th e Daily Texan Revised revenue estimate may cause services cut The student newspaper of the University of Texas at Austin 'SVT1VCL d 0 XOQ W31N3D WHdOdOIW Wednesday, March 9,1983 C ti2C L X I Twenty-Five Cents By HERB BOOTH Daily Texan Staff State Comptroller Bob Bullock's revised revenue estim ates are forcing Texas' legislative leaders to choose be­ tween either slicing state services or imposing increased state taxes upon Texans. Tuesday, Bullock trimmed his esti­ mate of available state revenues for the 1984-85 biennium by another $867.1 million. The revision represents a drop of 3.8 percent from the comptroller's January estimate. Bullock, who slashed revenue esti­ mates for the biennium by $1.5 billion in January, said state lawmakers still can expect $3.28 billion in new funds for the biennium. He offered two explanations for the drop in expected revenue: plummeting worldwide oil prices and sluggish tax receipts. ‘We’ve |ot to run the < ovemment like a busi­ ness. We must reassess our priorities.’ "W e're cutting back what w e expect to receive, but w e've still got the big­ gest cash surplus (of any state) in the cou n try," Bullock said. "T he Legisla­ ture still has 17.8 percent m ore money than the last time they w rote a state budget (1981)." He said state revenue from sever­ ance taxes drops about $40 million for every $1 drop in the world price of a barrel of oil. Bullock said if oil prices fall again, his office will revise revenue estimates again. Texas leaders acknowledged the re­ duction with little surprise and hinted at the possibility of a tax bill. Lt. Gov. — Gov. Mark White Bill Hobby said the reduced revenue estimates will make the Legislature's budget-writing task even m ore diffi­ cult. "If you want to have a first-class state, you have to have m ore tax reve­ n u e," Hobby said. "W e will have to look very closely at the state's most critical needs and balance them against greatly reduced revenu es." Hobby has scheduled a special meet­ ing of the Senate on Thursday to dis­ cuss Texas' budgetary problems with the comptroller. Gov. Mark White said legislators will have to make a choice between cutting services and increasing taxes. White, scheduled to present his budget to a joint session of the Legisla­ ture at 11 a.m . W ednesday, said he has three alternatives for boosting state revenues without taxing Texans but would not say what the alternatives are. "W e've anticipated most of th is," White said. "It will require som e ad­ justments to make ends m eet." White, speaking to the League of said he Women Voters Tuesday, stands by his original proposal of in­ creasing state teachers' salaries at least 24 percent, even though he admits state services may be cut. "W e've got to run the government like a business," White said. "W e must reassess our priorities." He said possible cuts could come the state highway program. from "W e've got to quit tearing up what w e've already built," White said. Pope’s visit unsuccessful Papal authority rapidly weakening in Central America Runoff election to resolve Students’ Association races Bob Bulock ... trims his estimate of avalable revenues by another $867.1mWon. BUI Hobby ... ‘If you want to h a first-class state, you hav have more tax revenue.' •we to United Press International T EG U CIG A LPA , H ond uras — Pope John Paul ITs m ission to C en­ tral Amenca had three main pur­ poses, two of them central to the fu­ ture of the Roman Catholic Church. It could be years before history shows if the trip had long-term im­ pact. In the short run, how ever, the pope had little success in at least two of his reasons for undertaking the dangerous and highly exhausting tour. W herever John Paul w ent, he pleaded for peace and for the sancti­ ty of human life. He also called on priests and nuns to refrain from involving them selves in the region's explosive politics. His third purpose was to unify the Catholic Church itself against the ad­ vances of a vigorous Protestant evangelicalism, against Marxism and against the 20th century decline in religious interest. But in El Salvador, the civil war resumed the day after he left the country, with both guerrillas and the U .S.-backed governm ent stepping up offensives with renewed gusto. In Guatemala, the military govern­ ment showed w hat it thought about John Paul's "san ctity of human life" even before he arrived, permitting the execution of six men despite a Vatican plea for mercy. The executions nearly sidetracked the pope's visit to Guatem ala, with Vatican sources reporting John Paul analysis felt personally "in su lte d ." In Nicaragua, the M arxist-dom i­ nated junta used his visit, in which for reconciliation be­ he pleaded tween warring factions, to stir up support in its fight against what it called U .S.-backed rightist rebels op­ erating out of H onduras. He had just as little success per­ suading five rebel priests to obey his orders to get out of politics. The top-ranking priest is Foreign M inister Miguel d'Escoto, who was out of the country for the nonaligned summ it in India. D 'Escoto avoided any em barrass­ ing incidents, but his fellow priest, Ernesto Cardenal, m inister of cul­ ture, did not fare as well. Cardenal publicly kneeled before John Paul at the airport arrival cere­ mony in Managua Friday. He received no solace from the pope, who refused to shake his hand and instead wagged his finger in dis­ a p p ro v a l, " Y o u m u st straighten out your position with the ch u rch ." s a y in g , At a later mass, he again adm on­ ished clergymen saying they must ideological spurn com prom ises tem poral op­ tion s." "u n accep tab le and His words had no apparent effect, «John Paul II ... pleaded for peace during visit to Central America however. Priests working with rebels in El Salvador had an open letter ready for his arrival Sunday, asking him to un­ derstand why they would continue working with guerrillas. Both incidents indicated the slipp­ ing power of papal authority, since priests must take vows of absolute obedience to be ordained. By USA BROWN-RICHAU and RICHARD STUBBE Daily Texan Staff W ednesday's runoff election will de­ cide w ho will be the next president of the Students' Association — Tom D un­ lap or Mitch Kreindler. But while the two candidates still are campaigning toward a resolution of their electoral conflict, som e students who w on their races outright last week have risked losing their newly earned positions by failing to m eet the dead­ lines for submitting financial disclosure statem ents for their cam paigns. Dunlap garnered 1,106 votes (32.5 percent) to Kreindler's 1,092 (32.0 per­ cent) in the general election March 2. Both Dunlap and Kreindler are busi­ ness seniors. In the vice president's race, David W hite and Trevor Pearlm an oppose each other in a runoff. W hite, liberal arts junior, received 1,570 votes to lead the general election with 48.2 percent of the vote; Pearlm an, liberal arts sen­ ior, finished second with 1,189 votes (36.6 percent). Lisa Davis, com m unica­ tion junior, had 494 votes (1512 per­ cent) to force the runoff. Twelve students elected to the Stu­ dent Senate in last w eek's elections may lose their seats if they do not file financial disclosure forms and pay late- filing fees to the Judicial Com m ission by noon Friday. The election code requires that all candidates, regardless of w hether they win, submit financial disclosure forms to the com mission before and after the election. The forms were due on Feb. OPEC Twelve newly elect­ ed senators may lose their seats iff they do not file finan­ cial disclosure forms and pay late-filing fees by noon Friday. 28 and on M arch 7. Vice presidential candidate Pearlman also risks disqualifying himself from holding office unless he files the appro­ priate form and fee with the com m is­ sion by the same deadline. Com mission m em ber Mark Kolitz, business senior, said at the com m is­ sion's m eeting Tuesday night that the candidates w ho missed the filing dead­ line should be disqualified because the filing requirem ent is explicitly stated in the election code and because all candi­ dates were told several times about the deadline. However, commission Chairman John Denson, fourth-year public af­ fairs/law student, called disqualifica­ tion "a harsh rem ed y." After private deliberation, the com ­ mission decided to extend the filing deadline to noon Friday and to fine the students $10. In addition, each student will forfeit the $15 filing fee that all can­ didates must pay to insure against elec­ tion code infractions during cam paign­ ing. The filing fee is usually refunded polling places ■ Natural Sciences, Graduate S d □ Computation Center, east of Man Building ■ Business, Graduate B u sin ess,f cation, Library Science, Nursing □ Gregory Gym, 21 st and Speedw? a Liberal Arts, Architecture. Co*1 nication □ West Mall a Engineering, Pharmacy, Sodnl Work □ Robert Lee Moore HaU, 26th and Speedway a Law, LBJ School, Fine Arts □ Law School to candidates after the election None of the students will be ly certified as an officeholder unt or she files. The students who filed aftet deadline but before the con ruling Tuesday will forfeit h deposit, the com m issionet- t The commission also voted two winning candidates vvl, hold office was questioned In dates who lost the election Julia Barrington, lite ia l i r i s ■ o more, and Barbara Archer, nurs sophomore, both were i ortified w mng candidates from their respective colleges._____________________ Presidential candidates discuss stu­ dent services fees. Page 2 Nations struggle to prevent oil price wai United Press International LONDON — Iran and Nigeria blocked O PEC 's last-ditch efforts to forge an agreem ent to avert a full-scale price war Tuesday, and V enezuela's oil m inister warned the oil cartel's price could sink as low as $25 a barrel. The 13 oil m inisters of the O rganiza­ tion of Petroleum Exporting Countries held m ore than two hours of talks and then agreed to m eet again W ednesday, with no indication they were closer to agreem ent on prices and individual output quotas. Indonesian Oil M inister Subroto said there was a "50-50 chance of reaching an agreem ent" w hen the m inisters re­ sum e their informal talks W ednesday. United Arab Emirates Oil M inister Mana Saeed A1 Otaiba agreed with Su- broto's odds and said, "T h e time was not sufficient to d ay ." But sources said Nigeria remained steadfastly opposed to raising its oil prices as part of a com prom ise plan to prevent a pricing free-for-all and Iran continued to resist any lowering of O PEC prices. "N igeria is now here closer to accept­ ing a com prom ise than Iran is nearer to accepting a price c u t," an O PEC official said. Venezuelan Oil M inister Hum berto Calderon Berti said the majority of the OPEC nations already had reached an understanding on a price cut and were focusing on a new base price of b e­ tween $28.50 and $30 a barrel. " If we d on't reach agreem ent during the talks this w eek, I think we will meet again in one or two m onths and we will not be discussing a price level of $30," Calderon warned. "W e will be discussing maybe $25 a barrel." Industry sources said the Soviet U n­ ion, the w orld's largest oil producer, has unofficially cut its m ajor export crude for European custom ers by $2 to $27.50 a barrel. The O PEC m inisters met at the Inter­ continental Hotel as Iran, which has ig­ nored its output quota, and Nigeria pressed for a larger share of the OPEC market that has shrunk to less than 14 million barrels a day. "Discord now has erupted on who should produce how m u ch ," one m in­ ister's aide said. "D em and for quotas stretch beyond 18 million b arrels." Calderon said world oil prices should stabilize if OPEC m em bers adopt a production ceiling of 17.5 mil­ lion barrels a day for the rest of the year and stick to individual output quotas. Calderon, w ho has acted as a concili­ ator in O P EC 's unprecedented cam ­ paign to put a floor under crum bling United Arab Emirates Oil Ministet Mana Saeed Al Otaiba ... says OPEC did not have enough tirn^ Tuesday to reach a price agree ment. world oil prices, said ri believed !in could be persuaded to accept ! >u prices. International Women’s Day march About 50 men and women marched from Sixth Street to an International Women’s Day rally at the Capitol Tues­ day. The rally was sponsored by Women for Peace, an Austin network’ of women’s groups for peace. Interna­ tional Women's Day was established in 1970 to com­ memorate the 1908 garment workers’ strike. Shannon O'Neill, Daily Texan Staff Campus still frustrates handicapped, despite reforms Editor's note: This story is the first of a three-part series concerning the problems handicapped students at the University have in gaining access to buildings on campus. By KELLEY SHANNON Daily Texan Staff While the University has remodeled some of its buildings to make them ac­ cessible to handicapped students, sev­ eral of those students say parts of many buildings still are inaccessible. In 1977, the University undertook a $1.6 million construction plan to com­ ply with Section 504 of the federal Re­ habilitation Act of 1973. The act is de­ signed to eliminate discrimination on the basis of handicaps in program s re­ ceiving federal funds. Paul Alexander, a second-year law student confined to a wheelchair, said Friday he believes parts of Tow nes Hall are not accessible to mobility-impaired students. The UT School of Law is housed in Townes HaU. "In spite of their (the UT administra­ tion's) persistence of declaring that it (Townes HaU) is accessible, I think it's one of the most inaccessible buddings on cam p us," Alexander said. Entering and using the Tarlton Law Library in Townes HaU is difficult for students in wheelchairs, Alexander said, because the library's doors are too heavy to open. Also causing problems for mobility- impaired students are the Ubrary's high shelves, Alexander said. "M any (of the shelves) are very taU and impos­ sible to get to ," he said. "Y ou can't do it by yourself." Townes Hall's classroom s also are not weU-designed for handicapped students, Alexander said. "The class­ rooms are impossible," he said, be­ cause students in wheelchairs must sit in the back of the tiered rooms and "com p ete" with wastebaskets and chairs. "There is no place for you to put your books and stuff, and you end up blocking the exit," Alexander said. Nancy Crowthers, a social work sen­ ior who is mobility-impaired, said the auditorium of Robert Lee Moore HaU is not accessible to students in wheel­ chairs. Crowthers said when she had a class in the auditorium, stairs at the au­ ditorium's entrance prevented her from entering the room and sitting with the rest of the students. "Y ou have to sit on stage with the professor, which is real unnerving," Crowthers said. A nother building that Crowthers said is inaccessible to the handicapped is the School of Social Work Building, where she has had many classes. Crowthers said she cannot get to the second and third levels of the building because there are no elevators to those floors. Jeff Bowlin, advertising senior and president of People Against Barriers, said the University technically meets the accessibility provisions of the 1973 Rehabilitation Act. However, Bowlin said, some UT buildings still are inac­ cessible. "Sometimes I wonder what is going on in the architects' m inds," Bowlin said. limited access problems of the hancficapped Thursday's story w ill exam ine the UT adm inistration's response to the students' criticism s. Page 2/The Daily Texan/Wednesday, March 9 ,1 9 8 3 M CNSm UAl CRAMPS? Do you experience pain when you hove your menstrual period? UUould you be willing to keep a diary concerning how a new medication affects your poin for ON€ menstrual cycle? fl physical examination, pap smear and laboratory tests will be done free of charge. If you are interested, please call •iemedkol Research Grevp 4S1-7I79 Durham Nixon-Clay College ENROLL NOW FOR Classes Beginning March 22,1983 — Executive Secretary/Word Processing — Computer Programming — Electonic Technology — Business Administration/Sr. Accounting — Authorized Under Federal Law to enroll non-immigrant Alien Students (1-20 Form) — Fully Accredited College (AICS & NATTS) 119 W. 8th & Colorado 478-3446 T h e D /u iy T e x a s . . Assistant Managing Editors Editor Managing Editor U e* Beyer Roger Campbel . Lynn Easley. Eddie Pertons, David Woodruff Assistant Editors........................ Maureen Paskin, Roger Worthington David Lindsey .................Mike Godwin . Dé Ann Weimer Images Editor . . Marie Mahoney Associate Images Editor............... Cathy Ragland News Editor Associate News Editor News Assignments Editor ■negee/Entortainment Assignment» Editor Uz Sports E d ito r.............. Suzanne Mtehel Sieve Associate Sports E d ito r CampbMI Photo Editor.............................. KanRyef Assistant Photo E d to r...................Oartd Sprague Features E d ito r...................Kate Banks CN IB Editor..................WWam Burdette General Reporters...................... Coteen Hobbs. Paul de la Garza, Laura Fiahar. RtehardStuMa Senior Sportswrttare........................... Ed Combs Mika Mackes». Brad Townaand, DD rntCM D ill r ^ h i a Graphics Editor Ronny Goms Newswriters Herb Booth, Kelley Shannon. Kristie Gottas, David Teece. Mark Barron Editorial Assistant...................... Tim Chumley .Ray Vdoyaga Jack Crager, Michael Crider Michelle Entertainment Assistants . Sports Make-up Editor Entertainment Editor Sports Assistants Make-up Editor . . . Wire Editor Copy Editors Robberson Bill Duncan, Tucker Graves . Bob Davila Michael Saenz . Michael Murtey, Nancy Hancock, Lenora Post A rtis ts ............................ Sam Hurt, Brad Wines Shannon O'Neill, Travis Spradling Photographers TEXAN ADVERTISING STAFF Terry Berk Tom Bielpfeldt. Calise Burchett, Laura Dickerson, Debbie Fletcher Robert Fowler. Claudia Graves. Ken Grays. Carolyn Mangold. Greg Payne Jane Porter. Marla Press, Doug Rapie- Heidi Reinberg. Jeanette Sigler, James Sweeney The Daily T exa n a studen’ new spaper at The U niversity of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications Drawe D U niversity Station Austin TX 78712-7209 The Daily Texan is pub­ lished M onday T uesday W ednesday Thursday and Friday, except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin. TX 78710 New s con tribu tion s will bo accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editonal office (Texas Student Inquines P ublications B u ild ing 2 122; or a t the news laboratory iC om m unication Building A4 136) corn n rning delivery and lassified advertising should be m ade in TSP Building 3 200 (471-5244) The national advertising representative of The D aily Texan is Communications and Advertising Servi­ ces to Students 1633 W est Centra! Street Evanston Illinois 60201 C M PS. 1680 North Vine Suite 900 H ollyw ood CA 90 02 8 Am erican Passage. 500 Third A venue W est, Seattle WA 98119 The i ’aiiy Texan $g!«s< ribes to U nited Press International and N ew York Times N ew s Service The Texan is a m em ber os she Associated Collegiate Press the Southw est Journalism Congress the Texas D aily N ewspaper Association and Am erican N ew spaper Publishers Association Columbia Scholastic Press Association C o p y r ig h t 1 9 8 3 T e x a s S t u d e n t Publications THE D AILY TEXAN S U BS C RIPTIO N RATES O n e Semester (Fan g ' S pring; Tw o Sem esters 1 a.1 and Spring Sum m er Session O n e Year T ali Sr '-g and S u m m e r’ Send o rderi an 3 adc 7209 ; - r Bui diuQ ' 3 200 48 00 15 60 60 00 cha ng es to Texas Student Publications P O Box D, Austin TX 78712- PU B NO 146440 $24.00 WEDNESDAY SPECIAL/J Fresh Baked / j / H \ Quiche \and d in n e r s a l a d , a SPINACH \ / / V *267 \ BROCCOLI MUSHROOM / ¡3 / jj \ ¡ t í H T H Í j JWSAN JACINTO / /4%-9lb //S A N J A C IN T O LORRAINE 11T H Í \ v / / open toe comes in: • navy • beige • purple black • white • green Candidates agree student input concerning service fees needed By LAURA FISHER Daily Texan Staff The two Students' Association presi­ dential candidates, Tom Dunlap and Mitch Kreindler, agreed Tuesday stu­ dents cannot gain control of student fees because the UT System regents "always are going to hold the last card," in Kreindler's words. But Kreindler, business administra­ tion senior, said there can be "a good deal of student input" in the handling of student services fees. For example, he said, regents should be presented with the line-item budget approved by the Student Services Fee Committee. Dunlap, business administration sen­ ior, said: "Students should maximize the degree to which they can impact that control. That's the bottom line — are students being served adequately for their money?" Both candidates, who oppose each other in a runoff election Wednesday, answered questions prepared by the Texas Union Ideas and Interactions Committee at a noon forum in the Texas Union Board of Directors Room. A study should be conducted to determine the cost-effectiveness of the Student Health Center, Dunlap said. "We need some type of all-student clinic on campus. But it's got to work," he said. Because so few students use the hos­ pital in the Student Health Center, it down. favors shutting Kreindler Equipment from the center's surgery unit, which was closed last year, should be sold, he said. Dunlap said he supports the adminis­ tration's efforts to limit UT enrollment. He said a committee should be estab­ lished "to deal with this subject," but it is not up to the Students' Association to create an enrollment policy. Kreindler said administrative mea­ sures to decrease total enrollment while increasing minority enrollment are "good.1" However, he said, "We should make sure not too many students are prevented from coming to the Universi­ ty. We don't want to get just the créme de la créme.” Stressing his experience as Dobie Center program coordinator and Coun­ cil of Business Administration presi­ dent, Kreindler said: "I know the ad­ ministration, contacts, and I know how to work with student leaders ... I've worked on this campus for three solid years." Dunlap said, "I served in the Student Senate in its first, crucial term and I was instrumental in developing the by-laws of the senate." Kreindler responded, "I've written constitutions and by-laws too. What's more important is output and what stu­ dents see." Building the Students' Association's credibility is "a big deal," that will re­ quire "actively, aggressively seeking student input," Dunlap said. "It (Stu­ dents' Association) has got to get out and earn its keep. It's got to prove why it's the Students' Association." Kreindler said UT President Peter Flawn should be given a weekly briefing on the Students' Association's activities in addition to his meetings with Ronald Brown, vice president for student af­ fairs. Dunlap said: "I certainly don't expect Peter Flawn to sit in on every one of the Students' Association's meetings. They (the administration) should try to com­ municate with us as we trv to communi­ cate with them." 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Belt — 10.00 Handbag — 26.00 Earrings or bangle — 5.00 Necklace — 28.00 Sunglasses — 32.00 Jaquen- Jcft- T il* * ' Ciní^ 1204 West 6th in Pecan Square 476-2291 S P E C IA L ! 9190 mM per pair 2 pair for 39" Available in navy and beige on-the-drag at 2406 Guadalupe YARING'S 2406 GUADALUPE ONLY world & nation The Daily Texan/Wednesday, March 9 ,1 983/Page 3 Conferees bicker over Mideast United Press International N E W D E L H I, India — Rivals at the summit meeting of the nonaligned movement agreed Tuesday to paper over their differences on Afghanistan and Cambodia but remained at odds over the Iran-Iraq war and Middle East peace. leaders on Two miles from the conference — described as the largest gathering of national record — a homemade bomb exploded in an un­ derground market, wounding seven people and damaging five shops, po­ lice said. Police said the All India Sikhs Stu­ dents Federation, which is pressing for religious autonomy for its sect in the state of Punjab, claimed responsibility for the blast. Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, following meetings with Jordan's King Hussein and Lebanese President Amin Gemayel, called on the summit to seize a "golden opportunity" to settle the Palestinian problem, which he called the "core and crux of the Middle East conflict." But Palestine Liberation Organiza­ tion spokesman Abdel Moushsen Abu Maizer discounted Mubarak's behind- the-scene negotiating. "A n y meeting that takes place with­ out consulting the P L O as the sole and legitimate representative of the Pales­ tinian people is unacceptable,’ he said. Maizer also called President Rea­ gan's Sept. 1 Middle East peace initia­ tive "a call to w ar" for the Palestinians. The summit of the 101-member non- aligned movement opened Monday with the conference host, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, urging an end to the 30-month war between Iran and Iraq. The call received a negative response Tuesday from a member of the Iranian delegation, Manooghar Mottaki. "W e welcome Mrs. Gandhi's initia­ tive, but our thoughts are on the battle­ field," Mottaki, a member of the Irani­ an Parliament, told reporters. He also said Iran would press to have Iraq ousted from the non-aligned movement. A compromise was reached on the Afghanistan issue by a working group of the movement's political committee, satisfying the divergent views of both Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan. The compromise satisfies Pakistan's request to eliminate references to direct negotiations between Afghanistan and its neighbors. Pakistan is loath to do anything that would signify recogni­ tion of the Soviet-installed regime of Afghan President Babrak Karmal. The resolution on Afghanistan calls for a political solution of the Afghan problem and an end to foreign inter­ vention in the internal affairs of A f­ ghanistan, without naming the Soviet Union. The agreement was expected to be approved by the political committee and summit leaders. On the Cambodian issue — subject of a stormy debate which resulted in Cambodia's summit seat being left va­ cant — the working committee left vir­ tually untouched an original draft pre­ pared bv host India. The draft seeks to satisfy both Viet­ nam, whose troops occupy Cambodia and support a handpicked regime there, and a group of non-communist Southeast Asian nations that demand a Vietnamese pullout. news in brief Hosni Mubarak aligned nations to urge peace. United P'ess Internationa ... wants non- Israel seeks open border Ur !ed Press International Israel warned Lebanon Tuesday that there was no point to continuing' talk1- on troop withdrawals it Lebanon insisted on keeping the borders be­ tween their countries closed the Leba­ nese Christian militia radio said. Lebanese delegation spokesman Daoud Savegh, in a statement at the end of the 2Kt round of talk*- between Lrael and Lebanon, said no "major progress had been achieved, the Leba­ nese radio said At the same time however Israel ra­ dio said the Jewish ^tate was prepared to compromise on a number of ke\ i- sues to break the stalemate in the talks on withdrawal of Israeli troops from 1 ebanon and the two nations' future re­ lations fhe session it Khalde, eight miles south ot Beirut, opened with Israeli chief negotiator David Kimche clarify­ ing what he described as a misunder­ standing of his g o v e r n m e n t 's demand for open borders with Lebanon. Kimche said the trade Israel wants was "in no wav aimed at drowning the Lebanese market with Israeli goods Kimche said Israel was willing to lim­ it its exports to Lebanon. But the 1 eba- nese Christian radio said a spokesman for the Israeli delegation warned that it would not accept a closed frontier The chief of the Israeli delegation was surprised at the Lebanese foreign minister s talk of closing the borders and said if this was official I ebanese policy, then there was no point in con­ tinuing the negotiations, the radio quoted the spokesman a s saying Lebanese Foreign Minister Elie Salem said last week that Lebanon, which his­ torically has flourished as a trading cen­ ter, could not afford to open b o rd e rs with Israel if that meant it was cut off from the rest of the Middle East. In Jerusalem, Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir outlined new proposals that looked like a significant softening of the Israeli position and said there was a "good chance" for success in the talks. His comments to the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense C ommittee, report­ ed by Kraeli radio, said Israel was now proposing joint Israeli-Lebanese-Ameri­ can patrols, with the Israelis returning to Israel each night L.ebanon. adamantly opposed to anv Israeli troops remaining in Lebanon, was proposing Israeli air surveillance instead Shamir reportedly said. Reagan discusses El Salvador \\ ith President W A SH IN G T O N we will not Amen- Reagan pledging >r - civil war. the ad- canize El Salvadi Congress sought a ministration and compromise Tuesdav on emergency aid for the c entral American nation Aides said Reagan will decide the -pe- otic ft rm h i - request to V ongress for more help fot FT 'salvador will take later t h i s week after a meeting with top ad­ visers \ ke\ senator said one step mav be to train Salvadoran troop** in the United states a less risky proposition for American - o l d i e r s more U S military advmers then than sending Fhe administration also hopes to ob­ tain another Sc* million In militare aid Reagan met tor more than an hour at the White House Tuesday with congres sional leaders on the issue His p ress spokesman said the president offered them the pledge of no direct U.S. mili­ tare involvement along with an appeal tor a consensus approach to the entire region's troubles. Bneling re p o rte rs aboard Air Force One as R e a g a n headed for a speaking engagement in Florida depute press secretary 1 am Speakes quoted Reagan as telling the congressional leaders Fust. American combat troops are not going to El Salvador. And seco n d no Americans will go in to combat with Sah adoran units V\e will not American­ ize this conflict ’ "■senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Charles Percy. R 111 and House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair em­ man Clement Zablocki D-Wis erged from the meeting saving there was a teeling the aid request will be granted but with stnngs. "I am willing, said Perce subject to a number ot conditions: an amnesty pro gram; reinstitution of a criminal justice system protection for the opposition be­ fore, during and after the election; and a sincere conversation between the gov­ ernment and the guerrillas Perce said the United S t a t e s is consid­ ering training some Salvadorans at Fort Bragg, \ C , "to minimize the number of L S troops needed in El Sal', ador Sen Henrv Jackson, D-Wash., said af­ ter the meeting there will be no combat role for U.S. advisers but more are needed, particularly to drill Salvadoran t r o o p s in such matters as respect for hu­ man nghts. Japan agrees to U.S. blockade TOKYO Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone s government Tuesday out­ lined a nevs defense police that com­ mits Japan to the Reagan administra­ tion s global stratege against the Soviet Union. Chiet Cabinet Secretary Masaharu Gotoda, the government s principal spokesman, told Parliament that Japan would permit a L S blockade of three strategic waterways even if Japan were not under direct attack. U.S. militare e x p e rts believe that in the event of war such a blockade would enable the United States to bot­ tle up Soviet warships in the Sea of Ja­ pan to prevent them from reaching the Pacific or Indian oceans. Gotoda also told a House of Repre­ sentatives budget committee that the government would proceed w ith a de­ cision to allow transfer of advanced military the Lnited States the onlv country that has a mili­ tare pact with japan. technology to Nakasone made the decisions on the s tra its and sale of militare technology to appease American demands for a tougher Japanese military posture. The prime minister's political oppo­ nents have seized on the issues to in­ sist he is reviving the militarism that swept Japan toward World W ar 11 As a result, his popularity rating has plunged. in Nakasone announced January that his gov'ernment would approve commercial sales of military technolo­ gy to the United States. The top oppo­ sition Socialists and other left-wing parties, however, have charged the de­ cision violates a 1976 government poli cy against arm> sales to foreign na­ tions. Gotoda told Parliament the govern­ ment would stick with the 7-year-old arms ban but argued the "transfer of military technology" to the Lnited States was a totalle different matter "The government ev ill abide be its earlier decision to provide the United States with advanced military technol­ ogy, because the move is stipulated in the mutual defense agreement" Goto­ da said. The government's statement contra­ dicts earlier remarks be the Defense Minister to an opposition legislator that the blockade of the three straits would occur onlv if Japan were under attack Taking it to the streets Graduates from Italian medical schools, unable to find work, set up a makeshift clinic in the streets of Naples Tuesday in protest of the Italian government’s inability to provide them hospital jobs. United Press International Gift from an admirer Queen Elizabeth looks down at 4-year-old Erin Lisa Johnston after the little girl presented flowers to Her Majesty at City Hall in Victoria, British Columbia Tuesday. Johnston had written to the queen asking if she could present flowers to Her Majesty. The queen acceded, and the dream came true. President’s talk recalls Cold War moral values United Press International O R L A N D O , Fla. President Rea­ gan Tuesdav resurrected the harsh rhe­ toric of the Cold War, calling commu­ nism 'the focus of evil in the modern w orld" and suggesting for those who believe in God that it might be better to be dead than red. Reagan's hard-line, strident remarks came in a speech prepared for the 41*4 annual convention of the National As­ sociation of Evangelicals, part of an ef­ fort by the White House to reaffirm Reagan's ties with the political and re­ ligious right. It was offered in the context of preferring to be free to believe in God than being raised under communism and "one dav die no longer believing in G o d." Reagan did not use the phrase bet­ ter red than dead” in his speech, nor did he use the counter to it, "better dead than red." But the impact of his words seemed clear. In his text, Reagan said: " A number of years ago, I heard a young father addressing a tremendous gathering in California. It was during the time of the Cold W ar when com­ munism and our own w ay of life were verv much on people's minds. He was speaking to that subject. Suddenly, I heard him saying 'I love my little girls more than anything in the world, but I would rather see them,' and I thought — 'Oh, no, not that.' But I had un­ derestimated him. He went on: 'I would rather see them die now, still believing in God than to grow' up un­ der communism and one day die no longer believing in God.' "There were thousands of young people in that audience. They came to their feet with shouts of joy. They rec­ ognized the profound truth in what he said. The "better red than dead phrase came into use during the Cold War of the 1930s and reierred to those who wanted to avoid war with the Soviets at all costs and were urging caution in joining anti-communist fights around the globe. Warning against accommodation with the Soviet Union in his speech, Reagan also told his audience he wants a return "to traditional values" and de­ clared, "Am erica is in the midst of a spiritual awakening and a moral re­ newal.” In his prepared remarks, Reagan also said his political opponents have sought to discard "the tried and time- tested values upon which our very civi­ lization is based" and vowed to use his office to place such moral issues as abortion and praver in school at the top of the nation's political agenda. Some of his sharpest rhetoric came as he tied emphasis on traditional mor­ al values to East-West relations. With the evangelicals poised to de­ bate the issue of a possible freeze on nuclear weapons and a freeze resolu­ tion before the House Foreign Affairs Com m ittee, Reagan launched a lengthy attack on Soviet doctrine and said while he will try to negotiate arms reductions with the Soviets, "They must be made to understand we will never compromise our principles and standards." Reagan, who early in his presidency said the Soviets would lie, cheat or steal to achieve their global objectives, said: "Le t us pray for all those who live in that totalitarian darkness — pray they will discover the joy of knowing God." From Texan news services German legislator plans to reveal Pershing-2 sites BO N N , West Germany — A member of the anti-NATO Greens Party said Tuesdav he plans to disclose the loca­ tion in West Germanv of U.S. medium- range missile bases as part of a scheme to block their deployment. "W e plan to publicize the sites for American Persh­ ing-2 missiles and other secret informa­ tion we consider unimportant," said Gert Bastian, one of 27 members of Parliament the partv gained in Sun­ day's election. Bastían is a former ma- jor general who left the army because he opposed West German plans to de­ ploy the missiles. The Bonn govern­ ment has withheld information on the bases apparently in fear of demonstra­ tions at them. Freeze proposal passes W A S H IN G T O N W A S H IN G T O N Rejecting warn­ ings bv President Reagan against "sim ­ ple-minded appeasement," the House Foreign Affairs Committee Tuesday approved a resolution asking the Unit­ ed States and Russia to seek agreement on a "complete halt" in the nuclear weapons race. The vote bv the Demo- cratic-led panel was greeted with sus­ tained applause bv an overflow crowd. Speaker Thomas O 'Neill said the pro­ posal will be taken up bv the House next week, and he predicted the vote "w ill be very close." Reagan to sell s a tellites President Rea­ gan has decided to sell the nation's weather and Earth resources satellites to the highest bidders among private U.S. companies, a White House spokesman said Tuesday. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administra­ tion chief John Byrne said the weather service does not "anticipate abrogat­ ing" its dutv to provide free weather forecasts to the general public, howev­ er. The rationale behind the sale is a combination of cost-cutting and a belief that private concerns would pursue ad­ vances in satellite technology more ef­ fectively than the government. M ore dioxin d isc o vered JEFF ER S O N CITY, Mo. — Dioxin contamination has been confirmed in four new site s in Missouri, including a suburban St. Louis mobile home park where five Times Beach families relo­ cated, an environmental official said Tuesday. The announcement at the state capital raised the number of con­ firmed sites where the toxic chemical ha^ been found in Missouri to 26 W il­ liam Rice, deputy regional administra­ tor of Kansas City's Environmental Protection Agency office, also said soil samples were being tested from an es­ timated 50 other suspected sites. Train s trik e s h it MY N E W YO R K — Almost 85,000 com­ muters from New York and Connecti­ cut were affected Tuesday by a strike against Metro-North train company that began Monday. They joined 70,000 New Jersey commuters who de­ pend on N| Transit trains, stalled by a separate walkout since March 1. Medi­ ator Arvid Anderson said no negotia­ tions were scheduled in the Metro- North dispute; negotiations were to re­ sume Thursday the NJ Transit in strike. Despite predictions, both morn­ ing and evening Tuesday rush hours ended without serious delays. C andidates woo party A T LA N T A Six Democratic presi­ dential hopefuls converged on Atlanta Tuesday for the state party's Jefferson- Jackson Day dinner. The event, a fund­ raiser for the Georgia Democratic Par- ; ty, was a chance for the candidates to impress the expected 2,000 party work­ ers and officials on hand at the $100-a- : plate event. Former Vice President : Walter Móndale, former Florida Gov. Reubin Askew and Sens John Glenn of Ohio, Ernest Hollings of South Ca- ; rolina, Dale Bumpers of Arkansas and Gary Hart of Colorado each addressed | the crowd. Stock prices drop N EW YO RK Stock prices tumbled from their record levels Tuesday as worry over oil prices and interest rates sent investors scurrying to the side­ lines. The Dow Jones industrial aver­ age closed at 1,119.78, down 21.96 from Monday's all-time high of 1,141.74. It was the biggest drop for the blue-chip index since Jan. 24, when it fell 22.81. The New York Stock Ex­ change index, which also set a new record Monday, was down 1.26 to 87.40. Page 4/The Daily Texan/Wednesday, March 9,1983 O pinions expressed m The Daily T w in are those of the editor or the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees viewpoint Salmons bill worthy Wednesday the Student Senate will face the difficult decision of whether to approve an amendment to the Students' Association constitution that would guaran­ tee minority and international students seats in the sen­ ate. Much as one may be tempted to regard opponents of the bill as racists, unfortunately it's not that simple. Those who have opposed the bill have raised some good objections. But, they aren't good enough. As written, the proposal would guarantee black, Hispanic and international students one senator per 2,000 students or major portion thereof, which this year would mean one black, one international and two Hispanic senators. The philosophy behind the hill, pro­ mulgated by Joe Salmons and Paul Begala, is the same as that behind the national Voting Rights Act. In accor­ dance with this act, courts have consistently held that voting districts that dilute the voting power of minority groups violate the principle of one person, one vote. Since the "districts" for the Student Senate are divid­ ed among the various colleges, the voting power of minority students is severely diluted. The situation with at-large seats isn't much better. Even if every black student had voted for a single candidate in the fall election, those votes would not have been enough to carry an at-large seat in the senate. The argument that comes up most against Salmons' bill is that it amounts to tokenism. While there is some merit to this complaint, it neglects to consider that the setup we have now is tokenism of the worst kind. Cur­ rently the president of the Students' Association has black, Hispanic and international student advisers, but they have no vote whatsoever and can only address the senate on matters that directly affect the group they represent. Next there is the protest that one should not treat people differently on the basis of their race. There is much to be said for the philosophical merit of this argu­ ment. In a perfect world, it would make a lot of sense. But we don't live in a perfect world, and our ideas don't exist in a vacuum. It would be nice to think that a minority student has the same chance of being elected as a white student, but only the most naive student would argue that such an equality exists on this cam­ pus or anywhere. Furthermore, unlike many other af­ firmative action programs, Salmons' bill would not take anything away from anyone. It merely creates new sen­ ate seats in addition to the ones that exist already. Opponents of the bill say it is unnecessary because minority students haven't demonstrated that they are unable to get elected by virtue of their race. But the biggest problem now is not so much that minority stu­ dents run and are defeated (although that is a prob­ lem), but that they don't run to start with. Some say this is because minority students are apathetic, but nothing could be further from the truth. The Office of the Dean of Students estimates that half of all minority students are involved in at least one campus organiza­ tion. This compares to a third of all white students. Minority students in general are more active than white students; they're simply not active in student govern­ ment because they do not feel welcome there. We need to make them feel welcome. Finally there is the argument that if the Students' Association establishes special seats for racial minori­ ties, why should it not establish special seats for relig­ ious minorities, or for handicapped students or homo­ sexuals? The answer to that question is simply this, the Univ ersity of Texas has a long-standing tradition of dis­ criminating on the basis of race. It has no such reputa­ tion for discriminating on the basis of religion or sexual preference or physical ability. Though the days of Heman Sweatt are fortunately behind us, minority groups are still grossly under­ represented at UT. Although blacks and Hispanics con­ stitute 12 and 21 percent of the population in Texas, those groups constitute only 2.7 and 8.2 percent of the UT population. Not only does the University have a tough time attracting minority students to this white kids' school, bqt it has an even harder time retaining them. The Students' Association should do whatever it can to make minority students feel less disenfranchised at UT. The Salmons bill is a step in the right direction. Lisa Bevcr Rhyne bill good, too The Student Senate will also consider Wednesday a resolution urging the Texas Student Publications board to stop printing sexist advertisements. Although the board is forbidden in its handbook from accepting ads that cast either sex in aq inferior role, such ads constantly appear in the Texan. I he res­ olution, proposed by Rebecca Rhyne, asks the board to uphold its code of advertising acceptability and to re­ form the code so as to "m ore effectively screen out sexist advertisem ents." There can be no doubt that the media have a tremen­ dous impact on the way individuals view the world. There should be no question that in publishing ads that depict women as sex objects, the media perpetuate the stereotype of women as sexual playthings. About the only question that remains then is whether in refusing to print such ads, TSP would be violating the First Amendment rights of advertisers. The courts have ruled that newspapers have a right to reject ads that do not meet the paper's standard of acceptability. Just as the Texan does not print every letter to the editor it receives (some are libelous, ob­ scene or simply impertinent) or for that matter every storv submitted by our reporters (many are inaccurate, incomplete or simplv uninteresting), we do not have an obligation to publish everv ad that comes our way. One might argue that by screening out some ads based on their sexist nature, I SP would be setting a precedent for rejecting other ads based on their political content. However, the board's handbook specifically forbids the censorship of political advertising, and for good reason. It is in the public's best interest to pro­ mote the unfettered expression of anv and all political ideas, and for that reason a guaranteed open forum is worth the risk of printing political ads that might of­ fend some readers. But as there is no compelling social value in having Budweiser, for example, promote its beer by splattering T&A all over the Texan, there is no reason to run the risk of promoting sexism just so that Budweiser's promoters will feel unfettered. Rhvne's resolution is an excellent idea. It is high time the students take an active role in making the student- dominated TSP board accountable to its constituency. Lisa Bever Duncan’s record goes the distance Austin has been known for being ahead of its time on a great manv is­ sues. I'd like to see it stay that way. In the past two years, City Council m em ­ ber Roger Duncan has been a leader in translating innovative ideas into public policy. Austin is one of the only cities in the country that has filed a lawsuit on the issue of nuclear power plant m ism an­ agem ent, and we have begun an ag­ gressive alternate energy campaign that can be greatly expanded. Duncan has taken the lead in this and other issues. Manv of his accom ­ plishm ents in the past two years speak to this. Duncan personally went to W ash­ ington, D.C. with mem bers of the Aus­ tin Nuclear Freeze Cam paign to lobby Rep. Jake Pickle. He helped spearhead the effort to get the city to sell the South Texas N u­ clear Project for five years and worked another year and a half trying to nego­ tiate a way out through legal channels. He supported an energy m anage­ ment plan that calls for 553 m egawatts of peak energy being replaced by con ­ servation and renewable energy. This program can be expanded in the fu­ ture. He is supporting a 50 percent in­ crease in energy efficiency in all new buildings. At least 2,000 conservation rebates have been paid to Austin residents as an incentive to buy energy-efficient ap­ pliances. There is $350,000 available for low loans in this year's pilot program. interest w eatherization He supported Proposition 7, a re­ form in the electric rate structure which gave most A ustinites a break on their electric bill. Duncan is running against two m a­ jor opponents. The first is Willie Kocu- rek. He is a serious opponent. He is past president of the school board and a longtime Austin businessm an. If Kocurek is elected, I think it possi- guest column them ble he could turn long-overdue chang­ es around. He could pull the plug on the lawsuit against Houston Lighting & Power for lodged against mism anagm eent of the South Texas Nuclear Project, and vote against in­ creased funding of alternative energy. It's hard to say though, because he has almost no record on energy issues at all. However, some of his backers do, and it's not against STNP. Roger Duncan's other opponent is Ray Mariotti, the editor of the Austin A merican Statesman. Increasingly over the past year, Mariotti has written venomous, vindictive editorials to criti­ cize the City Council that go far be­ yond the bounds of political disagree­ ment. The paper has also been known r^)t to print letters to the editor that disagree with these editorials. The most abusive editorials are in the form of a “bat cave" column, which characterizes the council as bats — who see things upside down (which usually means they don't agree with his point of view). This editorial has even ended up on the front page, in my opinion, in the subliminal form of a full color picture of bats flying across downtown Austin, which the paper ran in late sum m er of last year. Israel is occupying Lebanon, the econom y is spiraling out of control, and they run bats on the front page. How relevant. This is, however, insignificant, com ­ pared to the paper's poor coverage of local news. W hether this is due to ma­ nipulation or negligence (or both) by the senior adm inistrators of the paper is a good question. My own opinion is that there is som e amount of manipulation bv the senior staff. An editor, after all, can edit sto ­ less than ries to convey som ething their original m eaning. An editor can assign stories to be written that reflect the point of view and issue he is inter­ ested in, while ignoring stories that present the opposite point of view’ An editor can bury a story in the back pag­ es or give it front page coverage. I'm not sure, but I think I know w hat will be thrown against D uncan. There w'as a telephone poll done to gauge public opinion last week. On that poll, participants were asked if they thought he was the leader of a group of council- men, and if we need “a whole new cou ncil." It appears som eone is sin ­ gling him out. But this poor coverage or noncover­ age of issues might be due to the top- down attitude of the Statesm an's m an­ agem ent, which allows verv little input or participation from the public. These administrators decide what is "n e w s," b u t m a n y c o n s id e r i s s u e s newsw orthy get shallow coverage or no coverage at all. What ever the rea­ son, I feel the public is not getting the whole story. I There are several issues at stake. One is w hether we will allow a major city new spaper to keep serving us with misinformation. A nother is if we can rely on a proven record. Duncan has worked in our interest, and has helped form city policy which has saved Aus­ tinites m oney while creating jobs, and doing it in an environm entally sound way. Volunteer help is much needed by him, as well as other alternate energy, anti-nuclear council candidates. E ssen­ tially, we will have to go over the head of the Statesm an to get the word out. R obbin s is an Austin resident. Not for poets or communism O f all the Chnstian com mandm ents, surely the most taxing intellectually is that which prohibits suicide. The case against suicide in certain circumstances this writer accepts only as an article of faith. The rationale has always seemed to me beyond the reach of finite minds: which delivers us to those areas Chris­ tianity promptly describes as "m yster­ ie s . ' What brings this on, of course, is the joint suicide of Arthur Koestler and his wife, Cynthia. His death w as consummated with ex­ traordinary dignity. He and his wife were discovered, according to the news storv, seated in separate chairs in the living room It was known that Koes­ tler, age 77, w as suffering from leukem ­ ia and from Parkinson's disease. Also that he was a vice president of an or­ the Voluntan- Eu­ ganization called thanasia Society, to whose principal publication Koestler had contributed it he made the the introduction. In point that it is not the nature of human beings to die "peacefully and without ' as so manv animals do, and that fu ss therefore he implied — when the time came, he would attend to his own extinction. letters We do not know w hy his wife shared whatever poison did them in. Cynthia was 20 years vounger and was not suf- fering, so far as one knows, from any disabling disease. 1 turned to a volume of from Whittaker Cham bers published almost 15 years ago. C ham ­ bers in this letter (addressed to me) was describing a visit with Koestler at his Austrian eyn e near Innsbruck, in 1959. One night Koestler was recounting his experiences on the occasion that he es­ caped from a Nazi jail in France during the war. william f. buckley jr on the right "H e was wnth Benjamin, the mentor and analyst of Bertolt Brecht (Chambers wrote). Benjamin planned to walk across the Pyrenees. K would not go through Spam because of his death sen ­ tence dunng the Civil War. Since nei­ ther expected it, Benjamin to make shared his most precious possession with K: a massive dose of morphine In our time, I think, it has to become true that there is no greater love than that a man share his poison with hi> fnend Mrs. Koestler elected not to live w ith­ out Arthur, and so he shared h is m or­ phine with her. Iain Hamilton has written a life ot Koestler mysteriously invisible in book stores for reasons Macmillan Company has never made plain. Koestler was one of the totally interesting men of our age, whose penetration of the com m u­ nist mind and soul brought forth a masterpiece. "If vou re-read Darkness at Noon' at this late hou r," Whittaker Chambers wrote me in 1459, you will see how true of it, too, this is i.e that it is a book of poetry. "1 re-read it recently I came to the part where, atter his breakdown, Rubashov is permitted a few minutes of air in the prison yard Beside him the Central Asian peasant who has been jailed because, at the pneking of the children,' the trots in peasant and his wife had barricaded themselves their house and un­ masked themselves at reactionanes Looking sidewise at Rubashov in his slv peasant wav, he says: 1 do not think they have left much of \our Honor and me.' "Then, in the snow of the prison vard under the machine gun towers, he remembers how it was when the snow melted in the mountains of Asia and flowed in torrents Then they drove the sheep into the hills, rivers of them, so manv that 'lour Honor could not count them all I cannot go on reading be­ cause 1 can no longer see the words To think that anv man of mv time could have written anything so heart-teanng- lv beautiful wonderful, causing tear^ This is what makes K so precious to me not the little man whom so manv peo­ ple find cranky, and for vs horn one must sometimes make allowances But this pure (poetic) creativity which is more than, bv taking thought he could evoke." Koestler and Chambers were once fellow revolutionaries And w hen W hit­ taker Chambers published his book, "W itness, 12 vears after Darkness at Noon, Chambers received from k o es­ \ou did not return tler a single line from Hell with emptv hands koestler wrote manv books on manv subjects. is a permanent But "Darkness at Noon part of our patrim om It might be said if Chambers was correct, that the fcxxik is a work of poetry that in the long run communism and Darkness at Noon' cannot co-exist Unhappily, com m u­ nism, like human beings, is not likelv to die peacefully and without fuss 1983 Universal Press Syndicate Making the joke official at EPA She has flown, that bluebird of bloated brine, leaving a trail of dioxin sludge for her successor. You know her, you love her, you can t live without ... well, mavbe you can; she is, of course, EPA adm inistrator Anne Gorsuch Burford. As of Saturday, the w riting on the proverbial wall was that Sw eet Anne would be history in a matter of davs. This news disheartened me, as one might expect. After all, she was filling in verv capably for the secretary of the interior, while he is rem aining suspiciously quiet (perhaps selling off Jelly- stone Park and declaring open season on Yogi Bear?). W ithout her biting satirical wit, her incredibly humorous assertions that Big Business can actually respect the environ­ ment w ithout a little friendly coercion, her attempts to bring a little laughter to the dry environs of W ashington bv pulling a little joke on the residents of Tim es Beach; (Q: Excuse me, but you have som e dioxin in your ear. A: I'm sorry, but I can't hear you, I've got som e dioxin in my ear. Q; Oh. Sor­ ry.); w ithout all that, W ashington seem s to be headed for a bland summer. But 1, your faithful Political O bserver, have seen a way to extend this hilarity until, at least, the real beginning of the bizarre presidential race, already in progress. H ire a Big Executive: And w hen I say Big, let's look for a man of Taftian dim ensions, somebody who looks like the personification of Big Business. Preferably from a company like International Sludge and Amalgamated Dirt. It would be a genius stroke on the president's part be­ cause, by hiring som ebody so obviously anti-environment, the environm ental pressure groups would make sure that the poor guy would not even be able to change the coffee grounds without one of their representatives standing by to make sure he disposed of them correctly. The guy's company would be under scrutiny as well, and for the first time in its history, International Sludge and Amalgamated Dirt would meet EPA standards because of allegations that the administrator was favoring his company. After a while, with judicious selection of EPA heads, the entire country would be cleaned up, and fish would make their way back to Lake Erie, only to drown of an overdose of fresh water. scott durfee daily texan columnist Hire Jam es Watt to J o both Interior an d Exterior Imagine the outcry if he were hired to head up the EPA. To most minds, it would be catastrophic. Ah, but most minds are not thinking ahead. To be in control of the two governm ent agencies that con­ trol the welfare of the environment of the United States would be the ultimate power trip. J.W . would go berserk four days after being sworn in as EPA chief, ordering the formation of a national park in dow ntow n Pittsburgh He would then order a dam built in front of the drain pipe of the United Catabolism factory in W isconsin, creating a veritable lake of waste m aterials, which he would then go water-ski­ ing on to prove its safety. Of course, the skis would melt, along with the dam, creating the w’orst flood ever Congress, of course, would declare him insane, and to make sure such a fiasco never occurs again, would only con­ firm an appointee from the Sierra Club. James would then spend the rem ainder of his days rem iniscing about his Grand Plan to pave the United States. Abolish the EPA: Someone could seriously get away with this by fooling Phyllis Schlafly into believing that the ÉPA is actually the re-introduced ERA amendment. She would o r­ ganize her troops again and before anybody could get through to her and tell her what EPA actually stands for, the EPA would be a dead agency, the victim of uninformed po­ litical pressure. Hire Me: That's right. If nothing else, I'll be good copy for the new spapers; i.e. "In an exclusive interview, EPA chief Scott Durfee outlines his plans for the ridding of toxic waste. 'If we just ignore it, maybe it'll go a w a y / " __________________ Durfee isa sophomoric Plan II student r^vija ¿É. dL firing line Squeal rule In her March 4 editorial, Maureen the court decision Paskin supports striking down the rule that "would have required federally funded family planning clinics to notify the parents of girls under 18 years of age that the clin­ ic had given their daughter a prescrip­ tion for birth controL" That court decision is telling me (as a parent) that what goes on between the government and my children is none of my business! What really bothers me, though, is that situations like this need not arise in the first place. They wouldn't if par­ ents would have the courage and con­ viction to raise their children respect­ ing biblical guidance and authority, and attend a Bible-believing, Bible- in preaching church God's Word. that's strong It's crucial. There is a high price to be paid for failure to do so — and th a t- a fact, folks. Robert I lolt Austin resident Lind paranoid Perhaps M ichael land should re-ex­ amine his editorial regarding the envi­ ronmentalist threat and m ake an a p ­ pointm ent with a professional to di- cuss his acute stage of paranoia It he feels so threatened bv the radical env i­ ronm entalist. perhaps he should take a tour through the many chemical waste disposal site- near Houston and around the country I wonder if Lind ha-- ever heard ot Love Canal It would do him som e good to argue his case defending Big Busine-'- L S A with people whose yards were flooded bv dead 1\ toxn liq uids, and w hose hom es were traps t r noxiou- fum es The insidien- problem of environ mental pollution cannot hi trivialized bv people like Lind unwil mg to face ire dwm the fact that our resources , n- are be dling and our lands and lack of mg destroyed bv a complot* foresight 1 do not support erin h im i but 1 am not blind to the realitv that a serum- env ironnu ntal threat exist- fuhe Daniels Geology Salvad o ran soap What m ost of the people interviewed in S oapbox Tuesdav don’t understand about the situation in FI Salvador i- that it i- not a que-ton of com m um -m or democracy W hat the ^alvadorans are experiencing now i- not demotrn cy; it i- a war against them bv the c v ernment Thousand1- ot innocent civ ¡ ians are -lau gh tered bv crazed hi 'od thirstv governmt nt an i L s turuL I death -quad - Poor, hungrv people in 1 atm \meri can are not concerned about irrelevant 1 preter questions l i k e W h i c h vio United State- capitalism i r soviet Un is a ion com m unism ?" W hat they are con­ lot more basic: cerned about whether or not they will have enough food for tomorrow, w hether or not their children will survive until adult­ hood, and of course, whether or not their villages and fields will be burned or they themselves captured, tortured or murdered by government forces. People trying to survive don't have time to study Karl Marx or Adam Smith. Thev just want a better life for themselves and for their children. Margaret Haves Latin Am erican studies M ore se x The Budweiser supplement had prettv girls with swimsuits and T-shirts on Many companies use this method of advertisement. SO WHAT?! If the company chooses to use models, male and female, thev probably feel this method of advertisement will sell their product If thev purposefully "exploit" a sex, the demand for their product might decrease due to unpopularity with the consum er. Most com panies would probably not want to suffer a decrease in demand. Anyw ay, intelli­ gent consum ers probably w on't buv a product |ust because sex is used as a '-oiling tnck. For those who are upset at the "e x ­ ploitation’ used in the Budweiser ads, check your magazine racks for G lam ­ C osm opolitan, our M adem oiselle Seven teen and other steamy literature that use pretty girls in swim suits and T-shirts to sell their products If vou >till feel a need to -peak out, try com ­ about Barry M anilo w 's plain in g album, which w hen plaved backwards during a full moon the eighth of October in t iuam on reveals two female d i s k jockies in D enver’ Again, so what?!! Greatest Hits the middle i n i t i a l s ot Bobb\ Baker Mechanical engineering New Deal le gacy I find it appropriate though sad. t h it tht 1 BJ School, named for one of the great inflationist socialists of our time should sponsor the recent sym ­ posium of Franklin Roosevelt. The spectacle of New Deal engineers in­ dulging in a three-day backslapping to com mem orate the N>th anniversary of Roosevelt's inauguration is enough to rouse even the most som nolent capital­ ist. What made t h i s particular event so oner us however, was (at the lack of publicized information concerning lec- ture t i m e s and p l a c e s and b the (de­ liberate 7> -cheduling of those lectures at times when only a small audience could attend (9 a m to noon Friday, I. for one. would have t o r i xample ke i to attend some of the lectures, and would have done so except for having to work during the symposium hours I leave it to the reader s c o n je ­ ture as to why no lectures or discus­ sions were scheduled during the eve­ ning, when the majority of people with jobs could attend. According to The Daily Texan, those who did attend found high good hum or in such inane bon mots as the desirability of "co m ­ forting the afflicted and afflicting the com fortable." From each according to his ability, comrades? I doubt that the "legacy of the New Deal" lectures mentioned such fea­ tures as the colossal hoax of the Social Security system or the establishment of the dangerous fiction that government has a responsibility to control a na­ tion's economy and dictate its citizens' disposal of their own income. The true legacy of the New Deal is a desperate, perhaps ultimately impossible, attempt to recover from an orgy of "fly now, pay later" governmental vote-buying. Thanks a lot, Franklin. A lan M cK endree A ustin resident lution to deploy the missiles, if the Ge­ neva disarmament negotiatons fail, are of vital interest. The Germans are the ones who are stuck in the center of Eu­ rope and military preoccupations are naturally present. But the U.S. press offers a very skewed picture in placing the missile question as the central or only issue. This distorted point of view cannot be fully corrected by an after- math analysis — as the New York Times did. Newsmakers should finally learn to give continuous, non-ethnocentric edi­ issues. torials about foreign policy Then you would not read two days af­ ter the fact that Australia had elections. Moreover, you would not get the im­ pression that the El Salvadorans voted for or against the U .S., while their main concern was peace. The domestic issues prevail in the relatively unim­ portant municipal elections in France — as they do in the U.S. Thus, new spaper analysts should STOP(M tA IN lN ó.C fm ,,HAVE YOU NOTICED HOW BUSINESS HAS PICKED OP LATELY I, Point of view _________ The coverage of the Germ an elec­ tions, "the most important one since 30 vears," is again a perfect exam ple of ethnocentric American newswriting — not to talk about TV "a n a ly sis." For davs vou could read from the New fo r k Times to The Dailv Texan that this election was for or against the de­ ployment of 108 Pershing 2 and 96 cruise missiles in Germany at the end in the vear. Two davs after the elector­ al victory of the Christian Democrats ("and Reagan was the Times (pnnted vesterdav in the Texani suddenly finds out that 'G erm ans link kohl win to ]obs, not missiles is s u e /' Is it not possible to predict the topics be­ fore the elections? re lie v e d ), For G erm ans the issues w ere the high unem loym ent rate (10.4 percent) and concerns about environm ent pro- tecton Of course, the NATO alliance and the fultillment of the two-track so­ explain and conclude before the topic does it bv itself and get rid of the delu­ sion that everv other country's police is directly the almighty linked with American perspective. A ndreas A’m ckler Graduate, history Get real The recent student elections con ­ firmed my reservations about the abili­ ty and com m itm ent of the fledgeling Students' Association to provide a real forum for anvone other than the elitist lunior politicians. 1 w ouldn't exactly classify m yself as an "average stu d en t," hut I would say that my resum é suffers from blank white space more than those of most members of the student clique. I cer­ tainly have been less than w holeheart­ The Daily Texan/Wednesday, March 9, 1963/Page 5 edly accepted into that group. During my campaign for president my sup­ porters were publicly harrassed, I was informed by an opponent's campaign worker that "n o one voted for m e," and I received vulgar telephone mes­ sages. Even now, after the election, I can't go to a party without Begala groupies interrogating my companion about being with me. These people think I'm foolish be­ cause I tried to lighten up the elections; that I'm a traitor because I question their motives; that I'm a radical be­ cause I don't conform. I contend that student government at UT exists to serve a few. Even the editor of "the Student N ewspaper of the University of Texas at Austin" influences voters in student elections not only by endors­ ing candidates of her choice in their campaign literature, but also by sud­ denly co-writing editorials with presi­ dential candidates a week before the election. I know who the real buffoons are. It would appear that the 90-plus percent of the students who didn't vote in last W ednesday's election know too. I hereby announce the formation of the Real Students' Association. We will soon be circulating petitions to call a the following ques­ referendum on tions: Should student senators be required to wear party hats at meetings? Should thev be required to vote with kazoos — once for ves; twice for no? Should free beer be provided at all Students' A ssociation m eetings7 Should m eetings be held outdoors (preferably at Zilker Park or Hippy H ollow )?' Should a cam pus mem orial be erect­ ed to Hank T. Hallucination? Please sign these petitions and vote in the ensuing referendum . The Real Students' Association will begin m eet­ ing regularly on Thursday nights at 8 p.m. in the Union. We will drink heav­ ily. Watch cam pus new s in briet for further announcem ents or call 441-4040 for details. text that the veteran has "readjusted to the norm-stream of society," whether they suffer loss of limbs, sight, hearing or degenerating health or organs. All WWII and Korean veterans receive their benefits for life. If you're going to fund conflict, after the "settling of the losses d ust," people with physical should be taken care of for life. After all, one in perfect or near perfect health before engagement should t>e com pen­ sated for losses incurred after their tour. An industrial accident lawsuit would net "m any dollars" sufficient to compensate loss, but war is treated as fiscal welfare to the majority of Viet­ nam veterans who suffered physical to deformities — budget cutters to no avail. therefore subject I received a Silver Star, two Bronze Stars and a Purple Heart. Net result was 70 percent hearing loss (helicopter crash) and retirement 12 years ago with a 70 percent rating. I now have 15 per­ cent hearing left and am going deaf, have had two brain surgeries, lost the majoritv of my body strength on the left side and in May will have my liver transplanted at the University of Pitts­ burgh Medical Facilities — attributed to Agent Orange. All at the age of 32. My disability is being taken away from me after receiving $95,040 over 12 vears. Not as much as 1 would have received if I had fallen into a manhole uncovered at an industrial or construc­ tion site where the management was negligent. Better think about how the last veterans were taken care of for losses before supporting an action again anywhere else. Vietnam veterans already know this — the human being is as expendable as anv tank, plane or weapon after the profits have been made against "com m unist encroach­ m ent." Think about it, future veterans. Will there be enough money to com ­ pensate for vour physical losses7 It's a pretty cruel Catch-22 w hen vou will receive the "sw iftness of the pen" be­ fore and after anv conflict. David N. D uke A ustin resident Bill L eissner Liberal Arts A Deadly b last To Steve Rudner. On future w ars to Before further military con g re ssm e n , w ith the "sw iftness of the p en ," commit this country involve­ ment in El Salvador, better look to the history of the last conflict (Vietnam) and consider the hum an elem ent. Viet­ nam veterans were rewarded by this country with nothing less than dis­ grace for the "sw iftness of the pen" stripped away all present and future benefits due widows and dependents of men killed in action in Vietnam . All veterans on VA com pensation rolls for 12 years are now taken off entirely under the con ­ In 1982 losses. their Have you forgotten your campaign promise to "reflect our desires as stu­ dents at U T" and to continue "stu dent input into board m atters" (Daily Tex­ an, April 6)7 T he asinine killing of The D eadly Texan behind closed doors reeks even worse than your feeble ex­ cuses put forth for that action, not to mention vour personal attempt at lim­ iting student outcry bv misinforming interested students such as me as to the true reasons for last Thursday's ex­ ecutive meeting. Louis K. Bonham Plan II CU STO M ER INFORMATION FROM G EN ERA L MOTORS IR A A cco u n ts 9 .5 0 % 1 0 .1 0 9 % Annual Yield New A ccou n t B o n u s: 15% rate from date opened through first full calendar m onth Variable Rate Deposit A ccount— $100 m inim um . 18 Month Fixed Rate Certificate— $500 m inim um . — A L o o k a t I n d iv id u a l R e t i r e m e n t A c c o u n ts — fe* É * * ■* ’ - «*;..• . . • U " ; . "Y-.'lS" ; • á ; M L . ••• ¿Á ■■ { ■ ~ ¿ L-v j * U g & 'r i / 1 a n : 4 - K " u M P * ?f c > ' í ' V . . i " * - — 21. » i ¿ . * ' . i ’ UNIVERSITY CREDIT UNION 476-4676 Main Office 30th and Cedar 9 - 4 . M o n . - F r i . _ .... ' 9 - 7 . rhurs. T ?f»U nTón Texas Union 9 - 4 . M o n . - F n . Co-Op Brancn Co-Op Bookstore 9 - 4 . M o n . - F n . Serving I T faculty, staff and full-time graduate students. ^ N C 1 J A A l l a c c o u n t s i n s u r e d t o S I 0 0 ,0 0 0 h > N C .IJ A , a I S G o v e r n m e n t A g e n c y . HOWTO STOP DRUNK DRIVING. TOUGH LAWS MAY HELP, BUT WE ALSO NEED TO CH ANGE OUR ATTITUDES. Do you know anyone w ho’s in favor of drunk driving? Not likely. And yet many people have driven when under the influence of alcohol, or will do it at least once. Take a look at some chilling statistics. One out of every two of us will be in­ volved in an alcohol-related accident sometime during our lives. Last year alone, more than 25,000 people died in such accidents; an additional 1.5 million were injured. A disproportionate number of those killed were under 25 years old. ¡ ; The cost of drunk-driving accidents amounts to over $24 billion every year in property damage, loss of wages, medical and legal fees. Not to mention the emotional pain to the vic­ tims’ families and friends. What is being done about it? Over the years, many different approaches have been tried: mandatory jail sentences, stiff fines, license suspensions, alcohol- rehabilitation programs, and higher drinking-age laws. No single countermeas­ ure seems to do the job by itself. Tough laws, unless they are supported by equally tough enforcement and the certainty of punishment, don’t seem to car. The Department of Trans­ portation is now field-testing that device. We also strongly favor all efforts that focus attention on the problem such as the Presidential Commission on ; Drunk Driving. Make sure I your friends and family know 1 the facts about mixing alco­ hol and driving. Drunk driv­ ing will only stop when we all decide it isn’t socially acceptable. Be self-confident enough to admit when you’ve had too much to drink to drive safely. j Meanwhile, seat belts are still your best protec­ tion against drunk drivers. They can’t prevent an acci­ dent, but they will help save your life during a serious c r a s h - whatever the cause. This advertisement is part o f our continuing effort to give customers useful information about their cais and trucks and the company that builds them. MARK O f EXCELLENCE Chevrolet • Pontiac Oldsmobile • Buick Cadillac • GMC Truck work over the long run. Even with all three, probably the most effective single thing we could do is to examine our own attitudes about drinking and driving. How much do you really know about the effects of alcohol? The facts may sur­ prise you. For example, a lot of people believe that beer and wine are less intoxicat­ ing than other drinks. In fact, a can of beer, a glass of wine, or a B/Lounce drink of 86-proof liquor are all about equally intoxicating. A lot of factors d eter­ mine how quickly youTl get drunk. Your body weight, how much you’ve had to eat, and the number of drinks you have over a specified time all make a difference. That’s why it’s so hard to know when you’ve had too much. A common legal defini­ tion of intoxication is .10 per­ cent blood-alcohol level. For a 160 lb. person, it takes about four or five drinks in the first two hours on an empty stom­ ach to reach the legal limit, compared with three or four drinks in the first two hours for someone who weighs 120 lbs. Of course, your judgment and reaction time will be impaired well before you reach the legal limit. At General Motors, we’re very concerned about the effects of drinking on driv­ ing. Over a decade ago, we developed a device that tests a driver’s reflexes and motor responses before starting the Houston senator urges passage of Texas pari-mutuel betting bill Page 6/The Daily Texan Wednesday, March 9,1983 IMMIGRATION P aul Parsons, p.c. A ttorney a t Law BOARD CERTIFIED • IMMIGRATION & NATIONALITY LAW TEXAS BOARD OF LEGAL SPECIALIZATION LICENSED BY TEXAS SUPREME COURT 2200 GUADALUPE. SUITE 216 (512) 477-7887 O wn Your Own CABLE TV STEREO KIT HEAR H B O ... M T V .. .CINEM AX IN STEREO u-INSTALL KIT - - 1 YEAR SU R / TEE ( The Video S torej HILLEU !H IU E L = H IL L E L ! THE HILLEL /'hil—lel/n: bitter herb and charoset between two pieces of matzoh LIKE OUR NAMESAKE, WE KNOW HOW TO PUT IT TOGETHER! MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW AT THE ORIGINAL PASSOVER SANDWICH SHOP 476-0125 2105 SAN ANTONIO TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK — FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5244 459-54 33 BUY, SILL, RENT, TRAM.. WANT ADS... 471-5344 THE © f t lf lS O T A SAFI, SIMPLE SATISFYING WAY TO LOSE WEIGHT. 7 o m -7 p m 458-4446 EX 209 Perry School ESL Quality instruction in English in a personalized atmos­ phere. • Conversation • Gram mar • Reading • Composition • Preparation for TOEFL • Small classes • Authorized to issue 1-20 form Separate classes for adults a n d adolescents. Perry School 710fost 41trSt. i from Hancock hecreotion C enter) 456-1211 ByDAVlbTEECE and MARK BARRON Daily Texan Staff During a Senate com m ittee hearing packed with spectators, state Sen. Craig W ashington, D-H ouston, pre­ sented a bill Tuesday that would legal­ ize pari-mutuel betting in Texas. The Senate Com m ittee on Economic Developm ent, chaired by Sen. O .H . "Ik e ” Harris, R-Dallas, heard testim o­ ny on the bill for alm ost four hours be­ fore sending the legislation to a sub­ com mittee for further consideration. Hundreds of people from a variety of groups filled the Senate Cham ber to hear the testimony. Among those testifying in favor of the bill were K entucky Gov. John Y. Brown, state Com ptroller Bob Bullock and Tim Curry, Tarrant Countv district attorney. "If there's any state in the nation that should have horse racing, it's Tex­ a s ," Brown said. "W e (in Kentucky) have found it to be a very positive in­ d ustry." Along with legalizing pari-mutuel betting at race tracks, the bill would also set aside 5 percent of the re v e n u es earned for the state-funded Aid to Families with D ependent Children program. The bill also would have the gover­ nor name six mem bers to a commission to regulate the horse racing mdu^trv and insist on financial disclosures from track owners. "W e want this bill to be dean and address only one issue," said Wash­ ington, co-sponsor of the bill, who out­ lined the major provisions of the legis­ lation for the committee. "This bill con­ trols every aspect of horse radng in Texas. There's no question about it." Curry said: "I've been a DA and criminal attorney for 20 years, and I do not believe pari-mutuel betting in the form of this bill will increase crime in Texas." Four w itnesses w ere on hand to op­ pose the bill. Leading the opposition was Allan Maley, executive director of Texans Against Gam bling, a group formed two weeks ago to stop the m ea­ sure. "T h e num ber of people attending race tracks has leveled off and appears to be declining," M aley said. " If we're going to attract industries to Texas, let's attract growth industries, not sick and dying o n e s." During a meeting of the H ouse Com ­ mittee on Urban Affairs late Tuesday, Maley said states ended up decreasing the pari-mutuel tax on race track earn­ ings to keep them viable, and were, in effect, "investing in the track s." Because the race tracks w ere failing, M aley said, states had to keep lower­ ing the tax rate to cover their invest­ ments. Gerrv Fulcher, director of Dela­ ware's Council on Gam bling Problems, Sen. Craig Washington ... ‘This bill controls every aspect of horse racing in Texas.’ said, "Legalized gam bling has never produced the amount of revenue that is projected " Fulcher, a self-confessed com pulsive gambler, cited studies indicating that w hen a race track was nearby, people would spend even their grocery monev on gambling. 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W ith R e a d m g (Dynam ics y o u ca n h a n d le b o th - all th e re a d in g you re e x p e c te d to do a n d k n o w p lu s s till h a ve tim e to d o w h a t you w a n t to do T o d ay yo u c a n in c re a s e y o u r re e d in g s p e e d . d ra m a tic a lly L e t E v e ly n W o o d s h o w y o u ho w You ve g o t n o th in g to lo s e b u t a lo t o f c ra m m in g and s le e p le s s n ig h ts R e a d in g D y n a m ic s -n o w you know th e r e is a b e tte r w a y C a ll E v e ly n W o o d and kiss your N o - S n o o z ' g o o d b y e — FINALS START IN ONLY 9 WEEKS! — Register Now for Speciol 7-Day Spring Break Course Coll Toll Free 1 -800-442-9405 Classes Held in: Ausfin-Arlingfon-Dallas-Houston 'ivV-YJV'v. >Y; □ EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMKS Whole Earth Provision Co. 2410 San Antonio 478-1577 8868 Research 458- V , J Senate will consider minority seats By RICHARD STUBBE Daily Texan Staff During what probably will be its fi­ nal meeting before new senators take office April 1, the Student Senate will consider a constitutional amendment Wednesday night that would create special seats in the senate for minori­ ties. Joe Salmons, graduate school sena­ tor, and Students' Association Presi­ dent Paul Begala submitted the amend­ ment, entitled The Minority Represen­ tation Act. The act would allow black students, Hispanic students and foreign stu­ dents to cast one of their four votes for one-year senator at-large for a candi­ date running for black senator at-large, Hispanic senator at-large or foreign senator at-large. One senator per 2,000 students, or portion thereof, would represent each minority group. Any student would be allowed to run for one of the special seats, but only minorities would be al­ lowed to vote for the seat representing them. A two-thirds vote by the senate would send the amendment to the general student body for approval. Two other bills are included on the agenda. One, submitted by Barry Glantz, senator from the College of Architec­ ture, would establish an ad hoc com­ mittee to investigate how the Students' Association can help occupants dis­ placed by the University's expansion into East Austin. The other, submitted by Mike Cole, senator from the College of Engineer­ ing, asks the Students' Association to recommend to the administration and UT System Board of Regents that the "T room" in the basement of Taylor Hall be maintained as a student lounge facility. GRADUATE STUDENT FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE presented by The Graduate Opportunity Program of The Office of Graduate Studtes Leam about available sources of financial aid for 1983- 84, including: fellowships, grants assistantships, loans, work study, departmental aid, etc. Thursday, M arch 10,1983 3-5 p.m. M ain Bldg.212 The Daily Texan/Wednc liny, March 9,19 W a g e 7 Photograph I Ireland Summer Semester Interested in photography? Looking for an elective? Earn three hours credit first summer session for a photographic workshop conducted in Ireland. For details call the Department of Journalism 471-7708. ALL KODAK! FILM 25% off A N Y KIND...AN Y Q U AN TITY A N D PROCESSING DISCOUNT Coupons Available for each roll purchased Texas U n io n Film Service (Info Lobby) 471-4114 U.T I D required S ubnvt fhtj o d wrth o r d e r STR ETCH IN G ! A E R O B IC EXERCISE! "PRE" G RAN D O P E N IN G SPECIAL PER W O RKO U T * FREE SA U N A , W HIRLPOOL & STEAM TO FIRST 50 PEOPLE! M A R C H W O R K O U T SCHEDULE WEEKDAYS: 4:30,5:30,6:30, 7:30 SATURDAYS: 10:30,12 NOON, 1:00,2:00 •m u st PURCHASE MINIMUM OF 12 WORKOUTS) All W orkouts Are C h a lle n gin g N e ve r Boring! CALL N O W ! 458-8507 "Let i > flo o r Your Bod\ I'olk Eat, drink and be merry b u t don't f o rg e t t h e ^ s u m m e r f i n a n c i a l a id a p p l i c a t i o n d e a d l in e 199 CLASSROOMS, MOUNTAIN VIEW. All ou r w in d o w s o p en to a great clim ate for learn in g : summer school in the Colorado Rockies. Stu dy Sh ak esp eare u n d e r the stars, exp lo re our rivers and sn o w -cap p ed m ou n tain s, and take classe s w ith w orld -fam ous lectu rers. W e offer hundreds of acad em ic co u rses, a w ide array o f p ro fessio n al p erfo rm in g arts and recreatio nal activ ities, and a distingu ished g u est and resid en t faculty- If y o u 're w ind ow sh o p p in g for an exciting ed u catio n al a d v en tu re, call us for in form ation on ou r 24-h o u r line: (303) 492-7424, or w rite for a free catalogue. U N IV ER SITY O F C O L O R A D O — B O U L D E R C am pus Box 7 Boulder, C o lo rad o 80309 P lea se sen d m e in fo rm a tio n o n the fo llo w in g 1983 P ro g ram s P E R F O R M IN G A R T S □ C O L O R A D O D A N C E FE ST IV A L Ju n e 3-30 : C O L O R A D O M U S IC F E ST IV A L Ju n e 2 3-Ju lv 29 C O L O R A D O S H A K E S P E A R E FE ST IV A L Ju lv 8 -A u g u st 19 Ju n e 6 -Ju lv 24 : M U SIC T H E A T R E FE ST IV A L D IS T IN G U IS H E D V IS IT IN G P R O F E S S O R S ; SH IR L E Y C H IS H O L M — fir st black, w o m an to e n te r C o n g r e ss an d to run for P r e sid e n t o f th e U n ite d S ta te s W o m en a n d P u blic P o licy ” Ju ly 11-A ugu st 12 □ D A V ID L C O S T IL I in te rn a tio n a l le a d e r in E xe rcise P h y siolo g y 'S cie n tific P rin c ip les o f T ra in in g Ju n e 6 -Ju lv 8 T O R U T A K E M IT S U A N D B E R N A R D R A N D S - c o n te m p o ra ry co m p o se rs, w ill |O intlv te a ch "M usic in th e 20th C e n t u r y w ith m a s te r cla s s e s in c o m p o sitio n Ju n e 27-Ju lv 1 □ T E A C H E R R E C E R T IF IC A T IO N □ S T E W A R T I. U D A L L — fo r m e r S e c r e ta r y o f th e In te rio r P R O G R A M M O U N T A IN R E S E A R C H S T A T IO N (F ield E cology, Field T e c h n iq u e s in E n v iro n m e n ta l S c ie n c e , M o u n ta in G eo m o rp h - olog v, M o u n ta in C lim a to lo g y ) □ R E C R E A T IO N P R O G R A M A N D FA C IL IT IE S S C H E D U L E O F C O U R S E S A N D A P P L IC A T IO N □ H O U S IN G u n d er Jo h n F K en n ed y , T h e E n v iro n m e n ta l M o v e m e n t: Its E v o lu tio n an d Im p act o n th e Built E n v iro n m e n t Ju ly 12-A u gu st 12 A C A D E M IC C A L E N D A R JU N E 6 T O A U G U S T 1 2 ,1 9 8 3 N a m e---------------------------------------------------- — -------------------------------— A d d ress-------------------------- City ------------------------------- . S ta te . Z ip . 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SATISFYING— U coute M end proxU»» yo» «M o m ob « x * day.___ e a s y — H — * * rt, and the airport connects you all er the world. Much, much better tí an Austin. 1 o go from Austin any- v\ here, you have to go to Dallas or H ruston or \tlanta. But in every other respect, ! think Austin would stand a i ance of becom ing number one. 1 need a place with a good library, d Denver had a m arvelous library. Austin may have better. 1 he L niversi- *\ here is quite superior to any 1 was Hiciated with there. Austin h is a great deal going for it. It doesn't, ot course, have the great R ckv M ountains, but a lot of places d n't But the lake and the Hill Coun- ís ven appealing. I his is a beautiful t cation right on the dividing line be- oi. n the 11 ot ¡and and Hill Country. It s quite appealing. \ m entioned once that writers ist feel a deep affinity for a topic 0 d have -om e expertise in the field c fore the\ w rite. Can you relate that nitv to y our project here in Texas? Well, you m u st rem em ber that 1 have been com ing to Texas since 1936. 1 hat's i lot of years. And I had been in all parts of it, except the northeast. I wrott mtimnteiv about Texas in "C en- ti nnial' d i. 1, ksbor< all the way over to Robert Lee. And over to H orsehead Crossing. A the cattle drive. And in so, ! w ent all the way from I Ain't feel that I com e as a stranger. I've also worked with the University arit t\ >t situations. I was the edi­ ten 1; r one of your great professors, t -urge Sanchez, who was writing be a - on the Spanish culture. (That w as) in ibout 1937. And I've edited a ( •uple oí books on Texas history, so I cerne with a prettv good background. curse never enough to w rite. In order to do that, you have to com e k and reconfirm your im pressions. Will L B] play an im portant role in your present book? i decided that about 10 years ago. He w ill not. Bet ause 1 d on't think I'm com - p* tent to deal with that. I think Robert is doing a splendid job, and it (_ lisproportionate for me to a i id t- pline of keeping on focus is not easy. It isn't research if you're just wand­ ering. It's research if you have identi­ fied a problem and really see the solu­ tion to it or elaboration of it. 'New light on' is a phrase I use all the time. What are they thinking about this now; what is the latest evaluation of Stephen Aus­ tin? How long does it take from the con­ ception of the idea to the completion of the manuscript? I would think that if you look over my total record with as honest a re­ port as possible, you would find that I have usually had a terminating period of years. More like 10, 15 years. There have been some exceptions to that, but they have been eruptions. The book on Hungary was obviously the result of the revolution. And the book on Kent State, about which I'm very proud, was again the result of an eruption. For the most part, I would have a record of having kicked the idea around a decade or so. But I've also kicked around a lot of other ideas that I haven't written about. It's a germ inat­ ing process, in the case of "C en ten n i­ al,'' I have an outline that I drew up, I think som e 30 years before I wrote it. Have you set up any time frame for the book on Texas? No, I've never done that. 1 would resent it if anybody forced it upon me. I've never allowed my publisher or anybody to. On a magazine article, where there's a deadline, and they tell you at the beginning, 'W e need this,' that's a deal and you either do it or you don't do it. And that's maybe a three- week job. If it's important enough, I take out the three w eeks and do it. But a book, I've never allowed any timeline. Generically, there's an inher­ ent timetable of about three years from the time that you start to com mit to it. And there's a long period prior to that, but in that long period there are also five or six other great ideas so you re not really in the 'w ouldn't it be fun if stage. And you don't bind yourself to it. You never prom ise to deliver the manuscript by that time. I never even tell people where I am in the m anu­ script until I write them a letter and say '1 have com pleted it.' Is that one of your stipulations? Yes, but it's never com e down to that, because with my track record they feel that if they get it they will have som ething upon which they can begin to work im m ediately. Now, infi­ nite number of changes are made you w on't believe how many changes. But, they know they have a manuscript and that if they w ant to do their work expeditiously now, that in a given number of m onths, we'll have a book Does history illuminate your books or do your books help illuminate his­ tory? I graduated from college with ex tremely high honors in English. I went on with that for about five years. And then I stopped cold turkey and went over to history. I have a strong minor in that. Then two years after I did that, I was a professor in history. So my life has oscillated betw een these two fields. I have enorm ous love for each of them and would have been quite happy with either and might have been farther ahead had I stayed with one. I haven't been able to do that. I've been like a pendulum . That is why I write fiction and non-fiction and dously, but on the other hand I know you work seven days a week, every day of the year. Do you view it more as a job or as a hobby? That's a very good question. I think what we can see is that with the unbe­ lievable success that som e of my things have had, I'm in a position where I don't have to work. I don't quit be­ cause I do have this compulsion to share ideas, to write powerful stories. I don't think of myself as a driven man. I really don't. Other people have sometimes felt I w as, but they see me only when I'm working. W hen I'm working, I do actually work every day. When I'm not working, I really dawdle around and waste time and catch up with things. But when you're a freelance, which I am completely ... I'm probably the first total freelance you've ever met, in that I'm not employed by anybody. I have no guarantees of income. I don't get any paid vacation. I don't have any paid Medicare. I don't have any retire­ ment. I do it or it don't get done. And that is a different experience. It's a per­ ilous position, but it's a position of great honor. I've been asked how many people there are like me in America, who make their whole living from the writ­ ing of books. And if you restrict it to moderately good books, rather than how-to-do-its or things like that, there m aybe 20. Everybody else has a teach­ ing job or works in one way or another — public relations or motion pictures or television. I don't do any of that. I only write books. Considering the sparse amount of time that people have to devote to lei­ sure activities such as reading, what is it about your books that causes people to devote the amount of time that they do, so that they almost crave the length of your books? If you read my mail, you would see that that is not a fiction, really. I get letters every day of the w eek, saying that the books are too short, that w hen they come to the last three chapters, they begin to ration them selves. I think that these letters com e from bookahol- a wonderful breed of people that i c s I like to encourage. So maybe w e're talking about a peculiar situation. . But also, I get a great many letters from men in busy occupations w ho say that they find my books an investm ent. They want to spend the time on them. I don't know really. I think I've stum ­ bled upon som ething that I do moderately well that fills a need Do you consider any of your books to be autobiographical in any sense? Well, my second book, "T h e Fires of Sp ring ." has been held to be autobio­ graphical. In the poorhouse section it is and in the New York section it is not at all. I have never felt that the personal experience alone was adequate basis for a book of mine. I'm totally unlike Norman Mailer in that aspect. Do you indulge in any forms of writing other than historical fiction? Yes, if you look at my published record, which is som e 33 books, I think, you'll find a very wide scatter­ ing. I have five very im portant books on Asian art that people never hear about. I've done one of the very strong books on sports in America. I could, I think, enter your departm ent of athlet­ ics tomorrow as a professor. And I've done politics. I think that's part of the reason why I'm relatively active, be­ cause I have had this wide scattering. But, I'm known for the big books. You seem to be right in the middle of a lot of things. Do you enjoy that position? By accident, I am in that position. If you could read my mail for a m onth or even a w eek, you w ouldn't believe the mail I get. I would think I'm like N or­ man Mailer or Joyce Carol O ates. Peo­ ple know w e're around. They know w e're lively people. W e're people of great commitment. Again, this is one of the rewards of an intellectual life. I'm 7 6 . 1 have survived. I have this moderately good record. We become valuable far beyond our merit, simply because w e're here. I'm still working, they're not working. It's just brute sur­ vival. If I live to be 90, people will say, 'H e's the grand old man of something or other.' I w on't be a damn bit better than I was at 30. But I'll still be here. Do you think that perhaps that's M ich e n e r an d his w ife, M ari, enjoy the beauty of their surroundings in the Te as Hill C o u n try Here, the lake and hills m eet, creating a stunning setting fo r M ic h e n e r’s w o rk. try to do that Now, if you look at my last book, "S p a c e ," you'll find that lohnson occupies a very honorable po­ rtio n in it because his role in space was significant and very honorable. I don't suppose it will be som ething like that As a central, motivating charac­ ter, no ( an you expand upon the amount of research that goes into your historical novels? I doubt that you would believe it. I would say it's i u s t voluminous. Hun dred s of books .. studies and analyses. 1 do all of that m yself. But I now have people to help find it, and very im port­ ant, go over it for error when I'm through. Do you think there's a certain amount of sk ill involved in doing re­ search? I have never thought so. I have thought it was the product of a good education and that anybody could han­ dle it. Maybe the discipline to do it and to keep it on focus ... I might bring eight b< >oks and three of them 1 d o n ’t read much more than the index T hey have nothing for me. Of the other five, I might get one I read every word of; it's just a treasure. The others I dip into. O ne really doesn t know until he does it. And the disci- why I find m yself at ease with both. something that keeps you going? Again, I think I might have been far­ ther along if I had specialized in one or the other, but I w asn't able to do so. I don't think that my personality would have perm itted it anyway. So, in many things, I have many regrets about the way my life has gone, but not grueling regrets, because I have a feeling that being the kind of person 1 am , I proba­ bly would do the same thing over again. I don't for a m inute think that if 1 could make the run a second time 1 would do any better. How did it feel to have your first novel ("T ales of the South Pacific") win a Pulitzer Prize for fiction? Well, you know 1 never wrote any­ thing until 1 was 40. And that's a peri­ lous gamble. I could have lost the whole thing. I was a very slow starter. I have al­ ways been very low keyed. 1 never had a burning desire to do anything. I still never have. I have a burning desire to do things well, but anything I feel the same way about. There are no priori­ ties in my life. And I was always that way, within reason. So that I think maybe it was hesitancy more than any­ thing else. W hen I started, I had a ter­ rific head of steam up. You seem to enjoy w riting trem en- To tell you the truth, I try to keep it in balance. I'm a hell of an employ­ ment agency. I pass these things on to younger people who can do them bet­ ter than I can do them. I've done this for years and I've been associated with a lot of books. I tell them, 'N o way I can do it, but there's a kid over here who can do it better than I can do it.' By the same token, I've lived on rec­ ommendations of other people. Profes­ sors saw that I was moderately good and gave me a lift up. I never applied for a job in my life, because I lived in that wonderful ambience of learning. Space" w as published after you served on the NASA advisory council. How long have you been interested in the space program? In a casual way, always. I've always been good in mathematics, general master of physics. Laym an may be a little more accurate, not much more. Then in 1 9 7 6 1 was brought into the space program , so I've spent seven or eight years there. And very intimately. I'm right into the middle of it. 1 understand that you're a staunch supporter of w om en's rights. W hat do you see as the present and future roles of women in our society — how they're changing or perhaps how they contrast with other societies that you've lived in? The societies I've lived in that hold women in sub)ugation — and they are many — are ones that I've had no af­ finity for. Now partly this is because I am a Quaker, and the Quakers have always been very strong in passing out equal responsibilities for w omen. That's one of the reasons w hy our col­ leges are so great. Because they've al­ ways had 50 percent w om en on the board of anything. And there's a hell of a lot of nonsense that men prom ul­ gate that they d on't permit. And this has been a strong influence on me. O ne of the mysteries of my life the last five years is the dem ise of ERA. I don't understand it. I see som e aspects of it w hich aren't clear. The role of the various churches in it stagger me, but of course, religion inherently is anti­ feminist. W hen I was living in Israel 1 went to the synagogue every Friday night for two years. You can't have a m eeting unless there are 10 men present. The wom en don't count. And w hen you're in the m eeting, the w om en have to sit behind a screen or behind a partition. They are honored guests, but they are guests. And som etim es I, the Gentile, would surreptitiously count as a man and there would be some devout Jew ­ ish w om en w ho didn't count. I've seen this all mv life. I've lived in a great many other societies. Religion is very anti-feminine — all religions are. I suppose even Quakers are. I just find this archaic. Applying this to America, it's obvi­ ous that roles are changing for w om en and that they're advancing somew hat. Do you think it's starting to peak out? No, I think w e've hit a plateau where we will remain for some time. W e're in a plateau right now in an aw ­ ful lot of things. W hat qualities do you think make a good writer a good novelist? I've thought about this a great deal to try to identify what it is in me that i¡ different from somebody of equal inte lectual ability and I think it's a trem en­ dous compulsion to communicate. 1 think it's as simple as that. A painter wants to get his vision on the canvas; musician wants to share the sound he hears; and I think I want to have peo­ ple share the interpretations I develop iff A- B B SSaB£ Interview by Kelle Banks Photography by Bob Malish The amount of research that goes into a Michener novel? ‘I doubt would believe i t ... it’s just voluminous,’ he said. sports The Daly Ttxan/Wt In iy. March 9 ,1983/Pa e 9 Three UT women named all-SWC Top-ranked Houston heads up men’s team Drexler and Walker tied for m en's Player of the Year honors. Arkansas' sophomore center Joe Kleine, a sec­ ond-team All-SWC selection, was se­ lected N ewcomer of the Year. the fifth spot. specialist, was the only Longhorn named to the second team. The 5-6 junior from Slaton expressed dis.ip pointment at not making the first team "I worked hard for it," she said "Bu t 1 could have not even made the second team. But it's a great honor be cause it's the first time I've got an award since I've been h e re ." From staff and wire reports The Texas w om en's basketball team, ranked third in the nation, placed two the 1983 All-Southwest players on Conference first team and one on the second team, the conference office an­ nounced Tuesday. The wom en's All-SWC team, picked by the league's head coaches, includes Texas center Annette Smith and point guard Terri Mackey on the first team. Clyde Drexler and Michael Young, two underclassmen w ho have helped make the Houston Cougars the na­ tion's No. 1 ranked team, w ere unani­ mous selections to the m en's team. Arkansas' Darrell Walker, the SWC's leading scorer, was also a unanimous choice for the m en's team, which was chosen by a panel of sportswriters and broadcasters. Walker averaged close to 19 points per gam e during the regular season for the Razorbacks, while Drexler was third in the league in scoring and sec­ ond in rebounding. Young hit 53 per­ cent of his shots and led the Cougars in scoring. Joining Drexler, Young and Walker on the first team are Darrell Browder, who during the course of the season became TCU's all-time leading scorer, and Akeem Abdul Olajuwon, who edged teammate Larry Micheaux for Guy Lewis, who guided the Cougars to their first Southwest Conference championship, was the overwhelming pick as the league's Coach of the Year. The w om en's Player of the Year was UT's Sm ith, a 5-11 sophomore from Bay City. She led the conference in scoring average (22.9) and field-goal percentage (55.7). " I think all of us deserve it," Smith said. "W e got down and worked hard all year." M ackey, a 5-7 ju nior out of Sapulpa, O kla., said: "I feel it's a reflection on the entire team. W e're the best team in the conference, and we deserve that many on the (All-SWC) team ." Guard Esoleta W haley, a defensive the w om en's Rounding out first team are Texas Tech's Carolyn T h u m p son and Gwen McCray and Arkansas' Bettye Fiscus. The w om en's Coach of the Yeai award went to Tech's first-year coat h M arsha Sharp, who led the Red Raid ers to a 20-7 regular season record md a third-place finish in the SWC SM U 's Shasta Sm others, a fres! m r from Denton, was named Newt of the Year. Sm others averaged points, 10th in the conference. ; 1 See Sportsrecord/p. 11 Tennis team routs NTSU for 4th shutout of year Labay’s versatility allows double role By ED COMBS Daily Texan Staff baseball player. Texas' Steve Labay even looks like a At 6-3, 180 pounds, he's about the right size. His brown hair is slightly sun-bleached below the cap line and his voice has just a hint of a country twang — as in good-old-fashioned- country-hardball. A brief look at his statistics will re­ veal he can play baseball, too. Al­ though his batting average has slumped to .255, Labay is leading the Longhorns in runs batted in with 16 and is tied for the team lead in runs scored with 16. But Labay is more than your average hitter: so far this season, he also has been one of Texas' leading pitchers. On a staff many thought would be led by the likes of Kirk Killingsworth, Mike Capel, Calvin Schiraldi and preseason All-American Roger Clem ens, Labay was the first Texas pitcher to win three games. He picked up his third victory March 1 in Texas' 3-2 win over Oral Roberts, then ranked third by Baseball America, pitching six shutout innings before the Titans broke through with two home runs in the sixth. Labay, w hose last start was a six in­ ning no-decision against Lubbock Christian College M onday, has posted a 1.61 ERA in 22 ’A innings pitched, giving up 18 hits and w alking only two batters. "T h e throwing I've done so far has been a little surprising," Labay said. "I'v e been a little wild in the past, but the more work I get, the better I'll be. The first game, w hen I pitched the shutout (a 6-0 win over UT Arlington), really helped my confidence. This one two home did ru ns." too, except for the While Labay may be surpnsed with his pitching success, Texas coach Clitf Gustafson said he isn't. "W e thought he could pitch when we recruited h im ," G ustafson said. "W hat surpnsed us is that he hadn't pitched well in practice." Labay is from A ngleton, a town of Sieve Labay ... ‘I’m more com­ fortable as a N iter.’ about 12,000 on the Gulf Coast near Galveston Island. He was all-district three years at Angleton High School before enrolling in Angelina Junior College in East Texas, near Lufkin. Although most of his success at Tex­ as has com e while standing on the mound, Labay prefers being pitched to. " I still think of m yself as a hitter, al­ though I haven't hit well lately ," he said. "W h en I first w ent to junior col­ lege, I w ent as a pitcher and learned to hit. I'm more com fortable as a h itter." Gustafson also seem s com fortable with Labay as a hitter. Com fortable enough, at least, to forego the usual designated-hitter route by letting La­ bay pitch, hit and field. Gustafson said he doesn't use that tactic often. "In his case, I think he can handle it," Gustafson said. "H e 's an energetic type w ho gets very involved in partici­ p ating." W hen h e's not participating in base­ ball, Labay enjoys working with classic Ford M ustangs. A smile crossed his face as he recalled a 1967 fastback M us­ tang he owned in high school. "I worked on it every d ay ," he said. " I took the sparkplugs out every w eek­ end and cleaned them , waxed it all the time. I wish I'd never sold it now. If he keeps up his pace, Labay could start to look more and more like a pro­ fessional baseball player. Then, he could afford almost anv car he wants. By MICHELLE ROBBERSON Daily Texan Staff rains The came at an intense m om ent — 6-5 in the first-set tie-break- er, with Texas' Jonny Levine and Tom Fontana barely ahead of N orth Texas State's Sergio Becker and Rafael Delga­ do. Dark clouds threatened play mpst of the afternoon, and for the Longhorns' No. 2 doubles team, the light shower provided a break from a sluggish, see­ saw set. The pair returned to the court to clinch the tie-breaker with a Fontana overhead. L ev ine stu m bled and F o n tan a through the second set, 5-7, allowing Becker and Delgado to even the set to­ tal at 1-1. But the Longhorn tandem proceeded to dash N TSU 's third-set hopes in 20 m inutes, 6-0, w ith NTSU barely picking up a point. The No. 6 Longhorns need not have worried about the outcom e of that final match — Texas, now 9-4, clinched its fourth shutout of the season. U n­ ranked NTSU, 3-7, collected only two sets in the match. "It was a good m atch to play after TEXAScontinued on p. 11 STUDENTS’ ASSOCIATION Travis S pradling. D aily To* Texas’ Jonny Levine argues he should be allowed to replay point after a stray ball interrupted his set BETA THETA PI In Coordination with the POSSE West Present SPRING BREAK ’83 KICK OFF STREET PARTY featuring music by $3.00 per person All you can drin1’ “PORTRAIT” Thursday March 10 3-7 P.M. 24th and Rio Grande Tom _ nun lap President Tom Dunlap is experienced • 82-83 SENATOR-AT-LARGE • CHAIRMAN, SENATE RULES COMMITTEE • DEVELOPER OF SENATE BY-LAWS DAVID I ■ -w hite ■ V ★★★★★★★★ Vice President David White is qualified • 82-83 SENATOR-AT-LARGE • CHAIRMAN, SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE • MEMBER, TEXAS UNION FINANCE COMMITTEE We’ve got the experience to get tne Student Senate on the move! VOTE TODAY PoM M tkol Advertisement Pag* 10/The Daily Texan/Wednesday, March 9,1963 SHÓÉ SHOP We m oka and repair boots sh o ts leather goods • M O D U S * ENGLISH W IST U N I Bug» SHEEPSKIN COW SCALE IMPACTED W ISDOM TBBCT If you require removal of impacted third U K *» end would t * * wiffing to complete a survey of your postopenttve c m , ■ ¡due* in your fee will be offered The following services will be provided: Consultation and examination X-rays Anesthesia (l.V. sedation) Oral Surgery Postoperative Care Capitol Saddlery ^ 1614 Lavaca A u stin, T e xas 47 8*9 309 Biomedical Research Grotp, la c 451*7179 M l Please contact UNIVERSITY BOXINGPresen ts: TEXAS ARKANSAS VS 10 Bouts Scheduled Austin City Coliseum W ednesday - March 9th 7:30 p.m. $3.50 General — $6.00 Ringside Oklahoma upset in Big 8 tournament drifted Pram MwncBbnal NORMAN, Okla. — Calvin Thompson scored 30 points to lead Kansas to an 87-77 victory over No. 19 Oklahoma in the first round of the post-season Big Eight Conference Basketball tournament Tuesday night. Kansas shot 54 percent from the field, compared to 38 per­ cent for the Sooners, 23-8. The victory sends Kansas against Oklahoma State in the semifinal round of the tournament at Kansas City, Mo. Wayman Tisdale, Oklahoma's All-America freshman, hit only six-of-18 shots. Oklahoma played without starting point guard Bo Overton, who injured his ankle before the game when he fell as he walked down some stairs at a fraternity house. Back-up guard Jan Pannell scored 11 points as Overton's replacement. Missouri 88, Colorado 73 COLUMBIA, Mo. — Steve Stipanovich scored 21 points and Jon Sundvold added 14 in the final home appearance of their brillant four-year careers to carry No. 9 Missouri to to a 88-73 victory in the opening round of the Big Eight tournament. Missouri advanced into a semifinal game Friday night against Nebraska. Mark Dressier added 24 points while Greg Cavener and Prince Bridges earned 12 apiece, as the Big Eight champion Tigers improved their record to 25-6 this season with their fifth straight win. Okla. St. 75, Kansas St. 61 STILLWATER, Okla. — Lorenza Andrews scored 18 point to lead Oklahoma State to a 75-61 victory over Kansas State i the first round of the Big Eight tournament. The Cowboys, 22-6, advanced to semifinal play for the firslj time in the six-year history of the tournament. The Pokes face Kansas Friday night. Matt G ark and Raymond Crenshaw added 16 each for the winners. Bill Self came off the bench to add 11 points and five assists. Center Les Craft took scoring honors for the Wildcat with 26 points and nine rebounds. Nebraska 94, Iowa St. 71 LINCOLN, Neb. — David Ponce scored 14 points and four other Huskers scored in double figures to power Nebraska tol a 94-71 victory over Iowa State in the first round of the Big| Eight tournament. Nebraska, 19-8, advanced to the semifinals at Kansas City, I Mo., and will play regular season champion Missouri Friday) night. Iowa State ended the season 13-15. Iowa State was called for a tournament-record 33 personal) fouls. The Huskers shot a tournament-record 42 free throws, hitting 34 for 81 percent. The 58 total fouls were also a tourna­ ment record. Go Greyhound round trip to Dallas for just S3 2 60. W aco tor $17 40 and San Antonio for only $1 3 70 Departures and return trips from convenient loca­ tions near cam pus Call 476-7451 for schedules and information “ Africa’s Economic Squeeze” Thursday, March 10 7:00 p.m. PHI KAPPA THETA'S 5th ANNUAL SOFTBALL TOURNAMENT March 26-27 at KRIEG FIELDS J!r*ií*i lo r PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS For information call: Rick Alvarado: 453-6322 Robert Hogeda: 471-7012 C a ll before M a rc h 20th Helpful hints and informa­ tion to help the student find a way through the Austin housing maze. Reod aN about it in the T e x a n 's Housing Guide on April 6. Soap Creek Saloon 1201 S. Congojas TONIGHT THE KINGPINS w/TtmCeyaie-SafarBaad 443-1966 The Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees will meet Tonight 6:00 P.M. in the T S P Photo Studio 4.122 Visitors are Invited A little good news goes a Long Distance. Land a job for next summer? Call home! Your parents will relish the thought of you m aking money, as opposed to spending it. , ^ Get a good grade on a paper? Parents love to see proof that they raised a smart kid. You don't need a big event to call home. Even a little good news can go a long, long way. And nobody's more eager to hear about it than your family. You can call anyone in Texas between 11pm Fndav and 5pm Sunday, and talk 10 minutes, for $2.52* Or less, depending on where you call. So go ahead. When you've done something good, snare the good news! Reach out and touch someone. @ Southwestern Bell •Price applies to calls dialed One-Plus without operator assistance. Same rate applies from 11 pm to 8am every night. Tax not included. If the whole dorm heaved a sigh of relief when you threw that last sock in the washing machine then for you, doing laundry is news. News that your Mom would be delighted to hear. M U N C H Jk G U Z Z L f FOR ONLY $ 1 .6 5 C o n a n s C hka4>i>-*u\ i, P p p a n p iz z a hv t h e s l u e , it s th e u ltim a te l u n c h f o r h ig h -s p e e d p iz z a lo v e rs , b e c a u s e it s rc ad v w h e n y o u a re (« c t th e sIk c at th e r ig h t p ric e , a lo n g w ith a d r in k J u s t S i p o n S o c o m e b u s t.»da\ w i th t f j s ' T h e S lu e A v a ila b le f r o m H t o 2, w e e k d a y s o n l y it s th e b e v m u n c h a n d g u n k it: to w n A n d at th e b e st p n c e O te » e x p ire s M a r c h 18 W 3 < »«- • c o u p o n at ail C o n a n s » m o m \ H O U * 1 M A K E n M A K E S O G R E A T t R iv e rsid e s W M assncv L ane * G u a d a lu p e a n d ^ 2Vtn a n d 2 4 3 8 U A n d e rs o n 1 a n e SAVE UP TO 50% ON MEN'S CLOTHING DOUBLE & SINGLE BREASTED SPORT COATS $ 5 1 M FROM 100% SILK TIES IT COMPARE AT j $18.99 ONLY $ 1 1 95 SLACKS DRESS SHIRTS • Short sleeves • Long sleeve J1 4M <™$ 1095 3 PC. VESTED SUITS From *7995 TRY OUR EASY LAY-AWAY PLAN... We Stock Shorts, Regulars, Extra Longs and Big Sizes to Size 60 EXPERT ALTERATIONS AVAILABLE OPEN MON.-FRI. 10 TO 7, SAT. 9 TO 6 D A D D V D M If l l I CAPITAL PLAZA MANUFACTURING COMPANY 451-4720 ...J • i t t l l l l l s i i i f t t i i i i i i s t a i i t K i i i i i t photogenesis, inc. sportsrecord nba NHond BMfctttodi A—oc. TuMday* Rm u Ks Seattle 98. New York 107 Portland 93. Atlanta 110 Indiana 101 Detroit 107 Phoenix 99 Dallas 120 Cleveland 102. Houston 99 Denver 129 San Antonio 118 college Colege Basketbal Scores Tournaments Big Eight Nebraska 94 lowaSt 71 Oklahoma St 75 Kansas St 61 Oklahoma 77 Kansas 87 Missouri 88 Colorado 73 ECAC-Metro Robt Morns 81 Loyola 60 Fairlgh Dicknsn 94 Wagner 84 Long island 74 Mans’ 56 ECAC-N. Atlantic Boston U 80. Vermont 75 N Hampshire 75 Cantsius 64 Holy Cross 65, Neastern 61 Maine 78 Niagara 76 (OTi III St 64 S III 54 Bradley 63 Drake 53 Tulsa 108, Indiana St 89 Maaourl Vaftey ton Players of the Year — Darrell Walker and Clyde Drexler Newcomer of the Year Coach of the Year Joe Kleme Guy Lewis. Hous 1963 DPI Women’s A6-SWC baakatbal teem first Team swc basketball 1963 UP1AS-SWC basketbal team first Team Clyde Drexler Houston Darrell Walker Arkansas Michael Young Houston Akeem Olajuwon Houston Darrell Browder TCU Second Team Larry Micheaux Houston Joe Kleme Arkansas Alvm Robertson A rkarsas B ub b aJe nm rg s Texas Tern Claude Riley Texas A&M Annette Smith, Texas Terri Mackey, Texas Bettye F iscus Arkansas Carolyn Thompson Texas Tech Gwen McCray. Texas Tech Second Team Penme Got* Rice Vickey Finch Houston Lola Reescano Baylor Jenm Edgar Texas A&M Esoteta Whaley. Texas Player of the Year — Annette Smith Newcomer o’ the Year Shasta Smothers. SMU Texas Tech Coach of the Year Marsha Sharp 1EXAS PRICE BUSIER! Cameras Video OPENING SOON IN AUSTIN Full and Part-time Sales Positions Available. Excellent pay and benefits. Send resume to: 4835 Whirlwind San Antonio, TX 78217 \ AjfeJ—^ springp 1 I N F O R M A L ^ V / CLASSES W REGISTER BEFORE SPRING BREAK Tx Union Information Lobby Wed, Thurs Mar 9,10 11 am-7pm OUTDOORS Rancho Del Cielo, M exico H o u ic Plant Care Plant Lite a t Central Texas W ildlife R e h abilitation THE AJtTS Batik: In ven tiv e D yeing D raw ing Beg. A Int. Japanese ink Pointing Pottery: Techniques of Throw ing A H a n d b u ild in g Stained Glass le o d e d C reative Writing Introd uction to P rofessional W riting Screen W riting PMOTOGftAPHY Block A W hite D a rk ro om P h o to graphing People Shooting Super Black A W hite Shots Fisas & n x n iis B asket W eaving H o o ked on Crochet k n ittin g for Beginners N e e d le p o in t > Int.) Q uitting ilnt.j T rad itio n al la c e M a k in g BALAMC1 A nger Control Coping with Loneliness H a n d lin g Stress Successfully M a k in g Sense of our {m o tio n s P re -M a rtia l W orkshop W hat is this thing called Love? H a th a Yoga M assage M assage fo r W om en SPfGAL INTOKST A Look ot the N ig h t Sky Effective Listening Public S p eaking Super Lea rn in g fo r Super M em ory COMPUTOS Personal C om puting: Financial Applications C o n versatio n al Swahili Soy A h h l Spanish for M edical Personnel English as a Second Language T.O.E.F.L. P re p a ra tio n Sign L an g u ag e G A M K SA SPOUTS B ridge Ice S k ating ju g g lin g N e w G am es Sailing S k yd iv in g W indsurfing MUSIC M ostly M o x a rt Bluegrass G u ita r o r M an d o lin G u ita r (Beg. W hat's a Dobro? DANCS B elly dance Tap Dance C o untry W estern Salsa Pa' T1 SSLF-R1UAMC1 Bike Repair M otorcycle M a in ten an ce Defensive D riving Bond, A n n u ity A M o n e y M a rk e t Funas Buying th a t First House In d iv id u a l R e tirem ent Accounts (IBA) Introd uction to T a x Shelters Investm ents fo r th e N e w Investor UINOUJUM C o nversational French C o n versational G e rm a n C o n versational P o rtuguese C o n versational Spanish SPIRITS A CUUNASY ARTS Classic Beers of Europe Ca|un C o oking N e w O rle a n s Brunch PHYSICAL ARTS Tai Chi Exercise to Music M a rtia l Arts H istory A P h ilosophy Above dosses still open 471-5651 I Q EQ UALS SHOE SIZE NOTE JOCK ARMS QUITE AN ATTRACTION AT SORORITY MIXERS FAT MATCHES HEAD FEET HE HASN T SEEN SINCE MIDDLE OF FRESHMAN YEAR PERMANENTLY DISFIGURED BY BREWS UPON BREWS AT ABEL S SOUVENIR FROM COACHING "HIS GIRLS IN DERBY DAY ZIPPER-KNEE ACQUIRED IN 1981 HARDIN HOUSE PANTY RAID M m CENTENNIAL C O N D O M IN IU M S PRESENTS £ £ THE SUPREME BODY JOCK.” There are a lot of stereotypes at UT — Moose Letterman, M issy Ozone, Jona­ than Hawthorne B illin g s le y III ("C h ip", frat rat) C entennial homebuyers and now the d istin ctive They're exceptionally sm art recogniz­ ing a prem ier location Just 2 short blocks from cam pus, C entennial hom eowners are minutes away from ch o ice entertainment, the best shopping or a late -nigh t bite Their favorite sorority and fraternity houses are also ne arby1 Not to m ention a com plete array of fantastic features at home a sparkling pool and cool fountains with inviting tanning deck, refreshing spa, secured off-street parking, cozy fireplace, tim e-saving m icrow ave oven and com plete w asher/dryer package And of course, enough space to share w ith good friends Shake the label put on you — join the truly exceptional types at C entennial C ondom inium s O M 1 T E M M IA D CÓN(X)MÍNRJMS^ w 501 W. 26th between San Antonio and Nueces For further inform ation call (512)478-7746 NEVER SETTLE FOR SECOND BEST. COMPARE OUR PRICES SHORTS $1 5 00- $2 0 00 suggested retail $20.00 to s36.00 Select from : Norton McNaughton, Modern Juniors, Junction Blvd., Bobby Brooks, Oscar de la Renta, Cliffhanger, and more! 26th AT GU ADAL UPE ( PARKING ON SAN AN T ON IO) M O P A C at A ND E R S O N 4 5 4 - 5 1 5 6 JOIN US ON THE SUMMIT. T-n s * « / • w . ’.K fcr WHO ARE WE? W e ’re Outward Bound — an opportunity tor you to experience personal growth through adventure. W e ’ll give you the unique opportunity to push your limits while enjoying th e grandeur of the Colorado Rockies in th e sum m ertim e. Soon er th an you th in k, the m oun­ tains will b ecom e your second hom e. You’ll gain a new perspective on your environm ent and yourself. As your journey unfolds, th e strangers in your group will b ecom e friends. T ogether, and by yourself, you’ll learn new ways to solve problem s and skills applicable to your everyday lite. T h ese . courses are tough. T h e y ’re m eant to be — hut not beyond the reach (if anyone who tries. T h e y ’re fun. And as safe as hum an ingenuity and experi­ en ce can m ake th em . WHERE? Few places on earth can m atch the beauty o f the Rocky M oun­ tains. Y ou’ll he surrounded by rugged peaks, fragile alpine rundra, fragrant sub-alpine m eadows, clear lakes, and the magic o f forests, wildflowers, rocks and streams. O n a ten-day or 23-day m ountaineering course, you’ll learn how to backpack, m ountain clim b, rock clim b and innu m erable oth er skills. You’ll feel th e ch allen ge o f an alpine peak ascent, rhe tranquility of a m oun­ tain dawn. WHEN? O ur summer program runs from May through Septem ber, spanning th e variety of cond itions and en viron ­ m ents from late spring to early fall. It the summer course doesn’t suit your schedule, consider our oth er experi­ en ces. G lid e the pristine through wilderness of the w inter m ountains on cross-country skis, to the fast- m oving pace of a w hitew ater raft trip, or explore the mystery of the C anyon- lands of southeastern U tah. thrill WHY YOU? W e all need a change of pace, an opportunity to live up to our own p otential. You can stay in your h om e forever. C om fortable. Secu re. U ntested in the rich waters ahead. O r you can chtxise to explore th e unknown. W rite for a free four-color catalog to ­ day. N o exp erien ce necessary. Outward Bound educational a non-profit organization. is JOIN US. Send a free catalog on th e year-round courses offered to: Colorado Outward Bound School 9 4 5 Pennsylvania St. Dept. 15 D enver, C O 8 0 2 0 3 (303 ) 8 3 7 -0 8 8 0 f t D CO LORADO Established 1961 The Daily Texan/Wednesday, March 9,1963/Page 11 Texas dumps NTSU continued from p.9 the tournament this week­ en d ," Texas assistant coach Dave Woods said. "They did really well, and it w as a good booster." The Longhorns are from weekend recovering losses to No. 9 Miami and No. 10 Clemson. Texas' Gavin Forbes, play­ ing No. 5 singles for an in­ jured Ted Erck, earned wins in both singles and doubles. Forbes, who usually plays No. 6 singles, clipped Delga­ do 7-6, 6-4, then teamed with Doug Snyder to down Jimmy Rose and Joreje Jim enez, 6-4, 6-4. "O n e gets more psyched 5 )," five (playing at No. "W ith up Forbes said. courts, you go on with the rest of the guys. It's different than playing No. 6 and going on the last match. It's more of a challenge and it gives you more spirit. I thought "I lost to him (Delgado) last year, and I was a bit ner­ vous," the senior from South Africa said. "H e plays well I against me. played good because I won it in the end, and even though it was close, I played my points w ell." In other singles action, Levine blitzed David Sam- mel, 6-3, 6-0, in the top spot, while No. 2 Paul Crozier edged Becker, 6-1, 4-6, 6-3. C ra ig K a rd o n d o w n e d Jimenez, 6-2, 6-1, in third sin­ gles. Helpful hints and information to help the stu­ dent find a way through the Austin housing maze. Read all about it in the Texan's Housing Guide on April 6. Cl/- a>5 y>=-*n.v-1 ... ; 7 » . . - i - j l ) i ) t 3 V . J >» J f jO, jL : .y .. » , • «■'. sXi- 1 s ... - , , ' i I “ p i n V U t-' vjJ A .S-' ^ jj/>, * | sf be lighter . . . think faster . . . feel better . . . float to relax Incredible! One year o f unlimited floating fo r 100.00 . available only until we . . reach our goal! 4501 Guadalupe, Suite 106 Austin, Tx. 78751 Call 458-8435 for info/appt. Performing Arts Center & Texas Union Cultural Entertainm ent C om m ittee Tk I Irtli i/M-Aitw T Awnr' A i i f tin John Anderson in concert KOKE-FM welcomes the "SwingirT " Country Star 8pm Wednesday, March 9 PAC Concert Hall Public tickets $10, $9, $8 CEC/PAC optional fee holders and senior citizens $6, $5, $4 Tickets at the PAC, Erwin Center, Texas U nion and other UTTM outlets N orthcross Ice Rink, Paramount Theater and Sears stores. C harge- a-Ticket, 477-6060. Inform ation, 471-1444. No cam eras. No recorders. arts & entertainment Page 12/The Daily Texan/Wednesday, March 9,1983 Poles go ‘Moonlighting’ in London film revi«w By SAMUEL BEAUMONT "M oonlighting"; directed by Jerzy Skolimowski; with Jeremy Irons, Eu­ gene Lipinski and Jiri Stanislav; at the Varsity Theatre. Rating: ★★Vi Polish expatriate writer/director Jerzy Skolim owski's "M oo n ligh tin g" has been treated as though it is a rich m eta­ phoric examination of Poland in the pe­ riod after the military dictatorship's re­ cent crackdown on Solidarity. This is largely because of the nature of Ameri­ ca's provincial view of world politics, which dissolves any political subtlety into a good guy/bad guy scenario — with vou-know-who invariably wearing the white hats. After all, at the same time as this country was in a frenzy the suppression of Solidarity, over President Reagan was out union-bust­ ing and American media refused to see the parallel. "M oonlighting," in fact, is a pleas­ ant, whimsical, comedy-drama boast­ ing surreal undertones and bizarre trappings. Although black slightly is frequently charming and always witty and intelli­ gent. long, this film comedy The film stars Jeremy Irons who, af­ ter his performance in the overrated melodrama "T he French Lieutenant's W om an" (a dreadful, boring movie that is essentially a kind of intellectual por­ nography), has replaced Ralph Bellamy as the international cinem a's outstand­ ing wimp-star — except that Irons lacks any self-deprecating humor or hint of intelligence. Instead, he is a whiner of the first class who looks as though he has just misplaced his most valuable possessions. Fortunately "Sorrow s of Irons' Young W erther" angst-ridden sensibili­ ty is ideal for this wry little comedy. The story is about four Polish construc­ tion workers who are flown to London by a mysterious boss who has hired them to renovate his London town- house. Their presence as workers in England is, of course, illegal, as they came in on visitors' visas. Unfortunately, shortly after they ar­ rive, the crackdown in Poland occurs. Irons, as the head Pole, decides it would be best if his countrymen did not know what was going on in their home­ land. "Moonlighting" thus evolves into a bizarre Pinteresque comedy, with three of the workers virtual prisoners in the house they are restoring. Meanwhile Irons' excursions into the real world become increasingly strange and ever more hysterical. To save mon­ ey he embarks on a series of shoplifting schemes that are as surreal as they are outrageous. He also takes to stealing neighbors' newspapers, heisting local bicycles and the like. His ingenuity is never as conspiratorial as it is obsessed with economy and survival. Still, the film is an elegant and funny romp through a complex and somewhat haunting landscape. / Drama of 1960s backdrops ‘July’ By JON GILLESPIE D aily Texan Staff Opening W ednesday night at the Capitol City Playhouse is "5th of Ju ly ," a poignant, adult comedy about the re­ union of a group of friends who came of age in the 1960s and separated when the decade drew to a close. The plav revolves around the decision of this group to keep or sell the old Missouri farmhouse in which they meet, per­ haps ending their reunions once and for all. New York actor Randall Wheatley plays the pivotal role of Kenneth Talley Jr., the gay crippled Vietnam veteran who pines for his lover, but it should be noted that "5th of Ju ly" is not a one- man show. O ther characters in the cast of eight include a carpet heiress w'ho wants to be a rock star, a doddering old aunt w ho's searching for the right place late husband's ashes and a precocious 13-year-old girl who grows up much too fast. to scatter her "5th of July" originally ran on Broad­ way for two years, with Christopher Reeve and Richard Thom as taking re­ spective turns in the role of the Viet­ nam vet. In 1978, the play received a bevy of Tony Awards, including one for Best Com edy. The opening night show starts at 7 p.m. W ednesday, with tickets costing $7 Free food and drinks will be served, and you'll be able to draw for a door prize - a room for two at the Driskill Hotel. "5th O f July" runs through April 2, with curtain time at 8 p.m ., except for opening night. Tickets for the W ednes­ day/Thursday shows are $5, while the Friday/Saturday show s are $6. Call 472- 2966 for reservations. Are You Playing With Us? For ten years the Back Room has been know n fo r b ringing you the best in live music every night. But we have also quietly m aintained the finest ga m e room in town. All our m a ­ chines are the latest models, and kept in top shape. If you d id n 't know , com e on in. If you fo rg o t, co m e on back. • Xevious • Jungle King • Q Dert • Pope ye • Liberator • Millipede • Joust (2) • Gologo (0) • Ms. Poc Mon • Poc Mon Plus e Doby Poc Mon (2) • Centipede • Moon Patrol • Time Pilot (2) • G ravitar • Storgote • Tron Tempest • Turbo PINDALL Defender • Scorpion Speok Easy • Medusa (4) Foosboll • (5) Pool Tobies jOOllI 2015 E. R IV ERSID E MARCH 19-20, 1983 COLLECTORS, DEALERS HISTORIANS, LIBRARIES MUSEUMS J-M Productions Presents: “The First and Largest Show o f This Type Ever in Texas” Wheatley ... gay, wounded vet. DURHAM NIXON-CLAY COLLEGE IN1ENSIVE ENGLISH Enroll n o w fo r classes beginning March 28,1983 • TOEFL/University p rep aratio n • N in e month comprehensive course • Small dosses/conversational method • Authorized under federal law to enroll n on-im m igrant alien students (1-20) 8th an d C o lo ra d o /2 n d floor 4 7 8 -3 4 4 6 The University of Texas at Austin College of Fine Arts Department of Drama Jeremy Irons... America’s wimp-star joins international cinema. ‘Sunday’: born of a dream By STEPHEN BONIN and AMPARO GARCIA KASSENS "B om On A Sunday"; Department of Drama production; at 8 p.m . Wednesday and Thursday in the Win- ship Drama Theater, 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard. Bonin: The best thing about watch­ ing T.J. W alsh's new play, "B o m On A Sunday," is being totally engulfed in the action. I was enhanced with the over all effect, which was intriguing and spellbinding. Although no bio­ graphical note is given in the program, it bears little significance to the overall effect of the show. It's spectacular, orig­ inal, daring, and it works. Kassens: By biographical note, of course, you are probably concerned with the one character in the plav who is not fictional. August Strindberg, who in this drama becom es the antagonist to a certain extent, is considered a major influence in the development of mod­ ern drama. The contribution to note here would be his development of the "dream play" because what you found as intnguing and spectacular probably was the quality that this production borrows from Strindberg's own inven­ tive style. Bonin: That's true if what you mean is that the script is fast-paced and furi­ ous at times. It powerfully conveys the inner workings of a creative, restless mind with several conversations going on at once. Tension weaves through­ out, and I feel we become just as ob­ sessed with who they are and what they're doing, as they are with each other. Kassens: The play is set at the tum- of-the-century, prior to Strindberg's de­ velopment of the dream play. This is the period during which he actually struggled with insanity, and Walsh's play essentially picks up during that time. The story, however, centers around Horatio, a fictional aspiring psychoanalyst who goes to study at the Charcot Institute in Paris. By chance, he happens to meet Strindberg. Bonin: And he proceeds to make Stnndberg his fust patient. Horatio is captivated by the mesmerizing idealist, who verbalizes every thought and reveals his life storv in a short time. Empathizing with his feelings of being "special, unique and different," Hora­ tio decides to find out just who this guv is. So basically the play is about self- analysis and the danger of becoming too introspective. Kassens: Walsh succeeds in develop­ ing a balanced story with imaginative extensions in the form of "fu ries" — a chorus in the Greek tradition — and im­ agery, which is true to the dream play form. By using this technique to depict both Horatio and Strindberg's self-dis­ closure, the soaring theatricality, which includes chanting/dancing women, the scenes that seem like a stream of con­ sciousness at times makes the audience leaving the TV's at feel good about home. And that, essentially, is what live drama needs to have, a high level of sensationalism. Bonin: Sensational is the right word, a result both of clever theatrical tech­ niques and powerfully intense perfor­ mances. On the surface thev create sen­ sationalism, but the subliminal product is even more penetrating W hereby, we end up asking ourselves, "D o I ever fall into this trap of bombarding mv con ­ science with endless unanswerable questions?" Kassens: The collaboration between Walsh, director Howard Schaefer, de­ signer Kathie Brookfield, choreogra­ pher Ann Aiko Bergeron, and last but not least, sound designer Jim Fntzler provide an experience that is unified but appropnatelv diverse in inspiration, imagination and appeal Thursday Lyle Lovett Friday Darden Smith and the Ramblers THE AUSTIN CIVIC CHORUS AND MEMBERS O f THE AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA PRESENT J kJ) assum Atcorbtny to &t.4Hatthrai by J. S. B ach SOLOISTS C b n d u c ie d b y Gene Gatxaith March 19, 1983 8 :0 0 PM R A .C . Concert Hall IRA SCHANTZ WILLIAM RHODES DARLENE W ILEY ELIZABETH MANNION LEONARD JOHNSON HERBERT ECKHOFF A f [ A S 0 B A Tickets $ 6 , 6 , 7 , A 8 Information 4 7 1 - 1 4 4 4 Charge a Ticket 4 7 7 -6 0 6 0 Located in the Texas U nion, m ain lev el Partially funded by the Gty of Austin FLY AUSTIN’S OWN AIRLINE The Emerald/Pan Am Express to Houston Intercontinental Airport 4 flights Monday through Wednesday 5 flights Thursday and Friday Convenient Weekend Schedules *30w V oneway YOUTH FARE * AVAILABLE TO PERSONS 12 yrs. to 21 yrs. of age valid I.D. with picture proving age will be required at time of purchase and time of travel________________ _ SOUTHWEST BOOK, PHOTOGRAPHIC AND PAPER COLLECTIBLES SHOW -= Austin, Texas ^ Saturday, March 19, 1983, 9 A.M. - 6 P.M. Sunday, March 20, 1983 10 A.M. - 5 P.M. G en eral A d m issio n : $ 2 .0 0 -O V ER 100 QUALITY TA BLES- Villa Capri Hotel - Entertainment & Convention Center 2400 Interregional Hwy Exit 235-B. “L B J Library Exit” on 13 5 BOOKS: A ll subjects, new, used, rare & collectibles PHOTOGRAPHIC: New & antique cameras, 19th and 20th century photographs; daguerreotypes, ambrotypes, tintypes, stereoviews, cartes de visite, cabinet cards, etc. PAPER: Historical documents, letters, autographs, diaries, maps, stocks & bonds, postcards, currency, stamps, trade cards, posters, political material, advertising & ephemera. ..D— , - T. A" ” ‘* 1-35 f l u i 1 1 * Í 1 V lfc < .p n y £ f — 2 |----------1 h «l LBJ Library r . -4 SPECIAL EXHIBITS ON PUBLIC DISPLAY FOR THE FIRST TIME ► Rare &. inscribed books from the Ray S. Walton C ol­ lection (David Crockett, Sam Houston, etc.) ► 19th Century Texas photographs & original Civil War photographs from the Lawrence T. Jones Collection. I J-M PRODUCTIONS, P.O. BOX 5249, AUSTIN, TEX A S 78763 - (512) 926-5876 or 474-2097 BORN ON A SUNDAY Riveting new p s y cho log ic al dram a ! 8 pm, March 7-10 Theater Room, 23rd and San Jacinto Public $4, Students/Senior Citizens $3 Tickets at PAC, Erwin Center, Texas Union and UTTM outlets: N orthcross Ice Rink, Paramount Theatre and Sears. Charge-a-Ticket, 477-6060. Inform ation, 471-1444. ' S j f r The Emerald/Pan Am Express flys you nonstop to Houston and then on to San Francisco, Las Vegas, Miami, New York, Los Angeles, or Washington D.C. $198 round trip One-ticket, one baggage check-in, one airline Also convenient daily flights to the beautiful Rio Grande Valley. EM ERH UJ MM14M EXPRESS For reservations: Austin 476-7511 Elsewhere: 1-800-392-6735 •Travel must be completed by April 1. 1983, seats may be limited on some flights. Seven day minimum stay, fourteen day maximum stay. Seven day advance purchase required. TEXAS SHOWDOWH GUADALUPE n m w j m dock o*27t S* M-SAT11-2 SUN 12-2 Happy Hour 2-7 Everyday NEVER A COVER COLDEST BEER IN TEXAS * LITTLE KINGS NIGHT * WEDNESDAY MARCH 9 7 CLOSING Free T-Shirts 2 for a Buck Featuring SH INER BOCK BUD. M ICHELOB on TAP & selected Imported Bottled Beer [iMelungsl BUY, SILL, RENT, TRADE.. W ANT A D S . .. 471-5244 "BEST PLAY IN TOWN"fl * • « i M d M r Dotty H o w s ALL THE NEWS THAT'S FIT TO WEAR! K ft's new s this sp n n g in fashion (m en's or t's) you'll re a d ab o u t rt in the Tex fecBprtf f l le d n r s d a y . M ari Owning TONY AWARD BEST COMEDY b y LANFORD W ILSON Directed by MARCH 9-APRIL 2 • 8pm * $■ • w*®-' 'S-* La© lu m t o as Tattutoh B o n k h a o d "G O D B L E S S Y O U D A H L IN G S " An H ovr wHh fHm o*/t%poke*> d iv a ot fto ^ a an d x ra a n I p m .J A A J K H 13,14,15 • L3 11 p.m. M A R C H 18.19 25,24 • 53 -RESERVATION S- 472-2966 CAPITOL CITY PLAYHO USE 214 West Fourth Street < < < < < / X TONITt V l ( OVERT* 10 THE ARGYLES & WHOA TRIGGER DOORS OPEN AT 8 00 SHOW, STARTS A! A30 COVER ONLY S2 00 TOMORR >U THE JiT T E R S FRI MAX & THE MAKE-UPS SAT THE LIFT SUNDAY CATHO LIC G IR L S > > > > Dx 110 E.4th /V X\ i> 72 -.4345 X /» ■VAC S IT V I 2 4 0 2 G L A O A L w P E 4'A-43S1 iupstairs JER EM Y IR O N S m FULL M E N U S A L A D D IN N E R S S U B S HOT H O M E M A D E S P E C IA L T Y S A N D W IC H E S BEER WINE GAMES NEW YORK PIZZA 608 W est 24th Street 4 7 2 - 9 6 3 3 BU YA SLICE AN Ready When You Are We use the best ingredients. Prepared fresh daily. Toppings available 30c Additional. EVERY DAY IS SPECIAL AT M IKE & SAL’S Wednesday - Super Special Large 16” Cheese Pizza *5.50 *1.00 each additional topping MON-SAT 1 lam-2am (1:15 last call for food preparation) S U N 12pm-l 2am ( 1 1 : 1 5 last call for food preparation) Texas' nationally known mu­ sic store featuring Central Texas' premier selection of new & used guitars, amps, and accessories in all price ranges. 3004 Guadalupe 478-0095 Between the palm trees and ro und the back. ¿VTYC T H E A T R E S - TIMES SHOWN FOR TODA Y ONL Y f mm T W I L IT t P R IC E S MON SAT IU N D A Y AND H O LID A Y S LIM ITED TO SEA T IN G ALL S H O W S B E F O R E 6:00 PM lit SH O W ONLY ém P a a a \ H ] ■ | I n o r t h c r o s s 6 A C i C I 1 7 NO RTM C RO SS MALL 1 4 7 AN D ERSO N A BU R N ET „ IH) Q (2:15-5:30/52.00) 7:45-9:45 THE ENTITY Lj 12:00-5:00/52.001-7:30-9:45 THE TOY Qj (1:30-5:00/52.001-7:15-9:30 e g g t r ia l E. T. (1:45-5:15/52.001 7:30-9:45 48 HRS. (2:00-5.30/52.001-7:30-9:30 THE STING II ¡P G ¡ (2:15-5:00/52.001-7:15-9 15 [R| 1 r i V i i / ^ ; u » K * K < ^ - 3222 - - - - “ - i l l 48 HRS. (5:30/52.001-7:45-9:45 |||] E.T. (5:00/52.001-7:15-9:30 ¡p (jj I S ntEASuai or t m roue c r o w n s T H E LORDS OF DISCIPLINE 1 § (5:15/52.001-7:30-9:30 R (5:30/52.001-7:45-9:45 | | i F i ^ K 453'6641 2200m*ncoc,<° R 1 1 ¿ l .i ¡P G I 6 Academy Award Nominations -I W E E K ONLY!- A A C W W W ! (5:30/52.501-4:30 1 ! * W 442 2333 1423 W B EN W H IT E $ 4 0 0 a l l MOVIES $ 4 0 0 1 E X C L U D IN G M ID N IG H T S H O W S ■ BEST FRIENDS 7:00-9:15 [ffGl K IS S M E G O O D B Y E ffQ 7:15-9:30 1 ■ I I I I I I 1 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... WANT ADS...471 -5244 The Daily Texan/Wednesday, March 9,196&Pap» 13 TONIGHT - M O O T W M tl BAND THUR - A im BOO FRI LBK>Y PAJtNBJ. BAND | I I *Back Room *015 E. RIVERSIDE Ml ft£8£L Drive-In 6902 Burleson Road Radio Sound System 385-7217 Privacy of Your Auto XXX Original Uncut Every M a n ’s F an tasy O P E N S 7 : 0 0 S T A R T S D U S K AUSTIN 6 521 THOMPSON OFF 183 1 Ml. S. OF MONTOPOUS PHONE: 385-5328 24 HOUR ADULT THEATRE COMPLEX V ID E O TAPE REN TA LS ft SA L E S LA R G EST SELE C T IO N - LO W EST P R IC E S S EE UP TO 6 M O V IES O N S E P A R A T E S C R E E N S FO R THE PRICE OF ONE D A U G H T E R D O M IN A TRIX HARD WORKER PIZZA GIRLS ALL M A LE CAST D ISCO UN T M ILIT ARY • STUDENT • SE N IO R S • COUPLES S W E D I S H E R O T I C A * A ra C fM t A w ard Moa^ n a ilo n * in c lu d in g Bent P ic tu r e 10 Academy A w ard N o m in a tio n * in c lu d in g B e st P ic t u r e theVerdict 2 :4 5-5:15-7:45-10:15 p u s n i M H o r m i A N T o o ts ie 2:30-5 :0 0 -7 :30 -1 0:0 0 ® A n oth er World, A nother Time. the Age of W ond er 4 A r U r a » A w ard ^o a 1 n a t io n * J f in c lu d in g B e s t Picture 4 L.« 9w Jx JACK LEMMON / ■ k 1 W . f l l f l U / X / c U K | L ^ ! JSTnu ymmr R p c SISSY SPACEK m is s in g 2:1 5-4:4 5 ^ 6 :0 0 - 8 :0 0 [WWTcl 1:0 0-3 :1 0 -5 :2 0 -7 :3 0 -9 :4 0 1:0 0 - 3 :20 - 5:40 - 8:0 0- 10 :1C Ja ck ie ________ Gleason ¿ f r lN G Barbara Hershey 12:45- 3 :0 0-5 :1 5 - 7 :3 0-9 :4 5 A c » 4 r a y A w a rd N o a ia c c Mervl Streep SOPHIE'S CHOICE 1:00-4:00- 7 :0 0-1 0:0 0 DUDLEY MOORE EUZADETH McG o v e r n L O /ESIC K 6 :00 8 :0 0 - 10:00 RIVERSIDE 1930 R IV E R S ID E • 441-5689 5:25 7 :3 0 - 9 :4 5 DISCOUNT MATINEES MON -FRI FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6PM CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS Pag® 14/The Daily Texan/Wednesday, March 9,1983 901 W . 24 476-2673 co n d o s Linda In g ra m 's C a m p u s A r e a 605 B eiivie w No v A p o 'O i 9 9 1 sq " siuciK 1 b e d 'o o m 1 ’ . r.qt-' $v < so o P e o o r ! ’e e -o o . ■, 2107 R.o G 'q n a e # 13 1 1 plus o f $49 9 00 'J 'q n g e t 'e e #62 EM $69 600 Park Place C o n d o s #205 2 1 $71 000 G re e nw oo d Towe's #205 1 1 $51 600 C e n t r a l A u s t in GAK K N O i. #21 6 . ’ $62 900 VILLAS o n t o w n l a h e # 2 1 1 it # 2 1 2 The TREEHOUSE condominiums 2612 San Pedro Models Open 10-6 Daily 1 A 2 Bedrooms • $69,950-$117,950 ONLY 6 Blocks from Campus Private garage w opener ; □ Panoramic view of Shoal Creek j Split level hot tub □ Fireplace -/□ Microwave Condominiums with the luxury you're accustomed to. G 1500 WEST LYNN Corner of West Lynn Enfield Model Open 10-6 Daily * Shuttle Bus Stop * 2 Car Garage w /O pener ♦ 2 Bedrooms w/Study Luxury at only $135,000 ONLY 3 UNITS LEFT Ready for Occupancy Below Market Financing TTC Q W l f S MODEL OPEN DAILY 10-6 MLK & Rio Grande 1 0 % F i n a n c i n g 1st year 1,2, & 3 Bedroom s from the 70 s to the 120 s ★ Spiral Staircases * ★ Security v ★ Washer/Dryer ★ 2 Car Garages © THE 'VERLOOK M O D E L OPEN DAILY 10-6 v One Bedrooms & One Bedrooms with Lofts Priced in 60's & 70s O N L Y 2 U N IT S LEFT! i f p o o i & Hpt Tub §| p c| to y System — M i n i Blinds ¡ -L Washer/Dryer , Eighteen elegant condominium homes located on a wooded bluff within walking ’ distance of the University of Texas. LIMITED OFFER - 5 % * L o w e s t A u s t in R a te Í . , 9 N O R T H L O O P / / A - I 1 - N DOG • S w im m in g Pool • Clubhouse • Tennis Courts • Sports Courts b Covered P a rkin g V f~ M IR k M H i M f) () VI 1 N ^ M O D E L S O P E N 10-6 D A IL Y (512)451-2191 • Fire p lace s • M icro w a ve • C a b le TV • S t a c k in g W a s h e r A D ry e r • R e frig e ra to rs Included M d á (512)476-2673 ; , í ;f!Vh f o r I» t y e a r , . W f o r 2 n d y e a r , V. f o r 3 r d y e a r t h e n t o F N M A ra te . 901 W . 2 4 t h S t A u s t in , T X 78706 CLASS1FIKD AC 'I® SIN O Consecutiva Day RatM 15 word imninwm Each word 1 tim a ...........................$ .22 Eoch word 3 t im w ......................... $ 4 8 Each word 5 tim o » .........................$ * /t Eoch word 10 tim w ......................... $ .97 1 col. x 1 inch 1 lim o .........................$6.46 1 col. x 1 inch 2-9 lim o s ....................$6.23 1 col. x 1 inch 10 or moro limos $5.90 $1.00 chargo lo chongo copy. First two words may bo all capital lollon. 25c for ooch addi­ tional word in capital lotion. Mostorcord and Visa occeptad 20% DISCOUNT on all dossihod odvoriising placad in ponon and prepaid (cash or chock only — no credit cards). TSP Budding, Room 3.200 2500 Whdis Monday through Friday 8 o.m -4 30 p.m. DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d a y T axan . . . . Erkfay 11 a.m. Tuasd ay Taxan . . .M o n day 11 o.m. W ad n asday T axan .Tuosd oy 11 a.m. Th ursd ay Taxan W adnasday 11 a.m. Frid ay T axan . . . Thursday 11 o.m. In tha avant of e rrors m oda In an a d ­ vertisem ent, Imm ediate notice m ust be giv e n a s the publishers are re­ sp o n sib le for o n ly O N I incorrect insertion. A ll claim s for odfustmonts sh ou ld be m ade not later than 38 d a y s offer publication. A dvertising prepaym ent n on-refundaM e. FOR SALE Autos for Sole_____ L & M V O L K S W E R K S . N e w a n d u sed V W parts. Rebuilt e n gin e s $ 6 9 9 installed, e x c h a n g e W e buy V W s, a n y condition. 2 5 1 - 2 2 6 5 1 9 7 9 B U IC K L e S a b re 4 d r, $ 5 0 0 2 8 2 - 0 6 1 4 automatic, A C 1 97 9 D O D G E pick-up. 6 cyl., short bed, $ 3 ,2 0 0 o r best offer. C all after 4 30, 2 5 5 - 197 4 A U T O M O T IV E R E P A IR S M in o r repairs a n d tune-ups d o n e at yo u r h om e $15 plus parts (if necessary) for tune-ups R ep airs nego tiab le UT student C all Rafael 4 4 5 - 0 3 5 3 C H R Y S L E R A IR condition er - real b o n e chiller 1 2 0 0 B T U w in d o w unit C all C h arlie at 4 7 8 - 6 7 7 6 $ 1 2 5 negotiable. ossette, C B ro d io $ 8 7 5 4 5 8 - 5 5 3 7 ___________ 197 4 C A P R I G o o d condition, e n gin e strong 1 9 7 4 To yota Célica, g o o d overall condition M u st sell both so o n 4 6 7 -9 9 1 1 nights, w e e k ­ ends 7 8 P L Y M O U T H Volare, AT, A/C, $ 2 7 0 0 . 4 7 7 - 6 5 3 4 , 1 2 -3 p m ________________________________ 1 9 7 5 D A T S U N 6 1 0 w a g o n A M / F M , $ 1 2 0 0 4 7 9 - 0 4 4 7 (nights), Judy 1 9 8 0 H O N D A Civic hatchback, 4-speed, ster­ low m ileage car. e o cassette very clean, $ 3 6 5 0 4 7 7 - 4 5 6 4 Tue-Fn_____________ 7 6 V E G A station w a g o n . Excellent condition, automatic, A C C all after 6pm , M -W -F , o r all d a y w eekends, 4 7 7 - 5 2 2 4 7 3 C A P R I Runs g o o d , 2 3 m pg, le a d e d gas, n ew tires & battery $ 7 0 0 2 5 8 - 0 3 9 6 1 9 8 0 C H EV ETT E. Excellent condition, 4-do or, 4-cyl., a ir - c o n d , autom atic transmission, red, n ew battery 3 6 , 0 0 0 miles. 4 8 0 - 0 2 9 4 . 1981 V W Rabbit Diesel. Air, A M , 4-speed, five yea r w arra nty plan Excellent condition. "Y o - g in ” 8 9 2 - 3 8 5 1 after 6 : 0 0 p.m 7 7 R E G A L Buick T-top, cruise control, re placed engine, A M / F M cassette deck, very nice C all Eddie, 4 7 6 - 1 7 7 2 o r leave m essage 2 6 6 - 1 7 6 0 Best offer S T A T IO N W A G O N D o d g e A spen, 1976, e x ­ cellent buy at $ 1 9 0 0 . 4 5 3 -4115. F O R D F A L C O N station w a g o n 6-cylinder, A C , m ech anically A -l, |ust inspected $ 6 0 0 After 5 p.m 8 3 7 - 4 7 2 7 _______________________ W A N T E D F O R parts 6-cylin der Dart a ro u n d 71 m odel (preferably Dem on). 2 5 0 - 0 1 5 8 M E C H A N I C P A R T S best bro k e n or w recked fo reign vehicle. $125, will buy. 2 5 0 - 0 1 5 8 B ART ER O R bucks. 1 9 7 0 D atsun sta/ w agon runs great C h e v y 3 4 ton step-van, 2 utility trailers W e n e e d sc hoo l b us-66, m otorcycle (m id-range c.c.), tent C all Lynn 4 7 7 - 8 5 9 0 1 9 7 5 G R A N A D A 2 dr auto G o o d condition M ust sell $ 1 2 0 0 After 5, 4 4 8 - 1 6 6 6 7 8 V W D a s h e r C B radio, AT, A C , needs little repo.r $ 2 , 5 0 0 Info, 4 7 9 - 0 7 7 3 ______________ 1 9 8 0 H O N D A C iv ic hatchback, 4-speed, A M / F M radio cassette Excellent condition, low mileage, $ 4 5 0 0 4 5 4 - 8 9 3 8 B E A U T IF U L M G M idget, blue convertible, $ 8 0 0 b e lo w b o o k value, $ 2 4 0 0 firm 441 - 9121 7 5 D A T S U N 2 8 0 Z . Excellent condition re a ­ so n a b ly priced 7 5 V e g a , re a so n a b le Runs well 2 6 3 - 5 4 7 9 , 3 2 7 -1 8 6 1 after 6 p.m. 7 6 T O Y O T A C élica G T C le a n a n d in great running condition 1 6 3 0 Even ings 4 5 2 _______________________________________ $ 2 7 5 0 CH EV ETT E, 197 6, gre a t condition, econom ical, b e low blue b o o k value $ 1 ,4 5 0 4 4 4 - 4 9 5 7 CONDOS FOR SALE SELL YO U R CAR A N D W ALK TO SC H O O L 1BR, 1BA c o n d o m in iu m within short distance to the university N e w cabinetry a n d floor tile Lovely h a r d w o o d floors in living a re a Fire­ place, c o v e re d parkin g, com m unity p o o l and w hirlpool. T o m m y D a v is at 3 2 7 * 8 4 7 2 , 8 3 5 - 2611 o r 4 5 3 - 6 6 6 6 NPC MULTI-HOUSING W A L K T O c am p u s o n e a n d two BR condos, price includes furniture, $ 5 3 , 5 0 0 - $ 7 6 , 5 0 0 Pool, lacuzzi, parking, security system, e xc e l­ lent investment N e w F H A finan cing ava ilable C res Realtors, 5 1 2 - 3 4 6 2193. CONDOS FOR SALE An exclusive condominium community On a p rivate r esid e n tia l street, close to th e U n iv ersity , shopping and e n te rta in m e n t, T he P artrid ge condom iniu m s provides busy stu d en ts a q u iet place for rela x a tio n or study. In th is e x c lu siv e com m unity o f e ig h t one- and two-bedroom h om es, y o u ’ll find privacy forem ost — no side w alls connect you to your neighbors, and in d ivid u al patios or b alcon ies a llo w for sp ecial gath erin gs. Units start at $69,900 ($480/mo. — 5% d ow n V m ARM) Every aspect of T he P a rtrid g e is designed for luxury and comfort Distinctive exteriors of • latticework • a triu m doors • bay w indow s • wood decking and Jacuzzi • m eticulous la n dsca p in g with sp rin k le r system s. Sp ac io u s interiors accented by • ceiling fans • m in ib lin d s a w o o d b u m in g fireplaces e m icrow aves e w a sh e rs a nd drye rs e decorator p ackages for a personal touch. D iscove r the easy lifestyle of Th e P artrid ge ... the ultim ate in lu x u ry a nd seclusion in a choice A u st in location. MODEL OPEN DAILY Weekdays 1-6 Weekends 10-6 A l l d im e n s io n s a re a p p r o x im a te . C o m p e tit iv e f in a n c in g a v a ila b le . Go ea st 1 block on 30th from G uadalupe & turn left on Fruth or call 477-6713 or 472-6805. Motorcycles for Sale Musical for Sal• Miscellaneous for Sale Y A M A H A U PRIGHT piano, eight years of transferable guarantee. $2 80 0. 4 4 3-34 47 . Q U E E N SIZE mattress and box springs. Brand now. $1 50 346-6173.______________________ $69,950 EDGECLIFF Dynonwta condominium ad in the trees! IRA, fireplace, lob of light. Decorated to the tee. Huge covered porch. For m o r* informo lion, c o l Cherie Copus at 835-2611 or 45 8- 2733. NPC MULTI-HOUSING 4 BLOCKS TOUT 2 badroonw, lVj bafhs, 2 years old in a 13 unit complex, pool and jacuzzi, 2 car garage, door opener, skylight in study, m any additional fea­ tures. 510 W. 18th. $139,900. CaH John Longs worth, 453-6811, 45 4 -2 2 5 3 . Nelson Puett & Associates. TREEHOUSE NORTHWEST AUSTIN Easy ac ce ss to M o p o c . Dynam ite c o n d o m in i­ um nestled up in the trees. 1BR, 1BA, fireplace C om m unity p o o l a n d io c u z z i. Fo r m ore infor­ m ation call C he rie C o p u s at 8 3 5 -2 6 1 1 o r 4 5 8 - 2 7 3 3 NPC MULTI-HOUSING E L E G A N T T O W N H O U S E M a rb le fo yer raised pane! study Upstairs sitting ro o m with wet bar, p nva te courtyard, g a r a g e $ 1 9 5 , 0 0 0 5 1 0 W . 3 3rd , 3 4 5 - 0 5 7 4 . _____________________ 2-1 A U S T IN c o n d o n e a r shuttle R efrigerator dishw asher, pool, g o o d tax write-off. O w n e r 2 1 4 -2 3 1 -3 5 1 7 , 2 1 4 - 6 9 0 - 3 5 6 9 _______________ 2 9 1 3 P E A R L St., 2BR, 2 BA, SL A , FP, W /D , re fngerator, m icrow ave, vac an t $ 8 8 , 5 0 0 G e n e Spence, ow ner/ogent, 451-5141. Motorcycles for Sale M U S T SELL, Suzuki G S 7 5 0 L , fo inng, A M / F M stereo, L-rack, backrest, a n d m ore C oll 8 3 7 2 3 1 6 after 7 p.m 1 9 7 8 H O N D A H a w k 4 0 0 , 7 0 0 0 miles, de p end able, g o o d pickup Best offer C oll Robm 4 7 6 - 5 9 1 8 __________________________ 1981 H O N D A C M 4 0 0 T , 4 2 0 0 miles. Like new extras. $11 00 firm D a y 4 7 1 - 5 9 5 5 , night 4 5 3 2 0 3 9 , Bill.____________________________ 1 9 7 9 K A W A S A K I K Z 4 0 0 G o o d condition Price nego tiab le C oll 4 5 4 - 1 8 9 6 M O R E T H A N 1 9 8 0 H o n d o a m oped! Passport G o o d condition, runs fine but needs a battery $ 3 5 0 o r best offer C all 4 4 5 - 5 3 2 1 A sk fo r L e o n ard 197 8 K A W A S A K I 4 0 0 , excellent condition tw o helmets, $ 8 0 0 Coll G len, 4 7 4 - 1 5 7 6 7 5 0 H O N D A Fairing, A M / F M cassette oil cooler, plus other accessories. $ 1 5 9 5 Adult ow n e r Excellent condition, excellent buy 2 8 2 - 3 4 4 9 1981 Y A M A H A X S 6 5 0 Spe cial 1 4 ,0 0 0 miles, asking $ 2 0 0 0 Jom es 3 8 5 -2 1 1 6 1978 H O N D A 5 5 0 , 1 0 ,0 0 0 miles, n e w seat and tires. Excellent c ondition $ 1 0 9 5 4 4 7 - 7 0 8 8 o r 4 5 3 - 6 1 7 4 .___________________________ H O N D A E X P R E SS -SR . M u st sell O n ly used tw o months. $ 3 0 0 or best offer. After 5 p.m 8 3 5 - 6 2 4 6 ___________________________________ 1 9 7 7 Y A M A H A R D 4 0 0 O n e ow ner, 1 0 ,0 0 0 miles. C lassic 2-stroke street bike Bell helmet 4 7 2 - 5 9 7 7 . ___________________________________ 1 9 8 2 H O N D A U rb a n Exp re ss M o p e d . Ternfic c ondition U n d e r 6 0 0 miles $ 4 5 0 C all 4 7 4 - 5 2 7 0 after 5 p.m. A sk for M a ria . 1 9 7 5 H O N D A C B 3 6 0 T W o n d e rfu l b e g in n e r's bike. W e ll m aintained 2 4 , 5 0 0 miles $ 5 0 0 C oll A a r o n 8 3 7 - 3 0 7 8 __________ H O N D A C B 2 0 0 T Runs g o o d , gre a t c am p us bike, 6 , 0 0 0 miles 4 5 8 '6 3 5 betw een 11am- lp m $ 4 0 0 firm Lynn H O N D A G O L D W 1 N G , 1 9 7 7 g o o d condition Accessories, including unique S u p e rw e d g e fo in n g A sk in g $ 1 9 0 0 4 5 4 2 0 0 3 BACH, STRAD., silver for sole. Very go o d con­ dition, access, included. $ 4 9 5 Call Cindy, 4 4 8 - 3 5 3 7 evenings. SYNTHESIZER, SYN TH I A K S portable/studio e with extra keyboord. Excellent condition f t 1 7 0 0 .4 5 4 -2 0 0 3 . Homes for Sale SH U T T L E A R E A . 2BR, 1 B A excellent first h o m e o r rental p ro p e rty Sibyl Leslie, 451-5141, ( 4 7 6 - 5 6 9 8 ) G e n e S p e n ce floors, H E M P H IL L PA R K , charm in g 4BR, S ' i B A hom e, fan. w o o d $ 1 8 0 , 0 0 0 451-5141 ( 4 7 7 - 8 2 7 8 ) G e n e Spe nce front porc h w /ceiling Keuykendoll, K a re n Tickets for Sola_____ PAT B E N A T A R ER IC C L A P T O N - J U D A S PR IEST tickets Fair pnces, g o o d seats 4 4 7 - 752 1, kee p trying Y A M A H A M O T O R scoo ter C A 5 0 1 m o old, 2 9 5 miles Paid $ 8 0 0 , sacrifice at $ 5 0 0 8 3 6 - 3 0 5 3 , 4 7 5 - 3 5 3 7 , Ben_______________ M I C K E Y G ILLEY , H A L L A N D O A T E S Excellent floor seats C oll anytim e d a y o r night Bill 4 6 7 - 8 4 7 8 _________________________________________ 71 H O N D A C L 3 5 0 , excellent condition $ 5 0 0 or best offer 4 5 1 - 8 5 5 3 after 5 p m 1 9 7 5 Y A M A H A 4 0 0 Enduro. 1 2 ,0 0 0 miles ex cellent condition $ 8 0 0 o b o 4 5 2 - 8 4 9 1 Bicycles for Sale TEXAS CYCLE Werke Bicycle salvage Spec oi girls old cruisers and 3 spds. $ 3 0 -3 9 1-5 7 days 1104 E 1st BICYCLES BIC YC LES1 Ac types reconditioned used bicycles $ 5 0 $120 Student discounts on new Visto, Bridgestone M o n go o se bicycles Expert repair service South Austin Bicycles 2 2 1 0 South 1st 444 0 8 0 5 M E N S 12-speed Panasonic bike n new condi tion $100 CaH Stephanie days 474 5 0 5 ' nights 4 6 7 9 2 7 3 S te re o s fo r S a le H A L L & O A T E S tickets, grea t floor seats C a ll A d a m o r Jam es at 4 7 7 - 6 5 2 8 , call anytim e Miscellaneous for Sate F IN E S T S O U T H W E S T E R N Indian tewelry plus excellent selection gifts & cards N e lso n 's Gifts 4 5 0 2 S C on gre ss, 4 4 4 - 3 8 1 4 IN S T A N T C A S H p a id for used b o o k s a n d r e ­ co rd s (thousands of used b o o k s in stock) Stop m a n d see for yourself C o - o p N o rth Discount Store 4101 G u o d a lu p e 4 5 3 -3 0 3 1 IB M M O D E L C typew riter Pica type, nylon rib b o n Excellent condition $ 1 2 5 firm 2 5 8 5 5 5 3 _________________________________________ F O R S A L E W a t e rb e d $ 1 3 0 For m ore infor­ m ation call 4 7 4 - 2 2 6 0 P O R T A B L E D IS H W A S H E R for sale Se a rs K en m ore Tw o ye a rs o ld $ 1 5 0 C oll 4 5 2 - 5 2 5 7 e a v e m e ssa ge J E N SE N 6x9 Triaxial car speakets Brand new never opened 5 0 watts $ 6 0 4 7 4 4 '5 6 after 7 0 0 p.m 7 FT 110 H P I/ O trailer, cover, skis, ac ce sso p s G o o d condition V e ry d e a n $ 2 5 0 0 4 5 2 - 5 2 5 7 leove m e ssa g e J E N SE N R 4 2 0 cassette car stereo Dolby 20 watts switchabie bi-amp but!? n Excellent con dition $ 2 2 5 47 8 87 5 2 LIKE N E W i Technics SA 2 2 2 3 0 watt rece ver Handles 2 tape decks 14 channe; memory $175 3 2 7 -9 6 0 7 ___________ e l e c t r o s t a t i c 500 watt amp needs repair $150 or best offer Call Mickey at 4 4 3 -3 5 3 2 EQU ALIZER preamp Soundcra*fsmar PE71 se • used but works wei $ 5 5 0 new w $ 2 0 0 Call Mickey at 4 4 3 3 5 3 2 M U ST SELL Toshiba stereo 3 n : compon» • • $150 Call Theresa after 9 0 0 p m 44 2 82 ’8 M u s ic a l for S a le FEN DER 75 amp ifier M e s B ; e style E • speaker Will product bom •'ender and M r shall sounds St* for st $ 9 6 5 i 4 . 8 8 5 9 _ s ' SHEET M U SIC ano so Center 611 W 29th 4 ' ' 50 0 « ; books Aiphn Mus M E X I C A N D R E S S E S H a n d m o d e W orth $ 4 0 to $ 6 0 I sell for $ 2 2 M a n y colo rs 4 7 4 9 8 4 6 W A S H E R D R Y E R electnc. beige. 5 yeors old $ 2 5 0 2 5 8 - 0 3 9 6 S E A R S O - P E D IC Sup rem e twin bed alm ost new $ 1 0 0 4 5 8 - 2 7 3 7 Lisa B IR K E N S T O C K S A N D A L S size 3 8 (about 7 !i? o r 8 iad.es) L.ke n e w $ 2 5 Coll 4 5 9 0 2 2 4 r H U B B Y ? L O S E w eight quickly a n d e a si!y C m b n d g e D/2 Block UT Shuttle * Laundry Facilities 108 W. 45th Street 452-1419, 453-2771 ALL BILLS PAID EFFICIENCY $280 In H y d e Park, close to c am p us & shuttle °oo l fully carpeted, d ra p e d a n d beautifully pan eled All built-in kitchen, C A / C H 4 5 ! 6 9 6 6 4 2 0 6 A v e n u e A 4 0 0 0 A v e n u e A, 4 5 8 -4 5 1 1 C E N T R A L P R O P E R T IE S I N C 4 5 1 - 6 5 3 3 ONE BEDROOM $325 La rg e studio apartm ent pnva te b a lc o n y : : bam . so m e c o ve re d parking, g a s cook ing , w a ter a n d g a s p a id 701 W N o rth L o o p 4 5 5 5 5 7 9 Central Properties Inc 451 6 5 3 3 1 BEDROOM $270 C lo se to c am pus a n d shuttte p o o l tulty p a r eled. carpeted a n d d ra p e d A i ; built-in kitch en, C A / C H w ater o n d g a s p o id 4 2 0 0 A v e n u e A. 4 5 1 - 6 9 6 6 C E N T R A L P R O P E R T IE S iN C 4 5 1 - 6 5 3 3 ALL BILLS PAID Efficiency, 1BR, small 2BR $ 2 4 0 - $390. CA/CH, walk or shuttle to UT. 2212 San Gabriel ONE BEDROOM $245 V e ry close to c om pus a n d shuttie smo¡ qute* com plex, lotge b e d ro o m wrth queen*;*© beO a n d w alk in closet Bu.H m krtchen C A / C H w ater potd 2 0 2 E 3 2 n d St 4 ’ 4 4 5 '8 C E N T R A L P R O P E R T IE S IN C 451 6 5 3 3 M A R K T W A I N W a lk to c am p us Sm oli attroc trvefy d e sign e d c om p lex 1BR 1BA, $ 3 2 5 / m o plus E L aund ry facilities 4 5 1 -8 1 2 2 W e stw o rid Real Estate W A L K T O c a m p u s Furnished o r unfurnished L arge efficiency 2 B R 2 B A efficiency Shuttle a n d city bus. 4 7 2 - 2 1 4 7 F U R N IS H E D 1BR, 45th a n d D uva l Sp a n ish O a lu Apo rtm ents C A, CH, g a s a n d w ote- p aid O n shuttle a n d city bus $ 3 0 5 4 6 7 - 0 6 9 8 _________________________________________ 3 0 2 W 38th Select efficiency apartm ents still ava ilable oil a p p lian c e s o n e block from shut­ tle, from $ 2 4 5 plus electncity 4 5 3 - 4 0 0 2 R E D U C E D R A T E 1BR n o w through sum m er o p ho no W o rm e r w eather c o m in g -w alk in g d is­ tance to UT la n d scap e a w n polm trees sun deck on d p o o l 4 7 6 - 0 3 9 1 C H A P A R R A L A P A R T M E N T S 2 4 0 8 Leon n o w leasing Efficiency $ 2 4 5 A B P TBR $ 3 2 5 A B P S ig n lease n o w o n d get I off rent for su m m e r m onths C oll 4 7 6 8 91 5 L A R G E F U R N IS H E D etfioency $ 2 2 5 IF shu* tie M o v e S p rin g Break M a rc h rent tree 4 5 3 i g 6 2 2 9 9 2 6 - 1 0 7 7 n s ________ h t W E S T A U S T IN unexpected v a c a n c y L a rge clean effic enc es new carpet a n d pom s G a s water p a id $ 2 8 0 • E N o pets Se e m a n a g e # 2 0 4 '115 W 10H-, or c at 4 7 7 346 1 TRi T O W E R S A partm ent G irls sublet $ 4 0 Secur tv sw m tota Hirough M a y i$ 12 5 m o m ing p o o 1 4 7 5 6 7 6 3 8 3 6 4 4 8 4 F O R R E N T 'B R $ 2 8 5 pet m o '0 mmute w oO from U rn on C a 1 v c h o e after 5 p - 4 7 6 5 4 6 5 _ __ _____________ - E F U R N IS H E D $ 2 3 0 month- 3 4 5 5 4 4 2 O E N i C ' - 0 7 S o n G o t m e E C o Bruh B l o d Realtors ______________________ FREE L O C A T I N G Service H gbitat Huntet C o n d o s A p a rt m e -ri H o u se s D u p e x e s A A re o s - Ai! P nc es C o 4 T4 ’ 5 3 2 B R O W N L E E 2 5 0 2 N u e ce s Efficiency $ 2 2 5 A B P W cnx to c am p us 4 7 8 - 1 5 3 2 G IV E M E a c a M o r y 4 7 6 " 6 3 9 a abo ut a greet p k x e for u j - n e f m eat o h of o e o p ie H ove .ots o f rim tell yo L A R G E F U R N IS H E D BR apartm ent ov - iob r for m m ediote OCCUPC-cy $ 2 Q: Diock from a w s c h a c C a! 4 ’ 6 7 9 5 ’ E O - , v . M E D I A TE O C C U P A N C Y - • ished a r u 'B R Pooh au n d ry shuttle, dtshw ,sh e' C A Í " A no the r V » o n d A p a rt— nnts 415 W 39tf N Pets 4 5 " 9 3 7 1 3 4 6 '2 3 3 R IO N U E C E S Apartm ent h r ren’ -m e d ia t e . C a 1 anv*-me D o n n y 4 7 4 - 5 5 9 4 B ra n d new txiicony o v e ' poo! N C E S r . U X a R v eH ’c e a re a Spe c a rates for leasing from A p r sted H o » » through A u gu st 3" A v c o b N Rro p e rte s 4 7 7 9 9 2 5 iportm enh n . O N SH U T T L E dry S L ’ S - D s 4 ’ ; } T7 4 fn .ytt System ’BR o v a oD 90 i T H E On-site Soles Office Now O pen 715 W. 221¿ Street 479-8906,473-2001 A tpenteliSiin d tei T>cvetapment F in d the apartm ent c o m m u n ity that is best suited to you with the Greater Austin Apartment Guide The A p artm e n t G u id e h as been used by th o u san d s in cities a c ro ss the co u n try and is now being pub­ lished for you, the A u stin apartm ent seeker. To receive yo u r FREE copy, call our offices at 512/454-0215 or send a self-addresse d stam ped envelope (w ith 70‘ postage) to H a a s P u b lish in g Co., 8220 R e se a rc h Blvd., No. 148-E, Austin, T e x a s 78758 ALSO AVAILABLE AT: 7-Eleven Convenience Stores, Military Bases, Motels, and Hotels, Major E m ­ ployers, Realtors, Banks, Moving Companies, Schools, Chambers of Com­ merce, and Airports. j j j j g f i g j g j j j l j g j l M g g jílW ilÉ D tftrilte m WW W IM W W B B EMPLOYMENT SERVIOS HELP WANTED A U M U S pa id $ 3 4 0 W . lo h r a n w x ^ ® |§ f| deck. N m t S t - I n t S o p la B U don Apta 444-12?». 3 -5 p *> , * * ? - ■ 2-1. (4 5 0 /m o 1-1 patos, pool wMt m • to tM lrM UT. Gar- NEAR IA R T O N Spring* pool and ZMtar t a i . 2-1, CA/CH, privacy, tanced, no d o g * M ud references. ( 4 2 5 / i ^ ^ « M É « M g t a t a 445-0310 UT EFFICIENCY O o m in « M i W . 2 M i and VA && $ 2 1 Q /m o n fh pk electricity. 4 8 0 - 0 6 0 0 ; a lto r 6 p m , 3 4 6 -O H O . M g t N a v t A f B . A R D O V M M T O V M M & U T N E A R D O V M M T O V M M & U T 1M-1BA with aerator, range, gas and wa­ ter suppled. 1616 W 6di. (2 7 5 /m o plus eiec tricky and dope sit. Coin operated loundry and 2 swimming pools. O n UT shuttle bus route. See Scott at Apt. #10 2 or col 4 76-2219 or col Debbie at 261-6191. J. A L T O N B A U E R L E , R E A L T O R 3 27-4524 FREE RENT UNTIL MARCH 15lh Unfurnished 1 and 2 bedrooms. O ff North Loop and Burnet Rood. 5 403 JEFF DAVIS 451-6928 NORWOOD Special remodeling rates through April 1st. Efficiency, $230/month, 1 bed­ rooms, $275 and $289 Lease now and save. 5606 N . Lomar 451-1917 EFFICIENCY In Clorkjville. ER/MS shuttle, CA/ CH, no petv 808 Window. 480- 9732. After 3:00 p.m. 2402 RIO Grande. 3BR. 2BA. FP. HW floors CA/CH, stove refrigerator no pets $ 6 7 5 • deposrt 451-5141 I S ftIN G S K C IA U El Cartes now taaeng spa­ cious 1-1, (3 0 0 ; 2-1. (3 5 0 . O n shuttle Con­ venient to dwpptng Pool, dehwoshor, dapos- al. Noor Capital Plaza. 451-6106. STUOtO C O N D O near St. Edward's Universi­ t y . - * y t r t Ü W i ' j r S K í : ¡na 441- 441 8 5 9 4 ,4 8 2 -5 8 2 1 ' DUVAL VILLA, (1 0 0 off first month’s rent. 2BR, IBA, $ 43 5 plus E. Hyde Pork a re a 4 3 0 5 Du- voi Street. 451-2343.______________________ ALL BILLS paid on newhr remodeled 2BR apartment on shuttle. ( 4 0 0 or ( 3 4 5 t- bids. Pod, laundry. Cameron Trace, 1200 E. 52nd, 480-9191,453-6239._____________________ FREE Vi mo. rent for limited time on new 2 bedroom apartment. 2 blocks to shuttle, shop ping. $ 34 5 + . Cameron Trace, 1200 E. 52nd. 480-9 19 1 ,4 5 3-62 39 UNFURNISHED HOUSES AVAILABLE N O W two and three bedroom older homes, apartments. Coll now fo r 24 hour Information. 4 5 2 -5 97 9 2BR/1WBA fownhouse Two large decks with views of Townloke. Fireplaces, gos, appli- onces, W /D connections, earth tone carpets, garage On shuttle route $575/m onth Short term leases available Coll Connie, C L Reeves Red Estate, 4 47 -8 3 0 3 AVAILABLE SOO N, 5300-B McCondless luxurious townhome, 3BR/3BA, carpeted, CA/ CH beam ceiling with skylight and ceiling fans, all new appliances, including microwave oven, W /D . carport wtih storage, covered patio $ 8 2 5/m o 9 2 6 -7 4 5 3 _____________________ 9 0 0 8 EAST Dr 2 -l with study N e w hardw ood floors, new paint, huge yard, pets okay $ 3 9 5 / mo 443-3401, 8 9 2 -0 9 6 3 ________________ 9 32 E 50th 2-1, pets okay, huge kitchen, many trees. $ 40 0/m o 443-3401 or 8 92 - 0 9 6 3 _________ 2-1, fireploce, carpet extremely nice, clean IF shuttle N o pets $495, $ 3 0 0 deposit 453 - 9 66 1 _______________________________ CRESTVIEW 3-1, fenced yard deck, screened porch, dishwasher stove, carport $425/110 $ 2 2 5 deposit 837-1481 Mike, evenings 2 8 0 0 SAN Pedro downstoirs, 2BR. living room Ltchen both $450/ month deposit $ 2 0 0 C all John 4 7 2 9281 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS W W # M W * > é t é # é é é * > S u m m e r K F a l l F r e \ i e n Starting today and throughout next week we are previewing The Best lil ol Apartments at Texas Stop by and register today for our FE>EE 11 AWINf We have spacious one and two bed­ rooms with gas cooking, heating and hot w ater PAID. And yes we do have efficien­ cies, a pool, laundry and fireplaces as well as balconies. All at the 1st stop on the RC shuttle. So stop by today so you don’t miss the opening a c t 1500 Royal Crest 444.7516 _ SlThe Arbor^PE M A N O N E W duplos. 2 M . IBA, 1 garage North between Burne* and IH -3 5 C a l George 4 77 -6 50 2 . DUPLEX FOR runt immedtatafy. 2 M Clorfcsvito area 8 02 8 Winflo, neor shuttle Day col Xump Management 478-8186, night 474 - NICE EFFICIENCY, April opening appliances, AC, ceitng fan, (food neighborhood, IF ihuNU, $210 458-8192 (work). 4 5 9 -5 8 3 4 (homu). CENTRALLY LOCATED 3 M duplex. $425, hardwood Boon, large yard, no pets. Avail­ able April 1. Drive by 3 4 0 7 Larry Lane. CaK 4 7 2 -2 4 7 0 BRIDGE WAY VILLAS Close-in, new 28R, 2BA units with advantages of a luxury duplex (f*nced-in back yard, cov­ ered parking, up to 1200 square feet, fully op plionced) plus condominium luxury of owner maintained, grounds and swimming pool. 474-1575, 447-4 22 3 . 3 27 -5 35 8 , 447-3216 evenings, weekends. UT-HEMPHILL-LUXURY Large, newly renovated 2BR-1BA, CA/ CH, ceiling fans, miniblinds, hardwood floors, all appliances, 9' ceilings, 1100 sq. ft. No pets. $700/month. 478-6041 CONDOS FOR RENT NORTHWEST HILLS Large 2BR, 2 h B A studio Fireploce, pool patio, and appliances $ 57 5 -i E 4 79 9724, 3 4 6 -2 8 3 3 o fte r 6 p m SPACIOUS 2BR u nf condo close to Town Lake Convenient to compus or downtow n AR appliances, pool G as/water paid. $ 49 0/m o Coll Patty 452 -9 69 2 , 4 76 -2 6 7 3 ____________ FURNISHED 2BR at O range Tree Available now 467-0113 Norlh Fork Condos Just completed luxurious 1, 2 & 3 bedrooms. Near UT Designer decorated with parquet ftoonng, garden windows and doors, fire­ places. plush carpetm a wallpaper, brass fans, stocked washer and dryers, and large touch­ stone microwaves 458-5906 4401 SPEEDWAY #100 or 255-5710 ROOMS TA O S C O -E D d o rm 1 block fro m cam pus Rooms a v a ila b le m m ed*ately fo r spang 4 7 4 - 6 9 0 5 _____________________________________ PRIVATE FURNISHED do rm ro o m pills paid, ne a r UT kitchen privileges ca rp e te d $ 2 0 0 / m onth 4 7 7 -1 5 2 9 FURNISHED BOYS W a lk in g dis tance UT $ 8 5 $ 2 0 5 ABP H o w e ll P roperties 4 7 7 - 9 9 2 5 _______________________________________ A VAILABLE IM M E DIA TE LY efficiency ro o m AH btHs pa»d n e a r UT F or m o re info, call R> c o rd in C o 474-5981 ROOMMATES O N E OR tw o *em aie o r m oie housem ates needed fo r 3BR duplex ZHker Park $ 2 2 0 ABP C oil Rob 4 4 2 - 9 6 7 2 til m idnight t R O O M M A T E NEEDED to shore 2BR 1 bo th ¡F shuttte 5 rent a n d txils C ail 4 5 3 - 0 2 6 4 NEED R O O M M A T E fem oie A S A P ’ BR BA hjH y-fum sheO, C A 'C H . walk->n closet E C able o p tio n a l C ail 4 5 8 -6 8 9 0 IF shuttle $137 50 plus p o o l m icro w a ve 1st 3-2 R O O M M A T E M /F need e d A p r N o rth $150, 3 utilities Before 7 0 0 4 5 9 - 3 3 7 3 , a fte r 7 0 0 8 3 5 -6 5 0 1 __________________ NEED FEMALE ro o m m a te shore d u p le x Z iker P a ri orea on shuttle $175 m o Share bills A va ila b le A p n l 1st 4 4 4 7 2 3 5 a fte r 5 3 0 BEAUTIFUL HO USE 302 Ch#*B 610A.B EM306 EM311 0 0 1 9 JM30«^ EM3H 1.M319S Don’t put (hi* oB until th e night before an exam. It’s too late then. • 2 b io d u from cam pus plus parking • Very reasonable rates • Lots of patience . in language you'U understand • Also high school courses in the above subjects. UT Placem ent Test Prepara tlon and SA T, G R E review ! Pat Lacey a T a to ria f Service ■ 4 5 S - 5 M # 1 I | O S . 1 * 3 4 7 7 - 7 M 3 I I N H . I M S t E NG LISH TU T O R IN G , p ro o fre a d in g $10 hr See typm g ad 2 3 y e a n e xp e rie n c e te a ch in g co iie q e Enqitsh M a u d e C o rd w e ií Ph D 4 7 9 3 9 0 9 __________________ ____________________ M A T H , PHYSICS h jto n n g Eight y e a n exp e n - ence as TA, AÍ, tu to r G reg, 4 5 4 - 9 9 4 5 (b e fo re 4 30pm , a fte r 9 0 0 p m | EXPERIENCED M A T H te a c h e r o ffe rin g p riv a te tu to n n g n M 8 0 8 A , M 8 0 8 B M 4 0 3 K Reason a b le rates Blocks a v a ila b le 8 3 7 - 7 4 5 9 ROOM AND BOARD CASTILIAN HAS a limited number of spaces to lease for spring Phone 478-9811 The Castili­ an 2323 San Antonio St NEED N O N S M O K IN G female to take over contract at Castilian Call 4 7 8 -4 0 3 5 or 444- 4358___________________________________ NEW GUILD Cooperative seeks hard-w ork­ ing, open-minded people to live, work and play in historic, dem ocratically run home Coll 4 72 -0 35 2 or come by 510 W 23rd FEMALE/MALE vacancies Vegetarian co-op with swimming pool, sun deck. 2610 Rio Grande. Check us out. 4 76 -7 90 5 . FREE ROOM and board to fathers assistant after school for two girls, 7 and 9 in beautiful Great Hills home. Personable, dedicated stu­ dent m quiet environment Car needed M ile ­ age plus nominal salary in summer Lovely children octive in the arts and recreation Re­ sponses: P.O Box D-5, 78712 SENECA HOUSE, a feminist vegetanan co-op, has one vacancy. Come by for dinner at 6:00 p.m. and meet our members. Coll 4 7 7 -0 2 2 5 for more information. MUSICAL INSTRUCTION EXPERIENCED PIANO/GUITAR teacher Be- qmnervadvanced UT degree After 5 p.m 459 4 0 8 2 . ____________________________ SILVER BACH Strad, very good condition A c­ cesiones Inc. Cindy 4 48 -3 5 3 7 (trumpet) PIANO LESSONS, beginner-advanced. Expe- nenced, qualified teacher Classical and im­ provised styles. 4 53-9696. CRUKE S H 9 tabsl (1 4 (2 8 ,0 0 0 year. Cartb- bean, How ok wodd C o l Cfuaeworid for guide, ExfUTEX. y, itawd— r. 1-916-973-1111 HELP WANTED WANTED 10,000 STUDENTS' PHOTOS. I 3 S / S 1 S 0 G u a r a n te e d in c o m e m in im u m with accom paning m anu­ script Free detailed Inform ation and 100 p h o to eam ploe. Send $1 25 to cover postage and handling to New York Photo Exchange. Inc . (Oept CR) 120 Wall Street. New York. NY 10005 CASEWORKER II Provides the majority of staff supervision and ensures overol schedule coordination of activ­ ities within the unit. Masters level training in special education or social sciences. Hands-on experience with outatic/developinentaRy de­ layed children, adolescents: experience devel­ oping individual education plans, data colec­ tion: working with famte s and experience wiRt parent groups and/or siblings and volun­ teers. Salary $1319 monthly to De increased after six months employment. Apply before Friday, March 4, 5:00 p.m. at Auslin-Travis County Mental Health Mental Retardation Center, 1430 Collier, or call 447-2166 be­ tween 4 -5pm. EOE. SHERATON CREST INN Evening desk derk needed. Must be neat in appearance, and dependable A pply in Per­ sonnel Office at the bock of hotel. 111 E. 1st, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday between 1-4 p.m. SHERATON CREST INN TBX operator position available, 3 -llp m shift. Must have a pleasant telephone voice and neat appearance. A pply in personnel office at the back of the hotel 111 E. 1st St M-T-W, 1- 4pm THERAPIST TECHNICIAN IV (RELIEF) Special Educal ed areas preferably. Hands-on teach-' mg experience w ith autistic individuals. Experience w ith fam ilies o f autistic chil­ dren K now ledge and practical experi­ ence in areas o t be h a v io r m anagement, curriculum fo r d e v e lo p m e n ta l^ delayed individuals. Flexible hours, M onoay- Saturday Salary $ 5 .5 4 /h o u r to be in­ creased after six months em ployment. A p p ly before Friday, M arch 11, 5 p.m. at Austin-Travis County M en ta l Health M ental Retardation Center, 1430 Col­ lier, o r coll 4 4 7 -2 1 6 6 between 4-5 p.m. EOE. RESIDENT ASSISTANT Dobie Center Applications are now available fo r Resident Assistant positions fo r 1983-84 school year Applications may be picked up at front desk ond must be returned no later than Fndoy, March 11th by 5pm Part-time 5-9pm to make appointm ents fo r local home im provements com pany G ood storting salary and w eekly bonus. Call M r Johnson betw een 12-4 p m. 45 2 - 1629. Part-time Two canvas appointm ents fo r a local home im provem ent com pany $4 2 5 / hr to start plus bonuses Call M r David between 12-4 p.m., 4 5 2 -1 6 2 9 BRAND NEW N ever befo re in Austin) W e need part tim e public relations per­ sonnel fo r fastest g row ing business in U S history1 Help us introduce the most exciting breakthrough m natural foods. Flexible hours w ith com plete training. Earn $ 3 0 0 -1 0 0 0 per week Call now 8 3 5 -8 7 8 3 SPRING BREAK SUMMER JOBS Earn $ 8 6 5 /h o u r w h ile at hom e in the D allas/ Ft W o rth M e tro p le x d u rin g S pring Break. Re­ serve y o u r summer |Ob n o w Dallas C ounty call (2 '4 ) 3 4 9 - 0 8 4 9 fro m 9am to 1pm o n ly T ar­ rant C ounty app ly a t 212 S M esq u ite St, A rl­ ington Suite 1-G S a tu rd a y 10am o r 12 noon (M a rch 12) ond M o n d a y . M o rc h 14 10am o r 12 n o o n only (Clip o u t a n d save ) BUDGET R ent-A -C ar n o w has o full tim e service agent position open to w o rk 7 a m -3 p m , M o n d a y thro u g h Enday A p p lic a tio n s are n o w being a ccepted at 3 3 3 0 M a n o r Rood, o r phone 4 7 8 -6 4 3 8 fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n PART TIME 2 h o u rs/d a y, 7 d a y s /week Call 4 7 2 - 3 8 9 8 _________________________________ NEED WATER safety instructor and gymnastic coach to teach adoptive aquatic ana gymnas­ tic classes for YMCA. Lila 476 -6 70 5 M AD DO G ond Beans is looking fo r part time cooks for nights and weekends A pply in per­ son, 512 W 24th St after 4 p m. LE SPORTSAC is seeking two part time em­ ployees M-W-F 5-9pm, T-Th 5-9pm, Saturday 12-6 A pply in person at Highland Malt EXPERIENCED PERSON for swimming pool upkeep at River W oods Apartments Through summer $ 5 00/hour 441-8314 6 00 E. Riverside Dr , Magic Time Machine N o w taking applications for beverage servers Apply 3-5 p.m in person N o phone calls. DAY WAITPERSONS needed immediately Please apply in person between 2-4 p.m at Hyde Parir Bar and Grill, 420 6 Duval. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FT-PT, salad prep and breakfast persons Must be dependable, able to meet people, and work independently Apply m person Green-goes Salad Bar, 17th & San Jacinto MIKE & Choriie's needs lunch server Apply in person, 2-3 p.m., 1206 W . 34th St. GYMNASTICS CO ACH/instrudor - part time 3-5 days/week Coaching and teaching expe- nence required. Call 476 -5 66 2 DAYTIME A ND night time hostesses. Apply in person, 2-5 p m Bridger's Creek Restaurant, 414 Barton Spnngs Rd PART TIME help wonted 1130am -130pm and 6 30pm-8:30pm A pply in person, 5 555 N Lamar, Suite C-115. BABYSITTER NEEDED. T-F. 3-8pm for 5 mo old baby. Ask for Julie 3 2 7 -4 4 8 9 (after 4 30 - 327-2950).______________________________ WORK WHEN you have free time to deliver circulars door to door. Earn $3 50-5.00/hour Car, phone necessory 451-9676 DBK ClfiK. ntataf. M L m a t a l R o r t * ' ntahl. Alw zem-9 III N OWMOBlI RV 9pm -fa* eve- |9pm 6 Baft. AppfL w mmer and fofl Mmataen. Must be penoitobfe; neot op* peorina tom# coBta a , enpenence its ( wwn pumc, CNpanooon. m m tor low M d m i. Apply in person • mornings W e # Wind M old. IH -3 5 and Airport Bfvd FLOWER SELLERS Austin's original Rower people, carh paid daity. W e serve Attain. 4 74 - 2 36 9 ,4 7 3 -6 2 3 1 ._________________________ GIRLS! D O You like to party while making good money? Are you affable, sociable, and N. Lamar i years a fto rl ip.m. and talk to us. lingerie salesperson Tuesday, PART TIME Wednesday, Thursday mornings and some lays. Minimum wage plus. 453-1227 for So» appointment. NUTRITION STUDY: Healthy mata students (age 19-22 only). Earn $875 PLUS free medi- coT work-up PLUS oil meab free 4 /2 5 /8 3 -7 /3 / 83 PLUS live in Student Health Center 5 /13/ 8 3 -7 /4 /8 3 . Must be wilting to foNow restricted fei e and donate samples of blood, body fluids ond feces. 471-4287 ext. 3 0 or PAX 10-974 or GEA 307 (9-12om, 2-4pm). GEORGE'S GET H and Go. Port time help wonted. Apply in person, 2 6 0 4 E. 7lh M on­ day-Friday, 11-6. N o phone colls. AIDE IN kitchen to help prepore and serve lunch in private nursery school. 8:30om-lpm. Also, aide for teacher in four year old class. Hours 8-12. West loke Hills. CaM 327-1530 after 5pm. NE W RESTAURANT and club is taking appli­ cations for waitpersons, buspersons, oyster shucker, hostperson. Call Tokyo Steak House, 453 -7 4 8 2 after 2 30pm __________________ NUTRITION STUDY - subjects over age 18 needed! Donate saliva, blood, hair one time only Poyment $4.0 0 plus learn Zinc ond Cop­ per values. 471-4287, ext. 3 0 only 9am- 12noon, 2-4pm. PART TIME help wanted in seafood restaurant and market. Apply Terry's Seafood, 1151 Air­ port Blvd. NEED BREAD this summer?...Don’t loaf. Call 713-9 32 -7 6 87 for soles ¡ob._______________ QUIET MATURE individual seeks research as­ sistant position for private company/law firm. Have extensive experience in bibliographic searching, clerical work and would en|oy legal research Reply to Box 526, Route 2, Austin, TX 78744._______________________________ GENERAL CLERICAL help needed for small blications firm in Northwest Austin, 15-20 pul n o ours/week. W e need someone who can work well with figures, and be ottenhve to de­ tail Good phone presence ond typing skill necessary Proofreading and copy editing skills helpful. Modest salary but great opportu­ nity to leam Send resume to Nattier Publica­ tions, Box 270 07 , Austin, 787 55 EARN EXTRA cash on your own time! Person­ able, outgoing salespersons needed G ood product, good money! Call 477-2019 NIGHT KITCHEN, port time Steak and Ale, 2211 W Anderson Ln. Apply M-S, 2-5pm. N o phone calls please PART TIME checkers and packoge clerks. Day ond evening hours. Must w ork weekends. A p ­ ply in person. Tom Thumb # 7 7 , 3700 Bee Caves Rd WILL PAY computer science ma|or to help stu­ dent enter data in computer Call Debbie 441- 0 06 3 PHOTOGRAPHERS PHOTOTECH is now ac- cepting applications for candid party photo­ graphers. Must have 35mm SLR, be clean cut and personable Call from 10-5, 474-4879 PERMANENT, FULL, or part time positions available Landscape or night secunty guard G ood references mandatory Apply in person, 4105 Medical Parkway, Suite 201, 451-8178 The Elliott System BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES LITERARY AGENT o r rep W riter Has stimulat­ ing timely matenal; Looking for an individual with solid contacts. Matenal based on true sto­ ry witfi appropriate documentation. Re­ sponses P.O Box D-7, Austin, TX 78712. HERBAL LIFE The way to lose weight naturally and a natural way to make money easily. 445-6904. MISCELLANEOUS NEW PHONE service, 444 area. I will pay monthly service if allowed to hook up answer­ ing machine and use my old number 346- 0 3 4 8 ___________________________________ SOFTBALL PLAYERS Need three or four out­ standing female players to complete potential­ ly-outstanding slow-pitch for Spnng/ Summer local/state competition Tryouts re­ quired Age 18 or younger as of 9/1/83. Call 836-0199 fo r details. Leave message. team FAST CASH //e loan on most anything of val­ ue. We buy, sell gold and silver. 5134 Burnet Rd. 454-0459 892-0019 TRAVEL SPRINGBREAKERS 2BR/1BA rent houses in Port Aransas, Texas. Call 1-749- 6513 ask for Jim. SKI STEAMBOAT Spnng Break. Need two ad­ ditional sk.ers male or female Transportation provided Call 4 78 -9 05 4 o r 477-0991. SPRINGBREAKERS SOUTH Padre Island, fur- mshed mobile homes. Accommodate 6-8, deck, BBQ, $450/w eek $75 deposit 385- 0601,1-546-1884 after 6 p.m SKI SPRING BREAK March 13-19 $269 COMPLETE Includes transportation, lodging, 2 meals daily, and 5-day lift tickets Call W a n ­ derlust Travel for details. 474 -5 56 6 , 2404 Rio Grande TWO TW O-W AY plane tickets to Los Angeles Southwest Airlines Best offer 4 77-8799. VACATION IN Mazatlan, M exicol Luxury beach condominium, sleeps four. March 14-19 $40/mght. 4 53 -3 3 3 4 COME TO warm wonderful Brownsville, play m Mexico, and surf on S. Podre Island. Dis­ count rates fo r students Phone (542) 546- 5104 or write Plazo Square Motel, 225 5 Central Blvd , Brownsville, IX 78520. EURAILPASS, YOUTH Hostel passes, ond charter flights will save you money on your European trip. Call Rainbow Tours (713) 681- 2733; 7 40 7 Katy Road, Houston, 77024. STEAMBOAT MADE EASYI W e can sleep 3- 90 people in the same complex. Economical, ski-in/ski-out, quality accommodations. Bro­ chure, P.O Box 771514, Steamboat Spnngs, CO 8 04 77 Coll collect 3 0 3 -8 79 -7 8 04 . _________WANTED________ QUIET, MATURE individual seeks research as­ sistant position for private company/low firm. Hove extensive experience in bibliographic searching dencal work ond would en|oy legal research. Reply to Box 526, Route 2, Austin, TX 78744._______________________________ COMPUTER SCIENCE graduate student wants to work part time on interesting short term (less than 6 months) computer-related projects. I can do programming software design, consul­ tation, tutoring and technical writing. I am a quick study; expenenced with many systems and languages. 453-6003. HELPWANTED HELPWANTED The DaNy Taxan/WednMday, March 9, t i n r a p in PttSONAL ■ HAWAII FOR Spring IfeaU Round trip Horn- tan Honofufu. tanpw only. (400.327-1066. GWM, 36, m b norteen obon for fun or quiet Enjoy motaogn, music, doncmg. Joy, Cl 474-9752. Riders Wanted Go Greyhound round trip to Dallas lor just $32 60, Waco lor (17 40 and San Antonio for only (13.70 Convenient campus departures and return trips Call 47S-7451 for schedules and infor­ mation FOR RENT FROZEN MARGARITA, cocktail mochines for largo porties. MargaritaviHe. Jay Brim ot 454 - 9724. Nights, 8 37 0 8 9 0 ,8 3 7 -3 9 0 4 28R UNFURNISHED condo just off Town Lake. Convenient to downtown or compus. 1490/month. CoH Patty, 4 52-9692, 476- 2 6 7 3 ___________________________________ COMMUTER PARKING available, $ 7 5 /te - mestar. For information, coll: 4 78-8575. LOST- FOUND 17th STI TYPING, PRINTING, The Complete hwhmbmd FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 270 7 H IM PH ILL PK. Monty at Port in g ______ FOUND: KEYS at comer of Speedway ond 45lh. Coll 472-1961 to identify LINDA’S TYPING, south. F a * pensive 4 42 -7 46 5 after 5 pjit. TYPING M aster Typist The computerized T Y P IN G S T O R E T WéDo RUSH WORK! SAME DAY AND ONE DAY SERVICE EXPERT WORD PROCESSING SERVICE THAT’S AFFORDABLE RESUMES T e rm P apers, D issertatio n s, Theses, P rofessional R ep orts P R ’s, & L a w B riefs 472-0293 FREE PARKING J ■ D o b ie M a l l # 3 6 2021 G u a d a lu p e . TYPING BY DEANNE. S cm term papers, dissertations, legal IBM Correct- Selectric Reasonable rotee 4 47 -7 26 4 . i KATHE’S QUICK Type legol and professional. Reference* arakkte. 15 years experience. 282-6139. PROFESSIONAL TYPIST Accurate service, fa# turn around Theses, dissertation*, professional reports, etc. Borboto Tuto*, 453-5124._______ W O O D S TYPING Service . «shan you want i done right. 2 2 0 0 Guodalupa, side enhance. 4 72-6 30 2 .______________________________ TYPING TUTORING - proafiearfing. 10y ea n experience, former college teacher. MA in English See your grades go up. 276-7771, 2 5 8 -7 7 5 0 ______________________________ r - LIGHTNING QUICK TYPING Thomas, tations, technical, legol. Proofing stall, fngtah B A , IBM II. Barbara, 476-7991.____________ INTELLIGENT ACCURATE typing/word cessing. Customer mrsspeling* cam Resumes with flair. Rush service avai Creative Services, 2 4 2 0 Guodalupa, 478- 3 6 3 3 ___________________________________ PROOFREADING, TUTORING, 510/hour Im­ maculate typing of theses, reporta, papen, $1 35/page up. See tutoring ad. Maude Cardwell, Ph.D., 4 79 -8 90 9 .________________ JEANNE'S TYPING Service Typing in my North Austin home. Fast, reasonable, accu­ rate 836-4303. PATTY'S WORD Processing Term papers, pro­ fessional reports, dissertations. Pick up, rvdt service till midnight. 3 45 -4 26 9 . TYPING/PROOFING/Slenography nonpareil: reports, theses, manuscripts, resumas, letters; statistical, legal, medical. South. Joe, 4 47 - _ 2552. TYPING 1532 7 DAYS/WEEK Vera Tee. 454 - . V l r A ' • P R ' * • Papers • Resumes cS • Letters • Law Briefs EXPERT TYPING/ WORD PROCESSING ■406 West 13th (h a lt block o ff G uadalupe) | l l ^ L 4 8 £ 0 0 4 0 H T Y P f N O / W O f t D M O C K S S I N O Spesto» 'Otes *r,r forqlN & C.'od [nq.neennq Resumes Bepo^ No ob too dA, jih Very ptohi .ent .n Inq.meennq & Ter.hr.fO c e'd P.,i op 4 »e»y A*otiob»e M I L U K 'S T Y P I N G S E K V K E South Austin) 447-5906 Words. phu s TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G Resumes * Papers Law Bnefs * Dissertations Personalized Multiple Letters TUTORING Expenenced' Professional Math and English 4 - 2 7 2 4 2404 Rio G rande 6 8 TYPIN G • REASONABLE RATES* C a ll b e t w e e n 8 a m a n d 1 0 p m C a r o ly n W in te r s 459-952 7 YES we type FRESHMAN YHIMIS So start ou t w ith good grados Serving the Students of U niversity of Texas fo r over 25 years 2707 Hemphill 472-3210 472-7677 FAST SERVICE typing. English: (1 .00 page. Spanish, (1.25 page. Karen 4 52-6726.________________________ Italian, Portuguese: TYPING - $1.00/page. Legal - $1.25. IBM Selectnc II Professional, experienced typist. (Near UT campus.) 4 77 -5 45 6 . PROFESSIONAL TYPING - con do la# minuta. Includes spelling punctuation, and grammar. $1 25/page Condoce 451 -4 88 5 ,4 5 2-93 73 . 95c page, double spaced. Thesis, dissertation. $1.25 Thirteen years expenence. Dormg 443-5613.______________________________ QUICK-TYPE Typing Service. $1.50 per poge. without footnotes No extra charge for rush lobs Will also do art work. CaK Melody G # at 1-863-5385_____________________ __ TYPING - FAST accurate, reasonable. Excel­ lent spelling/grammar Resume specialist. Can- dy. 451-9596____________________________ TYPING RESEARCH papers, theses, disserta­ tions, statistical correcting selectric, pica/etta. Will proof, experienced, reasonable. 441- 1893____________________________ _ TYPING. $1 50 per page 476 -6 86 8 . Ask tar Nancy PROFESSIONAL ACCURATE typing SIDO/ page most cases. Campus pick-up and deliv­ ery Janie 244-0213. SPECIAL RATES until March 1. SOc/poge. D 5. Word Processing. Ask about pick-up and de­ livery Lee Starr, 444-0801. QUICK TYPING $1 50 page: Term papen, re­ ports, theses, legal 16th Street location on shuttle 476 -7 33 0 WORDMASTER PROFESSIONAL typmg~hx papers, resumes, multiple letters. Rush service available Riverside-IH 35 area. 4 47-9257. $1 25 TYPING, includes rush service. Expert proofing, extensive academic experience. IBM Correcting Patncia Henderson, B A , 467- 0167 (Lamar/55tb) T Y P IN G M B A Q * RESUMES one or two day sanrka with or without pictures 2707 Hemphill Park Just North of 77th at Bueddape 472-3210 472-7677 “Snap ou t o f sm oking.” Free spdl-check program run on all work. Competitive prices. State- of-lhe-Art Word Processing Pro­ gram 4 7 2 -1 6 8 6 TYPING SERVICE 4 4 3 - 4 4 0 0 • a,.'. - v - [ ’ • - ' T E C S INC 1 0 0 5 E ST ELMO PROFESSIONAL TYPING $100 per page Satisfaction guaranteed Extra charge for pick­ up and delivery. 445-0108, 459-1091. TYPIST: FAST, accurate, resume and rush spe­ cialist, IBM equipment, $1.25/page Help with grammar. 454 -8 93 0 . ______________ PROFESSIONAL TYPIST Themes, disserta­ tions, theses, resumes. $1.50/poge Call Julie, 835 6 0 8 9 ______________________________ ALL "WORDS", N O ACTION? Only House of Tutor accepts papers until midnight. Ready 8om. 4 7 4 -4 7 2 3 ____________________ __ EXPERIENCED SECRETARY available for var­ ied typing service. Coll after 6 30 weekdays, onytime weekends. 4 5 4 -8554._____________ MELINDA'S TYPING. $1.10/poge, 15 years professional expenence. Noon to midnight. Vicinity IH35-32nd. 479-8871._____________ Free pickup TYPING .. PROFESSIONALLY and delivery, $1.10/pg Call 3 45 -8 0 6 2 after 5 3 0 p.m. COLLEGE STUDENTS TYPING TYPING Line up your summer job now. The Jewish Community Center Sports Comp needs counselors with expertise and experience in both team ond individual sports. Contact Cheryl Vetter or Alan Sa- taloff at ( 7 1 3 ) 7 2 9 - 2 4 3 3 PR •60 GENERAL WORD-PROCESSING 2807 SAN JACINTO AUSTIN, TX 78705 * Typing Services * Computerizad Formatting e Permanent Ditk Files * Copies * Proofing * School Supplies M S U M 8 S $ 6 .5 0 A N D U P 476-9290 "Whenever you feel like smokin a cigarette, instead of striktn up a match, strike up the b an d - the ‘ Larry Hagman Special Stop Smokin’ Wrlat Snappln Red Rubber Band! Get one free from your American Cancer Society” k Page l 6/The Daily Texan/Wednetday, March 9,1 9 0 3 Lewis explains omissions By HERB BOOTH Daily Texan Staff "I have no secrets," House Speaker Gib Lewis said Tuesday concerning financial holdings he failed to list in his financial statement for 1981. State law requires that elected state officials file a complete financial disclosure with the secretary of state's office. Failure to do so is a Class B misdemeanor, punishable by up to six months in jail and a $1,000 fine. After a Dallas reporter uncovered the omissions from Lew­ is disclosure last week, the speaker issued a statement blam­ ing the omissions on a lapse of memory. "It's mv mistake. I'm the only one to blame," Lewis said Tuesday "I've just got to gut up to it." On Monday the Fort Worth Democrat filed a 21-page ad­ dendum to his 1981 financial disclosure, listing income from the rental of five properties and the sale of others as well as stocks and shares in six corporations, including over 3,000 shares in LM&M Aviation. Besides being involved in business dealings with liquor dis­ tributors, Lewis is now linked with Dean Cobb, a former state representative who lobbied last session for pari-mutuel bett­ ing. "I've known Dean Cobb for 12 years," Lewis said. "W e've had several business ventures in the past. Most have failed." He said these business failures are why the company Lewis co-owns with Cobb is named Lewis and Cobb Limited. "W e had limited funds," Lewis said. Gt> Lewis... ‘It’s my mis­ take. I’m the only one to blame.’ Bill would prohibit late PAC formations By PAUL DE LA GARZA Daily Texan Staff The Texas Senate passed a bill Tuesday that would prohi­ b it last-minute formations of political action committees to make campaign contributions before an election. A PAC is a committee formed to raise funds to pro­ mote a candidate or legisla­ tion. PACs may be formed any time before an election, which the bill's sponsor, state Sen. James E. "Buster" Brown, R- Lake Jackson, said leads to "abuses" during the final days before an election. The bill stipulates that a PAC may not make a contri­ bution or expenditure until 30 days after it has filed with the secretary of state's office. PACs, like lobbyists, are re­ quired to register with the sec­ retary of state's office. Special elections are ex­ empted from the bill's provi­ sions. Brown, a member of the Legislature's joint ethics sub­ committee, said the subcom­ mittee discussed during the interim a number of abuses in the election process. Brown said the main pur­ pose of the bill is to allow full public disclosure regarding the functions undertaken by PACs. A PAC cannot legally func­ tion until a treasurer has been named and has filed with the secretary of state's office. Brown said the intent of the bill was not to restrict who can contribute, but to make sure the public knows who is mak­ ing campaign contributions. PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz Sharp rise in DWI arrests overloads county officials By COLLEEN HOBBS Daily Texan Staff in A stepped-up police en­ forcement program has dou­ bled the number of DWI ar­ three rests months, but county court of­ ficials say there are inade­ quate provisions for pro­ secuting the extra cases. the past "It's had a tremendous ef­ fect on u s," Leslie Taylor, judge in County Court at- Law No. 1, said Tuesday. "The police system has been beefed up, but the (county) judicial system has remained the same. There's no way we can expand, and the entire system is close to grinding to a halt under all this." Officers made 518 DWI ar­ rests between December 1981 and February 1982, but under the new program the number increased to 1,124 for the comparable period. Initial court appearances for those charge» with DWI are scheduled a month after arrest. Taylor said half of these scheduled appearances are delayed because cases have not yet been filed with the county clerk during that time. All DWI complaints must be filed through the clerk's office before a hearing is set, she said. C o u n ty C le rk D o ris Shropshire she has said asked county commissioners for two additional employees to process paperwork but said her office actually needs five to 10 more employees. "W e're backed up pretty w ell," Shropshire said. "It's very frustrating. We only have eight hours a day to get things done, so we just push ourselves all day long." C o u nty C o m m issio n er Richard Moya «aid the re- £| S s t will be reviewed and H additional funding may be included when a new budget is proposed in Octo­ ber. However, he said the derk's office may be able to function with the same staff if it is made more efficient. County Attorney Margaret Moore said her office is "barely keeping up" with the additional work. She said the full effect of the extra cases would be felt as cases pro­ gressed further through the judicial system. "The breakdown is in the city derk's office," Moore said. "It's steadily getting worse in our office, but I'm never going to tell a police­ man not to arrest someone." Moore said she believes ar­ resting more drunk drivers is worth the extra work. NEEDED TWO GOOD PEOPLE fo r two Student Positions on the University Co-operative Society Board of Directors The qu alification s are: v u must be a bona fide full time student in residence at UT Austin, working toward a degree a .Undergraduates must be registered for at least 12 hours b Graduate students must be registered for at least 9 hours ! h ese positions are open to students in all disciplines except Nursing Scho ol and The Graduate School These schools are presently represented ) T! ,.'se positions are for two years Candidates should anticipate being able to serve until May 1985 A ppiications are available at the Co-op from G race Howard or C. W. W alker in the office at the top of the stairs behind The Attitudes fashion departm ent BLOOM COUNTY "TH6 MAKING Of AN AMERICAN STINKER ".CHAPTER THR6£: sfEves CARiy PRiORmes... APPLICATION DEADLINE 4:00p m Friday, March 11 STEVEN? STEVEN? MAJORING IN SERVICE SINCE 1896 Helpful hints and information to help the student find a w a y through the Austin housing m aze. Read all abou t it in the T exa n 's Housing G u ide on April 6. This Desk Can Reach Mach 2. Som e desk jo b s are more excitin g than others. A s a Navy pilot ( r llight officer, your desk can be a sophis- ticated com bination >f supersonic je t air- making authority. In the air, and on the ground, you have management responsi­ bility from the begin­ ning. And your responsibility grows as you gain experience. : ift and advanced electronic equipm ent. B u t you can handle it. B e ca u se N avy flight training gives you th e n avig atio n , aerodynam ics and o th er tech n ica l know-how you need. in return, N avy av iatio n dem ands som ething of you as an officer: Leadership. Your path to lead ership s ta r ts with officer training th a t ’s am ong th e m ost demanding in th e m ilitary. I t ’s intensive leadership and p rofessional schooling combined with rigorous N avy flig h t training. And i t ’s all geared to prepare you and other college graduates for the urn ue challenge of Na y aviation. The program is tough but rewarding. _______________ NAVY O P P O R T U N IT Y IN F O R M A T IO N C E N T E R P.O. B o x 5000, C lifton, N J 07015 One im portant reward for Navy officers is decision- A d d ress. C ity ____ -A p t . # _ . S t a t e . A ge------- .+ C o U e g e /U n iv e r e ity _ t Y e a r in C o lle g e . * G P A A M a jo r /M in o r __ No company can give you this kind of leadership responsibility this fast. And nothing beats the sheer excitement of Navy flying. The salary is exciting, too. Right away, you’ll earn about $18,300 a year. That’s better than the average corpora­ tion will pay you just out of college. And with regular Navy promotions and other pay increases, your annual salary will soar to $31,100 after four years. That’s on top of a full package of benefits and privileges. i W 204 Before you settle down to an earth- bound desk job, reach for the sky. Reach for the coupon. Find out what it takes to be part of the Naval Aviation Tfeam. You could have a desk that flies at twice the speed of sound. -Zip. □ Please send me m ore inform ation about becom ­ in g a m em ber of the N aval A viation Tfeam. (0 A > I * I P h o n e N u m b e r_____________________________________________ I A re* C od e! B e s t T im e to Call T h is is for gen ersl recru itm en t in form ation You do n o t hav e to furnish any of th e in form ation requ ested . O f cou rse, th e m ore we know, th e more we can help to d ete rm in e th e kin d s of N avy poai- 9 / 8 2 tio n s for w hich you qualify. Navy Officers Get Responsibility Fast by Berk e B reathed 'mm, * * * ’ d u m rtv e w t i t y .f i ! U PI W E A T H E R F O T O C A S T The forecast for the Austin area is for generally fair skies Wednesday and Thursday with afternoon high temperatures near 70 both days. Winds will be light and out of the north. Nationally, rain is expected on the North Pacific Coast Wednesday, and snow will fall over the Upper Great Lakes Region. Skies will remain generally fair across the rest of the nation. ACROSS 1 G hetto 5 Outwit 9 G it1 14 Bread type 15 C a p --------- Head to toe 16 M onoclinic m ineral 17 Where Cork is 18 C oncrete 19 Assessed 20 Insect 21 Think first 23 Saves 25 River to the Baltic 26 Total 27 Identical 29 Sort of: Suf­ fix 32 Peal 35 Drill 36 Dwelling Sp 37 H ockey's blue — 38 Sound 39 Use needles 40 Besides 41 Hip b o n e s 42 Squander 43 Pronoun 44 Persuaded 45 Par of " j " 46 Sway 48 Alien 52 M ake u n i­ form 56 Vintage car 57 1492ship 58 Bird 59 Hasty 60 WWII road 61 C hurchm an 62 D im inutive ending 63 Desires 64 Night birds 65 Legal paper DOWN 1 Pike 2 Mr Greene 3 Arm y groups 4 Stags 5 C ontainer 6 Sw ords 7 W here B ang­ kok was 8 Far: Prefix 9 Long step 10 C ontainer 11 Service clubbers 12 Dill herb TU ESDAY’S PUZZLE SOLVED aaaaa ana aaa aaaaa II lA IM lA ^ T T o T w l i It ■ s Ih Ia Im I □ □ □ a 3GHK3H QQOQ aaaaaaaaaa □□□□ aaaaaa aaa aaaa aaaa aaa aaaaaai aaaaa aaaaa coo □aauaaaaaaaoaaa aaa aaaaa aaaaa aaaaaa aaa aaaa aaaa aaa aaaaaa aaaa aaaaaaaaaa aaaa aaaaa aaaa aaa aaaaa aaaa 38 Instrum ent 42 Had on 44 Autos 45 Bakery units 47 Inward 48 Last 49 C holeric 50 Deed 51 Em inent 52 B estride 53 Floor piece 54 M ake over 55 S ketched 59 Suckled 13 M anufac­ tured 21 Snivel 22 Vaulted 24 Engraving 27 Not hollow 28 Song 30 Aperture 31 An em otion 32 Soil 33 Hawaiian city 34 Indem nity 35 Dance 36 Fish news capsules Summer program seeks workers Persons interested in applying for temporary summer em­ ployment with the Austin Parks and Recreation Department Summer Playground Program can pick up applications from the Parks and Recreation Administrative Office, 1500 W. Riv­ erside Drive, or the City Personnel Department, 150 E. River­ side Dnve. Discussion: African economics Great Decisions, a non-partisan discussion group, will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Municipal Annex, 310 W. Second St., in the first-floor conference room. Great Decisions is sponsored nationally by the Foreign Poli­ cy Association and locally by the Austm-Maseru Sister Cities Society. Thursday's discussion highlights the economic squeeze in Africa. For more information, call Beverly Donoghue at 477-9017 or 478-6785. Texas Union holds logo contest Students, faculty and staff are encouraged to submit de­ signs for the Texas Union logo contest commemorating the Union's 50th anniversary The winner of the contest will receive $100. Designs must be camera-ready, one-color and include the current Unton logo. All designs become property of the Un­ ion. Entnes must be submitted by 5 p.m. March 25, to the Stu­ dent Activities Center, Texas Union Building 4 300. For more information, call Marcia Harehck at 471-5651, ext. 274. Friar Society takes applications Applications for membership in the Fnar Society are avail­ able at the Texas Union Student Activities Center information desk. The Friar Society', the oldest honor society at UT, seeks students who have at least 75 undergraduate hours at the University and who have demonstrated leaderhtp in campus activities. Applications must be submitted bv March 22. ‘Bored and Beautiful’ presented Performances of an adaptation of works by F. Scott Fitzger­ ald will be presented in the Communication Building A audi­ torium at 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday. "Bored and Beautiful," directed by Lynn Miller, assistant professor of speech communication, utilizes student actors and is part of the Performance of Literature senes produced by the Department of Speech Communication. Tickets for the production are $2. campus news in brief ANNOUNCEMENTS The Inter-Varsity Christian Fetow- ship will hold a mutti-image pro­ duction of Habakkuk at 7 30 and 9 30 p m Wednesday in University Baptist Church Theater The Singapore Students' Associa­ tion will view the association s con­ to 3 p.m stitution from 9 a m Wednesday in Texas Union Build­ ing 3 128 The Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador will rally to oppose President Reagan s aid to El Salvador at noon Wednesday on the West Mall Texas Union Informal Classes will hold spring registration 11 a m to 7 p m Wednesday in the Texas Union Building Lobby Texas Union Chicano Culture Com­ mittee will hold a fa|ita sale from 11 a m to 3 p m Wednesday in the Texas Union Patio The Students' Association SURE Committee will hold a mandatory orientation for SURE volunteers from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday In the Texas Union Sinclair Suite. The Mexican American Centennial Action Committee will present Mexican American student life at the University of Texas-1880s to 1980s, through March 31 in Aca­ demic Center Foyer The Women's Reeidsnce H a lt will present a wellness program at 7:30 p m Wednesday in Littlefield Resi­ dence Hall Library. LECTURES The Chid Development Organiza­ tion will sponsor a lecture on Toy Selection at 7 p.m Wednesday in Woolridge Hall. The Austin Society Archaeological Institute of America apartment» of Classics, Art and Anthropology will sponsor a lec­ ture: "Excavating a Sunken City: Port Royal Jamaica 1655-1692" at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Art Building 1 120 The National Chicano Health Organi­ zation will sponsor a lecture: "Cu­ from 3 to 4:30 p.m. randerismo Wednesday in Texas Union Build­ ing 4.118 The Undergraduate Phloaophy As­ sociation will sponsor a lecture at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Wag- gener Hall 3.16. American Stucties, FoRdore and Women’s Studes will sponsor a lecture: "Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature" at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Calhoun Hall 100. The Computer Sciences Depart­ ment will sponsor a lecture: "Local Area Network Security" at 4 p.m. Wednesday in T.S. Painter Hall 3.14. The Department of Art will sponsor a lecture: "American Impressionism and Regional Expression” at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Art Building 1 120 The Center for A M vi Studee win sponsor a lectura World Ranunc»- ation in the Indian Tradition' at 4 p m Thursday in the Texas Urvon Eastwoods Ftoom. The Union of Iranian Students wd present an International Women's Day program at 7 p m Wednesday in Academic Center Auditorium. The Democratic SocM ets of Arnett ca will present a Nicaragua Update at 8 p m Wednesday in Texas Un­ ion Building 3 116 Students for Lowel Lebermann w * meet from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Wednes­ day m Texas Union Building 3.206 MEETINGS The UT Facufty Women w»n meet from 3 to 5 p.m Wednesday in WaggenerHall 201. The Career Contacte Student In ­ volvement Committee will meet at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Uta B. Etter Alumni Center The Canterbury AeaodeBon will hold a worship service, dinner and pro­ gram: Healing God's Relation­ ship with Man" by the Rev. R. Ran­ dolph Cooper from 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesday In Episcopal Student Center. 27th Street and University Avenue. The Servants of God RaeoclHon will meet at noon Thursday in th t Texas Union Board of Directors Room Americans Raised Abroad win meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday in the Taxaa Union Forty Acres Room. Ebony Bght Plus win meet at 7:15 in Andrews Dining Wednesday Hall. The UT Fashion Group will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday In Geology Build­ ing 125. The National Chicano Health Organi­ zation win meet at 7 p.m. Wednes­ day in Graduate School of Busi­ ness Building 1212 The Students' ReeociHon win meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Main Building 212. The University Adrenture Gaming Society win meet lor D & D. V A V, champions, droids, catt of cthuihu and others at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Garrison HaH 313. The UT Surf Association wifi meet at 9 p.m. Wednesday in the Texas Union Eastwoods Room. The American Society for Personnel Administration win meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Lila B. Etter Alumni Center. The UT Roatburmare Win hold three- mile and seven-mile group runa at 5 p.m. Wednesday in L. Thao I N- montHaH. The CBA Student Cound wM meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in RKG Foundation. For more information call 471-1992. People AgMnst Barriers w i meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Jester Cen­ ter West First Floor Lounge.