! DAILY TEXAN ___________________________________________________ ¿Í. w^d VCCÜ Vol <_________________ « « <* * . * »» »» . , , , , , The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin_________ Wednesday, March 29,1989 25c Dobie residents may file lawsuit By RANDY KENNEDY Daily Texan Staff A D obie C enter resident said Tuesday that despite prom ises by the dorm itory's m anagem ent to re­ open recreational facilities, he will try to su e for “contract d am ages" incurred during three m onths o f re­ stricted use. And M itchell Solom on, the UT stud ents' attorney w ho has been contacted about possible litigation, said he believes the approxim ately 900 students living in th e 29-story least com plex som e dam ages as a result of the loss of the facilities." "h av e suffered at Adi W ilk, a com m unication fresh ­ m an, said he contacted Solom on last w eek and told him th at parts of the dorm 's patio recreation area — including, a-sw im m ing pool, volley­ ball court and basketball court — have been restricted by barricades or lum ber piles since stu d ents re­ turned from C hristm as break Jan . 16. The facilities w ere form ally closed o ff early last w eek w hen work b e­ gan on the roof and parapet wall areas of the tow er in preparation for m ajor renovation in the sum m er. W hile Dobie G eneral M anager Richard B em s said he d o es not b e­ lieve he violated the lease ag ree­ m ent and was concerned primarily for resid ents' safety, W ilk said D o­ bie m anagem ent ow es stud ents for the lost tim e. A copy of the 1989-90 year-long lease agreem ent states, under the "facilities and serv ices" clause, that "ra tes include m eals and use o f all com m on facilities, sw im m ing pool, recreational equipm ent and sau ­ n a s ." A fter a M onday night closed m eeting with about 65 residen ts to address com plaints about the co n ­ struction, B em s said the areas p o s­ sibly will be reopened early next w eek after w orkers finish the roof preparation. He also said th e sw im m ing pool is usually n ot refilled for u se until af­ te r spring break, w hen th e w eather g ets w arm er. But W ilk said after B e m s' refusal at the m eeting to provide m onetary com pensation to residents, he d e­ cided to actively seek a law suit. "T h e only n ext step, because he [Bem s] will not work w ith us, is th at w e have to find a law yer to W e will not be taken advantage of anymore and we’re going to do something about it.’ — Dobie resident Adi Wilk help u s ," Wilk said. "W e will not be taken advantage of anym ore and we re going to do som ething about it." Bem s said during and after the m eeting that com pensation is u n ­ justified. "B u t th at's w hy there are several horses in a race — everybody has a different o p in io n ," he said. Solom on said although he has not contacted B em s and does not have w ritten confirm ation that Bem s will not com pensate the students, he b e­ lieves an individual or class-action law suit could be filed. " I guess like Dr. B em s said, there could be differences of opinion, but in my opinion, I think the students have suffered at least som e dam ­ ages as a result of the loss of the facilities," he said. "B u t hopefully w e w on't have to go to court on this thing if there can be a m eeting of the m inds betw een the D obie m an­ agem ent for a reasonable am ount of co m p en satio n ." Solom on said if the stud ents are unable to afford a law yer, then "w e are able and w e are authorized to take action on behalf o f the stu ­ d e n ts." He said if stud ents ask for a large am ount of m onetary com p ensation, private law yers could pu rsue claim s and use a percentage of any com ­ pensation for legal fees. While W ilk said he did contact three other law yers about the possi­ ble suit, h e will follow Solom on 's di­ rection on how to proceed. " I contacted th e other law yers b e­ cause I w anted to see if I had any real basis for going to the UT law ­ y e r," W ilk said. "W h atev er he [So­ lomon] say s, w e're doing So if he says it's n o t w ise to go to court, w e w o n 't do it ." He said he will contact B em s W ed nesd ay about obtaining a w rit­ ten statem ent th at D obie m anage­ m ent is n o t w illing to com p ensate students m onetarily for the recre­ ation restrictions. By KEVIN HARGIS Daily Texan Staff The parents of missing UT pre- med junior Mark Kilroy plan to meet with state officials Wednes­ day to enlist governmental help in the search for their son, they said Tuesday night. James and Helen Kilroy flew to Austin from Brownsville and field­ ed questions from the Austin me­ dia for about half an hour. Helen Kilroy said she welcomed the coverage. "We know how important it is that the media keep Mark in front of everyone's eyes," she said. "We appreciate the coverage. We know someone out there knows some­ thing. We hope that person will search their heart and will call." Mark Kilroy disappeared March 14 during a spring break excursion to Matamoros, Mexico — a trip Helen Kilroy said was a gift for his 21st birthday. The Kilroys plan an early-morn­ ing conference with state Rep. Lloyd Criss, D-Galveston, to ask his assistance to keep the investi­ gation moving ahead, Jim Kilroy said. Kilroy said he believes the police effort in Brownsville has been going well, but said he wants the search expanded into Mexico. Helen Kilroy said not know ing M ark's w hereabouts is the hardest thing she has to face, but that sup­ port from friends and strangers has softened the ordeal. "T h a t's the biggest fear — not k n o w in g ," she said. Mark Kilroy and three friends left the Hard R ock Cafe in M ata­ m oros after a night of drinking and w ere w alking the G atew ay In tern atio n al Bridge spanning the Rio G rande, w hen h is friends noticed he w as gone at about 2 a.m . toward Police believe that Kilroy, o f Santa Fe, Texas, stopped on the w ay to th e bridge to speak with a m an w ho had a fresh cut on his cheek. T h e man w as described as a H ispanic male w ith a thin build, about 5 feet 8 in ch es tall, w earing a blue plaid shirt. O fficials have yet to find anyone m atching that description. Gw en H uddleston, a family friend w ho took phone calls for th e Kilroys on Tuesd ay, said m em ­ bers of K ilroy's fraternity, Lam bda C hi A lpha, will circulate petitions around th e UT com m unity. Petitions will be sent to Presi­ d en t B ush and M exican P resident C arlos Salinas d e G ortari, H ud­ dleston said. C am eron C ou nty Sheriff A lex Perez said Tuesday the investiga­ Parents seek state aid to locate son Students’ Association Vice President James Ray fielded questions at his final meeting Tuesday night. Chris Bell was elected to replace Ray. Robert K irkham /Daily Texan Staff Officer: SA lax with money By DIANA WILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff Stud ents' Association representatives have show n a lack of "sin cere co n cern " about how they spend the group's m oney, the SA bu siness financial officer said Tuesday. Financial D irector G regg Zeitlin said SA repre­ sentatives have been overly anxious to leave the group's bi-w eekly Tuesday night m eetings and have not carefully exam ined m oney requests be­ fore approving funds. "T h e attitude of the representatives seem s to be they get in here and w ant to get out as soon as p o ssib le," said Zeitlin, a finance senior. " I feel student representatives do not have a sincere concern for the m oney being sp e n t." " I think it is im portant that our representa­ tives care about the m oney that they are passing w ithout being in such h a ste ," h e said. SA President M ike H ulbert said he believes SA representatives care about allocations, but that bills are not discussed throughly enough in hear­ ing com m ittees. "1 d o n 't think anyone w ould tell you we ha­ v en 't m ade m istak es," said H ulbert, an electrical engineering senior. "B u t overall, the quality of programs that com e to us is very h ig h ." fund. This year, the group has been forced three times to finish business early because absent representatives have prevented the organization from m aintaining a quorum . O f the 38 SA repre­ sentatives, 24 m ust be present for the group to have a quorum as m andated by its constitution. SA Vice President Jam es Ray said that before Tuesday's m eeting, Kevin M orrow, representa­ tive for the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, w as rem oved from the organization due to excessive absences. As the year progresses, it becom es hard to keep representatives excited about their posi­ tions on the association, said Ray, an electrical engineering senior. "T h e longer you go, the harder it g e ts," he said. 'T h e ir enthusiasm has w aned w hen you get to this p o in t." SA representatives approved $4,956.35 Tues­ day to fund six projects, including $800 for a gay rights speaker and film festival, $1,771 for 12 fo- rensics students to attend a national com petition and $1,000 to help fund a presentation by Joyce Carol O ates, a nationally renow ned author. The organization ended the year with $17 in the general fund and also depleted the special Zeitlin said the association allocates money primarily from the two funds; one fund is re­ served for projects the association usually spon sors, such as Alcohol Aw areness Week, and the other fund is used for unforeseen projects, like the forensics trip. This year, the SA allocated $39,483 to help support cam pus projects, he said Ray said it is difficult for representatives to know how much money to approve early m the year because they do not know what projects will arise later in the sem ester. "W e can't make them look into the future e a r ­ ly in the y ear," he said. Also in the organization s last night for 1988- 89 business: ■ The group allocated $450 from its special projects fund to help support Natmai Science". thi week. The W eek, which w eek's activities include a forum on environ­ mental aw areness at 4 p.m. W< 2 m A h in the Texas Union Presidential R o o m a nd < Ac u' t v mixer at 5 p.m W ednesday in i ivlor I laii 3 . 128 is being held ■ SA representatives voted to recognize up to Ih e 37 UT teachers for teaching excellence group approved $650 for honorary plaques Lawmakers to drop UT-Brownsville bill By JUNDA WOO Daily Texan Staff The head of Pan American U ni­ versity at Brow nsville said Tuesday law makers should forget about cre­ ating a free-standing UT System cam pus in his city — at least for now. "T h e im portant issue is the m erg­ e r ," said H om er Pena, the school's joining the president. Legislation UT and Pan Am erican University system s w as throw n off the fast track M onday because of a clause specifying a UT cam pus at Brow ns­ ville. The South Texas city holds a sat­ ellite school of the Edinburg-based Pan Am erican System . It cannot grant its ow n degrees. "T h e m erger is the first priority here in the [Rio G rande] V alley ," Pena said. "A free-standing cam pus is som ething that ultim ately is going to occur sooner or later." Gov. Bill Clem ents and the UT System oppose the Brow nsville cam pus idea, saying it muddies the agreem ent ham m ered out by the two system s last year. UT System officials favor a Brow nsville cam pus after the m erg­ er goes through. they will say Because o f the opposition, the chairwoman of the House Higher Education Com m ittee routed the subcom m ittee, to a legislation w here lawmakers will take it up ih e merger W ednesday afternoon legislation previously had sped the Legislature, winning through quick and overw helm ing Senate ap­ proval last month. Rep. W ilhelmina Delco, D Aus­ tin, chairwoman o f the education the committee, said she expects subcom m ittee to cut the Brow ns­ ville provision a prediction ech ­ oed by bill co-sponsor Sen. Hector Uribe, D-Brow nsville. " O f course I'm disappointed but in the legislative process you don t alw'avs get w hat you ask for i ribe said. "Y o u 're happy to get -ome- thing.' The subcommittee also will co n ­ sider a merger bill bv Reps. Alex M oreno, D-Edinburg, and Juan Hi­ nojosa, D-M cAllen, which does not specify a Brownsville campus A U T-Pan A m erican m ergei would be one of Severn! ; u en large Texas universities and South Texas schools to help quell le gisla­ tive and legal pressures to boost that area's education. South Te>as is one of the nation's fastest growing and poorest regions John Moore/Daily Texan Staff James and Helen Kilroy search for their missing son, UT junior Mark. tion has not yet turned up any sol­ id leads. "We are still in the same limbo," Perez said. Officers checked leads from more than 90 phone calls resulting from a segment of America’s Most Wanted and came up with "noth­ ing definite," he said. Recent callers to the sheriff's of­ fice have expressed concern with the situation, but have produced no new tips, Perez said. H e said a M exican radio station report that M ark Kilroy turned up in Tam pico w as false. H uddleston said an oth er false report that appeared in a M exican new spaper stated that Kilroy had been found dead. Jim Kilroy w ants to put those re­ ports to rest. "W e w ant to make sure it's well know n in M atam oros that he has not been fo u n d ," he said. FBI offers information, job openings to UT students By RON LUBKE and CHRISTIAN MCDONALD Daily Texan Staff Since his days as the FBI director in the mid 1970s, Clarence Kelley has witnessed an increase of violence around the country. "Last Friday in Kansas City, Missouri, a little girl, just 15 years old, waiting for the bus to take her to high school, was in some manner kid­ napped and taken away," said Kelley, who served as the FBI director from 1973 to 1976. "Three days later an abandoned car was left in a garage, and in die trunk this little girl was found. Why does something like that happen?" he asked. Kelley spoke about crime resistance Tuesday night as part of the Texas Union Student Issue Committee's symposium, "A Behind the Scenes Look at the FBI," in the Texas Union. "I think we are in a decline," said Kelley, who now runs his own private investigation business in Kansas City, Mo. "I don't think it will be any­ thing like the Roman Empire, but in the course of the years I have been in law enforcement it has become increasingly difficult to handle peo­ ple." Former President Richard Nixon appointed Kelley director to replace J. Edgar Hoover. Kel­ ley also served as an agent for 21 years and po­ lice chief of Kansas City for 12 years. Earlier Tuesday, John Otto, FBI associate di­ rector, spoke about recruiting and held an open forum on national issues concerning the bureau. Otto said an FBI agent must be able to cope with problems when starting his career because he has to "find out if you like —- or at least don't greatly dislike — adversarial positions." Other traits needed are patience and diversity, he said. "An agent needs a long-range approach because investigations are long-range and com­ plex," Otto said. Since the appointment of William Sessions as FBI director, the bureau has looked extensively into discrimination problems within the agency, he said. "We have no place in the FBI for any form of discrimination and we won't tolerate it," Otto said. "If any occurs, we are going to hit it head on, no doubt about it." To deal with possible discrimination, the FBI restructured the equal employment department by moving it up in fhe organization and hiring the head of the department from outside the bu­ reau, he said. The bureau also hired an outside contractor See FBI, page 2 U T S w w t h M r t — Voting on the UT Sweetheart will be Wednesday and Thurs­ day Polling locations are lo cated at ■ East Mall — College of Fine Arts and Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs ■ Robert Lee Moore Hall — C o lleg es of E n ­ gineering and Pharmacy and the School of Law ■ West Mall — C o lleg es of Natural- S c i­ ence, Architecture, Liberal Arts and G ra d u ­ ate Studies ■ Communications Complex — C olleg e of Communication and School of Social Work • Between the Perry-Castaneda Library and the University Teaching C e n te r — C o l­ leges of Business Administration and E d u c a ­ tion, School of Nursing and the G ra d u a te School of Library and Information S cience 5 WEATHER with a 10-foot - I w o uld n’t touch this Oops N ever m ind As W a d e ’ w akes up dream m g of th e higf hard one he can look for W e d n es d a y 's h ig h to o* to r low 8 0s M arg o would prob ab ly a g re e that be plays the hot corner well, esp ecially whet he go es d e e p in hip ho>e H e s been p< e n d in g the baseball fo r years but e's b e e even longer At .east D e b b ie s riot g u .u g n.ip the cold (upper 50s) shouldei But b e . arefu of northwest winds at 10 15 m p h Arot nd the R ed Sox c a m p , who Knows w* at n a K '> “ c w hen the wiru t b !ows INDEX A round C am pu s Classifieds C om ics Editorials Entertainment Sports State & Local University W orld & Natior 15 11 15 4 9 8 7 5 3 Texas AIDS epidemic expected to increase The AIDS epidemic will continue to grow in Texas and nationwide "without an end in sight,'*' a Hous­ ton medical official told a state Sen­ ate committee Tuesday. About 45,(XX) Texans will be diag­ nosed with AIDS by the end of 1992, an increase from the more than 6,000 Texans who have already been diagnosed with the deadly vi­ rus, said Dr. Palmer Beasley of UT Health Science Center at Houston. Com m ittee C h airm an Chet Brooks, D-Pasadena, identified about $45 million the state could use to address the epidemic as part of legislation proposed by a legislative task force on AIDS. STNP deemed hazardous Safety questions still hover over the South Texas Nuclear Project, cit­ izens' groups said Tuesday. To commemorate the 10th anni­ versary of the Three Mile Island ac­ cident, Public Citizen and the Texas Safe Utility Network issued a report showing more than 600 allegations of safety problems at the Texas project. The groups said a federal licens­ ing team tried to investigate 60 of the allegations in four days last Jan­ uary. STNP officials could not be reached for comment. Stiles slams parole board The Board of Pardons and Paroles is "very poorly run" and needs to be revamped, said the sponsor of a bill tentatively approved Tuesday by the House to create an adminis­ trative panel over the agency. "That agency is without leader­ ship at this time, and it needs a complete and total overhaul," said Rep. Mark Stiles, D-Beaumont. The measure won initial House approval without debate. Bill exempts river agency Expressing mistrust of Texas Sun­ set Reviews, a state senator per­ suaded colleagues Tuesday to ex­ empt river authorities from the periodic evaluations let lawmakers abolish agencies no longer useful. that The Austin-area Lower Colorado River Authority was exempted from the legislation, which passed 27-4 and moves to the House. Compiled by Jim Greer and Junda Woo, Daily Texan Staff Youfve Got the World Ahead of You EARN ACADEMIC CREDITS Fall, Spring & Summer Programs Spain • France • Mexico International Studies Abroad For a complete packet and quick response call: 4 8 0 - 8 5 2 2 a TICKET DISM ISSAL ONLY $12 W/THIS AD GUARANTEED TO BEAT COMPETITORS PRICE BY $2 W/THEIR AD NEAR CAMPUS NO TESTS REGISTER BY PHONE BUDGET DEFENSIVE DRIVING 454-5300 4314 Madfcol Porfcwoy RENTAL REPAIRS SUPPLIES ACCESSORIES PRECISIO N H B CAMERA & VIDEO* 3004 Guadalupe Austin. Texas 78705 (512)477-3841 CAMERAS NEW & USED TRADES PROCESSING Canon We honor the Canon Credit Card Enpy easy extended payments with no money down Available only in U S Canon • EOS A U T0F0CU S SYSTEM-Faster, Quieter, operates in Extremely Low Light Conditions1 • Green Zone— Full Auto Position provides mistake- proof photography, even for beginners1 • Full range of Caqon EF lenses and EOS Dedicated Speedites for maximum versatility, creativity! • Includes Canon U S A . Inc one year limited warranty/registration card! • Optional EOS Four-Year Extended Protection Plan available! O F F E R S G O O D T H R U 4-8-89 6 2 0 • AUTO EXPOSURE BRACKETING • MULTIPLE EXPOSURE • VARIABLE PROGRAM S H IR • 1/4000 SEC SHUTTER SPEED • 1/250 SEC FLASH SYNCH • INCLUDES CANON USA LIMITED WARRANTY Page 2/THE D A IL Y TEXAN/Wednesday, March 29,1989 The Domino’s Insert in the Tuesday Daily Texan was dated incorrectly. Domino’s will honor all coupons dated 2/28/89 until April 28, 1989. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused. T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff Mike Erickson, .......................... ................................................................. Mike Godwin ........................................................... Stacey Freedenthal Karen Adams, Steve Crawford, Steve Dobbins, Cherie Henderson .............................................................. Dennis McCarthy Editor......................... Managing Editor............. Associate Managing Editors News Editor................... Associate News Editors News Assignments E d it o r .......................................................................................Kim Homer Jim Greer, Kevin Hargis. Alan Hines, General Reporters Randy Kennedy, Greg Perliski, Diana Williams, Junda Woo Bruce McDougall . Susan Boren, Tom Philpott ............. Robert Wilonsky Special Pages Editor Associate Editors Entertainment Editor...................................................... Associate Entertainment Ed itor............................................................... Sports E d it o r ........................ Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporters Photo Editor........................... Associate Photo Editor. . . Im ages Ed itor........................................................................................ Associate Images Editors Graphics E d it o r ................................................................................ Around Campus Editor Ray Dise, Schuyler Dixon, Jerry Gemander JohnFoxworth Jeff Holt ................................... Bret Bloomquist . Mike Issue Staff News Assistants ................................... Mark Brandon, Kate Jeffrey, Ron Lubke, Lydia Lum, Christian McDonald, Denise Shannon ..................................................................................Kathryn Johnson Paul Hammons, Marissa Silvera Sports Assistant Sports Writer Entertainment A s s is t a n t ................................................................................. Rachel Jenkins Editonal Columnist Scott Henson Editorial A ssista n t................................................................................................. Bryan Solie Editorial C a rt o o n is t ............................................................................................................. Makeup Editor Jennifer Melton Wire E d it o r ..................................................................................................... Joseph Abbott Copy Editors Photographers Graphics Assistant Comic Stnp Cartoonists ......................................................................... Robert Kirkham, John Moore ............................................................................ Jeff Satterwhite ........................................................ Van Garrett, John Keen, Tom King, Robert Rodriguez, Martin Wagner, Chris Ware Christina Colias, Marianne . . . . Hubbard, Susan LaRonde, Laura Merritt Advertising Local D is p la y ...............................................Eric Ashford, Deborah Bannworth, Matthew Beech hold, Tony Colvin, Cary B. Cook, Betty Ellis, Sam Hefton, Sue Hwang, Denise Johnson, David Lutz. Beth Mitchell, Mike Motal, Gina Padilla, Cindy Pels, Bryson Read, Jody Ruhberg, Jeff Satterwhite, Alan Selby, Jam es Stewart, A C. Webb, Chris Wilson Classified Display Asi Chitrarachis, Brandy Cochrane, Ricardo R. Fernandez Classified Telephone S a le s............................................. Robert Acosta, Art Carrillo, Charles Hyman, Melanie Neel, Juanda Powell Classified Telephone Service...................................................... Susan Fleischaker, Jennifer Head, Linda Martin, Shawn McMinn, Toni Schmitt The Daily Texan (U SPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis, Austin, TX 78705 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4.136). For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865. For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471-8900. For classified word advertising, call 471 -5244. Entire contents copyright 1969 Texas Student Publications The Daly Texan Mai SubecrtpMon Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring). . $30.00 Two Semesters (Fall and Sp rin g )......................................................................................... 55.00 20.00 Summer Session 75.00 One Year (Fall, Spring and S u m m e r )....................................................... .................. To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471-5083. Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P.O Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209, or to TSP Building C3.200, or call 471 -5083 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to TSP, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209. FBI Continued from page 1 for its career development depart­ ment and changed the way it evalu­ ates some employees, Otto said. Also Tuesday, a recruiting semi­ nar was conducted at the Texas Un­ ion Theater by Byron Sage, FBI su­ pervisory senior agent for Austin and Waco, and Special Agent Pa­ trick Cowley. Sage said an agent must be a U.S. citizen, 23 or older, with a four-year degree. Three years of professional experience also is required for some jobs to ensure that applicants have experience in the “ real world." "Twenty-three is pretty young to come in and strap on a gun and play Wyatt Earp," he said. Linda Milch PROFESSIONAL STUDIO r c o Q c a a * 1 1 N S T A M T Carol Huneke Gregor Sauer RESU M ES • PASSPORTS APPLICATIO N S • IM M IG R A T IO N C O L O R • B&W Rob Walker Kathy Strong Mindy Brown Clark, Jeff Turrentine 2532 G u a d a l u p e • 477-5555 FRSE P A R K IN G IN P tA R REPAIR • Boots • Shoes • Leather Goods • Luggage CUSTOM MADE 4 • Boots • Belts • Chaps • Etc. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca «Austin .478-9309 S H E A I \ S t y l e ^ i j a m r \ r r HAIR DESIG N 1 0 9 5 CUTS R ÍA ) 115 I S ( L I 'D E S S H A M i l X > C O s n m o s A S I ) H L O W D R Y O Q 9 5 PERMS A o o m o s A i h \)R H A I R C I T O R L O S O H A IR I j J I I TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK — FOR YO U RS CALL 471 -5244 W A L K - IN S W E L C O M E 3701 GUADALUPE O P E N 9 3 0 - 6 3 0 , M E — — i & 454-5774 C 7 7 A S A T 9 S C O U P O N EX PIR ES 4/16/89 NATURAL SCIENCES WEEK CONTINUES March 29 th through 31st Calendar of Events 29th W ednesday 1:00 pm 3:30 pm 4:00 pm 5:00 pm Tour of Interior Design Lab by Dr. Joe Logan in PAI 4.02 Talk on “Hot H-Atom Chemistry” by Dr. Zare in WEL 2.122 Students’ Association Forum on Environmental Awareness in Texas Union Presidential Room Student-Faculty Mixer in TAY 3.128 30th T h u rsd ay 11:00 am Limited tour of Butterfly Exhibit by Dr. Gilbert. Meet on ground floor of Patterson Labs by the ele­ vators. 15 people maximum. Call 471-3285 for a free ticket. Talk on “Energy and Angle-Resolved Photoelec­ tron Spectroscopy” by Dr. Zare in WEL 2.122 Talk on Magnetic Resonance Imaging by Dr. Shoulders in WEL 2.304 3:30 pm 4:00 pm 31st F rid ay 8:00 am 10:00 am Free Student-Faculty Breakfast in WCH 1Ó0 Tour of Tokamak Fusion Research Center by Mr. Andy Meigs. Meet in lobby outside PMA library in RLM. SPONSORED BY THE NATURAL SCIENCES COUNCIL W E SUIT YOUR STYLE! HARBOR CASUALS DALLAS Preston Center (214) 691-5881 The Galleria (214) 458-9931 Valley View (214) 980-8807 AUSTIN The Arboretum (512) 346-2682 HOUSTON The Galleria (713) 961-3891 Baybrook Mall (713) 280-9788 FT. WORTH Hulen M all (817) 294-0527 SA N ANTO NIO North Star M all O pening early April Tuesday’s Dow Jones Industrial Average: UP 17.68 to 2,275.54 Volume: 146.42 million shares WORLD & NATION Wednesday, March 29,1989 Page 3 Meese: Reagan feared ousting in contra case Associated Press WASHINGTON — Former Attorney General Edwin Meese testified at Oliver North's trial Tuesday that the specter of impeachment hung over the White House in the 72 hours after aides discovered a planned diversion of Iran arms sale money to the Nicaraguan contras. In two hours of testimony, Meese said he told then-President Reagan about the diver­ sion the day after North confirmed that the plan, outlined in a memo, had become a fact. "Your worst nightmare had come true?" asked North lawyer Brendan Sullivan. "Y es, it w as," Meese replied. "You knew that spelled trouble?" "Yes, I did." That nightmare was the revelation that two activities in which North was deeply involved had been intertwined: the admin­ istration's secret sale of weapons to Iran and the secret diversion of money from the arms sales — with the knowledge of U.S. officials — to the rebels fighting the Nicara­ guan government at a time such aid was forbidden by law. "Merging of those two factors could cause toppling of the president himself?" "Y es," Meese replied. The memo, which had survived massive shredding efforts by North, his secretary and an aide, was found on Nov. 22, 1986, I felt it vital that there not be any appearance of a cover- up.’ — Edwin Meese, former attorney general by Meese aide William Bradford Reynolds in North's office. The next day, a Sunday, Meese met with North and others at the Justice Department. Meese said that in the Sunday meeting, North appeared surprised that Meese had obtained the memo that outlined the arms sales profit diversion plan. public disclosure might have. "I believe he asked where we had gotten the m em o," said Meese. He testified also that North assured him then that the plan was Israel's and U.S. in­ volvement was "n o n e." And he said North told him he had contacted contra leader Adolfo Calero and suggested Calero open three accounts in Switzerland to get the money from the Israelis. In truth, North co-defendants Richard Secord and Albert Hakim had arranged to receive the Iran money in private Swiss ac­ counts they established and 'controlled, in­ vestigators found. Meese said he talked to the president on Monday and they talked of the impact the "I don't know whether the actual word 'impeachment' was used," Meese testified. But he said there was concern over "the tremendous consequences" of the discov­ ery. The former attorney general said the ad­ ministration also was concerned that its po­ litical opponents might get hold of the in­ formation about the diversion before it could be made public. "I felt it vital that there not be any ap­ pearance of a cover-up," he said. It was decided that Reagan would hold a news to announce that conference Nov. 25, North had been fired, and that his boss, Adm. John Poindexter, had resigned. Khomeini’s heir resigns on request Associated Press NICOSIA, Cyprus — Ayatollah Ali Montazeri resigned Tuesday as the heir-apparent to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and said he did so at the bidding of the 88-year-old revolutionary patriarch himself. Montazeri and two high Foreign Ministry officials appeared to be the first government casualties in a fierce drive by Khomeini to return Iran to the roots of its fundamental­ ist revolution. Iran's U.N. ambassador, Moham­ mad Jaafar Mahallati, also resigned Tuesday, two days after Deputy Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Larijani stepped down. Both are U .S .-educa ted. Khomeini last month harshly at­ tacked those who would rebuild links with the West and denounced revolu­ lagging tionary fervor. M o n t a z e r i 's resignation came after Khomeini sent him a letter on March 26 ask­ ing him to step down, reported o fficia l Ir a n 's T eh ran radio, monitored in Ni- cosia Montazen "I see myself compelled to obey your orders, because the survival and stability of the Islamic Republic rests on obeying your comm and," the radio quoted the 64-year-old Montazeri as saying. The Mujahedeen Khalq, Iran's main opposition group, commented in a telex to The Associated Press from its Baghdad, Iraq, headquar­ ters: "A wave of dismissals and re­ signations ... at various levels is on the rise. ... The disposal of Montaz­ eri indicates an eruption at the high­ est level of the unending internal conflicts. " The immediate cause of Montaz­ eri's ouster appears to be his critical assessm ent of the revolution's ac­ complishments. In a speech published Feb. 12 by the official Islamic Republic News Agency, Montazeri declared that Iranian leaders made many mis­ takes in the first 10 years of the rev­ olution which isolated the fledgling republic from much of the world. His remarks drew a stinging rejoin­ der from Khomeini. Montazeri was chosen by an 83- member Council of Experts as Kho­ meini's successor in 1985. The ad hoc assembly itself had been elected in 1982 to ensure succession in case of Khomeini's death. Montazeri, a close ally of Kho­ meini since they organized an upris­ ing against the late Shah Moham­ mad Reza Pahlavi in 1963, was chosen after Khomeini hinted his support. On Tuesday he said he al­ ways opposed the move and that he simply wanted to return to being a religious student. No immediate word surfaced on another Khomeini successor. Khomeini had assailed Montaz­ eri, without mentioning Montazeri's name, after the Feb. 12 speech. "H ow short-sighted are those who think that because we did not reach final victory at the front, that mar­ tyrdom and self-sacrifice are worth­ less," he said. Immediately after the cease-fire in the eight-year Iran-Iraq war last August, Khomeini apparently gave free rein to the pragmatists. Parlia­ ment Speaker Hashemi Rafsanjani and Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayati, seeking loans and technol­ ogy to rebuild Iran, spearheaded a drive to soften Iran's radical image. By last week, however, Khomeini was proclaiming that Iran had drift­ ed away from the values of the rev­ olution. AIDS crisis protest Associated Press New York City police take protesters into custody dur­ ing a demonstration near City Hall. The AIDS activists were trying Tuesday to bring attention to what they say is the city’s inaction in dealing with the AIDS crisis. America Associated Press NEW YORK — A judge Tuesday disquali­ fied the San Diego Yacht Club as the winner in last year's America's Cup challenge and awarded the international sailing trophy to the defeated New Zealand club. State Supreme Court Justice Carmen Cipar- ick said San Diego "violated the spirit" of the race by using a 60-foot catamaran to defend against the Mercury Bay Boating Club's sin­ gle-hulled yacht, which is about 90 feet at the water line. San Diego's catamaran is the Stars and Stripes, a multi-hulled boat that is lighter, faster and more maneuverable than the New Zealand. Skippered by Dennis Conner, the San Di­ ego crew sailed to easy victory over the Mer­ cury Bay club in waters off San Diego last September. Calling the contest a "gross m ism atch," the judge ordered the 138-year-old silver cup turned over to the New Zealanders. Patrick Goddard, commodore of the San Diego club, said a decision on whether to file an appeal will be made in the next several days after the boards of the San Diego Yacht Club and its event organizer, the America's Cup Organizing Committee, are briefed by at­ torneys. Until that decision is made, the Cup will remain with the yacht club, Goddard said. The leader of the New Zealand syndicate, Michael Fay, expressed no surprise at the de­ cision. "It had to come sooner or later," he said from Wellington, New Zealand. "W e were al­ ways strong in our belief in what the Cup meant and the Cup has come through." think I Fay said the America's Cup itself was the real winner and the ruling would be good for the integrity of the event. In her 14-page decision, the judge said the 102-year-old Deed of Gift which governs the race does not specify the size a boat must be or the number of hulls it must have. But, she said, "th e conclusion is inescapa­ ble" that George Schuyler, who established the race, "contemplated the defending vessel to relate in some way to the specifications of the challenger." Therefore, Ciparick said, "it is clear that a catamaran may not defend an America's Cup competition against a monohull." Associated Press Iraqi settlement for missile attack called satisfactory by U.S. officials WASHINGTON — U.S. officials said Tuesday; Iraq's agreement to pay $27.35 million to the fanOiie&£ of the 37 sailors killed in the attack on the USS Stark is a satisfactory and fair settlement but it is unclear when the payments will be made. The agreement, formally announced by the State Department, represents about 92 percent erf the $29.6 million the United States had requested for the fam i-' lies of those who died in Iraq's unprovoked missile attack on the Stark in 1987. Bush administration officials, speaking on condi­ tion they not be identified, said it remained unclear when Iraq would hand over the money. Former official held in Japanese scandal TOKYO — Prosecutors arrested a second former high Japanese government official Tuesday in a bri­ bery scandal that is generating pressure on Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita to resign. Tuesday's arrest of Kunio Takaishi, former vice minister of education, coincided with formal charges beihg filed against Takashi Kato, a former vice minis­ ter of labor who was arrested March 8. The two are the highest-ranking public officials to be arrested in the case. Both were accused of receiving bribes in the form of bargain-priced shares fot using their influence to benefit Recruit C o., an information conglomerate. ; Army surrounds site of prison rebellion SANTA CATARINA PINULA, Guatemala — Sol­ diers and police ringed a prison controlled by rebelli­ ous inmates Tuesday. ' . President V inicio Cerezo said drug traffickers may have sponsored the rebellion by up to 100 inmates who took over the central buildings of the 2 V2-square- mile Pavon prison farm while relatives of inmates were visiting on Easter Sunday. More than 600 visi­ tors have remained inside. Four guards and three prisoners were killed in the takeover and about 20 people were wounded. Rebel inmates were armed with carbines taken from the prison armory. Ueberroth may make offer for Eastern ' NEW YORK — Texas Air Corp. directors met Tues­ day and were expected to consider offers to buy strike-crippled Eastern Airlines, sources said. Peter Ueberroth, whose term as baseball commis­ sioner ends Saturday, may offer $300 million to $500 million during the meeting that ends Wednesday, said baseball and airline industry sources. Takeover specialist Carl Icahn hoped union concessions would persuade Eastern creditors to let him take control. Sources said substantive discussions in the regular­ ly scheduled meetings probably wouldn't get under way until Wednesday. Soviet chess master makes move to U.S. NEW YORK — The Soviet Union's leading young chess player and his father requested political asylum here Tuesday, said a grandmaster and fellow Soviet defector who aided them. Gata Kamsky, 14, and his father, Rustam Kamsky, spoke with an FBI official Tuesday and are staying at an undisclosed address in the New York area, said Grandmaster Lev Alburt, a former U.S. chess champi­ on who defected from the Soviet Union in 1979. World champion Garri Kasparov and other experts have said Kamsky, who was here to play in the New York Open tournament, is likely to reach the highest echelons of world chess. Soviet politicians dumped in unprecedented election Associated Press MOSCOW — At least 37 key Communist Party and government leaders went down to embarrassing defeats in the Soviet Union's first multicandidate election, according to results trickling in Tuesday from across the nation. The losers in balloting for a new national parliament included a can­ didate member of the ruling Polit­ buro, the premiers of Latvia and Lithuania, and 27 Communist Party leaders from major cities, regions and republics, according to results obtained from interviews and vari­ ous press reports. The humiliation was greatest for officials who ran unopposed on the ballot and still lost because more than 50 percent of the voters crossed out their names. Activists in cities from Leningrad to Kiev waged "cross-out" cam­ to vote paigns urging against certain officials by blacking out their names on the ballots. citizens Izvestia reported Tuesday what it called the "sensational" result that no one was elected in 168 electoral districts where there were only one or two candidates because so many citizens voted against them. In the weeks prior to the election, activists carried posters in Kiev il­ lustrating ballots with several names crossed out. Ukrainian Com­ munist Party chief Vladimir Shcher- bitsky won anyway, but voters re­ jected both the party chief and the mayor of Kiev. All three ran unop­ posed In Leningrad, Deputy Mayor Alexei Bolshakov also lost despite facing no opposition. Scraps of hand-m ade p osters appeared throughout the city in recent w'eeks suggesting he be defeated for that reason alone, according to a resi­ dent. The defeat of so many top Com­ munist Party and government offi­ cials was seen as a blow to the es­ tablishment, but Foreign Ministry spokesman Gennady Gerasimov said Tuesday that 80 percent of the party's candidates had won. Although those rejected for seats in the new Congress of People's Deputies retain their current posi­ tions, Gerasimov said local party or­ ganizations will examine the losses and decide their future. "Maybe they were wrong for their posts," he said. "M aybe they failed to advertise their platforms. Every case should be taken sepa­ rately." intense Despite interest, most election results have yet to be re­ ported in Soviet media. Oil slick cleanup continues Associated Press VALDEZ, Alaska — Fishermen mobilized Tuesday to protect un­ tainted beaches and estuaries from the nation's worst oil spill, and the Port of Valdez reopened to tankers lined up to load North Slope crude oil. Cleanup officials said they had abandoned hope of controlling the spill with mechanical skimmers or chemical dispersants and planned instead to rely on burning the oil, which formed a long, black bruise on the brilliant blue waters of Prince William Sound. Since the tanker Exxon Valdez ran spilling 240,000 aground Friday, barrels, the oil has moved more than 40 miles, contaminating beach­ es and marine life as it goes. "This oil spill has been 12 years in the com ing," said Don Cornett, an Exxon spokesman. But he claimed that given the amount of oil trans­ ported during that period, the in­ dustry's safety record actually is quite good. With assistance from the state, a fishermen's group from nearby Cor­ dova dispatched a few dozen boats with cleanup gear to protect three important pink salmon hatcheries in the path of the rapidly spreading slick. Beaches on at least five uninhabit­ ed islands have been fouled, and the slick was fast approached sensi­ tive salmon-spawning areas on the larger Knight Island to the south­ west. "Frankly, we are past attempting to recover much oil," said Larry Dietrick, a spokesman for the Alas­ ka Department of Environmental Conservation. "O ur primary efforts are now in the defense of very sen­ sitive areas." Exxon said it planned to turn loose an army of workers equipped with rakes and shovels to clean up rugged, remote beaches already contaminated. But Dietrick said there was no sign of that happen­ ing, and the fishermen said they couldn't wait any longer. President Bush dispatched Trans­ portation Secretary Samuel Skinner, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Bill Reilly and Coast Guard Commandant Paul Yost to "take a hard look at where this dis­ aster stands." Bush said the federal government may take over the cleanup from Exxon if the officials conclude that not enough is being done. Asked whether he was satisfied with Exxon's efforts, Bush said, "They're certainly making a good beginning here, but there are some conflicting reports on that. I don't want to prejudge that." Alaska Gov. Steve Cowper, a Democrat who has been highly criti­ cal of the cleanup, flew to Valdez to meet with the administration offi­ cials. He said he wants the federal to designate clearly government which agency is in charge when spills occur. the oil Cowper said industry hasn't shown the ability to handle tanker spills. He said there is no guarantee that things would be bet­ ter if another accident took place. As contractors scrambled to hire workers off the street for the back­ breaking task of cleaning isolated beaches and coves, the federal Bu­ reau of Land Management started mobilizing five fire crews totaling about 100 people to assist. BLM spokesman Dave Vickery said the crews should arrive in Valdez on Wednesday. The shift to manual labor came as the size of the slick outstripped the means to contain it. Cornett said there were 12 skimmers deployed early Tuesday, but they had man­ aged to scoop only about 3,500 bar­ rels from the sea's surface. Cornett said cleanup crews lost an excellent opportunity to use chemical dispersants on the spill Sunday because the state Depart­ ment of Environmental Conserva­ tion and the federal Environmental Protection Agency were hesitant to authorize use of the chemicals. P a g e 4/THE DAILY TEXAN/Wednesday, March 29, 1989 EDITORIALS Viewpoint opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor and the writer of the article T hey are n o t necessarily the opinions of the University adm inistration the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of O perating Trustees R u s s ia n D r e ssin g There will be no U.S. Gorbachev f \ A T here is our Gorbachev?” pundits from Anthony Lewis to « / % / William F. Buckley have been begging to know since w w about 1987. Whoever our Gorbachev may be, s/he surely isn't stolid, banal old George Bush. And if the State Department's first public response to the Soviet Union's troop reductions and political/economic reforms signals anything, it's that Secretary of State James Baker is no Gorbachev-style New Thinker either. After months of drift, Baker has finally responded to Gorbachev's revolutionary new policies. But the Soviet-policy proposal he discussed with reporters Monday is much more vague than visionary. In the plan, the Soviet Union would loosen its hold over Eastern Europe in exchange for a U.S. promise not to take advantage of the situation. Sound pretty vague? Now listen to Baker describe it: "I think it is w orthy of consideration because it is a novel approach,” he told report­ ers M onday. "It is broadly gauged in its features." "Broadly gauged"? That's the double-speak of a bureaucrat; Baker sounds more like one of Gorbachev's entrenched, paper-pushing ene- mies-of-perestroika than he does a a Gorbachevian statesman. And not only is the plan vague, but it's also unrealistic. Baker would ask the Soviets to reduce their military and political presence at their borders — in exchange for a mere promise. How will Gorbachev explain that to members of the Politburo? For this they allowed him to unilaterally cut significant Warsaw Pact troop strength last winter? You can almost hear the Politburo hard-liners chuckling. And the final disgrace of Baker's "plan” : It's not even original — he acknowledges that Henry Kissinger thought it up. Baker should thus abandon this vague, unrealistic bit of warmed-over Kissingerism and confront Gorbachev with a plan that's specific, original and difficult to refuse. How? He could announce that the United States will cut military aid to every country it "protects” — if and only if the Soviets agree to do the same. To help promote stability, both countries could then funnel a large chunk of the money saved into the United Nations, whose role as peace­ keeper and peace-maker would instantly expand. The rest of the money could help bolster each country's sagging econ­ omy. (The Soviet economy, of course, sags a little more than ours does, but nobody argues that the U.S. economy doesn't need more infrastruc­ ture and capital investment.) A nd even if the Soviets refused the offer, the United States would at least switch its role from passive reactor to innovative actor in East-West affairs. But this is all too much to ask of a secretary of state who responds to the m ost reformist, reasonable Soviet leader since the revolution with a plan that can only boast of "broadly gauged ... features.” With leaders like Bush and Baker in place, there will be no U.S. Gorba­ chev ... for at least four more years. — Tom Philpott ....... i . tÉ >& - •.' •. - M iiiiia E dge At least he's not going to up and die again TULSA, Okla. — Hundreds of Oral Roberts University students laid money at the feet of evangelist Oral Roberts at a chapel service Tues­ day after he said he must raise $11 million by May 6 or creditors will "start dismantling” the school and his ministry. ■ Alii..... The 71-year-old evangelist said scandals in other ministries have caused contributions to his ministry to decline from $5 million a month to $2.7 million a month during the past two years. Speaking to a sometimes hushed and often raucous gathering of 4,300 students at the campus service, Roberts described himself as a "tough old bird” intent on keeping the university going "until Jesus comes." — Associated Press < ! > * " a k v . i pp**' u>- “M oreW l Than W allet” vM.MvrtR.SAi T f t t s s ~ ■BvFfAU) NtV* so TNATi WHY He ALWAV3 - SMIUEO AT ME THAT UMW The truth about democracy in America To hear the newspapers' clamor, one and revolution — are almost always controlled by elites. Federal judges are appointed by na­ tional politicians, and lawyers cost money. The pope decides policy for the Catholic church; pastors and elders decide it for the Protestants. would think that "free and fair” elec­ tions in El Salvador were the greatest thing since indoor plumbing. S c o t t H e n s o n TEXAN COLUMNIST In actuality, the elections themselves are all but meaningless. The footnotes of history books are filled with the names of elected lead­ ers who were killed or overthrown. The election of Alfredo Cristiani means noth­ ing to the Salvadoran people as long as the rev­ olution rocks the country and the economy is a wreck. Only what he does has meaning. If Cristiani's election means the return of the death squads and an end to land reform, is de­ mocracy still a good thing? The claim that elections are a cure for the social problems confronting Central America comes from the prevalence among Americans of the widely held m yth that democracy is a value. Democracy has existed during periods of war, slavery, genocide, massive poverty, etc. The decision to drop an atomic bomb on Hiro­ shima was made by a democratically elected president. Hitler was democratically elected, and I've never heard anyone say that those elections w eren't "free and fair." Democracy is not a value; it is not an end like freedom, liberty or justice. Democracy's a means to achieve those ends; and all other cir­ cumstances being equal, democracy is the best means to achieve given social ends or values. But this doesn't mean it's the only means. Democracy in El Salvador is a means that serves the ends of the rich and the middle class. For the supporters of the FMLN in El Salva- dor, this means is not an option. Their chosen means to their ends is armed revolution. Most Salvadorans have absolutely no say-so in the issue at all. People will always find ways to address so­ cial problems the political system can't or doesn't handle. For example, in America, as elsewhere, theft is often a means to an end of fighting poverty for the individual. Alcoholism and drug abuse are sometimes means to combat boredom, stress, depression, frustration and many other sources of alienation that grow out of an exces­ sively materialistic society. And, of course, there are also institutional means to the end of combatting these prob­ lems. Religion is a good example. Also, the non-democratic judicial system makes many and arguably most of the import­ ant value judgements for the masses in Ameri­ ca. Violent revolution has been used by leaders from Thomas Jefferson to Vladimir Lenin to Daniel Ortega to Yitzhak Shamir as means to enforce values they believed in. These men knew, as Karl Marx wrote in Capi­ tal, that "Revolutions are not made with laws.” Ironically, but understandably, all these m en became big proponents of "the law” after they won. For that matter, revolutions are rarely truly "populist,” and anyway, revolutionaries still must set up a leadership group that later will become the society's elites after the conflict. In the United States we see a highly decen­ tralized control over the dominant values of so­ ciety, but that still doesn't mean that people have control over the decisions that most affect their lives. Instead, the private ownership of capital in America places most of these decisions in the hands of a private set of elites. In socialist coun­ tries people also have little input into produc­ tion decisions, but with socialism there's cen­ tralized decision-making, and at least in theory there's some democratic input. People everywhere spend most of their life's energy on the job. But at the workplace, the chief value is not justice, equity or freedom — it is profits. And individuals have no democratic say-so about that. In America, even accounting for our minia­ ture welfare state, almost everyone has to work to eat. People elect "leaders,” but still have no "democratic" control over their own lives. That's the end of democracy in America — to keep it that way. These alternative means — like law, religion Henson is an economics senior. Workers deserve a break At best, Greg Weiner's recent column ("Eastern strike creates a worker's hell,” The Daily Texan, March 23) is vitriolic; at worst, it is savage demagoguery. He does not understand the facts sur­ rounding the strike, nor the economic con­ ditions that working people in the United States face in the late 1980s. The treatment that employees of Texas Air have received harks back to an earlier age of capitalism. It's a cliche, but Frank Lorenzo is a robber baron. Working people in the United States have fought against the Frank Lorenzos for 150 years, to everyone's benefit, except perhaps the Frank Lorenzos. This is also a cliche, but if it weren't for the strikes that our fathers and mothers and grandm others and grandfathers waged, we wouldn't have Social Security, eig h t-h o u r w orkdays a n d 40-hour workweeks, sick pay, pensions, health benefits, safer working conditions and, most important, the middle class. International Association of Machinists members are being asked to take paycuts of $6,000-$7,000 per year for the third time in six years. What would Weiner's parents do if they were forced to take such a cut? Would Weiner call them "replaceable" and "expendable," and taunt them for not being content with their "still beefy” in­ comes? Perhaps more directly to the point, would Weiner still be in college, discours­ ing on the greed and stupidity of the working people? Weiner alleges that IAM members and their families at Eastern forced this strike out of disrespect for both their jobs and * their fellow employees. This is a Ue, and a particularly mean one: Union members are putting themselves and their families at severe economic risk so that all workers in the United States can support their fami­ lies at a level of economic security we've all been told is the just reward for hard work. In the last 10 years, however, they have endured a 50 percent rise in the cost of living and unprecedented wage cuts at the behest of corporate m anage» unable to operate efficiently in the deregulated air­ NOW MO) UNDERSTAND WHY I NEED AN ASSAULT RIFLE - BECAUSE lite m © IAIN' to TAKE IT AWAY, IS W HY.' line industry. First, in 1983, Eastern worked out a stock for 20 percent wage cut swap with all three of its unions. Two years later, East­ ern asked for another 20 percent cut from its unions. IAM members refused to sacrifice their livelihoods while management incom­ petency went unchecked. Eastern was then sold to Lorenzo — who seeks to make Eastern and Continental "com- petetive" the only way he knows how, by forcing workers to subsidize organization­ al inefficiency through sharp reductions in living standards while he strips the corpo­ ration of its valuable assets and amasses a large personal fortune. "Blaming the victim" is commonplace in our culture, and Weiner's diatribe is sim­ ply another — albeit egregious — example of this perverse practice. There are few ac­ tions more heinous. Bill Liker Jon Wainwright Graduate students in economics Sound of one hand dapping I whole-bleeding-heartedly agree with Lisa Swan's views ('Trump-hating left tru­ ly hates capitalism," The Daily Texan, Mon­ day). Her comparison of Trump's troubles to those of the Ayn Rand character How­ ard Roark in The Fountainhead is right on target, a bloody bullseye! Talented people like Idi Amin Dada, Pi­ nochet, Marcos, and not to forget, Hitler, who came to their peaks of accomplish­ ment through the capitalist free-market system, were all stopped by visionless parasites. These great rugged individualists, like Trump, who fought the system of the col­ lective in order to build their designs m ust truly be cherished by others who view themselves as frontiersmen and women, those who don't run with the crowd but lead it and take advantage of its herd be­ havior. I applaud Lisa Swan using only my right hand, being right-handed and reclined, or rather relaxed, and inclined to agree with the sacrifice of excess. Take my useless left please! David Blanc Archaeology And in the blue comer... Those of us who follow Austin politics are thrilled to see that a major debate on an important city issue is taking place here on the UT campus. ' Tonight at 7 p.m. in Graduate School of Business 2.124, Coundlmembers Robert Bamstone and Sally Shipman will debate the strong mayor proposal. Bamstone has proposed changing our city government from a council-manager system to a strong mayor. Thus far, Bamstone is the only council member publicly for the plan while Ship­ man is the only member to oppose it. The debate should be reflective of the lively de­ bates that these two have in the council chambers. The event is sponsored by the Students' Association, University Demo­ crats and the Young Conservatives of Tex­ as. Brian Wordell Business Trash your litter, folks I totally agree with Claire Randle's letter ("Control your urges: recycle," Firing Line, March 24), which encouraged people to re­ cycle some of the trash that accumulates on the UT campus. But besides asking people to recycle on their own, I thought I'd go one step fur­ ther and ask for The Daily Texan and the University to get in on the act. For instance, why can't The Texan put out recycling bins next to the orange newspaper distribution boxes and next to UT trash containers? Then, when you put out the daily editions each morning, you could also pick up the recycled papers and use them to keep your costs down on printing paper. Also, why can't the University provide recycling bins for aluminum cans and maybe even glass containers; they sure could make some money by selling the aluminum scrap to recycling companies! But besides all the profit motives, recy­ cling should be pursued for two reasons: reducing the amount of garbage on our campus and, perhaps more important, trying to conserve resources. Come on Daily Texan and UT, give conservation and recycling a try! Timothy Thompson UT staff Trite labels ineffective Reading Lisa Swan's pedantic editorial ('Trump-hating left truly hates capital­ ism," The Daily Texan, Monday) roused me to put apathy aside and respond with a thorough rebuttal. However, upon close inspection of her editorial, I found that it lacked a coherent argument to rebut and was so full of misconceptions and misinformation that such a task would be of monumental pro­ portions. After all, anyone who would apply the label "sociological experimenting" to wel­ fare policy is obviously not operating with all oars in the water. I must say, Swan, that I was not aware that sociologists engi­ neered the New Deal and the Great Soci­ ety. Your use of trite labels such as "card- carrying, bleeding-heart liberal" would seem to indicate that you are not in the least bit interested in the free exchange of ideas, but instead seek to slander the ideo­ logical opposition. Although you are a senior, I strongly suggest you repeat your course work. You have failed to learn the most valuable les­ sons provided by a college education: ob­ jectivity and true critical thinking. Margaret Rankin English Who's really the Antichrist? I've always believed that if Satan exists, the best disguise for him would be a preacher: spewing Bible quotations left and right. For awhile I was convinced that many (if not all) evangelists were the Anti­ christ. Thank you Erick Kelemen for open­ ing my eyes ("Instead, he's the Anti­ christ," Firing Line, Tuesday). While Donald Trump may be grotesque­ ly rich, you and many others, including perhaps me, may salivate at his wealth but scorn his greed. Donald happens to be one of capital­ ism's crown jewels, along with Forbes and Sam Walton. I don't believe for an instant that any of them are Satan. It's a bad cov­ er, too obvious. A verse-spewing Bible maniac, howev­ er, is a safe bet. Now, who might Erick really be? Hmmm...SATAN!?! And to re­ spond to Ross Richie's accusation that The Texan is insensitive to a Christian audience by capitalizing Ed. Are you sure you're not... nah! Steve Veneruso Business T h e Da il y T e x a n UNIVERSITY Wednesday, March 29,1989 Page 5 Counselor: Rapists fail to see crim e By DENISE SHANNON Daily Texan Staff Sex offenders believe in their hearts and souls that their actions are not wrong, a social worker said Tuesday at a panel discussion, "The Psychology of the Rapist." Vivian Lewis Heine, a social worker whose private practice spe­ in counseling sex crime cializes perpetrators, joined four other ex­ perts for the discussion, one of sev­ eral Rape Awareness Week events sponsored by University NOW and the Students' Association. The other panelists were Pamela Cook-Kinney, coordinator of public eduation at the Austin Rape Crisis Center; Senior Sgt. Hector Reveles, supervisor in the Austin Police De­ partment sex crimes division; Sgt. Tommy Saldana, who works under Reveles; and Linda Zimmerman, a social worker specializing in work with rape survivors for the Police Department. Heine stressed that the rapist is foremost a criminal. "In my practice, I'm not into whether ... he loved his mother, or if his mother loved him," Heine said. "We need to treat his behavior first. Otherwise, it might cost us more victims. "What's going on in his mind is two words: 'My way,' " Heine said. "There are not many common de­ nominators in their backgrounds." But Reveles said his experience and readings have taught him some commonalities among rapists. He cited an FBI study in which 52 per­ cent of the rapists participating were forced to submit to penetra­ tion at some point in their lives. UT student Zaneta WMams talks Tuesday at the West Mai about the South African SharpevBe massacre. Robert KirkharrVDaily Texan Staff Groups rally to protest apartheid Zaneta Williams, chairwoman of the Steve Biko Com­ mittee, told the crowd, "If you don't demand the Uni­ versity to take your money out of South Africa," the situation in that country will escalate and "get really ugly." Williams countered the argument that divestment by U.S. companies would cause black South Africans to lose jobs. "Less than 1 percent of American companies employ black people there — how will that [divestiture] hurt? The people won't have jobs? The people don't have jobs now," Williams said. Brandon Powell, the rally's emcee and head of the Steve Biko Committee's special events committee, charged that the U.S. government support of the South African government indicates racism. By KATE JEFFREY Daily Texan Staff Amid cries of "Free South Africa" ancl "UT out of South Africa," anti-apartheid activists de nounced rac­ ism in South Africa and Austin, asking students to "stand up'" against apartheid in a Tuesda y rally. About 50 people attended the rally, which was held on the West Mall to commemorate the Sharpeville mas­ sacre in South Africa and co-sponsored by the Steve Biko Committee and the Black Students Alliance. The massacre occurred March 21, 1960, when South African blacks protested against passbook laws, which required them to carry work permits and i dentification in all white areas. Police intervened and ¡as the protes­ tors fled, many — including women an d children — were shot in the back. Marcus Brown, president of the Black ¡Student Alli­ ance, said the Sharpeville massacre brought the op­ pression of black South Africans to light. "We felt like this was a day that needed to be remem­ bered not only on campus ... but in the world," Brown said. Speakers criticized Western governments for trading with South Africa and the UT System Boa rd of Regents for continuing to invest in that country. The United States continues to invest in South Africa because it cannot "bear the thought" of blacks leading an industrial power, Powell said. However, Heine said the rapists in the FBI study simply may have lied. Hilton Mokoka, a Steve Biko committee member from South Africa, said he wants to enlighten UT stu­ dents about fighting apartheid. Students should boy­ cott companies such as Reebok, Shell Oil and Coca- Cola and persuade the University to divest, Mokoka said. "In my practice, 73 percent of of­ fenders tell me they were sexually abused," she said. "Then when I give them a polygraph, I find out they were lying. It comes out that 30 percent were abused." I c o u p o n _______ ROFFLER SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN I ! SHAMPOO* _ $ C CUT BLOW DRY 0 Services perform ed by supervised stud ents1 5339 Burnet 458-2620 W I S D O M T E E T H If you need the removal of wisdom teeth.. CALL B IO M E D IC A L R E S E A R C H # ' " W G R O U P inc. Ill III at 451-0411 ancial incentive provided for r opinion on a pain medication M on.-Fn. 8 :3 0 -4 :3 0 TODAY! Student Services Building Conierence Room 2:00 p.m. SSII 2.106 The Student Services Fee Committee reviews the budgets oí student services to recommend the al­ location oí student services fees — about $8,800,000 oí your money. Today we will be re­ viewing the budgets oí the following agencies, and we welcome your views: The Dally T oxan KTSB IfYou’reTaking One Of Our Competitor’s LSAT Prep Courses, You Could Be StudyingFor Last Year’s Exam. If you’re not taking Stanley H. Kaplan to prepare for the new LSAT, you could be wasting your time studying for an exam that’s already outdated That's because unlike most test prep companies, our research department acts on test changes befóte others even know they exist. And with Kaplan, you 11 benefit from our 50 years of experience, small classes and superior teaching methods So when it comes to preparing for the new LSAT, study with the one test prep company that always does its homework f STANLEY H. KAPLAN (Kt Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances CALL 472-EXAM OR 472-8085 FOR CLASS SCHEDULES AND SEMINAR INFORMATION Candidates apply for UT Sweetheart By MARK BRANDON Daily Texan Staff UT Sweetheart voting locations, see “Today,” page 1. Candidates vying for the UT Sweetheart title rejected the idea that the selection process is just a beauty contest and instead stressed service to the University as a prere­ quisite to hold the position. " A s UT S w e e th e a rt, I to like would help in the re­ cruitment of top students across Texas as well as the U.S.," said Michelle Ander­ son, one of four candidates vying for the title. Anderson A nderson, a marketing/international finance jun­ ior from Spring, co-chaired Round­ up '89 for the Student Involvement Committee. She has also served on the Presi­ dent's Board and as Spooks presi­ dent, as well as being active in Orange Jackets, Omicron Delta Kappa, and Delta Gamma sorority, which nominated her. Julie Griffin, a finance/pre-law junior from Van, as UT said Sweetheart, at­ tracting quality students to the U n i v e r s i t y would be one of her major goals. Kate Schneier, a Plan II junior from Princeton, New Jersey, said being an out-of- sta te re sid e n t would give her a unique perspec­ as UT tiv e Sweetheart. "I think it is im p o rta n t to Schneier highlight the di- versity at UT by that, I mean the wide range of cultures, experiences, and backgrounds," she said. Schneier was nominated by the Liberal Arts Council, and chaired the Council's Publications Commit­ tee. She also worked with the Stu­ d e n t Involvem ent Com m ittee Homecoming Talent Benefit and served on the Mortar Board and as executive assistant to the Cabinet of College Councils. Schneier is also active in Orange Jackets. A n n e k e Schroen, a Plan II/pre-med jun­ ior from Dallas, if elected said she would work on statewide re­ c ru itm e n t e f­ forts. " A s UT I Griffin to promote the University to students who excel in all areas of the Univer­ sity," Griffin said. S w e e th e a rt, like would Nom inated by the Business Council, of which she is vice presi­ dent, Griffin also chaired the Presi­ dential Assembly and served as sec­ retary of Omicron Delta Kappa honor society and is a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority. Griffin is also a member of the Texas Angels and Orange Jackets. "As Universi­ of Texas ty S w e e th e a rt, I Schroen would promote this University here on campus and throughout the state through con­ centrated recruiting efforts and spe­ cial campus events," Schroen said. Schroen served as Spooks histori­ an, secretary of Phi Eta Sigma fresh­ man honor society, and correspond­ ing secretary and big brother chair in the Alpha Phi sorority, which n om inated her. ad d itio n , Schroen has been active in Orange Jackets, the Texas Relays Student Committee, and the Homecoming Committee. In IVlembership is open to faculty and staff Half-time employment or more ImageWriter Clone 2400 Band Modems (E x te rn a l) M c800K Drives Sony 3.5” DS Disks (B oxed) PC Dac Easy PC Tools Deluxe 5.0 PC Paintbrush + Quicken Typing Tutor IV Hunt for Red October Chess Master 2100 Falcon AT F19 Stealth $259.00 $129.00 $225.00 $ 16.50 $65 $56 $98 $34 $35 $35 $35 $40 $48 Expressionist Quicken Big Thesaurus Hunt for Red October Pirates Deja Vu II 4th & Inches Falcon 2.0 $85 $34 $65 $35 $40 $35 $30 $40 Prices Good Thru 4/2/89 We Sell Your Unwanted Software on Consignment Hours: M-F 9:30-6 Sat 10-5 478-7171 2520 Guadalupe FREE PARKING IN REAR ENTRANCE! Special Orders, No Extra Charge IMMIGRATION H-l Work Visas Permanent Visas Relative Petitions Naturalizations Labor Certifications Marriage Cases Atfjustment of.Status Consular Processing PAUL PARSONS pc Attorney At Law Board Certified • Immigration 4 Nationality Law • Texas Board O f Legal Specialisation 704 RIO GRANDE 477-7887 TOMORROW: SPONSORED BY: BON VOYAGE TRAVEL 2021 ' GUADALUPE ST. TEL: 469-5656 M A R I J U A N A A Safe and Harmless Drug ? AMERICAS LEADER IN STUDENT TRAVEL F:OR 3 0 YEARS! WRONG Increasingly, evidence is pointing to the health risks asssociated with marijuana use, including high tar deposits in the lungs, possible effects to male and female reproductive systems, and some impairment of intellectual performance. Also, when used with alcohol, there is a combined negative effect on driving skills. Call or come by If you'd like more Information on how marijuana might affect you or a friend. CLUB EUROPA TRAVEL SHOW DON VOYAGE TRAVEL Suite 46, DOBIE MALL W&0JÍ CADEP • Individual Consultations • Staff Development • Resource Center • Alcohol Education Class • Peer-led Workshops • Brochures, Videos, etc. Campus Alcohol and Drug Education Program Student Health Center Division of Student Affairs 4 7 1 - 6 2 5 2 c2s ill tO O PM HURSDAY MARCH 30 Page 6/THE DAILY TEXAN/Wednesday, March 29,1989 BEST AVAILABLE COPY mim FLOWERS BY JEAN Pall Sm rice Florist FREE CAMPUS DELIVERY "A lot more for your $$$$$" M C /VISA 4 8 2 -8 8 1 2 I»--»*-**- * SPRING DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT SALE All diamonds and mountings substantially reduced. ALL WEDDING INVITATIONS and ANNOUNCEMENTS w/coupononly We also carry: Cake Tops Albums, Beds, Decorations Paper Goods etc. RMUYPKr 2900 W. Anderson Lane 454-2510 Mon.-Sat. 9-7 Some restrictions apply. B E S T STATIO NERS Specialists in W edding Invitations Large Selection Competitive Prices Complete Selection of W edding paper trousseau Srtital ^ (tf otisignmrn t Soutiqur shoppin g When for your special occasion, come see us & celebrate the savings 40%-75% off retail Party Formáis • Gowns for the entire wedding party For Appt. Call 440-0929 Bridal Registry: • Orrefors • Kosta Boda • iittala • Schott - Zwiesel • Dansk • Poyal Copenhagen • Block China • Georg Jensen • Boda Nova • Nambe' • Swid Powell and many fine gift items Also a selection of bridesmaid's and groom's gifts Giftwrap. Shipping. In-town delivery Use o u r Consultation when selecting the follow ing: [7J Wedding Invitations [7] Personalized Napkins [7] Thank You Notes \7\ Bridal Books [7] Champagne Glasses [7] Announcements [7] Personalized Matches (7) Place Cards [7] Cake Knives [7] Attendants' Gifts And many other beautiful Wedding Accessories Wedding Album collection may be checked out overnight. 3220 Manor Road • Austin • 477-2821 Symphony by Orrefors The European Influence* At The Arboretum 3 4 5 -6 6 8 8 Bridal Registry Just in time for the June bride, Breed & Co. offers a complete Bridal Registry.. Register for hand-painted Italian pottery, glassware from Spain and Mexico, South­ western inspired dinnerware, professional cookware and cookbooks to help you cook, fine crystal, and top-of-the-line European styled electrics. ...and we haven't forgotten the groom. We have gifts for the groom, too, from basic household tools to fine woodworking tools, gardening tools, and one of the most complete lines of barbecue grills and accessories in town. RREED&CQ M w ardware-Homeware-Garden 718 West 29th Street 474-6679 Fashion Consultants to Help You Plan Your Entire Wedding. Taffeta, Moiré, Cotton Floral, Damask, Brocade for the Bridesmaids. Jacquard, Mattelissé, Lace, Linen, Silk for the Mothers, and Grandmothers of the Bride and Groom. . u »»i yw* ... * ** * -- Beautiful Fabrics for Your Bridal Shower, Rehearsal Dinner, Reception/Going Away, and Honeymoon Banquet Facilities REHEARSAL DINNERS, FAMILY REUNIONS WEDDING RECEPTIONS Thousands of Country Store and Saloon Treasures From Old Austin and Central Texas Priced from $1 to $42,000 6416 N. LAMAR • AUSTIN, TEXAS 451-5440 Tall Come Visit! 5- Q I D I E I. D E A-& DILLARD’S COMPUTERIZED BRIDAL REGISTRY It’s time for both of you to discover Bride I.D.E.A.S., our computerized bridal registry designed to help your family and friends choose a gift that will truly please you. Here’s how it works. You come in together and our bridal consultant will record your tastes and assist you in coor­ dinating selections from our home furnishings area. Your choices will be entered into our elec­ tronically controlled program and will be instantly available in all Dillard’s stores from Kansas to south Ibxas, Arizona to Tennessee. When yofur family and friends visit pur Bride l.D.E.A.S. registry, they . Will have instant access to infor- v motion concerning gifts preferred : afid gifts already purchased. A ‘¿’ computer print out provides an l easy and convenient way for them $ to shop and avoid duplication. When you register you’ll receive a special gift from DiUard's, and there’s no fee for our services. So visit the Bride I.D.E.A.S. registry soon; there's one located in the China/Silver Department of every Dillard’s store. Dillard’s T h e Da il y T exan STATE & LOCAL Wednesday, March 29,1989 Page 7 Stocking policy to be studied By JIM GREER Daily Texan Staff The chairman of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission on Tues­ day defended the commission's re­ cent provision of animals to high public officials but said the agency will review policies on stocking wildlife. Charles Nash, Parks and Wildlife Commission chairman, said public confidence in the department has suffered after revelations that the agency stocked animals on officials' private ranches. “ Any time the public's got a prob­ lem with the perception of the way we're [conducting business], then I think we've got some things we need to take care of there," Nash said. He said he will appoint a special review committee to study the agency's animal stocking policies in light of newspaper reports that pub­ lic officials received special treat­ ment. According to reports published earlier this month, Parks and Wild­ life Department employees stocked deer, elk, birds and fish on the ranches of Texas House Speaker Gib Lewis at the state's expense. Lewis has said no special deals took place between him and the agency. It was also reported that 39 of 40 antelope stocked on a LIT System re­ gent's ranch died of starvation. Texas Parks and Wildlife staff members stocked the antelope on the Bosque County ranch of Louis Beecherl, chairman of the System board. The antelope died within six weeks of the December 1987 stock­ ing. Beecherl said the animals died be­ cause agency workers mishandled them. The published accounts also stated that the agency provided about 500 rainbow trout for a pri­ vate pond belonging to a relative of state Rep. Robert Saunders, D-La- Grange. Sen. Chet Edwards, chairman of the Senate Nominations Committee that heard testimony from Nash, postponed confirmation hearings on four appointees to the agency be­ cause of the recent reports. "The public is convinced that ... the average citizen gets treated one way and powerful people get treat­ ed another way," Edwards said. However, Edwards said he is pleased with the agency's decision to review stocking policies. "I'm convinced the Parks and Wildlife Commission is going in the right di­ rection," he said. With wire reports East Side convention site favored By ALAN HINES Daily Texan Staff Austin's new convention center should be located at a site east of Congress Avenue, several commissions told the City Council at its work session Tuesday. The council wants to break ground on the center by Dec. 27, and its first step is selecting a project site and attempting to swap city-owned land for the desired property. Two weeks remain before the council's site selection, and as councilmembers discuss potential locations, they will review the East Side recommendation, said Councilmember Max Nofziger. "The [planning] commission has done a very good job of studying the options and as a result we have something to work with," Nofziger said. Mary Arnold, city Planning Commission chairwom­ an, presented the recommendation Tuesday after com­ piling ideas from several city advisory panels, includ­ ing the Austin Convention and Visitors Bureau, the Downtown Commission and the Economic Develop­ ment Commission. "These boards determined the East Side convention center planning district to be the most viable option," Arnold said. "One of the most important reasons is the immediate access provided by Interstate 35. "Access is vital if the center is going to succeed." Jim Butler, Economic Development Commission chairman, added that his organization decided a con­ vention center between 1-35 and Congress Avenue would provide better access to hotels, the airport and downtown entertainment. "We had significant discussion about whether the East Side site would allow for the most competitiveness available," Butler sai^l. "We felt the proximity to the hotels and other amenities will help this." In addition, Arnold said, the Water and Wastewater Department found that a convention center east of Congress Avenue would require less money to reroute city water service than a West Side site — $585,000 rather than $653,000. The Parks and Recreation Board decided a West Side location would have a greater negative impact on sur­ rounding park land — including Town Lake — and neighborhoods than an East Side convention center, she said. The Planning Commission also recommends an East Side location, Arnold said, if the city provides adequate parking and protects nearby neighborhoods by restrict­ ing zoning in the area. SERVE WITH GOOD FRIENDS! s2l 25 149 I (Miad) Live........................................ Boiled Crayfish (■» 477-5053 1614 Barton Spring! ir) (2 block* W. of Lai i C rayfish................................ M 75(pw*d) *279» Hot Boudin Sausage . CAJIJN SEAFOOD AND D E L I M A RK ET Complete Line of Fresh Seafood Bi-Weekly . . 24th & San Antonio Open Monday-Saturday 11 am-until 1:30 at night The Buck$ are back! Bevo Buck$ make dollars and sense. The ever popular Bevo Bucks section will appear in The Daily Texan on Friday, April 7. Bevo Buck$ will be seen and used by 67,000 money conscious UT students, faculty, and staff. Call Retail Advertising 471-1865 To put your advertising dollars to work where they make sense. Deadline: Monday, April 3. Wede iver the UT market. Splashin’ around John Moore/Daily Texan Staff Clint Butler, a finance junior, wades through Barton Springs. Butler and his faithful dog, Ross, come out to the springs almost every day in order to catch a few rays and throw sticks for Ross to fetch. Suspects held in police shooting case Associated Press SAN ANTONIO — Two brothers sought in the slaying of a patrolman who was overpowered and dis­ armed turned themselves in Tues­ day to Bexar County prosecutors. Henry David Hernandez, 25, and Julian Hernandez, 28, whose driv­ er's license was recovered at the scene of the shooting early Monday, walked into the office of District At- torney Fred Rodriguez with their at­ torney Tuesday afternoon. They were taken before state Dis­ trict Judge James Barlow for a five- minute hearing. The judge ordered them held without bond and their attorney, Joe Hernandez, requested that no police or prosecutors speak to them without their attorney pres­ ent. The men, looking scared and de­ clining to answer reporters' ques­ tions, were led down a hall by about 10 district attorney investigators. One suspect wore a suit and the other, slacks and a vest. Rodriguez said the suspects' * at­ torney contacted him Tuesday morning after the suspects said they wanted to turn themselves in. "They were scared, Mr. Hernan­ dez was scared for them. He want­ ed my word that they would not be harm ed/' Rodriguez said. I I # I * JEWELRY REPAIRS AND MANUFACTURING GOLD - PLATINUM - SILVER • RESTORATION ANO ANTIQUE REPAIRS • RECUTTING and REPOUSHING OEMS •M0M0UAL DESIGNS T H E S H E F T A L L C O . 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Wednesday, March 29* 10:00 A.M. - 7:00 P.M. hdM 1712 LaVaca Next to High Fidelity (North of Uptown Enchilada Bar) Near Campus Wednesday, March 29, 1989 Page 8 SPORTS T h e Da il y T e x a n Reese’s winning style leads Horns Dramatic debut awards UT win By JERRY GERNANDER Daily Texan Staff U T 2 - S ,I t o b r — fcg O -6 UT Pitcher* : Pedraza (W, 3-0) Klvac (L. 3*2) Records: No 7 UT. 31-9 Nebraska: 11-6 N ext gam e: 7 p.m Friday at home vs. Rice Texas Coach Cliff G ustafson has been at a loss to explain h is p i t c h in g staff this sea­ son. T he 4.38 staff ERA w as one thing. But som e pitchers, in his mind, w ere acting like only half the pitchers they were — nam ely, starting pitcher Shane Reynolds and reliever C ur­ ry Harden. So, on the eve of the Academ y Aw ards, a couple of pitchers d es­ perately needed to stand and d e­ liver. For your consideration, Mr. G ustafson: a com bined three-hit freshm an Rodney shutout by Pedraza and Reynolds and the best outing of the year by Harden. H arden's perform ance could not make up for a 5-0 deficit and five errors as the Longhorns lost the second gam e of a doubleheader to Nebraska 8-5. But the 2-0 shutout win in the first game helped ease G ustafson's mind some. The pitchers ... oh, G ustafson liked them , he really liked them. "I really felt there w ere a lot of positive things to n ig h t," G ustaf­ son said. "O u r approach and our hustle w ere as good as they've b e e n ." The only pitching perform ance not satisfactory was that of fresh­ man lefty David Klvac, who gave up five runs — three unearned — in two innings and was pulled ear­ ly in th e second game. But Harden pitched lights-out, striking out five of the first six batters he faced, and the Long­ horns rallied from a 5-0 deficit and trailed 6-5 w hen Harden yielded to Chris Gaskill in the seventh. "It's about tim e, isn 't it?" Hard­ en said of his encouraging outing. "I'm now getting closer to w here I was last year — a lot closer than I was a couple w eeks a g o ." The main drama of the day, though, was in the first gam e's shutout by Pedraza and Reynolds, w ho are battling for the No. 3 spot in the starting rotation. Pedraza had surrendered just three earned runs in his previous 17% innings w hile Reynolds, w ho has struggled all season long, was pulled in the fourth inning of a start against Baylor last w eekend. Pedraza continued a scoreless streak of 10 innings w ith 5% more shutout innings. loaded But after Pedraza the bases on a hit and tw o walks in the sixth, Reynolds entered with two outs and a 1-0 count on Shaw n Bu­ chanan. He blew tw o strikes past Bu­ chanan before inducing him to ground out. He retired the side in order in the seventh to preserve the win and pick up his first save. "I like being a relief pitcher, to a "Y o u 'v e p o in t," Reynolds said. got to throw strikes. You w ant them to hit the ball for outs. I got four [outs]. "I needed a gam e like this to com e back and prove to [Gustaf­ son] I can do the jo b ." After the split, the Longhorns generally had confidence not usu­ ally present in a team that has lost four of its last 10 gam es. Cleanup hitter Scott Bryant is in a l-for-14 slump, and Lance Jon es, the h ot­ test hitter on the team over the last m onth, flied out twice with two runners on base to end rallies. "W e played w ell," Bryant said. "W e just didn't get the base hits w hen we needed, and they did. At least we did n't beat ourselves. We battled the w hole tim e ." Summer and his pleasures wait on thee... Sonnet XCVII APPLICATIONS are now being accepted for: By JAIME ARON Daily Texan Staff A key to success at any level in sports is for players to respect their coach. "H e's the guru of American swimming," boasted gold-medalist Shaun Jordan of his. "He takes the good swimmers and makes them better," agreed two-time team captain Andy Gill. "He told me I was going to do real well and I believed him ." "H e still recruited me my senior year when I wasn't swimming as well; he hung in there unlike a lot of other major colleges," said three- time All-American Brian Cisna. These are the opinions of only three of the hundreds of young ath­ letes who have had their swimming careers enhanced under the wings of Longhorn men's swimming coach Eddie Reese. His Texas teams have dominated the SWC in the 1980s, sweeping all 10 conference titles. Last year, his Horns won their second national title of this decade. He was also named an assistant coach for the 1988 U.S. Olympic team — fitting, considering he had coached team's 24 swimmers, more than any other sin­ gle coach. Those five Horns brought home five gold and one silver medal. five of the Reese swam at the University of Florida, where his brother Randy now coaches both the men's and women's teams. He won the SEC 200-yard individual medley from 1961-63, the 200 breast stroke and the 400 IM in 1963, while also serv­ ing as co-captain. He left Florida to coach and teach at a New Mexico high school for two years before returning to Flori­ da to become an assistant coach. He remained with the Gators until 1963, when he became head coach at Auburn. "When I went there [to Auburn], there were eight teams in the SEC and the only points Auburn had ever scored was getting eighth place in all the relays," Reese recalled. He took the challenge at Auburn and used it to establish himself among the top ranks of NCAA coaches. Under Reese, Auburn rose to second place in the SEC in 1978 and finished second at the NCAAs that same year. Success breeds opportunity and Reese's performance at Auburn brought him and wife Elinor to the Lone Star State. "W e had just moved into a new house in Auburn," Reese said. "I was kidding Elinor for a number of months before we got the house in November. 'Don't get happy with the house, we're going to Texas.' The job wasn't even open. I didn't know anything about it. I got a call in February that the job was open — was I interested. I said yes." Thus was spawned an addition to the long list of Texas Longhorn suc­ cesses. Like most things in life, though, it did not come right away. "I had a group "My first year here was the worst year of my life," Reese remem­ [of bered. swimmers] transferred that had from Auburn with me. I had a group of freshmen, and I had the group that was here with the other coach." Reese tried to improve the situa­ tion all at once — a decision he now regrets. "W e tried to beat SMU [which had won the 22 previous conference titles] the first year," Reese said. "N o matter how good you are, you can't have it all the first year. It's real hard to try to do it all. There were so many things, I kind of pulled back." Retreating from a problem is not characteristic of Eddie Reese. The next season would be a time to wipe the slate clean and start over. "The guys that were here accept­ ed me a little better after the first year," Reese said. "Then the guys that transferred became eligible and we had a good recruiting class. I felt more at home. That way you can be yourself." Now that is an Eddie Reese char­ acteristic. One key to the success that has been Reese's trademark is his gener­ al amicability. He describes his most as significant Seoul "standing in the cafeteria line talk­ ing to everybody from other coun­ tries." experience Reese shows that same affection toward his swimmers, a key ingred­ ient (of his knack for bringing the most out of an athlete. "Probably the real key is just to care about them ," Reese said of his athletes. "W hat you know of as a parent is unconditional love. You care about your kids no matter what they do. You need to do the same thing with the athletes. If you care about someone, you find ways to make them do the things that are best for them ." The care he shows is reflected af­ ter a meet. His swimmers huddle Overture. Though an overture can refer to the introduction of a musical score/ it also indicates interest in pursuing a relationship. So come see our full line of Denon components on Wednesdays and get a student discount with this ad. M arCum Electroni cs 6009 Burnet Road at Koenig Lane a 458-8277 A T W N E D A L E Shakespeare at Winedale’s 19th summer class. From June 24- August 22, the twenty students selected will study Shake­ speare through performance while living in a secluded commu­ nity at The Winedale Historical Center. See Professor James Ayres at Calhoun 20 for more information. ROUND-UP RING SALE ord er by SATU1 MY API 8th AND WEAR YOUR RING AT GRADUATION ABSOLUTE DEADLINE FOR MAY GRADUATION *40 00 00 *20 OFF 14kt OFF lOkt ★ ATTENTION SEN IO RS ★ INVITATIONS, CAPS A GOWNS, ACCESSORIES For the finest in Graduation Announcements A caps A gowns compare Balfour and order today HOURS MON-FRI &30-5:30 SAT 10-3:00 Balfour. No one remembers in so many ways. CAREER EXPO Bring your questions and your resumes! Over 15 companies from Austin, Houston, and San Antonio will be on hand recruiting for jobs and internships. APRIL 5,10-3 IN THE UGL LOBBY Sponsored by The Liberal Arts Council Courtesy of the UT Sports Information Department Coaching guru Eddie Reese, right, makes a point to assistant Kris Kubik. around Reese to hear him critique their performances as if he were a fire in the dead of winter. He tells each his time and what he did right and wrong, never missing a beat. "Swimming is an individual sport that is scored as a team ," philoso­ phizes Reese. "W e work on an indi­ vidual basis as much as possible." One of the biggest tasks swim­ ming faces is the ever-changing chemistry of a team. Yet that excites Reese. "It never gets to be a grind be­ cause the team changes every year; I don't like to do the same thing all the tim e," Reese said. "I always change my program 10 to 25 percent every year." Not only does the variety of the job keep it interesting, but Reese sees it as an advantage. "If you don't change something, then you're fooling yourself that you're doing everything right," Reese said. "O ne of the biggest problems you can get into is not going over the same stuff every year. The stuff that's important to the program you need to go over every year. I think you always need to be looking for ways to improve." Reese has found those ways to improve each year. He maintains a high level of success, one that could make it easy for his swimmers to get overconfident. But once again Reese is there to calm the troops. "I tell them, 'Look around. Has anyone shipped us a trophy yet?' We've been doing some talking, and we'll do a lot more. They're doing real well." If everything goes as planned, look for a deliveryman knocking on Reese's office in the near future. GET RID OF THAT TICKET “Steve made a boring DDC class most enjoyable!" $12»«« D A R BY ’S NO Pre-reg. — 4000 Medical Pkwy. Wed & Thurs-6 pm or Sat-8 am — 453-8280 I n s t a n t E u r a i l P a s s e s ! 469-5656 ■ o n Voyage T w a d i» the m u m e d name o f Au»to Bon_Voy«gel>aaalLt o c _ POSITION AVAILABLE Applications are now being accepted by Texas Student Publications for the position listed below. Application forms must be picked up and returned to the General Manager’s Office, TSP 3.200. Applicant must also pro­ vide a letter of application, resume, samples of pub­ lished work, and letters of recommendation. Appoint­ ment will be made on April 6,1989. Deadline for submitting application: noon, Thursday, April 6. Managing Editor, Summer 1989 The Daily Texan Qualifications: 1. Be a student registered at UT-Austin in the semester in which application is made. If application is made during the summer, however, registration during the previous spring semester shall be considered sufficient to satisfy this requirement. 2. Have a minimum 2.5 GPA on work done at UT-Austin. 3. Have completed J.312 (reporting) and J.314 (editing) at the time of filing with a grade of “C” or better. 4. Have completed J.360 (media law and ethics) or be regis­ tered for it at the time of filing, and must receive credit for the course before taking office. 5. Have completed J.322 (reporting) at the time of filing with a grade of “C” or better. 6. Have completed J.324 (layout) or J.336 (visual design) or be registered for it at the time of filing, and must receive credit for the course before taking office. 7. Have served at least once per week for nine weeks on the editorial staff of The Daily Texan during each of at least two semesters (or one semester and one 12-week summer session) within 18 months immmediately prior to and/or- including the semester in which application is made. The official record of the applicant’s experience will consist of the Texan staff box. 8. Must be serving on the Texan staff at the time of applica­ tion. 9. Must agree to fulfill all the duties of the managing editor during the full term of appointment and to sign the man­ aging editor’s contract. Only qualifícations 3, 5, 6, 7, and 8 may be waived by a two- thirds vote o f board members present when managing editor is appointed. Th e Daily Texan James Brown Stays Clean (We Think): Day 13 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Wednesday, March 29, 1989 A N D THE LO S E R S A R E Page 9 BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS □ Joan Cusack, W orking Girl □ G ee na Davis, The A c cid e n ta l Tourist □ Frances M cD orm and, Mississippi Burning □ M ichelle Pfeiffer, Dangerous Liaisons □ Sigourney W eaver, W orking Girl Every time an actress is n o m i­ nated in the best actress and best supporting actress categories, she end s up taking h o m e the " l e s s e r " of the tw o aw ards. T h u s, it's only logi­ cal to a s s u m e W e a v e r will win this year. O f course, to say that is to o v e r­ look the w rongly nom in ated G e e n a Davis — wrongly nom inated only in that sh e b e lo n g s in the best actress category’. Still, pu tting her here should safely place the statu ette in her hand s, as she w a s actually The A ccidental Tourist's leading lady, giv­ ing a w ack ed -ou t b u t w o nd erful perform ance as the w o m a n w h o brings love an d em otion back to William H u rt's life. Indeed, s h e is the very e s s e n c e of a role A n ne Tyler fully b reath ed to life in the pages of her novel. BEST DIRECTOR □ Charles Crichton, A Fish C a lle d W anda C Barry Levinson, Rain M an □ Mike Nichols, Working Gir! □ Alan Parker. Mississippi Burning □ Martin Scorsese, The Last Tem ptation o f Christ W h e th e r it b e directing 20-m inu te short films in N ew York Stories or such m o d ern classics as Taxi D river and A fter H ou rs, Martin Scorsese is the w o rld's prem ier director. His s w e e p in g ca m e ra m o v e ­ ments, gripping narrative style and refusal to shy aw av from the un p op - S e e O scar p ick s , page 10 Most of the ‘winners’ picked probably won’t win anyway By ROBERT WILONSKY Daily Texan Staff Predicting the Academy Award winners is every critic's favorite pastime, something he or she thinks people ac­ tually listen to and give a damn about — kind of like year-end top 10 lists, film reviews or star ratings. "It's going to rain Oscars for Rain Man!" the critics shout. "This year, Mississippi is spelled O-s-c-a-r!" they cry. "It'd be Dangerous not to bet on Glenn Close," the insiders say. And all the while, American moviegoers fight the lines, beat the crowds and make Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure the No. 1 film in the country for a while. Taking a cue from Siskel and Ebert (as usual), what follows are not predictions for who will walk away with the gold-plated statuette Wednes­ day (the telecast will begin at 8 p.m. on KVUE-Channel 24) or some such nonsense. No, these are picks for who should get the coveted Oscar, along with a play-at-home guide to the nominees and eventual losers. Er, winners, that is. Stephen Frears’ Dangerous Liaisons is worthy of capturing the best actress (Glenn Close) and best film awards. BEST PICTURE □ The Accidental Tourist □ Dangerous Liaisons □ Mississippi Burning □ Rain Man □ Working Girl While all the nominees in this ca- tergory (save the dim-witted, over­ rated Working Girl) are intelligent, th o u g h tfu l film s, on ly one possesses the true spark of genius: Dangerous Liaisons. While Mississippi Burning made it acceptable for Hollywood to deal with the civil rights movement and Rain Man packed a very emotional punch, the Stephen Frears-directed Liaisons takes a classic piece of litera­ ture, not to mention a hit stage play, and its origins transcends through four very outstanding per­ formances and brilliantly savage di­ alogue. BEST ACTOR □ Gene Hackman, Mississippi Burning □ Tom Hanks, Big □ Dustin Hoffman, Rain Man □ Edward James Olmos, Stand an d Deliver □ Max Von Sydow, Pelle the Conqueror After reviewing Hanks' and Ol­ mos' performances, it's obvious that both pale in comparison to the out­ standing work of Hackman, Von Sydow and Hoffman. These are no doubt five of this year's best performances (albeit Hanks should have been nominated for Punchline and the ignoring of Willem Dafoe as Christ is unforgiv­ able). Hoffman's performance as the autistic savant brother to Tom Cruise is his best performance since Straw Dogs in 1972, and it is truly a tough choice between the by-now legendary actors. But Hackman's riveting portrayal of the Southern sheriff-tumed-FBI agent in Mississippi Burning would, in a just world, guarantee him the Oscar. BEST ACTRESS □ Glenn Close, Dangerous Liaisons □ Jodie Foster, The Accused □ Melanie Griffith, Working Girl □ Meryl Streep, A Cry in the Dark □ Sigourney Weaver, Gorillas in the Mist teuil should be enough to change the academy's collective mind. While Foster's role as the rape vic­ tim in The Accused is one tailor-made for the award (she is the infamous "odds-on" favorite to win the Os­ car), Close plays her part with such delicious wickedness that the gleam in her eyes pierces not only John Malkovich's Vicmote de Valmont, but the audience as well. She has for years been the highlight of each film in which she has appeared, and Dangerous Liaisons is certainly no ex­ ception. From The World According to Garp on, Glenn Close has been nomi­ nated for every film in which she has ever appeared (save Maxie and The jagged Edge). Her stunning per­ formance as the Marquise de Mer- BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR □ Alec Guiness, Little Dorrit □ Kevin Kline, A Fish Called Wanda □ Martin Landau, Tucker □ River Phoenix, Running on Empty □ Dean Stockwell, Married to the Mob From the moment Martin Landau appeared on screen in Francis Ford Coppola's Tucker: The Man and his Dream, it was beautifully apparent that he was destined to take this award. As Tucker's financial backer, he brought to the part a certain tender­ ness and charm that he has rarely displayed during the course of his long, hit-and-miss career. T here were very few scenes last y ear that were as touching as when L a n d a u 's Abe Karatz admitted to Jeff Bridges' Preston Tucker that he had "caught his dream s," only to drag them down. Playing a role based on a real-life character is no easy task, but Lan­ dau elevates it to one that belongs solely to him. Gilliam makes a magnificent By GILBERT GARCIA Daily Texan Staff T e rry Gilliam's lavish big-budg- fantasy The et A dventures of Baron M u n ­ chausen opens an 18th with theatri­ century cal presentation depicting the leg­ endary liar's exploits. The play is abruptly interrupted when the real Baron emerges to indignantly scold the cast for misrepresenting his life. If this fanciful storyteller were still alive today, he would probably have no such complaints about Gil­ liam's Munchausen. Karl Friedrich Hieronymus Baron von Munchausen was an adventur­ er whose outlandish war stories in­ spired Rudolph Erich Raspe's popu­ the Munchausen lar book, and m yth has grow n by rum or- drenched leaps and bounds ever since. Gilliam sees the Baron as a stubborn believer in dreams and magic who refuses to conform to the dictates of the age of reason. The director subtly converts the Mun­ chausen story into a commentary on our technological age, where logic rules and a vivid imagination is of­ ten scoffed at. Gilliam's forte has always been his unrestrained visual sense. As an animator for the Monty Python troupe and director of the frighten­ ing Brazil, he demonstrated an abili­ ty to translate surreal ideas from the deepest recesses of his imagination into indelible film moments. However, his capacity for knitting a coherent storyline or writing crisp dialogue only intermittently match­ es his visual wit. The last time he attempted an adventurous chil­ dren's fantasy, with Time Bandits, the film's sluggish pace dragged dow n tr a n s c e n d e n t sequences. few its Munchausen shares Time Bandits' historical preoccupations and child­ like sense of wonder, but this time the formula is more successful. Baron Munchausen (John Neville) sets out to prove himself to the cyn­ ics in an 18th century city under at­ tack by the Turkish army. Accompa­ nied by 10-year-old Sally Salt (Sarah Polley), the Baron embarks on an odyssey to find his long-lost associ­ ates. Along the way, he and Sally sail to the moon, tangle with Vulcan (the Roman god of fire) and tempo­ rarily find themselves trapped in­ side a sedentary sea creature. The Baron ultimately finds his friends and they successfully defend the city against the Turks. After ponderously introducing its premise, Munchausen's structure ac­ quires the feel of a loosely connect­ ed series of vignettes. Most of these fragments succeed on their own terms, but they don't necessarily hang together well. Basically, Mun­ chausen is that most peculiar artistic paradox — a whole that equals less than the sum of its parts. Nonetheless, Munchausen blows away such reservations simply be­ cause it's such an overwhelming feast for the eyes. It's hard to wit­ ness the Baron blithely clinging to a flying cannonball or see Berthold (Eric Idle) — the world's fastest man — traverse hundreds of miles in a matter of seconds and not cling to PAR/ f EVERYONE TALKS ABOUT CHANGING THE WORLD. THIS YEAR 3750 PEOPLE WILL ACTUALLY DO IT Not everyone is cut out to change the world. After all, it takes education, skills and a spare two years. Also a willingness to work. Hard. This year 3,750 Americans will join the Peace Corps to do just that. They'll do things like build roads, plant forests and crops, teach English, develop small businesses, train community health workers, or even coach basketball. However, what they'll be doing isn't half as important as the fact that they'll be changing a little piece of the world.. .for the better. And when they return, these 3,750 Americans will find that experience doing hard work will have another benefit. It's exactly what their next employers are looking for. So, give the Peace Corps your next two years. And while you're out changing the world, you'll also be making a place in it for yourself. No Chrome No Contracts Open Every Day 4121 Guadalupe Next door to Austin Barbell Co. 459-9174 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE. W ANT A D S...471-5 2 4 4 Eaale Nest Cafe WEAREBACK! Jerry and Jimmie (Owners from 3/84-8/86) 2405 San Antonio 11 AM-3 PM MON-FRI 474-7812 Peace Corps representatives will be on campus to talk about opportunities for over­ seas service. BA/BS candidates in MATH, SCIENCE, & EDUCATION are particularly needed for summer. To learn more about how your skills can be put to work, plan to stop by or call: 1-800-442-7294 ext. 134 INFO TABLE TUes., Weds., Mar. 28 & 29 8:30-4:00 Jester Center West Mall FILM SEMINAR Tuesday, Mar. 28 6:30 pm, CBA 4.238 Grad School Business INTERVIEWS Wednesday, Mar. 29 Career Planning & Placement, Jester Please bring completed application to interview THE ADVENTURES OF BARON MUNCHAUSEN Starring: John Neville, Eric Idle Director: Terry Gilliam Playing at: The Lincoln 3, 6406 1-35 North Rating: ★★★ (out of four) these images long after leaving the movie theater. Best of all, the huge cast almost uniformly handles the somewhat dry script with finesse and high spirits. British theater veteran Nev­ ille's portrayal of Munchausen is true — in spirit, if not in detail — to the myth of a pompously endearing dreamer, almost angrily defiant about the veracity of his inexplicable w o rld . is U nfortunately, M unchausen's jo y­ ful coda thorou g hly co n fu s in g and it serves to underline the film's other p roblem s. N o n e th e le s s , in the arena of film fantasy Gilliam is prac­ tically that makes his efforts all the m o re im­ portant this genre. the o n ly player, and tho se w h o love for Not e v e ry o n e will love M u n­ chausen, but few can d ispu te that at its core lies a th o ro u g h ly original vi­ sion. And am id cynically calculating sequels and m o re d erivativ e dross than you can thu m b dow nw ard for, that m ay be th e best r e c o m m e n d a t i o n f o r G i l l i a m ' s flawed trium ph. turn your Southwestern Paralegal Institute Have a Career in La w -- W ithout 3 more years in school. We are the only paralegal school in Houston that is approved by the American Bar Association. Our specialized training qualifies you for jobs in law firms corporate legal departments and banks. We provide free placement 2osi stance 1- 800 - 633-8967 D a y classes begin May 30,1989 Tues/Thurs evening classes begin May 1,1989 4886 Loop Central Drive, Suite 800, Houston 77081 Established in 1977 TONIGHT AT S T IIT H E TOUGHEST JOB Y D U U EV B tLQ V L 709 E 6TH STREET 474-1134 $1.50 FUNKY COLD MEDINAS Page 10/THE DAILY TEXAN/Wednesday, March 29,1989 r Ñ o r t h C h i n a ! N ow Delivers!!! ANYWHERE IN THE UT AREA I (Minim um order of $ 7 .5 0 ) | ■ CALL: 476-4819 USE THIS COUPON FOR 10% OFF ANY IN HOUSE DINING (expires 5 -31-8 9 ) I I DELIVERY DRIVERS NEEDED: I — Must have own car 9 0 1 0 O n a H fllim A INSTANT CASH AND BONUS If you need cash to help you out while you are in school, why not donate blood plasma You can donate twice m a 7 day penod and receive 810 every donation Plus with this ad you'H receive a M bonus on your first visit e Must have valid picture I 0 & some proof of Austin residence (student I 0 accepted) a U S bonus drawing every Friday a New donors will receive a M bonus on their 3rd donation Call 474-7941 AUSTIN 6 aTentÉrEO 5 2 1 T H O M P S O N O FF 1 8 3 1 MILE S O . o f M O N T O P O L IS Phono 3 8 5 - 5 3 2 8 ' “ C [ > 1 OPEN 2 4 HOURS SNAPSHOTS * * * DIRTY GIRLS 2 ( XXX) ( XXX) 2 FOR 1 TAPE RENTAL MON. WED. 6 FRL $ 1 4 . 9 5 T I T L E S d e v i l in m i s s j o n e s OEEP THROAT DEBBIE DOES DALLAS O T H E R T I T L E S IN S T O C K i T A P E S A S L O W A S i 9 . 0 5 The University of Texas Continuing Education Spring 1989 Workshops Communication Skills For Career Success W riting. Sp eak in g. Presenting. M anagin g. Sev en w ork sh op s allow you to focu s on im proved c o m m u n ica­ tion sk ills in b u sin e ss and interpersonal topics. Y ou will hear lectures by popular instructors, participate in dem on strations, and practice in intensive, leam -b y -d oin g se ssio n s. Stron g com m unication sk ills are important cornerstones o f su cc e ssfu l careers. C o m e, take ad v an tage o f an ideal learning en vironm ent to enhance your com m un ication abilities. Designing Memos, Letters...and More...For Business and Technology Instructor: D avid Beer, U T C o lle g e o f E ngin eerin g Thurs., April 6 ,8 :3 0 a .m .-4 :3 0 p.m . Handling Difficult Situations With Tact and Skill Instructor: Robert R yan , U T C o lle g e o f B u sin e ss A dm inistration Fri., April 1 4 ,8 :3 0 a .m .-4 :3 0 p.m . Sharpening Skills for Business Writing Instructor: Sh irley C ro ok , U T E x te n ­ sion Instruction and M aterials C en ter W ed., April 1 9 ,8 :3 0 a .m .-4 :3 0 p.m . Making Dynamic Sales Presentations Instructor: Ja c k W hitehead, U T C o lle g e o f C om m u nication W ed., April 2 6 ,8 :3 0 a .m .-4 :3 0 p.m . Communication Styles for Managers Instructor: K aren C am p b ell, T im e M an agem en t C on cep ts W ed., M ay 3 ,8 :3 0 a.m .-4 :3 0 p.m . Projecting a Professional Image Instructor: N eal H artm an, U T C o lle g e o f C om m u n ication Th urs., M ay 1 1 ,8 :3 0 a .m .-4 :3 0 p.m . Managing Microcomputers: Issues and Problems Instructor: Frank S ay re, U T M icro ­ com pu ter T each in g Facility T h urs., M ay 1 8 ,6 -9 p.m . A ll w ork sh op s will be presented in the T h om p so n C on feren ce C en ter on The U niversity o f T e x a s at A u stin cam p u s. Free parkin g for registrants. R egistration fee for each co u rse is an affo rd ab le $ 110. S p a c e is lim ited and early registration is en cou raged. O r­ gan ization s or in dividuals registerin g for five c o u rses or m ore at one tim e are eligib le for a discoun ted fee o f $95 per registration. T o register, o r for m ore inform ation, call the R e gistrar at (512)471-3125 Thompson Conference Center Next to the LBJ Library 26th Street at Red River D D U R A N U R A r i A U S T I N O P E R A H O U S E doors: 7:00 pm show: 8:00 pm l N f T * 8 M A Jubilee/J.T.O.’C. Production T e x a s U n io n F ilm s Slaughterhouse FÍV! Tonight a t 7:00 p.m . Union Theatre Stardust Memories Tonight a t 9:15 p.m . Union Th eatre Blew Up Tonight a t 5:00 A 7:15 p.m. Hogg Auditorium Eg] Wings o f Desire Tonight a t 9:20 p.m . Hogg Auditorium General Cinema BARGAIN M A T IN U S KVERY DAY ALL SNOWS BKPORI 6 PM ■ H IG H L A N D 10 M IPPLI FISKVILLI ROAD 454-9562 SAME DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES ★ T R O O P B E V E R L Y H IL L S n u TH X 12:43 3:00 3 !l0 7 :2 0 9:30 ñ ¿ j it LEVIA TH A N r 1:003:135:30 7:45 10:00 ★ L E A N O N M E r a n i 3:00 3:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 ★ C H A N C E S A R E 00 12:00 2:30 3:00 7:30 10:00 TH X THX ★ BILL A TED’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE oo 12:002:004:006:000:00 10:00 ★ B U R B S oo 12:30 2:503:107:139:30 ★ W O R K IN G G IR L r 12:00 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 ★ I ’M G O N N A G I T Y O U S U C K A r 12:43 2:55 5:05 7:239:33 ★ S K IN D E E P r 12:002:004:006:000:00 10:00 ★ R E S C U E R S o 12:001:45 3:303:13 7:00 ★ P O L IC E A C A D E M Y M is 9:15 Only H IG H L A N D M A L L HIOHLANP MALL BLVD. 451-7376 ★ 1:403:405:407:40940 ★ FLETCN LIVES ra 1:303:305:307:309:30 BARTO N CREEK MORAC at LOOP 360 327-8281 SAME DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES DEAD BANG r 12:30 2.-455407:159:30 ★ DANGEROUS LIAISONS r 12:202:405407:259:55 ★ NEW YORK STORIES pq 12402:254:507:159:45 ★ LEAN ON ME eon 1:003:155:30 7:45 10:00 BEACHES pon 12:152405457:309:55 8 D A Y ROMAN HOLIDAY $ 3 4 5 0 0 LAND ONLY. AIRFARE ROT INCLUDED UMVBtSfTY 463-TMP NORTH. . .452-0145 SOUTH. . .3200747 DOWNTOWN320-7272 U F E Daily Blackboard Specials NOODLES PARMESAN ($4.95) Spinach noodles topped with a “herbed" cheese sauce. Delicious. Served with homemade whole wheat rolls, butter and a fresh green garden salad. 25 im p orted b eers SUNDAY (5:00-10:00) “ PLATO” NITE 624 W. 34th St. M-Sat 11:30-11:30 L 451-9665 Sun 11:00-10:00 J li lENON HEVto Of A Nervous Breakdown A FILM BY ALMODOVAR 4:45-7:20-9:35 JIMI HENDRIX LIVE Torch song trilogy m ■ 3:00-9:40-12:001 wmsr11:45 DCBIE ? 1 St and Guadalupe 477-1324 F * i « t D e p a rtm e n t o f DRAMA College ol Fine Arts, The University of Texos at Austin DON JUAN COMES BACK FROM THE WAR by Odon von Horvath The legendary lover returns from the front of World War I a changed man ... or so he thinks. But can Don Juan really become a faithful lover? Horvath looks at the loss of idealism in the face of post-war realities. March 28 - April 1 Theatre Room Tickets are on sale at all UTTM TicketCenters. Charge-a-Ticket: 477-6060. Advance Sales. PRESIDIO THEATRES ARBOR A ( 2 : 3 5 - 5 : 0 0 ) - 7 : 3 5 - 9 : 4 5 ( 2 : 2 5 - 4 : 5 5 ) - 7 : 2 5 - 9 : 5 5 ( 2 : 4 5 - 5 : 1 0 ) SKINDEEP Dan). e r o u s L i a i s o n s D i- D B A N ( l e v I A T H A N 1 - 7 : 4 0 - 1 0 : 0 0 N O P ( 2 : 5 0 - 5 : 2 0 ) IX - 7 : 5 0 - 1 0 : 1 0 A S S E S R ■ . I H X R j l B R r v r T C r c r r v v r R W i ^ __ ll »x “ 7 : 3 5 - 1 0 : 1 5 n o P A S S E S 111 ( 2 : 0 5 - 4 : 4 5 ) \ I - \ V I O K K S I O K ! I Th e a d v e n t u r e s oi ( 1 : 5 0 - 4 : 3 0 ) H i ] H X B a r o n M e i n c t a u s e n - 7 : 2 0 - 1 0 : 0 5 n o p a s s e s D a n g e r o u s L i a i s o n s ( 2 : 1 5 - 4 : 5 5 ) - 7 : 4 5 - 1 0 : 2 0 I H X (■) NO P A S S f S[ H I I S S B S f t S (2 :3 0 -3 :1 5 ! -7 :3 3 -9 :5 5 1 H X H 1 H X c o u s i n s N O P A S S E S C o n e w i t h t h e W i n d (1 1 : 3 0 - 4 : 0 0 ) - 8 : 3 0 ( 1 2 : 0 0 ) - 8 : 4 0 | R e s c u e r s n o p a s s e s i ( 1 1:45~ 1:30~3:1 5~5:00)~ 7 00 ÍX2I L E V I A T H A N ^ ^ 1 » - urn Wr t TN C ( 2 : 5 0 - 5 : 0 5 ) - 7 : 5 0 - 1 0 : 1 0 A H A N C E S A R E - 7 : 4 5 - 1 0 : 0 5 ( 3 : 0 5 - 5 : 2 5 ( 3 : 0 5 - 5 : 2 5 ) F l e t c h L i v e s - 7 : 3 0 - 9 : 4 5 TTTx R e s c u e r s ( 2 : 3 5 - 4 : 2 5 ) - 6 : 1 0 - 7 : 5 5 ¡ i i & w m i * D r ) 2 : 5 5 - 5 : 2 0 ) - 7 : 4 3 - 1 0 : 0 0 ( 3 : 2 0 - 5 : 4 0 ) E A D o A N G -3 :0 0 -1 0 :1 0 n o P A S S E S ir] T H X PARENTHESES INDICATE DISCOUNTED SHOWS SHOWTIMÍ S ARC FOR TODAY ONLY WEDNESDAYS 7 1 0 2 ALL TICKETS: $ 3 . 0 0 THE BEST MOVIE PRICE W TOWN ¿ THERE IS A DIFFERENCE i m c $2 75 4:30 - 6 PM EVERY DAY ( ) $3.75 MATWEES & STUDENTS DAILY TODAY’S TIMES ONLY! $2.94 TICKETS AFTER 6 P.M. WEDNESDAY’S N0RTHCR0SS6, RIVERSDE8, WESTGATE8 WESTGATE 8 WESTGATE MALL S LAMAR & BEN WHITE 892 26% TROOP BEVERLY HILLS B ) 2 :10(5:15 @ $2.75>-7:30G:45 RESCUERS SI >■•$03:30(5 45 (a $2.75)-740940 SKMDEEP l 2.10(5:35 @ $2.75)-7:40-0:56 RAM MAN (B 1:50(5:15 (a $2.75)4:00 i H I TROOP BEVERLY HILLS B ) 210(8:36 g $2.78>-7:404:86 FLETCH LIVES m 2:10(5:15 Co. $2.75)-7:50->:46 LEVIATHAN 1 2:30(8:4» ® $ 75H 5-10:15 SKMDEEP fij 230(8:2» (a> $2.75)4:00-10*6 B IX i TED'S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE E l 240(3:2» <§> $2.7g)-7:209:25 COU8M8 E S I 240(8:25 <8 »! *56 WORKMQC C l l 240(4:56 (a $2.78)-7:109:36 POLICE ACADEMY 6 B ) 2 3 0 7 4 0 ROOFTOPS B __________ (346 @ $2.75)9:25__________ CHANCES ARE B1 2 3 0 (8 4 0 @ I M S RAM MAN IB 240(4:48 @ 82.7S)-7:28-10*6 1 I’M GONNA GIT YOU SUCKA 230(8:48 (a $2.78*4:18-10:18 POLICE ACADEMY 6 B ) 200(5:15 fa » ♦. RIVERSIDE & PLEASANT VALLEY RD 448 0008 NORTHCROSS MALL ANDERSON & BURNET 454-5147 TROOP BEVERLY HLLS I 2 0 X 8 4 0 ® 82.78*7:200:30 FLETCH UVES B1 2 1 X 8 :3 0 H * I emc. fy U ltn e. T H E S H E F T A L L C O . JEW ELERS G E M O L O G IS T S 2236 Guadalupe 477-4924 OntfwDragMKttoVMtaoe MgNand MM 48M395 lower LgmI atrae» tone T R A N S P O RTATI O N ■ ( ■ G U I D E mi mi B M B B M W B i T H E D a i l y TEXAN/W ednesday, March 2 9 ,1989/Page 11 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION MERCHANDISE 10 — Misc. Autos 10—-Misc. Autos 10— Misc. Autos 20 — Sports-Foreign 20 — Sports-Foreign 20 — Sports-Foreign 70 — Motorcycles 70 — Motorcycles 210 — Stereo-TV 1985 LASER-TURBO. Great condition. New tire». A M -F M cassette A/C $ 4 0 0 0 O B O 369-2667,280-2551 2 -2 7-4 7N C 84 FORD ESCORT, 49,000 mi., white with light blue interior, excellent condi­ tion, $ 2 5 0 0 OBO, call 4 4 8 -3 5 6 2 3-1- 4 5 N C _______________________________ 1986 PLYMOUTH RELIANT A/C, low mileoge, four new tires, $5000. 355- 2910 or 355 -2 8 5 4 late evening 3-21- 15NC_______________________________ 1956 PLYMOUTH S A V O Y 4-door Sedan Press button transmission, runs excellent & drives anywhere. N ew battery, brakes, tires. Just inspected $1800 O B O 477- 1363 mornings. 3-21-15NC Need transportation? Here's your chance to buy a great car for under 2,000 dol­ lars. several very dean, one owner cars to choose from . FIRST TEXAS H O N ­ D A THE FIRST C H O IC E 458-2511. 3- 27-15NC-F 1986 CHEVY SPECTRUM, built by Isuzu, 5 speed, stereo, looks like new, need wheels?? Call usl . .. FIRST TEXAS H O N ­ DA, THE FIRST CHOICE. 458-2511. 3- 27-15NC-F__________________________ 1981 D O D G E K - 2 door, standard, just inspected, $1200, negotiable. 453- 8084. 3-27-15NC____________________ '76 CRUISER!! Buick LeSabre, 4dr, 57,000 original miles, awesome cor! One owner. FIRST TEXAS H O N D A THE FIRST CHOICE. 458-2511. 3-27-15NC- F PULL YOUR boot this summer in style with this '7 7 Mercury Cougar Silver with sil­ ver insides, all power tilt cruise and air, 4 door, 57,000 right miles, near perfect at. FIRST TEXAS H O N D A THE FIRST CHOICE. 458-2511. 3-27-15N C-F______ 1973 CADILLAC. LOADED. Leather inte­ rior. New tires. Battery oltemater $959. 469-0828. Leave message to Michael. 12-19____________________________ 73 CADILLAC. Loaded leather interior, new tires, battery, altemater, $959 459-1979. Leave message to Michael. 12-19____________________________ 1977 DODG E Monaco, dependable $500 firm. 320-8626. 5-9___________ 1967 M U STA N G convertible, blue sharp, PS/PB, AT, 289cid, 106K, $4,000 firm. 495-2833. 5-9___________________ 1986 CO U G A R LS. 1 owner, excellent condition, power windows, white w/ laundau roof, red interior, nice 251-4454 after 6. 5-9 1979 BUICK 4-DOOR. Very safe, very comfortable, very reliable, looks good, runs well. $1200. 478-8900. 5-9 1981 REGAL LTD. A/C, AM/Coss, electric windows, locks. New brakes, tires, dean 88,000 $2,500 478-6860.1-20-73NC G O V ERN M EN T SEIZED Vehicles from $100. Fords. Mercedes. Corvettes. Chevy*. Surplus. Buyers Guide (1) 805- 687-6000 EXT. S-9413.3-2-18P 1985 TURBO SUNBIRD. Red, A/C, great stereo, 21K miles, exceNent condi- tion.$4900.472-1037. 3-2-15NC '86 PONTIAC FIERO, V-6, block, sunroof, PW, AM /FM cassette, $7200, Cheray, 495-3612. 2-23-49NC______________ 85 SPORTY RED Cougor, AC, PS, PB, cruise control, stereo tape deck, V-8, 388-2142,836-1555. 3-3-15NC 81 N E W YORKER Pioneer stereo, AC, PS, auto locks, power seats, windows, brakes, alloy wheels, $975. 458-3352. 3-3-15NC 1987 M A X IM A Aero package, 13K, sun­ roof, twin cam, tinted, 5 spd., power seat belt, warranty, adjustable shock. 472- 5327. 3-27-15NC 1982 RELIANT - Mitsubishi, 4 cyl., 89K miles, AT, AC, PB/PS, excellent condi­ tion, $2150. 480-8185. Leave message. 3-29-5-p 1977 BUICK SPECIAL New tires, brakes, battery, low mileage, $800 negotiable. Scott 480-0121. 3-22-35NC__________ 1964 MERCURY CO M ET sky blue, 60K original miles, looks, runs great. A real gem. 320-0168. 3-27-5B____________ 1962 CHEVY IM P A IA 4-dr, in one family for 20 years, excellent dty transporta­ tion, $1400. 452-2790. 3-28-31NC '81 CITATION A M /FM cassette, AC, 4- speed, 68K $1250. 480-0602 Mike. 3- 28-5B IS IT true .. .. Jeeps for $44 through the Government? Co# for foctsl 1-312-742- 1142 Ext. 9013. 3-29-2P_____________ 1984 FORD M U ST A N G IX. Excellent condition, A/C, cruise, power locks & windows Co# Scott 469-9639 3-29-5B 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 1984 N IS S A N 20 0SX AC, 2-door hatchbackjoaded, 5-speed, A M /F M cassette, clean. $4450. TK 3421 N Lamar 458-3151. 5-9______________ CLASSIC 1966 MERCEDES 230SL Rood- star. Serious inquiries only $12,000. CPI book average $14,500. 264-1616. 5-9 1983 DATSUN 280ZX 5-speed, T-tops, A/C, AM/FM, low mileage, Alpine Alarm system. $6400 453-1359 12-19 1978 M G B BEAUTIFUL blue body. Many new parts, runs and looks like new, 42,000 mi., $3450. 441-0735 5-9 B 0 i r REPAIR MdMMMiHÉAMatMtÉtÉMÉÉIÉMlMMÉfeiH | Foreign/Domestic £ Unibody Specialists Suspension & Alignment Repairs I. Expert Painting Frame Straightening Towing: 478-2694 Autos Autos Autos 7 8 FIAT SPIDER red convertible, speed, A M /F M cassette, like n $2795 259-5559.2-3-63NC 5- 86 N IS S A N 200SX loaded, auto, cruise, alarm system, only 32,000 mi., $7300 rw, OBO. Call 837-3915. 3-20-15-NC '87 Y U G O 5-speed A M /FM radio, 30,000 miles, runs great, extra dean. $2,350.259-5559 2-3-63NC________ 1964 V W BEETLE - rebuilt engine & front end, new tires, breaks, recently repoint- ed, $1200. Co# 442-7191 3-22-15NC M f**1 1987 SUZUKI SAMURAI. 18,000 miles Excellent condition. Hard top, A/C, A M cassette. $60 0 0 Angel 926-7001, 339 0694. 3-29-5B_____________________ PORSCHE 914 - '8 7 Iroch red, 916 front end, 911 hubs, Pirelli tires. Excellent inte­ rior, $2795. Must sell soon. 477 -5 8 4 3 3-29-31NC__________________________ 30 — Trucks-Vans 1984 Bronco II Low mileage, 4-speed w/ OD, 4X4, AM/FM, AC. Excellent condi- tion. $6650.836-2110. 5-9 1985 S10 BLAZER - V6. Looded, excellent condition. New brakes. $6,000 Call nas 6 -1 5N 70 — Motorcycles TJ’s Cycle Sales A Service Everyday low prices on parts & accessories Service by Registered Technicians I ¿ 1 0 % DISCOUNT, ON TUNE-UPS I o „ _ J 453-6255 V, 621S N. LAMAR H O N D A . Come ride with us 459-3311 Full Selection of Motorcycles & Scooters WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6 5 0 9 N . L A M A R 1984 H O N D A VT 500 Ascot Great con­ 478-2138 dition, 4,000 miles, red, $1100 O B O 3-29-5B 1981 Y A M A H A SEC A 550 excellent con dition helmet must see $1450 477- 5 2 6 6 3-29-3B 1984 FIERO SE Red, looded, 4-speed, one owner, 39,000 miles, $4300. 477- 6865.3-2-15NC___________________ 1984 RED N ISS A N Pulsar: 5-speed, per­ fect condition inside and out, original owner, never wrecked, 70,000 miles. $3800, 442-5331 leave message 2-24- 48NC___________________________ 1972 M G MIGIT convertible. Excellent condition, $1950. 339-2096 after 3pm 3-7-15NC________________________ 1981 B M W 3201. Silver. 86,000 miles Mint condition. $6200. Must see to ap­ preciate. 477-8980/495-6059 3-9- 15NC 73 PORSCHE 914 Excellent condition, AC, alloy wheels, Pirelli's, 100% stock, garaoe kept $2995. 280-3085 3-2- 44 NC 1988 SUZUKI SAM URAI white, 13,000 miles. 1988 SUZUKI SAM URAI black. 16,000 miles. 442-3747. 3-10-15NC 1982 V O LKSW A G EN Quantum. 5- speed, power windows, exce#ent condi­ tion. 442-3747.3-10-15NC__________ 84 STANZA HB Good interior, standard, AM /FM cassette stereo, new brakes, tires, clutch, sunroof. 444-7181. 3-9- 15NC____________________________ PORSCHE 924 - A/C, 4-speed, A M /FM cassette, sunroof, $1000 down and $50 per week, owner finance. 467-9711. 3- 25-15NC 1982 SAAB 900 turbo, 4 door block, sunroof, ac, new tires, $4975, 499- 8535- message. 3-27-15NC_________ 1979 PORSCHE 924. Good condfion $4500. Co# David 1-754-0868 3-29- 15NC 1978 PORSCHE 928 - 41,000 miles. ex­ ceNent condition, one owner $11,000 or offer. Leave message for Richard 448- 1957.3-23-5B_____________________ 1981 DATSUN 200SX 5sp, loaded, new tires, dependable, economical- 3 0 mpg, $1500 negotiable 447-1063. 3-23- 15NC SUPER SPIDERI 1981 Fiat Spider 2 00 0 convertible. Red Pininsorina beauty New rag top, carpet, Pirelli tires. Alpine sound system, low mileoge. Soon to be classic. Come see for yourself Call Ray 835-4411. 3-23-34NC______________ 1973 240Z ExceNent condition inside and out. Very dean. Must see. $4000. 442- 5785, leave message. 3-24-5B-F______ 7 6 SA A B EMS, block, cassette, stick, with strong engine, AC, 88,000 original miles, $2200/offer. 451-8080 3-27-5B '88 B M W PERFECT C O N D IT IO N must se#, 6,000 miles, black with sunroof $5,500. 474-0814. 3-28-58__________ JEEP W RANGLER 1987 Automatic 4X4 $11,000 476-2062. Leave message. 3-28-5B a-top loaded 23,000 mi. REPRESENT YOUR BUSINESS IN OUR NEXT TRANSPORTATION GUIDE MARCH 29th CALL 471-5244 1981 Y A M A H A V IR A G O 750 12,000 miles, real clean. $1000 negotiable 389-1413. Ptease leave message 3-24- 5B 1985 H O N D A N IG H T H A W K 450 - runs great, excellent condition, clean, $790. Call 452-3313 3-24-5B 1984 H O N D A XR200R Enduro, like new with trailer, helmet, low miles. 478- 1302.3-27-5B_______________________ 1986 RED Honda Elite 150 Deluxe Scooter, $1000. Call Garmond at 473- 888 5 3-27-58______________________ RED 1988 Y A M A H A Razz moped 1,000 miles, like new, $425. Call Bnan 451- 8 84 9 Leave message. 3-29-5B 80 — Bicycles MOUNTAIN llli lli i BLOWOUT • DtAAe Hertz Corporation 3850Airportt VO. Austin, Texas 78722 Telephone: 472-1148 ÍAÜTOTÍÑT 8 am-5 pm M-F X E B 1 l K i I a * • r A u t o m o t i v e S e r v i c e C e n t e r S s s A l 459-9917 3512 Guadalupe Personal checks welcome 4 5 0 1 S ou th C o n g r e s s A u stin Texas 7 8 7 4 5 512/444 5555 DO YOU OWN A HONDA? AUSTIN’S INDEPENDENT HONDA SPECIALISTS SINCE 1974 I O IL « F IL T E R CH AN O E Check aN fluids S 1 i r ii ! I ‘ i s *5 « t f i M R ii FREE 11 Brake Inspection 11 11 with any other repairs IJ , ENGINE TUNE ¡ ! H i I Plugs, pomts, condensor, rotor | | * cap & air cleaner, if needed $ 4 9 9 5 with this ad I I n I I I I I I II ll l l P P ll BRAKE SPECIAL! Regular pads or shoes installed on most vehicles *299 5 * 4001 Guadalupe 454-0388 2415 W. Ben White 444-2616 7829 Burnet Rd. 454-5B79 11928 Research 331-5522 N 0 B 0 D T B E A T S M ID A S I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I y § j * ■ t a u s lt llk a t lo u s 343-6000 QUALITY AUTOMOTIVE 441 -3737 1602 South Lam ar *Semi-mek>Mc extra S c o t c h t in t ™ 3M Trained, Satisfaction Guaranteed 3M Nationwide & Lifetime Warranty " D O M T S W E A T , T IN T IT ! " HONDA Come ride with us 459-3311 Full Selection of Motorcycles & Scooters WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6509 N. LAMAR UNLIMITED AUTO REPAIR ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * 1 0 % off any repairs * J with UT ID & ad ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Í T 1 ★ Í TUNE-UPS • E N G IN E REPAIR • A/C • ELECTRIC ! 1023 W. 24th St. 473-2317 I g i g p i | VISA Foreign A Domestic Does your ricebumer* need service? With a Free Su n sticker you get a free oil filter with every tune-up or service! A sk for yours today! (limited supply). Please bring your U T ID. 7514 Burnet 4930 S. Congress 453-6293 443-6686 •Your Toyota, Honda, Mazda or Nissan I I I I I I I f t ■1 >1 l| ■1 l| l l L Wednesday, March 29, 1989 Page 12 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING T h e Da il y T e x a n VISA/'MasterCard A ccep te d For Word Ads, call 471-5244/For Display Ads, call 471-8900/8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitis Avenue VISA/MasterCard Accepted THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360 — Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 3 6 0 » Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. Prmimmmm N ow For Spring-Sum m er-Fm tt Su Roca Apartments e 1 Bdr e N ice Pool e Tennis Courts across the street e W alk to Campus 1302W. 24th 477-3619 DIPLOMAT APARTMENTS BARGAIN RATES P r e l e a s e N o w F o r S p r in g - S u m m a r - F a ll tW aihCmfmt 478-2250 Manager Apt. #205 D a v is & Assoc. MMK-EMBBB 3101 Cedar at Speedway 9 Walk to Campus • Shuttle at Curb • 2 Pools 9 Manager on Site You Will Love Living Here CLASSIPIID WORD AC KATIS * Charged by the word 15 word minimum Set m 5 pt type only Rota art for consecu­ tive days Each word 1 time Each word 3 times Eoch word 5 times Eoch word 10 times Each word 15 times Eoch word 20 times $ 34 $ 90 $ 1.35 $2 30 $2.70 $3.20 per insertion $100 charge to change copy First two words may be oil capital lottery 25c for eoch additional word in capital letters. Mast­ ercard and Visa accepted CLASSJFIID LINE A P * tA T IS ___________________ $7.80 ‘ Charged by the line One column inch mini­ mum Available in 5 to 14 pt. type. 1 coi. x 1 inch 1 Time WORD A N D U N I AO DEADLINE SCHEDULE Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Fnday Friday Horn Monday Horn Tuesday llom Wednesday Horn Thursday Horn TO PLACE A WORD OR LINE A D CALL: 471-5244 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY* AD RATES * Charged by the column inch. One column inch minimum. A variety of type faces and su e s and borders available Foil Rotes Sept 1-May 30 1 to 49 column inches Per Month .................. $7.80 Per Column Inch Over 50 col. m. per month, coll for rates. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY DEADLINE SCHEDULE Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Fnday . Wednesday, 4 p.m. Thursday, 4 p.m. Friday, 4 p.m. Monday, 4 p.m. Tuesday, 4 p.m. TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED DISPLAY AD, CALL: 471-8900__________ In the event o f errors m ode in on advertisem ent, n o tK e must be given b y 11 a.m. th e first day, as the publishers a re responsible fo r only ONE inco rre ct insertio n AH claims fo r odfustm ents should be m od o not late r than 3 0 days a fte r pu blica tion . Pre-pate? b fb receive cred it slip if re q uest ed a t tim e o f conceflation, a n d if am o un t exceeds $2 0 0 Slip must be presented fo r a re o rd e r w ith ­ in 9 0 days to be valid C re dit slips o re non- tro re fe ra b le In con side ra tion o f The D oily Texan's a cce ptan ce o f odvertism g cop y fo r publication, th e o a en cy an d the advertiser wiH ind em nify an d save norm - less. Texas Student Publications a n d its officers, em ployees, an d o g e n h ogomsf o l k m , bo b ikt), da m ag e, a n d expense o f w hatsoe ver na tu re ore - ma out o f the copying, printing, o r publishing o f its odvertism eot including w ifhotrf fcrmtotion rea son­ ab le attorn ey's fees resulting from d o irro o f suits fo r libel, v iola tion o f n g ht o f privacy, plo gio nsm ond co p y n g h t a n d trad em ark m CLASSIFICATIONS TRANSPORTATION 1 0 — M la c. A v K m 2 0 — S p o r ts - F o r e ig n A u to s 3 0 - T r u c k s - V a n s 4 0 — V s h lc io s to T r o d # 5 0 — S o rv te o - R a p a lr 6 0 — O o rts - A cco s s o H o s 7 0 — M o fo r c y d o s 0 0 — B k y d o s 9 0 — V a h íd o L o o s in g 1 0 0 — V a h íd o s W o n to d REAL ESTATE SALES 1 1 0 — S o rv lc o s 1 2 0 — H o w s o s 1 3 0 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s o s 1 6 0 — M o b t la H o m o s - L o ts 1 5 0 — A c r e o g a -L o ts 1 6 0 — D u p ia x a s - A p a r t m a n ts 1 7 0 - W o n to d 1 0 0 — L o o n s MERCHANDISE 1 9 0 - A p p l lo n c o s 2 0 0 — F u r n itu r e - H o u s a h o ld 2 1 0 — S to r e o - T V 2 2 0 — C o m p u ta re - K q u ip m o n t 2 3 0 — P h o to - C o m o ro s 2 4 0 - B o o t s 2 5 0 — M u s ic a l I n s tr u m e n ts 2 6 0 - H o b b ia s 2 7 0 — M a c h in e r y - E q u ip m e n t 2 8 0 — S p o r t! n g - C a m p in g E q u ip m e n t 2 9 0 — F u m H u r e - A p p ila n c e R e n ta l 3 0 0 — 0 r o g e - R u m m a g e 3 1 0 — T r a d e 3 2 0 — W a n te d t o B u y o r R e n t MERCHANDISE 3 3 0 - P o t s 3 4 0 — M isc. RENTAL 3 5 0 — R e n ta l S o rv lc o s 3 6 0 — F u m . A p ts . 3 7 0 - U n i . A p ts . 3 8 0 — F u m . D u p le x e s 3 9 0 — U n f. D u p le x e s 4 0 0 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s o s 4 1 0 — F u m . H o u s e s 4 2 0 — U n f. H o u s e s 4 2 5 — R o o m s 4 3 0 — R o o m - B o a rd 4 3 5 — C o -o p s 4 5 0 — M o b ile H o m e s - L o ts 4 6 0 — B u s in e s s R e n ta ls 4 7 0 — R e s o rts 4 8 0 — S t o r a g e S p a ce 4 9 0 — W a n te d t o R e n t-L e a s e 5 0 0 — M is c . ANNOUNCEMENTS 510 — E ntartalnm ent-Tkkets 520— Personals 530- T r a v e l- Transportation 540 — Lost A Found 550— Licensed Child Care 560- P u b lic Notice 570 — M usk-M usldans EDUCATIONAL 5 8 0— Musical Instruction 590 — Tutoring 600 — Instruction Wanted 610 — Misc. Instruction SERVICES 620 — Legal Services 63 0— C omputer Services 640 — E xterm inators 650— M o v ln g-H a ullng 6 6 0 — Storage 670 — P ainting SERVICES 60 0— Office 690 — Rental Equipment 700— Furniture Repair 710 — Appliance Repair 7 2 0 - Storeo-TV Repair 730— Homo Repair 740- B ic y c le Repair 750 - T y p in g 76 0- M is c . Services EMPLOYMENT 770 — Employm ent Agencies 78 0— Employm ent Services 790 — Part time 800— G eneral H elp Wanted 81 0— Office-Clerical 820 — Accounttng- Bookkeeping 830 — A dm inistrative- M angem ent 8 4 0 -S a le s 8 5 0 - Retail 860 — Engineering- Technical 87 0— M a d k a l 88 0— Professional 890 — Clubs-Restaurants 900 — D om esfk-H ousehold 91 0— Positions W anted 920 — W ork W anted BUSINESS 9 3 0 — Business O pp ortu nities 940 — O pp ortu nities Wanted TSP Building, Room 3.200 2500 Whitis M onday through Friday 8 0 0 a m-5:00pm MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL 3 4 0 — Misc. 350 — Rental Services 360 — Furn. Apts. $ 1 1 0 I pay cash for old hsgh school rings. Paying up to $110 (men’s). Up to $35 flody’s). Abo buy H K 14K ¡ewetry Any condition. (930 anw M-F) pm JAMES LEWIS GOLD EXCHANGE 458-2639 F R E E Leasing Service Condoe • Apertment* Itts Houeee e Duplexes It's t/unglecxX there Leave the hunting to us! 482-8651 503 W. 3001 habitat hunters RENTAL 360 — Fum. Apts. 3 5 0 — Rental Services © FREE LOCATORS Best a n d fnendbeot le rv ic e ir» to w n. C o l today. THOMAS G. THOMPSON M REALTOR 452-8625 COMPREHENSIVE COMPUTERIZED Availabilities, All Types - All Prices - All Sizes Fa$1 Free Servicel Habiat Hunters, 482-8651 2-15-28P_________________ CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD MOVE IN today. Large efficiency 38th and Ave B, quiet, free basic cable, coin laundry, water/gas paid, furnished/ unfurnished. $20 0 plus electricity. A Miller broker 452-4212. 2-23-20B-K 4 BLOCKS West UT: Clean, quiet efficien­ cy. Water/gas, furnished. Gas heat & cooking $2291 476-7916. 2-28-20B-F WEST CAMPUS 1-1: Small, quiet com­ plex Laundry, basic cable - $26 -$280 + electricity. Available now. Call 454- 7900 Sandlin 6 Co. 3-1-206-F________ VIEW OF the Tower. North compus. Spa­ cious 2 bedroom apartments; $380 available April 1, shuttle 477-1452. 3-2- 20B LOFT APARTMENTS - West Compus $300 and up. Step Savers. 476-3028. 3-23-20B-D_______________________ LARGE ONE BR, new carpet, small quiet com plex near UT. 450-0368. 3-27-58- E TRANSPORTATION 50 — Service-Repair Tanglewood North We Pay A ll Your Heating AA /C i N o w For I# S p rin g -S u m m e r-F a ll * RR Shuttle stop at Front Door * 2 Pools & Remodeled Laundry Rooms * Ceiling Fans/Microwaves * Furnished/Unfurnished * Quality Residents Friendly Managers Who Care 452-0060 1 0 2 0 E . 4 5 t h CLOSETSI SPACIOUS 2-2 ceiling fans, microwave, shuttle, West campus, $400-$450. STEP SAVERS. 476-3028 3-23-20B-D B e f o r e y o u G o Prelease Now For Spring-Summer-FaM Q u ie t - N e a r S h u ttle ^478-6005^ 323-6526 ★ FRONTIER APTS. ★ SUMMER RATES-$2 20 PRE-LEASING 4111 AVE. A: Large efficiencies on shuttle and city bus. Quiet complex, CA/CH, G & W and ba­ sic TV cable paid. ★ 462*0930,323*5982 ★ 3-22-208-C Villa Solano Apartments 51st & Guadalupe e Shuttle Bus/City Bus e Shopping N e arb y e 2 Laundry Areas e N ice Pool 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Across From Intramural Fields 451-6682 M O V E I N ^ T O D A Y J j SPECIAL RATES Furnished Efficiencies M 's & 2-2's • 3 Pools • 3 Laundry Rooms • Gas ond W ater Paid a Shuttle at Front Door Ideal for Students Beat the High Electric Ratea Tanglewood W e s t s i d e Apartments m l M M Now For Spring-Summer-Fall 1403 Norwalk La. 472-9614 SEQUOIA APARTMENTS 301W. 38TH Prelease Now • Spring • Summer • FaU CHEZ JACQUE APARTMENTS Prelease N o w For Spring-Summer-Fall • 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts, e Pool • N e xt to Tennis Courts • W a lk to Campus 6 ABP except electricity 1302W.24th St. 477-3619 LA CANADA FURNISHED ALL BILLS PAID e Pool e W a lk To C a m pu s e A c ro s s F ro m Tennis C o u rts Pre-Lease Now For Spring-Summer-Fall CALL TODAY 477-3619 1302 W. 24th Office At Chez Jacques o o o o o o o e o o o o e o o |St. Moritz Apts. Summer A Fat Preteasing! M s & 2-1 ’s lofts, fireplaces, vaulted ceilings, ceiling fans, balconies and completely furnished. Small, cozy 4 complex with pool, covered parking I and security gates. 800 W 25th. 2Vs I ) p blocks west of campus. e 4 7 6 -4 0 6 0 ★ BEAUTIFUL ★ CHEAPEST ★ 1802 W Ave This complex is one of the nicest oporfmenfs in West Campus given it's inexpensive rents. We will try to accommodate anyone's tastes A pnce range. Gmat atmosphere, walk to U.T. Surrounded by beautiful houses. Pool with fountain. Free parking. Laundry room. New furniture. Full kitchen. Fully carpeted. Gas, water & water heater paid. <1 nou Now Preleasing for Summer, Fall, A Spring FaH/Soring Summer 1-1 starling at $295 1-1 starling at >365 2-2 starting at $395 2-2 starting at $495 3-2 starling at $645 3-2 starting at $785 W ill g iv e y o u g re a t d e a l o n y e a r lease OFFICE H OOPS: Evenings o n ly 5 8 p.m., M -F o r by appl. 478-7519 Pool o re o lust like in B a rto n 20B-F ★ 5 BLOCKS WEST U T * Large, quiet, immaculately clean semi­ efficiency. Kitchen, walk-in closet, laundry, aas heat & cooking, water/ gas furnished. On site manager. From $235.00 Red Oak Apartments 2104 San Gabriel ★ 476-7916 ★ 2-28-20B-F $225.00 Large 1 bedroom/carpeted, dis­ posal, CH/CA, ceiling fans, w a ­ ter/gas paid. Large pool and patio. W alk to UT. Fountain Terrace Apartments 610 W. 30th/Manager #134 477-8858 2-23-20B-F ★ ★ PRE-LEASING WEST CAMPUS LEON APARTMENTS Unfurnished efficiencies, new ly redec­ orated, w a te r paid, covered parking. Summer rate. ★ $ 2 2 0 462-0930 ★ 3-22-208-C SANDPIPER APTS. 2810 RIO GRANDE Large tastefully furnished 2 bed/2 bath. Fully equipped kitchen, frost- free refrigerator, microwave, pan­ try, walk-in closets, ceiling fans and intercom in each room, covered parking, pool, sundeck, resident manager, gas and water paid. N O W LEASING FOR SUMMER $425 + E; FALL $ 5 50 + E. SPE­ CIAL RATE FOR SUMMER-FALL LEASE. 47 4-25 42/444-275 0. 3-21-20B-D W ARW ICK APTS. Garden setting, pool w/waterfall, BBQ pits, large fully furnished 2- 2's, 1-1's and efficiencies. Located on 29th and West Ave. (behind Breeds Hardware). 2 9 07 WEST AVENUE. LEASING FOR SUM­ MER AN D FALL. BEST RENTAL DEALS. 474-74 26/346-277 0. 3-10-20B-D RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. / b o n’t Worry, Be Happy At J | Aspenwood Apartments Beat High Electric Rates • Intramural Fields • Water/Gas Paid • Shuttle at Front Door Across the Street Prelease Now For Summer-Fal 452-4447 4539 Guadalupe Yes, we h a v e special rates on furnish ed & un furnished apts. C e n t u r y S q u a re 3401 Red River 478-9775 4210 Red River 452-4366 Century Plaza 940 e 4othSt 453-8652 G ranada 915 e 41st 452-6518 Park Plaza & Plaza Court 101 E 33rd st 476-0363 V IP B est A partm ents, B est Prices. B est Locations Odidr CONDOMINIUMS A QUALITY LIFESTYLE PRESTIGIOUS NORTHWEST CAMPUS 1ST •furnished and Unfurnished 2 Bedroom/2 Bath 9 Pool/Jacuzzi 9 Ftreplaces-Ceiling Fans 9 New Orleans Style Courtyard 9 Full Appliance Package e including Washers & Dryers • Privarte Access Entry Now Preleasing fo r Summ er and FaU CefToday N.S. Property Menegem^it 343-8775 7MW.21«S*Mt Special I Rates I From $ 2 7 5 .0 0 O n UT Shuttle • 2 Pools e 2 Jacuzzis • Fireplaces • Vaulted Ceilings • Ceiling Fans • Mini Blinds Now Preleasing Summer-Fall OAK LODGE 440-0118 1317 Plceaast Valley THUNDERBIRD APARTMENTS 4510 Duval Prohasa Now For Spring-Summer- Fall • Shuttle N ear • Quiet Area 9 M anager on Site • Close to Shopping • Big Trees PRELEASE NOW 451-1244 GARAGE APARTMENTI One bedroom, hordwood floors, west campus, ceiling tons, water paid. $285. Apartment Find­ ers. 458-1213. 3-23-108-C 370 — Unt. Apts. M A R K X X r r n Afdtaas meaar I m • Spring-Summer-Fall Beotfhe High Electric Ratesl 1 Bedrooms & 2 Bedrooms Available 459-1664 3815 Guadalupe Davis & Assoc VILLAS of La Costa 1016 Camino La Costa * 1st STOP CR SHUTTLE * HALF PRICE SUMMERS * 2 LIGHTED TENNIS COURTS * O N SITE TENNIS PRO * SPARKLING POOL * WATER VOLLEYBALL LIMITED AVAILABILITY PhEASING NOW!!!! 454-5638 SPECIAL RATES Leasing Now on 1 Bedrooms FumishedAJnfumished C o nvenient to H a ncock C enter, S on, UT, & Hyde P a rk H alt a block to shuttle & city bus line. A ll a p p li­ ances, poo l, & la undry room. G as & w ater paid. 30 2 W est 3 8th 4 5 3 -4 0 0 2 ________________________ 2-24-208-F SPECIAL! H Y D E PARK Spacious, quiet, clean, shuttle, cov­ ered parking, 2BR/2BA, $325. Ceiling fans, mini-blinds, built-in desks, all gas paid and morel PLEASE LEAVE MESSAGE. 451-5825,4306 Ave. A. ______________ ' _________ 3-23-20B-D TWO BEDROOM $295 Summer Wolk or shuttle to campus, pool, ceiling tons. CAVALIER APTS. 3 0 7 E. 31st 3 2 0 -0 6 8 7 e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e ________________________ 3-27-20B-K PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER-FALL-SPRING 108 Place Apartments e Fum rihed/U nfurnrihed e D ritnvosher/D nposal e M icrow ave (optional) e Individual Storage e Pool and B arbeque/P alio e Loundry facilitie s e O n IF Shuttle e Hyde Park A rea e Across from G ty P o ri e Resident M anager From $2 00/M o n th 108 W . 4 5 th Street 452-1419 If n o o n s w w 3 8 5 -2 2 1 1 ,4 5 3 -2 7 7 1 3-9-20B-A WALK OR D lllO -U T ., Capitol, ACC, downtown. $250-$400, ABP + cable. Unusual rustic apartment. 1902-4 Nueces : 476-6109, 472-7562. 3-3-20B-F PRELEASING FOR Summer/Foil one block UT, small quiet com plex 1-1 ceiling tans, mini blinds. 2711 Hemphill Park. 478-1870.3-7-20B-K_______________ 1-1's, 2-1's AVAILABLEI $300-$395. SPA­ CIOUS, dean, garage, parking. Con­ venient 3121 Speedway. Coll Larry 469- 0 4 0 3 .3-7-20B-E____________________ 1 BR/1 BA modem furnished, near 45th St. and Guadalupe. Gas, water paid. Sunny, spacious. $265, Neuman M an­ agement 453-4500. 3-10-20BF CLOSE TO UT North. Efficiencies $165- $175. 1 bedroom apartments, $185- $235. Office 404 East 31st, 477-2214, 453-8812, 452-4516. 3-10-208-A LARGE CLEAN carpeted 1 bedroom/ efficiency. CH/CA ceiling tans, quiet mature individuals. N o peh. 35th St. 453-5417.3-20-20B-F_______________ GREAT OAK-spodous, immaculate 2-2, CA/CH, ceiling tons, dishwasher, pool, sundeck, 30ttVRed River. $475-$500. 4 7 7 -3 3 8 8 /4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 .3-22-20B-D LARGE, CLEAN effidency, ABP, $225, no lease, no deposit. 2201 M anor Rd. 480-8441, call between 9am-8pm. 3- 23-58 RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. G IG A N TIC ELM TREES gave this community its name. Come see huge 2 bedroom 2 bath apartment homes within walking distance of UT. Free heat. Call now. 452-1121 or453-1804 _________________________ 3-9-20B-K 2-1 IN HYDE PARK. Gas & ctnc appli­ ances. One block from shuttle. Brian 4 5 8 -5 0 8 5 .12-5pm. 3-9-208__________ 4 BEDROOM/2 BATH, 1600 sq. ft, walk­ ing distance to campus. 2811 Salado, $800/m o. Available June 1. 258-7817, 837-5368. 3-10-10B QUIET CUL-DE-SAC Efficiency, $235; 1-1, $265. Ceiling fans, gas-water paid. N e a r shuttle. 452-1121; 467-9709. 3-9-20B-K A tropical paradise exists at Villa Vallarta! Here you’ll find the condominium quality and design de- a tails that you demand. Enjoy romantic sunsets over ■ nearby Shoal Creek, or gather with friends in the security of our private courtyard. Relax at poolside to the splashing sounds of our waterfall and soothe J B away the tensions of hectic academics. Organized social events make YMU Tm iu*u a place to make friends that you can keep for a lifetime. • Swimming Pool • Hot Tub • Sports Court • Controlled Entry • Microwaves/lcemakers t Private Parking 2505 Longview 322-9887 Affordable luxury Designed for Student living Beautiful l and 2 Bedroom Plans from $275 Furnished or Unfurnished. Just off IH South, Oakwood Apartments offer options for every liv­ ing situation. Set amidst towering oak trees and lush landscaping, Oakwood features a complete range of amenities, including magnifi­ cent swimming pools. Six, nine and twelve month leases as well as month-to-month accom­ modations. Complete Home Services packages (including dishes, linens, T.V. and more). Maid Service is also available. Office open daily 9 to 6. Sorry, no pets. Oh th e IIT Shuttle Um Prf‘ i eosmc) n o w f or S u m m e r a n d Foil G u a r a n t e e t o d a y ' s p r i c e s n o w 1 De sure your Car is ready! Th e D a il y Te x a n AUTO GUIDE offers helpful information concerning all your Auto needs-from Tires to Tune-up to Transmission service to Insurance, Financing, or even a Brand New Car. WATCH FOR THE NEXT PUBLICATION ON APRIL 5th IN OUR CLASSIFIED SECTION \ RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL KIN TAL 370 — Unff. Apts. 370 — Unff. Apts. 370 — Unff. Apts. 370—-Unff. Apts. 390 — Unff. Du plexos 400— Condos- C O M PR E H E N SIV E C O M P U T E R IZ E D .voilobiKti A l zm - >ifi Prices - All locations. Fast Free S • rvicel Habitat Hunters, 482-8651.2-15- í 8P ÍI-1, hardwood FREE RENTI Noor CR, floors, miniblinds, pats water c ilk» paid. Pric* naaotiabbi. 928-3585 •vanings. 3-23-10BC 2 B E D R O O M DUPEX <.15 W. 33rd, $375. 2 badroom hows* 1821 W. 36th, $450.345-1777.3-23-5 B 400— C o n d o s- Townht husos Townhouses PRELEASING EXCLUSIVELY LISTED Stoneleigh(2 6 un500/month Call 713-954-5005. 3-22- 2B-E WEST CAM PUS 2 BDR/3 BA. FUR­ W /D , N IS H E D , STORY. 2 MICROW AVE, ETC. S8 0 0 /M O CALL A GENT MITCH ONLY. 476-2673. 3-20- 20B-D 400 — Condos- 420— Unff. H o u s i Townhouses CROIX 2 BR/2 BA, FURNISHED,W/D, M ICROW AVE, ETC S75G/MO. CALL A GENT MITCH ONLY. 476-2673. 3-20- 20B-D___________________________ CROIX LARGE 1-1, W/D, M ICROW AVE, ETC S5 5 0 /M O CALL A G EN T MITCH ONLY. 476-2673.3-20-208-P LARGE. QUIET 2-2. Fireploce, mi­ crowove, washer/dryer connections, fans, skylights, pool, oaks, low utiRlies. Di­ rect Metro bus route to UT 10 minutes. Manchara between Lamar/Ben White $500.445-4829.3-22-10B-F________ CENTENNIAL C O N D O --3B R/2B A , un­ furnished, across the street from campus. C o l for appointment. 499-0274, leave messge. 3-27-56 P RE-LEA SE FO R S U M M E R ,F A L L / SPRING. U NIQ UE 2-1, TW O BLOCKS T O L A W S C H O O L . A M E N IT IE S INCLUDE; HA RD W O O O FLOORS, FP, WD, CEILING FANS. ETC. S700/MO. CALL A GENT MITCH O N LY 467-9211/ 476-2673.3-24-208-0_____________ HUGE 1 BE D RO O M wI loft, vaulted ceil­ ings skyfight, gorgeous views, 2-car pri­ vate garage, fireploce, microwave, W / D . $650. C o l Tommy 476-2673 P M T 3-27-20B-D ENCH A N TIN G 1-BDR, 2 b ib to campus, security, spa, covered parking, private deck, W/D, micro ... $400. Cofl Tommy 476-2673 P M T . 3-27-206-D MEDITERRANEAN STYLE CO M FORT AT ST. THOMAS. Vaulted ceilings, balco­ nies, pool and jacuzzi, security, parking garage, all appliances. 2 BC > fur- nished/unfumished $800-51300 Co* Tommy 476-2673 P M T. 3-27-208-D SABINAL 2-2's SANTA FE style luxury, skyfigfa, french doors, flrepfoces, design­ er decor, a l appfiances, pooL security, covered parking, $800/Fal. Call Tammy 476-2673 P M T . 3-27-206-D_______ BARTON SPRING S 1 block, luxury 2-2 wilh microwave, Jen noire, flipfoce and great dosets. Pool ond spa, $625. Co* □audio, broker 474-4456/ 328-8808 3-28-108________________________ NORTHFORK C O N D O S: SmaR, quiet complex. 1 bedroom avoRabie - $325. 4401 Speedway 459-0889.3-29-206-F FURNISHED C O N D O . $99 move-in spe dal. W /D in unit. 1-1 $329/month. 4411 Guodolupe. CoR 251-7678.3-29-20B-C LOADED 2-2 C O N D O Enfield orea, avaflable for summer & fafl leases. ($450-$535). Available to show Friday & Monday afternoons. CoR s on 835- 7174 (days), 346-2293 (evenings). 3- 29-58-F___________________ 410 — Fum. Houses SU M M ER SUBLET; M ay 1-August 31. 2-1. G ood condition. Bockyard-deck/patio. Quiet neighborhood/Rosedale. $450 plus utilities. 458-4036 3-24-5B 420— Unff. Houses ★ SMALL 1 BEDROOM ★ Close, downtown! Furnished or not. N o utilities, no pets $245 PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER, FALL/SPRING A unique, completely renovated 1200 sq. ft., two bedroom + bonus room, one both. Hyde Pork home located one block from UT shuttle. Amenities include: all appliances, ceiling fans, one car garage, fenced yard. $700/ mo. CaH Milch 467-9211/476-2673. -24-: NOW PRE-LEASING! 2-3 Bedroom Houses Summer/Fall PARKE COMPANY 479-8110 2-27-20B-C CO M PR E H E N SIV E CO M PU TERIZED Avoifobilrttei, All Sizes - A l Prices - All Locations. Fast, Free, Servicel Habitat Hunters, 482-8651. 2-15-28P COm‘ pus. W/D, CA/CH, CP, fmt yd. Move-in speciol. Bret. 453-0540.3-7-206-D mT,S TW O BLOCKS FRO M CA M PU S nice 2-1, CA/CH, W/D, cp, $450. Move-in spe­ ciol available. Bret. 453-0540 3-7-208 D 2 BR/ 1 BA Cottage, private, quiet, hard wood floors, carport 5613 Jim Hoggs Neuman Management. 453-4500. 3-10 206F____________________________ PRE-LEASE O R NO W l-Nice Houses, 2-7 bedrooms. $500-51850. Eyes of Texas 477-1163. 3-21-206-D______________ FREE COMPUTERI 1-1 for $300, Walk to UT, stave, refrigerator. A/C, no pets. 451-4386.3-23-5B________________ TW O BLOCKS FRO M CAMPUS nice 2-1, CA/CH, W/D, cp, $375. Move-in spe­ cial available. Bret. 453-0540. 3-23- 208-D ________________ VERY NICE 3-2. Two blocks from cam­ pus. W/D, CA/CH, CP, fmt yd. Move-in speciol. Bret. 453-0540. 3-23-20B-D HISTORICAL TWO-story. West campus, under construction. Available 6-1. 6-2 with study, CACH, carpet, hardwoods, security, energy efficient. 346-6416. 3- 24-106 ____________________ CH A R M IN G VICTORIAN 3-story. West campus. 7-3-with study. CACH, carpet, hardwoods, energy efficient, security, yord. 343-6416.3-24-108___________ 1920's LARGE 1-1 cottage. O o k floors, ceiling fans, quiet. Just north of UT. $390. 3009A Fruth. 472-2123 3-24- 20B-F__________________________ 5105 DUVAL, 2-1 house hardwoods, fob of windows, fenced yord. 835-6083. 3- 27-10B-K________________________ PERFECT 3-2 near 45th, BuH Creek. CA/ CH, W/D, fenced, $650. Barton Heights 3-1, hardwoods, W/D, garage $600. 3-1 duplex on RR shuttle $450. Laura, 926- 9969,469-9800 3-29-3B-F_________ AVAILABLE NOW, 2 through 5 bedroom houses for rent. 452-5979 (24 hours). 3-29-20B-C 425 — Rooms ★ 444-2702 ★ _______________________ 3-28-5B-C SAVE $$$ LEASE OR BUY Hidden Valley manufactured home community - on bus route. Ten minutes to campus — 3-2 or 2-2. Club house, weight room, pool, tennis courts. Darlene, 926-8510 3-29-20B-D CO ZY BU N G A LO W in the heart of Hyde Park Totafiy remodeled 3-1 w/goroge, island kitchen. $900/mo, year lease. M o ­ tare ond responsible only. CoR Claudia, 474-4456 - 328-8808 3-9-12B-F WEST HOME Needs Female Roomer Immediately Lorge efficiency size suite, lots win­ dows, big closet, own entrance, deck backyard, with young medio profes­ sional. Very near U.T. & shuttle, dow n­ town, Capitol. Kitchen & washer/ dryer use. Cable. $250/month + $50.00 deposit. N O BILLS! 476- 2546. _____________________________3-23-5B ABPI CLEAN, private rooms. CA/CH— $170-5200. Wolk to campus. Deposit required. 2 8 0 0 Whitis. Bony, 472-4205. 3-22-10B-F__________________________ LARGE CLEA N carpeted room, private entrance/both, /refrigerator. N o kitch­ en. Bills poid. Quiet individual. N o petr 38th Street. 453-5417. 3-24-20B-F 1 • J. • Y ★ LUXURY ★ 1-1, 2-2, 3-2. M A N Y PROPER­ TIES AVAILABLE. C M L N O W FOR BEST SELECT IO N . A S K FOR MATT. ★ 474-4800 ★ CAMPUS C O N D O S 3-8-20B-A NORTH HILLS Spacious 2-1 \“2 town he if n« 10 min. from UT and downtown. Shuttle and city bus stop at front d o o r. Recently renovated. C A -C H , ceilii i g fans, deck, fireploce. Well-insulateel. Convenient to 183,Mopac, library, p o o l, shopping center. Available 1 A p ril. $475. 272- 57 8 3 .2 7 2 -4 0 7 6 . 2-24-20B-F PRE-LEASING The Merida W est University Place Large 2 BR and 3 BR luxury condos, w asher and dryer, microwave, g a ­ rage parking, starting at $700. G M Properties 454-4046 or 345-9986 3-29-20B-E RENTAL 430--- Room -Board Prelease Now m e n t Finders. CREEKSIDE 615 Upson Preieaae Now For Spring-Sum m er-FaK • Shuttle Bu s • City B u s • Jo ggin g Trails • Town Lake • Quiet Area • All Efficiencies • M ove in Today WILL NOT LAST LONG — BARGAIN RATES— Call Now 499-0491 s ta rtin g from $ 2 7 0 P V shuttle CHEVY CHASE DOWNS • 2 pools • Sp a e Tennis court e Fireplaces • Bay w ind ow s e Prom pt m aintenance e Beautiful landscaping e On-site m anagem ent 462-0777, 2504 Huntwick Village Green & t& Áete CC a C C ^ w w Get it while its hot! C C $ w Special student rates for a limited time only Now Leasing for Summer & Fall t Sparkling Pool • Weight Room • Saunas • Jacuzzi • Lush landscaping • 5 min. from UT • On city bus line 1-1’s, 2-2’s, 3-2’s & Duplexes 7224 Northeast Or. 926-9425 Ivanhoe Village Apartments — In Travis Heights — Next To Park — Quiet Neighborhood — Ideal For Grad Student — Recreation Areas — Pool/Laundry — Excellent Rate — Move in Today VILLA NORTH 2 Bedroom Apts Prelease Now For Spring- Summer-Fall 4520 Duval 459-9131 Davis & Assoc S P A C IO U S 2 -2 's country kitchen, CF's, built in bookcases, o n bus line, gre at for students. 9 2 8 -2 5 8 1 . 3 -2 7 -2 0 B __________ SU P ER L O C A T IO N in Clarksville Large efficiency $ 2 2 5 ,1 Bedroom $3 0 0 . 3 3 5 - 6 0 8 3 . 3 -2 7 -1 0 B -K 1500 East Side Dr. 441-4375 • $70 Move-in Special ★ N o w Preleasing for Summer & Fall • low deposit • extra large apartments • prompt maintenance/very clean • NR shuttle bus • swimming pool • newly decorated • large 1 bedroom - 7 5 0 sq. ft • large 2-2 -1 0 2 5 sq. ft. BROOKHOLLOW APARTMENTS 1414 A ren a Dr. ★ 445-5655 ★ 3-20-20B-F RENTAL 370 — Unff. Apts. E N JO Y A RELAXING SUMMER AT THE FOREST! Trees everywhere ... fresh air and friendly at­ mosphere. Our apartment community features: e Jr. Olympic size pool e Tennis courts e Weight room e Free aerobics • Free cable, HBO & Cinemax • Spacious Apt. Homes • Clubhouse • Hot & cold water pd. TH E FO REST APTS. 444-3161 SPRING BREAK SPECIAL! $991st mo. rent • Large efficiencies on UT Shuttle • Newly redecorated • Door to door trash service • Executive suites available Now Leasing! Stonewood Village Apts. 4 5 5 8 A v e . A 454-8903 C L O S E T O S H U T T L E STAFFORD H O l’SE \ P \ K I'M ! \ !" 2 -1 s sta rtin g at ,4 ' f t / 1-1 s s ta rtin g at: .i S 3 0 0 $ 2 0 0 SANDSTONE I & I I 2408 & ?50i Marx* Rd S U M M L R PALI SPRING YR I F A S E $2 5 3 $ 3 0 0 $2 6 6 koee tí’ afK/TTke F u n w h e ! .rst* aval Spa A Qubroom i f ** ifeea Prvl Mar tag**.; Cry Hager • Judent Resident Manager • Security PatroAed • Prof Landscaped Proper!»** tic WALNUT FUN Come by for a tour today and see for yourself the quiet, comfortable and pleasant environment that Walnut Run has for you. Our amenities include: • Hot Tub e Sauna e Microwaves e Balconies • Washer & Dryers in each unit. e On IF shuttle route • On-site management • Fireplaces 3203 Speedway 251-6329 478-9054 BRONZE BODY ★ ....can be yours with tan n in g bed ★ a n d exercise facility. M icro w a v e s, w ash e r/d ry e r fire­ places, on shuttle $ 9 9 deposit; starting at $ 0 0 5 . H A L F PRIC E connections, R E N T F O R S U M M E R M O N T H S I A partm e n t Finders. 458-1213 ________________________ 3-8-20B-C POSITIVE ENERGY 1-1 in renovated, 60 year old apart­ ment building available 4-10-89. $315 High ceilings, exposed brick, pool, laundry room. Close to every­ thing at the N E comer of 17th & Rio Grande. Rio House Apartments, Call or stop by anytime. 472-1238 (sorry, no preleasing.) 3-22-20B-K CHA-CHA-CHA ★ W e s t c a m p u s, p o o l, s p o r t court, ★ h o t tub, y u m m y d e c o r a t o r c o l­ ors. Efficiencies, o n e b e d r o o m s , a n d tw o b e d r o o m s . S e le c t n o w fo r F A L LI W a s h e r / d r y e r o ffe re d in a fe w t w o b e d r o o m s . A p a r t ­ 458-1213 3-8-20B-C Hyde Park - IF Shuttle LARGE efficiencies with wolk-in closets * LAUNDRY * VERY Quiet * GREAT Rates!* C oll M IK E 2 -6 p m. or leave message: • 323-6526 ★ Se q u oia Apartm ents - 301 W . 38th St. 3-22-20B-F $ 199.00!! Weight Room/Racquetball/tennis pools/more! Large Units, New Carpet & Tile Large 1-1: $229.00 2-2: $300.00 Properties One: 447-7368 c --------------------- 3-20-20B-F NEW EST! Brand N e w Detigner Interiors H uge Floorplans 1-1: $275 2 Bdr: $325 Unique pool/sundeck Sport Court Super Neighbors Properties One: 447-7368 --------------------- 3-20-20B-F HALF MONTH'S RENT FREE! in small, quiet Large 1-1 complex, near RR, new paint, flooring, carpet, mini­ blinds. Water & gas paid. $225-$245. 467-6508 3-20-10B RENT SPECIAL * from $ 19 9.00 Large efficiencies in the Hyde Porit area, e G a s & water paid • oil appliances • drapes e carpet e laundry e pool HYDE PARK PLACE 4 4 0 0 Ave. B M a n a g e r #113 4 5 2 -3 5 9 0 3-10-20B-F ★ WASHER/DRYER ★ ....you've got it in your very own apartment on shuttle. Enjoy two pools and jaccuzi. All of this for only $314. Pre­ leasing! Call Apartment Finders. 458-1213 ________________________ 3-8-20B-C WALK TO BEAUTIFUL WEST AUSTIN PARK — efficiencies on quiet street, just 2 bloclcs from shuttle. 452-1121/ 472-9516. 3-9-20B-K BRYKER W O O D S Near Seton Hospital and U.T. All new heating and A/ C. Old, English architecture in a trendy neighborhood. Don't lease until you call about this one. 453-4991 or452-l12l 3-9-208-K SPACIO US EFFICIENCY Furnished & un- fumished. All appliances. G as & water paid. Shuttle. $205. $50 deposit. 2 weeks free.305 W. 35th 459-4977. Terri. 3-9-10B-F____________________ G R E A T O A K - spacious, immaculate 2-2, CA/CH, ceiling fans, dishwasher, pool, sundeck, 30tn/Red River. Pre-lease Special. 477-3388.3-6-20B-D CASA GRANDE A PA R T M EN T S EFF (Ail ASP) $ 2 9 5 1 BR— $ 2 9 5 -$ 3 2 5 2-1— $ 3 7 5 2 -2 — $ 4 2 5 3 .2— $ 5 7 5 -$ 6 2 5 Furnished/Unfurnished Large rooms, parking, laundry, pool, on UT shuttle, near UT 1400 Rio G rande 480-8039 327-5045 3-21-20B-F C lassic W e s t Austin Large 1-1, grey carpet, cov­ ered parking, laundry, quiet atmosphere, $350. 1504 W in sor C off Enfield 454-0099 835-5928 3-27-20B-K Pre-Lease Walk to campus. Quiet effi­ ciencies $150 Summer, $200-$250 Fall. 504 Elmwood 454-0099 835-5928 _________________________ 3-27-20B-K W EST A U STIN 4-plexl Convenient to dow ntow n a nd UT. 2-1 Lovely neighborhood, refrigerator,CA/CH, mi­ crowave, covered parking. $59 5 476- 447 7 2-24-20B-C W A LK IN G DISTANCE to Campus. 1 Bed­ room $ 2 2 5 + E. Quiet neighborhood setting. 3 0 4 E. 33rd. Call manager 320- 0331. 2-24-20B-C $199 M O V E -IN Special. Spacious 1-1, grdrt for roommates. Quiet 8-plex, 2 blocks to bus. Available now. $ 225- 4 5 4 -7 9 0 0 $23 5 + electricity. Call Sandlin & Co. 3-10-11B-F______________ O N E B E D R O O M Efficiency Apartment. All Bills paid. $ 20 0 + $ 5 0 deposit. 467-9535. 3-10-10B__________________ PLEASANT QUIET spacious Hyde Pork efficiency, beautiful pool and courtyard, gas and water paid. Call David 458- 8893. Ken 452-7552. 3-10-206-D HYDE PARK COTTAGE - close to UT/ shuttle, 4412 B Speedway, 1 bedroom, wood floors, $225/mo. + bills. 4 59 - 0017.3-21-20B- D____________________ HUGE 2 story 1 BR apartment. Has hun­ dreds of windows over looking the Ney Museum & Waller Creek. Hardwood floor, fireploce. $450. N o dogs. 4 4 0 7 Ave H. Coll Tom Barr 458-4021. 3-23- 5B__________________________________ A LM O ST N E W I West campus, smaller, 2- 2, ceiling fan, whirlpool bath, wolk in closet. $ 3 9 5 -$ 4 2 5 now or pre-lease. Step Savers. 476-3028. 3-23-20B-D UN IQ U E EFFICIENCY! Saltillo tiles, ceil­ ing fan, fireplace, windows, walk-in closet, pool, shuttle. $225-$260. $ 5 0 deposit. Pre-leasing. Step Savers. 4 76 - 3 0 2 8 .3-23-20B- D___________________ SU M M ER SPECIAL! Large, roomy apart­ ments. Efficiency $175, one bedrooms $200. Deposit available. Gas, water, sewer, garbage paid. 1900 Burton Drive. 440-7197. 3- 24-20BC____________________________ required. Pre-leasing FREE HEATING, gas cooking, hot water - rent - $100 deposit/$100 first months shuttle/metro 1212 4 5 4 - 4 4 0 9 , Westheimer. 3-24-5BC 1920's LARGE 1-1 cottage. Oak floors, ceiling fans, quiet. Just north of UT. $390. 3 0 0 9 A Fruth. 472-2123. 3-24- 20B-F_____________________________ FIRST M O N T H free. Beautiful efficiencies, 1 & 2 bedroom condos. Includes fire­ place, fan, W /D connections, appliances & jacuzzi. O n RR shuttle. From $225. Sharon. 926-0898. 3-27-10B DO LPH IN APARTM ENTS - large carpet- ed, mini-blinds, walk-in closets, aN appli­ ances, RR shuttle, 2 city bus routes. $189/ mo. Gas/water paid. Brad 371-0160. 3- 28-4B-D BEAUTIFUL 2 B ED RO O M , 2 bath in 4- ptax. Spacious. Almost new. $350/mo. 612 N. Loop. 472-7617. 3-29-5B-C EXCEPTIONAL 1-1 near ntermural field. Freshly redecorated. Built-ins. Bay win­ dow. Watdr/hea* paid. $229.00. 452- 7 5 5 2 .3 -2 9-2 0 P_____________________ AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY- $225 Sumn '/Foil preleasing. W alk to cam­ pus: 1-1’s at 2 8 0 0 Rio Grande & 2 30 4 Leon; efficiencies at 2 7 3 0 Rio Grande. 331-4019. 3-29-20B-F 390 — Unff. Duplexes REDUCED 2-1 in older house available now or sum­ mer semester. Walk to UT. 474-0635. 3-23-7B RENTAL 400 — Condos-Tow nhouses JCtuLftM ^JJouAe 2-2's NOW AVAILABLE FOB SUMMER OF *89 PRE-LEASING ASK FOR OUR SUMMER RATES. Located in the prestigious West Cam pus neighborhood, these luxury condominiums are uniquely furnished and deco­ rated to create a comfortable, stylish environment expressly for student living. Our reputation is built on a thoughtful, caring attitude to­ wards our residents and every maintenance detail. Features • Computer controlled building entrance system • Separate alarm system for each unit • Covered parking w/good lighting • Separate locking storage area for each unit • Sm oke detectors and heat sensors in each unit • Personalized management only a phone call away (24 hrs) • Good lighting in outside hallw ays Amenities • Landscaped courtyard with spa • Cozy fireplaces w ith ceramic tile hearths • Fashionable, practical mini-blinds and sparkling brass fix­ tures throughout • French doors opening onto balconies • Decorative ceiling m olding • H igh ceilings, cathedral ceilings in 3rd-floor units - • Ceiling fans in living room and bedrooms • Hidden G E washers/dryers • Fully equipped G E kitchen includes frost-free refrigerator with ice-maker, dishwasher, microwave, self-cleaning oven and disposal • Spacious, organized pantry and sleek European-styie cabi­ netry • Pre-wired for telephone and cable TV • N — r c w p s U § m — 4 * e M p a » e e h i — y — foe FOR i O K I INFORMATION,CALL: 1451-3220 R io G r a n d e 1 f t M k s . f r o f l n U T M E T A M O R P H O S I S during the next few months, a dramatic change will take place at Doble Center. O n August 26th, a new building will be uihveiled. The brick exterior will be re­ placed with a post-modern look of solid glass, while the interior will sport all new room furnishings, carpeting and lighting fixtures. W e’re also adding a computer room, two high-speed sky box elevators, a lass-endosed lounge, and special floors for upper classmen. If this sounds inter­ esting to you, call Cheryl Hughes, our leasing manager, at 472-8411 or come by 2021 Guadalupe for a tour! IU M M E 2021 Guadalupe Street M M E Austin, Texas 78705 C E NTE I 472-8411 I IIIJ U I! l (800) YES-DORM All we have Is everything you want Page 14/THE DAILY TEXAN/Wednesday, March 29,1989 Dtb i AV AILABLE COPY RENTAL EDUCATIONAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICES SI-RVICES EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 425 — Rooms 590—Tutoring 590—Tutoring 750 —Typing 750 — Tjrping 790— Part Time 880— Professional 890—Clubs- NEAR UT Low School on RR bwnte. larga, roo*m--$150-$195 ABf CA/CH. ihora balfo. 33K) Rad Riv­ e r -476-3634. 3 2-208-F____________ fumóbad SHORT WALK UT Your own room. Qu.- ai, norvi i-smoUna, pattest. Shared kjScbarv C l 474-24C 74-2406 for prívala both, ABP $225-1275. CoH 472-5646 to shore bis, both. $120-$200. (3-20-206-FI WEST CAMPUS Summer Room* ovoR- obto now. V5 room $125. Ful Room $250 Common kitchen. A8P. 448-1343 or 480-8613.3-28-208______________ WEST AUSTIN, greot location on ER «hui­ lla Ideal for mature studious male. Quiet environment, nice house near Torrytown ihopping center PO Box 50103 Austin, Texas 78 78763.3-29-28______________ 435 — Co-ops FRIENDLY SUPPORTIVE. Veggie Co-op seeks femóle for double room--$295, includes afl bRIs, food. Great house, quiet neighborhood, good food. Royal Co-op, 1805 Read. 478-0880 3-1- 20B-K SHORT WALK UT Your own room. Qui­ et, non-smoking, petless Shared kitchen. CaB 474-2408 for private both, ABP. S225-S275 Call 472-5646 to shore bis,, both. S120-S200. 3-7-206-F 440 — Roommates MOVING? NEED a ploce? Or a room­ mate? ROOMMATE BROKERS finds compatible roommates &/or places: 477-5569. fee. 3-3-206-F____________ SHORT WALK UT. Your own room. Qui­ et, non-smoking, petless. Shored kitchen. CaB 474-2408 for private both, ABP. $225-5275 Coll 472-5646 to shore bis., both. $120-5200. 3-7-20B-F SUMMER ROOMMATE Needed. M ale/ Femóle. Groduatn/Senous student or professional desired. 2-l'/5 South River­ side area. Inexpensive Rent and bills. 442 -8973.3-27-58_________________ ROOMMATE NEEDED 2 BDR/2 BA, mi­ crowove, dishwasher, on CR shuttle. Move in immediotefy CoB after 4pm 467-9491. 3-28-4P_________________ FEMALE TO find and share apartment. Nonsmoking, neat, shore expenses. CaB Patty, 441-9408, work. 447-7542. 3- 29-6P FEMALE ROOMMATE needed 2-2. Go rage parking, security system & more. Extremely nice Oaudn. 476-8212. 3- 29-5B ANNOUNCEMENTS 520 — Personals SWEET THING - I love you, you hoi little firebolll Leave him and be mine today and forever Love ofwoys, You know who 3-29-1P_______________________ 560 — Public Notice BODY? MIND? Spirit? Who ore you? Phone 1-800-367-8788.3-24-5P RENTAL 435 — Co-ops M A TH TU TO R B M W .M th S t Office 477-7009 O v e r 10 yeere o f prolleaefopal k e ■ v l c t G R A D E . 8 t r u * * t in * ? ? » i e « reted on teeBe?? C e ll o r — by fo r a p p o in tm e n t f f i H pine * . t o EIO06 EM311 EM306S EM314 EM319 16 I EE411 EE318 EE212 EE323J MATH W H 02 H MM3F CS304P/F U403K1 C$206 M318K/L CS31S M306G C$410 M407 C$410 IMMMAB C$320 M808EAS C$336 CS345 W— M318K M427KA C$362 M311 CS37? PHYSICS CIW TTtl ENQ8P3 M PHY301 CHEM301/3Q2EN0307 i»l PHY302K4. CHEM610VB FNQ 306 THE PHV303M. CHEM616AB ENO310 ¡H PHY327KI M M M ATTHOn K DATA PHO. ACC311312 AST301 IbB DP A310 ACC326B27 AST302 HM 0PA333/K ACC364 AST303 H statsoo^ as tm tM eco ECO302 PSY317 ECO303 SOC317 + " ¿>1 QgHMAH « M ECO320K1 $ MMM EC0324 . D onl put M6 of? unte the night be­ fore a t ra m . R*6 loo late then... ♦ im ocktoUT • Yery reeeompfs * » eh n «tenca l rwtm rouaSTm ^m S: tfM b r a tiH Next door to Med Dog 6 B e e re J Wees 240i $L CONFIDENTIAL. PRIVATE business moth, calculus, physics, Pascal, statistics and economics. Col 251-8626. 3-23-20BF tutoring in SERVICES 650 — Moving- Hauling MOVERS: ABBEY absolutely professional. Piano moving, households, offices, aportmentv Specials to Dallas, Houston, etc. 479-9301 3-10-20B-D 710 — Appliance Repair f I m 6Bva5 VACMUM CUMMB 6 1 I 'Service Speck*" vacuum Sewing Machine $14.96 19.96 m'ad 909 W. 24ft) 473-VACS im 4-1499 I 720 — Stereo-TV Repair IT WE REPAIR 1 MTELEPHONE RECORDERS, Ü ÜVCfl* TELEVISIONS S7ER- ■ MEO COMPONENTS TYPE- §§§ H WRITERS CALCULATORS ■ I B E R K M A N ’S I SNOonfc C tnN r 740 — Bicycle Repair BICYCLE TUNE-UP MONDAY ONLYI Adjust spokes, brakes gears, headset, and bottom bracket. $16.50. The Bike Connection. 3709 N. IH-35. 469-9025. 3-22-20B_________________________ 750 — Typing r s ^ s r t y t i m ; & \ i k i s i i ; s 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 il.n i »«. k.S I I, 1 , 1 M nlnilr ASAP TYPING/wocd processing, papers, thesis dissertation, mailouts with a per­ sonal touch. $1.75/poge. Candace 451- 4885. 3-1-20P S l I C C K K D 4 4 4 - 4 7 3 1 BLOCK SERVICE I I I O K I \ < ; • l \ r s m i . i l . m i l ( « r o u p ■ \ 11 Sll ll It i I s 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 ,1 n . . . . . k S M l III M i i t m f i - SPANISH TUTOR: All courses Will help in grammar, composition, and conversa­ tion. Don't wad until it's too late I 322- 0849 2-22-20B-F PAPER ASSISTANCE: English. Govern­ ment, History, Philosophy etc. Don't wodl Reasonable help for reasonable prices. 458-6807. 2-24-208 EXCELLENT TUTORING: moth, physics, chemistry, computers, biochem, physiology, others 111 moke these easy! $10/hr. Kelly 474-7801 3- 3-20P_____________________________ logic, organic, GMAT, GRE, LSAT, SAT - Do you know the questions? Floppy Joe's may have the answers 477-9075. 3-23-5B TERM PAPERS - $1 50 per poge - free pick up/delivery in North Austin/ com- pus area. Connie 990-3055. 3-2-208 F R IE N D S ... Pearl Co-op TA08 Co-op Summer M 2 8 9 double Ratea: Fall Rates: *389 single, *319 double 349 single, Includes aH bills & meals • Swimming Pool • B/W darkroom • Computer usage • Walk to classes CALL 476-5678 NOW! ANNOUNCEMENTS 560 - Public Notice ZIVLEY’S THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE PRINTING APPLICATIONS Sure, We Type FRESHMAN THEMES W h y N e t S t a r t O u t w H f i O o o d O r a d f t ? L a w Briefs RESUMES 2707NEMPHILLPARK At 27th 6 Guadalupe Plenty of Parking 472-3210 472-7677 LONGHORN COPIES • R e s u m e s • T h e s e s • T e rm P a p e r s • W o r d P ro c e s s in g • B in d in g • L a m in a tin g • L a s e r P r in tin g • K o d a k - C o p ie s 2 5 1 8 G u a d a lu p e 476-4498 ACADEMIC TYPING SERVICE 504 W. 241 477-81' Twm Papan, Raa Briaft, Dinartoi $ 2 /pp. w /2 4 h r* f t) S t . 11 um«t, ions notice waalMftM. ■ Cewya " i 1 Wax! d o o r fo M o d Dp ■ I f M / l (tea m S u p á S S v m rA m M M a • ! P L E A S E ! e Allow me to PERSONALLY tend to your typing needs on my IBM W ord Processor. Fast and occurate to save you time and money. McCALL OFFICE SERVICES 346-6150 3-6-20B-D PROFESSIONAL WORDPROCESSING/ EDITING Special rate for students/faculty! $ 1 . 0 0 / p a g e 469-9431 TYPING & Wordprocessing Term Popen, Resumes, Theses. Fast service at reason­ able prices. Elite Office Services. 892- 0439,89 2-0 031.2-24-2 08 WORD PROCESSING/TRANSCRIPTION (Regular or microcassette) theses, resumes, papen. WordPerfect. Laser pnnting. 472-WORD. 2-24-20BK sonobl Fasti Experienced! TERM PAPERS, DISSERTATIONS, RESUMES. 24 years experience. Located in Northwest Austin. 335- 6839. 2-28-208 WORD PROCESSING reserve time now for your theses, dissertation, term po­ pen, reports. Barbara TuHos 453-5124. 3-22-208-K BALCONES BUSINESS Services. Papen, theses, dissertations, moil-outs, transcrip­ tions, proofreading. $1.50/pg. 15 yean experience. 280-6304. 3-22-208-D MACINTOSH TYPING SERVICE. Theses, apers, resumes. Im agew riter. extra. Sl / S ’poge pm). 3-23-20B available Laser printing 472-6913 (after 5 HOURLY REN TAL-Computer» & Type­ writers. Moctnt osh with lorge screen & loser writer II I 4T. Lowest prices. S ot/s Typing Etc. Shopping Cent , w. 258-5707. 3-6-208 183/Spicewood Springs COLLEGE EhK! iUSH composition teocher with PhD: wore I processing. $2/poge up. 3 blocks comp.. «. 479-8909 3-8-208-A THE STENO I'A D . $150/doubte spoce page. Word Procassing laser printer. 459-7710 or E137-3212.3-9-208-C PERSONAL SI iRVICE with Communique Word Process! g. Loser printed, choice of typeface, $2.25/pg, rush PU/Del. 836-0Í697.3-1 >-20BC________________ Have poper? , 11 type it) Includes report cover. Amo m sumes. All expertly pre­ pared . fast < 147 82 7- TYPING-80 ts, manuscripts poge and up. I *ck up and delivery ovart- abfe Diane. 32 15-7040. 3-28-20B-D W OODS TYPI N G & word Memory typ ewriters, LaserWriter. 25 yeon experience, i Good jlupe. 4 / 2-6302. 3-28-208-F I processing. MAC with 2200 PROFESSION/ a WORDPROCESSING IBM $1.2Q/pa )e and up. Quick turna­ round. Pick-uc , delivery. Storage avail- oble. 388-198» >,3-29-208____________ 760—M isc. Services LAWN CARE, quoldy work done when you want d. E- r digdol poger, 4 67-3356. 3 -2 0 208 251-3209, days- WEDDING - A NNIVERSARY - Birthday - Baby, Custom handpointed, 141 Plati­ num, Germon po slain, beoutiful heir­ loom Only 444-1861. Accepting 5 o nders/month. Order now. Free woHnong< sr. 3-27-5P $100. Cod SUMMER FIT! 4ESS. CoH Now II 469- 5682.3-28-511 WEDDING - iARY - Birthday Baby PLATES . CUSTOM PORCELAIN DESIGN. Han dpainted 14k/F‘tetin on German pore* lain. Appreciated gift. Coll 444-1861. Fre< i woHhangar with order. 4- 3-89 EMPLOYMENT 7 9 0 - P art Time ADVERTISING SALES Juniors, Seniors, and Grad. Stu­ dents to market public service advertising. High commissions to be paid weekly, flexible student hours. Please call Bruce, M-F, 8- 5,328-5190. _________________________ 3-8-208-P TELEMARKETING Earn $150-1200 + per week! Subscription sales fo r prestigious weeky business publication. Must be confident, professional, & able to w ork from home. Experience helpful. References required. Contact Scott Morris, 328-0180 Austin Business Journal 3-3-20B-F 483-5500 $5.00 HR STUDENT JOB Circus Ticket Sales Part-time evening hours 6-9 p.m. Mon-Fri Apply: 5555 N. Lamor C-107 9-4 pm $5.00 HR 483-5500 ________________________ 2-24-206-K NEAR CAMPUS - Full/port time. TYPIST (45+ wpm). BOOKEEPER (we train). Runner (your cor). ODD JOBS. 408 W. 17th St.: Applications 9om-4pm. (2-24- 206-F)____________________________ NATIONAL HEALTH agency seeks tern­ ary fund raising project coordinator. Good communication skills, transporta­ tion required, soles experience helpful. Reply to: TSP Box D-2 Austin, Tx 78713- 7209.3-9-108 PART-TIME TELEMARKETERS. No e; ence necessoryl W il train. No si Students welcome. $3.50/hour. 447- 7554 Col mornings. 3-20-208 ENERGETIC PERSON needed to run er­ rands. Must hove own car and good driving record. Call 343-1641 after 600pm . 3-20-10B-F_________________ TYPING, PHONES, M ojor Accounting (hours will quolify toward CPA); market­ ing, advertising preferred. Flexible hours. 10-20 hours per week. David. 34 3 -0 0 0 2 .3-22-6B_________________ EAR N $800 TELEMARKETING PERSONNEL needed immediately. Base pay plus commission. Are you a healthy, non-smoking Monday thru Friday 6-9pm. 454-8443. male betw jen the ages of 18-40 ~E---------------------------------- 11 « ^ ^ N C E D AFTERNOON teocher, a n d w ith ir r preschool and after school Above minimum wages. Apply B22. 3- weight? If : >o, you may qualify to programs, 10% of your ideal S E T O in a pharmaceutical ^ io b f020 D*nk>n Dr 837 participate research study and eam $800. TELEMARKETING. EARN $4.00/hr + The dates and times of the study commission setting appointments for am M W o w , You must b . 37-8827 *____ ' available I o remain in our facili- BURGER KING part-time held wonted, ty for the f intire period to be eli- W e WÜ work around schedute^ Ayply in gible. 2700 p son after 2pm. EOE. 3-24-4B CHECK-IN: 5:00pm, Fri, Aj x 7 500pm, Fri, A) x 14 500pm, Fri, A) x 21 500pm, Fri, Af w 28 CHECKOUT: 7-9om,Mon,Apr10 7-9am,Mon,Aprl7 7-9om, Mon, Apr 24 7-9am, Mon, May 1 In additior i, one brief outpatient visit is req jired after each peri­ od. To quc ilify, you must pass our free physi cal exam. Meals, ac- commoda tions, entrtainment and recre shonal activities pro­ vided free of charge. For more informatioi I, please call 447- 3641. STUDENT NEEDED with Mac tosh S.E. computer or better, to put together mo!- •nfl nst and labels. Col 834-1898, Paul f tetch. 3-24-5P DELI PERSON and bookstore attendont. Contact Tino at 328-7755. 3-27-5B-E SPRING IS here & our outdoor garden party business needs lots more helpers. Weekend work, 8 hour shifts, Party set­ up, kitchen help & final dean-up. $ 0 0 / hr 9 26 -69 07.3 -27 -28 ______________ VIDEO PRODUCTION personnel want­ ed. All positions scriptwriting through editing. Call Video Excursions 834-0172. 3-27-2B TELEMARKETERS NEEDED. No sales in­ volved, no experience necessary. Morn­ ing & evening shifts available. Call 443- 4488 Tue-Fri 9.30om-!:30pm. 3-28-2B ___________________________ PART TIME teller M-F 2:30-6, Saturdays 9-1. Co* Susan Liberty Bank 4500- H U A n PHARMACO ^±28-38 A i l Research for Better Health 3-29-1B-F WANTED MOTIVATED student who likes hard work and exudes enthusiasm. Sales, salary + commission. 454-5017. 3-28-18 800—General Help Wanted DAYeCAM P STAFF Seeking counselors w ith experience. Specialists needed fo r art, music, dra­ ma and sports. JCC CAMP SHALOM 331-1144 3-29-18 CAM P A N D R O S C O G G IN BOYS CAMP IN M A IN E Seeking Energetic, outgoind staff to teach tennis, soccer, baseball, swim, sail, watenki, canoe, woodworking, archery and riflery. Write or call col­ led: 733 West Street, Harrison, New York 10528.914-835-5800. US - FuR/port (4 5 + wpm). BOOKEEPER (we train). Runner (your car). O DD JOBS. 408 W. 17th St.: Applications 9om-4pm (2-24- 208-F) PERMANENT/PART-TIME evening telemarketing. No experience r sary. Practice your communication selling tickets to Houston Oilers gat Norm Austin hours: 5-9, M-F, 9-1 morning. Call 4 5 2 -3 7 7 2 .3-1-15B-C job i. In FULL & PART lime openings, student work program since 1948. $9.75 starting rate. All majors may apply. Scholarships available. Cal Vector 9am-5pm, 467- 6516.3-7-20-F_____________________ AIRLINES N O W hiring. Flight Attendants, Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service. Listings. Salones to $105K. Entry level positions. CoH (1)805-687-6000 Ext. A-9413. 3-10-20P W AN TED -G EO RG ETO W N Summer swim coach. Beginning May 15-July 31. Member-NW Swim Circuit. Contact Jay Trainor at 512-863-2562.3-20-108 ___ O H TV. M an y needed for commercials. Costing info. 0) 805-687- 6000, Ext. TV-9413. 3-20-20P ......................... ‘ RESIDENT MANAGER Hyde Pork 3 0 unit complex. Couple preferred. 458-8893. 3-22-8B-D_________________________ N O W TAKING «plications for oil de­ portments. Tom thumb #77. Above minimwn wage starting rates. Apply in person 37 0 0 Bee Caves Rd. No phone cols please. 3-22-58 WANTED FULL lime and port time check­ ers, pkg clerks, & cashiers. Apply in per­ son only “ Tom Thumb, 2222 M apac 3- 23-78 “ PART TIME employee for truck washing operation weekends and variable weeksdays. Must hove commercial driv- ers license. 837-9595. 3-27-58 SUMMER SWIM coach needed Oak Hid Area. M ay 23 to July 23. Member Aus­ tin HiDs Swim League. Call Diane 892- 33S4 evenings/weekends. 3-27-106-E MAKE HUNDREDS in your spare lime placing posters. N o selling. CoH (918)33MONEY. 3-28-1P CRUISE SHIP jobs. $30 0-$900 weekly. 928-0561. Ext C 3 -2 9 -4 B SUMMER WORK. $40 0-$ 450 per week. CoH 445 -56 49.3 -29 -38 MAKE HUNDREDS in your spare lime placing posters. No selling. CoH 918 33MONEY 3-29-1P_________________ 810 — Office- Clerical Administrative assistant for UT area dormitory. Non-student full-time. Must be very patient and able to handle different tasks with poise and ease. Call Carol Hughes at 472-8411 for an interview with resume from 1 to 3 pm or early morning. __________ 3-23-zOB-F NEAR CAMPUS - FuH/part time. TYPIST (45+ wpm). BOOKEEPER (we train). Runner (your car). O D D JOBS. 408 W. 17th. St.: Applications 9am-4pm. (2-24- 20B-F)____________________________ PART TIME employee needed for real es­ tate/property management company. Morning hours, typing and 10-key sibAs required. Call AKson at 454-4621. 3- 27-5B COMMERCIAL REAL Estate Company needs p a rt-tim e clerical help. WORDSTAR required 5 0 wpm. LOTUS 123 helpful. $6.00/hr. CoH Personnel Di- rector 346 -00 2 5 .3 -2 8 -5 8 ____________ BOOKKEEPER/RECEPTIONIST part time 10/hn per week. Filing, typina book­ keeping. Must have automobile. Near Campus. 4 6 7 -9 0 5 5 .3-29-5B_________ 3-2-206-C W ild U .T . I onghoms needed to fill fas sac ed positions. (Positions do not include missionary). (AGGIES (NEED NOT APPLYI) PART TIME drivers ond driver assistants Designated Driver Program. ^ Draignated t w Pro------- Shuttle students home from 6lh Street area. W eekends, flexible schedule. Call 476-8616.3-29-6___________________ Salary + Commission 2 Blc icks from U.T. 4 7 2 - 2 5 3 6 GOLF CART attendont needed. Tuesdays & Thursdays 12-dose. Riverside Golf Course. 5712 E. Riverside Drive. 3-29-38 3-27-3B-F 800— General Help Wanted ATTENTION TELEPHONE OPERATORS ★ AUSTI N SYMPHONY * O ffice / Assistant, Runner 2 0 Hr W eek M l st Have C ar Appl y 9 am -Noon llO l Red River 476-6064 3-27-5B TELEMARKETI N G POSITIONS available mominas an* i evening* shift*. Two blocks from cc tmpus. $5-10/hr. CoH Tony 4 7 7 -3 8 0 8 .3 - 24-68K________________ LOCAL CPA needs part time clerical, heavy typing and computer work. Cali for appointme nt. 474-7383. 3-27-3B Vi day — Great Pay Earn up to $10/h r. 820— Accounting- Booklet ping I want 15 happy, enthusiastic people who are motivated by making money. Our office has a cheerful, comfortable atmos­ phere with great co-workers, casual dress. No experience necessary. W e will train. AM & PM SHIFTS AVAILABLE GUYS, GALS, STUDENTS, HOMEMAKERS WELCOME HIRING N O W ) Apply in person at 3701 Guadalupe, Suite 105.12-12:30 pjn. & 6-6:30 pm _______________________ 3-27-48-f Camp Wekeelo for boys & girls, Canton, Maine, seeks staff for June 19-Aug. 20 for tennis, competitive swimming, water skiing, sailing/ windsurfing, piano, guitar, dance, gymnastics, video/photography, woodwor! ig, & backpacking. Also nurses' aides & kitchen work­ ers. On campus call David Martin: 832-1972, or write Camp Wekee- la, 130 S. MeHde Rd., Columbus, Ohio, 43209. 3-27-5B-F ART STUDENTS! NEED SOME BUCKS? Software company needs the excite­ ment only good graphics can provide. Many projects slated, games, packag­ ing to start. Send 1 art piece or copy with phone to: Sarrizon & Associates, PO-Box 162744, Austin, TX 787166. 3-27-58 GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,040 - $59,230/yr. Now Hiring. Call (1) 805- 687-6000 Ext. R r current tader- alfal. 3-1-37P for i OVERSEAS JOBS. Abo Cnxseships. I t e t e r e e $10,000~$K>5,000/yri 3 2 0 + ___ M f f i M f f i f f i B 805-68 87-6000 Ext OJ-9413. 3-7-1 NEAR CAMPUS FuH/part time. Gain bookkeeping experience. TYPIST (45 w p m ) RUNNER (your car) OOD JOBS. 408 W. 17*h St.: Applications 1 > am-4pm (3-2-208-F)_________ 850— Retail BUTTERFIELDS POSITIONS AVAILABLE RETAIL SALES EXPERIENCE DESIRED • PART-TIME Nights and Weekends • ASSISTANT STORE MANAGER Days, some nights t weekends Ftexibtty a must. Experience in dapiays and •ales desirable. Apply « person — North- cross Mol 3-27-38 860— Engineering- Technical PART TIME I i Programmer far IBM PC soft- wore, should uid be formlnr with DOS, BIOS, Turbo Pascal. Please caH Ursula or Monroe at 4 7 8 -8 0 2 4 .3-27-5B-E 880— Professional IMMEDIATE O P E N IN G AVAILABLE RESEARCH ASSOCIATE PO SITIO N w ith an estobished Austin basad com­ ma rol re al estate appraisal firm . Roai estate exporionca/oducaliond background a must. Sand/dalhrar re­ sume to 7 20 0 M opoc N orth, Ste. 210, Austin, 78731. 3-29-38 RESIDENT MANAGER for grade A prop- erty in Centoo! Hyde Park. Experienced, graduate stodent or married student cou- 01451-8412. 3-24- C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 TO PLACI A ClASSIFIKD AO EMPLOYMENT 880— Professional * * * * * * * * * * * * ♦ ¥ * * ¡CLEAN AIR WALKABOUT: SPONSORED BY AMERICAN LUNG ASSOCIATION OF TEXAS a n d ALPHA XI DELTA SORORITY April 2,2-5 p.m. at Fiesta Gardens on Town Lake lo breathe clean air □ I w i wok on Apr* 2 to Show my support O? the right □I want to recruit other walkers Please send me a recruiter'! pdcket raising pocket □I want to raise pledges. Please send me o tu n a □m unable to ion you on Apnl 2. but I support ths project Enclosed is my contribution of $________ N A M E ( T-SHIRT SIZE M L j o J PHONE CITY AG E STATE SEX ZIP COMPETITIVE WALKER ? YES N O p p r r ji iirpn r v . n fJ it:A N i7 A n n M M o ri $10 re g is tra tio n te e to : AMERICAN LUNG ASSOCIATION OF TEXAS. P O Box 24640. Austin. Tx 78755 | I A party package donated by Scholz Garden, Coors and 7up will be donated to-K -+( i f the campus organization with the most walkers. 3-27-208 890-C lu b s - Restaurants FINANCIAL ANALYST Th« Corporate O ffice of PRIME CABLE hos o pOMkoii optn foe o finonool onotysl. w y w M e w i mauae. m ra v ram nooyeiy, «vastar relukons, rs swin^ ructures, and potkdpahott in dtort and long tenn cor­ porate planning tedraduof should hove a Masters of Buenew Adminidration and CPA d h tax axperiancei, strong onotykcol ddk, and knowledge of Lotus 1-2-3. Individual should have 3 yean experience in accounl- n g wdh some finance experience. Flease send resume and salosy tequifemanls to: Pa­ tricio V. Hrabina, Human Resources Director, Prime Cable, 600 Congress Avenue, Suite 3000, Austin, Texas 78701. Please no telephone o s EOEM/F/V/H 3-22-88 ATTENTION LADIES! M ake your summer money now. Eam $1000/w k dancing at the all new Sugars Uptown Cabaret — Austin's finest business men's dub is now hiring dancers. No experience necessary. Call 451- 1711 for appointment. __________ 3-20-108 BARTENDING LEARN HOW IN 2 WEEKS Morning, afternoon and eve­ ning dasses available. Job placement assistance. Texas School of Bartenders. 440- 0791. Approved by Texas Edu­ cation Agency. 3-21-20B-F BANANAS/RED TOM ATO RESTAURANTS accepting hostess and waitperson appli­ cations. If you are available lunches 11:00-1:30 M -W -F or T-Th and some evenings until end of semester. Stop by be­ tween 4:30-5:30 at 1601 Guadalupe. 3-28-2B I sstaurants COOKS NIGHT Out Deli i ' hiring part b and defi tone prap/dahwathea cooks i counter derks. Apply at 1221 West Lynn. 3-27-58 MIKE & CHARLIE'S Emporium needs counter help. Tuetday-Thundoy 8:30- 1:30, Saturday 9:30-3 30 Apply at 1204 West 34th St. 3-29-3B-C_____________ 900— Donwstlc- HouMhold Housesttter/transportation & su­ pervision for self sufficient teen­ age boy. Student w /car needed to spend night in rural home and provide occasional transporta­ tion April 23-M ay 13th. Gener­ ous gas allowance, food, salary. Call collect 1-321-5626 (Bas­ trop) after 5. ___________________________ 3-24-6B MALE ATTENDANT Saturday and Sun­ day. 9am to 2pm to aid paraplegic. $5.50/hour. 452-9621. References and transportation required. 3-8-106 NANNY/HOUSEKEEPER needed imme- diotely. No weekends. Perfect for spouse of UT student 7:30-5:30 M-F. Call 331-4170 ask for Mn . McAlvain. 3-20- 208______________________________ NO N-SM O K IN G student wanted to core for infant boy part-time 20 /2 5 hrs. a week for 4 months, beginning April 11. Own transportation & references. Call 837-1674._________________________ LIVE-IN FOR medically needy baby for 10pm-7am. Schedule con alow dosses, training provided. 837-4644. 3- 27-58 (MMM IT! Use Your VISA or MasterCard to charge your Texan Want- Ads! Call 471-5244 Smart Shoppers Read the Texan Want-Ads! BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... CALL 471-5244 EMPLOYMENT 860— Engineering-Technical LABOROATORY JOB OPPORTUNITIES AT 3M AUSTIN CENTER AUSTIN, TEXAS CHEMICAL/MECHANICAL LABORATORY TECHNICAL AIDES - Part-time temporary employees (16-24 hours per week, extending through 1989). - Experienced and/or majoring in one of the follow­ ing disciplines: Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Materials’ Science, or Polymer Science/Engineer­ ing, Mechanical, Civil Engineering. - Prefer undergraduate in their junior/senior year orequivalent experience/background. If interested, please apply in person at 3M Austin Center. Our address is: 6801 Riverplace Blvd. (be­ tween FM 2222 and RR 620). For further informa­ tion call (512) 984-6580. We Aro An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/H/V Other prizes include two American Airline tick­ ets, dinners, movies and more. — 4 or 8-milewalk or — a competitive 5-kilometer walk — $10 registration fee (includes t-shirt and refreshments) * For more information caH 343-0(502 ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWING LEGAL ASSISTANT POSITIONS Vinson & Elkins, a major Houston law firm is seeking mature individuals with excellent academic credentials for career positions in its successful legal assistant program, working in such areas of tr t firm as civil litigation, corpo­ rate law, finance, tax, and employee benefits. We require good written and oral communication skills, the capacity to master and oraanize a new body of knowledge quickly, and the aaility and desire to interface with individuals from diverse backgrounds. We are seek­ ing individuals with graduate and undergraduate degrees. No previous le­ gal experience is required. conduct interviews on Thui A representative will be on campus to conduct interviews on Thursday, April 13, 1989. Pleas contact the Liberal Arts Career Center to schedule an interview. Complete transcripts, a research paper, and resume must be pi ro- vided to the Liberal Arts Career Center no later than Friday, April 7,1989. Descriptive literature is available from Ms. Linda Johnson, Liberal Arts Ca­ reer Center. For more information, contact Ms. Margaret Schatzman at (713) 654-4520. A MR MR MR m gm a - 4 * * * * 4- 4» 4- 4 * 4- * 4 ” 4- 4- 4- 4> 4- 4 * ♦ 4- * * ♦ ♦ ♦ * * ♦ ♦ ♦ * > 8 . * ■ •' • THE DAILY TEXAN/Wednesday, March 2 9 ,1989/Page 15 ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED show the historical film Mexico: 1910-1940 The Years of Revolution at 7:30 p.m. Thurs­ day in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.308. zation in the United States, will have an the West Mall information W ednesday. table on Around Campus is a daily column list­ ing University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and registered student organizations. To appear in Around Campus, organizations must be registered with the O ffice of Stu­ dent Activities. Announcements must be submitted on the correct form, available in The Daily Texan office, 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit subm issions to conform to style rules, although no significant changes w ill be made. ___________ MEETINGS___________ The Young Anarchist Front w ill meet from 7 to 8:30 p.m . W ednesday in Mary E. Gearing Hall 114. This society encourages self-responsibility, reliability and the em an­ cipation of the hum an race in religion, soci­ ety, economics, politics and intellect. Ev­ eryone is welcome. The University group of Alcoholics A nonymous will meet at noon on Monday, W ednesday and Friday in Burdine Hall 212 and on Tuesday and Thursday in Burdine 128. Shake Hands With the World w ill have a brow n bag lunch m eeting from noon to 1:30 p.m. W ednesday in Texas Union Building 4.108. All international students are welcome. The Texas Juggling Society w ill meet from 7 to 10 p.m . W ednesday in Russell A. Steindam Hall 213 and 215. A nyone inter­ ested in juggling is invited to attend. All skill levels are welcome. The Council of Graduate Students w ill have a regular meeting from 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday in G raduate School of Business Building 3.106. The Texas Union International Aware­ ness Committee will have a m andatory meeting for all international organizations to discuss International Week at 5:30 p.m . W ednesday in the Texas Union Building Eastwoods Room. Please bring all forms. The Movement Against Social Stratifica­ tion will m eet at 6:30 p.m . W ednesday in Parlin Hall 214 to discuss and plan events in memory of the anniversary of the April 4 assassination of Martin Luther King as well as to handle general business. All interest­ ed in fighting discrimination are encour­ aged to attend. The Black Health Professions Organiza­ tion will have a m andatory m eeting for Body Beautiful contestants at 6:30 p.m . W ednesday in the Texas Union Building Afro-American C ulture Room. Members will get information for the contest from you. Bring your music or choice of music. The Black Health Professions Organiza­ tion will have a m andatory m em bers m eet­ ing at 7 p.m. W ednesday in the Texas U n­ ion Building Afro-American C ulture Room. If you are on the statistics committee or want to help out, be there at 6:15 p.m . Campus Pro-Life Movement w ill have a legislative m eeting at 6:30 p.m. W ednesday in University Teaching Center 1.104. The Steve Biko Committee education subcommittee will meet at 6 p.m . W ednes­ day in Batts Hall 207. All interested are wel­ come. The University Hispanic Chamber of Commerce will present guest speaker Joe Morin of TAMACC at 7:30 p.m . W ednes­ day in University Teaching C enter 1.116. All mem bers please attend. New mem bers are welcome. The Institute of Latin American Studies Student Association will meet at 6 p.m. W ednesday in Sid Richardson Hall 1.302. Members will discuss party plans and share am using banter an d boring reports. Marshall McCluhan will not speak. The University Democrats w ill have the following committee meetings: Foresight staff at 6:30 p.m ., Projects at 7 p.m ., Issues and Education at 6 p.m . and Finance at 5:30 p.m. W ednesday in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.302. The University Speleological Society will have a m eeting for everyone interested in caves and caving at 7:30 p.m . W ednes­ day in T.S. Painter Hall 2.48. MECHA (Movimiento Estudiantil Chi- cano e Aztlan) will meet at 6:45 p.m . W ednesday outside of the Texas Union Building Chicano Culture Room. The Anime Club w ill have a business meeting from 7:30 to 8 p.m . W ednesday in the Beauford H. Jester Center West big screen television room (in the basem ent) to decide what will be show n at the next screening. M em bership cords will be passed out. ________ SHORT COURSES________ The Hillel Foundation w ill offer a be­ ginners class in Israeli folk dancing at 7:30 p.m. W ednesday followed by advanced teaching and request dancing until 10:30 p.m. at the Hillel House, 2105 San Antonio St. Everyone is welcome and it's free. For more information, call Shirley at 327-4773. Joe C. Thompson Conference Center and Com putation Center User Services will offer Microcomputer Teaching Facility H ands-O n w orkshops next w eek in Thompson Conference C enter 3.108: Mi­ crosoft Word for the IBM PC: First Course to 4 p.m . Monday and from 8:30 a.m. WordPerfect for the IBM PC: First Course from 6 to 9 p.m . W ednesday and Thurs­ day. Microsoft Word for the IBM PC: Sec­ ond Course will be held from 8:30 a.m . to 4 p.m. April 10. Cost is $30 with valid UT ID, $108 w ith governm ent ID and $150 for oth­ ers. Attendance is limited to 28. For regis­ tration information, call 471-3125. Computation Center User Services w ill offer short courses next week in C om puta­ tion Center 8. Courses will include: UNIX System Administration from 5 to 7 p.m. Monday and W ednesday; File Editing: Common Tasks in XEDIT from 5 to 7 p.m . Thursday; Introduction to the IBM 3081: U nderstanding the System from 5 to 7 p.m . Thursday in T.U. Taylor Hall of Engineer­ ing 101. Courses are $2 an hour w ith a valid UT ID. Cash paym ents m ust be m ade be­ fore 3 p.m . Register at C om putation Center 12 or contact the short course registrar at 471-3241, ext. 214, for m ore information. The Career Center w ill sponsor a job search w orkshop "Tapping the H idden Job M arket" from 2 to 3:30 p.m ., from 3:30 to 5 p.m. April 12 in University Teaching C en­ ter 3.102 and from 7 to 8:30 p.m . in Univer­ sity Teaching C enter 3.112. Career and job search counselors from the Career C enter will speak. Videotaped interviews with professionals from Procter & Gamble, Sematech and the A nderson Consulting G roup (Arthur A nderson & Co.). The Student Health Center's substance abuse aw areness peer instructors will offer w orkshops regarding several different top­ ics to resident halls, sororities, fraternities and other cam pus organizations. For more information, call 471-6252. _____________ FILMS_____________ The Astronomy Department w ill show the movies Evolution, Sun Dagger and Blue Planet at 7:30 p.m . W ednesday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 4.102. Admission is free. A star party will follow the films, w eather permitting. The Institute of Latin American Studies Student Association will show a video doc­ um entary on the Mayan ruins at Copan, H onduras, at 12:15 p.m . W ednesday in College of Business A dm inistration Build­ ing 4.340. Vito Valdiz, visiting Fulbright scholar from H onduras, will speak. ________ PERFORMANCES________ KTSB and the Campus Interaction Com­ mittee will have live music with Primitive M odem s and i2i at 10 p.m. W ednesday in the Texas Union Building Texas Tavern. Admission is free. LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS The Department of Anthropology Paleoanthropology Series will sponsor the public lecture "H om inids From Two Caves In Israel And The Question Of M odem H um an O rigins" at 5 p.m. Thursday in Burdine Hall 134. Professor Yoel Rak from Tel Aviv University will speak. Food For Thought w ill present this w eek's topic, "Literature as Therapy: A Novel Approach to Mental H ealth," from noon to 1 p.m . Thursday in the Texas Un­ ion Building Eastwoods Room. Jerome Bump, professor of English, will speak. Admission is free and open to all. Bring your lunch. The Archer M. Huntington Art Gallery lecture "Art Students will sponsor the Speaking on their Work" at noon W ednes­ day in the H untington Art Gallery. Stu­ dents exhibiting in the Annual Student Ex­ hibition will speak. INTERGREX w ill sponsor a lecture and discussion on "Afro-American Writers and Cultural Studies" at 7 p.m. W ednesday in University Teaching Center 3.110. Wahnee- ma Lubiano, assistant professor of English, will speak. The Young Conservatives of Texas, the Students' Asssociation and the University Democrats will sponsor a debate between Mayor Pro Tempore Sally Shipm an and City Councilmember Robert Bamstone on the merits of the strong mayor proposal at 7 p.m . W ednesday in G raduate School of Business Building 2.124. The Departments of Anthropology, Art and Classics will sponsor the Archaeologi­ cal Institute of America lecture at 8 p.m. W ednesday in Art Building 1.110. Karl Butzer, professor of geography, will speak on "M edieval Archaeology in Eastern Spain: Some views of Village Life and Cas- tl^U se." The Department of Physical Education will sponsor a mental m anagem ent sem inar "W ith W inning In M ind" from 6 to 10 p.m. Friday in L. Theo Bellmont Hall 328. O lym ­ pic and World C ham pion Lanny Bassham will speak. Cost is $10 and attendance is limited. The Faculty/Staff Christian Fellowship will sponsor the lecture "Social Change and the Pentecostal/Charismatic Move­ m ent" at 12:30 p.m . W ednesday in G arri­ son Hall 200. Jerry Shepperd will speak. ____________ OTHER____________ The Texas Union Fine Arts Committee will sponsor an art competition to be judged on April 19 by UT professors. Prizes will be aw arded. Call Robert at 472-3649 for specifics. (Spanish Conversatorio conversation group) — the D epartm ent of Spanish and Portuguese invites all interested students to join the "lunch bunch" every W ednes­ day from noon to 1 p.m . in Batts Hall 201. Bring your lunch if you wish; come and go as you please. This is an opportunity to practice Spanish conversation in an infor­ mal, no-pressure enviom m ent. All levels of ability are welcome. There will be facilita­ tors to assist each week. Christians on Campus w ill have Bible study from noon to 1 p.m. W ednesday in Texas Union Building 4.224. The Mexican Students Association will NUDE, the only student naturist organi­ The UT Roadrunners w ill have their weekly run at 5 p.m . W ednesday. M eet in front of L. Theo Bellmont Hall. R unners of all abilities are welcome. For more inform a­ tion, call Randy Remington at 495-5508. UT Health Center-Student Outreach and the Dean of Students-Disabled Services will sponsor adapted aquatics, sw im m ing and therapy for disabled students, faculty and staff from 8 to 9:45 p.m. W ednesday and from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday in the Anna Hiss G ymnasium pool. Volunteers will be avail­ able if assistance is needed. The Natural Sciences Council an­ nounces the Natural Sciences Week events for W ednesday: ■ A tour of the Interior Design Lab at 1 p.m. in T.S. Painter Hall 4.02. ■ A talk on "H ot H-Atom Chem istry” at 3:30 p.m. in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.122. ■ A Students' Association environm ental forum at 4 p.m. in the Texas Union Build­ ing Presidential Room. ■ A student-faculty mixer at 5 p.m . in T.U. Taylor Hall of Engineering 3.128. Student Volunteer Services needs vol­ unteers for the following: ■ G roups or individuals to help w ith an alternative school fund-raiser. Activities will include an auction, raffle and chil­ dren's activities. Help also needed with food and setup/cleanup. ■ For elem entary schools. O pportunities will include working with Spanish speak­ ers, library and book fair and reading tutor­ ing. For more information, call 471-3065. The Career Center announces a sales in­ ternship program for juniors with a GPA of 3.0. It will be with Steelcase Inc. based in Grand Rapids, Mich, with com panies all over the United States. This internship will take place in Houston, w here you will receive thorough training. Come to the Ca­ reer C enter in Beauford H. Jester Center A115 for more details and to turn in a re­ sum e if you are interested. The Canterbury Episcopal Students' As­ sociation will have a yearbook picture fol­ lowed by a w orship service and d inner at 5:30 p.m. W ednesday. Meet at the South Mall. Seth Deleery will continue his fasci­ nating comparison of the gospels of Matthew and Luke. The National Student Business League will have elections at 7 p.m . W ednesday in Graduate School of Business Building 2 . 120. The Texas Equestrian Team will com­ pete in the IHSA Region VI show at S outh­ ern Illinois University in Carbondale, 111. April 1 an d 2. This is the last regular show before regionals. For more information, call 451-5401. The Cabinet of College Councils' Stu­ dents for Academic Integrity market "Texas is the B est...H onestly" T-shirts W ednesday on the W est Mall. 1 O ne w ho does: suff. 5 Lean animal 10 Puncture 14 A ntelope 15 B reather 16 Dress of old 17 July 4 20 W ag e 21 A m o s ’ buddy 2 2 M isplays 2 3 S p ick-an d - span 24 G ratis 25 M ad looks 28 H arb or towns 32 H elen ’s abductor 33 Fissile rock 3 4 G ran ad a gold 3 5 Israel’s A b b a — 3 6 School group 3 7 Out on — 3 8 Everything 3 9 G arm ent 4 0 B erate 41 Dwelling for seniors 4 3 .Stove parts 44 Optim ism 45 Olympus troublem aker 46 Bakes (eggs) 49 A la c k ’s kin 50 God: pref. 53 M akeshift bom b 56 Adjective suffix 57 Sm ithy 58 O stentation 59 Throw 60 Absconds C A R E s A M U S E 0 c T A D s H E B A R R Y P E N 1 M A G E M E N T A L 1 S T T E R S E D E E R G U S H E R E R 1 E S G R A N T E D L 1 E S A N D S U 1 T E T R A 1 N E D s E N s U O U S D E T A 1 L E D S A R C O M A T E N E T G E E B 1 R D S N E E z E s S T A 1 R S p R 0 U T L 1 P s 1 D E A L F 1 N G E R T 1 p s U E D E T O N S T Y s T E E D P R u D E A R D 0 R L O E S S 61 Hilarity DOWN 1 Gloss over 2 Fish 3 B ackw ater 4 W oody plant 5 Dissipates 6 Sw eet stuff 7 M r. Vallee 8 Enzyme: suff. 9 Officers 10 Hi-fi plus 11 Rumpus 12 G el agent 13 Bights 18 Containers 19 Light crinkled fabric 23 Duplicate 24 M eal 25 W eapon 26 W ire rope 27 S o m e exam s 28 Portion 29 M e a t cut 30 Brom idic 31 Fixes (shoes) 33 Sludge 36 C uts short 37 F arm sounds 39 N YS E word 40 Adroit 42 Pangs 43 C harm s 45 Eulogy 46 S truck 47 W an derer 48 Sicknesses 49 Israeli city 50 Plane area 51 Lease 52 Additional 54 Tenn. athlete 55 Follow 10 16 19 2 3 7 8 9 11 12 13 4 56 r r ■ r !23^ 1 14 17 20 32 53 56 59 3-29-89 ■ 22 ■24 ■28 ■33 _■ 37 _ ■40 ■ 43 ■45 2b 26 2 / 35 38 J ■ 36 ■39 41 _ 1 P■44 48 46 4 / 30 31 ,29 ■34 ■ 49 54 ■57 60 50 51 52 55 I| 58 1 61 © 1989 United Feature Syndicate FOR OFFICE USE O N LY Do not write in this space D o o n e s b u ry b y g a r r v t r u d e a u AND BOTH BILL ANP BANPY ARB IN THB HOS­ PITAL KJ/TH IT, TOO2 YES, MA'AM. BILL ONLY HAS AIPS-RELATEP COMPLEX, BUT RANPY HAS FULL BLOUJN KAPOSI'S SARCOMA. I I THINK YOU'LL FIND THAT AIDS IÁJILL BB THE ONLY TOPIC AT YOUR toujnm eeting tdpay. people UJILLU/ANT YOUR VIEWS ON EVBKf- TWNG, FROM HEALTH CARL COSTS TO CONHPENTIALITY ISSUES TO RE -LICENSING THE BATH HOUSES / RE-LICENSING UH... YES, MA'AM. THEY THE BATH HOUSES ? YOU HAVE BEEN MEAN, THEY'RE FOR SOME TIM E. \ CLOSED? \ _____ BUT I THOUGHT GOOP HYGIENE UJAS EXACTLY THE ISSUE1 I BETTER GET THE BRIEFING BOOKS,.. P.S./rev. 3-89 : Cd & — BURNT ORANGE BLUES a n d lK v Ajtefor A fhio- NR~ S tfh eB U)riH A «tv>s.icAi- N ü rtB fi . AND LAND IN YbfZK. l o &LA. T i e stN iN g :- U f c f i CXfeRSUOUON 'B K j U O N ' M a e IdrTH A to DOLLAR. H A ip cu r, d ó n a le » if c o m p -/ I t /<», M i c e /TifeurYtp I b u j & z - Y p d o k s , O i > s r D s s i e ...eA ODV.eaPcee»,,, E x c j E t t T b v o e js . D o e s N 'T HfWe FAU-(MC=. OFF,,. BY VAN GARRETT AND D O S ie ISN 'T BV ft\\\pe 1Q 50K J. e p irfetgr tfiAjowp a n\ei2.Tír¿) is. THE MAGICIAN BY TOM KINO M X X m COUNTY by Berke B reathed ACTOMJUf^'S GUlfe IttfEffesF M OW^tAT HMGrtCWMlD Vgo£KS,f4ov4TOAT 0 K w SOHEVftWirt v id m e I. ■ VMEA Y co fLUCr IT 111, |T TK*taFoRw»S Ytoo w*ib WHO feVE* o t) T U t C tllM N E L AT TilAT tH E . T'OO ST. I T ilfcr N A Y U rtT li -WjE-CtMNAEt -rt 1c: % .uutr> Y e A r t .t K iikftl- m i d i TMWtK M L S*%OOL1> M lttT t SOME- DA8ES OVER Tb Vjftttv* ♦ H tfL A Y e o Y C U M W tí. 0 | I Vi HAT COUUD DO VKOtkx? Visit the Texas Union’s new Texas Kitchen. You’ll find variety, freshness, and home-style meals you never would have expected to find on campus. There’s something for everyone: Bud’s Best Bar-B-Que Try a plate of “Texas-Style” Bar-B-Que right here on campus! Bud’s menu includes Brisket, Sausage and Combo Plates with all the Fixin’s. Steer Here The Texas Kitchen’s grill serves Burgers, Greek Gyros, Fish and Chicken Sandwiches, Fries and Onion Rings. Pizza Pickup Pick up a slice of Pizza (pepperoni, sausage, hamburger, vegetarian, combo, etc.) or a plate of Pasta (lasagna, spaghetti, etc.) from the Pizza Pickup. The Hill Country Cafe serves the freshest Chicken Fried Steak, Fried Chicken, Chicken Breast Sandwiches, Salad Bar, Vege­ tables, Desserts and Breakfasts on campus. El Burrito The home of the “Burrito Grande” serves Enchiladas, Taco Salads, and other mexican dishes The Texas K itchen Main Level, Texas Union Serving Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner Monday through Friday O O f l Q Jfli The Texas Union 24th and Guadalupe y <