Da ily T e x a n Vol. 89, No. 41 3 Sections The student new spaper of The University of Tex as at Austin ________________ Monday, October 3 0 ,1 9 8 9 25 c 000 S. Africans Associated Press CROWN MINES, South Africa — More than 70,000 blacks chanting in triumph welcomed freed leaders of the outlawed African National Congress on Sunday at the largest anti-government rally in the country's history. Virtually every aspect of the rally — including repeated praise for the ANC's guerrilla campaign — violated security laws, but police kept their distance. Government-run reported the rally as the top item on the evening news. television "Today, the ANC has captured center stage in South Africa," said Walter Sisu- lu, 77, the group's former general secre­ tary, from a podium erected beneath huge banners of the ANC and the South African Communist Party. He and six ANC colleagues were freed uncondition­ ally from prison Oct. 15. All but one had spent at least 25 years in prison. The crowd, which also included white South Africans and diplomats from at least 15 countries, filled most of the seats in a soccer stadium recently opened out­ side Johannesburg. "We have come here to witness a his­ toric event," said West German diplo­ matic Andreas Zobel. Police and soldiers set up roadblocks nearby and searched vehicles, but few se­ curity force personnel were visible at the stadium itself. Sisulu said his movement would never abandon its guerrilla campaign unilater­ ally but would consider suspending vio­ lence and entering talks if the govern­ freed all political prisoners, ment legalized the ANC and lifted the 40- month-old state of emergency. "To date, we see no clear indication that the government is serious about negotiation," said Sisulu, who urged in­ tensified economic sanctions. "All the utterances are vague." The government gave permission for the rally to take place, part of an attempt by President F.W. de Klerk to promote black-white negotiations on a new consti­ tution. But a magistrate had warned or­ ganizers that speakers should avoid pro­ moting ANC aims. "We refused," said Cyril Ramaphosa, a union leader and one of the main orga­ nizers. "The ANC lives. It is amongst us." Deafening cheers erupted when Sisulu and his colleagues emerged from beneath the grandstands and slowly circled the playing field behind an honor guard of 20 young militants, clad in khaki uniforms and marching in military style. At the end of the parade was 80-year- old ANC official Oscar Mpetha, being pushed in a wheelchair. He was the country's oldest political prisoner before his release. Walter Sisulu gives the crowd the black power salute. Associ^tfld Pross Union requests internal audit Board seeks budget cures Hope Yen Daily Texan Staff In a move to seek solutions for the Texas Union's budget problems, the Union Board of Directors on Fri­ day approved a subcommittee's rec­ ommendation to request an audit of the organization's finances. Karroll Kitt, spokeswoman for the subcommittee and an associate pro­ fessor of home economics, said after considering the services of the UT Office of Internal Audits, an inde­ pendent accounting firm, a consult­ ant familiar with student union finances and professors from the UT School of Business, members of the subcommittee — established two weeks ago to seek consultation for the Union — agreed to recommend that the UT Office of Internal Audits conduct the investigation. "I don't know what you want to call it — a consultation, audit or whatever — but we looked at the key considerations of the time in­ volved for the consultation, the cost factor, and the credibility to both the students and the board," Kitt said. "The cost is nothing for an inter­ nal audit. With the receipt of the au­ dit in the spring semester, the board will be able to use the information provided and decide if further study is necessary," she said, explaining that the costs of using an accounting firm or a Union consultant have been would be prohibitive. She added that Robert May, chairman of the Department of Ac­ that counting, expressed doubt business professors would be will­ ing to take on an extensive audit in the time frame the board wanted. Board members unanimously ap­ proved a two-week operational au­ dit evaluating Union procedures on purchasing, receiving and invento­ ry- The board also approved a two- month profit and loss analysis by the audit office to review how Un­ ion funds are used and, if neces­ sary, to recommending practices improve efficiency and economy. In addition, board members ap­ proved a three-month management survey in which Union employees will be questioned about how they feel about their jobs in terms of ef­ fectiveness. Board members have been seek­ ing solutions for the Union's finan- Please see Union, page 2 A swinging set Tom Stevens/Daily Texan Staff Deborah Kearney, a sociology senior, and Dominique Marshall, a finance junior, ride the swings at Pease Park. The roommates, both from Houston, are in Phi Beta Chi sorority, which was having a field day at the park Sunday afternoon. “W e do everything together,” Marshall said. Hearing- Larry Rowe Daily Texan Staff An alarming number of deaf and hearing-impaired people might not know how to prevent AIDS, but now they can find out about the dis­ ease at home with a program that offers safe sex workshops in sign language. AIDS Services of Austin, in re­ sponse to a suspected high rate of Human Immunodeficiency Virus in­ fection in Austin's deaf and hear­ ing-impaired community, in August made its Home Safer Sex Work­ shops for Gay Men accessible to the deaf community, said Paul Clover, the agency's education director, Fri­ day. Clover said there are reasons to believe that the deaf community, like other communities whose pri- AIDS Hispanic Hj|Hj|us/’ Jimenez officials and so- pjffP to the growing jpt^ÍNational Latino which broad- 0 Austin. MtkwTpfograms to in- behavior could ■and stop acti vites which isa major fac- increasing AIDS rate. B - or more than 16,800 of the 109,000 people who have AIDS in the United States — are Hispanic, according to statistics from the Centers ror Disease Control. Yolanda Serrano, a health worker In Phila­ delphia, also spoke during the discussion, say­ ing that she delivers dean needles to crack houses in her area to prevent addicts from sharing needles and spreading the deadly dis- ■ Serrano said 53 percent of Hispanic women with AIDS contracted the disease through in- mary language is not spoken Eng­ lish, is more susceptible to contract­ ing AIDS. "All of our outreach to this com­ munity is because they are so isolat­ ed from the normal means of com­ munication," he said. "They don't hear the radio or television. They don't hear conversations about AIDS. So they are lacking the infor­ mation on how AIDS is transmitted. "On the East and West coasts, we are seeing a higher per capita rate of AIDS in the deaf community," he said. The agency's Deaf AIDS Task Force members, communicating in language, conduct safe sex sign they workshops tell in which groups which sexual activities are safe and which are not. They also lead the group in discussing cre­ ative ways to safely approach their sexuality. Navy jet crash kills 5, injures 2 INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY Associated Press PENSACOLA, Fla. — A trainer jet crashed Sunday afternoon on the flight deck of the aircraft carrier Lex­ ington in the Gulf of Mexico, killing five people and injuring at least two, the Navy said. The 3:30 p.m. CST crash of the two-seat T-2 Buckeye caused several fires on the World War II-era ship that sailors quickly brought under control, officials said. The Lexington, the Navy's oldest aircraft carrier, was 30 miles south of its home port of Pensacola when the accident occurred, said Harry White, a civilian spokesman at Pen­ sacola Naval Air Station. The jet was assigned to Training Squadron 19, based at the Meridian, Miss., Naval Air Station, White said. The victims' identities were being withheld pending notification of their relatives. In addition to destroying the jet, the crash did major damage to two aircraft on the ship and minor dam­ age to another, said Army Maj. John Smith, a spokesman, at the Penta­ gon. I ALA. lS»Pe¡Pensacola Plane Crash 1150 miles I --------------- Associated Press Navy helicopters took casualties to the West Florida Regional Medi­ cal Center and the U.S. Navy Hos­ pital in Pensacola, and to the Uni­ versity of South Alabama Medical Center in Mobile, authorities said. second- and One of the injured, Anthony Lo­ pez, 21, was in critical but stable condition at the Mobile hospital with third-degree bum s over 40 to 45 percent of his body, hospital spokeswoman Moni­ ca Knight said. Lopez was the only sailor brought to that hospital, she said. The Lexington was heading back to Pensacola, and was expected to arrive at the city's commercial port on Monday, officials said. The Coast Guard sent a jet from Mobile to fly a team of ordnance ex­ perts from Panama City to Pensaco­ la, Coast Guard Lt. Mark Kasper said in New Orleans. The Navy ap­ parently was concerned that fuel cells atxiard the jet might explode after being damaged in the crash, Kasper said. The 46-year-old Lexington is the only aircraft carrier used exclusively by the Navy for training. It has 1,440 men and women assigned to it. The accident occurred a week be­ fore the 45th anniversary of a Japa­ nese kamikaze attack that killed 47 crew members and injured 127 on Nov. 4, 1944. The original Lexington crew plans to hold a reunion next weekend in Pensacola that includes a day cruise on Saturday, Nov. 4, to commemo­ rate the attack. The Lexington was commissioned on Feb. 17, 1943. Its planes sank or destroyed more than a million tons of Japanese shipping and 1,039 ene­ my aircraft. Sixth Street’s not exactly what is used to be — that is, if anyone can decide just what it used to be. Simultaneously seen by some Austin club owners and others as a ghost town, a “yuppie enclave” and other assorted adjectives, just what does the future hold in store for the Images strip? Also inside:_______________________ Campus abortion groups readying troops TD-throwing Metcalf, Browns trounce Oilers 6 9 Weather: Cloudy with a 60 percent chance of rain. Turning breezy and cooler with highs in the mid-70s and lows near 50. Index: Around Austin.......................... 12 Around Campus.................. 15 Classifieds............................. 13 Comics....................................15 Editorials............................... 4 Im ages................ Supplement Sports................................... 9 State & L o cal...................... 7 University............................ 6 World & Nation...................... 3 Clover said the task force had to rewrite AIDS prevention language, such as the use of the word "trans­ mission," to make it appropriate for a deaf audience. "In the deaf community, it ['transmission'] would be an auto­ mobile part," he said. "We have to say the virus gets from me into you through these ways." Task force member Mark Seeger said most deaf and hearing-im­ paired people might not know about AIDS simply because their primary language is sign, not Eng­ lish. "Most deaf people read at a third- grade level or below, but not all," Seeger said. "As a result, a lot of the coverage did not reach the deaf and hearing-impaired population." Most news coverage about AIDS Please see AIDS, page 2 Students will have chance to grade UT Dane Schiller Daily Texan Staff to articulate In November, students will be able their concerns about the University to administra­ to rs in the Main Building, legislators in the Capitol and Texans in their homes, student leaders said Sun­ day. The Students' Association is in the final stages of preparing a "re­ ferendum" that will give students an opportunity to rate the quality of the University's educational envi­ ronment, said Patrick Elwood, chairman of the SA's University Pol­ icy committee. "If nothing is ever said, the ad­ ministration will have no means of knowing how students feel, aside from someone standing up in the free speech area at noon and having PI— a — Rating UT, paga 2 Page 2 Monday, October 30,1989 T H E D A IL Y T EXA N *UT Austin departments only Lansing Pugh Autodesk's UT Representative 441-4666 A AutoCAD $750* AutoCAD and the Autodesk logo are regstered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office by Autodesk, Inc NORTH, SOUTH 4 C A M PU S Court Approved TIC K ET 'DISM ISSAL! • Frequent classes • insurance Discounts • Pay at the Door LOCATIONS NEAR YOU. BUDGET DEFENSIVE DRIVING .454-5300. 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F O X "For the Best Pictures o f Your P H O T O t-HRLABS ” Union Continued from page 1 cial problem s since the beginning of the sem ester, w hen Union Director Andrew Smith told them the organ­ ization would face revenue loss as early as 1991 because of state-man- dated pay raises. Smith also w arned board m em ­ bers that unless relief m easures are put in place, the Union will suffer "drastic cuts in staff, program s, ser­ vices and hours of operation." John M urphy, a board m em ber and a professor of advertising, said he believes the board is taking "the wrong direction" in finding solu­ tions for the Union's budget prob­ lems. "I'm uneasy with this report," he said, referring to the recom m enda­ tions. "I d o n 't think the problem is financial. It shows up on financial sheets, but it has to do with m arket­ ing problems. "Isn't the audit going to show us that in allocating costs for the Union dining service that there's a prob­ lem?" he asked. "We already know that, but the question is w hat are we going to do about it?" Neel Baumgardner, board chair­ man and a m em ber of the subcom ­ mittee, said the option of m arketing studies remains open to the board. Board m em bers also passed a motion authorizing Baum gardner, a business junior, to establish a sub­ committee charged with finding sources for m arketing suggestions for the Union. The board also authorized Baum­ gardner to appoint two more sub­ committees — one into fund-raising possibilities for the Un­ the other to investigate ion and ways of seeking University financial support for Union program s and operations. to look M urphy said he believes the Uni­ versity should provide some help. "It seems unfair to make the Union bear the burden of all costs w hen contributing to the educational op­ the students," he portunities of said. But Carol Prior, a Union staff member, w arned of the dangers of having the University support part of the U nion's program ming. "If the program s area is paid for and separated, the heart of the U n­ ion is no longer in place," she said, explaining that the organization's central mission is to serve the stu­ dents. "If separated, it would put us in a precarious situation. We would no longer have the Union and the Uni­ versity will look at us in a way of solely business," she said. Powell also w arned of the d an ­ gers of creating a fund-raising sub­ committee. T h e D a i l y T e x a n Permanent Staff Editor........................... Managing Editor.............. Associate Managing Editors ............. News Editor Associate News Editors . News Assignments Editor General Reporters ........... . Associate E d it o r s ........... Entertainment Editor Associate Entertainment Editor Sports E d it o r .............................. Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporters Photo Editor.................................... Associate Photo Editor Images Editor.............. Associate Im ages Editors Graphics Editor Around Campus Editor . Jaime ........... Karen Adams Robert Wilonsky Jeanne Acton, Bruce McDougall, Rob Walker, Janet Webb . Randy Kennedy Alan Hines, Ron Lubke Mindy Brown Susan Boren, Dan Dworin, Gerard Farrell, Eva Llorens. Dane Schiller, Diana Williams . Steve Crawford, Greg Weiner Jeff Turrentine Bobby Ruggiero Dave Winter Gilbert Garcia Aron, Ray Dise, Craig Douglas. Paul Hammons John Foxworth . . Marc Fort Lee Nichols Mike Clark, Greg May Tom King Jenny Jolin ......................... . . Issue Staff News Assistants . . . Sports Assistant Sports Writers . Entertainment Assistant Editorial Columnist. . Editorial A ssistan t......................... Makeup Editor......................................................... Wire Editor . . Copy Editors Photographers Graphics Assistant................................................... Comic Strip Cartoonists . . . . . Martha FitzSimon, Larry Rowe. Miguel Salinas, Leslie Wimberly, Hope Yen Wayne Hardin Jeff Caplan. Davud Hansen Jen Howze Kristy Wiley Kim Horner . Jennifer Kowalik April Eubanks. Laura McCarty, Andrea Reece, Andy Thomas Austin Holiday, Tom Stevens Tom King, Robert Rodriguez 1 Local Display Classified Display Classified Telephone Sales Advertising C a ry B Cook, S a m Hefton, M elanie H a n so n D avid Law rence, D avid Lutz, Kelly M cLe an, Beth Mitchell, M ichael Oh, G ina Padilla, C ind y Pels, Jo d y Ruhberg, C h a rle s W ickm an, C h ris W ilson Noel Hw ang, C h a rle s Hym an, S h a w n M c M in n Classified Telephone Service ............................................ Michelle Dapra, Paula Barrett Ju and a Powell, S te ve D a v id so n Je n a Kim, Be c ky Pokluda ............................................ Robert A costa, Art Carrillo, The Daily Texan (U S P S 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas al Austin is published by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis. Austin, TX 78705 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday Wednesday. Thursday and Fnday except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710 New s contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 101) For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865 For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471-8900 For classified word advertising, call 471-5244 Entire contents copyright 1989 Texas Student Publications The Daly Texan Mai Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring) Two Sem esters (Fall and Spring) Summer Session One Year (Fall, Spring and Summer) T S P Building C 3 200. or call 471-5083 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P O Box D Austin TX 78713-7209 or to To charge by V IS A or MasterCard, call 471-5083 P O ST M A ST E R : Send address changes to TSP, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209. $30 00 55 00 20 00 75 00 AIDS Continued from page 1 im m une deficiency uses medical term inology that m any deaf people m ight not com prehend, Seeger said. "The w hole term, ac­ quired syn­ drome, is hard enough for your av­ erage Joe Blow to com prehend," he said. "Imagine som eone coming language trying from a different to." A brochure produced by the task force for hearing-im paired readers language defines AIDS terms. "Acquired to get, Im m une body protect, Deficiency weak, Syn­ drom e disease," the pam phlet states. in sign Seeger said AIDS education over­ looked the hearing-im paired popu­ lation before deaf outreach efforts. "All of the lack of inform ation that deaf people experience is what leads many people to believe that they might not have been aware of safe sex practices," he said. "They might have engaged in unsafe prac- tives while the rest of the popula- Rating UT Continued from page 1 a 30-minute discussion on minority recruitment and retention," Elwood said. The results of the survey, which will be conducted Nov. 13-17, will be broken dow n by individual col­ leges for evaluation, he said. With the results, the SA will give the Uni­ versity an overall grade for its edu­ cational environm ent. Analyzed results will be sent to members of the Texas Legislature, UT adm inistrators and media or­ ganizations throughout the state for publication, Elwood said. He said he believes the project will give adm inistrators and politi­ cians a fresh perspective with which to evaluate the University! In the past, the adm inistration has relied on presidential commit­ tees to gauge student concerns, El­ wood said. The problem , he said, is that the adm inistration relies on committee m em bers for answ ers — regardless of their qualifications to evaluate the questions. "The adm inistration is more apt to take into account w hat a tenured professor has to say. W hether he is in touch with the student body or not has been irrelevant to them ," he said. SA members will carry out the Angela Stallings survey by m anning booths across the campus. U ndergraduate stu­ dents will answ er 15 questions that cover such areas as class availabili­ ty, student access to professors, mi­ nority recruitm ent and retention and financial aid, Elwood said. Jeanette Moreno "These are im portant issues to every student on this cam pus and only by voicing their opinion will the adm inistration be able to gauge their concerns," he said. Elwood said m em bers of the ad­ m inistration are aw are of the re­ ferendum but are wary of its poten­ tial impact. "They think it will be a good thing, but are also afraid that if it is not done correctly it may hurt the University," he said. "W e disa­ gree." James Vick, vice president of stu­ dent affairs, could not be reached for com m ent about the survey Sun­ day. But Jerry H addican, SA presi- tion had already been educated and was making inform ed choices." Tom Cox, a task force m em ber w ho teaches in sign language d u r­ ing the w orkshops, said he notices in the deaf audience a realization of "m ore of the factual things about AIDS — things we w ould probably take for granted because w e're so bom barded with it. "It's so simple, yet it can be so im portant," he said. Anyone w ho w ants to host a hom e w orkshop can contact the agency and request that the Deaf AIDS Task Force send a team to teach their group about preventing HIV infection, Clover said. The w orkshops also are available for hearing audiences. O ther efforts by the AIDS services agency to reach the deaf com m unity include advertising their Telephone Device for the Deaf and distributing an AIDS prevention brochure, writ­ ten in sign language syntax. “The administration is more apt to take into ac­ count what a tenured professor has to say.” — Patrick Elwood, SA University Policy Committee chairman dent, said he is unaw are of any con­ cerns about the project from within the adm inistration. H addican said although nobody from the adm inistration has contact­ ed him about the survey, he be­ lieves there is no better way to gauge the state of the University than to go directly to the students. "W ho better to grade the Univer­ sity than those people w ho have to live with the degree they earn for the rest of their lives?" Haddican asked. "This is a real good chance for the SA to go to the students and give them a chance to say w hat is on their m inds, instead of speaking for them and guessing w hat is on their m ind," he said. Evaluating the stu d en ts' perspec­ tive is imperative to an un d erstan d ­ ing of the University, Haddican said. "N o adm inistrator waits in line for financial aid or waits two hours at the [Student] Health Center. Stu­ dents are the best yardsticks for judgm ent of how the University is doing." David Ritchie, a public affairs and law graduate student, said he be­ lieves no one involved w ith the sur­ vey is out to hurt the University but to im prove it. Ritchie, an SA m em ber, said the survey will give students an oppor­ tunity to evaluate their education via a format similar to the one that is presently used by students to evalu­ ate their individual instructors. "If this thing can make the ad­ m inistration more aw are of the stu­ dent body's concerns, it has more than paid for itself," he said. SALE “SHORT” BOOTS to $ 9 9 Values to s13525 Brands From White Mountain, Perry Ellis, Mia and Others. Forme Masses. 15DTX Free Glasses Buy a pair of contact lenses or glasses and get a free pair of glasses at ISO's Free For All Sale. Buy a complete pair of glasses or contact lenses at the regular pnce and get a free pair of glasses (same person) from our specially tagged collection Offer includes most single vision and bifocal prescriptions Some lens restnctions apply Minimum first pair purchase cm glasses or contact lenses, $99 Tints, Uv and no­ scratch coatings are available at regular cost Complete glasses include frames and . lenses Exam and care kit not included Eyeglasses and/or contact lens (if applicable) prescription required for purchase Coupon must be presented at time of order. No other discounts apply Most TSOs are operated by doctors of optometry An independent doctor of optometry is located ad jacent to some TSO offices Lifter good through November 26,1909, at participating TSCV T O TEXAS STATE O PTICAL A AflurdahieByevrear. fixin A fimuly Of Doctors. I l i l M i S B v O f D o c i l — —- — _ a1¿ £ l 2 J I I I I I Oyer 10 TSO offices in the Austin area: Austin • Oak Hill • Round Rock • San Marcos cismpmtu me WORLD & NATION v v w n i . u ex i x m i i w m I I I ! M o n d a v ■ O c t o b o f 3 0 . 19 8 c) P <' i q f I) \ I I \ H \ \ N FRIDAY S DOW JO N E S 2.596 72 DOWN 17.01 V olum e 1 70.330.000 shares Soviets grant bloc freedom Hungary, E. Germany allowed to possess ‘the right of choice’ Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — The Krem lin would not object if H ungary chose to leave the W arsaw Pact or East G erm any chose to reunite with W est G erm any, Soviet officials said Sunday. A senior Bush adm inistration offi­ cial expressed surprise at the com ­ m ents, by Soviet party spokesm an Nikolai Shishlin and Foreign M inis­ try spokesm an G ennadi Gerasim ov. Previously, Soviet and Hungarian officials have stressed that Hungary would stay in the W arsaw Pact. The Soviet statem ents follow ed a declaration by President Mikhail Gorbachev last w eek that his nation had no moral right to interfere with changes under way in the Soviet bloc nations of Eastern Europe. G orbachev also declared a will­ ingness to dissolve the W arsaw Pact if the W est disbands the North A t­ lantic Treaty O rganization, a step the Bush adm inistration has reject­ ed as an effort to cut U .S. influence in Europe. Shishlin, appearing on the ABC- TV program This Week With David Brinkley, w as asked w hether the So ­ viet Union would object if Hungary decided to leave the W arsaw Pact. "W e resp ect the H ungarian choice, anyhow . W e are not afraid of these ch a n g e s," said Shishlin. Asked w h ether Hungary was "fre e to leave the W arsaw P act," Shishlin replied: "Su rely. But you know that Hungarian officials de­ clared that they are ready to be in the W arsaw Pact, until n o w ." In 1956, a declaration by H ungari­ an leader Imre Nagy that his nation would quit the alliance prompted Soviet military intervention. In re­ cent m onths, reform leaders elected to pow er in H ungary and Poland have declared their intention to re­ main in the Soviet alliance. Shishlin also appeared to leave the door open to reunification of W est and East G erm any, which have been divided since World W ar II. The U .S. and W est G erm an gov­ ernm ents historically have favored unification, but the East G erm an and Soviet governm ents have not. In light of the turmoil in East G er­ m any, Shishlin said: "N obod y can predict w hat will happen. And I am sure that this situation should be changed and it will be ch an g ed ." "H ow will it be ch an g ed ?," Sh ish ­ lin w as asked. plied. "B v the right of ch o ice,” he re­ "E vervth ing depends on the G er­ m ans. But it is necessary to under­ stand our interests, not to d estabil­ ize the situation in E u ro p e," he said. "L e t us wait a little bit, and I think w e will find a new situ atio n ." Shishlin did not respond directly w hen asked w h ether it would be possible to rem ove the Berlin W all, erected by East G erm any and the Soviet Union in 1961 to prevent the flight of refugees to the W est. G erasim ov, appearing on the sy n­ d ica ted p ro g ram , O n e-O n -O n e, called the new policy "th e Frank Sinatra D o ctrin e." "F ran k Sinatra has a very popular song, I Had it M y Way. So, H u n­ gary, Poland, every other country, has its ow n way. They decide w hich road to take. It's their business. And w e w atch, w atch closely, but we do not in terfere," said G erasim ov. Politburo member Guenter Schabowski defended his position as a communist politician in front of several thousand East Berliners Sunday E. Berlin mourns victims of wall Associated Press BERLIN — At least 20,000 East Berliners ob­ served a m inute of silence Sunday for those killed while attem pting to flee over the Berlin Wall, the first such public m ourning since C om ­ m unist authorities built the wall in 1961. The observance cam e as the East Berliners gathered in a dow ntow n square for a rallv called by M ayor Erhard Krack to discuss reform . Sim i­ lar m eetings w ere organized in the southern cit­ ies of Leipzig and Karl-M arx-Stadt as part of a governm ent effort to stop activists from staging protests to voice their dem ands. dem ocracy protests in recent w eeks. Protesters rallied in at least three cities Saturday night. In East Berlin, m icrophones were provided for speakers from the crow d, one of whom called for the m inute of silence. "W e have to rem em ber those w ho lost their lives in the m inefields and along the barbed wire and in the w aters of the Spree River just because once in their lives they wanted to see another part of the w o rld ," said the man, w ho was uni­ dentified. "If the present reform course really leads to a better socialism , it's at least necessary to rem em ­ ber those victim s of a policy of the past that nev­ er corresponded to reality ," he said. in 1961 to prevent the country's citizens from fleeing W est. The w all's construction w as su­ pervised by Erich H onecker, the hard-line leader who was replaced this month after 18 years as party leader. He w as replaced by Egon Krenz. W est G erm an hum an rights groups say 191 people were killed trying to flee East G erm any from 1961 to 1988. The East Berlin dialogue session outside the old City Hall was sponsored by the city's C om ­ m unist leadership. It quickly becam e an em o­ tional forum in w hich C om m unist leaders were called to account for a host of m isdeeds and blunders. They w ere frequently greeted with boos and w histles. All three cities have been shaken by large pro­ East Germ an authorities built the Berlin Wall Bush, Ortega at odds over ending 19-month cease-fire Associated Press M ANAGUA, Nicaragua — O pposition leaders said Saturday that President Daniel O rtega plans to end a cease-fire with contra rebels to disrupt national elections that the governm ent fears it will lose. But O rtega returned hom e Saturday from a regional sum m it saying President Bush had show n interest in enlisting the help of other Latin A m erican presidents to change O rtega's decision to end the 19-m onth-old truce. " I interpret this as a predisposition of President Bush, amid all his rhetoric, of negotiating this m atter of the truce with the m ediation" of Latin Am erican presidents, O rtega said. Luis Sanchez, a spokesm an for the N a­ tional O pposition Union, said the cancella­ tion of the cease-fire "p laces the electoral process under a state of sie g e ." He spoke to Radio Católica, N icaragua's Rom an C atho­ lic C hurch radio station, in a telephone in ­ terview from San Jose, C osta Rica, w here the sum m it was held. He called O rtega's plan "a m aneuver to intim idate the p o p u latio n ." Before leaving C osta Rica, O rtega an ­ nounced that his leftist Sandinista govern­ m ent will end the cease-fire with U .S.- backed contra rebels, but he did not say w hen. Ortega said Friday the cease-fire could not hold because of stepped up attacks by rebels. "T h e drop of w ater that m ade the glass spill o v er" w as an attack O ct. 21 in which 19 soldiers died, he told an audience at the “I interpret this as a predispo­ sition of President Bush, amid all his rhetoric, of negotiating this matter of the truce with the mediation.” — Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega University of Costa Rica. O rtega said his governm ent will formally announce Tuesday w hether it will extend the for another month. It was presum ed he would end the cease-fire then. the contras truce with ning of every m onth. Ortega said he had spoken with presi­ dents Carlos Andres Perez of Venezuela and O scar Arias of Costa Rica at the sum ­ mit and that they told him they w ere will­ ing to m ediate betw een O rtega and Bush on the truce. Interview ed live by governm ent-run Voice of Nicaragua radio after stepping off an airplane on his return to M anagua, O rte­ ga denied reports he had storm ed out of the two-day summit. He said he left early simply to attend to matters in Nicaragua. Ortega dism issed a Bush com m ent call­ ing him a "little m a n ," saying: "T h is is a totally defensive attitude on the part of President B u sh ." For 19 m onths, the governm ent had been extending the truce, usually at the begin­ Contra leader Adolfo Calero said in a telephone interview in Miami that the co n ­ tras were not responsible for the O ct. 21 ambush. "O rtega is crying w o lf," he said. "Behind this ploy we can see that he w ants to dis­ rupt the electoral process because of Violeta C ham orro's increasing popularity and sup­ p o rt." Violeta Barrios de Cham orro of the coali­ tion National O pposition Union is O rtega's main challenger in the Feb. 25 election. Calero and Bosco M atam oros, the chief contra spokesm an in W ashington, said reb­ els have neither the w eapons nor m anpow ­ er to m ount offensives. "It defies any logic that 3,000 m en at the most could carry out any military operation in N icaragua," M atam oros said in a tele­ phone interview . He said m ost contras re­ mained in cam ps in neighboring H onduras. Associated Press Quakes in Algiers kill 19, injure 100 ALGIERS, Algeria — Tw o earth ­ quakes about 15 m inutes apart struck northern Algeria Sunday night, killing at least 19 people and injuring about 100, the Interior M inistry reported. M ost of the deaths w ere in the Tipasa region 40 miles w est of Al­ giers and in the tow n of C hurchell on the M editerranean coast 60 miles w est of the capjtal, the m in­ istry said in a statem ent issued early M onday. The French governm ent an­ nounced in Paris that it w as offer­ ing em ergency aid to Algeria, a former French colony. The N ational C enter of A strono­ my and G eophysics said the earth ­ quakes, at 8:15 p.m . and 8:27 p.m ., w ere estim ated at 6.0 on the Richter scale Iran to mark embassy takeover N ICO SIA , C yprus — Iran said Sunday it will mark the 10th anni­ versary of the storm ing of the U .S. Em bassy in Tehran by letting its citizens tour the captured com ­ pound and look at Iranians w ho allegedly spied for the CIA. Iran's official Islam ic Republic News Agency urged Iranians to take an active part in the celebra­ tions on Saturday, the anniversary of the em bassy'^ seizure and the beginning of a traum atic hostage crisis. in Tehran Radio said Nov. 4, the date 1979 when militants stormed the em bassy, has been of­ ficially named "D ay of the Strug­ gle Against Global A rrog ance," an Iranian euphemism for the United States. 20 die in fiery plane crash HON OLULU — Rescuers recov­ ered 20 bodies Sunday from the charred wreckage of a com m uter plane that crashed in a rem ote val­ ley on the island of M olokai, offi­ cials said. The victim s included m em bers of a high school's volley­ ball teams. There w ere no survivors, M aui Deputy Fire C hief Leroy H okoana said. in a "T h a t thing was b a d ," H okoana said interview . telephone "T h e re is debris spread over about 300 feet and parts of the plane b u rn ed ." Fire rescue team s w ere using helicopters to ferry the bodies back to Kahului Airport on the island of M aui, Hokoana said. The islands separated by 10-mile-wide are Pailolo C hannel. Mexican train crash kills 1 M EXICO CITY — A passenger train crashed into tw o parked loco­ m otives Sunday in the w estern state of N ayarit, killing one person and injuring about 100 people, of­ ficials said. the Dr. Raul Parra at Ixtlan Health C enter said that the loco­ motive engineer w as killed in the crash and that the firem an w as se­ riously injured. He estim ated the num ber of people injured at 100 and said his center had treated 56, m ost of w hom had been released. The train, El Sinaloense, w as on its way from the Pacific beach re­ sort of M azatlan to G uadalajara, 550 miles w est of M exico City, w hen the collision occurred near the small tow n of A guacatlan, 40 miles southeast of Tepic. News reports from Tepic said it may have been caused by faulty rail sw itching. A uthorities said they w ere investigating. Fire whips through Malibu roared M A U BU , Calif. — A wind- through whipped blaze brush and canyon country over­ looking the Pacific O cean Sunday, charring 4,000 acres, destroying one home and forcing more than 2,000 cam pers to flee in this celeb­ rity enclave, officials said. U.S. extradites alleged Medellin smuggler Associated Press BO G O TA , Colom bia — The alleged m aster smuggler of the M edellin cocaine cartel was turned over to U .S. nar­ cotics agents before dawn Sunday at a Bogota airport and the United to States, C olom bian authorities flown C O L O M B IA A T W AR said. The suspect, Jose Abello Silva, was the fifth and most im portant drug trafficking suspect ex­ tradited from Colom bia to the United States since the Colom bian governm ent began a drug crackdow n 10 w eeks ago. He was being flown to Tulsa, w here he was wanted on charges of conspiracy and distribu­ tion of cocaine. Abello was the fifth Colom bian extradited to the United States since the governm ent of Presi­ dent Virgilio Barco declared w ar on drug traffick­ ers Aug. 19. Eight more Colom bian drug trafficking su s­ pects are being held for extradition. Abello was arrested O ct. 10 in a Bogota restau ­ rant. Police said he had undergone plastic sur­ gery to avoid detection. He was turned over to C olom bia's secret po­ lice, the Adm inistrative Security D epartm ent, and held under provisional arrest w hile the U .S. Justice D epartm ent forwarded the extradition papers. Abello was indicted by a federal grand jury in Tulsa on Sept. 2, 1987, along with Florida stock broker Frank Palm ero. Palm ero later was con­ victed on drug distribution charges and sen ­ tenced to 16 years in prison. Abello allegedly traveled to Aruba in 1986 and conspired with convicted cocaine trafficker Boris O larte-M orales, Palm ero and others to import 500 kilograms of cocaine into the United States. Cornelius D ougherty, a spokesm an for the U .S. Drug Enforcem ent Adm inistration, said Abello "w as considered a m ajor transporter for the M edellin cartel." While Abello is the m ost im portant drug traf­ ficking suspect snared so far in the drug crack­ dow n, he does not figure in the U .S. Justice D e­ partm ent's list of the 12 m ost wanted traffickers. Resignation lowers voters’ opinions of Thatcher Associated Press LO N D O N — Prim e M inister M argaret Thatch­ er said Sunday she fully supported Nigel Law ­ son during his six years as Britain's treasury chief and tried to talk him out of quitting. But a flurry of public opinion polls taken after Law son's sudden resignation as chancellor of the exchequer suggests voters now think less of Thatcher. O ne poll show ed a m ajority o f voters want her to step dow n as C onservative Party leader before the next election. "T o me, the chancellor's position was u nas­ sailable. I alw ays supported h im ," Thatcher said in a com bative television interview . "N igel had determ ined that he was going to put in his resignation. I did everything possible to stop him but I was not su ccessfu l." Law son resigned his C abinet post Thursday, saying he could not continue to serve as long as Thatcher retained her part-tim e personal eco­ nom ic adviser, Sir Alan W alters. The W ashing­ ton-based W alters also resigned. Thatcher said she told Lawson she believed advisers were hired to advise and m inisters to make decisions. But she admitted Suhday "I don't know " w hether Law son would have stayed on if she had fired Walters. The two men disagreed over m onetary policy and Britain's entry into the European M onetary System, a mechanism for stabilizing European exchange rates. Lawson supported m em bership, but W alters called the system "half-baked." During some heated exchanges, Thatcher accused interviewer Brian W alden, a former La- “To me, the chancellor’s position was unassailable. I always sup­ ported him.” — English Prime Minister M argaret Thatcher bor Party law m aker, of being "d o m in eerin g " and trying to get her to accept blam e for Law ­ son's resignation. "It is not a question of blam ing a n y o n e ," she insisted. "N igel was a very successful, brilliantly successful, chancellor for six years. O f course I knew that one day he would go ... I d id n't ex­ pect it to happen this way or as so o n ." Thatcher rejected W alden's suggestions she was unyielding and authoritarian, saying: "N o n ­ sense. I am staying my ow n sw eet reasonable self." „ How ever, a Gallup poll published in the pro- C onservative Sunday Telegraph found that 47 per­ cent of voters polled and 24 percent of C onserva­ tives thought less of Thatcher after Law son's resignation. Eighty-two percent of all voters and 69 percent of C onservatives believed Law son's departure had reinforced Thatcher's reputation as som e­ times being "b o ssy and d ictatorial," the poll said. Thirty-eight percent o f C onservatives and 72 percent of all voters in the poll said Thatcher was "beginning to lose control of the situ atio n ." The Obseri'er, a liberal new spaper, said in an editorial that Th atch er's style was beginning to resem ble "th e Upas tree, a venom ous Javanese bush so powerful that it destroys everything it to u ch es." British Broadcasting Corp. television surveyed 125 Conservative law m akers by telephone and said 39 p eicent believe Thatcher should change her leadership style while 52 percent do not. A poll in The M ail on Sunday suggested 54 percent of voters think Thatcher should step down as Tory leader and let som eone else lead the party into the next election expected in 1991. The Mail said that was Th atcher's low est person­ al rating since she was voted into pow er in 1979. The Sunday Correspondent poll taken before Law son's resignation said the opposition Labor Party had the backing of 50 percent of British voters, a full 15 percent more than the C onserva­ tives. O thers put the Tories from six to 10 points behind Labor, and said their sam plings gave the main opposition party 47 percent to 48 percent of voter support. The new spapers did not give the m argins of error of their polls. Sam pling sizes varied from G allup's 505 voters to The Mail on Sunday's 1,043. In a speech Saturday night, Deputy Prime Minister Sir Geoffrey Howe indirectly w arned Thatcher that she could not ignore Britain's com ­ mitment to become a full member of the Europe­ an Monetary System. Thatcher agreed in June that Britain would join the system "w h en the time is rig h t," and reiterated Sunday she is waiting for oth er Euro­ pean countries to permit the freer m ovem ent of capital before signing on. I UK D a i l y T e x a n Page 4 Monday. October 30, 1989 EDITORIALS T H E D A ILY TEXA N Editorial Board Karen Adams Steve Crawford Associate Editor Editor Greg Weiner Associate Editor Viewpoint opinions expressed in The D efy Texan are those of the editor and writer of the article They are not necessarily those of the University administra­ tion. the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Opinions expressed in Dissenting Opinions and staff or guest col­ umns are those of the writer Letters submitted to Firing Line should be fewer than 250 words, and guest columns should be no more than 800 words Bring submissions to The Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, or mail them to The Daily Texan P 0 Box D, Austin, Tx 78713 Letters may be edited for length, libel and Texan grammar punctuation style The Daily Texan Endorsements Nov. 7 Elections All endorsements were made by the Daily Texan editorial board. Responses to these endorsements are welcome, and may be equal in length to the original endorsement. Double whammy: Vote NO on Amendments 1, 11 Do our state legislators deserve Amendment 1 would link legislators', the the lieutenant governor's and house speaker's salaries to fixed per­ centages of the governor's salary. approve this am endm ent, they will put control of legislators' salaries in legislators' hands. tors will respond by cleaning up their act, the argum ent goes. own pay and we may never see lobby­ ists put in their place. a pay raise? Amendment 11 would link per diem living expenses to federally ac­ cepted levels. Together, these am end­ ments would provide higher, more competitive salaries that would open opportunities and attract better candi­ dates. On looks great. On closer examination, though the surface, the plan Well, we don't buy that. Legislators have given no indication they care about ethics reform. And the give-us- what-we-want-first attitude doesn't lead us to believe that feelings toward ethics reform will substantially change anytime soon, pay raise or no. Legislators work for voters, not vice versa. If they want a pay hike, they need to prove they really deserve one. They need to reform. Then we'll consider your ideas. That's like saying, "You'll work for me, but you can do whatever you want and I may or may not be able to fire y o u ." As stated before, legislators work for us, not for themselves. As their employers, we have the right to deter­ mine their salaries. If you think about it, w e'd also be giving away one of the only tools we have to force our legislators into mak­ ing ethics reforms. Give them more m oney and the control to boost their W hat's especially annoying about the proposal is that it implies we can't decide for ourselves what's reasonable and what's not. Well, we can. At some point, we'll need to give our legislators a raise. But that doesn't mean we should accept the first pro­ posal that's offered — especially when it's seriously flawed. These am endm ents are flawed, and that's why you should vote no to both on Nov. 7. — The Daily Texan editorial board ■ Ethics reform has been com plete­ ly ignored. Increase pay and legisla­ ■ Control over pay raises would be taken out of voters' hands. If voters G ranted, those who say they do have som e, uh, interesting ar­ gum ents. It's a full-time job now, w e're told. And $7,200 per year just doesn't cover the expenses of perform ing that job. If we want quality legislators, we have to pay for them . Besides, if w e're really interested in helping legislators refuse gifts and donations from lobbyists, don't m ake them so dependent on their m oney. A m endm ents 1 and 11, supporters argue, would rem edy this situation. Amendment 2: Vote no At first glance, this am endm ent would be quite beneficial — the $500 million in bonds would provide m uch-needed assistance to w ater program s through­ out the state. Unfortunately, the state is already in m ajor trouble with bond indebtedness: M ore than $1 billion in w a­ ter project bonds alone rem ain unissued. $500 million more would put a heavy burden on the state's al­ ready shaky credit. The Legislature should do more work in attem pt­ ing to discover alternative funding m easures, rather than piling up the debt. Amendment 3: Vote no A m endm ent 3 is another exam ple of a nice-sound­ ing proposal that Texas just can't afford right now. O f course it would be great if the governm ent could afford to sell bonds to help reinforce and diver­ sify Texas businesses, just like it would be great if it could sell bonds to pay for water projects. U nfortunately, the reality of the situation is that trying to issue m ore bonds in the face of m assive indebtedness will ju st get us into more trouble. On top of all that, many would argue that it's a little dubious for our governm ent to be meddling around in business ventures, even w ithout the risky bonding m easures. Funding of private businesses should be private. Amendment 4: Vote no The am endm ent provides som e tax exem ptions for certain land owned bv non-profit veterans groups. It's hard to argue against veterans, but it's prettv easy to see the problem s with a tax system that pro­ vides penny-ante exem ptions for special-interest groups. Today, veterans — tomorrow, w ho know s. There's a limited extent to which taxes can be used as tools for non-revenue m easures. This exceeds that. Especially given Texas' revenue-hungry govern­ ment, this is no time to help som e groups out at the expense of other taxpayers. Amendment 5: Vote yes This am endm ent would make things a lot easier for businesses trying to export their goods outside of state lines by exem pting business inventories des­ tined for out-of-state shipm ent from ad valorem tax­ es. The exem ption should boost econom ic develop­ ment for bu sinesses that work outside the state; it could attract other business to Texas as well. W hat's m ore, should people at the local level feel it is unfair or is putting undue pressure upon property ow ners and intrastate bu sinesses, the local tax gov­ ernm ents can override the exem ption. M ost states have a policy similar to this one. Texas should, too. Amendment 6: Vote no C urrently, hospital board m em bers serve two-year terms, and their term s are staggered. As a result, elections for hospital boards take place every year, and voters elect about half of the m em bers of a partic­ ular board each election. A m endm ent 6 would change the current status to four-year term s to avoid disabling disruption caused by the yearly elections, as well as saving m oney by allowing the elections to be held at the sam e time as other m unicipal and district elections. But in this time of already far-rem oved politicians, we d on't need to have m ore electees not responsible to voters. The four-vear term s would isolate hospital board m em bers even further from the public. O ne other thing: If passed, the am endm ent would simply tack on another exception to the constitutional two-year limit on term s o f office. Many are suggest­ ing that the limit sim ply be rem oved, rather than fur­ ther extending the list of exceptions. Amendment 7: Vote no Basically, the am endm ent is designed to make sw earing-in cerem onies half as long by taking out the oral oath denying any bribery has taken place during an elected official's cam paign. Som e feel that the present oath is outdated and overly w ordy. The state­ m ent denying bribery w ould still be included in a w ritten statem ent. Still, on a sym bolic level, it is im portant that elected and appointed officials be su bject to a verbal, public oath, if for no other reason but to reassure the public in this time of growing concern over eroding ethics in the governm ent. Except for saving a little time, th ere's no real reason to take out the oath. Amendment 8: Vote yes Bonds, bonds and more bonds. Unlike some of the other proposals involving issuance of bonds, this amendment should be passed. The sale of the bonds would provide funds for statewide law enforcem ent facilities, for construction of badly needed correctional facilities and, perhaps most importantly, mental health and mental retarda­ tion institutions. The sale of bonds for these facilities would cut down on taxes that would otherwise be used. And the funds must be raised: Texas has been notorious in not providing for the welfare of inmates» and mental patients, as well as keeping an (at the very least) ade­ quate law enforcem ent program . Amendment 9: Vote yes Texas' present crim inal-justice system has separate agencies dealing with im prisonm ent, probation and parole. Inefficient? You bet. The agencies are interdependent. They ought to be under one authority. In addition, consolidating the agencies will save time and m oney. Proponents of the am endm ent correctly argue that that's time and money that could go tow ard real crim inal-justice ser­ vices. Amendment 10: Vote yes This proposal would let the Legislature make laws allowing or requiring courts to provide information to juries about the effects of time off of sentences for good conduct, as well as eligibility for parole or m an­ datory supervision on the time served by a convicted defendant. The am endm ent should be passed, primarily b e­ cause in order for proper setencing to take place, ju ­ ries m ust be provided with all inform ation related to trials and sentencing. The result would be fairer and more accurate decisions by juries. Amendment 12: Vote no The am endm ent would m ake it easier for school districts to borrow m oney by reducing the risk of in­ vesting in bonds they issue. D efensible points can be made for and against the proposal, but in light of the recent Edgewood v. Kirby decision, they may be made moot. The decision will revolutionize school funding in Texas, and there's no point in borrow ing for a system that's about to be changed. Better to wait and see what happens with school financing before jum ping into more indebtedness. Amendment 13: Vote no - No o n e's against crime victim s, but the bill of rights the am endm ent proposes is far too vague. It speaks of the victim 's right to be treated with "fa irn e s s ," with respect for his/her "dignitv and privacy" and the like. No standards exist for defining those term s. The am endm ent further gives the state's prosecu t­ ing attorney power to enforce these. That, given the vagueness, am ounts to a blank check for prosecutors. T hat's dangerous anyw ay, but especially so in crim i­ nal cases. Texas law already safeguards victims of crim es. We may or may not need to go further — but certainly not this far. Amendment 15: Vote yes Allowing som e non-profit groups to conduct raffles is just one step in the decrim inalization of som ething that should n't have been illegal to begin with — gam ­ bling. T h e re 's no reason n o n -p rofit o rg anizatio n s shouldn't be able to conduct gam bling to raise m on­ ey. In fact, it pinpoints gam bling's biggest plus — cash. Seeing charitable groups engage in gam bling for profit is likely to convince the state that it can do the sam e — via a state lottery. Amendment 16: Vote yes By localizing control over hospital districts, the state decentralizes authority and prom otes efficiency. T h ere's no reason localities should have to play M other-M av-I with the Legislature every time they want to control procedures of exclusively local co n ­ cern. Hospital districts obviously have to be tailored to m eet local needs. The am endm ent would allow hom e rule over hom e concerns. As an added bonus, it'll take another load off an already inefficient legislature. Amendment 17: Vote no A m endm ents' sponsors have a nasty habit of couching the wording of their am endm ents in a way that m akes it hard to vote against them . A m endm ent 17 pretends to be a m easure to beef up fire protec­ tion. It may very well be, but the proposal has plenty of draw backs that far outw eigh its benefits. First, state financial assistance to local fire depart­ m ents gives the state pow er over what should be a local matter. Also, the am endm ent forces taxpayers statew ide to pay for fire protection only a few locali­ ties will receive. The am endm ent provides a very specific exception to a provision in the Texas Constitution that says that state m onies can be spent only for state public pur­ poses. T here's a reason for that provision: to keep the state from hoarding pow er over entities that can be best m anaged locally Amendment 18: Vote no Am endm ent 18 is nothing but a w hitewash of Tex­ as state governm ent's incom petence. In 1985 the state formulated a far-reaching w ater program. Part of that included a constitutional am endm ent authorizing the Legislature to authorize the Texas W ater Development Board to issue certain w ater-conservation bonds. Problem is, the Legislature never got around to YES NO v□ 0 □ 0 □ 0 OUR VOTES ARE... AMENDMENT t: The constitutional amendment to limit the salary of the lieutenant governor and the speaker of the house of representatives to not more than one-half of the governor's salary and to limit the salary of a member of the legislature to not more than one-fourth of the governor's salary. AMENDMENT 2: The constitutional amendment to authorize the issuance of an additional $500 million of Texas water development bonds for water supply, water quality, and flood control purposes. AMENDMENT 3: The constitutional amendment authorizing the legislature to provide for the recovery and further development of the state's economy, with goals of increasing job opportunities and other benefits for Texas residents, through state financing of the development and production of Texas products and businesses. AMENDMENT 4: The constitutional amendment to authorize the legislature to exempt property of non-profit veterans organizations from ad valorem taxation. □ 0 a □ □ □ 0 0 a □ a a □ □ a □ #a □ a □a □ a □ □ a □ a a □ □a □ □ □ AMENDMENT 5: The constitutional amendment promoting economic growth, job creation, and fair tax treatment for Texans who export goods to other states and nations by restoring and allowing, on a local option basis, an ad valorem tax exemption for certain persona property that Is in Texas only temporarily for the purpose of assembling, storing, manufacturing, processing, or fabricating. AMENDMENT 6: Authorizing the members of a hospital district governing board to serve four-year terms. AMENDMENT 7: The constitutional amendment to require that a member of the legislature, the secretary of state, and an elected or appointed officer, before assuming office, sign a written oath stating that the member, the secretary of state, or the officer did not engage in bribery to obtain the office, AMENDMENT 8: The constitutional amendment authorizing the issuance of general obligation bonds for projects relating to facilities of corrections institutions, youth corrections institutions, and mental health and mental retardation institutions and for the expansion of statewide law enforcement facilities. AMENDMENT 9: The constitutional amendment authorizing the legislature to organize and combine various state agencies that perlorm criminal justice functions. AMENDMENT 10: The constitutional amendment authorizing the legislature to require or permit courts to inform juries about the effect of good conduct time and eligibility for parole or mandatory supervision on the period of incarceration served by a defendant convicted of a criminal offense. AMENDMENT 11: The constitutional amendment to set the amount of per diem received by a member of the legislature at the amount allowed for federal Income tax purposes as a deduction for living expenses incurred by a state legislator in connection with off ¡cía! business. AMENDMENT 12: The constitutional amendment to provide for using the permanent school fund and its income to guarantee bonds issued by the state for the purpose of aiding school districts. AMENDMENT 13: The constitutional amendment providing a bill of rights for crime victims. AMENDMENT 14: The constitutional amendment requiring a district attorney serving in Fort Bend County to be elected and serve a term in the manner provided by general law for criminal district attorneys. AMENDMENT 15: The constitutional amendment authorizing the legislature to permit and regulate raffles conducted by certain nonprofit organizations for charitable purposes. AMENDMENT 16: The constitutional amendment granting to the people the right to decide whether to create and maintain hospital districts to protect the public well-being in a manner independent of the legislature. AMENDMENT 17: The constitutional amendment authorizing the state to provide scholarships, grants, loans, and other financial assistance to local fire departments and other public fire-fighting organizations to purchase fire-fighting equipment, to aid In providing necessary equipment and facilities to comply with federal and state law, and to educate and train their members. AMENDMENT 18: The constitutional amendment to eliminate certain time limitations relating to the issuance of Texas agricultural water conservation bonds. AMENDMENT 19: The constitutional amendment to authorize local governments to invest their funds as provided by law* ; AMENDMENT 20: The constitutional amendment to abolish the office of county surveyor in Cass, Ector, Garza, Smith, Bexar, Harris, and Webb counties. AMENDMENT 21: The constitutional amendment providing for the issuance of general obligation bonds as college savings bonds to provide educational loans to students and to encourage the public to save for a college education. doing that before this year. The 71st Legislature then authorized the issuance of those bonds — but now the W ater Development Board has only two months to get the bonds out. Am endm ent 18 would effective­ ly extend that deadline by eliminating some time lim­ itations. Not a bad idea, maybe, but it w ouldn't have been necessary had the Legislature done its job back in 1985. Amendment 19: Vote yes This proposal would allow local governm ents to invest funds as provided by law. W hat does this m ean? In simple terms, opportuni­ ty. The state has leeway in choosing investment op­ portunities, including money market mutual funds. Approval of this am endm ent would open those choices up to smaller political subdivisions (city gov­ ernm ents, county governm ents, etc.). More leeway would mean m ore freedom in making constituents' monies work for them . At a time when w e're struggling to provide more with our restricted resources, we need to take advan­ tage of every opportunity to do m ore with the money we have. Amendment 21: Vote yes The am endm ent, quite simply, would pump some money into Texas' bread-starved higher-education system. An education system that doesn't haunt the lower reaches of every national survey may prepare Texans to pay off those bonds and deal with the rest of the state's econom ic problems. Econom ic developm ent and diversification rely on a broad base of educated workers. Education pays for itself. College students especially must send a m essage to the state that w e're willing to pay for education. In­ debtedness is nasty, but an ignorant populace is worse. Amendments 14, 20: no comment Am endm ent 14, if approved, would require that the district attorney in Fort Bend County serve a term in the m anner provided by state law for criminal dis­ trict attorneys. Approval of Am endm ent 20 would abolish the of­ fice of county surveyor in Cass, Ector, Garza, Smith, Bexar, Harris and Webb counties. Sound reasonable? Think a minute. Why should the entire state vote on changes that need to be made in eight counties? These decisions should be m ade at the county level, not at the state level. Because of our baroque constitu­ tion, though, voters are stuck making derisions on things they d on't know or d on't care about. Quite simply, we need to reform our constitution. In the m eantim e, if you happen to care about one of these am endm ents, vote. If you don't care or don't know, d on't bother. THE Da ily T ex a n Monday, October 30,1989 Page 5 STUDINT SPECIAL SUPERCUTS-Style Makes the Difference Let SUPERCUTS treat you to a special $6 SUPERCUTThat's $2 off our regularly $8-priced SUPERCUT*. Good only at these locations: Park Green Center at Riverside and Pleasant Volley 3025 Guadalupe at 30th & Guadalupe (coupon required) w E O T E i I m W p n H D w * W Not good with any other oHe» Don’t kill yourself trying to find a costume... ’ One c ou po n per pizza * Go o d at an\ ( onan s 6 0 3 W. 2 9 th /4 7 8 -5 7 I 2 2 6 0 6 G uad alupe/476-1981 2 1 1 0 R iv ersid e/441 -91 03 T hat's right, due to recent expansion we need to fill one hundred posi­ tions immediately. Our telemarketing representatives enjoy: • Great pay. • Life, health, dental, and vision plans. Even for part-timers. • A positive employee-centered • Professional training on state-of-the-art environment. equipment. Opportunity to advance throughout our rapidly growing nationwide network. Call today: fliOHe** A N E Q U A L O P P O R T U N IT Y E M P L O Y E R - 4 4 2 5 1 1 Or apply in person at: Pioneer TeléTechnologies, 4120 Freidrich, Ste. 100 Southpark Business Park Austin, TX J O B S - Report to the Cactus studio according to the schedule below to be photographed for the 1 9 9 0 yearbook. SENIORS 9k GRAD STUDENTS Come any time during studio hours. W e won't turn you away! JUNIORS A SOPHOMORES Last names begin A-L: Oct. 23-25 Last names begin M-Z: Oct. 2 5-27 FRESHMEN Last names begin A-L: Oct 30-31 Last names begin M-Z: Nov. i 2 LOCATION: TSP 4.122, 25th and Whrtis MONOS» 8 30 a m noon, 14 30 p m ■: graduating seniors and grad students - S3 50, others - $2 00 CACTUS YEARBOOK It's YOUR Book 1 IU I) \ 11 3 I I \AN Page 6 Monday. October 30, 1989 UNIVERSITY UT minority recruitment plan deemed ‘a starting point’ Martha FttzSimon Daily Texgtn Staff A n ew fiv e-y ear m in o rity re cru itm en t an d retention p lan — re ce n tly ad op ted by th e U T S y ste m B oard o f R e g en ts — is on ly a "s ta r tin g p o in t" in im p ro v in g m in ority re p ­ re sen ta tio n at th e U n iv ersity , officials said Friday. Sarita B ro w n , a s sista n t d ean o f grad u ate stu d ies and d irecto r of th e G rad u ate O p ­ p o rtu n ity P rogram and co -a u th o r of the n ew m in ority re cru itm en t and reten tio n p lan , said a lth o u g h th e U T a d m in istratio n co n sid ers m in ority issu e s a p riority, m ore w o rk in th a t area is n e ed e d . " I t 's a g ood startin g p o in t to hav e a d o cu ­ m en t like this on th e b o o k s and in p e o p le 's h a n d s ," B row n said . " B u t th a t's w h at it is — a startin g p o in t." S h e said sin ce h er o ffice is w ith o u t the fu n d s to in itiate new p ro g ram s, m in ority stu d e n ts will n ot hav e m an y reso u rces to rely on. " T h e w ell h as ru n d r y ," B row n said . " W e n e ed n ew re so u rces if w e w an t new e ffo r ts ." T h e U n iv ersity 's n e w m in o rity re cru it­ m en t and re te n tio n p lan — ap p rov ed O ct. 13 by th e B oard of R e g en ts — su m m arizes th e cu rren t statu s o f U T m in o rity stu d e n t, facu lty and p ro fessio n al sta ff p ro g ram s. T h e plan calls for a n ew M in ority O u t­ reach C e n te r in A u stin to a ssist m id d le and h igh sch oo l stu d e n ts w h o are at acad em ic risk, in creased fin an cial aid p ro g ram s and d ev elo p m en t o f a m in o rity facu lty and p ro­ fe ssio n al lead ersh ip p ro gram . T h e co st of th e fiv e -y e ar plan is estim ated at $33 m illion. A cco rd in g to the p la n 's d o cu m en ta tio n , th e p e rce n tag e of b lack and H isp an ic u n ­ d erg rad u ate stu d e n ts at the U n iv ersity is ab ou t 15 p e rce n t — a 5 p e rce n t in crease in m in ority stu d e n ts from 1979. w h ite stu d e n ts. M in o rity g rad u ate sch oo l e n ro llm en t is a b o u t 7 p ercen t. A lso, ab o u t 5 p e rce n t o f th e UT facu lty is co m p o sed o f b lack s an d H isp an ics. L ew is W rig h t, a s sista n t vice p re sid e n t for ad m in istratio n , said sev eral re a so n s exist for lack o f p ro g re ss in m in ority re cru itm en t and re te n tio n . "T h e r e is a d iffe ren ce in th e q u ality of [k in d erg arten th ro u g h 12th] g rad e e d u ca ­ tion o f m an y b lack and H isp an ic s tu d e n ts ," W righ t said . " T h e r e is a g reater n eed for financial su p p o rt. " T h e U n iv ersity is still a h o stile p lace for blacks and H is p a n ic s ," h e ad d ed . " I f in a d ­ dition to m e e tin g acad em ic ch a lle n g e s, if a stu d e n t co m es into an e n v iro n m en t th a t's n ot frien d ly , th e n th a t's a barrier to th eir s u c c e s s ." H e agreed w ith o th e r UT a d m in istra to rs that th ere is not e n o u g h m o n ey for a d d i­ tional m inority p ro g ram s. T h e rep ort also fo u n d a low er grad u atio n rate for b lack s and H isp an ics co m p ared to " T h e U n iv ersity h as in v ested all it can in th ese p ro je cts and w h at it's say in g to the state an d fed eral g o v ern m e n t is th a t th ere are th in g s th at can b e d o n e b u t w e n eed ad d ition al re so u rces to fu nd th e m ," W rig h t said. T h e U n iv ersity cu rre n tly h as m o re th an 100 p ro g ram s and e v e n ts targ eted at m in o r­ ity stu d e n ts. But M arcu s B row n , U T B lack S tu d e n t A l­ lian ce p re sid e n t, said th e a d m in istra tio n m u st d o m ore to recru it an d retain b lack s. " I t is u n realistic to th in k a few p ro g ram s can ch an g e a n y th in g ," th e stu d e n t lead er said. "F o r th e m o st part, if the U n iv ersity is really co n cern e d an d really in te reste d in re ­ tain in g b lack stu d e n ts and is in te re ste d in b ein g a co m p le te u n iv ersity , it m u st b e ­ com e m ore d iv erse in its cu rre n t p o licies and at ... a d m in istra tiv e le v e ls ." R en e L ara, vice ch airm an of th e M ex ican A m erican S tu d e n t L ead ersh ip C o u n cil, said he th in k s th e U n iv ersity is co m m itted to m in ority re cru itm en t and re te n tio n b u t it d oes n o t n e cessa rily u se its m o n e y in te lli­ g ently in th e se areas. H e said n ot all m em b ers in his o rg an iza­ tion ag ree th at the ad m in istration is doing all it can . " A t a recen t m eetin g w ith officials, so m e ­ on e raised the point th at if the U n iversity has been able to raise m illions of dollars for en gin eerin g in on e of their large p rojects, w h y n ot use the sam e skills n eed ed for m i­ nority recru itm en t and re te n tio n ," Lara said. Elaine A d am s, T exas H igh er E d u cation C oord in atin g Board assistan t com m issio n er for equal op p ortu n ity p lanning, said the U niversity is on e of m ore th an 100 state in­ stitutions that w ere required by the state to develop m inority recru itm en t and reten tion plans in 1983. A d am s said an y req u ests for funds from the U niversity or o th er sch ools to p ay for th ese plans w ould be subm itted to the T ex­ as L eg istatu re, but she cau tio n ed ag ain st the idea of new reso u rces being the an sw er to the problem s. Board approves 2 new degrees Eva Uorens Daily Texan Staff M e m b ers of th e T e x a s H ig h er Ed ­ u cation C o o rd in atin g Board gave fi­ nal ap p roval Fridav to tw o new d e ­ grees at th e U n iv ersity an d aw ard ed $3 m illion for tech n ical p ro g ra m s in p ublic co m m u n ity co lle g e s. T h e board u n a n im o u sly ap p roved the creation of d o cto ral p ro g ra m s in p ublic policy and lan- g u ages. in Slav ic L od is R h o d es, a sso cia te d ean of the L y n d on B. Jo h n s o n Sch o o l of Public A ffairs, said th e n e w d o cto r­ ate in pu blic policy w ill b e a sm all program fo cu sin g on re sea rch . " I w ould an ticip ate th at n o m ore than six stu d e n ts w ill be en ro lled in the p ro g ra m ," R h o d e s said . " S t u ­ d en ts will hav e to id en tify a p articu ­ lar area of policy th e y m ig h t be in ­ terested in and p rove co m p e te n ce in research te ch n iq u es and a p p ro a ch ­ e s ," he said . But R h o d e s said th e co o rd in a tin g board h as to give its final approval for the new d eg ree at its Jan u ary m e e tin g b efo re the p ro g ram can be im p lem en ted te n tativ e ly by 1991. T h e creation of the n e w d octoral program is c o n siste n t w ith th e LBJ s c h o o l's stated goals esta b lish e d in 1970. "P a rt o f ou r plan w as to hav e a to p -n o tch m a ste r's d eg ree level and create a d o cto rate d eg ree at a tim e w e felt c o m fo rta b le ," he said . T h e d octo ral d eg ree in Slav ic la n ­ g u ag es, w h ich p assed its first test w h en th e Board of R e g en ts g ave its stam p o f approval in Ju n e , will be o n e of 25 in th e n atio n , accord in g to a co o rd in atin g b oard rep ort. M ichael K atz, ch airm an o f the D e ­ p artm en t Slavic L an g u ag es, cou ld n o t be reach ed for co m m en t S u n d ay ab o u t the n e w program . of T h e b oard also aw ard ed 39 grants to talin g ab o u t $3 m illion and — fu n d ed th ro u g h a fed eral g ran t u n ­ d er the C arl D. P erkins V ocational E d u catio n A ct — for technical and v o cation al p ro gram s in the s ta te 's co m m u n ity co lleg es, u n iv ersities and tech n ical in stitu tes. " I t is critical to d ev elop a literate, te ch n ically p ro ficien t w ork force as w e su p p o rt h ig h er ed u cation re­ s e a r c h ," said K en n eth A sh w o rth , co m m issio n e r o f h ig h er ed u catio n . T h e g ran ts will fund p ro g ram s in th e are as of cu rricu lu m d e v e lo p ­ m e n t, p e rso n n e l d ev elo p m en t, re­ search d ev elo p m en t and m odel/ d em o n stra tio n p ro gram s. Board m em b ers also heard re co m ­ m e n d a tio n s on p h asin g ou t te c h n i­ cal and vo cation al p ro g ram s in four- y ear in stitu tio n s. In 1987, the board ap p roved in co rp o ratin g the review of th ese p ro g ram s into the on g o in g e v alu atio n of co m m u n ity colleg es and vocational sch o o ls. Hal D a u g h e rty , c o o rd in a tin g board ch airm an , said board rules d ictate that tw o -y ear vo cation al p ro ­ gram s sh ou ld be provided by co m ­ m u nity and ju n io r co lleg es w h en feasible. H e in B eau m o n t, M id w estern U n iv ersity in W ichita Falls and S o u th w e st T e x ­ as S tate U n iv ersity in San M arcos hav e vo lu n tarily p h ased o u t or c o n ­ verted 25 vo catio n al p ro g ra m s. "T h is leav es sev en se n io r in s titu ­ tions offerin g th e se p ro g ram s, co m ­ pared to 14 in 1 9 7 6 ," h e said. said L am ar U n iv ersity T h e b oard also re co m m en d e d th e deferral of a p ro p o se d m a ste r's d e ­ gree in so ftw are e n g in e e rin g at th e U n iv ersity o f H o u sto n b ecau se the to d escrib e the term in o lo g y u sed program w as in accu rate. " It is not an e n g in e e rin g p rogram but a co m p u te r scie n ce p ro g ra m ," D au g h erty said. But H u gh W alk er, e xecu tiv e vice th e U n iv ersity of th e title m o re a p ­ field , th e ch a n ce llo r at H o u sto n , said propriately- d escrib e s w hich is relativ ely new . A UT third-year philosophy major, Neal Durando, right, fences with Robert Reed from San Antonio College in Hall Sunday. the finals of the Long-Horn Open in L. Theo Bellmont Campus abortion groups gear up for elections, special session Miguel Salinas-Zamora Daily Texan Staff A s T exas political races b eg in to heat up, U T an ti-ab o rtio n and a b o r­ tion rights activ ists are jo in in g th eir state and n ation al co u n te rp a rts to su p p o rt ca n d id a te s w h o will h elp th em in flu en ce th e fu tu re o f a b o r­ tion law s, stu d e n t lea d e rs said Fri­ day. M ich ele A roch a, m ed ia co o rd in a ­ tor of the C a m p u s P ro -L ife M o v e ­ m en t, said the g ro u p w ill b e s u p ­ p o rtin g "a n y p ro-life c a n d id a te s " in the u p co m in g e le ctio n s — re g a rd ­ less o f political p arty . But b eca u se cam p aig n s for state offices are still in th e fo rm ativ e sta g ­ es, ab ortion s ta n ce s are d ifficu lt to d eterm in e . te n tativ e "E v e ry th in g right is n o w ," A roch a said . " W e are k e e p ­ ing an o p en m ind . W e w ill h elp them g et elected if they w ill h elp us restrictin g a b o r­ p ass tio n s ." leg islatio n A roch a, a sp e ech co m m u n icatio n sen io r, said th e o rg a n iz a tio n 's cu r­ ren t e ffo rts are fo cu sed on p e rsu a d ­ ing G ov . Bill C le m e n ts to add the ab ortion issu e to the ag en d a o f the u p co m in g sp ecial sessio n o f the T exas L eg islatu re. T h e sessio n — to w o rk e rs' cu rren tly o p en o n ly co m p en satio n d eb ate — is s c h e d ­ uled to begin N ov. 13. "G o v . C le m e n ts said h e w ould not in clu d e ab o rtio n afte r he said he w o u ld ," sh e said . " W e are tryin g to lobby and co n v in ce C le m e n ts to a l­ low it in th e sp ecial s e s s io n ." Jo e P o jm a n , leg islativ e co o rd in a ­ tor for the U T o rg an izatio n and state p resid en t o f T exas C o lleg ian s for Life, said he b eliev es th e ab ortion issu e is only g o in g to in ten sify . R e­ cen t legislation p assed in th e P e n n ­ sylvania H ou se o f R ep re se n tativ e s — w h ich p ro h ib its late-term a b o r­ tions — is an im p o rtan t victory for a n ti-ab o rtio n a ctiv ists, he said. " It [th e P en n sy lv an ia ab ortion law ] is a very p ro g re ssiv e law , sin ce no o th e r state h as b an n ed third tri­ m e ste r a b o rtio n s — th o se w h ich are d o n e afte r 24 to 25 w eeks of p re g ­ n a n c y ," said P o jm a n , an ae ro sp ace e n g in e e rin g g rad u a te stu d en t. W hile an ti-ab o rtio n activ ists a p ­ p laud ed leg isla ­ the P en n sy lv a n ia tion and P resid en t B u s h 's v eto last w eek of a bill th at w ould hav e a l­ low ed M ed icaid fu n d in g for a b o r­ tion s in the case o f rap e and in cest, s tu d e n t p ro -ch o ice a d v o cates said th ey rem ain op tim istic. Paige L efo n t, co -ch a irm a n and co ­ fo u n d er o f S tu d e n ts for C h o ice , said h er gro u p — w h ich is affiliated w ith th e statew id e T e x a n s for C h o ice — also will b e in volved w ith th e u p ­ co m in g sp ecial se ssio n of th e L eg is­ latu re by p a rticip atin g in a C ap itol rally to k eep a b o rtio n o ff th e s e s ­ s io n 's sch ed u le. " I t is n ot up to th e sta te leg isla ­ tors to d ecid e th e fate o f a w o m a n 's b o d y ," sh e said . " W e d o n 't w an t ab o rtio n on the a g e n d a o f th e sp e ­ cial s e s s io n ." T h e rally, sch e d u le d for N ov. 12, will co in cid e w ith a n a tio n al rally in W a sh in g to n , D .C ., sev eral ab ortion rallies in o th e r state s. an d P o jm a n said h is g ro u p is p rim ari­ ly lobb y in g for strict p aren tal c o n ­ sen t law s an d th e b a n n in g o f late- term a b o rtio n s and sta te fu n d in g of ab ortions. th e r e ," P ojm an "If w e get an abortion bill on the floor of the H ou se o r the S en ate, the v o tes are said. "M o s t legislators are pro-life. This is a S ou th ern , co n serv ativ e, religious state, and th at overall spells p ro ­ life." L efont said th at in con ju nction with the T exas A bortion R ights A c­ tion L eag u e, h er o rgan izatio n will com pile lists of can d id ates an d their stan d s on the abortion issue. " W e are shifting ou r focus to the state le v e l," sh e said. " W e w an t to see stu d en ts visiting their legisla­ tors, lobby an d v o te for p ro -ch o ice c a n d id a te s." Southwest Airlines Fun Pack Vacations Las Vegas 174$ FROM V acatio n Packages th at include A ir Travel, H otel, FunBook and more Register at Reed Travel and win two Free roundtrip tickets on Southwest Airlines Drawing to he held Thursday, N ovem ber 16, 1989. N o purchase required. Packages available from 2 to 7 nights. A ll packages are priced per person, double o c c u p a n c y , and su rch arg es apply for w eek en d an d h o lid ay tra v e l. T rav el m ay o rig in a te any day o f th e w eek, how ever, h o tel c h o ic e s are lim ited for S atu rd ay arrivals/departures. Packages are lim ited subject to availab ility and must be N xiked n o later th a n 8 days before d ep artu re. A b o v e rate is for least exp en siv e 2 n ight p ack ag e av ailab le from A u stin for trav el co m p leted by 1 2 /2 8 /8 9 . S o m e holiday p eriod s m ay n ot be available. S ou th w est A irlin es Fun Pack V acatio n s are operated by Funw ay V acatio n s, a divisioh of Funw ay H olidays Fu njet, Inc. / / / Reed Tra vel 3 4 0 5 K . G u a d a lu p e 6 0 2 9 N o r t h IH 3 5 ( 5 1 2 ) 4 5 3 - 8 7 4 7 ( 5 1 2 ) 4 5 2 - 0 1 4 5 University Market Facts... 70% of all UT students live in off-campus housing 15% live in dormitones The average non-dormitory student household is 2.4 persons (Source T ie University Market. BekJen Associates 1967) graduate students 14 - * t - .» *•. 4 < " > j | •, , v - J l v * # v v % V*a>. J p f* •> i $ £& ‘ ‘t? " M l M ff -7's * +■» TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK FOR YOURS CALL 471 >5244 LAND WITH AIR FORCE ROTC AND WATCH YOUR CAREER FLY. * As an Air Force ROTC cadet, you can land yourself in a career with excitement: as a pilot, navigator, missile officer - as an Air Force officer. You will gain an education in leadership as you work toward your degree. You’ll learn to command with confidence. You may also qualify for scholarship programs that help pay for college. When you graduate, you can exchange your tassle and gown for an Air Force uniform - and watch your career take off. Call CAPT MARK LADD 5 1 2 -4 7 1 -1 7 7 6 III Leadership Excellence Starts Here 10 yrs. experience 4 6 2 -1 3 7 5 CAR BROKEN? No Towing No Early A.M. Drop-off MOBILE REPAIRS! McGuln Car Repair Import/Domestic Class of 72 for RESUMES PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS IMMIGRATION fftfrif eye 2532 GUADALUPE 477-5555 REGISTRATION FOR SPRING, 1990 October 30-November 3,1989 1. Pick up your registration Course Request Form at your major departmental office. 2. Meet with your academic adviser for course approval. 3. Submit your completed Course Request Form at the Flown Academic Center lobby between 8:00 am and 4:45 pm, October 30-November 3,1989. 4. You must pick up your registration fee bill at the Flawn Academic Center lobby on November 27 through November 29, 1989. See Spring Course Schedule for specific date and time. BILLS ARE NOT MAILED. 5. Payment deadline is December 13,1989. OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR STATE & LOCAL l ilt 1) \1! Y 1 1 \ \N Monday. October 30, 1983 Page ■’ H.E.B. brii^s ‘Chronicle’ back, but in discreet area Leslie Wimberiey Daily Texan Staff After pulling The Austin Chronicle alm ost four w eeks ago in response to criticism over the free publica­ tion's "explicit a d s," H .E .B . officials on Friday said the action was pre­ mature and the paper will be avail­ able again — in a new area of the store. Mike de la Garza, public affairs director at H .E .B . in San A ntonio, said the grocery store did not take its entire clientele into consideration w hen officials decided to pull the weekly publication from its racks. "W h en we m ade our decision, we were focusing on the issue of suita­ bility for children and not consider­ ing the other side of the issue, like the popularity of the m agazine with cu sto m ers," de la Garza said. "W e got a good num ber of letters from people w ho w ant the m aga­ zine back in the sto re ," he said. The paper was pulled from shelves after com plaints registered by Mark W eaver, Texas director of the American Fam ily A ssociation, in early O ctober. W eaver said The inappropriate for a Chronicle w as family atm osphere — such as a gro­ cery store — because its classified personal advertisem ents are "e x ­ plicit." W eaver could not be reached for com m ent Sunday. De la Garza said in an effort to make the w eekly not readily accessi- “We got a good number of letters from people who want the magazine back in the store.” — Mike de la G arza, H .E .B . public affairs director ble to children, the publication will be available in a special section of the store, away from other free m agazines the store offers. "W e are placing the magazine in a special rack in the custom er service section. W e realize discretion in dis­ tribution is n ecessary ," he said. "P ersonnel working in area can pro­ vide discretion w hen needed — only w hen n ee d ed ." Previously, com pany officials said the the paper was pulled stores because it was not in keeping with the H .E .B . image. from But the dismissal of the publica­ tion started a wave of protests and the firm w as besieged with letters, de la Garza said. Austin resident Karen Kenter, who organized protests and circu­ lated a petition against H .E.B. b e­ the cause of store's policy reversal. its action, praised "Its w onderful they could reach an am icable point and put it back in the sto re s," Kenter said. She said w hen H .E.B. officials de­ cided to resum e distribution of The Chronicle, her petition contained 350 from people signatures — som e w ho w ere not even familiar with the publication. "O ld er people, w ho said they had never picked it up before, said they couldn't stand w hat was going o n ," Kenter said. W eaver's claims that the new spa­ per was unsuitable for a family at­ m osphere w ere off base, she said, especially considering that the N a­ tional Enquirer is distributed near the stores' check-out counters. Nick Barbaro, Chronicle publisher, said the paper's next issue will be available at A ustin-area H .E.B. stores. He said, how ever, that store offi­ cials' original plan to put the m aga­ zine back on shelves w as rejected. "T h e first offer on this was The Chronicle would be available behind custom er service desk. You would have to stand in line and wait. W e d idn't feel that was accep table," Barbaro said. N ew spaper officials refused the offer because having the paper available only upon request implied som e im propriety on the part of The Chronicle. "T h e plan is to put them w here people can pick them u p ," he said. Barbaro said he believes that all the publicity stem m ing from the controversy will be an asset to the paper. "I think we will move a lot more publications than b efo re," he said, adding that the free publications rack never was very "n o tice a b le ." Super collider reported inadequate Associated Press H O U STO N — D espite four years of developm ent, prototypes of m ag­ nets critical to the perform ance of the superconducting super collider are inadequate and may have to be redesigned, The Houston Post reported Sunday. $6 billion Final plans for the dual 53-m ile race tracks for subatom ic particles, to be built under the farm land of Ellis C ounty, 30 miles south of Dal­ las, are due Feb. 1 at the Energy D e­ partment. Scientists say SSC planners have that long to com e up with a plan that will work at a price C ongress will pay. At issue are alm ost 8,000 pow er­ ful dipole m agnets, m ost of them more than 56 feet long, that will have to operate reliably for 20 years in w hat will be the largest scientific instrum ent ever. Billions of protons, propelled by the supercold electrom agnets, will stream in opposite directions at nearly the speed of light. The m ag­ n ets will the positively charged protons to collide at a total energy of 40 trillion electron volts, breaking loose the fundam ental par­ ticles. focus But those m agnets presently are not up to the task, according to a com m ittee of scientists who con- vened earlier this year to assess their perform ances. Russell H uson, director of the Texas Accelerator Center, said the panel found that several test m ag­ field nets had met strength, but lacked sufficient oper­ ating m argin to work reliably. the design Roy Schw itters, director of the re­ cently created SSC Laboratory — the entity that will oversee the final design, construction and operation of the collider — said that increasing the operating m argin for the acceler­ ator will increase the cost of the project. 7 feSki m B recken rid g e s239 plus S20 tax |u N I V { í S I T Y Z I f A C M C l U f Dobie Mall «469-0999 PC & M a cin to sh S ervices Repairs • Upgrades Free estimates SOFTWARE EXCHANGE New • U se d • R entals 2520 Guadalupe St. 478-7171 HAUmN omera& GOODW ILL INDUSTRIES STORES Halloween s finest Flappers. Drag Queens and fan­ Roam the racks of one-of-a-kind apparel. Sort tastically painted faces are created in G o o d w ill In­ through shelves of novel notions And emerge with dustries stores You'll find incredible bargains on a unique H alloween costume reflecting your own unique costumes, face and hair paint and Halloween creative flair decorations Flying high A U.S. Customs Black Hawk helicopter took off from the Capitol Saturday after being on display as part of a war on drugs parade. The helicopter, based in San Chris Oathout Special to The Texan Angelo and on loan from the Army, is one of many aircraft used by customs officials combatting illegal drug trafficking at the border. Bullock releases school financing plan Dan Dworin Daily Texa n Staff W arning that a Texas Suprem e Court decision could prohibit his of­ fice from giving state m oney to school districts, the state com ptrol­ ler released a report Friday detailing a new school financing plan. Bob Bullock, state com ptroller of public accounts, said he will be prohibited by law from allowing m oney from state coffers to flow to the state's public schools if the Leg­ islature does not m eet the high court's recent challenge to com e up with an alternative financing m eth­ od by May 1, 1990. "U n less there's a plan in place by May 1 that m eets the Texas Su ­ preme C ourt's recent order, I'm for­ bidden to send anv more state m on­ ey to Texas sch o o ls," Bullock said in a press release. The court declared the state's public school financing system un­ constitutional O ct. 2 because of u ne­ qual funding for schools in areas with low property values. Bullock, a D em ocratic candidate for lieutenant governor, released a special financial report outlining his own $1 billion proposal for salvag­ ing the state's school system in time to avoid being cut off by the court. The com ptroller's plan involved $200 million in state bond m oney, funding with $600 that coupling million raised through temporary tax increases and broadening the tax base. About $250 million currently rem ains state accounts ear­ marked for public school funding. in But a spokesm an for Bullock's of­ fice said the com ptroller has not yet determ ined w here the tax increases would be and w hether they could be passed temporarily and then re­ tracted . fro m ," com e the "W e don't have a specific recom ­ m endation about w here the taxes John should Bender, spokesm an. Bender added that the com ptroller's office puts together detailed revenue esti­ mates for the Legislature before the beginning of every session and will said work with House and Senate lead­ ers in form ing a finance plan. Law m akers will reconvene Nov. 14 to debate w orkers' com pensation insurance issues. Bender said Bullock hopes Gov. Bill C lem ents will open the call dur­ ing the session to allow initial dis­ cussion of education finance issues. "M r. Bullock has urged the Legis­ lature and the governor to not wait until sp rin g ," he said. "Su ch a diffi­ cult issue should not be put off until the last m o n th ." Gov. C lem ents has said only w orkers' com pensation reform will be debated in the upcom ing 30-day session and has called for another special session in the spring for ed u ­ cation debate. He has not vet desig­ nated a convening date for the edu­ cation session. House and Senate school finance task forces have been formed to make recom m endations to the Leg­ islature but await chairm an appoint­ m ents by the governor. $500 Com pensation Are you a healthy» non-smoking male between the ages of 18-45, weighing 135-200 pounds, and within 10% of your ideal weight? If so, you may qualify to participate in a pharmaceutical research study and receive up to $500. The dates and times of the study are listed below. You must be available to remain in our facility for the entire period to l a eligible. Check-in time: 5:00 pm Friday, November 10 Friday, November 17 Check-out time: 2-3:00 pm Sunday, November 12 Sunday, November 19 in addition, brief morning outpatient visits are required on November 10,15,15, and 17. To qualify, you must pass our free physical exam. Me 4, accommodations, entertainment, and recreational activities provided free-of-charge. For mom information, ptaaaa can: 447-3611 P H A R M A C O Rm m rtk For BaUt Hmith ■ LSAT ABLE R ep rin ts & D ot's T yp in g Color Toner at the Touch of a Button!! October Special - 750 Spiral Bindings! “22nd “20th M.L.K- 2002-A Guadalupe St. We also Type: •Term Papers •Thesis •Dissertations •Resumés M -F 8am - 10pm Sat 12-6, Sun 12-8 472-5353 Why subscribe to Utmost M agazine? T k M W Let it all flap out The Roaring Twenties were quiet, compared to Halloween with you W t f QttSEN G o ahead D o it Halloween gaiety is the perfect excuse, and Goodwill is the perfect source CLWN Paint your face then paint the town Complete your c o s ­ tu m e w ith face and hair point, in 10 m id colors, from any Good- will store mm Go Punk Go crazy G o to Goodwill to get it GRE The Test Is When? Classes Forming Now. S STANLEY H. KAPLAN JS Take Kaplan Or Take Your Glances GOODW ILL INDUSTRIES STORES Our Business Works So People Can 7121 N. Lamar Bhd. 454-5006 4444 N. Lamar‘Bhd. 451-2306 836 Airport Blvd. 388-3277 1111 L First St. 322-0815 5734 Manchaca 440-4849 1200 Round Rock Ave. 300-2911 LSAT 12/2/89 GMAT 1/27/90 GRE 1/13/90 *50 DISCOUNT ON TUITION THROUGH DEC. 1st! CALL 472-EXAM for one hellish semester. UtmosT offers salvation, and helps you make informed choices, with the UtmosT Faculty Best/Worst Ratings, coming in spring 1990. Don't miss it. Bubble in UtmosT as an op­ Choices Picking the wrong teacher can make tional fee when you register for spring classes. Utmef ar, ll.|llfcl ft UT. w Page 8 Monday, October 30,1989 THE DAILY TEXAN New J é .W HANA Restaurant Oriental Fast Food New Gerard Farrell Daily Texan Staff .Lunch & Dinner $q q e o Same price 0 . 0 0 OC U p New 6929 A ir p o r t B lv d . Next to Wendv’s burgers 452-3999 183 Research H a n a IN? Airport I B l v ^ . Official Directory is here! Man sentenced to 80 years in shooting case A Travis C o u n ty ju ry on Friday sen ten ced a 47-year-old A ustin m an to 80 years in p riso n a n d im p o sed a $10,000 fine for a June sh o o tin g in w hich he m aim ed his estran g ed com m on-law wife. The sam e ju ry on T h u rsd a y found Ri Van P han of 7033 U.S. 290 East guilty of atte m p te d capital m u rd e r in the attack on Xiu Thi Pham of Fort W orth. Pham , w h ose left leg w as a m p u ­ tated above th e knee as a result of the attack, said she w as pleased w ith P h a n 's p u n ish m e n t. "I like it. I feel very, very h ap p y . I knew this w as possible because a lot of people care for m e ," she said. "1 will start m y life ag a in ." RAY BAN l! Sunglasses SAVE 20-50% WE BEAT ANY RETAIL PRICE1 BiL ' D o g S u n g la s s e s 2021 G u a d a lu p e 2nd F L O O R D o b ie M a l l 476-0171 ★ Air Fare Busters ★ If you are 12 to 25 years old enjoy Europe even on Christmas with No Restrictions' Paris Frankfurt Rome Madrid Amsterdam *5 1 8 °° Geneva *5 1 8 °° Hamburg *5 7 8 °° Munich *7 0 0 °° Milan *5 0 0 °° Zurich s532°° *518°° *518°° *6 1 400 *532°° Yo g , • Open Weekends 10-4 • Ask for other destinations (713)961-5109 (800)232-6783 (800) AF-Buster CAFE ENCHILADAS SUIZAS 2 Corn tortillas overstufTed w m arinated chicken, m ellow green ch ilies. sour cream & gobs o f m elted m onterrey jack ch eese Served with a generous cup of black beans & ripe avocado slices. 25 im ported beers 624 W 34th St 451 -9 66 5 M Sal 11 30-11.30 Sun 11 0 0-10 00 L a w y e r D o u g la s B e h r e n d t, P h a n 's atto rn ey , d eclined to com ­ m en t on his clien t's sentence. P han will be eligible for parole af­ ter serving 15 years of his sentence. Late on the n ig h t of June 25, P han drove Pham , 45, from Fort W orth to A ustin against h e r will, b eating her w ith his fists an d hittin g h er w ith a h am m er in o rd e r to p re v e n t h er from attracting a tten tio n from p a ss­ ing drivers. A rriving in A ustin, he drove Pham to his a p a rtm e n t com ­ plex, w here h e sh o t h e r twice w ith a sh o tg u n before tu rn in g th e g u n on him self in a m ock suicide attem p t, the jury found. Prosecutors asked jurors for the m axim um p u n ish m e n t allow able — life im p riso n m en t — because they believe P han can n o t be reh abilitat­ ed. Referring to a 1981 conviction on a m isd em ean o r assa u lt charge in H arris C o u n ty — in w hich P h an w as sen ten ced to o ne year p ro b a ­ tion for cutting his prev io u s wife w ith a knife — A ssistan t D istrict A t­ to rn ey R honda H u rley said, "H e 's had probatio n before. It has n o t rehabilitated him . H e com m itted an act of violence on a n o th e r fam ily m em b er." A lth o u g h the m an had been in ­ volved in a sporadic relationship w ith Pham for a b o u t eight years, he w as never divorced from his wife in H arris C ounty. The defense so u g h t probation in the sh ooting because, as th ey had co n ten d ed d u rin g the trial, P han did not in ten d to kill his com m on- law wife. "T h e re 's only o ne crim e h ig h e r — th a t's capital m u rd er. But this lady is alive. Do you also w an t to tell the co m m un ity th a t this crim e is th e sam e as killing som eone?" B eh ren d t asked th e jury. "Just because th e state w a n ts th e top of the line d o e s n 't m ean th e y 're entitled to it," he said. But A ssistant D istrict A tto rn ey Robert Sm ith, the o th e r p ro se c u to r in the case, told ju ro rs, "If y o u sign the p ro b atio n form , this m an [Phan] is going to get on th e elevator w ith y o u ." H e also said P ham could b e in d an g e r of a reprisal attack if th e d e ­ fen d an t w ere g ran ted prob atio n. "Y ou are giving this m an a h u n tin g license," Sm ith said. "T here is n o w ay he is going to forgive P h am for testifying ag ainst h im ." Sm ith also said h e w a n ted a life sentence to sen d a m essage to o th ­ ers that dom estic violence will be p u n ish ed . ^ K H ir g e r s , txp*mV/5M9 for S u p er-B ert 2 3A9! QUARTER POUNDER I I "On Whole I I I i l COUPON REDEEMED IN STORE ONLY 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Daily *3 3 0 3 N. 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Incorporated Cordially Invites University of Texas Undergraduate Business Students To Attend An Inform ation M eeting To Discuss Investment Banking And Working on Wall Street Tuesday, October 31,1989 6:00 P.M. Buy a 14K ring at a 10K price. Now, five richly detailed men’s and wom en’s 14K ^ gold rings from ArtCarved are on sale J Full Lifetime Warrant) They’re all l4Kgold. Now at 10K prices That’s 40 gold-free. at 10K prices.* Try one on. You’ll notice the luster and quality that enables An offer like that is hard to pass up. So don’t. Buy your college ring now from ArtCarved to back its workmanship with a ArtCarved. Ask how' you can save j on gold acces­ sories, too. m i l i Houston Room - Guest Quarters Hotel Reception Following ■ hive special styles only UNIVERSITY C O O P 12 iO ( i I i . h I . i lupt • i~’0 “’2 l l • I*. irkmj 4 .it 2 > r d S . m \ n t o n i o M o n 1 ri N: /> O t o %/>() pi l l . S.il 9: >0 t o 0 : 0 0 p m . S n n d a \ n o t ) t o 5 : 0 0 pi n M o n d a y . O t o h o r 3 0 I'm I) mi \ I í \ vn í uj» 0 ‘ r<3f - osar s tricks, Browns’ treat Metcalf TD pass, three gadget plays power Cleveland past Houston Associated Press CLEVELAND — Bemie Kosar everything did except pull a rab- bit out of his hel­ met. NFL Stopped __________________ defense in first half, cold by H o u sto n 's the the Cleveland Browns resorted to trick­ ery in the second half Sunday, us­ ing gadget plays on three of their four touchdown drives and beating the Oilers 28-17. "I guess it was appropriate, with Halloween coming up,” Houston quarterback Warren Moon said. "I guess they thought they couldn't come straight at us, so they fell back on the gadget plays. It's surprising to see two or three of them work like that.” The Browns (5-3) trailed 10-0 at halftime and began the second half innocently enough with a 13-play scoring drive capped by Kosar's 5- yard scramble. Helping set up the score, though, was Reggie Langhorne's 18-yard run on a reverse. < L a split of its Texas visit. The C ougars d efeated Texas A&M 6-15, 15-9, 15-12, 15-11, in C ollege Station on Friday. Friday's victory m ave have co n ­ tributed to BYL's slo w start in Sat­ urday's m atch. A gainst the A ggies, junior M annda G orbahn had to leave the match after su stain in g a neck injury in gam e four as a result of a collision w ith o n e of her team ­ m ates. G orbahn's 18 kills led the m atch, but w ere no recom p en se for a trip to the hospital G orbahn didn't see action against the L onghorns, w h o w on for the fourth tim e in nine tries against the C ougars. From the sid elin e, G or­ bahn to her lent moral support team m ates, but her a b sen se on the court had a greater im pact. " I t w a s m o re of a m e n ta l th in g thing,'' Brigham than a physical Y oung Coach Elaine M ichaelis said about the slo w start "1 think w e had a hard tim e con vin cin g the team , until the third gam e, that w e could play w ithou t her because s h e ' s the leading hitter "You feel like, I don't know if w e can d o this or not And it took until the third gam e tor them to believe that they could d o it." N ie m in e n , w h o m issed th e first tw o w e e k s of th e season because s h e w a s w ith th e Finnish N ational Team at th e E u ro p e a n C h a m p i o n ­ ships, a n d S te p h a n ie T rane, w h o a d d e d 15 kill** S a tu r d a y , w e r e left to g u id e a n o ffe n se mi*"*ing i t s s h a r p ­ est p ro n g . W i th o u t G o r b a h n , BYU w a s n 't s h a rp e n o u g h to stick its o p ­ p o n e n t . Texas, on th e o th e r h a n d w as r a ­ zor sh a rp . Paced by Janine G re m - m e l's team le a d in g I s kills a n d 12 each bv A n n e tt e G a r /a a n d Nikki Busch, skillfully th e L o n g h o r n s w o rk e d their w a y th r o u g h the first tw o gam es. Like a prize fighter facing a s p a r r ­ th e ing p a rtn e r, Texas deflected C o u g a r attack a n d m a in ta in e d its p oise until it saw an o p e n i n g , th e n m o v e d quicklv a n d p o w e rfu lly for the kill. L'T C oach Mick H aley attr ib u te d Texas' victory to th r e e causes. ■ Fir**t, th e te am did w hat it p r a c ­ ticed. " W e h a v e n ’t h a d tremble plav in g But w e 'v e h a d h a r d , " Haley said tro u b le executing th e g a m e p la n ." ■ Second, s ta rtin g se tte r M issy Kurt w a s at th e to p of her gam e. " T o n ig h t is the first tim e th a t I've seen M issy K urt reallv m a n h a n d l e th e offense, H ale y a d d e d . "1 m e a n sh e w a s a b s o lu te ly g reat in th e first § Annette Garza and Nikki Busch battle BYU’s Tea Nieminen at the net. Austin Holiday Daily Texan Staff “Tonight is the first time that I’ve seen Missy Kurt really manhandle the offense. I mean she was abso­ lutely great in the first two games and that concentra­ tion is a building place for the future.” — Mick Halev, Texas volleyball coach tw o gam es and that concentration is a building place for the future." ■ Third, the L onghorns m ade a com eback to w in. "W e played a 13-14 gam e and cam e back and w on after n u m erou s sid e-ou ts against a team that is pre­ dictable vet not predictable in that they spray the ball a lot," H alev said. "They don't give you a standard pattern other than that vou k n ow it is com in g. Thev w orked on our o u t­ sid es and our o u tsid es held up real w ell." G rem m el d o w n p la y ed her in di­ vidual accom p lish m en t. "O nce the team com es together and w e are all in tense and w e are all into the gam e and no o n e is drifting aw ay, that's w h en w e d o the best," sh e said. UT, Arkansas split cross country meet Jeff Captan Daify Texan Staff Tina Hall ran her b est race of the sea so n and t h e h e l p e d L a d y L o n g ­ h o r n s d e fe a t A rkansas and th eir c a p tu r e S W C _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ f o u r t h cou n try ch am pion sh ip, Saturday in Dallas. The m en w eren 't so su ccessfu l as A rkansas ran an incredible race. The H ogs placed five runners in the top eigh t sp o ts, taking their 16th con sective con feren ce ch am ­ p ionship. Horns cross Hall, w ith a tim e of 16:54, w on the individual title, b ecom in g the sixth Ladv L onghorn to accom ­ plish that goal. Hall has b een the top Texas finisher in all five m eets this season. "Tina Hall had an ou tstan d in g perform ance," C oach Terry C raw ­ ford said. "She really took com ­ m and of the race." Hall w asn 't the o n ly su ccess sto­ ry at the m eet. The w'hole team exceptionally w ell, placing ran seven runners in th e top 20. Senior Shelly McBride finished fourth, Eileen Ellig lit h , C hristine G e n t ile a n d G a b r ie lle P uhlm ann 13th for a w in n in g total of 41 points. 12th Tracy Laughlin finished 17th, and sop h om ore w alk -on M elissa Amaral fin ish ed 20th. "I w as really h app y w ith m ine and the team 's results," Hall said. "W e ran as a team . W hen the im ­ portant m eets com e, w e co m e to­ gether." "I am relieved . It w as a very g ood victory b ecau se w e really had to fight for it," Crawford said. to Baylor surprised A rkansas finish secon d w ith 54 points; the Razorhacks w ere third w ith 69 points. S teve S isso n paced the Texas m en again, but it w asn't en o u g h to lift the L on ghorns over the Arka- nasa jinx. "A rkansas w as a lot tough er than w e anticipated. T hey had three just super," H ead Coach Stan H u n ts­ man said. freshm en that ran T exas ran w ell en ou gh to easilv take secon d place. S isson fin ish ed fifth w ith a tim e of 24:49. S h au n Barnes placed ninth in on e h is b est p erform ances of the season and N o y e s L ivingston finished 10th. A rkansas w o n w ith o n ly 27 points, 26 p oints ahead o f the H orns, w h o h ave finished runner- up n in e of th e last 10 vears. "The last tw o w ee k s w e h aven 't run to our p otential," L ivingston said. "They [Arkansas] beat u s in the first m ile." A rkansas, w hich has had so m e s h o w in g s le s s -th a n -im p r e s s iv e earlier this sea so n reallv put th in gs together for th e con feren ce m eet. "The w ay they ran [Saturday] they can d o real w ell at n ationals," L ivingston said. Both Texas squads h ave tw o w eek s to prepare for the m ost im ­ portant m eet o f the sea so n , the District 6 m eet. This m eet q ualifies the top tw o team s to com p ete for the N C A A ch am p ion sh ip . a a y s , Both Longhorn swim teams easily sink all opposition David Hansen Daily Texan Staff You cou ld say th e Texas men w o m e n a n d r u d e w e r e t h is g u e s t s w e e k e n d in H o u sto n . Both d o m in a ted the S o u th w est Con- fe r e n c e R ela y s Saturday at Rice. The m en cam e Horns IMMIGRATION WORK VISAS LABOR CERTIFICATIONS PERMANENT RESIDENCY BARBARA HINES, pc Attorney at Law Board Certified immigration and Nationality Law Texas Board of Legal Specialization 1005 E. 40th 452-0201 hom e Friday night, but the Lady Longhorns staved in tow n to ad ­ m inister a beating to H ou ston Satur­ day at the W oodlands. The m en w on all but on e relav, losing o n ly the 300-vard butterfly relay to Texas A&M. A rkansas and SM U finished behind Texas. A ssist­ ant coach Kris Kubik said, "W e w ere real good . W e raced very w ell which is w hat w e w an ted to see." O n the w o m en 's sid e, Texas d e ­ feated secon d -p lace A rkansas and third-place H ou ston at the relay m eet, and on Saturday, beat H o u s­ ton 78-60, w ith sop h o m o re Julie C ooper and freshm an A m v Shaw both w in n in g tw o even ts. W om en 's coach Mark Schubert said the team "swam w ith a lot of en th u siasm . The relav m eet has a lot o f short even ts, and it's a fun w ay to start the season ." At the m en 's relav m eet, senior D oug Gjertsen, sop h om ore Jeff Thi- bault and sen ior Kirk Stackle turned im pressive perfor­ in m ances. esp ecially All three sw am on six relays. Stac­ kle led off th e 300-yard breast-stroke relay just on e-ten th of a secon d over tim e and the N C A A q ualifyin g Gjertsen, said Kubik, "w as Gjert­ sen. H e's th e best relav sw im m er in the country'. Our key p eo p le did re­ ally w ell. For the m ost part, w e d om inated the entire m eet." Saturday, it w as m ore of the sam e at T he W ood lan d s sw im com p lex. The Lady L on ghorns d om in ated led by Shaw from start to finish, and C ooper. Schubert said Shaw " con tin u es to form er w orld be am azin g." The record h older the 200-m eter in breast stroke didn't sw im breast stroke Saturday, but still m an aged to w in tw o ev e n ts, the 200-m eter and 400-m eter freestyles, an d sw im on the w in n in g 400-m eter free relay. O n e year ago, the relay m eet w as Schubert's first dav on the job. H e step p ed off a plane from Florida and prom ptly lost the m eet to A rkansas. It w a s a bad o m en , as Texas w en t on to finish secon d at the N C A A ch a m p io n sh ip s to Stanford. "W e redeem ed o u rse lv es for last year's perform ance," Schubert said Fri­ day. M aybe it's a good om en for this year's team . NOV. 10-12 or 17-19 20 hours $195 LSAT PREP 323-2833 REPAIR • Boots • Shoes • Leather Goods • Luggage CUSTOM MADE • Boots • Belts • Chaps • Etc. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca «Austm.478-9309 ■ ■ KEGSFOR LESS LOGAN’S 1004 W. 24TH Happy Hour Drinks' «M> Monday Night Football •fterSpJD . Lavaca 472*2828 REE HALLOWEEN SHUTTLEl tea] yoUfs to a freC r /c b on f ffe tdi/b fo f r o o ts & h x t i s haljovvfeen pa rfy. The U niversity Pre-Law A ssociation Endorses The Stanley H. Kaplan LSAT Prep Course For more inform ation, Call 471-5284 HOG. • Ride FREE! • Catch a ‘Dillo at the City Coliseum or one of the many stops on the UT campus and ride direct to Sixth Street. • The Halloween ‘Dillo shuttle will operate from 7pm to 3am, Tuesday, October 31. • ‘Dillos will run every 15 minutes. $ 1 9 l9 5 ■ SALE! Reg $29.95 i l E f v o p n a i m m o ^ ~ ~ M l u L E ^ 0 YOU N t WF 4 0 7 * 7 ^ ^ 4 7 4 - 1 2 0 9 The NIKE Land Shark. A multi-purpose cleated shoe for any natural surface. Rooster ™ 5 Andrews M amé (.«aáainpr «mEttmni U n t « sNm! I r r r t *¿11 S U m 1* U m ar m i I r a « k m 1 INTERNATIONAL STUDIES ABROAD a ^ a n y ^ c í 5 D " 3 r A * \ SPAIN «FRANCE «MEXICO S p r i n g d e a d l i n e N o v e m b e r 3 0 t h 4 8 0 - 8 5 2 2 81 1 W 2 4 t h S u i t e 2 0 1 A u s t n 7 8 7 0 5 I * * * it P A H # N o N o C h ro m e C o n tr a c ts Open Every Day 4121 Guadalupe N ext door to A u i t i i B a r b e ll C o . 459*9174 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiitt H AIR TEA M YANKEE CLIPPER $700 HAIRCUT $ c o o OFF ALWAYS EVERY PERM OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK M-F M M 9 SAT M M 4 I SUN 1SJS-S4 S DobieMMi UT CAMPUS 4744191 I Noxxus Products PU M I Pnmen t t tu s Coupon T h e D a i l y T e x a n Monday, October 30,1989 Page 11 SPORTS RECORD FootbaH Browns 28, Oilers 17 NFL te l c-'st dov»-s .a-os pass ng R e i_ -- >a us C v c A r- — Sacked yatis bos- p--s r „—r^es-Ljs! »a'3s a» a-«session t I T 0 0 0 0 c pci. pf pa ’ 5C 2 2 - 'SC 5CC S í -A3 ’ 9C 300 ’ 6 ’ 3?5 '8 9 ' 3 ' '2 5 '3 2 2 *5 0 0 C C 625 204 140 625 - 3 ' " 2 500 0 " '9 8 500 ” 6 ’ 56 7 3 7 0—17 0 0 21 7—» Hou ’6 25-89 210 26 •5 -2 5-0 3 -3 ’ 6-44 2-0 9-66 30 19 Oa ig 3 ' ’ 03 280 0 ’ 5 -2 G 2 2-14 2-47 0-0 5-45 29 4 ’ tndttnapofcs M>ar> New E ng a -d X v Jets O n c m n a t C»eve and -touStor P'-tstx.'g'- Denw > a Ra ge's S ea ~ e k a -s a s C iv S a r Dsegc N v G a -ts -’*• a o e p r a S’hoemx Aas'-'nyor Da as M'T'-'esota C-'-cago G*ee- 5a, ' a —cia Bay Dero-: San p-anoscc L A fta r* s N e * O neans A: a—a NATIONAL CONFERENCE te t 6 6 Central 5 5 2 3 West 750 * 84 ’ 33 500 " 8 *46 50C ’ 43 -55 375 154 * 82 250 132 '5 6 '0 9 ' - 5 8 5 * ' 9C ‘ 6 a '5 0 500 ‘ 56 " 3 500 2 '0 203 ’ 06 232 000 -*4 Me 625 2 * 9 173 500 205 201 ’ 7 ' 206 3 -5 ’ 93 '2 5 " 8 8 -5 2 '5 ’ 45 '8 6 ’ 93 625 ’ 45 '9 5 500 '8 3 ' 4 ' 250 Sunday s games V n . O 'e a 'vs 20 a - anta * 3 G reen B a, 23 De''o>t 20 0 T C e ve ana 28 Hcx-s’ on i ' P ittsburgh 23 K ansas Crty ’ ? C h ica go 2 C _os A -g e es R a - . 'C S^“ac ?' Miam ' ? New E ng la nd 23 tn d ia n a o c s 22 0 T p h o e n i. '9 Ga as ’ 0 C in cm n a ' 56 ' a —oa Bay 23 San F 'a n c is c c 23 New vorx je t s '0 .o s A n g e e s RaiO e's 3 ' W a s h i n g ' 24 pn. ade on a 2? Denver 24 Seatne ' 0 San D e g o ' Monday’s game V* nnesoia a’ N e * io r k G a - 's 8 c m MDIVDUAL STATISTICS n J - o . - *2 -5 6 R a z ie -6 '3 P>~*e~ 5 -*2 M o o r 2 6 C « v e ta ría M e tc a - '7 -4 8 V a - v a 7-2? • . a - g - v " - * •■ '8 R e d d e - 2 - 0 Kosa* 4 : - ASS V G “ x v o - M oc~ ’ 5 -2 5 -0 -2 4 - C e v e a - d K ; s a r - 4 ’ 9 2 - 2 6 2 M elca » t - 1-0-32 RECEIVING — H o uslon H i 3 -6 " G . " is 3-42 Je fh ie s 3- 30 C\a>car 2 -6 ' R - - e " 2 -2 9 Rcz-e- '- 6 H tg n s m th '- 6 . .e .e a T C M e-: a " 6-46 S - a - g - v '4 "64 .a - o h o m e 4 53 M anoa ’ -5 M SSED A iE lC G O ALS— None Cardinals 19, Cowboys 10 - ’St downs P.snes-, aros °a s s ng R e 'u ir. Vgrds C-Jmc A- — S acked ia ? d s Lost r _n *S c ..-nt>es-uos' °enai* f w e i 18-” ooom 3 9 Bater 3-5 Sikanen-a 1 3 P a fn e ’ *4 -33 jc a a n ’ 8-68 -loge .s i * e, ' 3 Da as PASSING P hoen-. H o g e d o o m ' ' 3 0 ' 6 4 Da ;as >S a s ” 2" 4 9 2 264 R£CE'V S G — Pnoen > A . a * 3 ’ 6 N ov ace» rP 1-3 Jo rd a n 1-0 , T Se*'.;- 6 6 C E- Jo ne s 3 50 '2 S * a h e m a ’ '2 Baker ’ -9 - e 1 D a 1 as M a t e * - '8 S h e o c a '0 4 -9 2 D ixon 3 -33 ’ a . 'a a ’as 2 35 P o ts o r-2 Pa-dav at 714 C on­ gress A ve.. 477-5725. ■ From 10 a m to noon W ed n esd ay at 701 N ew m an Lake A ustin 477-1261 Peaceful Person Peaceful Planet W orkshop will be held from 9 a m. to 4 .30 p .m . S aturday Learn w in-w m conflict reso lu tio n skills ap p li­ cable to vour dailv life based on the teachings of M ahatm a G andhi and M artin L uther King Jr POSITIONS AVAILABLE Texas Student Publications Minority Advisory Committee Applicants are sought to serve on the newly created Texas Student Publications Minority Advisory Committee. Presi­ dent of the TSP Board of O perating Trustees will appoint seven members to this committee by November 9, 1989. The TSP Board established the committee to suggest ways for TSP to develop a better relationship with m inority com­ m unities, specifically by examining TSP stylebooks, m inori­ ty recruitm ent/retention efforts and sensitivity workshops for staffers. Prospective members should apply by filing an application form and a statem ent th a t includes th eir qualifications and reasons for w anting to serve on the committee. Application forms may be picked up and returned to the TSP General M anager’s Office, TSP 3.304. The Mutual UFO Network will present a public UFO lecture by Walt Andrus, founder and director of M ÚFON, about the Gulf Breeze Case at 8 p.m . Friday at the Hancock Recreation Center, 811 E. 4Íst St. Tickets for MUFON members, students and senior citi­ zen s cost S3. Ticket cost few the general public is S5. For more information, call 2884)505, 444- 6935 or 328-5100. Participate in one-on-one communication exercises for exploring human interactions and developing com munication skills. For more in­ formation, call 454-2060. Pioneer Farm will sponsor a family day from 1 to 5 p.m S u n d ay The Jourdan-Bach- m an Farm, 11418 S prinkle C ut-off Road, is a special place w here people can learn how pioneers settled and farm ed th e land V isitors can see th e farm anim als, take part in the daily chores a n d tour the historic h o m es an d b am s. C ost on S unday is $2 for ad u lts, $1 for children 3 to 12, free for children y o u n g er than 3 For m ore inform ation, call 837-1215. The 15th annual Texas Renaissance Festival will be held from 9 a m to d ark every S atu r­ day and S unday th ro u g h N ov. 12 The festival is 50 m iles north of H o u sto n on FM 1774 b e­ tw een M agnolia an d Plantersv llle Tickets at th e gate are $12.95 for ad u lts, $6.95 for chil­ d re n 5 through 12 a n d free for children y o unger th an 5 D iscount tickets are available from the office th ro u g h the mail and at area K roger stores. Free p ark in g a n d cam ping. For m ore inform ation, call 1-800-458-3435 or (713) 356-2178 or write the Texas R enaissance F esti­ val, Route 2 Box 650, P lantersville, TX 77363 n o th in g s W orse THAN A BAD i Stylish Cuts for Men and Women i Perms & Highlights i Spirals & Vavooms i Close-m Locations —U~* U T & Downtown i Plenty erf %! Free Parking $5.00 Discount With This Ad for 1 st Visit! ' jarvce Kay-Tl* Harcuflers 707 W. MLK 477-3798 |H u h ? > How m earfy?p f t f coffee drinks 7 to 7:45 A.M weekdays D eadline for receipt o f applications: noon, W ednesday, N ovem ber 1,1989 CAPTAIN QUACKENBIM’S CAFE, BAKERY & GALLERY 2120 GUADALUPE ST. (the Drag) n t t ^cb&ÁshA, eLvet yOwi tao/ie*yX* heLj/x U4 cetektaXe the... G ran d O p e n in g o f th e C o -o p 's n e w ly e n la r g e d CHILDREN’S BOOK . DEPARTMENT When: Monday, October 30 through Sunday, November 5 Where: The Children's Book Department, General Books, Sec­ ond Floor o f the University Co-op What: Hundreds of new titles, pre-school to young adult, fiction and non-fiction, coloring books, work books, audio cassettes, award winning titles, paperback and hard cover, 99$ to $35.00, books to suit everyone's taste and pocketbook. How: By bike, cycle, skateboard, carriage, on foot, or by Capi­ tol Metro to the UT campus. Free parking with any $3.00 purchase. S p e c i a l , H aJLLow e& K Candy, balloons, & coloring books for all children w ho come to the store on Tuesday, October 31 Free Polaroid picture o f each child in a Halloween costume. 20% OFF THIS WEEK ONLY • ALL CHILDREN’S BOOKS _________ General Books • 2nd Floor___________ XioAe to oo*hp¿vie.*sYou top Co-op,! UNIVERSITY CO OP i ^ i i ^ i l l • Mon-I-'ri 8:30-":3<>. Sat 9:30-6*00, S u n 12-5 11 i(i G u a d a l u p e • n v . I t h e D a il y T exa n Monday, October 30,1989 Page 13 T E X A N C LA SSIFIED S 8:00-5:00 p.m./Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 CLASSIFIEDS ....If it’s speed you’re after, the classifieds real­ ly move it! in Sell it fast, for a good price when you ad­ the classi­ vertise fieds. Somewhere there’s a buyer for evry- thing you want to sell. find The Classifieds them faster. CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A WOOD OR U N I AD CALL: 471 «5244__________ CLASSIFIED WORD AD* RATES__________ C K o rg e d b y th e w o r d 15 w o r d m in i­ m um Sei ,n 5 o ’ -v o n oní» Ra’ es o re t o ' co n s e c u tiv e days E och w o r d 1 tim e E ocn w o r d 3 tim es E och w o r d 5 tim es E och w o r d 10 tim es E och w o r d 15 tim es E ach w o r d 2 0 tim es S 3 4 5 9 0 S 1 3 5 $ 2 3 0 5 2 1*0 5 3 2 0 per .rs e -tio r fir s t v c S ■ 0 0 c tio -g e to c tio n g e c o p y w o rd s m a y b e o í c a p ita l le tte rs 2 5 c ‘ o- e o c 1- o d d m o n o l w o r d m c a p ita !#*- •ers to a s fe rc a -d o n d V isa o c c e p te d W O R D A N D U N E A O D E A D L I N E S C H E D U L E M o n d a » T uesday W e d n e s d c » T hursday E n d o y E n d o y 1 l o r - M o n d a y H o rn Tuesday ^ lo m W e d n e s d a y 1 lo m Thursday T o m TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED DISPLAY AD, CALL: 471-8900__________ CLASSIFIED DISPLAY* AD RATES_______ * C h a 'g e d b y *>e column trvch CV»e cohmn rvcH rrttn-'T’u r" A v a f e*V O* *vpe foce$ O 'x j s re s ar$<3 b o r d e r a v o ^ a b 'e Faji R otes S ep* 1 -M a y 3 0 1 to 4 0 cot^n*in inches Per M o n t* S ’ 8 0 Per Co^yrnn ir*ch O v e r 5 0 c o i a e r m onth c o ll For ro^es CLASSIFIED LINE AD ‘ RATES___________ C L A S S I F I E D D I S P L A Y D E A D L I N E S C H E D U L E 'C h a rg e d by the line O n e c o G m - m im m um Avoi>oble m 5 to 14 pt type ,»ch ' c e 1 m ch 1 Tim e $ " 8 0 M o n d a y Tuesda> W e d n e s d a y Thw^sdav F rid a y W ednesday 4 p rr Thursday 4 p m F nd o v 4 p m M o n o ov 4 p m uesday 4 p r fn th e eve n t o t e rro rs m o d e m a n a d ­ v e rtise m e n t n o tic e mus* b e g iv e n b y 11 o m the First d a y as th e p u b lish e rs ore re s p o n s ib le For o n h O N E m co rre c * in s e rtio n AH cia>ms For a d iu s tm e n h s h o u ld be m o d e no* la te r th a n 3 0 days a h e r p u b lic a r o n Pre p a id kills r*ce *ve cre d '* si»p 4 re a u e s te d a t tim e oF c cn * o *n o u n * e xce eds c e % * o n S2 0 0 Sftp most b e p re s e n te d fo r a r e o r d e r wrth¡n 9 0 d a y s to be voifd C re d it slips o re n o n -tra n s fe ra b le n c o n s id e ra tio n o f The D a ily T exon s o c c e p ta n c e o f a d v e rtis in g c o p y For p u b lic a tio n th e a g e n c y a n d the ad verhser w ill in d e m n ify o n d save ha rm - >ess Texas S tu d e n t P u b lic a h o n * a n d its ofhc e rs, e m p lo y e e s a n d a g e n ts ag o m st o< kiss io b tltty d o m o g e a n d e xpense o f w h a ts o e v e r n a tu re o n s m g o u t oF the c o p v -n g p rin tin g o r p u b lis h in g o* -h o d v e rh s m e n t in c lu d in g w ith o u t lim ito h o n re a s o n a b le a tto m e s s Fees "esuh- ng f*-om cksims oF Suits For itb e v io la n o n oF rig h t oF p o v o c y p*og»ansm a n d CO pvnght a n d tro d e m a rk ¡n fn n q e m e n t DEADLINE: 11:00 a.m. prior to publication M A STER C A R D V IS A A C C EP T ED ^ = \ 1 M“t"c" d CLASSIFICATIONS T R A N S P O R T A T I O N 10 — NUk . A u to s 2 0 — S p o r t s - E o f fe w A u to s 3 0 — T ru e k s -V o n s 4 0 — V to n e le s t o T r a i t 5 0 — S o r v k o - O o p a tr * 0 — E a m - A c r a s M r l . s 7 0 — M o t o r cvcW s 90 — W c y tto s W - V t W d t l t B M n j 100 — V o h M o * W o n to d R E A L E S T A T E S A L E S 1 1 0 — S e rv ic e * 1 2 0 - H o w to s 130 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u f s 1 0 0 — M o M . H o m t s l o f i 15 0 — A c r . o p . l o t s 1 0 0 — O u p f e x . t - 1 7 0 — 1 1 0 0 — L o a n s M E R C H A N D I S E 1 9 0 — A p p H o n c o s 2 0 0 — l i m M u n - H o v t t h o M 2 1 0 — S to to o -T V 2 2 0 — C o m p wt o r s - 2 3 0 — ttts o C o -C n m x rn i 2 4 0 — B o a ts 2 5 0 — M u t k a l I n t t r u m . n t s 2 4 0 - 2 7 0 — M o c h m e r y - fq v « p m * n t 2 0 0 — S p o n H n g -C o m p in g E q u ip m e n t 2 0 0 — F u r n itu r e - A p p lia n c e R e n ta l 3 0 0 — O a r o g e - R u m m o g e S oles 3 1 0 — TroO e 3 2 0 — W o n te d to R u y o r R ent M E R C H A N D I S E 3 3 0 — Rets 3 4 0 — M isc. R E N T A L 3 5 0 — R e n ta l S e rv ic e s 3 0 0 — F u m . A p ts . 3 7 0 - U n i. A p ts 3 0 0 — t u r n . D u p le x e s 3 9 0 — U n i. D u p le x e s 4 0 0 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e * 4 1 0 — F u m . H o u s e s 4 2 0 — U n f . H o u s e s 4 2 5 — R o o m s 4 3 0 — R o o m -R o o rd 4 J 5 — C o -o p s 4 4 0 — R o o m m a te s 4 5 0 — M o b ile H o m e s - lo ts 4 6 0 — B u s in e s s R e n ta ls 4 7 0 — R e s o rts 4 B 0 — i t o r o p i S p o r t « 9 0 — W o n to d t o B o n t- L o o s . 5 0 0 - M I k . A N N O U N C E M E N T S 5 1 0 — I n to tia m m a n t- T lc fc a H 5 2 0 — N n c n o b T r a v e l 5 3 0 - T r o n v p o r to n o n 5 4 0 — L o s t A f o u n d 5 5 0 — U t n i t d C h ild C a r . 5 0 0 — O u b ik N o t i t . 5 7 0 — M u s k - M u s ic ia n s E D U C A T I O N A L 5 0 0 — M u s ic a l I n s tr u c tio n 5 tC — T u to r in p 6 0 0 — I n s tr u c tio n W o n te d 6 1 0 — M is t. In s tr u c tio n S E R V IC E S 6 2 0 — l . p a l S o rv ic o s 6 3 0 — C o m p u te r Sp t v i c s 6 4 0 — ( k t e r m in a r o n 6 5 0 — M o v in p - H o u h n p 6 6 0 — S to r o p e 6 7 0 — f o t n t i n p S E R V IC E S 6 0 0 - O f t k . 6 6 0 — O e r ta t t p u i p m e n l 7 0 0 — f u r n i t u r e R e p a ir 7 1 0 — A p p A o n t . R e p a ir 72® ~ S *o cP O -T V R te a a r 7 3 0 - N o n t . O . p o . r 7 4 0 — p ^ y r t . R a p p ,, 76« - N w T L r v t c * * e m p l o y m e n t 7®® — t m p i o y m . n l w > » ' n 760 — h p r t N n t SO® - t t e n o r t d H M p W o n to d • 1 ® ~ O W tc - C le ric «k ®3® ~ A c t o u n t in p - 13® — A d t t t m it t r a t lv e . 64® — S o to * •5® — B » » « il R ® " E n g in e e r in g . T a c H n k a i | 7 # - M p d k o i e4R We. • w pm « « .iO T » o i •9® — C lu b s - R . s t o u r p n t s R®®~ d o t n o s t k - H o u s e h o ld *1® - P o s it io n s W o n to d 93® - W o r t W o n to d • U S I N E S S 9 J® ~ B u s k te s s OppotTunMos ♦Rd — Opportunities N o n te d 471-5244 CLASSIFIEDS ....Your extra income source. It makes sense. Think of all the things you can Buy in Classi­ That fied. means you can also Sell a lot in things of Classified. CALL 471-5244 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 10— Misc. Autos 20 — Sports-Foreign 80 — Bicycles 340-M is c . 360 — Fum. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. tires 7 3 C A D IL L A C L o o d e d le a th e r in te r io r n e w $ 9 5 9 4 5 9 - 1 9 7 9 L e a v e m essage to M tc h o e l 12-19 o d e m o to r b e tte r , tra n sm issio n 1 9 8 8 CHRYSLER L E B A R O N c o n v e rtib le a u to m a tic o c p re m iu m p o c k o g e hit w h e e l, cruise c o n tro l, p w m d o w s /lo c k s , p to ch o o s e fro m 4 4 3 - 4 4 3 5 4 -1 2 - 5 N C seats 7 fro m G O V E R N M E N T SEIZED V e h icfe s $ 1 0 0 C o rv e tte s F o rd s. M e rc e d e s C h e v y * S urplus Bu yers G u id e (1) 8 0 5 6 8 7 - 6 0 0 0 E xt S -9 4 1 3 1 0 - 6 -2 0 6 Autos 7 9 C A M E R O BLACK, n e w en g in e new outom otic transmission, n e w stereo P W PL AC, $ 2 0 0 0 O B O c a í Ench 4 5 8 2 4 0 8 1 0 -1 8 -1 5 N C _______________________ 1 9 8 7 M U S T A N G C O N VE R T IB LE 5 0 L G T Low m ileoge F u iy lo o d e d C h e rry condition $ 1 3 .9 0 0 0 8 0 3 4 5 - 2 6 2 7 TO -18-15N C _____________________________ 1 9 8 0 T O Y O T A Tercel fo r sale with A C , n ew dutch, n e w tires. $ 1 2 0 0 Coll D iip 4 6 7 - 9 5 2 0 1 Q -1 9 -1 5 N C _________________ '5 2 IN T E R N A T IO N A L p tc k -u p 6 5 K miles, e n g in e clu tch n e w c a n d y a p p le p o in t b a tte ry , 4 4 7 - $ 4 5 0 0 tiie s P to fe c f 6 4 5 5 1 0 - 4 -2 0 N C BEAUTIFUL V IR G IN w h ite '7 7 C onvertí b b superbeetle N e w p ain t/s te re o cas­ 8 3 5 - sette/seat c o v e rV tires. $ 4 0 0 0 9 6 3 5 1 0 - 2 0 - 5 8 _________________________ 2 0 B -C 7 7 CUTLASS SUPR EM E A C , PB PS, ex cwRwnt c o n d itio n insid e o n d o u t N e e d s m in o r b o d y w o r k . A s k in g $ 1 3 0 0 4 7 3 - 2 3 1 7 1 0 -1 2 -1 5 N C H O N D A CRX ’8 7 F M stereo, sunroof a l ­ 2 3 0 0 0 m iles G o o d lo y w h e e ls , condition 1 0-21- 1 5 N C .___________________________________ 4 4 0 - 0 1 4 6 A C SI FOR SALE B io n c h i ra c e r 21 G r e a t c o n d it io n v e ry recent fro m e “ tu n e -u p $ 3 2 5 C o i 4 6 2 - 0 0 5 2 1 0 -3 0 -5B REAL ESTATE SALES 130 — Condos - Townhouses A U C T IO N i A U C T IO N ! A U C T IO N ! TH IS IS THE A U C T IO N O F THE YEAR! TH IS IS N C N B 1 C A L L JERRY HALE O A K E S O R A N Y A G E N T A T PM T 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 10-13- MERCHANDISE 200 — Furniture- Household FIVE PIECE BRASS o n d gloss o c ta g o n s h a p e d d in e tte set Shll b o x e d n e v e r used, > 1 4 7 8 9 2 - 7 0 8 0 1 0-17-58 EXTRA F IR M in n e r sprin g m attress a n d b o x s p n n g N e v e r used still p o c k o g e d Q u e e n $ 1 8 5 k in a $ 217, includes d e kv e ry H o m e 8 9 2 - 7 0 8 0 Q U E E N S IZE D w a te r bed, lin e r b lo c k p e d e s ta l d o r k w o o d fro m e shelf h e o d b o a rd E x c e ie n t c o n d itio n $ 1 2 5 B e fo re 8 9 2 - 3 6 3 5 5 3 0 8 9 2 - 1 2 0 9 . a fte r 5 3 0 1 0 - 2 5 - 5 8 ________________________________ BLA C K L A Q U E R e n te rta in m e n t c e n te r C a rv e d o a k b a r a n d stools S ofas ta b le s ta b le s, a n d m o re C o n sig n m e n t C o n n e c tio n 4 5 2 - 7 9 5 0 A n d e rs o n S q u a re 4 8 0 0 1 0 - 2 7 - 2 B - D _____________________ 220 — Computers* Equipment M A C 5 1 2 K SYSTEMS! $ 5 4 5 . w / 6 m o w a r r a n t y N e w used, c o m p u te rs h a r d w o r e s o ft­ w a re C o n s ig n m e n ts w o n te d A u d io -v is u - o l o n d c o m p u te r re p a irs A C R C O M P U T E R S 4 9 2 2 B u r n e t Rd 4 5 2 - 6 8 5 2 1 0 - 1 9 -2 0 8 -D HILL COUNTRY COMPUTERS XT, AT, a n d 3 8 6 Systems 1 y r w a r r a n t y . F re e s e t-u p . F r e e D e liv ­ e r y M a s t e r C a r d & V is a o c c e p t e d O p e n e v e n in g s a n d w e e k e n d s C o ll f o r a FREE p n c e list! 2 4 4 -1 0 2 8 _____________________________10-18- 2 0 B - D KATHERINE'S COMPUTERS S u p e r X T-1 m e g R A M , 1 2 m e g f lo p p y , 12 m e g a h e r t z c o lc k s p e e d $ 5 4 9 F a st A T - 2 m e g s R A M 6 5 m e g h a r d RED H O T 1 9 8 6 M a z d a 3 2 3 U l H atah - back. outom otic, A M F M to p e no air 3 0 ,0 0 0 $ 4 5 0 0 3 2 8 - 8 2 1 9 1 0 -2 3 -1 5 B 1981 V O IK S W A G O N S C IR O C C O 5- speed. A M M cassette Running but needs som e w o r k $ 1 8 0 0 4 9 5 - 3 3 6 6 1 0-18-5P ________________________________ 1 9 7 5 V W SUPERBEETLE with sunroof mint condition! I Also n e w e n g in e point $ 1 9 9 5 2 8 2 -5 3 1 1 ________________________ 8 5 M U S T A N G G T 5 0 A u to sunroof folly lo e d e d m aro o n , g re y tint, excellent condition 1 0 - 2 5 - 1 5 N C ____________________________________ 4 9 5 - 2 1 9 4 $ 6 2 0 0 1 9 6 7 M U S T A N G fully restored out 2 8 9 engine, autom atic transmission Perfect b o d y W h ite / block to p 2 5 5 - 3 1 3 3 1 0 -2 5 -1 5 N C inside, 1 9 8 6 RX-7, w h ite 1 9 ,5 0 0 m ibs. $ 9 0 0 0 ' 5 speed 8 3 7 - 2 0 5 7 1 0 -2 5 -1 5 -N C 1 9 8 7 SU B AR U JUSTY G L 5sp A C, A M F M Silver g ra y interior O n ly 2 2 0 0 0 rm bs E x ceien t First $ 4 5 0 0 takes it 4 4 7 - 5 4 1 3 1 0 -1 9 -5 8 1 9 8 8 Y U G O , re d 4-sp gre a t $ 1 9 5 0 8 3 4 - 9 7 1 3 1 0 -2 6 - 1 5 N C looks an d runs 8 4 G TI e x c e ie n t condition, o n e o w n e r sunroof A M / F M cassette co r $ 3 7 0 0 4 4 4 - 6 2 1 8 1 0 - 2 5 - 5 6 ____________ Fun 8 4 V W C O N V ER TIB LE lo w m ileage, very cleon C oll a fter 6 pm 1 - 6 2 0 - 7 6 6 6 1 0 -2 7 -5 B __________________ 5 -s p e e d A C , 1 9 7 9 V O L V O 2 4 5 D L S W A C , 76K m ib s perfect b o d y b a th e r seats Runs g re a t $ 2 8 0 0 4 5 4 - 9 3 8 2 1 0 -3 0 -5 B ____________ 30 — Trucks-Vans F O R D B R O N C O X IT W indsor, blue o n d w hite $ 3 0 0 0 8 7 7 9 11-1-15NC 8 0 V -8 351 4 7 7 1 9 7 3 F O R D o n e ton ca m p e r special W est compos traveling, a ir conditioning G r e a t truck d e a l. $ T O 0 , 4 7 6 - 1 0 4 7 10- 1 2 -1 5 N C _________________________________ 86 F O R D A erostar, b u rg an d y. AC , ST cruise, v ery ec onom ical $ 4 6 0 0 firm. C o l 2 6 4 - 2 9 6 7 . 1 0 - 2 5 - 5 8 _______________ 70 — Motorcycles M O T O R C Y C L E G A R A G E SALE 19 8 7 Hymccmc 6 0 0 6 5 0 0 miles Some scratches $ 2 4 0 0 1987 H ym coot 6 0 0 Immaculate Custom d n v e $1 3 4 9 Pamf 1100 miles $ 3100 A ll s y s te m s in c lu d e 1 y e a r w a r r a n t y 1988 Kgtpno 6 0 0 lo w m»les Custom Po»nt 1983 Hondo CB 1100 f 3 0 0 0 m»le$ Custom $ 3 0 0 0 Po.nl $1 5 0 0 1981 Yamaha TT 2 5 0 d.n b«ke $ 5 0 0 4 6 7 -2 2 2 2 N e a r In tra m u r a l Fields a n d 3 0 d a y r e f u n d p o lic y F re e d e l i v ­ e r y t o U T o f f ic e s M C /V IS A o c c e p t e d 4 6 2 -3 7 3 2 _____________________________ 1 0 -2 6 - 5 B -D IB M S E IE C T R IC II w ith c o rre c tio n t o p . R e c e n tly s e rv ic e d m g ro a t c o n d itio n __________________________ 1 0 - 2 5 - 5 8 $ 3 9 5 2 7 2 - 5 1 5 6 m ghts 1 0 -2 4 - 5 8 H O N D A 1 0 0 1 9 7 2 1 2 0 0 m ibs Runs g re a t, looks n e w $ 3 0 0 O B O 2 7 2 - 5 1 5 6 nights 1 0 - 2 4 - 5 8 '8 3 K A W A S A K I G P Z 5 5 0 Perfect condi tion 6 ,6 0 0 miles See to a p p re c ia te $ 1 2 9 9 firm 3 2 0 - 8 8 7 2 m essoge 1 0 - 2 4 - 5 8 1 9 8 6 H O N D A ELITE 8 0 w hit# e x c e fb n t condition, 3 , 0 0 0 m ies helm et in cluded $ 7 0 0 cash o nly C a í 4 6 9 - 0 1 3 6 1 0 -2 5 - 5 8 _______________________________________ 1 9 8 6 H O N D A SPREE block, e x c e ie n t condition, 6 months p o id $ 2 5 0 C o l after 5 o r le a v e m essage 4 5 2 7 5 3 4 1 0 - 2 5 - 5 8 ____________________ insurance 1 9 8 2 H O N D A A S C O T FT5 0 0 Red 11 8 0 0 miles Runs an d looks g re a t M ust $ 6 2 5 o r best offe r C a i 4 4 5 - 6 2 0 7 s e i 1 0 - 2 5 5P________________________________ 8 3 H O N D A S H A D O W Runs great, lo w m ile o g e le a v e m essoge 1 0 - 2 6 - 5B 4 5 3 - 0 7 5 4 , $ 1 0 0 0 1 9 8 3 VF 7 5 0 F IN TER C EP TO R Full fa.r tng, custom chrom e, w h ite paint N e w tires, K erker h eaders Im m aculate $ 1 8 0 0 4 4 2 - 6 1 0 3 1 0 - 2 6 - 5 B -D __________________ 1 9 8 7 H O N D A ELITE 8 0 , b lue excellent condition 1 8 0 0 m ibs h elm et included $ 8 5 0 4 7 8 - 2 0 3 6 b e fo re 12 3 0 p m 1 0 - 2 7 5P______________________ n eg o tia b le c o n d i t io n , ‘8 4 H O N D A A E R O 125 seats tw o red g o o d r e l i a b l e m ain ten an ce records a v a ila b le . $ 6 0 0 0 8 0 4 5 8 - 9 7 5 7 please le a v e m essoge 1 0 - 2 7 - 5 8 ________________________________ v e r y Interceptor 7 0 0 c c , e b o n 8 5 H O N D A e x c e ie n t condition helm e t and c o ver included, $ 2 0 0 0 neg o tiab le. c o i Tuon 4 6 2 - 9 4 7 6 1 0 - 3 0 - 5P 80 — Bicycles THAU. BIKE SALE Hrwfm T k * O N L Y S 1 M *1 ¿etime Wsrrenfy * 1 Y#*f F *•« Service Studen! omxKmi tuper» -epsxrs Bicydei i O » 3 ‘ South Austin 2210 S 1*1444 VISA MC A M i i p BLOWOUT • O lAM O H D . M O N T A G N X H e NISteB • m m » s u m a c a * * NmM maHmM BUCITS BWKS f28*2810 " t B B B H B h h M I « t o . M C . t n i e oeoover e e ta o m e to B R A N D N E W R a le ig h Techntum 12 s p e e d > 1 7 5 n e g o t a b b C o l S o n d y 4 7 4 7 9 6 5 10 c o n d it i o n E x c e lle n t 2 4 - 5 8 ___________________________________ 1 9 8 5 M IY A T A 3 1 0 Q w c k r e b a te h u b * > 2 5 0 3 7 0 - 0 4 1 7 (b e tw e e n 6 a n d 8 p m ) 1 0 2 6 - 5 8 ________________________________ C A N N O N O A l l R acm g N c y c b 5 8 c m M a t r i x p u m p ce er f b e n . > 7 5 0 4 7 7 - 8 6 1 9 . Ex ce d e n t s e w u p m e * Z e s o l 1 0 2 6 5 8 TIRED O F U S IN G C o m p u te r e n t e r te r m i­ nals? W o r k f r o m h o r n . T a b v id e o 9 5 0 to rm in a l w ith 1 2 0 0 b o d m o d e m $ 3 0 0 J o h n 4 5 3 - 6 5 1 8 1 0 -2 4 -5 8 _______________ A T A R I 5 2 0 S T , m o n o c h ro m e m o n ito r, u n - g b s id e d dis k d n v e , Epson 1 X 8 6 p n n to r c o m p u te r de s k a n d c h a ir lots o f s o ftw a r e 1 0 -2 7 -5 B ___________ $ 6 5 0 3 4 3 - 6 4 4 5 C O M M O D O R E 6 4 , disk d n v e m o n ito r, fa st c o rtn d g e «ark. $ 4 9 w o r k $ 4 9 5 0 8 0 4 7 8 2 9 5 3 1 0 - 3 0 - 5 8 c o lo r lo a d M a n y gom es D riv e n e e d s p n n to r m odem , g a n 250 — Musical _ Instruments ~ BO S S SUPER fe e d b a c k » o n d d is to rtio n p e d a l o n fy o n e y e a r o ld h a rd ly u sed $ 5 0 C o ll o fto r 2, 4 7 7 - 9 5 8 4 1 0 - 2 6 - 5 8 R O L A N D A L P H A J u n o p o ly p h o n ic s y n ­ th e size r, 1 2 8 p re s e t sound p r o g r o m o b b M ID I m u lt c o n d itio n $ 5 5 0 0 8 0 4 7 2 - 2 9 5 3 1 0 -3 0 -5 8 ’ *___________ f u iy 280 — Sporting- Camping Equip. 290 — Fumiture- Appliance Rental ★ FIN G E R FURNITURE RENTAL ★ • C o m p le te Living Room D ining Room & B edroom from $ 4 9 9 5 m o 7801 N. Lomar 459-4125 10 2 7 2 0 8 D 330 — Pets tg u o n a * lizordl,m uch ZOO K E fP E fT REPTILES Auttm s onfy r e p tile * o n ly (to re Snake*, Turtle* T ro n tu lo i monitor more B uy Sei Trade $ 5 > 2 5 0 2 8 8 HERP IQ -16-208-E____________________ $1 HA LLO W E E N KITTY Block w ith green eye* Six montKi o id W ill make a greoi pet C o l 3 4 6 6 2 3 6 o*k for Anne 10 26 5P_______________________________________ 340 — Misc. THE AUSTIN GOLD AN0 SILVER EX C H A N G E C a í u» fin * fo r b e d p n c e * 1 0 1 8 1 8 8 ________________ 4 6 2 2155 AJAY OCTAGYM l> M d tw ic e >150 2 88 2 4 4 7 1 0 -7 4 -5 8 __________________ D R A F T IN G TABLES > 8 0 eoch. M e to i b oo kca xM $ 3 0 eoch 750-8021 10 2 7 58 C A U 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD 10*12 # TV Rentol from only $19 9 5 m o J* I JAMES LEWIS i GOLD A SILVER I EXCHANGE ■ WE ARE AUSTIN’S *1 1 GOLD & SILVER BUYERS i BECAME I WE GUARANTEE THE m HIGHEST CASH BUY PRICES m FOR YOUR USED: m G O L D J E W E L R Y DIAMONDS ■ WHXMNG BANDS MGH SCHOOL MNGS DENTAL GOLD ■ m y;..' STERLING SILVERWARE H ANYTHING GOLD o r SIL VER m IN ANY CONDITION'. ■4*01 BURNET 458-2B39 - RENTAL 350 — Rental Services © FREE LOCATORS Best ond fnendkest m town C o l today THOMAS G. THOMPSON JH REALTOR 452 $625 360 — Fum. Apts. Tanglewood North Can you say 2 Pools? • RR shuttle at front d o o r • Remodeled laundry rooms • Ceiling fan s/ m icrowaves LEASE NOW! 452-0060 1 0 2 0 E 4 5 t h Prote$$’onj>\ M o n e d a d t>\ Daws & Assoc Spanish Trails Apartments 4520 Bennett Dr. 4 5 2 0 0 6 0 H U R R Y ! 1 BR & 2 BR Nice Pool Common Area & Courtyard Fenced with Iron Gates Shuttle at Comer Only a Few Left WU Not Last Much Longer P ro fe s s io n a l «U neperi to O n to 6 Aaeoctofes W e s t 1-1 s 6 2-2 s • 0 POOLS • 3 Laund?v flooms • GosVaie' Po¡d 8 Shuftie of fronr door 8 Furnished or UnV- mshed IDEAL FOR STUDENTS! 1403 Ncxwolh Lp 4 7 2 - 9 6 1 4 ALL BILLS PAID Fall Rates Eff. 1 BR Sm. 2 BR $300 $360-$395 $395 W oik or shuffle to campus. C A /C H , rem ode lad, convenient to everything 2212 San Gabriel Student Special1 $225ABP E F F IC IE N C IE S 2 BLOCKS UT H O L L O W A Y A P T S 2 50 2 N ueces 4 7 4 - 2 3 6 5 Rio N ueces 1 B R & 2 B R 2 Blocks From Campus' Ceiling Fans Mini Blinds Pool Pnvate Parking laundry Rooms 600 W. 26th ^ 4 7 4 -0 9 7 1 sy CASA DE SALADO APARTMENTS 1 b e d ro o m fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n ts w a ­ te r g a s o n d basic TV c o b le p a id N o pets S w im m in g p o o l A C a n d c e ' ng fa n s la u n d r y fa cilitie s C lo se to com pus n e o r shuttle R esid en t m a n a g e r # 11 2 2 6 1 0 S o la d o S tre e t Fo r 4 7 7 2 5 3 4 U n it a v a ia lb le n o w in fo 1 0 -9-2 0 8 C H ills id e A p ts. 1 & 2 B e d ro o m s F u rn ishe d o r U n fu rn is h e d C le o n & Q u 'e t A ll U tilities P aid 4 7 8 -2 8 1 9 514 D a w s o n Rd Just O f f B a rto n S p n n g s Rd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-5 2 0 6 C . MESQUITE TREE APARTM ENTS O ne bed ro om far rushed apartm ents Close to campus neor shuttle Dishwash er A/ C Ceiling fan. Laundry facilities and hot tub W a te r and basic T V coble poid N o pets 2410 Longview Resident mono- ger # 3 0 1 For info 4 7 8 -2 3 5 7 UNIT AVAILABLE N O W 10-13 2 08 C ★ WEST CAMPUS ★ It's a g re a t d e a l! in sm a ll 1-1's F u rn ish e d c o m p le x $ 2 2 5 - $ 2 5 0 (w e co n a ls o u n fu rm sh i H u rry w h ile th e y last! Apartment Finders 458-1213 10-24 20B-C ★ EAST CAMPUS ★ SPECIAL 3 2 N D A T IH 3 5 A V A LO N APTS 2 BR -7 BA $ 3 6 5 I BR -1 BA $ 2 6 5 Ce.1 »ng fans antro large walk-m closets units on srte m onoger foundry $qu#aky clean G ra ot law engin ee rin g *tu dents. IB J School fo r 476-3629 __________________________10-20 2 08 f • Q u ie t • Spacious • T w o B e d ro o m s S to rtin g $ 3 8 0 m o W a lk to ca m p us RR shuttle Free c a b le pool la u n d ry o n site m a n o g e m e n t trees, & m o re SHANTI APARTMENTS • 4 7 6 -8 4 7 4 * 4 5 3 - 2 3 6 3 10 25 2 08 K NEED A HOM E? You must see our excellent room m ate pla n 1 2-1 w ith pool w ater, ond extended cable p ro ­ vided O nly 5 blocks from cam ­ pus, O nly S 380 call A p a rtm e n t F in d e rs 458-1213 WEST CAMPUS Tim berw ood A p o n loft pool m»sts efficient firepiace huge trees walk to campus $2 70 3 0 0 1000 W 26th St 4 '8 1623 4 ? 8 4 8 8 6 _______ _________ 10-5 2 0 6 -0 ACROSS FROM campus ta rg e one bed room apartm ent w afer gas paid $ 2 8 0 5 0 0 E lm wood Place 3 4 5 1552 or 3 4 5 5 4 2 3 10 10 98 A D O R A B lf 2 2 iN h o a u ttfu H y d e F o r i a r o o g ig o n tK t r o . * c o v e r o d p o rk m g a n d f ir o p f a t e O n *huttfe C a í 4 5 9 171' 4 5 2 1121 1 0 -1 8 - 2 0 8 -E ___ LARG E Q U iE l e ffic ie n c y 3 8 th vmd A ve n u . 8 Fro# b a u r c a b te co n w asner o n d d r y e r g o * a n d w a fe r p o d $ 2 0 0 * • b c t r ic t t y A n n # M 4b< 4 5 2 4 2 1 2 10 ___________________ 18 2 0 8 K W A L K i O U t $ 2 6 0 7 1 0 8 San G o b - e 1 3 4 S 1 5 5 2 o r ’ 6 d t A p t W a fe r gos pc»d 3 4 5 5 4 2 3 10 2 3 >08 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ G R E A T V lf W 1 Groa» p o c e N e a p t 1 8 d r > 3 0 0 rogutar $ 3 3 5 b u ■ _______ lo m ) 4 7 7 7 1 5 8 10 2 6 4 P am pus .TO T A R tY T O W N G A R A G E A pt Bocttotcrs t/Lcmncy ktoraf fo r g r a d u a fe s h rd .n i p a d $ 3 0 0 4 7 7 ,7 1 2 3 1. 0 *# 1 0 -2 6 56 B C A U T tfU t W EST c a m p u s c o n d o onfy $ 4 7 5 / m o 1-1 W D c e Á n g to n w a lk to UT C o l 4 7 4 7 4 1 8 1 0 - 3 0 - 3 ® _______ HYDE PAR K o n shuttb U r o q u . I 1 L a rg e A T T E N T IO N SKIERS U nited e d itio n K 2 - KVC skis S k ie d o n fo u r da y s $ 4 5 0 o r best o ffe r 7 9 4 - 9 3 2 3 1 0 -2 7 -5 8 __________ T o n g le w o o d RENTAL RENTAL 400—Condos Townhom** 425 — Rooms j G uadalupe i Square Condos M ié Guadalupe * Fully Furnished * Walk, Jog or Ride to Campus » Covered Parking * Ceding Fans * Central Air Heat 477-6661 C a l l P r o n t o ! I d A o d p to r C o EXTRA NIC E 1 b d r - b o C o r v d o o n U T s h u t ­ t le , M a r b l e F 'P m t n t b t m d s c e i l ­ i n g f o n s p o c e s a v e r m i c r o w a v e & c o f f w m a k e r w a l k - i n c lo s e t s , p a t i o w o s H e r & d r y e r O n f y $ 3 5 0 ^ 9 4 - 8 1 1 1 P r o f e s s i o n a l l y r n o n o g * G b v W t n f i e i d P r o p e r ­ ties Inc 1 0 - 3 0 - 5P ★ MEXICAN TILE! ★ W a l k f a c a m p u s 1 b e d r o o m / 1 f r e o ! a c e c e t l m g fan b a m ­ b a t h b o o - l i n e d p n v a t e p a h o g a s and w a t e r p a i d r o o m m a t e s O K ; O n ly $ 4 3 0 ! A p a rtm e n t Finders 4 5 8 -1 2 1 3 _________________1 0 - 2 4 - 2 0 6 -C T O M G R E E N C O N D O S ' LAR G E 2-1 LUXURY C O N D O 3 B L O C K S FR O M C A M P U S IN C L U D E A M E N IT IE S w a s h e r , d r y e r m i c r o w a v e c o v ERED P A R K IN G $ 6 s o m o m u c h AT p m T 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 10 2 5 2 0 8 e t c c C R O IX- l a r g e m n e w c a r p e t a n d P A IN T ' A M E N IT IE S IN C L U D E W A S H E R DRYER M IC R O W A V E SEC U R ITY ETC AVAILABLE N O W i $ 5 0 0 / M O M IT C H A T PMT 4 7 6 2 6 7 3 10 2 5 208-C 420 — Unf. Houses WEEKEND GET-AWAY LAKE TRAVIS $25 o night or 3 rughti ond 2 days fo• $49 COUNTRY CLUB GOLF PRIVILEGES Ideo For fraternity sorronty re*reot Lago Vista Lodges 5 1 2 -2 6 7 -1 1 1 6 1 0 -2 4 - 5 8 E 3701 SPEEDWAY 3 Bedroom-2 Baths, Gas stove, large living area, window AC, $ 6 5 0 / month. 477-582 7 (day); 478-2693 (nights). _____________________ 1 0 -2 7 -3 8 506 WEST 35th (just east of Guodalupe) Two-bedroom home, Central air/heat, Appliances Nov. 1 Move-in $335.00 453-4990 - Owner 10 2 7 28 E TW O B E D R O O M , O n e b a th housto 1821 W 3&»h $ 4 5 0 3 4 0 3 K .ng $ 4 5 0 t q .2 4 - 5 8 ___________________ 3 4 5 1777 ic h o o t Deck Eostwoods 716 E 26lh St Froitsly pcxnfed 2-1 A C R O S S F R O M overlooking W a lle r C roek Pork ceiimg fons 4 7 6 9 4 1 9 10 2 5 108 low B'KE TO UT 3 7 0 3 H o iy w o o d C ozy two tfedroom o n e bath h a rd w o o d floors exiling fail* fe n ced yord g a r a g e $ 4 4 0 3 2 3 9 3 8 0 1 0 -2 6 -1 0 8 W ALK TO U T N e w 4 3 A Í a p o fio n ie * W D, 4 7 4 -4 7 5 5 , 8 5 8 - 7 5 1 1 1 0 -2 6 5 8 D ivetEsor g re a t ro o m m a te *’ far U N F U R N IS H E D C O T T A G E Herghtj, shctofe route, p n vo ta $ 3 9 5 mo ptasdepotrt 4 4 7 - 9 4 1 9 10 3 0 - 5 8 E 2 1 f e w RENTAL 425 — Rooms VERY LARGE cfean p n vate r o o m 'e n ­ tran ce 'b a fh ro fn q e ra to r N o kitchen 3 8 th St Q u ito individual N o pets bitfs p o d 4 5 3 - 5 4 1 7 1 0 - 6 - 2 0 6 - D____________ R O O M S W EST C A M P U S 1 9 0 9 W 2 2 n d h a rd w o o d flo o r*, 10 ft ceiling w alk to com pu* $ 1 9 0 - 5 2 3 5 3 4 3 6 4 1 6 1 0 -2 0 10B-C M A LE A C C O M M O D A T IO N now avail in the Castilian M o v e m nom to a b le g u o ro n le e a S p n ng occom m odoko n L a i 4 7 8 -9 8 1 1 d u n n g business hrs or co m e by 2 3 2 3 Son A n to n » 1 0 -2 4 2 0 6 C_______________________________ R O O M BATH limited kitchtoi p rm to g e* m attractive hom e occupted by m o th » an d g ro w n son G o o d n e ig hborhood P ace n egohotve 8 3 7 - 0 5 8 4 1 0 -2 7 -5 8 440 — Roommates TWO BEDROOM TWO BATH ROOMMATE NEEDED. NON-SMOKING UT STUDENT. $199/MO. 444-7536 S P R IN G S U M M E R S h on w alk UT Q u iet nonsmoking petfess Shored Lechen For p nvate bath ABP $ 2 5 0 - $ 2 9 5 4 9 5 9 3 4 6 / ( 4 7 4 . 2 4 0 8 m e u o g e ) To sham M is bath $ 1 2 0 - 5 2 0 0 C all 4 7 2 - 5 6 4 6 T 0 -3 -2 0 8 -A _____________________________ FEMALE R O O M M A T E rsMcfed for 2 -2 -rast com pu* a p a rtm e n t Pool hottub w $ 3 0 0 m o CoH 4 7 8 4 2 2 3 10 d etc 2 5 - 5 P ___________________________________ $ 1 9 6 m o ROOM AAATE N E E D E D W C 2 btks UT 2 2 S h o r e kitchen both Firoptoce po o l spa cov erod p arking 4 7 4 - 5 0 4 5 1 0 -2 7 -5 P b ill* '4 * 500 — Misc. P A R K IN G SPACE nx>nfh Phone 4 7 7 9 0 6 5 1 0 -2 6 -7 P G ro n d e fa r ront $ 4 5 p * 2 8 1 5 Rkd ANNOUNCEMENTS 510 — Entertainment- Tickets________ R O L L IN G S T O N E S -R E M " Bonnie Raitt TimEiuk 3 N e w Kids o n the Block- PlL- R odney C r o w e i Stevie Ray V aug hn Jeff Beck W W F S h o w tim e Tickets . 0 6 W 4 7 8 9 9 9 9 1 0 -1 9 -1 2 8 -D __________ M L K tickets 11 11 SIX S T O N E S Field 3 8 th ro w $ 8 0 eoch Coll 4 5 8 2 9 1 7 o r 8 3 5 1 2 8 0 10 2 5 5 8 __________ D a lla s S T O N E S TICKETS First th o w m D o ia s N o v 10th 6 to g eth er *echon 2 0 C o i 4 4 4 - 4 5 1 4 10 2 6 - 5 8 D__________________ C R E W W A N T E D fa t soiltsoot racing on Lake Travis E x p erie n ce desired but will tram C a í Tim 2 6 1 -4 2 1 8 1 0 -2 6 -5 B R EM TICKETS $ 3 5 or best o ffe ' 451 2 3 6 5 1 0 2 6 - 5B R O IL IN G S T O N E S tw o tickets to Sat N o v 11 co n cert in D o ia s $ 6 5 neg Call 3 3 8 - 1 6 7 2 1 0 - 3 0 -5 P ____________________ 520 — Personals M O N E Y FOR Y O U G rants, loons, ano scholarships W n fe G M G Services P O Box 3 6 9 7 Edm berg Tx 7 8 5 4 0 - 3 6 9 7 1 0 - 2 4 - 5 8 _ 530 — Travel Transportation e x p e d itio n A m a zo n now being organized to Venezuela fo r photographic documenta­ tion o f recently discovered In­ dian caves pictographs. Jan 1-Jan. 15, 1990. Cost a p p ro xi­ mately $1400 Contact Prof Gibbs Mtlliken UT Art Dept ________________________________ 1 0 - 2 4 - 5 8 TW O R O U N D trip heket* valid an y w h e re Southwest Bys expires N o v e m b e r 17th $ 1 5 0 0 0 eoch or best offer 4 7 8 - 3 5 8 8 1 0 -3 0 58 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD i : CALL •471-5244: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a * J 3 III3 X !X !X !X n C IX IIIIIX !I2 D O N ’T W A I T . . Apply now for spring semester at: Creekside Apartments Live bv TOWN LAKE! • UT shuttle city bus • logging trails • quiet • all efficiencies - Bargain Rates - 4990491 615 Upson Tai/v Managed K Assoc Eastaire Apartments Move-in Today! 1 B dr, S ta rtin g at 2 2 5 0 0 By appointment Call Amy at 4520060 9 0 0 E . 5 1 s t S t . Airport Blvd. FY.Ve.v-ra n .//s \Un#g«d b% n » i i * 6 V»,<.x GET YOUR OWN PLACE! LARGE EFFICIENCIES Starting at $ 2 1 0 • UT intramural Fields • N e w ly R e m o d e l e d • E x c e lle n t L o c a tio n • fF Shuttle • Preleasing tor Spring Summer • Door »o door trasn service • Ceiling Fans 4558 Avenue A 454-8903 e B E A U T IF U L e C H E A P E S T ♦ * QUIET * ’ 8 0 2 W#*t Ave Thu compie» n one o* the w e s t apartments in W#$r Compás given its inexpensive rents W e * 1 *r\ to accommodate anyone i tastes & pnce range G^eaf atmosphere waik to U T Surrounded b> beoutiM Kouves Poo* with fountain Free parking Laundry room New fumtture Full krtcSen Folly carpeted Ga> wafer and cable TV pa*d 1 2 2 left- $ 5 2 5 We writ occom*moda»e your budge* from the ieaP e*pen*»ve to the most iuxunous selitng Furnished or unfurnished' Offtct HOURS tvemngs onh 5 8 p m V f or by appt 4 7 8 7519 lo'Qtotlit most ttoKXitrtui l>X>i tn We«* vOmtX'i 10 2 7 2 0 8 - C WEST CAMPUS TIMBERWOOD APARTMENTS Efficiencies, fireplace loft p o o l huge to campus $ 2 7 0 $ 3 0 0 1000 West 26th trees walk M O V E IN N O W A N D GET A $ 5 0 GRANT M o v # -nto C ourtiond A pH and w « 11 pay up to $ 5 0 o* your uYitftHn ond ®v «k> n o n tfi Ki*#p th * $ 5 0 tn your p o c ie * and e n fo y our w r f h o n m u 'o w o v e $ voHey bolt $wím m .ng p ool cxxty ca b o n a and ou< o n viH K c k # b C om # *n an d viwt o u r & 2 RDR t u f V t s ta rtin g a* $ 3 5 9 ■ Ivanhoe ^ Village Rots I 5 0 0 E a st S id e Dr 441-4375 frotetionofK 0o% s & %sa» ★ $225 ★ H U G E 1-1'S! G re a t n e ig h b o rh o o d 1 RIDGETOP APTS. ★ 320-0331 ★ 1 0 -1 3 -2 0 8 -C BRYKER W O O D S Near Seton Hospital and UT 1 BDR/1 BA. A ll n e w heating and AC . O ld English a rc h i­ tecture in a tre n d y n e ig h ­ b o rh o o d $ 2 8 0 , D o n 't lease until yo u ca ll a b o u t this one! 4 5 3 -4 9 9 1 , 452-1121. IO -1 8 -2 Q 6-K # 7 SHUTTLE FO R m aturo student* small co m p lex la rg e p o o i se cunty an d on site m a n o g e i 1 orsd 2 6R $ 2 3 5 8 3 6 4 6 8 6 9 -2 1 108 A tonm * caEite G O R G E O U S LARGE 2 - 1 ’ ?- C entral Lo­ cation Everything n e w $ 3 3 0 STEP SAVERS 4 7 6 - 3 0 2 8 1 0 -3 2 0 8 F HYDE PARK small efficiency ne ighborfiood n o d fi o f law school $ 2 2 5 ABP 3 3 0 3 D uvoll 4 7 2 - 2 1 2 3 10 2 3 - 2 0 8 - 0 ___________ in stately 3 0 0 6 D U V A L 1 b ed ro o m . 1 bath Avot! ab le N o v 1 $ 2 4 0 m onth 371 3 0 9 9 1 0 -2 4 -2 0 8 -C BOY G E O R G E could live hero' 2-1 m the shodo— of UT $ 3 2 5 apphances 4 7 7 LIVE 2 4 hou r* 1 0 -2 5 2 0 8 LARGE T W O story o n e bedroom s and efficiencies olong S p e e d w a y C a /C h IBR $ 2 7 5 efficiencies $ 2 2 5 4 5 3 0 5 4 0 1 0 - 2 5 -2 0 8 D_______________ L O C A T IO N 1 L O C A T IO N ' A nd o í biis poid neor D o w n to w n UT Copitoll O ld ­ er building re n o v a te d w ith la rg e rooms and plenty of a m b ia n c e 1 m onth fr o .! Coll owrror ot 4 7 4 4 8 4 8 10 2 5 2 0 8 -C TAKE O V E R shuttle beautiful a ro o amenities 4 4 7 - 3 9 6 9 1 0 -2 7 -5 8 leas# until M a y l 2-1 1 '2 all low ront G A R A G E A P A R T M E N T -J o rra tt A ve e ffi­ ro fn d g .ro - ciency AC ra n g e (no o ven) tor, $ 2 7 5 ’ m onth (includes utilih.*} Prefer g rad student immed«Jfe?y 4 5 8 -8 0 8 1 le a v e m esto g e 1 0 -2 7 5B A v a ila b le D O N 'T W A S T E time! Houses condos duplexes you n a m e it w e hove it Coll Stopsavers 4 7 6 - 3 0 2 7 1 0 -2 7 2 0 8 A 2 -2 P E N T H O U S E ” CITY view P arquee Boors 18th arvd la v o c a 4 7 6 3 0 2 8 1 0 -2 7 2 0 B A lu x u ry 1 W EST C A M P U S Huge 1-1 aU amenities nice W a s $ 5 5 0 n o w $ 4 2 5 Stepsavers 4 7 6 3 0 2 8 1 0 -2 7 2 0 -B A fir# U N IQ U E E FFIC IEN C Y S attio hie place ceiling fa n o í a p p lian ce* STEP SAVERS T em O N L Y ! 4 7 6 3 0 2 8 10 3 0 2 0 6 -A __________________________ 380 — Furn. Duplexes la rg e kitchen furnished dúplex 1 9 2 0 $ 3 B lO C K S UT house 11 living fenc ed room C A C H w ashet dryer bock yord $ 3 2 5 ♦ electricity $ 3 0 0 deposit 711 G ro h o m 4 7 2 1 3 0 3 or 4 8 0 0 9 3 0 1 0 -2 5 5B lorge 390 — Unf. Duplexes BEAUTIFUL 2 2 F e n c d y o rd 1 0 0 yofa* fro m UT shuttle $ 2 9 9 Q u ie t i ul d e * x R v e rv d e o ro a 4 5 4 7 9 0 0 8 3 7 2 1 8 5 10 5 -108 5 M IN U T E S UT o n shuttle east o f 1 3 5 , a p p it r e d e c o r a te d qu ie t a re a on ce $ c a rp e te d $ 2 75 4 7 2 9 0 1 9 10 20-10B 2 2 D R IP P IN G S P R IN G S s c h o o l* h r i t cioss lo r g e a p p r o x im a te ly 1 1 0 0 s q u a re fo o t 2 1 K itch e n a p p lia n c e * W D c o n n e c tio n ! Front p o rc h y o rd ABP fe n c e d b a c k $ 4 3 5 R utfond P ro p e rtie s 4 6 9 - 0 7 1 6 10 2 5 - 2 0 6 400 — Condos- Townhouses 2 BLO C K S fr o m UT 2 2 p e n th o u s e por $ 8 5 0 qu et B oors ABP S te p s a v e rs 4 7 6 3 0 2 8 10 17 2 0 8 b r e a th ta k in g view C o urtiand A portm enh 4 5 4 2 5 3 7 >0 3 0 IB HYDE PARK, cute 1-1 AH a p p h o n c e s n e a r shuttle 4 4 0 5 A v e n u e A $275 4 2 2 0 10 2 6 2 0 B 3 4 6 RENTAL 360 — Fum. Apts. lu C ^4 t¿ U c iK 2323 San Antonio 478-9811 "jTrTTTTTTTTTTTVT-rTTT^T '-riT r T T T T t- Calm Down! In the Heart of West Campus. Relax in an efficiency, 1 -1, or 2-1 Prices starting at $300.00 mo. Ail Bills Paid! San Gabriel Square Apts 2212 San Gabriel 474-7732 Male accommodation available now at: CdAtéU&K 2323 San Antonio (512)-478-9811 10 24 7 0 8 C 4 7 8 1623 47 8 4886 10-5 2 0 8 D C O N V E R TIB LE '8 7 M U S T A N G G T 5 0 w h ife /re d s te re o t i lt cruise o í e x tro s $13 4 9 5 2 8 0 -2 8 0 1 ta p e e q u a liz e r 4 7 6 - 1 5 1 5 .1Q -14-5B_____________________ 1 9 8 5 P L Y M O U T H R E LIA N T 4 d o o r A C 8 9 k m iles, c le a n , n e w 10-18- $ 2 2 0 0 1 5 N C ____________________________________ tires, b ra k e s 4 4 7 - 8 9 4 2 e ve n in g s M G 8 C O N V E R T IB L E 7 9 Fire e n g in e re d Runs g o o d ro ck, n e w L u g g o g e tires $ 1 9 0 0 n e g o tia b le 4 5 3 - 4 8 1 7 10- 1 8 -1 5 N C ________________________________ 1 9 8 2 F O R D ESC OR T 4 - d o o r a p p le re d 4 9 9 - G re a t c o n d itio n 0 1 2 6 10-11-2 0 N C ______________________ $ 1 2 5 0 0 8 0 '8 4 W A G O N E E R . 4 W D 4 c y lin d e r. 4- d o o r 5 speed. A C , M ic h e lm 's , $ 5 3 0 0 , 3 2 7 - 0 9 9 8 9 -1 8 -1 5 N C __________________ 1 9 8 2 BLUE F O R D Escort S ta n d a rd tra n s ­ 4 5 9 - m ission n e w tires, A M /F M s te re o 0 8 8 9 1 0 -2 1 -1 5 N C ______________________ 1 9 8 4 F O R D ESCORT IX A M 'F M cas sette svrth AC , 4 - d o o r h a tc h b a c k , $ 2 8 5 0 n e g C o ll S co tt 3 8 5 - 1 4 6 4 1 0 -2 5 -1 5 N C 1 9 8 2 F O R D M U S T A N G G L, o u to m o tic 6 g re a t c y lin d e r c o ld A C PS/PB s te re o 1 0 -2 5 - c o n d itio n 1SN C ____________________________________ 2 5 8 - 1 2 8 7 $ 1 6 5 0 1 9 8 4 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A SR-5 - g re a t c o n d itio n , $ 2 7 0 0 n e g c o ll J os eph 4 5 3 - 1 3 0 8 1 0 -2 6 -1 5 N C _______________________ 1 9 8 7 H Y U N D A I G LS 4 d o o r AT PS AM F M cassette 1 2 ,0 0 0 m iles s u n ro o f $ 4 6 5 0 / o ffe r 4 4 4 - 2 3 0 4 4 6 2 6 5 0 8 10- 2 6 -1 5 N C ________________________________ '8 7 G R A N D A M , 2 0 k m ile a g e 2 d o o r g re a t c o n d itio n , m ust s e i $ 7 7 0 0 H a n 4 6 9 - 0 2 2 3 , 1 D 1 9 - 2 0 N C _________________ 81 ESCORT S T A T IO N W a g o n N e w h e a d n e w tra n n y lo o d e d c le o n $ 1 5 5 0 2 6 4 - 2 8 7 2 1 0 -2 6 -1 5 N C _________________ 1 9 7 8 F O R D T-BIRD E x c e lle n t m e c h o m c o l c o n d itio n , g o o d b o d y a n d in te n o r 351 M / 4 0 0 e n g in e , $ 1 0 0 0 C a ll 4 5 9 -5 0 9 1 1 0 -2 6 -1 5 N C • 8 6 CH EVY N O V A 5 -s p e e d PS. A C , ster- e o, 4 - d o o r . 3 3 IC $ 4 5 0 0 , 4 5 2 - 0 7 5 3 e v e n in g s 1 0 -2 7 -1 5 N C 7 9 O L D S C U TLA SS, runs b u t nee d s w o rk . Best ca sh o ffe r C o ll S co tt 4 4 1 - 6 3 7 2 1 0 -2 7 -1 5 -N C _____________________ 1 9 8 8 D O D G E S H A D O W b lo c k 2 d r , d o th in te rio r, A C , PS P8, $ 7 1 0 0 / 0 8 0 O w n a t w o r k 4 7 7 - 5 0 7 8 1 0 -2 3 -1 5 N C 1 9 8 8 T O Y O T A PIC KU P lo w n v ie o g e A C A M / F M 4 - s p e e d , w h it e s ta n d o rd c a b & b e d C o ll S teve a t 3 4 3 - 7 0 8 8 1 0 -2 8 -1 5 N C ______________________ c a s s e tte "75 CH EVY P IC K -U P G o o d c o n d itio n $ 1 5 0 0 , 4 5 8 - 2 2 7 7 1 0 -2 4 -5 B ____________ 1981 O L D S R e g e n c y 9 8 N e w e n g in e w ith w a rra n ty , $ 2 2 5 0 4 5 8 - 2 2 7 7 1 0 - 2 4 - 5 8 ____________ e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n 1 9 8 2 REG AL. V e ry > 1 8 5 0 4 5 8 - 2 2 7 7 1 0 - 2 4 -5 8 ____________ c o n d itio n g o o d 1 9 7 6 PACER R U N S w e ll, v e ry re lia b le , 4 7 2 - o n d it's b o l b o u s $ 2 9 7 5 0 O B O 1 2 3 8 1 0 -2 4 -5 B '8 7 C H E V Y SPRINT d o o r, cassette $ 3 7 0 0 , r w g o h o b l. 3 3 1 -4 1 0 4 1 Q -2 5 -5 B a u to , A C A M /F M b lu e silver F our 1 9 7 8 F O R D FIESTA 4 s p m ta fw d 8 6 K n * l« , w d l m a in ta in e d $ 7 5 0 rw g 3 2 8 - 8 7 5 9 b a v . rtw s s o g . 1 0 - 2 6 - 5P 1 9 8 2 BLUE F O R D E scort S ta n d a rd tra n s ­ m ission, r a w tires, A M /F M s te re o 4 5 9 - 0 8 8 9 1 ) 0 -2 7 2 0 N C _____________________ "8 3 P O N T IA C 6 0 0 0 LE A u to m a tic tra n s ­ m ission A C runs g re a t. $ 3 5 0 0 o r best o f f w 7 9 4 - 9 3 2 3 1 0 -2 7 5 8 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 1 9 8 4 H O N D A LX 4 - d r A T A C lo w m iles fta r e a /c a s s e tt. m o m te n e n c . re c o rd s , lu g g o g . ro ck. $ 5 9 9 5 3 3 5 - 0 7 1 6 9 2 3 15NC_______________________ 1 9 8 2 S C IR O C C O - - A M /F M , e q u a liz e r A C n e w clu tc h C V ¡cxM g re a t $ 2 5 0 0 0 8 0 4 7 3 - 2 1 9 7 10 1 0 -1 7 N C runs 1 9 8 4 RED PRELUDE $ 4 7 0 0 4 5 2 - 5 2 6 6 9 2 9 - 4 8 _________________________________ 1 9 7 4 TR6 N e w to p b r a k e s m u ffle r lu e s N o de n ts o r rust Y e llo w ExceHent c o n d th o n $ 3 5 0 0 3 4 6 - 8 8 5 5 1 0 - 3 - 2 0 N C '8 2 T O Y O T A SU PRA A T A C 7 4 K o n g i not m b s A Í p o w e r S u n ro o f N e v e r w r e c k e d E x tra e b o n 31 e n g in e Fast a n d s m o o th $ 5 0 0 0 4 5 3 - 2 9 7 6 1 D 1 1 -1 5 N C 1981 D A T S U N 2 8 0 ZX G l p o c k o g . 2X 2 5 - s p . . d s ta re o cossm te B lo c k /re d Ex c. l . nt c o n d itio n $ 2 4 0 0 4 7 7 - 2 1 7 5 10- 11-15NC 8 3 V O L K S W A G O N C O N V E R T IB L E w h i t . R a b b it 4 0 ,0 0 0 . 1st class, A /W F M c o t s w t . 4 7 4 - 4 2 1 2 11-1-15NC ___________ 1 9 8 5 H O N O A G v tc H a tc h b o c k , 4 spd oc, o m /fm W r f m a m ta u w d . g o o d c o n d b o n $ 3 5 0 0 Co® 2 8 2 4 2 4 0 10-12 15 N C 1971 V W T H IN G 3 2 0 0 0 m b s d a rk g r e w i $ 3 0 0 0 C a í 4 7 3 6 5 5 2 10 12 15 N C ____________________________________ 1 9 8 7 H Y U N D A I G l, 2 dr A C . A M /F M c o u . t r . d b n t c o n d itio n $ 5 5 0 0 O B O 6 6 5 9 1 0 -5 5 8 lo w m ib o g . h a tc h b a c k • * 3 8 5 - •82 H O N D A A C C O R D L X - 5 sp g re a t «b r eo, runs p e r b c i y $ 3 0 0 0 N e g C o ll le a v e m essa g e 4 7 4 9 9 2 5 1 0 -6 2 0 N C 7 8 T R A N S A H 4 5 5 T -to p . 4 sp d 4 0 0 v h p F a d e r th a n 8 8 C o m e N e H o n d b s b e tto r M ian tr a c Z D riv e n d o i y O v e r 1 3 ,0 0 0 inu to t o d. F e d 3 4 6 - 3 5 5 4 , 8 3 8 - 7 4 0 6 10-11 2 0 N C $ 4 5 0 0 ta ita s s u n ro o f, lo w m ib a a . , p e r b c t con d to o n B e d o ffe r 4 5 4 - 3 1 5 8 t0 - K ) - 2 0 N C _____________________________ l o d w r s te re o , • 6 M A Z D A R X 7 en ten d e d w o n o wty, o l s e rv ic e 4 5 8 - 8 3 0 9 , le a v e te e n a g e . 1 0 - 1 H 5 N C >W er 2 1 .0 0 0 e e b i» re c o r d * . B M W 3 3 0 1 1 9 8 0 Srhrer / t o n. e x c e ie n t c o x d t a t t , e a e r t e e * k e e a i r e c o r d * > 4 9 0 0 C d 3 3 8 - 3 9 3 3 K > -2 5 i y < \ 1 9 8 3 T O Y O T A S u p ra a m * c o n d A n n l 8 n g h t ta d . 5 - t p lo e d e d «u rwe o f. 9 8 t t t e l e * > 5 4 0 0 4 4 4 - 9 9 1 3 / 4 4 7 - f f m 10- 2 5 - 1 5 N C 1 9 8 8 D I A M O N D B A C K D e o ro XT, lik e n e w . 2 0 * h o n d b b o r * > 2 7 5 0 8 0 . t 2 7 - 5 8 fra m e , A n a y a n x * T b o n e l O 4 7 9 - 8 7 7 8 4 7 4 - 7 7 3 2 4 B L O C K S V I (o n vhufee Q u ito wral m o n t o n t a * ta d < C o iro ro d p a rk in g . lo u rvky E x c ta w . 1700 N u to.« Q u .n to. 3 2 2 9 5 7 2 10 3 0 108 1 9 9 9 9 1 0 -6 -2 0 8 -K Page 14 Monday, October 30,1989 THE DAILY TEXAN AN N O U N CEM EN TS SERVICES SERVICES 530— Travel 750- T y p in g 750 — Typing_______ Transportation ZIVLEY’S ★ Word Processing ★ Top Quality Laser Printing ★ Applications ★ Themes ★ Law Briefs ★ Resumes at 27th & Guadalupe 2707 Hemphill Park 472*3210 472*7677 LONGHORN COPIES • Resumes • Theses • Term papers • Word Processing • Binding • Laminating • Laser Printing • Kodak ’ Copies 2518 Guadalupe 476-4498 • R ESU M ES • TERM PAPERS • RUSH SERVICE • LASER PRINTING O P E N 7 D A Y S W E E K til M id niqh t S u n d a y to T h u r sd a y H ouse of l% \ T U T O R S lW 472-66 66 813 W 24th DOBIE MALL s! % | The Original SPEEDWAY TYPING 469-5653 FAST TURN § § ★WOW$1.25/pg.i* D a y Ru sh $ 2 .2 5 , N ig h t Rush $3 , E xp e rie n c e d , p ro fe ssio n a l typing. UNIVERSITY TYPING ★ 495-9541 ★ 6 1 0 W . 3 0 th S l -Right fron t a rc h w a y 10-16-20B-C ! PLEASE! A llo w me to p e rs o n a lly tend to y o u r typ in g n e e d s o n m y I B M W o r d P r o ­ cessor, Fast a n d a cc u ra te to sa v e y o u time a n d m o ne y. M c C A L L O F F IC E S E R V IC E S 3 4 6 -6 1 5 0 ____________ 10-18-20B -C ★ TYPE-RITE Typing Service C ollege papers starting at $1.50/poge! ★ Resumes $10; laser printer available. Prompt service, ptck-up and delivery available Hours: 7 :3 0 a.m -6 p.m. or a f­ ter hours by appointment. O u r new loca­ tion is 1301 W . 38th # 1 0 5 ★ 453-7504 ★ _______________ 10-18-20B -C C O L L E G E E N G L IS H composition teacher ond editor with PhD, proofreading, w ord processing, laser printing,$2/pg. & up 4 7 9 - 8 9 0 9 f0 -1 0 -2 0 B -C ___________ _ A V A IL A B L E T O students or business Re­ search, p roofread ing Call 4 7 8 - 5 0 5 3 ■nomings only Easy access for M S shut­ tle. 10-13-20B.________________ __ rYPE-IT T Y P IN G Service Professional, re­ liable service Font selection, pnnted on .□serJet pnnter B. J. at 3 3 5 - 5 4 3 2 10-18- 20P_________________________________ J E A N N E 'S T Y P IN G service N orth Austin home. W o r d processing, transenbmg, general typing. Fast, reasonable, a ccu ­ rate 8 am - 9 pm. 8 3 6 - 4 3 0 3 . 10-19-18P W O R D P R O C E S S IN G If time, m oney professionalism and better grades are important, coll B arb ara Tullus, 4 5 3-51 24 . 1 0 -2 5 -2 0 B _______________________ _ Q U A L IT Y W O R D P rocessing-personal­ ized service at affordable pnces $1.50/ p age o nd up. Pickup and delivery avail­ able Dione 3 3 5 - 7 0 4 0 10 -2 5 -2 0 P THE S T E N O P AD. $1.75 and up/double spaced page. W o r d processing with laser pnntmg. 4 5 9 - 7 7 1 0 1 0 -2 6 -2 0 B -C P R O F E S S IO N A L W O R D processing, rea­ sonable rates, com pus delivery, o ver­ night service (most cases) 3 8 8 - Í9 8 9 10- 2 7 - 2 0 B C R E S T E D B O B S NOVEMBER 22-26 * - NiGhTS |||||| S T E A M B O B JANUARY 2-12 * 5 OR 6 NIGHTS ~ ^ R § | B R E C K E N R I Q & l JANUARY 2-7 * 5 NIGHTS *— W I N T E R P A J * j | JANUARY 2 - 7 * 5 N |G“ ’ S v a il /b e a v e r ^ ^ B IjAN'JAPy s 12 * 5 : r ~ m m n m l c g u n a i a r a « a m u m t o u H e m a u n a ft w e w m a i 1-800-321-5911 550 — Licensed Child Care L AKE A U S T IN M o ntesso n Full d a y p ro ­ gram a g e i 2 -5 y e a n 7 15-5:45, otter school p rogram Call 4 7 7 - 7 7 5 3 10-25- 5 B -D ___________________________________ 560 — Public Notice W RITERS! Expression M a g a z in e needs illustrations. stones, poems, essays, ana Se n d S A S E to B ox 2 4 2 9 , M eso, Arizon a 8 5 2 1 4 10-11-20B EDUCATIONAL 580 — Musical Instruction G U IT A R L E S S O N S -R & B, rock, iazz, country 10 years teaching experience A n d y Bullington. 452-61 81 10-11-20B-D 590 — Tutoring TUTORING^ At a time and location you spe c­ ify Graduate Students will help you make the grade • Math e Physics • Data Proc • Economics e English e Foreign • Comp Science • Chemistry • Business • Engineering • Astronomy • Computer Lessons Langauges CM 4784260 and a 24 hr. telecommunications system w i select a qualified tutor for you. A+ MOBILE TUTORING • TUTORING - All Subjects • TEST & EXAM REVIEWS • CUSS NOTES OPEN 7 DAYS/WEEK til Midnight Sunday to Thursday H ouse of l% \ T U T O R S lW 472-6666 813 W. 24th C O N F ID E N T IA L , PRIVATE in Business Math, Calculus, Physics, Pascal, Statistics, a n d Economics. Call 2 5 1 -8 6 2 6 1 0 - 5 - 2 0 B - K ___________________________ tulonng A S T R O N O M Y TUTOR experienced, $10/ hr Bill 4 4 5 - 6 7 5 8 10 -3 0 -2 0 B -K SERVICES 630 — Computer Services W O R D P R O C E S S IN G -re o so n a b le rotes, term papers, resumes, monusenpts, etc C oll 33 1-47 19 anytime A sk for C yndy 1 0 - 4 - 2 0 B K ____________________________ 750 — Typing A S A P W O R D Processing All papers typed with personal touch. $1 7 5 p a g e Fast turnaround C an d ace 4 5 1 -4 8 8 5 IQ ­ S '2 0 P _________________ STARR Q U A L IT Y w o rd processing and graphics All student papers 4 4 4 -0 8 0 1 10 -5 -2 0 B -C W O R D P R O C E S S IN G transcnption (stan­ d ard or microcassette.) Resumes, theses, pap e rs Laser printing. W o r d Perfect R e asonabiel Expenencedl 4 7 2 - W O R D 10-10- 2 0 B -D RENTAL 435 — Co-ops MALE AND FEMALE SPACES NOW AVAILABLE IN SINGLE OR DOUBLE ROOMS C o m e See w h a t th e L e st in a f f o r d a b l e s t u d e n t h o u s i n g h a s to o ffe r. r X ) o n t i l a i t - s d p p i y n o w f o r '^DOUBLE COLLEGE HOUSES •319* . SINGLE CO-OPS *389°° mo. f Includes 19 meals per week and all utilities) 1906 Peart St. 512/476-5678 EMPLOYMENT 800 — General Help Wanted ATTENTION UT STUDENTS $8.00 PER HOUR United Parcel Service offers limited part-time opportunities involving loading and unloading of packages. For more information applicants must apply in person with the Student Employ­ ment Referral Service, Rm 2.222 of the Texas Union. Refer to Job #G-00-665 Phone Inquiries to the Texas Union will not be accepted. Equal Opportunity Employer R IV ER SID E7 C X T O R F oreo! Loser pnnter resumes, reports, * letters. C hoice of type styles. Reo sonable rates. 4 4 1-03 25 . ________________________ 1 0 2 5 - 2 0 B C University o re o W O R D P R O C E S S IN G Experienced edi­ Sp an ish o nd tor English reasonable rotes 4 7 7 9 5 2 3 1 0 -2 5 -2 0 B -A Coll Robert for RE SE A R C H /T E R M papers, reports, theses, dissertation. Accurate, fast, turnaround. W o r d Perfect. Anytime. A n n e 441-1893. 10 -3 0 -3 7 P _____________________________ 760 — Misc. Services STUDENTS NEED EXTRA SPENDING MONEY? W e 're looking for dependable outgoing people for variuos temporary positions. All shifts available including evening and weekends. Food service experi­ ence especially needed, but not mandatory. Call T A D Technical for appointment, 323-0191. 10-30-1B-E $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ STUDENT LOANS & SCHOLARSHIPS N O W AVAILABLE! Call to reserve your funds. 459-7019 10 -5 -2 0 B -D C U S T O M H A L L O W E E N M akeup. Hor- ror, gore, a nd fantasy At the backroom 10/27- 10/31 Coll 4 4 1 -4 6 7 7 for infor­ mation 1 0 -24-5 B Y O U R R E S ID E N C E cleaned thoroughly $ 3 0 A lso m ove-out cleaning, windows. V ery reasonable rotes Ten years expen- ence. Please coH today 4 4 3 - 0 7 7 2 . 10- 2 5 - 2 0 B _____________________________ EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part Tim© N O W ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR CLASSIFIED AD SALES REPRESENTATIVES FOR THE DAILY TEXAN O N THE JOB TRAINING STARTS IMMEDIATELY! include solicitation of Duties classified ads by telephone, pri­ marily to business people. Must be detail oriented and dep end­ able. Must have pleasant phone personality and excellent cus­ tomer service skills. Sales, tele­ marketing, advertising or cus­ tom e r se rv ic e e x p e r ie n c e helpful. Telephone inquiries not accept­ ed. Applicants must be Universi­ ty of Texas student. A pply in per­ son at The Daily Texan, Rm. 4.124 between 2:00-5 :0 0 p.m. M-F. The University of Texas at Austin is an equal opportunity/affirma­ tive action employer. __________ 1 0 -3 0 -1 0 N C 4 8 3 - 5 5 0 0 $5 .0 0 HR ★ STUDENTS ★ Concert ticket sales. Phone Rep Positions Port time evening hours. M o nd ay-Thurs- d a y 5 : 3 0 - 9 : 0 0 p.m. Friday 5 3 0 - 8 3 0 p.m. Satu rd ay 9:00-12 0 0 a m. 5 5 5 5 N. Lam ar C-107 1-4 p.m. ____________________ 10 -2 0 -2 0 B -K ★ C H R IS T M A S E A R N IN G ★ P O W E R ! O ur marketing office is getting ready for Christmas! You should be also! Earn that Merry Christmas now! Part-time am/pm shifts avail­ able. Salaries and generous bonus schedule. Call Bunny from 9:30- 12:30 am or 6-9 pm at: ★ 2 5 5 -0 2 4 9 ★ 10 -9-20 B -K D O RIA 'S~ JEWELRY S a le sp e r s o n s n e e d e d fo r C h n stm a s sa les at sterling silver kiosk in the malls. W a g e s plus b on u s, a n d |ewelry discount. M u s t h a v e c a r 2 0 - 3 0 h o u rs p er w eek. 451-5463 (call between 9 a m 5 ¡ 10 25-10B -K STUDENT JOBS E a rn m o n e y w h ile g o in g to school. o r g a n iz a t io n S ta te w id e c o n su m e r w in n in g fair & a ffo rd a b le insu ra n c e rates. N o w h a s full a n d p art time staff p o sitio n s a v a ila b le fo r e n e rgetic & e n ­ thusiastic w o m e n & men. H o u r s 2 -1 0 p.m C a ll T e x a s C itizen A ctio n 4 7 8 - 7 2 2 7 10-27-2 B-E How would you like to work at a private softball complex? W e are looking for women & men with a neat appearance & an outgoing and talkative personality. Call 445-7595 between 10 am & 2 pm for Lonnie or Peter to arrange an interview. 10 -30-4 B -K lo c o l M a l l o c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s for part-tim e h o lid a y h ost p e r s o n s (1 0 -2 0 h rs/w ee k) M u s i b e a v a ila b le to w o rk N o v . 11-Dec. 2 4 t h M o s t ly w e e k e n d s with so m e a fte rn o o n s a n d e v e n in g s P osition req u ire s a p le a sa n t a n d o u t ­ g o in g p e rso n a lity A p p l y in p e r s o n at the N o r t h c r o s s M a l l M a n a g e m e n t o f f k e 2 5 2 5 W e st A n d e r s o n L a n e 10 2 7 - 3 B k e y p u n c h ” O P ER A T O R •Part time position/early A M , 4 hrs. daily. Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume/ salary requirements to P.O. Box 5310, Austin, TX 7 8 7 6 3 . Atten­ tion: J.T. _______________________________ 1 0 -2 4 -5 8 A p p lia n c e c o m p a n y n e e d s part-tim e d e liv e ry p e r s o n to w o r k a fte rn o o n s a n d Sa tu rd a y s. M u s t h a v e g o o d d r y ­ in g re c o rd . J o b re q u ire s lifting o f a p ­ p lian ce s, o c c u ro te p a p e r w o r k a n d a n ea t a p p e a r a n c e M u s t b e d e p e n d ­ a b le a n d b e a b le to interact w ell with c u sto m e rs 2 0 - 2 5 hrs. p e r w eek. A p ­ p ly in p erson . 1 0 - 7 p.m. M - F o n ly In ­ g r a m A p p lia n c e . 1 2 0 0 6 R e se arch. 9 10 24 56 M O N D A Y T H R O U G H F R ID A Y 9 1, $ 4 .50/hr In d u d es kght typing, H m g p h o n e duties. Property m a n a ge r e xperi­ ence preferred Se n d reaume 13010 Reseorch # 1 0 4 , 7 8 7 5 0 10-19 W 6 -E FA R T T IM E seasonal help to w o rk week- e nd s o s hoft/horiess «# motor sh opp ing cantor fo r h ofid sy season, CoH 3 3 8 4 4 3 7 fo r m ore «fo rm ation 10 -2 4 -5 6 -C PART-TIM E recepXonat/typnt for estate — --Mar. H o nesty integrity, and smarts i hrVweek. 454-3133, Tom, 10-25- 5 6 -0 I WORLD SERIES RECORD A s 9r Giants 6 Game 4 BATTM G SUM M ARY SAN FRANCISCO OAKLAND R H d rsn It Lansford 3 b C a n se c o rt M cG w ire 1b D H d rsn cf Steinb ach c Phillips 2b W e iss s s M o ore p b- Phelps N elson p Honeycutt p B urn s p f-Parker Eckersiey p Totals But'er cl Ooerkfeil 3 b e -T h o m pson 2 b B ed rosia n p C lark 1b Mitcheli II W illiams s s K en ne d y c Litton 2b Nixon rt R o b in so n p L a C o s s p a-Bathe Brantley p D o w n s p c-Riles d -M a too n ad o Letterts p Uribe ss Totals Oakland M oore W .2-0 N elson Honeycutt B urn s E ckersley S 1 Tot i SanFrandaco R o b in so n 1,0-1 L a C o s s Brantley D o w n s Lefteris B ed rosia n Totata ab r h 2b 3b hrtbi 1 2 0 6 4 1 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 1 0 3 0 4 3 0 0 1 t 5 0 0 0 0 3 1 2 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 9 3 2 1 1 0 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 12 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 2 2 t 1 1 1 0 1 o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 39 ab r h 2b 3b hr rbi 1 1 5 1 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 4 1 1 1 2 0 0 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 ■( 1 0 1 2 4 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 6 35 6 9 t ip 6 h 5 1-3 1 1-3 3 r er bto ao 2 2 2 0 0 0 9 6 6 2 3 1 1 - 3 0 9 I P 1 2-3 3 1-3 1-3 1 2-3 1-3 1 2-3 9 12 r er bb so 4 1 0 4 1 3 3 3 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 2 0 0 7 9 9 0 2 0 PITCHING SUM M ARY SC O R E BY M N M G S Oakland SanFrandaco a -gro u nd e d out tor L a C o s s in trie 5tri b -p o o o e d out tor M oore in the 7th, c -p in c h hit tor D o w n s in the 7th d tripled tor Riles in the 7th, e -sin gle d tor Oberktell in the 7th f- p o o p e d out tor B u rn s in the 9th 130 031 010— 9 000 002 4 0 0 -6 L O B — O a klan d 10. S a n F ra n c isc o 4 S B C a n s e c o ( 1 ) U m p ires H o m e Rennert. First Clark, S e co n d . G re g g Third Garcia, Let! R u n g e Right V oltaggio T 3 0 7 A -62,032 A’s 13, Giants 7 Game Three 200 241 040— 13 14 0 Oakland 010 200 004— 7 10 3 SanFrandaco Stewart Honeycutt (8) N elso n (9). B u y m s (9) a n d Stein- bach. Garretts D o w n s (4) Brantley (5). H am m ake r (8). Lef- ferts (8) and K e n n e d y M an w arin g W -Stewart. 2-0 L— Garrelts. 0-2 H R s— O a klan d D H e n d e rso n 2 (2). Phillips ( 1 ). C a n s e c o (1) L a n sfo r d (1 ) S a n Fran cisco. W W íam s (1) Bathe (1) A’s 5, Giants 1 Game Two SanFrandaco Oakland Re usch e i D o w n s (5). Lefferts (7), B e d ro sia n (8) a n d K e n ­ nedy. Moore, Honeycutt (8), E ck e rsle y (9) a n d Steinb a ch O a k la n d Stein W Moore, 1-0 L- R e u sc h e i 0-1 H R b a c h (1 ) 001 000 000— 1 4 0 100 400 OOx— 5 7 0 A’s 5, Giants 0 Game One 000 000 0 0 0 -0 5 1 SanFrandaco 031 100 OOx— 5 11 1 Oakland Garrelts. H am m ake r (5) Brantley (6), L a C o s s (8) a nd K e n ­ nedy. Stewart and Steinb a ch W -Stewart. 1-0 L— G a r ­ relts. 0-1 H R s O akland. Parker (1). W e iss (1) BK DOUBLES BURGER COMBO OFFER KING •WITH PURCHASE OF ANY SIZE FRIES AND ANY SIZE PEPSI 5 DOUBLES TO CHOOSE FROM: 1. DOUBLE CHEESE BURGER .............................................Reg. $1.59 2. BACON DO UBLE......................... Reg. $1.89 ................................................Reg. $1.99 3. BACON DOUBLE DELUXE 4. NEW SALSA DOUBLE ..............Reg. $1.99 5. NEW BBQ BACON DO U BLE ..............................................Reg. $1.99 OFFER EXPIRES 11-15-89_______ Lookout below It’s time you gave yourself a GSE™ If you're sexually active, you should know about the G S E G S E stands for genital self-examination. It’s a simple examination you can give yourself to check for any signs or sym ptom s of a sexually transmitted disease. Sen d for your free G S E Guide today. B e ­ cau se when it co m e s to sexual relationships, there are som e important things to look out for. To receive your free G SE Guide, simply fill out and return the coupon or call, toll-free, 1-800-234-1124. S p o ' s c r e d b y B u r r o u g h s W e llc o m e C o m c o n ju n c t io n with the A m e r c a n A c a d e m y o» D e r m a t o lo g y tf e A m e ric a n A c a d e m y of Family P h y s c a n s m e A m e ric a n C o lle g e of G e n e ra - P r a c H io n e r s • O s t e o p a t h ic M e d c n e a 1 t S u r g e r y the A m e ric a n O s t e o p a t h y A s s o c ia t io n a n d the A m e r ic a n S o o a i H e a lth A s s o c ation 1989 B. Wei ne L ig h ts re s e r v e d For your free G SE Guide, fill out this coupon and mail to G S E PO Box 4088, Woburn M A 01888-4088 N a m e (p lea se pnnt) A d d r e ss City State Z IP Cj E n g lish version G S p a n is h version Are you over 18 years ot a ge 7 G Yes G N o EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 800 — General Help Wanted 800 — General Help Wanfed 800 — General Help Wanted 860 — Engineering- Technical 790 — Part Time PART TIM E help wonted at furniture store Call 4 5 4 8 6 0 3 1 0 -2 5 -5 8 _______________ N E A R C A M P U S Full/part time TYPIST (45 * wpm) B O O K K E E P E R (we tram) Runner (your car). O D D J O B S 4 0 8 W. 17th St Applications 9o m 4pm 10-25- 2 0 B -A P ART-TIM E secretanol help needed B a ­ sic business computer skills needed Flexible hours 4 7 8 - 0 9 0 9 1 0 -2 5 -5 8 PART-TIM E help needed 15-20hrs week ly W e e k e n d s T e n n is backgro u nd required Call 4 4 2 -1 4 6 6 1 0 -26-5 B a must E V E N IN G R E C E P T IO N IST position avail able for large volum e dealership Appli cants need personable p hone voice and neat app e aran c e Please apply in per son at A p p le D o d g e 52 1 0 IH 3 5 South M o n d o y -F n d a y 10-26-10B PART-TIM E secretory/bookkeeper Coll 3 2 7 - 3 3 9 7 ofter 1pm 1 0 -2 6 -4 8 _________ D E P E N D A B L E C H IL D core w orker need­ ed Su n d a y m ornings a nd W e d n e sd a y evenings, also need teen teocher Coll Phyllis at 3 2 8 7 7 5 5 1 0 -2 6 -3 B -D HELP W A N T E D for (onitonal com pany flexible hours M u tt have o w n transpor tation Coll Sporklm g Im ages M -F 3-5 pm 4 4 1 - 9 6 6 6 1 0 -2 6 5 § C h r i s t m a s s e a s o n position»--fuii- time/porl time G o o d pay Call after 4 pm. M o n d a y -W e d n e s d o y Richard's Puz­ zles 280-6541 10 27-68 800 ■ General Help Wanted A IR L IN E S N O W H IR IN G Ekght Attend ants. T ravel A g e nts, M e c h a n ic s, Customer Service Listings Salones to $)05K. Entry 8 0 5 6 8 7 6 0 0 0 Ext A-9413 10 12-20P level positions C o i (1) J O B S $ 1 6 0 4 0 G O V E R N M E N T - $59 230/yr N o w hinng Call (1) 805 687 6 0 0 0 Ext R-9413 for current fed­ eral list 10-12-20P F A S H IO N E X C E S S O R Y manufacturer with showroom m DaBos ond Atlanta market seeks part-time designer to help d e sig n creative ■xcestones 3 2 7 -0 4 2 7 10-27-28 fo rw ard , fa sh io n C n i i M S h i p J o b s H IM N O Mon - Womon, Summ#tl Yoar Round PHOTOGRAPHERS, TOUR GUIDES. RECREATION PERSONNEL. Excellent pay plus FREE travoi Caribbean. Hawaii. Bahamas, South Pacific, Maxico C A 1 1 N O W ! Cali refundable 1-206-736-0775, Ext. 600 N. BARTENDING Learn How In 2 Weeks! Morning, Afternoon, & Evening Classes Learn how to free-pour, like in the movie Cocktail! J o b P lo ce m e n t A ssista n c e Texas School of Bartenders 440-0 7 9 1 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ * Approved by Texas Education Agency 10 19 2Ó8-E RETAIL HELP Staffing for Holiday Season. Part-time work 12-15 hr/ week. $320/mo. Call for interview 467-6516 10-30-106 E X P E R IE N C E D D R E S S A G E nder needed to exercise/train Arabians « PBugerviHe area. Ill provide ho n es if you the time C o l 251-3648, evening*. 10 25-56 TELEPHONE OPERATORS - H IR IN G NOW !!! EARN UP TO $10/HR. DRIVER FO R recycling collections Fami- lar with UT area, valid Tx d n v e r'i li­ cense, g o o d d n vm g record, g o o d physi­ cal condition, delivery experience helpful Eco lo gy Action 3 8 5 - 6 2 0 4 10- 3 0 - 3 8 3 0 enthusiastic individuals ne ed e d with ple asan t personalities to help staff o u r p ro m o tio n a l office for the hottest rad io p ro m otion ever to run in the Austin a r e a Fun a n d easy, gre a t co -w orkers, o n d casu al dress m ake this |ob extrem ely de sirab le N O E X ­ P E R IE N C E N E C E S S A R Y W e will train enthusiastic individuals A A A /P M a n d FT/PT S H IF T S A V A IL A B L E , a p p ly in p e rson at 5501 N Lam ar Suite C 105 (Behind the C h in e se Restaurant) 12- 12 3 0 o n d 6 -6 3 0 P .M G U Y S . G A L S , S T U D E N T S W E L C O M E ! 10-30 3 MARKET DISCOVER CREDIT CARDS E A R N M O N E Y watching TV! $5 0 ,0 0 0 / yr (1) 8 0 5 - incom e potential Details 6 8 7 6 0 0 0 Ext K -7 0 5 10-25-11P 810 — Office- Clerical N E A R C A M P U S Full/port time TYPIST (45 + wpm) B O O K K E E P E R (we tram) Runner (your cor) O D D J O B S 4 0 8 W 17th St Applications 9 a m -4p m 10-25- ____________ 2 0 6 - A necessary A n sw er R E C E P T I O N I S T / T R A N S C R IP T I O N I S T part-time Com puter literacy, micro-soft w ord telephone general elenco!, fast p aced office Send lesume, toping speed ond references IH 3 5 Austin, Attn M a rily n ,3 0 H N 7 8 7 2 2 1 0 -30-5 B 820 — Accounting- Bookkeeping N E A R C A M P U S FuH/port time G am b oo kkee p in g experience TYPIST (45 w p m ) R U N N E R (your cor) O D D J O B S 4 0 8 W 17th St Applications 9om -4pm . (1 0 -3 -2 0 6 -A)____________________ 10-30-1 850 — Retail N E A R C A M P U S EuH/pon time TYPIST (45 + wpm) B O O K K E E P E R (we tram) Runner (your cor) O D D J O B S 4 0 8 W 17th St Applications 9am 4pm 10-25- 206 A JEW ELRY SA L E S- experienced person needed Doy, fu l time, port-lune. 451- 0521, ask for G io n a 10-20-206 m s M M M M M M M M IM M H M I i t-.iM IM M M fc E A R N M O N E Y R e a d i n g b o o k s l $30,00Q/yr « co m e potential. Details (1) 6 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext Y-9413 10-13-178 r O V E R S E A S J O B S $ 9 0 0 -2 0 0 0 mo Sum ­ mer, Yr. round, A l countries, oil fields. Free « f e Write UC, P O Box 52-TX02 C o ro n o Del M o r C A 9 2 6 2 5 1Q-12-21P V ID E O STO RE has opening for week- endVholidoy*. Apply « person, 6 03 7 N IH 35 at 2 9 0 Eost 10-25-56 CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD SYSTEM ADMINISTRATOR Small High-Tech software company requires a half-time system administrator for a network of UNIX, Macintosh and P C workstations Posi­ tion requires experience with hardware software installa­ tion, maintenance and troub­ leshooting on these systems Experience with S u n NFS, Apollo and V A X systems as well as programming in C is desirable Located near U T Send references, resumé, and college transcript to Ickfitífk mmé Engineering Software, Inc 1301 West 25th Suite 300 Austin TX 78706 Attn sysadmin 880— Professional Residential Treatment Center near Oakhill hiring the following positions: Full-time weekend su­ pervisor and part-time overnight weekend supervisor. Excellent references a MUST. Call 288- 2687. Monday, Tuesday, Thurs­ day & Friday between 11:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. ONLY. 10-23-10B-K 890 - Clubs- ~ ” Restaurants BURGER KING 2700 Guadalupe N o w htnng fo r lata night shift. W e ore lo o k in g fo r p e o p le w h o like to w o rk nighlshifl. $ 3 7 5 /h r & u p A p p ly in p e r s o n B urger K in g 2 7 0 0 G u a d a lu p e B etw ee n 8 p.m. & 10 p.m. E .O E . 10-30-5B 900 — Domestic- Household 870- M e d ic a l N U R S IN G ST U D E N T S needed for nurse aids and hom e core. Flexible with school hours. N o r r e l Corporation, 459- 8716 10-30-56-E 880— Professional L A W S C H O O L Gradúale: em ploym ent« El Po m . S end returns to 615 E Schuster Bkta lO , El Paso, T X 7 9 9 0 2 10-10-206 immediate S E E K IN G M O T IV A T E D enthueartc per sons to teach aftorschool children part- time afternoon* only. Positivo atmos­ phere Experience required. Ap ply in person with Creativo W orld. 2 0 2 3 Den­ ton D r 8 3 7 -8 8 4 0 1a 30-6 6 WANTED: RESPONSIBLE PERSON with reliable cor to pick two children ages 5 and 7 up from school and cara for them from 2:30-5:30 in my West Austin home. References re­ quired, co l 480-0394 after 6 p.m. or 480-1868 (day). $7/hr. dart. ________________________10-30-3 HOUSEKEEFER WANTED 3 to 5 monv mgVweek, to dean, do laundry, and to iron. Nonsmoker Ako looking for baby- 328-7810 TO 18-106 LOOKING FOR childcare Tuesdays 11- 3pm $5/hr Transportation required 45#i and Bumet Rd 467 0620 10 26 56 I AROUND CAMPUS Around Campus is a daily column listing University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and registered stu­ dent organizations. To appear in Around Campus, organizations must be registered with the Office of Cam­ pus Act|vities. Announcements must be submitted on the correct form, available in The D aily Texan office, 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The D aily Texan reserves the right to edit to style submissions ru les, alth ou gh no sig n ific a n t changes will be made. to conform MEETINGS The University Group of Alcohol­ ics A n o n y m o u s will m eet from noon to 1 p .m . M onday th ro u g h T h u rsd ay in Batts H all 106 an d on F riday in Batts Hall 107. Alcoholics Anonymous w ill have a closed m eeting from noo n to 1 p.m . M onday, W e d n esd ay an d F riday at St. A u stin 's C h u rch , P aulist H all, 2010 G uad alu p e St. an d on T u esd ay and T h u rsd ay at All S aints' E piscopal C hurch, G regg H o u se 313, 27th Street and U niversity A venue. The University Musicians' Organi­ zation will m eet at 8 p.m . M on d ay in Parlin Hall 101. The Univeristy Group of Alchohol- ics A n o n y m o u s will have an Early Bird m eeting from 8 to 9 a.m . M onday th ro u g h Friday in Batts Hall 107. The UT Sailing Team w ill meet at 7 p.m . M onday in R obert Lee M oore Hall 5.104. N ew m em bers w elcom e. The Texas Student TV Task Force will m eet at 5 p .m . M onday in Robert A. W elch H all 2.312. The Association for Freedom and D em ocracy in C hina will m e et at 8 p.m . M o nday in LBJ School 3.110 to m eet the bicycle team and to discuss the future. The Mexican American Association of P harm acy S tu d e n ts will m eet from noon to 1 p .m . M onday in P harm acy Building 2.116. All pre-P h arm acy s tu ­ d e n ts w elcom e. The Undergraduate Art History As­ sociation will m eet at 5 p.m . M onday at M exic-Arte, 409 C ongress Ave. Beta Beta Beta w ill meet at 6 p.m. M onday in T.S. P ainter Hall 1.06. The Hisapnic Pre-Law Association Scholarship C om m ittee will m eet at 4:30 p.m . M on d ay in the Texas U nion Building C hicano C u ltu re Room . The Hispanic Pre-Law Association will m eet at 5:30 p .m . M o nd ay in the Texas U nion B uilding C hicano C ul­ tu re Room. A UT professor will offer sugg estio n s on w hich courses to take to b etter p re p a re for law school. The Black Pre-Law Association will m eet at 7 p .m . M onday in U niversity Teaching C e n te r 1.118. A d m issio n s from UT Law School will officer speak. R efresh m ents will be served. The Catholic Student Association Service an d Social C o m m ittee will m eet at 5 p .m . M onday at th e U niver­ sity C atholic C enter. Overeaters Anonymous w ill have a bro w n bag o p en d iscussion m eetin g from noon to 1 p .m . M o nday in Bur- din e Hall 232. Alpha Chi w ill have an officers m eeting at 6:30 p.m . M onday in Beau- ford H. Jester C e n te r A 305A. T-shirt designs will be v o te d on. Building 3.106. The Freshman Student Association will m eet at 7:30 p .m . M onday in U ni­ versity T eaching C en ter 3.112. Ron Frigault from th e Office of the D ean of S tu d en ts will speak. The Longhorn Greens will meet at 7:30 p.m . M o n d ay on th e patio of the Texas U nion Building. The Asian Business Students Asso­ ciation will m eet at 6:30 p .m . M onday in th e G ra d u ate School of B usiness Building 2.120. D ean W itt will speak. ABSA in fo rm er due. For m ore infor­ m ation, call Irene at 371-0179. IEEE w ill m eet at 5 p .m . T h u rsd ay in E ngineering Science Building 302. A rep rese n tativ e from A n dersen C o n ­ sulting will speak. R efreshm ents will be served. The Russian Club w ill meet at 7 p.m . M onday in C alhoun Hall 422. The anti-Stalinist film Repentance will be sh ow n. The University Democrats Public Relations a n d Projects C om m ittee m eetings will be transferred to Sen. P arm er's p re-H allow een fun d -raiser from 5 to 7 p .m . M onday at the A m er­ ican Legion T ravis Post No. 76, 2201 W. First St. C om m ittee m em bers can contact D anelle for free p asses a n d in­ form ation. The UT Tukong Moosul Club will m eet from 5 to 7:30 p.m . M onday, W ednesday an d Friday in A nna H iss G ym nasium 136 for traditional M artial A rts training. The University Yoga Club will have class from 5:30 to 7 p.m . M ondav in E n gin eering T eaching C enter 2.102. Please w ear loose clothing and bring a tow el or blanket. Circle K International will meet at 7 p .m . M onday the U niversity in T eaching C e n te r 3.102. UT w o m e n 's basketball coach Jody C onradt will speak. E veryone w elcom e. PERFORMANCES T he D e p a rtm e n t of French a n d Ital­ in ian will p re se n t a perform ance French of E ugene Ionesco's La Lecon and Exercises de Diction at 8 p.m . M on­ day in Batts H all A uditorium . Per­ form ance by the C om pagnie C laude Beauclaire, Paris. LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS The Liberal Arts Council will spon­ sor a series of lectures M onday: ■ Lisa K essler, S tu d en t H ealth C en ­ ter, ''N u tritio n and Stress: Practical Tip for M anaging Diet D uring S tress” at no o n in B urdine 116. ■ Ted E dw ards, director, Hills M ed­ ical C en ter an d KLBJ-AM radio p er­ sonality, "K eeping Fit and H ealthy an d Being a G reat S tu d en t All at the Sam e T im e” at 12:15 p.m . in Texas U nion B uilding 3.116. ■ Liz S toebner, "T he Role of A uto- Eroticism in P ost-M odern Latin A m er­ ican Fem inist L iterature" at 4 p .m . in Texas U nion Building 3.116. ■ Tony V anchu, "C u ltu ral A spects U nder G la sn o st," 4 to 5 p.m . in Texas U nion B uilding 4.118. S N P hA a n d th e C ollege of P h arm a­ cy will p re se n t a lecture by N igel G ragg, p resid e n t and fo u n d er of P h ar­ m acists and C orp o rate A m erica for AIDS E ducation, titled "Y our Role as a H ealth C are Professional Aids- E d u ­ cation" at n o o n M onday in P harm acy The Longhorn Greens w ill sponsor a lecture by M icheál Fabrizio titled "V egetarianism an d N atu re " at 7:30 p.m . M onday in Parlin H all 1. IEEE w ill present a lecture by rep­ resentatives from M cDonnell D ouglas at 6 p.m . M onday in the E ngineering Science Building 302. R efreshm ents will be served. E veryone welcom e. Petroleum Engineering w ill spon­ sor a sem inar w ith Bernie Baldwin, senior R esearch C hem ist, Phillips Pe­ troleum , titled "N M R Im aging as A p ­ plied to C ore C haracterization" from 3 to 4 p.m . M onday in C hem ical an d P e tro le u m E n g in e e rin g B u ild in g 2.208. SHORT COURSES/WORKSHOPS The Center for High Performance C om p u tin g will offer the follow ing w ork sh o p s on U N ICOS for CH PC Crav su p e rc o m p u te r users in C o m p u ­ tation C enter Room 8: ■ S u p erco m p u tin g u n d e r UN ICOS for N ew C H PC U sers, 9 a.m . to 5 p.m . M onday. P rerequisite: fam iliarity w ith UNIX o p era tin g system . ■ S u p erco m p u tin g for Experienced U sers, 8:30 a.m . to 5 p .m . T uesday. Prerequisites: fam iliarity w ith CH PC proced u res an d Fortran. C ourses are free to all UT people, b u t space is lim ­ ited and registration is required. For the Short- m ore C ourse R egistrar at 471-3241. inform ation, call The Computation Center and Joe C. T h o m p so n C onference C enter will offer the follow ing courses in T h o m p ­ son C onference C en ter 3.108: ■ dBase III + : First C ourse, 8:30 a.m . to 4 p.m . M onday. UT cost $30. ■ P ageM aker for IBM: First C ourse, 8:30 a.m . to 4 p .m . T hursday. UT cost is $30. ■ P ageM aker for th e IBM: Second C ourse, 8:30 a.m . to 4 p.m . Friday. UT cost $30. ■ R egression w ith PC SAS, 8:30 a.m . to 4 p .m . S aturday. UT cost is $30. ■ Introduction to H yperC ard, 8:30 a.m . to 4 p .m . W ednesday. UT cost is $30. ■ Introduction to V ersaC ad M acin­ tosh, 8:30 a.m . to 12:30 p.m . Friday. UT cost is $20. ■ DOS: S econd C ourse, 8:30 a.m . to 4 p.m . T uesday. UT cost is $30 Call 471-3121 for registation inform ation. OTHER U tm ost is accepting applications in te rn s, p h o to g rap h e rs for w riters, and illustrators. For m ore inform a­ tion, call 471-4111 or visit Texas S tu­ den t Publications Building C 4 .102. Study in Australia on a UT Ex­ change Program . S tudy at the U niver­ sity of S ydney, pay UT tuition an d receive g rad es in residence tow ard your UT G PA . For details, visit the S tudy A broad Office at 100 W. 26th St. A pplication d eadline for 1990 aca­ dem ic year is N ov. 1. The Campus Alcohol and Drug A buse E ducation Program is now in­ terview ing stu d e n ts to be accepted as substance ab u se prev en tio n P eer In­ structors. U p p er division course credit available for training in full an d for teaching p erform ance in the sp rin g of 1990. Tw o se m e ste r com m ittm ent re­ quired; low er division stu d e n ts con­ sidered. Call M itzi H enry at 471-6252 for m ore inform ation or to set u p an interview . The Texas Memorial Museum has th e O riginal G o d d ess of Liberty on display. M useum h o u rs are 9 a .m . to 5 p .m . M onday th ro u g h Friday, 10 a.m . to 5 p .m . S atu rd ay arid 1 to 5 p .m . S unday. Free a n d o p en to the public. The Institute for Latin American S tudies will sp o n so r a brow n bag lunch m eeting of the C entral A m eri­ can W orking G roup "A lm u erzo " at 12:30 p.m . M onday in Sid R ichardson H all 1.320. Judy Butler, ed ito r of E n­ vió, will talk ab o u t th e current situa­ tion in N icaragua. The Baptist Student Union will hold p re-registration for their Biblical S tudies classes the spring. C lasses are transferrable. For m ore inform ation an d to register, call 474-1429. to be held in ECE student organizations will have a Fajita Fest from 3 p.m . to dark Friday in E astw oods Park. All you can eat an d d rin k for $1. IEEE will have a brown bag lunch at noo n W ed n esd ay in E ngineering Science Building 6Ó2. R efreshm ents will be served. The UT School of Architecture will p rese n t an exhibit of non-stu d io w ork by stu d e n ts titled "M ore T han G reen Eggs and H am " 8 a.m . to 5 p.m . th ro u g h Dec. 1 in the M ebane G allery, G oldsm ith Hall 2.105. in A rchitecture The Measurement and Evaluation C en ter an n o u n c es th at Friday in the last day to register for the Dec. 2 LSAT w ith o u t a late fee. M aterials are avail­ able at the MEC, 2616 W ichita St., and at the Inform ation D esk in the M ain Building. For m ore inform ation, call 471-3032. The Measurement and Evaluation C en ter will ad m in ister the follow ing tests for placem ent credit T uesday M 305G ($28) at 6:15 p .m ., the W ord Pro­ cessing Test ($23) at 4 p.m . and the G ram m ar, Spelling an d P unctuation Test ($23) at 6:15 p.m . The fees can be paid from 2 to 6 p.m . on test day at the Beauford H. Jester C enter ticket office. For m ore inform ation, call 471 - 3032. The Association for Freedom and D em ocracy in C hina will sp o n so r a h u m a n rights rally at noon M onday on th e W est Mall. M em bers of the "June 4 Bicycle T eam ," AFDC, Steve Biko C om m ittee, C entral Peace Initia­ tive an d o th e r organizations will speak. DOS/Services for Students with D isabilities needs: ■ A tu to r w ith background in soci­ ology/social w ork to read for blind Ph.D . stu d e n t in social w ork. ■ A v o lu n te er tu to r for Philosophy 313 K. E xperience w ith learning d is­ abilities desired. ■ A rea d er for a blind astronom y stu d e n t. A stronom y or Physics back­ g ro u n d desired . For m ore inform a­ tion, call 471-6259. KTSB invites all campus organiza­ tions to participate in the Campus Voic­ es show s. T he sh o w s inform A ustin of cultural and inform ative program s of cam pus g ro u p s. For m ore inform a­ tion, call 471-5106. THE D a ily T e x a n Monday, October 30,1989 Pago 15 w#- ACROSS 1 Tax pros 5 Juices 9 Aspect 14 E. Indian buffalo 15 Piece of ground 16 Automaton 17 Bankrupt 18 Water: Sp. 19 Musical work 20 Busy insect 21 Ship section 22 Asian pepper 23 Instructor 25 Inanimate 27 Owns 28 Bewildered 29 Green shade 32 Plant piece 35 Poverty 37 An astringent 38 Off. worker 39 Upon 40 Drafted ones 42 Blends 43 Fodder crop 44 Knocks 45 Weaken 46 Each of two 47 Sc. of B.Sc. 51 Lower than 54 Fur source 56 Gallery contents 57 Rectify 58 Advance 59 Baby’s nurse 60 Burn 61 Reword 62 Greek letter 63 Endured 64 Relatives PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED c i r i e i a i m h o M a I l I aaao sauna san □h h h asaan ann@ □asm anoaa naam grao QDoa aaranaa anaas aaaaa 000000 anannaas aaoaa asaaa nan ana anaaa s h o d 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 000(90 a 00000a anaaa a a a a a a □ E_ S I Y 1 M □00000 N B M T « A S W Ñ M 65 Mideast gulf DOWN 1 Weight unit 2 Fruit 3 Ms. Bryant 4 Iniquity 5 Rainstorms 6 — Hiss 7 Flood 8 Aces 9 Certify (a will) 10 Aspired 11 Sanction 12 Irritated 13 And others 21 Chase flies 24 Bell 26 Discern 28 Shoestrings 29 Brooches 30 This: Sp. 31 Prophet 32 Girdle 33 Argument 34 Well-behaved 35 Spying spots 36 Cosmetic 38 Photocopy 41 Jammed 42 Rainless 45 Detects 46 Kind of drum 47 Blemish 48 Called 49 Shipping box 50 51 Fish 52 Radiate 53 Weave type 55 Stir 59 Arab cloak Frome” 10-30-89 © 1989 United Feature Syndicate AS YOU 916 OUT, YOU WONDER IF YOU'LL EVERBE THE SAM E, IF YOUR DREAMS HAVE PERISHED ALONG YOUR ILLUSIONS. K. Kat x / ' \ j ‘ by H errim an BUT THEM YOUR COMMUNITY PULLS TOGETHER, AND IN IN F KJN9NFSS OF NEIGHBORS YOU FIN 9 HOPE, A N D A SENSE THAT SOMEHOW YOULU/LL SURVIVE A LLT H tS ... ...UNLESS, OF COURSE, YOU'RE AN AIPS PATIENT. COULD YOU HURRY? I'V E ONLY GOT A FEW WEEKS AS IT IS . D < UJ Q D 0C H >cc cc < o > n p U 3 f t u C 0 o o THE FUSCO BROTHERS BY J.C . DUFFY P IT H — - SCHOOL Dining Center There's no need for law students to rush back and forth across campus for a great meal. The Law School D ining Center's complete menu includes hot entrees such as a grilled chicken plate, and a chicken fried steak plate, a great turkey sub, fresh vegetables, a Baked Potato Bar, burritos and taco salads. W hile you're there take advantage o f Austin's beautiful fall weather and dine on a shady patio. \ Tow nes H all 1 108 B reakfast: M on-Fri 7:30 a m -1 0 :3 0 am L u nch: 1 la m -3 pm CBA Dining Center D on't let the nam e fool you - CBA Dining Center is easily accessible to the entire "Liberal Arts Sector" as well. Any student on this side of campus is welcome to stop in for an item from the grill, hot and cold sandwiches, breakfast, a hot entree, soups, salads, or a great Texas U nion Baked Potato. Follow your nose to the "giant ham m er" on the CBA's Third Level and it's chow -tim e. • ~w t m Today's Lesson: Texas Union Satellites provide food to EVERY comer of campus! ETC II Dining Center Take a study break at the ETC II Dining Center while you're in the "Engineering Sector". The ETC II featuers hot sandwiches, pastries and donuts, cold and hot drinks, soups and salads. The ETC II Dining Center is conveniently located in a quiet area where m unching and studying exist in harm ony. ETC II Stu d en t Lounge M an d ay-Frid ay 7:30 am -2 pm FINE ARTS Dining Center There's no need to be a "starving artist" with good food right around the corner. The Fine Arts D ining Center features a com plete breakfast m enu, a huge array o f sandwiches, a Baked Potato Bar, salads, and soups. And if you insist upon being a starving artist, then have a cool drink on th e Fine Arts Patio as you contem plate your next masterpiece. Fine Arts B u ild in g 1 .1 0 2 B . B reak fast: M on-Fri 7 :3 0 a m -1 0 :3 0 am L u n ch : 1 0 :3 0 am -2 pm D rinks an d san d w iches u n til 3 pm October 30, 1989 * t A $ feet’s Myth Austin Lyric Opera Austin ‘Firsts’ The Lizard Lounge # 1% '1 2 P * . ■■ ■ i 1 f ® *• *• • i • % $ jf * ' • , i % f t ! ?? f r f YOU CAN'T ALWAYS GET WHAT YOU WANT. UNLESS YOU CALL DOMINO'S PIZZAf b a * cheese style cheese ni/ya !"r lor (ink «1 0(1 S U e £ h •aeh " PlUS ,av ......... '«PPtaes arc OR Two S mall P izzasi $ 5 9 9 ""'“ <'%‘is w each (XT pizza ^ "W ! 1 ¡ Order a large price you’re trying to‘Beat the Clock- ^ V A L I D T U E S D A Y O N L Y I ,,1“. awrtc >1* WU ,H„ i m u i nal slyfc* ! Aw Pizza; $749 (|<‘f a medium \ '¿" i»a I oa . 4 * <1 finlv / «"(» W.4» p<« »¿.ítfi¡S5y^ I — to OR ,5» Pan Piaui ¡999- (f l fMo medium v r i»., 9 are‘i-i- f°r °n,v ,,r' ®* ea * * i r r s a le dri. , ,,*‘Mxeri * h r n - "W in e s arc 75c each / 9 * f arh lo‘,(,‘‘d with '«<«"METALWlNP-UPS (% R T S u p p u e s ^ X % HO iSY cwuxttN* B O O K S * # ^ ---------------- EDITOR Lee Nichols ASSOCIATE EDITORS Mike Clark, Greg May USTINGS EDITOR Andrea Reece UTING WRITERS Nancy Corral, Steve Dobbins, Gilbert Garcia, Lisa Mims, Tom Patterson, Jeff Turrentine, Rob Walker, Robert Wilonsky, Dave Winter CONTRIBUTING ARTISTS Lynda Barry,Tom King, David Marks, Marc Trujillo, Chris Ware CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS Ceorge Bridg« (cover), Kirk J. Crippens M A S K S ‘^ N O S E ^ Ma k e - u F Ce ffclWTS C A M D Y 6°U > LAMfe » WfVHP 'A R O u N P y á # U G O RAVENSB u RGER® 3*»»» ( pmtes é am b' ^ p t a y m o b i f fbLKMANlS® HANP A PUPPETS SPIDER *10* TERRA TtoVS H-STF™ EVCAYflAY mo N-JAT 1100-7.00 SUNDAY 12 00 - L oo i7 o t South ComGk c s s SlUFfiep TCf\s By" GUND • 0AKI ir tiF F CHARM - N. AH. BEAR AmAUSm RAKiH* Russ _ -------- > L 1M .T T D S.TÓCK 1 -shaHjasfiHBo_____ 4 Images THE DAILY TEXAN October 30, 1989 m m ISP»* ■* m usic____________________ _ Tribute albums: Rock’s sincerest form of flattery Various Artists The Bridge: A Tribute to Nell Young Caroline Records Various Artists Time Between: A Tribute to the Byrds Imaginary Records Various Artists Shangri-La: A Tribute to the Kinks Imaginary Records By Jeff Turrentlne, Rob Walker and Robert Wllonsky Bands that can, do. Bands that can't, cover songs from bands that do. That's one of the. general axioms of pop music. Be it the Knack's brilliant version of Buddy Holly's Heartbeat or Don Johnson's downright frightening re­ make of Aaron Neville's soul classic Tell It Like It Is, the success of the cover song may well depend upon either the talent (or lack th ereof of the artist, the strength of the origi­ nal material, or a little of both. Recent years have seen tributes to such disparate artists as Holly, Cap­ tain Beefheart and Syd Barrett, while ones are forthcoming to the Rolling Stones and the Bonzos. In the last couple of months alone, the Pixies, Nick Cave, the Flesh tones, Dinosaur jr., Cud and dozens of other artists have appeared on "trib­ ute" albums to Neil Young, the Byrds and the Kinks. Young, Roger McGuinn and Ray Davies rank among the most influ­ ential songwriters of the rock era, and each has certainly affected the direction pop/punk chose to follow, if not the artists on these LPs them­ selves. I n the last decade, Neil Young has turned out some of the most in­ consistent work of an already scat­ tershot career; albums like Trans, This Note's For You and Re-ac-tor cer­ tainly can't be faulted for their ambi­ tion, but that's about it. Then along comes 1989, finding Young with two of the finest albums of his ca­ reer — on one of which he only ap­ pears spiritually. It's the tribute al­ bum The Bridge that truly illustrates all Young has meant musically as a singer-song writer-guita rist. From Sonic Youth's iconoclastic rendering of Computer Age to Nick Cave's — surprise — devastatingly dreary version of Helpless, The Bridge runs the stylistic gamut. The al­ bum's selections range from classic (Cinnamon Girl) to obscure (Captain Kennedy); each band on the LP lends to Young's creations interpretations not too far from what he originally intended. Leave it to Young soundalikes Di­ nosaur Jr. to chip in with a send-up of Lotta Love, the song Nicolette Lar­ son made popular nearly a decade ago. Or for the Flaming Lips, a band that picks up where Josie and the Pussycats left off, to spew out some­ thing resembling After the Goldrush. Other highlights off the album in­ clude Henry Kaiser's medley of The Needle and the Damage Done and To­ night's the Night and Psychic TV's surprisingly touching Only Love Can Break Your Heart. Kaiser, who as a member of Crazy Backwards Alpha­ bet has covered Grateful Dead songs with remarkable grace, does the same here accompanied by Jack­ son Browne sideman David Lind- its ley. And Psychic TV, for all pomp and mock posing, actually takes Young at his heartbreaking word. Young has proven himself over 20 years to be pop music's premier chameleon, changing from bar-band rocker to new-waver-come-lately to countrified hillbilly and back again in the blink of an eye. Thus, the ec­ lectic roster of artists on The Bridge makes great sense. This holds espe­ cially true for Victoria Williams and on this album are of that peculiar "alternative" persuasion that would under most circumstances be la­ beled "garage rock," were it not for the sly self-consciousness of the art­ ists involved. The textured synths of Icicle Works and the chimey Rickenback- er 12-string fills of the Mr. Tambou­ rine M an-era Byrds are about as far apart as two sounds can be under the rubric of "rock ;" yet the Works' updated rendition of Triad/Chestnut Mare — a country song when it was written — comes off beautifully, if a little solemnly. An ominous pipe or­ gan segues into a dense carpet of synthesizers, leavened only by — what's that? — a Rickenbacker 12- string fill that pops in and out of the mix. Since most of the Byrds' "fa­ m ous" material was written by oth­ ers (Bob Dylan, specifically), many of the songs on Time Between might be rather obscure to those of us who grew up listening to Turn, Turn, Turn or Tambourine Man on classic rock radio. Still, even the most mar­ ginally aware of fans will be inter­ ested to hear how the Moffs pull off 1989 finds Neil Young with two of the fin­ est albums of his career — on one of which he only appears spiritually. the Williams Brothers and the Pix­ ies, two bands in the same musical spectrum but at opposite poles. The family W illiam s romps through Don't Let it Bring You Down, sounding as though they were on a small stage somewhere, playing to a room full of downtrodden drunks. It's one of the few tracks off The Bridge that actually contains more raw emotional spark than the origi­ nal. In contrast, the Pixies have toned down (somewhat) Winterlong, one of Young's more undeservedly overlooked songs. It bears little re­ semblance to the Pixies' current work, yet like most of The Bridge’s contents it provides a fairly even mixture between the Young and the young. In any one of their myriad incar­ nations, the Byrds were single- handedly defining entire genres: airplane-noise country rock, folk rock, raga rock, psychedelic rock. You'd be hard pressed to find any common denominator in Poco, the Rain Parade and the Long Ryders, but if there's one thing that links these seemingly incongruent bands, then it's the Byrds — a group un­ paralleled in American rock history for its dynamism, creativity and in­ fluence. a Time Between, compilation featuring the talents of 14 different bands, is a heartfelt if somewhat un­ even tribute to the group started by jaded C h icag o fo lk ie R o g er McGuinn in 1964. Most of the bands Eight Miles High (barely, and with very little new to offer), or how Di­ nosaur Jr. tackles Gene Clark's gold­ en Feel a Whole Lot Better (blistering­ ly, with maximum levels of distortion and frenzy.) the Miracle Legion's Mark Mulcahy takes a break from his career-long Michael Stipe imitation to cut loose on corny Mr. Spaceman, M cGuinn's Buck Owens-y little dit­ ty about an invasion from beyond, given a pretty close reading here. Brit folkies Richard Thompson, Clive Gregson and Christine Collis- ter proffer a slow and swooning ver­ sion of Clark's Here Without You, which lulls with its gentle acoustic treatment and melancholy lines of desperation. Several of the tracks are inspired, but sadly too many seem flat, as though the songs were assigned rather than chosen. One wonders little-known which of the many bands on Time Between offered their talents because the Byrds played an integral role in their musical devel­ opment, and which just snatched up the opportunity to be "on a record." Maybe that's missing the point. But even if a second-rate neo-psy­ chedelic band like Thin White Rope shares some "attitude" with David Crosby, that doesn't mean they can do justice to a black masterpiece like Everybody Has Been Burned. Time Be­ tween is a great idea, but a little more time — and maybe money, if that was the crucial factor — should have gone into its making. Sonic Youth, top, deconstructs Young’s Computer Age, and Miracle Legion goes bonkers with their version of the Byrds’ Mr. Spaceman. T he Kinks are already among rock's most-covered bands. Van Halen, the Pretenders, the Jam and countless others have committed versions of classic Ray Davies tunes to vinyl. And hardly a garage rock band exists that didn't cut its teeth on the infamous opening chords of You Really Got Me. But the producers of Shangri-La made the right choice when they dredged up bands on the order o f The Mock Turtles, the Droogs, Patch-Up Boys and Cud to rework such non-legendary Kinks titles as Big Sky, This Strange Effect, You Shouldn't Be Sad, and She's Got Every­ thing. After all, the Kinks, rock's eternal underdogs, have made a ca­ reer of their obscurity, and to aban­ don the trend now with an all-star tribute record would be nothing short of hypocritical. Still, not even this compilation could avoid Lola, and it's none other than Cud that takes the initiative with its deadpan dance version, which sounds like a dreadful idea but actually comes off pretty well. they to be p ostm od ern , Just changed the "C-O -L-A , cola" line to "K -O -L-A ." Nice touch. Actually, Lola exemplifies perhaps the most surprising thing about Shangri-La: the overall purity of these versions. The Chesterfield Kings bring a bit of a hardcore edge to Live Life, the Cataran slows down Tired o f Waiting and Wolfhounds make the verses of I'm Not Like Ev­ erybody Else decipherable. O ther­ wise, though, the cuts sound like note-for-note remakes, albeit sung in a less familiar voice. The Fleshtones find themselves in the unlikely position of being the biggest name on the record, though their version of Too Much on My Mind, while com petent, is hardly the L P s standout. After Cud's ver­ sion of Lola (which we mention mostly so we can write "C u d " again), the Droogs' cover of She's Got Everything is the best cut. This oft-forgotten rocker in the You Really Got Me/All Day and All o f the Night tradition finds new life in the band's clean and aggressive treatment. For the devout few who have stuck with the most underrated act in rock history through its countless incarnations, the record is nothing short of a validation, a promise that the Kinks not only have other fol­ lowers, but that tradition lives on in a new generation of bands. Even if the Kinks never got the credit they deserved, it's comforting at least to know that, somewhere, Cud was listening. Thanks to Waterloo Records for the loan of these albums. Turrentine is an English junior. is a journalism/RTF junior. Walker Wilonsky is a journalism senior. October 30, 1989 Images THE DAILY TEXAN 5 CHARTS Waterloo Records’ Top Ten Albums 1. Kate Bush The Sensual World 2. Tracy Chapman Crossroads 3. Rickie Lee Jones Flying Cowboys 4. Bob Dylan Oh Mercy 5. k.d. lang and the reclines Absolute Torch and Twang 6. James McMurtry Too Long in the Wasteland 7. Neil Young Freedom 8. David Byrne Rei Momo 9. Nanci Griffith Storms 10. Jeff Beck Jeff Beck's Guitar Shop — Oct. 2 3 ,1 9 8 9 KTSB’s Top Ten Albums 1. Red Hot Chili Peppers Mother's Milk 2. Glass Eye Hello Young Lovers 3. Sugarcubes Here Today, Tomorrow ... Next Week! 4. Hand of Glory Far from Kith and Kin 5. Dwight Yoakam Just Lookin' For a Hit 6. Timbuk 3 Edge of Allegiance 7. The Fall Seminal Live 8. Meat Puppets Monsters 9. Beat Happening Black Candy 10. Shellyan Orphan Century Flower music Hey hey, my my Young fights for 'Freedom' on his best LP in a decade Neil Young Freedom Reprise Records By Greg May W hen looking at the many mu­ sical tangents Neil Young has taken in the last two decades, one would think the Canadian had a polka or zydeco album lined up as his next release. Yet with his new album Freedom, Young — as he oc­ casionally does — cycles back to the raw and minimally produced folk- rock style which spawned his early hits. Freedom is Young's second effort since breaking his less-than-cordial relationship with Geffen Records, which attempted to sue Young for purposely making poor albums. Whether intentional or not, Young has given Geffen a slap in the face by making an album that easily ri­ vals all his major successes — obvi­ ously his best since Rust Never Sleeps came out 10 years ago. At first, Freedom seems like a re­ trospective of Young's earliest solo albums, such as Everybody Knows This is Nowhere, Harvest and After the Gold Rush. The LP's songs feature both the country flavor of Harvest and the angry chainsaw guitars which typify Young's work with Crazy Horse. However, Young leaves absolute­ ly no doubt that he sits opposite the Beach Boys on the '60s-regurgita- tion spectrum. Though there are many parallels between Freedom and the Young of 15 or 20 years ago, the album is far from a throwback. The first single, Rockin' in the Free World, provides the basic anthem for Freedom the same way Hey Hey My My did for Rust Never Sleeps — the album opens with a solo acous­ tic version, while on the last cut Young throws the same song back into the listener's face in a grinding fuzzbox-with-bad-diode heavy-met- al rendition. Young doesn't let all the songs on Freedom drown in angry guitar licks. On two of the album's most beauti­ ful tracks, Hangin on a Limb and The Ways o f Love, he teams up with eter­ nal collaborator Linda Ronstadt, with great results. The lyrics Young sings — and of­ ten screams — throughout the al­ bum are every bit as soothing, poet­ ic and assaultive as the music. Freedom echoes the "w hat the hell is wrong with u s" attitude of Rust Never Sleeps, yet the messages are much more obvious. Most of the songs on Freedom make pointed attacks on the Rea- gan-Bush era's Darwinist approach innumerable social to America's woes, especially drugs and the homeless. On Crime in the City, for example, Young bemoans the plight of urban America, against a back­ ground of eerily subdued horns and acoustic guitar riffs. By far the most unusual song of the album is Young's biting rock cover of the Drifters oldie On Broad­ way. The lyrics are given a very cyn­ ical tone when Young replaces the original "I know I'll make it" refrain with a furious ranting of "G ive me Freedom echoes both Young's rockers and his country-ish classics. that crack ... Give me some of that crack." Indeed, throu ghou t Freedom Young seems preoccupied with all facets of the drug world. Songs like Crime in the City and Eldorado deal with the drug trade, while Young gives a powerful first-hand account of the opposite end of the supply- demand curve in No M ore — a poig­ nant tale of drug seduction which echoes The Needle and the Damage Done. Nearly every one of the 12 songs on Freedom drips with potential comparisons to early Young tunes. The songs, however, are unmistak­ ably set in the present, and Young's attitude on much of the album is ex­ emplified by his cynical revamping of Bush catch phrases: "W e've got a the thousand points of homeless man/We've got a kinder gentler machine gun hand." light/for After Young's first few angered cries in Rockin' in the Free World, the listener knows that the album isn't so much about "freedom " as the lack thereof. Though it's certainly arguable whether the citizens of the "free world" have ever truly been free, Neil Young has always safe­ guarded his own musical liberty from pop/commercial mediocrity — and Freedom represents his most de­ fiant defense of his artistic freedom in a decade. May, a Plan II sophomore, is an asso­ ciate editor of Images. The refreshing taste of Ice-T Ice-T The Iceberg/Freedom of Speech ... Just Watch What You Say Sire Records W ho says rap is violent? Ice-T does, and you gotta hand it to him for that. Check out the cover art: a three-gun salute to Unfortunately, the only great party song here is What Ya Wanna Do?, a mega-MC jam involving all of Ice's Rhyme Syndicate. But other attempts, like the title track and The Girl Tried to Kill Me, end up as lame exercises in using the word "fu ck ." — Tom Patterson Hand of G lotis tense tunes a man in a Raiders cap. Even the playlist cops a cool Jello Biafra cameo and a tribute to the malicious uses of the household power drill. Ice-T doesn't condone violence. He does, however, think gang and street violence de­ serve discussion in rap music, and he's never too iced to chastise a crack-smoking, gun-tot- ing brother who gives the race a bad rep. By ignoring the problem or trusting too much in the government, he believes, the black man will fall by his own fault. The best cuts on The Iceberg are the mellow rhymes. Slow, slick and as cool as the man's name, raps like Peel Their Caps Back and You Played Yourself display the Iceman at his best. Meanwhile, Ice also macks his way through hardline violent beats like Hit the Deck and* Hunted Child; although they're not as slick as the mellow songs, they still slap the ear while refreshing the mind. Hand of Glory Far from Kith and Kin Skyclad Records If you've been to more than three shows in Austin, you've seen Hand of Glory (for­ merly Ballad Shambles) live — they've opened for all manner of beasts at any num­ ber of local clubs, but have seldom headlined. Thus it follows that Far from Kith and Kin sounds strong, but reads weak; there are some standout tracks, but the LP screams "warm-up band." This hollowness doesn't jibe with Hand of Glory's pedigree — the foursome's composed of ex-members of Poison 13, Joe "K in g" Car­ rasco's original Crowns, Doctors' Mob and the LeRoi Brothers. But rock history is littered with supergroups that were less than the sum — Oct. 2 9 ,1 9 8 9 of their parts, and while Hand of Glory trumps Asia, they're bound to lose any com­ petition with their own heritage. Actually, their sound recalls everything their ancestor bands had in common — a sort of altemative-frat-band stampede, high on speed and volume — but omits much of the attitude, wit and panache that made each band an Austin legend. Doctors' Mob without the humor, or Poison 13 without the venom. Except for the first and last cuts, side one is generally flushable. And those two tracks, Bloody Red Sun and Crucifixation (The Poet's Curse), succeed on guts alone, without any help from their brittle post-thrash tone and soupily faux-mystical lyrics. But on side two, Hand of Glory throws away its tarot cards and comes up with Ball and Chain, an anthemic swamp stomp that takes up residence in the brain and just won't leave. The side closer, Don't Drag Me Down, also smokes, and the in-between tracks are much heavier on licks and lighter on pretense than their flip-side counterparts. All in all, Far from Kith and Kin is nearly tom in half by the tension between its artsy death- rock lyrical content and its 1985-vintage bar band context. Perhaps the band was search­ ing for meaning; they've ended up doing "d ep th " to death. Lighten up, dudes. — Mike Clark Ice-T displays his cool-as-his-name stance. 6 Images THE DAILY TEXAN October 30,1989 books I Not quite ‘By the Book’ Paterno's captivating biography rushes past usual sports-talk PATERNO BY THE BO( )K been coaching 40 years as an assist­ been coaching 40 years as an assist- ant and a head coach," Paterno said from the Penn State campus in State College, Pa. throughout his life. throughout his life. Paterno and co-author Bernard Asbell triumph in the battle to ade­ quately discuss Patem o's glorious career at Penn State without letting the game of football dominate the book. vacuum Brown and pi Brown and promotes in the book, but also the education — the striv­ ing for excellence — a football play­ er receives on the field. What makes Paterno unique among most sports biographies is ; that some chapters don't mention football at all. The chapter titled "V irgil" de­ votes itself to Patem o's lifelong love of Virgilian literature. The Aeneid re­ sonates throughout Paterno — Vir­ gil's epic serves as a constant source of explanation for Patem o's own motivations and priorities. Paterno, for example, writes that j See Book, page 7 "There have been many opportu­ nities inside and outside of coach­ ing. They wanted to tell right from the beginning why I coach in col­ lege, why it's important to me, and then go on with the rest of the sto­ r y " From the onset, readers are tuned into Patem o's "grand experiment" — winning isn't everything, educa­ tion is. By education, Paterno means not just the classical liberal arts education that he received at Asbell, who assembled the book from a series of interviews with Pa­ terno, was a football illiterate before working with the legendary coach. This lack of football expertise by Pa­ tem o's co-author proves essential to the book's success — the structure of the book brings out Paterno as the complex man he is. Many sports autobiographies glorify coaches that are football addicts, decicated to winning and excelling on the field only. Paterno isn't one of them and Asbell's organization of the book aptly illustrates the point. Asbell organizes most of the book chronologically, but not all of it. The book begins with Patem o's refusal in 1972 to coach for the National Football League's Boston Patriots. The Patriots' owner Bill Sullivan of­ fered Paterno a ridiculous amount of money in addition to total control of his football team. Paterno turned down Sullivan because ''pro football is about winning. Only w inning." Asbell started the book with that particular decision because it de­ fines Patem o's character. Beginning with that event "w as the idea of Bernard and the editor. The reason was that people could see why I stay in coaching. I've Paterno: By the Book Joe Paterno with Bernard Asbell Random House 276 pages $18.95 By Dave Winter J oe Patemo's autobiography, Pa­ terno: By the Book represents a test of his life's work — to combine the challenges of a college education with the competition of major col­ lege Indeed, Paterno succeeds in balancing the two pur­ just as he has suits in his book, football. GARNER & SMITH BESTSBlfllS Fiction *1. On the Golden Porch (H) Tatyana Tolstaya 2. Foucault's Pendulum (H) Umberto Eco 3. The Too of Pooh (P) Benjamin Hoff 4. A Confederacy of Dunces (P) John K. Toole 5. One Hundred Years of Solitude (P) Gabriel Garcia Marquez 6. The House of the Spirits (P) Isabel Allende 7. The Oldest Uvlng Confederate Wid­ ow Tells AII(H) Allan Gurganus 8. Guilty (P) Georges Bataille 9. The Stranger (P) Albert Camus Raymond Carver 10. Will You Please Be Quiet Please(P) Non-fiction 1. Federico Garcia Lorca (H) Ian Gibson 2. Adam, Eve. & the Serpent (P) Elaine Pagels 3. Wartime (H) Paul Fussell 4. Graywolf Annual Five: Multi-Cultural Literacy (P) Rick Simonson and Scot Walker 5. Miles: The Autobiography (H) Miles Davis 6. Songllnes (P) Bruce Chatwin 7. Literary Theory: An Introduction (P) Terry Eagleton 8. Woman Warrior (P) Maxine Hong Kingston Anthony Storr 10. The Power of Myth (P) Joseph Campbell 9. Solitude: A Return to the Self (P) *H : Hardback P. Paperback — Oct. 26.1989 Paterno: The unlikely champion of academe, not athletics A touching tribute: Penn State geneticists unveil their Paterno clone. By Dave Winter Everybody knows that football coaches are cursed with a vision of the universe nar­ rower than any stadium tunnel. Football coaches traditionally draw inspiration only from other coaches — Rockne, Lombardi, Halas, Bryant. But the hero mentioned throughout Joe Pa­ temo's new autobiography is Virgil's Aeneas. The Trojans Aeneas coached, however, weren't from Southern California. Many coaches talk about academics in ath­ letic terms. In Paterno: By the Book, the Penn State coach reverses the relationship, writing that his team's warriors are modern-day Vir­ gilian heroes — like Virgil's Trojan army, Pa­ temo's Nittany Lions don't wear flashy em­ blems or harbor individual bravado for accomplishments the entire team earned. Patemo's Penn State program is different from many because, unlike his colleagues, he takes a clear stand that college athletics serve college academics and not the other way around. Paterno didn't just drop a few classical liter­ ary references in the book to show he went to school at Brown. Virgil's literature isn't just the center of Patemo's book. It's the center of his life. Paterno was a high school junior at Brooklyn Prep when a Jesuit scholastic intro­ duced him to the work. "My experience in translating The Aeneid with Father (Thomas] Bermingham has had a profound influence on m e," Paterno recently said from State College, Pa. "It whetted my appetite to take on the responsibility I've tak­ en on in the ways I have. Before [co-author] Bernard [Asbell] and I realized it, it became a prominent part of the book." With the book, Paterno aims to debunk two absolute myths — that he is all good and that college football is all evil. "On record, I wanted people to understand I'm not a goody-goody guy, that I'm not per­ fect. I get more credit when we win than I deserve. I get nervous that people can't iden­ tify with me. I don't like talking about myself, especially in print. "But I like to express my ideas when I feel I could do some good. I felt that with all that's been going on in big-time college football, es­ pecially in your part of the country [referring to the Southwest Conference's recent miser­ ies], it was important for people to see there's a lot of good in college football for players who keep their priorities in order. It's not easy but with discipline, a player can get an education and be competitive in big-time col­ lege football." Like the paternalistic Branch Rickey, whose "noble experiment" racially integrated pro­ fessional baseball, Paterno writes of a "grand experiment," the integration of a rigorous higher education and the discipline of "big- time" college football. The experiment has been an unqualified success. Since Paterno became head coach in 1966, 85 percent of his players have graduat­ ed and his teams have posted three undefeat­ ed seasons and won two national titles. Paterno isn't just posting numbers for a good public image either. The book's discus­ sion of Penn State campus life prove what editor Sam Vaughan says in the book's intro­ duction. "Paterno is an educator who hap­ pens to be a big-league football coach." In the book, Patemo stresses that separat­ ing players from the mainstream of campus, like Bear Bryant did at Alabama, is the worst thing a coach can do to his players; he also said he doesn't believe in having separate dormitories for football players. "We don't have football players segregated from the mainstream of campus for two rea­ sons. First, it's good for the player. Second, it's good for the other kid who wouldn't oth­ erwise know a football player. He can have an impact on their lives and their thinking. "It's very unfortunate that we have athletic dormitories in this country. Most of the big problems have come at colleges with separate dormitories." Patemo's discussion of Penn State's foot­ ball history and policy bear a distinct reflec­ tion of the heritage and reputation of football at the University of Texas. Like Penn State, Texas refuses to establish separate athletic dormitories, Coach David McWilliams said. McWilliams lived at Brack- enridge as a player in the early 1960s. The players have since relocated to Jester Center. But that's not all. Patemo's section on the 1969 season casts a slightly dimmer hue on Texas' national cham­ pionship season. Patemo's discussion of this season provides the most impassioned and, therefore, interesting reading during Pater- no's recantation of football games. Because defending national champion Ohio State was undefeated when Penn State had to commit to a bowl game, Penn State selected the Orange Bowl over the Cotton. "If Texas had been No. 1 when we made our decision, we would have gone to Dallas regardless. But Ohio State was No. 1 when we made the decision. What would have been a great game never came to be," Patemo said. President Nixon "awarded" the national title to the Longhorns after they beat Arkan­ sas, but before the bowl games confirmed the distinction. After "Great Shoot-Out," Nixon tried to console the ex­ cluded Nittany Lions and the entire state of Pennsylvania by honoring them for having the longest unbeaten streak — which peaked at 31 games — in college football. the publicized Patemo is vitriolic in print. "Nixon favored us with an honor any idiot consulting a record book could see that we had taken for ourselves, thank you, without his help." Both Texas and Penn State completed un­ defeated seasons, and the Longhorns, as the chapter title indicates, were crowned "grab- bag chamj ons." In die book, Patemo advo­ cates a playoff system to crown a national October 30, 1989 Images THE DAILY TEXAN 7 Book, from page 6 the quarterbacks on his teams must resemble Virgilian heroes: "There's no doubt the superstar quarterback will excite the. fans and juice up the box office. The other kind — a leader — is a nerve center, the energy source, the field com­ mander of the team. ... He is a man not primarily for the fans, but for the team. He is a Virgilian hero." like former Syracuse head coach Frank Malon­ ey, invoke references to Virgil. In 1977, Maloney's Orangemen lost to Penn State but, immediately after the game, the coach asked his team to pray for Patemo's hospitalized son. Even opponents, "We hear so seldom about the re­ spect created by competition and how' it may elevate us to higher ground. That gesture by Frank Maloney ... is right out of Virgil's vision of honor and courage. He was a warrior who needed a victory and came close to having one, but he just wasn't destined to win that game." Paterno writes about success in these same terms. "Success to me is not winning a game. Success doesn't require, say, an 8-3 season or better. When Aeneas left his dty of Troy which had been defeated and destroyed, his army waged war and endured hell, year after year, suffering storms and shipwrecks and pestilence, terrible elements they couldn't control while fighting battles they tried to control. ... The epic is not about the victory, but about the glorious struggle. It is not about success, but about the human striving that made it possible." Another chapter devotes itself to Patemo's game-day attire (and sense of humor): Rolled-up pants, white athletic socks, football shoes and the occasional treat — his local­ ly famous khaki pants dotted with big blue whales. Patemo's character — his empha­ sis on education and his sense of humor — is not buried beneath an avalanche of football jargon and 20/ 20 hindsight. When Asbell and Paterno eventu­ ally arnve at Patemo's Penn State career, however, the hard-core foot­ ball discussion begins. Paterno does his best to keep the discussion un­ derstandable; he emphasizes per­ sonalities, not pass routes. Amid scores and summaries, readers discover that the 1969 Penn State team refused to play in the 1970 Cotton Bowl because thev feared Dallas' racist reputation. Pa­ terno also speaks at length about Mike Cooper's struggle against fan racism as he became the Nittany Li­ ons' first black quarterback in 1970. Human interest again interrupts the game stories when Paterno speaks of running back John Cap- pelletti. In 1973, Cappelletti wept at the podium as he dedicated his Heisman Trophy to his younger brother Joey, who suffered from leukemia. From Patemo's discussion of his teams and his life, it's clear that football is not the focus of his life. Nor is it the focus of his book. Paterno: By the Book is more than just weekday reading for Sunday's armchair quarterbacks. The book vindicates big time college football at a time when it needs vindication and also presents Paterno, a man of­ ten misunderstood and sanctified, as a complex but fallible man. Winter, a history senior, is the sports editor o/The Texan. Paterno, from page 6 champion. Patemo's bitter tone, 20 years lat­ er, sets up a contradiction which, at the end of the book, he admits he can't resolve. "I'm the guy who preaches that winning isn't everything. I'm the first to say you've got to be willing to lose. ... I didn't promise ... to be consistent, or to resolve contradic­ tions, or even try to avoid them. Like suffering, contradictions are life and have to be endured." Patemo's grand experiment — demanding academic and athletic excellence — seems the ultimate contradiction to proponents of one pursuit at the expense of the other. But for four decades, Paterno has shown not only that football and ed­ ucation can co-exist, but that they can be mutually beneficial. * - - | | | Jg | | g ¡¡ : an BRING THIS AD FOR j j f l FREE FRAME*! WITH ANY PRESCRIPTION LENS H OFFER EXPIRES 11-30-89 |L I » ( X H ' . I l k l l l K i i i < MII l< *1 ( II | S . I l l \|||I M||< t S lM I t J I M » \i J J J i < ill, II I, ill l| M ■ I S I I I I It \ , i s 7N 7< f > I M I I I I II I l l |( I , M |< , I I I ‘2 For 1 Rental •Nomtil DapMt Required EXPIRES 11/30 89 _ . 1 History Center exhibit honors ‘firsts’of Austin's oast * ™ « = « « ------------------------------------------------ í N‘ "c,Com“ there are n m odem society many accomplishments and church or the first UT football game, that we knew we were going to have," she said. West Walnut cost $120. to amaze us. But in our daily strivings for perfection we seem to forget the events that started it all. (achievements that never cease From now until Nov. 18, the Aus­ tin History Center is honoring some moments, major and minor, of the first 150 years of city history. The display of photos and memorabilia, titled "Memorable Firsts in O ur His­ to ry /' highlights local "firsts" in the civic, cultural and commercial life of Austin. "But when we got started, we found there was a first under basi­ cally every rock we looked. It ended up being a fun experience for us." The exhibit consists primarily of copies of photos from the center's own extensive files — Kearl said the originals are too valuable to risk dis­ playing. Much of the center's collec­ tion came from the files of the Aus­ tin American-Statesman and Austin Citizen; other sources include com­ munity groups, local families, and historians. According to Beruta Kearl, the cu­ rator of the center and one of the organizers * of the display, assem­ bling "Memorable Firsts" turned into an enjoyable learning experi­ ence for the staff. "Originally, we circulated a list around the staff ask­ ing them for their firsts; there are some standard ones, like the first "Memorable Firsts" pinpoints the beginning of Austin history at Sept. 1, 1839, the day of the first sale of lots, which took place under an oak tree in p re se n t-d a y R epublic Square. At the auction, a lot on the northeast com er of Congress Ave­ nue and Cedar Street (Fourth Street) the highest price _ garnered $2,800. A lot in the 700 block of The display features photographs of Dr. Thomas W. Anderson, Aus­ tin s first physician, who came to Hornsby's Bend in 1835, and Rich­ ard Floyd and Parthenia Barton, the first recorded couple to marry. Floyd and Barton, the daughter of William "Uncle Billy" Barton of Bar­ ton Springs fame, got hitched on Oct. 18, 1839. Austin's first permanent church was built in 1847 by the Methodists, the only denomination in town at the time to hold regular services. Located on the comer of Congress and Cedar, the original building was later bought by the Christian Church and moved to the comer of Mulberry Street (10th Street) and Brazos Street. "Memorable Firsts" also spot­ lights the history of Austin sports. the On Thanksgiving Day 1893, University began a tradition that See Firsts, page 23 i nfhT 'Sl^ S flfSf f00tbal1 team took the field In 1893, defeating the state champion "Dallas Football Club by a score of 18-16. Lizard Lounge: Not just another Hairs remix By Steve Dobbins in this lin e ," she says taking an oth ­ er drag. cigarette, Kate O nstead. T he scene is nothing new for She takes a long drag on a leans back against the glass brick wall outside Lizard Lounge. S h e 's dressed in all black and her blond hair is tied back with a black ribbon. As the line in front of her m oves a few feet, she releases a cloud of sm oke and fol­ lows step. then Tonight O nstead, a 1989 UT grad­ uate, is with her best friend Mindy. They've come to Lizard Lounge to dance, and as the line m oves them closer to the front door of the club, their bodies begin to m ove with the beat pounding from inside. At 22, Onstead is already a veter­ an of the Austin club scene. Five years ago she stood outside the building that now houses Lizard Lounge in a line very sim ilar to the one she stands in tonight. But back then the club was H all's and O n ­ stead was using a fake ID to get past the doorm an. "I had som e of the best tim es I've this place was ever had when H a ll's," O nstead s a y s ."I'v e been going out to clubs ever since, and I've never been to a place quite like H all's." But it's been four years since the doors of Hall's were closed and the several attem pts to reopen the club under different nam es have left bad tastes in the m ouths of m any Austin club regulars. "I cam e when it was The Edge and I cam e when it w as Mind Eras­ ers, but they w ere both dismal fail­ u res," O nstead says. Tonight marks Ó n stead 's first vis­ it to the building's latest incarnation and she's already a little skeptical. "The music sounds pretty cool, but take a look at som e of the geeks In the sum m er of 1985, the w are­ house-like building at 404 C olorado St. gave birth to a gay bar aim ed at a college crowd and featuring a m ore progressive mix of m usic than the other gay bars in tow n. Called H all's — after H all's Paint Factory, the building's original tenant — the club becam e an alm ost im m ediate success. The clu b 's repu­ tation for playing the city's best mix quickly spread through the under­ ground club scene and a diverse crowd m ade H all's its hom e. The club also gained fam e as a hom e for the d esigner drug Ecstasy. In 1985 Ecstasy (or X) was still legal and at H all's anyone could buy the small tablets at the door. Tim G luege, doorm an for The Boathouse, a gay bar located direct­ ly across the street from the build­ ing that housed H all's, sm iles when he recalls the club the sum m er opened. " It w as in cred ible," G luege said. "T h ere was all that good, new m u­ sic and X w as legal and H all's was right in the middle of it. It was an era all in itself. For anyone who ex­ perienced it, there will never be a tim e like it ag ain ." W ith H all's cam e the birth of the enorm ously popular Club Iguana, a club that m oved to different build­ ings each night and featured under­ ground m usic. The success of Club Iguana brought a different crowd to It soon becam e m ore and H alt's. m ore of a G reek hangout and began to cater less to the gays and under­ ground crow d, G luege said. "T h e fun people that had m ade H all's so popular and so different stopped g o in g ," he said. "T h e ow n ­ ers got a little greedy and turned their loyalties to w hoever paid the Trash Disco Night on Thursday evenings has become a favorite among the eclectic Lizard Lounge crowd. m o st th e G re e k s stopped going and there w as no one th e re ." nam e of Lizard L ounge and drew a crow d o f 2,000 through its doors on the first night. ca sh . T h e n In the spring of 1987 H all's closed with little w arning to em ployees or patrons. Since then the club has reopened under several nam es such as The Edge and Mind Erasers, but the at­ tem pts to bring back the atm os­ phere of H all's failed soon after flight. "Y o u can throw a thousand cans of paint over those w alls, but you can 't bring H all's b a ck ," G luege "E v ery o n e's grow n up and said. gone on to different things. It will never be the sam e a g a in ." "W e d o n 't w ant to be H a ll's," said H elen Rayborn, m anager of Lizard Lounge. "T h e only reason H all's w as so successful w as b e­ cau se X w as legal. You could have opened up a garage, called it H all's and sold X at the door and it would have been successful. "W e really felt A ustin was ready for som ething new . W e liked the idea of Pow er Tools in H ou ston — a club w h ere anything can happen. to bring som ething W e w anted com pletely different to like A u stin ." that Bruce G od w in, ow n er o f N um bers in H ou ston; and Bruce D avid son, a disc jockey from Los A n geles, Liz­ ard Lounge becam e a reality. Since its op en in g in Sep tem ber, the club has successfully draw n crow ds exceeding 1,000 each Satu r­ day night. The building actually h ou ses tw o clubs w ith sep arate en tran ces and jo in ed by a m utual d ance floors, stairw ay. O n e cov er charge gains entran ce the B assm ent, w hich featu res a rap/funk m ix, and Lizard Lounge, w hich con cen trates on industrial m usic. to both For both clubs, the focus is on the But on Sept. 3, the building at 404 Colorado St. reopened under the W ith the help o f Jo h n B eem an, ow ner of the PTL C lub in H ou ston; unusual. See Lizard, page 23 CROCODILESIN EVENING WEAR ... A nd Other Tales \ r 7113 Burnet Road 452-2807 In our 9th Year FAN CLUB 30% DISCOUNT! ATERBALLETTO l e t I t a l i a n B a l MONDAY NIGHT, OCTOBER 30 “K A SE 101” PARTY AND COSTUME CONTEST 9:00 P.M.-12:00 P.M. OVER $2300 DOLLARS IN CASH AND PRIZES TUESDAY NIGHT, OCTOBER 31 V.I.L. EXCHANGE NIG H T 7 TO 8 “Free Champagne” For all the Ladies. 490 BAR DRINKS, WINE, AND FROZEN DRINKS FOR THE LADIES AND $1.50 BOTTLED BEER FOR EVERYONE 8 TO 11 r\ . . " M 1 H I Two different program s: Friday, Nov. 3 at 8 p.m. and Sunday, Nov. 5 at 2 p.m. UT Bass Concert Hall. CHARGE-A-TICKET: 477-6060 It a lia n ballet t r o u p e A t e r b a lle t to p e r f o r m s tw o e u - n m ^ s o l m a g it a i (la n c e 11lied w ith L u r o p e a n f o lk lo r e — tales o l c r o u x li l r s in e v e n in g w e a r at a p a rts d e e p in a n i m a g i n a n fo rest, of a g ir l w h o lu e s o n a h ill w ith e lve s a n d a w itch, o l a d r e a m e r la t ín r e v e lin g m the glo w o l th e se ttin g s u n — set to the m u sic of V iv a ld i. A r e th a F r a n k lin . ( lu t k C o r e a , a n d e v e n m o re . I icke ts $ 1 5 , $ 1 2 ( S ID . SN K A N C l u b ) Iickets at all I I I M 1 it ket< Centers For a free mfrs of the delightful program note\, m il 171- N H BAKERY j M a f f i w i , M u f f i n. M u f f i n s B a y 1 • G e t 1 F R E E ! ! ! B i t k t U s i d . Blaeberry Roosevelt Oat Bran Baaaaa Nat Apple Walaat Blaeberry Braa c m » 459-5411 411£ 43r d 7* « , BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY « U SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6 PM * DENOTES STEREO SOUND GREAT HILLS 8 US 1831 SALAT HILLS TRAIL 794-8076 S H O C K E R ü THX 12 35 2 55 5 15 7 40 9 55 F A T M A N A N D L I T T L E B O Y ECU* 12 20 2 45 5 10 7 36 10 00 G R O S S A N A T O M Y t P G I S l o 1 00 3 10 5 20 7 30 9 45 s e a O F L O V E !£ * 12 302 505 10725945 D R Y W H IT E S E A S O N IS * 12 4 0 3 0 5 5 2 5 7 4 0 9 5 5 N E X T O F K IN E THX 1 00 3 15 5 35 7 45 10 00 L E T H A L W E A P O N 2 (S * 12 45 3 00 5 15 7 25 9 40 A B Y S S fPGia)* 1 1 0 4 1 0 7 1 5 9 55 HIGHLAND MALL IlLVARD HIGHLAND MALL » 451-7326 10 ALL s e a t s ALL TIMES ' BATM AN iPC is le 5 20 7 30 10 00 1 45 4 30 7 15 1 0 0 0 S A T & S U N CHEETAH 6 FHIEHDS É 5 15 7 1 5 9 15 2 0 0 3 45 5 30 7 30 9 30 S A T & S U N BARTON CREEK MOMC at LOOP 360 327-8281 G R O S S A N A T O M Y fG IS lTHX 12 4 5 3 0 0 5 2 0 7 3 5 1 0 0 0 FARENTNOOO frcisfl * 1 3 0 4 0 0 7 1 5 9 4 5 S E A O F L O V E H THX 12 30 2 45 5 00 7 20 9 35 A B Y S S f c i l V 1 15 4 15 7 15 10 00 U N C L E B U C K [pt;J 1 30 3 30 5 30 7 30 9 30 HIGHLAND 1 1-3 S at MIDDLE a LIE RD 4 3 4 -9 5 6 2 K IL L M E A O A IN ® * 12 00 2 00 4 00 6 00 8 00 10 00 W O R T H W INNING 1 2 2 0 2 4 5 5 1 0 7 3 5 9 5 5 U N C L E B U C K [if .] * 12 05 1 55 3 55 5 55 7 55 9 55 T H E B E A R {pg]* 12 00 1 55 3 50 5 45 7 40 9 35 G R O S S A N A T O M Y IPGialTHX 12 30 2 45 5 00 7 15 9 30 N E X T O F K IN [R THX 12 15 2 40 5 05 7 30 9 50 B L A C K R A IN 1 * 12 0 0 2 30 5 00 7 30 10 00 S H O C K E R d * 12 05 2 30 5 05 7 35 9 50 FABULOUS BAKER SOTS lr; THX 12 10 2 35 4 55 7 25 9 55 S E A O F L O V E [«!» 12 1 0 2 3 5 5 0 0 7 3 0 1 0 0 0 OF THE OPERA INNOCENT MAN 2:45 5:30 7:45 10:00 October 30, 1989 Images THE DAILY TEXAN 11 C I N E M A R K T H E A T R E S MOVIES 12 I-35 N @ F.M. 1825 251-7773 J Z S s M r T u M d a y l ^ M S I ALL SEATS $2.75 FOR ALL TUES SHOWS EX CEPT B L A C K R A N . F A T V A N A O LD GRINGO n THX 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 LO O K W HO’S TALKING |P*.i3l THX 2:45 4:45 7:15 9:30 FATMAN ANO UTTLE BOY 2:30 5 0 0 7 3 0 10:00 [mal NOPASSES BLACK RAIN ® 2 30 5:00 7:30 10:00 N O P A S S E S SEA OF LOVE 2:45 5:30 7:4510:00 HALLOWEEN 5 m 3:155:157:159:30 SEX, LIES AND VIDEOTAPE 3 0 0 5 157:159:15 WORTH WINNING m 3:005:15 7:30 9:45 SHOCKER « 2:304:45 7:00 9:15 KILL ME AGAIN 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00 is WHEN HARRY MET SALLY 3:15 5:30 7:45 9:45 $2.75 Al shows before 6 pm FRANKIE'S BACK The silent movie w lh live music by Fr 'mx e on the 3-story toll V ssef Row tracker pipe orgo” Saturday, Oct. 28, 9 p.m. & Midnight Tuesday, Oct. 31, 7 & 10 p.m. UT Bates Recital Hall Charge-a-Ticket: 477-6060 £ ' D | E L a N D 0 f I ' D i e N a c h o I Í T t a T X r o i A M » * » . AUSTIN 6 SU}™* A D U L T V I D E O 521 TH OM PSO N O FF 183 1 MILE SO. of M ONTO PO LIS Phone 3 8 5 -5 3 2 8 A l i J a . J o p e n 2% h o u r s C A L L TH EATRE FOR TITLES A LL REN T ALS 2 FOR ONE EVERY OA y I MON. WED. & F R L t w o d a y s f o r t h e n o c i o f o n e RENTALS S 1-S 3 SALES S9.95-S54.95 T A P E E X C H A N G E DISCOUNT ■ M A G S: 8 0 ft* ma"°* ^ N R I a c k , k - SWINOEP A A LL M A H $150 All Seats ;: ¡ All Shows:i Jock Nicholson BATMAN 9 15 *w 5:009:50 NOPASSES FAR EN TN O O O (FG13) 2:307:20 «FORTH WINNING ( F B I 3) 2:405:00 7:159:20 NO KLBJ^iOOISCOUKT TICKETS NOPASSES LO OK WMO’S TALKIN G (FG13) 3:005:20 7:4510:00 NOPASSES KILL ME AGAIN (R) 4:006:008:0010:00 IMMEDIATE FAMILY (FG13) 1:453:35 5:35 7:309:45 B L A C K RAIN (R> 2:004:307:009:30 NO KLBJ-MO DOCOUNT TICKETS NOPASSES WHEN HARRY M E T B A LL Y (N) 2:104:45 7:259:30 STUDENT OMCOUNT OAKY M UST PR E SE N T CU R R E N T V A L D ID. (SPE CIAL E N G A G E M EN T S E X C L U D E D ) SH O C K E R (R) 2:455:307:55 10:20 KILL M E AGAIN (R) 3:30 5:45 8; 1510:30 LO O K WHOM TALKIN G 3:155:157:409:55 NOPASSES WORTH WINNING (F O l 3) 2:155:007:309:45 NO KlBJ4tOOOCOUNT TICKETS NOPASSES N E X T O F KIN (R) 2:155:007:40 10:05 T H E B E A R (FBI 3) 3:005:007:159:30 S E A O F LO VE (R) 3:155:307:5510:20 • L A C K RAIN (R) 2:004:45 7:3010:05 N onM uaom couuT tickets NOPASSES W M BDIATS FAM ILY (FG13| 3:255:408:00 10:20 NOPASSES SBX, LIBB A VIOCOTAFS (R| 2:455:257:5010:00 TH S BB AR (RG13) 3:155:157:409:45 FATMAN A W U TTLIB0T (FBI 3| 2:104:507:30 10:10 NO KLBJWOBCOUHT TICKETS NOPASSES LA LATRICE (R| 2:304:50 7:30 9:40 THE MUSIC TE A C H ER (FOl 2:505:15 7:409:50 STEVE KOK1NOS (512)451-0677 7329-A Burnet Rd. Austin, Texas 78757 VILLAGE TWIN $ 1 .0 0 BA TM A N (F O l 3| 2:355:00 7:259:55 C H I S T A N (O) 2:254:206:00 JO H N N Y HANDSOM E (R) 7:50 10:00 A Q U A R I U S 4 $ 1 . 0 0 BA TM A N ( F O l 3) 7:009:45 KICKBOX8R(R| 7:4510:05 JO H N N Y HANDSOM E (R) 9:55 O M O STBUSTERSII (FBI 8:00 CN CBTAN(0| 7:25 NIOMTMARI F T . 9 (R) 10:15 B A TM A N (FG13) 7:009:45 CN B BT6 N (G) 7:30 FIILO O F DREAMS (FOl 9:30 RIVERSIDE 1) 0 1 . 1 A R C I N E M A B A T M A N ena NICHOLSON, KEATON F n 7 0 0 . 9 4 5 12 15 Sat 1 3 0 .4 15. 7 00 9 45 12 15 Sun 1 30, 4 15. 7 00 9 45 M on Thur 7 0 0 9 45 KICKBOXER si VAN DAMME Fn & Mon Thur 9 30 S«l & Sun 4 30 9 30 MILLENIUM m KRIS KB C H ER Y L LBO O Fn ft Mon Thur 7 00 Sat ft Sun 2 00 7 00 m o n n rfm AUTdAY' A l l s e a t s - a l l s h o w s J M A N N W£ S T GA T £ 4P0fl W E S T G A T E B L V D Kevin CoNrm and Jotrm fart Jorm FIELD OF DREAMS 4:44 7:1» M S fg ) Mtckey Bourke m JOHNNY HANDSOME !g______ I N W M I Michael Keaton tom Bamtngm A J o t * Ntchotsoo m V 4:4» 1.SS 1QN0 EcTlI_______ BATMAN ( TIMES PUBLISHED ARE FOR TODAY ONLY I L A K E H I L L S 4 S O U T H W O O D 2 $ 1 . 0 0 MA D f . lk ’k x s M k w Ik o p K a lC o m f.iji I k u i 1 !B)oña9 flQrllnda AND HER SON j H Tonight • 7:00 p.m. I Hogg Auditorium ( v M I I French with subtitles Tonight 9:00 p.m. Hogg Auditorium___________ HAPPY HOUR M o n - F r i 3 p m - 7 p m D ra ft B eer M arg aritas F in g er F o o d EVERY SUNDAY ALL DAY HAPPY HOUR 5-12 a fij* "■ THE TAVERN r AIR c o n d itio n e d RESTAURANT & BAR Never to far from 12th and Lamar E ^ _ I F 1 F R E E J E L L - 0 S H O T on O ct 31 whan wearing a costume M o n thurs. Sun 11 am 12 pm • fri & Sat 11 am 1 pm • 474 74% • 922 W 12m T he myth about Sixth Street persists. It states that Aus­ tin's most commercially suc­ cessful entertainm ent locale was once an earthy, vibrant, pan- cultural, creative mecca, but short­ sightedness and greed transformed it into a soulless aural refuse factory in glittery disguise — a painful pim­ ple on the rear end of the proud Austin music scene. Singer/songwriter Nanci Griffith bolstered the myth when she sug­ gested that Sixth Street's "d ecline" symbolized her reason for moving from the Capital City to Nashville. She described the Sixth Street of her youth as a place where people regu­ larly danced to live conjunto music, an image which probably doesn't evoke a recent Friday night at Mag­ gie Mae's. Nonetheless, the myth betrays a touch of overweening romanticism that may be inflating Sixth Street's past — and at time demeaning its present. the same In Alan Govenar's book, Meeting the Blues: The Rise o f the Texas Sound, Austin is rightfully accorded consid­ erable attention as a source of musi­ cal activity. Yet, Govenar scarcely mentions Sixth Street, choosing in­ stead to focus on East 11th Street and legendary R&B clubs like the Victory Grill, perceiving that section of the city as the true wellspring of all that Austin music has wrought. This perspective is shared by club owner Clifford Antone, whose internationally famous An tone's originally opened on Sixth Street in "W hen I started on Sixth 1975. Street, there was nothing. It was a ghost tow n," Antone recalls. "I Jimmie it — me and started Vaughan, the Thunderbirds, Paul Ray, Angela Strehli and a bunch of other people." Brad First, owner of the Cannibal Club, one of Austin's premier sources of new music, concurs with Antone about Sixth Street's lack of activity in the mid-'70s. "W hen I first moved here, there w asn't a Sixth Street," First says. "A bout the only thing going on down here was Antone's and a couple of other things, but hardly any of the restau­ rants were really in existence. Not even Steamboat was there at that time. "T h e street's changed, if only be­ cause when I got here there really w asn't anything going on in the street. It was real rundown and all the buildings were piles of sh it." First opened his club on Sixth Street because it presented an avail­ able site, but he understands the misgivings that many people have about joining the mass of high-deci- bel humanity that lines the street every weekend. The Cannibal Club was designed to be "a n original- band musical show case," but many people tend to equate Sixth Street with cover bands and dance clubs. "I just know that the original-mu- sic crowd is not really prone to going down to Sixth Stree t," First says. "There hasn't really been an original music club that supported this area of the music scene that's been located on Sixth Street." Nonetheless, some would argue that Sixth Street has historically played an im­ portant role in Austin as a interaction. Paul center of social Sessums, owner of the Black Cat Lounge — a springboard for per­ formers like Timbuk 3 and Tony Perez — speaks from personal expe­ "Sixth Street has always rience. been vital," Sessums says. "In 1947, I was shining shoes down on Sixth Street. It was packed down there then. You'd find blues, a little bit of Mexican music, country and west­ ern." Sessums sees Sixth Street's evolu­ tion (or de-evolution) as part of a series of historical cycles. "Every 10 years or so you have a major change, and about every four years you have a flat shift," he says. "At the turn of the century it [Sixth Street] was basically a Jewish/ Lebanese area. The Lebanese and Jewish businessmen stayed up there till right after the Second World War was over. It changed into sort of a nighttime party strip instead of a daytime business dis­ trict." According to Sessums, race rela­ tions also played a significant role in the shape of the Sixth Street land­ scape. "It was mostly white and Mexican soldiers, and blacks were over on 11th Street," he recalls. "But then by the mid-'50s, when segregation was over, blacks started coming over and they stayed there till about 15 years ag o." At that point, key business and municipal leaders pinpointed Sixth Street as a potential growth area and began a gentrification program. The resulting changes still elicit bit­ terness from Antone over the forced removal of his club from its original site. "The city tore it d ow n," he notes. "The big developers Watson and Casey had it tom down, and then they went bankrupt. A whole block of great businesses, places like OK Records and Catman's, were tom dowri." First believes that Sixth Street's metamorphosis wras part of a coor­ dinated city plan to attract tourists. "It's just been a makeover on Sixth just devel­ Street," he says. "It's oped into exactly what they thought it should be, kind of a little enter­ tainment alley, a one-street, five- block-long French Q uarter." Such a conscious evocation of New Orleans not only means profits, it inspire ef­ fusive hyperbole, such as Billboard magazine's recent descrip­ tion of Sixth Street as Austin's "m ain drag for hot, live m usic," cit­ ing it as the center of "o n e of the most diverse and remarkably talent- rich club scenes anyw here." Nonetheless, John Wheat, Barker Texas History Center musical archi­ vist, finds the Crescent City analogy misplaced. "It's a little overblow n," Wheat says of Sixth Street's current state. "Bourbon Street it is not. Bourbon Street has that long tradition and it's evolved in a lot of different direc­ tion s." in that Sessums suggests the mid-'70s Sixth Street started on its path to becoming the "yuppie en­ clave” many Austinites love to hate. "A n architect and a couple of other upper-middle class white people started buying up property to do the urban renewal thing," Sessums says. "They'd buy cheap property and frill it up a little bit. They set off a whole chain reaction." According to Antone, the mixed results provide an example of naivete on the part of Austin devel­ opers. "Looking back on it, you can see that they didn't know what they were doing," he says. "Som e guys in and with thought they were going to be Don­ ald Trump. So a lot of people suf­ fered, a lot of small merchants suf­ fered." funny hair came local music A constant source of irritation among aficionados stems from the relative dearth of original music in Sixth Street clubs. Yet First believes the situation has only improved since the mid-'70s, noting that original music can be heard at his club, as well as other Sixth Street venues such as the Black Cat Lounge, Joe's Generic Bar, Raven's and Steamboat. He also argues that Sixth Street never occupied a place on the cutting edge of the local music scene. thing, but for "A ntone's ruled and that was the blues the outlaw country thing, everyone was going to the Broken Spoke, or Soap Creek Saloon, which was way out. For the new rock, punk thing, they were going to Raul's, which was down by the campus [where Texas Show ­ down Saloon currently resides]. Sixth Street just w asn't a thing. I re­ member the Atlantis Club being on Sixth Street and it was just kind of a hole to go that was dangerous into." W heat late- rem em bers lamented Sixth Street of a genera­ tion ago as a mere cog, not the driv­ the force, of the Austin music ing industry. "I don't think it was ever any more interesting a musical hotbed than any number of places in A ustin," he says. "I just don't think it was ever the mecca. It was one of about three or four active places that put Austin on the musical m ap." O ne factor that keeps many of the people who fre­ quented Armadillo World Headquarters and Raul's away from Sixth Street is an increas­ ingly well-publicized crime prob­ including several muggings lem, and violent incidents over the last several months. In an effort to com­ bat the overcongestion that seems to be exacerbating the situation, the Austin Police Department recently experimented with a policy of block­ ing off traffic on Sixth Street on weekend nights. Though the policy wreaks finan­ cial havoc on clubs like the Black Cat Lounge, which depend on walk-in business, Sessums supports the experimental measure. "I lose about $800 a w eek," he says, "because when they didn't have the streets blocked I'd have like 150 motorcyclists outside and they'd all come in and order beer to go. But the street was so damned packed that I was always on edge, thinking, 'W ho's going to be the first kid run over?' And the tensions were just terrible. "S o even though I'm losing m on­ ey, I really like the idea of closing the street off totally. For societal purposes, it's the best thing to d o ." First agrees with Sessums' assess­ ment. "M y report as a merchant on the street to the police department was, 'yeah, that worked. I like it.' " First is quick to add, however, that Sixth Street's crime problem does not match the hype. "C onsid ­ ering all the business, and how many people come down here on a weekly basis, the percentage is real­ ly very sm all," he says. Does all that Sixth this mean Street may actually become a vital source of musical creativity? First thinks the potential exists. "I'v e al­ ways thought it's improving. I've been a real optimist on the whole situation. Sessums remains skeptical. "It'll get more yuppie, and younger." If so, where does that leave sw ea­ ty, unvarnished stalwarts like Black Cat? "M y place will probably be a place like in the French Quarter, where tourists come into it," Ses­ sums says. "Tourists come because it's been there a long tirr ? or there's something distinctly difft “ent about it. I doubt if it will hold out much longer as a local haven." Antone remains disgusted about the destruction of his original club "W hat 1 without compensation. would like to see is for them to tear down the high rise, like they did to u s," he says. "I got things started there and they don't even have a plaque saying this is where An­ tone's was and saying what we did." Concerning Sixth Street's future, Antone can express only apathy. "I could care less really," he says. "If the whole place closed down, it wouldn't mean anything to m e." What has happened to live music on Austin's hip party strip? Could it be that there wasn't really that much there to begin with? Story by Gilbert Garcia LOOK WHO'S SERVIN’ O n S unday ! 476-5858 Serv ing continuously 11 A M - 10 FM 2113 Manor Road 4 blocks cast of 1-35 Austin's source for quality Futons, frames and accessories now has two locations to serve you. • V 476-4766 Ralph J. Branch D.D.S. ONLAYS A N D INLAYS Q. W hat exactly is a dental onlay, and how is it different from an inlay? A. O nlays are used if a tooth has been filled before and is no longer strong, or decay is extensive, or w hen a tooth cusp (the elevat­ ed tops of back teeth that grind food) breaks off, and m ore drilling and protection are required. An onlay is different from an inlay only in the am ount of tooth to be filled; a larger area needs an onlay. A n inlay lies within the surro u n din g tooth cusps; an onlay covers those cusps with gold, giving greater strength to the tooth and protecting the rest of it from breakage. If a smaller cavity can take an inlay, this is preferable, since less of the tooth will have to be drilled away. Silver or amalgam fillings can fill a tooth, but cannot protect it the way a gold onlay can. The onlay prevents the w eakened tooth from splitting in strength what it accom plishes makes it well worth the difference. case the patient applies extra is needed, in chewing. A gold onlay costs more, but w hen it ..£2QZ.Rv)fll... Emergency # • » open mike Nobody must get ‘Stone’-d Magazine insults music with its best-of-'80s hit list By Mike Clark R olling Stone becam e the talk of a million cocktail parties its b e s t-o f-th e - la s t-2 0 - v e a r s lists; apparently, the thrill of such in 1987 w ith But for notoriety was so heady the Stone-ers that they'v e given the '8 0 s the sam e arbitrary, sim plistic, in­ sulting and short-sighted treatm ent. In case you 've been under a rock recently — the list was in USA Today and the evening new scasts — the C lash 's London C alling w as No. 1. No argu m ent there. T h e rem aind er of the top 10 is an m ixture of the good (R .E .M .'s M urm ur, Talking H eads' Remain in Light), the bad (The Joshua Tree, Thriller) and the repu l­ sive (Born in the U .S .A .). The rest of the list is sim ilarly schizoid, with AC D C 's Back in Black nearly 50 places above Sign 'o' the Times, and Sonic Y o u th 's Daydream Saturn sandw iched betw een ZZ T op 's Elim inator and Tina T u rn er's Private Dancer. These salient exam ples — and there are m any, m any oth ers — raise som e obv ious q u estio n s: "S e z w ho? W ho can com pare XTC to M a­ donna to Black U huru? And who can say that C aptain B eefheart is only one point better than D ef L ep ­ pard?'' The answ er, of cou rse, is ''rock critics.'' Since pop m usic has as yet no stand ard s aesth etic w ell-defined (unlike film , literature or the visual arts), m ost review s, including those in Im ages, do little m ore than say " it's good becau se I say it's g o o d ." M ost of our readers know7 that, and many have been w ont to express their d ispleasu re with our op inions. the A verage Pop Fan has been b row beaten by the critical Mafia of m iddle-aged w hite m ale burnout '60s throw backs into sw al­ low ing a lot of m usical A n nie G reen Springs and calling it Bordeaux. Do you really like Springsteen all that m uch? If you do, aren't there also a num ber of less fam ous-an d-su ccess- ful perform ers w ho you adm ire nearly as m uch, and w ho d id n't m ake the Stone Hot 100? It's un d eniable that Bruce has unique gifts and has m ade fantastic m usic. But reason he the only m akes the oat-bran-eaters w ho hold rock criticism by the short hairs so tu m escent is becau se they, like he, '60s on the East grew up in the their C oast, and sp ent m ost of ad olescences the sam e streets cars girls fixations as he did. sw eating over A nyone w ho com es from a d iffer­ en t fram e of reference probably has d ifferent m usical priorities, but no on e listen s to them. This tunnel vi­ sion is apparen t in the dearth of the non -w hite/n on -rock LPs on Stone's and eclectic supp osed ly bound ary-free hit parade. O ut o f 100 records, only tw o country album s appear — Lyle Lo­ vett's 1986 debut and Steve E arle's G uitar Town, the latter of w hich is rock-oriented. T h ere's only one reg­ gae album , the adm ittedly brilliant Red by Black U huru; on e "w orld m u sic" record, a Sow eto m usic com pilation midw'ifed by critical param our Paul Sim on; and nothing in a language other than English — no King Su n n y A de, Fela Kuti or Ruben Blades. It Takes a Nation N o jazz un less you count Sting al­ though that w as probably in ten tio n ­ al. Three rap records — Public Ene­ m y's ..., Run- D .M .C .'s d ebut and LL Cool J's Radio. Stetsason ic, Ice-T, D e La Soul, G rand m aster Flash, Afrika Bambataa are all consp icu ou s by their absence. A m inim al soul presen ce, 13 in all, four by Prince, one each by M i­ chael and Jan e t Jack son , and noth­ ing save Sign o' the Times released after 1985. If Luth er V andross and Tina T u rner d eserve it, so do Bobby Brow n and T eren ce Trent D 'A rby. Linda T h o m p son (with h er h u s­ band Richard) and Tracy C hapm an are in the T op 10, follow ed by a m ere 10 o th er w om en, m ostly in bands (N atalie M erchant, C h ryssie H ynde, E xene C ervenka) and m ost­ ly at the bottom . N one o f these w om en are undeserving, but ZZ Top and C row ded H ouse m ade it and Joan Jett and th e G o-G os d id n't. G o figure. Even the "m o d ern ro ck " bands on the list are the k n ee-jerk faves of critics w h o'v e been told by the in ­ d ustry, and in turn en jo in ed us, to like these band s m ore than others — Son ic Y ou th , th e R eplacem ents, Joy D ivision, the Feelies, H usker th e re 's n o th in g D u. C e rta in ly w rong w ith ch oices, but th ese th e re 's about a billion oth er bands that also d eserve to be here. See Stone, page 23 THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS PRESENTS TTTTTT EAST OF THE SUN, WEST OF THE MOON adapted by Brian Krai A Theatre for Youth presentation, this age-old tale of a girl’s battles with trolls, hags and gargoyles is given lively new treatment by UT Drama. The youngsters will delight as evil falls to a fiesty kid’s determination. Nov. 3, 7 p.m. & Nov. S ,2 A 4 p.m. at Opera Lab Theatre RECKLESS by Craig Luca» All is not calm, all is not bright on Christmas Eve when well-to-do Rachel is hurled into the snowy night. In her nightmare-albeit a comic one-the heroine meets an unexpected cast of characters as she attempts to run from her own rocky past. Nov. 7-11, 8 p.m. in the T h e a tre Room Tickets on sale at all UTTM TicketCenters. Charge-a-Ticket: 477-6060. Call 471-1444 for more information. A U S T IN S L A R G E ST SE L E C T IO N O f RO LE P L A Y W G .6 A M E S 4 f t Posters T-shirts 4 f t Baseball Cards A Large Selection of Back Issue Comics 4 f t Collectors Supplies and Information ,4 ft Discount Subscription Service Available RPG, FASA, Palladium BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE.. WANT ADS...471-5244 ■ ' reí/** m , . i M O N D A Y K T B C K V U E [ K X A N I K B V O KLRU TBS BET M A X A M C CB S This Morning Good Morning Today America J L 2 L J B L S L j Ghostbusters M GED . (■05) Grili Sotoflex About Movies L f i J |6 30) Sign Oft PRIME TIME 7:00 p m © X GARFIELD’S HALLOWEEN ADVENTURE | 1 9 8 5 i Garfield enlists 0d>e s company to go out on Halloween to get more canoy when they get caught in a storm, they take shelter in a haunted house □ O ® MACGYVER Richard Dea” Anderson, Michael Des Barres MacGyver again f-nds himselt m an uneasy alliance with his old nemesis Murooc. as they mount a desoerate attempt to save M u rdoc s s¡ste' Q o ® ALF Max Wright Anne S c hedeen Neai Tanner aDuses his brother W O e s hospitality by moving m, causing ALF to hide and scheme to drive Neal away Q O © 21 JUMP STREET Johnny Depp Peter DeLuise Hanson and Penha ! encounter a teenage psychic who asse ts m their investigation oí a ser¡es of high school arson fires p O T f MACNEIL/LEHRER NEWSHOUR © VIDEO LP George Clinton © REBELDE Grecia Colmenares Ricardo Dan” Novela de Argentina © MOVIE PUMPKINHEAD (1988) Lance Henriksen. John DiAquino When a onely man s young son is killed by reckless motorcyclists, he con¡ures up a murderous evil spirit of revenge R ' © BEWITCHED © * MOVIE SOLARBABIES (1986) Richard Jordan Jam; Gertz The earth of the distant 'uture is a dry barren remembrance of its past glory It s a place where cruelty reigns and a glass of water is precious PG13 © SOUTH BANK: ANDY WARHOL Famous for his pop art. underground movies and New York partying this film attempts to uncover the artist behind the hype through media interviews © WAR STORIES Battle For Warsaw © CHURCH STREET STATION f f i MEMORIES OF CHINA Chinese food expert Kenneth Lo lands in Beging where Peking duck faces stiff competition from Kentucky fried chicken (Pt 2 Of 2) © JIM HENSON’S GHOST OF FAFFNER HALL In this episode. Improvised Music Mimi and Rift discover a hidden musical maze in Faffner Hah Ladysmith Black Mambazo and Gil Evans band guest p © NFL MONDAY NIGHT MATCH-UP Minnesota vs N Y Giants © WWW MOVIE THE GOODBYE GIRL (1977) Richard Dieyiuss. Marsha M ason An over the hill Broadway actress with a precocious daughter finds true love after she reluctantly agrees to share her apartment PG © SW ISS FAMILY ROBINSON Martin Milner Cameron Mitchell A shipwrecked family battles storms wildlife and pirates to turn a deserted island into a tropica paradise n the early 1800s 7:05 p m © * * * MOVIE POLTERGEIST (1982, JoBeth Williams. Craig T Neison Supernatural spirits step out of a TV screen to turn a peaceful suburban home into a scene of terror PG 7:30 p m © X PEOPLE NEXT DOOR Jeffrey Jones Mary Gross Aboy s Halloween party turns into a mghmare !or Wa'ter when various creatures o' the night start arriving p © ® THE WICKEDEST WITCH Rue McCianahan. Raffi DiBlasio An evil witch enLsts the help of a cadre of gargoyles on Halloween to help her end the curse that nas banished her to the netherworld for 300 years © NEW ODD COUPLE © MR ED © CROOK & CHASE © MOVIE FEDS (1988) Rebecca DeMornay Mary Gross A couple of mismatched FBI rookies try to make the grade with hilarious results PG13 p © NFL MONDAY NIGHT MAGAZINE 7:50 p m © DISNEY SALUTES THE AMERICAN TEACHER (1989) Barbara Bush Top teachers across the country are recognized for their personal achievements and accomplishments 8:00 p m 0 X MURPHY BROWN Cand'ce Bergen Pat Corley An anonymous tipster shares the same sizzling iead about a goverment scandal with Murphy and Fiank cause some unhealthy competition p O ® ABC MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL Vikings vs Giants (L) © ® MOVIE Settle The Score NBC MONDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES (1989) Jac'yn Smith Howard Duff A Chicago policewoman returns to her hometown 20 years after being raped to track down her attacker p © © ALIEN NATION As Halloween approaches, a serial killer is stalking Newcomers with an MO which is eerily similar to one of their most grisly legends □ © ® TRAVELS Film producer Richard Goodwin travels by tugboat and barge from London to Pans, expiormg rivers and canals and meeting peopie and cu'tures p © VIDEO SOUL Host Donnie S mpson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recordmg stars © DULCE DESAFIO Adela Norega Eduardo Yanez Novela de Mexico © w w * MOVIE YOUNG MR LINCOLN (1939: Henry Fonda Alice B rab> The story of Lincoln s eariy years beginning m 1832 when he was a young iawyer. s enacted © PATTY DUKE ffl SAFARI The Silent Hunter © NASHVILLE NOW © OUR CENTURY: THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION The Red F ag s ratsed as the Communists ead the peopie to revolution on November 7. 1917 © YACHTING San Francisco B>g Boat Senes R3C6 2 © * * * MOVIE MY FAIR LADY (1964) Audrey Hepbu-” Rex Hamson Enchanting musical from Snaw s Pygmahon with Professor Henry Higgins transforming a guttersnipe into a regal lady to win a bet G 8:30 p m © X FAMOUS TEDDY Z Jon Cryer Alex Rocco Teddy begins a relationship with a glamorous star when she mvites him home to co o k As the relationship begins to sizzle her husband returns home p © MOVIE WAXWORK (1988¡ Zacn Gall gan. Deborah Foreman A group o’ teenagers slip into a new wax museum after hours for a little private en|oymen: Admission is free. but it could cost them their lives R © CAR 54 WHERE ARE YOU? © JAZZ COUNTERPOINT: DANNY BARKER Host Billy Tayior welcomes jazz guitarist Danny Barker a native Tennessee folk hero who s never travelled tar from his mountain home 9:00 p m © X DESIGNING WOMEN Delta Burke Annie Potts When Charlene s cousin moves to Atlanta with her perfect family Charlene discovers that her cousm is being physically abused by her husband p © © STAR TREK © ® ART OF THE WESTERN WORLD In a look at the art and architecture of the early 17th century. Michael Wood outlines the Baroque style m the paintings of Cortona and Caravaggio © PORTADA Teresa Rodriguez © SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE qp n e v y s © HAITI: DREAMS OF DEMOCRACY (1987) This impressionistic him explores the cultura! and political state of Haiti one year after the tali of the Duvaher dictatorship © AMERICA COAST TO COAST Niagara Falls © SHORTSTORIES An astronaut and an alien discover universal truths a Gothic thriller set in a spooky mansion, and a secretary who s boss is in the bedroom © WWW MOVIE TUCKER: THE MAN & HIS DREAM 1988) Jet* Bridges Joan Alien In the 1940s Preston Tucker had a vision of building the car of the future His genius and ambition were no match for Detroit s Big Three carmakers PG13 p © SWIMSUIT 89 © MOVIE THEY LIVE 11988) Roddy Pipe: Meg Foster A third world nation planet Earth .s taken ever by first world aliens through hypnotic, suggestion in the m ass media R 9:30 p m 0 X NEWHART Dick hopes to spend time with his father, but ail Dad wants to do s watch television Not even the arrival of a baseball legend noves him (R) p © ww MOVIE GARGOYLES 1972, Cornel Wilde Jenn ’er Sa l An anthropoiog-st and his photographer daughter enroute to Mexico to research a book on demonology ae _____ Cnt Duc*v a Joan Rivers Sally AM :38 10 11 12 Pnce is Rigm Young & Restless News Beautiful Home Strangers Lovmo All My Children Sesame Street (TV Dennis Beaver Bradv Bunch Regis 4 Kathw Lee Burnett Mama s Scrabble Concentra! n Gold Girls 227______ Family Ties Gome' Pyle Generations Hooan Days Of Our Fall Guy ITV Lives Another World Movie Birth Of The Blues Mr Rogers 35) B wtc S pc P'OQtam Spc Program S pc Program Movie Law vs Briiy 05) House Spc Program S pc P'OQram M o v e Outlay* (0 5 ) Little House 01 Dark Shadows (0 5 ) Perry Mason (0 5 ) Chamber 01 Horrors ( 05) T & J (3 5 ) Fimt {0 5 ) Fimt Our V oc e s Video LP Odd Coupie Video Sou: Video V ’b'ations Movie Cry 0* Werewori Movie____ WerewoM Curr Affair DuckTales ITV Chip N Dale Happy Days 35) B radv Rap Show Mr Rogers ! 05) Munst Poltergeist Sky VdeoCountry an t On TV As The World One Lite To Turns I'v e Guiding Light General Santa Barbara 5 PM a CB S News ABC News Hospi‘a: Hunter Donahue News News USA Today MacGyver Geraldo Hard Copy ET____ News News Cosby Garfield Next Door Murphy Teddy Z Designing Newhart News Cheers In Edition Oprah Winfrey Jeopardy1 NBC News News Wheei ALF Wicked News Carson L & Shirley Sesame____ ( 3 5 ) Gd T Viceo LP Webster Street ( 0 5 ) HbtH Soft Notes 3 s Company 321 Contact 35) Andy Who s B o s s’ Nancy Sews ( 0 5 ) Jeffe Our Voices Night Ct 21 Jump Street Bus Rpt MacNen Lehr er I 35; Santo 05) Poltergeist Video LP Odd Couple Video Sot,: ABC Monday Night______ Mowe Settle The Score Alien Nation Travels Football Star T'ek Western World Art Movie Arsen ,o Hall PO V Gargoy'es Video LP Movie Vampire Friend M o ve M o ve Behfld W'fh D-r'a” Office O oo's Crook________ Sloppy Dae Movie China Nashviiie Now Heathcih Den-’S Movie Pottergest Mcvie Pumpkinhead Movie Wixwory On Stage American Magazine D o n : S t Thmk Fas: Ma*e G'ade Insp Gadget Looney Tj~es Church St Bewitched Crook M- Ec Nashville Now Patty Ou*e Ca' 54 Sat Nile Movie House Of Strangers Country Comedy Movie Young V- Lmcom Qn Stage SCTV M o ve House Chu'Ch St 0* St'angers Croo* Laugh ,n Vy 3 S o 's Pat Satak News Show AM Night Heat Niohtline Twitrte Zone Letterman Santord Alter Hours Oh Center Exp.ore- Sh;n,ng Nashvilie Now Donna Reed Odd Couple Movie Midnight Love CNN S g n Oft (1 5 ) Better Ou Voices M o ve Young 10 11 7 AM 1 30 a AM 0 30 Q AM 3 30 1 0 “ 11 “ 1 2 5 4 PM • 30 9 PM 30 A Aoua Viva Enamorada TV Mujer Mi Segunda 3 Í Madre Cristina a n o 30 * c n * ;30 3 6 !■ 7 PM JO * 8 - Noticiero Señora Rebelde 9 I f l o ­ l l z Aquí Esta Aquí Esta 12 ^ Amor Ma*e Room Bewtrhed DISNEY © Donald Dumbo Movie Cmdereiia You 4 Me Disney Presents Lunch Box Dumbo Big Bud In China Factory Pooh Beaties Raccoon Donald Ktus Micxev Mouse M o v * Friendship In W G N © F N N B R A V O f f i nvestments Market Preview D I S C O V E R ffi A R T S IQ H B O f f i E S P N f fi S H O W f f i ----------- Architecture 0! Frank Lloyd Movie Seven Minutes lr. (Conti Cont) SoortsCerte, Movie 1 Own Assignment Wnght Heaven Ar coins Bozo Teddv RuxDirt Movie Albur de 3ugs Bunny Amor Beaver MommQ Anne Frank Movie Feds Professional Fantasy Island MarketLine American Album Comedy Break God • U N I m m Tramposa Joan Rivers A M El Derecho de Nacer Geraldo News MarketWatch World Tastes PasQuale Golden Aqe Of Larceny Mowe A Touch On Locat.on Midday Market Discovery On Go Animal World Wilderness Dream MktWatch PM Mom Nature The Racecourse Movie Botany Bay Movie Smokey And The Band*! II Movie Out 01 The Shadows Rpt Investors IRS Tax Beat MktWatch PM Wall St Countdown MarketWrap Evening News Art Market Americas Business South Bank Andy Warhol Counterpoint Movie Rosa Luxemburg A Griffith D Van Dyke Fact Of Life Yooi Bear C O P S DuckTales Chip & Dale Fun House W KRP Cheers Nioht Court Movie Soiarbabies Newhart Hill Street Blues Movie Chamber Discovery On Go Washington Wrestling Schoolboy Fr Irving Movie Again Dancing Frog Truck Chill The Unicom Movie 1 Own Finnegan Begm Go Kart Chmp The Racecouise SportsCentet Robin Hood Vienna Movie Tucker The Man & His Movie Bless The Beasts And Profiles Chronicle Survival Wtd Golden Aoe Movie A Touch 01 Larceny Comedy Break Children Profiles Chronicle Memories Of China Our Century Survival Wid Babar Fattier Hall Movie Feds Getting Fit Workout Body Motion BodvShapinQ Professional Tenn.s Sportraits Bow; no Wrld Sunxts! M D S SoortsLoo* NFL Trivia Match-Up N Fl Maoazine Yachting World Tastes Pasouale Passport Secrets 01 Nature Mom Nature Great Escape Wrld Momtoi War Stones Satan Hollywood Challenge At The Improv Sport g Life Outdoor Life Memones Ot China Wrld Monitor Our Century Rendezvous ( 5 5 ) Kies In (25 ) Common Threads 1 3 U 2 _________ Muscle Mag SportsCenter NFL Great Moments NFL G'eat Moments Movie Goodbye family Rob nso ( 50) Teacher Movie M y Fan Lady Girl Live , 40; Wise Guys (20) Rich Ha: Spike Jones Movie Cmde'elia 1989 T V Listing Inc Ft Worth. Tx Dulce Desafio • Portada News Haiti Dreams Cst To Cst Shortstories Movie Tucker Swimsuit 89 M o v e Tne> Uní Y Niños Chas Charge Investment Animal World Wilderness Movie Albur de 01 Horrors Andy Warhol 10:30 pm © X CHEERS □ © ® BEST OF CARSON Guests Winners of the Los Ange es MuSit Center S Youth Competition (R) © NEW ODD COUPLE © ww MOVIE THE SHINING ’ 9 8 0 Jack Nicholson Shelley Duvan A man and wfe with a small son are employed to took after a resort hote1 tngh m the Colorado mountains Based on the book by Stephen King R Q © MY THREE SONS © HILL STREET BLUES W last Van On East Ferry Ave © CROOK & CHASE ffi SPORTSCENTER 10:40 pm ffi * MOVIE WISE GUYS 1986 Danpy DeVito Joe Piscopo Goofba" gangsters be! a bundle ot the boss bucks on the wrong horse swipe a killer s Cadillac and party on the don s credit card R 10:55 pm © KIDS IN THE HALL Da>e Foley Bruce McCuiloch The critically acoaimed Canadian comedy troupe puts its custon O © B R O T H E R S g O 3 M A C N E I L / L E H R E R N E W S H O U R f f i D E S M O N D S 0 R E B E L D E G recia C o lm e n a re s Ricardo Da- 1 N o ve la de Arge ntina f f i ** M O V IE L IT T L E N IK IT A i 1 9 8 8 1 S idn ey Poitier R ive r P h o e n ix A yo un g Am erican boy struggles to save his fa m ily w hen he through an P Bt agent that his parents are S o vie t 'earns term [5 P G g sleeper spies 0 3 B E W IT C H E D f f i * M O V IE H A L L O W E E N II ( 1 9 8 1 ) Ja rm e L e e C urbs P a m e la S u s a n S h o o p T h e m ad Killer continues to stalk a yo u n g girl this tim e through 7 Im p eria1 to w a rd s the Allied cause the hails of a near deserted hospital R S ) G E O R G E S O L T I f f i W IL D L IF E C H R O N IC L E S M o s t Intelligent f f i W O R L D W A R I R ob ert R yan G e rm a n y sinks the Am eric an ship and propels the U S f f i M O V IE P U N C H L IN E (1 9 8 8 ) Sa v F e e T o m H a n k s A subu rba n N e w Je rs e y housew ife struggles to fulfill he- dream of bec om ing a sta n d -u p c o m ic and seeks guidance tro m a lonely driven com m C D A D V E N T U R E Con quer T h e Arctic from T ro m s o N o rw a y (P t 1 O f 2) C D * M O V IE P H A N T A S M II S c n m m Regg«e Bannister T w o yo u n g pais risk 1 9 8 8 ) A n g u s R g it all to s to p the evii and m urdering Tan M a n tro m dulling into the skulls of the living w ith his tradem ark silver s ph eres R CD S U P E R S E N S E T H E M A K IN G O F S U P E R S E N S E scenes look at the techniques and equ ipm ent ,1 9 8 8 ) T h is pro gra m takes a behind the used to m ak e the s en es 7 :0 5 p m f f i * * M O V IE H E A V E N W IT H A G U N G len n F o rd C a ro lyn Jo n e s A gunslinger turn ed preachei m a sm all le to n n e d w estern to w n sets up a church and b e c o m e s em broiled m a teuti 19 6 9 over water rights P G 7 :3 0 p m Q I H A G A R T H E H O R R IB L E H a g a ' returns h om e to his fam ily after years o ' pillaging to discover that Ins h ouseh old is a s ha m bles m this anim ated s p e o a : g Q U H E A D O F T H E C L A S S D an F n s c h m a n D a n ie 1 S c h n c d e i A rvid and D e n n is get the o pp o rtun ity to p te s e n ! then science project for possible inclusion on the next space shuttle m ission g Q ® K A T E & A L L I E g 0 3 B A B Y . I'M B A C K f f i A M E R IC A N M O V IE L E G E N D S A M U E L G O L D W Y N This series of specials offers pro fn es o ' celebrated H u .iy w o o d art sts T h is installm ent p ro ' ¡es legendary producer philanthropist Sam u el G o id w y n Q M R EO C D J U S T F O R T H E R E C O R O d e m olish a house f f i t h e T W E N T IE T H C E N T U R Y W alter C io n k .te The e ve nts leading up to the hist b o m b in g o* e Dee brothers T o k y o are exam in ed C D D A N G E R B A Y D o n n e lly R h o d e s Ocean H eilm a n D oc R o b e a s the tio u b le s h o o tm g v e te tm anan and his tanu iy live a a d v e n tu 'o u s ufe m the bea uty of C an ada g 8 :0 0 p m © cZ J A K E A N D T H E F A T M A N g © 2 4 D O O G IE H O W S E R . M O N en P a t n c H a m s Lis a D ean R y a n Fru stra ted after a string ot broken dates W a n d a breaks up w ith D oo g ie H e m ean w hile m ust m ediate betw een a bitter w ife and tier stricken husban d g 0 3 1 N IG H T C O U R T Jo h n La rro q u e tte R ic h a id M o " D an takes Bull lo a sw inging s - g 'e s n gt ’ club and teaches him the subtleties of seduction n e xch an ge for a loan g O ® * * * M O V IE T H E G O D F A T H E R (P T 1 O F .1 9 7 2 , M d iio n B ra n d o Al Pac m o S to ry of 2 ) syn dicate ctnettam his tann iy ¡Je and ope ration s in the crim e w orld R O ® M A R K R U S S E L L C O M E D Y S P E C IA L Russel creates hilarious son gs and C o m m e u U n c s h u m the atest headlines to pon ' out s o m e ot the iu m n e s t sigrts of the tun es ( Q V ID E O S O U L H o s t D o n m e S im p s o n counts d o w n the h ottest urban c o n te m p o ra ry m usic videos and in terview s re coid m g stais f f i D U L C E D E S A F I O A dela N o n e g a Ed u a rd o Y a n e z N o ve la de M e x ic o M O V IE H E L L S A N G E L S i f 9 3 0 i Je a n © * Harlow Ben L y o n D e e d e d by H o w ard H u g h e s and Ja m e s W hale th .s tale ot W orld W ar | dv,ato«s features spectacular aena>,tooi#ge '■ s * * © G R E E N A C R E S f f i A L V IN A I L E Y D A N C E T H E A T R E T H E S T A C K U P , C R Y A lvin Aaey Alice C oitra ne Th e c o m p a n y p e rfo rm s Th e S ta ck U p a gritty look a? N e w Y o ’ k s street ¡Te and C ry A lley s tribute to black w om en C D W IN G S N o rth A m erican B 2 5 C D N A S H V I L L E N O W C D R O A D T O W A R R o o s e v e " s N e w Dea focuses the co un try s energy on the h om efron t w hen the U n ite d S ta te s ba th es a - ec ono m ic depression f f i B IL L IA R D S B ru n s w c k W o rld Ope". 9 Ba C h a m p io n s h ip s fro m L a s V e g a s . N V W o m e n s Final B eardon vs K e m n sto n (T ) © + * M O V IE M I L L IO N D O L L A R M E R M A ID 11 9 5 2 1 Esth er W illia m s . V id o r M ature B ased on the life ot A n n e tte Kellerm an daughter of an Australian m usic *eacher w ho regained the use of her lim bs by s w im m in g the crippied 8 :3 0 p m O 3? A N Y T H IN G B U T L O V E Ja m ie L e e C urbs Richard Kind W h e n H a n n a h tries to befriend an the p'an unpopular f a d checker at the m aga zin e ba ckfiies and H an n ah taces an unpleasant responsibility g O ® N U T T H O U S E M o lly Hag an Brian M c N a m a ra Sally panics w he n Charles hires a beautiful public relations co nsultan t to generate business for the hotel g O ® T I M E L I N E T h e m o d e m W est s distrust ot R u ssia is b a c e a b ie . m p art, to 1 2 4 7 . w he n a papal e n v o y m et w ith the m ig h ty M o n g o l hordes led by G e n g h is Kh an g © C A R 54 W H E R E A R E Y O U 7 8 :4 5 p m C D C E L E B R IT Y C L O S E -U P T un e m for probing interview s w ith this m o n th s h ottest stars and find out about their exciting lives after the cam eras s to p Bill Harris h osts 9 :0 0 p m O C T W IS E G U Y Ken W ah W hen Vtnnie is given a b o x belongin g to his late Pattie D Arba nvth e brother he d is c o ve rs a diary ot his father that unlocks the truth about his past □ © a T H E B A R B A R A W A L T E R S S P E C IA L Barbara s gu ests include T h e D u c h e ss o ' Y o rk actress Kath leen Turner and actor Te d D a n s o n g © Q U A N T U M L E A P S co tt B ax a. S a m m ust feign blin dn ess w hen he ¡eaps into the life ot a blind concert pianist thou gh he fore se es 19 6 4 ! a chance to use his actual vistor g O i f T H O M A S H A R T B E N T O N U s m g archiva footage h om e m o vie s a id in terview s w ith those w h o knew him this film otte rs a a fascinating p o 'tia it of the influential artist g © S U P E R E S T E L A R 0 'g a B -e e s * © M O V IE T H IN G S C H A N G E A m e c h e Jo e M a n te g n a A C hicago shoe shine m an agiees to take a m in d e r rap tor a m obste r in return for a fish ig boat Out thin gs change pg g © S A T U R D A Y N IG H T L IV E 19 8 8 ) Do- © * * M O V IE N A T IV E S O N M att D c o r A b e g.ns to un derstan d the o ppression ot racial teat w t i f lo v e n p o v e n s h e d 19 year old yo uth tie accidently kills a w ealth y w hite gm 19 8 6 V to P G C D S U R V IV A L U S S F m k¡ f f i T H E V IE T N A M W A R W IT H W A L T E R C R O N K IT E W aiter C ro nkite H ere is a vivid portrait of the Q u een C ¡ty of the S o u th that becam e a centei of corruption w ilt black ' aike ts and d e s p e ó te h ospitals f f i 1S T & T E N M IN D G A M E S 0 J S ■ ms. S h a n n o n T w e ed W nei a hot new rookie a” .ves T D and Christie m u s t learn to handle not only the player but m s f f i L A D IE S P R O B O W L IN G T O U R S 3 0 000 T e m p e O p e n fro m T e m p e A Z i L ) M O V IE B A T 21 f f i * D a . r.y G lover A >econnn s s .eic e pilot - s ks his lterferm g lather g ,1 9 8 8 ) G en e H a c km a n its legendary * * hfe and a court m artial to rescue <1 d ow n ed m issile intelligence expert R 9 :0 5 p m f f i C H IC O M E N D E S V O IC E O F T H E A M A Z O N This s p e o a 1 ieve ais the exploitation of the ram tom st and poin ts out the viable im pact a stio n g international n o ve m e n t m ight have m helping to revive m e tores ts 9 :3 0 p m © N O T IC IE R O U N IV IS IO N Ed m on Nor to d © S C T V C D P R E D A T O R S A N D P R E Y P red ators O ’ The Sky C D O N S T A G E f f i KID S IN T H E H A L L ( W F 0 ey B m r e M cC u iio c h Th e f i t i .1 c o m e d y trou pe puts its cu stom a rily biza ire s ;v O'- e v e 'y d a y eve n ts g , a< t a- ed C .m ao tarented co m e d ian s Jo h n M u lro o n e y and Cary O d e s team up lor a round 0! laughs f f i M O V IE M E M O R IE S O F M E 190S) B Jiy K T B C a ( D K V U E a a K X A N a n K B V O K L R U 7 A M ' .30 C B S This M orning Good M o m mg Toda y Ghosttw sters Lila s ' (-05) G * America • Dennis Beaver * M r Rooers 35) B wtc October 30, 1989 Images T H E D A ILY T EX A N 17 M A X A M C H A S H H IC K Scrabble Concentrat n Gold Girts 2 2 7 Bradv Bunch Regis & Kattiie Lee Burnett M am a s Lives Another W orld Santa Barbara Mo v í G 1 Blues Sesam e Street ITV * . . 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