X i t u ? ¿ r 9 0 0 9 ¿ ‘ U 0 4 D U 1 1 J V ^ 4 i r ¡ s .' y r n 7 y D u * 9 - M l'-: i d o j ; 1 y 4 b « ñ g 4 ñ o ~ o I I 0 14 >j o O J Q y ¿ y t ¿ 0 0 i " ' ’ J- Wá í d w , o VOI. O : ÜC. d i 7 ' ♦ 1 t , » , , 7 2 ¿ ( j Daily Texan The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Thursday, April 20 ,1989 25C Grad students stage sickout in 2 departments By RANDY KENNEDY Daily Texan Staff At least 41 graduate em ployees in two College of Liberal Arts departm ents called in sick W ednesday to protest the loss of state-paid health insurance prem ium shar­ ing. Robert Brody, acting chairm an of the De­ partm ent of Spanish and Portuguese, said although it was difficult to keep an accurate count of all absent em ployees, about 19 as­ sistant instructors failed to show up to teach classes. Brody said he believed the departm ent's teaching assistants, w ho usually hold office hours and help faculty m em bers grade pa­ pers, were on the job b u t he was not sure. "I can't really guarantee that they were w here they were supposed to be today," he said. "There may have been more TAs and AIs who d id n 't show u p , . but w ho also d idn't call in." Twenty-two teaching assistants and as­ sistant instructors also called in sick in the D epartm ent of Germanic Languages, af­ fecting as m any as 500 students in 22 class­ es, said Theresa Justice, graduate coordina­ tor. Acting D ep artm ent C hairm an John Weinstock said although he supports the protest in principle, he believes it is unfair to undergraduate students w ho paid to take the classes. "It penalizes the undergrad uates," W ein­ stock said. "I d o n 't think they are particu­ larly aware of the issues or that this is their fault. There are m ore effective m eans of protest than this." However, he said departm ent faculty and adm inistrators "think the graduate stu­ dents have a right to a decent insurance benefit plan." G raduate student em ployees — w ho now num ber about 2,800 at the University — lost prem ium sharing in February 1988 w hen the Texas H igher Education Coordi­ nating Board declared it illegal. In the past two weeks, graduate students have picketed and held protest rallies in re­ sponse to a UT System decision discontinu­ ing $115 m onthly salary supplem ents pro­ vided replace prem ium to paym ents. tem porarily A graduate student in the D epartm ent of Spanish and Portuguese, w ho asked not to be identified, said graduate em ployees be­ lieved a "sickout" w ould be effective in that departm ent because of the large num ber of teach classes graduate employees w ho there. said. "This is w here our pow er lies," the grad­ uate student said. "O ther departm ents have their pow er in other areas, and they have to do som ething else because they are afraid for their jobs. But we had to do som ething for ourselves." About 102 graduate em ployees w ork in the departm ent as either TAs or AIs, com ­ pared to only 41 full faculty m em bers, the student said. Because Texas law prohibits state em ­ ployee strikes, m any graduate em ployees w ere very reluctant to participate and those w ho did were careful not to write anything dow n to prove the protest was organized, the student said. "We know that we could lose our jobs over this, but we also feel very strongly about losing our benefits," the student Last week, about 50 graduate students — m any of whom had recently resigned in protest from the Council of G raduate Stu­ dents — voted to make unw ritten plans for a sickout. Liz Hiles, a senior office assistant in the D epartm ent of Philosophy, said she had heard about plans for a similar sickout in that departm ent, but graduate employees did not go through with the protest "be­ cause they were too fearful for their jobs." An assistant instructor in the D epartm ent of Germanic Languages, w ho also asked not to be identified, said he believes the sickout will work in combination with other protest events to bring more attention to the health benefits problem. "It's every little bit tow ards reaching our goal," he said. Senate OKs bill reviving benefits By JIM GREER Daily Texan Staff The Texas Senate W ednesday overwhelm ingly passed a bill that w ould restore graduate student in­ surance prem ium sharing at the University, but the m easure's spon­ sor said he is worried about state funding of the benefits. "Finding m oney is always h ard," said Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos, D- Austin. His bill passed the Senate by a 27-2 margin. The proposal's $10 million annual price tag has been w hittled dow n from a fiscal note of about $27 mil­ lion. "The lower we can bring the fiscal note the better the chances are," Barrientos said. He said the revised $10 million cost more accurately addresses the target group of the legislation. The anticipated cost originally was much higher because the pro­ jections included students ineligible for prem ium sharing and omitted grants, Barrientos said. The bill would make eligible for prem ium sharing full-time UT grad­ uate students w ho work at least 20 hours a week for the University as teaching assistants, assistant in­ structors or research assistants, he said. Barrientos said he met w ith UT officials before the Legislature's reg­ ular session began to discuss resto­ ration of the benefits. O n March 20, a higher education committee heard testim ony in favor of the m easure from UT President William C unningham and several UT graduate student employees. C unningham said the prem ium sharing is necessary to attract and retain graduate students at the Uni­ versity. Erik Devereux, former Council of G raduate Students president and a graduate governm ent student, said more activity from the UT System and the University has ensued since students began protesting for bene­ fit restoration a week ago. "The public activism has had an effect on the Capitol," Devereux said. "It seems to, in particular, have motivated the UT System to care about this issue because we already cared know UT-Austin about it." "The lower fiscal note helps it out trem endously," he said. Rep. Wilhelmina Delco, D-Aus­ tin, is sponsoring a similar m easure in the House. Delco, who serves as Higher Edu­ cation Committee chairwom an, also cited as a plus the revised $10 mil­ lion cost carried by her bill. She said Tuesday she sent the bill to a subcommittee because the fiscal note was $27 million and she be­ lieved the legislation could not get out of the House. The bill passed the full committee Tuesday. Delco also said the higher cost had applied to students outside the eligible group. Incoming! Tom Stevens/Daily Texan Staff Randy Akin plays disc golf on a new nine-hole course in Pease Park. Akin, who will be a UT computer science major in the fall, said he was playing the course Wednesday because the 18-hole course at Bartholomew Park would be too treacherous after Wednesday’s rains. At least 47 dead from Navy battleship explosion in Atlantic Associated Press NORFOLK, Va. — A huge gun turret packed w ith gunpow der ex­ ploded in flames on the battleship USS Iowa near Puerto Rico on W ednesday, killing at least 47 sail­ ors in one of the w orst naval disas­ ters since the Vietnam War. The death toll from the accident during a gunnery exercise "could go higher, but w e d o n 't know at this point," said Lt. Cm dr. Steve Bur­ nett, a spokesm an for the Atlantic Fleet, based in Norfolk. The death count was taken from a list of sailors assigned to the position rather than a body count. The num ber of crew m en injured had not been determ ined, he said. W e don’t know how many people were in there at the time.’ — Lt. Cmdr. Chris Baumann, fleet spokesman Two ships participating in the same exercise collided W ednesday afternoon about 500 miles east of Jacksonville, Fla., causing one mi­ nor injury, said Archie Galloway, a civilian public affairs officer at N or­ folk. N either the USS Platt, a fleet oiler, nor the frigate USS Tripp was in danger of sinking, Galloway said. The ships w ere not in the sam e area as the Iowa. The explosion occurred in one of the Iow a's three heavily arm ored turrets, each of w hich supports three of the ship's nine 16-inch guns. The turret was "full of gun­ po w der," said Lt. Cm dr. Chris Bau­ m ann, another fleet spokesm an. Iowa crew m en p ut out the fire in 80 m inutes, flooded several m aga­ zine com partm ents holding explo­ sives as a precaution and declared the ship out of danger, Baumann said. The Iowa rendezvoused at mi- daftem oon w ith the nearby aircraft carrier USS Coral Sea, which carries three doctors and has full medical facilities, Baum ann said. Helicop­ ters from the Coral Sea brought medical equipm ent to the Iowa and transferred some injured crewmen to the carrier. "The ship has not sent a list of the w ounded. They have other things more pressing to worry about," said Lt. Russ Grier, an Atlantic Fleet spokesm an. The Iowa will arrive Thursday at Roosevelt Roads, a Navy base in Puerto Rico, said Cm dr. Robert Franzm ann of the Atlantic Fleet. The 46-year-old ship, one of the four largest in the fleet, is based at Norfolk. Bum victims from the Iowa were being evacuated to Brooke Army Medical C enter specialized b um unit in San Antonio, according to a medical official in Puerto Rico. Navy officials were notifying rela­ tives personally of the deaths, Bau­ m ann said. Several family m em bers gathered at a gym nasium in Norfolk to await word. "The longer we hear nothing, the better it is," said Sandy Tate of Charleston, W.Va., a relative of crewm an Jonathan Tate. The explosion occurred during a gunnery exercise about 330 miles northeast of Puerto Rico, Burnett said. The ship's 16-inch guns can fire 2,700-pound shells a distance of 23 miles. The fire was in the second of the two forward turrets, at the loading position of the m iddle gun, said Bruce Nason, a Navy spokesm an at the Pentagon. There also is a turret at the back of the Iowa. Each turret is protected by arm or that is 1 TVi inches thick. There was no sign of the accident visible during a flyover of the ship. A gun turret is norm ally occupied by 27 people, but can hold 60 to 70 people, Baum ann said. "W e d o n 't know how m any people w ere in there at the tim e," he said. The training exercise to im prove fleet readiness began April 13 and involved 19,000 people aboard 29 U.S. ships, three allied ships and shore-based aircraft, Baumann said. North arguments end with emotional pleas Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — O liv e r N orth's lawyer, in an em otional fi­ nal argum ent W ednesday, por­ trayed the form er W hite H ouse aide as a sacrificial lamb, a scapegoat and a hostage, and im plored jurors in his trial to "set him free." "O liver N orth never w anted to be a hero ," said Brendan Sullivan. "H e just w ants to go hom e." But prosecutor John Keker, hav­ ing the last w ord, asked the jury to "retu rn a verdict of guilty in each and every one of the 12 charges." With that, the nine w om en and three m en w ho will decide N orth's fate w ere sent hom e. They will re­ turn T hursday to begin their delib­ erations after instructions from U.S. District Judge G erhard Gesell. D ur­ ing deliberation, the jury will be sequestered for the first time since the Iran-contra trial began. In his hour-long rebuttal, Keker said it had been an "u n hap py, u n ­ pleasant, miserable criminal trial," and dism issed Sullivan's closing ar­ g u m en t w ith a S hakespearean touch: "It was all sound and fury, signifying nothing." this "You have heard a lot about cour­ age at trial," Keker said. "T here's another kind of courage: to adm it w hen you are courage, w rong, courage to adm it personal responsibility, courage to adm it guilt w here appropriate. He [North] has not adm itted any of those things; it's time for you to do it for him ." It was the end of tw o tough days for N orth, a former M arine lieuten­ ant colonel w hose pow er while he was at the National Security Council was substantial. His face paled and he busied him self w ith w riting while Keker denounced him; he looked at the jury while Sullivan pleaded for him. "The governm ent has not show n criminal behavior," Sullivan said. "The m an w ho held the lives of oth­ ers in his hands now puts his life into yo u rs." The reference w as to N orth's protecting nam es of people he dealt w ith by shredding or alter­ ing docum ents, w hich Sullivan saw as "a reasonable thing to d o ." W EATHER Aretha Franklin/Diana Ross weather — Ooohh, I’m missing sun, tell me why the skies fade. Thursday’s skies will be cloudy, but the tem perature will soar into the mid 80s so you can put your top down while cruising on the freeway of love. Oh weather, think ... about what you’re trying to do to me Friz­ zy hair. C loudy moods. With lows in the lower 60s. Turns me upside down, oh yo u ’re turning me, inside out, round and round. Stop, in the name of love! Set me free, why don ’t you babe? I want some R-E-S- P-E-C-T. Found out what it means to me. As pretty as a rose in Span­ ish Harlem bow ing in the wake of 10 mph southeasterly winds. At least those w inds make me feel like a natural woman. W ho’s zoom ing who?' INDEX Around Campus.............................19 Classifieds....................................14 Comics...........................................19 4 Editorials.................................... Entertainment................................ 12 S p o rts ...........................................11 8 State & L o c a l............................. 6 University................................ 3 World & N a tio n ......................... Child-stealing rumors abound in Mexico Associated Press Rumors of child-stealing by fugitive leaders of a bloody cult that dealt in drugs and ritual killing sent worried parents to pick up their children at Matamoros, Mexico, schools W ednesday, officials said. M eanwhile, Texas law enforcem ent officials spent W ednesday looking for the two key suspects in the slayings of 15 people — including the kidnapping and m urder of UT pre-m ed senior Mark Kilroy — after learning the pair may be headed tow ard Austin. Cult leaders Alfonso de Jesus Constanzo, a Cuban- American, and Sara Aldrete of Brownsville were still at large along w ith at least three other com panions, au­ thorities said. Reports that cult leaders had threatened to kidnap children for sacrifice if fellow cult m em bers were not freed sent M atam oros parents to schools to pick up their children. Police said the threatening calls were a hoax. "They [news media] are creating the psychosis with all these rum ors," said a telephone operator at the Fed­ eral Police office. "W e have h u ndreds of people calling to ask if the rum ors are true." Regional police C om m ander Jesus Urquiza Martinez said special guards were being posted, especially at outlying schools. "W e cannot hide reality," C ham ber of Commerce di­ rector A ndres C ahuigh said. "This happened here, but it could have h appened anyw here. We m ust now start show ing again the good things about M atamoros and we m ust rem ind our visitors that this is a good city, quiet, w ith a healthy society." Federal investigators said the search for the missing sect m em bers continued and w as being coordinated in Mexico by the Mexico City office. In Texas, D epartm ent of Public Safety spokesm an David Wells said a bulletin sent Tuesday to Texas and New Mexico law enforcem ent officials stated that a citi­ zen of Clovis, N .M ., reported seeing two people closely matching the descriptions of Aldrete, 24, and 26-year- old Constanzo. The two are w anted on federal w arrants of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution and are suspects in the m ur­ ders of at least 15 people by a drug-sm uggling cult based in M atamoros. Wells said he did not know why New Mexico author­ ities believe the pair are bound for A ustin, but the in­ formation possibly came from an overheard conversa­ tion. Clovis police issued the bulletin after a convenience store clerk reported seeing a couple that closely resem ­ bled Constanzo and Aldrete, he said. The clerk said the m an had straight black hair and a m uscular build while the w om an wore blue sweat pants and a multi-colored top, and that the two drove a freshly painted blue van with yellow curtains, Wells said. The bulletin described the van as in good condition, but police did not know its vehicle m ake or license plate num ber, Wells said. Byron Sage, the FBI agent in charge of the bureau's Austin office, said a nationw ide m anhunt for the pair is underw ay. Sage and Wells said the people described in the bul­ letin may not be the fugitive pair. "There's not a positive identification on the people in the van," Sage said. With reports from Kevin Hargis, Daily Texan Staff Multiple-slaying suspect arrested in Mexico MEXICO CITY — Ramon Salcido Bojorquez, a California winery worker arrested Wednesday in the slayings of seven people, told Mexican police he killed his wife and a co-worker because he thought they were having an affair, officials said. “He was arrested before dawn this morning in a surprise roadblock set up by agents fighting the illicit drug trade," said Vicente Mendoza, a spokesman for the attorney general's office. Salcido, also suspected of killing his two daughters, his mother-in-law and two sisters-in- law in a rampage in Sonoma County, Calif., was picked up just outside Guasave, the spokesman said. The village is near Los Mochis, Salcido's hometown in Sinaloa state about 850 miles northwest of Mexico City. Mendoza said he did not know Salcido's na­ tionality, and U.S. Embassy spokesman Bill the embassy was not certain Graves said whether he was an American citizen. “He has been arrested at the request of U.S. authorities who have asked for his extradition. We are bringing him to Mexico City," Mendoza said, adding that Salcido was in the custody of the Federal Judicial Police, a branch of the Mexi­ can attorney general's office. He said Salcido would be taken to Mexico City for an extradition hearing. Javier Coello Trejo, deputy attorney general, told reporters Salcido drove into Mexico at the Calexico, Calif., border crossing. Coello said Salcido told police under question­ ing he had lived in California for nine years and acquired American citizenship. Other officials said that information is being checked with po­ lice in California. Salcido told Mexican police he went on the rampage in a fit of jealousy after suspecting that his wife of five years was having an affair with one of his co-workers, Tracy Toovey, Coello said. Salcido, 28, was a forklift operator who worked with Toovey at the winery. About 300 people attended a memorial service Tuesday for Toovey in Sonoma County. According to Coello, Salcido told police he killed his wife with a 9mm pistol. Salcido was arrested the same day services were being held in Petaluma, Calif., for some of the six members of Salcido's family who were killed. Salcido's wife, mother-in-law, two sisters-in- law and Toovey were butchered, shot to death or both on April 15. The next day, three of Salci­ do's daughters were found with their throats cut, two of them dead. The survivor, 3-year-old Carmina, is recover­ ing in Petaluma Valley Hospital. She told inves­ tigators her father cut her and her sisters. Salcido's friends told the San Francisco Examin­ er that he had a frenzied, cocaine-fueled night of drinking and dancing before the killings. "He party, party, party all the time — run around all night," the newspaper quoted one unidentified person as saying. "He drink every­ thing — beer, wine, tequila." Salcido's mother, Valentina Bojorquez Armen- dariz, said her son called her on Friday and told her "Mama, this is last time you will hear my voice." SCONES FOR CYCLISTS! (Closed Sun. afternoons) Ex-South Carolina coaches indicted in steroids problem • Fresh Baked Goods • M esquite Grill • Sm oothies • J u ic e B ar / z a % o f f ' \ ' COUPON \ with i student 1 ID b j l r t i k U jr I * / ' Page 2/THE D AILY TEXAN/Thursday, April 20, 1989 T h e Da il y T exa n Permanent Staff .............Mike Godwin Associated Press Editor Managing Eddor Associate Managing Editors News Editor Associate News Editors News Assignments Editor General Reporters Special Pages Editor Associate Editors Entertainment Editor Associate Entertainment Editor Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporters Photo Editor Associate Photo Eddor Images Editor Associate Images Editors Graphics Editor Around Campus Editor News Assistants Entertainment Assistant Editorial Columnist Editorial Assistant Edrtonal Cartoonist Makeup Editor Wire Eddor Copy Editors Photographers Graphics Assistant Com ic Stnp Cartoonists Volunteer Local Display Classified Display Classified Telephone Sales Classified Telephone Service Stacey FreedenthaJ Karen Adams. Steve Crawford, Steve Dobbins, Jennifer Horan Dennis McCarthy . Mike Erickson, Linda Milch .......................Kim Homer Jim Greer, Kevin Hargis. Alan Hines, Randy Kennedy. Greg Perliski. Diana Williams, Junda Woo Bruce McDougal! Susan Boren, Tom Philpott Robert Wikxisky Carol Huneke Bret Bloomquist Gregor Sauer Ray Dise, Schuyler Dixon, Jerry Gemander John Foxworth Jeff Holt Rob Walker Mike Clark, Jeff Turrentine Kathy Strong Mindy Brown issue Staff Joseph Abbott, Ben Cohen, Stephanie Parsley, Deena Perkins. W.J. Scott Bobby Ruggiero Scott Henson Lee Nichols Jeff Satterwhite Deke Bond Chris Amtson Christian McDonald, Richard Wame, Janet Webb Missy Ammann, Tom Stevens ................ Francis Tsai Van Garrett, John Keen, Tom King, Robert Rodriguez, Martin Wagner, C hns Ware Melissa Ham s Advertising Enc Ashford, Deborah Bannworth, Matthew Beechhold. Tony Colvin, Cary B Cook, Sam Hefton, Sue Hwang, Denise Johnson David Lawrence, David Lutz, Beth Mitchell, Gma Padilla. 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Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209. Associated Press COLUMBIA, S.C. — Three for­ mer South Carolina assistant foot­ ball coaches, one an assistant coach at Texas A&M University, were in­ dicted Wednesday for allegedly pro­ viding athletes with anabolic steroids, and a fourth was charged with importing the muscle-building drug into the state. The indictments came as Athletic Director King Dixon said South Ca­ rolina reopened an internal investi­ gation into the charges. The univer­ sity probe was halted after the grand jury investigation began. James Washburn, Thomas Gadd and Thomas Kurucz were charged with "conspiring to conduct a pro­ gram of illegal steroid use by mem­ bers of the athletic community, ... particularly by ... the university's football team." The coaches alleged- B U Y , SELL, RENT, TRADE 471-5244 W A N T AD S 480-9011 473-0735 ly encouraged and monitored the progress of the athletes using steroids. The three coaches also were importing steroids charged with into South Carolina and dispensing the drug without prescriptions. The indictments cover the period of May 1984 to December 1987. Keith Kephart, an assistant coach at Texas A&M and a former strength coach at South Carolina, was charged with conspiring with "other members of the USC athletic community" to bring steroids into the state and dispense them with­ out prescriptions. Kephart, whose contract at Texas A&M expires in May, had no imme­ diate comment, a school spokesman said. the facing The charges four coaches are all misdemeanors. If convicted on all counts, the three could be sentenced to a maximum of four years and fined $301,000. Kephart faces a maximum of five years in prison and $302,000 in fines if convicted on all five counts. U.S. Attorney Vinton Lide said at a news conference Wednesday the coaches also used steroids. In a page 7 story Wednesday, The Daily Texan incorrectly identi­ fied Ana Alonso as a graduate student. Alonso, whose name was misspelled in the story, is ac­ tually an assistant professor of anthropology. The Texan regrets the error. C la r ific a t io n In a page 5 story Monday, The Daily Texan stated that the UT two Police Department rapes were reported on campus in 1988. said While two were reported, only one of the reports turned out to be a substantiated case. The T»*xan regrets any misun­ derstanding. R e n t a l S p a c e PUBLIC STORAGE MANAGEMENT INC. •L2S N Lmmt I M U M U O 9X7 447-0287 *t S82S N l w « BlvU H 7 4 I U 4202 4444111 8018 E !«■ White 44442E2 **01 E I m White 441-7200 200 S I d It «474174 10100 N M S S344784 0200 It «March 827-7000 CALL NOW FOR M AY'S STUDENT SP EC IA LS!!! LIBERTY ( B O O K S ) A Quality Bookstore tor Lesbians and Gay Mon Lssrn the truth about the varitties of human sexual and psychological realities. 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FOLEYTS ...O F C O U R S E Wednesday’s Dow Jones Industrial Average: UP 7.51 to 2,386.91 Volume: 191.51 million shares WORLD & NATION BUB e » -:: Bush, Hussein discuss Palestinian election plans Thursday, April 20, 1989 Page 3 Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Bush and Jordan's King Hussein agreed Wednesday to strive for "a serious negotiating process" for Middle East peace, and the United States said the monarch did not reject an Israeli proposal for Palestinian elections in the West Bank and Gaza. After the two leaders talked for more than an hour at the White House, the ad­ ministration expressed satisfaction over Hussein's statment to Bush that "I fully support you and all your efforts." Hussein's visit marked the end of the first round of Middle East diplomacy for Bush, following talks earlier this month with Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir. As he had done with the two others, Bush played tour guide for the king. He took Hussein by helicopter to Mount Vernon, Va., to visit the home of George Washington overlooking the Potomac Riv­ er. They returned to the capital on a yacht confiscated from drug merchants and now owned by the Navy. Standing alongside Hussein in a Rose Garden ceremony, Bush said, "T h e time T h e time has come to en­ courage fresh thinking.’ — President Bush has come to encourage fresh thinking, to avoid sterile debate and to focus on the dif­ ficult but critical work of structuring a se­ rious negotiating process. "H is majesty committed Jordan to this task and I commit the United States to this task ," Bush said. The administration said the next step was to develop Shamir's proposal for the 1.7 million Palestinians in the occupied territo­ ries to elect representatives to negotiate with Israel on limited self-government. The United States has endorsed the pro­ posal on the condition that the elections lead to negotiations on the final status of the territories. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Ned Walker told Congress that the United States wants a timetable from Israel by July for the elections. But he said that "serious difficulties" re­ main over what kind of elections would be held and which Palestinians would agree to take part. Walker said it should not matter to Israel whether candidates are card-carrying mem­ bers of the Palestine Liberation Organiza­ tion. Shamir has ruled out negotiating with the PLO, which he holds responsibile for the violence that has wracked the occupied territories. In his public remarks, Bush said that "properly designed and mutually accept­ able elections could, as an initial step, con­ tribute to a political process leading to ne­ gotiations on the final status of the We^t Bank and G aza." NATO talks focus on weapons update Defense Secretary Cheney pushing Europe to match Soviet short-range nuclear missiles Associated Press BRUSSELS, Belgium — U.S. offi­ cials Wednesday stepped up efforts to convince European allies that NATO must its short- range nuclear weapons by offering intelligence information on how the Soviets are boosting their arsenal. improve Defense sources said, however, that it remained unclear how the 16- nation North Atlantic Treaty Organ­ ization would handle the politically sensitive issue. Defense Secretary Dick Cheney, attending his first NATO meeting, presented what was described as an unexpectedly extensive intelligence briefing behind closed doors, stress­ ing the Soviet Union's efforts in the past five years to modernize its own arsenal of short-range nuclear mis­ siles and artillery shells. "O ur evidence is overwhelming that this has been an ongoing pro­ cess and will continue to be an on­ going process," said one senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity. the Western alliance, The decision to offer the briefing was prompted by a growing split within in which West Germany, Belgium and some other European countries have expressed doubt about moving now to replace the Lance nuclear missiles deployed with NATO forces. Those missiles are expected to be­ come obsolete by the mid-1990s and American officials say NATO has no choice but to replace them and maintain some nuclear weapons in Europe. Belgium, West Germany and a few other NATO members also have questioned the wisdom of pro­ ceeding now with modernization when it might be possible to open new arms control talks with the So­ viets on the issue. The United States counters that negotiations should be completed on reducing long-range nuclear mis­ siles and conventional forces before NATO worries about short-range battlefield missiles. At the conclusion of the first day of NATO consultations, the Ameri­ can defense source said the United States was convinced the modern­ ization issue had been spawned by internal politics within individual countries, and not by any real split between the United States and its allies. While final decisions on produc­ tion and deployment schedules are not necessary right now, the source continued, the U.S. government does need some broad language of support for nuclear modernization in order to win funding from Con­ gress to start missile development work. "N o specific decisions on specific weapons in specific numbers in spe­ cific locations are required now ," said the U .S. source. "B u t it is clear that Congress will not support programs that they be­ lieve that the alliance is not pre­ pared to see become a part of our deterrent. "A nd that's a problem. So there is no doubt that Congress will be look­ ing to see if there is a proper expres­ sion of support." The NATO allies agreed W ednes­ day that nuclear weapons cannot be withdrawn from Europe given the current arms balance with Russia and the Warsaw Pact, and thus Cheney hopes to win the expression of support he wants, the source concluded. "N A TO is 40 years old this year. It has gone through many crises and we will also overcome this o n e," said Dutch Defense Minister Frits Bolkestein. The first day of discussions ran longer than expected. Officials said the allies appeared in agreement that the defense min­ isters should not do anything that would be seen as upsetting in the next few weeks before a summit of President Bush and other NATO leaders. A student leader tried to calm protesters who converged on the Chinese Communist Party headquarters at Zhongnanhai Wednesday morning. Beijing police charge rallying crowd Associated Press Associated Press BEIJING — Thousands of police rushed a crowd of 3,000 pro-democracy activists on Beij­ ing's main boulevard early Thursday, beating some protesters and taking away others. "Fascists, dogs!" members of the crowd yelled at police as they ran to safety. "Hoodlum s and bandits!" Police by the thousands charged the crowd at 3:30 a.m ., sending protesters fleeing east past Tiananmen Square, the site of three days of ral­ lies calling for political reform and commemorat­ ing the death of purged Communist Party leader Hu Yaobang. At one com er about eight police officers grab­ bed a woman in her 20s. One officer ripped off the sleeve of her coat. Other officers slapped her face. Another protester on a bicycle also was hit. Three officers knocked him to the ground and began kicking him. Chinese protesters said they saw at least six other people being beaten. Some protesters threw bottles at police. There were no figures on arrests, but an Asso­ ciated Press reporter saw two people being put into a police jeep. Chinese witnesses said they saw about eight people being taken away. About 200 police also rushed a crowd of sever­ al hundred protesters in the western section of the city, kicking and beating demonstrators who did not run quickly enough. Another group of about 150-200 students who had been blocking the front of the Communist Party's headquarters at Zhongnanhai were taken away in a bus. Its destination was not known. In Shanghai, about 1,000 students and work­ ers marched Wednesday to the central People's Square. Police surrounded the square to keep onlook­ ers away, and the demonstration broke up about 7 p.m ., foreign and Chinese sources said. In both Beijing and Shanghai the demonstra­ tions — the largest since nationwide student protests the winter of 1986-87 — were triggered by Saturday's death of Hu at age 73. in Hu, acclaimed by students for protecting the rights of intellectuals, was forced to resign in January 1987 after being blamed by conserva­ tives for failing to take a harsh line against the student demonstrations. Associated Press Soviet oil-skimmer arrives to help clean up tanker spill SEWARD, Alaska — A Soviet ship that can skim oil on the high seas joined the war against the nation's worst oil spill W ednes­ day, docking in a town named for the man who bought Alaska from Russia for $7.2 mil­ lion. The 11,400-ton Vaidogubsky, 425 feet long, steamed 30 miles up fjord-like Resur­ rection Bay under a cloudy sky, flying the Soviet hammer and sickle from its stem and an American flag from its towering white su­ perstructure. It tied up at a railroad dock, its decks strewn with heavy equipment, smoke spew­ ing from its stacks. "It's pretty impressive for a skim m er," said Coast Guard Petty Officer Ken Safford, who snapped photos as the ship arrived a little before 8 a.m. "It's huge." Relief caravan attacked in Kenya NAIROBI, Kenya — Attackers ambushed the first truck convoy of a U.N. famine relief effort intended to save 100,000 lives in the southern Sudan war zone, killing seven armed escorts, U.N. officials said W ednes­ day. They said a civilian driver and two assist­ ants were wounded, and radio reports from the scene identified the slain escorts as mem­ bers of the rebel Sudan People's Liberation Army. U.N. officials in Nairobi did not affix blame for the attack on the 14-truck convoy, but speculation centered on nomadic tribal warriors, army soldiers or government-spon­ sored militias operating against the rebels. Relief officials said the trucks were carry­ ing 100 tons of food, medicine and other sup­ plies to Torit, 100-miles west of Kapoeta, when they were halted by rocket and auto­ matic weapons fire. General: U.S. negligent in Lebanon Syrian attacks on Lebanon's Christian heart­ land. Aoun addressed about 1,200 Christians who braved intermittent rocket and artillery barrages and marched to the presidential pal­ ace in suburban Baabda to support Aoun's "w ar of liberation" against Syria's 40,000 troops in Lebanon. Christian parliamentarians have called for a cease-fire in the fighting with the Syrians and their Druse Moslem militia allies. But the demonstrators rejected the sugges­ tion, highlighting a split in the Christian camp. The demonstrators burned an effigy of Syrian President Hafez Assad and chanted "D eath to Assad!" Fish oil may lower blood pressure BOSTON — Large doses of fish oil can re­ lieve mild high blood pressure and may work as well as some commonly used pre­ scription drugs, a study concludes. Many claims have been made about the seeming benefits of fish oil on the heart and circulatory system, but convincing data to back up these beliefs have been scarce and many experts remain dubious. The latest study, conducted on 32 white males, provides some of the strongest evi­ dence yet to support at least one of fish oil's reputed merits. Fish oil seemed to work about as well as two mainstays of blood pressure therapy — diuretics and the beta-blocker drug propra­ nolol. Car bomb kills Salvadoran official SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — El Salva­ dor's attorney general was killed Wednesday by a bomb that his driver said was placed on top of his car at an intersection. The rightist president-elect blamed leftist guerrillas. Roberto Garcia Alvarado, 53, was killed in­ stantly by the blast, said Oscar Orellana, the driver. TTie explosion ripped a hole through the roof of the attorney general's Jeep Chero­ kee. Garcia is the highest-ranking government official slain since the civil war began in 1981. BEIRUT, Lebanon — The Christian army com m ander, Gen. Michel Aoun, said Wednesday the United States was involved in "a conspiracy of silence" by failing to halt No group immediately claimed responsi­ bility. President-elect Alfredo Cristiani blamed leftist guerrillas battling the U .S.- backed government. Soviet paper hints activists poisoned Associated Press MOSCOW — The Soviet government newspaper Izvestia reported Wednesday some victims of a clash between soldiers and protesters in Soviet Georgia are suf­ fering from a poison resembling a nerve toxin. An Izvestia interview with Georgia's health minister, Irakliy Menagarishvili, appeared to bolster charges by activists in the southern republic that soldiers used a toxic substance to break up a nationalist demonstration April 9 on Tbilisi's main street. The clash killed 20 people. Izvestia did not say how many of the 140 people still hospitalized after the confron­ tation were suffering from symptoms of poisoning. The new Georgian Communist Party chief, Givi Gumbaridze, said in an inter­ view on Soviet television W ednesday that the situation remained tense despite the It is necessary that the peo­ ple discover the truth.’ — Givi Gumbaridze, Georgian Communist Party chief government's lifting a curfew and with­ drawing soldiers. "A wall of alienation rem ains," he said. "It is necessary that the people discover the truth." Gumbaridze, the former KGB chief of Georgia, last week replaced Dzhumber Patiashvili, who accepted responsibility for the bloodshed and resigned. Menagarishvili told Izvestia leading toxi­ cologists believed the substance used on protesters had "an irritating and atropine­ like effect." He said scientists in Tbilisi, Moscow and Leningrad were diagnosing the cases. Atropine is a poisonous crystalline al­ kaloid. In large doses it can induce nerve paralysis and delirium. It can cause death through combined cardiac and respiratory failure. Georgian activists claim people died af­ ter being gassed, but officials have not confirmed this. The Communist Party newspaper Prav- da on Wednesday said Interior Ministry officials acknowledged tear gas was used in two places to break up protesters. But Pravda quoted an unidentified spokesman as saying regular army soldiers could not have used gas because it is not standard issue. "Unfortunately, this crucial admission came several days late, and was made only after level of passions had reached the highest degree," Pravda said. the The Tass news agency said failure to promptly acknowledge what was done "led to fantastic rumors and allegations which made people ... mistrust official re­ ports." Supreme Court called on to ban dial-a-porn Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Bush adminis­ tration urged the Supreme Court on Wednesday to protect the nation's chil­ dren by upholding a federal law that would shut down the $2 billion "dial-a- porn" industry. Congress was justified when it passed a law last year banning all sexually explicit telephone dial-up message services to "protect children from hearing patently offensive speech," Justice Department lawyer Richard Taranto contended. But Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe, representing a major purveyor of dial-a-pom services, said Congress went too far. Saying most attempts by children to reach the 976 numbers used by dial-a- pom companies can be frustrated by tech­ nological safeguards, Tribe said, "Their availability makes this flat ban illegiti­ m ate." The 976 exchanges also are used for other, non-controversial types of messag­ es such as sport scores, time checks and weather reports. Bom in 1983, the dial-a-pom industry matured quickly. In 1984, Taranto said, 180 million such calls were placed by cus­ tomers in New York alone. The industry's income last year topped $2 billion, he said. The total ban on dial-a-pom never was imposed because a federal judge in Cali­ fornia ruled that the 1988 law could be applied only to obscene, not merely inde­ cent, phone messages. U.S. District Judge Wallace Tashima in Los Angeles said outlawing non-obscene messages, even though they may be inap­ propriate for minors, violates the free- speech protections of the Constitution's First Amendment. The government ap­ pealed the ruling to the Supreme Court. Justice Sandra Day O 'Connor said Wednesday she doubted whether the pro­ posed ban meets the "least restrictive m eans" test the court has used when scrutinizing governmental based on speech content. interference She asked the government's lawyer why technological safeguards such as scrambling devices or access codes could not provide "a feasible and effective wav to preserve the states' compelling interest in protecting children" while allowing adult access to such services. Taranto answered that the various safe­ guards contain "significant loopholes." But Tribe, conceding that "som e kids will get through" despite the "technologi cal wizardry," said parents — not the government — are the best monitors. "The question is whether we are going to have the government displace the par­ ent because not all parents are perfect," Tribe said. When Justice Antonin Scalia suggested that the case involved "pornography that is short of ob scen ity," Tribe disagreed. just He said many of the telephone messag­ es at issue are "m erely suggestive." Page 4 T H E DAILY TEXAN Thursday. April 20, 1989 EDITORIALS Viewpoint o r 1' ' s e *i w s s c u • The Daily Texan am v They are not necessarily the opinions ol the University Texas Student Put rations Boast of Ottera' ng 7 'us'ees )f t h e Pi.) t o r a n c ) t h e w n t e r o f t h e a r t ic le i n ).tra t i i n ' t i e B o a r d o f R e g e n t s o r t h e V ie w p o in t B etrayed Patrick sabotaged Brack tract deal one of its own to thank. The UT System got taken down a notch Wednesday, and it has Michael Patrick, executive vice chancellor for asset m anage­ ment, fatallv wounded the System's chances for an advantageous com­ promise in the Brackenridge Tract deal. Originally, the System wanted a 99-year commercial lease on the 450-acre tract in exchange for a 20-year lease on the System-owned Lions Municipal Golf Course. The new proposal, which the City Council and Legislature must still approve, allows the System to develop only 90 acres of the tract com­ mercially for 30 years in exchange for a 30-year lease on the golf course. And Patrick's poor bedside m anner is largely to blame for this huge concession. At a recent public hearing, Patrick brazenly told the City Council, "It's like we're the big kid on the block who's 6 feet 5 inches and 270 pounds. No matter how nice we are, we're still 6 feet 5 inches and 270 pounds." Patrick also allowed nine months to lapse in the negotiation process at one point. When he decided to revive negotiations, his revised plan clearly didn't adhere to city zoning codes. This confused commission members w ho were told by Patrick that the System would comply with all codes. Obeying the law would not normally be an issue. However, the University's state status exempts it from city codes if it develops land for the state. But if it develops the land commercially ... well, then the law falls into a gray area that Patrick decided to exploit. System officials should think twice before putting Patrick in charge of any future deals. With him in charge, the System stands to lose its good name and not just its shirt. — Susan Boren B a d C h em istr y Protest the financial-aid drug law R ight-wing polemicists often chastise the federal government for Sometimes they're correct. Just look at the silly law that will require college financial-aid recipients to sign a pledge not to use or sell illegal drugs. Now, we understand the reasoning behind the idea — drug abuse is obviously a bad thing. being obtrusive and ineffectual But to think that making students sign a little pledge will in any way stem campus drug abuse is pure fancy. You can just hear some bureau­ crat somewhere arguing that mandatory drug testing of recipients, be­ fore thev get their money, will inspire them to stop using drugs. But what will stop them from abstaining sufficiently long before the test so that their results are clean, and then reverting to old form? "Well," comes the bureaucratic reply, "make the drug tests random. That way, financial-aid druggies will have to stay clean all the time." Yes, but it would also single out a random group for punishment. The whole situation reeks of Ronald Reagan's early-'80s attack on federal employees with overdue student loans — he wanted to punish them by taking payments directly out of their paychecks. Thankfully, Congress and the public objected and Reagan revoked his executive order. Unfortunately, Congress — with the blessing of Rep. J.J. "Jake" Pickle, D-Texas — has already passed this bill into law. So what can students do to protest? Don Davis, assistant director of the Office of Student Financial Services, has inspired us with an idea. "It'll be interesting if someone doesn't sign it [the pledge]," he says. Students who d on't like unjust, arbitrary federal meddling in their university's affairs should simply refuse to sign it. — Tom Philpott Avoid the UT prod: Students unite now! On Tuesday, about 300 people gathered S co tt H e n so n TEXAN COLUMNIST the sum m er. in front of the Main Building to call for the restoration of graduate stu d en t em ployee health benefits for A round the com er on the W est Mall, another 50 or so attended a Black Student Alliance- sponsored rally to call on the University to hire m ore m inority faculty. Both of these groups protested the Universi­ ty's lack of concern for the education and well­ being of its students. Most graduate students believe the Universi­ ty betrayed them after years of paternalistic coddling designed to keep them com placent, and perhaps a bit fearful. The BSA's em phasis was on the perpetual lack of com m itm ent to providing black and H ispanic role m odels for students in the form of professors. In essence, both stu d en t groups were pro­ testing different aspects of the same trend — that the University d o esn 't give a dam n about students, just its bottom line. Harry Cleaver, associate professor of economics, noticed the irony, the graduate students "you should talk to [the BSA] ... your struggle is their struggle." telling H e's right. Just as the division of w orkers in craft unions inhibits effective solidarity w hen workers make dem ands, so do divisions am ong students allow the University to play students off against one another. O n Tuesday, close to 400 students came to the M ain Building to pro­ test w hat am ounts to the sam e problem. T hat's a lot of people pow er if students team ed up. But these two issues aren 't the only ones w here the adm inistration's cavalier attitude tow ard students show s up. Even w hen the ad ­ m inistration came to the bargaining table on the child-care issue, its proposal w ould make service for UT faculty and staff supersede that for students. It's possible day-care facilities will be distributed in about as egalitarian a fashion as the parking spaces — i.e., the students will get screwed — if stud ents d o n 't acquire the clout to enforce their dem ands. Child care is treated as a completely separate " T h is is the underlying current of all student struggles — the struggle to place humanity and learning above profits and research as the central values of the UniversityJ 9 issue. In fact, the graduate students reviving the Council of G raduate S tudents cite child care as one issue they hope will draw graduate stu ­ dents back into their camp. But as the graduate stu d en ts w ho carried their babies dow n to the chancellor's office Tuesday w ould tell you, providing health care for your family and having quality day care for your child are the sam e issue: "Will I be able to care for my family while I go to school?" A nd if the answ er to th at question turns out to be " n o ," then we need to seriously question and challenge the priorities of those in pow er. This is the underlying current of all stu d en t struggles — the struggle to place hum anity and learning above profits and research as the cen­ tral values of the University. Even the struggles of anti-apartheid activists ultim ately hinge on this one, central issue. Pro­ testing UT investm ents that help prop u p an apartheid state only transfers the em phasis to non-student victims of the sam e phenom enon. In all instances the source of tension is the deg­ radation of hum an beings in the nam e of the Almighty Dollar. The University has the strategy of "divide and conquer" dow n to an art. Students are di­ vided naturally into different colleges, d ep art­ m ents and classes. These are the m ain divisions the University uses, although race and class are also historical favorites. For instance, graduate students in the engi­ neering and business schools have been in­ formed that their supplements will be covered no matter what, while the other colleges that bring in less outside research funds can't make that offer. So if not all graduate students are up in arms over the loss of benefits, at least part of the reason is that some have been paid off — and the pay-off pattern follows these natural divisions among fields of study. Similarly, the University is able to maintain graduation rates for minorities as low as 35 per­ cent for blacks and 45 percent for Hispanics be­ cause these students' struggles are isolated from the white majority. Crossing these divi­ sions and addressing them as part of more fun­ damental issues would enhance the ability of all groups to achieve their goals. There are models for umbrella-type organiza­ tions where individual, autonomous groups combine their forces to address the needs of the entire community — Saul Alinsky's book, Re­ veille for Radicals comes to mind. Alinsky organized what he called "People's Organizations" in poor communities, where each small business/church/labor union/local club/etc. supports other members with lobby­ ing efforts and attendance of events and ac­ tions. That's the difference between 50 people at a BSA rally and 400 — students need to learn to recognize their common struggle, and sup­ port each other's goals as vehem ently as their own. But even without such an organizational structure, student organizers could still do a lot for their causes by making an effort to commu­ nicate with and support each other in their struggles against a common adversary. United, students could conceivably over­ throw even the most odious of UT policies — divided, the University can usually pick stu­ dents off one group at a time. As is always the case in the struggles of the powerless against the powerful, solidarity brings strength, and with strength, there's po­ tential for social change. Henson is an economics senior. COGS must be resurrected to address broad array of grad issues L ast week, the officers of the Council of Graduate Stu­ dents and many of its rep­ resentatives resigned because of K evin M uir GUEST COLUMNIST groups and the adm inistration so that the needs of the graduate stu­ dent population are considered in any proposal. Ultimately, I see on- cam pus child care as trem endous assistance g1 aduate-student parents and as a draw ing card to prospective older graduate stu­ dents. to ■ Student Health Center: As most graduate students know, the Student Health C enter is not well- equipped for the older-than-aver- age student. It is especially inade­ quate for students with children and expectant m others. Presently, a renovation of the Student Health C enter is being considered. G rad­ uate students should have a voice in any changes. COGS can be that voice. ■ M ulticulturalism : The gradu­ ate stud ent body is diverse. Each year we have a large num ber of international students entering the graduate school. At present, a unified approach to welcoming and assim ulating these students into the University and the Austin area does not exist. I can see COGS (possibly w orking w ith in­ ternational groups) operating a "b u d d y " system to ease the tran­ sition for the international stu­ dents. In a related issue, I believe COGS — because of its diverse constituency — should be work­ ing w ith the adm inistration, the S tudents' Assembly an d the Texas U n io n M u lticu ltu ralism Task Force in developing a UT discrimi­ nation policy. ■ Advisory positions: COGS has in the past sent representa­ tives to both the University Coun­ cil and the G raduate Assembly. In addition, COGS m em bers recently served on the Liberal Arts Dean In Search Com m ittee and the O m ­ budsm an Screening Com mittee. I m ention this to show that it is not unprecedented for COGS to pro­ vide advisers. fact, COGS should actively seek out advisory positions so that graduate student interests will be w ell-represented in m any areas. As an additional benefit, I believe com m unication betw een the adm inistration and graduate students will increase, w hich m ay prevent surprises such as the health benefits crisis. ■ Health benefits: I reluctantly m ention this issue because with the the recent resignations of COGS officers and representa­ tives, m uch of the driving force regain our and m achinery health benefits have disappeared from COGS. H ow ever, I still be­ lieve the organization can be effec­ tive on this issue, although from a lower profile position. to ■ N ational representation: COGS should join together with graduate groups at other universi­ ties to promote common interests. To this end, membership in the National Association of Graduate Students is important. This group is presently pursuing the repeal of taxation on fellowships and schol­ arships. ■ Social events: The only UT- that sponsored social activities most graduate students attend are their departmental picnics and Christmas parties. Unlike other universities, interdepartment fra­ ternization is rare here. I would like to propose that COGS could be the vehicle for sponsoring in­ terdepartment social events. Al­ ternatively, I could see COGS working with the Texas Union on a stand-alone graduate student programming committee. ■ Information services: I am sure many would agree that there is a limited sense of community among UT graduate students. To situation, COGS improve this should continue to periodically publish a graduate student newsletter. In addition, for the new students, COGS should con­ tinue providing the Graduate Guide. If you are interested in any of the above issues or would like to see other graduate student issues addressed, I would like to encour­ age your attendance at the next meeting of COGS to be held in CBA 4.344 Thursday, April 20, at 5:30 p.m. At this meeting we will discuss the future and the direc­ tion of COGS. Although many graduate stu­ dents are in school only to broad­ en their career skills, the rebirth of COGS is an opportunity for any graduate student regardless of discipline to also enhance his or her leadership skills. M uir is a Graduate Student in Chemical Engineering and is a Gradu­ ate School SA Representative. frustration from recent adminis­ tration actions on the graduate employee health benefits crisis. This action left the group in a state of limbo. Although the resignations were unfortunate, I believe that now is a unique time in which COGS can be restructured from primarily a single-issue group to an effective broad-based organization. A m ulti-dimensional COGS could tackle several issues which affect many graduate students. With this in mind, I would like to propose the following as a new vi­ sion for COGS: ■ On-campus child care: Al­ though several groups are study­ ing on-campus child care, gradu­ ate is limited. I believe COGS could work in conjunction with existing in v o lv e m e n t s t u d e n t F ir in g L in e Sweetheart column hateful The Texan's dem onstrations, both subtle and overt, of its anti-Greek bias have giv­ en me a num ber of good laughs in the 10 years I've been reading the paper. H owev­ er, I was thoroughly appalled by the vi­ triolic attack on UT Sweetheart Michelle Anderson by editorialists Susan Boren and Tom Philpott right, Sweetheart, get serious," Vieu’point, Tues­ day). Cnticism s of the UT Sw eetheart's function may be valid, but disparaging an individual as Boren and Philpott did is both uncalled for and harmful. ("Bittersweet: All A nderson's credentials as an honors student and active m em ber of the UT com ­ m unity seem almost impeccable; the as­ saults on her intelligence and character, apparently based solely on out-of-context to statem ents boost UT's image with 'positive' reign," The Daily Texan, Monday), are irresponsi­ ble, cynical and reprehensible. ("Sw eetheart sets plans I d o n 't know Anderson and have never been part of the Greek com m unity. As a working journalist, how ever, I feel com­ pelled to apologize on behalf of the m any professionals w ho would not use a new s­ paper's m ost im portant editorial place­ m ent for such pointless venom . Good luck, Michelle, in your year as Sweetheart; I'm sure you'll represent the University with the class, kindness and good sense that others som etim es lack. Steve Hill Graduate student in journalism Hit her again! Hit her again! liked the column bashing the UT Sweetheart ("Bittersweet: All right, Sweet­ heart, get serious," Viewpoint, Tuesday). If she didn't deserve it, then print some in­ telligent words she has uttered recently. I Sara Pevaroff Political communications Sweetheart issue fabricated In the Viewpoint appearing in The Daily Texan on Tuesday ("Bittersweet: All right, Sweetheart, get serious"), Susan Boren and Tom Philpott wrongly accused Mi­ chelle Anderson, UT's newly elected Sweetheart, of belittling black-white rela­ tions at the University. Since Boren and Philpott obviously misinterpreted Ander­ son's statements in the Monday Texan ("Sweetheart sets plans to boost UT's im­ age with 'positive' reign"), an explanation is in order. Boren and Philpott reason that since An­ derson is white and in a sorority that she may take racial issues lightly, a clever, well-founded deduction. Instead of sug­ gesting "deprogramming" for Anderson, they should re-evaluate their own mode of thinking. Boren and Philpott should not waste their time reading racial connota­ tions into everything or fabricating artifi­ cial issues, but should act to correct the real problems. Charles F. Lano Jr. Zoology Matthew R. Pearson Finance You can all piss off, okay? In response to C harlotte N orris' letter ("Let's not get pissy, now ," Firing Line, Tuesday): Sigma Phi Epsilon w ould like to apologize for any em barassm ent w e have caused you by exposing our genetalia or any feelings of inadequacy we may have cause your mate(s). Thank you for your generous offer to take up a collection to purchase toilet facil­ ities for your friendly neighbors, but after careful consideration of the problem , we decided to raise the m oney by subletting a condo or hocking a BMW. To our good buddy Kelton Morgan (" 'Pissy' may be wrong word," Firing Line, Wednesday): Obviously your source of information was not your girlfriend or mother. The Daily Texan's act of printing Norris' and Morgan's letters was a cheap shot below the belt aimed toward the Greek community. Congratulations, however, to The Daily Texan for exposing the biggest and most .. . newsworthy story on West Campus. Tom Stickler Representative member Just come to class I have a few questions about: HED s278 Fieldwork: Methods of Con­ traception I about places? 1. If hours are to be arranged, how 2. Is there a lab fee and if so, is it legal? 3. Does this "fieldwork" involve gas sta­ tions and rolls of quarters? 4. What are the prerequisites? Puberty? 5. How can any college student fail this class? 6. Is parental consent needed? 7. Who are the guest lecturers? Xa viera Hollander? C. Everett Koop? 8. If upper-division standing is required, are other positions optional? 9. Are there any oral exams? I'm really curious. Waldo Gibson Architecture Goddess of Liberty statue begins UT reign THE D a ily TEXAN/Thursday, April 2 0 ,1989/Page 5 Greek service project gives homeless a meal By DEENA PERKMS Daily Texan Staff Interfratemity Council leaders will spend Thursday morning on the street — serving about 150 homeless people breakfast. The Greek and Service Bbard — EFC's leaders — normally acts as a liaison between UT service groups, fraternities and sororities without actually initiating various community service projects. But for Thursday and Wednes­ day mornings, the board members are taking over a project normally performed by the Ladies of Chari­ ty, the Catholic wing of Goodwill Industries said Don Kloster, board chairman. The breakfast will be the board's first independent service project in its two-year history, Kloster said. "It is a good chance for us to do something on a mutual basis — to have interaction between board members," he said. "This is right up our alley as far as service proj­ ects go." Kloster said organizations such as Goodwill only serve lunch and dinner, offering only coffee in the morning, so the Ladies of Charity decided to serve breakfast. The project will take place in front of the St. Vincent De Paul Stores at 321 E. Second St. and at 1500 S. Congress Ave. because several homeless people buy their clothes there, Kloster said. IFC Director Scott Wilder said he is pleased that board members initiated their program. "The best aspect of this is that college students don't get expo­ sure to these things," and the project gives students a greater understanding of the homeless sit­ uation, Wilder said. Mike Wallace, a board member representing the Texas Wranglers, said he would like to see more ser­ vices originated by the board members. By JOSEPH ABBOTT Daily Texan Staff Texas Memorial Museum will be closed to the public for a couple of days while a new resident moves in. It takes a while to make a home for a Goddess. The deity is the original Goddess of Liberty statue that formerly stood atop the state Capitol. The almost-16-foot statue will be moved by truck Thursday from its previous home in an aircraft hangar to the museum. An 80-ton crane will lift the statue from the truck to the museum's south doors, where it will be put on a special dolly and moved lengthwise into the build­ ing. Inside, workers will hoist the stat­ ue into an upright position on its base in the museum's main hall. The museum will stay closed Fri­ day while work continues to install the statue. The Goddess will go on public display when the museum reopens Saturday at 1 p.m. The statue, made of zinc alloy at­ tached to an iron skeleton, stood atop the Capitol dome for nearly a ‘W e hope the statue is a little less scary.’ — Dorothy Young, Texas Memorial Museum official century. But a century is a long time for anything to have to face Austin's weather, and time took its toll on the Goddess. It was removed in late 1985 and replaced the following year with a more durable aluminum replica. The original will occupy the mu­ seum's main hall, where a 30-foot mosasaur skeleton used to stand. The mosasaur — a prehistoric aquatic lizard — was disassembled for the move in March and will be reassembled on the lower level as the centerpiece of the museum'“ paleontology exhibit. "We're very pleased to be able to exhibit a little piece of Texas histo­ ry," said Dorothy Young, the muse­ um's education and public relations FOR YOUR CLOTHES • C ollege • Women’s • Maternity • Teens’ Accessories • Children’s • Infants’ We buy fo r cash, or consignm ent s e ll eration • Buy/Sell • Consignment • Resale • Wholesale • Samples MON-SAT 10 AM-5:30PM 454-4000 7942 GREAT NORTHERN BLVD. (MOPAC & WEST ANDERSON LN.) AUSTIN *400 EXTRA CASH BACK/DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN Offered Graduating Seniors & Grad. 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GRADUATING SENIORS AND GRADUATE STUDENTS ALSO MAY QUALIFY FOR • A delayed first payment option with equal monthly payments that do not start until four months following the date of purchase. Contact David McDavid Chrysler-Plymouth for details. 13573 Research Blvd. (at Anderson MM Road) Austin, TX 78750 FREE BENETTON Key Chain w/Purchase coordinator. Young said the mosasaur used to scare small children visiting the mu­ seum. "We hope the statue is a little less scary," she said. The Goddess is scheduled to re­ main at the museum for at least three years, while the State Preser­ vation Board chooses a permanent home for it, said Capitol curator Bonnie Campbell. said Campbell the projected $32,800 cost of the move will be paid by private donors. Among them is Chevron USA, which gave $25,000 toward the project. Many of the other contributors donated goods and services to help defray costs, she said. "I think we're going to come in a little under the budget," Campbell said. "But I won't really know until all of the bills come in." Trinity Street will be closed dur­ ing the move and reopened after the statue arrives at the museum. The public will be able to watch the move from behind barricades and police tape. IS YÜE NON-SEDATING AHTIHISTAMINE INEFFECTIVE??? If your prescription non-sedating antihistamine does not relieve your spring allergy symptoms you may qualify for a study of an investigational n o n ­ sedating antihistamine. Study participants receive fipee skin testing and financial compensation upon study completion. For m ore inform ation call: H ealth.Q u.est R e se a rc h « t a g A A 1 9 9 VVe’re open at the main office drive-thru Mon.-Fri., 7 a m - 7 pm and Sat. 9 am-4 pm > r #IÍÉ¡ft ■Credit Union i Auttia. m 78765-4069 * 512 ’ *87-80811 Poetas hicanas: Reflections in the Mirror A POETRY READING with Maria Limon Angela de Hoyos Evangelma Vigil-Piñon AND A SPECIAL PERFORMANCE BY NEW WORLD ARTS TOURING TEATRO TROUPE 6:30 p.m. THURSDAY APRIL 20TH, 1989 in the Texas Union Ballroom @ 24th and Guadalupe SPONSORED BY EL MOVIMIENTO ESTUDI ANTIL CHICANO'A de AZTLAN. THE GRADU ATE OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM, DEAN OF STUDENTS OFFICE/MEX AM CULTURAL EXCHANGE PROG , HISPANIC PRE LAW AS­ SOC CENTER FOR MEX -AM STUDIES and «nth special thanks to the league of United Chicano Artists. La Paha. A jstm Peace & Jus­ tice Coalition, and the National Endowment tor the Arts BAKERY M u f f i n s , M u f f i n s , Muffins Buy i ♦ Get l FREE! Oat Bran Banana Nut w i t h t h i s a d Blueberry R o o s e v e l t Apple Walnut B l u e b e r r y Br an 7m - »,•. 4 5 » - S4SS 4 1 1 E. 43rd 7 days, wetk W hy subscribe to UTMOST M agazine? 5/orv. nrv- c u f i Mk r I vP i ? y L / i H p i/ n t £ - ft riFfli T€/> J a c k € r ivly- i 1* f / t o £ S € Sum m er C olors O f B enetto n. HIGHLAND MALL ■ NORTHCROSS MALL Advice Everybody needs some guidance when if comes to getting a job. UtmosT gives lots in the UTMOST Career Guide, a special section coming in spring 1990. Get on track. Bubble in UtmosT as an a ^ cT optional fee when you register for fall classes. i U T / V I O S I lex City M a g á /im ul I I Thursday, April 20, 1989 Page 6 UNIVERSITY T h e Da il y T e x a n Danalynn Recer, a graduate student in Afro-American history and co-chair for GSLA, addresses a West Mall crowd on gay issues. Tom Stevens/Daily Texan Staff UT art student says he plagiarized ‘Texan’ cartoonist’s work By RANDY KENNEDY Daily Texan Staff A UT art student said Wednesday he knowingly plagiarized the car­ toon strips of a Daily Texan artist by submitting the artwork as his own to a national skateboarding maga­ zine. Greg Neal, a fine arts sophomore, said he submitted photocopies of cartoons drawn by Texan artist Chris Ware to the final issue of Homeboy, a now-defunct California publication. Neal said he knew the magazine's I I I I Chris Ware’s comic-strip character editor was under the impression the cartoons were his own work. “It got out of hand before I real­ BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! 0?*lCUK£A *35° Starting at Colors: Tortoise, Yellow Gold, Black, Brown, Red and others Present Coupon and get Vi oft on lenses when ordering a complete pair of glasses. Expires 5-9-89. We also solder metal frames. Q uality Vision 462-0001 4311 South First ized it," Neal said. “I made a mis­ take, obviously I made a mistake, by passing off someone else's talent as my ow n." The untitled daily cartoon strip by Ware features the adventures of a “potato head" character and in­ cludes other character elements. In the magazine's June 1989 edi­ tion, Ware's artwork is displayed on a full page with “GREG NEAL" written above the cartoons. On the adjacent page is a recent telephone interview with Neal, conducted by the magazine's former editor, Andy Jenkins. In the interview, Jenkins asked Neal to submit more strips and Neal said, “Oh, you mean with that same character? The potato guy?" He lat­ er added, “I'll stick with him, that's pretty good stuff." Neal said he submitted the art­ work as his own because he believes Ware "does really good stuff." Ware, a fine arts senior, said while he is angry Neal used the art, he does not plan to seek compensa­ tion for the magazine article or to take Neal to court. “I talked with him already, and we've pretty well settled the thing between u s," Ware said. “I don't think there's any reason for legal ac­ tion." But Texas Student Publications General Manager Richard Lytle said because Ware is a Texan staff mem­ ber and his cartoon strips are copy­ righted, legal action against Neal is an option. “At this point, we just have the matter under discussion," Lytle said. “I'm personally still trying to assemble the data about i t /' He added that TSP could refer the problem to UT System lawyers. Jenkins said Tuesday he had known Neal for almost a year and was never certain the UT student was submitting his own material. "This is really a shock to u s," he said. "I never realized he was actu­ ally doing it, but I had my suspi­ cions. I would call it more of a hunch. “But I didn't know how to ap­ proach him on it because it would have been awkward," Jenkins said. International Studies Abroad EARN ACADEMIC CREDITS Fall, Spring & Summer Programs Spain • Fran ce • Mexico For a complete packet and quick response call: 480-8522 TICKET DISMISSAL ONLY $12 W/THIS AD GUARANTEED TO BEAT COMPETITORS PRICE BY $2 W/THEIR AD NEAR CAMPUS NO TESTS REGISTER BY PHONE BUDGET DEFENSIVE DRIVING 454-5300 4 3 1 4 Madicol Parltway Group challenges gays to reveal themselves By BEN COHEN Daily Texan Staff Assuring gay students that they are not alone on campus, the Gay and Lesbian Students' Association challenged heterosexuals to exam­ ine their perceptions of homosexu­ als during a Wednesday rally on the West Mall. “The more straight people are ex­ posed to gay and lesbian concerns, the more homophobia is generally lessened," said Ted Spencer, a speech communications graduate student. “And it's encouraging for gays to see more people to identify with. It lets them know that coming out is every bit as possible as living a sheltered life," Spencer added. Rob Nash, an English junior, an­ nounced that the Rev. Jesse Jackson would give the keynote speech at the March on Austin for Lesbian/ Gay Equal Rights on April 30. The marchers, scheduled to meet at noon at the Austin Coliseum and proceed to the Capitol, will attempt to make state legislators take notice of gay and lesbian issues. “Let's send a message to the Leg­ islature that they can take their so­ domy laws and sodomize them­ selves with them ," Brad Williams, a liberal arts senior, told a crowd of about 50 attending the rally. Wednesday's rally was part of the University's fourth annual Lesbian and Gay Awareness Week. Speak­ ers addressed topics ranging from homophobia on campus to the legal and economic barriers faced by homosexuals. Frank Serio, GLSA co-chair and a mathematics graduate student, said all students can make their own “lit­ tle stands" for gay rights. “Tell the bigot at work that 'fag­ got' and 'dyke' are terms as unac­ ceptable as 's p ic ,'" Serio said. 'nigger' and Jeff Graham, a graduate student in drama, said that the approxi­ mately 4 0 ,0 0 0 straight students at the University will have about 4 ,0 0 0 gay children. “They'll have to face a lot of bigo­ try," Graham said. "I hope they don't have to go through the same family problems some of us did." Danalynn Recer, a co-chair of the GLSA and co-ordinator of the Uni­ versity chapter of the National Or­ ganization for Women, addressed some of the stereotypes gays and lesbians must face. “People often say homosexuality is unnatural. If by that they mean it must be natural instinctive, enough to break through society's prejudice ... we're certainly not taught it and there are no role mod­ els to learn it from ," she said. “It's a realization we come to about our­ selves." Cool aid! Breezy cotton tankdresses for juniors at a red hot price Only $30 Easy-to-live-in styles from B.D.P. Long and loose sundresses of soft cotton jersey. Choose from bright stripes and solid colors. Junior sizes s-m-1. Only 30.00 IMMIGRATION H, vs PRACTICAL TRAINING P A ll PARSONS P.C. Attorney at Law B O A R D CERTIFIED IMMIGRATION & NATIONALITY LAW T E X A S B O ARD O F LE G A L SPECIALIZATIO N 704 Rio Grande 477-7887 CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD Rice University Sum m er P rogram o f H ispanic Studies Segovia, Spain Ju n e 5-July 15,1989 Language and Upper Division Courses Graduate Courses P R O G R A M F E E : $1,850.00 Eligibility and Admission Courses are open for credit to Rice students and students from other recognized colleges and universities. application For forms and further information, contact Dr. Maria Teresa Leal, Director, Summer Program in Spain, Department of Spanish, Rice University, Houston, TX 77251. Deadline for application: April 21, 1989. Partial scholar­ ship available. LSAT • GRE • GMAT 100°/c of Princeton Review LSAT, GRE and GMAT students in Austin would rec­ ommend our course to a friend. Why? Because they know from experience that The Princeton Review gives a student what no other preparation can: a proven formula for Beating Standardized Tests. Spring Courses Now Forming 469-6336 CaJI now for moro information I FinandaJ Astmtanoe Available THE PRINCETON r e v ie w IR S We Score More! SHOP D ILLA R D 'S BA R TO N C R E E K S Q U A R E, H A N C O C K C E N T E R A N D H IG H LA N D M A L L SHOP M O N D A Y T H R O U G H S A T U R D A Y 10-9. S U N D A Y 12-6 AM ER IC AN EXPR ESS W E L C O M E South African says government only changing world’s perception tain rights based on which class they are bom into — colored, black, Indian or white. South African women as a whole are the most oppressed "as a race, a class, a sex," she said. Their role is understated and sometimes never mentioned. Both sexes must fight for equal rights for all races, Ngubo said, but she added "we also have to fight alongside each other for the liber­ ation of ourselves as women." Ngubo also explained the struc­ ture of South Africa's black-majority mining industry and pointed out that 44 percent of the world's coal is produced there. But despite South Africa's high levels of coal production, Ngubo said a lack of domestic oil fields is that nation's "Achilles heel." "For all its richness in minerals, South Africa does not have its own oil deposits," she said. The military cannot operate with­ out oil, Ngubo said, and Americans should support an international boycott of Shell Oil Company be­ cause that firm violates the United Nations' oil embargo against South Africa. "Shell Oil is the one culprit who has earned this target," she said. "So I urge you to support that. Your car doesn't care what kind of gas you put into it." Ngubo said by supporting such boycotts and by supporting divest­ ment, Americans can help "make it costly for the South African govern­ ment to maintain the status quo." THE ARMY CAN HELP YOU GET A $25,200 EDGE ON COLLEGE. 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April 2 0 .1989/Page 7 Boycotters to make up economics test By DIANA WILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff Students who boycotted an up- per-division economics test earlier this month to protest grades will make up the missing grade by compiling a readings packet on ed­ ucational problems and delivering a presentation on the topic. John Eallonardo, a philosophy senior who refused to take an Eco­ nomics 350K this month, said he believes participat­ ing in the boycott has taught him more than if he had completed the exam. test earlier "I think I've learned a little bit about what it takes to be involved in a protest against something I don't believe in," Eallonardo said. "I've also learned that there are a lot of people who won't do that." Eallonardo and eight other stu­ dents refused to take the exam be­ cause they believe grading sys­ tems do not effectively show how much a student can learn in a course. "I don't think grades are partic­ ularly fair or particularly neces­ sary," Eallonardo said. The boycott occurred after the examinations were distributed. One student protested grading to the class, ripped his test in half and urged classmates to leave with him. The exam represented about 36 percent of the class grade. Harry Cleaver, the associate professor of economics who teach­ es the course, said he agreed to let them make up the exam by assem­ bling a readings packet on prob­ lems in education after talking with the students who walked out during the test. Each student to prove he or she studied for the exam by turning in completed re­ is required view questions and analyzing pre­ vious course readings, he said. The students who boycotted the test are now doing more work than those who finished the exam­ ination, Cleaver said. David McClellan, an economics/ history junior who refused to take the test, said it would have been easier to take the exam. "I knew the material — I would have made an A," McClellan said. "I'm putting in much more work now than the people who had tak­ en the test." McClellan said he believes the boycott has raised student aware­ ness on the problems found in grading systems. "If we've accomplished nothing else, we've got people to begin thinking about issue of grades," he said. the The Restored Capitol Place To Stay COMPLIMENTARY VALET PARKING • 148 REMODELED GUEST ROOMS • SATTELLITE CABLE TV —Showtime, ESPN, WGN, etc. • MEETING & BANQUET FACILITIES • UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS VAN SHUTTLE • JOCKEY CLUB BAR & GRILL —breakfast buffet —daily lunch specials —soup & salad bar —happy hour specials • ON SITE SECURITY TRY US AGAIN FOR THE FIRST TIME MADA INN CAPITOL 1 Ith at San Jacinto Austin, Texas 512/476-7151 or 1/800-2 RAMADA HELPS YOU MAKE THE GRADE!! Come See Easy to Use Application Solutions Including: Word Processing Graphics Spreadsheets and Much Much More... Fabulous Prizes to Be Given Away!!! 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No purdaae is By STEPHANIE PARSLEY Daily Texan Staff Although the South African gov­ ernment tries to convince the world it is making changes, it is only changing public perception, a repre­ sentative for the South Africa Mine- workers Union said Wednesday. Nomonde Ngubo, an anti-apar­ theid activist, spoke to about 50 people at the LBJ Library in a sym­ posium co-sponsored by the Steve Biko Committee, and said South Af­ rica's problems are not always caused by racial discrimination alone. "The system uses economic and political racism to keep people in subjugation," Ngubo said. "As I speak standing here, I do not have the right to vote, to live where I want. All this is predicted at birth." She said the more the govern­ ment tries to repress non-white South Africans, the more they re­ sist. People in South Africa have cer- Instant Eurail Passes! 469-5656 p a g n Bon Voy.BC TcvcJ * « . T O W ii the assumed name of Ausdn Bon Voyage Travel, Inc. I SU N G I A.1 S U N G LA SSES ^ M U S C H Í LOMO ¡M IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH IIM IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE ¡ F R E E IN IT IA L L E G A L | I CONSULTATION (with this ad) I = IMMIGRATION ASSISTANCE = • Labor Certification • H-1 Work Visas • Relative Petitions • Permanent Residency • U S Citizenship • Asylum • Changes of Status • Consular Processing Gloria Lee Vera Attorney at Law 443-4788 ftiiimiiiiiiimtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiir coupon ______ ROFFUER SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN SHAMPOO* s S CUT BLOW DRY Service* perform ed by supervised students! I 5339 Burnet 458-2620 | REPAIR • Boots • Shoes • Leather Goods • Luggage CUSTOM MADE • Boots • Belts • Chaps • Etc. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca «Austin «478-9309- G/M S T EA K H O U S E D ELIV ER S ! 474-GMGM V IN T A G E W A TC H ES R ES T O R E D and FINE WATCHES REPAIRED ROLEX AUDEMAR - PIGUET CARTIER PATEK - PHILLIPPE 1 hr Service on most Electronics T H E S H E F T A L L C O . JEWELERS CEMOLÓCISTS 2236 Ouellupt 427-4924 On ttw Drag next to Wataa HtgNand Ms* 456-9255 •cross trom Scarbroughs Brush up on Spanish between semesters A between semester trip to the Institute Filología Hispánica of Saltillo in Mexico is planned May 20-27. The Spanish-language school is in the Sierra Madre Mountains, an hour s drive from Monterrey, Mexico, and offers year-round classes emphasizing conversational skills. * Students are housed with Mex­ ican families, providing an oppor­ tunity for intensive practice of the language. Cost for the week, including room, board and transportation between Laredo and Saltillo, is $375. For information, call Glenda Mkaska at 458-8008. Thursday, April 20. 1989 Page 8 STATE & LOCAL T h e Da il y T e x a n Taxes on bonds denounced Plan would injure local governments, officials say By ALAN HINES Daily Texan Staff If the U .S. C ongress m akes m u­ nicipal bonds taxable, the cost of public service projects could in ­ crease by as m uch as 20 to 30 per­ cent, state and city officials said W ednesday. State Treasurer Ann Richards joined Austin M ayor Lee C ooke, Fort W orth M ayor Bob Bolen and G alveston M ayor jan ice Coggeshall in voicing opposition during a m orning press conference to a plan increase federal reve­ that would nues by slapping a the bonds. tax on they are "T h e federal governm ent is so desperate for m oney at this point that literally nickel-and- diming local governm ent to d ea th ," Richards said. "It is essential that we convince the C ongress to pass a Constitutional am endm ent that pro­ tects the tax-exem pt status of these b o n d s." The Public Finance Netw ork — a coalition of 36 national organiza­ local tions representing state and governm ents — sponsored a one- day conference in A ustin to discuss congressional lobbying m ethods to support tax-free m unicipal bonds. The U .S. Suprem e Court ruled last sum m er the C onstitution does not protect the tax-exem pt status of state local pu blic-purpose bonds, a ruling that prom pted the lobby's form ation. and Cooke said if m unicipal bonds are taxed at a level equal to other tax­ able securities, construction costs for two of A u stin's most prom inent projects will soar. "If we lose our tax-exem pt status, it's going to be another $120 to $150 million to build our new airport. If we have to issue a $50 million bond for our convention center, again, that cost would rise an additional $12 to $15 m illio n ," Cooke said. Bolen added that those extra ex­ penses will not go toward the actual project. "T h a t's m oney that will not build one more brick, one more runway, or one m ore square foot of carpeting in that convention center — it's ju st to pay the cost to issue these bonds. "A n d then people are going to look at the cost of these projects and say, 'Gee, M ayor, you're doing a crappy job.' But it w on 't be his fault — it'll be the governm ent's fault," Bolen said. Richards said that by the year 2000, the state will issue a total of about $144.5 billion in municipal bonds, and if the interest is taxable, the cost of issuing them will rise by almost $25 billion. M ost discussion on possibly tax­ ing the bonds, Richards said, is within congressional com m ittees. "It's like trying to fight a battle with an am orphous piece of bubble gum — w hen you ask a particular congressm an about this, they'll say that they never heard of it, so we don't know w here these ideas are coming fro m ," she said. that lawmakers know Before C ongress passes a new revenue package, Richards said, it is vital the drawbacks of taxing revenue bonds — an action that "w ould increase the cost of all public service projects by 30 p ercen t." Capitol bond sale added to prison bill By JUNDA WOO Daily Texan Staff The Texas Senate lengthened a prison-bond proposal W ednesday by adding a $160 million bond sale to re­ vamp the aging Capitol building. But Gov. Bill C lem ents and H ouse Speaker Gib Lewis oppose the legislation, and the differences are likely to mire the w hole bill in a conference com m ittee. The $330 million in prison m oney and all the C apitol- restoration funds need voter approval. C lem ents pro­ posed the prison-bond idea, which would pay for 11,000 new beds. How ever, he believes the Legislature should use its general fund to remodel and expand the 101-year-old Capitol. "It's just the best use of m o n ey ," said C lem ents spokesm an Jav Rosser. " If there's enough m oney avail­ able now to finance Capitol reconstruction, then it should be paid with general rev en u e." Lewis, D-Fort W orth, said law m akers m ust tighten their belts rather than opt for bon d s, on which the state must pay interest. Although earlier this year law m ak­ ers expected a billion-dollar deficit, accounting w izard­ ry and reclaimed taxes turned that projection into a $2 billion surplus. "A ll of a sudden we find a ray of sunshine, and suddenly w e stam pede ag ain ," Lewis said. "I certainly hate to do th a t." "T h e se funds are not going to be available in the next biennium , so what you're doing by spending all this money is you 're committing the next Legislature to a tax bill — unless the econom y just really goes crazy, and I d on't see that happening right n o w ," Lew is said. Sen. Eddie Bernice Johnson, D-Dallas, w ho proposed the Capitol bonds, said she also w as not pleased with the idea. But funding the remodeling out of the general fund would rob needed m oney from hum an services, Johnson said. Legislators had counted on a proposed cigarette tax while writing the hum an-services budget. W hen key lawmakers nixed that idea last week, program s such as Medicaid and aid to pregnant w om en were left hang­ ing. O pponents of Capitol bonds also say work would be delayed by at least nine m onths while the state waited for voters' approval. The State Preservation Board earlier this month unveiled a $154 million Capitol revam p that includes a vast underground com plex, which would double exist­ ing office space. Abel Ruiz, a former school board member, speaks to environmentalists gathered for a rally at the Capitol. Groups dispute ‘Austin bashing9 bills Melissa Amman/Daily Texan Staff By W.J. SCOTT Daily Texan Staff en v iro n m en tal grou p A u stin members the Capitol rallied at W ednesday to protest w hat they call "A ustin bashing bills" — about 60 pieces of legislation that include an act permitting the city to protect endangered species only within its corporate boundaries. "T hese bills are trying to take away the city's ability to protect its water supplies, to protect its endan­ gered species, and set its own elec­ tric ra te s," said Christi Stevens, an Earth First! member. Stevens said she is upset with the bills because they will void ordi­ nances already enacted by the City Council. "T oday's rally is against som e 60- odd bills that are referred to as A us­ tin bashing bills," Stevens said. Members of the Sierra Club, Clean W ater Action, South Austin and Central Austin Dem ocrats and Campus Animal Rights Activists were some of the groups rallying to oppose the various bills. Stevens spon­ sored by Rep. Terral Smith, R-Aus- legislation said that would tin, take setting the city's electric rate out of the hands of the City Council and into the hands of the Public Utility Com m is­ sion is bad new s for Austin resi­ dents. "This [the PUC] is a non-elective [Gov.] Bill board appointed by Clem ents, so I doubt if the bill's cre­ ator, Terral Smith, has the people's interest in stake h e re ," Stevens said. "I believe that Representative Smith's intention is to raise residen­ tial and small-bill rates in order to give breaks to com m ercial, industri­ al and huge energy-gobbling homes out in N orthw est Travis County by the lake," she said. Smith could not be reached for com m ent. Stevens said she is hoping to see a battle betw een Smith and her dis­ trict rep resentative, W ilhelm ina Delco, D-Austin. "T he ordinary folks here in A us­ tin will have their electric rates go up if Terral Smith gets his w ay, and that's not rig h t," Stevens said. Legislation that would allow Aus­ tin's City Council to protect endan­ gered species only within its corpo­ rate boundaries and not in adjacent areas drew strong criticism from several protesters. "I support hom e ru le," said A us­ tin resident Shockley Searcy. "F o r the first time anyw here in the country, the city would gain the pow er and control to protect their own environm ent, and the state Legislature w ants to take that right aw ay ," Searcy said. Bill Tryon, administrative assist­ ant to Rep. Ben Campell, R-Lewis- ville, the legislation's sponsor, said he does not understand w hy the protesters are angry with Cam pell's bill. "O u r bill simply states that no other county agency should be able to label an animal an endangered sp ecies," Tryon said. "H ow ever, Mr. Campbell applauds the activists for using their First A m endm ent right for freedom of sp eech ." E a rth F irst! m e m b e r A n d y McCauley said he is concerned that if the ability to regulate w ater quali­ ty and endangered species laws is given to state or federal agencies, the two levels of governm ent will not be able to provide the personnel to enforce the proposed legislation. Here's a package deal worth looking into... Yearbook/Magazine/Directory Package! Save more than 30 percent off what you’d pay after publication by ordering the Yearbook/M agazine/Directory Package when you register for fall classes. For $32.50, you’ll get • the 1990 Cactus Yearbook ($34.25 value) • a subscription to U tm o s T magazine for 1989-90 ($10.80 value) • the 1989-90 Official Directory ($2.00 value) That’s all three student publications— a $47.05 value— for less than you’d pay for Cactus Yearbook alone after publication. Don’t miss the opportunity to save big...w ith a great package deal! Bubble in Yrbk/Mag/Dir when you register! 1 SELECT OPTIONAL FEES 0 1 A t hle t let $ 5 2 . 0 0 02 t ochar /Ba s k . S 4 . 00 03 $ $12 . 0 0 04 Drama D e p t . 05 Vrbk/M a g / D I r $ 3 2 . 5 0 06 Cactus Yrbk . $ 2 8 . . 5 0 07 Utmost M a g . $ 8 .. 5 0 08 S t udin t Dir. $ 2.. 0 0 09 Psragr f nus 10 C Park 1 ng $15.. 0 0 $13. 00 I Yes o © © © # © © © © © Houston shelter to close doors Associated Press HOUSTON — The city's largest homeless shelter will suspend oper­ ations at its biggest men's branch next month and may close indefi­ nitely unless it gets the money nec­ essary to make city-mandated im­ provements, officials said. Carloss Morris, board chairman of the Star of Hope, said the 400-bed emergency men's shelter cannot af­ ford extensive structural changes re­ quired to meet fire code and occu­ pancy restrictions placed recently on its leased Preston facility. The fa­ cility also faces increased costs for security, staffing and program qual­ ity, he said. The Preston shelter, which serves 1,200 meals daily, will close May 8, but the 100-bed men's La Branch shelter will remain open, he said. "We now have only 180 days to bring our shelters up to city code standards," Morris had said in a let­ ter dated Monday to potential con­ tributors. "If we do not have the money to do this, we will be forced to close the facilities and put hundreds of Houston's homeless on the streets again." Earlier this month, city public works inspectors found a variety of building code violations and or­ dered they be corrected as part of Star of Hope's applications for occu­ pancy permits. City Fire Department officials found that the two Star of Hope men's shelters, at Preston and La Branch downtown, and the wom­ en's and children's shelter, did not have the required permits. In his letter, Morris criticized "hostile newspaper reporters who are quick to point out our problems, but very slow in offering us any constructive solutions." Don Johnson, president of Star of Hope, a non-profit organization founded in 1907, has said that me­ dia reports about poor standards at the shelters have had a negative im­ pact on contributions. Firm to pay claims for trial AIDS drug Associated Press DALLAS — American Airlines has agreed to pay in­ surance claims for an experimental AIDS treatment af­ ter complaints that employees were being denied cov­ erage. American announced it will tell its insurance admin­ istrator, Prudential Insurance Co. of America, to accept new and previously rejected claims for aerosolized pen­ tamidine despite guidelines excluding experimental drugs. Martha Siar, a benefits administrator, told the Dallas Times Herald the airline now recognizes the drug is needed and does help patients. Aerosolized pentamidine is used to treat and prevent pneumocystis carinii pneumonia or PCP, the most common life-threatening infection seen in people with acquired immune deficiency syndrome. The federal government, which has approved pen­ tamidine for intravenous use, is scheduled to review the aerosolized version May 1. The nation's leading medical experts have recommended aerosolized pen­ tamidine because it does not produce the adverse side effects of the intravenous form. American Airlines officials reviewed the issue after employees with AIDS and their doctors and nurses complained in early April that the company's insurance did not cover the treatment, which costs between $160 and $340 a month. The company had cited the thera­ py's lack of government approval in denying coverage. AIDS caregivers welcomed American's decision. Penny Pickle, director of a private nursing service for AIDS sufferers, hailed the decision and called it "abso­ lutely wonderful." She said five American Airlines em­ ployees who had been receiving the treatment through her agency were denied a total of $12,000 in claims over several months. T h e D a il y TEXAN/Thursday, April 20,1989/Page 9 State Senate approves tenant-rights bills A package of tenant-rights bills sailed through the Texas Senate on Wednesday. The legislation, spon­ sored by Sen. J.E. "Buster" Brown, R-Lake Jackson, would: ■ Allow a tenant who has been locked out unlawfully to obtain a writ of re-entry and recover $500 or one month's rent, whichever is greater. ■ Prohibit a landlord from remov­ ing some property from tenants' premises, except for repair or re­ placement. Brown said the measure is a response to landlords who force tenants out by removing doors or windows. ■ More clearly define "forcible entry" by a landlord. A fourth measure would make it easier for tenants to deduct repairs, said its sponsor Sen. Eddie Bernice Johnson, D-Dallas. All the measures were sent to the House. Insurance reforms passed The Texas Senate on Wednesday adopted legislation to tighten regu­ lation of insurance companies, and a key lawmaker pushing the reform package said 20 more insurance firms need to be investigated be­ cause of allegations of fraud. Anger at both the State Board of Insurance and the insurance indus­ try it oversees prompted several senators to add even tougher guide­ lines to the omnibus insurance bill, such as removing the industry from the protection of antitrust laws. Sen. John Montford, D-Lubbock, who shepherded the centerpiece of the reform package, accepted most of the amendments from his col­ leagues. "It's coming out of here stronger than garlic," Montford said. Hobby said passage of the insur­ ance reform package was critical. Insurance nominee expected An Austin financial consultant is expected to be named this week to the State Board of Insurance, The reported Dallas Morning News Wednesday. Paul Wrotenbery would be Gov. Bill Clements' final appointment to the beleaguered three-person board. Two members resigned earli­ er this year amid charges of gross mismanagement at the agency, and the remaining member's term has expired. Sen. Craig Washington, D-Hous- ton, has told reporters he will fight the appointments if all nominees are white males — which would be the case if Clements picks Wroten­ bery, a former budget director for the governor. Earlier in the day, Lt. Gov. Bill With staff and wire reports “financial Aid Available For U.T. Undergraduates With Driving Ambition!” C * 6 7» / y "Hit the road today J 'W ith Lone Star's Undergraduat "'s'«-^F/nanc/ng Program!" Drive a new Lone Star Pontiac of your choice now Before you graduate with the Undergraduate Buyer’s Program! -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- i I $600 O ff YOUR DOWN-PAYMENT FROM PONTIAC! I | % # I . ■ I I ou get $600 off your . 1 a down-paym ent when you qualify for Pontiac’s I Undergraduate Buyer's ^ ( j N ! Program, plus any other I incentives avaHable See | Lone Star for details— now! —- , Lone Star% • $600 Down-Payment Assistance ^ o . ■ ■, ^ • Special Underqraduate , P Í lT I I C ^ I G U V GMAC Financing w , . . A s ís ta n le * 6 □ . » , « r a @ p Z W . Parental Support C o u n t s ! ----------- > ____ Toward Your Income. I I L— WLone Star Pontiac — 1 4610 IH-35 • Just South of Ben White • Call 445-0300 “ Austin’s Most Exciting Road CarsT The Annual Membership Meeting will be held Monday, April 24 at 5:30 p.m. at University Federal Credit Union which is located at 46th and Guadalupe Streets. There will be an election of officers, official reports, and refreshments. U niversity Federal Credit Union M ain O ffice: P. O. 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May not be used m conjunction with any other offer Offer expires May 21. 1989 • | | I g | WHATABURGER. j |_ MOf FRESH AW M AKT0( W CRr j 2 4 2 0 GUADALUPE Page 10 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N /T h u rsd a y, April 20, 1989 Galveston student decries high school’s drug testing Associated Press testing p ro g ra m G A L V E S T O N — A high school stud ent cha lle n g in g his sch o o l's d rug said he taking a d ru g test d id n 't m ind w h en he enlisted in the A r m y , but urin alysis to participate in school activities is u n n ece s s a ry . " I believe o p era tin g a tank or helicopter or m a c h in e g u n is a lit­ tle m ore d a n g e r o u s th a n playing a clarinet or s o m e th in g in a b a n d , " said Brent Brooks, 19, a sen ior at East C h a m b e rs H ig h S ch o o l w h o sued his school district to prevent the school from m a k in g urinalysis m a n d a to ry for th o se in extracurric­ ular activities. gave Brooks testified o n ly e ig ht m in ­ utes T u e s d a y in a tw o-d a v h earing before U .S . District J u d g e H ugh G ib s o n . G ib s o n lawyers three w e e k s to file written arg u ­ m e n ts but set no date for a deci­ sion on the constitu tio nality of drug testin g in the East C h a m b e rs C o u n t y I n d e p e n d e n t S ch o o l D is­ trict. B rooks said he alread y has s u b ­ mitted to Arm y d rug testing to pre p are for a four-year e n listm e n t w h e n he g ra d u ates from high s c h o o l . Brooks w'as the stand by fellow s en io r and star follow ed to basketball player Patrick Thomas. Thomas told the court he quit smoking marijuana — temporarily — when the district announced last summer it would start manda­ tory urine tests. Under questioning from Ameri­ can Civil Liberties Union attorney Bruce Griffiths, Thomas admitted smoking marijuana once since the basketball season ended and said police found a marijuana cigarette in his car when he was stopped for speeding. Brooks said he is ineligible for extracurricular activities because of low grades. Gibson exempted Brooks from drug tests in November. In December, the judge ordered the district to cease mandatory student urinalysis altogether and allowed ACLU attorneys to make the case a class action lawsuit that will apply to all the district's stu­ dents. The judge continued that order until he rules on the case. East Chambers began taking ur­ ine samples in October from sixth- through 12th-graders who partici­ pate in extracurricular activities. All but 37 of the 300 students ei­ ther were participating in extracur­ ricular activities or volunteered to be tested for illegal drugs or alco­ hol, school officials said. FINANCIAL AID FOR UT STUDENTS Y o u may be eligible re g a rd le s s of s c h o la s tic standing or in­ com e Computer a s s is te d nationw ide m atching s e rv ic e sup­ plemented by a P E R S O N A L search to m atch your q u a lifica ­ tio n s w ith the re q u ire m e n ts of m ore than 1 ,0 0 0 T exas financial aid g ra n to rs. FINANCIAL AID COUNSELORS 5 1 0 South Congress, Suite 109 Austin, Texas 7 8 7 0 4 ■■ gm g * D I jm jm jm ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ♦ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ■ i r Southwestern Paralegal Institute Have a Career in Law - Without 3 more years in school. 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Riverside in the Riverhills Shopping Center M - F 9-5:30 Killeen community college audited Associated Press HOUSTON — The state auditor's office is in­ vestigating financial transactions in which the American Educational Complex used several million dollars in college funds to construct an office building and renovate a commercial ware­ house to entice businesses to Killeen. The auditors began examining records at the Killeen-area community college several weeks ago after a management consultant gained ap­ proval for the review from Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby and House Speaker Gib Lewis, the Houston Chronicle reported Wednesday. "I told the lieutenant governor and the speak­ er that the auditors could be helpful in answer­ ing some financial questions that I couldn't," said Terrell Blodgett, a UT professor who is con­ ducting a management audit at the AEC. Blodgett was hired by the college about three months ago after Hobby, Lewis and state Rep. Stan Schlueter, D-Killeen, agreed that the AEC's unusual structure and worldwide operations should be evaluated by a management expert in the wake of well-publicized problems at the Kil­ leen institution. Blodgett said he asked for help after reviewing hundreds of pages of college documents and in­ terviewing about 60 AEC employees, former em­ ployees and others connected with the college. The management consultant originally expect­ ed his study to take six weeks. But the review has stretched for three months and now is slated for completion by June 1. The college has agreed to pay the University $6,000 for Blodgett's services. Blodgett said state auditors are examining transactions in which the college last year took out an $800,000 bank loan to finance its effort to help the city of Killeen and the Killeen Industrial Foundation entice the Student Loan Marketing Association to open a center in Killeen. The college spent nearly $500,000 converting a 30,000-square-foot warehouse into office space for the center and loaned $335,000 to the Indus­ trial Foundation to purchase the building, col­ lege documents show. The Killeen Industrial Foundation then drew up legal papers to offer the loan association free rent for 36 months with an option to purchase the building after that time, said AEC Chancellor Jim Anderson. The loan association employs about 60 and is projected to employ 400 in about five years. The Industrial Foundation has paid $165,000 to the college in interest payments and has agreed to pay a total of $210,000, he said. Anderson, who became chancellor last Aug­ ust, said he had nothing to do with the associa­ tion transactions — which were negotiated by former Chancellor Phillip Swartz — but said he assumes they were intended to stimulate the city's economy and promote future training ac­ tivities for the college. He said of the college's involvement, "It might not be the smartest business deal I've ever heard of, but it's not illegal." The auditors also are studying records of a 1983 real estate deal, in which the AEC built a $1.6 million office building on the comer of its campus to house a Killeen branch of Electronic Data Systems, the Texas company founded by Ross Perot. Fort Worth council members’ ethics probed Associated Press FORT WORTH — Fort Worth Mayor Bob Bolen says he does not know whether any penalties will be imposed against four City Council members who violated the city's code of ethics. Bolen said he is not ruling out anything, but needs time to study a report by the city attorney's office that outlines how rules governing conduct by city officials were bro­ ken. The investigation into ethics was ordered last month after persistent reports that some council members had benefited from their positions. The confirmation of the violations by City Attorney Wade Adkins was especially unsettling because it came the day after hometown hero Jim Wright became the first speaker of the House to be accused of ethical violations. Adkins on Tuesday disclosed "technical violations" of the city ethics code and charter by Council Members William Garrison, Garey Gilley, Steve Murrin and Louis Za­ pata. The next City Council election is May 6, and all four are up for re- election. Bolen said he will appoint an in­ dependent committee to review and suggest amendments to the city eth­ ics code. Bolen also said he plans to ask outgoing Council Member Estil Vance, who was not named in the report, to serve as committee chair­ man. According to Adkins' report, none of the four deliberately be­ came involved in city decisions in which they had a financial stake in order to benefit themselves. The report said one member had voted on a contract for a company he founded; two others voted on a contract with a bank that had lent them money; and a fourth indirectly benefited from a nightclub promo­ tion partly funded with tax dollars. The four council members have acknowledged the violations, and Zapata expressed embarrassment. All four could be removed from office, but the council members said they wanted to read and reflect on Adkins' report and its opinions. Although several political chal­ lengers took advantage of the situa­ tion to criticize the council, others said the investigation was no big deal. "I haven't seen anything that tells me these men acted improperly," said former Mayor William Barr. "Fort Worth has been blessed with one of the most honest city govern­ ments in the country." LAST C A LL from Neiman Marcus LADIES SPRING SPORTSWEAR SALE Our Entire Selection of Ladies ACTIVE AND MODERATE SPORTSWEAR has been reduced to $R5°° and under. EVERY ACTIVE AND MODERATE TOP EVERY ACTIVE AND MODERATE PANT * 2 0 ° ° EVERY ACTIVE AND MODERATE SKIRT *15°° oo and under and under and under These prices are in effect through W ednesday, April 26 only. Blue Round dot on back of ticket indicates $25-$20-$15 prices above. ‘ COUTURE AND DESIGNER SPORTSWEAR NOT INCLUDED ‘ QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED ‘ PREVIOUS REDUCTIONS HAVE BEEN TAKEN P.S. Yes! You can use your NM® charge card or American Express®. All sales are final. No mail or phone orders or deliveries. NEW ! FREE DELIVERY 'S5 00 Minimum delivery order ’ Limited Delivery area VISIT OUR NEW RIVERSIDE LOCATION ! 441-9103 LAST CALL® from NEMAN MARCUS® Brodto oaks Shopping Center Ben White Blvd. at South Lamar MON.4AT. 10 A.M.-9 P M SUN. 12 NOON6 P.M. (612) 447-0701 T h e Da il y T e x a n s p o r t s Thursday, April 20, 1989 Page 11 Rangers chug Brewers, 5-1 Murphy heats up as Atlanta rallies past Houston Associated Press ARLINGTON — Pete Incavi- glia beat the M i l w a u k e e Brewers with his arm a n d b at W e d n e s d a y night. Incaviglia hit a two-run homer and a sacrifice fly and threw out a runner from left field to stem a Brewers' rally in a 5-1 victory by the streaking Texas Rangers. The Rangers are 12-2, the best record in the majors and the best start in their 17-year history. Incaviglia's sacrifice fly came in the fourth inning and his two-run homer in the sixth. In the top of the sixth he cut down a Milwaukee runner trying to go from first to third on a single. "I got a bigger thrill out of the throw than my hom er," Incaviglia said. "I guess I have a rap as a bad outfielder. I think they'll keep run­ ning on me no matter what I do. I try to make 'em pay." Incaviglia, mired in a .220 slump, said he came out of it by keeping his bats locked up during pregame practice. "I did something different; 1 didn't take any batting practice," he said. "I felt real relaxed and real comfortable at the plate. Maybe I'll try that again." Milwaukee Manager Tom Trebel- horn said the Brewers are "not play­ ing up to our abilities and we're not getting any breaks and the Rangers are playing up to their ability and getting breaks. It's as simple as that." Julio Franco and Ruben Sierra also homered for Texas while Jamie Moyer (3-0) allowed a run and five hits in 6V 3 innings. Mike Birkbeck (0-1) was the victim of the Rangers' long-ball attack. He lasted 5 Vs inn­ ings. Incaviglia's sacrifice fly after a walk and Franco's double put Texas ahead in the third inning, Sierra hit a solo homer in the sixth and, after Franco walked, Incaviglia followed with a 424-foot homer. The Brewers ran themselves out of a chance for a big inning in the sixth. Charlie O'Brien singled but was cut down at third by left fielder Incaviglia's throw after Paul Moli- tor's single. Molitor, who took sec­ ond on the play, then tried to steal third and was thrown out by catcher Jim Sundberg. ■ Braves 4, Astros 3 — With one swing Wednesday night, Dale Mur­ phy may have gotten back some confidence back. In Atlanta, M urphy's two-run single with two out in the eighth in­ ning gave the Braves a victory over Houston. "I haven't done anything so it felt good to help out the cause," Mur­ phy said. "It's one game, but it helps the confidence a little." Murphy had entered the game with a .115 batting average and only two RBIs in his first 13 games. "A guy that's been struggling all year gets two key hits and drives in three runs," Braves manager Russ Nixon said. "It really picked us up." Murphy's hit came off Larry An­ dersen, the second reliever in the eighth after the Braves had chased starter Jim Clancy (1-1) who yielded only four hits in 7V.í innings. "That's what we've seen from him ever since we got him," Hous­ ton manager Art Howe said of Clan­ cy, who spent his first 11 years with the Toronto Blue Jays. "He's been a competitor," Howe said. "He's got good stuff." Both runs in the Braves' eighth were unearned after pinch-hitter Dion James was safe on shortstop Rafael Ramirez's error with one out. Lonnie Smith followed with a sin­ gle, sending James to third and chasing Clancy. Juan Agosto struck out pinch- hitter Darrell Evans, with Smith stealing second on the play. Gerald Perry walked to load the bases and Murphy then singled off Andersen. The Astros have lost four straight. Jose Alvarez (2-0) pitched 1V3 inn­ ings for the victory. 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Carrie Dawson/Special to the Texan Coxswain Cathy Brombide implored Texas Crew members, from left, Hank Terrel, Wes Snow, John Frane and Greg Heath to keep up the pace as they competed in the novice 2,000-meter race at the Tope­ ka Regatta Saturday. The team rowed on to a second- place finish. In other men’s novice action, the 400- meter, 4-man A-boat finished third and the B-boat finished second, while the 8-man boat also cruised to a second-place finish. The men’s varsity team also fared well: in the heavyweight division, the 2,000-meter, 4- man A-boat finished second; the 400-meter, 4-man B- boat finished first; and the 400-meter 8-man boat came in second. In the lightweight division, the 400- meter, 8-man team also finished second. The wom­ en’s team also competed in Topeka, and tallied a first- place award in the 2,000-meter, 4-man race; second place in the heavyweight and lightweight 400-meter, 4- man races, and in the 400-meter, 8-man race; third place in the novice 2,000-meter, 8-man race; and fourth place in the novice 400-meter, 4-man contest. The team is now preparing for the Tennessee Regatta April 28. Sometimes demf is tjet^r. Meet the two toughest cops in town. One’s just a little smarter than the other. JAMES BELUSHI AND INTRODUCING JERRY LEE AS HIMSELF aGORDON COMPANY^ J O D D N H e v ME HARRIS “t MMS GOODMAN f e s a s s S K B S R l. OPENS FRIDAY, APRIL 28 AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU. STEVEN SIEGE SKDONNASMTffl ^ CHARLES GORDON ^ ROD H I STEVEN SIEGE .SCOTT MYERS’ LAWRENCE GORDON« ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT T h e Da i l y T e x a n Throwing Muses and preconceptions out the window Thursday. April 20. 1989 Page 12 CRITIC’S C H O I C E t i-i ‘VIVA VIVALDI’ D espite the silly nam e, Viva Vivaldi prom ises to be one of the m ost inventive dance perform ances this year. exciting and Consisting of five dances, the program features Yakov Sharir, H eyw ood "W oody” M cGriff and Carolyn Beck of the University perform ing and dancing to the w orks of Antonio Vivaldi. The program will include Laú­ date Pueri, Nisi Domitius (Psalm 126) and other w orks by the b a­ roque com poser. Viva V i v a l d i , at 8 p.m . through Saturday and at 2 p.m . Sun day in the UT O pera Lab Theatre. By MIKE CLARK Daily Texan Staff “ T h e hotel o p ­ erator w ants m e d e a d ,” K ristin H ersh say s with one of her fre­ q u e n t la u g h s . "T h e W arners' credit card is in­ valid, all of a su d d en . A nd I'm in the w rong time zone. I only got 45 m inutes of sle e p ." For H ersh, leader of un dergroun d rising stars Throw ing M uses, the challenges of being a new -m odel rock g o d d e ss are surprisingly m un ­ dane. Surprisin g in that Throwing M uses is am on g p op m usic's m ost complex an d "artistic" b an ds — the New England-based quartet traffics in that w ould confuse John Coltrane, galvanizes listeners with an aggressive guitar- based soun d, and throw s som e of the trickiest lyrical curveballs in rock history. ch an ges chord All this is m ade even m ore re­ freshing when ju xtap osed with the group's personality. N ot only are three of the four m em bers fem ale, but their dem ean or hardly su g g e sts the turbulence displayed on their five LPs, including the current hit Hunkpapa. They look and act more like your classm ates in freshm an English than one of A m erica's m ost pow erful bands. "T h at's probably the m ost im ­ portant thing, is that we are every­ Los Angeles Guitar Quartet Saturday, April 22 at 8 p.m UT Bates Recital Hall Charge-a-Ticket: 477-6060 The amazing classical sounds of the Los Angeles Guitar Quartet in a program of: Holst, Bach, Copland, Leisner, and de Falla. The band's first records were for 4AD, the highly specialized English label that also handles the Cocteau Twins, and the 10-minute Soul Sol­ dier piece was financed by a grant from the American Film Institute. Songs like Fish and LPs like House Tornado and The Fat Skier were hyper-verbal and bordered on the obtuse, always interesting but just short of compelling. Hunkpapa features a much purer and more-stripped-down sound, appealing both as art and rock. The shift, Hersh says, is a conscious one. "Tanya [Donelly, the band's singer-guitarist] said we had to learn not to play. We made the deci­ sion to start making decisions, y'know? We used to let any lyrical, melodic or rhythmic element fly into the material. "I enjoy that, but on the other hand it's kind of an assault on peo­ ple's ears, people who need space or a distinct repeated melody line — a hook, I guess." She says "hook" as if uttering an obscenity for the first time. "That dirty old word. But I like that space. We became objective listeners within our own language. I think Hunkpapa kind of puts the other stuff in perspective; people will know what we were on. about then after listening to us now." The creation of this space allows listeners to "get into" Throwing Muses and live the stories Hersh tells in a way that was impossible to before. "I think it's necessary for See Muses, page 13 ItMtalMSplBBiM 0 Mocks WModaM) 177-508 T*mp CloMd on M ondar* TUES-SAT.: 10 c pm Leslie Langston, Kristin Hersh, Tanya DoneNy and David Nardzo make up Throwing Muses, “a guitar band.’ body's sister, everybody's brother, son, m other, d au g h te r," H ersh say s. "Y o u go to the superm arket, and the people there are capable of Mania or Bea [two of Hunkpapa's m ost raucous tracks], and they're capable of playing g u itar." Another laugh. becom es When H ersh sin gs, she often and sem i-con sciously p o s ­ sessed by other p erson as — a bitter wife in Devil's Roof, an Indian girl in the current single Dizzy, or a m ysti­ cal mythic figure (the description doesn't do her justice) in the earlier single-video Soul Soldier. "I'd say each of those is a piece of m e ," H ersh say s, "b ecau se I can be­ come those people w hen I'm sin g­ ing, and I can becom e them in my life if m y life calls for it — like m ost people do, I assu m e. I've seen those characters take over other p eople's personalities; I know w om en and men w ho are those characters, and w hen I w as first w riting I couldn't control their vibrancy. They w ere so pow erful an d controlling they ju st crushed m y ow n personality. "A n d I thought, 'W hat the hell. Is m y personality that im portant when I can create Art-with-a-capital-A,' or w hatever they w ere ," she say s with a laugh. "N o w , I think I have a bet­ ter attitude. They can't crush me anym ore because m y hum anity is NEW ORDER with Throwing Muses Where: City Coliseum When: Thursday n ecessary for the em pathy. I need to be a person; I can't ju st Tie son gs' because the son gs need m ore sw eat and earthiness than th at." Throw ing M uses w as spaw n ed about eight years ago in the sam e Providence, R.I., club scene that produced Talking H eads — "It's a nice circuit, but it's d y in g " — and for m uch of their career they created Art-with-a-capital-A. THE' LUMBER} YAm 255-4073 16511 BRATTON LANE THURSDAYS THE ALL NEW LIP SYNC GONG SHOW G R AN D PRIZE — A TRIP FOR 2 TO L A S V E G A S Judging by Audience Participation Based on Best Imper­ sonation, Costume & Music Selection mtm 250 BEER NIGHT WITH PEOPLES CHOICE $1.25 LONGNECKS $1.50 SEX ON THE BEACH CAJUN SEAFOOD AND DELI MARKET COMPLETE LINE OF FRESH SEAFOOD BI-WEEKLY YES! WE NOW HAVE FRESH LIVE CRABS! Live Crabs . Boiled Crabs Shrimp . . . . . . $1 1 .95 doz . $13.95doz 50/60 ct. $4.95» . $ 2 .2 5 » Boiled Crayfish . . $ 1 .4 9 lb. (select) Live. . Crayfish. . . $ 1 .7 5 lb. (purged) Hot Boudin Sausage . $ 2 .7 9 » . Specialty Cajun Foods, Seasons and Mixes Available C h ican e N ig h t F rid a y W ater th e D og Ten H ands ¡2¡ S a t u r d a y Tw o N ice Q iris Texas Union 24th & G uadalupe CALL 471 -5244 T O PLACE A CLASSIFIED A D r "North China 1 Now Delivers!!! ANYWHERE IN THE UT AREA (Minimum order of $7.50) CALL: 476-4819 10% OFF ANY IN HOUSE DINNER (expires 5-31-89) DELIVERY DRIVERS NEEDED: — Must have own car 2910 Guadalupe £iCagtusi?i T onight An E vening With Dave Von Ronk Friday David Hailey Saturday Eric Taylor T exas Union 24th & G u adalu p e Department of DRAMA C o lle g e o f f i n e A rts, T h e U n iv e r s it y o f T e s o s at A u s tin THE PLOUGH & THE STARS by Sean O 'Casey The Irish Civil War forces families in a Dublin neighborhood into conflict. Battles between the Irish Citizen Army and those seeking independence come to a head over Easter weekend. The result: cleansing sadness and unspeakable loss. April 21-22, 26-29 B. Iden Payne Theatre Tickets are on sale at all UTTM TicketCenters. Charge-a-Ticket: 477-6060. Advance Sales. Austin Night 1 Life HH w/"THt tAWMDf MISSIAH" H A M Y 'T O IH O M A f" YOUNG w/special guest JR. BROWN TONITE 10-2 SHOW & DANCE CHILL FACTOR plus JOHNNY R fvn trs 3rd DRGRER FRI: JOHNNY UNO AIM SAX MANUCS 441-2444 1315 S. Congress Cuisine WED. 26TH THURS. 27TH SALEM TREE TOO SOLID FLESH 9:30 pm KELLY WILLIS and RADIO RANCH CHAPPARREL 9:30 pm Acoustic Music Jam EVERY SUNDAY - Starts at 7:00 OPEN 11:00 A.M. M-F • 1 P.M. Sat-Sun. 445-7544 * 2008 S o u th C o n c re s s Ave. FREE SHRIMP On Friday's H a p p y Hour Buffet 4-8 Doubles for Singles $1.50 16oz. Draft THURSDAY DUKE JUPITER 9:00 Drink Specials $1.00 Schnapps $1.25 Shiner Bock 16 oz. Draft $2.25 Premium Well Cocktails TAKE A BREAK... ...W ITHOUT GOING BROKE' 215 E. 6th St. (across from Jorge s) 477-3771 KneARvo s Ri s t or a nt e It al i ano ☆ ☆ ☆ 1 / 4 ”Tiny sized restaurant packs powerful pasta St at es man p u n c h . L u n c h M o n - F r i 10 - 2 D i n n e r M o n - T h u r 5:3 0 -1 0 F r i - S a t 5 :3 0 -1 1 :3 0 • Attentive Tableside Service • Wonderful A mbience • GREAT FOOD • Convenient to Downtown RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED 618 E 6th • 479 8151 v THURSDAY T R A S H DISCO NIGHT 705 RED RIVER 477-6626 FRIDAY THE TOUCH GALLERY — “ LIVE” — O R iGINA L f; R O G R E SSI VE DA NCE M U S ¡C, L A S E R S INCt UDEL 1.50 W ELL DRINKS SHOW TIME: 11 00 P M ^ ^ ^ 1400 BARTON-SPRINGS V O T E D B E S T B A R B X Q U T ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT . M B M t g Q U E w e a m m w EVEtty )Ay CATTjSH ? — 7 | It * * £ * « I ——1 - I PtCKJ.1 I*- 41 F .IP A V tU T U X M V O N LY ■W A TCH I F O R ,! IN S ovtm Auytih IBEER.GARDEN? MAGGIE MAE'S U .S JL TWO G REAT ROCK BANDS TONIGHT! BOB POPULARandDOUBLETAKE $ 1 .5 0 M ICH ELOB DRY FROM 9 :0 0 T IL CLOSING THURSDAYS ARE BIG BEER BUCK-OFF NIGHT ($1.00 OFF ALL BIG BEERS) MUST BE 21 OR OLDER TO BE ADMITTED WO OOVX*WITH VALID U.T.I.D. S E E Y O U O N S D T H S T R E E T MAGGIE MAX’S • 323-386 EAST SIXTH STREET (BETWEEN CONGRESS AVENUE AND 1-36) • 476-8641 TH E D AILY TEXAN/Thursday, April 2 0 ,1989/Page 13 least I hope so." Even though Hunkpapa is more ac­ cessible than previous efforts, Hersh admits to feeling nostalgia for the days when her art had a capital A. "What I miss is the desperate resonance of it, b u t... you can't live with it. I just would not be alive if I were still treating my music that way; there was no resonance in my body, in my personal life. "It's too bad that what I do sounds so 'deep'; it seems we have so many words for negative emo­ tions that we can identify very easi­ ly, but there's so many shades of positive emotions in what we do that don't have simple labels. You know, 'joy' and 'happiness' sound really goofy. I think we use a lot of desperate happiness and exhilara­ tion that comes across as negative because it's so powerful — maybe it's because we're women, I don't know." Ah, yes, gender. Hersh, Donelly and bassist Leslie Langston (and drummer David Narcizo) have em­ erged as proof that women in rock need not act like either girls or men, but can combine their feminine per­ spective with the straight-four beat. "I think [being female] has affect­ ed us less than it has most female artists, and I'm grateful for that," Hersh says. "I think our femaleness comes out in ways that people are unfamiliar with, so they don't really notice. They call it 'quirky' and think it's strange, but it's really that the foundation of music is so mas­ culine, and it wouldn't come natu­ rally to us. We're just being female, and people aren't used to that." THE M A T Y 4 7 4 -4 3 5 1 A ll ' i ' ' /' \V\ Sho es Hwis D*VMo, Schworzef««gg*r TWINS 7:30 Amy Irving CROSSING P ELANCEY MYSTIC PIZZA 9:15 Open M onday-Saturday 11 a m -u n til 1:30 at night X P a n Jiseo fS o u tlC L in O rvpicaf ¿^alery Featured highlights from the cuisines of South China Sea: Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, the Philippines, Vietnam, & regional Chinese dishes. All recipes are prepared with nutrition condous in mind. No MSG Added Vegetarian Menu Available Catering upon request Lunch Dinner M-F 11-2:30 S-S 12-3 S-Th 5-10 F-Sat 5-11 SUNDAY LUNCH BUFFET 12-3 p.m. All you can eat for $9.95/person C IN E M A R K TH EA TR E S 1 TORCH SONG TRILOGY 24th & San Antonio Texas Union Films W eekend Frmnch w /*u M rt*s Today a t 5:00 A 7:00 p.m . Union Th aatr* H am let Tonight a t 9:00 p.m. U nion Thoatra A Clockwork Orange Tonight a t 11:40 p.m. Union Thoatra D a n to n Today a t 5:15 p.m . H oaa A uditorium What Have I Done to Deserve This? Spanish w/subtMms Tonight a t 7:00 p.m. H oaa Auditorium Working Girl Tonight a t 9:00 p.m . Hogg Auditorium SH SB (ñh) ® m A n n tjm A LL DAY ALL SEA TS— ALL SH O W S MANN U/ESTGATE 4608 W ESTGATE BLVD. Gregory hSrt-M m TAP 4:4* 7:009:1» IPO»! < Eric Stofan THE FLY II 5:15 7:80 9:44 1 1 Schwonmrm ggtf, C TWINS 4:45 7:00 *30 I ■. Oortny D»vHo In < C TIMES PUBLISHED ARE FOR TODAY ONLY ~) M u s e s Continued from page 12 them to participate; otherwise, we'd just be on TV, /k n o w ?" Hersh says. "I don't like audiences that treat us like we're some kind of presentation. The best performanc­ es happen between the audience and the band, and I really feel that songs are unfinished if they don't seep into anyone else. "We wouldn't be doing our job if we didn't reach people on the first level, grabbing them and then tak­ ing them to all the other levels. There are a lot of people who don't know how hard music can hit you." The UT Departm ent o f D ram a presents V I V A V I V A L D I n z n n z n v m M l IN K W O M B O f Y O U 4:45-9:35 H tL D O V tH A S a l u t e t o R o c k y A B o l l w i n k l e 5:00-11:30 7:25-11:45 WOMEN ON THE VEKGE OF A NEKVOUS BREAKDOWN 7:15-9:25 D 0 D | f G u a d a lu p e 477-1324 UT's acclaimed Dance Repertory Theater presents a dance concert celebrating the music of Antonio Vivaldi. Featuring guest artist Kurt Weinheimer, and world premieres by Yacov Sharir and Heywood "W o o d y" McGriff. A treat for eyes and ears alike! Thursday, April 20- Saturday April 22 at 8 p.m. Sunday, April 23 at 2 p.m. UT Opera Lab Theatre Tickets at all UTTM TicketC enters. C h a rg e -a -T ic k e t: 47 7-60 60. C a ll 47 1-1 4 4 4 fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n . PRESIDIO THEATRES P S N O P A S S E S ( 3 : 2 0 ) - 7 : 5 0 L A W R E N C E of A r a b i a O u t of C o n t r o l NO PASSES t h a D r e a m T e a m ( 2 : 3 0 - 5 : 0 0 ) - 7 : 3 0 - 1 0 : 1 5 ( 2 : 4 5 - 5 : 1 0 ) - 7 : 4 0 - 1 0 : 0 0 I h x PU] Ti HX Pill I h x i ,, i. 2 : 2 0 - 4 : 5 0 - 7 : 2 0 - 3 : 5 0 , • l i a i s o n s ■ ■ The a d v e n t u r e s of B a r o n M u n c h a u s e n S A Y A N Y T H I N G . NO P A S S E S M A J O R N O P A S S E S ( 1 :5 5 - 4 :3 0 ) - 7 : 2 0 - 1 0 : 1 0 ( 2 :2 0 - 4 :4 5 ) - 7 : 3 0 - 1 0 : 0 0 NO PASSES L E A G U E ( 2 :3 0 - 5 :0 0 1 - 7 : 3 0 - 1 0 : 2 0 T H X « » f R X w : l3 I H X II D r e a m T e a m ( 2 : 3 0 - 5 : 0 0 ) - 7 : 3 5 - i o : 0 5 J H X L E A N ON ME ( 2 : 3 5 - 5 : 2 0 ) - 7 : 4 5 - 1 0 : 1 0 D A N G E R O U S L I A I S O N S ( 2 :2 5 - 5 :0 0 ) - 7 : 3 0 - 1 0 : 0 0 f.,; [ r ] gu a i p i l V IN : E N T < 1 : 3 0 - 3 : 4 0 - 5 :5 0 ) - 8 : 0 0 - 1 0 : 0 5 n o p a s s e s R E S C U E R S (J I / . « (1 1 : 4 5 - 1 : 3 0 - 3 : 1 5 - ^ : 0 0 ) j « . . . ______ . c . U N R A T E D ?elle T I E C O N Q U E R E R 7 ' 3 0 —1 0 * 1 5 L i t t l e D o r r i t t * \ m n° p a s s e , s L i t t l e D o r r i t t * 2 ( 1 1 :0 0 - 2 :4 0 1 - 6 :2 0 ( 2 :3 0 1 - 6 :1 0 -9 :4 0 mm a ( 3 :0 5 - 5 :2 5 ) 7 : 4 5 - 1 0 : 0 0 ____ | H X |tV , ,; S A Y A N Y T H I N G . F l e t c h L i v e s (2 :4 5 -5 :1 0 ) - 7 :3 0 - 9 :4 5 DEAD CALM M A J O R 2 :5 5 - 5 :1 5 - 7 :5 5 - 1 0 :0 5 N° ^SSES p g IS, L E A G U E (3:0 0- 5:20 )- 7 :4 0 -3 :5 5 R P A D f N T H E S E S I N D I C A T E D I S C O U N T E D S H O W S S H O W T I M E S A R E F O R T O D A Y O N L Y _ . — 2 1 0 2 ALL$TICKETS: W EDNESDAYS 467-9772 Student Prices W/IO $3 Mon.-Thurs. Same Day Tickets on Sale When Box Office Opens MISSISSIPPI BURNING 1 1:00-3:15-5:30-7:40-9:55 RAIN MAN ffl 11:30-2:05-4:40-7:10-9:45 SING m 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 TRUE BELIEVERS ® 1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15-9:15 COUSINS iPGiai 1:10-3:15-5:30-7:30-9:30 FAREWELL TO THE KING 1:10-3:20-5:30-7:40-9:50 EcíH TROOP BEVERLY HILLS E 1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15-9:15 NEW YORK STORIES d 1:00-3:15-5:30-7:45-10:00 But there are a lot of people who know how hard Throwing Muses can hit. The group has achieved a devoted cult following, and Hersh spoofs some of her audience's excesses in a line from Fall Down: "I showed this girl my stitches/She said she had some too/She said she thinks she'll start a rock band too." than she "I think that I'm listening to something other is," Hersh says. "Fall Down is a lot of pathetic stories; she's trying to face her pathetic shadow. It hurts my feelings when people say, 'Wow, I could use a little catharsis! I think I'll start a band!' I'm not exorcising my personal demons as much as the demons I share with everybody. At A D U L T V I D E O AUSTIN 6 center 1 1 1 ^ W 521 THOMPSON OFF 183 1 MILE SO. of MONTOPOLIS P h o n e 3 8 5 - 5 3 2 8 2 A D U L T & 1 A L L M A L E THEATRE o p e n 2 4 h o u r s CALL THEATRE FOR TITLES video peeps (LADIES FREE ON SATJ MON. WED. & FR Ltw o DAYS FOR THE PRXX OF ONE RENTALS $ 1 -$ 3 SALES S 0.99-S 64.05 TAPE EXCHANGE DISCOUNT MAGS: * OFT> hand, paperback. H M O V I E S 1 2 i & 11-35 N @ F.M. 1825 251-7773 I f l r Tues. All Shows $2.50 Except MAJOR LEAGUE 1 rax MAJOR LEAGUE ® 12:15 2:45 5:15 7:45 10:00 LEAN ON ME le m 12:00, 2:15, 4:45, 7:00, 9:30 THE DREAM TEAM E c ra rax 12:00 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 DISORGANIZED CRIME d 12:45 3:005:00 7:309:45 v f r f f r f DEAD CALM ® 1:00 3:15 5:307:4510:00 CYBORG S 1:153:15 5:157:159:15 FLETCH LIVES ED 12:30 3:00 5:15 7:309:45 LEVIATHAN ® 12:15 4:459:15 SING e g h i 2:30 7:00 7:159:15 THE RESCUERS ® 1:153:155:30 r f BILL & TED’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE ED RAIN MAN ® r 1:304:15 7:009:45 f SHE’S OUT OF CONTROL m r TROOP BEVERLY HILLS ED 12:45 3:00 5:30 7:45 9:45 12:302:45 3:00 7:159:30 ■ ^ $2.50 All shows before 6 pm ■ A J 1 j 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 J Neworder T O N IG H T Concert with special guests: T H R O W IN G M U S E S 6/M STEAK HOUSE THURSDAY April 20 CITY COLISEUM While the others have their lights off... ...one still shines high. Don’t miss G/M LATE NTTE A J T O C. RO AD S TA R PRODUCTION Thursday, Friday, and Saturday Nights open til 3 a m. TK Kfts ,n a ab'i- a! S T A R T I C K E T C E N T E R V Antuni'sHfujrils Watt1:uu Mtn i irr.ls s Ccnqiass I L l.' L'ty anC Vulei , Art>< an'..*’■ O.il'vV buncjqnc r Rucareis s.r Maa as R ,s s;< W,. ' : ■” '[ a. i : i . •* At,*.»*” : a- V,' uqe Is : K :nv" CHARGE INFORMATION 4 6 2 - 0 3 0 3 Call About Delivery' 4 7 4 - G M G M I University Market Facts... During the past 30 days, students of the uni­ versity spent $2,445,136 for clothing and shoes at Austin stores Source The University Marnel Belden Associates 1987 amo T H E R E IS A D IF F E R E N C E THE BEST MOVIE PRICE M TOWN S2.7S 4:30 - 6 PM EVERY DAY ( ) $3.75 MAUNEES & STUDENTS DAILY TODAY’S TIM ES ONLY! WESTGATE 8 WESTGATE MALL S LAMAR & BEN WHITE 892-2696 SHE’S OUT OF CONTROL m 2:1015:15 @ $2.75)-7:30-9:45 CYBORG d 2:20-(S:4S Ca $ 2 .7 5 ^ :0 0 4 :5 5 ____ RAIN MAN d 7.5045:05 (a $2.75; 1:00 B ill TEDS EXCELLENT ADVENTURE E3 2:2045:25 @ $2.75^7:20-9:25 RESCUERS d 7:5046:00 @ $2.751-7:40-9:15 TROOP BEVERLY HILLS ED~ 2:7045:08 ® $2.75)-7:20-9:35 COUSINS Eg ill 2.-0045:06 (a $2.75)-7:20-9:35 WORKING GIRL d 2:0044:55 @ * 2 .75>-7:104:25 RIVERSIDE 8 RIVERSIDE & PLEASANT VALLEY RD 448 0008 SAY ANYTHING Eud 2:2045:00 Ca $2.7S)-7:35-9:50 DISORGANIZED CRIME d 2:0045:30 (a $2.75F«: 15-10:20 MAJOR LEAGUE d 2:2045:46 @ <2.75)-7:55-10:00 SHE’S OUT OF CONTROL ISO 2:7045:15(0 $2.75)-7:45-9:35 MAJOR LEAGUE d 2:0045:15 (a 82.751-7:30-9:40 DISORGANIZED CRIME d 7:4545:30 to 82.75>-7:40-10:00 SAY ANYTHING fcui] 2:7545:00 (fl 8 2.7 5>-7 .J 9 :3 0 CYBORG d 2:3045:46 g 82.781-5:06-10:10 RAM MAN d 2.-OOI4:46 (a 82.7S»-7:15-9:50 DEAD CALM d 2:30(5:15 Ca >2 75)-7:28-9:35 FLETCH LIVES ED 7:25-9:25 rescuers m— 2:7046:00 « 82.75) CYBORG d 2:7544:46 ® 82.757-7:40-9:30 ram Man £;------- 1.4544:30® 82.75F7:10-9:50 dexdcíujm i — ; I LIVES Eg] 200 I T ■ P J . M NORTHCROSS MALL ANDERSON & BURNET 454-5147 $d(X ) ALL TIMES AT YOUR $ 4 o o DISCOUNT THEATRES WITH A DIFFERENCE 1 1 AQUARIUS 4 I’M GONNA GIT YOU SUCKA a 7:36-9:36 1500 S PLEASANT VALLEY RD 444 3222 I TWMS m ■ 7:25-9:45 ■ FLY M d 7.45-9:56 LAND BEFORE TBM 7:18 I FAREWELL TO THE KMO is) 22 6 General Cinema M" [BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY M Y ■ ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM ■ * DENOTES STEREO SOUND H IG H L A N D 1 0 M IP P H F1SKVILLE ROAD 434 -9 562 SAME DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES “ -HR ★ SHE'S OUT OF CONTROL pquTHX 1.00 3:1 $ 5:30 7:43 10:00 DISORGANIZED CRIME r THX 12:43 3KM 5: IS 7:30 9:45 ★ DREAM TEAM pan 12:152:405:05 7:3010:00 THX ★ DEAD CALM r 12:30 2:435:0010:00 ★ BEACHES pais 12:102:35 3:00 7:239:30 ★ LEAN ON MEn 12:00 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 ★ RESCUERS a 12:00 1:45 3:30 5:15 ★ SKIN DEEP r 6:00 10:00 only ★ LEVIATHAN r 1:00 3:15 5:30 7:4510:00 ★ WORKING GIRL r 13:00 2:30 5.00 7:30 10:00 ★ CHANCES ARE no 1 1 4 0 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 H IG H L A N D M A L L H IGHLAND MALL BLVD. 451-7326 ★ CYBORGr 1:40 3:405:407:409:40 FLETCH LIVES Fa 1:303:305:307:309:30 BARTON CREEK M ORAC o f LOOP 3 60 327-1281 SAME DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES ★ DANGEROUS LIAISONS ii 12:10 2:33 3.-00 7:25 9:50 ★ NEW YORK STORIES m 13:20 2:40 5:00 7:20 9:40 ★ BEACHES PB13 12:302:503:107:304:50 WHAT’S THE UNIVERSITY IN TEXAS? FOR CORRECT ANSWER, CHECK YOUR STUDENT ID. WHAT’S THE BEST PLACE IH TOWH — FOR COMPACT DISCS IH AUSTIH? n C O M P A C T FOR CORRECT ANSWER, GO TO STUDENT ID SALE!! BRING IN VALID UT ID AND RECEIVE ALL DISCS ON SALE* (SALE EXPIRES 4/23 7:00 PM) O F A U S T I N CD STORE ASSETS • AUSTIN S FIRST & ONLY EXCLUSIVE CD STORE • PRICE, SERVICE, SELECTION • BUY 12 GET ONE FREE PROGRAM* • MOST PRE-OWNED DISCS $8.00-$10.00** • TRADE PRIVILEGES • VIP PROGRAM (BUY 30 GET 10% OFF FOR LIFE)* • PREVIEW POLICY — LISTEN BEFORE YOU BUY • LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED • FAST SPECIAL ORDERS • HARD TO FIND ITEMS • STAFFED BY FULL TIME CD EXPERTS • PROGRAMS COINCIDE ** USED DISCS GUARANTEED. AVAILABLE FOR LISTENING A CLEANING BEFORE PURCHASE C O M P A C T gO O F A U S T I N IN LINCOLN VILLAGE NEXTTOBOOKSTOP 454-1212 SOUTHWOOD 2 1423 W BEN WHITE 7:30-#-A6 LAND BEFORE TIM 7:46 442 2333 ★ DMORGANIZEO CRIME r THX 1:003:10 5:13 7:33 4:43 ★ DREAM TEAM m u 12:408x003:84 7 :4 0 1 * 0 0 * $2.00 OFF DISCS NOT ON SALE, $1.00 OFF USED DISCS, 10% OFF MULTI-DISC SETS, 3” SINGLES NOT ON SALE MEET THE GIRLS THE WHOLE TOWH IS TALKING ABOUT. STARTLING.’ [..JANET MASLIN • NY TIMES LEGITIMATELY CERTAIN TO BE ONE OF THIS YEAR’S MOST CONTROVERSIAL FLICKS.” .. REX REED • AT THE MOVIES “‘■//eafi&V-’ REACHES WILD AND ORIGINAL COMIC HIGHS”*1) ... DAVID ANSEN NEWSWEEK NEW WORLD PICTURES in association with (MMARQUE ENTERTAINMENT(USA) LTD presents ‘HEATHERS' starring WINONA IWDER • CHRISTIAN SLATER SHANNEN DOHERTY ^ , - NORMAN HOLLYN ^CA/D NEWMAN iSCHRISTOPHER WEBSTER *"0DANIEL WATERS1^ D E N IS E D! m * - MICHAEL LEHMANN FRANCIS KENNY R W66T68CT80 ~] M U WORl D l*k. 11 JKf E S t a r t s T O M O R R O W ! Thursday, April 20, 1989 Page 14 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING T h e D a i l y T e x a n V ISA MasterCard Accepted For Word Ads, call 471-5244/For Display Ads, call 471-8900/8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitis Avenue VISA/MasterCard Accepted TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION REAL ESTATE SALES MERCHANDISE 20 — Sports-Foreign 20 — Sports-Foreign 70 — Motorcycles 70 — Motorcycles 130 — C o n d o s- 340— Misc. Autos Autos 19 84 N I S S A N 2 0 0 S X . A C , 2 -d o o r 5-spe ed , A M / F M hatch bock, lood ed , cassette, clean. $ 4 4 5 0 . TK 34 21 N Lamar 458-3151. 5 - 9 C L A S S IC 1 9 6 6 M E R C E D E S 2 3 0 S L Road- star Senous inquiries o nly $12,000. CPI book average $14,500. 264-1616. 5 -9 1 9 8 4 3 0 0 Z X Turbo g o o d condition 4-14- $ 7 , 5 0 0 negotiable 3 4 3 -1 9 4 7 . 1 5 N C __________________________________ G R E A T M IL E A G E ! 1 9 8 3 M a z d a G LC . Sunroof, D o lb y stereo with equalizer. $ 2 , 0 7 5 negotiable. 264-1841. A fter 6. 4- 1 4 -1 5 N C _______________________________ 1983 D A T S U N 2 8 0 2 X 5 speed, T-tops, lo w mileoge, Alpine A/C, A M / F M , Aiorm system. $ 6 0 0 0 4 5 3 - 1 3 5 9 12-19 1 9 8 7 S U Z U K I S A M U R A I. Iceland blue, white top. Excellent condition $ 5 0 0 0 . Johnny 3 4 3 - 8 4 4 9 4 -1 9 -1 5 N C __________ 19 78 M G B B EA U T IFU L blue body. M a n y new parts, runs a n d lo o ks like new, 4 2 ,0 0 0 mi., $ 3 4 5 0 . 4 4 1 - 0 7 3 5 5 -9 1 9 6 9 A U S T IN H E A L Y Sorite 2 tops, runs great, g o o d condition. M u st drive to a p - pred ate 8 9 2 - 0 6 9 0 4 -2 0 - 1 5 N C _________ 19 79 M E R C U R Y C A P R I. C le an car, V-6, A M / F M , 4-speed. $1 29 0. Robin,3 4 3 - 0 5 5 7 . 12-19_____________________ - 7 8 D A T S U N 2 8 0 Z 2 + 2, well-moin- tomed $ 3 1 0 0 negotiable. 2 5 8 - 2 6 8 3 o r 2 5 0 - 5 4 6 3 . 4 -1 3 -1 5 N C __________________ \ - y M j ig * « y - * * - • • ' ¿ f e n C R U IS E M IS S IL E 1 9 8 3 H o n d a V - 6 5 HO Occ $ 1 4 0 0 O B O CoH Tom 3 2 0 - 8 6 8 4 G o o d condition very fast. 4 -1 8 -5 B 1 9 8 4 7 0 0 N IG H T H A W K - S 7 2 0 0 miles, blue o n black, g o o d condition $ 1 4 0 0 negotiable. Call John at 4 7 9 -6 4 0 1 . 4 - 18-5B 19 8 7 S U Z U K I M O P E D . Perfect condition. Basket odd e d. O n ly h as 5 0 miles o n it. $ 3 5 0 . 4 5 1 -9 5 7 0 . 4 -1 8-5B 1 9 8 0 Y A M A H A X T 2 5 0 G o o d condition new drivetrain. M u st sell $ 3 0 0 4 6 9 - 5 9 3 7 . 4-1 9 -5 P __________________________ '8 5 N I N J A 6 0 0 R G re a t shape, g o o d miles, n ever laid dow n, m any extras, $ 2 3 5 0 . 3 4 3 - 9 6 0 7 David. 4-1 9-3B 1 9 8 6 H O N D A ELITE 150. Blue Excellent condition. L ow mileage. N e w battery. UT sticker. A sk in g for $ 9 9 5 . 4 7 8 - 3 0 7 9 . Leave m e ssa g e .4 -2 0 -5 P '8 6 Y A M A H A R A D IA N 600cc, o a ra g e kept, 1 3 ,0 0 0 miles. O il c ha ng ed every 1 0 0 0 miles. Runs great. $ 1 3 0 0 4 4 4 - 1 2 2 4 after 5pm. 4 - 2 0 - 2 B 1 9 8 6 H O N D A E SPR EE Red Excellent condition. O n ly 5 3 0 0 miles $ 3 7 5 . Dun- con 3 4 6 -7 3 1 8 . 4 - 2 0 - 3 B 80 — Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE BLOWOUT # D IA M O N D BACK e M ONTAG NA e NISHIK1 e JA M B • Student Discounts, New iUsed Bikes BUCK’S BIKES 92B-2B10 VISA MC, Am Exp., Discover Welcome M E N 'S 2 1 " 12 speed. Centurion C o m p - T A metallic silver, Sh im a no 6 0 0 hard- w a rd 2 7 X 1 " rims, ind u de s accessories $ 2 7 5 , 4 7 7 - 4 6 0 2 4-1 8 -5 B -K REAL ESTATE SALES 120 — Houses B U Y E R 'S M A R K E T N O W IS THE T IM EI Low est prices. FH A, H U D , F N M A hous­ es. Buy before interest rates g o upl B U Y N O W Jerry at P M T 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 . 4 -5 - 2 0 B - D 130 — Condos - Townhouses C O N D O UT C am p u s a re a divided into 2 efficiency apartments. Live in o n e - rent the other. O w n e r $ 2 6 ,6 5 0 . Lynch Properties 4 5 4 - 5 8 6 9 . 4 - 1 9-3B financing. O n ly 1 9 7 2 C L A S S IC M G M id ge t beoutiful red paint, runs g o o d . $ 1 7 5 0 Leave m essage to John ot 4 5 3 - 5 4 5 7 . 4-1 4-5B ___________ 1 9 8 5 N I S S A N 2 0 0 S X very low mileage, 2 3 ,0 0 0 , Automatic, sun roof, diaital locks, excellent d ashb o ard , automatic c o n d it io n . n e g o t ia b l e . M o h o m a u d 3 2 7 - 9 6 2 2 . 4 -1 8-5B $ 7 0 0 0 1 9 8 2 S A A B 9 0 0 Turbo 2 dr., excellent condition, 5 speed, financing available, $ 4 8 0 0 . 3 4 5 - 8 0 1 2 Leave messoge. 4-19- 5 8_________________ 1 9 7 9 P O R S C H E 9 2 4 Excellent condition, 5 speed, A/C, sunroof, stereo/ cassette, a lloy wheels, Pirelli's o nd bra. $ 4 5 0 0 . 4 9 9 -0 1 3 3 . 4-1 9 -5 B y__________________ 81 D A T S U N 28 0 Z X , 2-seoter, manual transmission, blue a n d silver, 7 3 ,0 0 0 miles, $ 2 5 0 0 , O B O 4 4 3 -7 8 2 1 . 4 - 2 0 - 5 8 '8 4 Renault Encore N icel auto, A/C, S o n y deck, dependable, $ 3 2 0 0 . 4 4 2 - 81 0 2 P.M. o n d w e ek en d s.4-2 0-5B 1 9 6 4 V W BEATLE, rebuilt e ngine and front-end , n e w tires, brakes, recently re­ pointed $ 1 85 0. 4 4 2-71 91 4 - 2 0 - 2 0 N C 30 — Trucks-Vans 1 9 8 6 G M C S IE R R A Classic, black, new paint, loaded. 3 0 5 V-8. $ 6 2 0 0 3 3 9 - 1 9 4 0 evenings a n d weekends. 4-18- 1 5 N C 70 — Motorcycles 19 83 Y A M A H A 6 5 0 H E R IT A G E Special 4 7 0 0 miles, excellent condition, $ 7 9 5 negotiable. Call Russ 4 7 2 -8 1 6 7 , can leave m essoge o n mochine. 3-31-15P 19 8 2 C B 9 0 0F , K & N, Supertrap, sport kit, a nd m uch m ore $ 1 2 5 0 obo. 2 5 9 - 0105. C all after 5pm. 4 - 0 4 - 1 5 N C '8 2 K aw asak i A R 8 0 factory condition with helmet a nd access. Excellent for W e st Cam pus; Y a m a h a S e c a 4 0 0 , Red, excellent condition $ 5 0 0 4 8 2 - 8 8 1 8 4- 20 -10B H O N D A . Come ride with us 459-3311 Full Selection of Motorcycles & Scooters WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6509 N. LAM AR T J ’s Cycle Sales A Service Everyday low prices on parts & accessories Service by Registered Technicians i 1 0 % DISCOUNT 4 - ON TUNE-UPS • I * O) I 2 I 453-6255 2 v 6215 N. LAMAR j Z ld, 1 9 8 2 H O N D A A S C O T FT 50 0, 9 3 0 0 miles, in g o o d condition, n e w starter, for $ 8 5 0 . 4 9 5 - 2 5 9 3 . 4-12-10B-E___________ 1 9 8 8 H O N D A ELITE 5 0 -aq u a , g o o d condition, only 15 0 miles, $ 6 9 5 . Call Heather 4 6 9 - 5 7 6 7 . 4-1 3-5B ____________ 1 9 8 8 B L A C K H O N D A Sp ree with helmet. Perfect $ 3 5 0 c on d rtion -300 miles, negotiable. 2 6 6 - 9 3 7 5 o r 4 4 5 -1 9 2 3 . 4- 14-5P ___________________________________ 1 9 8 4 W H IT E M O T O G U Z Z I - 15K miles, luggoge, excellent condition. $1800/ negotiable. Jeff 3 2 0 -0 4 1 7 . 4 -3 -1 0B G R E A T D E A L I 1 9 8 0 H o n d a C X 5 0 0 Cus- tom. W a t e r - c o o le d , W indshield, fairing, backrest, bookrack. $ 5 0 0 . 4 4 4 -5 1 5 5 . 4-17-5P sh a ft-d rive n . TRANSPO RTATIO N 50 — Servlce-Repalr ho ra e d by the w o rd 15 w o rd mtmmum in 5 pt type onfy Rates or® for consecu- C L A S S IF IE D W O R D A D *R A T E S t»v® days Foe*» w ord 1 t»m® Each w ord 3 hmes Eoch w ord 5 times Each w o rd 10 times Eoch w o rd 15 times Eoch w ord 2 0 times $ 34 $ 9 0 S 1 3 5 $ 2 3 0 $ 2 7 0 $ 3 2 0 pier insertion $ 1 0 0 charge to c h a n ge copy First two w ords m ay be oil capital letters 2 5 c for eoch additional w ord »n capital letters M a s t ­ ercard ond V isa occepted C L A S S IF IE D L IN I A P *R A T E S ____________________ ‘C h a rg e d by the Ime O n e colum n inch mini­ mum Avoilabte in 5 to 14 pt type 1 col x 1 inch 1 Time $ 7 8 0 W O R D A N D L IN I A D D E A D L IN E SC H E D U L E M o n d a y Tuesday W e d n e sd a y Thursday Fnd ay Fnd oy 11am M o n d a y Horn Tuesday H am W e d n e s d a y 11am Thursday 11am T O R L A C f A W O R D O R L IN K A D CA LL: 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 C L A S S IF IE D M S F L A Y 'A D RA T ES * C h a rg e d by the column inch. O n e column inch minimum A variety of type faces ond su e s and borders available FoH Rates Sept 1 -M a y 3 0 1 to 4 9 column inches Per M onth $ 7 8 0 Per C olum n Inch O ve r 5 0 col in per month, coH for rates C L A S S IF IE D D IS P L A Y D E A D L IN E S C H E D U L E M o n d a y Tuesday W e d n e sd a y Thursday Fnd ay W e d n e s d a y 4 p m Thursday 4 p m Fnday, 4 p m M o n d a y 4 p m Tuesday. 4 p m TO PLA C E A C L A S S IF IE D D IS P L A Y A D, CALL: 4 7 1 -8 9 0 0 ____________ In th e e v e n t o f ® rro n mod® »r o n a d v e rtise m e n t, no tic e m ust b e g iv e n by 11 a m th e first d o y a s th e pu b lish ers o r e r e sp o n sib le fo r o n ly O N E in c o rre c t in se rtio n Ail do»m$ fo r o d fu stm e n ts sh o u ld b e m o d e n o t la t e ' th a n 3 0 d a y s a fte r p u b lic a tio n P r e p a id toils n ecerve c re d it slip A r e q u e s te d a t o n d A a m o u n t e x c e e d s tim e of c o n ce llcih o r $ 2 0 0 Slip m ust b e p r e s e n te d to r a r e o r d e r w ith m 9 0 d a y s to b e vofed C re d it slips a r e n o n tr a n s fe ra b le In c o n s id e r a tio n of T he D oily T e x a n 's o c c e p to n c e o f a d v e r t i n g c o p y fo r p u b lic a tio n th e o g e n c y a n d th e a d v e rtis e r will in d e m n ify o n d s a v e h a rm less T exos S tu d e n t P u b lica tio n s a n d its o ffice rs e m p lo y e e s, o n d a g e n ts oga m s* oH loss liability d o m o g e o n d e x p e n s e of w h a ts o e v e r n a tu re arts ing o u t o f th e c o p y in g , p rinting, o r p u b lish in g o f rts o a v e r h s m e n t includ ing w ith o u t lim itation r e a s o n a b le a tto r n e y s fe e s resulting fro m claim s o f suits fo r libel v io la tio n o f rig h t o f prrvocy, p la g ia n s m o n d c o p y rig h t o n d tr a d e m a rk in frin g e m e n t C LA SSIFIC A T IO N S TR A N SPO R TA TIO N 10 — M i x . A u to s 20 — Sp o rt*-F o re ign A u to s 30 — T ru ck s-V an * 40 — V ehicle* to Trod* 50 — Servlce-Rep air 60 — P a rts-A ccessories 70 — M otorcycles 80 — Bicycles 90 — V ehicle Le asin g 100 — Vehicles W anted REAL ESTATE SALES 1 1 0 - Services 120 — H o u se s 130 — C o n d o s-T o w n h o u ses 140 — M o b ile H om e s-Lots 150— A cre age -Lo ts 160 — D u p le x e s - A partm e n ts 170 — W anted 1 8 0— L o a n s M ER CH A N D ISE 190 — A p p lia n ce s 200 — Furniture- H o u se h o ld 2 1 0 — Stereo-TV 220 — Com pu ters- Equlpm ent 230 — P h o to -C am e ra s 2 4 0 — B o a ts 250 — M u sic a l Instrum ents 260 — H o b b ie s 270 — M achin e ry- Iq u lp m e n t 280 — Sp o rtin g -C a m p in g Equipm ent 290 — Furniture-Appliance Rental 300 — G a r a g e -R u m m a g e Sa le s 3 1 0 - T r a d e 320 — W anted to B u y o r Rent M ER CH A N D ISE 3 3 0 — Pets 340 — Misc. RENTAL 350 — Rental Services 360 — Fum . Apts. 3 7 0 - U n f . Apts. 380 — Fum . D u ple x e s 390 — Unf. D u p le x es 400 — C o n d o s-T o w n h o u se s 410 — Fum . H o u se s 420 — Unf. H o u se s 425 — R o o m s 430 — R o o m -B o a rd 435 — C o -o p s 440 — Roo m m ate s 450 — M o b ile H om es-Lots 4 6 0 — B u sin e ss Rentals 470 — Resorts 480 — S to ra g e Space 490 — W an te d to Rent-Lease 5 0 0 — M is c . A N N O U N C E M E N T S 510 — Entorta! nm ent-Tlckets 520 — P e rso n als 530 — Travel- T ran spo rtatio n 5 4 0 — Lost A Found 550 - Licensed Child C are 5 6 0 — Public Notice 570 — M u sic-M u sician s ED U CATIO N A L 580 — M u sical Instruction 590 — Tutoring 600 — Instruction W anted 610 — Misc. Instruction SERVICES 6 2 0 — Legal Services 630 — Com puter Services 640 — Exterm inators 650 — M o v in g -H a u lin g 660 — S to ra ge 670 — Pain tin g SERVICES 680 — Office 690 — Rental Equipm ent 700 — Furniture Re p a ir 710 — A pplian ce Repair 720 — Stereo-T V Repair 730 — H o m e Re p a ir 74 0 - B i c y c l e R ep air 750 — T yp in g 760 — Misc. Services EM PLO YM EN T 770 — Em ploym ent A gen cies 780 — Em ploym ent Services 790 — Part time 800 — G e n e ra l H e lp W anted 810 — Office-Clerical 820 — A ccou ntin g- B o o k k e e p in g 830 — A d m in istra tive- M a n ge m e n t 8 4 0 — Sale s 8 5 0 — Retail 860 — En gin eerin g- Technical 870 — M edical 880 — P ro fessio n al 8 9 0 — C lu bs-R esta u ran ts 900 — Dom estic-H o useho ld 910 — Positions W anted 920 — W ork W anted B U SIN E SS 930 — B u sin e ss Opp ortun ities 940 — O pp ortun ities W anted TSP Building, Room 3 2 0 0 2 5 0 0 Whitis M o n d a y through Friday 8 0 0 a m -5 0 0 p m TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. Autos 10 — Misc. Autos 10 — Misc. Autos 1973 C A D IL L A C L O A D E D Leather inte nor N e w tires Battery altemater $ 9 5 9 . 4 6 9 - 0 8 2 8 Leave m essage to M icboel 12-19__________________ 1984 F O R D M U S T A N G L X Excellent condition, A/C, cruise, pow er locks & w indow s Call Scott 4 6 9 - 9 6 3 9 4-5 - 15 N C __________________________________ 7 3 C A D IL L A C Load ed leather intenor, new tires, battery, alternator, $ 9 5 9 4 5 9-19 79 . Leave m essage to M ich ae l 12-19 C O N V E R T IB L E 8 2 LeBaron, M a rk C ross Edition Looks, runs great C o o l summer vehicle $ 3 5 0 0 4 5 9 - 7 0 2 7 , leave mes­ sage 4 -6 -1 5 N C 19 8 8 C H R Y S LE R L E B A R O N convertible, automatic transmission, a/c premium package, tilt wheel, cruise control, p seats, 7 to c hoose windows/locks, p from. 4 4 3 - 4 4 3 5 . 4 - 1 2 -5 N C _____________ '7 4 C H E V Y N O V A . Excellent condition Coll for particulars after 6pm. 2 8 8 - 56 16 Will negotiate. 4 - 2 0 -1 5 N C -E 1977 D O D G E M o n a c o , d ependable $ 5 0 0 firm. 3 2 0 - 8 6 2 6 5 -9 ______________ 1967 M U S T A N G convertible, blue sharp, PS/PB, AT, 289cid, 106K, $ 4 , 0 0 0 firm 5 -9_______________________ 4 9 5 - 2 8 3 3 1986 C O U G A R LS 1 ownef, excellent condition, pow er windows, white w/ toundau ro o f rec intenor, nice 2 5 1 -4 4 5 4 after 6 5 -9 1 9 7 9 B U IC K 4 - D O O R V e ry safe, very comfortable, very reliable, looks go o d, rvns well $ 1 2 0 0 4 7 8 - 8 9 0 0 5 -9 G O V E R N M E N T SE IZ E D Vehicles from $100. C hevys Surplus Buyers G u id e (1) 8 0 5 - 6 8 7 - 6 0 0 0 EXT S -94 13 4-3 -1 8P Fords. M e rced e s Corvettes 8 6 P O N T IA C FIERO, V-6, block, sunroof, PW, A M / F M cassette $ 7 2 0 0 , Cheroy, 4 9 5 -3 6 1 2 2 - 2 3 - 4 9 N C _________________ 1 9 64 M E R C U R Y C O M E T sky blue, 6 0 K original miles, looks, runs great A real gem 3 2 0 -0 1 6 8 3-3 1 -1 5 N C _____________ 1962 C H E V Y IM P A L A 4-dr, in o ne family for 2 0 years, excellent city transporta­ tion, $ 1 4 0 0 4 5 2 - 2 7 9 0 3 -2 8 - 3 1 N C 1984 CHEVETTE 2-door, 4 speed, A/C, A M / F M stereo, 4 4 , 0 0 0 miles, $ 2 1 0 0 3 3 1 -6 4 2 7 4 6 -1 5 N C 1 9 76 L I N C O I N C O N T IN E N T A L cu. in V 8 - All power, A C , $ 2 0 0 0 O B O 3 8 5 -1 2 6 5 o r 3 4 6 - 1 0 6 9 4 -7 -1 5 N C 4 6 0 19 85 T U R B O S U N B IR D Red, A/C, great stereo, 21K miles, excellent condition. 47 2 -1 0 3 7 . 4 -1 3-19 N C __________________ Steel, 1981 O L D S M O B IL E 9 8 Regency B ro u g­ ham Excellent condition tires, wire wheels, $ 2 9 0 0 3 8 9 - 3 1 5 2 4-11-15NC___________ looded gray, N e w 1 9 8 0 C H E V Y Citation 4-door, radio, g o o d tires, new dutch, $1000/m ake of­ fer 2 8 0 - 0 2 3 8 8-5pm . 4 -2 1 N C __________ 1985 H O N D A C IVIC, 2 -dr. Hatchback, blue,75K, standard, A C . W a s grven com pany car—o n ly reason I'm sellingl $ 3 0 0 0 , 3 2 8 - 9 0 3 8 , Virginio 4-1 0 -1 5 N C 1985 M U S T A N G Convertible, LX, V-8, 4- looded, low mileoge, call 4 4 5 - 0 8 0 3 14-15N C L IN C O L N C O N T IN E N T A L M a rk V 1979. Excellent condition, low mileage $ 4 9 0 0 O B O 3 2 0 - 8 0 2 4 . 4 -1 8 -1 5 N C ___________ 1984 M A Z D A R X 7 -G S L Immoculatel Blue 5-spd w/sunroof G ra y intenor low mileage, extras! 8 3 4 - 7 0 5 5 , days 251- 8519/N . 4 -1 8 -1 5 N C ___________________ 7 9 M E R C U R Y C a p n 6 cy AT, AC, A M / E M cassette Runs g o o d $ 1 0 9 5 n e go 3 2 2 - 0 9 7 4 4 4 7 - 4 9 3 7 M ust sell. 4-19- 1 5 N C 8 2 F O R D E S C O R T L. Blue. Stereo. D e ­ pendable 4 4 3 - 4 3 8 6 , leave message. 4-17-5B ________________________________ G R A N D PRIX Landau, 1984, Clean, Low- mileage, new radiáis, gem of car, $ 4 4 0 0 / offer/trade. 4 5 1 -9 8 1 3 .4 -1 7 -5 B 19 6 7 B M W - Classic car & in great shape $ 2 0 0 0 . Call Tom, 4 4 8 -1 5 6 9 . 4- 18-5B-F_________________________________ '7 4 P O N T IA C G L M . V e ry comfortable, reliable. N e w battery, fandutch, fuel lines, plugs. $ 9 5 0 . 3 2 3 - 5 7 7 2 . 4-1 8 -5 B 19 66 P L Y M O U T H S T A T IO N w agon. N e w shocks, new battery, new tires, new front brakes. $550 /n eg. David, 4 4 4 - 5 7 92 , 4 4 5 33 19 4-1 8 -5 8_______________ 1 9 7 6 C H E V Y H A L F ton truck. G o o d w ork truck. $1500. A lso truck tool b o xe s ond headach e rack for sale 2 6 4-18 41 after 6 4 -2 0 -5 B F CALL 471 -5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD TRANSPORTATION 50 — Service-Ropair Defore you Go 1 9 7 8 FIAT SP ID E R convertible. D e e p bur- gandy. N e w paint job, top, PirelK tires. Leather interior. A M M cassette stereo. A ir conditioning. Rebuilt engine. $ 2 9 5 0 . 4 4 4 - 7 2 9 6 5 -9 7 8 FIAT SP ID E R red convertible, like n speed, A M / F M cassette, $ 2 7 9 5 . 2 5 9 -5 5 5 9 . 2 - 3 - 6 3 N C 5- '8 7 Y U G O 5-spe ed 3 0 , 0 0 0 miles, runs $ 2 , 3 5 0 2 5 9 - 5 5 5 9 . A M / F M radio, f reat, extra dean. -3 -6 3 N C 19 84 RED N I S S A N Pukar: 5-speed, p er­ fect condition inside a nd out, original owner, never wrecked, 7 0 , 0 0 0 miles, $ 3 8 0 0 , 4 4 2 -5 3 3 1 leave message. 2 -2 4 - 4 8 N C __________________________________ 7 3 P O R S C H E 914 Excellent condition, AC, olloy wheels, Pirelli's, 1 0 0 % stock, g a ra g e kept $ 2 9 9 5 . 2 8 0 - 3 0 8 5 . 3 -2 - 4 4 N C 1981 D A T S U N 2 0 0 S X , 5sp, looded, new tires, dependable, econom ical- 3 0 mpg, $ 1 5 0 0 negotiable 4 4 7 -1 0 6 3 . 3 - 2 3 - 1 5 N C SU P ER SP ID E R I 1981 Fia» Sp id e r 2 0 0 0 convertible. Red Pininsarina beauty. N e w rag top, carpet, Pirelli tires. Alpine sound system, lo w mileage. S o o n to be classic C o m e see fo r yourself. Call Ray 835-4411. 3 - 2 3 - 3 4 N C __________________ 1 9 7 3 2 4 0 Z Excellent condition inside and out. V ery dean. M u st see. 4 4 2 - 5 7 8 5 , leave m essage. 3 -3 1 -1 5 N C -F '7 6 S A A B E M S, black, cassette, stick, with strong engine, A C , 8 8 , 0 0 0 original miles, $2200/offer. 4 5 1 - 8 0 8 0 4 - 3 -1 5 N C JEEP W R A N G L E R 1 9 8 7 Automatic 4 X 4 Rag-top lo a de d 2 3 , 0 0 0 mi. $11,000 Call 4 7 6 -2 0 6 2 . Leave message. 4-4 - 1 5 N C __________________________________ 19 87 SU Z U K I S A M U R A I. 18 ,0 0 0 miles. Excellent condition. H a rd top, A/C, A M cassette. $ 6 0 0 0 . A n g e l 9 2 6 -7 0 0 1 , 3 3 9 - 0 6 9 4 . 4 -5 -1 5 N C ______________________ P O R S C H E 914 - '8 7 Iroch rad, 916 front end, 911 hubs, Pirelli tires. Excellent inte­ rior, $ 2 7 9 5 . M u st sell soon. 4 7 7 - 5 8 4 3 . 3 -2 9 -3 1 N C 1 9 83 F O R D E S C O R T - 2 door, 4 speed, stereo/cassette, 7 9 K , extra d e a n $1950. Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet, 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 4- 6-1 5N C -F______________________________ 1982 P O N T IA C FIREBIRD. 4 speed, A/C, stereo/cassette. Auto 88K, Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet, 4 5 0 -0 2 1 8 . 4-6 - 1 5 N C -F _________________________________ $1 95 0. 1 9 8 0 H O N D A PRELU DE, 5 speed, o ow er sunroof, A/C, stereo/cassette, $1950. A u to Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet, 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 4- 6-1 5N c-F _______________________________ 1 9 8 5 N I S S A N 3 0 0 Z X T-Tops, automatic, options $ 8 5 0 0 . Auto loaded with all Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet, 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 4-6 - 1 5 N C -F_________________________________ 1 9 7 8 FIREBIRD. Bronze, G o o d paint, p ow e r windows, n ew 3 5 D , automatic. $1300. Parked outside Jester 4 4 5 - 0 8 5 5 . 4 - 6 -1 5 N C ______________________________ 19 8 7 M U S T A N G LX 5.0 5-speed, all power, A M /F m cassette/equalizer, tilt, cruise, 42K, $ 8 7 0 0 4 4 2 - 7 5 6 4 . 4-7 - 1 5 N C __________________________________ interior, 8 5 T O Y O T A M R 2 , red/black sunroof, A M / F M cassette, 5-speed. $ 6 7 5 0 o r best offer. 4 9 5 - 2 3 3 6 . 4-6 - 1 5 N C __________________________________ 19 7 9 T R IU M P Spitfire dark red converti­ ble, sell, immaculate condition M u st leaving country. A sk in g $ 2 8 0 0 4 4 4 - 6 2 4 2 . 4-11-15NC 7 8 D A T S U N 2 8 0 Z Block, totally restored, new Pirelli's, D e n o n stystem-wrth amps, all records 3 2 0 - 8 2 2 2 . 4 -1 3 -1 5 N C 1 9 7 9 H O N D A P R E LU D E AT, A C , A M / FM, sunroof, extra d ea n, runs good. 8 6 K miles $ 1 7 5 0 4 5 4 - 4 4 6 2 after 4pm. Teresa. 4-1 4 -1 5 N C 7 6 A L F A R om eo Spider, 8 2 , 0 0 0 miles, rebuilt engine, transmission, PireUi's, cas­ sette, 5 -speed, gre at summ er car. $ 3 2 0 0 . 4 4 8 - 8 7 3 8 . 4 - 7 - 2 3 - N C 19 82 P E U G E O T 6 0 4 decil.electric win­ d ow s ond sunroof, interior, Micheliru, runs well $ 2 0 7 5 . Call anytime 4 7 2 - 4 3 2 4 . 4 -1 4 -1 5 N C leather C O L L IS IO N REPA IR & A U T O P A IN T IN G OUR MANAGER WENT CRAZY Bring your dam aged vehicle for an estimate and get a FREE T-SHIRT and for only *15 a COMPLETE DETAILING SERVICE PREFERRED CUSTOMER CARD* plus (This includes: Steam-clean engine, vacuum interior, spot shampoo seat & carpets, dress vinyl surfaces, clean glass & chrome, dress tires.) Regular price $55.00. Catch: W e want you to visit our facilities, so that the next time you need our services, you'll know where to go! 3 L O C A T I O N S O P E N S A T 9-1 e M O N - F R I 8 -5 :3 0 6222 MANCHACA RD. (Between Stassney & Wm Cannon) 12322 HWY. 620 (1/i mile W o f Hwy 183) 873SN. LAMAR (tem ileN of Hwy 183) 836-0163 443-4862 'C all for appointment Limited time offer 331-8083 RENTAL 360 — Fum. Apts. EFF. & 1-2-3-4 BDRM APARTMENTS S ta rtin g A t $260 Preleasing for Summer and Fall • Fum./Unf. • Shuttle Bus • 5 Min. To Dow ntow n • M o d e m • M icrow ave s • Lofts W /Fans • Spacious • ll Floorplans 444-7536 R iv e r s id e O tto r f POINT SOUTH— BRIDGEHOLLOW Rental Office: 1910W illowcreek Townhouses WEST CAMPUS/ NORTH CAMPUS M a n y foreclosures on shuttles or walking distance to UT. in­ Save thousands buying stead of leasing. Call Agent Mitch Only, PMT, 476-2673. ' 4-14-20B-D M ERCHANDISE 200 — Fumiture- Household SM A L L C O U C H , go od condition, beige & brown, perfect for student». $ 5 5 or bed offer. 4 4 4 -5 4 9 9 .4-175B__________ STEREO CA BIN ET -dork, wood, glass d o o rs, $ 5 0 - entertainment center, dark wood, excel- lent condition, $85. 4 58 -6 0 53.4-17-58 con dition, g r e a t 5 PIECE B RA SS ond glass octagon shaped dinette set. Still boxed, never used, $ 14 7,892-7080. 4-19-106C EXTRA FIRM innenprina mattress and box springs. Never usea Still packaged. Queen $185. King, $217. Includes dekv- ery. 8 9 2 -7 0 8 0 .4-19-10BC_____________ 210 — Stereo-TV CA R A L A R M SI Remote. With various op­ tions, $ 2 0 0 installed, for appointment or information coH 452-7105. 4-14-5B O N E PHILLIPS turntable, one Gerrard turntable, one Sony 7 0 watt omplifier- $ 7 5 for all three. Call John 837-1811. 4- 17-5B_______________________________ 220 — Computers- Equipment D A T A FRA M E X P 30 - limited time special $599, indudes free software; W IN G Z special $269, Visa/Mastercard occepted. 3 4 3 -8 2 5 5 .1-14-5B___________________ E LE C T R O C O M M U N IC A T O R II Typewrit­ er. Excellent condition, multi-function. $75. Please call Jaime at 4 69-5726. 4- 14-5B_______________________________ TELEVIDEO TS1605 IBM compatible PC, indudes Olddata printer, 0-bonus soft­ ware. Super buy-$500 251-4402. 4-19- 2B___________________ 230 — Photo- Cameras 35mm C O N T A X RTS BODY, Contax Auto winder, Vrvtar 75-300, Sakor 500mm, 3 Contax viewing screens. $ 5 7 5 or sell individually. 3 45-5927. 3- 30-20B-Ey___________________________ 250 — Musical Instruments ALVAREZ 12 string guitar with pide up and case. AH in excellent condition. $450. Coll John 837-1811. 4-17-5B 280 — Sporting- Cam ping Equip. FULL SET of Golf dubs. Never used. Must sell. 3 22-0233. 4-11-108 18 FO O T P O W E R S H O O T Poroso» AH equipment. $ 5 0 0 negotiable. 451-0312. Leave messoge. 4-19-5B 290 — Furniture- Appliance Rental FINGER FURNITURE RENTAL • Complete Living Room, Din­ ing Room & Bedroom from $49.95/mo. a TV Rental from $29.95/mo. 7801 N. Lamar 459-4125 4 -1 8 -2 0 B -D AUTHENTIC REPLICA watches» authentic weight, authentic glass, crystal replica Louis Vuitton handbags and accessory items. Dealers wanted. CoH 4 45-7290. 4-14-5B 350— Rental Services RENTAL © FREE LOCATORS B « l and triendtaM ssnice in town. C a l today. THOMAS C. THOMPSON JH KALTOK 452-8625 F R E E L e a sin g Se rvice xtdos Ap moms 4S- Houses eOuptsMs# ( i s ■ ' § * ■ * * huntne to U»! WmM 482-8651 803 W. 30h [habitat hunters Moving in June? (or late May) You get the best deals in town! O n shuttle or not, call us — W e know the deals! Apartment Finders 458-1213 5-13-IOB-C N O W PRELEASING 1,2,3 BED RO O M S West Campus, Enfield, Hyde Pari $325-$1500. Largest campus area inventory. Stop by 2401 Rio Grande or call: PARKE COMPANY 479-8110 4-7-20P-F 360 — Fum. Apts. TWO BEDROOM $ 2 9 5 Summer Walk or shuttle lo campus, pool, ceiling fans. CAVALIER APTS. 307 E. 31st 320-0687 3 -27-20B-K Hyde Park - IF Shuttle LARGE efficiencies with walk-in dosets ★ LAUNDRY * VERY Quiet * GREAT Rates! Call M IKE - please leave message: ★ 3 2 3 -6 5 2 6 ★ Sequoia Apartments - 301W. 38th St. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HYDE PARK for summer 1-1 a l the ameni­ ties, shuttle, two blocks from law school, all bjlis paid. $285. 4 72-2507. 4 -2 0-SP O N UT Campus W alk to school. Large Apt. hardwood floor 3-BR. $550. 2 5 0 9 San Antonio 4 5 3 -5 9 0 0 4-20-7B FU RN ISH ED 2-2 2813 Rio Grande. Campus Life style lo­ cators 477-1711. Free locator service 4- 20-10B. RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. Jbon’t Worry, Be Happy AtX* Aspenwood Apartments Beat High Electric Rates • Water/Gas Paid • Intramural Fields • Shuttle at Front Door Across the Street Prelease Now For Summer-FaB 452-4447 4539 Guadalupe HOP, SKIP or JUMP To Campus, Only 3 Blocks Away Cornerstone Apartm ents Altordab* m et Campus LMngl • Completely Fumtthed • One Bedroom/One Bath Hunyt Only A Few Units Leftl 478-4642 or 459-4878 272S Rio Qrande De sure your Cor is ready! Th e D a ily Te x a n AUTO GUIDE offers helpful information concerning all your Auto needs-from Tires to Tune-up to Transmission service to Insurance, Financing, or even a Brand N ew Car. WATCH FOR THE NEXT PUBLICATION ON APRIL 21st IN OUR CLASSIFIED SECTION GARDENGATE 2222 Rio Grande 476-4992 Four Beautiful 7-7 floorplans to choose from. e Walk to campus e Furnished e C/F e Microwave e Large closets e Patio/Balcony e Pool e 2 Jacuzzis e 6 Laundry rooms Now Preleasing Summer/ Fall/Spring Limited Avaibbility , S p ^ e RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360— Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 3 6 0 — F u m . A p ts . T H E D a i l y TE X AN /Thursday, April 20, ¡y8 y/ha ye ic WEST CAMPUS! $ 2 4 0 $ 3 2 0 S u itin g from SUM M ER F A L L • Walk to Campua • siting Fans • Micrawavaa • Larga 1 A 2 Badrooma . fo r P e v h tü tg fo r ü i im r 479-6105 LONGHAVEN APARTMENTS RE X LMTES Furnished Efficiencies 1 - 1 '* & 2 - 2 ' * • 3 Pool* • 3 Laundry Room* o Gas and Walor Paid • Shuttle at Front Door t a t . Id o a t I b f S tm B o a t t h o B g k Tanglewood W stside t a t r t n t i t « h e p ipring-3u$mmmr*MI 1403 Noiwalk In. 472-9614 SEQUOIA APARTMENTS 301W. 38TH Prelease Now • Spring • Summer • Fall Quiet - N ear Shuttle 323-6526 Tanglewood North We Pay A ll Your Heating A A/C E n l o o r o H o w F o r S p r t n g - S u m m o r * RR Shuttle stop at Front Door * 2 Pools & Remodeled Laundry Rooms * Ceiling Fans/Microwaves * Furnished/Unfurnished * Quality Residents Friendly Managers Who Care 452-0060 1020 E. 45th MARK XX Probase Now For Spring-Summer-Fall Beat the High Electric Rates! 1 Bedrooms & 2 Bedrooms Available 459-1664 3815 Guadalupe Davis & Assoc. C ontinental Apartments 910 E. 40th • Shuttle bus and City bus available • Across from 9-hole g o lf course • Across from m ajor shopping a rea • N ice Pc • Large spacious 2 bedroom s furnished Prelease Now Summer/Fall I Super Rales-Move In Today 454-5934 Professionally managed by Davis and Associates West Canpas doesn’t hove to costafortnne e 6 blocks W. of campus e 1 block from grocery, pharmacy, shopping e Gas heating & cooking — low electric bills e Cozy 15 unit complex e Vi block from shuttle Summer rates from $275 25Vz St. between San Gabriel & Leon Summit 1008 W. 25Vt • 495-9477 Chaparosa Apartments 3110 Red River C L O SE TO U .T. — * — Small, quiet, quality complex 2 blocks from Law, on shuttle; attrac­ tively furnished, with pool, laundry, and all bills paid. E fficiency to 3BR 474-1902 Villa Solano Apartments 51st & Guadalupe • Shuttle Bus/City Bus • Shopping Nearby • 2 Laundry Areas • Nice Pool 1 & 2 Bedropm Apts. Across From Intramural Fields 451-6682 MOVE IN TODAY CHECK ITOUTI! Super low rales for summer/fall Efficiencies, 1 bedroom , & 2 bedroom furnished/unfurnished Convenient to U.T. Seton, Hancock Cen­ ter, shuttle, & city bus line. All appliances, pool, laundry room. Gas & water paid. 302 W. 38th 453-4002 3-31-20B-F VIEW POINT APTS W a lk o r shuttle to campus! Just 5 blocks west o f G uadalupe at the end o f 26th Street. Then com e hom e to yo u r attractive a ffo rd a b le efficiency w ith a lovely w o o d e d view. Attentive m anagem ent ensures quality living. Pool, laundry facilities. Furnished or unfurnished. 4 7 6 -8 5 9 0 . 3-30-20B-C BEST OF HYDE PARK! 1-1 w ith vaulted ceilings, shuttle ac­ cess, quiet atmosphere, covered park­ ing, balconies, skylights, furnished. TELLURIDE APTS. 4100 AVE. C 452-4414 4-14-5B-C WARWICK APTS. Garden setting, pool w/waterfall, BBQ pits, large fully furnished 2- 2's, 1-1's and efficiencies. Located on 29th and West Ave. (behind Breeds Hardware). 2907 WEST AVENUE. LEASING FOR SUM­ MER AND FALL. BEST RENTAL DEALS. 474-7426/346-2770. 4-17-20B-D 1010 W. 23rd THREE FRIENDS Unique, Attractive Affordable, Clean e Summer rates, discount fo r 1 yr. lease e 1 & 2 Bedrooms available e C onvenient to UT, ACC & State e Furnished o r Unfurnished Pre Lease fo r Summer, Foil 474-4418/478-5467 ★ 5 B L O C K S W E S T U T * Large, quiet, immaculately clean semi­ efficiency. Kitchen, walk-in closet, laundry, gas heat & cooking, water/ gas furnished. On site manager. From $235.00 Red O ak Apartments 2104 San Gabriel ★ 4 7 6 - 7 9 1 6 ★ Summer Rental, Lovely 1 BR in Hyde Park. Furnished, w ater bed, microwave, pa­ tio, beautiful trees, near park, w /p o o l, tennis, etc. For non- responsible, quiet smoker only. Rent reason­ able negotiable 323-2115. 4-12-20B 4-17 4-4-20B-F V . I . P . A F T S . sum n UNO Luxurious 3 bdrm, 2 both two lovoi unit, suitobio for 3 or 4 matura studants. Also larga ona bdrm. wo- tar and gas paid, a POOL a PATIO a NEW CAJtPET a FURNISHED a WALK a IF SHUTTLE AT DOOR ■ Y A W . 4 7 4 -0 3 6 3 1 0 1 K .3 W D ★ FRONTIER APTS. ★ SUMMER RATES - $220 PRE-LEASING 4111 AVE. A: Large efficiencies on shuttle and city bus. Quiet complex, CA/CH, G&W and ba­ sic TV cable paid. ★ 462-0930,323-5982, ★ 4-19-20B-C RENTAL 370— Unf. Apts. ♦ BEAUTIFUL ★ CHEAPEST ★ A QUIET k 1802 W.Av*. Urn complex s one ofihe nkmt aporlmsnh in VVW Campm ghmn its. inenpemive rsnls. We w 0 * y to accommodate anyone'¡ fcnta t p Greet atmoepheie, walk lo U.T. Surroundad fay baouMtui houaa Pool with fountain. Fraa porting. Laundry room. Naw fornitura. M aitchan. M y empatad. Cm, water I water hoolof pod. Now Preloaong (or Summer, Fat, & Spring t a L 1-1 rtorUng at *295 1-1 dortingm*365 2-2 eating at *395 2-2 Porting at $495 3-2 Poring at $445 3-2 Oaring at $785 Fg a t a i s a r d s i & B i r » , . kyapft. la r g l, wort baoiriM pool in W«e 478-7519 NtCompw 4-19-2010B-F Summer Specials Starting at *2 5 5 ! Come by for a tour and sample the quality living that Wild- creek hes for you. Our amenities include: a Spooli a Jacuzzi a Tannto Courts a dossloshum a On sds msnsgsment Call Glenn at 385-2605 today! The Arrangement a Quality Living at Affordable Rates a • Furnished S Unfurnished, from $225 e Numerous Floorplans to Choose From Eff., Lofts, Townhouses, 1-1,2-2 e On Shuttle, Convenient Location e Pool & Clubhouse * Ask about our Fantastic Preleasing Rates Today a 444-7880 8 1 8 4 B u r t o n D r . RENTAL 370— Unf. Apts. STRETCH YOUR BUCKS LEASE AT BR0WNST0HE! R it starts from: 8230 826 0 829 0 Eff. 1-1 s 2-1's w /9 mo. or 1 yr. laase Plus: 2 pools. 3 laundry rooms, new carpet & paint, new tile & wallpaper on selected units. Door to door trash pick-up, on-site management, security & maintenance. On IF shuttle. Cat Un4a or Lari NOW 454-34M e e e e e e e e e e e e e e FREE RENT The Ultimate Student Living Experience On 6th St. • UT Shuttle • 2 Pools • Laundromat • Mgmt/Maint. on site • Gas and Water Paid Heathercrest Apts. 161< W .S th L 476-2219J A tropical paradise exists at Villa Vailarta! Here you'll find the condominium quality and design de- m tails that you demand. Enjoy romantic sunsets over ■§ k9 nearby Shoal Creek, or gather with friends in the security of our private courtyard. Relax at poolside to the splashing sounds of our waterfall and soothe Jh away the tensions of hectic academics. Organized social events make friends that you can keep for a lifetime. a place to make ^ 8 • Swimming Pool • Hot Tub • Sports Court Ask about our specials on Eff. & 1 Bdrms. • Controlled Entry • Microwaves/lcemakers • Private Parking M Mo, ‘VoUcvitci 2505 Longview 322-9887 Affordable Luxury Designed for Student Living Beautiful 1 and 2 Bedroom Plans from $275 Furnished or Unfurnished. Just off IH 35 South, Oakwood Apartments offer options for every living situation. Set amidst towering oak trees and lush landscap­ ing, Oakwood features a complete range of amenities, including magnificent swimming pools. Six, nine and twelve month leases as well as month-to-month accom­ modations. Complete Home Services packages available (including dishes, linens, T.V. and more). Maid Service is also available. Office open daily 9 to 6. Sorry, no pets. On Hm IIT Sbuttto Ua« CLOSE TO SHUTTLE S T A F F O R D H O U S E A I’A K T M ! V i s 2-1’s starting at: S 3 0 0 1-1 s starting at: s S 2 0 0 A A M. sW SANDSTONE r I & I I 2408 ft 2501 Manor Rd SUMMER FALL SPRING YR LEASE $255 $300 $ 2 M • Ooa. to «huta» • Ft/malad untt* n i l • Sea ft Ojbroom • LactrJry F scAtm • Security Pstrofted • Pro* Landscaped Prat ftlanaped by ftepency Prupertte* tic . Student Riwident Manage. rs g iB g rB S io For the discriminating taste, O ak Grove! Come home to a quiet tree-shaded atmosphere. Relax on our sundeck by the sparkling pool or in the cool shelter of the spreading oaks. Perfectly located, you're within minutes from UT. Oak Grove offers seclusion, privacy and charm at Aus­ tin's best address. Oak Grove features a swimming pool surrounded by wooden sundeck and huge native oak trees. Apartments feature pri­ vate patios or balconies, ceiling fans, fireplaces, vaulted ceil­ ings, separate dining areas, oversized walk-in closets and pass through serving bars. Kitchens are fully applianced with sunny kitchen windows. Some feature utility areas with washer/dryer connections. Professional on-site management and maintenance. Cable TV available. Small pets accepted. ASK ABOUT OUR $50 SUMMER DISCOUNT One and Two Bedroom Starting at $300 447-7939 A . LII TAKES IS BALLS, ANET AND A POOL The fun just seems to happen at C ourtlan d A partm ents. With our volleyball pool, everyone enjoys the great outdoors, from the middle of the action or the sidelines. Enjoy the pools, free membership in our on-site health club, wet bars, microwaves, custom decorating and we’re on the U T shuttle too! In fact, we have everything you need to make your apartm ent and social life sensational! C om e visit our one and two bedroom suites starting at $ 3 2 9 .0 0 . CO URTLAND A P A R T M E N T S 1200 Broadmoor D rive • 454-2537 $195 Efficiencies • Large efficiencies on UT Shuttle • Newly redecorated • Door to door trash service • Executive suites available • Ask about our specials! Now Leasing fo r Summer A Fall Stonewood Village Apts. 4558 Ave. A 454-8903 Austin’s exclusive downtown apartm ent community. Now leasing for immediate and summer occupancy. Enjoy a private retreat just 2 blocks from the excitement of 6th Street, with enclosed covered parking and controlled access. Convenience and privacy, in elegant downtown apartment living. Only from Byram Properties. 201 East 4th Street, Austin, T X 78701 512/472-6706 ^ Move in now or Prelease for Future Occupancy A P A R T M E N T S SUMMER SPECIAL Efficiencies, 1 6 2 Bedroom Apt. Homes starting at $ 1 9 5 ! We always have a special PRE-LEASE NOW Yes, we have special rates on furnished & un furnished apts. Century Square 3401 Red River 478-9775 4210 Red River 452-4366 Century Plaza 940E.40thst. 453-8652 Granada 9i5E.4ist 452-6518 Park Plaza & Plaza Court 101 E. 33rd St. 476-0363 VIP Penbrook Club Apts. 929-3150 Best Apartments, Best Prices, Best Locations g i i i i i i i m i i i i i m m i i i i i i i i i m i i m i i i i i i i i i i m i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i H i i i i m i i i ^ . All Bills Paid V E R S A IL L E S 467-9272 4411 Airport EFF — 2BRH99& u p . • Close to UT shuttle & Capitol Metro • New pool • Pets ok = 5 s § ¡ Call Now! • Townhomes avaialable • 10% Student discount • Furnished also available I 5 = = 9 2 6 -6 6 6 4 | ñ i i i i i i i i i n i i m i i i i m i M i i i i i u m i i i i i i i i m i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i m i i u i i i i i m m r f 710 Sq. Ft. 860 Sq Ft 4 GREAT REASONS TO LIVE AT WILLOW CREEK HILLS K • New Furniture Avail. • Fum. or Unfum. Avail. • Microwaves • Dishwashers • 3 1-Bdr Floorplans • Great Views • Excellent Maintenance • Excellent Management • Shuttle Stop • 2 Pools • 4 Laundry Rooms • Pantries • Sundeck w/City View • Walk-in Closets • Designer Color Schemes • 3 2-Bdr Fioorplani PRE-LEASING SUMMER/FALL 1016 Sq. Ft. 1000 Sq. Ft. $200 MOVE-IN BONUS! I Present this ad to C ourtlan d A partm ents and move in within 3 0 days from today to receive your special move-in bonus. i I 444-0010 . X .' yr HI 1911 Willow Creek [•r. _____ 1 S h o w d o w n High Point Village] HO, HO HO!! IVs Christmas in June We outdraw the other guys ‘cause: j You get $300 OFF w/ this ad!* 0 We’ve got tennis & basketball courts. Q We have a sparkling pool, fl We re on the UT shuttle route. Q Our rates start at $270! a t C a n y o n P a s s i $100 O F F fo r Ju n e , J u ly & A u g u st* • On UT shuttle • Clubroom • Free parking • Walk-in closets • Eff., 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm • Pool • Private Balconies/Patios • W /D connections (som e a p to ) Pre leasi ng n ow for S u m m e r and Fall Guarantee t o d a y ' s p ric es n o w ' 2400 Wickersham Lb. 385-2044 *Ask for (tetad., please C a n y o n Pa s s ‘ A s k f o r d e t a ils 4 5 4 - 2 1 5 7 P age 16/THE DAILY TEXAN/Thursday, April 20, 1989 RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. WEST 24TH APARTMENTS Prelease N o w For Spring-Summer-Fall • 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. • Pool • Next to Tennis Courts • W alk to Cam pus • Basic Cable Paid For 1302 W. 24th St. 477-3619 DIPLOMAT APARTMENTS BARGAIN RATES Prelaw Now F w 9 | i r m g - Sum m er-Fall tWdkteCampm* 478-2250 Manager Apt. #205 Davis & Assoc. M M K - B W n S 3101 Cedar at Speedway • Walk to Campus • Shuttle at Curb • 2 Pools • Manager on Site You WiH Love Living Here Pretease Now For Spring-Summer-Fat I-1's - coble laundry. Small quia» complex J 2 6 0 - J 2 8 0 Preleasing. 2812 Rio Gronde coll 4 5 4 -7 9 0 0 Sandlin & Co. 4- II-2 0 6 - F____________________________ ENFIELD ROAD, 2-1, nicely fumbhed, pool, large, courtyard, laundry, quiet, on-site maintenance. From $375, ER shuttle Antilles Apartments. 2 20 2 -2 2 04 Enfield Rd. 477-1303. 4-11-208-F y ★ ★ PRE-LEASING WEST CAMPUS LEON APARTMENTS Unfurnished efficiencies, newty redec­ orated, water paid, covered parking. Summ er rate $220 462-0930 ★ ★ 4-19-20B-C F R O M $200 EFFICIENCY/1 B E D R O O M Dishwasher, disposal, microwave (option­ al), individual storage, pool, Borbeque. laundry, on IF shuttle, across from City Pork, resident manager Unfurnished oho available 108 P LA C E A P A R T M E N T S 108 W E S T 45T H 452-1419 If no answ er 385-2211 or 4 53 -2 7 7 1. __________________________ 4-19-206-A SH O A L CREEK Apts. 2 50 4 Leon Unique 1-bedroom, quiet atmosphere Glass w ol front, stone fenced pnvocy patio $ 3 0 0 -$ 3 25 4 8 0 -8 3 0 5 3-30-20B-C LARGE TWO-story one bedrooms and efficiencies. Along Speedway; Available now S U M M E R S A V IN G S Bret, 453- 0 5 4 0 4-4-20B-D RENTAL 400 — Condos-Townhouses * Vanderbilt * Luxury West Campus one and two bedroom condominiums. Now preL ing tor Summer and Fall Security systems, all appliances, Pool/Jacuzzi, on-site leasing and management. Select units still available. Call 479-6004 to arrange an appointment. RENTAL 430 — Room -Board T H I S W H A T S U M M E R T H E DO S M A R T R E S I D E N T S OF 3 - D O R M S d o . . . S T A Y A T THE C O N T E S S A s m THE C O N T E S S A WEST T T T T T T TT AND SPEND YOUR AFTERNOONS S T U D Y IN G ON THE O U T D O O R P O O L D E C K $ 550/PER SESSION I N C L U D I N G ME A L S ALL P R I V A T E ROOMS NO DEPOSIT / CLOSE TO CAMPUS COMPUTER ROOM P A R T I E S AND A S U M M E R T R I P CALL 4 7 6 - 4 6 4 8 OR 4 7 7 - 9 7 6 6 TODAY 2707 RIO GRANDE &2706 NUECES SPECIAL DISCOUNT: $ 5 0 . OFF THE PRICE OF ONE SUMMER S E S S I O N TO ANY R E S ID E N T WITH AN ' 8 8 / ' 8 9 DORMITORY I . D . FROM ANOTHER (NOT 3 -DORMS) U . T . AREA DORM. SHOW I . D . WHEN YOU SUBMIT YOUR CONTRACT One Block From Campus THREE OAKS APARTMENTS SuvwSpeciol1 $185ABP E F F I C I E N C I E S 2 B LO C K S UT Fall rotes from $225 ABP H<. M ! ( ) \ A / A Y A f ’I S 474-2365or476-Í957 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ! S t Moritz Apts. ! • Summer A FsMPretemng! • ® 1-1's & 2-1's lofts, fireplaces, vaulted * • ceilings, ceiling tans, balconies and • • completely furnished Small, cozy • • complex with pool, covered parking # • and security gates. 800 W. 25th 2 1/5 # 0 blocks west o( campus • 476-4060 a • Now Leasing Summer, Fall, Spring Reserve Now And Secure Super Rates • W alk to UT, 2-2,1-1 • C A /CH , pool, laundry facilities • Cable connections, dishwasher, disposal • G a s stove, furnace, water heater • Assigned parking • Pleasant atmosphere • Available week of M a y 20 and August 20 474-5929 __________________________3-31-20B-K C O M E RELAX... by our crystal clear pool and enjoy spacious, furnished, apartment home living. Gas, cooking, a nd heat paid, ceiling fans, giant closets, skylights, desks, miniblinds, a nd huge patios a nd balconies, W A L K T O C A M P U S ! Hurry going fast! 476-1619 _________________________ 3-31-20B-C 2 B ED RO O M T O W N H O U SE N e ar Hancock Center & shuttle. $325-$345, Sum­ mer; $ 3 7 0 -$ 3 9 0 , Fall. C A C H . N o pets. Phone 926-1219. 3-31-20B SANDPIPER APTS. 2810 RIO GRANDE Large tastefully furnished 2 bed/2 bath. Fully equipped kitchen, frost- free refrigerator, microwave, pan­ try, walk-in closets, ceiling fans and intercom in each room, covered parking, pool, sundeck, resident manager, gas and water paid. N O W LEASING FOR SU M M ER $425 + E; FALL $550 + E. SPE­ CIAL RATE FOR SUMMER-FALL LEASE. 474-2542, 469-0026/ 346-2770. 4-19-20B-D $ 2 2 5 .0 0 Large 1 bedroom/carpeted, dis­ posal, CH/CA, ceiling fans, wa­ ter/gas paid. Large pool and patio. Walk to UT. Fountain Terrace Apartments 610 W. 30th/Manager #134 477-8858 3-30-20B-F M O V E IN today. Large efficiency, 38th and Ave. B, quiet, free basic cable, coin laundry, water/gas paid, fumehed/un- fumished. $200 plus electricity. A M l ler, broker, 452-4212.4-4-20B-K 4 BLOCKS West UT; dean, quiet efficien­ cy. Water/gas furnished. G as heat and cooking $229.476-7916. 4-4-20B-F 1-l's»2-V* Available! $300-$395. Spo- dous, dean, garage parking. Conven­ ient 3121 Speedway. C o l Larry 469- 0403.4-11-20B-E__________________ PRELEASING FOR Summer/Fal one block UT, smal auiet complex, 1-1 ceiling fans, mini blinas. 2711 Hemphill Pork. 478-1870.4-13-19B________________ PRELEASING FOR Summer/FaN one block UT, smal auiet complex, 1-1 ceftrtg fans, mini blinas. 2711 HemphW Park. 478-1870. 4-13-19B AVAILABLE TO sublet M ay 10- Aug 10,1- BR Sunny Apt. with hardwood Alle, 2 cats. $300/mo. 476-6848. Leave message. 4-19-5B If interested call LARGE CO LO N IA L house has a vacan­ cy. Upstairs apartment, deck, trees, hir- nished, $285.442-3030.4-20-14BF 370— Unf. Apts. THUNDERBDU) APARTMENTS 4510 Duval Pretease Now For Spring-Summer-Fall • Shuttle Near • Quiet Area e Manager on Site • Close to Shopping • Big Trees PRELEASE NOW 451-1244 ? ] Preleasing now ON IF SHUTTLE Big Relaxing Pool 24 Hr. Emergency Maintenance On-site Management Villa Orleans Villa Gardens 206 W. 38th St. ^ 452-3314 v • FROM $200 • 1 Bdr/1 Ba • Furnished • Laundry • PRELEASE FOR SUMMER • PRELEASE FOR FALL LOW RATES! 451-5840 409 W. 38th St. CLASS A C TS! HOUSTON 2801 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 BRANDYWINE 2804 Whitis Ave. - 495-9593 DALLAS 2803 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 WILSHIRE 301W. 29th - 495-9523 Great Summer Rates • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Central A ir/H eat • 2 Blocks from Cam pus R I V E R S I D E Q U A R T E R S 444-3611 IH 35 or Riverside Drive CASADE SALADO APARTMENTS 1 & 2 bedroom furnished apartments, water, g a s a n d basic TV cable paid. N o pets. Sw im m ing pool, A C , and ceiling fans. Laundry facilities. Close to campus, near shuttle. Resident m an­ a g e r #112, 2 6 1 0 S a la d o Street. For info 4 7 7 -2 5 3 4 . Units available now. 4-10-20B-D SU M M ER SPECIAll Large, roomy apart­ ments. Efficiency $175, one bedrooms $200. Deposit required. Pre-leasing available. Gas, water, sewer, garbage poid. 1900 Burton Drive. 440-7197. 3- 24-20BC $200 M O V E IN brae 2-2's, CF's, built in bookcases, on bus line, great for siu- dents 928-2581 926-8740. 3-27-20B EXCEPTIONAL 1-1 near intermurol field. Freshly redecorated. BuÜt-ins. Bay win­ dow. Water/heat paid. $229.00. 452- 7552. 3-29-20P LARGE CLEAN carpeted 1 bedroom/effi- dency, CA/CH, ceiling fans, quiet ma­ ture individuals. N o pets 35th St. 453- 5417.4-17-20BE___________________ W ALK TO UT or comer of shuttle bus. W. 35th & Speedway. Nice brick 2 Bed­ room. Kitchen - lots of cabinets, W/D. $425. Deposit $200. 452-5104. 4-18- 10B RENTAL 430 — Room -Board The CURE for the Summertime blues... THE CASTILIAN MESQUITE TREE APARTMENTS O ne bedroom furnished apartments. Close to campus,near shuttle. Dishwash­ er, A/C, ceiling fan. Laundry facilities, & hot tub. Water and basic T.V. cable paid. N o pets. Resident manager #301, 2410 Longview St. For info, 4 78-2357. UNITS AVAILABLE N O W . 4-10-20B-D • CONQUISTADOR • 4412 A ve A Quality furnished apartments, spacious, newly decorated, 1 & 2 bedrooms. Quiet, owner-man­ aged. Summer rates from $265 • 450-0955 • 4-20-20B-F RENTAL 430 — Room -Board mn i u r r tig vD auif 0 0 1 V « 8 t 2 4 t h B t n t t TS The V E R Y B E S T for L E S S COM PARE: * P R IC E S - Starting at $3,900 Including EXQUISITE DINING of World Famous Food. * UV1NG SP A C E - GIGANTIC CLOSETS. Uving Rooms, Oinlng Rooms, Bedrooms all fully furnished. * FULL KITCH EN S - Other dorms don't have them! * AM EN ITIES - Pool, Sauna. Study Rooms. Laundries, Sundeck, 24 Hour Security. Fitness Center, Game Room, Private Decks, Lounges. Free Maid Service Twice Weekly, Parking Garage Avalable APPLICATIO NS BEING ACCEPTED (512) 472-5846 Summer Rates from $295 e 1 BR & 2 BR e Ceiling Fans e Central A/C e On Shuttle e Laundry Room e Fully Furnished e Pool Rio Nueces 26th @ Nueces (600 W. 26th) 474-0971 QUIET W E ST C A M P U S furnished efficiencies 910 W . 26th St. Hard to believe, you so y? We're 3 V2 blocks from Comm, building. Next door to W/C shuttle. It's true! Cleon, quiet, inexpensive Irving for the serious student. Sum m er rate $ 2 0 0 ; Fall/Spring $ 2 7 5 Discounts for extended lease Call 4 7 8 - 1 3 5 0 for appt. & m ore info. "Your Oasis in C haos" 4-17-20B-F RENTAL 430 Our dorm is open for 50MM6R c v A - How about yours? Call today about our great summer rates. Com e by for a tour — w e re right on the NR shuttle. Summer liv­ ing by the lake - don't wait! BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471 -5244 Mvtutb Pmtrn - - • 15 Quality Meals/wk. • Weekly Maid Service • Swimming Pool • Physical Fitness Center • Recreation Center • Computer Center • Television Lounges • Large Study Center • Deck Parking • Social/Sports Programming ONLY $4 9 9 p e r SESSION 2323 San Antonio • (512) 478-9811 RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL KINTAL KINTAL KINTAL 370 - U n f . Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 380 — Fum. Duplexes I 4 00 — Condos Townhomes 4 00 — Condos- 4 00 — Condos- Townhouses Townhouses 400— Condos Town homos THE DAILY TEXAN/Thursday, April 20,1989/Page 17 UT AREA - Large, cheerfully remodeled ____ i-i's, 2-i's,2-2's, 3-i's, $395-$695, ap- V a l e n c i a pliances, for June 1, cat OK. Owner 479-6153. 3-31-20B-A ★ WEST CAMPUS ★ ________________________ 2-2's from $ 7 5 0 836-4437 _________________________ 4-20-208 P r e l e a s e N o w . v ' . r . V ’ i j $ 2 7 0 P V ■,f ,t j*tu • C H E V Y C H A S E D O W N S e 2 p o o ls • Spa • T e n n is c o u rt • F ire p la c e s • B ay w in d o w s • P ro m p t m a in te n a n c e • B e a u tifu l la n d s c a p in g • O n -site m a n a g e m e n t 4 6 2 - 0 7 7 7 2504 Huntwick Ivanhoe Village Apartments — In Travis Heights — Next To Park — Quiet Neighborhood — Ideal For Grad Student — Recreation Areas -Pool/Laundry -Excellent Rate — Move in Today 1500 East Side Dr. 441-4375 ★ ★ ★ ★ WEST CAMPUS LUXURY ★ Condo Quality iA Walk to Campus ★ Hot Tub/Large Pool ★ Sundecks ★ B-B-Q Area it Popular Restaurants/ Shopping Camino Real APARTMENTS 2810 SALADO ^ 4 7 2 - 3 8 1 6 v VÍLLÁ NORTH 2 Bedroom Apts Prelease Now For Spring- S immer-Fall 4520 Duval 459-9131 Davis & Assoc CASA GRANDE A P A R T M E N T S EFF(AMAep>$295 1 BR— $ 2 9 5 - $ 3 2 5 2-1— $ 3 7 5 2 - 2 — $ 4 2 5 3 - 2 — $ 5 7 5 - $ 6 2 5 Furnished/Unfurnished Large rooms, parking, laundry, pool, on UT shuttle, near UT 1400 Rio Grande 4 8 0 -8 0 3 9 3 2 7 -5 0 4 5 4-20-20B-F -oiloblo ________________________ 4-13-20B-K HUGE 2-2! O n quiet street surrounded by gigantic elm trees, verti­ cal blinds, ceiling fans, free heat — summer discount. 452-1121 FROM $200 EFFICIENCY/! BEDROOM Dishwasher, disposal, microwave (option­ al), individual storage, pool,barbeque laundry, on IF shuttle, across from City Pork, residentmanager. Unfurnished also available. 108 PLACE APARTMENTS 108 WEST 45TH 452-1419 If no answ er 385-2211 o r 4 53 -27 71. _________________________4-19-20B-A 1 BR - $100 2 BR - $125 STUDENT SPECIAL PRE-LEASE N O W TEXAS BEST LOCATORS 462-2532 __________________________ 4-10-20B SPECIAL RATE 2 BR 2 BA S w im m in g p o o l- h o t tu b S e c u rity system C o v e r e d p a r k in g R e m o d e le d M o r e Info 442-1331 _________________________ 4-7-20B-K E F F IC IE N C IE S Efficiencies on quiet street, just 2 blocks from shuttle. W alk to beautiful West Aus­ tin Park. 452-1121/472-9516 ________________________ 4-13-20B-K S225-S300 AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY- Summer/Fall preleasing. Walk to cam­ pus: 1-1's at 2800 Rio Grande & 2304 Leon; efficiencies a* 2703 Rio Grande. 499-0796. 3-29-20B-F______________ GORGEOUS ONE and Two bedrooms. W /D, fireplaces, patios, and shuttle. Pre­ lease or immediate move-in. Starting at $262/m o. Step Savers 476-3028. 3-30- 20B-D SPACIOUS EFFICIENCIES - All appli- ances, gas & water paid. Near shuttle. $205 - $50 deposit. 305 W 35th. 395- 4977. Terri. 3-31-20B-F_____________ WEST AUSTIN 4-plexl Convenient to do w n to w n and UT. 2-1 Lovely neighborhood, refrigerator,CA/CH, mi­ crowave, covered parking. $595 476- 4477. 3-31-20B-C__________________ FREE HEATING, gas cooking, hot water - rent - $100 deposit/$100 first months sh u ttle /m e tro 1212 4 5 4 -4 4 0 9 , Westheimer. 3-31-20B-C WALK TO UTI 3101 Tom Green St., small, quiet complex with an on site manager, laundry, parking. 474-1646. 3-31-20B-C 7107 GUADALUPE - One bedroom/One bath, carpet, central air, appliances, near St. John's. $175/month. 371-3099. 3-31-20B- D________________________ BRAND NEW Interior - 2 bed/2 bath. All bills paidl $475/mo. Call David Hayes, PMT, 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 .4-3-20B-D__________ NICE ONE bedroom. 1913 Rio Grande. Tri-plex, hardwood floors, ceiling fans, large patio. $375 Brett, 453-0540. 4- 4-20B- D___________________________ 912 E. 48Vi St.—2/1 with fenced yard) All appliances, CA/CH, $400. 454-3514. 4-5-20B-C_________________________ ONE BLOCK north of campus. Comer of Speedway and 31st. Quiet, large 1-1 hardwood floors, many windows. 345- 6028, 343-9062. 4-5-20BA__________ N O W AVAILABLE: Perfect West Campus location. Large studios, 2-1's + 1-1's. $300-5450. 480-0976. 4-7-10B-F GREAT FOR roommates. South Lamar area. Remodeled, 1-1's. Ceiling walk-in closet. $225-$235. Call 454- 790 0 Sandlin & Co. 4-11-20B-F________ fan, One, two-story studio apartment. Avail­ able summer and foil. West Campus, $395, very snazzy. 480-0976. 4-11- 10B-F_____________________________ SMALL QUIET new complex. 1-1 $195, 2- 1 $260: Bus 1 blk/ shuttle, 1 mile. 250- 1325. 4-12-20B BARTON SPRINGS 1 block. Large 2-2 with great closets. Microwave, Jennair grill, fireplace, pool & spa. $625 Call Claudia 474-4456, 328-8808. 4-13- 10BF______________________________ 2 WEEKS FREE. Move in special. Nice 1 & 2 bedrooms on UT shuttle. Call 441- 8365 or 338-0427.4-18-108 4 BEDROOM, 1600 sq. ft„ walking dis- tance to campus. 2811 Salado. $ 75 0/ mo. 258-7817, 837-5368. 4-18-108-E EFFICIENCY PRIVATE entrance and courtyard. 1 block from shuttle, N o pets. ABP. $175/5100 deposit. Cali after 7pm, 467-9932. 4-18-3B TROPICANA APARTMENTSI Super big one and two bedrooms. Quiet and con­ venient. Pool, laundry, ER shuttle. 2606 Enfield #6. 474-6534, 474-1100. 4-18- 20B-C____________________________ WEST CAMPUS - condo 2-1V5 ceiling fans, microwave, dishwasher, walk-in closet, summer lease. $575 negotiable. Call 288-3674.4-19-108_____________ HOMEY, PRIVATE, convenient, 2-1 & 1-1. Both with hardwood floors, large kitch­ en, private yard, parking. Quiet neigh­ borhood. $300 450-0955. 4-20-20BF AWESOME APARTMENT 2 BR/2 B A 3 blocks to UT. Usually $85Q/month, summer only $630/month W O W I Dione 495-9701. 4-20-78 Roomy 3/1, 2 dens, A/C, Freshly pointed, off Cameron Rd. $400/mo. Anthony 92 6 -5 4 6 7 .4-20-2B Rates start at $215!! El Dorado, El Campo, La Pas SmaS, quiet commomhe, featuring: • Pool • Coiling Fom o CATCH o Enorgy officiont o Furnished 5 min. from UT. On UT Shuttle and Motro routo. 1 & 2 Bdrms avail. PRELIASING NOW Office located at 3501 Speedway 472-4893 i KAAkfe V h A A A A A A ^ W V V V V W TIRED OF ROOMMATES? L u x u r y C o m p l e x Your choice for the personal touch of thoughtful design. From the rich landscaping to the private pool. Designed with large, flexible living space. $150 holds your apartment till fall. ROPER BALDW IN 834-1031 4-20-5B QUIET LIVING E f f i c ie n c ie s $ 2 1 5 2 / 2 s $ 3 6 0 M ini-blinds, private patios, electronic security system, convenient N o rth - C entral lo cation. In touch w ith all the best o f Austin. HAVEN EAST APARTMENTS ROPER BALDWIN 834-1031 4-20-5B THE PERFECT EFFICIENCY Leasing for summer & fall Efficiency plan is designed w ith yo u r separate sleeping area & full kitchen w ith convenient breakfast alcove. These plans o ffe r w all-length closets, mini-blinds, private parties. N o rth - C entral location. HAVEN EAST For a ll the simple pleasures o f yo u r life. 4-20-5B FREE Passes to Barton Springs Beat trie Sum m er heat w ith trie best deal in W est Campus. Huge 1-1 apartm ent with • W a lk-in closet ■ C eiling fans e AC , a n d ■ C overed parking Free passes to Barton Springs w ith 1 ye a r lease. Starring a t $ 2 7 9 p e r month. The Carrells Apts. 2812 Nueces, Apt.101 476-0111 4 - 3 - 2 0 B - K N E W E S T ! B rand N e w Designer Interiors H uge Floorplans 1-1: $275 2 Bdr: $325 Unique pool/sundeck Sport Court Super N eighbors Properties One: 44 7 -7 3 6 8 ------------------------ 4 -1 7 -2 0 B -F $199.001! Weight Room/Racquetball/tennis pools/morel Large Unifs, New Carpet & Tile Large 1-1: $229.00 2-2: $300.00 Properties One: 44 7 -7 3 6 8 ------------------------------ 4 -1 7 -2 0 B -F ★ SPACIOUS ★ 1 BEDROOMS H uge 1-1's starting at $2001 Assigned parking, miniblinds, quiet neighbor­ h oo d otmosphere. Call a fte r 3 p.m.: Ridgetop Apts. 320-0331 4 -1 7 -5 B ★ MADRID APTS. ★ Large 1 and 2 bedrooms. $265- $350! Gas and water paid, CA/ CH, pool and barbeque area, nice quiet community. ★ 462-0930, ★ ★ 447-9845 ★ 4-3-20B-C BRYKER W OODS N e a r Seton Hospital and U.T. All new heating and A/ C. Old, English architecture in a trendy neighborhood. Don't lease until you call about this one. 453-4 991 ar452-1121 ________________________ 4-13-20B-K * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * RENT SPECIAL from $19 9.00 Lorae efficiencies »n (he H yde P a ri area, e Gas & water paid • ail appliances • drapes e carpet e laundry • pool HYDE PARK PLACE 4 4 0 0 Ave. B M a n a g e r #113 452-3590 4-17-20B-F • SPACIOUS ★ 1 BEDROOMS H uge 1-1's starting at $2001 Assigned parking, miniblinds, quiet ne ig h b o r­ h oo d atmosphere. Call afte r 3 p.m.: 320-0331 4-17-5B VILLAS of La Costa 1016 Comino La Costa * 1st STOP CR SHUTTLE * HALF PRICE SUMMERS * 2 LIGHTED TENNIS COURTS * O N SITE TENNIS PRO * SPARKLING POOL * WATER VOLLEYBALL LIMITED A VAILABILITY PRELEASING NOW!!!! 454-5638 CREEKSIDE 61 5 Upson Prebase Now For Spring-Summer-Fat • Shuttle Bus • City Bus • Jogging Trails • Town Lake • Quiet Area • All Efficiencies • Move in Today WILL NOT LAST LONG —BARGAIN RATES— C a ll N o w 499-0491 $ 2 7 5 . 0 0 on UT shuttle T ake a trip on Oak Lodge* . •P V s n u ltif • ? Pív t í • ? J-lf • FnppniU'S • Vaulted 0 ' !mqs • ( pdinq fa n s • Mini Binds • 3 non'n '(msps avan Now Preleasing Summer-Fall O A K L O D G E 4 4 0 - 0 1 1 8 2317 Pleasant Valley Rd. M/ m - Starting from $262 1 & 2 Bedrooms Ceiling Fan # Microwaves • Fireplaces 2 Laundry Facilities *2 Pods 2 Jacuzzis • Clubhouse • Ice Makers On UT Shuttle TRESTLES 453-4968 1071 Clayton Lane AUSTIN'S BEST LOCATERS New location 2222 Rio Grande D-112 Free locating Condos, Houses, Apartments, Duplexes 478-5277 __________________________ 4-14-2QB • $70 Move-in Special ★ Now Preleasing for Summer & Fall • low deposit • extra large apartments • prompt maintenance/very clean • NR shuttle bus e swimming pool e newly decorated • large 1 bedroom - 750 sq. ft. • large 2-2 -10 2 5 sq. ft. BROOKHOLLOW APARTMENTS 1414 A re n a Dr. ★ 445-5655 ★ 4-17-20B-F RENTAL 435 — Co-ops H jd e P o ri^ A ^ fl^ je q ^ a r g e large furniture a# enough fo r 3, appliance*, washer, dryer, CA/CH, mini-blmds, beautiful hard­ wood floors, $495. O wner 479-6153, fo r June 1.4-19-158-A________________ 390 — Unf. Duplexes CLASSIC 50'S DUPLEX In quiet neighborhood, close to U.T., 2-1 CH/CA, ceiling fans, carport, fenced yard, $450 w / move-in special. 335-0197 ________________________ 3-30-20B-E NEAR UT - Hyde Park, shuttle, large stylishly remodeled two bedroom. Exclusive neighbor­ hood on Park Blvd., beautiful hardwood floors, A/C's, appli­ ances, washer, dryer, garage, balcony, $650, owner 479- 6153, for June 1 or earlier. Cat OK! 4-19-15B-A GREAT UNIV home 1 8DR/1 8A newly painted, carpet, mini blinds, ceiling fans, yard maintained, available June 1. 476- 4755.3-31-208____________________ FREE RENTI Near CR, 2-1, hardwood floors, miniblinds, pets allowed, water paid. Price negotiable. 9 2 8 -3 5 6 5 evenings. 3-23-10BC location, 1-bedrrom, wafer/gas HARDWOOD FLOORSI Beouriful Hyde Pork paid, ceiling fans, UT shuttle, $450. CaK Apartment Finders 458-1213. 4-18-106- C________________________________________ NEAT, EXTRA dean 2-1 near compusl Appliances, drapes, carport, storage, fenced, nice trees, $395. 926-8789. 4- 19-10BC___________________________ NEAR UT Large, remodeled one bed­ room, fenced yard, carport, new carpet, modem kitchen, A/C, fans, mini-blinds, opplionces, $395, owner 479-6153. 4- 19-15B-A__________________________ NEAR UT- Hyde Park, shuttle, large re­ modeled 1 bedroom on Park Blvd. Ex­ clusive neighborhood, beautiful hard­ wood floors, appliances, mini-blinds, A/ C's, fans, garage, $475. Owner 479- 6153 for June 1, cot O.K. 4-19-158-A UT AREA- Cheerfully remodeled 2/1, ap­ pliances, A/C, fans, beautiful hardwood floors, balcony, garage, $395, Owner 479-6153 for June 1, cat oJc. 4-19-15B-A 2 bedroom duplex - Available - can be seen April 25. A/C, new paint - white inside. $325/mo. 1818 W 38th. Pay rent 1812 W 38th. 4-20-5B-F______________ NEAR SPICEWOOD Sprirtgs/Mopoc. 3- floor plan, fire­ 2, 2-story, interesting place, carport, fenced yard. $60 0/ month. 3 2 7 -4 7 8 3 .4-20-5B 400 — Condos- Townhouses 1 R H B M c o m o S i r i ■ r i f 905 W. 22 Vi St. West Campus area Starting at $800 Half-price summer rates. • 2 Br./2 Ba. • Small, 10 unit complex. • Pool & Jacuzzi. e W & D in each apt • C o vered parking 476-9100 C ■ I • t • Y ’’R l U K D H SUMMER SPECIALS PRELEASES AVAILABLE H yde pork Oaks, 1-1, washer, dryer, fireplace, track lighting, patio. $300-Summer $525 for Fall 3-6-9-1 2 m onth lease term availble. RECAR & ASSOCIATES 3 4 5 -9 8 8 6 4-10-20B Campus Condos Orangetree 1 1 $60 0 Centennial 2 2 900 Nueces Place 1 1 Croix 2-2 325 8 00 4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 Hyde Park Condo want$ to be a 4 BDR. 3 BDR w / loft, fea­ tures designer interiors, Italian tile, fireplaces, french doors, W /D, micro, shuttle at door­ step, $1000. Call Tammy 476- 2673 P.M.T. 3-27-20B-D HUGE 1 BEDROOM w / loft, vaulted c«l- ings, skylight, gorgeous views, 2-car pri­ vate garage, fireplace, microwave, W /D . . $650. CaK Tommy 476-2673 PM.T. 3-27-20B-D ANNOUNCEMENTS 560 — Public Notice SUMMER SPECIAL WEST UNIVERSITY PLACE 8 0 8 W . 29th Street GREAT POOL A N D SPA Large 2 Br. and 2 Bo condos w ith g a ­ rage parking. Starting a t $ 5 5 0 . OWNER LEASED AND MANAGED 454-4046 or 345-9986 4-20-208-E LUXURY C O N D O S THE MERIDA 26th and San G abriel. Large 2 Br. and 3 Br. condos, spa, W /D , all kitch­ en appliances including m icrowave, and garage parking. Starting at $ 7 0 0 (3 Br. a vailab le fo r summer only a t a special rate.) O W N ER LEASED A N D M A N A G E D 454-4046 or 3 45-9986 4-20-208-E PRELEASE FOR FALL Enfield Town Home: 2 -2 V i C ondo. Fireplace, Balcony, Security, Covered Parking, R efrigerator and M icrow ave . Pool, Sauna, W h irlp o o l, Shuttle. $ 6 7 5 /m o . $ 3 5 0 Deposit. A va ila ble June 1. Tammy Fariss, ow ner/agent. BENCHMARK CROIX ROBBINS' PLACE O AKV IE W NUECES OAKS ST. TH O M AS N ow prefeasina for summer & foil! Many others available. Come by 2401 Rio Grande or coll: PARKE CO M PANY 479-8110 _________________________ 4-7-20P-F WESTVIEW CONDOS Now pre-leasing 2-2's and 1-1's. Includes: Security, covered parking, hot tub, pool, W/D, microwave, etc 2-2's - $600 ($675 9 mo. lease) 1-1's - $475 ($500 9 mo. lease). Model open 2-6. CoM Jerry 480-8314/476-2673. Property Man­ agement o f Texas. 4-14-20B-D Beautiful West Campus 2-2, + loft. Built in desks, book­ cases, ceiling fans, mini­ blinds, fireplace, microwave, stove/refrigerator, washer/ dryer, alarm. Fabulous view, near complex swimming pool and hot tub. ABP ex­ cept electricity. $ 9 5 0 — 9 month lease, $ 8 0 0 — 12 month lease. Available June 1st. 441-6496. 4-19-3B ENCHANTING 1-BDR, 2 b ib to campus, security, spa, covered parking, private deck, W /D, micro . . . $400. Cod Tommy 476-2673 P.M.T. 3-27-20B-D________ MEDITERRANEAN STYLE COMFORT AT ST. THOMAS. Vaulted ceilings, balco­ nies, pool and jocuzzi, security, parking garage, all appliances. 2 BDRs fur­ nished/unfurnished S800-S1300. Call Tommy 476-2673 PM.T. 3-27-20B-D FURNISHED CONDO. $99 move-in spe­ cial. W /D in unit. 1-1 $329/month. 44Í1 Guodolupe. Coll 251-7678.3-29-20B-C TRAVIS HEIGHTSI O n shuttle, large 3 BDR/2 BA with fireplace, all appliances with pool view. Coll today - Chalmers Componies. 452-7000. 3-30-20B PRE-LEASE CENTENNIAL-2-2, W /D, MICRO, FP, SECURITY, $ 85 0/M O (YEAR LEASE) FURNISHED. CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY. 476-2673. 3-30- 208-D SUMMER ONLY CENTENNIAL 3-2 FUL­ LY FURNISHED, S750/M O . CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY. 476-2673. 3-30- 208-D PRE-LEASE 1-1 GUADALUPE SQUARE - WALK TO CAMPUS. FULLY FUR­ NISHED. S325/M O (YR. LEASE). CALL AGENT MITCH 476-2673. PM.T. 3- 30-20B-D PRE-LEASE CROIX 1-1 - W /D, MICRO, FIREPLACE, SECURITY, PARTIALLY FUR­ NISHED. $49 5/M O (YR. LEASE) CALL AGENT MITCH 476-2673. PM.T. 3- 30-20BD__________________________ BUENA VISTA condo, one block from campus—summer only. 2-2, FULLY FUR­ NISHED: TV, microwave, W /D , fans, 1908 Son Antonio Cad Dave 476-5931 or (713)353-9654 after 5:30pm collect. 4-3-208 UT CONDO PRE-LEASING Benchmark 2-2 large Robbins Ploce 2-2 loaded Pecan Tree 1-1 loft Guadalupe Place 1-1 nice $1250 $800-$1150 $450 $325 Call for more Information Tom at 472-6201 Harrison Pearson 4-4-206-K 2104 PEARL 3 UNITS: 3/2,3-1 Vi, HUGE 1-1. SPACIOUS, MODERN WITH VINTAGE TOUCHES. W/D, CA/CH, APPLIANCES. JUNE-MAY LEASE $127S, $1179, $635 CALL MIKE AT 478-6565 OR SHARYN AT 474-5867 2 5 0 9 Peori Stoneleiqh: 2 4 0 9 Leon 3-2's fro m $ 9 5 0 1,2, & 3 bedroom s 2-2's from $ 7 2 5 O p e n House from 1-4 d a ily West Ridqe: 2 -2 $ 6 5 0 /y e a r $ 7 5 0 /9 mo. Luxury Living with A ll Am enities: e pool/spa e covered parking e fireplace • security e washer/dryer e ceiling fans, etc... ALSO: DoS RÍOS— l-l's-fumithed: $350/summer, $375/year, $425/9 mo. RoyceGouHey 327-4029/453-5237 Kyle Graham 477-7770 ----------------- 4-12-20B-F W est Cam pus C r o ix C h e ls e a C e n te n n ia l P r e s e r v a t io n S q u a re W e d g e w o o d 1-1 2 -3 2 -2 2 -2 2 -2 Many others Cam pus Condos 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 CENTENNIAL Huge units, great complex Vi block to UT pool, spa, & all appliances * 3 - 2 - $ 1 2 9 5 _ year) 2-2 — $995 Call Sean, City Properties: 478- 6565/478-1747 4-19-3B-F 2/2 C O N D O FOR RENT FOR SUM MER 4 Blocks from Campus Large, each bedroom has own bathroom. Washer, dryer, mi­ crowave, ceiling fans. $ 5 0 0 / month. Call Annette at 472- 3421. ____________________________ 4-19-5B The Centennial Chelsea Condominiums Large selection available! Call us for your housing needs. Johnson & Company 4 5 2 -0 2 2 5 4-17-20B-C PRE-LEASE NOW Large luxurious 2-2, microwave, fireplaces, W /D, furnished deck, trees, shuttle, covered parkinq, $650. 4 2 0 0/4 2 0 2 Speedway Matthew Properties 454-0099 835-5928 4-11-20B-K SUMMER ONLY, WC, 2-2, FULLY FUR- 2-1, S380/M O . O, NISHED, $42 CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY, 476- 2673. 3-30-208-D_________________ PRE-LEASE 2-2 - RIVERSIDE SHUTTLE, W /D , MICRO, ETC. S450/M O (YR. LEASE). CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY 476-2673.PM.T. 3-30-208D EDUCATIONAL 610 — Misc. Instruction BRAND NEW INTERIORS - 2 bed/2 C o l David ,7! h. Haye* at PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 .4-3-208-D PRE LEASE now fo r bed unite. F al or summer in We«t Campus. CaN M ark A b­ ernathy. 474-4800. Campus Condo*. 4- 4-20fcA______________ _____________ PRE-LEASE CROtX 2 BDRM/2 BATH, WASHER/DRYER. MICROWAVE, ETC $ 80 0/MO. CALL DAVID HAYES AT P M T. 476-2673. 4-4-208-D_________ PRE-LEASING ORANGETREE & CEN­ TENNIAL-1,2,1 3 BEDROOMS, PRICES START AT S575/M O . CALL DAVID HAYES AT PM T. 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 .4-4-208-D 2 BEDROOM/2 BATH. PRE-LEASE NICE CONDOS IN WEST CAMPUS WASHER/DRYER, MICROWAVE, ETC. STARTING AT $ 6 0 0 /M 0 . CALL DAVID HAYES AT PM.T. 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 .4-4-208-D 2 BEDROOM/2 BATH DESIGNER INTE­ RIOR WITH WASHER/DRYER, M I­ CROWAVE, ETC. FURNISHED/UNFUR­ NISHED START AT $67 5/M O . CALL DAVID HAYES AT PM.T. 476-2673. 4- 4-20B-D___________________________ OVER 1900 iq ft. 3 BR and den 3 BA 4 blocfo from campus. $105Q/month. CaN Stan at 331-1431.4-7-20B____________ PRESERVATION SQUARE 2-2 Fumahed, W /D etc. $800. M any other complexes also. CaN Kelly only today! 474-4800. 4- 7-20B-A __________________ PRE-LEASE STARTING JUNE 1. UNIQUE 2-1, TWO BLOCKS TO LAW SCHOOL. AMENITIES INCLUDE: SECURITY, TWO COVERED PARKING, HARDWOOD FLOORS, FIREPLACE, W /D , CEILING FANS. $675/M O . CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY. 467-9211/476-2673. 4-12-208- D WEST CAMPUS PENTHOUSE - 1400 SQ. FEET. 2-2 ALL AMENITIES IN­ CLUDING . . . SECURITY, COVERED PARKING, W /D, MICRO, ETC CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY 476-2673. PM.T. 4-13-20BD_________________________ SUMMER ONLY SPECIAL - CROIX CEN­ TENNIAL, ORANGETREE, CHELSEA ETC. FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED STARTING AT $30Q/MONTH. CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY 476-2673. 4-13- 20B WEST UNIVERSITY PLACE CONDOSI 2- 2 for summer starting at $500, foN and spring from $750. Owner leased and manoged. 482-0082, 454-4918. 4-14- 20BC FURNISHED 1-1 Miwner only- washer, dryer, microwave, security, coveted parking, beautiful pool/hat tub, waft la school, $500 negotiable 480-0019. 4- 19-38 _________________________ ST. THOMAS 2-1, furnished, W /D, oN amenities. AvaNable summer/foN. CaN KeNy of Campus Condo*. 474-4800. 4- __________________ 20-14B A CENTENNIAL HUGE O ie Bedroom, Furnished, W /D, Security, pool, fire­ place, ceifing fans. $40 0 - summer. $600 -FaN/Spring. 472 8 2 6 9 .4 -20-5B-E 420 — Unf. Houses PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER, FALL/SPRING A unique, com pletely renovated 1200 sq. ft., tw o bedroom + bonus room, one bath. H yde Park hom e located one block from UT shuttle. Amenities include: all appliances, ceiling fans, one cor garage, fenced yard. $ 7 0 0 / mo. Call M itch 4 6 7 -9 2 1 1 /4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . ________________________3-24-208-D SAVE $$$ LEASE OR BUY Hidden Valley manufactured home community - on bus route. Ten minutes to campus — 3-2 or 2-2. Club house, weight room, pool, tennis courts. Darlene, 926-8510 3-29-20B-D 7 BEDROOMS 3 bath Hyde park home just north of UT. Two living areas. fans. CA/CH Thirteen ceiling completely renovated. Vi block to park. One block to shuttle. Quiet neighborhood. Available 1 June. 2 7 2 -5 7 8 3 , 2 7 2 -4 0 7 6 ________________________ 3-30-20B-F AVAILABLE NOW , 2 through 5 bedroom houses fo r rent. 452-5979 (24 hours). 3-29-20B-C LUXURIOUS WEST Campus 2-2 Summer Fall Condo AN amenities furnished pool hottub Great price Co# collect 915-584- 7020.4-14-11 8_____________________ WONDERFUL 3 BDR-1V2 BA Univ. home, newly painted, mini blinds, hardwood floors, gorge, beautiful yard maintained. 476-4755. 3-31-20B________________ SUMMER ONLY beautiful 2BDR/2BA. Close to campus $50Q/Month. W /D, mi­ crowave, covered parking, security. CaN 320-8571.4-17-5P__________________ WALK TO CAMPUSI Large efficiencies, W /D included, microwave, guarded windows, covered parking only $350. CaN Apartment Finders 458-1213. 4-17- 20B-C_____________________________ PRE-LEASEI In the heart a f campus. Spa­ cious, 6-3 with hardwoods, apptainces, parking, great floorplan. $1500 Vista Properties 472-3453. 4- 10-108-C__________________________ roommate 45th and Duval-Two bedrooms, one dishwasher, hard­ bath. Refrigerator, wood floors, ceiling fans, oc, gas. $ 47 5/ mo. 371-3099.4-4-208-D____________ SUMMER LEASE nice spacious 2-2. Fur­ nished, 15 minutes drive from UT, city bus $550/mo. 458-3044 avertings. 4-18- 168_______________________ PRELEASING 2,3,4 BEDROOMS Avail­ able summer and foil. WEST CAMPUS, HYDE PARK, $450-$1800. PARKE COM- PANY—479-8110.4-7-20P-F ROOMY 2-21 Pool, jocuzzi, 3 blocks from campus, great for roommates, leasing $600. CaN Apartment Finders 458-1213. 4-18-10B-C________________________ COUNTRY LIVING - Private 3-1. Large yard. Appliances. Fireplace. Near Tra- cor 6402 Johnny Morris. $ 4 0 0 /mo 472-2097. 4-7-20B-D LARGE FURNISHED 1 Brd condo-avaN- oble M ay 25th, w /d. pool, parking, patio, 2 blocks to campus. 713-497- 7361.4-18-5N C____________________ COUNTRY HOME on 969 - L a ro e T T Appliances, porches, fence, CA/CH. W ood burning heater. $475/m o. 472- 2 0 9 7 .4-7-20B-D 2810 NUECES #202. THE Elms Condo­ miniums. Large, spacious 2-1. Fireplace, all appliances, microwave, ceiling fans. Walk to UT. Perfect for roommates. $525. Dan Joseph 479-8727. Avatbbfe May 15. 4-18-20B-F 2810 NUECES # 20 5. LARGE 2-1 Con­ dominium. Pefect for roommates. Ceiling fans, fireplace, aN opplionces, W/D. Only $595. Available September 1. Don Joseph 479-8727.14-18-208_________ WEST CAMPUS - 2 BR/2 BA security, covered parking, microwave, W /D, etc. $675/mo. (9 mo. lease) $ 4 5 0 /mo. (sum­ mer) Call Agent Mitch only- PMT 476- 2673. 4-19-16BD____________________ SPIFFY 1-lVS loft type off Mopac, near Northcross. Near shuttle. Fire, pool, re­ served parking. Gas, wafer paid. $400. Evenings, weekends 836-6245. 4-19- 108 PERSONAL COMPUTER available in homel 2-5 Bedrooms, older homes, $200 up. 452-5979 (24 hours). 4-10- 208F_____________________________ BARTON SPRINGS area. 4-2, wood floors, carpet, ceiling fans, deck, yard, w/d, quiet neighborhood, $900 for fall. 263-9421.4-11-208_________________ 3-2, Fireplace. Across from Pease park, between 15th & MLK - 1601 Shoal Creek. 1 Block-shuttle & walk UT/ACC. Summer $750, FaN $850. 480-0662. 4-11-106 CHARMING VICTORIAN 3-story. West campus. 7-3 with study. CA/CH, carpet, hardwoods, energy efficient, security, yard. 343-6416 4-12-10BC___________ 3-2 HOUSEI W hat a deail Remodeled, hardwood floors, W /D included, only $575. Call Apartment Finders 458-1213. 4-18-10B- C_________________________ 4-BEDROOM/3 BATH CA/CH. O ff En­ field Shuffle Bus at 2510 Quarry Road. $750 Summer. $1000 FaN. 480-0662. 4-18-10B SERVICES 650 — M oving-Hauling IE » M O VIN G & STORAGEs I N ¡ « M C I \ I T S * 0 R A G E ! * STUDEt l% O F F S T 1 1 •1 20 ■ Al H E R ! . . ¡ L L S U M * BE SAFE, BE SECURE ■ j C A L L 837*0991 i SERVICES 660 — Storage SABINAL 2-2's SANTA FE style luxury, skylight, french doors, fireplaces, design­ er decor, aN appliances, pool, security, covered parking, $800/FaN. Call Tammy 476-2673 PM.T. 3-27-208-D________ 2810 NUECES #101. LARGE, Extra - nice 1-1. AH opplionces, ceiling fans, W/D, firepioce completely furnished. W alk to UT. Available June 1. $415. Don Joseph. 479-8727. 4-18-208_______________ F i n e A r t C la s s e s • Start any túne • Easy-to-leam steps • Superb one-on-one instruction • Create your own schedule • Progress in every class F ree T r ia l C la s s M bs ion: Rsnabsancb 4425 M ofac So . S u m 102 892-3351 CONGRESS MINI STORAGE i 443-1100 i i I • SECURE STORAGE AT AFFORDABLE PRICES ! t FULL-TIME ON-SITE RESIDENT MGR. $ C 0 0 ^ O FF FIRST M O N TH ’S RENT With This Ad. CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD WANT APS... • 5x1 Os 10x1Os 5x5s SERVICES 660 4 5 15 S. CONGRESS You’ve heard of College Houses Co-ops, why not try us this SUMMER! Singles Doubles *349°° *289°° Includes All Meals & Bills! 4 7 6 -5 6 7 8 1906 Pearl Street You can be sure of several things with us -1 7 home- cooked meals a-week, Central AC, computer rooms, pool & friendly atmosphere Taos, 21st S treet, Pearl St., Opsis Apts., Laurel House H A I M ■ I w J l P i i S DO IT YOURSELF & SAVE • YOU LOCK IT • YOU KEEP THE KEY OVER 1700 SPACES • 26 SIZES • S’X 5’TO 20’X 40’ REWFORCED CONCRETE BLDGS • RESIDENT MANAGER § e £ ¿ S t o r a g e # OPEN PARKING STORAGE • 7 DAY ACCESS BOATS, RV’S AUTOS, CAMPERS, TRAILERS, ETC • INSURANCE AVAILABLE • SECURITY FENCED & LIGHTED GATES OPEN: 7AM-10PM DAILY SUNDAY 7 AM-8 PM 453-6302 •400 BURNET R0. H e n r iSUL eotM iO w it *1 0 O F F 1st Month’s rent with this ad! I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Page 18 THE D A ILY TEXAN Thursday, April 20, 1989 RENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICES EMPLOYMIMT 420 — Unf. Houses 530 — Travel 750 — Typing 790— Part Tima CHEAP RENT - 2 5 0 0 M onor Rd Thraa bedroom, 1 W bath, fanced yard G J King Raoitor» 9 2 6 -9 7 3 3 4-19-15-BC NEAR UT - Hyd« Pork. jKutfl* cute 2/1, fenced yard, A/C, fans, blind» appk- once» washer dryer, beautiful hord- w ood floors $ 5 5 0 O w ner 479 -6 15 3 . for June 1, pet ok. 4-19-15B-A fireplace, C O N V E N IEN T TO UT 4-1. large fenced beautiful hordwood yard, floor», many trees. C A /C H , W /D connections, oppltoncos, $ 6 9 5 Ow ner 4 79 -6 15 3 , for June 1, pet ok 4-19-15B-A EYES OF Texas properties now pre-leas mg Austin's best selection of 3 -8 bed­ room houses $ 6 5 0 -$ 1 8 0 0 477-1163 4 2 0 -2 0 6 D WEST CAMPUS Renovoted 3 -2 CA/CH W /D hook-ups Available 6-1 1200 W 2 2 ’^Jnd J 1 0 0 0 Fall negotiable 3 2 7 -0 0 4 9 4 -2 0 2B SSOO'Summer, 425 — Rooms WEST CAMPUS Summer Rooms avail oble now v5 room $125 Full Room $ 2 5 0 Common kitchen ABP 4 4 8 1343 or 4 8 0 -8 6 1 3 3 -2 8 -2 0 6 NEAR UT Low School on RR shuttle Large, rooms- $150-$195 ABP C A CH share baths 3310 Red Rrv er -4 7 6 -3 6 3 4 4-7-20B-F furnished LARGE, CLEAN carpeted room private entrone e/both/refrigerator N o kitchen BiBs paid Quiet individual N o pets 38th Street 4 5 3 5417 4 -7 -20 B F SHORT WALK UT Your own room Q ui­ et, non-smoking, pefless Shored kitchen Call 4 7 4 -2 4 0 8 for private bath, ABP $ 7 2 5 $ 2 7 5 Coll 4 7 2 -5 6 4 6 to share bills, bath S 120-S 200 4-19 20BF R O O M IN a conscience, vegetarian, shored household for mere women on bus route near Bart Springs $195 plus shared utilities 4 4 7 -6 3 6 7 4 -2 0-2 P 435 — Co-ops Transportation ^UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA ANDES SUMMER SESSION, MERIDA VENEZUELA M a y 6-June 18, 1989 June 18-July 30, 1989 ianasxige requirement $1,645 Sohsfy in­ cludes oirtore Houston-Menda Houston, Room & Board Excursions Fees for 14-16 credits extra O C T P r o g r a m V E N U S A C P S A Co# ;oliec! 407-439-004’ Mr» Ano Leon evenings 512-472-0804 ______________________________ 3-31-21B 560 — Public Notice infertile, W ANTED TO ADOPT M ature single w om an, really wants to ad opt infant and p ro ­ loving home. N o vide secure, surrogates, |ust legal no n-ag en­ cy adoption. M edical and legal expenses can be reimbursed. If you might consider placing your baby with me, please call me: (512)442-4221. 4-20-1P SUMMER PLANS? W o rld Student service corps sponsor» service p rotect in G ua te ­ mala Coll 3 2 2 0 4 0 4 4-12-8P BODY? M IN D ? SPIRIT? W h o a re you? Phone 1-800 3 6 7 -8 7 8 8 4-17-5P EDUCATIONAL 580 — Musical Instruction GUITAR LESSONS R & B Rock, jazz, country, things n between Ten years teaching experience Andy Bullington 4 52 6181 3 31 20B 590 — Tutoring ACADEMIC TYPING SERVICE 504 W. 241 h St. 11 477-81f umos, Tarm Popan, Ras Bnafs, Dtuartot K>m $ 2 / p p . w / 2 4 h r» n o r tf WaMSAMM. ■ CziP*** 1 M Maxrf door to M o d Oo O pon S a.m. to M Pickup A Dot Iv o r y , p 4 Boon'i mnJohf iv 3 G w # LONGHORN COPIES • Resumes • Theses • Term Papers • Word Processing • Binding • Laminating • Laser Printing • Kodak'* Copies 2518 G uadalupe 476-4498 Announcing the Reopening of the ORIGINAL SPEEDWAY TYPING (JOHN IS BACK with experienced Typists!) Dependability — Accuracy — Panache DOB1EMALL ^ FASTTURN; COLLEGE ENGLISH composition teacher with PhD, word processing, $ 2/poge up, 3 blocks campus 4 7 9 -8 9 0 9 . 4-11-20BA 4-17-5B Neat house Nice room All bills paid G re a t fo o d Friendly & fu n 1 Summ er rates: Doubles $253-290 Singles $283-342 Fall rates: Doubles $283-308 Singles $326-398 ICC CO-OPS 476-1957 ■ FR EN C H ■ HO USE! Summer: / ' $ 2 5 5 d o u b le s ; $309 sin g les F a ll: j $ 2 9 5 d o u b le s \ $351 sin g le s ^ All hills • Great meals 4 b lo c k s I i 478-6586 SHORT WALK UT Your own room Q ui­ et, non smoking, petless. Shared lutchen Call 4 7 4 -2 4 0 8 for private bath, ABP $ 2 2 5 -$ 2 7 5 Call 4 7 2 -5 6 4 6 to share bills, bath S 120-S 200 4-20-20B F 440 — Roommates Roommate needed — G raduate Engineering student — quiet, studious, neat, non-smoker, non- party type wishes to share 2 bedroom apartm ent w /com pati- ble roommate, male or female Call o r w rite David Peyton, 208 Elm W o o d Ct., Los Gatos, Calif 9 5 0 3 0 . (408) 3 7 8 2343 ____________________________ 4-17-5B-F R O O M M A T E NEEDED 4-B edroom clean spacious furnished apartment Stu­ dent, non-smoker O n shuttle $189 4 4 4 -7 5 3 7 3-31-208 M O V IN G ? NEED a place? O r a room­ mate? R O O M M A TE BROKERS finds compatible roommates & /o r places 4 7 7 -5 5 6 9 Fee 4-7-20B-F SHORT WALK UT Your own room Q ui­ et, non smoking, pefless Shored kitchen Coll 4 7 4 -2 4 0 8 for pnvate bath, ABP $ 2 2 5 -$ 2 7 5 Call 4 7 2 -5 6 4 6 to share bill»., both S 120-S 200. 4-11-20B-F SHARE BEAUTIFUL (wo-story condo on Ben White ond Manchoca Fireploce, pool, w /d, fans, cathedral ceilings O ne pnvate room and one shared. $ 2 0 0 /m o util First month • freel 838-6211 (day) 4 4 2 -6 6 7 6 (after 10pm). 4-12-10P_______________________ ceiling PRIVATE B E D R O O M /bathroom , fur rushed, IF shuttle, $ 2 0 0 /m o -summer, M / F, waterbed, spa, 10 blocks north campus 4 5 1 -8 8 4 9 , Chns 4-17-5B______________ FEMALE RO O M M A TE share house near IF, 3 BD/1BA own room. $185 * bills, June 1, summer onty 4 5 1 -7 6 6 6 4-18-4P T W O STORY home in Tarrytown, quality, security, ond convenience, $ 1 7 5 /$ 2 7 5 CoN for on appointment 3 2 0 -8 8 5 8 4- 11-4BF________________________________ RO O M M A TE NEEDED Available M ay 1, Large 8R in 2 BR house Ave F between 41st and 42nd Sts CA/CH, $ 3 5 0 /m o Call 4 7 2 -7 8 6 2 non smoking male or female, grod/student preferred 4-19-3BF laundry, WALK UT Housemate needs to share furnished 4 -2 House or condo V j block from com pus Pnvate entronco, tennis court, pool, etc Low summer rent! 4 80 - 9 8 2 0 4-19-15P FEMALE R O O M M A TES wonted 3 BDR-2 BA 2 CAR House $ 20 G /M o • utilities N e a r 3 M Call 4 6 7 -0 4 1 2 or leove mes soge 4 19-3P 2 BR/2 BA with one room, one bath avoiiabie Female, nonsmoker, Lennox Apts, West Campus Security 4 9 5 -9 5 9 2 4-19 58__________________ FEMALE RO O M M A TE needed for dean 3 -2 -2 in N o Austin Microwave mini blinds, dishwosher $ 2 5 0 /mo • "5 txHs 339-3103-Lupito 4 -2 0 5BF_________ RO O M M A TE NEEDED Female Non apt Smoker share large 2 bedroom O w n room/bath $ 1 5 8 /M o - V3 bills Share $119/M o - Vs bflls 4 6 2 1081 4 2 0-2P ________________________________ THREE FEMALE Roommates wanted to share four bedroom house near cam pus $190 per room Washer Dryer 9 2 8 -8 5 4 0 4 -2 0 -5 P 470 — Resorts O R LA N D O FLORIDA area-plush Two bedroom condo sleeps sot, June 3-10, $ 4 0 0 2 8 0 -3 4 6 5 after 6 pm 4 17 58 ANNOUNCEMENTS 510 — Entertainment- Tickets R O U N D TRIP airline ticket to Australia/ N e w Zealand Must leave 6 2 5 return 8 -5 WiS accept best offer 214-891- 0 0 2 0 . 4-2 0-3 B ________________________ AIRLINE TICKET one way Austin Greenvflle. South Carolina. M a y 11, $100 1-396 2071 4-2 0-5 P to CALL 471-5244 TO PLACI A CLASSIFIED AD M A T H T U T O R O ffice 477-7003 504 W. 24th St. O v e r 10 y e a r s o f p r o f e s s io n a l s e r v ic e h e l p i n g s t u d e n t s m a k e T H E G R A D E . S t r u g g l i n g ? ? F r u s t r a t e d o n t e s t s ? ? C a l l o r c o m e b v fo r a p p o in t m e n t . COMP E N G * SCIENCE MATH EM306 w TERMS M 30' 302 F.M311 CS304PF M303F PM306S CS206 M403KL EM314 CS315 M 316XL EM319 CS410 M305G EE316 CS41G MX07 EE411 M808A 3 CR.1?8 EE318 M 606F A 8 CS336 EE212 CS34E M318K EE323 CS352 M427K.L CS372 M 31' ENGUSH CHEMISTRY ENG603 PHYSICS PHY30: CHEM301 302ENG307 PHY302K.L CHEM610AB ENG 308 P H Y 303M CHEM618AB FNG310 PHY327KL BUSINESS ASTRON DATA PRO ACC311 312 AST301 ACC326 327 AST302 DPA310 AST303 DPA333 K ACC364 AST 307 STAT309 ECO FRENCH PSY317 EC 0302 GERMAN ECO303 SOC317 SPANISH EC0320K i EC0324 Don't put this off urrti the night be­ fore an exam It's too lata then... • I Stock to UT • Very reasonable • Lots of patience * In i language m es you can understand Next door to Mad Dog & Beans West 24th St Campus $ 10 HR. tes 10 HP BLOCK / at rJUtceu j TUTORING SERVICE S U C C E E D T U T O R I N G • P e r s o n a l a n d ( ¡ r o u p • A l l s u b j e c t s 472-6666 7 s /w n k ,S -T li 'til M id m tr PROFESSIONAL WORD PROCESSING/ EDITING Special rate for students/faculty! $1.25/page 469-9431 4-19-20B-C Have paper? I'll type it! Includes report covet Also resumes All expertty pre- pored fast 4 4 7 -2 8 2 9 3 -2 7-2 0 B TY PIN G -80c/page CAMPUS PICK-UP & 1- DELIVERY Satisfaction guaranteed. 2 9 5 -2 2 0 9 Jom 3 -2 8 -2 0 6 W O R D PROCESSING/TYPING Reports, resumes, $1.50/ theses, manuscripts. page and up Pck up ond delivery avail­ able Dione 3 3 5 -7 0 4 0 3 -2 8-2 0 B -D W O O D S TYPING & word processing. M A C with M e m o ry LaserWriter 2 5 years expenence. 2 2 0 0 Guadalupe 4 7 2 -6 3 0 2 . 3 -28-20B -F ty pew riters, PROFESSIONAL W ORDPROCESSING IBM $1 2 0 /p a g e and up. Quick turna­ round Pick-up, delivery Storage avail- oble 3 8 8 -1 9 8 9 3 -2 9 -2 0 B _____________ TYPE-WRITE typing service. All college papers $1.50/poge Resume $10. Laser printer available. Prompt service 4 4 3 - 4 2 2 9 3 -3 0 -2 0 B -C ___________________ TERM PAPERS, reports, theses, disserta­ tions IBM- compatible or correcting selectric Fast, accurate $1 25/page. 441- 1893- 4 -4 -26 P TERM PAPERS- $1 5 0 per poge- free pick up/ delivery in North Austin/campus area Connie, 9 9 0 -3 0 5 5 4-6-20B -C W O R D PROCESSING/TRANSCRIPTION (Regular or microcossette) resumes, papers Wordperfect. Laser pnnflng Reasonable! Fasti Expenencedl 4 7 2 -9 6 7 3 4-10-20B-K________________ theses, ABC TYPING W O R D PROCESSING SERVICE $1 85/P AG E. D.S. 3 9 3 3 Steck Avenue 3 4 5 -7 9 8 0 . 4 -1 2 -2 0 6 __________ PERSONAL SERVICE with Communique W ord Processing Loser printed, choice of typeface, $ 2 .2 5/p g ., rush PU/DEL. 8 3 6 -0 6 9 7 4-13-19BC_________________ THE STENO PAD $1.50/double space page W ord Processing 4 5 9 -7 7 1 0 or 8 3 7 -3 2 1 2 4-13-20BC laser printer. ASAP TYPING /w ord processing, papers, thesis, dissertation, mailouts with a per­ sonal touch $1 8 5/poge . Candace 451- 4 8 8 5 4-17-20P TYPING LEGAL papers, resumes, term Pick up/delivery. Reasonable papers Bonnie. 4 7 8 -7 6 4 6 4-19-5B-E 760 — Misc. Services D I S C O V E R Y O l RE P R E G N A N T ? Texas 1-800-772-2740 N ational 1-800-433-2922 The Edna Gladney Center o f Fort Worth, TX DISCOVER GLADNKY. EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part Tima ★ S T U D E N T S ★ Earn extra $ Part-tim e te m p o ra ry assign­ ment» a v a ila b le . M u s t b e a w e to w o rk 8 -1 2 o r 1-5 w eekday» a n d /o r w o o ko n d s. AUSTIN TEMPORARY SERVICES, INC. Night Counselor for residen­ tial vocational facility for adult mentally retarded men locat­ ed 1 block from U.T. Appli­ cants must have observational skills & ability to serve as posi­ tive role models for adult males. Ideal job for student of Human Services. Work hours are: 5 p.m.-8 a.m. every other weeknight in exchange for room & board. No salary. Call Alan at 478-7557. __________________________4-17-4NC ACTIVE SPORTS WAR Outlet port lima tolas parson Ratal experience raquwad 8401 Bumat Rood 4 -17 5B RUNNER TO work 20 hr»/week Must ba dap andob la own ond transportation 331-8801 4-18-58 hova ADVERTISING SALES/uppar dossmon ond graduólas Safi ods m me KLRU pro­ gram guida Gam vafuobla axpananca ond aom axtra monay C al S Mairi for interview at 471-4811. EO£ 4-18-48 t c L A s s I F 1 E D A D s 4 7 1 5 2 4 4 TELLER Part-Time 6 months experience. Cashier exp - cannot be substituted. Hours 11-3 p.m. Mon-Fri. Apply at: Bank of Austin 2104 Guadalupe 9 :0 0 a.m .-4:30 p.m. ________________________ 4-20-5 Invest­ Establish Real Estate ment Company seeks summer help in Houston. Emphasis will be a door to door cold calling and marketing of over 50 re­ tail and office warehouse properties. Salary plus com­ mission. Rob Turk 713-772- 3727. 4-19-5B CAMPUS LIFESTYLES Receiving office (2 blocb from campus) is now inter­ time viewing fo r p art runners, clerks, receiving and general office work. Call 4 7 4 -5 0 0 2 . 9 a.m .-ll a.m. only. Ask for personnel. 4-18-5B-E NEAR CAMPUS - Full/port time TYPIST (45 + wpm). BOOKEEPER (we train). Runner (your cor). O D D JOBS. 4 0 8 W . 17th St.: Applications 9am -4pm . (3-31- 20B-F)________________________________ W O RK 3'-^ blocb from campus, evening positions setting appointments over the phone and make $5-10/hr. plus bonus, great working environment. Call Tony/ Kns at 4 7 7 -3 8 0 8 . 4-13-10B-K__________ CATERING BUSINESS seeking energetic, people-oriented part time help, hourly plus tips. Contact Blake at 3 39 -8 8 1 8 . 4- 14-5B________________________________ DJ'S W A N TE D for America's largest mo­ bile DJ company, must hove dean driv- mg record and conservative appearance. W eekend positions open 331-9391, 10- 4 Mon-Fri. 4-14-5B____________________ APARTMENT LEASING person needed, afternoons, UT area complex. Good personality/professional appearance. $4/hour. 3 46 -1 98 4 . 4-18-5B _________ SEEKING SUMMER supervision for our 4 children, ages 10-13. 4 or 5 afternoons per week. $ 2 0 /d a y + activity and car allowance Reliable references required. Coll Carla 4 4 4 - 6 0 3 4 or Donna 3 28 -2 79 1 . 4-19-3B transportation & INTERESTED IN working at a private softball complex? Evenings and week­ ends. Call Lonnie 4 4 5 -7 5 9 5 , M-E, 10- 2pm. 4-19-3B CHILDCARE WORKER needed for North Austin Church Wednesday & Sunday evenings. $ 4 .0 0 /h r Coll 834-1100 4 -2 0 - 5B FITNESS INSTRUCTOR, 2 5 hours per week. Experience with Nautilus & free weights preferred. 3 4 5 -8 8 0 0 . 4 -2 0-5 B 800 General Help Wanted TEMPORARY WORKERS H c o m e h o m e H HT0 DALLAS/FORTH ¡¡¡WORTH AND WORK! ALL SUMMER H i GENERAL WAREHOUSE $ 4 .5 0 -6 .0 0 PER HOUR APPLY TO WORK THIS SUMMER • N O WAITING • N O LONG LINES a N O WORRIES GREAT OPPORTUNITY. CALL NOW TO LET US KNOW WHEN TO EXPECT YOUI ( f ^ C O I E F I R V I N G / L A S C O L I N A S 21 4-2 58-003 1 í q u a l O p p o r tu n ity f m p lo y o r NovoraFoo Attention Telephone Operators Dynamic Voices Earn over $ 3 0 0 /w ee k I need 20 happy enthusiastic people who are motivated by making money. Our office has a comfortable and cheerful atmosphere. With great co­ worker», casual dress. No experience necessary. AM/PM, FULL/PART TIME SHIFTS AVAIALBLE. STUDENTS AND HOMEMAKERS WELCOMED. Hiring now. Apply in person at 3701 Gua­ dalupe, Suite 105. 12-12:30 p.m. and 6-6:30 p.m. only. ____________________________4-17-4B SEMICONDUCTOR TEST OPERATOR Responsible for the set-up, operations and minor maintenance of automatic probers, testen and test handlers. In­ dividual will be responsible for key­ board entry of work in process status for the shift. No experience neces­ sary. Mechanical aptitude preferred. Need people for all three shifts and weekends. Fill out application at Crystal Semi- Conductor Corp., 4210 South Industri­ al Dr., Austin, Texas 78744. EOE 4-19-58 Needed English conversation teacher at private institute in Pusan, Korea. Beginning June or September, 1989. Annual salary range $13,000- $15,000. Provided apartment ond roundtnp air ticket. Yearly contract. Leave your resume under the door in Bellmont 516 for interview appoint­ ment by April 24. No phone calls. GRADUATING PHARMACISTS? li­ Full-time, any U.S. cense! Exciting travel benefits! Positions nation­ wide. Call 1-916-784- 6200. 4-4-20B-C GROUP WANTED University organization or group to work a rail 1989 National Marketing Promotion. Gain valuable expeience working for a top Fortune 500 firm while earning great pay plus bonuses. Call: Petra or Eileen 1-800-592-2121 ___________________________ 4-19-4B ELECTROLUX CORPORATION Now recruiting for summer jobs, full and part time, earn up to $600/week and more plus up to $ 1 0 ,0 0 0 aw ard bonuses. Coll 443-2831 (South), 451-6404 (Central), 250-5446 (NW). ________________________ 4-10-20B-E college PART TIME/FULL TIME COORDINATOR Base pay $ 5 .0 0 plus commission plus company benefits to $ 9 .0 0 + /h r. Hours flexible. Applicants must type at least 35 + wpm, hove experience in sales & have good communication skills or equivalent. Send resume to Champion Tower, 4 0 0 E. Anderson Lane, Suite 4 9 4 , Austin, Texas 7 8 7 5 2 . ___________________________ 4-20-4B STUDENTS SUMMER JOBS!! Earn up to $ 5 0 0 0 this summer work­ ing with America's #1 water pollution lobby. W ork involves gross roots com­ munity education, organizing, and fund-raising. G ood resume material, esp. appropriate for government, pol­ itics or science majors. Call Victoria or Ed 4 7 4 -0 6 0 5 . EOE __________________________ 4-17-5B-C NIGHT DESK Attendant wanted 40 hours/week. Apply at The Castillian 2323 San Antonio 478-9811. EOE/M/F/ H. 4-12-88_________________________ 4-14-108 SUMMER JOBS on cruise ships 817-626- 6136. 4-13-19B - G OVERNMENT JOBS $16,040 (1) 805- $59,230/yr. Now Hmng Coil 687 -60 00 Exl. R-9413 tor current foder- ol list. 3-1-37P_____________________ OVERSEAS JOBS. Abo Cruneships $10,000-$105,000/yri Now Hinngl 320-1 Listings! (1) 805-687-6000 Ext OJ-9413 4-10-19P EARN M O N E Y Reoding books! $30,000/yr income potential. Details. 0) 805-687-6000 Ext. Y-9413. 4-7-18P NEAR CAMPUS - Full/part time TYPIST (45+ wpm). BOOKEEPER (we train). Runner (your car) ODD JOBS. 408 W 17th St.: Applications 9am-4pm. (3-31- 208-F) EMPLOYMENT 790-P a r t« m e MARKETING OPPORTUNITY S ta rtin g Fall 1989 Sales oriented, industrious individuo! with strong initiative sought for prestigious Marketing/Promotions position with Top Fortune 500 firm. Student must commit to 20 hours per week for the entire 1989-1990 school year. Excellent salary and bonuses. Flexible hours. AH work is on cam- F *» - Applicants should have experience/strong interest in sales, market­ ing, promotion, management and/or public speaking. Internship credit possible. Por mom Information, « 1 0 0 4 9 2 - 1 » o r Band rwMumm tm d cowar lattmr to: CDI, 210 Waat W ashington Squara 1 1th Floor, PhUttdmlph la , Fann»ytvan k t 19106 M M /M /f S V / M The class of ’94 boasted a poet, prophet, historian, toastmaster, and wizard of chemical engineerin J. tells us about where we’ve come from and where we can go. Cactus has been published at The University of Texas at Austin every year without interruption since 1894. That first slim volume con­ tained six photographs. The massive 1989 edition contains more than 13,000. Whafs to come in the 1990 Cactus? That’s up to you. Cactus is produced by UT students, about UT students, for UT students. It’s your triumphs and troubles, your escapades and dreams. And your piece of history. Carry on. C actu s Y e a rb o o k C arry on All twenty senior class members are pictured in the Cactus Yearbook of 1894, the first edition published at The University of Texas. There really was an official class prophet, along with official class colors (gold and black), a class motto, a class poem, and even a class yell: “Rah! Bray! Roar! Cap and gown,, on the town, class of ninety- four!’’ Class president E.P. Schoch (middle row, cen­ ter) was admired for organizing the men’s glee club and for being the University’s first graduate in civil engineering. He went on to become one of UTs most prominent and respected faculty mem­ bers, widely acknowledged as the father of chemical engineering in the South. Schoch also found time to develop his musical interests while on the UT faculty, founding the University Orches­ tra and the Longhorn Band. Stated purpose of the 1894 Cactus Yearbook was to “bring some knowledge of our college organizations and some savor of college cheer and college fun.” It does that and a lot more. It Save time and money! Bubble in “Cactus Yearbook” or “Yearbook/ Magazine/Directory Package” when you register for fall. EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 800 — General Help Wanted 800 — General Help Wanted 840 — Sales 900 — Domestic- Household 900 — Domestic- Household ★ TR A V EL G R A D U A T E ! ★ English teachers needed in rural Japan. N o specific background required. Personality key, y e a r commitment, send resume, tw o color photos to FukurCollege, d 0 W ill Hines, 6 19 M a rlin e , Hous­ ton, TX 7 7 0 3 4 . _______________________________ 4 -2 0 -4 Spend the Summer O N THE BEACH in beautiful Corpus Christi. Looking for a people oriented student with hotel front desk experience. Send for application and details. Mary Lou Hill, Villa Del Sol, 3 9 3 8 Surfside Blvd., Corpus Christi, TX 7 8 4 0 2 . ____________________________4-20-5 CAMP A N D R O S C O G G IN BOYS CAMP IN M AINE Seeking Energetic, outgoind staff *o teach tennis, soccer, baseball, swim, sail, waterski, canoe, woodworking archery and riflery. Write or call col­ lect: 733 West Street, Harrison, New York 10528.914-835-5800. __________________________ 3-27-20B OUT OF WORK? W HAT A DRAG! Flopping Burgers not your bog? Being broke is not any fun, In those clothes, you look like a bum! N eed a job full time or part. Give us a call & get a start. 4 7 2 -2 5 3 6 __________________________ 4-17-3B-F FLORIST DELIVERY -Apnl 24-28 Alfs Florist 2002 Guadalupe 472-8878 4- 20-3B_____________________________ APPLICATIONS ARE now being accept­ ed for summer lifeguards. WSI & CPR certification required. Teaching experience preferred. Call 345-8367 for details. 4-14-108 LIFEGUARDS WANTED - experienced for Lost Creek Country Club.Lifeguard training, certificate required. 892-1205/ 458-2605. Mane 4-17-5B CONCERT TICKET sales for special events production company. No experience necessary. Start immediate­ ly, make $4-$ll/hr. Call 452-2152. 4-10- 108_______________________________ PART-TIME FEMALE personal core at­ tendant for disabled UT student (off- campus- non live in). Apply with Danielle, Student Health Center 471-2166 4-10- 10B 810 — Office- Clerical NEAR CAMPUS - Full/part time. TYPIST (45+ wpm). BOOKEEPER (we train). Runner (your cor). ODD JOBS. 408 W. 17fh. St Applications 9am-4pm. (3-31- 20B-F) 820 — Accounting* Bookkeeping Full charge bookkeeper for Doctor's office. AR, AP, GL, GS. Non-smoker, full-time, 5 years previous experience. Business degree. Apply in person at 711 W . 38th, Suite C6. Between 9 and 4. Bring resume or call 453-1271. 4-19-3B NEAR CAMPUS Full/part tima. Goin bookkaaptng axpananca. TYPIST (45 w.p.m.) RUNNER (your cor) OOD JOBS 408 W 17th St. Applications 9am-4pm. 4-6-208-F M H IM IIU IM IIIIIIIIH IIIIIIIIIIM IIIH IM IM i: 1 CALL 4 7 1 -5 3 4 4 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD ¡ 1 f i CAREER OPPORTUNITY NOW Put those college skills to work and join the sales staff at TruGreen, the nation's premier lawn-care company. We offer paid salary training, salary + commission, auto allowance, paid vacation, incentives and benefits. Call Chris Baker today for an interview at (512) 385-2311. 4 -17-20B 880 — Professional ★★ BARTENDING ★★ LEARN H O W IN 2 WEEKS Morning, afternoon & evening classes. Job placement assistance. Texas School o f Bartenders ★★ 440-0791 ★★ Approved by Texas Education Agency. ________________________ 3-21-208-F 890 — Clubs- Restaurants ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ B A R T E N D IN G Learn How In 2 W eeb! Morning, Afternoon, & Evening Classes Learn how to free-pour, like in the movie Cocktail! Job Placement Assistance Texas School of Bartenders 4 4 0 -0 7 9 1 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Approved by Texas Education Agency ________________________ 4-18-2ÓB-F RESTAURANT ASSISTANT MANAGER Unique opportunity in UT area; Will train, but must have food industry ex­ perience & be responsible, outgoing, & ambitious. Salary $12,000 + . Po­ tential for flexible hours. Send resume with cover letter to TBM Corporate Office 1990 Post Oak Blvd. # 2 0 5 0 Houston, Texas 77056 4-20-108 RESTAURANT MANAGER Unique opportunity in UT area; Will train, but must have food industry ex­ perience & be responsible, outgoing, & ambitious. Salary $15-18,000 +. Send resume with cover letter to: TBM Corporate Office 1990 Post Oak Blvd. # 2 0 5 0 Houston, Texas 77056 __________________________ 4-20-108 SCHOLARSHIP + JOB The Hickory Street Bar and Grille has a program providing full scholarships for cost of tui­ tion, books, and fees available to all employees. W e have im­ mediate positions avaialble. Ap­ ply in person at 800 Congress Avenue between 8-10 a.m. 4-19-3B-K RESTAURANT COUNTER Help, full or port Arne, summer or permanent; UT orea, food industry axpananca & cor desirable, lino 478-7655 weekdays 8-1 lam or 2-5pm 4-20-108 contact EXPERIENCED WAITPEOPLE needed. 5 minuta* from compus. Evenings, Tues- Sat. Apply in parson after 2pm 2414 Ex­ position, Ste D100. 4-14-58 H IR IN G N O W exp erienced waitpersons cashiers, and hosts. Apply in person between 2-4pm. Jazz, 212 E 6th St 4-18-58 900— Dom*stk- HouMhold SUNNY ENFIELD Garage Apartment $85.00 ABP + 4 days house deoning a month. Experience, reference* required 477-1442 4-17-5P Summer babysitter for 2 chil­ dren, 5 and 6 years old. $5/hr. Air-conditioned car w/seatbelts and aood driving record re­ quired for transporting children to summer activities. Child devel­ opment/education major or ex­ tensive experience w/children required. References required. Call Grace, 327-3899. RELIABLE RESPONSIBLE student with car to care for 2 children this summer. Must like to swim & be outdoors. Please have references. Call for interview 3 2 8 -3 7 1 6 after 6 :0 0 pm. 4-19-3B 910— Positions Wanted 4-14-15B HOUSE-SIT, single woman, 49, librarian, during summer session I. Coll (512)672- 9402 evenings References. 4-17-5P Free room & board in exchange for occasional babysitting and light housekeeping. 2222 area. Must have dependable trans­ portation. Making arrangements now for summer and autumn semesters. Call 4 74-6066 and leave message for Steven. 4-7-10 EMPTY HOUSE worry you? Mature, unemcumbered teacher moving to Aus­ tin in June. Will housesit. Coll Linda col­ lect (505)522-9074 evenings. 4-20-5P HOUSE SITTING. Junior lecturer seeks house sitting position through summer vacation. Coll Kathy 713-524-7378 evenings. 4-14-6P CALL 471-5244 TO PLACI A CLASSIFIED AD BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... CALL 471 -5244 EMPLOYMENT 800 — General Help Wanted mm JOB OPENINGS for PART TIME & FULL TIME APPLY AT 2600 Guadalupe All employees eligible for all Employee Benefits S O I M /F /V /H AIRLINES HIRING • Flight Attendants M O W I • CuMtomor Service ^ ^ 1 1 ■ Ticket Agents Reservation Agents Ramp Agents • Maintenance The airlines are currently seeking individuals to fill many airline career positions. The salaries range to $30,000 with excellent benefits. Many entry level positions available. Call (303) 444-2722 Ext. 7 *.. ■ • i m H R -£W M W H w W i m im M Around Campus is a daily column listing University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and registered student organizations. To appear in Around Campus, organizations must be regis­ tered with the Office of Student Activi­ ties. Announcements must be submit­ ted on the correct form, available in The Daily Texan office, 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, by 11 a.m. the day be­ fore publication. The D aily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions to conform to style rules, although no sig­ nificant changes will be made. The University Ballroom Dance Soci­ ety will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in Dra­ ma Building 1.172. We will learn the in­ ternational tango. The Royal Order of Pythons will meet to form a betting pool on whether Jim Wright or Pete Rose will lose his job first at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Batts Hall 102. SHORT COURSES The Student Health Center will spon­ sor a "Methods of Contraception" class from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Student Health Center 448. Call 471-4158 to reg­ ister. MEETINGS FILMS UT Aerobic Dance is looking for in­ structors. A general meeting will be held at 5:30 p.m. Thursday in Gregory 3. For information call Kim at 495-3135. Bellwether will meet at 6 p.m. Thurs­ day in Beauford H. Jester Center 315. Overeaters Anonymous will meet at noon Thursday in the University Catho­ lic Center, 2010 University Ave. The University Squash Club will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday on the ninth floor of L. Theo Bellmont Hall (south end). New members are welcome. Mem­ bers will discuss the tournament for spring and summer. Sign up for free les­ sons. The UT Fencing Club will meet from 6:30 to 7 p.m. Thursdays in L. Theo Bell­ mont Hall 302. The Mexican Students Association will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in Rob­ ert A. Welch Hall 2.308. The Council of Graduate Students will meet to discuss the election of new COGS officers from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Thursday in College of Business Admin­ istration Building 4.344. Contact Stan Gaines at 835-5605 for details. The Christian Science Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in Texas Union Building 4.222. The UT Student Nurses Association will meet at 12:30 p.m. Friday in the un­ dergraduate lounge, third floor of the School of Nursing. All nursing majors invited. Change of officers and a senior send-off are planned. Refreshments will be served. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in College of Education Building 330A. David Max­ well will talk on "Works Righteousness v. Salvation By Grace." Delta Omicron Chi Pre-Med and Pre- Dent Society will have the last meeting of the semester at 7 p.m. Thursday in University Teaching Center 3.110. Emil Pollard, anesthesiologist from Phoenix, Ariz., will speak. Members will plan a post-MCAT party (last party of the se­ mester). The African Students Association will meet at 5 p.m. Thursday in the Tex­ as Union Building Afro-American Cul­ ture Room. The Filipino Students' Association will meet from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Thurs­ day in University Teaching Center 1.104. All members please attend. We will dis­ cuss plans of our next and last party. The American Institute of Aeronau­ tics and Astronautics will meet at 7 p.m. in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.246 (note new room). Hans Mark, UT System Chancel­ lor and formerly of NASA, will speak. Officer elections will be promptly at p.m. The Department of Oriental and Afri­ can Languages and Literatures will sponsor a showing of The Ramayana, an Indian television serial in Hindi, parts 31, 32 and 33 at 7 p.m. Thursday in Batts Hall 12. The Student Eckankar Society will present The Journey Home, a video in­ struction to the teachings of Eckankar, at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Building Eastwoods Room. If you are cu­ rious about the divine nature of dreams, reincarnation or soul travel, come and bring a friend. PERFORMANCES The UT Dance Team will perform their spring show "Serious Slammin" April 30 at Westlake High School, 4100 Westlake High Drive, at 2 and 8 p.m. Tickets are $5 in advance and $6 at the door. For ticket information, call 389- 1960. The Theatre Collective will perform Little Shop of Horrors at 8 p.m. Thursday and Saturday and at 2 p.m. Sunday in Batts Hall auditorium. Tickets will be $5 for students with a valid UT ID, ACOT members, senior citizens and groups, $7 for the general public. LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS ILAS and the Department of Spanish and Portuguese will sponsor a confer­ ence on Brazilian literature and popular culture, day I, from 2 to 4 p.m. Thursday in Batts Hall 201. Randal Johnson from the University of Florida and Roberto Reis from the University of Minnesota will speak. There will also be a panel dis­ cussion. The College of Communication will sponsor the lecture "Shadows in a Prism: Media in a Changing Era" at 4 p.m. Thursday in University Teaching Center 1.146. Austin Long-Scott will speak. The Biological Engineering Society will sponsor a presentation on "Thermo­ graphic Visualization of Dynamic Vaso­ motor Response by Computer-Assisted Delineation of Peripheral Vascular Pat­ terns" at 7 p.m. Thursday in Engineer­ ing Science Building 602. Eric Chan will speak. The Pharmacy Council and the Liber­ al Arts Council will sponsor the lecture "Drugs vs. Therapy: Treatment for Men­ tal Health" from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Building T-House Lounge. This will be a point-counter- point discussion on treatment for men­ tally ill patients. The Center for Materials Science and Engineering/Mechanical Engineering will sponsor the lecture "Mechanical Be­ havior of Titanium Alumnides" at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in Engineering Teaching Center 9.130. Tony Thompson, profes­ sor and chairman of the materials sci­ ence and engineering department at Camegie-Mellon University, will speak. The Department of Geological Sci­ ences will sponsor technical sessions at 4 p.m. Thursday in Geology Building 100. Janet Coleman will speak on "Deposi- tional Systems and Sequence Stratigra­ phy of the Lower Oligocene Vicksburg Formation." The Center for Asian Studies will sponsor the South Asia seminar "A Traditional' Indian Cultural Perform­ ance meets Its Modem Publics" at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the Peter T. Flawn Ac­ ademic Center Tinker Library. A recep­ tion will be held at 3:30 p.m. Phillip Zar- rilli, professor of theater and drama of South Asian studies and director of the Asian Theater Program at the University of Wisconsin, will speak. The UT School of Architecture will sponsor the lecture "Coop Himmelblau: Architecture is Dead, Long Live Archi­ tecture" at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in Jessen Auditorium. Architect Wolf Prix, Coop Himmelblau of Vienna and Los Angeles, will speak. The Women's Studies Research Semi­ nars will sponsor "The Tolstoy Marriage: A Partership" at 4 p.m. Thursday in the Student Services Building Staff Lounge (4.104). Louise Smoluchowski, author of Lev and Sonya: The Story of the Tolstoy Marriage, will speak. The Department of Art will sponsor the public lecture "The Education of Jeanne d'Evreux: Role Models and Beha- vorial Prescriptions in her Book of Hours at the Cloisters" at 4 p.m. Thursday in Art Building 1.110. Joan Holladay, as­ sistant professor of art history, will speak. The Office of the Dean of Students will sponsor the open discussion "Mexi­ can Americans, Chícanos, Hispanic Lati­ nos: Is There A Difference?" from 8 to 10 p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Building Chicano Culture Room. Discus­ sion facilitators will be Reuben Garcia, Rolando Gonzalez and Luis Valdes. Re­ freshments will be provided. Campus Pro-Life Movement will sponsor a discussion about why most pro-lifers and pro-choicers want to mod­ ify Roe vs. Wade through the Missouri case, at 7 p.m. Thursday in University Teaching Center 1.102. The Mexican Students Association will sponsor the lecture "Primordial Landscape and Mesoamerican Urban Design on Mayan Inscriptions" at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in University Teaching Center 1.144. Elena Bernal will speak. OTHER The Liberal Arts Council will have Writer7s Circle at 5 p.m. in Peter T. Flawn Academic Center 20. UT Students for the Exploration and Development of Space will have a doughnut and coffee sale from 8 a.m. to noon Thursday in the Robert Lee Moore Hall lobby. in The Texas Equestrian Team will com­ the Intercollegiate National pete Championship Horse Show at Mount Holyoke College, Mass. Olympic show jumping medalist Greg Best will be pres­ ent. Call 451-5401 or 467-0487 for more information. The Microbiology Medical Technolo­ gy Student Society will have officer elec­ tions statements in Leodocia Pope's of­ fice, Experimental Science Building 214. Please turn in a paragraph statement and specify the office you are running for. Positions will be open to all mem­ bers. Graduate students interested in serv­ ing as an editorial intern on staff for Ttye Slavic Review 1989-90, contact Professor Sidney Monas, 471-3607. Student Volunteer Services needs volunteers to staff and participate in a volleyball raiser. Teams will gather pledges and play four games May 6. For more information, call 471-3065. tournament fund The Measurement and Evaluation Center will administer the following tests Tuesday: Word Processing ($23) at 4 p.m. and the Grammar, Spelling and Punctuation—GSP— ($23) at 6:15 p.m. Fees can be paid from 2 to 6 p.m. on the test day in the Beauford H. Jester Center ticket office. For more information, call the MEC at 471-3032. Law and Graduate Students for Gay and Lesbian Concerns will have a spring banquet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. The Brazilian Students Association will have a "feijoada" party Saturday. If you still need more details, please call Christina at 478-4623 or Frank at 472- 4361. The Gay and Lesbian Students Asso­ ciation will sponsor the following events Thursday as a part of their Lesbian and Gay Awareness Week: ■ A workshop on coming out at 7 p.m. in Parlin Hall 104. ■ The film I’ve Heard the Mermaids Sing­ ing at 9 p.m. in the Texas Union Building Eastwoods Room. The School of Architecture will spon­ sor an exhibition of student work from the London/Basel fall study abroad pro­ gram from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. through April 28 in the Goldsmith Hall exhibition space. The Chicano Culture Committee will sponsor Chicano Night from 10 p.m. Thursday to 1 a.m. Friday in the Texas Union Building Tavern. There will be re­ freshments and dancing. The Office of the Dean of Students' Welcome Program will have welcomer training from 5 to 6:30 p.m. Thursday in Beauford H. Jester Center A 317A. The UT School of Law will sponsor a UT Ex-Students' Career Fair from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday in the Peter T. Flawn Academic Center Lobby. Partici­ pants will include admissions staff from the School of Law. Students 25 and Over — The Office of the Dean of Students invites you to a brown bag lunch from noon to 1 p.m. Friday in Texas Union Building 4.108. Drop by and share tips for surviving fi­ nals. POLYSTRIP. T h e D a il y TEXAN/Thursday, April 20,1989/Page 19 ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 1 Weeps 5 Quieten 9 Exotic 14 “ a Kick 15 Athena 16 Actor Greene 17 Singer Fitzgerald 18 Southerners 20 Money: slang 21 Long time 22 Gets edgy 23 Actor Leon — 25 Gamble 27 Flower 29 Bump into 30 Melodies 34 Ending for east or west 36 Dealer’s call 38 PGA’s Palmer 39 Powerful one 42 Patent 43 Old auto 44 Greek letter 45 — a: not any 4 6 last resort 47 Table parts 49 Musical note 51 Of course: slang 54 Fracture’s kin 58 A Gershwin 60 — monster 61 Non-renter 63 Biting insect 64 — ego 65 CPA or CA 66 Narrow way 67 Some hills 68 Paroxysms 69 Deers’ kin L A K E R G A S H S E A R E R G O A M O R E A L T O S O L U s R O O T B E E R S S N A P P E D u p B E M C E E A S T E S T 1 R E D p A R T L E P E R S E P O D E T 1 O S C R O L L S A w P 1 L O T H A L F S O L E S O L E F 1 R S T S O N N E T P 1 E S A T H E N A 1 E L D C A N A D 1 A N A C H O R E R E P A S S A G E | s A P O R E M 1 T u N 1 T E S A N E P A G E S A V E R P E S DOWN 1 Attack 2 Amorous eyer 3 Musician 4 Dynamo part 5 Eating spot 6 Tolerate 7 Italian artist 8 Spoil 9 Wood 10 Meat cut 11 Cleopatra’s attendant 12 Nine: comb, form 13 Quality: suff. 19 Article 24 Approved 26 Puffs 28 PGA’s Snead 30 Vengeance goddess 31 — fortitude 32 Commotion 33 Immunizers 34 Black: poet. 35 Italian town 37 Nevada river 38 Composer Harold — 40 Be a judge of 41 Slippery one 46 River of Florence 48 Bird group 49 Litters 50 Set up 52 Metallic sound 53 Abhors 54 Pretend 55 Shaft 56 Channels 57 Oceanward 59 Skills 62 USAF distaff org. 10 11 12 13 1 2 3 4 66 7 18 19 18 15 8 19 ■22 0■ 26 28 ■29 37 38 27 35 ■36 40 49 55 56 57 30 31 32 33 41 ■44 ■1 48 50 ■1 52 60 59 53 63 66 69 43 46 ■58 62 65 14 17 20 23 34 39 42 45 54 61 64 67 1 Doonesbury 68 BY GARRY TRUDEAU ITS BECAUSE YOUR FR1FNPS PON'T m m you to Mies OUT! 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' CK»WI| <*' BY TOM KING BLOOM COUNTY by B erk e B reath ed Page 20 T H E D A IL Y TEXAN/Thursday, April 20, 1989 Riverside Location ALL DAY BUFFET ^ ^ ■ 5 1 K95 DINNER LUNCH ^25 11:00-2:30 5:00-9:00 O P E N 7 D A Y S W E E K DINNER SPECIAL TO GO 495 Over 30 Selections Including: Appetizers Salad Bar • Soups • Entrees 2007 E. RIVERSIDE 447-1520 f a A TA LAI CHINESE RESTAURANT A * C o p i n g w it h l if e 's D A Y P R O B L E M S T H U R S D A Y S AT N o o t f . \fbop^S THOUGHT \ TODAY’S TOPIC End of Semester Stress: A Survival Kit Texas Union Eastwoods Room (2.102), 12-1:30 Sponsored by Counseling, Learning and Career Services mm N H L Playoffs Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgh 2, series tied 1 -1 Montreal 3. Boston 2, OT, Montreal leads series 2-0 NBA Standings AanmeaCOT Phoanix 117, Miami 91 Detroit 115, Indiana 105 Atlanta 100. Mkwaukae 92 Houston 99. S o t Antonio 64 Thursday's Gamaa Boston at New York, 6.30 p m Philadelphia at New Jersey. 6:30pm. Chicago at Washington. 6:30 p m S o t Antonio at Denver. 8:30 p m Portland at Seattle 9 p m Sacramento at L A Lakers, 9:30 p.m 1 «-Detroit 2 y-Cleveland 3 y Atlanta 4 x-New York 5 y-Mifwaukee 6 y-Chicago 7 y-Philadelphia 8 Boston 9 Washington 10 New Jersey Indiana 12 Charlotte 1 y-L A Lakers 2 y-Phoenix 3 x-Utah 4 y Seattle 5 y Houston . . 6 y-Golden State 7 y-Denver 8 Portland 9 Dallas . 10 Sacramento 11 L A Clippers San Antonio 13. Miarm ........... . . . W L 61 19 56 24 51 29 . 50 30 48 32 46 33 44 35 41 38 39 40 26 54 26 54 2C 60 O B P ot 763 .700 5 636 10 625 11 600 13 582 14V2 557 .519 161£ 191/5 494 21V? 325 35 325 35 .250 41 W L 54 25 54 26 50 30 45 34 44 36 43 37 42 37 38 41 36 44 26 53 21 59 21 59 . 14 67 550 532 Pet OB 684 _ 675 V2 625 4V? 570 9 1 0lS 538 1 lV s 12 481 16 450 181/2 329 28 263 331/S 263 33’/2 173 41 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471 -5244 x-clinched division title y-clinched playoff berth z-clinched league's best record ^ FOODS • DRUGS Enjoy Low, Low Meat Prices You Can Sink \bur Teeth Into! H R H-E-B Ground Beef All Beef 5-Pbund Average Weight Roll. Limit-2, Please (Additional 98c Lb.) R H Small Navel Oranges Excellent Source O f Vitamin C And Potassium S A V Huggies Disposable Diapers Choose From Thick Or Supertrim: • Sm all, 66 's • M edium, 4 8 ’s • Large, 3 2 's • X-Large, Supertrim Only, 2 8 ’s Limit-2 Total. Please s a v Surf Laundry Detergent______ 42-Ounce Box. Limit-2 Total, Please $157 Huqgks 06PO6A8U D W tB S ^ ^ VUFfR fHM SUPIBABSOMfN? M T W T F I S 22 19 * 20 ^21 Prices Good Wednesday, April 19, Through Tuesday, April 2 5 ,1989 In Austin, Georgetown, Round Rock And Bastrop • Limit Rights Reserved • Baseball A i Tinea COT AMERICAN LEAGUE W 6 . 6 6 6 .............................5 6 3 Weet DMaton W 12 10 9 .......................... 7 8 6 ............................. 5 Wednesday's Oentsa . . L Pet OB 500 — 6 462 7 462 7 429 1 8 1 7 400 9 1VS .273 2 Vs 8 VS VS .417 L P e t QB 857 — 2 625 3 6 600 3 V2 6 583 4 5 .571 4 6 429 6 8 333 7V2 10 Boston Baltimore Milwaukee New York Cleveland Toronto Detroit Texas Oakland California Minnesota K ansas City. Chicago Seattle New York 4, Toronto 2 Oakland 7. Seattle 5 Baltimore 6, K ansas City 5 Boston 8. Cleveland 4 Detroit 3, Minnesota 2 Texas 5. Milwaukee 1 California 7, C hicago 2 Thursday’t Games Detroit (Tanana 0-2) at Minnesota (R Smith 1-0), 12 15 p m Boston (Boyd 0-1) at Cleveland (Yett 1-1). 12.35 p m Kansas City (Sabertiagen 1-1) at Baltimore (Ballard 2-0), 6 35 p m Seattle (Bankhead 0-1) at Chicago (Perez 1 -1). 7 30 p m Only gam es scheduled Chicago Montreal . Philadelphia Pittsburgh St Louis New York San Francisco Cincinnati Atlanta San Diego Los Angeles Houston NATIONAL LEAGUE East DMaton W L 8 9 . 7 6 .......................... 5 .....................5 5 6 6 8 7 8 West DMaton W L 9 , 8 8 8 7 5 Wednesday's Gamas 6 6 7 8 8 10 - Pet. GB 615 600 — 1 538 2 V? 429 2V2 417 3 385 Vs Pet QB 600 — 571 533 500 467 2 333 4 1 11/2 Pittsburgh 7, St Louis 5 San Diego 4, San Francisco 3 Montreal 3, C hicago 2 New York 4, Philadelphia 2 Atlanta 4, Houston 3 Los Angeles 3, Cincinnati 0 Thursday's Games Philadelphia (Howell 1-0) at Pittsburgh (Dunne 1-0). 6 05 p m C hicago (Bielecki 1 -0) at New York (Gooden 2-0). 6 35 p m Houston (Scott 2-1) at Atlanta (2 Smith 0-2), 6 40 p m Montreal (R.Johnson 0-2) at St Louis (Hill 0-0), 7 05 p m Only gam es scheduled PC & Macintosh Services Repairs • Upgrades Free estimates SOFTWAREEXCHANGE New b Used • Rentals 2520 Guadalupe St. 478-7171 IMMIGRATION WORK VISAS LABOR CERTIFICATIONS PERMANENT RESIDENCY BARBARA HINES,pc Attorney at Law Board Certified Immigration and Nationality Law Texas Board of Legal Specialization 1005 E. 40th 452-0201 WISDOM TEETH If you need the removal of wisdom teeth... CA LL g A B IO M E D IC A L JSB m R E S E A R C H U Q P G R O U P I N C . at 4 51-0411 Financial incentive provided for your opinion on a pain medication Mon.-Fri. 8:30-4:30 N o N o C hrom e C o n tra cts Open Every Day 4121 Guadalupe Next door to Austin Barbell Co. 459-9174 INSTANT CASH AND BONUS If you need cash to help you out while you are in school, why not donate blood plasma. You can donate twice in a 7 day period and receive $10 every donation. Plus with this ad you'll receive a S 2 bonus on your first visit. b M u st have valid picture I D. & some proof of Austin residence (student I.D. accepted) b $ 2 5 bonus, drawing every Friday. b New donors will receive a $5 bonus on their 3rd donation within 9 days. b Call for more information concerning more bonus programs. Call 474-7941 Austin Plasma Center 8800 OmmIbImim