T i ILY Te x a n Vol. 87, No. 164 2 Sections_________________________ The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Friday, June 17,1988 25c Fraud investigation turns up evidence Leak of confidential information revealed Associated Press WASHINGTON — A massive am ount of confidential im properly inform ation was funneled from the Defense D epartm ent to McDonnell Douglas C orp., a search w arrant issued in a nationw ide investigation of possi­ ble Pentagon contracting corruption revealed Thursday. The search w arrant said the governm ent is investigating the "bribery of public officials" in connection with a scheme in which de­ fense contractors got inside information from former governm ent officials whom they had hired as consultants. Attorney General Edwin Meese declined to give a direct answ er w hen asked if bribes had been accepted in the Pentagon. "That will all come out in the course of the indictm ents and ultim ately in the trials," he told reporters. The fraud and bribery investigation, in­ volving the alleged sale of inform ation to some of the nation's biggest defense contrae tors, drew attention all over W ashington. President Reagan "is very concerned" about the revelations of the past few days, spokesm an Marlin Fitzwater said after a m eeting that included the president, Vice President George Bush, Meese and FBI Di­ rector William Sessions. Reagan instructed them to move "as rapid­ ly as possible" to gt t the facts. Meese said indictm ents may be handed dow n in 30 to 90 days. Fitzwater said the matter "certainly poses an internal security problem ." He said Reagan "feels that this is a m atter that de­ serves his attention and that everyone in­ volved should know of his feelings, the in­ tensity which he feels about dealing with any kinds of crimes that have been committed here." The search w arrant that shed new light on the case was unsealed in federal court in St. Louis. It said Melvyn Paisley, who served from 1981 to April 1987 as assistant secretary of the Navy for research, engineering and systems, a key acquisitions post, provided "classified and/or confidential" docum ents to McDonnell Douglas. Paisley was a key associate of former Navy Secretary John Lehman. Paisley now has n u ­ m erous defense contractors as clients in his consulting business. Melon-choly Frank Ordonez Daily T e xa r $raft Jimmy Moreno chooses a melon for a customer. Moreno sells vard and 51st Street from 8 a m to 5 p.m. every day His brother melons, watermelons and tomatoes at the corner of Airport Boule- in-law, who owns a produce store, supplies him with the melons UT revises Blackland acquisition plan UT and the Blackland area Manor HoaiT Western section Eastern section By JUNDA WOO Daily Texan Staff The University has reshaped its Blackland acquisition plans — long criticized by some in the East Austin neighborhood — to pin­ point part of the area for develop­ ment. But although the University now will build sooner in some parts of Blackland than in others, the adm inistration stands firm on its policy to buy all 16 blocks of the neighborhood for cam pus use. In the new plan, the neighbor­ hood — bordered by M anor Road, Chicon Street, Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, and Comal Street — is divided roughly into w estern and eastern halves, w ith the w est­ ern section slated for earliest UT use. The U niversity's purchases in both sections total about 38 per­ cent of Blackland. So far it has not used that prop­ erty, but it allows the City of A us­ tin to renovate purchased hom es into low-cost housing. The City Council recently approved $50,000 for that purpose. M em bers of the Blackland Neighborhood Association have complained since UT grow th there began in 1981 that the adm inistra­ tion was uncom m unicative and would not reveal the areas it in­ tended to develop. The new plan, forged earlier this week, also lists several options for residents selling hom es to the Uni­ versity. Residents may continue living in their hom es until 1994; select "com parable" houses outside the neighborhood that the University would buy in exchange for the old homes; or move their hom es, at UT expense, to vacant lots outside the neighborhood. Ed Sharpe, UT vice president for adm inistration, said there is "no question" that flaws existed in the University's old policy, which he said required residents to leave within 90 days of a sale. Sharpe said the adm inistration has been working for some time on a new plan, and the change was not spurred bv a recent sutrge in Blackland protests that included letter to UT a harshly w orded President William C unningham . But neighborhood group m em ­ bers are still unsatisfied. The association president, Veon McReynolds, said W ednesday the new plan was an im provem ent, but that he will still press for a stop to all expansion in Blackland. Bo McCarver, secretary of the neighborhood said Thursday that the new UT strate­ gy varies little from the old one. association, "The only thing new is that it has m ade public the University's intentions about w here they plan to develop in the im mediate fu­ ture," he said. He said the new set of options put in writing a policy the Univer­ sity has long practiced. "They've always been willing to negotiate w h en se llin g ," McCarver said. it com es to "They're ignoring broader is­ sues like the right of the com m uni­ ty to exist," he said. Area shown I in map above H U Property owned by U T East/W est dividing line Kathy Strong, Daily Texan Staff Associated Press A study in politics — The Uni­ versity has received a grant to con­ duct the first major survey of politi­ the Hispanic in cal attitudes 5 community. Throe down, one to go? — The Pistons overpower the Lakers to make the series 3-2, but whether Detroit can win another game at the 7 Forum remains to be seen. Rap at your own risk — For a city that prides itself on its musical bonanza, rappers say Austin isn't exactly a haven for hip-hop sounds 9 WEATHER Answering machine weather — Hello I can’t come to the phone right now Actually, I can come to the phone right now I just don't want to. I’m too busy enjoying the partly cloudy skies and highs in the 90s As soon as it drops to lows in the 70s, I'll return your call Or may­ be I won't. I could get caught in iso­ lated showers or southeast winds at 10 mph Just leave a message at the beep, and I II answer you when I d am n it BEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEP Click. w e ll fe e l like INDEX Around Cam pus...............................13 11 Classifieds 13 Comics 4 Editorials 9 Entertainment S p o r t s ...................................... 7 6 State & Local 5 University 3 World & Nation . . . . Convoy heads for Washington Clash with government on legality of shipping supplies continues By WILL KITTS Daily Texan Staff Members of the Veterans Peace Convoy encam ped near Austin Thursday vowed to move on Friday to W ashington, D.C. The convoy participants had harsh w ords for a U.S. Treasury D epartm ent ban on exports of vehicles to Ni­ caragua. "The whole em bargo was illegal. It should never have prohibited w hat we w ere carrying," said Anthony Guarisco, a convoy driver from Topac, Ariz. Guarisco, a veteran of World War II and the Korean War, said he planned to deliver pencils, paper and other school supplies to schoolchildren in Nicaragua. "O u r anim osity is not directed at the custom s peo­ ple, who were all very nice, but at [Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs Elliot] Abrams and Reagan," he said. Convoy m em ber Judy Tracy, a nurse from Boston, said medical supplies such as antibiotic solutions, sa­ line solutions and children's aspirin were destroyed by the heat during the convoy's eight-day stopover in Laredo. "They're stopping us from letting the people of Ni­ caragua know there are Americans for peace and jus­ tice," Tracy said. The convoy was turned back Wednesday at the Mexi­ can border in Laredo by U.S. Customs agents because of a 1985 trade embargo that allows only humanitarian assistance to Nicaragua. The Treasury Department has said the convoy trucks could be used by the Sandinistas for military purposes. Four convoy trucks were seized when drivers refused to sign export declarations requiring them to return the vehicles to the United States within 30 days. Convoy leaders insist they planned to donate the 37 convoy vehicles to schools, clinics and other communi­ ty organizations in Nicaragua. Convoy m em ber Mike Dash, from S eattle, the group's hum anitarian — not politi­ cal — nature. em p h asiz ed "But now we may have to get in­ volved in the political arena," Dash said. "O ur concern is for the chil­ dren, not the Sandinistas or the con­ tras, but the children ." Steve Brooks, w ho com m ands a Veterans of Foreign Wars post in Cruz the Santa Cruz, California, said Treasury D epartm ent's actions may actually benefit the convoy. "W e're onto som ething by turning to W ashington," Brooks said. "It will generate 100 times more goods tor Nicaragua than we have now ." About 50 people attended a noon rally Thursday at the Federal Building in Austin to protest the prohibi­ tion and lend support to the convoy group, m ost of whom remained behind at the Alma de Mujer campsite outside the city. Steve Somerstein, a lawyer with the convoy, said a federal lawsuit filed in Laredo Thursday will seek both the return of the trucks and passage of the convoy into Nicaragua. Speaking at the rally, Somerstein said, "The end users of all these vehicles are humanitarian groups." Convoy member Carrie Pace told demonstrators she and her husband had planned to deliver food and med­ ical supplies to an agency for disabled children in Man­ agua, but their van was seized by customs agents. Convoy member and World War 11 veteran John Cruz said the Treasury Department's decision to block the flow of aid directly affects "thousands of orphans" in Nicaragua. "Anything we didn't take down there means some more kids are dying," Cruz said. With reports from John Clark, D aily Texan Staff Pro tem selection irks black leaders By GARRY LEAVELL Daily Texan Staff A,ustin black leaders expressed emotions Thursday ranging from disappointm ent the wake of the City Council's choice of Counciimember Sallv Shipman as mayor pro tem instead of Councii- membc: Charles Urdy. to anger in After W ednesday night's sw ear­ ing-in of Mayor Lee Cooke and tnrr - ouncilm em bers, fhe council selected Shipm an as trie city s sec­ ond-in-command by a 5-2 vote She was chosen over Urdy — the only black counciimember — who said he expected to follow outgoing Mayor Pro Tem John Trevino inti the position because tradition had dictated the post go to the senior counciimember. Akwasi Evans, publisher and edi­ tor of Nokoa — an Arro-American com m unity new spaper — said he felt deceived by the council s action "My initial reaction w a s a feeling of hurt," Evans said He added he was particu.ariv up­ set with Counciimember George Hum phrey, whom Evans said he had worked closely with ir the past Hum phrev voted for Shipman "1 was surprised that he would break tradition so readilv," Evans said. But Hum phrev said Wednesday he gave Shipman his commitment six months ago. Evans said Lrdv should have been chosen because of his seniori­ ty, integntv and objectivity and >aid the decision was an artron! to the black commumtv When it comes to the \in c a n community we are otter, treated is stepchildren ar.d dealt with is an afterthought, ' Evans said "I thin*, we have a great balance [on the council] — ail white on one side and unw hite on the other ne said. "The only thing whiter umfv on is exploiting us and this was an example of that ’ Evans called the vote cultural chauvinism" but said he does not expect it to deter blacks from lobbv- mg the council. ! think Afro-Americans will be more reticent to bring issues to the council so the other people can -ee ~ow the council reacts E \ans said Dorothv Turner c e s id e n t of the Black Citizens Task Force agreed and said it is incumbent upon the hack com m on! to remem ber th< rote. Arizona jury acquits former Gov. Mecham PHOENLX A ru — Former Gov Evan Mecham was round innocent Thursday of concealing a 5350 000 campaign loan, a partial vindication for g o v e rn o r first U S impeached and removed trom office in 59 years th e Minutes after the clerk hud read the jury s last "not guiitv finding on the six counts against \ techam and his brother Willard the !udge declared the tnal over and Mec- ham 's supporters cheered "Justice can occur in Arizona when you get to the people and o u t­ side the politicians the ot-vear-oid former governor tend reporters out­ side the court We re happv we re happy. You re alwuvs apprehensive but not realiv surprised He said he would hold a n e w s conference Fndav m orning sm iled b ro ad lv As the final verdict was read M echam an d hugged his attorney Michael Scott then turned and embraced his wife Florence. Then he crossed to the lurors and began shaking their hands. Scott asked Judge Michael Rvan whether Mecham could make a statem ent, but the judge refused saying "This is a court of law Mr. Scott." Mecham had acknowledged he did not itemize the $350,000 loan from developer and attorney Barrv Wolfson on either his personal or campaign financial statem ents The defense said the failure was an in­ nocent mistake, partly due to Wil­ lard's inexperience as a bookkeeper the prosecution con­ tended that the conservative Repub­ lican badly needed the Wolfson loan then to keep his campaign afloat hid it to avoid spoiling his them e of However, oeing beholden to n o one ;urv nad deliberated receiving after The hours the o Wednesdav following seven aa • testimony ise ■ of s l x felony Mecham could have been fenced to 12 vears in prison t v icted on al-’ .. u m t s perjurv willful concealment and vt mg taise docum ents Hi> old brother raced .> maximum vea-'' on three coutus ■n- m - ot ril­ ar­ a i s ' o Uorbtn -aiu \ttornev U-< m tat it had offered after the verdict to let Mecnam picad guiitv o i mis­ dem eanor before the mat vgan out Mecham turneo h ;n down Mecham was impeacheo w :fu Arizona House and removed trom office on \p n l 4 when the >tute Sen­ ate convicted him ot misusing non ev from a state prouxoi 'uno. mo investigation ol trvmg to thwart an a death threat He nao oiso aced an im peachm ent oan trial concealment charge but tne "x ate decided not to consider tne matft to avoid prejudicing the cmninai tri­ a l the an The former auto dea let had run tor governor tour times unsuvces»- tullv before he won a three-wav ace in November Gov. Rose Mottord. the LVmo era tic secretary of state w ho took over Mecham s post affet he wa> v moved bv the legislature said n 1 prepared statem ent that die 'u u v o her predecessor and hi» entire family can resum e their lives a> p ri vate cu ens The end or tins trial signats a hastening ot a two hug process whwh ha> begun ami th*n the citi­ zens ot this great state so richly de­ serve, she said Woman says mystery boy not relative Associated Press EL PASO — A French w om an was m istaken w hen she thought her the unidentified, grandson was hearing-im paired boy found last year w andering streets of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, authorities said Thursday. the Camille M uller of Le Bourg a Thi- bouville, France, said Thursday that photos of the unidentified boy strongly resem bled her grandson, Philippe Muller. But Philippe, a 13- year-old w ho just com pleted sixth grade, was located later Thursday in El Paso, an FBI spokesw om an said. Both of Philippe M uller's parents are living in El Paso. The boy's m other, Margie Muller, a biology teacher at Ysleta High School, said the boy's father, also nam ed Phi­ lippe, had not been in contact with his m other for m onths. "I saw the new s last night, and they were talking about it and my daughter Pearl and I were laughing and saying it sounds like som ething Mamie [Camille Muller] would do," Margie Muller said Thursday. "But we just d id n 't believe it could be her. She show ed a picture and it d id n 't look m uch like Filipito. it sounds "Knowing her, like som ething she would do. ... I'm just am azed. I can't get over it. But being so far aw ay from [her son] and not know ing his w hereabouts, I can see w here she would jum p on this." Since he was found last Novem ­ ber, Mexican and U.S. authorities have been trying to identify the boy, nicknam ed Sabat because he was found on a Saturday — Sabado in Spanish. A uthorities d o n 't know Sabat's real nam e or w here he's from, but they believe he is 7 or 8 years old. He has been staying at a child-care center in Juarez since he was found. Sabat is deaf in his right ear and has 25 percent hearing in his left ear. He com m unicates m ainly through gestures and drawings. His pictures seem to indicate that he survived a sm all-plane crash that killed his sister and both parents. Authorities said W ednesday that the French lead w as the m ost prom ­ ising of more than 30 the FBI was pursuing. The FBI became involved in the case after Mexican child wel­ fare workers noticed Sabat seem ed to prefer American food and car­ toon characters. Sabat's Mexican guardians called their Texas coun­ terparts at the D epartm ent of H um an Services. If Sabat's relatives can't be found, he will be put up for adoption in Mexico, authorities have said. Page 2/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, June 17.1988 State parks official resigns, will plead guilty to fraud Charges stem from ‘false information’ supplied by wildlife commissioner about loans from Dallas bank Associated Press DALLAS — Edwin L. Cox Jr. said Thursday he is resigning from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Com ­ mission after agreeing to plead guilty to a federal bank fraud charge. Cox, of A thens, w ho has been chairm an of the com m ission for five years, th e ch arge said stem m ed from his position as a borrow er and a form er director of InterFirst Bank, Dallas. Cited in the charges were the $80 million in loans, plus interest, that Cox repaid to InterFirst in Oc­ tober 1987. Cox, statem ent Bruce G enderson, an attorney for Cox, said Cox would enter the plea June 24. A sentencing date will be set then. in a issued Thursday, said he was resigning because "I have agreed to plead guilty to a federal criminal charge in Dallas relating to false inform a­ tion that I subm itted to InterFirst Bank of Dallas several years ago as part of the adm inistration of loans I then had with the bank. "In breaking the law, I have m ade a serious m istake. I have hurt my wife an d children, our m any loyal friends, an d em ploy­ ees. I have disappointed those w ho had the greatest confidence in me. For this, I have no one to blame but myself. I am truly sorry that I have let all these people dow n. "M y w rongdoing h as now forced me to leave the Parks and Wildlife position that I hold so dear. No public service could ever have been m ore rew arding to me. "In my 9Vá years on the commis­ sion, I feel we have m ade a real contribution to our state parks sys­ tem and o u r fish and wildlife re­ sources. I sincerely appreciate the f Bill ] c o n f id e n c e G o v e r n o r Clem ents show ed in me w hen I worked through my ow n personal financial difficulties and feel that u nd er his continuing leadership, the Texas Parks and Wildlife De­ partm ent will reach an even high­ er level of excellence." U.S. A ttorney Marvin Collins said a felony information filed Thursday in Dallas charged Cox w ith bank fraud. Collins said collateral reports filed for continuation of the loans indicated more than 20,000 head of cattle as collateral w hen there were fewer than 5,000, w orth a fraction of the value. M aximum punishm ent upon conviction is five years in prison and $250,000 in fines, Collins said. "Those w ho have access to large sum s of borrowed m oney are going to have to U nderstand that they m ust obey the sam e rules and laws as the rest of us. No one is above the law ," Collins said. Collins said Cox "w as a highly placed bank executive w ho knew better, but took full advantage of his influence and know ledge gained from his position as an in­ sider. "This is one of the few cases w here the defendant repaid the fi­ nancial institution in full, and did so before criminal prosecution was begu n," Collins said. Cox's financial problems became public in July 1986 w hen then-In- terFirst C orp., the parent of Inter­ First Bank Dallas, which subse­ quently merged with Republic Bank to become First Republic- Bank, announced that loans m ade by the bank to Cox were in d e­ fault. Cox had resigned as a direc­ tor of the bank in June 1986. His father, a founding director of In­ terFirst and for whom the Edwin L. Cox School of Business at Southern M ethodist University is nam ed, resigned from the bank holding com pany's board in Aug­ ust 1986. InterFirst at the sam e time an ­ nounced a $281 million loss for the quarter and said it was preparing to make a provision for loan losses for that quarter of as m uch as $365 million. A Wall Street Journal article at that time quoted bank officials as saying a big part of the expected charge was from $80 million in loans, letters of credit and other lines InterFirst's flagship (the Dal­ las bank) extended to Cox. Cox subsequently paid $96 mil­ lion in principal, interest and fees to the bank representing the full am ount owed. Those paym ents consisted of $18 million between June 1986 and June 1987, $42 mil­ lion in Septem ber 1987 and $36 million on Oct. 30, 1987. The Septem ber paym ent was m ade one day after Cox sold his interest Independent Holding Corp., the nation's sec­ ond-largest meat packer, bank of­ in Swift ficials said. Cox had led a group of investors in a leveraged buyout of the com­ pany 20 m onths before the sale. At that time, it was the largest pri­ vately ow ned com pany in the state with 1986 revenues of $3.7 billion. The $96 million in paym ents to InterFirst and its successor, First RepublicBank, fulfilled Cox's fi­ nancial obligations. W hen Cox m ade the final pay­ m ent in October 1987, he said, "It was unfortunate that my liquidity problems occurred at a time w hen InterFirst was having problem s of its own. W hat really bothered me was that they m ight be afraid I would take the easy way out and walk away from my obligations as so m any in Texas had. I refused to do that and the bank worked with me in the im plem entation of the repaym ent plan." Cox also is a cattle feeder in the Texas Panhandle and a rancher in H enderson County. Amarillo National Bank execu­ tive vice president Bill W are told the A thens Daily Review on Thursday that Cox had been a cus­ tom er of the bank since 1973 and will continue to be one. T h e Da il y T e x a n Insurance issue grounds Ferris wheel DALLAS — Liability insurance problem s are plagu­ ing the largest Ferris wheel in the W estern Hemi­ sphere, but officials at the State Fair of Texas said Thursday they believe the Texas Star will spin again this fall. The ow ner of the 212V2-foot-high Texas Star said he has so far been unable to obtain the $10 million in in­ surance required u n d er a contract with the fair. The Ferris wheel, like the w ooden Comet roller coast­ er that was once a fair m ainstay, is a victim of balloon­ ing liability insurance costs. The 40-year-old roller coaster was shut dow n in 1986. "We are waiting on the ow ner to get the insurance, as required by the contract," said fair spokeswom an Nancy Wiley. "But we d o n 't anticipate that the wheel w on't operate. We w ant it operating; he [the owner] wants it operating. So he will try to do it before the fair opens in October." O w ner BLB Panorama Inc. and its president, Buster Brown, are in the process of looking for insurance rate quotes. "We are sort of in lim bo," Brown said. "W e have been working diligently about three weeks and have five inquiries in w ith all the com panies who would even entertain the idea." "We have been through three brokers and 25 to 30 companies, and m ost of them are not interested in in­ suring just this one ride. It has nothing to do with its safety. N one so far has said they could get us $10 mil­ lion in coverage." W hen the ride was brought to the state fair from Italy in 1985, Brown agreed to a contract requiring $10 mil­ lion in liability insurance. ‘W e are waiting on the owner to get the insurance, as re­ quired by the contract. But we don’t anticipate that the wheel won’t oper­ ate. We want it operating; he [the owner] wants it operating. So he will try to do it before the fair opens in Octo­ ber.’ — Fair spokeswoman Nancy Wiley But Wiley said liability insurance costs rose dram ati­ cally in 1986 and ride operators began to feel the crunch. So the Ferris wheel, which is the height of a 20- story building, was perm itted to operate with $1 mil­ lion in insurance for two years. "We saw some easing up of the situation last year," Wiley said. The fair's executive board decided this spring to re­ quire Brown to restore insurance coverage on the ride to $10 million, she said. Brown on May 24 received a letter giving him 10 days to secure the additional insurance. "The contract is technically in default," said Wiley. "It is the original contract signed in 1985 w hen the ride was put up." More than 100,000 people have ridden the wheel since it was installed, she said. Built by SDC C orp., the fair's largest attraction was disassem bled and transport­ ed by boat to Houston, then brought to Dallas in 40 truckloads. Permanent Staff Associated Press Mike Godwin Kevin McHargue Karen Adams, Steve Dobbins. Mike Fanmn, Tanya Voss ........................................................ Shr« Vaidhyanathan Editor Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors News Editor Associate News Editors General Reporters Special Pages Editor Associate Editors Entertainment Editor Associate Entertainment Editor General Entertainment Reporter Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporter Photo Editor Associate Photo Editor Images Editor Associate Images Editors University Editor Art Director . . . Cheryl Laird, Dennis McCarthy John Council, Mike Erickson. Jim Greer, Garry Leaveil, Greg Periiski, Junda Woo Jeanne Acton Mark Grayson, Tom PhUpott Steve Crawlord Rob Walker Joe aims Steve Davis Jerry Gemander Allen Brook John Foxworth omquist Ben Cohen, Lee Nichols Jo® Yonan Ashley Bogle B u t ............................................................................................... Clarence Hill A sso c ia te Art Director N e w s A ssista n ts Sports A ssistant Entertainm ent W nter Entertainm ent Assistant E diton al Co lum nists Editorial A ssistant M ake u p Editor Wire Editor C o p y Editors Photographer G ra p h ics A ssistant . . . . ............... C o m ic Strip C a rtoonists Volunteers Issue Staff .................................................................. Chris Ware John C la rk Andres Eguiguren, Jim Kennett, Will Kitts, Denise Shannon Paul Hammons Rachel Jenkins, Ren Scherr Carol Huneke James Geshwiler, Greg Weiner ........................................... Dee Ann Bullard ................................................... Leigh Floyd Kevin Hargis Robert Duggan, Bryan Leake, Anand Pardhanam Frank Ordoftez Kathy Strong Susan Boren, Tom King, Robert Rodriguez, Martin Wagner Paul Hahn L o ca l D isp la y C la ssifie d D isplay C la ssifie d Tele p ho ne S a le s C la s s ifie d T elep ho ne S e rv ice Advertising Deborah Bannworth, Ann del Lano, Betty Ellis John Farris, David Hamlin, Denise Johnson Beth Mitchell, Natalie Niesner, Gina Padilla, Chris Wilson Leslie Kuykendall, Ricardo R. Fernandez. Shameem Patel John Baker, Alan Fineman, Paul Leveson, Melanie Neel, Martin Pellinant, Victoria Woo Melinda Dellerson, Melanie McCall, Una McGeehan, Lon Smith The Daily Texan (U S PS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis Austin. TX 78705 The Daily Texan is published Monday. 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U a h in c '4 476-7457 I I f ' J ) Thursday’s Dow Jones Industrial Average: DOWN 37.16 to 2,094.24 Volume: 161.55 million shares W orld & N ation Friday, June 17, 1988 Page 3 Irish terrorism provokes worry among authorities Safety concerns increase as Toronto summit nears Associated Press TORONTO — An IRA bombing in Northern Ireland that killed six soldiers, and the recent arrest of two suspected Japanese terrorists in the United States, m agnify security concerní» for the seven-nation eco­ nomic sum m it in Toronto next week. Police helicopters are already whirling over dow ntow n skys­ crapers at night and border immi­ gration checks have been tightened, Metropolitan Police Staff Superin­ ten d en t Bernard N adeau said Thursday. “The biggest threat is terrorism. Historically, they've always been active at sum m it conferences. They have a way of getting into a country illegally," N adeau said. Police are paying special attention to the safety of British Prime M inis­ ter M argaret Thatcher, w ho narrow ­ ly escaped injury w hen the Irish Re­ publican Army bom bed her hotel in Brighton, England, on Oct. 12, 1984. The IRA claimed responsibility for a booby-trap bom b in Lisburn, N orthern Ireland, on W ednesday which killed six British soldiers tak­ ing part in a charity race. “W e're uncom fortable any time British royalty visits, or anyone con­ nected with the British govern­ m ent," said N adeau. “ We're always concerned that the IRA could be ac­ tive." Protecting Thatcher, President Reagan and the leaders of five other sum m it nations and the European Com m unity has been m ade more difficult by C anada's decision to hold the sum m it in the country's biggest city. Previous North Ameri­ can locations for the annual event have been Puerto Rico; Montebello, Quebec; and Williamsburg, Va. The last major city to host the sum m it was Tokyo in May 1986, w hen Japan's radical Middle Core Faction fired five hom em ade rockets into the dow ntow n area. No one was injured. The possibility of an attack on Japanese Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita arose in April when a sus­ pected Japanese Red Army terrorist, Yu Kikumura, 35, was arrested on the New Jersey Turnpike. Police found three pipe bombs and false papers in his car. An 18-year-old Japanese college student, Yoshio Kosugi, was d e­ tained June 12 in Philadelphia after police found a rifle, grenades and am m unition in his luggage. Police are equipped with com put­ er-enhanced photographs of all know n Red Army members, and a helicopter-borne rapid deploym ent assault squad staged a dem onstra­ tion at an O ntario military base this m onth to send a message to would- be terrorists. “The public will never see them unless som ething h ap ­ pens," said Nadeau. Canadian Solicitor General James Kelleher said is spending $4.9 million on sum m it se­ curity and deploying 3,000 officers and agents. the governm ent N adeau said eight security forces are involved, not counting secret service agents brought by the world leaders. They are the C anadian Se­ cret Intelligence Service, Royal Canadian M ounted Police, C anadi­ an armed forces, O ntario Provincial Police, M etropolitan Toronto Police, and the Durham , Peel and York re­ gional police forces. S h a r p s h o o te r s w ith h ig h - powered rifles will be posted in off­ ice towers, up to 15 city blocks will be sealed off as m otorcades ferry the leaders to and from their hotels, and city expressways will be closed for 15 m inutes at a time as delegates are escorted to dinner engagem ents in the suburbs. “W e've had people in and out of here for four or five m onths," said Patrick Boutette of the Old Mill res­ taurant, w here finance m inisters will dine Sunday night. firs t a r r e s ts o c c u rre d W ednesday w hen police broke up an anti-sum m it protest at the Uni­ versity of Toronto and charged 15 people with trespassing. T he Police denied perm ission for an anti-war group, Alliance for Non- Violent Action, to march dow n Uni­ versity Avenue to the M etropolitan Toronto C onvention C enter where the leaders will meet. “ D em onstra­ tors could occupy the attention of police and allow terrorists to act," Nadeau said. He said police also worry about random attacks by “unstable per­ sons" like John Hinckley Jr., who shot and w ounded Reagan in 1981. British soldiers in Lisburn look at sheet-covered bodies and a van destroyed by an IRA terrorist attack. Five people were killed in the bombing. Security lapse allowed IRA attack, British say Associated Press Associated Press LISBURN, N orthern Ireland — Officials ad ­ mitted Thursday that a security lapse allowed an IRA guerrilla squad to kill six British soldiers by attaching a bomb to their van while they ran in a charity race. The outlaw ed Irish Republican Army claimed responsibility for the bom bing W ednesday and vowed "unceasing w ar" against British forces in the province. Sean McManus, chairm an of the IRA's legal political wing Sinn Fein, appealed to families of British soldiers serving in the province to press their governm ent to “ w ithdraw from Ireland and bring an end to the tragic deaths resulting from Britain's partition of our country. peace, but the deaths of the six British soldiers on W ednesday night are part of the price of the British governm ent's intransigence," McManus said in statem ent issued Thursday in Dublin, capital of the Irish Republic. A half-m arathon for charity had just ended at the close of a warm, sunny day in this garrison in town, headquarters for N orthern Ireland. The exploding bomb turned the van into a fireball and scattered torn, burn­ ing bodies onto the street. the British army "I saw two bodies lying in the middle of the road," said Nigel Sands, 19. "O ne of them had no legs, and one of them was burning. It was badly mutilated. It seems they were blown from the van. There was panic and people were run­ ning everyw here." "We regret all deaths and earnestly desire Ten civilians were w ounded, including a 2- year-old boy and a man of 80, but authorities said no one was hurt seriously. Political leaders in Britain and Ireland joined prominent Protestants and Roman Catholics of Northern Ireland on Thursday in denouncing the attack. Townspeople in Lisburn seven miles from Belfast, gathered behind police barners in small, silent groups to gaze at the gutted hulk of the van. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher ^aid ir the House of Commons the bombing was a ' "emble atrocity” and reiterated the government s deter­ mination "to defeat the terrorism of the IRA, w'hich shoot and bomb to kill Northern Ireland Secretary Tom King, the governm ents :he province conferred with army commanders in Lisburn be­ fore living to London to report to Parliament top official in Failed monsoons force India into importing food again Associated Press mains. India succeeded NEW DELHI, India — More than a dec­ ade after in growing enough food to feed itself, drought has forced the w orld's second m ost populous nation back to the international food m ar­ kets. The purchases have been small — a mil­ lion metric tons of w heat from the United States and 500,000 metric tons of rice from Thailand — and are solely to replenish buffer stocks. But they underscore the lim­ its of India's “green revolution" of the early 1970s and how reliant on the w eather it re­ India's ability to feed itself also is linked to curbing a population that has reached 800 million and is growing at a rate of 2.2 percent a year. The food problem s began last sum m er when the m onsoon failed and a drought moved north into prim e farm ing regions, leading to a w inter rice harvest about 10 million tons less than that of the previous year. W hen the rains did come, another wheat crop was in the fields. That harvest was slightly larger than that of the year before, “but they needed a fantastic crop to make up for the kharif [winter rice] failure," said a W estern diplom at, speaking on condition of anonym ity. to make up for The governm ent has used its food reserves the shortfall. Reserves have shrunk from 25 million metric tons in July 1987 to about 9.43 mil­ lion tons, new s and other reports said. A metric ton weighs 2,205 pounds and is equivalent to about 1.1 short tons. “India handled the drought well," said the diplom at, an agricultural specialist. "W e've had no reports of deaths." The governm ent's problem is getting enough of the w heat now being harvested. Farmers, private traders and flour millers have been working to keep the wheat crop off the market to take advantage of the shrinking national reserves and drive up prices. The United News of India recently quoted Sukh Ram, minister of state for food and supply, as warning m iddlemen about hoarding. Hope is focused on the life-bestowing monsoon due to hit New Delhi in late June W estern officials expect India to buv more wheat and rice this year, and the strength of the monsoon will determ ine how much must be purchased. Problems remain even if the weather coo­ perates and India s grain production con­ tinues its modest increase The green revolution extended mlv to wheat and rice, and production ags tn other areas, according to \gricuiture Secre­ tare C. Asrinivasa Sastre India bought 100,000 metric tons ot com trom Argentina this vear and was given 100,000 tons be the United States Com m- ports could total 501' 000 tons b\ the end r the year, the Western diplomat -aid Western officials nave criticized India - -a1 me it s :o :he agriculture extension servio not getting necessarv ta rmers. intormation 8 escape Kentucky prison by sawing through doors Associated Press three of EDDYVILLE, Ky. — Eight in­ them convicted m ates, m urderers, escaped Thursday from the only maxim um-security peni­ tentiary in Kentucky, and authori­ ties say they likely split up after they fled. At least nine other inm ates also tried but failed to flee the Kentucky State Penitentiary after several small fires were started in another section of the building to divert guards, said prison spokesm an Bobby Waller. The escapees apparently sawed their sliding cell doors from their tracks and then cut through a prison w indow early Thursday m orning, officials said. marks on them , prisoners also Waller said. indicating those to get out, tried Barry Banister, another spokes­ m an, said the search was concen­ trated in the area around the peni­ tentiary, which is five miles east of Eddyville. Authorities said dogs had tracked the scent of at least one escapee to a spot about a half-mile away where a pickup was stolen. "We have reason to believe that, based on various reports, they may have split u p ," Waller said. The prison, near Lake Barkley and Kentucky Lake, is surrounded on three sides by w ater and on the fourth by woods, Waller said. "It's very easy for an individual to elude u s," he said. O ne prisoner was found hanging from the window , he said, and eight other single-man cells had cut The fires broke out in the adm in­ istrative control unit, which houses the w orst," said "th e worst of Eght Prisoners Ree State Penitentiary Associated Press Waller. The escapees w ere in an o th ­ er area, he said. The escapees climbed dow n an extension cord tied to a window about 30 feet from the ground, a third prison spokesm an Jack Wood said. He said once they got outside, the escapees traveled across a small parking lot tow ard Lake Barkley, w here they walked along the shore to the other side of the prison and up into a wooded area. Drought continues to grip nation Associated Press Texas farmers burned the thorns off cactus to provide em ergency cattle feed in a drought called the worst in a half-century, while growers in the Midwest bem oaned Thursday's scattered show ers as little more than tanta­ lizing. “ It's going to help a few farmers, but tor most farm ­ ers it's too little too late," said Dan Bowman, a meteo­ rologist for W eatherData in Wichita, atter some Kansas com m unities got more than 2 inches of ram and joplin, Mo., got 1G inches Thursday m orning. Drought has plagued the nation's midsection, where it is as dry as it has been since the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, and the Southeast, forcing farmers to sell off cattle they can't afford to feed and to plow under shnveled crops. The |u n e shortfall of rain follows a dr\ winter and a parched spring. T hursday's show ers, said Herb Kinnear of the Indi­ ana Farm Bureau, were "just enough to settle the dust." “ But it's keeping the sun from shining and baking things,” he said. “T hat's one consolation A nother consolation was an additional $10 million in emergency state loans for up to 45,000 Hoosier farmers Elsewhere, barges along the Mississippi were stran d ­ ed at low-water bottlenecks, fires were on the rise in Missouri and Georgia and ^ n se n g growers n Wi». n- ¡1- sin were discovering that even thev were suffering though the exotic root thrives on and -oil In W ashington, President Reagan appointed an mer- .videspn. d to deal with the agency committee drought. Texas r a n c h e r s m the Lower Rio Grande ire using propane b u r n e r s to remove thorns -om orukh pear cactus to allow cattle to graze on ne vate? ¡warn­ ing plants, s a id kraig Gaihrnore of he ’ -xas Vo, " ment of Agriculture s farmer assistance nog' mi ulev However, the drought ias struck so deep in >oun areas that ranchers have stopped the pi icuce .'ecausc even cactus is shnveling he sa d In North Dakota which the I 5 \gncu lure Vpa ■ ment said w a s hit hardest a ” ag-cu tv-j; economist predicted losses trom three ma or crops coo o billion t h i s year t n s2 The estim ate accounts for io»es •• rederai uenoencv paym ents and turnover ot the monev n :hc ecoooim tor the losses we 11 kkclv nave on c r o p s other but not than wheat barlev and o a t s in economist with North Dakota State L tuversitv -aid \r ie r . eboim Bill Lvtle a South Dakota climatologist said the state normallv g e t s M inches ot ram tn lune and this • ear has onlv received 0 3 inches so tar tor the month Associated Press Ferraro’s son given prison term RUTLAND, Vt. — The son of former vice presiden­ tial candidate Geraldine Ferraro was sentenced Thurs­ day to four months in jail for selling $25 worth of cocaine to an undercover police officer. John Zaccaro Jr., 24, also was ordered to pay a $1,500 fine and perform 300 hours of community ser­ vice. “We are obviously very disappointed by the harsh­ ness of the sentence," Ferraro said, noting that other defendants in Vermont drug cases have received lighter penalties. She said the conviction would be appealed. During his sentencing hearing, Zaccaro told Ver­ mont District Judge Francis McCaffrey in a shaky voice that he has sworn off drugs. “I'd like to make a personal pledge to you and my family that I will never again be involved in drugs or any illegality," he said. Go-ahead given for Iran-contra trials WASHINGTON — A federal judge ruled Thursday that prosecutors did not violate the rights of Oliver North and three co-defendants, paving the way for their trials to proceed. U.S. District Judge G erhard Gesell rejected a chal­ lenge by the defense which contended that prosecu­ tors m ade im proper use of testim ony given to C on­ gress under grants ot trom prosecution. Researchers: Risk of contracting AIDS increases with use of birth control pills immunity limited STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Prostitutes in Africa who use birth control pills are two to three times as likely as other prostitutes to become infected with AIDS, researchers said Thursday. Thev said it is not know n vvhv birth control pills should increase a w o m an s nsk ot getting AIDS but the pills can produce a condition that ought serve as an entry point for the virus into the bloodstream The nsk of getting AIDS through heterosexual con tact also increases in people w ith >uch diseases a> herpes, syphilis and chancroid all ot w hich produce genital ulcers or lesions, said Dr king Holm es ot Har borview Medical C enter in Seattle, Wash Control of these and other genital ulcer diseases "should be the highest priority tor controlling hetero­ sexual AIDS transm ission," Holmes ^aid at the Fourth International Conference on All>S Page 4/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, June 17,1988 E ditorials Viewpoint opinions expressed in The D aily Taxan are those of the editor and the writer of the article They are not necessarily the opinions of the University administration the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board ot Operating Trustees Opinions expressed in Second Opinion and staff or guest columns are those of the writer BÍHBB¡1¡ áiMm J , % m í i ' Slo w A h ea d Metro agreement raises new questions Thanks to the UT System Board of Regents' approval, we will have new shuttle buses next year, with no immediate increase in cost. But unless students continue to monitor Capital Metro's plans, our air-conditioned heaven could turn into an overpacked, sweaty hell. On May 20, Capital Metro officials publicly announced their offer to replace Laidlaw's antiquated school buses with modem, air-condi­ tioned, disabled-accessible buses matching Laidlaw's current $3.2 mil­ lion contract. The deal appeared to be the students' dream, a vast improvement over Laidlaw's hotter-than-a-sauna buses. The measure quickly passed from the University to the regents, who approved it last week. But the fight for better student transportation is not over. Metro has promised us better buses — but has promised us little more. Yet more questions remain, and the answers actually may give us a bus system worse than Laidlaw's. ■ Who will drive the buses? Metro's current offer will sub-contract the driving (most likely to Laidlaw), but will pay these drivers roughly $4.50 less per hour than Metro drivers. Students need to demand well- paid, safe drivers. ■ What will our next contract cost? Metro currently has agreed to lose money serving the UT community — about $1.4 million over the next five years. But after Metro takes over, Laidlaw will most likely liquidate its buses to schools, churches and day-care companies. In the past, at least we could threaten to leave Laidlaw and switch our contract to Metro if costs suddenly increased. But without Laidlaw in Austin, Metro has no competition. In a few years, Metro can charge us what it wants to make up pending losses. Students need to protect themselves from the subsequent student service fee increases. ■ Where will Metro service carry students? It is as yet unclear whether Metro will continue to offer express service to outlying areas with large student populations. Laidlaw currently provides express service to the South Riverside, Cameron Road and Pleasant Valley areas. On Metro, students may have to board the South Congress bus, go down Guadalupe Street, Colorado Street and Seventh Street all the way out to Pleasant Valley Road and then wait for another bus to take them home. Also, the Metro bus could stop at every other street, slowing the trip even more. Students need to pressure for express service. ■ Why does Metro insist on providing joint service for the public and students? If students only need to show their IDs to board buses and everyone else needs to pay, drivers will need to check all IDs to pre­ vent public freeloading. If a hundred students are waiting curbside and everyone needs to show an ID, no one may make it to class on time. Students need to be assured of an efficient boarding system. ■ How frequently will Metro buses run? Several shuttle routes (the IF, PV and SR in particular) serve several hundred students each day. To meet the demand, Laidlaw frequently "stacks" several buses to­ gether, having two or three buses pick up students at once. Metro buses run at regular intervals. If these buses run every 15 minutes or so, students may find themselves and their neighbors stranded curbside, waiting for the next bus. Students need to push for more frequent service during peak periods. When students get new buses in fall 1989, the sweltering ride to campus can improve for all. But until then, we need to ensure we do not get bumped to the back seat. We need to proceed with caution. — James Geshwiler Parents should care for their own kids R ecently there has been discussion about the University's role in making child care available to students and employees. But parents are responsible for Colleen Porter TEXAN COLUMNIST their children, and if parents want to abandon their children to day care, then they should pay for it. I do not want any part of my student services fee to pay for child care services — not because I don't care about children, but because I do. A recent study by researchers at the Univer­ sity of Texas at Dallas found that full-time pre­ school child care was associated with a host of negative consequences by the time those chil­ dren were in third grade. The researchers looked at middle-class chil­ dren in the suburbs of Dallas. They found poorer study skills, diminished self-esteem and less popularity among children who had been in full-time day care since infancy. While a few earlier studies suggested there were some positive effects of day care, they only looked at younger children. The Dallas study was praised for its "long-term " approach when it was presented at the International Conference of Infant Studies in Washington last month. But even such long-term studies are inade­ quate for gauging the consequences of day care, because a child's upbringing has an effect that lasts far beyond third grade. It seems America is engaged in a massive social experi­ ment: leaving children at child-care centers all day, and not knowing the results for years to come. Psychologist Albert Bandura maintains that children learn through observation. The role models to which a child is exposed can have a profound influence. With whom does a child spend most of his waking hours? What is the educational back­ ground and intelligence level of those people? Some child-care workers love children and have chosen that field, but many others do it because they lack skills to do anything else. Of course, there is that myth some parents use to justify neglecting their children the rest of the day: "It's the quality of time that counts, not the quantity." Now, maybe these parents are paragons of patience when they come home from work. But when I come home from a long day of work I am tired and grumpy and trying to get dinner on the table, and I suspect that is the reality for most people. time. Precious It takes a certain amount of quantity to come up with quality teaching moments occur spontaneously and cannot be scheduled or postponed. Like finding a dead bird on the sidewalk, or having a child ask, "W hat are my chances of getting AIDS?" At these special times, parents can pass on their values and help shape tomorrow. But such opportunities can be missed if parents and children aren't spending time together. Why do parents consign their children to day care? For single parents, it is an unfortunate imperative. But for couples there are two rea­ sons: greed and pride. They insist that they both "m ust" work (because cable television and a second car are necessities they will not live without). Also, some people lack the self­ esteem to be a full-time parent, and need the gratification of a job outside the home. This is not to suggest that all mothers should stay home and bake cookies. There are usually two parents, and either can do the job, espe­ cially after breast-feeding is no longer a consid­ eration. Broadcast journalist Ted Koppel, for example, stayed home with his children while his wife went to law school. Nor am I proposing that parents forsake their careers forever. Little children grow up all too soon, and then parents can change their priorities. Just talk to some children in day care centers. You might hear a boy who tells wistfully about the time he was sick and one of his parents stayed home with him all day. Or a little girl who calls her teacher "M om m y," and stares hesitantly at the parent who comes to pick her up at 6 p.m. Parents need to think twice about abandon­ ing their children to day care. And then they should think again. Porter is a graduate student in journalism. Critics misguided in questioning Israel's riot-control strategems L ike any faithful American diplomat, George Shultz has a penchant for sticking his hand into as many foreign Greg W einer TEXAN COLUMNIST ty and cease to be a Jewish State. But is Israel afraid of democracy? If the Jews are a minority, why maintain a Jewish homeland there? cookie jars as possible. mitted to its death. He's found his latest stash by hopping on the international jug­ gernaut to blast Israel's West Bank occupation. Shultz has reaped a sizable harvest of praise in recent weeks for his outspoken denunci­ ation of that country's West Bank policies. The accolades the secretary has received for his heroic (albeit myo­ pic) comments add to the evi­ dence in support of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's corol­ lary to Murphy's Law: Critics will always point their fingers before they gather the facts. Shultz, as well as the rest of the international community, seems to have a selective memory when it comes to decrying the Israeli oc­ cupation. It was, after all, only two decades ago that the Jewish State took the West Bank and Gaza Strip from Jordan in a defen­ sive military maneuver. Remember that, George? That's right. Defensive. When the 1967 war broke out between Israel and Egypt — over the latter's military buildup on the former's borders — Israeli Prime Minister Levi Eshkol warned Jor­ dan not to enter a conflict in which it had no business. But the Jordanian government, craving a piece of the pie, would Since have none of that peace stuff. In­ stead, it wasted no time in getting involved in the war. In the course of defending itself against that act of aggression, Israel took the West Bank and Gaza. then, Israel has been backed further and further into a moral Jordanian- forced occupation binds Israel be­ tween domestic threats and inter­ national criticism; leaves the nation with no viable alternative but to occupy. corner. The it To return the territories to Jor­ dan, as U.N. resolution 242 sug­ gests, would be to license Jordan's aggressive entry into the 1967 con­ flict. land It would also cede which is crucial as a buffer against any future Jordanian attack. If the regions are annexed, Isra­ el will likely lose its Jewish majori­ in Despite this cul-de-sac, Israel's conduct the occupation has been remarkably responsible. It has reacted to violent Palestinian uprisings by restricting certain civ­ il rights — an ordinary move in the context of bloody insurgence. Abraham Lincoln, the great dar­ ling of human-rights enthusiasts, did the same thing during the Civ­ il War. The Israelis have resorted to gunfire, beatings and tear gas only after first being pelted with rocks, firebombs and Molotov cocktails. Somehow, the critics have over­ looked both the history behind the conflict and the stalemate Israel faces during it. Israel doesn't deserve the com­ plaints the world has unloaded on its shoulders. Rather, the nagging criticism of the international com­ munity ought to be directed toward Jordan, whose belligerent entry into the 1967 war compelled the Israeli occupation. Of course, foreign commentary, if constructive, is always helpful. But, as Middle Eastern historian Bernard Lewis wrote of the Arab- Israeli conflict: "W ithout foreign stimulation, there would be grave danger of deterioration and re­ gression; without foreign irritants, there might also be some hope of peace." And the amnesia the nations of the world have displayed in evalu­ the age-old struggle has ating been the greatest irritant of all. Weiner is a government junior. The answer is simple: 2,000 years of terror, from Titus to Hit­ ler, have taught the Jews a hard- learned lesson. No foreign gov­ ernment can be or will be trusted with their protection. The creation of a Palestinian state on the West Bank and Gaza is as troublesome as the other al­ ternatives. The Palestinian Liber­ ation Organization, which recent­ ly proclaimed itself the official representative of the Palestinian people, in speech, writing and action, on Israel's de­ struction. No ra tio n a l body p o litic concedes territory to those com­ is hell-bent, ■ ( S X f l B H O M M f M r National acceptance of one language im­ plies social and financial sanctions against other languages — sanctions which are costly. Imagine the federally funded University teaching American Sign Language as a first language losing precious dollars. Imagine the potential never explored in a young child's life because he/she strug­ gles through classes taught in an unfamil­ iar tongue and (as statistics have shown) drops out of his frustrating sophomore classes to join a road crew or the welfare pool. What next? Next could be an immigra­ tion policy denying residence to non-Eng­ lish speakers. No business licensing or loans allowed to those with a Standard­ ized English Skills Test score of less than 85 percent? Requiring all recipients of wel­ fare to pass an English Skills test with a passing score? If the above vision of the future doesn't fill one with fear and loathing this should: Who will decide what English Standard English is? Our friends on Capitol Hill? Unfortunately, protectionism raises its ugly head under the guise of thrifty cultur­ al unification. Instead of understanding the effectiveness of bilingual life for giving all the speakers a better understanding of both languages the short-sighted can only understand the up-front dollars spent to accommodate cultural diversity in our great melting pot. Protectionist policy in any form sends exclusionary messages to the members of other countries as well as our own. In this supposed age of glasnost, we can't afford to tarnish our image as the defenders of democracy and freedom in the world. Emily Haworth Udel Sociology Webb a whiner Janet Webb, who are you? First of all, who said birth control is only the males' responsibility ("Bashing men bolsters fem ale p sy ch e s ," The Daily Texan, Wednesday)? Who are you sleeping with that you didn't already discuss this problem with? If it's a pick-up at a bar, of course he isn't going to give a shit. What the hell do you expect? Second, who waits next to the phone anymore? Haven't you ever heard of dismissing someone or calling him if he doesn't call you for a while? Wow, what a concept! Why do you go out with guys that do things you don't like? Do you ever think of telling them (instead of everyone else) you don't like some of this stuff? Just going behind their backs is abso­ lutely ridiculous. You're just a crying wim­ py little girl! What a sad thing for you. Meredith Wheeler Zoology U.S. policies racist, too Before "Japan bashing" begins on the pages of The Daily Texan ("Japanese preju­ dice deserves retaliatory trade bill," The Texan, Wednesday), perhaps Carol Haney ought to see the hypocrisy of her own words ... from a Japanese perspective. Haney cites "racist and anti-American policies and m essages" as the ethical basis for a U.S. trade bill "with strong anti-Ja­ pan m easures." Ooh, that'll show them. After all, Americans are never guilty of rac­ ism or anti-name-a-country messages (es­ pecially in trade bills). Let us not look at our own "right wing" — the KKK — which prints its share of racist and anti-Semitic literature. Let us not use the recent "English First” debate as an example of an attempt to keep the Mexican-American community impoverished and uneducated. Most importantly, let us not see the U.S. policy towards countries like South Africa and Israel — countries which brutally and actively suppress blacks or Palestinians within their own borders. The sad thing is, we have sent those re­ gimes economic and/or military aid. As far as statements concerning Japa­ nese attitudes towards World War II, may I suggest that you read some history of that war that goes beyond the atomic bomb or a piece of Japanese literature from the postwar era. I believe you will find it quite enlightening. Finally, we come to "anti-American tendencies." These ideas do not just ap­ pear in a society. Perhaps the Japanese — like many other nations around the globe — are reacting to the U.S. tendency to treat their country in a paternalistic (read imperialistic) manner. This tendency is particularly evident in your proposal; however, what right do Americns have to claim ethical superiority? Attempts to encourage equality (racial and other) are admirable, but perhaps the most effective way of changing discrimina­ tory tendencies is by example. Kathryn Palamountain Plan U 'English First' denigrates In reference to the proposed "English as the National Language" plank in the Re­ publicans' national and Texas platforms I would like to offer a few thoughts. Th e D a ily Texan Friday, June 17, 1988 Page 5 N T V E R S IT Y UT gets grant to study Hispanics By ANDRES EGUIGUREN Daily Texan Staff The UT Center for Mexican Amer­ ican Studies has received a $157,000 grant from the Ford Foundation to study the political values of H ispan­ ics — the first such survey in the nation. The Latino National Political Sur­ vey will consist of in-person inter­ view s with 2,600 people — 800 of Mexican heritage and 600 each of Cuban, Puerto Rican and A nglo an­ cestry. Those surveyed will be cho­ sen randomly throughout the na­ tion. "We are going to try to capture ... the belief structure of Latinos," said Rodolfo de la Garza, the center's di­ rector and principal investigator for the survey. Garza said little research has been done on the political beliefs of Hispanics, adding that "right now you don't even know how Latinos voted in the 1984 presidential elec­ tion." John Garcia, one of the principal survey investigators and acting head of the political science depart­ m ent at the University of Arizona at Tucson, said the survey w ould try to find out to what extent a "Latino community" actually exists. Garcia said the survey w ould in­ clude several types of questions. A m ong the general categories to be addressed are: ■ The concept o f ethnicity and cultural if Hispanics see them selves, and act, as part of a cultural group. identity. For exam ple, ■ The civic culture of Hispanics and the role of the individual in governm ent. For exam ple, w hether they are active participants and find political institutions legitimate ven ­ ues for action. ■ The political attitude of H ispan­ ics to voting and political participa­ tion in general. ■ Hispanic attitudes to certain group organizations, such as school and church groups. ■ Hispanic awareness of political issu es and candidates. For exam ple, w hether a person living in a heavily Hispanic area is more aware than som eone living in a more diverse area. ■ A recognition of the immigrant experience and its influence on be­ havior in the United States. Garcia said Mexicans, Cubans and Puerto Ricans make up about 80 percent of the total Hispanic p opu­ lation in the United States. He said the other 20 percent pres­ ent such a diversity that the investi­ gators decided they should not be included for technical and econom ic reasons. The 600 A nglos to be surveyed will serve as a basis of comparison w ith Hispanics w ithin the same com m unity. The final results of the survey may not be available for another tw o or three years, said de la Garza. Garcia said results w ould be ben­ eficial for elected officials to find out Hispanic issues, and for H ispanics to see if politicians are perhaps ig­ noring or taking for granted those issues. A s an exam ple, Garcia said "Lati­ nos are generally believed to be un­ concerned with ecological issues, but w e may find otherw ise." The survey results will be sent to the Panel Study on Income D ynam ­ ics, which de is "among the m ost important sources on econom ic and dem ographic data available to the nation." la Garza said Professors to help design garden By JIM KENNETT Daily Texan Staff The Zilker Botanical Garden may becom e one of the best gardens in the world due to the guidance of the UT Department of Botany, a garden society official said Thursday. "I think what w e have are the ingredients to have a worldclass garden," said Richard Hardin, president of the Texas Botanical Garden Society. A scientific advisory council of about 30 volunteers and consisting m ostly of UT professors will oversee the garden's layout, Hardin said. Ground breaking should begin in the fall, he added. The University's Department of Botany — ranked highly nationwide — is expected to be one of the great­ est assets to the park's developm ent, he said. Other UT departm ents, such as architecture and art, also will contribute to the garden's design, he said. Another important ingredient will be the leadership of Arthur Bell, soon-to-retire director of England's Roy­ al Botanic Gardens, or Kew Gardens, Hardin said. Bell will divide his time betw een teaching at the Uni­ versity and serving as the garden's scientific director. "He is probably the m ost w orld-renow ned expert on this planet," Hardin said. Gibbs Milliken, a professor of art with a biology back­ ground, said one of the garden's key features will be a canyon created from an old lim estone quarry that will h ouse tropical and sub-tropical plants. Slopes faring different directions will be cut into the canyon to provide the kinds of lighting various plants need, Milliken said. Light-levels are being tested now at Hamilton Pool and W estcave Preserve, he said. G reenhouses and buildings will be underground, w ith only the roofs show ing, to remain as unobtrusive as possible, Milliken said. The success of the garden depends on getting the necessary funding and volunteer help, he said. Hardin said the society, which is m anaging the gar­ den's developm ent, is raising funds through honorary society m em berships sold at $25 each. "We're trying to do this w ithout asking the city of Austin for m oney," he said. "They have enough prob­ lem s as it is." The society hopes to get at least 10,000 members to raise the $250,000 necessary to pay salaries and m ain­ tain overhead for the garden. Hardin said he hopes to have at least half the m em ­ bership by October, w h en work on the gardens should begin using volunteers from engineering, construction and other fields. Presently only two or three true U.S. botanical gar­ dens and about 12 in the world exist that are at the level Zilker Botanical Garden is hoped to attain, Hardin said. A true botanical garden is a natural science laborato­ ry that involves all the sciences and can be used for research and education, he said. "The fact that this is a beautiful thing to walk through happens alm ost incidentally," he said. "You don't plant a [botanical] garden for beauty — you plant specim ens." Hardin said it may take 20 to 25 years before the trees in the garden are fully mature. "You have a lot of babies in there and it takes time for them to grow up," he said. "That doesn't mean we're going to sit around for years w aiting for it to grow." What a m eal, what a deal, what a steal. 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Her grandfather has come to collect ancestral paintings from the village, and Ns passionate interest in these works, along with his strange, ragged clothes, make him an object of ridicule. Lena wants to be accepted by her new classmates, and this desire prompts her to join in the mockery of her grandfather — she betrays her own relative and thus betrays herself. According to the LA. Times film critic Benson, the movie is an insightful portrait of group dynamics and is also an informative view of Soviet culture. Moreover, the film which is directed by Rotan Bykov is beautifully photographed. Jester AudKorium 7 p.m. In EngMsh with Russien subtil w. open to the puts ?. C N k tte ff OPEN LA TE T IL L 8:00! Roses $8.95 dozen Casa Verde Florist 451-0691 fad n |41at S t. DaMyBp@@ial H w rim H—t i n o R O LE X Best Prices On New & Pre-Owned Rolex Watches, All Genuine w/warranty J. S tern Diamonds 471-4649 H rrt BapuMc Bank Tower Olh 6 Congreea W IS D O M T E E T H If you need the removal of wisdom teeth... CALL B IO M E D IC A L RESEARCH G R O U P INC: •1451-0411 FranaHln * Fm Your Opinion On a Pain M«d¡ca#Oíi Mon -Fn 8 30-4 30 ______ coupon______ ROFFLER SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN Sarvlcai partorm ad by luparvlvacl students' 5339 Burnet 458 2620 High kicks Frank Ordoñez/Daily T e x a n Staff Philadelphia Eagles punter John Teltschik practices at Memorial Stadium. Teltschik, a two-time all-Southwest Conference player, played football for the University from 1982 to 1985. Teltschik said that he liked Memori­ al because of the good facilities and because he knows many of the people there. UT coeds dare to bare in new calendar, citing desire for adventure, ‘notoriety’ By CLAIRE OSBORN Daily Texan Staff UT coeds have po sed in sw im ­ suits for calend ars before — b u t now they are taking th eir bikini tops off for a new calendar entitled Texas Visions. Jon D eM ayo, o w n er of M arketing Specialities — th e co m pany th at is pro d u cin g the calen d ar — said he got th e idea for the sem i-n u d e cal­ e n d a r one year ago. H e ad v ertised for m odels in The Daily Texan a n d p o sted signs aro u n d cam pus. All of the pictures w ere sh o t this M ay, he said. D eM ayo got th e b est bid from a K orean p u b lish er, an d will d istrib­ ute th e calendar all over the S o u th ­ w est in A u g ust, he said. "W e w ere ju st looking for UT coeds w ith nice a p p e a ra n c e s," D e­ M ayo said. "W e h ad a cross section of ty p es apply. "A couple of girls w an ted to do it for n o to rie ty ," h e said. D eM ayo said he paid the w om en from $200-300 for a p h o to session th at took tw o to th ree h o u rs. "I w as payin g them twice as m u ch as a top- paid m odel in A u stin ," he said. Som e w om en posed topless w hile o th ers d o n n e d w et T-shirts, he said. D eM ayo said he w an ted the p h o ­ in fam iliar places to g rap h s taken such as W indy Point and M ount Bonnell, b ut th ey w ere n ot private en ough. Instead, the w om en posed at Lake Travis, H am ilto n 's Pool, Hill C o u ntry Rifle Range an d th e Pointe, a subdivision off Lake A ustin Boule­ vard. "I consider w h a t w e did very tasteful, an d I gave the girls a cer­ tain am o u n t of say in w hich pictures we u s e d ," he said. D eM ayo said he u sed fictitious nam es in the calendar an d looked at each w o m a n 's driv er's license and UT identification card to m ake sure she w as at least 18 years old an d a UT stu d en t. O ne of the girls featured in the calendar said she chose to p ose be­ cause she w an ted to d o som ething "a little o u t of the o rd in a ry ." She posed in a topless bikini by a filled w ith M ayfield Park pond w aterlilies an d flam ingos. At first 1 felt w eird, but th en the p h o to g ra p h er and m ake-up artist m ade m e feel com fortable," she said. "It w as m ore like art; it w as classy." DeM ayo said he knew of one o th e r calendar th at featured totally n u d e collegiate w om en from Illi­ nois. Contact Lens Wearers A re y o u r e y e s — red? — itching? — painful? — mattering? Ii you have the above complaints, you may be able to participate in an eye-drop drug study in the treatment oí giant papillary conjunctivitis. During the study, you will receive a pair oí contact lenses, eye care, and the drug at no cost. P le a se c a ll T h o m a s T. H en d erso n , M.D. for fu rth e r in fo rm a tio n a t 474-6744 Ibis investigational drug study is b e in g sponsored b y Ciba-Geigy Kaplan “Early Bird”classes. Take one and fly high ontest day Want high scores on the MCAT, LSAT, GMAI DAT, or GRE? Then get into hig h gear with a Kaplan “Eaity Bird” class. Well prepare you for one of these career- shaping exam s and still leave you plenty of time to spare. So while the pressures off this summer, why not put a little of your free time to advantage? A scoring advantage. Don’t wait till the last minute. Sign up— today After all, everyone knows what the eaiiy bird gets. 1KAPLAN STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTEX LTD. MCAT 9/17/88 LSAT 10/1/88 Call 472-8085 now forming Classes Friday, June 17,1988 Page 6 S t a t e & L o c a l T h e Daily Texan 3 SWT students ask court to make regents pay fees By MIKE ERICKSON Daily Texan Staff Three Southwest Texas State Uni­ versity students suing their board of regents asked a state district judge Thursday to force the regents to pay the students' legal bills. State District Judge Jon Wisser said he probably will rule Monday on whether the Texas State Univer­ sity Board of Regents should pay the students' attorney, Susan Morri­ son, the $7,293 she is asking in legal fees and expenses. The students suing the board — Jody Dodd, John Harris and Jeff Heamdon — contend a lawsuit was the only way they could communi­ cate with the regents, and therefore, they are entitled to have the regents pay their legal fees, Morrison said. Students sent telegrams to board members May 30 asking them to re­ consider their actions at a May 19 board meeting where they voted to fire SWT president Robert Hardes­ ty, ban the prescribing and dispens­ ing of contraceptives from the stu­ dent health center and demolish a historic campus building. Students did not get a response from the regents until they sued the board, Morrison said. After Wisser ruled the meeting "null and void" June 3 because it violated the Texas Open Meetings Act, the regents met Monday and repeated their earlier actions except for changing the vote to destroy the campus building. A ssistan t A ttorney General George Warner said that the state is willing to pay Morrison $1,000, but that Morrison has overcharged the students. "We understand the statute au­ thorizes reasonable attorney's fees," he said. "It's the amount that's im­ portant." Warner said Morrison's bill to the students states she spent almost 22 hours — at $100 per hour — prepar­ ing the temporary restraining order Wisser granted June 3. "It's my opinion that is an unrea­ sonable amount of time to prepare a garden variety TRO," he said. Morrison disagreed with Warner and said the Open Meetings Act will be undermined if the judge does not grant the students' re­ quest. "N o TRO can be called garden va­ riety. This case involved a lot of dif­ ferent interest groups," she said. "If they [the fees] are not granted, it's a chilling effect on the O pen M eetings Act." O rdinary citizens will be less like­ ly to bring cases under the act if they think they will have to pay high legal fees, she said. Morrison intends to donate the requested m oney to charity, she said. Claude Ducloux, an attorney who has practiced civil law for 10 years, said M orrison's fees were "reason­ able and custom ary" for Travis County. Woman escapes from rapist By JIM GREER Daily Texan Staff A woman might have injured the "H yde Park rapist" by biting him Monday night after he attem pted to sexu­ ally assault her at her apartment near the UT cam pus. The rapist is suspected in two other attempted sexual assaults and two rapes that have taken place in the Hyde Park area between early 1986 and the present, said Kellye Norris, an Austin police spokeswoman. Monday night's victim, a 19-year-oid woman — who is not a UT student — was attacked in her Hyde Park apartm ent, less than two miles north of the UT cam­ pus, Norris said. The w om an was not hurt, Norris said. The w om an "m anaged to fight him off and bit him on [at least] one of the fingers of his right h an d ," Norris said. The m an — a white male in his mid-20s, of short to m edium height, with a slim build, light complexion and light-colored hair — apparently fled on foot after being bitten, Norris said. Pickup accident A 52-year-old Austin man was in critical condition Thursday night at Brack- enridge Hospital after his Ford pickup flipped over on I-35 after he suffered a heart attack while driving, a hospital spokeswoman said. While driving on I-35 Thursday morning, Gary McKee, suffered a heart attack that made him “slump over” in his seat, said Marsha Walker, a Brackenridge Hospital spokeswoman. McKee’s truck then “went over,” she said. “He’s not breathing for himself,” Walker said. — Jim Greer, Daily Texan Staff Frank Ordoñez/Daily Texan Staff Police discover missing woman dead near place of employment By JIM GREER Daily Texan Staff Police Thursday afternoon found the partially decomposed body of an Austin woman who had been missing for four days, a Travis County deputy coroner said. An autopsy will be performed Friday after 9 a.m., said Jim Hall, deputy coroner at the Travis County medical examiner's office. Hall said he assumes she was shot, but is uncertain without an autopsy. The woman, Brenda Porter Wal- don, was last seen alive Monday morning, shortly after midnight Sunday, said Kellye Norris, an Austin police spokeswoman. Police found Waldon outside Tracor Inc., her place of employ­ ment, Norris said. Police have a suspect in custo­ dy, but they would not release de­ tails on the case Wednesday night. No charges had been filed as of Wednesday night, Norris said. Waldon was last seen alive leav­ ing her sister's apartment to drive home. She was wearing a short- sleeved red dress and red sandals, Norris said. 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(512)460-9797 Store Hours: 8 a.m. til 1 a.m. T h e Da il y T e x a n Sports Pistons find one more Silver(dome) lining, lead 3-2 Friday, June 17, 1988 Page 7 D etroit came back w ith six straight points, including two bas­ kets by Thomas, for a 96-84 advan­ tage with 4:21 to go, and the Lakers got no closer than seven the rest of the way. The Lakers, who scored only 35 points in the second half of Tues­ day's 25-point defeat, took a 15-2 lead 4:19 into the game, giving it the look of a blowout as Detroit turned the ball over on six of its first eight possessions. But after two tim eouts, the Pis­ tons responded with a 23-10 run, tying the score 25-25 with 1:40 left. Dantley, who had 19 points at half- time, scored nine in a five-minute span during the spurt and forced W orthy to the bench with his third foul less than five m inutes into the game. ■f*;r Associated Press PONTIAC, Mich. — A huge crowd and a huge first-half com e­ back T hursday night brought the Detroit Pistons to the verge of burst­ ing the Los Angeles Lakers' hopes of a repeat cham pionship. "W e've got a chance because w e're up 3-2," Pistons Coach Chuck Daly said after their 104-94 victory in front of a record playoff crowd in the last NBA gam e at the Pontiac Silverdome. "The Lakers are great in their building. We did it once and we'll have to see w hat h ap p en s." Standing in the way of the Pis­ tons' first cham pionship are two gam es at the Forum, the hom e of the Lakers, w ho can become the first repeat w inner in 19 years with two victories there. Game 6 will be Sunday and Game 7, if necessary, on Tuesday night. The Lakers, w ho are in the NBA finals for the seventh tim e in the last nine years, are trying to become the first team since the 1968-69 Boston Celtics to repeat as cham pions. Los Angeles Coach Pat Riley, who said after w inning the title a year ago, "I'm going to guarantee everyone w e're going to repeat," did not back away from that state­ m ent after T hursday's defeat. "I like our chances," Riley said. "I still believe this team is going to win the cham pionship. I'm sure o ur fans will be very vocal. The buck stops in Los Angeles. We'll have to be high­ ly m otivated to get the job done." Detroit's Adrian Dantley scored 19 of his 25 points in the first half, 18 of them during a 52-26 spurt that w iped out an early 13-point deficit. Defensive specialist Joe Dumars added 19 points, making nine of his first 12 shots, reserve guard Vinnie Johnson added 16 and Isiah Thomas had 15 points and eight assists for the Pistons, who won the opening gam e of the series at the Forum 105- 93. Forty-one-year-old Kareem Ab- dul-Jabbar was brilliant in defeat, scoring 26 points, one short of his high for the entire season. Magic Johnson added 15 points and 17 as­ sists for the Lakers. The game set an NBA playoff at­ tendance record with a crowd of 41,732. Los Angeles trailed only 59-50 at halftime despite being outscored 52- 26 in a span of 16:38 in the first and second quarters. The Lakers opened a 15-2 lead, but 18 points by Dantley fueled De­ troit's big rally, which turned the 13-point deficit into a 54-41 lead. James W orthy, who played only eight m inutes because of foul trou­ ble and scored just two points in the first half, had eight points as the Lakers outscored Detroit 17-10 to start the third quarter, cutting the deficit to 69-67. A jum per by Vinnie Johnson gave the Pistons a 90-79 lead with 7:44 left in the game, but a basket by W orthy and a 3-pointer by Byron Scott got the Lakers within six. ■ Detroit 104, Los Angeles 94 ■ Key to the Pistons’ victory — Adrian Dantley and Vinnie Johnson got hot at the right times during the first half, turning an early 15-2 Los Angeles lead into a 54-41 Detroit advantage LOS ANGELES (94) — Green 2-3 1-2 5, Worthy 4-10 6-7 14, Abdul-Jabbar 12-21 2-4 26, E. Johnson 4-15 7-11 15, Scott 6- 16 2-5 15, Cooper 0-3 0-0 0, Rambis 0-0 1-21, Thompson 7-8 0-2 14, Campbell 1- 1 0-0 2, Matthews 1-1 0-0 2 Totals 37-78 19-33 94 DETROIT (104) — Mahorn 0-1 0-0 0, Dantley 7-10 11-13 25, Laimbeer 4-14 0-0 8, Dumars 9-13 1-2 19, Thomas 4-13 7-8 15, Salley 1-2 5-6 7, V. Johnson 8-16 0-0 16, Edwards 4-6 2-2 10, Rodman 1-10-0 2, Russell 0-0 2-2 2 Totals 38-76 28-33 104. Los Angeles . . .30 20 25 19— 94 Detroit . . . . . .27 32 22 23—104 3-Point goal— Scott. Fouled out— Rod­ man Rebounds— Los Angeles 38 (Green, Abdul-Jabbar, Johnson 6), Detroit 60 (Laimbeer 11). Assists— Los Angeles 26 (Johnson 17), Detroit 20 (Thomas 8) To­ tal fouls— Los Angeles 27, Detroit 29 A— 41,732. Magic Johnson and Isiah Thomas exchange greetings Thursday. i Me askill hurls three-hitter past Rangers Kareem Abdu Jabbar passes over Detroit’s Dennis Rodman. Associdtod Press Lyle makes best of bad Open conditions Former Masters champion one of 11 to produce sub-par opening round Associated Press BROOKLINE, Mass. — M asters cham pi­ on Sandy Lyle coaxed a hard-fought 68 out of difficult conditions on T hursday and gained a place in a three-w ay tie for the lead in the first round of the 88th U.S. O pen Golf C ham pionship. "I squeezed about as m uch out of it as I could," said Lyle, a Scot w ho ranks as the outstanding figure on the PGA Tour this The four key holes, page 14. Leader board, pag 8. season, being the only three-tim e winner. leading the earnings list while "I can't believe I shot 68 playing the way I d id ," Lyle said. "I m issed a lot of greens and I m issed the fairway about 10 tim es." But he scrambled w hen he had to, chipped in from about 25 yards for a birdie and finished in a rush, dropping an 18-20- foot birdie putt on the 16th hole, then gain­ ing a share of the lead w ith a 15-footer on the final hole. That p u t him in a tie for the lead with a couple of long-struggling Americans, Bob Gilder and Mike Nicolette. Seve Ballesteros of Spain, twice a w inner of the M asters and a two-tim e British O pen w inner w ho gained some confidence in his putter with a playoff victory at W estchester last week, led a group at 69. "M y putting stroke came back," Ballest­ eros said. "I m ade some p utts like the old days. I d o n 't know w hat will happen, but I have a good feeling about this w eek." He was tied with Scott Sim pson, the de­ fending O pen cham pion, form er M asters champion Larry Mize, Dick Mast and Paul Azinger, the 1987 Player of the Year. C urtis Strange, hailed by som e of his fel­ low American tourists as the outstanding player in the gam e today, holed out a fair­ way shot for an eagle-2 on the 14th hole and was w ithin a stroke of the lead until he bogeyed the final hole from a bunker. He was tied at 70 with veteran Lanny W adkins, a two-tim e w inner this season, and former M asters cham pion Craig Stadler. That put 11 m en under par for the day. By com parison, the last time the U.S. O pen was held on this course, in 1963, only seven subpar rounds were recorded for four rounds of competition. The reason? "They gave you some fairway to play w ith," said Gilder, 37, w ho has played in 13 of the last 15 American national cham pi­ onships. "It's the best setup I've ever seen for a U.S. O pen course," Gilder said. "It's still tough. But it's not as tough as O pen cours­ es usually are." Both Gilder and Nicolette played in the more forgiving conditions of the m orning while Lyle's late tee time put him out in the w orst of the w eather — strong, swirling w inds that torm ented some of golf's great­ est nam es. Jack Nicklaus, for example, struggled to a 74 as did Australian Greg Norm an. PGA cham pion Larry Nelson took a 78 that in­ cluded a fat 41 on the back nine at The C ountry Club, the course in suburban Bos­ ton know n as "The Old Lady of Clyde Street." Tom W atson, w ho won the O pen in 1982 and holds five British O pen titles, was am ong the leaders at one under par after 12 holes. But, just as it has done so often in recent years, his putter suddenly w ent sour. He 4-putted from the fringe on the 13th hole. He ran his lag putt about two feet beyond the cup, missed that one, missed from about the same distance on a third putt and finally tapped in for a double bo­ gey- He also 3-putted for par on the next hole, took 40 over the back and finished with a 74. "The wind was picking up, making it tough to pull a club, and the greens were getting hard and fast when we finished," Nicolette said. "Good luck to the late start­ ers. We had the best of it." Nicolette, 37, has lost his exem pt status on the PGA Tour three times due to lack of performance, has m ade his way into only three tournam ents this season and has a grand total of $6,450 in 1988 earnings. "If I don't make a big check this week, my bank account is in serious trouble," he said. Nicolette, who said he has spent most of the season practicing and plaving in mini- Back in court NFLPA seeks injunction on restricted free agency Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS — The National Football League Players Associa­ tion returns to federal court Friday in its continuing effort to win u n ­ restricted free agency. The NFLPA will try to convince U.S. District Judge David Doty that an im passe has been reached in contract negotiations betw een the union and m anagem ent, said Carol Rieger, a M inneapolis law­ yer representing the union. If Doty rules that an im passe ex­ ists, then it's possible he could grant the the union a prelim inary injunction that would allow unre­ stricted free agency for about 350 players. A clerk in D oty's office said Thursday that the judge probably would rule on the im passe ques­ tion Friday. But he said if Doty rules the is an judge probably w ou ld n 't rule on the free agency question until lat­ er. im passe, there Rieger said the players need a decision on the free agency ques­ tion before training cam ps open in July. Rieger works for Lindquist & V ennum , the law firm that repre­ sented the NFLPA in 1975 and 1976 in the John Mackey case — an antitrust challenge of the free- agent system in use at that time. NFL ow ners have said they are confident that Doty will approve the current system , which requires a team signing a free agent to com­ pensate his old team w ith a first- round draft choice. U nder current rules, NFL teams have the right of first refusal and are com pensated if a free agent is signed by another club. Only two players have changed team s in 12 years of the plan. The union filed the antitrust lawsuit against m anagem ent on Oct. 15, w hen players returned to work w ithout a new contract after a 24-day strike. There have been no formal negotiations between players and m anagem ent since. Free agency was a major strike is­ sue. Doty ruled in January that NFL ow ners can continue to impose free-agency restrictions on players until a collective bargaining im­ passe is reached. He also urged the tw o sides to settle the issue at the bargaining table. In April, the National Labor Re­ lations Board General Counsel ruled that the NFLPA and m an­ agem ent reached an im passe d u r­ ing labor negotiations in 1987. The ow ners' bargaining unit, the NFL M anagem ent Council, al­ leged that the union was bargain­ ing in bad faith and had refused to bargain before the sides broke off negotiations. But the NLRB threw out those com plaints. NFLPA officials say the decision enables Doty to rule that an im­ passe has been reached and to eventually give the union the pre­ liminary injunction that w ould al­ low unrestricted free agency. If Doty rules there is an im­ passe, the ow ners probably would appeal to the 8th Circuit C ourt of Appeals. T here's a "reasonable chance" Doty will declare an im passe in ne­ gotiations, said Gary Roberts, a law professor at Tulane University who once represented the NFL in antitrust cases, told the Star Tri­ bune. Associated Press A N A H E IM , C alif. — K irk McCaskill's last shuto ut w as a pain. This one was a pleasure. T he C alifo rn ia rig h t-h a n d e r pitched a three-hitter Thursday as the Angels beat the Texas Rangers 3-0. His last shu tout w as against the Seattle M ariners on April 15, 1987. Six days later, McCaskill was on the disabled list. A week after that, he had elbow surgery to rem ove bone chips. "I d o n 't w ant to say I'm back. I was saying that in spring training and it took a w hile," McCaskill said. "But this was my best gam e since the surgery. The feeling is 180 de­ grees different from w hat it w as af­ ter that last sh u to u t." McCaskill, 3-5, struck out 10 and walked three as he w on for the first time since May 8. He had lost two with four no decisions since then. Though his recent record m ay not show it, he said he is im proving. "I knew I'd been progressing, getting a little better every time o ut," McCaskill said. "M aybe not in the obvious things, but the small things that make a difference." Singles by Ruben Sierra in the first inning, Steve Buechele in the fifth and Pete Incaviglia in the ninth were the only hits for Texas, which has lost six of its last nine games. California has won seven of 18 gam es since May 28 an d five of the victories have been shutouts. ■ Royals 9, Athletics 5 — In O ak­ land, Mark Gubicza allowed six hits in eight innings for his fourth con­ secutive victory and Pat Tabler drove in four runs as streaking Kan­ sas City pulled w ithin 4Vi gam es of first-place O akland by beating the Athletics. The Royals, 13 gam es behind O akland on June 1, have w on six consecutive gam es and 13 of their last 14 — including all six m eetings with the Athletics, the American League West leaders, w ho have lost Boston’s Rick Cerone tags out Baltimore's Edcfee Murray at home. four straight and nine of their last 11 games. The victory moved Kansas City past M innesota into second place. hit Larry Sheets drew a walk to load the bases and Mickev Tettie- ton doubled in two runs, his first hit in It? lifetime at-bats with the bast's loaded. struck out Associated press Gubicza, 4-5 five, walked three and allowed onlv one earned run. Dan Q uisenberrv pitched the ninth allowing a run on a single, a walk and Luis Polonia s fielder's choice grounder a O rioles 8, Red Sox 4 — In Balti­ more, Cal Ripken's two-run double and Jim Traber's run-scoring single highlighted a three-run tifth inning as the Orioles defeated Boston Traber had three hits and three RBI Baltimore walked 10 times Jeff Ballard, 3-3 allowed seven hits in seven innings. Mark William­ son relieved after Spike O w en's leadoff double in the eighth and earned his first save Marty Barrett stole hom e m the fourth inning to give Boston a 1-0 lead. It was the first time a Red Sox player had stolen hom e since Gary Allenson did it in 1980 as part of a double steal, and the first straight steal of hom e since Tommy Harper on Mav 28, 1973 Boston starter Jett Sellers, who h ad n 't yielded a hit in the first three innings, failed to reti.e a batter in the fourth Nlurrav, fraber and Fred Lynn singled, with M urray getting throw n out at the plate on Lynn's ■ Blue Jays 13, Tigers 5 In De­ troit, Mike Flanagan allowed five hits in eight innings and Frrue Whitt w ent 4-tor-5 with tour RBI's to lead a l> h it attack a- Toronto beat the Tigers Flanagan 0-4 walked niv and struck out a season-high seven but was relieved bv Mark Ross after walking the first two batters in the ninth. Ross gave up Rav knight > two-run double and Mike Heath s run-scoring double Luis Salazar drove in a run with a buses-loaded and pinch-hitter Dave forceout Bergman hit a sacrifice tlv ■ W hite Sox 3, Brewers 1 — In Milwaukee, Jerry Reuss allowed six hits in seven innings for his fourth straight victory as Chicago defeated Milwaukee the Brewers' four-game w inning streak to end The W hite Sox took advantage of including four M ilwaukee errors, three by second basem an Juan C as­ tillo. Castillo's third error on a double­ play grounder in the sixth helped the W hite Sox score the tying and go-ahead runs against Milwaukee Former UT golfer Tom Kite waves Thursday. tour and local events, salvaged his part of the lead by saving par from bunkers on the last two holes. Gilder, who scored the last of his six ca­ reer title s in 14 8 3 , credited his fast start to a change in attitude b - " who has starter C hns Bosio lost tour straight decisions and failed for :he sixth nrre to ger his seventh w:n. Reuss, b - 2 walked one and struck out three to earn his 204th career victory It was ms second win over Milwaukee m a week. Bobbv Thig­ pen pitched two mnings for his 15th save ■ Astros ~ Reds 4 — In Cincin­ nati, Glenn Davis hit i pair ot two- run hom ers ano Mike Scott allowed rive hits before leaving with i eg injure n the eighth inning is Hous­ ton defeated the xeds Scott "4-2, strained ms eft ham­ string when he slipped coming oft the m ound after C hns Sabo hit a run-scormg grounder to tnird Scott to deter­ will be examined Fndav mine the o urv third Houston the Dave Srruth pitcher came m with two outs and a runner on first in the mmh and earned his 12th save the seventv or Scott ado singled n a -un n the eighth Glenn Davis mt both his homers oft Mario Soto 5~~ who has ost his last five starts Soto gave up sex hits lin­ and a poo- or walks over rive ings The Astros snapped C m cm nab's season-high winning streak a' four gam es and moved to within a game of first-place L os Angeles tn the Na­ tional I cague West Cincinnati re­ mains in fourth place 5 games back • Braves 9, Dodgers 2 In At­ lanta, Ken OberkteU went 4-tor-5 and drove in three runs to lead an 18-hit attack a-- the braver defeated Los Angeles tv? snap a rive-game los­ ing streak The Atlanta offense he!peo. Cane Smith, 3-3, gam his first victory since May 2 and end h is string ot five consecutive no-decision out­ ings. He missed three starts with arm ailm ents Smith also had two hits and scored twice Ev e n Atlanta starter had at least one hit Smith gave up seven hits w a Iked three and struck out two in seven innings Page 8/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, June 17,1988 sfl- ' *,/ .■ v- ' !■ U.S. Open t a t round aeonas >8 * —71 (o danotea m U ir): Major Leagut >s Royals 9, Athletics 5 Astros 7, Reds 4 Bob Gilder Mike Nicotefte Sandy Lyle Dick Mast Scott Simpson Save Ba testeros Larry Mize Paul Azmger Curtis Strange Lanny Wadkins Craig Stadler Andy Bean Scott Hoch a-BtH Mayfair Hale Irwin Ben Crenshaw IsaoAoki Steven Bowman D A Weibnng Mark O'Meara Dan Haltdorson Chip Johnson Mark Hayes Buddy Gardner Nick Faldo Ken Green Steve Pate Jeff Siuman Mark Marress Tom Kite Nick Price Dennis T rixler Kent Stauffer Fred Couples Mark McCumber Jim Hallet Danny Edwards David Ishn Duffy Waldorf Lee T revino Jay Haas John Cook Mike Swartz Mark McNulty T C Chen Fuzzy Zoeller Dave Barr Gil Morgan Jerry Haas George Shortridge Raymond Floyd Payne Stewart Chip Beck Rodger Davis Brian Tennyson Mark Brooks Robert Wilkin . Jim Carter Jack Nicklaus Mark Caicavecchta Mike Reid Bobby Wadkins Bob Eastwood Alfred Morton Tommy Nakapma Ed Dougherty Hal Sutton. Steve Lowery Kenny Perry Andy North . Tom Watson Greg Norman Roger Maitbie Mike Hammond Richard Cromwell Dave Erickson Mac O’Grady Bernhard L anger Clarence Rose Mark Wiebe Mark Lye Davis Love III . Jim Thorpe Blaine McCallester Cary Hungate . . . Jim Gallagher. Jr Steve Veriato Peter Jacobsen Lennie Clements Mike McGee Steve Chapman Dave Stockton Hubert Green Don Pooley Mike Hulbert Ray Barr Jr Houston 7, Cincinnati 4 Atlanta 9, Los Angeles 2 Only games scheduled Friday's Games Montreal (B Smith 4-4) at Chicago (Sutcliffe 4-4) 3 05 New York (Candelaria 8-2) at Cleveland (Farrell 6-4). Frtdqr’i Ganes Toronto (Cerutti 3-3) at Detroit (Tanana 9-4), 6:35 p.m. Boston (Boyd 6-5) at Baltimore (Tibbs 2-3). 7:05 p m Seattle (Bankhead 1-2) at Minnesota (Viola 9-2). 7.05 Houston (Knepper 7-1 and Anduiar 0-2) at Atlanta California (Fraser 4-6) at Kansas City (Power 4-1), 7 35 (Mahler 7-6 and Puleo 0-3). 2,4 40 p m San Francisco (Hammaker 3-0) at Cincinnati (Jackson 6- Chicago (J Davis 0-1 or Long 2-2) at Milwaukee (August 6 35 pm p m pm ■ «¡TineaCOT ■ NATIONAL LEAGUE W 41 36 32 32 28 W ..................... 31 WeatDMaion ..........................34 ...................... 34 32 30 .......................27 21 Thursday's Oamee New York Pittsburgh Chicago St Louis Montreal Philadelphia Los Angeles Houston San Francisco Cincinnati San Diego Atlanta pm 3), 6:35 p.m. 6 35 pm p.m. Philadelphia (K Gross 7-2) at New York (Gooden 9-2) St Louis (Magrane 0-1) at Pittsburgh (Dunne 4-4), 6 35 San Diego (Rasmussen 3-6 and Whitson 6-5) at Los An­ geles (Leary 5-4 and Sutton 3-4), 2,6 05 p m Saturday's ©amaa San Francisco at Cincinnati, 12 1 5pm Montreal at Chicago. 1 20 p m San Diego at Los Angeles. 3.05 p m Philadelphia at New York, 6 05 p m St Louis at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. Houston at Atlanta. 6:40 p m AMERICAN LEAGUE EaatDMaion New York W 39 L Pet. GB 629 — 23 SUCH H D€Al! « I » 603 578 523 492 485 266 PCI. 625 554 548 484 444 394 385 114 3 6V4 8V4 9 23 4 l4 5 9 11’^ 15 15 VS Detroit Cleveland Milwaukee Boston Toronto Baltimore Oakland Kansas City Minnesota Texas Chicago Seattle California J8 37 34 30 32 17 25 27 31 31 34 47 24 29 28 33 35 40 40 n t Jal,.h unnMun w 40 36 34 .......................... 31 28 26 25 Thuredey’s Games California 3. Texas 0 Kansas City 9. Oakland 5 Baltimore 8. Boston 4 Toronto 13. Detroit 5 Chicago 3, Milwaukee 1 Only games scheduled 2-1), 7 3 5 p m Texas (Guzman 6-5) at Oakland (Stewart 9-5), 9 35 p m Saturday’s Games Boston at Baltimore. 12:20 p.m. New York at Cleveland. 12:35 p.m Toronto at Detroit, 3:05 p.m Texas at Oakland. 3 05 p.m. California at Kansas City, 7:05 p m Seattle at Minnesota, 7:05 p m Chicago at Milwaukee. 7 35 p m Angels 3, Rangers 0 TEXAS Espy ct Petralli ph McDwel ct Fletchr ss Sierra rf Incvglia If Kunkel pr OBnen 1 b Parrish dh MStanly c Buechle 3b Wilkrsn 2b Totals Texea CrtWomta CALIFORNIA M ir h bi 3 0 0 0 Dwnng dh 1 0 0 0 Schotild ss 0 0 0 0 CDavis rf Joyner 1b 3 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 Armas If 4 0 1 0 DWhite cf 0 0 0 0 Howell 3b 4 0 0 0 Boone c 3 0 0 0 CWalkr 2b 3 0 0 0 ' 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 31 0 3 0 Totals a b r h b i 2 1 1 0 4 0 1 1 5 0 1 0 3 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 4 0 1 0 30 3 • 3 000 000 000—0 100 Olx—3 100 Game Winning RBI — Joyner (3) E—MStanley. Howell LOB—Texas 7, California 12. 2B— Schofield SB—Downing (2), DWhite 2 (6). Texas Kilgus L.6-5 Cecena Mohorcic C e liom is McCaskill W.3-5 *> H R ER BB SO 6 1-3 6 11-3 0 1-3 0 9 3 2 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 4 2 4 2 0 0 3 10 HBP—Schofield by Mohorcic BK— McCaskill T—2:52 A—21,754 D 4 B VIDEO SERVICE r o lO l llU l AUSTIN. tlXAS H74I -RVIc T ^ I M n * m 1 f 8 3 7 -9 0 7 6 tnt Discounts Sfin for RESUMES PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS IMMIGRATION tfw d e H C 2532 GUADALUPE 477-5555 SPECIALIZED NOW IN STOCK "Hardrocks" "R< ckhoppers" "Rockhopper Comp" 2404 SAN GABRIEL 477-6846 TONS of IRON A Pennies Pound 4123 Guadalupe Next Door to Hyde Park Gym 459-4747 CHRIS’S LIQUOR 5201 CAMERON RD. 451 -7 3 91 OPEN 10-9 PM 2418 S. LAMAR BLVD. 4 4 2 -2 2 8 8 OPEN 10-9 PM g a a a . . . . eoeetor 1 0 .0 0 * BOCK SINNER 24 .1tae.ptaedepaaB TiCATE BEER 12 at. « M Product etMexioo. . . . 6 lor a « 1 f fe HEINEK1N BEER 12 t f CONONABEER 4 * - M b 12 aa. Imparted . . . . ............. 12tor 7 . 9 9 - fc c o m 1 6 . 9 9 : . I PALE ALE 12 ea. Product eUnf wd................ é ler 4 . 9 9 MOOELO ESPECIAL cone 12 so. Product at Mwde c. . . . éter 2 . 9 9 1 4 » EER f BECKSBEER 12oe.Prod.ofBemiuwy......................tie r 4 . 7 7 . 4t% ST. 12oe.Product' «tor 4 . 1 9 FUNSTENBEBO BEER H o t, toe duct af arm awy................«tar 4 . 9 9 PEI h 12 aa. Product at CM na......................«tar 3 . 4 9 OBEATWALL BEER 12aa. tooduatatOtowa......................«tar 3 . 9 9 PECAN ST. IACER 12aa.BroaadtoAHrtto1k.. . . . . . «tar 4 . 4 9 * A . . HH0 BDOBEfiNNS «tar 3 . 7 9 12aa-taaduotatM atooa , At> NUBSONCSBESR 12 aa. Preduel el M m dee...................«tar 3 . 4 9 MAMBA MALT U8UOB I 2«aa.taaduet at A M eo...................... 1tor 1 . 9 9 TUCKR MALT IACEB i 12ea.PredoelelAtrtee......................«tor 5 . 9 9 • M BAM ROD PALE ALE t a d u t d k p a id ........................2 Ur tar 3 . 7 9 DNIKRACKMMALTU yior ^ ^ 4 M . SPAIENDAMMALTLtquoT . ‘7 a 12afc Pradaat at Be— w . . . 7 7 «tar 5 . 7 9 KANSASCfTY Stttwfl ss WWilsncf Tablar 1b Pacota 1b Trtabll rl Seltzer 3b FWhitedh Macfarlnc Wellmn2b Thurmn It Eisnrch It Tétate 41 CRy OAKLAND Polonia If Gallego 3b Lansfrd3b Canseco rf Parker dh Steinbchc McGwir 1b Javier cf Hubbrd 2b Weiss ss d t r h M 4 1 1 0 5 2 2 0 5 0 3 4 0 1 0 0 4 0 2 3 5 1 3 0 5 1 2 2 4 1 0 0 5 2 4 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 S 17 S a l t r h M 5 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 3 1 2 0 4 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 4 2 1 0 4 0 0 1 3 0 1 1 HOUSTON GYoungcf BHatchr If Puhllf Doran 2b GDavi81b Walling 3b Basarf CRenlds ss Trevino c Scott p >P >P 34 S 7 3 000 221 4 0 0 - 0 000 031 001—5 Game Winning RBI — Tab ler (3). E—Stillwell. Tabier, Thurman. DP— Kansas City 2, Oak­ land 1 LOB—Kansas City 8, Oakland 6 3B—Wilson HR— FWhite (3) SB—Thurman (1). Javier (9) B» H RER BB 8 0 CMCMNATI G r h M 5 0 1 0 Larkin ss 4 13 0 Sabo 3b 10 0 0 Daniels If 4 2 2 0 EDavia cf 5 2 2 4 ONsMrf 4 1 1 0 McClndph 4 1 2 1 Durtvn 1b 2 0 0 0 Eiaaky ph 3 0 0 0 BDiazc 4 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sok) p Bellph Birtsas p FWHIms p Coliinsph Franco p McGrff ph Bnwnngpr Tredwy2b cf i ph 36 7 1 2 8 Totals abrhbi 5 1 1 0 4 0 0 1 3 1 1 0 4 2 2 3 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 10 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 36 4 8 4 a n 000 120-7 000 o n 011-4 ^ If aneas City Gubtczi W.9-5 Qui Mind CYoung L.4-4 Nelson Honeycutt Plunk Cadaret Eckersley 6 4 1 1 1 1 1 3 4 1 4 1 4 2-3 9 3 1 1-3 0 2 2-3 2 1 1-3 1 1 Plunk pitched to 2 batters in the 8th WP—CYoung BK—Honeycutt PB— Steinbach. Macfar- ane T—3:07 A—23,579. Blue Jays 13, Tigers 5 TORONTO Fernndz ss Leess Moseby cf Mllnks dh GBell If Campsn if McGritf 1b Gruber 3b Whitt c Leach rf Barfield rf Uriano2b Totals DotroR afcrhbi 4 2 3 0 1 0 0 0 4 1 1 1 4 1 2 0 4 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 4 3 2 1 5 3 4 4 0 1 0 0 4 1 2 1 5 0 1 2 13 IS 10 Pettis cf Whitakr 2b Salazar If Tramml ss Wlwndr ss Brgmn ph Lemon rf Hemdndh Brokns 3b Knight 1b Heath c a b rh b i 4 1 1 0 4 0 1 0 5 0 1 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 2 1 1 0 4 1 1 2 4 1 1 1 41 Totals 32 S 7 S 124 002 0 1 3 -1 3 000 000 005— 5 Game Winning RBI — None E—Brookens, Lemon 2, Whitaker, Pettis. DP—Toronto 1 —Toronto 5, Detroit 9. 2B—Liriano. Trammell, Barfield. Knight. Heath 3B—Whitt, Gruber HR— Whitt (3) SB— Pettis (30), Gruber (9). SF—Bergman i» Toronto Flanagan W.6-4 Ross H RER BB 8 0 6 7 2 1 5 2 2 3 2 3 e 1 Morris L.6-8 Gibson Trujlo 2 2-3 3 1-3 3 6 7 6 4 2 1 5 4 4 Flanagan pitched to 2 batters in the 9th WP—Morris. Gibson. Flanagan. Trujillo T—3:11. A—22,927 Game Winning RBI — GDavis (5). E—EDavis. DP—Cincinnati 1. LOB— Houston 7, Cincin­ nati 6 .2B—Durham, Daniels. BHatcher. Bass. 3B—Larkin HR—GDavts 2 (15), EDavia 2 (11) SB— Daniels (10). S— CReynokte. Scott W.8-2 Agosto DSmithS,12 Soto L.3-7 Birtsas FWilliams Franco I H R ER M BO 7 2-3 5 2 1 3 3 1 1 0 1 6 1 1 - 3 1 0 0 1 0 6 4 5 2 1-3 4 3 0 0 0 2-3 2 1 4 3 0 0 2 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 HBP—Trevino by Soto WP—Scott. BK—Birtsas T—2:36. A—22.614. Braves 9, Dodgers 2 L08ANQEL8 ATLANTA Sax 2b Shrprsn 2b MHtchr 1 b Crews p Gibson if Heeplf Marshal rf MiDavis rf Shelby cf HamKn3b Sciosciac Stubbs 1b Andesnss KHowell p yc Det Los Angilss Loa Angelas KHowell L.0-1 Crews ZSmith W.3-3 Echlbgr Assnmchr AHaltcf 3b Echlbgr p Asnmchrp GPerry 1b DMrphy rf DJames If Thomas ss Virgil c Gant 2b ZSmithp Runga 3b a b rh b i 2 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 1 2 1 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 32 2 8 2 tor h i 5 1 2 0 5 1 4 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 1 1 0 1 3 2 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 2 1 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 Totals 40 818 8 100 001 000-2 030 420 OOM-O H RER BB BO E> 6 2 7 1 1 15 9 3 0 1 7 8 0 0 0 7 2 1 0 0 0 2 3 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 Rooster's SUMMER adidas Questar $29.95 Reg. $51.95 Nylon upper running shoe with pigskin trim. Motion supporting inlay sole. Rearfoot board lasting. Double density polyurethane midsole with Dellinger web. adidas Stefan Edberg $39.95 . $59.95 jilm fc n - n J li t T i i » a jj Full grain leather upper tennis shoe with EVA midsole. Padded tongue and absorbent sockliner. adidas ATP 3000 $34.95 Reg. $49.95 Full grain leather tennis shoe with terry lining. Thermoplastic heel control device. Full length EVA midsole. Lateral stability rail. Rubber half shell sole. adidas Anderlecht Reg. $47.95 $29.95 Full leather upper soccer shoe with nylon lining. V rearfoot support. For hardground use. adidos Rooster Andrews 3901 Guadalupe A n d t r a o r t L a n e a t S to o a l C r a e k & L a n a r a t B a a W M t a sporting goods O p e n • a * - 9 paa 15 W O R D S FO R 4 DAYS ONLY 00* CALL *Applies to ads in m erchandise and tran sp o rta­ tion categories, priced a t $500 an d under. Pri­ vate p a rty ads onli 471-5244 88DCTAILS ,,eND€«flD T€XANc« Shop in the sunshine at The Texas Union’s Super Summer Sidewalk Sale. Get your hands on some great deals on gifts, art supplies, grocery items, and other assorted goodies. But be quick— the sale's on for two days only: Friday and Saturday, June 17,18 from 10 am to 3 pm. To find the Super Summer Sidewalk Sale, go to the northeast comer of The Texas Union Building, on the comer of 24th & Guadalupe (just off the Drag) on the UT campus. For more information, call 471*3292. Brought to you by The Texas Union n // * n * ^ II _ ^ -p \\ ' / * 9 \) 4 ll 11 9. " \V ~ // * II * = = » ' = " II * * = * * U \\ " * 9 4 * * I II * ^ II * " = ^ // * - // 11 * r * v * * t = * v *, V ' - , v * * ♦ r » - - . * i * , «r w «* . v li 11 « 11 « & •I * / / * H * * « * * 77 ' U * * * II * * * • » « * 1 - ^ ^ H » ^ ^ a % Z % + II II " H u - II // H v ^ / / 4. * « / / * * t * * * " ■ * _ 11 * II H II V 11 k ♦ II + + 4 % 7/ f * ^ „ , * u 1 " •I „ // as / , % H 2 . 1 ♦ // a. n * * II » * * I _ // * « * 11 * * II * * = * * " » * * » ' ' n // 11 * *, // * * 11 : ' / - II ti I/ ® at A H S- + * i* W - — \\ A, > * If » 11 ss * 9 n v > * J * s. * A V II 7, ♦ „ * y , >\ // ' ' ,1 ^ ^ 1 II » O =s * / / '• j. ; % % V 11 * „ * ♦ a T h e Duuly T ex a n A r ts & E ntertainm ent Friday, June 17,1988 Page 9 Bum Rap? Local Hip-Hoppers criticize Austin establishment’s anti-rap attitude By REN SCHERR Daily Texan Staff Austin Hip-Hop survives in spite of Austin. In spite of minimal support from the clubs, the producers, the press and the radio stations that ostensi­ bly make Austin "a great music town," Hip-Hop survives, and sur­ vives quite handily. The scene is running purely on the undeniable talent of local rap artists, and on their belief in music fans, if not the music establishment of this city. Among the most visible Capital City cut creators is J.T. Def, a young man who has marshaled the sup­ port of students at Lanier High School in a successful drive to cul­ tivate a rap scene in North Austin. In association with Austin's Bad Mutha Goose, his label, E.J. Produc­ tions, has been making and market­ ing rap cassettes featuring various Texas groups for some three years. The promising E.J. sound has devel­ into a curiously Texan oped melange of funk, swing, and New York "Dope" beats. Having recently produced most of the new Bad Mu­ tha Goose LP, J.T. is priming to pro­ duce a record with his own group, Loud Posse. Like other Hip-Hop artists in Austin, Def bemoans the lack of lo­ cal venues for his music, explaining that "The only way an Austin Rap group can gig in a club is if Bad Mu­ tha Goose lets them open up for them ." The only major event which gave a spotlight to groups like Loud Posse, Hostile Union, and others on the E.J. label was South by South­ west, which notably drew rap music from all over Texas. For E.JJs artists, a change in the Sixth Street attitude is crucial to their increased exposure and suc­ cess in Austin. "Right now they've got almost nothing but cover bands, and it's a really stupid scene," says Def, who cautiously takes heart in the recent opening of Club Cairo, whose owner, Brad First, is sympa­ thetic to the plight of local Hip-Hop. "If someone opened a club with an eye towards promoting rap music, the kids would go there because they go to Sixth Street anyway." The hippest towns, even those that profess to be half as hip as Aus­ tin, nurture thriving Rap scenes. In bald business terms, Hip-Hop is both wildly lucrative and enor­ mously influential, and the places that plan to be on the music map tomorrow checked it out a long time ago. In Texas, the volume of rap sales is tremendous. Unfortunately, most of this money is ending up in New York, Miami, Los Angeles, and just about anyplace except Texas. Austin rappers also suffer from a chronic lack of radio coverage. Al­ though, in general, J.T. praises the I f RACHEL JENKINS Daily Texan Staff Most people tend to think of mus­ icals as lighthearted lyric romps, as pleasant, but often superficial, es­ capes from the realities of daily life. But starting Friday, those who love and even those who loathe the genre can look forward to a some­ what different strain of musical, as the UT Department of Drama prem­ ieres its production of Stephen Son­ dheim and George Furth's Merrily We Roll Along. "I think the look and the feel of this piece is going to be very excit­ ing for an audience. But it's a musi­ cal to spark some thought — it's not a musical to cover everything over with sugar," said director Rod Caspers. "It's a contemporary musical that ... is perhaps more in line with many people's sensibilities right now ," said Caspers. "It's meant to really challenge the audience and 1 think that's a really neat thing about this piece, and why it's important. It's not meant solely to be entertain­ ment, though I think it's highly en­ tertaining." Caspers, a UT graduate and cur­ rently an instructor in the Depart­ ment of Drama, says that Merrily is a very challenging piece to perform, as well. Sondheim is an important figure in the m odem American mu­ sical, and "the literature and the music is more difficult than what you'll find in a lot of musicals — just his style of writing," said Caspers. "I think we should challenge the students and the design staff and myself with that kind of material," he said. "It's certainly not die easi­ est thing to approach, hut that ‘Merrily’ rolls away from escapism Not exactly Brooklyn, but hey, what the hell — Austin rappers M.C. Kool Pop, J.T. Def and Rockmaster K.J. work of community radio station KAZI, he claims that "they could have done a lot more for local rap with their original idea," and as­ serts that they have lapsed into the anti-rap mentality similar to that portrayed in Spike Lee's School Daze. the music biz savvy to provide the impetus for Lone Star Hip-Hop tal­ ent to bust out onto the national scene with or without help from what they term "the powers that be" in Austin. showcasing five of their acts in one night. "W e're not going to have people up there tuning their instru­ ments on stage ... we want to give Austin something serious." "A lot of people on the board of directors ... believe rap is a negative influence on the black commmuni- ty," Def said. "They don't under­ stand that black people aren't going to be helped by listening to LaVert or Luther Vandross." Keir Worthy, co-owner of the Austin-based promotion company, Hot Wax Productions, agrees. "Brothers have gotten too fucking bourgeois for their own good. Peri­ od. Every good black art form that comes along, they let slip away — jazz, blues, and now rap." Worthy and frequent partner Da­ vid Johnson, veterans of the music scene in Los Angeles, New York, and Detroit, believe that Austin's commercial radio has the power to significantly improve the climate for rap and all other local music. While he would not expect the radio sta­ tions to play music that was not "commercially viable," Worthy, a former Deejay in Detroit, would urge the Austin radio to become less regimented in its format, and to consistently support local music. "When a record company looks at a group, they like to see if it has a regional following," Worthy said. How can people here get a regional following if they can't even get air­ play in their own hometown?" Johnson and Worthy might just have the national connections and Through Hot Wax, they furnish regional representation and promo­ tional services for record stations and record labels around the coun­ try. In addition, Johnson owns the local Key Light Recording Studios, and has founded a record label, Big Head Productions. Big H ead's m ost am bitious project is a series of compilation al­ bums geared to promote the rap, funk, jazz, and R & B talent in Aus­ tin and Central Texas. The first LP is due in early Sep­ tember, and will feature several very strong rap acts, including QT 1 4 B C, a cerebral solo artist known also as John Tillman, the University of Texas track star and Olympic hopeful in the triple jump. Also featured on the album are Killeen's Those Hombres, with their compelling cut, Young Daddy. John­ son, a classically trained pianist who has toured with such groups as Peaches and Herb, possesses a real flair for Hip-Hop and R & B produc­ tion, which is sure to come out on this compilation. "This thing is going to hit the desk of every major label VP and promotion person," states Worthy, who has been engineering a promo­ tional campaign for the album over the course of the last three years. The producing/promoting duo are also planning "to beat people up with quality entertainment" with a series of shows on Sixth Street Johnson and Worthy place a premium on working reciprocally with other Hip-Hop producers in Austin. To their dismay, however, they must contend not only with poor coverage by local radio stations and the press, but also with a sel­ fish, manipulative attitude they say pervades local Hip-Hop. "My whole thing is to try and ex­ pand what little is happening here," Worthy said. "Unfortunately the at­ titude among local rap artists seems to be 'I gotta use you, and then step on you to get to the next plateau' ... there haven't been enough people even looking at this area to give a damn so why do we have to be dog eat dog about this?" Louis Black, editor of the Austin Chronicle, admitted that his paper's coverage of Austin Hip-Hop has been spotty, attributing the incon­ sistency to a lack of writers familiar with the genre. Yet he also pointed out that "Hip- Hop has always flourished as a re­ negade, revolutionary scene," and that perhaps the local movement has benefited and matured from not having been more focused upon in the past. Still, Austin rappers are working hard to get their scene together, and their innovative efforts deserve rec­ ognition. With a little play from the local radio and press, their music could really begin to mean some­ thing within the context of national Hip-Hop. On Stage: Well, they might be sideways in the photo above, but even so, ex­ pect an interesting entertaining show from They Might Be Giants at Liberty Lunch Friday night. The two-man band crafts wonderfully bent songs from the depths of their brains, like Absolutely Bill's Mood, I Hope That I Get Old Before I Die and Mr. Klaw. is there And of course the group's where-the-hell-did-that- come-from MTV hit Don't Let's Start, an exceedingly tuneful romp with one of the few truly great vi­ deos to come out in a while. If all that won't bring you to the show, maybe this will: Opening act for the Minneapolis duo is Glass Eye, hot on the heels of its excellent new album, Bent by Na­ ture. A good show. If The Blues are more your style, then by all means check out An- tone's Blues Reunion Saturday and Sunday nights, where a really fine lineup of Austin blues musi­ cians, including W.C. Clark, Grey Ghost and Johnny Copeland, will be jamming. Excellent place to drink a beer or eight and get lost in some A-I- blues tunes. Cover charge for both shows is $8. And for folks that like their mu­ sic good 'n weird, there's The Ex­ perimental Music Affair Friday night at Austin Media Arts (2118 Guadalupe St., above Quacken- like bush's). Avant garde acts Spot, Seemen and the Boxcar Chil­ dren will be making appearances at the show. Cover charge is $2 and the show starts at 8 p.m. instance, On Film: Some really great stuff going on at the Union movie theaters this there's weekend. For She’s Gotta Have It, Spike Lee's hi­ larious, insightful, other-pleasant- adjective debut. The film concerns sex and independence for a wom­ an who has three (count 'em, three) men to satisfy her urges. Seeing Spike say "Please baby baby baby please baby" is worth the $3, $2.50 with UT ID, price. Playing Friday and Saturday nights at the Union Theater, 7:30 p.m. Equally hilarious is Raising A ri­ zona, the sophomore effort from Ethan and Joel Coen. The Coen Brothers' first film, Blood Simple, a brooding, Hitchcockian murder mystery set just north of here in Williamson Countv, put firmly on the cinema map them But Raising Arizona, a furious dash through the great Southwest, is even better, and one of the fun­ niest movies you'll ever see. It stars Nick Cage and Holly Hunter of Broadcast News fame. Playing Friday and Saturday night at the Union Theater, 11:15 p.m. And if you're in the mood for something a little less frantic, see Lasse Hallstrom s award-winning film, My Life as a Dog. Bv turns touching, nostalgic, hilarious and the movie will definitelv sad, spark some deep reaction in one viewing it. Yes, it's that good. Playing Friday and Saturday at Hogg Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. through Shepard's memory, and this reversal of the traditional narra­ tive order poses Merrily's most in­ teresting performance problem, said Caspers. "It starts in 1980 and each scene that takes place happens ap­ proximately three to five years prior to the one that just happened," he said. "In essence for the actors — well, for all of us — it may be more like acting in a movie," Caspers said. "You know, where they'll shoot things out of sequence? Because you're not allowed the luxury, if you will, of a logical character devel­ opment. Or a chronological character development." For the transitions between each scene the ensemble becomes "al­ most like a Greek chorus," he said. They "direct themselves to the audi­ ence and ask the audience — this show isn't only about this major character here, it's about you too, and how did you get to where you're at right now?" He continued, "So while it's about Franklin Shepard, we are trying to include the audience in this, because that's the strength of the piece. "1 hope people leave kind of thinking back through their experi­ ence, and their travel through the last 20 years or so," he said. "And hopefuUy, we'll help people ask some fairly introspective questions about their own progress or trav­ els." M errily We Roil Along, 8 p.m. Friday ami Saturday. Alao Wednes­ days through Saturdays, June 22-25 and June 29-July 2 at the B. Iden Payne Theater in the Drama Build­ ing at 23rd Street ami San Jacinto Boulevard. Tickets $8, $6 UT stu­ dents and seniors. On sale at UTTM Ticket Centers and by phone at 477-6060. For more infor­ mation call 471-1444. lot Behind the Curtain to Theater goers have a choose from these days. Certainly one of the best plays around town takes place at Capitol Citv Play­ house — Billy's Last Broadcast It's a rapid-fire comedy concerning Bil­ ly, an early morning AM D) in Montana who hates his job, gets fired for it and then gets involved with a plot to hijack the station. Then things get weird Plot twists and decidedly witty dialogue per­ vade in local playwright Randall Wheatley's script. Plavs Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m., and Sun­ day at 2 p.m., with shows running through July 10. Tickets are $g. See the review of the play in Monday s Images for even more info. Another good choice is Ote Me Time, playing at Zachary Scott for T h e a tre . t i me Ju st in For Thought: Finally, in the very best Andy Rooney style, ever stop to think how hard moms have had it on television shows this past season? I mean, really? AP television writ­ er Kathryn Baker has, and here's her report: ■ Full House, mother dead ■ My Two Dads, mother dead ■ Valerie's Family, mother dead ■ I Married Dora, mother dead Pretty grim, huh? We here in the Entertainment Department have to wonder what exactly cer­ tain TV types have against moth­ ers. Sure, they give you complexes about sex and sure, they make you juneteenth Festivities, the musical is a view of black music in rurn-ot- the-centurv New Orleans A really wonderful cast makes this spicv and sensual musical come to life and then some Playing Fndav and Saturday at 8 p m gunda\ at 2:15 p m . with shows running through lulv 10. Tickets are $10. .And then there s the Stephen Sondheim musical Mtru ly Wr Roll Along plaving at B. iden Payne Theatre nght here on campus. The work concerns high school mends and their hoped-for path> to glorv This is the only I 1 Drama Depart­ this ment production going on summer so \o u should ^atcn it For more on the show >ee tne in­ terview with director Rod Caspers just to your left on this page eat na>t\ green things but isn t death a bit extreme ? Next season is not >o bad both moms and dads get it with both barrels, so the apparent evil thoughts are more evenly and ud- iciously spread. As Baker reports, we have: ■ Baby Boom, mother single ■ Close to Home mother off finding self • Dear John, husband divorced ■ Empty Nest, mother dead • The Robert Guillaume Show, father divorced ■ Paradise, children inherited, sis­ ter dead Mark Flores, Sandra Vais and Mark Boyet star in Merrity We Rot Along. makes it to me all the more excit­ ing." Caspers added that while he ad­ mires, and in fact has directed, sev­ eral productions of the more tradi­ tional brand of musical, he finds Merrily attractive because ot its chal­ lenging script and the story's more immediate, personal relevance for its actors and audience. 'T his particular story I think is very appropriate to the young per­ former, and I think it's very timely for any audience member, because we see three young people who are very, very close friends, and we see how that friendship lasted at times and they then disintegrated as passed through the years," said Caspers. "There's a whole lot in here about holding on to your dreams and fol­ lowing what you really want to do and being true to yourself," he con­ tinued. "And the consequences of denying or trying to put down your dreams or yourself or your friends." The story takes place in the mem­ ory of successful Hollywood pro­ ducer Franklin Shepard (Mark Flores) and centers on the collapse of his relationship with two old friends: Mary Flynn (Sandra Vails) and Charley Kringas (Mark Boyett). As the musical opens it is the 25th anniversary of Shepard's high school graduation. "In his speech Frank starts to tell the young students ... that they need to maybe understand what 'compromise' and 'practical' and tempering their dreams m eans," said Caspers. "Because life isn't going to be what they think it's going to be." The story moves backwards Page 10/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, June 17,1988 m iT Y “Si* W M M U ITBk 474-4381 1 ü ü W s MMDS SOON I | \ I \ M H HI M s i If V I I s ' " IN f M ' 'I 1 H I • I '>!•' STUDENT SPECIAL SUPERCUTS-Style Mokes the Difference 3 s C A 709 E. SIXTH STREET % BLOCK WEST OF IH 35 Happy Hour 4 to 9 pm THURSDAYS FRIDAY id by Free foi l buffet cet AUTHENTIC MEXICAN CUISINE FRIDAY — $1.50 Well Drinks til 11 pm Ladies Free Well Drinks till* 11 pm Open till 4 am SATURDAY-$1.50 Well Drinks till 11 pm Ladies Free Well Drinks till 11 pm Open till 4 am THE M O D E M S / i r \ i TODAY (5:10 (a $3.00) 7:30. 9:43 ONE WEEK ONLY! B e r t r a n d t a v e r n ie r CHALLENGES THE MYTH OF CHIVALRY IN AN EPIC TALE OF LOVE, COURAGE AND DEFIANCE. CAPITOL CITY PLAYHOUSE Presents ,k I r f? UsT t o ® The New Comedy by Randall Wheatley ("Bugs In The Systom” and "Along tor the Ride") June 9th-July 9th Wednesdays thru Saturdays at 8:00 p.m. (One matinee on June 26th at 2:00 p.m.) Working at the lowest rated radio station (KNOB) in the nation wasn’t that bad . until Billy got fired. Complimentary hors d oeuvres on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. Faculty, Students, Staff; tickets $5 Wed, Thurs; $7 Fri, Sat. 214 W. 4th St., 472-2966 •C A P ITO L A t n b s w l ■ B t f t l 452-2518 B O W L E V E R Y O TH E R G A M E FREE! EXPIRES JULY 5, 1988 H! i r « wiinf • S A K t . S U N H I N G Chinese Restaurant mi W I T Lunch Special at $2.99 Comb Dinner at $4.95 2 8 0 1 G u a d a l up e . Sui t e 4 Tel: 4 5 8 6 5 0 4 Dinner 2: JO pm- 10:00 pm Sun Thru 2: 6) pm 1 0: 10 pm f ri S.it am r c.i ft, i!J / Vrfv /•.»• aII in t. . at’\ . • Let SUPERCUTS treat you to a special $6 SUPERCUT "V That's $2 off our regularly 58-pnced SUPERCUT And, as a bonus, you can get a shampoo for only $1. Good only at these locations: Park Green Center at Riverside and Pleasant Valley 3025 Guodalupt at 30th & Guadalupe Valid through June 24 Not good w4b any odmr afVwr NO PASSES B IG (1 2:25-2:55-5:151-7:50-10:10 j * 0 T H K I F U N N Y F A R M ho passes ho ^ (12:00-2:35-4:551-7:25-9:50 T H E P R E S I D I O NOPASSTEf f ± t ± X I H X f | (1 1:00-1:25-3:35-5:451-8:10-10:25 R A M B O II I (11:40-2:10-4:351-7:15-9:40 NO PASSES B U L L D U R H A M hoM. s« I5I (12:30-3:05-5:301-840-10:15 R E D H E A T (12:00-2:30-5451-7:30-9:55 [Rj G R E A T O U T D O O R S NO PASSES (140-3:15-5:401-7:45-10:10 S T O R M Y M O N D A Y (11:45-245-5:151-7:15-9:30 LR) -------- IS _ W I L L O W NO PASSES (PC (11:15-1:50-4:251-7:45-10:20 I H X ICROCODILE DUNDEE 2 * ° ****«« ( 1 2 : 1 5 - 2 : 4 0 - 5 ^ ) 5 1 - 7 : 3 5 - 1 0 : 0 0 I M X * m R A M B O III no passes (1 1:20-1:20-3:20-5:251-8:05-10:30 r f í x g l l C T m o á r i : C R O C O D I L E D U N D E E 2 g p j NO PASSES TW O B IO S C R E E N S I 1 : 2 : (1 1 :4 5 -2 :1 5 -4 :4 5 1 -7 :1 5 -9 :4 5 (1 2:2 0 -2 :50 -5 :20 1 -7 :50 -1 0:2 0 ________ B IG B U S I N E S S N0PAS8i i l P (1 1 :3 0 -1 :3 5-3 :4 0-5 :4 5 1-8 :0 0-1 0 :1 0 T H X R A M B O I I I N0 PASSES R (11:15-1:20-3:30-5:351-7:45-9:50 _____ T H E P R E S I D I O NO PAS3E^ ® I H X (1 2 4 0 -2 4 0 -4 :0 0 -8 :0 0 1 -8 :1 0 -1 0 :1 5 N0PAS8ts F U N N Y F A R M TO (12:30-2:55-5:201-7:45-10:10 W I L L O W NO PASSES (12:15-2.40-5:05>-7:30-9:55 I zzzmÉs PAR EN THESES INDICATE DISCOUNTED SHOWS. SHO W TIM ES ARE FOR TODAY O NLY _A_ SUMMER CHILDREN’S M F I L M F E S T I V A L M TH E CARE BEARS? V I L L A G E ! J A V t L I N B O O T G R A IN S O F F A IT H H O I P O L L O I M IC H A E L J O H N S O N & T H E K IL E E R B E E S J • n • 2 M b T I M R I 'K 1 I oxer; Union 24 th & G u a d a lu p e Tonight In Concert LOUDON WAIN WRIGHT III Two allows: 8 & 10:30 pm Saturday TWO NICE GIRLS Texas Union 2 4th & G uadalupe University Market Facts... 77% of all students ot the university have a car in Austin Source The University Market Bekton Associates 1987 I t is th e d a y a fte r to m o rro w A m e n ta has been o v e rru n l e t h e lp is on th e w a y DENNIS HOPPER MICHAEL J. POLLARD of m mom sm n STARTS N E X T FR ID A Y !! General Cinema BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY FIRST MATINEE SNOW ONLY D O L B Y m m O = it BARTON CREEK M O RAC at LOOP 360 327-8281 SAMI DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES ★ GREAT OUTDOORS THX 1:25 3:25 5:25 7:35 9:45 PG POLTERGEIST III 1:30 3:35 5:40 7:45 9:50 P613 ★ BIG 1:00 3:05 5:10 7:15 9:20 PG ★FUNNYFARM 1:103:155:207:25 9:30 PG 1:05 9:45 PG H IG H L A N D M A LL HIGHLAND MALL BLVD. 451-7326 ★ BIG 1:25 3:30 5:35 7:40 9:45 PG MOONSTRUCK 1:30 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 PG CAPITAL P L A Z A 1-35 ot CAMERON RD. 452-7640 RED NEAT 1:00 3:105:20 7:30 9:40 R FUNNYFARM 1:45 3:45 5:45 7:45 9:45 PG THb UT Poportmu t of Jroma Summor Musko If Bockl Merrily TONIGHT A u s t i n 6 Ai)v ' TNy;‘ )ro 5 2 1 T H O M P S O N OFF 1 8 3 1 M IL F S O o f M O N T O P O L IS Phone 3 8 5 - 5 3 2 8 OPEN 2 4 HOURS IB P 1 ^ ■ T O RICHES (X) ADULT VIDEO SALES A RENTALS LOWEST PRICES-MAGAZINES VIDEO PEEPS IN A 6 CHANNEL ALL MALE AUDITORIUM University Market Facts... 78% of all UT students live in off-campus housing. 15% live in dormitories The aver­ age non-dormitory student household is 2.4 persons. Source 'The University Merkel Balden AModatee. 1987 FrktoyxwSsafurday, Junt 17-18 MlAj|flaA4jljMa4 SBbbmbbbmbBb CmAbimIjusb WMnlMvQQyl IT livU ^n wQIUFlKiyii Jun# 22-25 and Juna 29-July 2 8 p.m. B. Ickn Rayiw Thaatr* (23rd and San Jacinto) Charga-a Tkkaf: 477-6060 Information: 471-1444 University Market Facts... Within the past 30 days, students the university pu rchased of $1,394,790 worth of gasoline and oil for their automobiles. Source: "The University Market” Belden Associates, 1987 i f f i A n n tloo ALL DAY ALL S E A T S -A L L SHOW S MANN WESTGATE 4808 W ESTGATE BLVD m m MORNING VIETNAM f | f | W m 11:48 *18 4 *8 7:181*8 I I Tom SeaecK Steve GUttenberg, Te, TH MENANPA — 12401:1* §40 7:19 *4 0 W m SSm n r RETURN TO SNOWY RIVER II 114S24944S74091S [0 C TIMES PUBLISHED ARE FOR TQOAY ONLY 3 ¡ D O M I N O V i P IZ Z A M u ñ ] T H E B E S T P I Z Z A D E A L S ! Any medium (12") pizza with your favorite topping only $5.51 plus tax. Please mention coupon when ordering. One coupon per order. Expires 7/31/88 $5.51 476-7181 447-6681 404 W. 26th St. 474-7676 458-9101 4115 Guadalupe 913 N. Lamar 1931 E. Oltorf DT Ad 6.88 | I I I I I I I I I I I ' ^ M r * s p e c i a l g u e s t . HOUSE OF FREAKS SATURDAY, June 25 8 p.m. AUSTIN OPERA HOUSE B e a | r i c e A FILM BY BERTRAND TAVERNIER ACCLAIMED DIRECTOR OF “ROUND MIDNIGHT" AND “A SUNDAY IN THE COUNTRY" R TODAY: (5:05 (a $3.00) 7 :2 5 ,9 :4 5 DAILY BARGAIN MATINEES TILL 4 30 SUPER DISCOUNT DESIGNATED ( ) TWILITE SHOWS FRIDAY'S TIMIS ¿ im e d p §ü I tw i- lit e s h o w (tw i* lit' s h o ) n . i & m c T h e a t r e s ’d e e p e s t a d m is s io n d isc o u n t. 2. T e r m u s e d f o r m o v i e s s t a r t i n g b e t w e e n 4 . 3 0 an d 6 : 0 0 p .m ., d e sig n a te d in n e w sp a p e r by ( ). 3 D aily s h o w s p riced so yo u c a n s e e a l l t h e g r e a t m o v ie s a t ¿im c a s o fte n a s y o u lik e! 8 9 2 2 6 9 6 & BIN WHITE J N O lN A l A U D IT O R IU M S PIVFRSIDf A PLEASANT VALLEY RD ,1/ART §Tf Of ó SOUND IN A, 1 AÜÜftORIÜMí RED HEAT w 1 00-3:30-(545)-440-10:15-12:25 RED HEAT ON TWO SCREENS 12:50 3 10-(5:33)-7:55-KH5-12:15 BULL DURHAM * 12J0-2 50-(5:15)-7 35-9 55-12^5 COLORS k 12:09-2 »-(5«5/-7:45-10^5-12 20 PRESIDIO k 12:29-2:50-(5:15,-7:25-1:35-1145 WILLOW |p<. 11J9* 2:39-14:55(-7-25-1:55 THE LAST EMPEROR lro<»i 12:40(1 45,-9:05-11 25 M ILA G R O M A N F IIL D WAR « 12.-99-2 39- 5 95i-7 45-tO 15 NORTHCROSS 6 14 5 4 6 1 4 7 N O H 'H TH O V , MA, ANOTH'jON & BUftN tr ' / , 'r? s ' , ’ Í t * l ' j it * f O* f ( / j f t A ( O ff .M L BIG BUSINESS ^ ON TWO SCREENS! 13:39-3:45-(549)-7:39-1:49-1145 WILLOW rci I :15-f4.30¡-7:15-1:59-ia:l5 P O L T I R G f 1ST III tová 12i4»-M 9-(3:3tr745-1945-1245 CROCODILE DUNDEE II * . onmotaMMU tCMIN 1:1249219-f449(-749-1:25-11:55 8CRMM2:149-3;39-(5i49)-949-1439 GREAT OUTDOORS tra) 12:59-340-(5:25)-7:45-1040-12:10 BULL DURHAM k 12:29-249-(545)-7:25-1:45-1245 CROCODILE DUNDEE II trvi 12:10-2:39-(4:55)-7:154:35-1145 BIG 1x8 1249-2:50-(5:15)-7:35-U5-11 55 RAMBO III h 1:00-3:29-(5:35)-745-1045-12:10 BIG BUSINESS ipoi 12:39-2:39-(4;55)-7; 15-1:25-11:35 POLTERGEIST III ipvisI 140-3:10-(5:55)-445-1919-12:15 4 m m m , SALSA 2:30 5:39-7:45-1:45 arruiNTo bad I I m e t# STAND A DELIVER Ipoi 240-5 15 7 391:54 FOX* . s m 4 . I I SOUTHWOOO 2 *** FRIDAY THi xm u A4S8 W. M N WMTI FOX* FMDAYTM 2*$$i mom I ■ " « ¿ H M M * tmu ■ M0M TIN 5 IHiKttHiU IMbCOUNf I HI AIHI C H IN IS K Í m C ALL G IR L O F 1988 p M & W m — i n w h w b m i m 1 ( T h e Da il y T e x a n C l a s s if ie d A d v e r t is in g Friday, June 17,1988 Page 11 VISA/MasterCard Accepted For Word ads, call 471-5244/For Display ads, call 471-1865/8 a.m.-4:30 p.m Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitis Avenue VISA/MasterCard Accepted H| MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360— Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. CLASSIFIED ADVIRTISING Consecutiva Doy Rotas 15 w o rd minim um Each w o rd 1 l i m a Each w o rd 3 timas Each w o rd 5 timas Each w o rd 10 timas Eoch w o rd 15 timas Each w o rd 2 0 timas $ .32 . . . . $ .87 . . . . $ 1 .3 0 . . . . $ 2 .2 0 . . . . $ 2 .5 5 . . . . $ 2 .8 0 p a r insertion 1 col. x 1 in ch 1 tim a . . . . $ 6.00 $1.00 charge to change copy. First tw o w o rd s m ay be oN capital letters. 2 5 c fo r each a d d itio n a l w o rd in ca pita l letters. M astercard a nd Visa accepted. E E DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d a y T e x a n ............... Friday 11am Tuesday Texan . tot ay 11am W e dnesday Texan . .Tuesday 11am Thursday Texon. .W e dn e sda y 11am Friday Texan . . . . Thursday 11am . . 1st t h e e v e n t o f e r r o r s m o d e In J 8, 111, ------- ■------ ,Uee to- , p i n p a id k in a r t c t i v i c n o n s u p M r e q u e s t e d a t t o e o f c a n c e R a - M e n . a n d I f a m o u n t e x c e e d s $ 2 .0 0 . SMp m u s t b e p r e s en t e d f o r a r e o r d e r w it h in 9 0 d a y s t o b e v a lid . C r e d it s lip s e r e n o n - I CLASSIFICATIONS ■ 1 TATION MERCHANDISE 1 0 -M te c . Autos 2 0 — Sports-Foreign Autoe 3 0 — Tracks* Vans 4 0 — Vahktos to Trade 0 0 — Sendee Itopalr * 0 — Parts-Accessories 7 0 — Motorcycles 0 0 — Bicycles 9 0 — Vehicle Leasing 100— V ehicles W anted REAL ESTATE SALES 110— Services 120— Houses 130— Condos-Townhouses 140— M obile H oaies-Lott 130— A creage-tots 160— O u p le x e s -H n H H 170— W anted 100— Loans MERCHANDISE 190— Appliances 20 0— nltu 21 0 — Stereo-TV 22 0— M Niters- Household 2 3 0 — Photo-Cameras 2 4 0 — Boats 23 0— Musical Instruments O AA U - L L . I --- 2 7 0 — M achinery- Kqulpment 200 — Sporttng-Cam ping Equipm ent 2 9 0 — Furniture-Appliance 3 0 0— O arage Rummage 310- 32 0— W anted to Buy RENTAL 350— ft*n tal 360— Fum . Apts. 370— U ni. Apts. 300— Fum . Duplexes 39 0— U nf. Duplexes 4 0 0 — Condos-Townhouses 41 0— Fum . Houses 42 0— U nf. Houses 42 5— Rooms 4 3 3 — Co-ops 4 3 0 -M o M e Homes-Lots 46 0— Business Rentals 4 7 0 — Resorts 4i0m>SlDNMM IfM UR 49 0— W anted to Rent-Loose ANNOUNCEMENTS 31 0— in tertaln m ent-Tlckets 52 0— Personals 53 0-T ra v e l- 34 0— Lost A Found ■ ¡ S I 330 d icensed Child Care 36 0— Fufalk Notice 57 0— Mustc-Musldans EDUCATIONAL 5 8 0— M usket Instruction 590-T u to rin g 6 0 0 — Instruction W anted 6 1 0 — Misc. Instruction SERVICES 6 2 0 — Legal Services 6 3 0 — Computer Services 650 — M ovbtg-Houllng A A A — V f O r D f f DR V 67 0— Fainting SERVICES 6 0 0 — Office 6 9 0— Rental Equipment 700— Furniture Repair 710 _ AppUonct lip o lr 72 0— Stereo-TV Repair 730— Home Repair 740— Bley do Repair 75 0-T y p in g 760— Misc. Services EMPLOYMENT 77 0— Employment Agencies 78 0— Employment Services 79 0— Part tim e 80 0— G eneral Help W anted 8 1 0 -O ffic e -C le ric a l 820 — cc iting- Bookkeeplng 830— A dm inistrative- 84 0— Sales 850— Retail 860 — Engineering- Technical ura 870— Medical 88 0— Professional 890— Clubs-R 9 0 0 — Pom ostk-Hou sohold 91 0— Positions W onted 92 0— W ork W anted BUSINESS 930 — Business Opportunities 94 0— Opportunities W anted TSP BuÜding, Room 3 .2 0 0 2 5 0 0 W h it» M o n d a y th rou g h Friday 8 a m -4 :3 0 p m 471-5244 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 10 —Misc. Autos 10 —Misc. Autos 20 — Sports-Foreign 70 — Motorcycles speed, stereo, 2 4 K miles. Extra nice. $ 6 9 9 5 . A uto Trends. 6 7 2 4 Burnet Road, 4 50 -0 12 8 . 7 -6 N ______________________ Sriah i. Li '8 3 M U S TA N G GT H.gh output V 8. T- top, AC, show room condition. $ 5 0 0 0 / o ffer. 837-1910.7-11__________________ * * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR CAR! We Buy Cars CaETony @ 4 4 5 -5 7 8 7 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * I ENJOYABLE i * DEFENSIVE * : Í DRIVING i { COURSE! £ £ • Traffic Ticket ★ * J * • Weeknight & ★ * Weekend Classes Dismissal J ca/rN C TI * 3 3 9 -4 7 8 1 J * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ AUTOMOBILES W e Buy Your C a r O r Truck Running O r Not. 2 5 1 - 2 8 8 1 A ft e r 5 :0 0 p.m .: 2 4 4 - 1 4 7 7 7-21C '81 BUICK Century, AT, PS/PB, A M /F M , cassette, new tires, 6 0 ,0 0 0 miles, $ 2 3 5 0 Coll 3 2 3 -2 7 9 7 .8 -1 2 ___________ 1975 FORD TO RINO . G o o d student car. High mileage. Runs g oo d. $ 5 2 5 . 4 4 7 - 9891. Leave M essage 8-12 1981 OLDS O M E G A , 5 7 ,0 0 0 miles, ex- ceHent condition. $2,100. 4 5 2 -7 5 3 6 . 8- 12____________________________________ 6 7 M U S TA N G 6-cylinder, outomatic, new paint, new engine, restored to ong - inol. $ 3 5 0 0 , n egotiable 4 7 7 -9 4 2 0 7-14 *86 REGAL Limited. Loaded. Excellent condition. Unlim ited m ileage W o rro n ty available 17,000 miles. M ust sell. 2 5 0 - 8 2 0 5 . 8-12___________________________ U N C O L N TO W NC AR S: leother intenor, m o o n ro o f, series, 1 9 8 4 - $ 7 5 0 0 , 1 9 8 3 -J 6 7 5 0 . A fte r 6 p.m 3 4 3 - 0 4 5 4 . 8-12 sig n a tu re sharp. $ 5 ,0 0 0 negotiable 8-12 EE3 5 7 3 . '7 8 MERCURY C o ua a r RX7. Pow er w in ­ dows and sun r o o f 9 5 k miles. G o o d c o n d itio n -$1050. 4 9 9 -8 3 3 3 . 8-12 1976 C A M A R O V 8. N e w tires, A C A M / FM stereo, great condition. Best offer. $1500, coH A m y 4 7 9 -6 9 5 8 8-12 * 1 FORD ESCORT, 2 -d o o r, 4 -speed, A / C $ 1 ,2 0 0 o r best offer. 3 3 1 -5 5 3 2 8-12 1979 CUTLASS SUPREME. Excellent ru n ­ ning condition. M ust sell. Best o ffe r over $1,700 C oll tyso. 328-5131 doys 8-12 1983 Datsun 2 0 0 SX Hatchback. G re a t co le g e cor. SGL package, loaded. A l­ pine. N ego tia ble. M ust sell. 2 80 -3 15 4 . 8- 12____________________________________ MUST SELLI 85 M ustang convertible new tires, d eo n, $ 8 9 0 0 o r offer. 3 3 1 -4 6 0 7 8-12__________________________________ 1980 MERCURY CAPRI 2 -d o o r, 4-speed runs g ood. tope, 7OK, A Q A M /F M $ 2 ,0 0 0 negotiable 4 7 2 -9 4 8 4 , Randy. 8-12_________________________________ 1979 FORD Foumont. Runs g o o d , lo w miles, AT, PB, PS C all 3 4 6 -5 0 5 1 A ny- tim el 8-12 RED HOT bargoms! Drug dealers' cars, boots, planes repo'd. Surplus. Your area. Buyers G uide (1) 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext. S- 9413 7 -2 5 1957 PLYMOUTH Looks G re at $ 1500 0 8 0 CoH to see Robert 4 7 7 -1 8 5 4 8- 12____________________________________ '8 7 N E W Yorker Turbo, silver/blue, lo a d ­ ed, leather seats. Like new, must sell. O n ly $11,500 3 2 8 -2 7 5 8 . 8-12 1973 MERCURY B R A G H A M Fully load ed, excellent condition, lo w milage. For m ore inform ation caD 4 67 -8 15 0 . 6 -2 4 1985 C A M A R O Bedinetta autom atic, T- t i, A M /F M cassette, PS/PB. Loaded. 5 0 0 2 5 9 -2 2 6 8 , 8 3 2 -5 4 3 1 6-21 C A N Y O U buy Jeeps, Cors, 4 x 4's Seized in drug roids fo r under $100.007 Cod fo r facts to d o y 6 0 2 -8 3 7 3401 Ext 723. 6-17___________________________ 1973 MERCURY B R A G H A M Fudy lo ad ed, excellent condition, lo w im leoge. For m ore inform ation cad 4 67 -8 15 0 . 6 -2 4 V 1970 CHEVROLET M okbu, fo u r door, runs great, $ 8 0 0 o r best o ffe r Cad D e r­ rick 4 7 4 -6 3 1 8 a nytim e 6 -2 7 74 V O L V O w a g o n $ 8 0 0 ; 68 K ar m onnG hio $ 1 7 0 0 ,6 3 Rombler Classic station w a go n $ 7 0 0 A ll in g oo d co n d i- tion 371 3 2 4 3 6 -2 2 ___________________ '8 5 PLYMOUTH H O R IZ O N 2 6 ,0 0 0 miles. Excellent co n d itio n O n g in o l ow n e r Cod I 491 9314 6 29_________ 1985 LASER TURBO 5-speed, ve ry d eon, lilt cruise, sunroof, b ra louvres 3 6 ,0 0 0 miles $ 5 9 9 5 251 9 0 3 9 6 21__________ FOR SALE V W S upeibeetie, 1974 O ne ow ner, g o o d condition $ 17 50 o r best o ffe r C oil 441 0 2 3 4 7 6______________ FOR SALE 1941 antique C hevrolet-spe­ cial deluxe 7 5 ,0 0 0 miles, block, 2 -d o o r Excellent beauty a nd condition $ 3 5 0 0 3 27 4 9 2 0 ,9 2 8 6 5 9 0 8 12___________ 1985 CHEVROLET Cavalier, 4 door, black, AC, Sony A M /F M ca ssette, 68K, excellent condition $ 3 4 0 0 4 5 4 -8 5 3 5 7 -6 _______________ ____________ 1968 CHEVROLET Im pala, $ 4 0 0 . 1977 H o n d a A cco rd , 1981 Ford Fairmont, $1000. 1975 D o dg e Von, $1000. A ll in g o o d condition. 4 7 2 -8 1 2 0 evenings, weekends. 7-12 $ 9 0 0 1977 TRANS Am. Black, b urgundy in teri­ or, cruise, AC, A M /F M cossette. Perfect condition. $2150. 4 5 3 -1 3 5 9 8-12 ASSUME L O A N on 1987 Escort W o g on . Excellent condition. 2 8 0 -3 8 4 2 . 6 -3 0 1981 M U S TA N G , grey, 5-speed, hatch- back, g o o d condition. Sacrifice $1995. N ego tia ble, cod M un a t 4 7 9 -0 7 2 3 .6 -2 0 1972 V O L V O Station W o g o n . G re a t shape, needs new engine (2 liter fuel in- jection). $ 4 0 0 . 476-4111. 6 -2 0 __________ 1986 D O D G E 6 0 0 C onvertible. Beautiful w hite e xtenor. A ll extras , m utt see to a ppreciate $ 9 2 5 0 1 -2 9 5 -2 0 5 6 . 6-21 '7 9 CHEVETTE, AC, A M /F M , fo u r door, (W )4 5 0 - runs and looks g o o d $ 7 0 0 4 0 4 7 , (H )331-6427. 6-21______________ 1981 CHEVETTE professor's cor in excel­ lent condition. 5 3 ,0 0 0 miles, AC, asking $ 2 ,0 0 0 , b o o k value $ 2 4 0 0 4 5 8 -8 0 3 7 6-22_________________________________ GRADUATE SALE. 1980 Ford Mustang. $ 9 0 0 o r best offe r. V ery reliable. Coll Simon, 4 6 9 -0 8 2 8 . 6 -2 2 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 7 9 SCIROCCO. 4-speed, air, lo w miles, Pioneer system, m oo nro o f, fo g lights. 4 7 8 -4 0 3 4 a fte r 6. 8-12________________ '6 7 BUG. G re a t condition, high p e rfo rm ­ ance engine, $ 9 0 0 o r best offe r. 4 4 3 - 7 8 9 5 .8 -1 2 ___________________________ FOR SALE; 1986 H o nd a CRX, excellent condition, 3 4 ,0 0 0 miles, AC, autom atic cossette player, $ 6 5 0 0 Dick, 3 88 -1 36 6 . 8-12__________________________________ '71 M G B GT, g re at condition, runs g oo d, looks g oo d. M ust sed. $1100 O B O . 2 8 2 - 7 3 5 9 . 8-12 1974 CORVETTE O R A N G E, T-Top, auto, air, superb condition, $ 6,100, b o o k va l- ue, $ 5 ,9 0 0 1 -2 6 2 -2 2 0 2 (Kyle) 6-10 86 RX7 TINTED glass, excellent c o n d i­ tion, lo w mileage, $ 9 ,7 0 0 . 2 4 4 -0 7 6 0 , evenings and weekends 8-12 1973 V O L V O runs wed, dependable, $1,500. 3 2 2 -0 3 5 8 , Jerry. 8-12_________ 1983 V O L V O DL w o g o n AC, A M /F M , 5- speed, cruise, 8 2 K miles, tin ted glass, $ 7 ,8 0 0 Cod 1 -2 8 5 -4 2 3 8 8-12_________ 1984 SUBARU G L W o g on . 'M u te, e xcel­ le nt plush interior, p o w e r w in d o w s/ m ir­ rors, new M ich e liiu . W id negotiate 4 7 2 - 9911 8-12 1976 ALFA R O M E O Spyder ow ner. Rebuilt engine. N e w top, seats, battery, records $ 3 ,5 0 0 . 3 3 1 -4 8 6 0 8-12 Ivory, 1 1983 M A Z D A RX-7, 5-speed, A /C . sun roof, g re a t co d $ 5 9 5 0 . A uto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rd. 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 8 -1 2N 1983 CHEVROLET C A M A R O , 5 speed, A /C , stereo. 3 9 ,0 0 0 miles. 1 o w ne r A uto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rd 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 8-12N ________________________________ 1979 H O N D A PRELUDE 5-speed, A /C . p o w e r sunroof. G re a t condition $ 2 2 5 0 A ta o Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet, 4 50 -0 17 8 . 8 -12N ________________________________ 1976 M G MIDGET. Redl 4-speed, stereo, 5 8 ,0 0 0 o rig in a l miles. $ 19 50 A uto Trends 6 7 2 4 Burnet, 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 8 -1 2N 1974 DATSUN 2 6 0 2 , 4-speed, A /C Super d eon, super condition. $ 2 4 5 0 A uto Trends 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rd 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 8-12N ________________________________ 1985 N IS S A N SENTRA Deluxe, red. 4 d oo r, loaded. M u tt see. $ 4 8 0 0 4 4 8 - 2661 8-12 F IN A N C IN G AVAILABLE, 1985 Renault Adionce 1.7L. Blue, 4 -d o o r, AC, new brakes. $ 2 5 0 0 Susan, 4 4 2 -9 6 0 3 , 4 2 2 - 5 5 6 3 8 12 1985 SCIROCCO Super mee, lo a d e d Kom ei XL sport package, $ 8 0 0 0 value, osfcmg only $ 5 7 0 0 . 8 3 5 9 0 9 8 8-12 1973 SUPER8EATLE, dep en d ab le Irons $ 9 9 5 portattan, spirited perfo rm an ce 9 2 6 8 9 7 7 8-12 86 SUBARU XT A M /F M cassette, loaded, beoutiful. $ 8 ,5 0 0 neg otia b le Cad Lou, 3 2 8 7 7 4 4 o r 3 8 5 3 6 0 8 8 1 2 1980 FORD M ustang G h w 5 0 V 8 ,o u to make, AT, AC, stereo, g re at t o i $ 1950 A uto trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rood 4 50 - 0128 7 6 1984 V W RABBIT Convertible, ta w m4e age, looks beotriiful. g re a t condition $ 8 0 0 0 o r best o ffe r Cad 4 7 4 -6 3 1 8 a n y ­ tim e 6 27 10—Misc. Autos PROFESSIONALLY INSTALLED j M IT O H D N D O W •25Any Ful Auto Tint i I! db Autos ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ J !! S U M M E R * Í S A LE !! * : * ta. 2 43,000 m ile s ......................... $2895 ^ 2 P « n FUN-FUN-FUN. W 19*0 Tnumpto Spitfire. British ra n g ^ 19WToyo«»4i4Loogbed pick-up Blue, 5 spd. AC. PS................... $1695 J * 72 Porsche 914,5 sp. AC, 58,000 ♦ )$. m ile s .................................... $3295 ) f 77 Corvette, white, AT, sir, excellent )$■ caod n ...................................$7995 ta . 1981Cqxi,aaeowwr,AC,5q>.,PS, j, * very cla n ................................ $2195 ^ ^ 1985 JeepCJ7, low miles, soft £ top, d a n ............................. $7995 2 J 1985 S-10 Pickup, very clan. . . $4995 ^ * * * 5 Vic Sumner It j * Motors * 724 N. Lamar J ! 479-0193 ; * 4 - SELL Í + BUY * * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 1966 V W convertible, fully restored Red in color, m ag wheels, excellent c o n d i­ tion. 1-795-12075, M a n d io c a anea 8 4 2 1973 VW , SQUARE back, new tires, new seats, $ 8 0 0 ,4 7 8 -3 0 4 4 , evenings. 6-17 runs well. Clean, dep en d ab le 1984 SUBARU HATCHBACK, 4 speed, AC, stereo. Excellent 7 9 ,0 0 0 miles, new togs, new 7 0 3 7 8-12___________________________ inspection $ $ 2 4 9 5 . 4 5 4 - 1977 280Z, runs g oo d. M ust sacrifice. Best offer. Com e and see. 4 4 5 -6 1 7 6 8- 12____________________________________ 1978 RABBIT, 8 7 ,0 0 0 miles, new brakes. A /C , stereo, runs gre at $ 12 00 nagoti- oble Cod 4 7 9 -0 8 6 9 6 -2 2_____________ 1985 SUBARU GL. A il pow e r, AAA/FM cassette, lo w mileage, excellent co n d i­ tion Cod G oyle, 4 4 2 -3 6 2 1 .6 -2 7 1972 M G M id g e t G re at condition, new brakes, recent poin t jo b, g o o t tires, w o o l seat covers. A lp ine stereo optio na l $ 2 2 0 0 C oll 4 7 8 -5 0 6 3 . 7-1____________ 85 CONVERTIBLE M U S T A N G GT lo ad ed. Low miles. Silver bullet Sacrifice. $ 1 0 ,9 0 0 .4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 7-1________________ RESTORED CLASSIC: 1978 Tnumph TR7 $ 4 0 0 0 , O B O . N e w engine, suspension, electrical, in terior, paint, brakes, etc. 251- 4 34 1.6 -2 1 1974 MERCEDES 2 8 0 4 door, autom at­ ic, a ir cond itio ne d Looks a nd runs great $ 4 0 0 0 . 2 8 2 -5 4 7 0 evenings. Doys, 4 4 3 - 2001 ask fo r Berrtre. 7 -6 1 985 M A Z D A RX7 GS W hite, AT, sun- roo f, A lp ine stereo, 26K miles, $ 7 9 5 0 A uto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rood 4 5 0 - 0128. 7 -6 N ___________________________ 1981 V W Rabbit Convertible 5-speed, stereo. N e w point G re at condition $ 4 9 5 0 . A uto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rood 45 0 -0 1 2 8 . 7 -6 N ______________________ 1 980 DATSUN 280ZX. 5 -speed, loaded, stereo/cossette. N e w Pirellis $ 3 4 9 5 A uto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet Road, 4 5 0 - 0128. 7 -6 N ___________________________ 1968 K A R M A N G x C oupe M e ch an i­ c a ly sound. B o d y/in te n o r excellent $ 2 2 0 0 . 3 2 0 -8 0 6 1 . 7-11________________ 1981 H O N D A A ccord w ith b roken heod gasket. M ust sell. M a ke offer, 4 5 4 -9 13 9 6 21 30 — Trucks-Vans '86 D O D G E R am charger 2 5 0 SE Royal 4 x4, im maculate, lo w mileage, loaded, $12,988. 2 8 0 2801 6-10______________ SURF/PARTY W A G O N 71 Ford Postal V a n -re e k s o f charocter -looks, g re at $1,150. 4 7 7 -1 8 3 4 8-12 runs 70 — Motorcycles Moped Special New 1987 Suzuki FA50H $399 with copy of this ad. Aus­ tin Suzuki. 444-9528. South of the River; Ben While and Gillis. All prices + TT&l. ^ 6-17C TJ's SALES & SERVICE Austin's New Alternative for: USED 5KE&, PARTS. ACC I SERVICE MO NO A YAM AHA KAWASAKI. SUZUKI SPRING TUNE UP SPECIAL 10% O f f W /A D Registered Technicians 6721 NORTH LAMAR 2 btoda south of loman 4 Aifport Turn on Raymond 453-6255 6 -2 3 8 1983 H O N D A 250X1 5 0 0 0 miles G o o d lunm ng nwsdition $ 7 5 0 ot best o fte . 3 2 2 9671 2814 W indsor 6-17 BRIGHT RED H o nd o tk te 1501 Beoutiful co nd itio n I Runt kke a dreom ! $ 7 5 0 O B O C o l Steve 4 8 2 9141 o . 4 8 2 8 7 0 4 C o l after 8 0 0 p m 6 17 FOR SALE 1985 H o nd o A ero 8 0 scooter, r onfmoty bosket excellent 8 7 5 0 /b e U o ffe i 451 2 3 5 8 6 2 0 red w / 1985 H O N O A El l i t 150 Red, taw mde age. $ 9 0 0 or beU o fle r Co* 4 7 2 5 0 9 9 6-20 '8 3 INTERCEPTOR V 4 5 Cleon and fast New krex. chain, a n d tuned $ 16 00 neg Col Andy 4 7 4 -4 2 2 0 6-21_____________ •1 SUZUKI 4 5 0 GSl Great contftkon now pat*. I parts. $ 5 0 0 o r beet o ffe r Cad 4 5 4 - 3243 6-21_______________________ 3 .6 -2 1 1966 6 0 0 N n p looks great, under 9 0 0 0 m let New krex tuned up ond reedy to run. $ 2 9 5 0 . C al Stave or Rax 327-4121. 7 18 21! J H O N D A . 459-3311 Full Selection of Motorcycles & Scooters Check on Our '87 WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6 5 0 9 N . LAMAR 1985 H O N D A 2 5 0 ELITE Like new, 4 9 0 miles. $ 9 9 9 o r best o ffe r 4 4 2 -3 3 7 7 , 4 7 9 -8 0 8 5 6-21_______________________ H O N D A PASSPORT C-90, g o o d condi lio n $ 3 0 0 (W )4 5 0 -4 0 4 7 , (H )331-6427 6-20_________________________________ Y A M A H A 1982 Seca 7 5 0 S upenor co n ­ dition, sports fernng, Bell helm et in clud­ ed 3 6 0 0 miles. $ 19 80 8 34 -3 6 8 1 6 -2 3 80 — Bicycles (while fhev last) ’(7 MOUNTAIN MM Buaaostovn*",-; m s , BUCK’S BIKES 4613 Springdale 926-2610 VISA, MC Am t«p Decover Welcome • fit! • 75 BIKES $25 and UP 2 A ustin Locations North-54lh & Airport (Satwwoy! South-S lom ar & Ottor* (Safwwoy) EVERY S A T U R D A Y 9 -5 AUSTIN BICYCLE SALVAS! 9 2 8 -4 9 0 0 6 3 C M BERTONI N k b rood bike C o­ lumbus fro me, all 6 0 0 EX $ 3 7 5 CaD evenings 4 7 9 -6 4 7 9 6-17 2 0 IN C H Um vega 12-speed «ounng bike Tip-ihifters, rack, ndden only fo u r nmes. $ 2 0 0 4 4 0 -7 9 1 7 6-17_________________ BRAND N E W bikes ho le a g u e fun - $ 2 7 5 hers Um vega M a xim a Una - $ 2 0 0 CoH Chris, 4 7 8 -3 1 5 8 6-21 10-SPEED BICYCLE G rione CHromoiy fram e - excellent condition. $ 2 5 0 4 40 - 7951 6-21 REAL ESTATE SALES 120 — Houses Downtown and UT — Professionals, beautiful house o rc o 1920 — Tnov» Heights a re a Q uiet stre e t, huge tre a t 2- 1, hrepioce w o o d ftaors, washer connac- tion. Fenced b ockyo rd L o u than 1 m4e fro m d o w n to w n — the onfy quotay a rea Ih a d o s a . 442-4901 6 -2 3 130 — Condos - Townhousas UT C O N D O 2400 SPEEDWAY #204 8 blocks from campus. 2 bedroom studio. 850 square feet. $54,000. 451-6961. * 2 3 FURNISHED 2-1 co nd o E n M d Shuttle A va ila b le second summer equ ip o G o o d table*, e * bads, now carpet, sofa, $ 5 3 ,5 0 0 4 7 2 2 0 9 3 o r Houston. 713- 9 56-9110 6 -2 3 _______________________ MERCHANDISE 200 — FumHura- Hoiisahold CARPET REMNANT SALE * 12 It > 9 N or larger Quatay carpels, poputoi coton. variety of Vytec $4 9 5 /tq yd. ond up * Block piush Saxony suitable tar home and auto. $6 95/sq yd * Slnng doth, g ro a and papular ptU em __________________ *17 M f 9 a * 5 p m Sat 9-2 pm SUMMER SPECIALS! EXECUTIVE SWIVEL CHAIRS $48.88 30 x 6 0 DESKS $90.00 $2800 GUEST CHAIRS FOLDING TABLES.................... $ 3 *0 0 Cox Office Products 346-1120 10938 Research, M-F 8:30- 5.30, Sat. 10-4 7-121 UPRIGHT P IA N O 1920 W erler (O v c o go) D a rk b ra w n w o o d C ulU ctib le a n ­ tique. $ 3 5 0 / 0 8 0 459-6110, le ave mes «age. * 1 3 ____________________________ MUST SELL S cootei best oHm 3*6 3 4 5 7 6 24 1985 H o nd o Elrt. 80 In g o o d condition $ 7 5 0 or walpaper $8 95 l/ r 704 S. tae u r 200 — Furniture- | Household 1 LIKE N E W Q u a a m ize mattress boxspring $150. Linen C abinet $ 2 5 . Lamp 1 25 Cash only. A fte r 5pm 4 7 3 8 3 6 4 . 6-17 SMALL DINETTE w ith fo u r ch a in , like new, $ 50 . (W )4 5 0 -4 0 4 7 , (H )331-6427 6-20_________________________________ THREE-4 d ra w e r legal file cabinets, $50. Each A lp h a M usk; Centers 4 7 7 -5 0 0 9 . 6-17V FULL SIZE MATTRESS, b ox spnng with fra m e . O n e y e o r o ld . E x c e lle n t $125. G a ry 4 6 7 -8 5 4 6 after condition 6pm. 6-21 220 — Computers- Equipment COMPUTER G AM ESI D S D role playing N e w lo w rates. 3 0 0 /1 2 0 0 baud, 8 lines. 2 8 0 -0 2 3 0 .6 -2 4 ______________________ EGA CO LOR m onitor. $ 3 7 5 . Plus cord, $125 C oll Enc 2 5 0 -8 8 4 7 .6 -2 2 TANDY COMPUTER TRS 8 0 -ill softwore modem cost $1,195, now $4751 N e w prince graphites, $1951 2 6 6 -2 7 5 6 1-598-2135 6 -2 2 vt socole, 250 — Musical Instruments HAYENES C Bute. Closed hole, C foot. V ery g o o d condition A p p ro xim a te ly 22 years old. 4 4 5 -2 0 3 0 evenings and weekends. 6-17 FOR SALE: Rotond gurtor Synth GR 7 0 0 + GR 3 0 3 gm tor Coll 4 4 2 -6 2 5 9 6-17 340 — Misc. UTVI MO DIFIED b oom b ox produces light, sound, stim ulation fo r mind maviesl Free in fo rm a tio n with SA5E: STARWAYS Dept DT PO Box 161232 Austin, Texas 7 8 7 1 6 .6 -2 2 __________________________ la cy V cto n a n -p yle BEAUTIFUL WHITE w e dding dress. $ 3 5 0 Detachable trom. Sixe 5 -6 Shen, 4 5 2 -4 7 0 6 6 -2 2 ________ SEARS HO M E stereo, $ 5 0 ; Tyco roce cor set, $30; 18" borbeque pit, $12. Jon, 4 63-9176, 836-5011 6 -2 2 _____________ O fFIC E DESKS, $ 4 5 eoch Chairs, $ 3 0 each W ing bock chairs, $ 5 0 Beoutiful condition Coll today, 4 5 3 -4 9 9 0 6 -22 RENTAL 350 — Rental Services F R E E [Leasing Service] Condos • Apertments Hooecs • D uptras It's s junfft* oot there heave the hunting to us? I I 482 -8 65 1 V ' 503 W . 3 0th h a b i t a t h u n t e t t s , FREE LOCATOR SERVICE f r t * tra n s p o rta tio n p r e n d e d Best a n d tn e n a h e s t service in tow n Th om e* G Thom pson Jr — 9 J REALTORS 4 5 2 -8 6 2 5 24 h ou rs a day FREE L c u to f Service • Campus • N. Austin I I 1 ■ I • RiverwieOttorf 1 * 5 Austm I I «7 7 1 • 4434111 1931E. Ofeorf JB Goodwim 134 W 1 V 340 — Fum. Apts. C haparosa A partm ents 3110 Red R iv e r C L O S E T O U .T . S m all, quiet, q u ality com plex 2 blocks from Law, on shuttle; attrac­ tiv ely furnished, w ith pool, laundry, and all b ills paid. Efficiency to 3BR 4 7 4 - 1 9 0 2 5 Blocks West UT immoaitate one Large, quiet bedroom effiaances. Kitchen, wolk in d okaty loundry, gat heat cooking, wafer/gas fumahad Owner manogad. Summer— $225. Fa#— $249 Rad Oak Apartments, 2104 San GabrieL 476-7916. 7-4 ★ BEAUTIFUL CHEAPEST * 1 8 0 2 W A v e . Tha cawptae ■ a m o f t w meed apartawna m \ M Canpwe gnan * e w e m a t a G rata abwoetawm. t a k to UT Surrowtaad by baatatui haunx. Pool w i ■orbwg lo uwtay room. He ktahon F v * carpotad Gat. < ita o t Fw b la k 1-l $ 7 9 * 3 3 6 5 2-fefSatammt $42*3565 $67V$7«5 3-7i (5 anirancot) OFFICE HRS Eveningt only; 5-8 p jn , M-F or by apa 4 7 8 -7 5 1 9 Poof OtaO ata tea ■ Barton Sgnngt * i Y * * * * * * * * * * * * * ALL BILLS PAID Summer Rates Eff. 1 BR Sm. 2 8R Summer Ful $2 9 5 $3 3 0 W a lt or ihuMto to m a am , CA/CH remodeled, convenianlto averydtaig 2212 San Gabriel 474-7732 Prgigosing fo r FaM * 2 0 A SffCUU LABGF deon 2-2. CA.'CH tom oppkoncat, pool, wndock. 3 0 ii/ Rod b e . $450-$500 477 33B8 472 2097 7-13C_____________________ 6FFtC*NCt€S-$175 One badroone $275. Along Spaadwey Fumidtad or unfurttahod. Col Bred Moody, 453- 0540. *2 0 C _____________________ TEUURIOC APARTMENTS 4100 A*a C Oaon, quita 1 BR, 1 BR wdh left h d i on »to today! 4534)461 7-IB $ 1 7 5 A B P ! 2 BLOCKS UT \ h W I . Y R f M O D H f I ) IM J R M S I V I.K K K H ( IK N Í IK S 476-1957/474-2365 N ow pre-leasing for fall, too! * 34di Street ond { + * Guodolupe u. 1-1 Catling Fans a Pato . * FULLY FURNISHED * * * $300 P a fo o s a Sucnmwr'fotl * J * 454-46t l Í jp a c jr,.; -. ¿ a ¿ 8 jro ts 4 '-M s v . M X rd UT CciUrsj fa r 4 bat ia r t o r g rir c f j T o v e r t d rjrte.i % ir-.a rm a -, - iti - í 1904 F««/t 476-5678 The A sh fo rd Sm tdeSm rnm m * ‘T h e t! it ALL BILLS PAD * Privacy Partead Pool • W alking Dwtanca to UT • Newfy nam odafad a Fcffmanad or Unfurmahad a Larga Efhctanoas, 1 -1 « A 2 2* » a 476-8915 Pre-Leasing for Summer FaM HYDEPARK LUXURY MASK EHBEKS t f i r n m m 31st & S p ee d w ay Large ! B rit P ii-rtianad. 2 C « i o | Fum MKT'nrrww 3itaia( Giaaa Cxwr*. Ptucm t. v i Vaaltad Getiina^ 2 P'k.u HKartari Co k » • M K ro w a va ocx*o«a' • r ^ o d u a t Storoga • Pool 4 B 8 Q /P c*c • laundry FookltaJ • O n ,c Shuttta • Hyba Pork A rvo • Ac-osa H jm o ty pork • 'S SKtarf M o rc g a r From $1 90 /Month 1 0 8 PLACE A P A R T M E N T S 1 0 8 W 4 5»cil U ta rx im • 4 '0C $ 95 Zee w c ria ja r * » #'<33 a :df 4 5 " -'C * 4 u C £ N " R A . ’ « C P i r E E N C ALL BILLS PAJDS245 N ew y m aoa n g tar summor snd te l. ^ r g a a A o a n e y n r*yd « Asrta newer. 3mIM» t DKrer and goMry 2a«^Hora 420C 4 m*. A. 45’ -4 'I,Sd. 45'-ta533 CtNTSA. PSCm rB NC .< : :r vi-r*» ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ O n e B l o c k F rom C am p us ¡U l!| J i: t i l e ! ■■ill I " ■ t o I SPECIAL $ 2 5 0 • On Shuttle • Fully Furnished • Security • Pool R io N u e c e s 26th @ Mueces (600 W. 26th) 4 7 4 - 0 9 7 1 4 5 4 - 4 6 2 1 SU CASA APTS NOW LEASING FOR FALL/SPRING On shuttle Wol to wol carpeting, Wdk-vi dosets, Oshwasher and driposoi Pool, two laundry rooms, plenty of porieng two gas gnk, boat cable pata Fai and spnnq ratas 1 BDRM, $295, 2 BDRA4, $415; 3 B0RM. $575. AI funuhed. 203 W 39th. or col 451- 2268, office hour» 9-5, M-F WARWICK APTS. 2907 West Avenue G reat deals on 2-2,1-1, and efficiencies for summer and fall. Fully furnished with all amenities. Pool, deck, cov­ ered p a rkin g a vailab le . Close to cam pus and shuttle. O n site m anagem ent. 474-7426-444-2750 7-21A SANDPIPER 2810 Rio Grande Beoutifully furnished large 2-2 Microwave, ceiling fans, frost free refrigerator, intercom, poor deck, covered parking. On «te mcnoger.terrf. Close to campus and shuttle. Super rates for sum­ mer and fall. 474-2542-444-2750 7-21A SPECIAL RATES M l Im a ng or d t a n x m 1 bt d mem 2 ko rtoncoot 'Cono r Soicn. LF ©rid ^vdo Fort. ? biock #0 #mflto ond cov burfno Al opoé- ancos, poot QfiC ountír» *ocn*. Goa and *o- 302 W. 38th 453-4002 ________________________________ 7 -22C Si-OCX TC ie C ro c i” « c r t im n i C ta irg tars, a o ra g * saver Ouét-n ooaarwtuei. Guiar - c T . r t r o - .= rg e N o om s. 4 2 2 -'2 ’ 2 6-2 3C MNTAL 340 — Fum. Apts. Tanglewood We itside A p i t O M O t S • 3 Poota • 3 - ^ L ir o v !lo o rra • S N iffla * P to rt Door • Near G o * Course GAS 6 WATER PAD 14031 472-9614 D a v is A A ssociates E N G L IS H A IR E APARTMENTS S o w L essing for Sum m er P relessing for Fall! Rem ipecud** E f f i c i e n c i e s M ’s 2-2’s T o w n h o u se : surxmgjw: $199 $229 $299 $329 ' v i t i » n v m um ylturatr uuotn l m i i ' i Mint .A s le fiu tw w s cc sta r hmi: r « u j } C u n a n » . S c M e c r u . fy s a tm C e a s a r S a a p u tc A.-.C ~ ; i c'f -. 'frz', 1 i.xnfSec t t v ’txc Rivttrfstjre ” ftonsne urn Otfurr 1919 Burton Dr. +40-1331 N O R T H C A M P U S STUDENTS _ 6 ^ = WELCOME! - - ^ 3 M ARKnAPTS 3815 Guadalupe 1A 2 BRs Movm In Today! 459-1664 VOb SoIa m Am O m Oí 51gtA Ouodolwpg Move In Todsryt 451-6682 ConttMWld Loroa 2 BRs Movo In Today 1 4544954 910C.40«h AspCMPggd ^ 1m m On-S-A- f - a-- 4524447 VIM - n - ta t m h leonvi 459-9131 4520 Duval ! M A /C M d IA m Ai I 0 M 6 4 M 4 S M M V W E S T C A M P U S STUDENTS í > - WELCOME! _ ’ 7 -1 X La Canada Timbtrwood Apartments Largo Eff. From $250 1000 W. 26th 47S-H23 ADBSkMd Walk to Campus 4774619 Offkte 1902 W. 34ffti ChcsJacfwcfl 24th A Lam ar Tennk Courts Near 4774411 Oflkte 1302 W. 24lh aU D O M A TI A P A im nvn • HntTubB • Not 4 7 6 -4 9 9 2 ttttto tfm ii D ip lo m a t A p a rtm e n ts Walk to Campus 469-0224 Mer.Apt.a05 SiBoca Apartacatf “S tu dent R eady” Move In Today 4774419 (M k6lSM «.S4tk Chimneys Apts. 4764992 O ffic e a t G ard en G ate 2222 Rio Grande ta AmitataOta WflAI • rTvrtoage pm m • ln|gy Mb PbbIi WATERBED QUEEN s iz e with bootahehree. Dark tain finieh. $ 1 2 0 / OBO. 459talK>, leave menage *1 3 HYOC PARK ateaancy $195 * atoctao- ty 4406 Ava C 4 7 *3 4 6 4 , 467-1290. 7-IB - ‘ - > / ; , % i - - ■ .,> Page 12/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, June 17,1988 RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360— Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apts. 370— Unf. Apts. 370— Unf. Apts. 370-U n f. Apts. 390— Unf. Duplexes 400— Condos Townhouses 400— Condos 400— Condos Townhousos Townhousos ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ IT H R E E I O A K S 1 APARTMENTS • FROM $200 • 1 Bdr/1 Ba • Furnished • Laundry Room • PRELEASE FOR SUMMER t PRELEASE FOR FALL LOW RATES! 451-5840 JMi U 60 V ONE-HALF BLOCK UT LAW SCHOOL A L L B IL L S P A ID Two bedroom/two bath small quiet property Tree shaded balconies on beautiful courtyard. New carpet, ap­ pliances, and paint. Huge bedrooms with built-in desks and bookshelves. Large closets with built-in highboys. Central A/C, heat and electricity poid. Moderate pnces. Now prelecsing for summer/fall. 476-5631 7-12A ~WEST~CAMPUS E FFIC IE N C IES 910 W. 26th St. $175 $200/month summer rale $ 2 50/month-Fo!l/Sprmg Barbeque grill, laundry room, C o ke machine, semester parties. C A LL 4 78-1350 7-18C W A L K T O C A M P U S S H U T T L E A N D C IT Y B U S L A R G E E F F IC IE N C Y 5 1 8 0 , I B E D R O O M A N D 2 B E D R O O M E F F IC IE N ­ C IE S F U R N I S H E D O R U N F U R N I S H E D M A U N A K A I 3 2 2 0 3 7 4 6 2 4 C E F F IC IE N C Y A N D 1 b e d r o o m $ 2 5 0 C a rp e te d , stove, re frig e ra to r W in d o w A C , trees w ater p a id 1 0 0 8 W e st 25th, 1 0 0 9 W e st 2 5 h 451 Ó 5 3 3 6 - 2 4 A C L O S E T O U T north Efficiencies, $ 1 6 5 - $ 1 8 5 $ 2 / 5 - $ 3 9 0 4 0 4 E 31st 4 7 7 2 2 1 4 , 4 5 3 - 8 8 1 2 , 4 5 2 4 5 1 6 6 - 3 0 L _________________________ $ 1 8 5 $ 2 2 5 2Br, IB r S P A C I O U S & N E A T I Fu rn ish e d 1 b e d r o o m P a r k n e i g h b o r h o o d S o m e bills p a id ! M a r k V, 3 9 1 4 A v e n u e D 3 2 3 0 7 4 0 6 3 0 N a t t r a c t i v e H y d e in A P A R T M E N T G A R A G E P e m b e r t o n H e ig h t s W e s t o f UT T re e h o u se setting ir quiet n e ig h b o r h o o d Bills p a id ex c lu d m g electricity $ 2 9 5 4 / 2 3 0 5 6 6 -17 1 B L O C K to c o m p u s 1-1 fre sh ly p ain te d o n d c arp e te d quiet com p le x, Sm all, c e ilin g fons, m tm blinds Fall $ 2 8 5 , su m ­ 2711 H e m p h ill Park m e r rates a v a ila b le 4 7 8 1 8 7 0 6 2 4 N RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. SALADO APTS. 2704 Salado Call now for beautiful, large fuNy furnished 2-2, 1-1. Ceiling fans, microwave, frost free refi |ero tors, intercom. Near campus and shuttle. On site managers. Gregt rates. Preleasing for summer and fall. 474-5723 - 444-2750 7-12A ALL BILLS paid Walk to UT. Capitol, ACC. Efficient»» $225 up. Roo m s$ 20 0 up Alio 2 BR 4 72 -7562 474-0750. 6- 30 _________________________________ 370 — Unf. Apts. $ 9 9 F ln t Moatfc’a See tl LARGE 1 and 2 Bedrooms Apartments and Townhomes a Flroptocos • Pool • Hot Tub 0 O n C R S h u m PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL!! r i i i i * lrongate f Apartments é 453-5300 ™ 1225 Wertheimer Dr. ^ 1 Í Í i i i i i i NOW LEASING! PRE-LEASE FOR FALL • F U R N ISH E D U N IT S A V A IL • Efficiencies One Bedmom*. and Two Bedrooms avail • Large Fool Patio • Microwaves • 2 Shuttle Routes • Clubhouse 444-7880 2124 B u rto n D r. NO W PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER! * 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Starling at $295 • ALL BILLS PAID • Located on UT shuttle & City B u s lin e s • f d v n g Distance to M a jor S h o p p in g Center • Ideal for Students CAI IER0N GREENS A P A R T M E N T S 5700 Cameron Rd. 4 5 4 - 7 0 0 7 ★ $50.00 Deposit ★ Preleasing for summer 8, faH Efficiencies and One Bedrooms ovo4ob!e neor shuttle, on 37th 8 Speedway and 35th & Guodakipe. e ceftngtans e swimming peak e finplocet e loundry room From $ 20 0 -$ 2 7 5 / m o n th l C a l Now: 495-9055; 480-0662, 453-8026 7-3N W ALK TO CAM PU S A V A L O N APTS. 3 2 N D AT IH35 Summer Rales: Eff-$I95, 1 Br-$225. 2Br?Bo $795 Conv t for low/engineering sludenh, low deport, ceSng fans, waft-m down, on me laundry/manager, quiet, dean. Smal homey ploce. 476-3629 4 5 9 -9 8 9 8 258-2176 7-11C * * * « * * * * * * * * * * # * * * * * * * * ♦ * * * * 4 * * * Rent Special 195.0011 LARGE efficiencies in Hyde Pork area e AR appliances e Pool e Drapes • Laundry e G as & Water paid H yd e Park Place 4400 Ave. B. Manager #113 452-3590 John Barkley Company U.T. AREA QUARTERS Unique, affordable bouses, duplexes, and aparenents; M ost with w ood flo o rs, fan s, lots o f windows, many trees H istoric charm, attractively re­ done, responsibly m anaged IMSNum sk 1/1 garret apt in hiatorie house. $276.00 70S W. 36th: Large 2/1 -1/2. upstairs bedrooms, wood (loon, very nice. $626.00 •O tW .ttkb Efficiency in [ 1920's 4-plex. $226.00 | 8904 WitghtmooA Nice 2/1 in pretty area east of Hyde ■ Park. Wood floor*. $390 904 W. 22-1/2: Large 1A with fireplace. $326.00 CALL FOR OTHERS 472-2123 V IL L A V A L L A R T A THE addreee In Wert Cempuel Tarte- Ufy daooraled 1-1» available for summer and la* Pool, jacuzzi. bae- krtbaR court and organized aodai ac- Ovtttoa Your homa In Paradlof I . 29 II ogvtow L f m e a o r ★ WEST CAMPUS ★ $ 2 2 0 1-1 $ 2 8 0 2-1 3-1 $ 3 3 0 • Pool! Woter/Gas paid. • B & G Properties 459-0156 346-0410 7-21C ★ S T U D E N T S ★ • 1-1, 7 5 0 square fort, $ 2 6 0 large enough for roommate • 2-2,1025 sq. ft $ 35 0 1st month's rent $ 7 0 Low deposit Extra Large Apartment Prompt Maintenance, very clean NR Shuttle Bus Swimming Pool Newly Decorated A nice small quiet community. BROO KH OLLOW APARTMENTS 1414 A re n a Dr. 445-5655 7-1N SUMMER LEASING SPECIAL $165 • Efficiencies • N e w ly Remodeled • All Appliances • O n Shuttle 371-0160 ALL BILLS PAID $214 1 - 1 .......................... $260 2 -2.................. $364 SOUTH SHUTTLE BLOWOUT Coll For Others PROPERTIES ONE 447-7368 7-1 6-22C Northwest Hills First month free. N e w ly remodeled. Tennis, pool, clubhouse. Preleasing summer fall. O n Shuttle Advantage Properties 452-0103 7-151 WALKING DISTANCE TO CAMPUS Summer special on 1 bedroom — $195 Quiet neighborhood setting. One 2 bed­ room now available. 3 0 4 E 33rd Coll 320-0331 7-1A WEST C A M PU S Large 2-lVl w/mi- crowave, ceiling fans, walk-in closets and more! Great locotion! Campus Prop- erties, 4 7 7 -3 3 3 4 6-21L_______________ QUIET REFURBISHED CO M PLEX IN CLARKESVILLE 1-1 ALL APPLIANCES, WATER/GAS PAID, LAUND RY R O O M $275 SU M M ER $29 5 FALL 1503 W 9TH CEN T U RIO N PROPERTIES, 345 659 9 7 11C TARRYTOW N SPLEND ID wooded loco tion, 1-1 garage apartment adjoining artijfs studio Extra large, new carpet­ ing, CA/CH Ideal for faculty member or studious graduate O n ER shuttle. Pnce slashed from $465. 478-8063. 6-178 TRAVIS HEIGHTS efficiency apartments Large bath, 2 closets, private entrance, share utilities. Lease $225/mo Call 448- 022 3 after 6pm. 6-23 PARKSIDE 7-15N Small complex, large d e a n freshly painted across from pool & park. 2-1 o nd 1-1% $ 3 5 0 -$ 2 5 0 . G as, water, coble paid. 4209 Burnet Rd. 454-8565 6-17L ZILKER AREA Efficiency, $175; 1 BR $250, 2 BR $275, Pool & Laundry on site. 447-7525 or 440-0944 7-221 ARE YOU BORED wtlh hcky-tocl apartment complexes that all look alike and lock character and style? Then please coma sae Rio House Apartments, a renovated 1920s apartment complex, located at the northeast comer of 17lh & Rio Grande. Large pool, laundry, elevator ond o relaxed comfortable ambiance. 1-1 avoiloble 6-10 for $295 472-1238 6-29 2 BEDROOM -1 BATH, fenced yard, cen­ tral air, $ 3 5 0 plus deposit. Near UT area Call 892 1255 6-21 M i R U S P W I W i n d j a m m e r A p t s . e G Hoot up » Outdoor iocu // 5 t I r Swimming Pr,'/s # Bar B Q u e s 6 Pirn,, a bastee»;- 4 Volley!»; facilities # t a n a ' CerqmK T ir Kitchen & Bqtr • . Bedroom # A M k m w ove ' /ve1 . iuf'/ •' N E W C L U B H O U S f UNDER C O N S TR U C T IO N //’T^ P o o l T a b l e s • A e r o b i c R o o m • j a c u z / i s • 1 S c r e e n T V • V i d e o G a m e * , V i l L ^ r O c n 4 4 7 - 4 1 3 0 2 1 0 1 B U R T O N D R 0n-Campus location Fall availability Full meal plan included from $ 3 9 7 5 D O B I E C E N T E R CLOSE TO SHUTTLE STAFFORD HOI’S F \ P . \ R I M I V I ' 2-1 s starting at S U M M E R F A L L Y R L E A S E $ 3 2 5 $ 3 5 0 $ 3 2 5 j S A N D S T O N E I & I I 2408 A 2SO' Marw* Rd SU M M ER FALL YR LtASt *2 5 *3 0 0 *2 6 6 o artum» •*r*»d unrts ava >pa & CJutxroom Jtijndry FmcMóe* Muda** HeetOani *Aei urt»y ^BtM tédK; Pro* Lanrta* e$*eO Prof Menagatf try H a g a n o Pm paroa» You’ll Save a Fistful of Dollar$! • F W g phons hook-up a F R E E otocMoRy coRM Ckon a N oto n o ,h u trtlfO to m sc o u rto a • G X H R M f W W I P ! • Sporting pool! • MMMU toQoMon Ulo, Mr. Gift, a 3000 Gnidakpe 1-1 /Ceiling Fans and Patio F u t y F u r n is h e d Starling at $325 454-4621 ★ ir ★ ir ★ ★ ★ ir ir ir ★ it it it it it ★ ★ ★ ★ it OFF CAMPUS O N /O F SHUTTLE e 2-2. Pool, tanne,souno, W/D modvnes, $325 a Qowt 2,3,4 Br from $375, $99 mova in a Country CVib sailing 2-2 roomeola pkxi $420 a 2-1 Dupiax $275,3-lVj houaa $350 a EfRdancy-IBr. from $175— Col for Mora Kadish Properties 447-3472 6-17 C E N T E N N IA L 2-2, TOTALLY FUR- NISHED. W/D, M ICRO W A V E, ETC. S 5 50/SU M M ER, $ 800/FALL. CALL A G E N T MITCH O N L Y AT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 6- 2 BA________________________________ C RO IX 2-2, FURNISH ED O R U N FU R ­ N ISH E D W/D, M ICRO W A V E, ETC. S 5 00 / SU M M E R ; S795/FALL. CALL A G E N T M ITCH ONLY, 476-2673. 6- 2 8A ________________________________ SE T O N 1-1, FURNISH ED O R U N FU R­ NISHED, W/D, C EILIN G FANS, ETC 5 30 0 /SU M M E R , $ 500/FALL. CALL A G EN T MITCH O N L Y AT 476-2673. 6- 28A ________________________________ ORANG ETREE 2-2, FU RNISH ED O R UN FU RNISH ED. W/D, C EILIN G FANS, ETC. S850/FALL. CALL A G E N T MITCH O N L Y AT 476- 2 6 7 3 .6 -2 8A 5 5 5 0 / S U M M E R 7-11 LARGE 1-1, C EILIN G fan, water paid. Per- fect for roommates. Large closets. 5350-summer. Apartment Finders- 458- 1213. 6 -2 9 A _________________________ located! Tennis STOP! CENTRALLY courts, pool, covered parking, W /D con­ nections, microwove, 2-2, Paddock C on­ dos. $525. Apartment Finders- 458- 1213. 6 -2 9 A _________________________ CALL N O W ) Furnished 1-1 only 5295- Sum m er; seel Apartment Finders- 458-1213. 6 -2 9A 5 3 5 0 -F a ll. M u st Centennial Condos Several 2-2's, Court yard level. All appliances, fire­ place, pool, and security parking! $8501 year lease. Johnson and Company 4 5 2 -4 3 0 0 Chelsa Condo Sham 2-2V2, Two Story, fir siace, fans, all appli­ ances, huge walk-in closet, and reserved parking! Johnson and Company 4 5 2 -4 3 0 0 LUXURY CONDOS Relax around the pool after dou of your lux­ ury 2 BDR condo. 31st St. Condos hove wósher/dryer, microwave, ceding fans, fire­ ploce Summer/$400, FaH/$750. Lea Ann, Amelia Bullock Realtors 345-5771 7-11 M E D E R N C O N V E N IE N T I.M. Fields shut- He 3-2. High efficiency CA/CH, Washer/ Dryer, microwave, $ 69 5 0 0 summer. 8 3 6 -0 3 7 5 evenings. 7-19______________ THE POINTE Huge 2-2 on shuttle. Neor Law School. Furnished, pool. $400. Available summer. 250-0076. 6 -30 $ 9 9 M O N E -IN Speciall Luxurious, at­ tractive condos. UT area efficiencies: fireplace, jacuzzi, ceiling fons. O n RR shuttle. Sharon, 926-0898. 6-30L. 6-17C L E N N O X C O N D O S 915 W. 23rd. Luxu- ry 1&2 bedrooms. $650-$950, Kirksey - Levy Realtors, 4 51-0072.7-5L FREE M A ID SERVICE Large 1-1, furnished. N e w c a r­ pet, lots o f w indow s, high ceil­ ings with fans. 2513 Seton Ave. # 2 01. $ 6 5 0 /m o . Low er summer rates. 12 month lease. 2 6 3 - 3174, 26 1-7034. BU E Ñ A VISTA G O R G E O U S 1/1 SECURI- TY 1 BLOCK FR O M C A M P U S $ 4 0 0 CALL JO H N AT PMT 476-2673. 7-11A HUGE 2/2 T W O STORY WITH LARGE S E C U R IT Y S T U D Y , C O V E R E D $ 95 0 CALL T A M M Y AT PARKING. PMT 476-2673. 7-11A________________ C R O IX 1/1- POOL, HOT-TUB, SECURITY. $ 5 0 0 CALL T A M M Y AT PMT 476- 2 67 3 7-11A. 6-17 8 U EN A VISTA 2/2 FULLY FURNISHED FOR 4. $ 7 5 0 CALL JO H N AT PMT 476-2673. 7-1TA_____________________ Hit Your Snooze Button Because your only 1 block from the UT Campus in this fully fur­ nished 1-1. Includes washer/ dryer, microwave, ceiling fans, and covered parking. Call 322- 9887 for leasing information. 6 -29C ENFIELD 2-2 V2 Gorgeous, enormous, loaded! S625, ask for Wayne, City Properties, 478-6565. Evenings, 462- 0625. 6-21N_________________________ LARGE 1 B E D R O O M near Law School. Walk to UT or take shuttle. Private indi­ vidual garage, microwave, ceiling fans, pool, security system and guard. 477- 3198 6-21___________________________ PARTIALLY FURNISHED 1 Bedroom, cor­ ner unit. Two Blocks west of campus. Super condition. Lease for foil. 473- 2 27 2 or collect (713) 780-4149.6-23 WEST C A M P U S large 2-2 condo All ap­ pliances, ceiling fans, microwave, W/D, vaulted ceilings. $ 7 5 0 furnished, $ 70 0 unfurnished. 480-8200. 7-5 C RO IX 2/2 FULLY FURNISHED. $89 5 FALL/SPRING. CALL T A M M Y AT PMT 476-2673. 7 -U A _____________________ 1-1 WEST C A M P U S N E W CARPET, W/D, 3 BLO C KS TO CAM PUS. $375. CALL ZAC H AT PMT 476-2673. 7-11A PRESERVATION SQ U ARE 2/2 - H A RD W O O D FLO O RS M E X IC A N TILE. $ 7 9 5 CALL ZACH AT PMT 476-2673. 7- 11A_________________________________ O R A N G E TREE EFFICIENCY 6 0 0 SO/ FT. FULLY FURNISHED, SEC U RED PARKING. $ 4 5 0 CALL ZAC H AT PMT 476-2673. 7 -U A _____________________ SPLIT LEVEL - 2/2 FULLY FURNISH ED $ 59 5 CALL MIKE AT PMT 476-2673. 7-U A _______________________________ S U N C H A S E 2/2 SECURITY - C O V ERED PARKING, LARGE PO O L A N D HOT- TUB. $ 6 5 0 CALL M IKE AT PMT 476- 2673. 7-11A_________________________ C EN T E N N IA L 2/2 PRO FESSIO N A LLY D ECO RATED A N D FURNISHED. $1000 CALL M IKE AT PMT 476-2673. 7-U A C HELSEA 2/1 PRO FESSIO NA LLY D E C O ­ RATED A N D FURNISHED. $ 5 5 0 CALL JO H N AT PMT 476-2673. 7-11A IF SHUTTLE. Summer rotes. Small, quiet complex. Efficiencies, I, 2, & 3 bed­ rooms. G as and heat paid. Ceiling fans. 4401 Speedway, 4 59-0889. 7-15 N 4401 SPEEDWAY. 1-1 condo, convenient UT shuttle route, appliances. Summer $300, fall $325, deposit $175. FaD pre- leose. Michoel, 335-5577. 7-11L S A V A N N A H C O N D O M IN IU M S . 915 West 2 2 ’/2. 2-2, W/D, dishwasher, fireplace, microwave, low summer rates. W e have a few left for fall. CoH 480- 0 9 7 6 6-22C 1000 W. 24TH. 2-1 condo. Appliances, ceiling fan, fireplace, balcony, shuttle route. Summer $500, fall $550, depout $250. Will prelease. Michoel, 335- 5 57 7 7-111 T!r C a s c a d e s M Sum m er special!! Efficiencies start at $125 (June, July, Aug.) — for UT people only — e Phone & electric installation free! e Two pools • On UT shuttle • Ceiling fans e Also: 1,2 & 3 Bdrms. available Cal now! 4 4 4 *4 4 8 5 AN OASIS IN THE MIDDLE OF AUSTIN 11*0 **.W “m s /¿Sift 5 (j@P • IJ VY V M e tom a hopataaey wotcNng a tar away oodiin the mtddle ol ew de w l Ha meats Tracy Ha*ot amare are you rm going to Canyon PaW. Ira grXngT eye MOVE IN SPECIAL!! VERY LARGE TOWNHOME CA/CH, al appliances, fireplace, pool, sauna, pets OK. 2-1 Vi, $375. Near IH 35 and Wiiam Cannon. 34 6 -4 3 9 2 7-111 C O ZY 1-1, microwave, dishwasher, vault­ ed ceiling, near UT shuttle, $350, month. 261-4025.6-16N_____________________ SHARE C O N D O 2-2, pool, on SR shuttle, close to campus/downtown. Call 440- 7571 or (214)231-9994 after 6pm. 6-17 RIO G R A N D E C O N D O S 6 0 0 S Q FT. N E W PAINT, N E W CARPET, FIREPLACE. $ 4 0 0 CALL JO H N AT PMT, 476-2673. 7-14A_______________________________ PARAPET 2-2 FULLY FURNISHED, C O V ­ ERED PARKING, $750. CALL J O H N AT PMT. 4 76-2673. 7-14A_______________ ENFIELD 1 B E D R O O M WITH LARGE STUDY, 2 STORY, LARGE DESK, $450. CALL ZACH-PMT, 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 7 - U A S A N PEDRO O A K S 2-2 FULLY FUR­ N ISH ED G A S PAID. $595, CALL ZAC H AT PMT, 476-2673. 7-14A___________ 31 ST STREET C O N D O - 2-2, POOL. HOT-TUB, C O V ERED PARKING. $650. CALL T A M M Y AT PMT, 476-2673. 7- 14A________________________________ SR SHUTTLE 3-2 T O W N H O M E . W/D, 2 CAR G A R A G E CALL T AM M Y-PM T 476-2673. 7 - U A SPLIT-LEVEL. $600. 1500 W EST LY N N T O W N H O M E M U L ­ TI LEVEL 2-2 WITH STUDY, WETBAR, T W O CAR GA RA G E, $795. CALL MIKE-PMT. 476-2673. 7 - U A __________ C H A M O N IX O N PV SHUTTLE. G O R ­ G E O U S 1200 SQ . FT 2-2, CITY VIEW, W/D, $595. CALL MIKE-PMT. 476- 2673. 7-14A_________________________ INCREDIBLE SPECIALII Gorgeous 2-2's off Guadalupe!! Summer Special only $250111 Vonnie Bennett, J B Goodwin, 443-8101, 282-6773, 2 8 2 -6 7 7 3 6-24B FOR RENT: 914 East 48 Vi Street. 2-1 with CA/CH, appliances, fenced back­ yard $42 5 454-3514. 1-846-8421. 6- 21V_________________________________ CLARKSVILLE 1-1, $285, ceiling fons, mini-blinds, new carpet. Sunny. 335- 6083. 6-28V________________________ WESTPLACE C O N D O S . Extra nice 2-2, pool and security system. Summer, $ 4 0 0 3 3 5 -6 0 8 3 .6 -28V ______________ HYDE PARK condo. Extra nice 1-1, ceiling fans, blinds and laundry room. Summer $27 5 3 3 5 -6 0 8 3 .6 -28V ______________ HYDE PARK AREA. Large luxury con­ dominium. 2-2, appliances, microwave, fireplace, fan, W /D connections, $600. ARCH Properties, 467-2390. 7-15A FALL PRE LEASE LUXURIOUS 2 -2'S 4 BLOCKS FR O M C A M P U S SECURITY, W/D, M ICRO W A V E, C O V ER E D PARK­ IN G 4 DIFFERENT FLO O R PLA N S TO C H O O SE FROM. $625/M O . CALL A G EN T MITCH ONLY. 476-2673. 7- 18A_________________________________ CO ZY 1-1, microwave, dishwasher, vault­ ed ceiling, near UT shuttle. $ 3 5 0 per month 261-4025.6 -3 0 N 420 — Unf. H o u ses UT - CAMPUS W e have a number of af­ fordable properties avail­ able for you! HPO Real Estate 467-7212 6-171 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ TRADE PAINTWORK FOR RENT Live rent-free X amount of lime in exchange I Drive bv: 411W. 37th. You move in with or without roommate. C A L I 453-4990 (owner) 6-20 2 fo ri 3-1 plus 1-1 10 blocks from UT. $650 for both. Large fenced yard, garage. 3401 Merrie Lynn. Call Dale 329-8511 Dale Stanka, Realtors 6-24 4-5 BEDROOM Elegant/modem 4-5 BR, 3 BA dose to UT. 1 block from Shuttle. CA/CH. Quiet ne ihborhood next to park. Rent very negoti­ able. 272-5783,272-4076 AVAILABLE N O W , 2 through 5 bedroom houses for rent. 4 5 2 -5 9 7 9 (24 hours). 6-19 ______________________ 44TH A N D Caswell. Gorgeous 2-storey 4-3, fireplace, central heat ond air, W/ D oppliances, lawn service. $1175. G n- dy, 328-6138 6 -2 8 N _________________ W A LK To Low school. 2 8 0 0 Dancy. 3 Bdr/1 Bth plus dining room with French doors. Hasrdwood floors, stove, refriger­ ator, fenced yord, garage. 625/month. 6-17 ______________________________ AVAILABLE N O W 3-2-2 plus loft. $575. Near Porter at Ohorf. CA/CH, pool, tennis. 451-4 3 8 6.6-30 TASTEFUL, C H A R M IN G , spacious! Tany- town. Shoal Creek, Hyde Park, 3,4,5 bedroom s $ 7 0 0 -5 1 6 0 0 . 477-1163. Agent. 6-17 SQ U EEKY C LE A N efficiencies, duplexes, houses. Available now. All areas. Flexi­ ble terms. 2-1's; 2-2'*; 3-2’s. 454-8387. 7-1 ________________________________ UT CLOSE, 2-1, AC, appliances, hord- wood floors, fenced bock yord. Quiet neighborhood. Tall trees 3310 Hemlock. Lease. $450. 327-4154. 7-1____________ THREE A N D FOUR Bedrooms. Campus Area. All Appliances. From $600/mo Call Now! Habitat Hunters 482-8651. 6- 24________________________ _ M UST SEE 2-1, two blocks IF. $295, gae and water paid. 453-7633. 6-17 3BRD, LARGE fenced yard, W/D, mi- crowavee, near shuttle. $495/month. Coll collect 512-696-6332 days, 512-735-5695 evenings. 6-17 Intramural O N SHUTTLE. 3 bedroom w/den. Large backyard. All appliances. 5 3 0 4 Abmg- don Pioce $ 5 5 0 A T L 477 -3 3 3 4.6-23 1 9 0 6 E 54th Older, dean, 2-1-1 Hard­ woods, blinds, AC's, fans, fenced yard. $ 4 9 0 926-1999, 472-2097. 7-12C NICE 3 1 Hyde Park 4 5 2 2 Speedway. O n UT shuttle, one block from park. $ 4 4 5 4 7 2 -2 4 3 3 6-17 THREE BLO C K S from UT 504 BeNvue 2- 1, CA/CH, like new $475, negotiable. CoH Brett Moody, 453-0540. 6-20C W EST C A M P U S 2-1; hardwood Boon, spacious, on shuttle, $500/month B and G Properties 4 5 9 0156, 3 4 6 041 0 7- 14C NICE 3 2 H O M E .Northeast area, appb- onces, fenced, garage, pel O K $495, 346 439 2 7 151 CO U N T RY LIVING 10 mmutes N E of Austin 3 1 CA/CH, on 15 ocres. $ 5 5 0 4 54 3514,1 8 4 6 8421 6-21V_________ G R O U P H O M E for 10 15. huge, dose to compus. $1800/month 322-5105 6 21 HYDE PARK House 3 1 1 , hardwood, fresh paint, tree», fenced $ 5 5 0 335- 6 0 8 3 Must see 6 -29 C O N V E N IE N T U! quomt, older 2-2, hardwoods, A/C, fon, yard. 3106 King Street $ 4 5 0 $ 5 0 0 472 2 09 7 478- _ 5 73 9 7-18C JO H YV IILE R O A D 38R 2 V í8 A CA/CH. 2 kvmg areas, 2 dmmg areas, dan. Uro- place, W /D connection», 2 car gorage. $ 7 5 0 4 4 4 7178, 445- AVAILABLE N O W , 2 through 5 houses tor rant 452 5 9 7 9 ( 1 7-18 <24 hours). O N 45TH near M a oo c kitchen gpphenret SPSO/i 4 7 8 3 6-17 4-2, CA/CM, 327* 425 — Rooms IN V IC T O RIA N home Reduced summer rents Summer lease lueury amentaos 2 R 1I Rm Grande 3 4 3 4 )9 6 5 6 29 . don’t wear out your welcome! T W O P O O L S • W A T E R V O L L t Y H A l J . rw < > H O T T U B S • ( T J i J N C L A N S • O N s H i r n r u • f i r e p l a c e s FREE LAUNDRY 440-0118 2317 P ir a t a * Valley Rd. Uowty tom reaches the oaes ana loakt at Tracy wnbaKang at the poo* Nnaay tom a happay M n g at Canyon an oawmiho mxest at turn Rant* «tart at * 1 9 5 ! ! P o o l P r t w o f s b a lc o n lM o r p a a o i O N U T S H U n iE O u b io o n i Eff 2 t 3 l d n r a . W a k -in c lo o st a - m o c o n m c N o m m t o m a p t n m l y a f f t M p a r t d n g . 2400WKXERSHAMLN C*Uraa.38S-2044»^_ C a n y o n P a s s 454-2157 M O t lC L A * * m iD * PAOK 14 2021 Guadalupe 472-8411 Tours Daily r a txjay 4 hot day ol woik 4 Khool. ■ mm Mumbkng down the Drag But Decauae *ie Itvae at The Caecadaa. Uaa ■ sptaahtng away r wontaa, lor only $125 a month! Southern Baptists condemn homosexuality Associated F^rc s SAN ANTONIO — Southern Baptists charged m odem society with an "erosion of moral sanity" Thursday and condemned homo­ sexuality as "an abomination in the eyes of God." "This deviant behavior has wrought havoc in the lives of mil­ lions," said assem bled "m e s­ sengers" of the 14.7 million-mem­ ber denomination. On the last day of the convention, it adopted one of the most unquali­ fied denunciations of homosexuality in recent major church annals. "The Bible is very clear in its teaching that homosexuality is a manifestation of a depraved na­ ture," the convention said, adding: "Homosexuality is a perversion of divine standards and a violation of nature and of natural affections." The resolution said, "Homosexu­ als are justified and even glorified in our secular media." With fundamentalists prevailing over moderates in this factionally divided gathering of 35,600 people, the meeting also whipped through a score of other resolutions. Among them, the convention: ■ Voiced "outrage over the firing of a competent, highly professional Christian," Dennis Shere, as pub­ lisher of Ohio's D ay ton D aily N ew s by Cox Newspapers for refusing to carry gay and lesbian advertising. ■ Rejected an amendment that would have pledged the denomina­ tion's institutions not to fire or re­ place anyone for disagreeing with its policies, such as those recently demanding biblical literalism. ■ Condemned provision of birth control information and devices at public school clinics, saying it und­ ermined parental authority, insti­ gated promiscuity and abdicated moral responsibility of schools. ■ Declared family and biblical val­ ues "under constant attack from secular humanism, materialism, rebellion substance abuse and against authority." ■ Questioned aspects of the Civil Rights Restoration Act, saying it should be modified to protect relig­ ious liberty, assuring exemption of institutions indirectly controlled by religion, as well as those directly re­ ligious. Brad Corrigan, a Dallas layman, urged the resolution criticizing the Cox newspaper publisher's firing, and for consistency also pushed for adoption of a policy allowing dis­ sent by the denomination's employ­ ees. Instead, he said, he had been "outvoted, outhustled and out­ foxed" by fundamentalists and lik­ ened to a "polecat" with other moderates at a convention which declared laymen couldn't disagree with elected leaders. In the resolution on homosexuali­ ty, gay people were termed the pri­ mary cause for the spread of AIDS, saying it not only has affected them "but also innocent victims." faith Homosexuals, "like all sinners, can receive forgiveness and victory through personal in Jesus Christ," the resolution said, adding: "[While] God loves the homosex­ ual and offers salvation, homosex­ uality is not a normal life style and is an abomination in the eyes of God." Judge accused of bias in granting Brandley retrial Associated Press CONROE — A judge who recommended to a state appeals court that death row inmate Clar­ ence Brandley get a new capital murder trial had his mind made up on how he would rule before ever hearing any testimony, the Montgomery County district attorney said Thursday. In a written brief filed with the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, prosecutor Peter Speers said that retired state District Judge Perry Pickett showed bias in recommending a new trial for Brandley. Speers said Pickett had his mind made up to grant Brandley a new trial before hearing testi­ mony in the October evidentiary hearing that took place in Galveston on a venue change. "If the testimony, Judge Pickett's findings and applicant's brief are to be believed, every law enforcement officer and public official in Mont­ gomery County was wearing the trademark white sheets of the Ku Klux Klan, contrasting nicely with Pickett's black robe," wrote Speers in his conclusions to the court. "If this scenario is to be believed, these same individuals would all be wearing engineer's caps as they joined together to railroad Clarence Brandley off to death row," he wrote. "Amidst all this, it would be easy indeed for the real legal issues to get lost in the smoke." Brandley, 36, was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to die for the August 1980 stran­ gulation murder of Cheryl Dee Fergeson of Bell- ville. Fergeson, who was white, was killed at Con­ roe High School where Brandley worked as a janitor. Brandley is black and his conviction has sparked accusations of racism. Pickett has recommended to the appeals court that it grant Brandley a new trial, but justices have not issued a ruling in the case. In the introduction to the brief, Speers ex­ pressed concern over pressure . "I say all this because of my genuine concern that amidst all the hoopla, the sensational but largely irrelevant record of the hearing, the mind-boggling order of Judge Pickett, and the impassioned 78-page brief filed by the appli­ cant's attorney, the actual legal issues germane to this proceeding will get lost, to the lasting detriment of the jurisprudence of this state," he wrote. Defense attorneys for Brandley submitted briefs last month. Anti-theft options would save millions, group says By JOHN COUNCIL Daily Texan Staff To halt the state's million-dollar losses in car thefts, a Texas Action Council on Theft spokes­ man Thursday called on all auto dealers to offer their customers anti-theft devices as an option on all new cars. Jerry Johns, public affairs chairman for TACT, a non-profit coalition of law enforcement officials and prosecutors, said offering the devices as an option would help curb auto theft rings in Texas. "If new car dealers would strongly encourage people who purchase these vehicles to install anti-theft devices, the theft rate would undoubt­ edly diminish significantly," Johns said. New car dealerships are now offering anti- theft devices at medium range prices of $300- 450, Johns said. Although auto alarms come as standard equip­ ment on expensive import cars like the Ferrari, Johns said he expects anti-theft devices to be­ come standard on domestic cars soon. "I would predict down the line that domestic cars will come with auto-theft devices on their top-of-the-line models," he said. But an Austin auto dealer is not as enthusiastic about offering the devices. Bill Lieb, general sales manager of Onion Creek Volkswagen, said his dealership has been offering anti-theft devices for a year, but few customers have requested them even though the Volkswagen has an extremely high rate of theft. "We don't sell many cars with anti-theft devic­ es," Lieb said. He attributed the low response to the devices to Volkswagen buyer purchasing trends. "Volkswagen buyers are pretty conservative and they don't go for a lot of options when they buy a car," he said. Onion Creek offers the anti-theft devices for $199.95, Lieb said. "We definitely don't make much of a profit on anti-theft devices," he said. ■if k 1 ' C - m mm -- * 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 D aily Texan office, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The D a ily Texan reserves the right to edit subm issions to conform to style rules, although no sig­ nificant changes w ill be made. MEETINGS The Gay and Lesbian Students Asso­ ciation will meet for happy hour from 4:30 to 6 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Building Cactus Cafe. All ages are wel­ come. UTSEDS w ill hold an informal get- together at 5 p.m. Friday at a round table in the Texas Union Building Armadeli. Everyone is welcome. Students Older Than Average will meet for happy hour(s) from 5 to 7 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Building Bat­ tle Oaks Room. This week: the eagerly anticipated first edition of the summer activities calendar. All activities, dates, times, announcements and cheap thrills sexlife? scheduled are subject to administrative fiat or mass apathy (or both). SOTA is a social and support group for students 23 and older. Alpha Chi, UT Chapter of Asian Americans, will hold a summer breeze mixer from 8 to 10:30 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Building Eastwoods Room. The event is free, and everyone is wel­ come. _______ SHORT COURSES_______ Thompson Conference Center and Computation Center User Services will offer a Microcomputer Teaching Facility Hands-On Workshop, Introduction to DOS, from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. next Thursday and 8:30 a.m. to noon Friday, June 24, in Thompson Conference Cen­ ter 3.108. Cost is $45 with valid UT ID, $162 with a government ID and $225 for others. Attendance is limited to 28. For registration information, call 471-3121. Computation Center User Services will offer several short courses next week in Computation Center 8 They are: Introduction to NOMAD 2, from 1 to 3 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday; Image Processing, from 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday; XEDIT Techniques, from 5 to 7 p.m. Tuesday; Introduction to TeX, from 10 a.m. to noon Wednesday; Device-Inde­ pendent Graphics with DI-3000, from 3 to 5 p.m. Thursday; Using Tapes on the IBM 3081-D, from 5 to 7 p.m . Thursday; and Introduction to LaTeX, from 10 a.m. to noon Friday. Courses are free to any­ one with a valid UT ID. Register at W.C. Hogg Building 9A (471-3241, ext 253). LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS Campus Advance for Christ w ill sponsor an appearance by Ron Enroth, a sociologist and nationally recognized au­ thority on extremist cults, on Christian Encounter, a call-in program on KLBJ- AM, from 6 to 7 p.m. Sunday. Enroth will answ er listeners' questions about extremist cults. _______ PERFORMANCES________ Theatre Collective will present two plays, Marsha N orm an's The Laundromat and James McLure's Laundry and Bour­ bon, at 8 p.m . Friday and Saturday in Calhoun Hall 100. Admission is $4 for students and $6 for others. ____________OTHER____________ The University Underwater Society will sponsor a dive at Marshall Ford on Lake Travis on Saturday. Meet in the parking lot diagonally across from Rob­ ert Lee Moore Hall at 10 a.m. for the car pool to the lake. Everyone is welcome. The University Folk Dance Society will sponsor free folk dancing from 8 to 11 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Build­ ing Q uadrangle Room. Learn Greek dances during June. No experience nec­ essary. For more inform ation, call Melis­ sa at 471-5985. Volunteers are needed to lead small groups of foreign students in informal English conversation once or twice per week. Place and time will be decided at the first meeting, which will be at Dexter Hall, 1103 W. 24th Street. For more in­ formation, call 471-4311. Campus Advance for Christ will sponsor a non-denorrunational student worship service with open communion from 10:30 a.m. to noon Sunday at 608 Park Place (26th Street and San Jacinto Boulevard). An informal w orship service for students will be held from 8 to 9 p m Come as you are. The Department of Psychology is seeking females who are fraternal twins to complete questionnaires for an experi­ ment. For more infomahon, call Carol M. Lewis at 453-6170. T h e D a il y TEXAN/Friday, June 17, 1988/Page 13 ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 1 Boom support 5 — morgana: mirage 9 Seeder 14 Entr*— : intermission 15 Verily 16 Childlike 17 Penitent one 18 Differed 20 Criterion 22 Puts up 23 Garment part 24 Rsh 25 Meat 26 Mild oath 27 Apprehension 28 Haunch 31 Reduced 34 Excoriates 35 Single: pref. 36 Army group 37 Food fare 38 Erst 39 R of rpm 40 Occupations 41 Plaster base 42 Female animal 43 Marie Saint and Gabor 44 Balderdash 45 Carouse 47 Lease 48 Hot springs 51 Kitchen tool 53 Periodical 55 Loathings 57 Noun or verb 58 Battery terminal 59 Prefix for gravure 60 Celt 61 Filleted 62 Shortly 63 Ruminant DOWN 1 Slough 2 Sharp 3 Energy 4 Gull’s kin 5 Front 6 Love: It. 7 Serve 8 Termite’s kin 9 Trappers 10 Green spots 11 Kind of investigation 12 Salamander 13 NL team 19 Track events 21 Passed on 25 Stunts 26 Acquire 27 Runs off 29 Length unit 30 D esserts 31 Unsullied 32 Once more 33 UK stream 34 Last 37 Sundry 38 Cereal 40 Made even 41 Plenty 44 Sanity 46 Composition 47 Slow: music 48 Siesta sound 49 Scan a sentence 50 Wood 51 Take hold of 52 City on I-80 53 Promptly 54 Was m debt 56 Biblical ruler 6-17-M c, 'V38 Unit«*d Fwttur* S yndicate AS THE RANPEM0NIUM CONTIN­ UES IN TIMES SQUARE, I'M NOW TALKING TO FREE MARKETEER I PHIL SLACKMEYERT PHIL, IT'S 1 A GREAT PAY FOR WALL STREET TOPAY, is n 't rr* YES, m s , AND YOU KNOW, RC- LANQ, T'S ABOUT TIME1 WALL STREET HAS GOTTEN PAPP6DA LOT LATELY, BUT IT LUAS THERE THAT THE BATTLE A6AJNST THE STATE-PLANNED ECONOMY WAS WON' 3 < LU Q 3 CC I - > CC CC < o > CD SURE, SOMETIMES THE COLP WAR GOT ¡RRTY, SOMETIMES LUG HAP TO CUT A FEW CORNERS 10 MAINTAIN CASH FLOW, BUTI V POTALO OVER AGAIN, EVEN IF T MEANT _ DOING MORE TIME' / HEY, THAT'S RIGHT. WHAT ARE YOU DO­ ING OUT OF... / AMNESTY T a n rbft RENTAL RENTAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICES SERVICES EMPLOYMENT 1 m 590— Tutoring 750— Typing 750— Typing 790— Part Timo 81 f VERY LARGE deon priva* roam. Refrig­ '¡m Si. Quiet erator, bath, no fcüai jfldM duek N o pato. N o Woe* 422-1212. 6 -2 4 C ______________________________ J on RR a Fur N E A R l/T Law ntahed rooms $150 to $ 2 2 5 ABRt CA/ C H -sh o ra b a lk 3310 Rad or, 476- 3 6 3 4 .7 -IN __________________________ PRIVATE BATH, private room. Skara K chaw, CA/CH Quial, non-«molona pede». 4 0 6 W. 17#i Si. Lo o m . $225, ARP. 4 7 2 -2 0 0 2 .7 - K _________________ R O O M FO R rani in 3BR condo. Frv* n- idsa from dm *#. N E Austin. P ool W/0, 1235/m o ASP. 9 2 6 -4 6 7 2 6-17 H YDE PARK room for nonsmoking grad­ úalo tludon» $179 ABP. N a or Noumon M onogomom. 453-4500. 6- 17N_________________________________ lH« N E A R C A M PU S. Accoss to hug* house. $125/mond> plus utilities 322-9105 or 4 7 8 -3 8 6 5 6-21 435 — Co-ops NEAT HOUSE A L L B IL L S ALL MEALS F » O O L SUNDECKS C O -E D F U N ! all from $230/mo. Pre-leasing for fall, too! ICC CO-OPS 510 W. 23rd 476-1957 440 — Roommates W E N E E D on# mor# non-smoking female lor n#w 2-2’/5 condo Pool, security, m>- crowave, computer and printer, W/D, on- tw#ring mochín#, and lots mor» $200/ V* bids. Wendy 385-4391. 6-17 N O N - S M O K IN G mole (student) wanted to shore furnished 2BR/2BA apartment Pool, shuttle, microwove, $175 + 'ri bills. 462-9631 after 5pm. 6-21_____________ 2 FEM ALES to shore Oronge Tree C on­ dominiums. 2-2 Vi, fully furnished, secur ity. $ 6 0 0 month, cad 4 7 7 -7 4 6 2 6-22 PRIVATE BATH, private room. Share kitchen, CA/CH Quiet, non-smoking, petiess 4 0 8 W. 17th St. Lease, $225, ABP 4 72-2002. 7 -1 C ________________ SOUTH, $110/mo. Nokempt town home, (W/D) To share with a stable, young mole couple. 4 6 2 -0 3 0 5 6-20 O N E B E D RO O M , own bath in Tarrytown house 1 block from shuttle Unfurnished/ great rate 472-2695, 4 9 9 -8 9 2 0 6-20 WALK TOUT Two rooms in 3 BR housa facing Eastwoods Park for 1988-89. This July fraa. Quiat, shady straat, CA/CH, W/D, coiling fans. $200/mo. + h bills. I'm o grw studant; smokers OK. Call Carol 476-2160. 6-17 S E E K IN G roommates DESPERATELY Clot# lo UT. In re­ spe ubi# ir viduoh pteat# call 477- 0 66 5.6-17________________________ • Mater# RESPONSIBLE R O O M M A T E n##d#d to sh a re lo rg e 2-1. F u rn iili# d or unfurnished, all opptionces, larg# yard, pets O K, nonsmokeo preferred. Cad G#org# or David al 929-3698. 6-17 N E E D QUIET dependable non-smoking roommate to tkor# 26R uportment on M S tkunl# route. $150/mo plus 4 bids. Cod 472-2288. 6-21__________________ N IC E 2-2 Condo Summ#r/fad(t) room­ mate n##d#d. Coll Tony 454-7216. Negotiable plus Vj bids. 6-17 FEMALE H O USE-M ate wonted Gua- dalup# D.P.S. ar#o. Nice rock kous#, lr##s, dock palios, jacuzzi, privacy, fenced, pel OK. O w n carport, wosk#r& dry#r , mkrowav#. $187.50 + V i bids. 4 5 2 -3 4 5 2 6 -2 0 ANNOUNCEMENTS 11 MATH ■ ■TUTOR 5M W.84tfc9L Olllee 477-7808 O r a r 16 jraara of pcodeee io n e l a e rrlc e b i tpfng « te d st d s m o b # T H 8 S t r u g g l i n g ? ? F r u e t reted Ü to o ls ?? C a ll o r MATH Msovsoe M303F sMoot/i I d R M CS30SP/F csarn CS31S CS410 IS309G CS410 IS407 MMSA/B CS3ZS IS K O E A e C8336 m tm CS34S C SSS2 M477M. CS37? M311 S ü a r m v e m m o s p h v m c s PHV301 CHB4301/302ENQ307 PHV309M. CHEMStOteB ENO 308 PHY309K/L CH E M S H A O ENO310 PHY327M. M E M A8TH0N. EM311 Esooes l « ESS319 EE31# EE411 EE31S EE212 EE323 EMQUBH 311 0. ACC311312 AST301 ACC32B/327 AST302 AST303 AST307 FWBtCH O f ‘'A * 0P A333K AOC364 STAT308 SCO P8V317 SOC317 S ECO303 ECO320K/L EC0024 Don’t put 04# oft unM eta U * *»► •ora an m m . r e too Mo «ton... » 1 mock to l/T w m m m m - SPANMH — WHO . a* Next dopr te Mod Dog 4 Beans W e e t 8 4 0 i S t l 530 — Travel Transportation \ P a l Cui tu i TUTOR 3 S IO M t SS&10HR BLOCK SERVICE R O U N D TRIP ticket on Continental Air­ lines to any destination. Valid until July 9. $ 2 2 0 / 0 8 0 452-3190, morning or very late. 6-22 L a a a A 540 — Lost & Found FEMALE YELLO W Lob found on compus 6-15. N o collar. Cod, 476-0108. 6-21 ^ E D U C A T I O N A L ^ 580 — Musical Instruction GUITAR LESSO N S: R & B, Rock, Jazz] Country, things in between 9 years teaching experience Andy Budington, 452-6181. 7-11L 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 House of | \ \ T U T O R S W PROFESSIONAL TUTORING ALL SUBJECTS OPEN 7 DAYS/WK S U N - T H U R S T IL M ID N IG H T 8 1 3 W . 2 4 t t i ( T r i - T o w e r s ) Also: DEFENSIVE DRIVING NOTEST 472SM 6 TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD CALL SERVICES 660 — Storage STORE YOUR Item with us. All sizes. $25 and up. Extra Space Storage. 892-1482 or 4 6 2 -2 6 8 8 .6 -2 0 750 — Typing A S A P TYPING/W ORD Processing pa­ pen, theses, dissertations, ma¡louts, with a personal touch. $1.60/poge. Candace 451-4885.6-29 RENTAL 430 — Room-Board MADISON -BELAIRE APARTMENTS Freshly Renovated, Large 2 BDRM Apartments ALL BILLS PAID Partial or Full Meal Plans Available • Ceiling Fans • Roommate Matching Service • Swimming Pool • Sport Court Come By For a Tour Today! 709 W. 22nd Street RENTAL 435 — Co-ops i n t r o d u c i n g . . . The Campus Guild 2 blocks UT’ABP-Remodeled’Spacious rooms Cable TV'Delidous meals*Sundeck*Funfunfun $235 doubles • $330 singles Also pre-leasing for fall! H Call soon! 476-1957 510 W. 23rd F R E N C H H O U S E ! $250 doubles $314 singles A ll b ills ( ir e a t m ea ls 4 b lo c k s IIT 478-6586 PEAHLST CO-OP 2 0 0 0 P e a r ! 707 W. 21st . 1 I V 1 I I I A S k i I I h r , N u m i n r i * $266 $347 - » / / / "* k ' • • • ,v ' I7(> 1837 176 3678 ' J p p l * ( a t » O r ‘ 5 476-5678 476-9478 For a great summer! $269 double $369 single A ll bills paid 17 hom e-cooked meeks/week On the d re g 476-5678 474-6905 Key to Open in mastering crown lies four holes Associated Press BROOKLINE, Mass. — When the also-rans reflect Monday and figure out where they lost the U.S. Open they probably will point to The Four Holes at The Country Club. Augusta National, home of the Masters, has its Amen Comer, and The Country Club has a stretch of four monster par-4 holes on the back nine that will bring any golfer to his knees. The front nine ends pleasantly enough, where No. 6 and No. 8 are par-4 holes that measure 312 and 385 yards. The ninth is a reasonable par 5 at 510 yards. That's all just to lull golfers to sleep. The back nine starts with four par 4 holes all measuring at least 433 yards. "Number 11 is the toughest hole on the course," Ben Crenshaw said. "It's a hole you should be happy to play in three 4s and a 5." Denis Watson would have been happy with any of those numbers on No. 11. He came to the hole 2 over for the round and left it 5 over. And he wasn't the only one to come staggering out of the No. 10 through No. 13 stretch on Thurs­ day. Crenshaw backed up his assess­ ment on the four holes with num­ bers. He turned the front nine 2 un­ der par then started the back nine bogey, bogey, bogey. Ken Green also made the turn 2 under. Three holes and three bo­ geys later he was 1-over-par. The word the players use over and over to describe what it will take to win on this course is pa­ tience. Ego-boosting birdies have to be put on back burners here as play­ ers learn to settle for the prudent par. In the case of No. 10 through No. 13, pars will be at a real premium and the players in shape to win Sunday will most likely be the play­ ers who have surrendered to the four monsters and had the patience to lay low until they make it to No. 14. EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part Tim® 800 — General Help Wanted 800— Gem ral Help Wanted $5/HR. 450-0187 $5/HR. 6-17 SUMMER J0BS-STUDENTS CONCERT TICKET SALES 6-9:30, M-F 9-12, SAT Apply: 5555 N. Lamar # 0 0 7 $ TELEMARKETERS $ $400-$500/week New office opening — necessitates immedi­ ate job opportunities her* in Austin. N O SELLING-oppoinknent setting only. Solory or commisiton available -t- generous bonúses. Vocation in Bahamas for those who qualify! Col anytime, oik for Pete. _ O V E R SE A S JO BS Also Cn_ $15,000-$95,400/yr. N o w Hiringl 32 - openingsl (1) 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext. OJ- 9413.7-19 LIKE T O cook/bake? C o r ñ u Ñ a n t s n l M P with expert international, vegetarian and boking recipes. CoM 3 46 -1 9 8 4 .6 -2 11 7-13L ★ 251-5556 ★ 810 — Office- Clerical 6 -2 3 N 800 — General Help Wanted______ $10.50 TO START Summer jobs available for college students. Flexible hours. Advancement programs available. Earn money while receiving good work experi­ ence. Call between 10 am - 5 pm. 454-1000. 7-251 ★ V EN D O R S ★ e Part time/Full-time, Days/nights sell­ ing hot dogs and fajitas downtown locations. e Must be clean-cut, sober and bondable. $3.50/hr. e Call 282-6721; 473-2616 after 12:00 noon. NEED SHARP INDIVIDUAL with professional attitude and appearance to be on-site manoger of small. Weft Austin apartment Community Compensation pock- age includes: efficiency apartment, utilities, plus smoll salary and commissions. Bring or moil resume to . MJ 11940 Jollyville Rd 12017 Austin, Texas 78759 6-17 EMPLOYMENT 830 Need Sharp Individual with professional attitude and appearance to be on-site manager of smal West Austin apartment community. Compensation pack­ age includes: efficiency apartment, irtititiet, pin small salary and commissiont. Bring or mail resume to: MJ 11940 Jollyville Rd 12017 Austin, Texas 78750 TELEMARKETING North Research Blvd area. Now hir­ ing for immediate employment with National Company. Must be able to work Tuesday-Friday 4pm-9pm and Saturday 9am-2pm. Salary plus bonuses. Ideal for students, home­ makers or moonlighters. Earn excel­ lent income in short hours. 331-1463, 4pm-9pm. 7-12N cials. Costing info. (1) 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 Ext. TV-9413. 7-25 6-17 iy l__________ — Ease Your Housing Search with Texan Classifieds SECTION CHIEF TRAINEES MBA's Apply Now The IRS is accepting applications for trainee posi­ tions. Training will consist of individual, classroom, and management assignments designed to prepare train­ ees in Section Chief positions. Salary range $18,726-$22,907. Life, health, retire­ ment benefits, annual and sick leave. Contact the Aus­ tin Service Center Personnel Office at 462-8137 or pick up application forms at 3651 S. IH 35, Austin, TX 73301. N E A R C AM PUS. FuK/Port-time. B O O K - KEEPER (We Train). TYPIST (45 + wpm). RU N N E R (Your C o d O D D JOBS. AppK- cation 9om-4pm, 4 0 8 W. 17lh St. .... 6- 2 3C ___________________________ _ EXPERIENCED 3 0 -t- hour service, mornings/weiekend hours. dra, 469- TYPIST/wordprocessor, compus orea ty *rp « 8 rs. San- >-5653.6-23 8-10 820 — Accounting- Bookkeeping N EA R C A M P U S FuK/Port-time Gate bookkeeping experience. TYPIST (45 + wpm). RU N N E R (your cor). O D D JOBS. Application 9om-4pm, 4 0 8 W. 17th St. 6-20C 840 — Sales ACTORS, STUDENTS, Modelsl Zachary Scott Theatre needs telephone repre­ sentatives. FuH/port-time fund raising. Don, 4 6 9 -0 0 4 4 .6-17N H IG H C O M IS S IO N opportunity self-motivating sales associates. N o in­ ventory required. Training and support offered. Call 346-6951, l-5pm. M -T H 6-22 890 — Clubs- Restaurants___ ENTERTAINERS NEEDED Weekly variety show needs singer^ comedians etc. Showcase your talent at the Boathouse. Contact Gerald 474-9667. Leave message after 5 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. 6-24 BARBEQUE FAST food restaurant, Eatf Riverside Drive. Positions tor cap ab M energetic, associate. 2 5 hours/week, flex­ ible schedule. Call John, 442-3939. 6- 17__________________________ _ D E C A N O W hiring DJ.'s. Bring demo tape between 12pm and 2pm. 7 0 9 E 6m Street. 6-17. 910— Positions Wanted FO R EIG N M ED IC A L student seeking any irt-time summer job. CoH Chiu 4 59 - 16-17 ZIVLEY’S THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE PRINTING, BINDINGmmm H b ^ l 27lh S1REE1 f Sure, We Type FRESHMAN THEMES Why Not Start Out wttti Good Grades? Law Briefs RESUMES 2707HEMPHILL PARK At 27th & Guadalupe Plenty of Parking 472-3210 472-7677 America's Oldest-Largest PROFESSIONAL RESUME SERVICE JOB WINNING! RESUMES $9vr tp. in o r 4 N # ry erVApp *o n * » joaltei ne e MaMng Campaigns SFfT rs » • » Free (ntonrtew/Utetime updtetng «g with:;the: fest; M t h e : i§;|i: M j|H w orld, to find out _ , w hat o u r destiny ' ’ Ú T h e n u m b er of .. * \ fÍÍ®ÍÍlf|^ • A ........................ ■ • ■ • • • • ■ • • • ( • • • • i • • • • « • 1 T * r »«. I % : : ^ n : S : S a : / . v e . \ > Y ¿ . S V . V . y v . * . v . \ v . v . v . \ v . v . a O : S : o : ^ : a u e a a : : : : : • ■ I I ' '/I• 1 V . W . V . V . 1V . V . ’ . V . V . V . V v . ' . ,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.‘ ^ \ i .v .v .v .v .m MMm \ N V \ >N y v r ' s Family must for 'Just say no' success By CRIST1NE MORENO Drug prevention programs designed with the young child in mind are increasing faster than ever before. The effectiveness of these programs must be questioned to determine whether they rep­ resent the best way to control drug use among America's youth. Popular programs in elementary schools in­ clude Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) and the "Ju st say n o" campaign. The anti-drug programs are meant to educate chil­ dren (ages 7-14) about the harm drugs and alcohol do and to help them make wise deci­ sions throughout their lives. Police officers and speakers visit schools and lecture for about an hour every week. Their tactics include films, puppet show s and pamphlets. The "Just Say N o" program w as establish­ ed about three years ago in Oakland, Calif. It is one of the 'm ost effective things we have right now,' said Bobby Heard, assistant youth coordinator with Texans' War on Drugs. "Just Say N o" employs a three-step method to deter drug use. First, children are taught to question whether something is right or wrong. Second, when they decide something is wrong, they are taught to say "n o ." Third­ ly, they seek an alternative activity to keep them occupied. But with children attending school only about seven hours a day and anti-drug speak­ ers lecturing for about an hour every week, children are still affected mostly by their par­ ents. The child may be educated in school but the home environment could have a greater possible effect. Organizations fighting drug use among Analysis school children appear to ignore the parent's role in educating their children about the dan­ gerous effects of drug usage. Among other role models, parents have a big influence on the development of a child. Statistically, if the parents are alcoholics or drug abusers, the child will probably fall in the same pattern, Margaret Lindsey, chair­ man of Prevention and Remediation In Drug Education (PRIDE) said. A new approach to diminish the drug situa­ tion is in dem and. Parents should also be ed­ ucated. The home environment in which the child lives in should be healthy. Many al­ coholic parents set bad exam ples which a e mirrored by these children. One possible solution to the issue would be to conduct a class at elementary schools once a week for parents and students. This gives the parent and child an opportunity to be in­ volved in an activity together while learning important facts about a serious issue. Another remedy is a mandatory class in which parents would learn to help their chil­ dren stay away from drugs and to become more involved in his or her child's life. Alvin Shaw, Austin police lieutenant work­ ing in the Youth Services Department, said this generation (ages 13-22) is 'lost.' In order to save the next generation (elementary chil­ dren) anti-drug program s are getting an early start on prevention. But this lost generation will reproduce, and the role m odels for the following generation to be bom will be the lost ones of today. Michael S. Hernandez Another mWon brain ceNs destroyed. Diverse culture mix enhances campus living By TONIA WITHERSPOON The University of Texas campus presents the viewer a look at people of all cultures and walks of life. What is not as obvious is the influ­ ence each student has on the cam­ pus atmosphere . Do the cultural diversities of the student cause tension, or do they contribute to form a pleasant atmos­ phere? Incidents show that some­ times tension is created because of racial discrimination, especially at schools, such as the University of Texas, that have a mixture of ethnic groups. For example, when UT students built a shanty to protest apartheid, it was destroyed by other students. This incident illustrated the under­ current of tension present among some students. Actions such as these are not common at UT, said Suzan Arm­ strong-West, assistant dean of stu­ dents. No acts of racial hostility have been reported recently. UT is experiencing an influx of minorities because of an increasing amount of recruitment among mi- noritiies, Armstrong-West said. As people from different backgrounds enter college, competition becomes more noticeable among the stu­ dents. Some of the minorities say they feel that they have to be a lot better than the majority because col­ or stands between them and equal opportunities. This com petitiven ess cau ses strain among the students, and they react differently to it. This feeling of discomfort often results in distrust or even hostility. Since more diverse groups have entered campus, changes have been made to guarantee that these stu­ dents have different organizations that help them keep their identity and background. There are courses such as Afro-American classes that are available to students as well as fraternities and sororities for indi­ vidual groups. Does this separation of activities help the student adapt to campus life or does it make things socially segregated? This division of groups supposed­ ly helps minority groups preserve their culture or heritage. Perhaps it does, but it also limits others from learning about the qualities that each ethnic group possesses. UT sororities recently chose to be­ come campus organizations, which means that all women have the right to join, as opposed to the trad­ invitation itional "closed rush" only. This process often excluded particular students from participat­ ing, Armstrong-West said. This is a small step forward, but it will be hard to get students interest­ ed in an organization that had been off limits to them for so long. Armstrong-West also said stu­ dents are apt to shy away from un­ familiar cultures and have a strong proclivity to mix with people of the same background. Some may feel that if they mix with other people they lose their identity. So instead of sharing their culture and enhanc­ ing their peers' experience with their individual characteristics, they fall into the ritual of communicating with a "select" group, she ex­ plained. "Students do not seem to realize that the atmosphere is pleasant when there are more ethnic groups involved. They forget that they can learn from each other," Armstrong- West said. Renee Fisher, a senior majoring in journalism, said it is not surprising to walk into a class that is divided into small groups depending on race. "It's more natural to sit with peo­ ple that you feel comfortable with and it sometimes means with peo­ ple of the same color," Fisher said. The Texas Achiever Volume 5 Editor Mariano Conde de Frankenberg Managing Editors Erica Shaffer, Tonia Witherspoon News Editor Tina Ortiz Assistant News Editors Melinda Lopez, Michelle Leal Rae Moseley Feature Editor Isidro DeLeon, Valerie Assistant Feature Editors Godines, Alan Gomez, Delia Gonzales Omar Curiel Chris Palacios Cristina Moreno Photo Editors Michael Hernandez, Aquila J. McNeal Celina Garcia, Grace Shaw Graphics Editors Editorial Editor Assistant Editorial Editors Advisers/Counselors Griffin Singer,director Debbie Nelson, assistant director Howard Antelis, Jill Blake Martin L. Gibson, Randy Miller Tom Nelson, James Voight The Texas Achiever is a publication of the 1908 High School Journalism Workshop for Minorities at The University of Texas at Austin. Sponsors of the workshop are the Dow Jones News­ paper Fund, Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc., Abilene Re- porter-News, Corpus Christi Caller-Times, Wichita Falls Times Record News, Canon USA, and the University of Texas at Aus­ tin — Office of the Dean of the College of Communication, De­ partment of Journalism, Texas Student Publications and the Off­ ice of the Vice President for Student Affairs. Recruiting Minorities more in demand By ERICA SHAFFER As the minority population in­ creases, universities and businesses are taking advantage by recruiting more minorities to decrease or elim­ inate the disparity in their business­ es. UT president William Cunning­ ham established a new policy of mi­ nority recruitment and retention last October. Under that policy, the University has made approximately 21 offers for faculty positions in 1988. More than 10 Hispanic and black faculty members will be added to the UT faculty this fall. The re­ cruiting policy will continue, as it was designed for long-term enforce­ ment. According to Lewis Wright, as­ sistant vice president of administra­ tion, the University strives to keep its salary structure competitive. He said top dozen in schools in salaries. it ranks the However, incentives to salary hire minorities "are no different than the'Incentives to recruit any other faculty m em ber," Wright said. Cunningham 's policy goes be­ yond hiring minorities. The pres­ ence of a significant number of mi­ nority faculty m em bers would increase the number of minority students en rollin g college, Wright said. "Clearly it w ill," he said. 'T h e point has been clearly made about role models. If one is in successful in recruiting minority fac­ ulty, then one will be successful in recruiting minority students." Recruiting minority students is difficult. Wright said military ser­ vice and community colleges take many minority students. He said some see the armed forces as an al­ ternative to college and see commu­ nity college as an alternative to a four-year college. results He also said that underprepara­ tion in disparity. Suzan Armstrong-West, assistant dean of students agreed, saying that the low entrance rate of minorities is due, in part, to the lack of academic prepa­ ration. Retaining minority students is more difficult, again partially be­ cause of the lack of academic prepa­ ration. The transition from high school to college is another factor. Some stu­ dents, even those with high grades, become unhappy or discouraged because they just do not like col­ lege. Special programs, such as Pre­ view — which allows entering mi­ nority freshman to experience dif­ ferent aspects of the university — are designed to aid in student reten­ tion. These programs are not orient­ ed toward tutoring as much as they seem, but they do try to establish student-teacher relations. "I think there are enough pro­ gram s," Armstrong-West said. "I just don't think we have the partici­ pation we ought to ." Some students may think that they don't need to participate in the programs because they consider them of no help. The role of business begins once minority students complete their education. More and more busi­ nesses are seeing the need and ben­ efits of hiring minorities. According to the U.S. Census Bu reau, minority workers will consti­ tute one-third of the work force by the turn of the century. Some ob­ servers say it is in the best interest of businesses, especially those with few minority workers, to hire them. This not only prevents understaff­ ing, but also helps in competition with foreign businesses. The news media, for example, hire more minorities because "they are grossly under-represented in our business," said Fernando Do- valina, assistant managing editor of the Houston Chronicle. Media opportunities for minori­ ties are endless — from photogra­ phers and reporters to copy editors and managers. "The sky's the lim­ it," Dovalina said. The lack of minorities in the jour­ nalism profession, according to Do­ valina, is due to many things, espe­ cially a long history of racism. Dovalina said this can be changed in part by promoting deserving minor­ ities. "Too many newspapers are too content with just hiring minori­ ties," he said. T he Texas A c h i e v e r — 3 Ethnic enrollment at UT Austin 1987 Source: UT Office Office of Instititianal Studies Minority Prafessars at UT Austin—1987-88 ioo Y □ Whit* B Hispanic B Foreign 0 Am anean Indian Q Asian Amanean B Black N -«,74B ■ Asian B Black B Hispanic 0 Amanean Indiaf Source: UT Austin Office of Institutional Studies _____________ M»172 al ZJMS total faculty_____________ Dovalina has interests outside the newsroom, too. He also said par­ ents should give their children the support they need to succeed He believes teachers need to be told that just because a student is not as well educated as other students, they have no reason to tell a student he or she cannot succeed. "There is almost a constant sys­ tem of rewards for doing a good sto­ ry," Dovalina said. "It could be that minonties have a need for this more than their white counterparts." Norma Sosa, managing editor of the Corpus Christi Caller-Times, be­ lieves things have changed for the better "There are a lot more oppor­ tunities now than when I was a re­ porter looking for my first job " she said "Newspapers are hinng," Sosa said. "They're hiring Hispanics, women, Asians, blacks Thev're looking for diversity, and thev're looking for talent. Newspapers are discovenng that minorities want the same things as everbodv else. I think journalism needs people with different backgrounds and different perspectives." Early birds get the aid By CEUNA GARCIA Complex forms can leave many students wondering it financial aid at the University of Texas is not just a myth, according to a UT official. Financial Aid Office Director Michael Novak said most stu­ dents can nonetheless find aid if they look and should not let lack of understanding or encouragement slow them down. Since grants come mostly from the federal government, bu­ reaucratic demands require that forms be tilled out entirelv and correctly. Details must be given special consideration tor stu­ dents to get the amount they need, Novak said. Students should go to a financial aid counselor tor help in filling out the applications properly, Novak said High school students must rely on their own counselors to help them complete the needed information and forms. If high school counselors cannot provide enough information, anv near­ by college or university financial aid office will probably give assistance, Novak said. State universities and colleges are now- required bv the federal government to increase their minority enrollments and receive money to help attract such students But thts money is not al­ ways easy to acquire, Novak said Don Davis, assistant director of the UT Student Financial Aid Office, said it is still easy to acquire financial help if figures from the 1986-87 academic year are any indication According to these statistics, about 10,500 students were awarded federal grants about 9,000 students received student loans, about 9,500 stu­ dents were given scholarships and about 1,600 students partía pated in the work study program. Most of the students received more than one type of financial aid. A student can substantially increase his or her chances of re­ ceiving monev. Novak said, by appiving for mam different scholarships, like federal fund grants, and student loans A student loan usually has better ioan terms than regular nank loans It does not accrue interest until after the >tudent ¿rauu- ates, and borrowers normailv do not nave to begin paving the monev back until six months after graduation Senior Admission Counselor George W\ macs -aid -tudents should w nte to the particular admissions offices f 'he colleges r universities thev are interested ;n and lsk 'or information :un- ceming special school scholarships "tudents -nouic also write to the particular department in which thev are interested and re­ quest information on financial aid m their chosen held Womack also -cud financial ud applicants should no: ne itr uu Invest to spend a little monev on needed information because mg in vourself is the best investment /ou can nuke Novak said forms should be rilled ut as soon is possible rur two reasons: First, since forms are hard to understand, students need no re time to till them out correctly Those with m correa ir missing information are orten sent back Because this takes more time ’it thedeadlme a student ris k s missing tie deadline ¡nd meen mg nothing Second, most aid programs, espeouilv federal ud, iave umt ed funds. This means the onger -.tudents /vait o ippiv m lower their chance of recetv mg fhe needed monev Dwavne Carranza, ehenustrv junior -aid he ,ouid corroborate File as eariv is o-u nossibiv can, these tacts from experience because it increases vour chances ot