BI.r A Í : í EXA N Student N e w s p a p e r at The University of Texas a t Austin Fiff®# r Cífm 3 ¡ 471 4591 471 - ‘865 e m i f l M n a Carter considering ‘^•'eak for 1981 3ur ‘ i a X I . . VTT„. *oi ed 11 u iw . big it should be, secretary Jody Powell said Tuesaa*. * TUl Powell said Carter still is mulling over whether any tax cut could be enacted without starting up a new round He said the president and his advisers would hold extensive discussions on the matter with congressional leaders and that the idea of a $25 billion reduction would be “ factored in” to the talks. Although Powell said the White House preferred that no tax cut be enacted before the November general election, House Speaker Thomas (Tip) O’Neill said Congress may approve a reduction before then anyway. “There was no question in all our minds there’s going to be a tax cut in 1981 — should it be reported this year or shouid it be reported next year ’’ O'Neill said after he and other congressional Democrats attended a m eeting with Carter at the White House. O’Neill said the House Ways and Means Com mittee will hold hearings on a tax cut som etim e in July and the Senate Finance Com m ittee is working on a sim ilar m easure. Dem ocrats on Capitol Hill are geared up for a tax cut following Republican proposals for a $22 billion reduction for fiscal 1981, but O’Neill said, “ the presi­ dent has not com m itted him self to a tax cut.’’ Powell also stressed that Carter has ot come to the bottom line yet. “ We’ve obviously been looking at what a tax cut for 1981 should look like, but absolutely no decisions have been m ade on tim in g, co m p o sitio n and amount, and those discussions will in­ volve Congress,” he said. Powell said Carter still must decide whether is is “ possible to put together a package that is responisble and that does not kick off a new round of in- lation.” He said Carter wanted “an orderly and responsible process in vivid contrast to t h e t h e m a n e u v e r i n g s o f Republicans" who said a tax out is necessary to offset the current reces­ sion. Powell said he thinks there has been a cooling off of the tax fever that hit Capitol Hill after Ronald Reagan and congressional Republicans announced their plans last week. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas, one of those who attended the White House meeting, told reporters Carter wanted to look at July economic figures and the proposed federal budget decision. “ He left his options open,’’ Bentsen said, adding that those in the meeting agreed “ it should be a coordinated effort between the Senate, the House and the executive branch.’’ “ I’m sure w e’ll have a tax cut next year,’’ he said. “ I don’t know whether we will have it this year.’’ Clayton trial date set Although July 21 has been set as the date for the trial of House Speaker Billy Clayton and three co-defendants in the FBI Brilab indictments, Austin lawyer Roy Minton said Tuesday he “doubted” the defense would be ready by that time. Clayton was indicted June 12 on six federal charges. They range from fraud to racketeering to conspiracy to com mit extortion. The charges are based on a s e r ie s of m e e tin g s and recorded telephone calls between the four defen­ dants, an FBI informant and FBI agents between August 1979 and March 1980. Going through the “ 80 to 100 hours” of FBI recordings necessary for preparing the defense was proceeding “slow ly,” Minton said. Deer Park labor leader L.G. Moore and Austin lawyers Randall Buck Woods and Donald Ray face trial with Clayton on July 21. Clayton pleaded not guilty to the charges June 20 and said he wants to get the trial over with as soon as possible to clear his name for a bid at a fourth term as speaker of the House. Clayton said, however, he will give up his re-election bid if he has not been cleared of the charges by September The government charges that Clayton agree to seek to influence the awarding of the state’s multimillion-dollar state insurance contract. The indictment says Clayton accepted $5,000 last Nov. 8 from Moore as part of the deal. Clayton said he took the money, but in­ tended to return it at the first opportuni­ ty. The money, however, was not return­ investigation ed before news of the broke Feb. 11. Where there’s smoke ... Rocky Kneten, Daily Texan Staff A fire M onday at the Capital National Bank building, at Eighth and Lavaca alm ost out 10 minutes after firem en w ere called. The building, under con- streets, covers parts of downtown Austin with thick sm oke. The fire was struction, is expected to be com pleted in February. Story, Page 11. Flawn names Longhorn Band director By DIA N E BALLARD Daily Texan Staff University President Peter Flawn named Glenn Richter as director of the Longhorn Band Tuesday, four months after former director Tom Rhodes left the of­ fice Richtt , assistant director oi the band in 1976 and 1977. will take office this summ er after he com pletes his duties as conductor of the University of Michigan Marching Band. Richter was out of town on business and could not be reached for comment. Richter, one of three final candidates for the office, gained the overwhelming support of a group of band students who met with the three candidates in early June, said David Schkade, former president of the band fraternity Kappa Kappa Psi. The other two final applicants were Jam e Hejl of Mississippi State University, assistant Longhorn Band director in 1975, and Robert Foster of Kansas State University. “ Mr. Richter is the person to pull the band together. H e’s as orange-blooded as anybody,’’ Schkade said. Several band students said the band had not been un­ ified during the last few years because students had split into two factions supporting and opposing Rhodes. “The whole thing caused a lot of division among everyone,’’ said a student in the band who wished to re­ main unidentified. Rhodes could not be reached at his San Antonio residence, but he told T h e D a ily T e x a n earlier that he resigned “ in the best interests of the University and the music departm ent.” Band members had been divided during the last few years over Rhodes’ directorship partially because “ when you have a group like this one, of exceptionally talented people who have strong feelings about how the band should be run, there’s going to be disagreem ent,” Schkade said. “The position (of band director) is a volatile one because it takes a special kind of person to work with a group this large, of som e of the best college-level musicians in the country,” he said. Schkade and several other band members agreed most of the band as a whole is ready to move forward and become a more unified group. UT System asks for studio rent Proposal requests $106,684 from KLRN/U By JE N N Y ABDO Daily Texan Staff The branch of the University System that houses public television station in San Antonio has made a KLRN proposal requesting $106,684 rental fee to be paid by Sept. 1. Representatives from the station will meet with officials from the Institute for Texan Cultures during the week of July 14 to n egotiate the proposal. William Jackson, general manager of KLRN/U, said Tuesday the station can­ not m eet the $106.684 request and will ask for a one-year extension from the in­ stitute to investigate alternatives to the payment. The Southwest Texas Public Broad­ casting Council, the license holder for stations KLRN/U, is operating under a reported $200,000 deficit. JACK MAGUIRE, the director of the institute, said Monday KLRN has been unable to m e e t the r e q u ir e m e n ts stipulated in the agreem ents since 1968. If the station cannot find an alter­ native by July 15 to paying the $106.000, it will have to m ove from the studio if the money is not paid by Sept.l. “ Neither can the State of Texas nor the institute (an agency of the state) legally subsidize the operation of a public television station on state proper­ ty ,” Maguire said. He said som e taxpayers support the station through private contributions and “ to ask all of the sta te’s taxpayers to further subsidize the station at a cost of an additional $100,000 or more each year is not only illegal but is unfair un­ less there is a specific appropriation of state funds for this purpose.” M aguire em p h a sized that “ The Institute of Texan Cultures is not evic­ ting KLRN.” T he J u ly 15 d e a d lin e w a s s e t because the U niversity’s fiscal year ends Aug. 31 and the institute would like 45 days to make the necessary ad­ justm ents in its budget if the SWTPBC decides against the agreem ent, Maguire said. According to records provided by the institute, KLRN has accumulated a $240,288 debt since 1968. The Institute of Texan Cultures has been the location for the KLRN studio since 1968, and since then there have been two rental agreem ents between the Southwest Texas Public Broadcasting Council and the institute. The first agreem ent in 1968 stipulated that KLRN would provide in-kind ser­ vices to the institute at a $30,000 annual rate in exchange for occupying space at the institute to run the station. The agreem ent was in effect until Aug. 31, 1976. During the period of the agreement KLRN was to provide $252,- 500 in in-kind services. The services con­ tributed by the station totalled $98,744 — $153,756 short of the amount required. IN 1976 an oth er a g r e e m e n t w as negotiated and provided that KLRN pay an annual rental of $50,303 for the space. A portion of this am ourf was to be paid in cash and the remainder was to be paid in in-kind services. Under this agreem ent KLRN was also contracted to provide in-kind services totaling $106,684 It provided $20,152 — a $86,532 debt. As of 1976, KLRN owed the institute $153,756 in services which had not been utilized when the second agreement was being drafted. Maguire said the manage­ ment of the station said it was not liable under the agreem ent to pay the cost and claimed it had m $125,000 payment to the institute in 1968 as a reduction to the amount of in-kind services. Maguire said, “The fact is that this cash payment was an expenditure by KLRN to remodel the space it was to oc­ cupy and had no bearing on the rental contractual agreem ent.” J A C K S O N S A ID he could not com ­ ment on the debt since he did not have the reco rd s and w as not g en eral m an ager during the agreem ents. He added, however, that “The in-kind method has not worked as in recent it was envisioned well as years.” tim e of the Since the Southwest Texas Public Broadcasting Council is unlikely to m eet the $106,684 to continue renting the studio from the institute Jackson said the station will probably m ove to KMOL-TV in San Antonio. KMOL, a com m ercial station, can offer KLRN space on its tower for the KLRN antenna now in New Braunfels, Jackson said “ Moving the antenna is part of the package so that we can give the viewers in San Antonio the sam e quality reception that Austin g e ts,” Jackson said. located The Communication Center at the University has been the location for KLRU. According to a contract between the University and the council, KLRU should pay the University approximate­ ly $180,000 annually as rent for the KLRU physical facilities. Cancer victims line up for laetrile in NEW YORK (U PI) - Between 350 d 400 cancer patients have applied to rticipate the first government- proved laetrile experiment, the Sloan- ittering Cancer Center said Tuesday. The controversial substance will be yen next week to the first of 50 tients in a year-long test at Sloan- ‘ttering, one of four institutions par- •ípating in the experiment. An equal number of patients will be given the drug at the Mayo Clinic, the University of California at Los Angeles and the University of Arizona. The National Cancer Institute an­ nounced the study last Friday after a delay of almost two years. Supporters of the drug maintain that it not only can cure cancer but also can prevent the dis­ ease. Dr. Charles W. Young, chief of developmental chemotherapy services at Sloan-Kettering and the principal in­ vestigator in that hospital’s experiment, said about five patients a week would be started on the treatment The substance is to be administered on an outpatient basis to patients for whom all known cancer treatm ents have fail­ ed. Austin lifeguard Christina Kimminis indulges in cool hobbits. Rocky Kneten, Daily Texan Staff Texas heat wave kills 62 From staff and wire reports There will be no im m ediate relief from the nine-day heat wave that continues to grip Texas and neighboring Sun Belt states and has claimed more than 62 lives in the state, increased the violent crim e rate and threatened Texas crops and livestock. The high temperature in Austin was 102 degrees Tues­ day following a week of record highs that peaked at 105 degrees last Friday. The high temperature in the state so far during the heat wave was 117 degrees in Wichita Falls late last week. The heat wave is caused by a high pressure area in the upper levels of the atmosphere that has stagnated over the Sun Belt states, said Dave Owens, meteorologist at the National Weather Service office. High pressure areas “ normally move through, “ but this one has decided to stay .” Owens predicted, however, some relief next week with temperatures being “ a littie cooler and maybe some rain ” Areas closer to the coast are remaining a little cooler because of prevailing winds from the Gulf of Mexico, he said A spokesman for the Dallas Police Department said crim e had risen markedly because of the heat. “ I think it’s the heat,” reported police spokesman Bob Shaw. An employee in the crim e analysis division of the Austin Police Department said reports showed that assaults were more violent than usual in Austin during the past few days. She also predicted an increase in burglaries because people would be leaving their windows open in their homes. Water use in Austin is also high because of the heat. “ We are exceeding our estim ates of what w e thought we would need to produce to meet custom ers’ needs,” said Mike Erdmann, assistant director for administration for the Austin Water Department. The peak of water usage usually com es in July, Erd­ mann said, but he expects no problem m providing customers with all the water they will need Water usage approached the 144 million gallon record for a 24-hour period in Austin Monday with 140 million gallons used, he said. Livestock and crops are also suffering because of the temperatures Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, July 2. 1980 IAUJY6RS IN ACTION! VISTA attor ne y needed by women's group in Alamo, TX: Spanish-speaking, i n t e r e s t in public r e l a t i o n s to gain r a p p o r t with local attorneys and bar. One-year position s t a r t s l a t e Aug. 1 Call C J a t 397-5925 for information IN VISTO Fall-r«4ar rwpiei frwrc? artffetal prista, draw»»»», or *IMe« •« « t il », fa-***» t-cMn tn u w le r*' Complete eupyh»* w rvice t offset printing pfcwtatwpy iag, potter ranking. typesetting Ttocas Union Copy Center lota w<« Opw a s Select group SUMMER HANDBAGS 30% OFF values 6.00 to 50.00 3.99 to 34.99 totes, clu tc h e s, In clu d es shoulder bags - all styles, choose from straws, summer canvas, vinyl and leathers. 2406 GUADALUPE ON-THE-DRAG W (£=■ I h 'K W T 'f R ‘%W * m ¡/ M ' í ¥ é ' ( i t é r # r T h e D a i l y T e x a n TEXAN PERM ANENT STATE Editor Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editor* Mark McKinnon Tom Baker Kellie Cannon Brian Dunbar Johr Haven* Diane Jane Morrison Assistant to the Editor News Editor Don Putter Associate News Editor Tony Kotecki Graphics Editor Scott Sudduth Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Robert King Entertainm ent Editor Melanie Hershon Greg Vimont Photo Editor Images Editor C lare Hagerty Images Associate Editor Jody Denberg Images Assistant Edit/ ”-* K e lly Cash. Alex Plaza Campus Activities Editor Suzy Lampert P a u li General Reporters A rigerstem D iane B a lla r d . A h sa Hagan Melinda Magee. David Pyndus B ill Valdez, John W illiam s Newsw riters M. lissa Ward Edito ria l t onsultan: Scott Campbell Robert Dorr isst K sT S F F Issue Editor News Assistant Editorial Assistant Entertainm ent Assistant Assistant Sports Editor Make-up Editor W ire Ed ito r Copy Editors Ja ck ie Smith Don Pedigo Je r r y Abdo Paul Cuiium Jo e Chemvcz Karen Hurley H a m s Hartm an Wendy F a rb Jo e Hal! Rocky Kneten Photographer 11 X A N A D V E R T IS IN G S T A F F Suzanne Baida Liz De Lorenzo Lisa Gerson Jan e m an e H a g a n , L a u r a M a n n in g G i n a Montgomery Peg Moody Jim Wells Je ffre y Whitehead Fred Goldsmith Son or daughter in college?% — 1-I j■r n i r 11 ■ ■ HI ■ 11 ■ i _*■■■SlfT ini 1i u■ i 3000 GUADALUPE PLACE condominiums Add up too* rears of rooming coeta and think what that would do toward investing m a condominium you could sail upon graduation M a $ o n r y c o n s t r u c t io n I n t u í a ta c O ’ c a t lin g n a ig h t V a u lt e d c a t lin g t a t t h ir d f lo o r C arpal and n n y l flooring GB ranga* and d ith w a th a r* Marpta ranitia * C olorad Hath fix turas Wat bar* optional Dash* optional Catling tan* Baiconia* OB air conditioning Laundry room S 29 900 Ed P e d e a t l. R e a lto rs 5725 North Interregional Austin Tsiaa 78723 1512) 454-4621 UTPD to begin giving misdemeanor tickets By DAVID P Y N D U S Daily Texan Staff A proposal to ticket persons on the Universi­ ty campus for misdemeanor offenses has been approved by Justice of the Peace Guy Herman and the county a tto r n e y ’s office, and the new procedure w i l l be im m ediately. U n iv ersity Police Chief Donald Cannon said Tuesday initiated Cannon said U T P D 's new tic k e tin g procedure — that of issuing “field releases" — would be very similar to the Austin Police Department s ticketing procedure. "The officer w ill have the option of deciding whether to ticket the suspect or arrest him ," he said, noting that ticketing a suspect instead of arresting him would save officers an hour and 45 minutes on each offense. FOR AN OFFICER to be able to ticket a suspect, he has to be able to identify that per­ son satisfactorily. Cannon said. However, iden­ tification is the only requirement an officer has to meet before issuing a field release. Time-saving is the biggest advantage to field releases he said. However, Cannon said he does not anticipate more arrests despite this savings of time. “ I think it ’s a good thing for the arrested and for the Travis County Ja il because of the over­ crowded situation there. Herman said Tues­ day. "W e've got a real problem with the jail — it’s at its peak lim it — and I'm for anything to alleviate that." Persons ticketed for misdmeanor offenses must appear in court no earlier than three days after the arrest and no la»er than 12 days after the arrest. Cannon said. i f you don t show up, Herman said, "A •failure to appear' charge will be issued." He said the charge is a Class C misdemeanor. “Blowing it (the field release, off might affect being able to get a personal bond." he added Although field releases will be used for all misdemeanor offenses, Herman said he hoped the goal of U T PD was not to hassle students smoking marijuana at the Special Events Center. “I would tend to think there are more serious things to be concerned with on the U T cam­ pus," Herman said. " I have no doubt they’re going to arrest people for dope Cannon said he expects only a few arrests for possession of marijuana on campus and does not anticipate more arrests at the S E C because of the field releases. ‘‘WE MIGHT make more arrests, but only because we re going to have more officers work there." Cannon said, adding, “ We don’t go inside the concert itself. He said it is the responsibility of the S EC ushers to report problems such as marijuana smoking police. The campus police are stationed in the S EC lobby and outside the arena. Cannon said. Herman said persons attending the Who con­ cert Thursday should have identification. Science board Carter nominates Flawn President Carter Tuesday nominated University Presi­ dent Peter Flaw n to serve on the National Science Board, the policy-makirg body of the National Science Foundation is o n e of six educators, scien tists and engineers nominated to serve on the 24-member board All nominations are subject to F l a w n confirm ation by the U .S. Senate. The N S F ’s continuous sup­ port of research and educa­ tion in the sciences plays an important role in national science policy planning. Flawn is a geologist. Among interests are his research e c o n o m i c g e o l o g y , e n ­ vironmental geology, natural reso u rce pol icy and the geology of Texas and Mexico. He has also served as presi­ dent of the Geological Society of America and the Associa­ tion of A m e r i c a n S t a t e Geologists. Flawn was unavailable for comment about his nomina­ tion. F e a t u r i n g . . . H u e v o s R a n c h e r o s , S t e a k a la M e x i c a n a , M i g a s , H o m e - m a d e B i s c u i t s , F l o u r T o r t i l l a s a n d Bol i l l os. C H c o 'i 1511 E a s t S ix t h O p e n d a il y : 6 't il 2 p m / P h o n e 478-2420 letter size copies copies copies 2 % ¡ Kinko's 2200 Guadalupe 476-4654 Ju ne 2 3 rd th ro u g h J u ly 15 th = wiiwnmiwiitii— —li— ü-güjjWwwmwwMMMMiiiiiMiiiiiiMiimiiiN The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications. D raw er D, University Station, Austin, T X 78712 The D aily Texan is published Monday. Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday, and F r i ­ day except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin, T X News contributions will be accepted by telephone * 471-4591 at the editorial office i Texas Student Publications Building 2 122 > or at the news laboratory (Communication Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be Building A 4 136 made in T S P Building 3 200 ( 471-5244 and display advertising in T S P Building 3 210 471-18651 The national advertising representative of The D aily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students, 6330 N Pulaski, Chicago, IL 60646 The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest the Texas D aily Newspaper Association, and Jo urnalism Congress American Newspaper Publishers Association Copyright 1980 Texas Student Publications T H E D A IL Y T E X A N S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E S Summer Session 1980 B y mail in Texas B y mail outside Texas within U .S.A ........................................ ............. .............................. ...................................................... One Semester (F a ll or Spring) 1980-81 B y mail in Texas B y mail outside Texas within USA ............ ............................................. ........................................... $10.50 11.00 17.50 18 50 Two Semesters . F a ll and Spring. 1980-81 B y mail in T e x a s .................... B y mail outside Texas within U.S A 32 00 34 00 Send orders and address changes to T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L IC A T IO N S , P.O Box P U B NO 146440 ......................................................... ........................................... D Austin Texas 78712. or to T S P Building C3 200 SEMI-ANNUAL 1c SHOE SALE HELP WANTED I If you are seeking full- or part-time work to help with those school expenses, be sure to check the classified pages each day in the ... T h e D a i l y T e x a n 1914 Guadalupe 476-1215 School Supplies Gifts • UT Items Greeting Cards • Stamps Cigarettes • Candy Magazines • Paperbacks I E X A s I N I O N General Store Open M-f 8-3 V. Save 3 0 % on selected styles of Danskins save now on leotards, skirts, two-piece sw im ­ suits, terry leotards, and shorts. S-M-L at Y A R I N G ' S O N - T H E - D R A G store only. SPECIAL SAVINGS Popular hot-w eather sandal in w hite or brown Reg 1 8 2 5 maine.ll: P A Y FOR T H E H I G H E R - P R I C E D P A I R SECOND P A I R O N L Y ONE CENT ChooL? from the latest styles in quality brands' A L L S A L E S F IN A L , P L E A S E •(N o t all stock included) o n-th e-d rag a t 2 4 0 6 G uadalu p e lio h M U ji Wednesday, July 2, 1980 □ THE D A ILY TEXAN World &National Page Carter signs trucking deregulation Kennedy attends White House ceremony for bill he proposed in effect, reducing consumer costs by as much as $8 billion a year, by ending wasteful practices and enhancing the essence of com petition.’’ Among those C arter praised was his political rival, Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., who sponsored a tougher bill two years ago that set the stage for the newly signed legislation. C arter asked Kennedy to say a few words, com­ mending him for working “ som etim es alone, sometimes facing discouragem ent but never giving up on the concept.” Kennedy, repeating his presidential campaign theme that the economy is the No. 1 issue of the American consum er, said no other piece of legisla- % *r WASHINGTON (UPI) — President C arter Tues­ day signed legislation he said will save consumers up to $8 billion annually by reducing government restrictions on the $41-billion-a-year interstate truck­ ing industry. The legislation, signed a year after C arter propos­ ed it to Congress, joins adm inistration-backed laws deregulating airlines and banks. A railroad deregula­ tion bill is expected to pass Congress later this year. ‘‘We’ve had notable success with this Congress during the last three and a half years in getting the federal governm ent’s nose out of the private lives of Am erican people and the p riv ate e n terp rise system .” C arter said during a Rose Garden signing ceremony. The legislation “will elim inate the red tape and the senseless over-regulation that have ham pered the free growth and the development of the American trucking industry. “ It will be highly anti-inflationary Iran warns Soviet Union not to spy By United Press International Iran’s powerful Islam ic fundamentalists warned the Soviet Union Tuesday that its diplomats may be treated the sam e way as the 53 captive Americans un­ less they stop ‘‘spying’’ on Iran. The warning, contained in the official newspaper of the Islamic Republican P arty, cam e as Tehran Radio reported what appeared to be President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr’s toughest attack on his fundamentalist critics to date. IN A SPEECH made on Monday but not carried by the radio until a day later, Bani-Sadr said Iran was “ endangered from within” by fundamentalists whose excesses are just as bad as those of the deposed shah. “ It is possible to mention numerous examples which illustrate how our revolution is endangered from within,” Bani-Sadr said. “ In the past regim e (of the shah) it was possible to attack the life and property or position of anyone il­ legally. It is also possible in this regime. “ In those days (it was done) in the nam e of the shah, and today in the name of the campaign against counter-revolutionaries,” he said. dent declared. “ When the people are kept ignorant, they do not un­ derstand. When they do not understand, they do not obey. When they do not obey, they are thought of as rebels. Then you begin using force ... and when force is used, you get addicted to (it),” he said. If this is allowed to continue, he said, there will be “ no difference between this regim e and the one just overthrown.” Bani-Sadr and the fundam entalists have been lock­ ed in a bitter struggle for power that has pushed back the start of a parliam entary debate on the fate of the 53 American hostages, who will complete their eighth month in captivity July 4. P a rliam en t has been charged by A yatollah Ruhollah Khomeini with deciding what to do with the hostages and the fundam entalists who control a m a­ jority of its seats are on record as wanting to try the captives as spies. THE ISLAMIC Republican P arty, the fundamen­ talists’ political alliance, meanwhile reacted to Mon­ day’s expulsion of a Soviet diplomat accused of spy­ ing by warning Moscow that its “ spies” would be treated the sam e way as American agents. “ We were hoping that the fall of the United States Embassy as the largest spy base of America in Iran would be a warning to other oppressors and ex­ ploiters so that they know what are the lim its and conditions for diplom ats,” the party newspaper the I s l a m i c R e p u b l i c said in an editorial. “ If we m ade it clear to the American spies that we are not going to stand crim es and spying, then we should also give warning to others who have stepped on our revolutionary soil. Is the Russian Em bassy a spy’s nest? ‘Could’ support Carter A rouncI t Ne W o R ld From Texan news services NAACP heart testimony MIAMI BEACH, Fla. - One of M iam i’s m ost respected black to ld d e le g a te s to the le a d e rs NAACP s 71st annual convention Tuesday that blacks face “ an­ nihilation’’ unless they find a solu­ tion to their problems. Athalie Range, chosen Miami’s most respected black leader in a re­ cent poll of area blacks, told d e le g a te s the solu tion to the problems that caused three days of rioting in Miami last May must come from blacks themselves — prim arily through pressuring the system with votes. U.S. aids Thailand WASHINGTON - The United States will send Thailand millions of dollars worth of American military equipm ent beginning July 23 to counter the Vietnamese incursions, White House press secretary Jody Powell announced Tuesday. Powell said President Carter made the decision in response to urgent requests from the Bangkok government, which sought help after the Vietnamese crossed the Thai- Cambodian border last week. Officials said the airlift will cost $1 million, which the U.S. govern­ m ent will pay, but Thailand will pay for the weapons. They said the airlift will begin July 23, giving Carter tim e to notify Congress of the deci­ sion. Missiles bought beck WASHINGTON - The Senate voted Tuesday to buy back 150 Phoenix missiles originally intended for Iran and at the same time voted to block any repayments to the Tehran government until the U.S. hostages are released. The Senate attached the provision blocking payments to Iran to the $51.9 billion weapons procurement bill which it debated for a second day. The Senate acted on the mis­ siles by voice vote on an amendment by Sen. David Boren, D-Okia. Senate leaders hope to end debate on the bill Wednesday. INS budget increased WASHINGTON - The House Tuesday voted to in crease the budget of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service and hire more border patrolmen. The action cam e during considera­ tion of $8,6 billion in 1981 funds for the State, Justice and Commerce departments. By a 337-72 vote, the House ap­ proved an amendment by Rep. Hamilton Fish, R-N.Y., to increase INS budget from $347.7 million to $370 million. It added 311 border patrol agents and 106 more inspec­ tors to the service. Viet vets honored WASHINGTON - P r e sid e n t Carter paid quiet tribute to Vietnam veterans Tuesday, saying that the ‘ painful” divisions wrought by the war were ending. “A nation healing is a good sight to behold from the presidency,” said Carter, standing in the sun-drenched Rose Garden at a bill-signing ceremony enabling the construction of a memorial to all of the 2.7 million Americans who served in the Viet­ nam war. Harris A ssociates found most Vietnam-era veterans feeling they were poorly treated upon retur­ ning home from the war, and that seven out of 10 Americans favor preferential hiring of veterans for federal jobs. Army cuts defeated WASHINGTON - The Senate Tuesday deflected a move to cut Army strength by 25,000 men, a parliamentary tactic designed by hawkish senators as a ploy to force the service into recruiting fewer but higher quality personnel. The Senate instead adopted a com­ promise between Sen. Sam Nunn, D- Ga., the primary advocate of the cut, and Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mieh,, who lead the effort to defeat the reduction It calls for the Army to seek higher quality personnel and was adopted 89-0. The action cam e during considera­ tion of the $51.9 billion weapons procurem ent bill. Stock* post modMt gain NEW YORK — Stocks, paced by investor interest in gold, energy, gam bling and takeover issu es, rallied for a modest gain Tuesday d esp ite uncertainty about the economy Trading was moderate. The Dow Jones industrial average, up and down within a 2-point range throughout the day, wound up gain­ ing 4.35 points to 872.27. It plunged 13 91 points Monday, the worst set­ back in a month. m '■ 'V : “ CENSORSHIP RULES this country,” the presi­ Wwm Sen. Edward Kennedy UPI Telephoto Jews attack Begin JERUSALEM (UPI) - More influential American than 50 J e w i s h l e a d e r s p u b l i c l y denounced P r i m e M in iste r M enachem B egin’s political “ extrem ism ” Tuesday and said Israel m ust make more con­ cessions in the occupied West Bank in return for peace. T h e s t a t e m e n t , w h i c h reflected a growing schism between American and Israeli Jews over the peace process, the group’s first public was denouncement of Begin, who one of the signers of the state­ ment described as “ a disaster.” The statem ent also cam e in the middle of another dispute between the United States and Israel, which said it was disap­ pointed with the U.S. abstention on a Jerusalem resolution pass­ ed by the U.N. Security Council Monday. A number of the signatories are attending the Jewish Agen­ cy Assembly in Israel, a gather­ ing of Jewish leaders from all over the world. They issued the statem ent condemning Begin at a news conference. D e p u t y P r i m e M i n i s t e r Yigael Yadin said he was disap­ pointed with the 14-0 vote con­ dem ning I s r a e l ’s m oves to declare Jerusalem as its of­ “not p a r­ ficial cap ital and ticularly satisfied with the abstention of the United States. “We wanted them to veto the resolution,” he said. There was no comment on either development from Begin, w ho w a s t h e Hadassah Hospital after suffer­ ing a in parliam ent Monday. r e s t i n g in Begin’s personal physician, D r. M ervyn Go t s ma n , told reporters the 66-year-old prim e m inister would have to spend t h r e e w e e k s tw o recuperating in the hospital before returning to work. o r He blam ed “ tensions and the p a s t few p re s su re s months” for the heart attack, Begin’s second in three years. in The statem en t c ritic a l of B e g i n s h a r d l i n e pol i c i e s towards the West Bank and, by i m p l i c a t i o n P a l e s t i n i a n autonomy talks with Egypt, was signed by 56 American Jewish le a d e rs and 250 p ro m in en t Israelis, including five form er generals. It called for “ peace and te rrito ria l security compromise on the West Bank.’’ through Kennedy alters stance •198 0 The New York Times WASHINGTON - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy said Tuesday he “ could” sup­ port President C arter in the general election if the adm inistration moves swiftly against the recession. But if it does not, he said, the D em ocratic nomination should be worth little to either of them. Kennedy’s m om entary concession of a circum stance in which he would back C arter was sandwiched in an interview between declarations that he, and not th e C a r t e r , woul d be ch o se n a t in D em ocratic N ational Convention August in New York City. Remarking that none of his own sup­ porters had personally urged him to quit the race since the prim aries ended three weeks ago, with C arter having won m ore than 300 more delegates than the 1,666 n e c e s s a r y f or n o mi n a t i o n , Kennedy said changing circum stances gave him hope in an “ uphill b attle.” Kennedy said there was nothing P resi­ dent C arter or his adm inistration could do that would persuade him to drop out of the race before the national conven­ tion. Kennedy said, “ My campaign has really been devoid of any personal ra n ­ cor or any personal criticism .” The senator, who was at the White House Tuesday for the signing of trucking l egi sl at i on, said his der egul at i on characterization of C arter as “ a clone of Ronald Reagan,” was only an attack on C arter’s economic policies, not a per­ sonal attack. Kennedy said he told C arter, when they met at the White House last month, that he would support him in efforts to cure the recession and its impact on “ hundreds of thousands, millions of un­ employed persons — men and women. “ I would welcome the opportunity to work with the a d m in istra tio n ” on developing and adopting anti-recession m easures,” he said. “ I believe then, and only then, will the Dem ocratic nomina­ tion be of value. ” Domestic auto production decreases DETROIT (UPI) — U.S. car production in June sagged an estim ated 36 percent below the com parable month last year amid indications the auto industry will keep output at conservative levels through 1980. F o recasts by W a r d ’s A u t o m o t i v e R e p o r t s , an authoritative industry statistical journal, indicated U.S. car production this year may come in as low as 6.6 million un­ its. slightly lower than 6.7 million in the recession year 1975 Ward’s said U.S. autom akers plan to cut car output in the July-September quarter to about 1.37 million units, a 17 per­ cent decline from the depressed third quarter last year and the lowest for the quarter since 1970. SECOND QUARTER production at 1 63 million cars was far short of its earlier target of 2.1 million tentative production schedules for Ward’s also said Big Three autom akers are cutting back on the September- December period — indicating the industry sees no im­ m ediate turnaround in its year-long slump. Unless sales improve, autom akers may be forced to reduce output even more than the 6 6 million forecast. Re­ cent car sales have been running at an annual rate of about 5 8 million or less. Indefinite layoffs of U.S. hourly autoworkers currently stand at about 245.000, and thousands m ore have been idled in temporary production cutbacks. June output was estim ated at 527,000 cars, a drop of 36 percent from 826,000 in the sam e month of 1979. THE MONTH’S production figures were not available from Chrysler Corp . but General Motors Corp. said it built 351,163 cars in June, down 31.9 percent. The Ford Motor Co. output of 108,553 cars was off 35.3 percent and American Motors Corp was down 30 percent on production of 13,861 cars. Volkswagen of America was the only U.S. autom aker to out-produce last June, building 18,771 cars last month for a year-to-year gain of 36.5 percent. So far this year, GM car production is off 25.3 percent, Ford is off 43.7 percent, AMC is up 21 1 percent and VWA is up 29.7 percent. June truck production by GM declined 69.7 percent to 39- 168 units Ford dropped 79 4 percent to 22,625 and AMC 55 3 percent to 6.808. So far this year, truck production by GM «s off 56 percent, Ford declined 59 percent and AMC is off 55 9 percent tion “ will have a greater im pact in dampening the fires of investors to enter the industry and existing firms to expand; remove or ease regulations that restrict service, require roundabout routes or lim it the type of goods carried; and allow rates to be ra is­ ed or lowered 10 percent in any one y ear” without Interstate Commerce Commission action. A key provision will end. by 1984. the antitrust im ­ munity carriers currently enjoy to get together and set rates involving individual trucking companies over a given route Joint rates, in which two or m ore firm s can set prices over a route they share, will not be affected. The American Trucking Associations, the industry lobby that spent more than $1 million fighting the legislation, reluctantly ended up supporting it — mainly because the ICC was prepared to go even further unless a bill was passed soon. Schmidt, Russia strike impasse on Afghanistan MOSCOW (UPI) — West Germ an Chancellor Helmut Schmidt said Tuesday he found little hope of a shift in the Soviet position on Afghanistan but thought negotiations on medium-range nuclear missiles were likely to take place. Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev, who met with Schmidt for five hours over the last two days, prom ised le a d e r’s proposals on A fghanistan, which included a timetable for complete Soviet withdrawal. But he noted “ our viewpoints differ substantially.” the G erm an to consider “ In the final session, it was agreed and es­ tablished that the two sides had differing positions but that the two sides each had understanding for the other’s position,” Schmidt said before leaving. THE 61-YEAR-OLD chancellor delayed his departure for a two-hour session with Soviet Defense Minister Dmitri Ustinov, during which they discussed NATO’s plan to deploy 572 medium- range U.S. nuclear m issiles across w estern Europe to counter the Soviet network of SS-20 nuclear warheads. Asked if he thought it would be possible to open negotiations with the Soviet Union on this sen­ sitive issue, Schmidt said, “ I have always believ­ ed it would come to negotiations and these conver­ sations have made this belief firm er.” SCHMIDT, the first western leader to visit M oscow s i n c e i nva de d Afghanistan last December, bluntly told Brezhnev during a Kremlin dinner Monday night that the West wants Soviet forces to leave Afghanistan. t he Sovi et Uni on The Communist P arty newspaper Pravda said in a lengthy editorial in its Wednesday editions only hours after Schmidt left tnat any suggestions for a complete Soviet troop withdrawal “ are un­ acceptable, since they turn the problem upside down.” The unsigned statem en t did not m ention Schmidt by name but appeared to be a rebuttal of his proposal. Pravda said the small troop withdrawal the S oviets announced la s t w eek, plus o th e r “ initiatives” require “a positive response, above all from the United States, and also from Pakistan and Iran.” THE SOVIET Tass news agency carried a 2.500- word report on Schm idt's visit but never once mentioned his Afghan comments. By contrast, it printed Brezhnev’s dinner speech verbatim. Brezhnev did not mention Afghanistan either. During Schmidt’s two-day visit, the two sides reached agreem ent on the signing of a 25-year bilateral trade accord, prelim inarily agreed upon in 1978, a West German spokesman said. West Germany is the Soviet Union’s biggest non­ communist trade partner, while the Soviet Union ranks fifth on West G erm any’s list of partners out­ side the European Common Market. THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, July 2, 1980 ‘Soviet aggression’ obscures draft RICHARD LAVINE D raft registration w as first proposed by Jim m y C arter last January as a response to the R ussian inva­ sion of A fghanistan. The rational w as that registration , and the draft that w ill inevitably follow , is aim ed at stem m in g “ the rising tide of Soviet a g g re ssio n .” But an exam ination of the fa cts w ill show that the Soviet Union is not the ch ief threat to A m erican world power, nor is the draft aim ed at S oviet strength It is the spread of national liberation m ov em en ts in the Third World that ts the real concern of the U.S. foreign policy, which needs a draft-sw ollen m ilitary to put down revolts again st op pressive Third World regim es. The m ost im portant unexam ined assum ption of A m erican p olitical d eb ate is that the United S tates and the Soviet Union are locked in a gigantic superpower stru ggle for world su prem acy. It follow s this assum p­ tion that a gain for one side m eans a loss for the other, in other w ords, that the superpow ers are playing a zero- sum gam e. It m ay be true that A m erican powe * and influence in the world have been declining sin ce its peak as the sole undam aged industrial pow er of the world after World War II. But the Soviet U nion’s foreign policy has not fared much better in the past 20 years. D esp ite som e su c c e ss, overall the U .S.S.R . has been unable to a c ­ cu m u late and m aintain influence in foreign countries for sustained periods of tim e. In fact, sin ce 1960 the Soviet Union has lost power in such large and im portant cou n tries as China, Egypt, India, Indonesia and Iraq and gained influence only in sm aller cou n tries like Cuba. It is one thing for the U .S.S.R . to supply arm s to nationalist or revolutionary forces to gain control in a Third World country, and quite another for it to e s ­ tablish a perm anent power position. For instance, in A fr ic a w h ich h as b een s w e p t by a n t i- c o lo n ia l m ovem en ts during the past two d ecad es, the Soviet Union has trade totalling only 3 percent of the con­ tinent’s total. N ow view the world for the A m erican point of view Since World War II the U.S. econom y has b ecom e to ta l­ ly integrated into a global sy stem . U.S. m ultinational corporations have enorm ous in vestm en ts o v erseas that produce even larger am ounts of incom e. Som e of this is rein vested abroad, but m ost of it returns to the United S tates as dividends, in terest, royalties, etc. T hese m ul­ tinationals rank am ong the largest corporations which dom inate the d om estic econom y. Their m ost lu crative foreign in vestm en ts are in the underdeveloped coun­ tries. S im ilarly m ajor U.S. banks have greatly expand­ ed their foreign operations and have com e to rely on foreign earnings as the m ost im portant sector of their total earnings. All this incom e flow ing into the United S tates from in vestm en ts abroad is im portant not only to the individual corporations, but to the national econom y as a w hole as a m ean s of preventing m am m oth d eficits in A m erican balance of p aym ents. It is therefore crucial to the continued operation and stability of the A m erican ec o n o m y th at th e p resen t n etw ork of relations with foreign cou n tries be preserved. The m ain threat to the profitable statu s quo is not the Soviet Union. In fact, the Soviet Union has b ecom e an increasingly valuable cu stom er for U.S. business in re­ cent years. M ost of the ch an ges unfavorable to U.S. lib era tio n c a p a b ilitie s h a v e c o m e from n a tio n a l m ovem en ts A m erica and the Caribbean. in areas like Southern A frica, Central T hese m ovem en ts have n ation alistic and soical revolutionary roots and are initiated not by the U .S.S.R but by deteriorating econom ic conditions and un­ bearable standards of living The m ain thrust of U.S. foreign policy sin ce World War II has been to prevent the su cc ess of these m ovem en ts, or to hold any change in the international status quo within the narrow est possible lim its This has been done by supporting reac­ tionary and oppressive regim es. This is w here the alleged threat from the U .S.S.R co m es in handy. “ Soviet a g g ressio n ” is not the real threat, but to the extent the public can be persuaded that it is, the policies actu ally intended to com bat the revolt of the Third World can be m ade p olitically palatable o f even popular. As an exam p le, the 100,000 m e n r a p id s t r ik e is b e in g b ille d a s a counterw eight to Soviet expansionism This force would be pitifully inadequate against a determ ined R ussian force operating near its own borders, as in A fghanistan. But it m ight work e ffec tiv e ly to shore up an oppressive Third World governm ent that could no longer defend itself against its own people or to rev erse the flow of a popular m ovem ent that w as attem p ting to w rest an un­ d erd evelop ed cou n try from the A m erican glob al econom ic system . f o r c e This is the true purpose of the draft. A nuclear war again st the Soviet Union does not require a standing arm y of m ore than tw o m illion m en but a m obile force that can strike rapidly anyw here in the Third World. L a v i n e is a n A u s t i n a t t o r n e y . Letters and columns T he D a ily T exan e n c o u r a g e s its readers to subm it gu est colum ns or letters to the editor on any subject. Columns and letters m ust be in good taste, a ccu rate, free from libel, m alice and personal con troversy. Since w e receiv e m any m ore contributions than can be p rin ted d a ily , le tt e r s and colum ns m ay be edited for brevity and clarity. lin es) or Colum hs should be 70 typed lines (60 le ss and double ch aracter spaced; lin es.. All le tter s, 20 typed m aterial subm itted for publication on the editorial p ages m ust include the a u th o r’s n a m e , c o lle g e sta tu s and telephone num ber letters Mail colum ns and the Editor. The D aily Texan, PO Box D. Austin, T exas 78712 or drop them by the p them by the basem en t o ffic e s at the northw est cor o rth w e stco r - litis Avenue. ner of 25th S treet and Whitis Avenue. to Editorials Page 4 Viewpoint Sioux get their dues The Sioux R eservation in the Black Hills will be set apart for the ab­ solute and undisturbed use and occupation of the Indians. L a r a m i e T r e a t y o f 1868 Although it w as a dollar short and a day late, the Suprem e Court ruled the federal governm ent has an obligation to pay eight Sioux Indian tribes $105 m illion as com pensation for the illegal seizure of the Black H ills of South Dakota in 1877. At issue w as not w hether the governm ent had w rongfully taken the land or that the Sioux should be reim bursed for the original land value of $17.5 m illion, but m erely the estab lish m en t of liability for back interest on the land. Calculated at 5 percent annually for 103 years, added to the original value, the sum am ounted to $17.5 m illion. (Of cou rse the value of the gold m ined from the land w as not accounted fo r .) The governm ent argued that d esp ite the fact the treaty w as abrogated only 11 years after it w as signed, the Sioux had been ju stly com pensated for by the provisions of $43 m illion worth of food and other supplies over 75 years. A ssociate Ju stice Harry A. Blackm un, writing for the m ajority, said “ the governm ent’s uncertain and indefinite obligation to provide the Sioux with rations until they b ecam e self-su fficien t did not con stitute adequate con sid era­ tion for the Black H ills.” Although the award hardly con stitu tes a just com pensation for past crim es it signals a w illingn ess to com m itted, acknow ledge and accep t responsibility for our sins. is sign ifican t the ruling in that The only dissent ca m e from A ssociate J u stice W illiam H. Rehnquist. In his venerable w isdom , Rehnquist verbalized the kind of sentim en t which allow ed such a d isagrace to ever occur: “ The 1877 act should be understood as the product of a long history for which the governm ent should not now be held liab le.” Apparently Mr. Rehnquist has not heard that those who forget the past are doomed to repeat it. Mark McKinnon Shuttling the music Have you ever found yourself out by a curb w aiting for a shuttle bus after studying all night for a fin al0 H ave you ever stum bled onto the bus feelin g like blue ch eese left out in the June sun to sw elter and rot? And has your suicidal despair ever been som ew hat relieved by the uplifting strains of an upbeat m elody em anating from the shuttle bus d river’s radio or c a sse tte player? Y es? Well, w e have too. What a p leasant relief from the institutional sterility of the U niversity to board a bus and have your ears caressed by the sw eet crooning of a soft soul song or to have your body jerked into m otion by the syn­ copated rhythm s of the Philadelphia Motown sound. Thanks to Transportation E n terp rises Inc. all m usic on shuttle buses has been outlawed, as a result of “ num erous p assen ger com p la in ts.” D rivers who violate the ban have been threatened w ith d ism issal. Is life getting so serious these days that people cannot even enjoy m usic? If the drivers are m issin g your stop, then speak up. We will avoid gettin g into all the lo gistical and technical argum ents here. We sim ply feel that m usic on the shuttle buses is refreshing and adds a little life to our daily routine. D oes the playing of m usic really represent such a threat to our sa fe ty ’ We thtnk not. our safety? We think not. Mark McKinnon W 4 « o ^ A S trn w atff \ J The newspaper business just ain’t what it used to be I By MARK McKINNON 1g.K I N N Q N It’s funny. I have only vague m em ories of ma jor ev e n ts in m y life occuring within the last d ecad e (due to drugs no doubt), y et I have cry sta l clea r m em o ries of in sign ifican t ev en ts which happened m uch earlier in m y life. My hedonist su m m er in Houston in 1975 is a blur, but I can rem em b er the ex a c t location of E a ster e g g s hidden in 1959. , One ex p erien ce which brings back a num ber of .vivid im p ression s w ere the years I spent a s a n ew spaper ca rrier in D enver The paper I d elivered , T h e R o c k y M o u n t a i n N e w s , w as a m orning paper, which presented d ifficu lties. The paper had to be d elivered at 5 a m w hich m ade it im p o ssib le to se e ad d resses. I CAN R E M E M B E R w aking to the alarm the first day of m y route w ith Jean n ie C. R ile y ’s O d e to B i l l y J o e w aftin g upon m y ears to cull m e from slum ber. I stum bled out to the curb and hoisted the h eavy bundles into the garage w here the cerem on ial folding rites began. F irst I un cerem on ial folding rites began. F irst I un- wired the bundles with m y trusty w ire-cu tter, then I laid a stack of about 10 papers on m y lap and placed 50 or so extra-strength green rubber bands on m y index finger. Then in one sw ift m o­ tion I folded the paper and slipped on a rubber band. After folding the papers I had to neatly pack them into the paper-bags w hich hung from the handlebars of m y heavy-duty S c h w i n n (a good p a p e r - b ik e w a s n ot o n ly e s s e n t i a l , but fashionable). finally m aking The first se v er a l d ays w ere agony. I wandered around with a flash ligh t checking m y illegib le list for su bscribers and it hom e around 9 a.m . R elief at having com p leted the job w as alw ays interrupted by irate cu stom ers who didn't get their paper, got a w et paper, didn’t get their paper on the porch or got their paper on the roof. Two particular incidents stand out in m y mind. Sundays w ere the toughest days. The paper Sundays w ere the toughest days. The paper w as alw ays enorm ous which m eant having to m ake two trips b ecau se the paper-bags cou ld n ’t hold them all So I cut a deal w ith a friend, who also had a route, w hereby w e would get up a little early and help each other out. One day, for som e absurd reason I c a n ’t recall now, in the m iddle of m y route (a fter his w as finished of cou rse) w e got into an argum ent and he stopped in the m id­ dle of the stre et and dumped out all m y papers and left. ANOTHER NOT SO fond m em ory is of a mid- January day when it w as snow ing and 17 d egrees below zero. It w as so cold m y bike froze and the w heels w ouldn’t m ove. My earn est pleadings couldn't persuade the folks to g iv e m e a ride in the car: “ We told you when you got this route w e w eren't going to help you, and w e m eant i t ! ” My only recou rse w as to carry the bags around my neck, which I did for about a block at which point I lifted the bags off to re lie v e the w eight and blood rushed to m y head and I p assed out. I and blood rushed to m y head and I passed out. I w as only down for about 15 seconds, but it chilled m y already stiff and trem bling body. When I finally m ade it hom e I w as just this side of frost­ bitten and lay p rostrate scream in g on the stairs w hile m y frozen feet painfully thaw ed out. Soon th ereafter I got an apartm ent route. What a breeze! All I had to do w as load the papers into the elevator, go to the top floor, stick a p iece of paper over the electro n ic ey e to keep the door open and then sash ay down the hall dropping papers at the appropriate doors. And what great fun I used to go to the roof with friends and hurl alien ob jects to the ground, delighting in our m isch ievou s behavior. E very now and then som e nefarious ch aracter would break the g la ss on the cig a re tte m ach in e but take only his favorite brand, which left us to ravage the spoils. Then there w as the tim e w e ripped a really cool ashtray out of the w all to add to our oedroom decor I retired from the r I retired from the new spaper business upon entering high school b ecau se it just w a sn ’t the thing to do anym ore. But, a year later, unable to find any other job. I w as back at it. Only this tim e I got a large route with a friend who had his d river’s licen se and owned a con vertible MG. It w as the life, until w e had to go co llectin g the first tim e. The route w a sn ’t exa ctly in the best part of town and when w e w ent co llectin g w e w ere usual­ ly m et by the frothing teeth of a D oberm an P inscher or e lse w e w ere sim p ly told to get lost. W hat’s a scraw ny 15-year-old supposed to say? After m y friend got robbed for the second tim e w e gave it up. There are good m em ories and bad m em o ries, but it w as an exp erien ce 1 11 n ever forget. It astounds m e today when I pick up m y paper on rainy days and it ’s in a cellop han e w rapper — what service. Things a in ’t like they used to be. M c K i n n o n is T e x a n e d i t o r . Journalism and drinking: suffering the pain of truth hangovers By ROBERT KING Journalism is a lot like drinking. A ctually, there is a m ore a ccu rate definition — being a journalist is lik e being a broke alchoholic. I m ean so poor you c a n ’t even afford a bottle of B o o n e s F a r m . In our so c iety alchohol is an essen tia l ingredient in m any a social endeavour A dvertising has done a w onderous job of m aking drinking an attra ctiv e, healthy hobby — T a s t e t h e h i g h c o u n t r y . So too. have m ost of the m o v ies and se ria ls about the occupation of reporting a journalism m ade glam orou s, high-paced profession. LIKE TH E IN E B R IA T E D fantasy of a “ round on the h o u se ,” frustrated journalists a lso have a com m on dream . For one day, one issu e of the paper, there w ill be no such thing a s libel. You se e . in actu ality, the law s governing the m edia tend to be rather incestuous. They w ere in itially form ulated to p rotect the public from a crusading, “ y e llo w ” p ress. The concept is, of course, highly com m en dab le. You c a n ’t have a horde of reporters running around deciding for th em selv es what is truth. Leapin lizards, im agine a nation inform ed by a horde of Howard C osells. in form ed , y e t The regrettab le part is that any in cestu ou s relationship is, of course, perverse. This is no d ifferen t. For in keeping A m erica from u n n e c e ssa r y rea lities, the m edia have spawned a contingent of jour­ n alistic devian ts like Phil Donahue and local flaks such as Cactus Pryor, and Mell and Joy ce and such kinky truism publications as P e o p l e and T h e S a n A n t o n i o L i g h t . in su la te d The function that these pseudo-journalistic en tities p er­ form is an in tellectual panacea. The public reads th ese rags and w atch es th ese show s and g o es aw ay content they know what is happening. They package the truth so sim ply, but let m e clu e you in on a little secret. The truth is like being high on cham pagne- suprem e elucidation, so sim p le, so neat, you wonder why you w eren't born drunk But oh, the next day, w hat a hangover. Try to take the truth, the w hole truth and nothing but the truth for an en tire day. You would not b eliev e the hangover. But that is p recisely the point. The human design is extrem e­ ly functionable. The body just can't hack drinking full tim e, it has to have tim e off for r e ce ss and recuperation. The human mind ca n ’t hack the truth full tim e eith er That’s the function of libel today — it p rotects the public from an over­ dose of truth. IT WOULD BE A jou rn alistic orgasm to exp ose som e truism s regarding som e recent local happenings, to tell the real truth behind the KLRN fia sco , or w hat the War on M ediocrity protected q u i r e r . here I com e. is actu ally about. But don’t w orry, you ’re journalism . N a t i o n a l E n ­ from “ ad v o ca cy ” Jack N icholson said it best in his com m en t on m ovie ratings. If you m ake a m ovie and you have a sc en e w ith a sword hacking off a w om en ’s b reast it w ill be rated R. If you m ake a m ovie w ith a m an kissing a w om en ’s breast it w ilí be rated X. Journalism is the sa m e thing. I ll w rite this word, f- - k, but you w ill never se e it. It's too ob scene, too so cially degrading But then turn to the en tertain m en t page and fetch a gander at those porno m ovie ads w ith the graphics of the w om en dem anding th em selves. Then try to take this w hole thing seriously. I’ll take a double._______________ ________________________ K i n g is a s s o c i a t e s p o r t s e d i t o r . DOONESBURY ANYWRDFROM J.J. TODAY, RJCK7 MRAID V — - f Jr NOT. BABB _ / I M S H SHE'D CALL IPONT UKB HAVING _ NO WAV TO REACH ) ' HER AT ALL. I JUST HOPE SHE'S OKAY. RELAX. I ’M S iM SHE'S HAVING THE TIME OF HER UFE! / by Garry Trudeau I REALLY THINK YOU 'RE overreact­ ing, MAN. / Did you kiMOw The official color of the University of Texas at Austin is focal or bright orange, not burnt orange. Jester Center has the most bricks of any building west of the Mississippi River. iversity. Dr. Lorene Rogers was the first woman president of a major U.S. un­ Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are tnose of the editor or the writer oi the arti­ cle and are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Wednesday, July 2, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 5 Sister Rosalie Bertel Is concerned about radiation levels at Three Mile Island Brad Doherty, Dally Texan Staff Nun questions safety at TMI By BILL VA LD EZ Daily Texan Staff The recent release of radioactive g as at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant has raised serious questions about the safety of the move — but Sister R osalie Bertel of Buffalo, N.Y. has no doubts about the effects of the venting. There were 97 im m ature baby deaths in an area of Wisconsin that is sur­ rounded by nuclear plants, Bertel said. She has had training in physics, biology, biochem istry and was a consultant to the N uclear R egulatory Commission and the Envirom ental Protection Agen­ cy The officials who approved the ven­ ting at the Three Mile Island plant do not dispute the relationship between venting and increased infant m ortality, she said. WHAT TH EY do say is that since the Wisconsin plants released 1,000 tim es the amount of g as that w as vented in Pennsylvania Saturday, the effects of the recent release at TMI rhould not be a s bad, Bertel said. “ But if you can docum ent baby deaths due to venting, it ought to give residents in the area cause to be con­ cerned.’ ’ she said. Bertel w as in Austin Sunday a s part of a nationwide effort she started to organize a network of scientists in the nuclear field to com bat what she feels is the biggest problem with nuclear energy — m isinform ation. B e r t e l i s a m e m b e r o f t h e Philadelphia-based Gray Nuns of the Sacred H eart, which she describes a s a teaching community. Prior to that she was a C arm elite nun, a clo iste re d com m unity that stre sses independence, self-sufficiency, a vegetarian diet and rigorous working duties. S h e h ad a l r e a d y r e c e i v e d a m aste r’s degree before entering the C arm elites and earned her doctorate after completing her vows. “ I ’m doing what nuns have been doing since the first order w as established,'' she said, “ all of the unfunded and unwanted work that nobody else will do.’ Bertel began researching the effects of low-level radiation while working as a biostatistician at the Roswell Cancer R esearch Institute in Buffalo in the late 1960s. While examining all possible en­ vironmental causes of cancer, she dis­ covered that the biggest increases in leukemia were attributable to the use of m edical X-rays. After studying the effects of low-level radiation on leukemia victim s for five years, she w as asked to speak before a county legislative hearing dealing with the licensing of a nuclear plant near Buffalo. “ TH E PRO PO SED location w as on a farm ju st outside the area where the Gerber baby food factory is located.” she said. Her testim ony on the dam age that low levels of radiation can inflict over a long period of time resulted in the first m oratorium again st the construction of a nuclear plant in 1974 — a prohibition that is still being enforced. While her intentions were not initially to speak out again st nuclear energy be­ ing used for production of electricity, she said she received such a strong reaction from her peers that “ it m ade m e su s p ic io u s and in ­ vestigating.” s ta r te d I What she found w as that federal radiation standards were established by the m ilitary in the 1950s to set guidelin es a s “ low a s reason ably achievable” — which translated m eans they were set a s low a s they possibly could and still allow workers to be around nuclear power plants, she said. th e B u t r e g u l a t i o n s a l l o w workers in ttye nuclear field to receive the equivalent of 1,000 m edical X-rays and the public the equivalent of 100 — standards far above the level when dam age will occur, she said. The regulations were also adopted 20 years before the use of nuclear power by u t i l i t y c o m p a n i e s b e c a m e w idespread, she said, and did not take into account large plants close to pop­ ulation centers. Bertel resigned her position with the Roswell group in 1978 after they had attem p ted to cen sor her re m ark s before a congressional hearing on the effects of low-level radiation, she said, and since then has been “ unfunded, but unfettered.” “ I ’m trying to get health officials to speak out again st low-level radiation,” she s ai d. “ W henever you h ear a physicist, engineer or chem ist talking about the m edical effects of low-level radiation, be careful. They don’t know beans about health.” THE BASIC m isunderstanding of the dangers of nuclear power, she said, is “ poor record keeping.” Previous studies documenting the dangers of low-level radiation have been criticized for their inability to ful­ ly document the singular cause of death. A person m ay have lived in the vicinity of a nuclear power plant for 15 y e a rs, B ertel said , but there w as alw ays the possiblity that the individual had been the victim of X-rays or atom ic testing. The strength of the Wisconsin studies showing a high incidence of infant m or­ tality is that Wisconsin is the only state in the Union to keep records on the cause of death in infant m ortality, she said. s a b o ta g e or “ The health issue is the bottom line,” she said. “ You can talk about w aste dis­ p o sa l p ro b le m s, the possibilities of a catastrophic accident, but what you are really talking about is the fragility of human existence. “ The basic prem ise of a nuclear society is that the society will survive in the end, plus or minus a few lives. But they can ’t even guarantee us that anym ore,” she said. Texas Union Specials! W ednesday and Thursday Only FR 1I SOUP W ITH PURCHASE OF SALAD DAD Santa Rita Room KOOZMS *1 .6 0 KOOL KUOS *2 .1 5 G eneral Store ■ 24NPS fO R THC PRICE O f 1 (Ice Cream) Eeyore*s and The Bottom Line (GSB) 3< COPIES Copy Center VMM PLATTER *2 .4 5 /ndvdos friod Hah, bakod potato and coh slow Steer Here SOUP ANO SALAD BAR fO R 91* Varsity Cafeteria (21st & Speedway) 5 cm SLIC I OF TM I B K Ñ UTIR 89* The Pizxadeii CHIU DOG AND LARGE SOFT DRINK *1 .2 9 The Garden Grille and Patio Snack Bar FIVE-K CERTIFICATE Weekly Rate — 7 /3 - 7 /9 $5,000 MINIMUM 6 to 18 MONTHS COMPOUNDED DAILY - PAID QUARTERLY Substantial penalty for early withdrawal. Federal regulations prohibit paym ent of dividends in excess of earnings. UNIVERSITY CREDIT UNION 30th and Cedar Mon-Fri 9-4 © N C U A 476-4676 Thursday 9-7 Page 6 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Wednesday, July 2, 198C VOU Will MRNRG€ BUSIN6SS MAJORS Challenge and opportunity await you! STOP BY THE INFO BOOTH: WEST MALL - NEXT MON - WED P€RC€ CORPS/VISTR The U niversity Co-Op will be closed FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY July 4 through 6 Open 8:30 a.m . Monday, July 7 Have a Happy, Safe Independence Holiday Funding for abortions kept at minimum While local organizations responded differently to the Supreme Court ruling to revive the Hyde Amendment, which bans federal funding of abortions, they agreed Tuesday that it would keep state as well as federal funding for abortions at a minimum. In Texas, there are two programs which fund abortions; the family planning program and Title X IX Medicaid. The family planning program receives 90 percent of its funds from the federal govern­ ment and 10 percent from the state, Bill Wagner, assistant chief of information ser­ vices at the state welfare department, said. Participation in this program is very low in Texas, he said With the Hyde Amendment back in effect, the federal family planning program will be allowed to spend no money toward abortions. If there is no federal money, there is no state money, ” Wagner said. The only other source of funding is Medicaid and under the Hyde provision there are only two ways to be eligible for it — if pregnancy occurs through rape or incest and is reported to the authorities, or if the mother's life is endangered by the pregnan­ cy,' he said The amendment bans funding for elective abortions. Department of Human Resources figures show 14,000 abortions were funded by Medicaid and social service money in Texas in 1978, the year before the Hyde Amendment took effect. Wagner said 351 of these abor­ tions were performed last year Most of these were “ spontaneous,’’ another term for mis­ carriage, he said. The Texas D llR cut back on publicly fund­ ed abortions after the Hyde Amendment took effect in 1978* but loosened restrictions somewhat after a federal district court judge in Brooklyn said the amendment was un­ constitutional Pamela Kinney of the Texas Abortion Rights Action League said that because state funds are contingent on federal funding, Mon­ day's reinstatement of the Hyde provisions would "cut funds for abortions in Texas com­ pletely. After they (the DHR) reinstated fun­ ding in February, we had been somewhat op­ timistic that the Supreme Court would rule in our favor. We were surprised at this change in policy within such a few months.“ she said. The tighter restrictions on welfare abor­ tions will mean more women carrying fetuses to term or delaying an abortion, ac­ cording to a study by the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta. The study showed that of the women preg­ nant and eligible for Medicaid in Texas, more than one-third carried the fetus to term in­ stead of having the abortion they wanted. "Women who used to get public money for abortions are now more apt to carry the pregnancy to term. " said Dr. Richard Guidotti of the CDC "More women will delay abortions. The delay comes from trying to find funds to get an abortion, "he said. Guidotti said that every week an abor tion is delayed increases the chance of com­ plications by 20 percent. Welfare recipients’ search for abortion funds worries Sharon Frsch. head of the Planned Parenthood Association in Austin. “ Women will try to rake up the money for abortions in some other way than Medicaid,” she said Ersch said she is afraid some women will turn to crime and prostitution as a result. Kinney said she feels the ruling is definite­ ly discriminatory against those who cannot afford abortions. Lobby sues independent Reagan supporters WASHINGTON (U P I) — Common Cause, the citizens’ lobby, filed suit Tuesday to block the controversial plans of indepen­ dent groups to raise and spend up to $55 million to get Ronald Reagan elected president. In a move criticized as “ divisive” by Republican Chairman Bill Brock, independent conservative and GOP groups have pledged to raise the money on behalf of Reagan — in addition to the $29.6 million in federal funds his official campaign will spend Common Cause Chairman Archibald Cox called the indepen­ dent effort illegal, and said it would return campaigns to the “ bad old days of Watergate.” But the groups say a Supreme Court decision allows such in­ dependent expenditures as long as they are not coordinated with the candidate's official campaign. Common cause filed suit in U.S. District Court against Americans for Change, a group headed by Sen. Harrison Schmitt, R-N.M., which has pledged to raise up to $30 million on Reagan’s behalf A second conservative group also has pledged to raise $25 million for the same cause. Schmitt said the law is explicit, and the burden of proof in determining whether his committee is or is not in concert with Reagan lies with Common Cause. Cox told a news conference the Common Cause suit contends the court ruling that allows independent expenditures does not permit political committees to spend more than $1,000 on behalf of a presidential candidate accepting federal funds. Even if it does, the suit contends that both groups are made up of Republican leaders who really cannot act independently of the Reagan campaign “ They cannot realistically isolate themselves from their own party solely for the purposes of trying to claim during the next few months they are independent’ operators,” Cox said. They “ will all be in a position to have a clear understanding of each other’s political strategy as the campaign unfolds.” Cox said the groups "threaten to unravel the public financing law and return us to the old pre-Watergate influence of money in presidential elections.” Some Reagan campaign officials have been critical of the in­ dependent efforts, saying there could be a voter backlash against massive spending in excess of the legal limit given the official campaign. “ If they emphasize different issues than Reagan wants to emphasize, if they run ads that are factually inaccurate, they force us to disavow them and that’s divisive,” Brock said. men and young men, save 15% to 45% on clothes that’ll take the heatwave with a breeze 13.99 shirts, w e r e $20 A. Save 30% on m e n ’s terry shirts for all your summer pleasures. Choose from a good assort­ ment of cool colors in your ch o ice of active looks. Easy-care polyester or polyester/cotton in sizes S, M, L XL. Knit Shirts. 12.99 shirts or shorts, w e r e s16 to M 8 e a c h B. M e n ’s tennis shorts an d shirts, your c h o ic e at 19% to 28%> savings. Select from various popular styles in cool summer colors; easy-care polyester/cotton blends. Shirt sizes S, M, L, XL, short sizes 30 to 38. Activewear. shirts, reg. $17 to M 9 13 .9 9 x r 12.99 C. For young men, famous maker jeans, ca su al a n d dress slacks at 24% to 46% sav­ ings. Choose belted, non-belted, pleated and non-pleated styles. Assorted seasonal colors in cotton, cotton denim, polyester/cotton and polyester/wool blends; assorted sizes. Slack Shack, Downtown; In G ear, Branches. Save 24% to 31 % on short-sleeved knit a n d terry shirts with fashion and active styling You'l look and feel your coolest wherever you go. Assorted seasonal colors of polyester/cotton in sizes S, M, L, XL. In Gear. shorts, w e r e O OOshirts were O OOsho 7.77 M2io!i8 7.77 >h D. Young men, save 17%> to 457© on your c h o ic e of shirts a n d shorts. Choose snort­ sleeved knit shirts with active, fashion and basic styling; polyester/cotton. Nylon and terry shorts in assorted colors. Shirts an d shorts in S, M, L, XL. In Gear, to M 3 MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S DEPARTMENTS. FIRST FLOOR. FOLEY'S IN HIGHLAND MALL SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (CLOSED FRIDAY) W ednesday, July 2, 1980 □ T H E DAILY TEX A N >" 'doe 7 Louganis completes diving sweep By A L A N N A C L A R Y Dally Texan Staff Chanting “ U.S.A., U.S.A., U.S.A.,’’ the crowd at the Tex­ as Swim Center honored the 1980 U.S. Olympic Diving Team Tuesday night. Greg Louganis and Megan Neyer, both of Mission Viejo, C a l i f . , t h e springboard and the tower in th e m en s and w o m e n ’s events. c a p t u r e d Louganis repeated his 1976 Olympic Diving Trials feat, when he won the 10-meter platform title Tuesday night. Louganis stunned the crowd, and his com petitors with two the near p erfec t dives on tower; scoring five 10s on both the reverse two and one-half som ersault tuck, and the in­ ward two and one-half som er­ sault pike dives. “ I Randy Ableman, also of Mission Viejo, cam e from fourth place on his final dive to upset Austinite Marc Virts for second place. thought he (Ableman) was fourth, possibly third,’’ Ron O’Brien, the Mission Viejo coach, said. “ I figured the only chance he had was to hit that last dive. ’ Hit it he did, scoring two 10s on his Curren loses Borg marches on WIMBLEDON (UPI) — Undeterred by the cool, misty rain, Bjorn Borg broke the prized record of a form er idol Tuesday by winning his 32nd consecutive singles m atch at Wimbledon. Borg, striving to prove himself the best player who ever lived, wiped out Balacs Taroczy. Hungary’s top player, 6-1, 7-5, 6-2, to break the m ark of Rod Laver and reach the quarterfinal round in his bid to set still another record by sweeping to a fifth con­ secutive Wimbledon championship. Vitas Gerulaitis, the fourth seed and twice a semifinalist here, was leading Wojtek Fibak, 6-3, 5-3, when their match was suspended because of rain Monday, but Fibak rallied to win 3-6, 4-6, 6-3, 6-3, 8-6. Also advancing to the quarterfinals w ere second seed John McEnroe and his doubles partner. No. 7 P eter Fleming. McEnroe proved superior in the tie-break to beat South African Kevin Curren, 7-5, 7-6 (7-4), 7-6 (7-4), and Fleming, who had needed only three points for victory when play was resumed in the fourth set tie-break, defeated Onny Parun of New Zealand, 6-3, 6-2, 6-7 (8-10), 7-6 (7-4). Jim m y Connors, the third seed, was leading com patriot Hank Pfister, 6-4, 5-5, when play was halted because of rain and darkness. The m atch previously had been scheduled for Mon­ day. Second-seeded Tracy Austin beat No. 11 G reer Stevens, 6-3, 6- 3. No. 3 Chris Evert-Lloyd routed Andrea Jaeger, the 15-year-old No. 14 seed, 6-1, 6-1, and No. 4 Evonne Goolagong-Cawley beat sixth seed Wendy Turnbull, 6-3, 6-2. All three winners moved into the semifinals Wednesday. Top seed Martina Navratilova won the first set from Billie Jean King 7-6 when play was suspended. Navratilova was trail­ ing 5-1 in the tie-break but won it 8-6. M cEnroe had to wait 25 hours after the m atch had begun to dispatch Curren, a form er U.S. intercollegiate champion at the University of Texas. Following the postponement from Monday night, when McEnroe led 7-5, 7-6, 3-3, he required only 34 m inutes more before winning the tie-break 7-4. “ It was pretty cold out there and raining hard when we started, so I just wanted to get it over w ith,” McEnroe said. “ I knew if I got one break the match would be over, but there were a lot of bad bounces and the court was very soft.” re v e rse one and one-half somersault, two and one-half twist dive from the free posi­ tion. “ They both did some fan­ tastic dives,’’ O’Brien, also an Olympic diving coach, said. “ I ’ll be glad to come back to Austin every y ea r.” Brian Bungum, of Austin, and the alternate on the Olym-. pic springboard team , placed third on the tower. “ I made it man, ... all of my d r e a m s ,” B ungum said to liste n in g “ Standing on the stand, hear­ ‘U.S.A., ing, U.S.A.,’ well the finest I have ever felt. I might feel better on my wedding night but ..." that was Virts, who was in second place up until his last dive, was selected as an alternate to the team. Following the meet, the 1980 U.S. Olympic Diving Team was presented to the public. Coaches for the divers will be O’Brien, Dick Kimball and B rvan Robbins the w om en’s Nam ed to sp rin g b o a rd te a m w e re : N eyer. C ynthia P o tte r of Austin, Chris Seufert and alternate Jennifer Chandler. The women’s 10-meter team includes Neyer, Barb Weins­ tein and Amy McGrath with Kit Salness as alternate. The m en ’s s p rin g b o a rd team consists of Louganis, D av e B u r g e r in g , K e v in M a c h e m e r and a l t e r n a t e Bungum. Division o f Recreational Sports Outdoor Program Summer 1980 8,10,15, & 17 K a y a k Clinic J u ly 2 7 -1 0 & 13 1 1 12-13 19 20 26 27 10 17-31 A u g u s t C a n o e Clinic Fly Fish ing Clinic N ite N a tu re H ik e -W ild B a sin W e e k e n d Trip to A r a n s a s W ild life R e fu g e 1 D a y C a n o e Trip N a tu re H ik e -B a rto n Creek Bike Trip A ro u n d A u stin 1 D a y C a n o e Trip N a tu re H ik e -W e stc a v e a n d H a m ilto n 's Pool N e w E n g la n d Bike Trip Free $ 2 5 (UT) $ 3 5 (n o n -U T ) $ 2 0 (UT) $25 (n o n -U T ) $12 $ 4 $ 4 $25 Free $12 $ 4 $ 2 5 0 The ! day canoe trips will be on either the San Marcos or upper (riiadalupe rivers, depending on prevailing river conditions. Canoe clinics are on I own Lake. K aya k clinics will be in Anna Hiss Gym. For more detailed information, come by Bellmont 104 or call 471-1093. NOW! THE QUICK, EASY WAY TO MAKE DELICIOUS IRISH COFFEE Irish Velvet is a luxurious blend of the finest Irish Whiskey, richest coffees, and sugar. All you do is add hot water and whipped cream! Makes perfect Irish Coffee... everytime! Louganis executes dive in platform competition. Tim Wentworth Ovett sets mile record Coe establishes new mark OSLO, Norway (UPI) — Steve Ovett set a world record for the m ile Tuesday with a tim e of 3 minutes. 48.8 seconds — two-tenths of a second faster than Sebastian Coe’s m ark set last sum m er on the sam e Bislet Inter­ national track. “ It tastes terrific,” said Ovett afte r cross­ ing the finish line. “ One of the big goals this year was to take the record from Coe.” The 25-year old Ovett, who is scheduled to race against Coe in the Moscow Olympics, then walked away from newsmen and refused to make any further comment. COE CLAIMED his own share of the glory as well Tuesday, setting a new world record in the 1,000 m eter with a blistering 2 minutes 13.40 seconds. “ I had no plans of trying a world record, and my aim was to beat the strong Willi Wuhlbeck of West G erm any,” Coe said after the race. “ But when I passed the 800 m eter m ark on 1.14:4.1 realized I could do it, even if I knew I would have problems from to the finish.’’ there It was Coe’s third world record at the Bislet arena in downtown Oslo. Last sum m er he cam e in at 1.44:33 in the 800 m eters and 12 days later clocked an record-breaking 3.49:0 on the English mile. “ It is hard to com pare the 1,000 m eter record with the 800 m eter and the English m ile record But I think it should be possible to run 1,000 m eters at least at 2.13:00 if I sta rt out a little bit more cautiously," the cham ­ pion said. The m arked unfriendliness between Coe and Ovett was apparent Monday night when the man behind the Bislet competition, Arne Haukvik, invited the athletes to his home for a feast of straw berries. Ovett was present, in g reat spirits until the arrival of Coe, at which point he left the par­ ty. refusing even to be photographed together with his rival. THE 1,000 m eters was Coe’s last m ajor race before the Olympics starting July 19. After the race, he said he would be speed training while waiting for the Games to start. In the discus throw, Mac Wilkins of the United States tasted a kind of revenge against Norwegian Knut Hjeltnes by placing first above him with a throw of 67.06 m eters. Sunday, H ejltnes unexpectedly beat the American. The javelin event was won by Hungarian Ferenc Paragi with 90.22 m eters, a very im ­ pressive perform ance. F orm er world record holder and Olym pic cham pion, fellow- countrym an Miklos Nemeth placed only fourth with 80.98. At the end of the event, he showed noticeable signs of a limp in his right leg. OVERSEAS ENGINE & SUPPLY service & repair e n g in e re build ing Datsun, Toyota, V.W., H onda Courier, Volvo, Luv, Audi Fox 836-3171 1003 S a g e b ru sh au’.pei.- FALL, 1980 LSAT Call Days Evenings & Weekends Educational Center TEST PREPARATION S P E C IA L IS T S SIN C E 1938 " C l a s s e s N o w F o r m i n g " In A u s ti n : 1801 Lavaca, Suite 104 Austin, Tx. 78701 512/472-8085 In D a lla s: 1 161 7 N. Cent. Exprwy. Dallas, Tx. 75243 2 14/750-0317 Tennis Classes Beginning I July 7th • Student discounts • All levels Beg., Int., Adv. • Evening & Morning times available • Kid's classes also available beginning July 14th Private Lessons by appointm ent One day racket stringing & repair Summer clothing specials Boast & Izod 100% cotton shirts* 1 7 ,S Private lessons by appt. Caswell Tennis Center 24th & Lamar 478-6268 15% off FICTION 1. The Bourne Identity, Robert Ludlum. P u b lish er’s P r ic e s all listed hardback Best Sellers Reg. $12.95 ............................ 2. Random Winds, Belva Plain. Reg $11.95 ............... 3. Princess Daisy, Judith Krantz. 4. The Ninja, Eric Van Lustbader. Reg $12 95 COOP $ 11.00. NON-FICTION 1. Thy Neighbor’s Wife. Gay Tálese. COOP $10.15. 2. F ree To Choose, Milton and Reg. $14.95 ................................................................. COOP $12.70. COOP $ 11.00. 3. Men in Love, Nancy Friday. Rose Friedman. Reg $9.95 ................................. COOP $ 8.4a. Reg. $12.95 ............................................................... COOP $11.00. Reg. $12 95 ............................................................... COOP 4. The Third Wave, Alvin Toffler. 5. Innocent Blood, P D. Jam es. Reg $14.95 ................................................................. COOP $12.70. Reg. $10.95 ............................................................... COOP 5. The Real War, Richard Nixon 6. 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Reg $10 00 ....................................... COOP $ 8.50. 7. Will, G Gordon Liddy. Reg. $13.95 ................. CLXM $11.95. 8. Donahue, Phil Donahue Reg $11 95 ................ COOP $10.15. 9. The Brethren, Bob Woodward and Scott Armstrong Reg $13.95 COOP ............... 10. Heartsounds, Martha Lear. Reg $12.95 11. Anatomy of an Illness, ......... COOP $11.00. Norman Cousins Reg $9.95 ................................ COOP $ 8.45. $ 11.9;». 12. War Within and Without, Anne Lindbergh Reg $14 95 .............. 13. Nothing Down, Robert Alien Reg $9 95 14. Aunt E rm a’s Cope Book, COOP COOI $ 8.4a. $1- i0. 13. Rage of Angels, Sidney Sheldon Reg $12.95 14. Sins of the Fathers, Susan Howatch COOP $ 11.00. 15. The Book of Lists No. 2, Irving Wallace Reg $12 95 ................................ COOP $11.00. Erma Bombeck. Reg. $9.95 ................................ COOP $ 8.45. $11.00. $ 9.30. $ 11.00. $ 9.30. $11.85. $ 8.45. $ 8.45. Reg $13 95 .............................................................. COOP 15. Portraits. Cynthia Freem an Reg $11 9 5 ........ COOP $11.05. $10.15. VISA & M a ite rC h arg e m W oltom o W elcom e vw lU & ttáA A j O flr— free 1 hr. p a r k in g w /$ 3 00 purchase books MKond level P< HJr 1 part of Irtsh Velvet Add 3 parts of piping hot water Spoon on w hipped cream insr* velvet produced by msh Dwu«ws W l LW D ub* in**end ♦ 4« Proo» * Imported by IMPORTED BEVERAGE SPECIALTIES CO. Mooooch» N«t • © ^ 0 C /frp ¿ oatm -O i A ll in The WAJfTAPT wmaMmmmmmmMmtmmmmmNmnmmmwimmumitmmiHtiMtmmmmmmtmMmtiu/ttMKHMmmmmMmii Call the Classified Hot Line — 471-5244 Wednesday, July 2, 1980 THE DAILY TEXAN Entertainment Page 8 Wreckless Eric Ip: no ‘Big Smash THE WHOTOMORROW [trtMnffd b» thr I I vprnal t v»>nl' ie n lH ¡trixlurrti.bi Niunc < itv \llra rln m ' I Thursday. July 3 8:(M) PM $10.0» $8.00 ALL TICKETS RESERVED TICKETS ON SALE AT SEC rNAICE-VTMlET A u stin 4 7 7 -6 0 6 0 San Marees 3 0 2 - 2 7 '» I Te m ple 7 7 1 - 0 1 7 6 Killee n 5 2 6 -2 8 8 1 MORE AT PIZZA INN I f y o u like m o r e , this is w h e r e it b e g in s . | | ■ Buy one O R IG IN A L T H I N C R U S T P IZ Z A ,! ■ next smaller T H I N C R U S T F R E E I ■ With this c o u p o n , bu y a n y giant, large or m e d i u m size O R I G I N A L T H I N | g C R U S T P IZ Z A and get your next smaller size O R I G I N A L ■ ■ ■ I m P r e se n t this c o u p o n with g u e s t che ck . | T H IN C R U S T P IZ Z A .with e q u a l n u m b e r o f in g r e d ie n ts , F R E E P i z z a I a n Not valid with a n y other offer. \ alid through Jul\ M. 1980 | Pizza inn You get^M ort o f théfly rigs ydiflove, 8 3 I f Research 8401 Burnet Road 1710 W. Ben White Blvd. 3000 Duval 376 Landa/New Braunfels x 2209 Riverside 7237 Hwy. 290 East By CHRIS WALTERS Daily Texan Staff “ Big Sm ash"; by Wreckless E ric ; on Stiff-Epic Records. If r e c o r d s c o u l d h a v e pimples, at least half of this double album would be ripe for smearing with a large gob of Clearasil. Wreckless Eric was one of the original Stiffs back when Nick Lowe was it was with for B ritain’s biggest haven musical screwballs. On the singles he did around 1976-77, te e n p e r s o n a his s m a r m y m ade him one of Stiff’s most amusingly dem ented acts. label and the He was Eddie Cochran with eczema. Buddy Holly with bad breath If Klvis P r e s le y ’s Sun singles were a sublime cut of G r a d e - A A m e r i c a n b e e f , Wreckless E r i c ’s early Stiff work was a greasy plate of Spam and chips. his Cockney E verym an voice r a r e l y w a s g u t t e r a l b u t vicious, bringing to g e th e r lo w er-class fr u s tr a tio n and the absurd confidence of a deranged outcast. Which, to a certain extent, was originally what Stiff was all about. Though the album doesn't have a complete listing. “ Big S m ash " seem s to have all of those singles and th e ir B- sides. It opens with "Whole Wide World, an early Lowe production and a minor classic — Eric figures that the only g irl on e a r t h is probably lying on a beach in Tahiti, and vows to “ go the whole wide world/just, to find her I t ’s an authentic anthem of rock n' roll nerd desire, augmented by a g uitar break that sounds like a fuzz-tone whip cracking. fo r h im On other cuts, Wreckless recalls feeling up a French girl, offers to take another girl to a “ c h e a p a n d n a s t y filllllm m ." sends “ sem aphore signals of loooovvvvve" and pines for “ Hit & Miss J u d y .” T h e re ’s even a song about a s e r i o u s t o p i c — D e a t h : “ th e r e ’s only one destination on the final taxi ..." T h e o t h e r h a lf of “ Big S m a s h " is all b rand new m aterial and not nearly as much fun W reckless’ humor and singing sound forced, and his lust for girls som etim es tu r n s in to m iso g y n y . T h e a rra n g e m en ts a r e satisfyingly loud and hard-edged, but lack the spontaneity E ric achieved with the half-dozen o r so producers who worked on his singles. In fact, all the m em orable stuff on "Big Sm ash " can be found on an a lb u m c alled “ Whole Wide World.” If you want a sam pler, the “ Live S tif f s " albu m , which also features Nick Lowe, L arry Wallis, Ian Dury and Elvis Costello, is a good bet. It can be found in cut-out bins alm ost everywhere. O m t'fPSiH ' O f 4 f 4 U S Uf* SP € C I 4 1 f ^ f N T S C C f U f O Backed by treb le­ laden guitar arra ng e m ents, tough, Wreckless Eric New Adams novel provocative, compelling By GEORGE COLEMAN Daily Texan Staff “ T h e G ir l in A S w in g ” ; by Richard Adams; Knopf; 339 pages; $11.95. H a v in g n e v e r r e a d R i c h a r d Adams' previous novels,"W atership Down," "S hardik" or "T h e Plague it ca m e as quite a surprise to Dogs, find that there a re still stylists in this world who know how to utilize English words to their fullest. this In his latest book. “ The Girl in A is perhaps A dam s’ Swing, gre a te st asset His vocabulary, one suspects, is unlimited. There isn ’t one page in this novel where Adams the proper finds himself words. lacking What em erges, then, is one of the most profoundly descriptive works that I have ever read. A d am s’ eye ignores not even the most minute detail, and he conveys what he sees with a style that I, for one. had long given up for dead The following pages of prose then are nothing less than literary bliss for a book c r i t i c . C o n s id e r a husband's description of the power the novel’s main c h a r a c te r had over him: . . . h e r p o w e r p o u r e d i n e x ­ h a u s t i b l y , f u l f i l l i n g , l i k e a hi gh w a t e r f a l l , no u s e w h a t e v e r e x ­ c e p t t he f l o w i n g o f a r i v e r to the s e a: so t h a t o f t e n t h e o r d i n a r y , d i u r n a l w o r l d s s e e m e d u n r e a l to m e , all d a y - t o - d a y l a n d m a r k s h a v i n g b e e n s u b m e r g e d o r s w e p t a w a y in this f l o o d o f v o l u p t u o u s l a r g e s s e . ” Nice, very nice. And the majority of the book reads just like that. Thankfully, there a r e a few stilted paragraphs here, otherw ise I would have thought Adams incapable of making a mistake. An example: t r e m b l i n g w i t h “ W h a t t h e a c o l y t e f i n d s on th e cold h ill si de w h e r e he w a k e s , a l o n e a n d t he f e a r f o r p e a c e o f m i n d ’s s a k e he h a d b e t t e r n e v e r h a v e s e e n, is the w i s d o m f o u n d in t h e s t o n y f i e l d , t h e k n o w l e d g e o f w o r k a b l e to be d o n e by h i m s e l f a l o n e . ” I still haven’t figured that one out, nor have I found its relevance to the story. These deviations a r e sm all when one considers Adam s' writing as a whole. Neverthless, simply good writing — and beautiful prose — does not a g re a t book make. As for the story in “ The Girl in A Swing,” I can only say that it displays the r a r e powers of an author who is capable of telling a tale so haunting, so ab­ solutely believable, that once we finish reading it, it doesn’t leave us. Instead, w e’re left wondering: did it really happen? Or was it a d re a m ? Adams mercifully has not m ade this horror/love story into the cheap “ so wicked is my flesh" tale it could have been. Instead, it invokes co m ­ parison to some of the world’s m ore classic tales. ( R e v i e w c o p y f u r n i s h e d by U T Co- Op. ) Soap Creek Saloon ★ ★ TO NIGHT * ★ 8 NIGHTS TO GO ★ ★ A L V IN CROW PLU S DOUG SAHM C O M IN G THIS WEEKEND ALBERT COLLINS IMMIGRATION ASSISTANCE Relative Permanent Resident Visas Labor Certifications Adjustment of Status Consular Processing Asylum Naturalization Visa Extensions Company Transfereesk Deportation Hearings PAUL PARSONS Attorney at Law 2200 Guadalupe, Suite 216 Austin, Texas 78705 (512) 477-7887 Se Habla Español ¿ A L U IN T H i ^K T A ^ 7; CALL THE H O T LIN E 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 T h e Posse 2 4 th & Rio G ra n d e featuring Dr. D o o m ’s Yardbirds & other Fried Things. The very best in Fried Chicken! ATCH SOME ACTION. w i t h K o d a k K o d a c o lo r 400, a fa s t film .1 1 3 0 6 N. LAMAR 4 ' í --------------------X ^ T o n ig h t THE RICK WEST HURRICAN BAND T h u rs d a y The Cooder Browne Band Longest H a p p y Hour in To w n Double Shots — 2 for 1 11 a .m .-8 p .m . NEVER A COVER CHARGE suitable for action shots — day or night! Great for firework displays. r i i i i i i i ' . i j j j W IN SOME ACTION w ith a Kodak R a ft. • register upstairs in Co-Op Camera • enter as many times as you wish • no purchase necessary DRAWING WILL BE HELD AT 5 PM JULY 3RD C O L O R P R O C E S S IN G » Kodak VISA & MasterCharge Welcome free 1 hr. parking w/$3 purchase LIBERTY LUNCH 405 W. 2nd at Guadalupe MARK HALLMAN GROUP ( co-producer of Carol King's new album ) NO COVER this and every Wed. this month 50* Beer Specials H a p p y H o u r in th e M o o n lig h t / ^ n$\ Wednesday night only from 9 -1 0 p.m. 4 7 7 -8 9 9 9 311 W. 6th Tonight BEACH PARTY THREE! LAZY DAISY RESTAURANT offers the following breakfast specials Monday through Friday 5 a .m .-11 a.m. EARLY BIRD SPECIALS 2 e g g * a n y s t y le h a t h b r o w n s ♦ o a st o r b is c u its c r e a m g r a v y o n re q u e s t w i t h 2 p ie c e * o f b a c o n o r * o u * a g e c o ffe e s e rv e d w i t h a n y b r e a k f a s t 1 .1 5 1 .5 5 .2 5 2 b is c u its o r t o a s t c r e a m g r a v y c o ffe e ta lly , w i t h 2 p ie c e s b a c o n o r s a u s a g e .9 5 1 .3 5 C h o ic e o f h o t h o m e m a d e s w e e t ro t) o r 1 b r e a k f a s t to c o s e r v e d w c o ffe e « J # ♦ C h ic k e n F rie d S te a k 11 a m -9 3 0 p . m . 7 D a y s S e rv e d w i t h S a la d f r e n c h fr ie s & ro lls 1 .7 5 w i t h b o k . d p o t a t o 2 .2 5 LOCATIONS; 1 1 0 1 G u o d a lu p o i J 8 t h t G u a d a lu p o t 3 3 0 1 C u llo n A v o ( C o n g r t t t A l i v o O a k ) ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 6 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 6 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Presents * Tonight * In the Beer Garden DOGS AT PLAY * Tomorrow ★ In the Beer Garden STEVEN FROMHOLZ A- Saturday * JAMES BROWN REVUE * Sunday » An Evening w ith ... JOSE FELICIANO The H istoric A rm adillo Beer Garden open daily, w eath er p erm ittin g SX5% BARTON SPR IN G S KD, 4 7 7 - 9 7 * 1 ACORN, files petition Groups want no utility cut-offs during heat B y A L IS A H A G A N Daily Texan Staff A c onsumers union and the Texas chapter ()S the A s s o c ia tio n of C o m m u n ity Organizations for Reform Now Tuesday fil­ ed a petition with the Public Utility Com­ mission which would prohibit termination of utility service under certain conditions such as severe heat waves. Members of the consumer groups ex­ pressed concern that rate payers would have utilities shut off if they could not pay their bills. Being without power for air cooling and heating could pose a health threat to Texas residents, ACORN regional organizer Judy Graves said. “ People are just scared to death to get their next utility bill,” Graves said. The Utility Customer Bill of Rights stipulates four procedures which the con­ sumer groups believe the PU C should adopt. • Persons should be provided with a statement of their rights as customers. • PU C should give customers the oppor­ tunity to pay bills on a deferred payment plan if their bills are delinquent and the customer has established that he is unable to pay the entire bill. • Utility service cannot be terminated without giving the customer notice. • Any customer requesting an opportuni­ ty to dispute the reasons for termination of service shall be given a hearing before an impartial decision maker. ACORN and the Southwest Office of Con­ sumers Union started work on the petition last fall and were initially concerned that Texas residents would have utilities ter­ minated during the winter, Graves said. It is only coincidence that ACORN and the consumers union presented the petition during the state’s record-breaking heat wave, she added. The PU C has 60 days to respond to the consumer groups’ petition and Graves predicts the commission will hold public hearings on the matter. Although A u stin ’s E le c t r ic U tility Department and Dallas’ utility department have issued statements claim ing they would not terminate service during the pre­ sent heat wave, Graves said “ there really needs to be a statewide regulation.” If accepted by the PUC, the petition will apply to every utility in the state except those which are m un icip ally owned. Consequently, the city’s Electric Utility Department would not fall under re­ quirements stipulated in the petition. “ If a problem began with the Electric U tility D epartm ent service a whole separate action would be needed,” Graves said. C a m p u s N e w s ¡im B u ic f Organization seeks aid for disabled students Services for Handicapped Students needs volunteers for th e s u m m e r s e s s io n s . Interested persons may con­ tact the dean of students of­ fice, 471-1201, Student Ser­ vices Building 101. A NN O UN CEM ENTS D EPARTM EN T OF ASTRONOM Y will show part three of the film "Is Anybody Out There: Finding Habitable Planets?" and the film "Infinite Horizons" at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 13.132. M EET IN G S JA P A N E S E CON VERSATION C L U B will meet at noon Wednesday m the Battle Oakes Room in the Texas Union Building. A u s t in 's first w in e bar C h e e se b o a rd s f in e w in e s by the glass 1200 West Lynn 472-3790 Wednesday, Ju ly 2, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 ^ '★ ★ ★ ^ ★ . E v e r y t h i n g I s b r i l l i a n t ' ^ New style gardening lowers food bills Anyone can grow $300 worth of groceries at the Community Gardens of Austin by investing $21 for rental on a plot of land and a little elbow grease. The Community Gardens, at Guadalupe Street and North Lamar Boulevard, are plots of land set aside by the city and state to be rented to citizens, said Victor Muehlen, garden planner. Anyone may rent a plot of land, 26 feet by 26 feet. Rent is $21 for six months. F o r that $21, unlim ited water, mulching material and all the free advice which might be needed to start a gar­ den are supplied, Muehlen said. “ You should be able to grow about $300 worth of food on a plot that size,” Muehlen said. “ And those figures are from up north where there’s only a (six-month) growing single season. With the winters in Austin, you might be able to double that.” The Gardens is a project of th e U n i v e r s i t y Y M C A . Muehlen said, and the land is owned and supervised by the state. Five acres of land are divided into plots at the Gardens, but all plots are presently rented. “ But the next rent term begins in August," Muehlen said. “ There is usually a high turnover of plots every six months.” Muehlen said that such v e g e ta b le s as b r o c c o li, c a u liflo w e r and cabbage traditionally do very well in the fa ll growing season, producing until a hard freeze comes, usually sometime in February. S u m m e r heat does not affect the gardens much either. “ We have unlimited water,’ Muehlen said “ So while farmers in the area are almost out of produce, the people at the gardens still have lots of stuff. “ We have a lot of people with a lot of experience, and everybody is real friendly and helpful," he said. Persons wishing to obtain more information about ren­ ta ls a t the C o m m u n ity Gardens may call 458-2009 on weekday afternoons. -KAmiwo Catto* N V DAW.V NEWS “ An exceptional work With her stubbornness and sincerity she reminded me of a young Katharine Hepburn.” -Hex Reed “ Judy Davis is the gutsiest young woman to win our hearts since Katharine Hepburn.” -Judith Cost “ A sparkling m ovie.” -G e o e S h a h t WNBC TV Paul Cohen. Rohm J kapian and Paul Lee man prrsem My Brilliant C areer \ia m n g Judy D avis and S am Neill Produced by Margaret Fink • Directed by G ill Arm strong Presented by The New South Wales Film Corporation and G U O VARSITY 2 4 0 2 G u a d a l u p e 4 7 4 -4 3 5 1 6: 00- 8: 00- 10:00 R £ 8 £ L Driae-ln 6902 Burleson Road New Cine-fi Sound System XXX Original Uncut 385-7217 Privacy of Your Auto Note Theatre sound operates through your car radio. If your car has no radio, bring a portable fsO\ wmm. $1.50 FIRST MATINEE SHOW ONLY C A P IT A L P L A Z A 452-7646 aIH 3 5 NORTH / m h i i b \ 11 — 1 WHOLLY MOSES (PG) 1:30-3:35-5:40-7:45-4:50 V H IG H L A N D M A L L / ' n a a a E 2 Z S E K E 2 s a \ IH 35 AT KOENIG LN. 451-7326 THE BLUES BROTHERS <*> 12 0 0 - 2 : 3 0 - 4 : 5 5 - 7 : 2 5 - 9 : 5 0 KRAMER vs. KRAMER (pg) 1:15-3:20-5:25-7:30-4.35 G E N E R A L C I N E M A T H E A T R E S n vau s t a r r i n g G EN A LE E JO H N H O LLVFIELD STEVE EVENT H EATHER GORDON starring ANNIE SPRINKLES! OPENS 8 STARTS DUSK I H E 'S A U F O R O N I E O l A Bokottice Inter national Pictures Releas EAST SCREEN I — I — I — ■ ■ Showtown2 _ £ Outdoor Theatre wml HWY 183 A CAMERON 8308584 •v.v 3 8 » CRUISING Al Pacino i n plus FOXES WEST SCREEN Maxwell Smart in The Nude Bomb plus Jaws II GANDIDE June 27-July 3. 5 & 6 UT Cabaret Theatre Bernstein’s bawdy musical adaptation of Voltaire’s classic satire B. Iden Payne Theatre, 23rd & San Jacinto 8 pm General Admission $5 Student $4 Season Ticket $ 16 471-1444 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * p resents TONIGHT ONLY! LOIN S LOVE By AGNES VARDA ( Director of O n e Sin g s, The O t h e r d o e s n ' t ) a B iz a r r e I is io n o f 6 0 s A m e r ic a m Tuesday is Dollar Day JSouthsk)e2 ..^Outdoor Theatre 710 E BEN WHITE 444-2296 Little Darlings plus Serial SCREAMS in the WINTER NIGHT plus Night Creatures BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 8:15 4* * * * * ♦ * * ♦ * * ♦ * * * * * * AMERICAN MULTI CINEMA m asmcEüíEa^ |OHN d a n — h i i t m u w k r o y i í , THE BLUES BROTHERS 4 42 2 3 3 3 »?3 W BEN w h it e blvo ll:4S-2:1S-(5:00-$1.751-7:45-10:15 l :45-(4:30-$ 1.75)-7:15-4:55 4 4 4 - 3 2 2 2 PLEASANT VALIEV RD o / I I t l t W 71 M M B O Y 12:00-2: J0-(5:00-$J.751-7:30-4:55 f “ LOIN S LOVE cannot be categorized. It is about the movies, j^. life in Am erica, being a superstar, and a vision of the ^ 4. Am erican Dream ...” 4 * jf- + )f. Starring: )$■ The w riters of “ Hair” , JA M E S RADO & G E R O M E R A G N I A ndy W arhol, Superstar, V IV A ^ Experim ental film m aker, SHIRLEY CLARKE * W ith: J EDDIE C O N ST A N T IN E, CARLO S CLAREN S , & appearances by J M IC K EY R O O N EY & PETER B O G D A N O V IC H í BURDINE AUD. at 7 & 9 p.m. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ^ * [ * * Only $1.50 J M I C H A E L C A I N E T h e MOVIE M U SICAL EVEN T o f t h e S O 's ! a ,. *« k 1:3044:30-51.751-7:30-10:30 ,4 • ->La * r - a i c m — -V. .Ic;' V a 1914 G u a d a lu p e 476-1215 1 00-3:1545:45-51.7514^0-10:15 n 2:3045:15-51.7514:00-10:30 Í M . MORTHCROSS 6 ' 454 5147 “ Íi«~ Hard hat day:» and tonk . o ' i i t i t . w r , honky > M M H m f ights. 2:1545:00-51 75)7:45-10:30 100-3:454:30-4:15 S C R E A M S O F A W IN T E R N IG H T The MOVIE MUSICAL EVENT of the 8011 C < u n t StO/O t / i c 2rt: 2:15-4:1544:15-51.7 514:1S -10:15 .... 12.00-2:3045-00-51.751-4:55 ■•fore ‘S t a r W a rs ’ th e re w a s end there w ilt a lw a ys be M Mm&s 100-i4:00-51751-7 00-4:55 h r 1200-2.3045:15-51 -75)4:00-10:30 ^ 4 5 3 - 6 6 4 1 2-00 hash ■ ■ . * T H E^STA fl. W A A Í S A C A C O N T IN U E S -AIKWONFOPC -i-joe c.-SMto . . . . 70 M M Uolby SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT 4 '* »•«♦> amC id Ck kb.n ‘ 2$ »2 00 1200 11:30-2:154500-52.001-7:45-10:15 "• * FROIW—— RUSSíakH WITH icui: ! : TECHNICOLOR “ UNITED ARTISTS Today at 7:00 & 9:15 Unton Theatre 1-50 U.T. 2.00 Non-U.T. :-v '• The Science Fiction Classic Forbidden Planet V ;!* i ,* » with Walter Pidgeon, Leslie Nielsen, & Anne Francis. LATE SNOW Union Theatre I SO U.T. 11:30 p.m. 2.00 Non-U.T. , r , M „ ■ ■ ... . „ „ i r r J v . ' . V y 1 1 1 p .\ .— * j .•• *.- i. **• ; *. y * t 1-ia—■- a-’ ’ f.'~ > .Ja,4a' M m\ C o m in g on July 3 , 1 n i y * v . • *•, •* 7 ' ....... > Íjm; 1776 ; / ‘.v • hi ÍV’l-* tt • •i'AVjr .v'.i r f f ¿Or M a tin e e s Daily No O ne 11 18 A d m itte d Late Show s Friday & Saturday Sundays Open Noon Picase Bnnq I O s Reqatdless Of Atje r - p * P R E S I D I O T H E A T R E S m Hi F IL M E D IN A U S T IN IMF REY NOLDS C U L T 1 00 -3:15 5:30 7:45 • 10:00 f h A l M l N l S IS S Y S I ’ACKK TOMMY I.KK .H)NKS .r— 12:30-2:50 5:10-7:40 10:05 V I L L A G E A 2 7 0 0 A N D E R S O N • 451-8352 H ERBIE S BACK W\| I mw » (*LNMM 4 1 K7N.S M IP B II G O t N - 5 * * ; J B A N A N A S Maú-uAír 12:00 2:00-4 00 6 :00-8:00 10:00 BIHT RKVVH.IIS StfftUQH CH.T1 1:00 3:15 5:30 7:45 10 00 1:15 3:30-5:45 8.00 10 15 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER H ER B IE'S BA C K W\l I WNM \ PV4WM 4 IH8N.N 111 W ill WH S -94s a ' BAN VNAN L A K E H I L L S 2 4 2 1 ( I N W H IT E • 444-0552 12:00 4 00 4 00 6 00 8 00 10.00 IM IKIE SCItKBNK R E D U C E D P R I C E S U N T IL 6:0 0 M O N T H R U F R I ■a See MAXWELL SMART as AGENT 86 in his first motion picture. uwS-*' UmK i I,in, In I JfV il WfitimilltT sopui x umiA MVHtTJ JO XLYSITUHVWI (JAMARU) (.LVXMM •frOQ-tam. J 5 5 5 - 7 5 0 - 9 4 5 T H E NUDE s o m T : x ,"" F E A T U R E S : $1.50 til 6:00. $2 00 after M ID N IG H T E R S: 51.50 e BLOOD FEUD — ” ... The best movie I have seen this year ... exciting, thought-provoking, at times amusing, at other times very moving. — Alan Jenkins Austin Amencan-Statesman — --------------- — ■fe* Wool Page 10 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, July 2, 1980 FOR SALE ROOMMATES FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS inch I tim e S4 70 W 24 inch 2-9 tim e s inch 10 or m ore tim es S4 01 Cl a s s i f i e d a d v e r t i s i n g Consecutive Day Rates $ s $ s 15 34 42 68 IS word m in im u m E a ch word 1 tim e E a c h word 3 tim es E a ch w o rd 5 tim e s E a c h w o rd 10 tim e s I col 1 col 1 col $! 00 ch a rg e to change copy F ir s t tw o w ord s m a y be a ll c a p ita l le tte rs 25* to r each a d d itio n a l w o rd In c a p ita l . . . — le tte rs _______ * * * 1 1 1 S T U D E N T F A C U L T Y S TA F F C onsecutive D ay Rates 13 w ord m in im u m E ach day » 91 E ach a d d itio n a l w ord each day t 07 I co l. x l inch each day S2 40 P a y m e n t in a dva n ce and c u rre n t I D m u s t be presented in TSP B u ild in g to 3 200 i 25th 8. W h itis ) fro m 8 a m 4 30 p m M o n d a y th ro u g h F rid a y T h e re is a SO* c h a rg e to change copy F ir s t tw o w o rd s m a y be a ll c a p ita l le tte rs 25' fo r each a d d itio n a l w ord in c a p ita l le tte rs O C A D U N f S C H f D U I I L # n 4 e y T .n o n F rid a y 7 0 0 p .m T v « * d a y T e x a n M a n d a y 1 1 0 0 a m W e d n e s d a y T e x a n T u e s d a y 1 1 : 0 0 a m T h u rs d a y T e x a n W e d n e s d a y 1 1 : 0 0 a m F rid a y T e x a n T h u rs d a y 1 1 . 0 0 a m In th e e v e n t o f e r r e r t m a d e in a n im m e d ia t e n o tic e m u s t h e y iv e n tis e m e n t os th e p u b lis h e rs a r e re s p o n s ib le fe r e n iy O N C m c e rre c t in s e rt te n A il c la im s fe r a d - lu s tm e n ts sh o u ld b e m o d e n e t la te r th a n 3 0 d a y s a f t e r p u b lic a tio n AUTOS FOR SALE VW E N G IN E S re b u ilt $459 in sta lle d , e x ­ change G enera! VW re p a ir Reasonable rates. 452-3821. We buy broken VWs 1970 M U S T A N G F A ST B A C K N e w engine 26 m pg, 3 speed, g re a t c o n d itio n $1300 477-5935 n e w r a d i o Í975 D A TS U N B210 47,000 m ile s A C A M F M $2300, n egotiable. B ill, 476-4979 a fte r 5. 1976 T R IU M P H TR7 e xc e lle n t co nd itio n, brow n, w ith lug g a ge ra ck, a ir, A M -F M cassette, 33,000 m ile s 447-2775. f i r e s p T G R E M L I Ñ ! ^ c y lin d e r , A M - F M cassette, a ir, luggage ra c k S I500 Joe, 476-7251. '73 P IN T O W AG O N In good c o n d itio n . $650. 926-0471, B ill. '77 G R A N D P rT x L J. B la c k on M a ck, ve lo u r in te rio r, loaded w ith a ll e xtra s, A M -F M stereo cassette. A classic beau­ ty. C all 476-1863 1974 C H E V Y 350 p ic k-u p O range and w hite, m ag wheels, stereo system , low m ile a g e $1995 f ir m 443-5657. '77 C A P R I 2000 cc, 4-spaad, A M -F M . 465-4555, 451 2542 1964 P L Y M O U T H F U R Y . v l , sm a ll c a r­ b u re tor, p ush -b u tto n tra n sm issio n , some body dam a g e , ru ns. $250 478-9829 FOR SALE M o t o r c y c l e - F a r S a le ____ YOU N E E D a J e ts k i It's hot, y o u 're hot. Can 478-5997 s]595, neg o tia b le .________ 1977 M O P E D Batavus, 700 miles, ex­ cellent condition, $250 or best offer. Vanessa, 836-2048, 250-6308 Bicyele-For Sale S ic Y C L E SC H W IN N C on tin e ntal, 23". $85 Call 452-6093 Stereo-For Sale C IR C L E S T E R E O ; prompt, reasonable audio/video service Used equipm ent bought and sold P arts and accessories. 1211 Red R iver 476-0947 lo u d s p e a k e rs , A D V E N T W A L N U T 5250/pair. C all M a rk , 459-3577 STE REO E Q U IP M E N T 't o r sale. Used Kenwood tuner, H artle y speakers, ADC turntable, tapedeck 458-4888 M uticol-For Sale T H E S T R IN G S H O P . Discounts on strings, new and used guitars 911 W 24th, 476-8421. A U S T IN 'S BEST selection of songbooks and sheet music Alpha M usic Center, 611 W 29th. 477-5009. B O O T L E G S A L I E N N a fio n U sed Records Downtown Flea M a rk e t, 601 East 5th. F rid a y , Saturday, Sunday, 9-6 476-8348 A N E W ST OR e 7 Recycled Records, 3405 Guadalupe, 458-4506. Buy, sell, trade Photography-For Sale 35MM BOGAN E N L A R G E R with easel! grain microscope, four trays and print t,ü e!.'J 170 t 22' 6! 35 B E S E L E R C O M P L E T E d a r k r o o m equipment, like new! $575. Call M ike or Ron, 444-6227, Pets-For Sole B L O O D H O U N D S B E A U T IF U L AKC pups 12 weeks, black and tan, Champion Shire pedigree Shots $250 214-247-6764 • Homes-For Sale To 5 S E C L U D E D AC RES Tn B a stro p C ounty near Red Rock Old slave ca bin , w afer w e ll w ith e le c tric pum p, capped o il w e ll w ith n a tu r a l gas, p a r t ia lly clea re d , SI9,500 cash No agents, no Tex debts. 477-8556 1974 14 X 70 m o b ile hom e 2BR, 2BA, one q u a rte r acre, 100 square fo o t p o rta b le b u ild in g Eanes ISO, Lake A u stin fa c ili­ ty $20,000 o r best o ffe r. 263-5169, 447-4411 ext 278 E N F IE L D C O N D O M IN IU M S . E ffic ie n ­ cies and one bedrooms $25,000 to $38,000 W end all C o rrig a n , 478-7005 A m r 'ia Bullock Realtors. • ; I ¿BA H Ü n Y l a Ñ D H E IG H T S - 3BR. s e p a ra te s tu d y , 2 liv in g and d in in g areas O n ly $47,500 E x c e lle n t shape G re a t lo ca tio n DOUG R O STED T. 458 8277, 454-7809 Roth and Assoc. P rofessors, w a lk to UT fro m th is larg e b ric k hom e w ith re n ta b le 2-story a d d i­ tio n L a rg e b e a u tifu l co rn e r lo t across s tre e t fr o m p a rk P riv a te back y a rd enclosed w ith old ro ck w a ll F iv e c e ilin g fans w ith h ig h e ffic ie n c y AC. Oak flo o rs a n d w a l l p a p e r t h r o u g h o u t . V e r y sp a cio u s m o d e rn k itc h e n . R eal o ld - fashioned c o m m u n ity a ttitu d e p re v a ils . A v e ry r a re fin d in A ld rid g e P lace 474- t y p e w r i t e r s N EW and used *125 and up D an s O ffic e E q u ip m e n t, 474- 6396 W HO T IC K E T S F lo o r seats. Phone *71- 5293 No jo k es W HO T IC K E T S V e ry good seats. C ali 327-6786 W HCTt ÍC K E T S C a ll 926-2853 IB M T Y P E W R IT E R m o de l B W ilson X/31 g o lf club* 472-6535 *130 lik e new, $125 YOU N E E D a Je tsk i. It's hot, yo u ’ re hot C all 478 5997 S1595. negot.able IC A R U S V G L ID E R 50 p la n s a nd p a rts , S200 258-3417 , co m p le te d A IR F R A M E W A T E R B E D ro om suite L ik e new Sell as set o r by piece 288 100! H E W L E T T P A C K A R D M O D E L 67 - f u l­ ly p ro g ra m m a b le c a lc u la to r Business decisions pack B lank tapes H ard fie ld case Like new condition $235 Ron P e rrin , 4512104 W H O T IC K E T S Excellent arena level Groups of 2, 4, 6 A il or a p a rt Bill 288- 0609 T R U N D L E BED, Simmons mattresses w m nypo-allergem c covers $50 327 0054 •W H O " $12 50 concert tickets - cheap! 444-4! 09, 444-0777 397 7522 TW O W H O tickets, $12 50 each 452 7000 b e fo re 12 00 £_m _ _ _____________ _ W h O t i c k e t s floor level G ilbert 3*5- J325 472-4902 o tte r 7 O rly four ett Miscellaneous-For Sale St i l l M O R E Who tic ke ts good seats, $15 C all D a v id at 478 5835 We buy jew elry, estate jew elry, diamonds and old gold. Highest cash prices paid.. C A P I T O L D I A M O N D SHOP 4018 N. Lam ar UNFURN. APARTMENTS F E M A L E W A N T E D fo r su m m e r to share b e a u tifu l, 2-1 house at 30th and P e a rl. F u rn ish e d , piano, hardw ood flo o rs, m a n y w indow s sun- porch. C A /C H , w asher, d ry e r, g a ra g e M ust be re spo n sible UT student S200, no b ilis, no deposit. C on ta ct C yndy 478-5437 A B o w ie Fan. HOUSEM ATE W A N TE D : Neat, responsible, non-sm oker, non-TV person to sh are nice 2 bedroom house w ith wooded y a rd and h ardw ood flo o rs Q uiet neig h bo rh o od in M aplew ood area V e g e ta ria n p re fe rre d $137/m onth plus deposit &, t/2 b ills C all J im a t 472-1202 a fte r 6 P lease keep fr y in g ! Circle Villa Apts. M O VE IN TODAY Summer Special • 1 BR $170 & E • 2 BR $200 & E • Shuttle Bus • Unfurnished & Furnished 2323 Town Lake Circle 4 4 4 -5 0 0 3 1BR - ‘ 215 S m a ll q u ie t a p a r tm e n t c o m m u n ity . L a rg e studio a p a rtm e n ts a v a ila b le now P riv a te balconies, 1 7 baths W ate r, gas, ca ble paid 701 W N o rth Loop 453-2230, 451 6533 Central Properties Inc. A L L B I L L S P A I D South. 1 and 2 b edroom a p a rtm e n ts on Tow n L a ke ; pool, W D room , co nve n ien t to d ow ntow n and c ity bus S ta rtin g $245, 444-3337 o r 476-2633, G i l ll n g w a t e r M a n a g e m e n t Co S U M M E R A N D fa ll 2 -1 7 u n fu rnish ed . $255 plus E ; la rg e 2-2 A B P $365, la rg e 2-1 A BP $360 2606 E n fie ld 474 5930 S H A R E T O W N H O U S E 2 - 1 7 $225 (b a lc o n y ), $195 fu rn is h e d / u n fu rn ish e d . fire p la c e , patio, storage CA-CH, WD, 3102 C edar 476-0736, 474U837 W A L K TO U T. 2608 R io G ra n d e A p a rt­ m ent B L u x u ry u n it in tr ip le x , g re a t fo r couple o r tw o students C A /C H , fu lly equipped kitc h e n , re frig e ra to r, 2BR, one w ith lo ft $400 m o n th ly , gas and w a te r paid. Sidney S. S m ith , 459-8757, R ea lto rs E N F IE L D L A R G E e ffic ie n c y 7 block to sh uttle , $160/m onth 1405 H a rtfo rd . M a n a g e r a p a rtm e n t 104 478-7005. ROOM A N D BOARD M A L E A N D fem ale vacancies. Double occupancy. 3 7 blocks from campus French House, 710 W. 21st. 478-6586 H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D by J u ly 1st. $140 plus 7 b ills Quiet, p e rm a n e n t, lib e r a l, c le a n , r e s p o n s ib le p e rs o n desired E l Ron, 459-9283 V É R Y L A R G E th re e bedroom house to share On c ity bus; shady, south M ike , 444 4483 TR A V IS H E IG H T S House needs th ir d ro o m m a te 6 la rg e room s, good eats, near Stacy. $117 . 442-5617 to share nice 2- F E M A L E W A N T E D story, 2BR a p a rtm e n t near UT F u r ­ nished, patio, AC, $140 A B P K a re n , 477- 1574 ; fo r 2 B R . 2 B A N E E D R O O M M A TE a p a rtm e n t S u m m er $100, fa ll $142.50 V acancy 7-13 Quiet, studious John, 441 - 9527 F IL L T H IS s p a tio -te m p o ra l vo id . R o o m ­ m ate fo r nice 2-2 a p a rtm e n t on s h u ttle SI30, 7 E Responsible, to le ra n t, ro ck-n- rolI a u d io p h ile 474-6349, Ed Keep t r y ­ ing, e a rly late ROOMMATS N E E D E D 3BR house D ishw asher ca rp e t, AC G a ra g e $130, 7 b ills L ib e ra l dependable 451-3565. l o o k i n g J E W I S H F E M A L E f o r a p a rtm e n t/ house near U T w ith m o re of same s ta rtin g fa ll C all Leah 478- 6295, 713-729-4181 o r 713-780-7125 (9-5). ROOMMATE FOR 2BR house. $162 50 la r g e 7 b il l s . H a r d w o o d b a ckya rd , co nve n ien t to dow n to w n. 454- 2408, keep try in g f l o o r s , N E E D E D IM M E D IA T E L Y person to f i l l 3rd b edroom in 3-1 C la rk s v ille house Close to MS, la rg e fro n t porch, h ard w o od ‘ loors S200 A B P Huge basem ent th a t should be u tiliz e d as studio w o rksh o p In q u ire a t 474 0159 a fte r 5 p m S U M M E R R O O M M A T E needed H ave yo ur own la rg e bedroom , s h u ttle bus at fro n t door, a ll b ills paid, new ca rp e t, new fu r n it u r e , pool, a ttr a c tiv e c o m p le x a c ro s s s tr e e t fr o m H a n c o c k M a ll $140'm onth R ob e rt, 454-8021 F E M A L E R Ó O M M aT É , c o m p a tib le , w a t e r - lo v in g , ( n o n - s m o ke r), independent fo r nice d up le x in N orth A u s tin C all between 8 30-11 p m , 836 1718. fr e s h a ir n u t _______________ HOUSEMATE N E E D E D , sh are 2BR a p a rtm e n t. F u rn ish e d , AC. O n ly $66, 7 expenses J u ly 12 t i l l Septem ber 1st 478- 3)03 H E R E 'S T H A T ad again F in a n c ia lly dependable ro o m m a te (s ) fo r 2-2 in South A u stin 4-plex Cheap, $112.50 o r less, low e le c tric ity 444-5507 R O O M M A T E F O R T b R house! $120 plus j b ills, ow n bath N ear 2 9th -L a m a r Dan, 474-2036 a fte r 6 ROOMS NOW L E A S IN G fo r s u m m e r Co-ed d o rm n ext to ca m pu s R em odeled, new fu rn ish in g s, re c re a tio n area, sundeck, w ide screen TV , re frig e ra to rs , no m eals, 24 hour s e c u rity . Taos, 2612 G uadalupe, 474-6905 N IC E ROOM, CA CH, w a lk in g d ista n ce UT. C ali 477-9388 TW O B L O C K S U T, n ic e ly fu rn is h e d ro om s, e ffic ie n c ie s and a p a rtm e n ts fro m $105 up L y le House, 2800 W h itis . 477-7558 P O O L 1 N E A R sh o p p in g , on s h u ttle 2BR$, IB R s. e ffic ie n c y Clean c o m p le x Call m a na g e r fo r p rice s 451 6762 fu rn is h e d e ffic ie n c y N E A R C A M P U S , $165 plus E Q u iet area H u r r y ! C all m anager. 472-4009 LAW S T U D E N T S 'd re a m Q uiet 2-1 n ea r law school W asher d ry e r S m all c o m ­ plex, nice te n a nts S395 plus E R ent now fo r ra te G r in n e ll P ro p e rty M a n a g e m e n t, 474-8486 re d u ce d s u m m e r L U X U R Y E F F S & ones at rates *149 * 160 N ear cam pus 459-3226 fa n ta s tic 1BR STU D IO $195 plus É , e ffic ie n c y $155 plus E A v a ila b le now Sunwest A p a rtm e n ts 404 W 35th 451-0791, 451- 2986. 345-0772.___________ , L A R G E E F F IC IE N C Y , s m a ll, fr ie n d ly com plex Q u ie t F iv e blocks to ca m pu s. 910 W 26th 472-6589 F U R N IS H E D E F F IC IE N C Y a p a rtm e n t n ear cam pus S i00 476-0333. S U B L E T S U M M E R , e ffic ie n c y . H o t plate, re fr ig e r a to r $160 A B P 473-2452 S U M M E R R A TE S now a v a ila b le 2BR 2BA $200 plus e le c tr ic ity W alk to U T Le Fonte A p a rtm e n ts 803 W 28th St F o r m ore in fo rm a tio n c a ll 472-7127 a fte r 5 30 S IM S T U D E N T E F F IC IE N C Y w a lk in g d is ta n c e U n iv e r s it y 500 E lm w o o d Place 345-1552 * 175, 2BR A P A R T M E N T near cam pus gas w a te r paid 3212 Red R ive r 472-5723 m o rnin g s o r com e by G R E A T O AK venient, la rg e 2-2 pool, sundeck d ry Lease $380 477-3388, 472 2097 - L u x u rio u s q u ie t co n ­ la u n ­ SU M M E R R A TE S 1 BR Studio $195 plus E C eilin g fan. d ish w a she r disposal Sunwest A p a rtm e n ts 404 W. 35th 451* 0791, 451-2986, 345-0772 _______ Ñ E A R LA W school A ir co nd itio ne d fu r nished room , sh are baths S115ABP 3310 Red R iver 476-3634 ALL OVER AUSTIN APARTMENT LOCATORS avoid the hassle! 4 3 1 4 -M e d tc a l P a rk w a y No. 1 4 5 9 - 3 2 2 6 ( I t n I ) UNIQUE CONTEMPORARY one bedroom efficiency a p a rtm e n ts Summer $1 55 plus E Fall $219 plus E turnithod w ith oH fh« goortafi 4 1 0 5 -S p e e d w a y , M a n a g e r N o. 103 call 4 5 1 -4 9 1 9 It no a n s w e r call 4 5 9 -3 2 2 6 S U M M E R R A T E S A L L B I L L S P A I D S m a ll 2 B R ' s $240 2215 Leon W alk or sh uttle to cam pus, c e n tra l a ir , and new c a rp e tin g 474-7732 FR EE M O NTH'S RENT A t Spanish T r a il you get the m o n th of June fre e when you sign a s u m m e r lease 1 and 2 b edroom a p a rtm e n ts A B P plus E $200 and up F rie n d ly co m p le x on CR shuttle, pool, la u n d ro m a t, re se rve d p a rkin g . Good fa ll ra te s The Spanish T ra il 4520 B ennett 451-3470 U N IV E R S IT Y N E IG H B O R H O O D 1BR a p a rtm e n t Shag ca rpe t, o ft s tre e t p a rk ­ ing Cable, w a te r and gas paid 1010 W. 23rd No pets $240 m onth plus E No preleasing fo r fa ll. 472-2273 1BR - ‘ 175 Hyde P a rk a rea and on sh uttle . Pool, lo ts of screen doors, g la s s W a te r a n d g a s p a id 4209 Speedway 452-6648, 451-6533 fu lly ca rpe ted , Central Properties Inc. 1BR - $195 Secluded sm all quiet complex. Built-in kitchen appliances, AC, trees. W ater, gas, cable paid. 609 E. 45th St 454-8995, 451-6533. Central Properties Inc. 5 B L O C K S W E S T OF C A M P U S L a rg e e ffic ie n c y C arpeted, gas sto ve ), w a te r, ca ble in clu d e d Paneled liv in g ro om w alk in closet. S um m er ra te s 1170 and $180 2104 San G a b rie l. Red Oaks A p a rtm e n ts 477-5514 476-7916 1 BR - '219 f u lly c a rp e te d and L a rg e b e d ro o m drapes A ll b u iit-m kitch en , CA CH, pool I n ­ a n d se c lu d e d tr a m u r a l F ie ld s Six m o n th s lease W ate r, gas, ca ble paid. 5606 R oosevelt. 454-2448 451-6533 lo c a tio n , w e s t o f Central Properties Inc. E F F I C I E N C Y $199 ABP Close to cam pus, b e a u tifu lly paneled, f u lly c a rp e te d , a ll b u ilt- in k itc h e n , CA CH 4000 A venue A 458-4511, 451- 6533 Central Properties Inc. 1BR - *165 H yde P a rk close to ca m pu s and s h u ttle b us B e a u t if u lly p a n e le d a n d f u l ly ca rpe ted . A ll b u ilt-in kitch e n and ve ry la r g e c lo s e ts , b u ilt - in b o o k s h e lv e s , C A /C H W a te r, gas, cable paid. 4307 A venue A 459-1571 451-6533 Central Properties Inc. G O I N G B A N A N A S ? We rent ap a rt me nts , duplexes, houses all over Austin. F R E E Real World Pro pe rtie s 443-2212 South 458-6111 N orth 345-6350 N o rth w e st 1BR - *140 E F F . - *130 R I O G R A N D E S Q U A R E APTS. 2800 Rio Grande 472-9569 S T O N E H E N G E CO-OP Fem ale vacan­ cy We are 5 women and 5 men living in post-Victorian home 3 blocks from cam - PUS. 6H w . j!2nd 474-9029, 477-7181. B E A U T IF U L P R IV A T E room s Clean. Special s u m m e r ra te s Co-ed K itch e n Close to ca m p u s 2411 Rio G ra n d e 477- 1205 R O Y A L C O -O P v a c a n c ie s ; m a le , fe m a le . Q u ie t neig hbo rh ood, g re a t meals, sundeck. 1805 Pearl. 478-0880 S IN G L E IN la rg e house. $110 plus share b ills Y a r d , la u n d r y , a nd k itc h e n fa c ilitie s A lice , 472-2627 la rg e blue T H R E E V A C A N C IE S house near campus Fem ales preferred Spacious rooms Some shared meals. Call 472-7753 for inform ation. in ROOM A N D B OA RD . O p p o rtu n ity fo r C h ris tia n g ir l in spacious hom e a w a y fro m hassle of c a m ­ pus. $200 m o n th ly A B P , 443-3218 liv e w ith fa m ily to N E W G U IL D Co-op has fem ale and m ale vacancies 510 W 23rd 472-0352. D E U T S C H E S HAUS: Cooperative close to university ol ers opportunity for con­ v e rs a tio n a l G e rm a n and Spanish. S e v e ra l g ra d u a te students, n a tiv e speakers G erm an or Spanish speakers or students only. 477-8865 WF. A R E L O O K IN G FO R A F E W GOOD W O M E N We are V, an easy going co-op from campus Economical, 6 blocks vegetarian Pets ok. 474-7767 fe m in is t co-op : S E N E C A F A L L S openings for fem inists Supportive en­ vironm ent, plenty of privacy/com pany. Two blocks UT. 2309 Nueces, 477-0225 H E A L T H A N D nutrition oriented co-op seeks responsible individuals We offer quiet res id e n tia l neighborhood near campus, vegetarian smoke-free environ­ ment, sundeck, open field and garden. Royal Co-op, 1805 Pearl 478-0880 UNFURNISHED HOUSES R O O M F O R S h a r e b a t h , r e n t re fr ig e r a to r $95 A B P 474-7108 m o r ­ nings F R E E ROOM re n t to teacher o r stu d e nt to sta y w ith w id o w a t n ig h t. C all 477-6286 ♦or m o re in fo rm a tio n . FURNISHED HOUSES to Shuttle 4-2. C A /C H , O N E BLOCK available only through 8/80 1205 West- moor $300 474-7776 SUBLET 2B R Turn]shecThouse 7-15-80 through 12-15-80 ( negotiable). A /C , W D, near law school. $225/month. Carol, 477- 9854. 478-0832 2 B R T R A I L E R on r i v e r e a s t o f Longhorn D am , 10 minutes to UT $215 6200 Grove D rive No. G Dean, 258-6425 FURNISHED APARTMENTS E F F I C I E N C Y C L O S E to c a m p u s C a rp e te d , d ra p e s , a p p lia n c e s C a ll C hris, «78 5489. 2302 Leon, H Y D E P A R K a rea near s h u ttle 3BR, 2BA, fire p la c e and appliances, w a te r paid No dogs $340, lease and deposit. Jack, 478-9521, W E Associates E F F I C I E N C I E S , 6607 a n d 7102 G uadalupe Gas paid, fu rn ish e d , d is ­ h w a sh e r. a c c e s s ib le s h u ttle , p a r t ia l leases a v a ila b le 454-3414. H Y O E P A R K , t w o s t o r y , d o w n s ta ir s 2 B R , 1BA p lu s s tu d io , appliances, $400, lease and deposit. No dogs. Ja ck, 478-9521, W E. Associates l a r g e M A U N A K A I now leasing fo r su m m e r and fa ll. R educed ra te s fo r su m m e r. W alk to cam pu s, sh u ttle and c ity bus. 472-2147 HOUSE FOR lease co nve n ien t to c a m ­ pus 3BR, over 3000 square feet, double lo t, b e a u tifu l tre e s and y a rd . N ew ca rp e t, p a tio and sundeck $675 m onth, one ye ar lease s ta rtin g 8-1-80 454-5380 2BR, 2 7 BA, 2 s to ry . Tw o c a r gara g e , fir e p la c e , p o o l, p a tio , m ic r o w a v e Sum m er and-'or school ye a r. A b o ut $425. 454-5305 PROFESSO RS, B A R R IN G T O N Oaks, 4- 2-2, p r iv a c y fir e p la c e , stove, re frig e ra to r ca ble Round Rock schools $450 474-7776 fe n ce , 2BR 1005 R o m e ría , redone, fenced, u t i li ­ ty porch, re fr ig e r a to r , A /C , c a rp o rt. $350 345-2665. j t 53-0377 C L E A N . C O N V E N I E N T U T . 2-1. G a ra g e A ir c o n d itio n d C onscientious m a rrie d couple Lease $300 405 E 38th 472 2097, 478-5739. ____________ ______ MUSICAL INSTRUCTION P IA N O LESSONS A ll leve ls E x p e rie n c ­ ed, q u a lifie d te a ch er. F o r in fo rm a tio n , phone 451-3549 E X PE R I E N C E D P I A N O T g U I T A R te a c h e r B e g in n e r s a d v a n c e d U T degree A fte r I p m 459-4082, 476-4407 g u i t a r L e s s o n s tra in e d expe rie nce d 451-0040 4 9 p m to r s e rio u s By in s tru c to r. P h il, H U N T IN G ÍO Ñ V IL L A A p a rtm e n ts . L a rg e e ffic ie n c y , fu rn ish e d , pool, la u n ­ d ry , s h u ttle $155 plus E 454-8903. 2- f S T Ü f f I o T $ 2 7 5 A B P In e luding ca bTe! AC. W alk, s h u ttle cam pus S m a ll c o m ­ plex S u m m e r lease 478-4747 S U M M E R L E A S E - T w e lv e O a k s A p a rtm e n ts 1BR, pool, cle a n easy p a rkin g , sh u ttle $185 plus E 301 W. 39th. 452-8610 L A R G E E F F IC IE N C Y , $150 plus ele c: tr lc ity , w a te r 906 W 22nd St 258-8755. O L D M A IN A p a rtm e n ts , 25th and P e a rl. 1BR, e ffic ie n c ie s F o u r blocks UT, sh u t­ tle, cable, pool 476-5109 o r 454-8301 L A N T E R N H IL L A p a rtm e n ts , h a lf­ m o nth fre e re n t F u rn ish e d and u n fu r­ nished 1 and 2 b edroom a p a rtm e n ts . 459-1030 1 BR A N D e ffic ie n c y a p a rtm e n ts fo r tease S u m m er ra te and p rele a sin g fo r I I A p a r t m e n t s , f a l l P e p p e r t r e e m anager, 408 W 37th A V A IL A B L E NOW A ll b ills paid ef f i c l e n c y o n I F s h u t t l e Q u i e t n eighborhood, lib e ra l su rro u n d in g s $179 plus $100 deposit The Pepper T re e a t 304 E 34th or c a ll 476-5839 F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T S N ear ¡aw school. Clean, $150 plus E and up 2800 S w isher, m g r a pt. 223 472-5369 25% O F F fir s t m o n th 's re nt. Le M a rqu e e A p a rtm e n ts L ow su m m e r ra te s a ll sues, pool, d ish w a sh e r S ta rt * 149 302 W 38th, 453 4002 26th - E F F IC IE N C Y now open 9)0 W 26th 472-6589 UNHJRN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS p A R & jo n AP&Rtment lOCAtORS H aving a hard tim e finding an apartm en t f Call us. We have the trained sp ecialists to do the job for you. (A sk about our rom m m ate finding service.) Sherry M c M illin , A gent iff it From SI 60 2 1 3 W . 5 t h 4 7 7-6688 8330 Bwm«t ltd 4 5 2 -6 6 8 8 1 BR - $165 N U E C E S S Q U A R E A P A R T M E N T S 2200 Nueces 472-3781 Pool 2 b lo cks ca m pu s Leasing Now F o r S u m m e r And F a ll B R O W N L E E DO RM - $150 A B P F A L L R E N T $165 2 Blocks to Campus 2502 Nueces 477-0883 PARKVIEW and 2 Bedroom A p artm en ts Furnished or U nfurnished $ 1 7 5 and Up Adult C om m unity 2 Swimming Pools ^ 3 laundry rooms ¿ t Downtown Austin ♦ City But UT shuttle^ Convoniont to ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 1616 WEST 6th STREET 4 7 2 - 1 3 3 7 i . . 4 ROOMS ROOMS •uattn, ta x** 71701 4 7 4-6905 N O W LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL Co-ed d o rm across the stre e t fr o m ca m pu s a t 27th St R ecently re no va te d fa c ility w ith ta s te fu l, e ffic ie n t fu rn is h in g s . R ecre a tio n area, sundeck, w id e screen TV , re frig e ra to rs in e ve ry room , 24 hour s e c u rity , inexpensive p a rk in g a v a ila b le . T a o s | 3612 guadalupe SUMMER RATES Redwood North 5101-Evans Unfurnished 459-0956 EH $145 Plus t. 1/1 ...$169 Plus E. Park Place 4306-Ave. A Furnished 451-3518 2/1...$239 plus E. Blackstone 29 10 -R e d River All Bills Paid 4 7 6 -5 6 3 1 Furnished & Unfurnished 1 / 1 . . . $ 2 0 0 2 /2 ...$ 2 7 5 The Elliott System 451-8178 M i s c e l i a n e o u s - F o f S a le IN D IA N S A L E ! is 25% off* Nelson s G 'fts 4502 S Congress 444- 3114, 10-6, closed M o nd a ys je w e lry W E S T A u s t i n ! shuttle, 2BR lo ve ly wooded area $350, appliances, a ttic fan, no pets 472 4032, 443 9314 A C T V I I 4303 Duval F urn ish ed 1 bedroom , $155 plus E., private patio, across from shopping center, near UT and shuttle 453-0298, 345- 8550. _ B E E H I V E APTS. 4209 Avenue B L a rg e fu rn is h e d e ffic ie n c y $147 50 plus E Some p riv a te patios d ishw asher, w a lk-m closet, near u t and s h u ttle M gr. no. 101 459-6180 453-0298 A B P E F F . , IBRs F r o m $160 Leasing fo r su m m er 5 blocks to c a m ­ pus Shuttle, pool. C H A P A R R A L A P T S. 2408 Leon 476-3467 P R E L E A S IN G FOR F A L L A N D S U M M E R M A U N A KAI 405 E. 31ST. 2BR, 2BA e ffic ie n c y , single e ffic ie n c y 1BR W a lk to cam pus, sh uttle and c ity bus. 472-2147 S U M M E R R A T E S C E N T R A L F U R N IS H E D e ffic ie n c y w ith gas heat, co okin g p a id ; la u n d ry and pool C on ve n ie n t to U T sh u ttle and c ity bus $189 plu s E. 451-4584 or 476-2633, G illin g w a te r M a n a g e m e n t Co. W A N T S O M E T H I N G D I F F E R E N T A N D W I T H S T Y L E O n ly fiv e a p a rtm e n ts le ft at su m m e r ra te A ll s m a ll one bedroom s. No pets Close to U T and sh uttle . P re le a sing fo r fa ll begins J u ly 1. 474-8413, 458-3649 S K A N S E N APTS. 4205 SPEEDW AY S U M M E R R A T E S W A L K TO CA MP US OR S H U T T L E BUS IB R , 1 BA, shag ca rp e t, CA CH 4312 Speedway ACT II I 3311 Red R iver ACT IV 2801 H e m p h ill ACT VI 2808 W h itis ACT V II I 2803 H e m p h ill ACT IX 30) W 29th ACT V Three Oaks 409 W 38th Pecan Square 506 W .37fh W e ste rn e r 27)1 and 2721 H e m p h ill 2806 H e m p h ill 453-0540 474-8125 476-0411 474 5650 476-04)1 474-5650 453-3383 459-1597 472-0649 472-0649 Ed P a d g e tt C om pany 454 4621 Stalking? Let a H a b ita t H unter guide you to an a p a rtm e n t, house or duplex S ave tim e, g a s & rent * Free Service * H a b ita t Hunters 4 7 4 -1 5 3 2 PRELEASING EFF. THROUGH 4 BRMS. SUMMER AND FALL SUMMER RATESI SHUTTLE BUS MODERN, SPACIOUS FURNISHED, UNFURNISHED POINT SOUTH 2700 WILL0WCREEK (Riverside A r e a ) 4 4 4 -7 5 3 6 C oupon For '6 M o n th Free Rent L e a s i n g S u m m e r / F a l l Sum m er eff. - 2 / 2 $ 1 9 0 -$ 2 1 0 & I Fall eff. - 2 / 2 $ 2 1 0 -5 3 0 5 & E Furnished an d U nfurnished S w im m in g Pool Large p a rty Room Free C ab le T V . M a n a g e m e n t Sponsored Parties 2005-Willow Creek Sat. 1 0 -5 M -F 9 -6 4 4 7 -6 6 9 6 Sun. 1-5 V illa g e V d le n Preleasing for Fall SUMMER RATES • security service • 2 lig h te d tennis courts • shuttle bus stops • exercise ro o m s/s au n as • free cabje 2 1 0 2 Burton Dr. • roommate selection service • putting greens • two pools (1 biggest in town) • furnished/unfurnished • arcade roofn 4 4 7 -4 1 3 0 &K 7¿e Front runner of the^ Riverside Apartm ents... O ffe rin g you a co nvenient location Shuttle bus access Extra spacious a p a rtm e n ts Large S w im m in g Pool A N D if you sign n o w , yo u 'll get O U R SPECIAL SU M M ER A N D FALL RATES 1616 Royal Crest 443-0051 ENGLISH AIRE APARTMENTS EFFICIENCY & 1 BEDROOM Starting at *185. Soma U tilities Paid On shuttle route FREE Racquetball & Tennis Courts Free Cable TV See one of Austin's F IN E S T A P A R T M E N T C O M M U N IT IE S 1 9 1 9 Burton Dr. English A ire 4 4 4 18 46 9 6 M o n -S a t. 1 2 -6 Sunday How to Afford Northwest H ills It’s easy when you live at Ridge Hollow, Northwest Hills’ most affordable apart­ ments. Here’s what you get for very reasonable rent: Hilltop location Fireplaces Washer/dryer connections Balconies and pauos with storage Tennis courts Swimming pool Malls and sixjpping centers Efficiency, 1 and 2 bedroom plans Come by today and see for yourself You’ll like the view from our hilltop And vou li like getting your money’s worth in Austin’s nicest neighborhood /, k»OO0MOl;O"l «POQTmiNfS R i d g e h o H a i u 6805 Woodhollow/Austin, Texas 78731 345-9315 COED • DORMW - p i < Now leasing for fall! • Svvir^ ning pool • Courtyard • T V lounge » Walking a stance to shuttle • Study roon’ . Parking available Enjoy the non-regim ented lifestyle at R aza 25 472-0100M a n a q e m 2505 Longview UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES HELP WANTED TYPING S T U D E N T S W E L C O M E s h u ttle , 3-2, ch ild re n C all 458-5301 T w o blocks f ir e p l a c e , no p e ts no 5 M IN U T E S dow ntow n and U T . 3508 C larkso n, D elw ood a re a 2-1, sundeck lovely setting. Lease, deposit' creek , $295 477-8556. S O U T H 2-2, fire p la c e , sh u ttle , kitchen I 906A ap p liances , C A /C H , no pets $320 V a lle y H ill C irc le 442-4121. two $200 2-1! 2, O ak H e ig h ts d u p lex, m onths only, shu ttle route, c a rp e te d q u i e t , m o d e r n , no p e ts C a y w o o d Loc ato rs 458-5301. H Y D E P A R K 3-1 W a lk U T , hardw ood , fe n c e , stove, r e f r i g e r a t o r $500 plus u tilitie s 808 H a rris . 459-0964 SERVICES PHOTOS ♦or PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 minute service MON.-SAT 10-6 477-5555 THE THIRD EYE 2530 GUADALUPE P t y d M r k A i t k f t a ü T I f you're anxioui d o p ro tto d , or c a n 't >lo«p, I he fa b ro C lin k of A u t t in m a y be able to help T ro a tm o n t i t f t ee for I hose w h o m o o t «imple en fry criteria boso d sole­ ly on m o d k o l o v a lu a tio n t This o p p o r tu n i­ ty h available duo to to t t in g procedures repaired b y the Federal la w regarding the development of new medications For complete in fo rm a tio n a n d to fin d o u t if you q u a lify , ca ll • 7 1 : 1 9 * 1 : Thesis, Dissertations & Professional Reports innyj a C O P Y IN G S E R V IC E J 44 Dobie M all 476-9171 P R O B L E M P R E G N AN C Y C O U N S E L IN G , R E F E R R A L S & F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T IN G T ex a s P ro b le m P re g n a n c y 600 W 28th, S u ite 101 M -F , 7:30-5:30 ___________ 474-9930__________ F R E E P R E G N A N C Y TESTS C o u n s e lin g on a ll p r e g n a n c y a l t e r ­ n a tiv e s , b ir th c o n tro l m e th o d s and w om en 's h ealth concerns. W a lk -in basis, M on - F r i. 9-5. W o m en 's R e fe r r a l C e n te r, 1800B L a v a c a , 476-6878 A ll r e fe r r a ls m a d e lo c a lly . A R T 'S M O V IN G and H a u lin g a n y a re a 24 hours, 7 days. 447-9384. 477-3249. D .H M O V IN G and H a u lin g T w o ton L o c a l m o v in g . t r u c k . D e p e n d a b le C o m p e titiv e prices 442-0141. C o m p l e t e G R E P R E P A R A T I O N m a th /v e r b a l re v ie w . T e s t-ta k in g skills, in s tru c to r, reas o n a b le ra te s . q u a lifie d W endy D ie tric h , 443-9354 J E N N I N G S ' M O V IN G a n d H a u lin g la rg e or D e p en d a b le personal s e rv ic e s m a ll jobs 7 d a y s /w e e k 442-7233. FURNISHED DUPLEXES F U R N IS H E D 2BR d u p le x , six blocks fro m cam p u s. A v a ila b le now. 476-5940, 459-3226 WANTED C LA SS R IN G S , gold je w e lr y , old pocket w a tc h e s , c u r r e n c y , s ta m p s w a n te d . H ig h prices paid P io n ee r Coin C o m ­ pany, 5555 N o rth L a m a r , B ldg. C-113 in C o m m e rc e P a rk , 451-3607. je w e lr y , B U Y IN G W O R L D gold, gold scrap gold, old coins, an tiq u e s , pocket f a ir m a r k e t p r ic e w a tc h e s P a y in g C a pitol Coin Co., 3004 G u a d a lu p e , 472- 1676 P h ilip N o h ra, ow n er. F O R E IG N S T U D E N T S f r o m G re e c e or this E n g la n d ? s u m m e r. C a ll M ic h a e l, 442-5039. I'll visit yo u r c o u n try A R T IS T S ! A R E you in te re s te d in d is­ p la y in g som e of you r a r t w o rk in n ew ly r e s ta u r a n t? C o n ta c t Rob a t opened Dow n to E a rth R e s ta u ra n t, 609 W . 29th. LOST & FOUND F O U N D O R L O S T a pet? Sp ecial P als H o tlin e, c a ll 258-0408 L O S T H E W L E T T P A C K A R D H P -2 1 c a lc u la to r 6-20-80 on Red R iv e r S treet. 459-0746, 452-0696, L a r r y . PERSONAL R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F r e e testin g and r e fe r r a ls . 474- eg n an cy M O T E L D E S K C L E R K P e rs o n ab le, a b le bodied in d iv id u a l fo r room re n ta ls an d sw itchbo ard d u ty E x ­ c e lle n t job lo r fu ll-tim e U n iv e rs ity stu ­ d e n t . A p p li c a n t s w it h e x p e r ie n c e p re fe rre d , but w e do tra m T h re e o r fo u r a fte rn o o n shifts 3 p .m . to 9 p m . each w eek, one n ig h t sh ift e v e ry tw o w eeks, and one M o n d a y shift fro m noon to 9 p m e v e ry tw o w eeks. A p p ly in person at 10 a m W est W inds M o te l, In te rs ta te H ig h w a y 35 a t th e A irp o rt B lvd in te rs e c ­ tion. 452-2511 lo o k in g fo r a M o th e r le s s hou seh o ld respo nsib le liv e -in person to h a n d le tw o d e lig h tfu l g irls ages 10 and 12 plus ru n a household P e rs o n m ust have v a lid d r iv ­ ing license, c a r, and re la te w e ll to peo­ ple F o r m o re p a rtic u la rs and to a r r a n g e an in te rv ie w , please c a ll D a v id Chasis fro m 8 a m -5 p .m . at 835-1770 t h a t n e e d e x t r a A L L Y O U F O L K S m oney can sell flo w e rs w ith The O rig in a l F lo w e r P e ople P a id d a ily . 288 1102 A V O N E X P A N D I N G S u m m e r re p re s e n ta tiv e s needed 8261, 258-9494 t h is a r e a 477- in te m p o r a r y c le rk ty p is t. P A R T - T IM E Ty p e at least 50 w p m . N e a t a p p e a ra n c e im p o rta n t. 8 a m -noon M -F th ro u g h end of A ugust C a ll H o w a rd Johnson's sales o ffic e M -F b etw een 8-5, 836-8520 F U L L - T IM E A N D p a rt-tim e positions a v a ila b le in p aw n shop. B e nefits. A p p ly 500 C hicon. 476-7772 L O O K G O O D in T -sh irts, shorts? P le a ­ sant sm ile"3 C a ll M s. F is h e r, 442-1020, re g a rd in g $15 hour p h o tog raphic p ro m o ­ tion. P E R S O N A L C A R E assistants needed f a ll fo r U T s tu d e n ts as sem es ter C a ll Sheri A llen, 471-4955 e x t. 167 8 a m -4 p m . liv e -in fo r M O N IT O R E Q U I P M E N T fo u r w e e k ly , c le a n p o lic e r e c o r d , re fe re n c e s F r e e study a fte r 10 a .m . w eekd ay s. t im e s lo c a l tim e 452-5763 A T T E N T IO N , U P P E R division business m a jo r s N a t io n a lly e x p a n d in g a s s e t in to m a n a g e m e n t c o m p a n y m o v in g Au stin a re a Sales and m a n a g e m e n t p o s i t i o n s a v a i l a b l e W o r k 4 - 6 hours w eek, e a rn up to $200-$500/ w eek CaH^473-6873 E X P E R I E N C E D , D E P E N D A B L E s i t t e r s n e e d e d M o r n in g s a n d o r evening s, A u gust 15-27 M u s t h a v e ow n tra n s p o rta tio n . Good pay 441-6814 a fte r 7 p .m . or 454-6330 a fte r 2 p .m . S H O E S A L E S P E R S O N N E E D E D p a rt- tim e or f u ll-tim e . H o u rly a g a in s t c o m ­ m ission. M u s t h av e previous shoe e x ­ p erience. C a ll fo r in te rv ie w 454-2738 S U M M E R H E L P needed w ith kid s and housew ork. F r e e room plus cash. W a t e r ­ fro n t L a k e A u stin C a ll Sandy, 327 4842 or 263-5051 t h r e e F A T H E R N E E D S h e lp w it h ch ild re n , ages 9-13, beginn ing A u g u st. Student p r e fe r r e d T u itio n , books, ro o m and board, expenses, c a r p ro vid ed C a ll 452-1622 fo r in te rv ie w . E X P E R IE N C E D B A R T E N D E R needed S a tu rd a y and M o n d a y nights. $3.40 hour plus tips. T A Statio n, 327-4095, 444-5818 H IG H L Y M O T I V A T E D , in te llig e n t p e r ­ son n e e d e d as A D M I N I S T R A T I V E S E C R E T A R Y in c o m p u te r s y s te m /s o ft­ w a re C o rp A d v a n c e m e n t o p p o rtu n ity . S a la r y d e p e n d e n t on a b i l i t y . S e n d resu m e S tatco m C orp., 5758 B alco nes D r. No. 202, 78731 T E L E P H O N E S A L E S , e a rn $300 a w eek if you hav e th a t w in n in g voice. Good leads, no collections, e x p e rie n c e in high vo lu m e phone t r a ff ic p re fe rre d . C a ll fo r ap p o in tm e n t, 477-3778 S E C U R I T Y G U A R D S n e e d ed . N ig h t slots open for in te llig e n t, a m ia b le and p h y s ic a lly f it persons. P a id tra in in g . E x ­ c e lle n t pay, b en efits, and w o rk in g con­ ditions. A p p ly in person fro n t desk D o b ie C e n te r. E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r . N E A T S IN G L E s e c re ta ry w a n te d fo r club W r ite : Singles, Box 133, 4502 South Congress, A u stin , 78745 F U L L - T IM E C L E R K needed. M u s t be ove r 21 and be a b le to pass p o ly g ra p h . If in te re ste d co m e by and fill out a p p lic a ­ tion a t 523 E . 6th No phone calls, please. TYPING H O L L E Y 'S 1505 L a v a c a 478-9484 P ro fe s s io n a l T yp in g , C o pying, B inding C o lo r X e ro x / WOODS T Y P I N G S ERV IC E W hen yo u w a n t it done r ig h t 472-6302 2200 G u a d a lu p e , side e n tra n c e A N Y T H IN G T Y P E D ! C o rre c tin g ¿ e le c ­ tric , e x p e rie n c e d , fro m $1.2 5 /p a g e 458- 2380 E X P E R T T Y P IN G , proofing - a ll types I B M S e le c tric , R a te n eg otiable A ll w o rk g u a ra n te e d . 453-5026 until m id n ig h t. Fire burns bank roof By JOHN WILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff b l a c k T h i c k , s m o k e enveloped downtown Austin for a short tim e Tuesday afternoon as a tw o-alarm fire caused extensive dam age to the second-story plaza roof of the new C a p ita l N atio n al Bank Building, under con­ stru c tio n a t S e v en th and Lavaca streets. A cig arette butt or match accidentally throwm on a pile of wood and trash stored on the unfinished roof caused the blaze. Lee G otcher, an Austin F i r e D e p a r t m e n t i n ­ v estig ato r, said A FD and Longcrier Co., the building’s contractor, the site for two hours, investigated "T h e re was heavy damage the roof and m aterials, to such as tarpaper and asphalt adhesive, stored on the roof,” G otcher said. No work was being done to the plaza, which is an exten­ sion of the 12-story building, at the time of the fire, Hal Hafner, project m anager for Longcrier, said. The fire was reported to the AFD by building workers at 12:59 p.m. Twenty firefighters from 12 units brought the fire under control in 10 minutes, Brady Pool, AFD assistant chief, said. No injuries w ere reported to t h e A u s t i n E m e r g e n c y Medical Service, but smoke hampered w orkers’ exit down stairw ells from higher floors. "T h e flat roof near the third floor was smoking — then boom — it went up in fla m e s," E rv Perkins, a carp en ter on the p ro ject, said a fte r viewing the accident. Construction will "continue as usual" Wednesday, Hafner said. TUTORING P H D M A T H tu to r w ill h elp you get the te s ts , a s s ig n m e n ts B ill g r a d e on D ie tric h , 443-9354 MISCELLANEOUS B & E P A R K IN G $10 O ne q u a rte r m ile 'P IC N I C '' on F M 2322! S e curity fro m p a tro lle d ! 16 a c r e s 1 O pen 8 p .m . J u ly 3rd to 9 a .m . J u ly 5th. C o m e e a r ly ! TYPING Austin Typing Service Experienced • Professional Academic specialist m in o r e d itin g in c lu d e d 4 5 1 - 6 0 1 2 G u a d a lu p e — S outh o f 1 83 (c o rn e r o f G u a d a lu p e A A m e tb u ry ) T Y P IN G , P R IN T IN G , B IN D IN G The C o m p le t e Professional FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 472-3210 472-7677 2707 HEMPHILL PK. P l e n t y o f P a r k in g • • • • • • • • • « • • • • • • • • a : econotype : • econocopy : Typin g C o p y in g , B in d in g , Printing IBM Correctin g Selectric R e ntal A Supplies 5 C copies N o rth M o n .-F r i. 8 : 3 0 - 5 : 3 0 S o t. 1 0 : 0 0 - 4 : 0 0 # 3 7 t h a n d G u a d a lu p e 4 5 3 - 5 4 5 2 * South M o n .-F r i. 8 : 3 0 - 5 : 0 0 E. R iv e rs id e a n d L a k e sh o re 4 4 3 - 4 4 9 8 • * • » * * T Y P IN G T H E S E S , dissertatio n s , te r m IB M papers, re p o rts , etc. E x p e rie n c e d . S e lectric . N e a r N o rth cro s s M a ll. 458- 6465 C A L L D e A n n e a t 474-1563 8-5 M -F or 345- 1244, 453-0234 w eekend s and eve ning s N o rm a lly 1-day se rv ic e . P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IS T , eco n o m ica l - e x p e rie n c e d A ll ty p e s of w o rk acc epted 251-4454 a fte r 6 p m E X P E R T T Y P l N G . Theses, fast, a c c u ra te U T d e liv e ry tric , carb o n rib b o n 458-2649 a fte r 5 p .m . rep o rts, IB M S e lec­ A C C U R A T E T Y P IS T , ex p e rie n c e d , fa s t s ervice, IB M S e le c tric . 443-5060, K im . T Y P IN G . R I V E R S ID E a re a Yo u get it w hen you w a n t it. Ire n e 's Business S e r­ vice. 443-4684. T Y P I N G E c o n o m ic a l ra te s . E a s y p a rk in g . 452- 2898, 453-7517.___________________________ p r o o f r e a d i n g A N D in exp en siv e ty p ­ F A S T , B E A U T IF U L , tu to rin g , ing Also p ro o fin g , w ritin g , resu m e p r e p a ra tio n . 2420 G u ad alu p e, 478-3633 Q U A L IT Y T Y P IN G at low ra te s E x ­ c e lle n t s p e lle r, g r a m m a r ia n . N e a r 45th and B u rn e t. 451-7086 P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P I N G s c r i p t s , G u a ra n te e d . Y v o n n e, 474-4863 - m a n u ­ r e p o r t s , s t a t i s t i c a l . lo n g theses, Q U A L IT Y T Y P IN G , p ro ofing, d issertatio n s , re p o rts , p ap ers S e le c tric O v e r n ig h t s e r v ic e . E R s h u ttle P a t 4 7 2 -3 4 5 0 a f t e r 5, M i l l s . 475 4 5 9 3 , w eekends. F A S T , F A S T P ro fess io n a l, e x p e rie n c ­ ed $ l/p a g e , d o u b le spaced. C a ll Bonnie, 441-6657. th e s e s P R O F E S S S I O N A L T Y P I N G te c h n ic a l/ s t a t is t ic a l/ g e n e ra l pap ers IB M C o rre c tin g w ith c a re fu l p ro o fin g S e le c tric . 451-4449. E X P E R I L N C E D T Y P I ST E co n om ica I, a ll types. IB M S e le c tric . U T pick-u p and d e liv e ry 835-1398 C LA SS P A P E R S ty p e d by e x p e rie n c e d ty p is t. Q uick s ervice, reaso n ab le ra te s Sharon, 452-9824 a fte r 6 p m P E R S O N A L IZ E D Q U A L IT Y ' ty p in g to f it yo u r needs. F r o m S l/p a g e F re e p ic k ­ up and d e liv e r y . K e n d ra , 282-3167. RESUMES w it h or w it h o u t pictu res 2 D a y Service 2 7 0 7 H e m p h ill Park Just N o r th o f 2 7 t h a t G u a d a lu p e 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 W e d n e sd a y, J u ly 2, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 11 NR/RC p * ) . North Riverside/Royal Crest Bus Route m l k 1 6:30* 7:02 7:10* 7:18* 7:26* 7:34 7:42 7:50 7:58 8:06 8:14 8:22 8:30 8:38 8:46 8:54 9:02 9:10 A A B C D A B C D A B C D A B C D A B 9:28 C 9:36 D 9:44 A 9:52 B 10:00 C 10:08 D 10:16 10:24 A B 10:32 C 10:40 D 10:48 A 10:56 B 11:04 C 11:12 D 11:20 A 11:28 B 11:36 C 11:44 D 11:52 AM 2 6:46 7:18 7:26 7:34 7:42 7:50 7:58 8:06 8 14 8:22 8:30 8:38 8:46 8:54 9:0 2/ 9:12 9:1 0/ 9:20 9:1 8/ 9:28 9:2 6/ 9:36 9:44 9:52 10:00 10:08 10:18 10:24 10:32 10:40 10:48 10:56 11:04 11:12 11:20 11:28 11:36 11:44 11:52 12:00 12:08 3 7:02 7:34 7:42 7:50 7:58 8:06 8.14 8:22 8:30 8:38 8:46 8:54 9:02 8:10 9:28 9:36 9:44 9:52 10:00 10:08 10:16 10:24 10:32 10:40 10:48 10:56 11:04 11:12 11:20 11:28 11:36 11:44 11:52 12:00 12:08 12:18 12:24 1. 0 E lm o n t/B u rto n & la cla r Wocxmncf 3. E lm o n t/B u rto n & Woodland 1 A 12:00 B 12:08 C 12:16 D 12:24 A 12:42 B 12:50 C 12:58 13:13 A B 13:22 C 13:32 A 13:43 B 13:54 C 14:05 A 14:16 14:27 a C 14:38 PM 2 12:16/ 12.26 12.24 12 34 12:32/ 12:42 12:40** 12:57 13:06 13:15 13:28 13:38 13:49 14:00 14:11 14:22 14:33 14:44 14:55 3 12.42 12:50 12:58 13:13 13:22 13:32 13:43 13:54 14:05 14:16 14:27 14:38 14:49 15:00 15:22** 15:21 15:22** 15:33 15:54 14:49 A B 1500 C 15:21 B 15:33 15:06 15:17 15:38 15:50/ 16:00 18:10 16:29 16:46 16:59 17:18 17:30 17:50 18:00 18:30 19:00 19:30 20:00 20:30 21:00 21:30 22:00 22:30 23:00 C 15:54 8 16:15 C 16:30 B 16:44 C 17*02 B 17:14 C 17:34 B 17:45 B 18:15 B 18:45 B 19:15 B 19:45 B 20:15 B 20:45 B 21:15 B 21:45 B 22:15 22:45 B RCE - 7:4S*-11:30**, Floats on any R iverside R oute as directed . 16:15 16:30 16:44 17:02 17:14 17:34 17:45 18:06** 18:15 18:45 19:15 19:45 20:15 20:45 21:15 21:45 22:15 22:45 23:15** •R ou te Begins **B u s Back to TEI NRC re tu rn s to the office at 1900. NRN be gins rou te at 1900. ° 0 , A, B, C, D, E in d ica te In d iv id u a l buses ru n n in g consecutively. Buses stop only at d e sig nate d sh u ttle stops, w ith rid e rs in d ica tin g w hich places the d rive r is to sto p at. M ilita ry tim e can be con verted easily by s u b tra ctin g 12 fro m a fte rn o o n hours. For m ore in fo rm a tio n on buses, schedules, routes o r m aps call 471-1424 o r 928-2801. M aps are ava ila ble at the Texas U nion and M ain B uild ing in fo rm a tio n desks. I 35 Lakeshore e Texans coin new words Three Texas businessmen may knock the standard dic­ tionary off its pedestal if peo­ ple who have always wanted to coin words will help them. Own-A-Word Inc. is the idea of businessmen from Houston, Austin and Dallas who are seeking words that will even­ tually be published in a dic­ tionary The dictionary will contain original words, sent in by their "ow ners.” "W e are publishing the dic­ tionary solely as a fun thing,” John G. Spears, vice president of Own-A-Word, said. "T he dictionary, we hope, will end up on sale in local book stores. We do, however, reserve the right to edit language to make the book readable for all ages.” After each dictionary entry, Own-A-Word intends to record th e o w n e r s n a m e a n d hometown No addresses will be published. The only thing word owners must do is pay for the stamp used to submit their entries, and entries must be post­ marked before Oct. 1, 1980. Entries should be mailed to Own-A-Word, Inc., Suite 115, PO Box 42999, Houston, Texas 77042. One Bellaire, Texas woman t h e w o r d s u b m i t t e d ‘ g r i t c h y . ” Which me a ns , ‘ ‘combi nat i on of gr i t and bitchy in a person.” is Another sample of an Own- A-Word " e l l wa y , ” sub­ mitted by a La P orte, Ind. resident. Its definition is "th e o c c u r r e n c e of m e e t i n g in a hallway and someone moving side to side, together, until someone breaks the se­ quence. The solution being each person taking one step back and one step to the right, forming the letter ‘L ’ and get­ ting the L ’ out of each other’s w ay.” Center seeks Bible’s source Professor to analyze Gutenberg text Professor E ric Poole, biographical consultant at the Humanities Research Center, has been assigned to analyze the University’s copy of the Gutenberg Bible to determine the printer’s source for the text. Discovering the source is a complex process since m onasteries in 15th cen­ tury Europe had different handwritten the Bible, Decherd manuscripts of Turner, director of the center, said Tuesday. The research was made possible because of handwritten notations in the margins, he said. Monks wrote the notations to specify block divisions. "T h e Gutenberg Bible we have is one of the superior copies because of its manuscript notations, completeness, size and condition,” Turner said. The Bible, which is one of 50 copies still in existence, was printed between 1453 and 1455. The University bought it in 1978 for $2.4 million. Poole will use computer analysis to aid in his research. The com puter’s identification skill, superior pattern measuring phrases, word patterns and other variants, helps determine what manuscript Gutenberg used In addition to his work with the Bible, Poole will examine other rare books in the HRC. Bookbinders in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance frequently used pieces of parchment taken from old books and documents to strengthen their work, Turner said. As a result, fragm ents of otherwise lost books may be recovered from the binding of other books. Poole brings with him a wonderful linguistic capacity and interest in com ­ puter technology. Turner said. Adding that he recommended Poole because of Poole’s acquaintance with medieval read handwri t i ng, his abil i ty medieval Latin and other languages, his knowledge of legal history and his previous work on early legal documents as historical sources. to Poole, a visiting professor from England, taught law and com parative studies at the University before his ap­ pointment last May. n a t i o n a l w e a t h e r S E R V I C E F O R E C A S T to 7 P m E S t 7 - 2 - 8 0 29 7 7- IT 15 600P TO KNOW THE PIFFERENCE BETWEEN ROCKS ANP STONES TODAY’S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Nuisance 5 Dogtrot, e.g. 9 Swills 14 — chamber 15 Peruvian 16 Dugout 17 Space 18 Hackney 20 Olive genus 21 Face twitch 22 Summits 23 Retreats 25 Container 27 Kind of run 29 Some RRs 30 Ossicle, e g. 34 — Baba 36 Of space 38 Dillydally 39 VIPs: 2 words 42 Sidetrack 43 Pallid 44 Corruption 45 Mount 46 Man's nick­ name 47 Oolong and pekoe 49 Exhausted 51 Moat 54 Flower 58 Society fig. 60 Valley 61 Return home 63 Greek letters 64 Collide 65 Withered 66 Lairs 67 Kinds 68 Ivan or Peter 69 Brink DOWN 1 Famed Argentinian 2 School: Fr. 3 Footwear needs 4 Pulpy berry 5 Essence 6 Trick 7 Fountain treats: 3 words 8 Mariner 9 Extent 10 Overdue 11 Ntcolo 12 Pius, e g 13 Notices 19 Devours 24 Intelligent UNITED Feature Syndicate Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved Q O D u a a □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ a a a s a g Q u a a a a a a j u a a a □ n a a □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ a a a □ o □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ a 26 Islam God 28 Eon 30 Pouch 31 Exaggerated 32 Roman tyrant 33 Formerly 34 Agalloch 35 Leah's son 37 Make happy 38 Subsided 40 Before 41 Seine 46 Sprit 4 8 camp 49 Adam 's son, et al 50 Tropical fish 52 Loud sound 53 W. German state 54 Curves 55 N il 56 Arm adillo 57 Endure 59 Pilsner 62 Adherent 10 11 12 13 19 19 r 100 v- U P I * E A T m ER e o t o c a s t $ Hot, sunny afternoons and warm, humid nights will continue through Thursday in Austin. Wednesday’s expected high will be 102 dropping to the upper 70s overnight. Winds will be from the south at 10-15 mph. The extended outlook for the Fourth of July weekend includes temperatures near 100 and continued hot, sunny skies. B.C. by jo lu m y h a rt CAN HÜU IMAGINE A HUNPREP-V0ICE ' /5T0N E OF A6ES"? THE FEPEKAL TRAPE COMMISSION IS MAKING SURE THAT ATULETES m 0 ENCWSE PRDPLCTS REALLY VO USE. THEM PROBLEM PREGNANCY? A re you considering Abortion? Confidential Free P regnancy Testing & Re ferra ls For in fo r m a tio n call PROBLEM PREGNANCY of AUSTIN (512 ) 474-9930 600 W. 28th, No. 101 Austin, Texas 78705 '— *9.00 CASH” ™ 1" *9.00 DOLLARS CASH! n s a y * a l i t e b y b * - ilood plasma donor. takes 1' j hours, u can donate every r$. II reteive S8 00 tor ^ first donation and tor a second dona- the same week. H jring this ad in with z ou will receive a bonus atter your motion. iTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, Phone 477 West 29th Uta, 4 Thors. I o.m.-é p.®.; too*- A fri. I a.®,-2:30 p.® Page 12 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Wednesday, July 2, 1980 S hoe S h o p ««a* W . m alt* and S H E E P S K I N repair b o .,. C O W * C A L F Snow not needed to ski Sport enthusiasts skim down grassy slopes shoes bolts leather goods ★ S A D D L E S ★ By WAYNE TERRY ENGLISH WESTERN Daily Texan Staff 1 6 1 4 Lavaca Capitol Saddlery Austin, Texas 4 7 8 -9 3 0 9 vrsA- Texans no longer need to travel to Ruidoso or Aspen to go skiing. All skiing enthusiasts need now is a grassy hill. Grass skiing is nearly identical to snow ski­ ing except the skis are shorter, Steve Foulger said Tuesday Foulger did the erass skiing commercial for Rondo soda and was a member of the U.S. grass skiing team which competed in the world championships last September. Grass skis work on the same principle as the caterpillar treads on bulldozers or tanks. A belt studded with grippers turns on a series of small wheels and bearings, and normal ski boots may be used for grass skiing. Foulger said. The first grass skiing slope in Texas has opened at the Ski and Skate Fam ily Fun Center at 3811 S. Congress Ave. and plans are being made to create a mile-long ski slope in the Lake Travis area, complete with chair lifts, a lodge and year-round skiing, said Foulger. This isn’t hard at a ll.” Richmond said. “ The in­ structor is real patient. That helps. I haven’t fallen down yet.” Scott Jones, a liberal art junior, also spent his first afternoon on the slopes Tuesday. like the same th in g ,” I ve done a lot of snow skiing, and this feels Jo n es said. just “ Someimes I get pretty out of control but I get better every time I go down.” Both Jones and Richmond felt that the ex­ perience was worth the $4 per hour charged at Ski and Skate. The International Ski Federation, the gover­ ning body of world class skiing, has accepted downhill grass skiing as a bona fide sport, Foulger said. “ They re going about sanctioning the sport now for world class competition,” Foulger said. “ The next logical step, of course, would be to get it accepted for the summer Olympic games as the counterpart of snow skiing.” “ The skis function well on most terrain, but are best on a well-groomed grass slope,” Foulger said. “ The best thing to do is come out and take a lesson, try them out. Grass skiing is usually a lot easier to pick up than snow skiing.” Instructors at Ski and Skate take beginners through the basic of grass skiing on minor slopes at the bottom of the hill at the south Congress location. As beginners get better, they are moved further up the hill, and finally turned loose at the top. Foulger said that many resorts are gearing up to provide grass skiing facilities, so that ski slopes may be used in the summer when there is no snow. Paul Richmond, an electrical engineering student at the University, took his first grass skiing lesson Tuesday afternoon. “ I ’ve roller skated and water skied before. The least expensive pair of skis available at Ski and Skate costs approxim ately $150, Foulger said. “ That’s less than a new pair of snow skis, and all the bindings are already on If you already own ski boots, you need nothing else,” he said. “ The skis will last for years with only minimal maintenance." GET IT IN YOUR CAR AT THE JULY 4th WEEKEND SPECIALS KLBJ LIVE REMOTE, SAT., 11 -2 P.M. BU D & COORS KEGS 1 6 G a llo n 3 3 9 « 9 S pi»**»»* • m ciu d #* k * 4> Í 00 cup* MICHELOB 12 Oz Bottles or C an s $2*39 (6-pk • Thn W m í ’i Sp