 0 % OFF ¡ ,«* t fm O/ \ ' q C r t 4f I* A (iem o f a M om I)cs<*r\« s a Bcaut> of a Ring. l'stíGSSZ- QUARTZ IsEWD ( J f/toH m l. w a t c h e s «C Clements foresees fewer gas allotments By JOEL WILLIAMS Dally Taxan Staff The future fuel dilemma will make present ■gasoline station lines seem im m aterial. Gov Bill Clements said at a press conference Thursday The problem is not going to get better It is going to get w orse,” Clements said We are going to see a great economic dislocation in this country ” Policy makers should start to work from a last year s fuel 20 percent reduction of deliveries, he said “ We are operating with a fixed amount of e n e r g y ,’’ th is com pounds prob lem s of maldistribution of supplies and abnormal growth patterns in areas like Houston, he said Clements said Ed Vetter, director of the Texas Energy and Natural Resources Ad Bvisory Council, m et Thursday and will meet Friday with refiners, distributors and marketers of gasoline, diesel fuel and jet fuel. The main problem they plan to address con­ cerns the distribution of available supplies. Clements said The Energy Council is trying to determine traffic patterns on the interstate highways which will be increasingly important during the su m m e r tourist season, he said Regarding allegations that oil companies a r e holding back supplies, he said the allegations a re nonsense’ and “ fabrications of peoples imaginations “ The governor said he is going to Washington Monday to meet v>ith the Texas congressional delegation and discuss positions on energy. Turning to other issues, Clements said he will go to Brownsville June 21 to m eet with the governors of states which share a border with M* There the four governors will discuss tfv pr blem s of undocumented worke s. energ> issues and drug smuggling. In addition to undocumented workers, the governors will discuss energy issues and drug smuggling along the border. Affor the Brownsville meeting, the gover­ nors will present their proposals to the gover­ nors of the Mexican states along the border. Mexico is just as interested as we a re,” he said. Discussion may lead to retrial By SH O ND A NOVAK Dally Texan Staff j u r y A f o r e m a n c o n t r a d i c t e d statem ents he made last week in an af­ fidavit that jurors considered improper evidencé in reaching a verdict in the Sheila Meinert case, M einert’s at­ torney said Thursday. M e i n e r t w a s c o n v i c t e d of t he attempted capital murder of former Austin police officer Joe Villegas Her attorney. Laird B Palmer, re­ quested a new trial May 31 on the basis of jury foreman Law rence E^hrlich’s af­ fidavit stating that during the punish­ m ent phase of the trial ju rors discussed “ the amount of tim e (Meinert) would have to serve" if assessed a 15-year prison term . Ju ro rs are prohibited from discuss­ ing parole during deliberations. However, prosecutors Thursday filed affidavits from Ehrlich and five other jurors stating they did not consider parole in reaching a verdict “ There was little if any discussion of the amount of tim e Sheila Meinert would serve on a 15-year sentence and such w i not discussed because (the judg* had instructed us not to discuss how long a person would serve the sentence Ehrlich's affidavit reads. How can you explain the contradic­ t o r statem ents? ’ P a lm er asked. Ehriieh also contradicted an earlier that Meinert's failure to influenced his verdict. He statem ent testify declined to comm ent on the matter. A Ju ne 18 hearing has been set in 167th ' nstrict Court. Palm er said he will appeal the case if his motion for a new trial is denied. I niv u rsitv Keepsake Ihanmnit ( vutr EDobie M all 'iiiimiHiiiitiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiino 4/7 ‘<‘t4 I HlllllllllllinilllllllllllllllllMHIIMIIMII» Upper Level 6 0 M in u te Service ON 60 Second Sunglasses For the man without a minute to spare. V you’re gonna like our NEXT DAY SERVICE IN by 11 a.m. OUT by 11 a.m. NEXT DAY on m ost color p rin t film s • convenient • fast service • superb quality • why settle for less VISA & MasterCharge Second level . O ' ? , . } . cpt*p indoors or out V o n ruteo photochromn tanses that i a n k e e p u p w i t h y o u r p a c e P H O T O - G R A V E X T R A lertsns from Corning In lea* than 60 seconds they change from U m oil clear indoors to a com­ f o r t a b l e s u n g l a s s ou tdoors And i n d o o r s again, w h e n y o u r # b a r k a n d convenient* t h e y fa rm q u i c k l y You can i- eep one pair of glasses o n a ll day no matter how active you a r e i n d o o r s o r o u t d o o r s C o m e t n a n d see f o r y o u r s e l f h o w fast, h o w c o n v e n i e n t h o w comfortable these g r e a t l e n s e s really are It only takes C O *’ ALPHA O M EG A OPTICAL 5P20^b 451 12705 Research A tv in O r d '» Sandwich Shops BUY 1 SALVATION - GET A SMALL SALVATION FREE! (O ffer go o d at Riverside, 38th St., & Twin O a ks locations only) B r in g This Coupon The original 3 cheese-3 m ea t sa n d w ich served on bread b a k e d fresh daily in our o w n bakery. ■ m * A L V I N OR U S S A L V A T I O N S A N D W I C H There I" No Substitute 1 7 0 5 S . t a k e s h o r e iCocnof Laktskxe 4 «¿voruée 442 *514 10:30 U A 'tO M ML 1 2 0 4 A W . 3 8 th Across from Sohwl 454-372* 10:30 (mm.-4.-0Q yi n*. (Offer ixpire* June IS ) 441-0721 10 30 a.m.-10£0 p-m. - I IN A CLASS ITSELF Music department gets new chairman Dr. Fiora C. Contino wiH become the new chairman of the University music department, it was announced this week. Dean Oscar Brocket! of the College of Fine Arts an­ nounced Wednesday that Contino’s appointment as chairman will become effective Sept. I. Professor Daniel Patrylak, department chairman since 1975. has accepted an out-of-state administrative post. For the past year Contino has been at the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore working at the Peabody Institute as a conductor, vocal coordinator and director of opera theater. She was also guest conductor of the Baltimore Symphony Contino’s activites in opera, symphonic and choral conduc­ ting have brought priase from publications such as the Opera Magazine and the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. Contino has served as assistant and guest conductor of the New Orleans Philharmonic Symphony, conductor of the Spr­ ing Opera Theater in San Francisco, the Aspen Music Festival in Colorado, the Ambler Festival of the Pittsburgh Symphony, the Memphis Opera Theatre and the director of the Aspen Choral Institute. A native of Malvern, N.Y., Contino studied at the Oberlin Conservatory in Ohio and at the Juilliard School in New York City (1949-51). Later Contino returned to the Juilliard School where she earned her master’s degree in choral conducting and her doctorate in opera conducting in 1964 Campus News in Brief □ Canoe trips planned T h e D i v i s i o n o f Recreational Sports will spon­ sor one-day canoe trips down the San Marcos or Guadalupe Rivers Saturday and Sunday. The $12 fee includes equip­ m ent, tran sp ortatio n and guides. These trips are suitable for both beginner and experienc­ ed c a n o e is ts . F ree ca n o e clinics are set for Wednesday and June 20 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Participants will learn basic flat water canoeing skills. Meet in Bellmont Hall 104 at 5:30 p.m. Sign-up for these programs also is in Bellmont Hall 104. For more information, call 471-1093. A N N O U N C E M E N T * UT S P E C IA L E V E N T S C O M M IT T E E will sponsor a party from 4 p.m. to 2 a.m. Fri­ day in the Union Building. UT R E C R E A T IO N C E N T E R and the bowling sports club will sponsor bowling for bucks at 8 p.m every Friday at the recreation center The entry fee is $2.50 UT F IL M C O M M IT T E E will p re sen t "Summertime" at 8 and 10 p.m. Fnday at the Union Theater Admission is $1 50 "Cat and M ouse" w.ll be presented at 8 and 10 p m Saturday in the Texas Union Theater Admission is $1.50 M E E T IN G S W O M E N O N T H E IR O W N - * E Y O N O O IV O R C E will meet at noon Friday in Student Services Building 2 to discuss sum m er p lan s for the group New students are invited to bring their lunch and join the group. S T U D E N T S O L D E R TH AN A V ER A G E will meet at 4 p.m. Friday in the Texas Tavern for happy hour All new students 23 years old and over are invited TA B LET O P G E N E R A L S will meet at 12 30 p.m Sunday in Bellmont Hall 242 All students interested in simulation gaming are invited L E S A M IS DE LA L A N G U E P R A N C IS E will meet from 6 to 8 p.m Friday at Lee Amle Restaurant for French conversation. Everyone with an interest in conver­ sational French is welcome dtiicQ f a c t o r y ¿R esta ura nt 454-8349 Austin’s WIDEST SELECTION of Natural Food Dinners COM PLETE NATURAL FOODS MENU ALL ENTREES MADE WITH THE GREATEST CARE AND HIGHEST Q l’ALITY NATURAL INGREDIENTS JUICE FACTORY N A T U R A L FOODS G RO C ER Y H E A L T H FOOD P R O D U C TS A C O M P L E T E SH O P P IN G F A C IL IT Y FOR A L L Y O U R H E A L T H N E E D S I ilh & A v e n u e A, o f f o f G u a d a l u p e III a . m . lo i p . m . 7 d a y » a w e e k 454-8349 J WEEKENDER SPECIALS GOOD FRIDAY AND ★ SATURDAY ★ „ *6.49 Sil „ BALLANTINES 86° Scotch ............................ 750 M l OLD CROW 80° Bourbon .......................... 750 M l 4.5 V I.W. HARPER 86° Bourbon ......................... 750 M l 5 .3 V JOHNNIE WALKER RED 86.88 Scotch....................... 750 M l ^7 « 69 G O RD O N S 80* V o d k a ............................. 750 M l GRENACHE ROSE S o b astia n i........................ LONE STAR BEER C a n s ................................ PEARL UTE BEER C a n s ................................ TECATE BEER Moxican Import ................ 750 M l *3.58 .. Caso *6.99 5th *2.27 *6.79 ... 6 PK *2.25 Buddy Susmati \s BEERS WINES 6500 Airport Blvd. Next To Highland Mall I d Q u a n tity R igh t* Reserved J S THE DAILY TEXAN Friday, June 8, 1979 Page 9 Arkansas to face Cal-State in finals OM AHA. Neb l U P I ) - Mickey Palm er rapped out five singles and Matt Vejar knocked in three runs Thurs­ day night when California S ta te - F u lle rto n defeated Pepperdine 8-5 to advance to the finals of the College World Series The Titans will play Arkan­ sas in the championship game Friday night Fullerton has already met Arkansas once in the series, winning 13-10 Palmer, in his first start in more than a month, had a sacrifice fly. a run socred and two R B I in addition to his five singles. Vejar doubled and singled for his three R B I Fullerton took an early lead on Vejar s two-run double in the first inning Pepperdine came back in its half of the first on a three-run homer by Walt Steele, his second of the series Fullerton tied the game in the second inning on an R B I single by Tim Wallach and took the lead for good with three runs in the fifth on five singles and an error Pepperdine closed the gap to 8-5 with two runs in the fifth on a sacrifice flv by Bobby Heisom ami a double by John Lais Fullerton added insurance runs on a ground hall by Sam Favata in the sixth and a single by Vejar in the eighth Tony Hudson of Fullerton came on in the seventh and struck out four of the last nine Pepperdine batters to record his third save in four series appearances Texas’ Merrllee Keller returns a serve in practice. Determination helps Keller reach A!AW championships B y M IK E L IT O F S K Y Dally Texan Staff For many college tennis players, skill and practice suffice, but not for Merrilee Keller. Texas’ No .1 ranked singles player. Keller places just as much concentration on attitude and conditioning. “ Everyone can hit. We all hit a lot of balls,” said the freshman. “ I t ’s just a matter of making up your mind you want to be good,” she explained. Through patience and determination, Keller has im ­ proved her game and attitude noticeably go­ ing into this weekend’s A IA W National Ten­ nis Championships at the University of Iowa in Iowa City. Keller’s overall record was 27-16. She finished second in the state meet and reached the semifinals in the A IA W regional meet, qualifing for nationals. KELLER HAD a mediocre season, posting a 17-14 record, but excelled in post-season play where she was 10-2. Her post-season im ­ provement can be explained in several ways. “ I decided to listen to Coach (Dick) King,” explains Keller. ‘‘At first I didn’t get along with him. He would say things to irritate me on the court, and it would really hurt my game. “ I wasn't motivated and was getting lazy and that’s when my game was really going bad. So I decided to give what he said a try and I made up my mind I was going to im­ prove,” she adds. King explains, "You might say she peaked at the right time. This is where you want your game to be at this time. She’s played top players from top teams all year long and this tournament is the topping on the cake.” K e ller, an 18-year-old freshman from Weston, Mass., insists conditioning is also a major part of her game.‘‘I run, lift weights and just work out,” she explains. “ Con­ ditioning comes in handy during a tough match. Everyone can hit, it’s just a matter of who gives out first and you’re glad you’re in condition at that time. ” Before choosing to come to Texas, Keller was undecided between Stanford and Texas. ‘‘I WAS two days within going to Stanford, but I decided on Texas. Texas offered more, had a better schedule and just traveled all over. They also offered me a scholarship,” Keller explained. Since arriving at the U niversity nine months ago, Keller has started in the No. 1 position and attributes that to desire. ‘‘I wanted it more than anyone else,” Keller said. New Rocket head coach Del Harris —UPl Temphoto Rockets pull surprise coaching switch HOUSTON ( U P II - Soft-spoken basketball tactician and author Del Harris Thursday was named by the Houston Rockets to replace head coach Tom Nissalke Neither Harris, 41, nor a represen­ tative of new Rockets owner George J. Maloof offered any indication at a news conference why the change was made. Nissalke, with whom Harris work ed as assistant coach four seasons at Salt Lake City and at Houston, ap­ parently has turned down Maloof s offer to become general manager " I haven't talked to anyone in weeks. I don’t know what is going on,” Nissalke said from his home shortly after the news conference He had a one-season. $90,000 con­ tract remaining with the club PUBLISH ED REPORTS in dicated Ray Patterson, the Rockets general manager the past six years, might continue in that job But the position had not been filled, Maloof said from his Albuquerque. N M . home Harris express#*! hope Patterson would stay with the Rockets We are fortunate to this point that Ray Patterson is still with us,M Harris said “ Hopefully they will be able to talk him into remaining ” Harris was given a one^year con­ less than-total control tract and over the ballclub “I don't have total control,” he said “ I don't want total control of the team ” In M ay gold has reached an all time high of $ 2 7 6 .1 0 an ounce. June 4 -7 we will be selling our 14 kt. light serpen­ tine anklets, bracelets, necklaces and earrings for $200.00 an ounce. 7 " b racelet 9 " a n klet 1 5 " n e c k la c e 1 6 " n e c kla ce 1 8 " n e c k la c e 2 0 " n e c k la c e 2 4 " n e c kla ce 3 0 " n e c k la c e c h a in e a r r i n g s -$+^50 $ 7.95 W r S O $10.95 524.00 $15.00 525.00 $16.00 529.00 $18.00 5 3 0 0 0 $20 00 537 50 $24.00 545r00 $30 00 YtSrOQ.. $ 9.95 2 0 % o ff all turquoise and m alachite 1 0 % off everything else in the store B ÍS 9 ELI7S Oobie M all 9-8 Mon.-Sat 477-1829 Sacond Level EGG ROLL STAND 2717 Guadalupe «78-0354 h x e v l l r n t( h in e x e h u m i n t f r i e r * ( m i NOW OPEN UNTIL 1:00 a.m. V e g ie E g g Roll B e e f E g g Roll S h rim p E g g Roll Fried W o n to n M u s h r o o m Fried Rice C h ick e n Fried Rice B eef Fried Rice Pork Fried Rice S h r im p Fried Rice 50* 6 0 ‘ 65* 50* $ 1 .5 9 $1 69 $1 69 $ 1 .6 9 $ 1 .8 9 S w e e t a n d So u r Pork S w e e t a n d So u r S h rim p M o K o o G a i Pen C a s h e w C h ick e n D in g Pepp er S te a k Beef w /B ro c c o li S h rim p w / M u t h r o o m t C h o p S u e y $2.15 $3 15 $2 50 $2 50 $2 50 $ 2 .5 0 $2 95 $2 15 F e d e ra l Ex p ress Corporation is looking for graduate students with M asters in Computer Science with C O B A L and IM S programming ex­ perience. These positions will be in Memphis, Tennessee. F e d e ra l Ex p ress is the nation's largest small package airlines ex­ tending to its employees a com­ prehensive benefits package and the opportunity to work in a growth- oriented environment. Se n d inquiries to: Lew M atthew s Director of Systems and Program m ing Federal Express Corporation 5100 Poplar, 20th Floor Memphis, Tennessee 38130 H I T A C H I Model CTC-93 Similar to Illustration a r r e w u n r a f w n ^ b COLOR TV 3 M O N T H S ÍO S B&WTV FOR SU M M E R *30 / 5 RENT IT ... THEN IF YO U UKE IT YO U C A N RÉNT-BUY IT. HITACHI 1 9 " ........................... $ 4 4 9 .9 5 1 0 0 % SOUD STATE FULLY A U T O M A T IC COLOR LOK. Q U IC K START 2 YEAR W A R R A N T Y WC. ( IN L IN E ) A N O 10 Y E A R S O N T U B E TRANSISTORS. CA SH PRICE .............. $399.95 m s u y o RENT CALCULATORS, ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS, STEREO SYSTEMS, TAPE RECORDERS, ADOBES, REFRIGERATORS, TELEPHONE ANSWERERS. RENT BY THE WEE*, MONTH, OR SEMESTER B E R K m n n s 2234 GUADALUPE • 476-3525 4930 BURNET ROAD • 454-6731 “ The Best Sandwich In T o w n " PHONE ORDERS WELCOME 32nd & Guadalupe 452-5010 1608 Lavaca 478-3281 201 E Riverside 441-5331 DAN’S 1600 LAVACA .................................................... 478-5423 5353 BURNFT RD................................................. 459-8689 S P E C I A L S G O O D F RI DA Y A N D S A T U R D A Y BA S ta u h W M aby CUTTY SARK VAT 69 GOLD EXCALIBUR 10 YR. M> Pr*ef Scotth W h o k y ............................ ................ . 7 S 0 M L " f M Search WKttlry ............................................................................... 3th Q # " R JT v i F r e e r * « * i' $mdk.................. DUFFTOWN GLENLIVET JOHNNIE WALKER RED B * Free# Search W hisky . ................................................................. h O A l JL JL t W W •0 P»f«e< Otn • .................. ................... . . . . . . 1.73 IT 0 . 7 7 IT O . O O S6 Free# Search W hisky USHERS HAIG PINCH 12 YR. GORDONS GIN té Free# Search W hisky WALKERS VODKA •o Free# W e M o ..................................................... SO Free# Sirsrifht tew rhen W hiskey KENTUCKY TAVERN EVAN WILLIAMS té er * 0 Free# S traight S swi k sn W hisk ey 101 Free# S rn sifM S s wrk s w W hiskey OLD TAYLOR 101 PR. KENTUCKY BEAU té Free# S traig ht Be wrksw W liisks f ......................... 100 Free# Uewewr SOUTHERN COMFORT RIKALOFF VODKA SO Fresrf V s A s SO Free# Fwerle fccee kwm DON Q RUM GILBEYS GIN SO F r W O ie 730 M l / , | T 7 1 0 a a o A A a y 1 7$ IT | * # T 1 . 7 JI T M Q • i f r o OO i a o o I U | y y m o o n o o o fl OQ A op ...... 1.73 o a q \ 71 IT a a o 730 M t —T s 4 O e c q ó # , j y 7S0 Mi. 7 SO M i d i / 7 e 7 0 a 0 0 * * # * . . T T 7 SO M i. R , O y a o o a i o 4 , | T c o o s r W 730 M i 7SO M i Sfh —T s O O DUROC BRANDY V.S.O.P. SO Free# fran c* S re« 4 y KAHLUA UQUEUR 1 } Vreei R A M RIUNITE LAMBRUSCO irsriMH U e * t S e k F e s - t rrnri ------------ a A f t S>* 0(40 a i a 3rS> d k s I W O C e n s s AO BUDWEISER CANS * c - a s ... ......—------— ....... . o Faca | ,07 « c c LONE STAR CANS a % q PABST CANS i a ft WIEDEMANNS .............................................................. .................................. 0 F A C * 17 C a e ---- ------- . . . . --------- — --------------------- > | 1 F A C * 0 . 1 7 I 6 MLS S e s s ie s — ----------- rrf-...r . ■ ...............* F A C * | , J O MEMOREX SALE > " I s it live or is it M em orex ? ' M EM OREX Record Cleaner MIMORCI M EM O R EX R e c o r d C e r e K ir M E M O R E X Clesmnq Krt C le a n in g Kit S i W i ü M l ” P ini P l MEMOREX 90-Minute 8-Track Recording Cartridge MfUOREX M E M O R E X 90 M E M O R E X 90 %8MN. <** *4*»* * N « # V • I9l3 k H t v e > • 2018 I Sutsne. 2*38 V» Ande ENTERTAINMENT T H E D A I L Y T E X A N ‘Yakuza’ represents genre at best Friday. Ju n e 8. 1979 Page 11 BEANS ... Welcomes You and Summer ... With our Original TACO SALAD Giant Chicken-Fried Steak or Basket of HOT PUPS! "Yakuza” ; directed by Sydney Pollack; written by Paul Schrader; with Robert Mitcham, Takakura Ken and Brian Keith; at 8 p.m. Friday and Satur­ day and 7:45 p.m. Sunday at Batts Auditorium. By LOUIS BLACK Yakuza is a mystery, a graceful excursion into another country, a white m an's vision of a foreign culture and a film critically reviled when it was first released. The Yakuza are m em bers of the Japanese underworld who have as complicated and complex a series of codes and rules of conduct as the more mythic/rom anticized sam urai During the last decade and a half the Yakuza films have become one of Japan’s most popular generic forms. In the early Seventies Paul Schrader wrote a screenplay based on this form. “ Yakuza’’ proved to be his first script sale, going for a spectacular $300,- 000 which caused it to be the talk of the industry. Veteran director Sydney Pollack (“ Jerem iah John­ s o n ”) was assigned to the project as well as Robert Mitchum and Takakura Ken, the biggest Japanese Yakuza star. Almost im mediately there was ten­ sion between Schrader and director Pollack over one another’s conception of the film. THE FILM OPENED to negative reviews, made no money and was regarded as a fiasco. Schrader went on to sell scripts for such films as “ Taxi Driver and “ Obsession” as well as writing and directing “ Blue Collar” and “ Hard Core.” He was to reflect later on “ Yakuza” saying, “ Pollack directed against the grain of the script. I wrote a violent, underworld film about blood, duty and obligation. He made a sort of rich, rom antic, trans- cultural film. Either of those films would be in­ teresting if fully realized, but the final product fell between those stools....” Without meaning to, perhaps, Schrader has gotten right to the heart of why this is such a successful, painfully underrated and amazingly eloquent film. Because it is this very combination which works so well. It both avoids the cheap, cW eekgnd Weekend is a list of the arts and entertainm ent activities Friday through Sunday in and around Austin. “ B ach ’s L unch ’’ F rid a y from noon to 1:30 p.m. at the State Capitol grounds features The Harp Duo playing pop to Debussy. F em inist m im e Suzanne Fox will appear at the F irst Unitarian Church of Austin, 4700 Grover St. at 8 p.m. F ri­ day. Fox, an American In­ taught and p er­ dian, has form ed throughout Europe and the United States and was a featured perform er at the International Women’s Year Conference in Houston in 1977. Admission is $2. Two films by Maya Deren, “The Very Eye of Night” and “ The Divine Horseman: The Living Gods of Haiti,” will be shown at 8:45 p.m. Friday at the Elisabeth Ney Museum, 303 E. 44th St. Admission is free. Esther’s Follies celebrate their second birthday at 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday at Liberty Lunch, 405 W. 2nd St. For their birthday, the Follies have put together a “ Best of E sther’s ” show that is bound to delight. Go early because it should be crowded. Admission is $3. Another birthday will be celebrated this weekend as Commedia del’ Austin turns one-year-old a t the Austin Folk Festival at 6:30 p.m. F ri­ day at the International Cafe. The festival, offering music, food booths and e n te rta in ­ ment, through runs Friday Sunday evening at Festival Gardens (along Town Lake, east of IH-35). The Roundtop Festival con­ tinues this weekend with an 8:15 p.m . c o n c e rt F rid a y featuring Jam es Dick and Eugene Rowley at the Mary Moody Northern Theater at St. Edw ard’s University. Two exhibitions featuring the work of Texas artists open Saturday. An exhibit of Texas Crafts will be on display at the Blaffer Gallery in the Fine Arts Building through July 29. At the Laguna G loria Art Museum “A Survey of Naive A The MONEY BOOK — it — T h e best d isco u n t book e v e r o ffe re d in A u s tin . $ $ F e a t u r in g h u n d re d s of d o lla r s in s a v in g s at A u s t in 's finest Night Clubt ( free cover j M other Earth (2) C razy Bob's (3) The G reenhouse Stars (4) Eli's (4) A fter O urs (2) Steam boat 1874 ( Vi price) Record Store» Oise Records Rocord Tow n Sound W arohouso Zebra Records Clothing Stores M ohan's India Imports King of Joans Longhorn General Store Altitudes Jean Store Vogue Shoes Christines Ragowitz T-Shirt Express Ai's Formal Woar Hair Fashion Boutiques Sheer M adnoss Com bs-N -Shears The Haircut Staro M a n e Event Rick's H airstyling H air Corner Boutique and many more of Austin's most respected merchants: Her G ear, Jock Shop, Steam b o at Springs, Strait M usic Co., W orld W ide Stereo, Pian t-lt Earth, A u d io Concepts, Russell's U n iq u ity Je w e lry a n d G ifts, M a m a 's Pizza, N o w York Su b w ay, Taste A lternativo , M e rle N o rm an Cosm etics, M a lib u G ra n d Prix, etc., etc. ... (coupons are guaranteed) Supply h lim ited, so d o n 't dekry. Come by 2200 Guadalupe, Suite 225 (cerner of 22nd A Guadalupe — upstairs) or call 476-3959 for mere information, listen for our ad on KIBJ-PM and Disco 90-FM. __________ NOW SERVING SUNDAY BRUNCH 11-2 311 West 6th St. H a p p y Hours 2 - 7 Every* D a y JOHN & OLIVIA i w U e a e e j j p i ■ ■ C b GANG ARE BACK! In ‘Yakuza’ Life-is-hell/people are ugly” philosophizing of Schrader at his violent/nihilistic worst (“ Taxi D river” ) and the overly rom antic trappings of stan­ dard Hollywood glamounzation. INSTEAD THE FILM weaves its own web, stay­ ing away from either extrem e, creating an in­ tric a te texture. The story concerns R obert Mitchum, who was stationed in Japan after the war, returning to that country 20 years later and becoming involved with the Yakuza. But more im ­ portant than the narrative is the portrayal and ex- ploration of interpersonal relationships, and es pecially the nature of obligations and duty. In a film full of wonders, the acting stands out Mitchum is both intellectual and instinctual, erotic and brutal, intelligent and oblivious He is brilliant­ ly counter-pointed by Takakura Ken The evolution of his character is so subtle that it is startling when you realize the changes that have occurrred “ Yakuza' is a violent, exciting, fast-paced film but one that generates an air of m ystery and a r­ ticulates its own set of rules as it progresses Texas Artists from 1840 to Present” also will be on dis­ play. At 8 p.m. Sunday, Mark J Cristal, H arryette Mullen and Ahmos Zu-Bolton will read their poetry at the Brazos Bookshop. 803 Red River St John Travolta Olivia New ton* John p ANM AvAl ON X IAN HU 11 t tX> HYHNt S. HO C AÍ SAH tw* a v ZmmrnTs É P L 7 II t IVMtt Ifl ^ 1:15-3:00-(TlS 5:4S)-4:00-10:1S L A K E H I L L S 2428 BIN WHITE • 444 05S2 IN DOilY STIRÍ0 12:50-3:00-5:10-7:20-9:30 “ May be the funniest movie of the year.' Witt Jo n e» M inneapolis Tribune A Km U métsFIM g f f C & Q Q Q Q \ \ , The Secret Society \ ,!v v 0f Jopon. THE YAKUZA x v C 'K --— M ,V-1 ■ ■ >.\ ■ - r ; - V , ■ ; le te Show 11:25 Only Friday end Saturday A.C. Aud BBS UTKXAS lixm v FILAIS VISCONTI'S DAMNED Ik* was H OCJfl fc) b e c o m e the secar id most powerful man in INa/J Cknnanv Mjnn M r m w m j % x m ir o a y A I • OF a 7:30 4 10:15 SI J S S - mT .-S. ;!• V1, fridey & Saturday Academic Center And. ■ ? - ■ ■ ■ The year is e future yewU proOelOy kue le too s c fe c£ S 7 a íT v x íl M ® c3Qcst® on ft rated, raSNer Xinfcy tefe cd occn^Acnfi h i, A Set A C Aed. M 0 pae. S1J 0 i I Page 12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, June 8 ^ 979 5-7 p.m. On The Union Patio c o p ie s ^ • J 1 / 0 C / / 2 • High Q uality D issertations • Quick Service reproduced on • No M ínim um s w aterm ark ed 1007c rag for W Business Cards Specialty Advertising Im p rin tin g kinko’s 2200 G uadalupe 476-4654 ST A T IO N E R Y • Notebooks • Rubber S tam p s B /W & Color In s t a n t P h o to s • No Waiting • 3 M inute S erv ice • 2 P ho to graph s 5.95 V isa 6.95 Passport P R E S E N T S “ T O N I G H T ” LEO N R ED B O N E STEVE GOODMAN THE R O C H E S ]______ FRI,, JÜÑE 15 MOSE ALLISON PASSENGER # ______ SAT., JUNE 16 PROFESSOR LONGHAIR NEW ORLEANS RHYTHM & BLUES ALL STARS SAT., JUNK 9 THE ROCKETS BEZERKO BROS. ★ ______ THURS., JUNE 14 AVERAGE WHITE BAND LE ROUX * M % BA RTON S P R IN G S R D . 4 7 7 - 9 7 6 * » M M A Complete Dinner Of Your Choice — $2.30 Beer Available e r a » A M P P I P A N M U L T I P I N P M A A m c r t l V M D ^ ADU LTS $3 00 S T U D E N T S A SR C ITIZE N S W ITH AMC CARD $2 50 JW I LITE S H O W S ! 50 C H IL D R E N S1 5 0 SPECIAL ENGAG EM EN TS FXCLI EXCLUDED Closed for Rem odeling, Look for Grand Reopening Announcem ents. jesi m m r jail DIRT BREAK FREE 146446111$ *4#V40* ♦ 4$ T it 2222 ....... >*» ' »—«* *A DIRT BREAK FREE a to n a * mamu ton \ * V E ^ .... JIW iR IT U *464461*4* j4R* uff, rv'& fr 146446-mS *4*14.661*40 JON VO IO HT . f •n i r FAYE DUNAW AY f THE ^ CHAMP h Pit 14KT» SiUH:«6l»IS f r Thie g m x trm t m ttxntm an miiiMrt ALL CINEMAS-S150 FIRST MATINEE SHOW ONLY H IG H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT K O ENIG LN 4 5 1 -7 3 2 6 fn t* n Til l 1:38-3:30-5:30 7:30-9:30 w His world is music. She lives in a world without sound. A lo v e story beyond w ords. 1:4 $ ¿ « H R S S : * S U 4 $ M $ P f c T i f " - 444 ] » } ¿^A Q U A R IU S 4 » } f 4 J 4 - S I4 7 ^ ^ ^ NORTHCROSS 6 iwetise* in i inner i d ^ 2:00-4:00-(TlS 6:00) -8 :0 0 *1 0 :0 0 jpCJ 2:00 4:00-(TIS 6:00) -8:00-9:55 DIRT «> BREAK FREE 1:J64:I6(TIS 4 10) 1 ) 0 10 TO _ REDUCED ADULT & ST J n w i R d t U H a i FOR TLS TICKETS...LIMITED TO SEATING H IG H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT KOENIG IN 451-7326 ------------------------------- HANOVER C T D C T T STR EET ,n> Fm Tvt* Times 1:10-3:20-5-J0-7:40-fJ0 A W A R D W I N N E R D C L IV tR Y r \ í) ic é€ m % COLOR French Cuisine & Libations Continental Steaks, Fish & Chicken Entrees Crepes, Quiche & Delightful Pasthes. Open 1 1 a m until Midnight Open early— Sat. & Sun (9 a m.) for Breakfast Open late till 2 a m., Fri. & Sat nights at ‘The Bakery for pastry 310 East 6th. I A UNIVERSAL AMUSEMENT A D U L T T H E A T R E S ■ ■ The Finest in Adult M otion Picture Entertainm ent INSIDE JENNIFER Í T O R Y O F « " C U E S Best Film of the Year plus A HOUSE OF STRANGE ANGE AND HIDDEN DESIRESfrJb <*D HIDDEN DE! Salon dAmour Hi THE M OST EROTIC HOUSE IN THE W ORLD! S tarring COLETTE M AREVIL* DENISE FEVIER JACQUES MARBEU1 • P 1ERRET RAYM OND A D U . T S O N L Y ( g ) uncut uncansorod plus m i 2224 G U A D A L U P E • 477-1964 OPEN 11 A V. < "FANTASY IN BLUE" starring Georgina Spelvin Parking Available 2130 S Congress 442-5719 OPEN H A M M a tin e e s Daily No O ne U nder 18 A d m itte d Late Shows Friday & Saturday. Sundays Open Noon Please Bring I D s Regardless Of Age D e B r o c a s C r o w n i n g T r i u m p h STARTS TONIGHT ONE WEEK ONLY A L A N B A T E S md P IE R R E B R A S S E U R J E A N -C L A U D E B R IA LY G E N E V IE V E B U J O L D A D O L F O C ELI F R A N C O lS E C M R IS T O P M E JU L IE N G U IO M A R M IC H E L IN E P R E S L E M IC H E L S E R R A U L T * Double feature Sat/Sun UietlnRRS NnOTI King «I Hearts Midnight Fri. A Skit and THAT MAN FROM RIO King (4:09) 8.10 13:00 Man (1:99) 4.00 10:09 VARSITY GUADALUPE • 474-4361 O V E L n W H A G E STORK • Champagne Fondue 26 Doors 1206 W. 38th tri-Mat OMAR AND THI h o w l e r s RESTAURANT-BAR 403 E. SIXTH 4 7 8 -2 9 1 2 I i ' \ nil- N lilr* ,«lk I .if* 2 lilt ''dii Viititnio Come by and enjoy our games w hile listening to your favorite music. POOL, D Y N A M O FO O S B A ll, PINBALL ELECTRONIC GAMES SPACE INVADERS, SPACE WARS & ELECTRONIC FOOTBALL O P fN 3 30-2 0 0 7 d a y s a w ##k 1 9 0 3 E. Rivorsido Drivo W o ok day H ap p y H our 4 0 0 -7 :0 0 4 4 4 -3 8 1 8 Friday, June 8, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 13 nSoap Creek Saloon THIS W ltK IN O ALVIN CROW DELBERT McCLINTON N t X T W t t K t N D V 11306 N. U M A R 8 3 8 -0 5 0 9» / v AN E X Q U IS IT E L Y B E A U T IF U L DREAM a f i l m y o u c a n f e e l g •The Valkov* stidea orroaa the that draws you slowly lato d ^ M ^ t e S U n e s s BOLLE CKXKR IS BÜtUANT The Film Bm w the sexual and spiritual evolution of a very proper and sophisticated Frenchwoman. THE VALLEY* OFffeRS SOMETHING aOTTfQUTOF THE ORDIN AMWao to it with an tapen mRBtHB -¿ ■ B A D D Y A tan talizin g m ixture o f latter- day T olkien and v td o ritn r p ftllo ao p h y , A STmKIHOLY POW ERFUL QUEST FILM, A fa s c in a tin g ex am p le of c in e m a tic P ink Floyd. The m ualc flow* th ro u g h aoarin g s h o ts o f th e New G uinea h ig h la n d s, m elding ea sily w ith s c e n e s of p o ly m o rp h o u s sex u a lity , e so te ric d ru g e x p e rim e n ta tio n and «m m ritu a liz e d n a H s ^ n c t a . ^ W HELD OVER 3RD WEEK! T o d a y , o n ly a h a n d fu l o f p s o p l# k n ow w h a t “T h e C h in a S y n d r o m a ” m r a n a ... S o o n y o u w ill k n ow . ■5 S Mon-Thur» Niflhts. • i.ie ana aaaaas S H § La Promenade Center i ■ 7115 Btfmet Rd. 459-4311 = ffliiiiwmwwnMmiimmmimiiiimiii SANYO COMPACT REFRIGERATOR RENT *20 "R m w ciimmfb 6 WEEKS 2234 GUADALUPE • 476-3525 4930 BURNET ROAD • 454-6731 We'd (ike to make T here’s no better, faster, cheaper way to sell your unwanted items than in a Daily Texan Unclassified ad For just one dollar you get a line of Unclassified advertising for three days the Unclassifieds to Use sell (or buy» just about anything! Come by Texas S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s Building 3 200 8 00 a m to 4 30 p m Monday through Friday to place yours. Pink Floyd IACK d M O N FONDA NflCHAFL DOUGLAS Michael Gorhard ’'SkSTÜ#’" .i The M apuqa IH be a n d H« C h tf h i M a M n w tea* «Win 4;smunby >Bf»t1 Bchrordrr le»teus*»aw * fkgm ft New \ m *«n >■>»*• y a / > hssso» A fa w aa soi EXO TIC , S U S P E N S E F U L A N D IN T R IG U IN G RIVERSIDE 1930 RIVERSIDE • 441 5689 "Giancarlo Giannini is.marvelous erotic film ." .. an elegant and She/it/ NB Gene rUtUMRAM I I A f i n t V W A M C N A U W U 4 A » I K H H S r t l l O m IH lH A l A t 'f i M l I X ^ * H IM IACK LEMMON IANI K>NDA M IC H M l tHMAA AS The Original Graphic scenes of smouldering sexuality... unbridled ero tid an .M SOS SALMAOOL WINS Radio Visconti's most ravishing and most sensuous film." leolerman, vo««m A film of effortless com m and. splendidly performed." VINCENT CANEY N.Y. T im * . Lush and politely lascivious." WALTER SPENCER. WORRadio < j l A N ( \ R L O C i l \ N N I N I An erotic^ ¡deal J4Í.M ABOLI Newswewh Ranks with the best T / l O N K L L I ^JENNIFER 1 L \ \ i-d^rti’» S iim m I K |* ofii Diitlxilkuii Marring' DOBIE 1 & 2 • 477 1324 DOBIE M A L I 2:20*4:40 7:00-9:20 single dream is more powerful than d thousand rectifies John T ra volta V I L L A G E a 7700 AMOCRSON* 451 8J52 L A K E H I L L S 2428 B IN WM ITI • 444 0552 Peter Sellars V I L L A G E ¿X 7700 a n DIRSOn • 45 i 8JS7 MIDNIGHTER S3.00 admission FREE PARKING IN DOBIE GARAGE Morion Srondo "SUPERMAN" Gono Hackman Christophor Km v * 1 2 :1 5 -2 :4 5 -5 :1 0 -7 :5 0 -1 0 30 V I L L A G E a 7700 ANDERSON «4S1 8352 Page 14 □ THE D A ILY TEXA N □ Friday, June 8. 1979 C L A S S I F I E 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 E a c h w ord one tim e * 14 E a c h w ord 3 tim es i 32 E a c h w ord 5 tim es * 3? E a c h w ord 10 tim es * 64 Student rate each time t 90 1 col * 1 inch one tim e *4 39 *3 96 1 col * 1 inch 2-9 tim e s 1 col * 1 inch 10 or m ore times S3 25 D C A O U N t SC M fO U l* Monday Tacen Friday Tweed ay Tacen Monday Wedneedey Tacan Tuesday Thursday Tacan Wednesday Friday Tacan Thursday J O O p m 1! 00 e m It 00 em I I 00 « m 11 CO a m "In the event *1 errors made in an advertisement, immediate net Me mutt he yrven at the publishers are responsible ter only ON* incorrect insertion Ail claims far adjustments should be mode net later than 30 days alter publication S T U D E N T F A C U L T Y S T A F F R A T E S IS w ord m inim u m , each day 4 90 E a c h additional w ord each d a y l 06 43 15 1 col * 1 inch each day *1 00 " U n c la s s if ie d * ' 1 line 3 d a y * (P re p a id N o R e fu n d *) Student*, faculty and staff m ust pre sent a cu rre nt i D and pay in ad vanee in T S P B id g 3 2Ó0 (251h *. W h lti*) from l a m to 4 30 p m M o n d a y throu gh F r id a y A UTOS FOR SALE G R E A T G A S mileage, 1971 Chevy Lu v interior, with bucket seats, M ik a d o slid in g rear window, stap bumper Call D ave at 474 1086 1975 H O R N E T W A0044, A C , A T . rad(«, power steering and brakes Perfect con­ dition $2000 Call 454-7924. 1943 M E R C E D E S 220SEB 4-door7 A T ’ AC, A M -F M , sunroof, alt leather, wood, lob, generator, battery, new valve P irelli tires D rive s and looks like new 25 m pg A ppraised *5000 83 7 6934 Í9 7 2 C H E V R O L E T IM P A L A . 4-dr7 M l y a u t o m a t i c , 4 5 ,0 0 0 m l l a s , g o o d m ach anlcal condition, body naeds work 3400 or beit offer, 453 7617, Sandy. 1975 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A 1600 Coupe O aluxa T E 37, AT, AC, A M / F M stereo tapa, naw m a g s and tiras Excellent con- d lflon, 50,000 miles, *2895 385-0741 1974 O L D S ''C U T L A S S Salon, completely toadad, re gu la r gas, fair mpg, $1995, 459- 4700,_____________ '69 V W V A Ñ , good condition New tires, battary. Recent engine overhaul *875 441-8201 1971 P L Y M O U T H D U S T I I I , tla n t ¿“star? dard, AC. good condition. *895. 385-0741 *800 1973 A M B A S S A D O R Autom atic, AC, vinyl, regular gas. great shape, huge trunk, no rust 474 9653 1978 M O N T E C A R L O , less than 20 000 miles, pay oft 84,616.17 W ill take 1850 or best otter Contact D a vid at 442-6427 or 327 3596 1969 O L D S C U T L A S S , excellent condi­ tion m echanically. Sounds, looks great, regular gas, 17 m pg *800. 476-2416 1972 D O D G E D A R T S w in g e r, T - d r autom atic, 90,000 miles, running good, clean. >785 474-1054 ______________ C L A S S IC 1970 Olds Cu tlass convertible Com pletely reconditioned m echanically. AT, PS, PB , AC bucket seats A skin g Invastmant. 452-9571, 477- 83000, good 0073 _____ '73 M U S T A N G V-8. fully equipped, low m llaaga, exceptionally clean 81800 firm. 472-9871 a fftr 5 FOR SALE M atorcyda-for So l* Í978 H O N D A H A W K , m u s f sell 4200 miles, recently tuned 474-4794. H O N D A T R A I L B I K E 70. good COndltiofL 8450 443-7713 B k y d a - F o r S o l * 10 S P E E D S : 23" Peugeot 8120, and 23 Claude Butler 3160 454 7542 S t « r * o ~ F o r S o l * 3 speakers, SA-7500 amp, mint condition, 2 years old. W ill ntgoflate Call 477 9563 after 5 pm T B A C M I L to reel 7250, autom atic Inad, goo ravarsa, re g u la rly m ain tain ed, good , 459 8028 condition, , *250 CallC all M lchata re g u la rly D I R E C T D R I V E turntable Lu xm an P D 121. Keith M o n k s M e rcu ry contact tone arm , Prom ethlan G ra d o cartrid ge List 8800, now 8495. or will sell places 892- 1120 nights. ____ ____ P I O N E E R S T E R E O cassette tape deck component. Excellent condition Price negotiable C all Paula. 443-2235. 471-1447 M -F 8-5 M usical-For Sat* N S W C A M P U S m u s ic sto re Sheet mutic, song books, guitars, strings, elec­ tric keyboards Alpha M u sic Center No 2, 29th 8, Guadalupe, 477-5009. No 1. 6609 Airport, 451-0645 I am selling the M O S S M A N G U IT A R S last of 5,000 S.L M o ssm a n steel string acoustic gu ita rs dlract from m y shop in Wlnfiatd, KS, at about V» retail price. Rosew ood gu itars start at *495. W a Invite you to com e visit our shop #t 2101 E 9th or ca ll after 5 p m 316/221-2625 Stuart M o s s m a n ___ Photogrophy-Por Sot* ___ M A M I Y A S E K O R 500 S L R Pe n t# * 50mm Ians, V lv lta r 35mm Ians, good con dition. Inquire, M ich ele 459-8028 ____ Pa N-For Sot* D Enoll Whlte-face. 1-392-0522 Homo» For So l* N E A R U T P r im a residential property 3-2 w ith stu d y , C A -C H , b e a u tifu lly low m a in te n a n ce ya rd la n d sca p e d , Covered patio, large storeroom Perfect for professor who w ant* to live near cam pus. A il brick, 17 years old Priced In 80'S. 451-6641 or 327-3782 1, C U T E H O M E Com pletely rebuilt Ik hardw ood floors F ive m inute drive c a m p u s *29,950 474-7776 E N F I E L D COTTAGE 3 B R *, quite specious with room to expend. Sep arate dining room and en­ trance foyer Hardw ood floors, gracio us Im a g in a t iv a flo o r pian. P a rfe c t tor radecorator N aw on markat. 855,000. E x c lu s iv a with this office C a ll M a r y Cu llen or C u rtis Jordon at Tba Cullen Co 442-7*33, office, or 442-9323, 2M-2078 Ft* Solo-Gorog • N O R T H E A S T - S A T U R D A Y , Sunday 8- 6. 1408 G len wood Clothing, m isc Item*, ga s cook stove _________________ 46Í8C^tll^8 f$^8^8S4 •“ Fot $481* N E L S O N 'S G IF T S Estab lish e d 1945 Indian L a r g e st selection reservation jewelry 4502 South C o n gress 444-3114. Closed M o n d a y s E X C E L L E N T B E E G E E S tickets, floor end erene see is 454-3139 A S T R O N O M I C A L T E L E S C O P E , *-.nch Mearte veriebte clock drive, m an y ex- tree. *74-1722________________________ S E A R S R O O M a ir conditioner new, 1280, 47^5230 Like K I N G S I Z E watertoed, frame, m attress, heater, sheets, lining. *300 478-5230 G A S D R Y E R *25 1 Í" black and w h iff television *30 w ail ciocfc S IS C e ll 474- 1645 e ven in gs U P R IG H T P I A N O 8300 T w in toed *13 each, good condition Tnea. 477-9259 10 ip e e 4 , s le e p e r G A R A G E S A L E couch, cloth**, kitchenw are, fo n t etc. S a t u r d a y (u n til * 00), Su n d a y 2010 m iit C f in . 444-7743 • i t FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED A P A R T M E N T S * FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS M FURNISHED APARTMENTS TYPING MiecoHanaous-Far S a l* W e b u y j e w e l r y , e s t a t e lewelry, diam onds, and old gold H ighest cash prices paid C A P I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4018 N L a m a r FURNISHED APARTMENTS EL r* a u i I A Sum m er Special • 1 BR Furn. $170 • 2 BR Furn. $200 • Full Leasing Too 305 W. 39 4524537 MARK XX - Sum m er Special - • 1 BR Furn. $170 • 2 BR Furn. $200 • Shuttle 2 Blkt. • Nice Pool - Patio • Fall Leasing Too 3815 Guadalupe 451-2621 LA PAZ APTS. Sum m er Specials • 1 BR Furn. $170 • 2 BR Furn. $200 • Shuttle 1 Blk • Nice Pool, Patio • Fall Leasing Too 401 W. 39 452-5491 VILLA NORTH Sum m er Special • iff. Fum. $135-$140 • 1 BR Fum. $155-$H5 • 2 BR Fum. $1*0-5200 • Fall Loosing Tool 4520 Duval 451-5641 El Dorado Sum m er Special 1 BR Fum. $150-$H5 SHuttio Front Door Nko Pool - Patio Fall Loasing Tool 3501 Speodw ay 472-4893 MARK VII APTS. Sum mer Special 1 BR Fum. $170 Shuttle Front Door 2 Pools Fall Leasing Tee 3100 Speedw ay 477-4477,472-0504 ( f n q l i s l A i r e A p a r t m e n t SPfCIAl SHORT TiRM SUMMER LEAS8S AVAILABLE! 1, 2 & Stu d io Apt*., F u rn ish e d E H or U n tu rn i shad W vte T f iiepmig JL_ f y 4E § v u * i * A ll E F F I C I E N C Y A P T , u tilities except electricity peld Now accepting ap p lication s for su m m e r and f a l l V i l l a E s p e r a n z a M a n a g e r, N o I I I , 454-1416 s e m e s t e r *1 6 5 / m o W A L K U T 11 *1 49 Quiet, sm all con-, pie* No pets, children Unexpected vacancy 304 E 33rd 47» 69?8. 472 *648 w e S r A U S T IN t-1 ÍÍ 3 9 Shuttle U T No pets, children 700 Hearn, 476-0953 The Retreat * 1 4 0 / Summer Rate / Largo furnished efficiency Nic* Pool/Patio 4400 Avenue A 451-4584 MARK V — Sum m er Rate — • 1 BR Fum. $170 • Nice Pool - Patio • Shuttle Comer » Fall Preleasing Too 3914 Ave. D 452-3511 2 2 0 7 Leon Apts. - Summer Specials • • 1 BR Fum. $170 • 2 BR Fum. $250 • Walk to Campus • Nico Pool & Patio • Fall Leasing Too 2207 Leon 472-5974 LE FONT APTS. Summer Rate — - 2 BR Fum - $220 Walk to campus Nice pool - patio 2 large baths Gas & water paid 803 W. 28 4 7 4 - 5 9 3 0 S u m m e r and F a ll P r e le a sin g El Chaparral Apts. 459-3538 405 W. 38th North C a m p u s Su m m er an d Fall Preleasing Viewpoint Apts. Call John at 476-2088 b e d r o o m efficiency a n d 2 a p a r t m e n t s a v a i l a b l e . 2518Leon W. C a m p u s Continental Apts. Fantastic Sum m er Rate 2 bedroom furnished . . $200 • Shuttle Corner • Nice Pool 910 E. 40 453-4262 DON'T WAIT A few choice apartm ent locations are still available — but they are going fast. Aspenwood Apts. 4539 Guadalupe 452-4447 Summer Rates 1 Bedroom Furnished $170 2 Bedroom Furnished *200 Shuttle Bus at front door! A h o signing tall basas now Intramural Holds across stroot P a rk Placa 4306 Avenue A 2 BR Fum Apt* — *185 A E. 4 5 1 - 3 5 1 8 V o y a g e u rs 311 East 31st Street ALL BILLS PAID Furn. Private Room — *115 1 BR — *215 2 BR/2 Bath — *325 Pool A Laundry 4 7 8 - 6 7 7 6 S T U D E N T S W E L C O M E Now leasing for sum m er end ted New carpet, new drapes, fre sh ly painted, on shuttle route 1 B R *220, fu rnishe d or un­ fu rn ish e d 4504 Ave. A 458 5301 ( New M a n a g e m e n t) C A Y W O O D P R O P E R T I E S W E ' V E GOT ' E M Houses, duplexes and apts. F re e - C ay wood L o cators 458-5301, 345-5003 F R E E Ves. W e are g iv in g som e free rent for August. V e ry nice ef­ ficiencies. Cable, shuttle, d is­ posal, double bed O n ly S145 plus E. 3805 Ave. B 453-7238, 444-1269_____________________ T H U N D E R B I R D A P T S . 4510 D u v a l L g fu rn ish e d 1 B R s and efficiencies a v a ila b le now 3 b locks fro m shuttle bus N e a r p a r k 8. s h o p p in g f a c i l i t i e s M a n a g e r 453-4239, 478-7355 Je rald W ine trou b Co. Hyde Pork Apts. — Sum mer Rates — iff. Fum. $135 1 BR Fum. $150 2 BR Fum. $175 Shuttle Front Door City Tennis Courts & Pool Across Street 4413 Speedway 458-2096 U n iv e rsity A rea A B P Lg, 1 B D R M - $199, shuttle or w a lk to c a m p u s , A C , d i s ­ hw asher, disposal. 2212 San Gabriel S u m m e r rates 2505 E N F I E L D (o n s h u t t le ) E ffic ie n c y & 1BR, fu rnished or unfurnished, d o o I, laundry, co u rtyard. 478-2775. A B P F u rn ish e d eff - 210 W. 38th, n e a r u n i v e r s i t y . S u m m e r rates/ sem ester leases. 454-5686 or 453-5338 C O N G R E S S P R O P E R T I E S IN C V E R Y L A R G E E F F . 32nd S T R E E T - $159 S h a g c a rp e t w a lk -in closet, b uilt-in k itc h e n a p p lia n c e s Q ueen size bed, C A C H Water, cable paid 474 6380 202 E 32nd 451-6533 C E N T R A L P R O P E R T I E S , IN C . 3 2 N D A T IH 35 A V A L O N E ffic ie n c y $150 plus E., 1 B R $175 plus E. and G. 2-2 $225 plus E. and G. W a lk to UT, pool, 472-7604. S U M M E R R A T E S W a lk to c a m p u s or shuttle bus I B R & ef­ f ic ie n c ie s s h a g carpet A C T III, 4312 Speedw ay, *145 & *175 plus E M a n a g e r 453-0540 fu r n is h e d C A - C H , A C T IV, 3311 Red R iver, *165 plu s E. M a n a g e r 474-8125 A C T V I, 2801 H em phill, *165 plus E M a n a g e r 476 0411 A C T V I II , 2808 W hitis, *165 plus E. M a n a g e r 474 5650 A C T IX , 2803 H em phill, *165 plus E. M a n a g e r 476-0411 A C T X, 301 W 29th *165 p lu s E M a n a g e r 474 5650 T H R E E O A K S 409 W 38th, *160 p lu s E M a n a g e r 453-3383 P E C A N S Q U A R E 506 W 37th, *160 plus E M a n a g e r 459 1597 W E S T E R N E R . 2806 H em phill, *150 plus E M a n a g e r 472-0649 2711 8. 2721 H E M P H I L L P A R K , F O U R P L E X 2808 H em phill, *175 plus E. *150 p lu s E M a n a g e r 472-0649 M a n a g e r 472-0649 E d Padgett 454-4621 U n iv e rsity A re a A B P S m a ll 2 B D R M . - $199. W a lk or shuttle to cam pus, AC, 2211 Leon - S u m m e r rates. * C W J T J SUMMER-FALL + J NEAR CAMPUS * 2 W * o n * • • a. D u n i x a a ts . (With AM Th. Q . . d t . i i) > 9 T*p Manoywn.m • Fan I attic tat*. Prim. Ucotion ^ 104 E. 32nd (Black 8 .f Sf»..dway and JJnd) * ^ T Manage. Apt. 103 Hwtne 476-8940 ^ Jg 4103-5 Speedwa y Mgr. No 203, 4 8 8 -^ ¿ 4037 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * t r • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • * Free Sorvico Parking Transportation HABITAT HUNTERS fr e e a p t lo c a t o r s e r v ic e A s p e c ia liz in g in c o m p la n a s w ith a c c a s s to sh u ttla Data Mall Suita IA 474-1532 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • O S U M M E R R A T E S Mauna Kai 405 E . 31st W alk fo c a m p u s shuttle, and city bus E ffic ie n c ie s *235 *154 50 . 2br 2ba 472-2147 S A V E E N E R G Y ! G E T O N S H U T T L E . R e se rv e d p a rk in g poo) lau n drom at S u m m e r vacancy, all b ill* paid except E. 8170 an d up T H E S P A N I S H T R A I L 4520 B E N N E T T 451-3470 A B P E F F S , I B R s from $155 L e a s m g for M a y 1, s u m m e r and fall, 5 blo cks to c a m p u s shuttle C H A P A R R A L A P TS . 2408 Leon . 476-3467 M A R K T W A I N 1106 W 22nd Quiet m od ern apt w alk to ca m p u s Summer rates S175-S185 Jack - 452-9S59 W E. & Associates C A S A D E S A L A D O 2610 Salado W alk 4 b lk s to ca m p u s or take W C shut­ tle 1 and 2 b d rm apt a v a ila b le im ­ m e d ia t e ly fo r s u m m e r o r s u m m e r throu gh fall C A -C H . pool, la u n d ry room , paid cable, g a s grill, off street parking. C all 477-2534 or com e by Apt 110 E N G L I S H A I R E A P T S . Special Short T e rm S u m m e r L e a se s A v a ila b le ! Efficien cie s, l 2, and studio apts., fu r­ nished and u nfu rn ish e d Water, trash, sewer, cable T V provided, on shuttle, 2 s w im m in g pools, 2 h and b all racquetball courts, 2 central laundries, lighted ten­ n is courts, near R iv e rsid e and Oltorf, of­ fice h o u rs 9-6 M o n-Sat, 12-6 Sunday. 1919 B urton Dr. 444-1846 III M O N T H L O W R A T E S G re at cool fun, L e M a r q u e e Apt., 302 W. 38th, all sizes, turn , unfurn. 453-4002 910 W. 26»h, efficiency 472-6589 6607 G uadalupe, 454-3414 5 B L O C K S W E S T O F C A M P U S Fu ll carpeted. G a s (stove), water, cable included P anelled livin g room W a lk in closet S u m m e r rates *150 and *155 A lso sm a ll efficiencies *132 2104 San G ab riel R E D O A K A P T S . 477-5514 476-7916 E N F I E L D M o p a c -L a k e Austin, shuH le 1-1 *139 N o pets, ch ildre n 700 Hearn, 476-0953 I M M E D I A T E O C C U P A N C Y . 2-1 *200 2- 2 *220. W ater, gas. cable, d isp osal paid W a lk U T No children, pets. 304 E 33rd, 478-6928 472 8648 W A L K U T 2-1 8200,2-218220. Im m e d ia te o ccu p ancy No children, pets. 304 E. 33rd, 478-6928, 472-8648 S P A C I O U S 2 B R R e n ts slashed. 2-1, *200, 2-2, *220 W a lk U T N o pets, ch ildre n 304 E 33rd. 478-6928 472-8648 T H E P E P P E R T R E E Apts., efficiency *185 mo., 1 B R *230 m o A B P , 476-8391. P R I V A T E P R E T T Y fu rnishe d studio H e m p h ill P a r k A C , k itchen, bath, su m m e r or longer, rent negotiable, 477- 4425 _ Ó Ñ C O R N E R of E n fie ld & Exposition, ig 1 4 2 B R s, fu rn ish e d or u nfurnished N ow le asing for s u m m e r or fall. C all 478- 0980 E F F I C I E N C I E S J 1 5 9 p lu s E , 1 B R studio *185 plus E N e a r shuttle Sunwest, 404 W 35th, 345-0772, 459-3493, 451-2986 O N L Y I B L O C K fo cam p us, cool, quiet, newly decorated efficiency, 8175 A B P (O p A lso sm a ll 2 B R apts, *225 A B P posite D ob ie G a ra g e ) 205 W 20th, 453- __________________________________ 4082 S T U D E N T S E F F 8116 Olid (M l A p ts' 2B R A S P *185 4 b lo cks to U T 447-9267 E N F I E L D A R E A O ne bedroom a p a rt­ m ent Pool, close shuttle 8195 p lu * elec­ tricity Sao P au lo 459 7495.472-9159 476 4999 1-1 S U I T E M A T E , 1 blk from UT, 8110 1- 1 efficiency nea<' UT, 8160 2-1 house on shu ttle *230 F le m m in g , N ich o ls, & Roie y In c 4783)028 4303 D U V A L A ct V I I A p t S . , lB R , near shopp in g and shu H le 345-8550, 453-0298 H M S P ro p e rtie s 1 B E D R O O M A P A R T M E N T , *145 plus E 4 blo cks from cam pus, pool lau n ­ drom at, cable T V Ju st repainted 474- 570! P L E A S E p o d sid e efficiency until Septem ber *150 p lu * E IF shuH le C all M a rk , 476-3187 S U B L E A S E f u r n i s h e d T H R E E B L O C K S to c a m p u s B ra n d new extra arg e e H iciancy in restored tri­ plex, *225 C A CH. w ater paid S u m m e r lease deposit No pets 478-5230 B A R G A I N T O n e a t s h o r t h a i r e d ge ntle m an efficiency, In d iv id u al house, c a r p o r t , u t i l i t i e s p e id 4 5 3 -1 9 1 2 A v a ila b le until Sept A i R C O N D I T I O N E D furnished room, sh a re baths, 8110, A B P 3310 Red River, 476-3634 __________ 2 B R F U R N O o s e t o c a m p u s A v a ila b le im m e d etely 8200 m onth 472-3318 W A L K I N G - U T s p a c io u s , 2-2, pool, C A CH. carpeted, cable, large closets, laundry, p ie asan t en v iro n m e n t 472-5332, 452 0779.__________ _______ w a l k T O U T - lg m od ern cH icteocie* A C C H M u c h sto rage sp e c* 1 person only N o pets *160 rear 3010 F ru th (1 block east oH G u a d a lu p e at 30th) 476- • 5 7 5 ____________________________________ 2 B R S T U D I O -8220 A B P S u m m e r tease on ly C lose to c a m p u s 2413 Leon, please ce il 478-4747 8145 p lu s £ . 3 totks to C a n 451-8059 _____ E F F I C I E N C Y shuHte 410 W 37th G A R A G E A P T . j block shuttle, $170 plus bills 507 E 39th, rear 327-4085 A B P $230 C H 'C A 1 bdrrr, for rejponyi- Die aduits W alkin g d istan ce UT. Pooi, no pets 3011 W hitis E F F I C I E N C Y ™ A P f - 1 blk cam p us *130 A B P 476-1900 T H E " B R O W N L E E A P T . Stu d en t ef ficie ncies *125 per m onth *100 deposit. A B P 2502 N ueces (2 b lo cks from c a m ­ p u s) L ease from Ju ne 1 to A ug ust 15 S t u d e n t p r e f e r r e d 472-9751. C a ll between 5 & 9 pm. S A V E *100 per m onth W a lk U T Rents slashe d 2-1 *200, 2-2 * 220, short lease No children, pets 304 E 33rd 478-6928, 472- 8648 1-1, W A L K U T *139, short lease No pets, c h ildre n 304 E 33rd 478-6928 . 472-8648 ROOMMATES C U T E , F U N , re lia b le fe m ale w an ts sam e, sh are apartm ent, Laura, 14220 H a ym e a d o w No 2081, Dallas. T X 75240 fall B A B Y S I T T E R N E E D E D to live in. Free rent in e xch ange for babysitting. 443- 2082 _ _ H O U S E M A T E , 2 bedroom house near IF , fenced back yard, carport. *125, '7a b ills 451 6098, 206 N e t r a y . _ M A L E R O O M M A T E fo share 2 B R un ­ fu rn ish e d house, C R shuHle, 451-6812, L a r r y ______________________ ___ N O N S M O K IN G F E M A L E for su m m e r and/or fall. P riv a te room , su n n y house, *120 plus '/a. Call Sue at 453-8395. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E G rad u ate stu­ furnished dent preferred. 2-bedroom duplex T arrytow n. *115, '/a bill*. 836- 7030U 00-5 00 T H IS N O N - S M O K IN G , ve ge ta rian co-op w ould like to meet som e responsible, m atu re in d ivid uals interested in living in a v e ry congenial household 476-7905 R O O M S , P R I V A T E or shared, in seven unique west ca m p u s co-ops O ffice open 1-5 pm 510 W 23rd, 476-1957 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D s h a r e n ic e house, great yard, trees E n te rtain and relax, stu d y-p arty Lib eral, creative, open person C all d a y s M a r k , 441-6454 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w anted to sh are 2 b d rm duplex, *125 p lu s a bills, 837- 6731 F U N F E M A L E share 2 bdrm . furnished ap artm en t AC, carport, shuttle, *150, utilities N ice neighborhood 474-1625 M A T U R e T e m a l E^^-s h a r e T b d r m .T b a house. L a rg e sun ny room , w /p rivate en­ tra n c e 3 b lk s c a m p u s L ib e r a l a t­ m osph ere *135 A B P , 478-6521 M A L E O R F E M A L E sh a re nice duplex. *120, Va b ills, pets okay Liz, 442-6499 H O U S E M A T E , 4 B R h o u se , A u s t i n , fireplace, real people 441-9852 sou th f e n c e d b a c k y a r d , t r e e s , *113/mo., bills ___ S E E K IN G F E M A L E , upper d ivision stu ­ dent, *90 plus bills, fu rnished, on shuttle route. 477-9171. R O O M M A T E T O sh a re 3 b d rm stone house a c ro ss fro m law school, 472-7480 2 6 T H -L A W S C H O O L . S m a ll yet fabulous house *125 plus 'h P re re q u isite s: neat, serious, creative, non-sm oker. M a r k E v a n s, 452-5843 night. C S D ep artm en t day. I N E E D F E M A L E room m ate to share m y la rge duplex, will also co nsid er m o v ­ ing. 441-2175, e a rly or late *125 plus bills. H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D . 3 bdrm ., 1 '/a bath, residential house, $110/mo., '/a bills, 5608 Shoalwood, 451-5506 M a le p referred F E M A L E S S H A R E beautiful new Fur­ fireplace, n ish e d d u p le x wooded lot *135/mo. '< E. 2-2 444-2240, D onna B a lc o n ie s, S H A R E R E N T and 1 B R in c la ss y 2 B R apt. S a v e gas. 1 blk to law school, c a m ­ pus. stadium , shopp ing AC, laundry, pool, A B P , congenial room m ates, only *100 and all this, too. Ja y/ B ill, 474-4281, keep tryin g S H A R E 3 B R house, v ery nice, near city b u s R e a s o n a b l e . S e r i o u s g r a d pre fe rred 459-5264 or 452-8427 R O O M M A T E , O W N bedroom in two bedroom apt Sm a ll com plex, relaxed, friendly, *115/electricity P refe r grad w riter or film student. C all 474-8714. T h re e blo cks fro m ca m p u s! G reat pool! R E S P O N S I B L E H O U S E M A T E needed to share 2-2 duplex In N orth Austin. Rent 8130 plus '/a utilities. P a r tia lly furnished, non -sm oker preferred C a ll Preston, 345- 1093 _ H O U S E M A T E T O sh are large house, ya rd in T a rryto w n 8117, bills. Prefe r g r a d 472-6374 M A L E R O O M M A T E to s h a re house block fro m c a m p u s H a ve own bedroom Neat, n on -sm oker B ills paid 895/mo 477-6037 N E E D Q U IE T , n on -sm ok in g fem ale to sh are nice 1-1 im m e d iately IF shuttle 890 plus E Dana, 452-3224, 458-3727. N O N - S M O K I N G ~ F E M A L E roommate^ own 2 room s, bath H yd e P ark. 8100, utilities N ard a, 454-6965 after 6 p.m. S P A C I O U S , Q U I E T house, 4 b lo ck s north of law school. M a le housem ate needed, 8100/mo., 478-2165._____________ N E E D T W O people to sh a re room in nice house AC, kitchen, on shuttle route *100 per m o n th p lu s s h a r e u tilitie s C all Jam e e at 474-4213 after 6:30 p.m. R O O M M A T E W A N T E D , liberal w om an to sh a re 2 -B R duplex oft South L a m a r. U nfurn ish ed , *108 plus one-half bills. B a c k yard, la u n d ry close. 447-5166 after 5 00 pm. R O O M M A T E 3 B R house b 7 $t. Jo h n s A ve 8 120 plu s V) bills 454 7542 F E M A L E F O R W est A u stin home, m a n y w indow s, rem odeled, quiet, hardw ood floors, no sm o kin g/ p ets A fter 5:30 472- 7365, 453-0352.___________________________ H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D : female, non- sm oker, independent. *90 p lu * '/Y bill*. W est c a m p u s Betsy, 477-9259. Keep t ry ­ ing. S U M M E R F E M A L E room m ate to share 2-2 ap artm en t *130 A B P , shuHle. 441- 9930 N E E D F E M A L E ro o m m ate to share a one bedroom apt Rent is $205 plus E 441-8517 M A L E H O U S E M A T E L ib e r a l , no cigarettes. L a rg e 2 br , furnished, A C Into new m usic *130 p lu s W bills, 451- 2212 N O N - S M O K I N G S T U D E N T s h a re 2 b d rm apartm ent, *120 N e a r c a m p u s Glen, 453-6406 after • p.m F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed to look for 2 b d rm apt for fall. N on-sm oker, prefer g ra d 474-0176 O W N R O O M in large house for su m m e r Fifteen m inute w alk to c a m p u s *125 plus b ills 452-6165 E A S Y G O IN G ta m a l e to s h a re ~W C house M o v e in im m e d ia te ly Deposit, rent *100 p lu * « bill*. C a ll 47»-3407, keep try in g 27»h STRSfT M B A ¿ 7 • TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING The Complete Professional FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 472-3210 472-7677 2 7 0 7 H E M PH ILL PK. Plenty of Parking o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o econotype : eionocopy : Typing, Copying, Binding, Printing IBM Correcting Selectric Rental A Supplies • • : NORTH • J • 37th & Guadalupe Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9-5 • J 453-5452 • SOUTH Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 • • • • L Riverside 4 Lakeskere 443-4488 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a • • • T Y P I N G E H R Typing Transcribing Typesetting S E R V I C E 474-8333 601 Brazos M o n ..S a t. 472-8936 Dobie M all ""•C R E A TIV E SERVICES REPORTS, PAPERS Proofread, typed St 00 page T utoring, A n a ly s is S5 00 up K • RESUMES Com posed, typed *8 95 (Jo b L ette rs S2 95) P ro o fre ad typed *2 50 page D ow n the block from Coop 2200 Guodaiupu • Surt» 228 • 478-3633 « ■ I W O R D S fR V IC E S , INC. W S p e c ia lis t » in: S c ie n tific a n d T a c h m c o l T y p in g T r a n u n p t i o n T h » > « > a n d D it « « r t a t io n > P r o o f r e a d in g A v a i l a b l e QUALITY W O R K AT R E A S O N A B L E R A T E S I S 0 3 G u a d a l u p e N e 2 0 2 4 7 4 - 7 S 2 6 W O O D S T Y P I N G S e r v ic e A ll w o rk guaranteed, reason ab le prices. T y p in g and typesetting. 2200 G uadalupe, 472- 6302 T Y P I N G : T H E S E S , dissertations, term papers, reports, etc Exp erienced , I B M Selectric. N e a r N o rth c ro ss M a ll. 458- 6465 P R O F E s s l O N A L “ t y p i s t w ith ’ e x ­ perience and know-how. D issertations, theses, profe ssion al reports, etc. B a r ­ bara Tullos, 453-5124 E X P E R l l f N C E D P R O F E S S I O N A L t y p i s t . T h e s e s , d i s s e r t a t i o n s , docum ents, etc. M o st reports *1 page C all Dottie, 327-0754 Complet* Typing S«rvic« TERM REPORTS, BRIEFS FRESHMAN THEMES 2707 Homphill Jutt North of 27th at Guadolupa 472-3210 472-7677 T E R R Y S T Y P I N G S e rv ic e T yp ing, t r a n s c r ib in g , T h e se s, resum es, all b usin ess and U n iv e rsity w ork 605 Brazos, 474-8333, or D ob ie M a ll, 472-8936. t y p e s e t t in g D E E S t y p i n g S e rv ice W h y pay hFgh p rice s We save you m oney by typing at h om e office 452-6312 S H E R R Y 'S T Y P I N G Service : d is se r ­ tations, theses, p ap e rs, and le tters reasonable, quality se r­ Dependable, vice 447-4455 after 6 G O O D C H E A P T Y P I N G theses, reports, d i s s e r t a t i o n s r e a s o n a b l e p ro fe ssion al P e g gy, Susan, 451-3663 F a s t , RESUMES w ith or w ith o u t p ktu ros 2 Day Sarvica 2 7 0 7 H am phill Park Just N o rth of 27 th at G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 MISCELLANEOUS M A T U R E , ’ R E S P O N S I B L E fem ale to s h a r e 2 B R , e x ce lle n t house, T r a v is H e ig h ts L e s f e 444-9420 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 testing and referrals. 474- 9 9 » W A N T E D C L A S S R IN G S gold jewelry, old pocket w atches, c u rre n c y , s t a m p s w anted H ig h p rice s paid. Pioneer C oin C o m ­ pany, 5555 N orth L a m a r B id g C -U 3 if* C om m e rc e P a rk, 451 3607 B U Y I N G W O R L D gold gold lew elry s c ra p goto old corns, an tiq u es pocket w a tc h e s P a y in g fa ir m a rk e t p rice Capitol Com Co 3004 G uadalupe, 472 H 76 P h ilip N o h ra ow ner S T A M P S W A N T E D W e 0 u y ~ U S & f o r e i g n s t a m p s a c ­ cu m ulations, old tetters w p o stm a rk s D eaton s S tam p Shop. 206 w 13th 474 9525 c o l l e c t i o n s LOST & F O U N D W O U L D L I K E to carp oo i with som aone to and fro m G e orgetow n and UT, call 471-4287 x 30 ov_86j-4234 P A R K I N G S P A C E S Dob.e H R C *15 per m onth 478-5230 three blo cks to MUSICAL INSTRUCTION T a k e P IA N O this su m m or S u m m e r rate - *75 for 12 w eeks A ll age s and ev e ls 452 7932 fro m U T doctoral V O IC E L E S S O N S c a n d id a t e b e g in n in g to a d v a n c e d , reason ab le rates and sch ed ulin g C all 4514788 V i O L i N V iQ L A . E x - oer.enceo teacher A d ults or ch ild re n w e lc o m e T ra n sp o rt a t io n n e c e ss a ry . C all Joan 92a-63ig lessons f doie t r a v e l *- - a -Mi * * A #uet B fr n t v e m e e m O M • * i u r t a w O A * O H ice H rs - M o n thru Set 9-4, Sun 12-6 I f l t turto*» Or. 444-1844 The K llio tf System s 4 5 1 - 8 1 7 8 $ 130-Si 40 P lu s E. S u m m e r rates. W e are look.ng for quiet, conscien tious students interested i * a lar ge efficiency 3 *ocat«ons near c a m p u s C A CH. lau n ­ dry deadboits. d isp o sa l 476-2812 S E P T E M B E R I P R E L E A S I N G T T 8159 E ShuHte U T west Quiet No pet*, ch ildre n 700 H e a rn 476-0953 L O S T L A R G E m ale neutered) cat - b la c k w t in y w h ite sp o t on c h e st R e w a rd 45» 1049 451 6605 L O W C O S T travel to israe i Toil tree 723-7676 9 am -6 pm N Y time S E P T E M B E R 1 P R E L E A S I N G 1-1 $1*8 E W a lk U T . q u ie t N o p et*, ch ildre n 304 E 33rd 470-692» 4 Y R O L D floppy eared oiack white she ph erd m ix Lost on D u v a l M o n d a y *- 4 w ants m e b a ck 474-7733. 472-3593 S H A R E G A S to D C H ave van lae around June 13th 385-3050 A ny fi late best UNFURN. APARTMENTS ROOM AND BOARD FOR RENT SERVICES SERVICES Friday, June 8, 1979 □ T H E D A ILY T EX A N □ Page 15 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED S U M M E R R E D U C T I O N S 1 & 2 B R A p ts S w im m in g pool C able T V 1st shuttle stop P r e l e o s in g f o r s u m m e r o r fa ll 442-9720 sch oo l, B L A C K S T O N E A P T S “ b lo c k f r o n i la r g e b u ilt-m d e s k s a n d law D o o k s h e lv e s 2 2. C A c h *300 A B P la w or g r a d s tu d e n t p r e f e rr e d 2910 R e d R iv e r . 474-5631 U N I Q U E T H R E E le ve l s tu d io in o ld e r *235 s. efec- tre e -sh a d e d n e ig h b o r h o o d t ric it y j45-*-313 °o Don t wait and pay high rent prices. Come see us! p M I N I - S T O R A G E C o n c r e 'e b lo c k c o n s t r u c t io n »12 50 u p m o n t h ly 4 4 4 241 1 W o o d l a n d S A A A M m i W a r e h o u s e S O U T H i x i m i i t t t SERVICES i i m i T INSTANT PASSPORT RESUME APPLICATION PHOTOS Whrle You Watt H a v r e S t a d ia s 2420 Guadalupe 472-4219 * X I X 1 I J PASSPORT PHOTO a RESUME PHOTOS APPLICATION PHOTOS - Just Walk In - — Ready in 2 minutes THE THIRD EYE 2 5 3 0 G u a d a lu p e 4 7 7 -5 5 5 5 A R T $ M O V I N G a n d M a u lt n a a n y Artpa 24 h o u r s ? d a y s 477 3249 44? 9334 Get Vour E yeglasses In ONE HOUR A t ALPHA OMEGA OPTICAL 12705 R e s e a r c h DEPRESSED — BLUE NO INITIATIVE ANXIOUS — TINS! FEARFUL FOR NO APPARINT RSASON C A N 'T SLEEP You can benefit from new advance$ i n medical research. I'o aee if you qualify for free and con- fidential medical treatment, call I77-20S7 any time. G i n n y ' s C o p y i n g S e r v i c e Theses, Dissertations and Professional Poparts. 44 Dobie Mali 476-9171 P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y C O U N S E L I N G , R E F E R R A L S & F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T I N G T e x a s 1 r o b le m P r e g n a n c y 600 VV 28th S u i*e 101 M F 8 30-S 00 SERVICES 474-9930 SERVICES *5 BONUS (on first donation only) BRING IN THIS AD & I.D. WITH PROOF OF AUSTIN RESIDENCE, OR STUDENT ID Austin Plasma Center 2800 Guadalupe 474-7941 MON. -Ft I. 9-6 ' > *8.00 — first Donation * 10.00 — Second Donation * 10.00 — Bonus on 10th Donation / SAT. 10-4 UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMINTS SPECIAL CONSTRUCTION RATES AND STUDENT LEASES Expert statistical consulting for dissertations and theses in the Behavioral Sciences. CaU 836-8934 (evening or weekend). A sk for Aero- ham. C H I L D C A R E Infan ts and Toddlers H alf-d ay parent co-op U N I V E R S I T Y U N I T E D M E T H O D I S T D A Y C A R E C E N T E R 474-5101 928-3558 M O D E L S 1979 s su e of T e x a s M o o e t D ir e c t o r y s b e in g p r e p a r e d tor d is t r ib u t io n a t t h i* t im e If y o u a r e e x p e r ie n c e d o r a s p ir in g m o d e '* n o w is the t im e to r e s e r v e »p«K » i n c lu d in g p h o t o a n d T h e d i r e c t o r y r e s u m e i* p r o v id e d to o v e r 200 f ir m » b oth m T e x a i a n d n a t io n a lly c o n tin u o u s ty r e q u e s te d fo r m o d e l* F o r m o r e in to r m a fto n i a ll 817 249-4339 o r d out Of to w n c a ll 1 800-327 9191 r , t M l F R E E R O O M M A T E A U S T I N T A T IO U S F R E E A P A R T M E N T L O C A T IO N S E R V I C E 459 4238, 327-5675 R U N B Y S T U D E N T S F O R S T U D E N T S F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T S C o u n s e l i n g o n a ll p r e g n a n c y a lt e r n a t iv e * feirth c o n t r o l m e t h o d * a n d w o m e n * h e a lth con< e r n * W a ix m b a s is Mon F r ’ v c Women * k f i c vl C e nte r 1800B I A va. i 476 6878 HELP WANTED A L l y o u F O L K S t h a t n e e d e x t r a m o n e y <. an se ll f lo w e r s w ith T h e O r ig i n a l F lo w e r P e o p le P a id d a ily 2*8 1102 A R T H U R M U R R A Y S h a s e x p a n d e d W e need m e n a n d w o m e n to t r a m a s In s t r u c t o r * ip e iia l is t s . a n d in t e r v ie w e r s P i e a s m g p e r s o n a lit y a n d w e ll g r o o m e d A p p ly G 'a n d C e n t ra l S t a t io n S h o p p in g M a ll. 8776 B R e s e a r c h N o p h o n e c a lls p le a se P H Y S I C A L F I T N E S S r o n s u it a n t A p p ly a * 1704 E 301 j N o p h o n e c a lls , p le a se F u llt im e a n o p s r t t im e a v a ila b l e H O U S E M O T H E R r e s p o n s i b l e m a t u r e w o m a n o r m a r r ie d c o u p le in te re ste d in c h ild r e n n e e d e d b y A u s t in h o m e for c h ild r e n lo c a te d In n ic e n e w ly c o n st ru c t e d a ir c o n d it io n e d b u d d in g R o o m A. b o a r d p lu s s a l a r y C a ll d lra c t re s s at 459 3353 P A R T T Í M E C U S T O D I A N w o r k at D i ll a r d s 6 a m . to 10 a m M o n d a y t h r o u g h S a t u r d a y *3 00 h r J o h n F o w le r . 452 0311 E X C E L L E N T T Y P I S T S n e e d e d M u s t ty p e 70 w p m C a ll P a t ti at 472 8936 or c o m e b y T e r r y 's T y p in g S e r v ic e in D o b le M a ll P E R S O N W A N T E D p a r t tim e to a s s is t h a n d i c a p p e d g r a d u a t e s t r u d e n t w it h e r r a n d s p e r s o n a l c a r e , l i b r a r y a n d o th e r p h y s ic a ll y d iff ic u lt t a s k s of afte n d in g sc h o o l N o r t h A u s t in O w n t r a n s p o r ta tio n C a ll 837 2343 or 837 6478 I N T E R I O R d e c o r a t o r A T T E N T I O N m a io r s P a r t - t im e s a le s p e r s o n n e e d e d to r A u s t i n 's m o s t p r e s t i g i o u s h o m e t a s h io n vtore P a u l * in t e r io r s A p p l y in p e rso n , 5909 B u r n e t R d T H E R E D T O M A T O R e s t a u r a n t t a k in g a p p lic a t io n s a ll p o s it io n s A p p l y In per s o n o n ly M o n d a y t h r o u g h F r i d a y 4 30- 5 30. 1601 G u a d a iu o e C O U N T E R H E L P 7-9 or 9 30 a m Sat. 8-1 00 C all C h a rle s for appointm ent 442-4354 M A N A G E R W A N T E D To m an age a sm a ll apt c o m ­ plex close to ca m p u s R e d u c ­ tions m rent for se rvice s plus h o u r l y w a g e s M u s t be o rgan ize d and handi person C a l l a f t e r 5 0 0 4 4 4 - 2 7 5 0 O P P O R T U N I T Y IN R E S T A U R A N T M A N A G E M E N T R i g h t n o w » e # r # s e e k i n g h i g h l y m o t iv a t e d w e d q u a lif ie d p e r s o n n e l for m a n a g e r P r e s e n t t r a in e e p e t it io n s o p e n in g in c lu d e s n ig n t m a n a g e r t ra in e e S ta rt a g r e a t c a r e e r now A p p ly in per *o n a f'e r 5 p m See M a e G r a c e B u r g e r K i n g 2200 G u a d a lu p e L C X 2 K IN G F O R A N A I R C O N D i T l O N K D i O B ’ O R T H O U G H T A B O U T A C A R E E R I N M A R K E T I N G ’ Y o u * a n sell the be st tor le s s W a tc h ex p e n a n c e d o p e r a t o r s m a k e * ) 110 hr ■ W e g u a r a n t e e $4 hr T E X A S T I C K E T S 5134 B u r n e t H d 45! 6297 M o n Sa t * « N e e d le a d or r h y t h m guita» p ia v e r fe» fe m a le v o c a lis t a n d a c o u s t ic g u it a r M u s t be w illin g to w o r k on m m m l j u o i ' b a s is to s t a r t W ill be p t a y m g ,>n T h u r s da y. F r i d a y a n u S a t u r d a y m g h t s f r o m 7 30 9 jo p m w e e k ly M u s i c Is C W s o m e p op a n d folk in f o r m a t io n p ie a s e ..an R o x a n e at 4 7 1 49*2 M o n t h ru F n h o u r s 8-J F or m o r e G R O W I N G N f W c o m p a n y n e e d s r e s p o n s i b l e m a t u r e s a l e s p e r s o n in la d ie s ■ e a d y to w e a r M u s t be a b le to w o rk w e e k e n d s S a la r y c o m m e n s u r a t e to e x p e l ie n t e c a n ( r a i y Joe s tor a p p o m tm e n f 4 )1 2 7 1 3 W E E K E N D S E C U R I T Y g u a r d n e e d e d T w o m i d m g h i to | a m s h if t s G o o d ia b tor stu d e n t 472 6798 b e tw e e n * p m | p m R E I i A B L E B A B Y S I T T E R n e e d e d tor 3 v r o l d b o y M W E m o r n i n g s ? 12 U m v e r s i ty a r e a »2 hr 4 7 * 8323 P A R T s e n i o r W A N T t o c h e m i» try m a io r for r e s e a r c h pro)e< t o w n h o u rs, h o n e st im m e d ia t e e m p lo y m e n t 385 6232, 185 *230 T I M E P H Y S I C A L L Y H A N D l l A P P i O g r a d u a t e stu d e n t is s e e k in g p e r t tim e a s s is t a n c e w ith < a r e t a ll 474 1333 W E E K i N O A N D n ig h t hoc» s a v a ila b le fo r d is h w a s h e r p re p f>erson O m e le t t r y W est. 478 864* A s k for K e n l o r P a t r h .a f l e x i b l e C O B O L P R O G R A M M E R sch e d u le , e x p e r . e n .# r e e q u ir e d (C e ll C D S In sid e the C o -O p ) fo r a n a p p o in t m e n t 476 721! ext 78 p a rt tim e d a y P I Z Z A R E S T A U R A N ! o r e v e n m g shift, s o m e w e e k e n d h o u r s r e q u ir e d F r i d a y 9 11 # m or 2 ) p m l a m a r O r g a n P a la c e 55)5 N A p p l y m p e r s o n M o n d a y S c a m p i % P A R T T I M E fle x ib le h o u rs, e x p e r ie n c e p r e f e rr e d 13 00 hr H o llo w a y » T e x a c o 19th & G u a d a lu p e W A N T E D 10 s t u d e n t s to t e le p h o n e s o lic it f r o m o u r c o m f o r t a b le o f fic e S h o r t h o u rs, g o o d p a y C a ll 4 7* 39)9 M E N T A L H E A t T H w o rk e r B r o w n S c h o o l r a n c h unit W o r k w ith a m o f lo n a i ly d is t u r b e d b o y s in e r a n c h se ttin g, both s h i f t s a v a i l a b l e d a y a n d e v e n i n g 13 00 hr w ith b e n e fits 444 48 IS. 478 *667 E O E I HELP WANTED HELP WANTCD START SUMMER JOB NOW BE A DO M INO 'S PIZZA DELIVERY PERSON • MAKE GOOD MONEY NOW • PART TIME OR FUU • FLEXIBLE HOURS & DAYS • MUST USE OW N CAR APPLY IN PERSON: ruadalupa 458-9101 • 201 1 I. Riverside 477-6611 UNCLASSIFIED L ig h t h a u lin g h a v e p ic k u p 476 3255 1 8 B e e G e e sT ix S e c t.o n s6 8 .lO 444-418* F r e e k itt e n s w h ite 474 7776 FURNISHED HOUSES S U M M E R S U B L E T 2 p p rm . f u r n is h e d p e t* o k a y n e a r U T $225 m o n t h 2310 D a n c y 472 *802 47* )708 UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES N O R T H f A S T * m tn to c a m p u s Larg»- 1 2 fire p la c e , n e w ca -pe t, fe n c e d v a m * 7 9 ) 32f 4 0 9 ) TO P L A C E T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D A D C A L L 471-5244 P A R T T I M E E M P L O Y M E N T W t»h c h a n t a b ie non p ro f * r e s e a r c h o r g a n u * t io n fo r v ig o r o u s p u b lic s p ir it e d in d iv ¡duel D u t ie s in c lu d e c o n ta c t in g c o m m u n .t y m .n d e d peop le in so u th w e s te rn t o w n s by ph o n e S a 'a r y is *3 SO per h o u r w .*h M o n d a y th ro u g h F r , q a v e m p lo y m e n t n e e d e d F o r a p p o in tm e n t ( a n 4S1- *459 R O O M S W A L K I N G D I S T A N C E U T s h a g c a r p e t C A C M kite h a n pr iv r e g e s H O ) m o U n i v e r s it y H o u s e 2*10 N u e c e s 477 9388 2 B L k $ U T n ic e ly fu r n is h e d r o o m s ef t ic ie n c le s a n d apt» f ro m » 9) a n d up T h# L y l e H o u s e 2800 W h d » 4 *7 7 S M S M A L L F A M I L Y w a n *» to re n t fu r m s h e d r o o m w fu ll bat** to fe m a re * ! * ) m o M e a ¡» a n d la u n d r y sei v ic e n c iu d e d W m C a n n o n a r e a 4 *3 0133 U N F U R N I S H E D R O O M *or re nt near s h u ttle *9 0 p lu s c h a r# u tilitie s 491 0 *79 ra te s r o o m s C O E D P R I V A T E s u m m e r • !!* paid Great location ;v v. e g e s la u n d r y pr iv i e g e s 477 \ m F u r n . s h e d t 8 * *9S v « S p e c at . ar-,se»e.i ** unen | , , m a l E S T U D f N T r o o m 1912 N u e c e s Convenían» k itc h e n to cam p us pr v .le g e s *21 *4 8 * 477 0)72 1 a w S c H O O t a » r o s » stre e t L a r g e B R n 2 8 R •»>*.»# a p t W h o le "o o r of h o u se W ill sha» e flo o r w r o o m m a t e a n d 'a w ¿it flCO *1 8 ) p r iv a h * B R o r 111) w r o o m rn a ta 474 1397 2 E X C E L L E N T s in g le r o o m » a v a d a b le 1 b lo c k t 'p m c a m p u s Ca*i* 477 *8 *5 W E S T C A M P U S h is t o r ic a l V ic t o r ia n m a n s io n the H u r t H o u s e h a s 3 e *» eMertt s m g ie It J u n e e n d 3 J u ly *1 1 ) m o p í o s « b ilis 478 I )!« r o u m t a v a . ia t x e b e g in n in g M ir r W A L L Y C B C A V E R UNION PATIO NOON TODAY flPflRTfTlENTS hDllnm AN ALL ADULT, OWNER MANAGED APARTMENT COMPLEX IN BEAUTIFUL NORTHWEST HILLS. EASILY LOCATED ACCESSIBLE TO DOWNTOWN. CONVENIENT TO ALL OF NORTH AUSTIN'S MAJOR SHOPPING AREAS, INCLUDING TWO LARGE MALLS. ALSO AVAILABLE TENNIS COURTS CLUB ROOM WASHER/DRYER CONNECTION LARGE BALCONIES & PATIOS WITH STORAGE CLOSETS FIREPLACES SW IM M ING POOL I i m i S A DR s*o # e w *c I CIMTtR W O O O H O L L O W l S A L C O N I S DR m o P A C i TO STRTI CAPITOL A DOWNTOWN Moantaoss mm i rmioct CIMTtR I I U R N I T to I i . i i 6805 Woodhollow 345-9315 DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau AFC TO JUST LIRE V SAY HOW MUCH TM e e r n m o F F O N BEING IN CALI­ PUANE.NHAJ w i & m r V Q & C F H K s > w a a m c x - FORNIA ' A G E F O R B R O U N * . HELL, AS YOUKNOUl, THE dOYERNOKG INTERESTS ARE ALUWS E M VINO, bu t keepin g n e m jR e h m in d , r p s A f t m B ie o e s a r e sp a c e AND ECOLOGY ' if m m ser io u s abo ut could V€£NV*ONMWT,*:M£ YOUGNE cm ABOUT SPACeSHP US AN EX EARTH, HE MIST SORT AMPLE. facin g som e H A W C H O a S i plane 7 (UHAT IF YOU CERTAINLY. SAY YOU SEE A aJHAa YOU CAN SAY ’HflUE em m sA Y 'H AY EA a n ic e ¡ x r NICE PAY,"OR YOU An d n COM- m s s u m * c a n k j u /t TODAY S CRO SSW ORD PUZZLE A C R O S S 1 C h u m s 5 Pun ish 10 Clutched hand 14 Agallooh 15 Ka nga roo feature 16 Preposition 17 Faculty VIP 18 Stow Mu*. 19 Stain 20 So le m n 2? C h in e se so Ciety 24 Hail' 25 Endure 27 P a sse d along <*9 W a s there 32 Arabian boat Var 33 Animal sound 34 — s a y s 36 Fe m ale s 40 W aler body 42 Engfiah seaport 44 Broad topped htil 45 Slum ber 47 M ore nrirjd ern 49 Tang 50 Sp o n g y grou n d 52 Detached 54 Height 58 B uddhist m onks 59 Golf term 60 Lofty 82 Rage d 66 Black Poet 07 f ell back Archaic 69 — Tunney 70 To boot 71 M a r tin iq u e peak 72 Celtic 73 G r a ss stalk 74 Gtn 75 C olored D O W N 1 Stuffs 2 To shelter 3 Magnetite Var 4 D C or On lano body 5 Excellent 6 Foot part 7 Sm all one § Part player 9 Ceiled U N IM D Feature Synd icate T h u r s d a y 5 P u / / k * S o lv e d W A 1 f* (A III * • 1 14I H i» 10 Untruth 11 Parquetry 12 R a n ge 13 C e rn e d 21 M a k e s leather 23 S h in # 26 Imp 28 M d abbr 29 Eiec units 30 Lathe, e g 31 P ig e o n s 36 Stair p o st 37 F r a s m tlie u 38 Utter 39 Scru ff f r j r f r n 41 Thing owed 43 Witty talk 46 Grim ace 48 Hindu hero 5t Se ize s 53 Roam ed 54 W eapon 55 Shelve 58 A sce n d e d 57 M s Drew 61 Girl s nam e 63 End in g for off or pret 64 Act 86 Land of 66 — diem V Page 16 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, June 8, 1979 Y oung strike s u p p o rte r relaxes b e fo re M ay 27 dem onstration. Valley of Tears' thinking "P e o pl e a r e b eg inning to r e a li z e that the t y p e o f c o u nt r y t he y li v e in is going to he m o r e a nd m o r e d e t e r m i n e d by w h a t a c t io n s t h e y ' r e wil l i ng to t a k e . It u s e d to be w e h ad a m o r e p a s s i v e w a y o f l o o k i n g a t the g o v e r n ­ things, m e n t wo ul d t a k e c a r e o f us. think m o r e a n d Rut, n o w I m o r e p e op l e , a nd this is all o v e r the worl d, a r e b eg in ni ng to r e al i z e w e d o h a r e a r e s p o n ­ s ibi lit y to e a c h o t h e r a s p e o ­ p l e P e o p l e a r e m o r e willing to s t i c k t heir n e c k s out a g a i n s t — S la ter w h a t Pascal, Our Lady of Guadalupa Catholic Church. The area of rich fertile farmland in South Texas is known as the Rio Grande the Valley. Those who profit harvests call it the “ Magic Valley"; those who work the fields cail it the “Valley of Tears is u n / u s t from Growers and farmworkers who make up the small rural towns of the area live physically side by side but economically worlds apart. Until recently those neighboring but distant worlds revolved around each other, orbiting in peaceful coexistence The forces have now left their historical paths and are heading on a collision course. towns. Driving Raymondville is like most other small the Texas ag ricu ltu ra l co m m u n ity of 8,000, nothing of particular significance is noticeable Yet Raymondville is signifi­ cant through Two years ago its citizens witnessed the town s first public demonstration Two months ago Raymondville had the first strike in its history, and the once sleepy community awakened. The in­ visible schism that existed between the growers and farmworkers suddenly becam e painfully visible and ever widening. Though acknowledging a gap exists which needs to be bridged is a step forward, it does not make the task of bridging that gap any easier. And for those unfamiliar, or too familiar, with compromise, the process is monumen­ tal if not impossible. On April 4 farmworkers walked off fields owned by Charles Wetegrove, the second largest produce grower in the Valley, demanding better wages and in­ stallation of sanitary facilities. A strike developed and picket lines were formed. "The f a r m w o r k e r s a r e v e r y h u ng ry p e op le . M a n y p e o p l e I k n o w do not h a v e e n o ug h f o o d In the w i n t e r p e o p l e u s e d o u r hall on the v e r y c ol d d a y s to s l e e p in, b e c a u s e t h e y had no c l o t h e s t h e m s e l v e s w a r m . I k n o w tho se p e o pl e , t h e y ’re d e s t i t u t e . " — Slater Pascal to k e e p Over the next several weeks, 18 farmworkers were arrested on m is­ d e m e a n o r c h a r g e s r a n g in g from trespassing and blocking passageway to felony charges of criminal m ischief. During that period Wetegrove enjoin­ ed Texas Rural Legal Aid attorneys from representing the farmworkers and filed suit lor str ik e r e la te d crop dam ages (approximately $300,000) On Easter Sunday strikers gathered on a narrow dirt road along one of the fields to protest the presence of “out­ side laborers" harvesting the crops. The sheriff and his men. along with about 50 DPS officers, stood on the edge of the field determined to keep the strikers a safe distance from the workers who had chosen to ignore the strike. "I (run the D P S ; I a m the bo ss o f e v e r y b o d y T he y a r e u nd e r m e wh e n t h e y c o m e here. I a m the one who tells the D P S wha t to do, w h e n to do it, wh e n to c o m e m. w h e n to l e a v e a n d w h a t e v e r . Those l a w . . . I ’d the p e o p l e v i o l a t e d ( T e x a n l i k e f o r y o u r e a l l y r e p o r t e r s ) to t al k to s o m e o f the s i s t e r s " — Willacy County Sheriff Oacar Corraa, May 25. The pastor and nuns of Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, brought food to the initiated picketing farmworkers and in an discussions with both sid es a tte m p t to b r id g e la n g u a g e and philosophical differences. t h i n k "I d o n ’t think t he y a r e l a w ­ t h a t I b r e a k e r s . e v e r y b o d y has a right to j u s t w a g e s . A n d e v e r y b o d y has a to d e m o n s t r a t e , a n d r i g h t t h a t ’s all t h es e p e o p l e w e r e doing. I f e e l t ha t t h e r e w e r e a l m o s t as m a n y o f f i ce r s in the f i e l d as t h e r e w e r e strik ers. This w a s the E a s t e r w e e k e n d , w h e n p e o p l e a l l o v e r t h e h i g h w a y s n e e d e d pr o t ec t i o n . . . a n d he re ( of ficer s) t he y all w e r e — Sister P ascal t he "She ( P a s c a l ) d o e s n ’t know a g o d —d a m n t hing a b o u t law e n f o r c e m e n t . S h e h a s no g o d —d a m n b u s i ne s s (d e a l i ng w i t h ) s t r i k i n g o r n o n- s t ri k i ng peo pl e. T h e y ( the s t r i k e r s ) w e r e out in the f i e ld s. T he y v i o l a t e d l a w . We w e r e a f r a i d t he y w e r e goi ng to hurt the w o r k e r s . . . T ha t ' s w h y you pull enough offi cers, to m a k e it c onv inc ing. Now , w e k no w l a w e n f o r c e m e n t ; w e ’re not g oing to tell her how to s a v e souls. A n d I could p r o b a b l y tell her a thing or t w o ab ou t t o o ." — Sheriff s a v i n g souls, Corraa, May 26 Juanita Valdez, one of the most effec­ tive and influential leaders of the strike, was present at the protest. Valdez said she saw someone she knew working in the fields and ventured out about 50 yards in an attempt to persuade the workers to join the strikers before she was spotted by DPS officers. Once Valdez spotted the officers she said she turned and faced the officers and explained to them that she was four months pregnant. She said she did not resist and alleges the officers threw her to the ground, handcuffed her, dragged her to several cars and, finding one open, threw her into the back seat. Interpretive Although Sheriff Correa was not pre­ sent during the incident, he said the of­ ficers involved acted in accordance with the law Strikers, however, say DPS officers were abusive and even threatened to m a k e a r r e s t s f o r s t e p p i n g on w ildflow ers which they th em selves were walking on. Tapes of the incident filmed by television news crew s have been subpoenaed. ( V a l d e z ) " T he r e i s no w a y to h a nd l e a f i g h t i n g w o m a n ... S h e ’s a g o d - d a m n e d r a b b l e r o us i n' b i t c h . . . (note: Correa referred to Valdez as “a friend of m ine’’ in a Daily Texan article, May 1) ...I g u a r a n t e e y o u she h ad no b u s i n e s s g o i n g out t h e r e and s he o ug h t to be god- d a n g e d g l a d it w a s n ’t m e t hat s t o p p e d her, ‘c a u s e I w o ul d h a v e hit h er on top o f the h ea d a n d k n o c k e d h e r o u t s o I wo ul dn' t h a v e had to m e s s w i t h her. She w a s f i x i n g to i n ­ c i t e a riot t hat c o u l d ’v e killed s o m e b o d y ... but s h e d o n ’t g i v e a d a m n . The s i s t e r d o n ’t g i v e a d a m n ei ther , s h e ’s c on d o n in g t hat t y p e o f t h i n g . " — 8herlff Correa Strike efforts then m ounted at W etegrove’s packing shed. Packing shed workers who chose to join the strike were supplanted by friends and business associates of Wetegrove trying to salvage the onion crop. On April 17, Raymondville’s two bank presidents, John Calkins and Bill Thorn­ ton, went to El Centro Del Pueblo, the T ex a s F a rm w o rk ers Union h ead ­ quarters, to talk to the strikers. Juanita Adame, a TFW m ember, said that both were heavily intoxicated and abusive. Many of those at the m eeting w ere children. Adame a lle g e s that Calkins, president of the school board, cam e in the Centro looking for the bathroom and said, “ Haven’t you people got something better to do than sit around here with your fingers up your ass?” TFW members filed a complaint and Calkins was found guilty of public intoxication and fined $100. When asked about the incident Thorn­ ton, also a city com m issioner, said, “ I won’t say that it didn’t get said. It didn’t get said by me. There were probably som e words like that used. It was unfor­ tunate, but it w asn’t meant to offend anyone.' On May 1, the TFW’s bus was burned. Police Chief Sabas Garza ruled the fire was caused by arson. On M ay 27, a p p r o x i m a t e l y 300 farmworkers and supporters from as far away as Chicago, marched peaceful­ ly from the outskirts of Raymondville to the lawn of the county courthouse to protest charges against those arrested, asking for all charges to be dropped. Judith Pratt, a state representative from New Mexico, said from what she had observed, injustices had been com ­ mitted. “ It looks very much to me like a direct attem pt to break the union leadership," Pratt said. One of the arrested strikers, Louis Burciaga, was granted a change of venue May 29 and further pre-trial hearings have been set for June 26. The extent of damages to W etegrove’s crops is yet to be determined. In term s of con­ cessions the strike was generally con­ sidered successful by the farmworkers. Wetegrove installed sanitary facilities and raised wages. He did not, however sign a contract. Long-term effects of the strike are yet to be determined. Although Antonio Orendain, TFW president, said the public attention the strike aroused will benefit the farmworkers, there is som e speculation that Wetegrove may opt not to plant onions next year and instead plant cotton which can be harvested by machinery. Interpretations of the events vary greatly between, and even within, each camp. But, one thing is clear. There is a tension in the Valley that is not likely to subside for a long tim e, and perhaps in the final analysis the burden of respon­ sibility can really only fall on the shoulders of society. " I t ’s all o f o u r f a u l t s , but it is l o c al iz ed in t he b a n k e r s a nd g r o w e r s . But, until all o f us b e c o m e s e n s i t i v e to w h a t w e a r e d o i n g , t h e f a r m w o r k e r s ) , then w e c a n ’t b l a m e the b u s i n e s s m e n a nd bank e r s. ( e x p l o i t i n g “ T h e p o w e r l e s s i n a n y s o c i e t y a r e t he l as t to be h e ar d or e v e n t a k e n into c o n s i d e r a ­ tion. T h e y a r e a l m o s t f o r c e d by s o c i e t y to do s o m e t h i n g w e w o ul d c a ll u n c i v i l i z e d e v e n to be heard. I s a y w e b e c a u s e I g u e s s I f e e l a p a r t o f all the evil. It ’s all o f us w h o c o n s u m e t h e y w o r k for. the p r o d u c t T h e y a r e out in the hot sun b e a t i ng t h ei r b r a i n s out a n d g i v i ng us all the t r e m e n d o u s a m o u n t s o f f o o d w e h a v e a n d w e c an go out a n d s p l u r g e a n y t i m e w e w a n t to. But, w hi l e t h e y ' r e p r o d u c i n g this v a s t a m o u n t o f f o o d f o r t ho s e t ha t a l r e a d y h a v e e v e r y t h i n g t he y go h o m e a n d s e e t h ei r c h i ld r en go to b e d h u n g r y ... it's a c o r ­ p o r a t e sin ... i t ’s a s y s t e m w e h a v e built to t h a t the s y s t e m wor k. We m a k e n e e d h u g e c o r p o r a t e p e r ­ s o n al i t ie s a n d w e n e e d p e o p l e w h o a r e less t han h u m a n — t h e y a r e the w o r k m a c h i n e s t ha t w e d o n ’t h a v e to b o t he r about. in o r d e r t h a t s y s t e m " I t ’s w h a t o u r e c o n o m i c into. s y s t e m has d e v e l o p e d A n d u n t i l i s c h a n g e d w h a t c h a n c e do t he s e p e o p l e h a v e ? T h e r e ’s nothing built into the e c o n o m i c s y s t e m t ha t s a y s , ‘H o w is it w i t h y o u ? ’ ” — Sister Pascal. Farm w orker vocalizes protests during m arch to county courthouse. if n u Wcj(uuu,n a J & U ,n9 Juanita V a lde z atop burned TFW bus. M archers protest arrests of 18 farm w orkers. Sheriff Oscar Correa observes rally._____ *