T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r a t The University of Texas a t Austin Twenty-Four Pages Vol. 79. No. 135 Copynght 1980, Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved (USPS 146-440) Austin, Texas. Friday, April 11, 1980 News and Editorial 471-4591 Display Advertising 471-1865 Business Office and Classified 471-5244 Use of force not ruled o *1980 The New YorK Times U h W ASH IN G TO N — President Carter, refusing to rule out the use of force, warned Iran Thursday that the United States “ as an aggrieved nation’’ would pursue every legal use of its power to free the Am erican hostages. Speaking to the annual convention of the Am erican Society of Newspaper Editors, the president also called for greater allied backing in the crises over Iran and Afghanistan and express­ ed the adm inistration’s determination to endure a protracted period of increased strain’’ with the R u ssian s u n til e v e ry S o vie t so ld ie r was withdrawn from Afghanistan. He repeated the Am erican view that once there was a total withdrawal of Soviet forces, the United States “ then, and only then’’ would be w ill­ ing to join in a guarantee on Afghanistan’s neutrality and non-interference in its internal af­ fairs. The president said that the firm response on Afghanistan had sent “ a very clear signal” to the Russians that “ further aggression” would be met by more than economic and political actions. HIS POLICIES CAME under sharp attack by the next speaker on the program , form er Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, who said the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan may have been prompted by the adm inistration’s reluctance to oppose earlier Soviet m ilitary actions. Kissinger also said that while he backed the ad­ m inistration’s tough response to the Afghan crisis, he said Carter lacked a coherent strategy for dealing with the situation. “ Are we acting now in order to punish the Soviet Union for an individual act, after which we w ill resum e the p revious rh e to ric and s ty le ,-’ Kissinger asked. "O r have we truly undertaken a new policy of firm ness? “ Are we committing ourselves to a long-term strategy that our allies can understand, that our Congress and public w ill sustain, and that w ill be carried out by the leadership groups of both par­ ties re g a rd le ss of who is v ic to rio u s in N o ve m b e r?’’ he said. “ And w hat is that strategy?” HE ADDED, HOWEVER, that it was crucial not to avoid negotiations with the Russians during these crises. He said that if the Russians agree to desist from regional wars and show general restraint, negotiations should be launched after the elections for a new strategic arm s lim itation treaty to replace the pending one that would last from 10 to 15 years, and include the next genera­ tion of weapons. In Iran, the Islam ic m ilitants in control of the Am ericans have threatened to kill the hostages if the United States used m ilitary force against Iran Thursday, one m ilitant even threatened to kill them if Iraq invaded Iran. Carter took no note of these threats, but kept open the possibility that the United States might go beyond the economic and political steps an­ nounced on Monday. Am erica w ill continue the careful and con- ¿ XX ‘ i?V f T'g.-r Jte g , " st Iran sidered exercise of its power,’’ the president said in his speech. “ We w ill pursue every — and I repeat every — legal use of that power to bring our people home, free and safe.” IN A Q U EST IO N and answer period that follow­ ed. Carter was asked to be more specific, but he said it would be “ ill-advised” for him “ to spell out any sort of detail and exact time schedule, or ex­ actly what options are available to us.” But he added that under international law, “ since we are an aggrieved nation, caused by not only the action of terrorists but also having the terrorists’ actions condoned by and even sup­ ported by the government, the breadth of the right that we have to take action to redress this grievance is quite extensive.” Militants say Iraq obeys U.S. orders By United Press International Jum ping into Ira n ’s worsening feud with Iraq, the U.S. Em bassy m ilitants accused the Baghdad regime Thursday of being Washington’s “ puppet” and said an attack by Iraq on Iran would put the lives of the 50 Am erican hostages in “ grave danger.” The w arning, the second by the m ilitants in two days, came as Iran dis­ patched a naval force to the northern Persian G ulf near Iraq following fierce border clashes Wednesday. Iranian officials also announced plans to c o u n te r P r e s id e n t C a r t e r ’ s diplomatic and economic boycott, w ar­ ning that any nation joining the United States would be cut off from supplies of Iranian oil. But the officials, who included Ira n ’s oil m inister and a key aide to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, also belittled the impact of the measures C arter an­ nounced Monday, saying A m e rica ’s western allies were too greedy for oil and divided by rivalries to join the boycott. European leaders meeting in Portugal unanimously demanded the release of the Am erican hostages but deferred any decision on backing U.S. calls for sanc­ tions against Tehran. A spokesman for the m ilitants in the U.S. Em bassy said if Iraq went to w ar with Iran, it would be “ only on orders from A m erica” and they would regard it as tantamount to Am erican m ilitary intervention. Reacting to C a rte r’s boycott an­ nouncement, the m ilitants warned on Wednesday that they would kill the hostages they seized 159 days ago if the United States resorts to force. “ This is an alert for Am erica. An at­ tack by Iraq, which would act only on orders from Am erica, would leave the h o sta g e s in g ra v e d a n g e r,” a spokesman for the m ilitants said in an interview on N BC ’s Today program. “ Iraq is A m e rica’s puppet,” the spokesman said. “ The Am erican people must stand before President C arter and not allow him to attack Iran or we w ill be forced to destroy the hostages.” A nationwide dem onstration was planned for Frid ay and officials called on all Iranians to turn out as an “ arm y of 20 m illion” and march in support of Khom eini’s confrontation with both Iraq and the United States. The m ilitary command reported all quiet on the Iranian-Iraqi frontier but said that Iranian naval units were sent to patrol the northern sector of the P e r­ sian G ulf near Iraq. The dispute between the two nations is rooted in decades of riva lry and con­ flicting claim s to two strategically plac­ ed islands in the Persian Gulf. Iran an­ nounced earlier this week that it intend­ ed to overthrow the Iraq i regim e of President Saddam Hussein Each side accused the other of acting on Washington’s orders and A1 Thawra, the official newspaper of Ira q ’s ruling B a a th is t P a rty , w arned Ira n w as heading towards “ a black destiny” if it allows “ Washington to push it to con­ front Iraq .” Meanwhile, two top officials assess­ ing the U.S. effort to isolate Iran for its refusal to release the hostages said the boycott would not work. Hashemi Rafsanjani, a member of the ruling Revolutionary Council and a key Khomeini aide, told the newspaper Ettelaat that Am erica’s European allies would seek to exploit the crisis by grab­ bing a larger share of Iranian oil. One of the members of a women’s swim team rests during preliminaries Thursday morning at the Texas Swim Center. She is one of 900 swimmers competing this week in the United States In­ door Swimming Championships. Sweet dreams . Jan Sonnenmalr, Daily Texan Staff Council votes down zoning request Barton Creek iandowners forbidden to build By MELINDA MAGEE Dally Texan Staff A request for “ office” zoning in the Barton Creek Watershed lost the City Council’s final approval by a narrow margin Thursday. The owners of 88 acres of land near Zilker Park on Barton Creek had won council approval in two prelim inary votes in 1978 and 1979, but the final vote was delayed two years because of a growing concern that development in the B arto n C reek W atershed w as polluting the creek. The council voted 4-3 not to grant owners Tom Bradfield, Donald Cum­ mins and Robert Mueller Jr . office zon­ ing on 50 acres adjacent to Zilker Park 's southwest side The owners were also denied zoning that would perm it offices and apartments to be built on a 38-acre tract by a 5-2 vote of the council. Council members opposed to granting the office zoning pointed to an ordinance designed to control development in the watershed scheduled to be adopted April 17 when a moratorium on develop­ ment expires. Since the ordinance would not be retroactive Thursday’s zoning change would have been exempt from the restrictions. At a public hearing following the council’s decision, environm entalists and developers alike expressed dis­ satisfaction with the compromises the proposed B arto n Creek ordinance makes between preserving water quali­ ty and allowing landowners to develop their land. Members of the Barton Creek Task Force, a group of environm entalists and developers appointed by the council eight months ago to draw up an or­ dinance that would protect Barton Creek and Barton Springs, also express­ ed dissatisfaction with the proposed or­ dinance. B u t m em bers said com ­ promises were necessary, considering the opposing factions within the task (See COUNCIL, Page 8.) Regents approve UT centennial bell project, award contract By GARDNER SELBY Dally Texan Staff A R LIN G T O N — The Board of Regents Thurs­ day set in motion prelim inary plans to move a set of 11 bells, originally installed in the Old Main Building, from an off-campus storage site to a proposed east campus tower. Fisher and Stillm an, a Dallas architectural firm , was selected by the board to plan what President Peter Flaw n called, “ a very ap­ propriate project for the U niversity centennial (in 1983).” Ranging in weight from 29 to 560 pounds, the bronze, ornamented bells were donated to the U niversity by Albert Sidney Burleson in 1930, Regent Tom Law said. Burleson was valedic­ torian of the first U niversity law school class in 1884, Law added. Fo r 45 years, the bells have been stored at the Balcones Research Center, he said. During the meeting, regents approved four east campus sites as tower possibilities. Also during the afternoon meeting, the board awarded a $217,070 contract to Stiefer Painting and Contracting Company, Austin, for the con­ struction of tem porary facilities to house students and faculty while Goldsmith H all and Sutton H all undergo renovation. LAW, CHAIRMAN OF the Buildings and Grounds C om m ittee, said the tem p orary buildings, to cost nearly $190,000, w ill adjoin Wooldridge H all. Renovation in the School of Architecture w ill be finished by 1985, he said. Concerning the possible revival of an active Students’ Association at the University, Law said he was “ expressing a view pretty much shared by all (the) regents in that I ’d very much like to see the return of a responsible student government.” Low voter turnout for the recent constitutional convention election, however, “ makes me wonder if students are really concerned or interested in such an idea,” Law said. “ It ’s discouraging to see such a sm all percen­ tage (4 percent) of people voting,” Law said, ad­ ding that current percentages are “ substantially lower than in 1938 when I ran against John Connal- ly for student body president — and out of 10,000 students, 5,000 votes were cast.” On another issue, Dan W illia m s , c h a ir­ man of the board, said a U T System cancer specialist, who was fired by the regents last December and then submitted a request for a rehearing in February, withdrew that request last week. Creighton Ed w a rd s, a highly-respected gynecological oncologist, was dismissed Dec. 7 by the regents from a surgeon-teaching post at M.D. Anderson Hospital in Houston, for allegedly ear­ ning more than $145,000 by “ moonlighting” from a sim ilar post at Southwestern Medical School in Dallas during 1974-1977. Associates of Edwards said the doctor spent most of the accumulated funds on medicine for poor people, over-time pay for nurses and clinical fees. Edwards paid the money back to U T last summer, sources said. IN A P P E A L I N G FOR THE re h e a rin g , Edwards promised new information that would show how he spent the outside earnings, his associates said. W illiam s said Thursday, (Ed w ard s’) appeal was on the agenda for this meeting But, at his request, I took it off. “ His “ He (E d w a rd s) did not say why he was withdrawing the appeal,” W illiam s said. Although most measures were smoothly rubber- stamped by regents during the U T Arlington meeting. Regent Jan e Blumberg expressed con­ cern about windows that do not open in a planned (See R E G E N T S , Page 8.) Friday Hot and maybe rainy . . . A 30 percent chance of showers or thunderstorms is forecast for Friday with high temperatures in the mid-80s. Low temperatures Friday night will be in the mid-50s. Winds will be northwesterly at 10-20 mph. The sun will set at 6:56 p.m. Friday and rise Saturday at 6:07 a.m. Rubin convicted of pie toss LOS A N G ELES (UPI) — Jerry Rubin was convicted Thursday of misdemeanor battery for throwing a pie into the face of nuclear scientist Edward Teller. Teller, known as the father of the H-bomb, was struck as he was giving a lecture on the UCLA campus Feb. 6. Three professors decide to appeal salary case By JENNY ABDO Dally Texan Staff Three of eight U niversity professors who unsuccessfully battled with form er in U .S . president Loren e Rogers D istrict Court last month over salary cuts during the 1975-76 academic year have decided to appeal their case History professor Phillip White and two physics professors, David Gavenda and Lawrence Shepley, w ill appeal their cases to the 5th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in New Orleans som etim e within the next few years. David Richards, the plaintiffs' at­ torney. said the admissions made by Rogers during the case pertaining to the reasons for cutting the three professors’ salaries warranted a need for appeal. Rogers testified she cut Shepley s salary increase because he violated University procedures by sending m ail to fa c u lty m em bers concerning a m atter at the University nursing school on behalf of the Am erican Assoc iation of University professors Shepley testified he was unaware that his actions were in violation of U niversi­ ty procedure and that regardless of the alleged violation, he was sending the mail as a faculty member of the physics department as well as an affiliate of A A U P. Since Rogers gave specific reason for Shepley’s reduced salary, the plaintiffs believe his case is the strongest of the eight. Judge Ja ck Roberts ruled M arch 13 that the constitutional rights of the eight professors were not violated according to the evidence and testimony presented during the two-day trial. The eight plaintiffs who filed the class action suit four and a half years ago allege that Rogers reduced their salary increases as reprisal for their political activism during historic periods at the University The other five plaintiffs not appealing their cases are Tom Ph ilp ott, an associate history professor; David Ed w ard s, governm ent p ro fesso r; Edwin A llaire, philosophv professor; Forest H ill, economics professor and Standish Meacham, history professor. -Q-rgfi Vlmont, Dally Texan S uff Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, April 11, 1980 Third Court of Civil Appeals 1 ¡'St- t: '8 0 ' L a va ca A u s tn T . 78701 ÍAE & TEXAS WRANGLERS present all campus TUG 6 l v*> STREET PARTY FRIDAY, APRIL 11, *AE backyard prizes m en — 15 kegs w o m en — gift certificates 50* 16 oz. B e e r For e n tr y in fo r m a tio n contact 474-0705 John Leeson or Dee Kelly 472-0430 1 jj| 2 ■ I FREE CANOE RRK! Rent a canoe for 1 h r. a t regular rate ($4 for first hr. — $2 for each additional hr.) & get second hr. FREE! SAVE $2! O ffe r g o o d M o n d a y th ro u g h F rid a y a t S Zilker Park Boat Rentals, just d o w n stream £ from Barton Springs S w im m in g Pool I L i 1 1 a.m. until dark - 9 a.m. until dark Weekday* Sat. & Sun. h I I I I I I I J Now a great imported beer that's less filling.' O ld * O slo is (were l(s remarkable h o » surh a distinguished full bodied beer ran be so unfitting Thais whv O ld c O slo has been a European legend since 1*49 Olde Oslo' from Norway. Full beer enjoymentjwithout the full feeling. am s i» PREGNANCY* ^TERMINATIONS • Free Pregnancy Testing • C o nfiden tial Counseling (214) 369-5210 North Central Women's Center 1 1 4 1 1-R N . C e n tra l E x p w y . D a lla s Texa» 7 5243 u Advice exempted from disclosure By T O M B A K E R Daily Texan Staff Attorney General Mark White has ruled University President Peter F la w n ’s faculty recommendations to the Board of Regents are ex­ empt from disclosure under the state Open Records Act. opinion, White based released Thursday, on a 1974 standard “ designed to protect from disclosure advice and opinion on policy matters and to encourage open and frank discussion between subor­ dinate and chief concerning administrative action.” The 1974 decision blocked in cases where disclosure “ portions of (a> document c o n s i s t of a d v i c e and recommendations.” W O. Schultz, University System associate general counsel, had sought the ruling on an Open Records Act sec­ tion which exempted from dis­ closure “ interagency or intra- agency memorandums or letters which would not be available by law to a party other than one in litigation with the agency.” Flawn had requested that University deans evaluate faculty for 1980-81 and make recommendations regarding tenure, promotion and ter­ mination. The president would then inform deans which recommendations he would make to regents. The recommendations will include the teacher’s name, department, present status and the recommended action — to grant or deny tenure or promotion or terminate. White, quoting a 1977 Open Nelson plans July retirement from teaching Eugene Nelson, a long-time business-real estate professor who has taught at the Univer­ sity since 1946, will retire in late July but will return in the fall to teach one last real es­ tate law course Nelson said Thursday he thought there were other things besides teaching he would like to do while he is still physically able Although he plans to keep in cl ose c o n t a c t wi th his colleagues at the University, he and his wife will spend more time at their “ country place” north of Liberty Hill. Nelson said he will garden and tend to eight mouflon she ep, w h i c h w i l l be “ nostalgic'' as he grew up on a farm. “ We re all disappointed we won't have his services,” said W illiam Lord, a business professor “ It’ll be a loss, we’ll miss him.” Nelson will be the guest of honor at a pre-retirement ap­ preciation brunch May 3. Members of the University faculty and staff, as well as former and present students are invited to attend the $9-a- plate brunch The reservation deadline is April 25. Campus Capsules Students to study leadership The University’s International Office will sponsor a leadership training workshop for international students from 9 a m to 2 p.m. Saturday at the International Office, 24th and Nueces streets. “ The purpose of the workshop is to enable participants to develop leadership skills through practical exercises.” said Sherri Evans, coordinator of the workshop The workshop will demonstrate good and bad leadership skills and stimulate discussion to exchange ideas about leadership, she said. It is designed primarily for international students, particular­ ly those involved in organizations registered with the Universi­ ty Interested participants may contact Evans at 471-1211. Day planned to honor students The University campus will be the site of two scholastic recognition ceremonies Saturday. University juniors and seniors with grade point averages of 3.5 or more will be congratulated at the University’s annual Honors Day at 2 p m, in the Special Events Center. Each of the 1,830 students will be individually introduced by their deans and will then receive special certificates from University President Peter Flawn. A second ceremony will recognize more than 200 high school students who have each received $1,000 per year scholarships through the Texas Achievement Program. The students will be honored in the first Texas Achievement Day in Robert A. Welch Hall. The teen-agers and their families have been invited to visit the campus for information concerning student academics, financial aid. housing and other services. Activities are planned from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Interview workshop scheduled Interview workshops for minority students interested in becoming involved in student activities are slated Saturday from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday and 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday in Student Services Building 302. The workshops are sponsored by Minority Student Services, part of the Office of the Dean of Students, and will provide in­ struction on successful participation in interviews. “ The primary purpose of the workshops is to provide the minority student with information on how to interview for positions on the Texas Union Committee, the Student Faculty Committee, the Presidential Standing Committee and other student-based groups so that minority participation will in­ crease,” Vicki Reese, Minority Student Service adviser, said Thursday. The workshops will inform minority students on where to find information about the committee for which they are applying, how to fill out committee applications, how to prepare for the interview, and what the “ do’s and don’ts” are of the inter­ viewing process. Workshop participants also will stage “ mock interviews” to gain experience with interviewing techniques. For more information, contact Reese at 471-1201. Dart club sponsors marathon Members of the University Dart Club are seeking pledges for a “ Dartathon” beginning Friday at the Texas Union Building to raise money for the Austin Meals On Wheels program. Club members will begin throwing darts at 8 p.m. Friday, in an effort to throw 1,000,001 points before 10 p.m. Sunday. Members will throw darts for 15 minutes for every 2 cents pledged Interested persons can call 471-1945 anytime during the Dartathon to make pledges or donations. For further information, call Todd Minor at 477-3472 or Leigh Cates at 327-0022. The I>,iilv Texan a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, Drawer D, University Station, Austin. TX 78712 The Daily Texan is published Monday. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and F ri­ das except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin. Tex News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office Texas Student Publications Building 2 1221 or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A 4 1361 Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in TSP Building 3 200 (471-5244) and display advertising in T SP Building 3.210 (471-1865) The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students. 1633 W. Central St., Evanston, Illinois 60201 The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journalism Congress, the Texas Daily Newspaper Association, and American Newspaper Publishers Association Copyright 1980 Texas Student Publications. T H E D A ILY T EXA N SUBSCRIPTION R A TES One Semester (Fall or Springi 1979-80 By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within USA Two Semesters 'F all and Spring) 1979-80 By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within U S. A $16 00 17 00 $29 00 31 00 Summer Session 1980 $10 50 By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within 11 00 U S A Send orders and address changes to T E X A S STUDENT PUBLICA TIO NS, P O Box K J B NO 146440 I) Austin Texas 78712 or to TSP Building. C3 200 MARCIA BALL A d m issio n Free Time: Friday, April 11th, 4 to 7 p.m . Place: Posse W est 2 4 th & Rio G rande Justice of the Peace Precinct 5 Vote Guy Herman May 3rd Democratic Primary Political A dvertising paid for by Students for Herman, David Crain, Treasurer, 1504 Hether, Austin, Texas 78704. m SPECIAL SALE C iP IO IM E E R I RENT STEREO COMPONENTS • R E C E IV E R S • A M P L IF IE R S • S P E A K E R S • M IC R O P H O N E S • T A P E D E C K S • V ID E O D E C K S R E N T IT, T H E N IF Y O U U K E IT, Y O U C A N R E N T - B U Y IT. B E R K m n n s t h e s t e r e o s t o r e 2 2 3 4 G U A D A L U P E • 4 7 6 -3 5 2 5 4 9 3 0 B U R N E T RD. • 454-6731 DAYS Buckled Sandal Available in: navy, brown, white, tan ^NOTHING’S HOTTER than the tropics Larry Smith Prints Notecards 75- Prints $7.00 & $10.00 V IS A * M m ttO fChm rgo Wotcomm fr** I St umtHtnQ in Co op l o t S3 OO p urcha oo 4 76 721 ’ 23SB Gu»d*iup* St Banded thong Available in White and brown Pure flattery for you. Gently draped bodice, tie belt, and swinging skirt with soft sheer flattering jacket. In white with lilac sheer polyester georgette, sizes 5 to 13, 66.00. 2 4 0 6 GUADALUPE • O N -TH E -D R A G Israeli troops, tanks dig into south Lebanon Lebanon turns to U.N., angry about in vasion Friday, April 11, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 3 Taibe, U.N. Z O N E in Lebanon : Irish B a tta lio n \ Z one : T ibn ine S h a k ra B»et Yahoun • Kunin „ Hill 8 8 0 + • * V • ------- ' / A rea C ontrolled by Haddad. ISRAEL TIBNINE, Lebanon (UPI) — More Israeli troops and tanks rolled across took up the border T hursday and positions inside south Lebanon within hailing distance of a battalion of Irish troops of the U.N. peacekeeping force. th ree m iles Lebanon, angry but powerless to turn back the mini-invasion, requested an urgent meeting of the U.N. Security Council. At the United Nations, where the council was summoned to consider Lebanon’s request, officials said there was “ some the Israelis indication” would withdraw soon. Bl T AT “ Black Hole Hill,” a forward U.N. observation post overlooking the frontier, an Irish officer studying the Israeli deployment through binoculars said it looked as if the troops had dug into “ perm anent positions.” In Israel, Prim e Minister Menachem Begin said the incursion was ordered to guard against another P alestinian raid terrorist attack against the northern Kibbutz of Misgav Am in which one Israeli child and two like Monday’s adults were killed. “ It is not an invasion,” Begin said. “ We respect the integrity of Lebanon. We want peace with and in Lebanon We want to make sure that our blood will not be spilled again.” At least tanks and th ree Israeli an arm ored personnel carrier accom ­ panied several scores of troops into Lebanon to reinforce the new Israeli line three miles inside the frontier and just a few yards south of the Irish U.N. zone. U.N. officials estim ated the total Israeli force now in the area at about 300 men and some 30 APCs and tanks. At the United Nations, Lebanese Am­ bassador Ghassan Tueni accused Israel of “ c o n s is te n tly ch a lle n g in g and obstructing” the U.N. mission in south Lebanon with its “ massive and con­ tinuing deployment of troops, tanks and arm ored c a rs .” “ THEY SEEM TO h av e ta k e n them selves perm anent positions,” said Maj. Michael Minehane, deputy com­ m ander of the Irish U.N. battalion. Israelis are dug in yards from Irish lines. UPI Telephoto Lebanese Christian tank faces opposition. UPI Telephoto Russians sucessfully dock Soyuz 35 and MOSCOW (UPI) — Two Soviet cosmonauts successfully docked their Soyuz 35 space capsule with the Salyut 6 laboratory in E arth orbit Thurs­ day, completing the first difficult phase of their mission. Flight engineer Valery Ryumin, who left the or­ biting spacelab less than eight months ago after a record 175-day mission, announced proudly in a telecast beamed to E arth shortly after the dock­ ing, “ Look. The station is absolutely in the sam e condition as we left it.” A television cam era mounted aboard the Salyut lab showed a flickering, bluish-gray picture of Ryumin and his pilot Lt. Col. Leonid Popov, floating weightless through the spacious cabin. Soviet television said the docking took place at 9:16 p.m. Announcement of the m aneuver was delayed nearly four hours, apparently to arrange the cosmonauts brief TV show from space. The Soyuz 35 craft carrying cosmonauts Popov tr a v e le d and R y u m in , from Central Asia spaceman, was Wednesday afternoon in the first manned space flight by any country this year. th e w o rld ’s m o st launched Soviet television also announced that Ryumin was a last-m inute choice for this Soyuz flight. He apparently was plucked from a back-up crew and tapped to replace another unidentified flight engineer who “ had trouble during his physical ex­ ercises.” The announcement of Ryumin s selection was one of the m ost startling surprises of the new m is­ sion, which may try for a space endurance m ark even greater than last years 175-day, 72-million mile orbital flight. Docking m aneuvers have in the past been one of the most difficult aspects of the Soviet manned or­ bital space program. Thursday’s m aneuver by Soyuz 35 apparently took place exactly on schedule — approximately 25 V2 hours after launch from the Baikonur spaceport in Central Asia. Ryumin, 40 and an engineer, was making his third orbital flight. Ironically, his first mission, Soyuz 25, in October 1977, was cut short to just 48 hours by a failure during the docking maneuver. But Ryumin rebounded from that earlier flight to complete last year’s record-setting trip aboard Soyuz 32 and 34. His companion about Soyuz 35 and the missions flight commander, Popov, 34, is an officer in the Soviet air force making his first flight beyond E arth ’s gravity. The Salyut 6 spacelab target already has a visitor — the unmanned Progress 8 supply ship that ferried food, fuel and w ater to the lab two weeks ago to prepare it for the cosmonauts The use of such ferry supply ships has enabled the Soviets to continually extend the amount at time cosmonauts can stay in space. The Salyut 6 spacelab has been perhaps the Soviet Union s most successful program since the flight of Yuri Gagarin, the world’s first spaceman, 19 years ago on Saturday. Salyut 6, a 21-ton orbit science laboratory, was placed into orbit Sept. 29, 1977. It features two docking bays, allowing cosmonauts to link with the station while receiving a supply ship or a pair of cosmonaut visitors at the sam e time. The 49-foot lab gives Soviet spacem en over 100 cubic yards of living space — an essential feature for flights lasting up to eight months. The Salyut 6 lab reflects the Soviet Union's1 emphasis on near-Earth studies and m arks an ap­ parent shift from deep-space manned flights to the moon or nearby planets. Soviet scientists already have used the lab for such experim ents as creating new alloys in space as well as perfec t crystals in the absence of gravity, thus opening up the possibility of future space factories. NRC staff wants to slap fine on TMI nuclear reactor maker WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Nuclear Regulatory Commission staff Thursday proposed a fine of $100,000 against nuclear reactor m anufacturer Babcock & Wilcox for failure to give the NRC vital safety information on the unit it sold to the Three Mile Island utility. The fine, which the firm has 20 days to either pay or contest, is the first civil penalty ever proposed by the staff against a reactor supplier. A spokesman for J. Ray McDermott Co., the New Orleans-based parent firm of Babcock & Wilcox, called the propos­ ed civil penalty unwarranted and said it would be contested. THE COMPANY is also named in a last $500 million dam age suit filed month by General Public Utilities, parent firm of the utility that operates the twin-reactor Three Mile Island sta­ tion in Pennsylvania. “ On the basis of our review, we have concluded that B&W did not have an effective system for collection, review and evaluation, and reporting of im por­ tant safety inform ation,” Victor Stello, NRC director of inspection and enforce­ ment, told the company in a letter. THE NRC last week concluded that safety problems linked to the company’s nine existing reactors did not justify shutting them down, but recommended a score of safety changes to head off future accidents. Babcock & Wilcox also manufactured the reactor a t Crystal River 3, a reactor involved in a recent Florida accident. The staff citation said the firm ’s in­ structions to reactor operators were in­ adequate for em ergencies like the one that resulted at Three Mile Island on March 28, 1979 — the nation’s worst nuclear mishap. IT ALSO SAID the firm made im ­ proper safety analyses for certain reac tor situations such as use of prim ary coolant pumps during accidents and the s u p p ly of f e e d w a t e r to s t e a m generators. No core dam age or radiation releases would have occurred at Three Mile Island had plant operators not switched off emergency high pressure pumps during the accident s early phase, the company and several accident studies have concluded. Testimony taken by the president’s Kemeny Commission on Three Mile Island showed that the firm ’s m anagers ignored a series of m em oranda from subordinates warning of the potential for an accident like Three Mile Island. U.S. says Latin American countries should offer Cubans asylum first ®1980 The New York Times WASHINGTON - The United States gave a signal Thursday that it expected Latin American countries to take the lead in offering asylum and resettle­ m ent to the thousands of Cubans now th e P e ru v ia n e m b a ssy c ro w d in g grounds in Havana. S ecretary of State Cyrus R. Vance himself was said by officials to have voiced impatience with the absence of the five Andean specific actions by Common Market nations and other Latin American governments to deal with the Cuban refugee crisis. VANCE’S ASSERTION that the new Cuban problem was prim arily one for the Latin Americans to resolve was made, however, before the Andean group announced after a meeting in Lima that its m em bers would share responsibility for accepting some of the refugees, officials said. At the State Departm ent briefing, a spokesman, David Passage, repeated his statem ent of Wednesday that the United States was prepared to accept “ a fair share of the refugees and a fair share of the costs” of resettling them. PASSAGE SAID, however, that “ this is a hemispheric problem and indeed it goes beyond the hem isphere.” United States efforts, he said, were currently international com­ centered “ in m unity,” rather than on action by itself to aid the Cubans. the “ I don’t accept the proposition that ours is the only country that can act in this situation,’’ he said. “ We support the efforts and actions of others.” The spokesman said he wished to stress that the problem faced by the in­ ternational community was not simply that of the Cubans now in the Peruvian embassy, “ but the problem of Cuba, where 10 percent of the population over the last two decades has fled from that governm ent.” He implied that Latin American governments has been slow to accept that larger problem, leaving in­ itiatives to Washington. OFFICIALS POINTED OUT that the United States has already accepted nearly 800,000 Cuban exiles for resettle­ m ent since Fidel Castro cam e to power in 1959 and has received between 9,000 and 10,000 within the last 15 months alone. One official said the adm inistration’s posture on the new Cuban re fu g ee to “ keep the problem was designed maximum pressure on other countries.' to a c t” and to do so if possible within the next 24 hours. “ It may require some very stiff words on our p a rt,” he said. Miss Lillian goes to court UPI Telephoto President Carter's mother, Miss Lillian, Is escorted Thursday to the Federal Building In Atlanta where she testified In the first day of the bank fraud trial of former federal budget director Bert Lance. Miss Lillian, a character witness for the defense, called Lance ‘quite a m an.’ Israeli troops break up Arab protest (UPI) — Israeli BIR ZEIT, Israeli-O ccupied West Bank troops fired bullets and tear gas into the air Thurs­ day to break up the second day of riots by Palestinian students who reportedly warned that the terrorist raid on an Israeli kibbutz nursery “ won’t be the la st.” Army troops surrounded the Bir Zeit University and fired the tear gas and warning shots to disperse the crowd, witnesses said. No one was injured ex­ cept an Israeli solider who was hit in the head by a flying rock. The driver of an Israeli minibus caught in a hail of rocks also fired shots in the air after rocks smashed the win­ dows of his vehicle. The Isra elis brought up to eight busloads of students off the campus and detained eight of them, m ilitary sources said. “ Misgav Am won’t be the last tim e,” the sources said the students shouted, referring to Monday’s Palestinian raid on a children’s nursery in a front-line kibbutz. Three Israelis died, including a baby, and 16 were wounded. The five assailants were killed. THE STUDENTS SAID they were protesting violence used by Israeli troops at R am allah’s teachers training college where 24 students were injured Wednesday. Nine of them were still hospitalized. Sources said the students shouted the sam e Misgav Am slogans at the protest in Ramallah, which the military sources said prompted the violent army reaction. News Capsules By United Press International U.S. and Oman to share Persian G ulf bases MUSCAT, Oman — The United States and Oman have agreed in prin­ ciple to a far-reaching defense alliance that will give America access to Omani bases near the Persian Gulf in exchange for m ilitary aid and a U.S. com m itm ent to the security of Oman, western diplomatic sources said Thursday. The sources emphasized, however, that negotiations about the details of this “new security relationship” were still going on and although they were progressing well, much hard bargaining remained. A State Department spokesman in Washington also said there were no difficulties in the negotiations but certain questions were still being resolved M oscow-Peking friendship treaty expires PEKING — The friendship treaty signed 30 years ago when China and the Soviet Union were on good term s expired Thursday and there were their few signs differences the Communist giants were close to bridging The 1950 treaty had been alm ost m eaningless since relations between the two nations soured 20 years ago and its expiration, with no firm plans for renegotiating a similar pact, is a further reminder of the chasm between Peking and Moscow. Relations between the two countries turned sour around 1960 when Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev refused to tolerate Chinese Com­ munist Party Chairman Mao Tse-tung styling him self a leader of the world com m unist m ovem ent. WWII Vets sue governm ent over radiation cancer WASHINGTON — The federal government was sued Thursday by U.S. m ilitary veterans who claim they suffered from cancer or other serious illnesses after exposure to radiation from the World War II bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and peacetim e nuclear tests. The class action suit was filed in U.S. D istrict Court in Washington by attorneys of the National Veterans Law Center specifically on behalf of seven former servicem en and two widows of former servicem en and two unofficial veterans organizations. In addition to the estim ated 4,000 servicem en ordered to clean up Hiroshima and Nagasaki after the August 1945 bombings, the action is also of interest to an about 250,000 personnel said to have participated in Feds take 'Joe Bananas' to court Friday SAN JOSE, Calif. — The government goes to court Friday in an attempt to win a conviction against Joseph “ Joe Bananas” Bonanno, one-time New York crim e lord who has never spent a day in prison. A conviction would be his first since he was found guilty and fined 35 years ago for violating a rent control law. D O W J O N E S A V E R A G E 30 I n d u s t r i a l s Closed at 791.47 Stocks up, m arket slow NEW YORK - Ford Motor Co. its quarterly dividend maintained payout, som e interest rates eased and the stock market registered its third straight gam Thursday in relatively light trading. T h e D ow J o n e s i n d u s t r i a l a v e r a g e , a 10.92-point wi nner Wednesday, tacked on 5.55 points to 791.47, bringing its three-day ad­ vance to 23.13 points. THE DAILY TEXAN Friday, April 11, 1980 Page 4 W M W W - fy m t y j K t m $e patient... Hes ioirg the best he Can EDITORIALS Election Commission Hearing distorted by legalese By KEN MACDOW ELL The edliorsh i poTT h e D a i l y T e x a n is one oftfie most im­ portant positions to which a student can aspire at UT. The editor determ inies policies, makes decisions and publishes opinions that affect a sizable portion of the University com ­ munity. Given the importance of the position, we cannot take lightly the process by which we fill that position. The recent campaign for T e xa n editor featured a dis­ concerting controversy — the resolution of which was equal­ ly disconcerting The fact that the controversy was resolved by an authoritative and official-sounding body — the E lec­ tion Commission — does little to lessen the disappointment. A FORMAL COMPLAINT was lodged against editor can­ didate Robert Hamilton for distributing campaign literature that allegedly contained misleading information. The rele­ vant section of the formal com plaint reads: “ Hamilton’s literature states that he worked as a production technician for the M o n t g o m e r y Co u n ty S e n ti ne l in Gaithersburg, to 1975. S e n t i n e l person n el M aryland spokeswoman Betty Carle contacted April 2, 1980 stated, ‘We have no record that he (Hamilton) ever worked at this newspaper in any capacity We did not even have a produc­ tion department at that time. I checked with the printer we used at that tim e and he said he (Hamilton) has never work­ ed for them either ’ from 1974 According to the Texas Student Publications Handbook, Appendix C, Section V < M ): “ No candidate shall make deceptive or misleading campaign statem ents, either orally or in signs or han­ douts. No candidate shall engage in deceptive or m is­ leading campaign activities, including any act reasonably calculated to injure or comprom ise the rights or interests of any student, faculty or administration m em ber.” The Election Commission voted 2-1 Tuesday to dism iss the charge. (The chairman did not vote.) The events leading up to this momentous vote raise som e serious questions about the credibility of the Election Commission in dealing with issues of this magnitude. The surviving portion of the old Students’ Association Constitution establishes the composition of the Election Commission: one Gamma Delta Epsilon member, two Alpha Phi Omega m em bers, one law student and one student appointed by the Students’ Association. With the dem ise of the Students’ Association, only four com m issioners serve. UNFORTUNATELY, Tuesday’s proceedings revealed a fundamental problem with the composition of the com m is­ sion Every utterance of the law student was welcomed with accommodating reverence by the other com m issioners. And every occasional effort at common sense could not survive the law student’s articulate abandonment of common sense. To his credit, the law student did descend to the ver­ nacular once, and with com mendable perception noted, “That’s the problem with legalese; it alw ays sounds so ass- holish ’’ It did indeed. E specially since its use distorted a crucial issue. Three of the com m issioners acknowledged that Robert Hamilton’s campaign literature was misleading. (The fourth com m issioner had very little to s a y .) Now, common sense suggests that when an election code forbids misleading literature, and when election com m issioners agree that literature is m isleading, then we have a violation. Not so. Enter “strict liability" and “ intent to injure" and irrelevant anecdotes about the innocent tendency to pad a resume. THE LAW’ STUDENT com m issioner steered the discus­ sion away from the fundamental question of misleading the voters; in its place, he discoursed upon “ intent to injure.’’ Robert Hamilton, one might perversely argue, cannot be held strictly liable for the m isleading statem ents in his literature since one cannot prove that he intentionally sought to injure anyone. in ten t to injure" is NOT the question. One must read the Election Code many tim es with an extravagent imagination to find any language requiring proof of "intent to injure." If the question of intent should even be a factor, it is “ in­ tent to mislead" — not "intent to injure. " And intent to m is­ lead is not nearly so murky and difficult a question as intent to injure. The non-law student com m issioners sensed this no­ tion, but kept looking to the law student com m issioner for guidance, qualifying their attem pts at independent thought with statem ents like “ correct m e if I’m wrong.” The com ­ missioner who did vote that Hamilton had violated the code deserves credit for outlasting the law student's rhetorical assault. PERHAPS THE SADDEST aspect of the Election Com­ mission hearing is a technical one. Had the com m issioners deliberated in private — as they are entitled to — then the strain of thinking out loud, the demand of making a per­ suasive case for each of their instincts and the tenseness of the polarized atm osphere could not have influenced their decision For the public and thus awkward deliberations, we can thank the individuals who righteously invoked the Open Meetings Act to force public deliberations. The Open Meetings Act certainly requires the hearing to be public, but the quasi-judicial nature of deliberating their decision should have allowed the com m issione *s to observe the hear­ ing, ask questions, listen to evidence and t h e n deliberate privately No one can question the com m issioners’ sincerity or their com m itm ent to fair and impartial proceedings. Unfor­ tunately, this one regrettable decision forces closer scrutiny of the com m ission's ability to resolve issues of such import. To be sure, the com m ission should henceforth deliberate in private But even then, the risk rem ains that one perhaps well-intentioned but misguided individual will dominate the thinking. As it is, the E lection Commission has endangered the credibility of all future cam pus elections. We m ay never be able to prove in the com m ission’s strictest sense that a can­ didate sought to “ injure" anyone. And so, who knows what a candidate — who m isleads without visibly seeking to injure anyone — may get away w ith9_________________________ M a c d o w e l l is t h e T e x a n a s s i s t a n t to t he edi tor. Evolution only rational approach By PHILLIP DiVALERIO Despite the arguments of Mr. David Cate (Tuesday, April 8, “ Assumptions of Evolution Column F a lse” ), evolu­ tion remains the only rational approach to explaining the origin of life on earth. Evolution is a theory which is used to make predictions, just like any other. So long as the evidence agrees with predictions of the theory, scientists will continue to use it. It's called The Scientific Method Creationism, however, is fantasy. It is not based on anthropological or geological evidence, but is the result of pure conjecture. Therefore it exists as a possible alternative hypothesis for scientists, but until stiong evidence resembling the type which scientists have been collecting for well over a cen tu ry favor of creationism , the scientific community will continue to scoff at it. That’s ca ll­ ed Professional Prerogative. is g ath ered in CATE CHARGES that evolution can­ not “explain the m echanism ... for the ultimate origin of the universe.” I agree com pletely. Archaeologists have never suggested that their evidence could exp la in such u n a n sw era b le problems. They’re m erely concerned with the evolution of life form s on earth. Because tim eless questions are unanswerable, scientists leave such m atters to theologians to speculate up­ on. c h a r g e s C A T E A L S O t h a t evolutionists make the absurd assum p­ tion that life can com e from non-life. Well, is it so absurd? As I understand it, the God theory demands, as part of its premise, that at one tim e there was nothing at all in the universe (except God, of course, the origin of whom creationists refuse to explain) For some reason, God then created the en­ tire universe as we know it in the span of seven days. If he also espouses this notion, then Mr. Cates has contradicted himself. If he includes life as part of then som e that m ystical creation, provision m ust be m ade for the mechanism by which God performed this feat. Life, then, c a n com e from non-life? (Oh, I forgot, God can do anything.) if proven w rong, Scientists are not philosophers. They are individuals with analytical minds who attempt to fit concrete evidence into rational and believable theories. They speculate as little as necessary b e c a u se , th eir reputations could be seriously dam ag­ ed They feel that creationist theories do not belong in the classroom s, and I heartily agree B esid es, th ere’s a problem if forced to teach a creationist theory alongside the theory of evolu­ tion Which of the hundreds of creation stories would they choose? (not Aside from an article in P o p u l a r the m ost S c i e n c e m agazine authoritative source available), the first two chapters of Genesis (not the rock group, but the book w ritten several thousand years ago), and som e very inconclusive evidence (such as the link" between m ysterious "missing horses and cows — keep reading T h e N a t i o n a l E n q u i r e r for all the latest developm ents), Mr Cate has very little to back his claim s __________________ j u n i o r E n g l i s h D i V a l e r i o is a m a j o r . DOONESBURY MY NBXTGUEST tS ONE O F -new rw srw jN G , m m as afounpt hjdnt j YOU JOIN MY CO-HOST : AND M t IN mCOMNG • TBNB BRENNER' * ' * CLAP! (ML CCLff 1 U9TEN TO THAT APPLAUSE' JUST USTBNTD/Tf they love YOU' Q jip ! TOU KNOtU MY CO-HOST, PONT YOU.Z5 P E * NO, I PONT He's an our- eeu&eive of-nopk eve* seeN ACTOR, h im BEFORE, i lC MERY. M IKE. PJHOEVER. YOU BOTH SEEM NICE ENOUGH T h e Da il y T e x a n Jann Snell Editor...................................................................... Beth Frerking Managing Editor........................................................ Walter Borges ....................................John Havens, Assistant Managing Editors Diane Jane Morrison ................................ Ken Macdowell Assistant to the Editor .............................. News Editor ................... ............................. .................................... Associate News E d itor................................ ............................. Mary Ann Kreps Sports Editor ........................................... ........................................ David King Associate Sports E o ito r............................... ................... ............. Jimmy Burch Arts and Entertainment Editor.................................Scott Bowles Features Editor................. ............................ Melanie Hershon Photo E ditor...................... .......................Harley Soltes Associate Photo Editor .......................... ........... Images Editor ................................. Images Assistant Editor ...................... Victoria Barnaart Camous Activities Editor ........................ Suzy Lamport Jenny Abdo, Tom Baker, General Reporters .......... Robbie Sabo Ron Saint Pierre. Clara Tuma. Patty Yznaga, Pat Jankowski, Melinda Magee. Diane Ballard, Alisa Hagan Gardner Selby, Shonda Novak Richard Polunsky, Martha Sheridan ............................ N ew sw riters............................ Senior Copy Editors Senior Wire Editor Steve Davis Ed Malcik f f dif & T ^J k . Issue Editor....................................................................Dianna Hunt News A ssistan ts.............................. Joey Lozano, David Pyndus, Pam Nester Editorial A ssistant...................................................... Tom Hartman Assistant Sports Editor .....................................Brenda Kopycinski Sports A ssistants...................... Roger Campbell, David Spangler Make-up E d itor.............................................................Tony Kotecki Wire E d itor.................................................................... Charlie Rose Copy Editors ...................................Susan Albrect. Robert Smith, Jackie Smith Photographers................................. Jan Sonnemair, Greg Vimont Copyr>gN i9 6 0 Texas Student Publications Reproduction of any pert of this publica- hor ts pro» * ted mnthout the express permission of the Daily Texan editor Opm or ; pressed m The Daily Taxan are thoee of the editor of the *n ter of the arti­ the Board of cle and .<•» n ,* necessarily those of the University or admimsfration Regent., <,t the e * a * Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Kathy Shwiff Bolivians protest Camps* m urder 3. WHAT IS THE HARM? Think about it. firing line Today, after eight hours of tension, we learned that Luis Espinal Camps was killed Luis, a Spanish nationalized Boli­ vian. was the director of the weekly newspaper, A q u i . He was a Jesuit priest, professor at the La Paz University, jour­ nalist and a man completely devoted to the people of his na­ tion. All Bolivian organizations are protesting this tragic event. The COB (Central of Bolivian Workers), the main labor organization, plus all political parties are holding a national one-day strike to express their rejection of the cruel assassination of Luis Espinal. it The people responsible for his death have not been found. is the public opinion of the Bolivians that the But murderers belong to the sam e group that attempted a coup d’etat in November 1979, the sam e group that im m ersed this country in seven years of fascism , the sam e group that helped to build up a paramilitary youth group in Santa Cruz. They constitute the military and the Bolivian right which acts against the people’s will to restore dem ocracy and free determination In the name of the army, and as defenders of sovereignity and freedom, they have been able to preserve a sem blance of legality. The Bolivians believe that it is this group which bears responsibility for the 12 bullets which entered Luis’ body. Why Luis? Journalism in Latin America, and specifically in Bolivia, is far from reaching a stage where it can be called “ o b j e c t iv e .” N ew sp a p ers h ere a re th e e x p r e ssio n mechanism s of economic power, of political power and of imperialist interest. Luis was a journalist and manager of A q u i Its mam objective was to report information which government-backed papers did not; it reported information related to the corruptive practices of the military. It is sad to observe, not just in Bolivia, but also in other Latin American countries, that the attem pts to build a regim e with democratic tendencies have been thwarted by certain groups and organizations which do not with these nations to return to free speech, free determination and a respect for human rights policies. Luis was killed for these reasons. The rightist m ovem ents have begun to notice that even the Christian churches are learning that power in the hands of the military is a serious m enace to their existence. Luis’ death is also a warning from rightist organizations to the Church against the Jesuits, and finally, against the will of the people The killing of Luis is a killing of a popular tenden­ cy which continues to grow daily in order to reach b e t t e r li vi ng c o n ­ d a y s , b e t t e r w a g e s a n d b e t t e r h u m a n d i ti ons. But the will of the people is so strong that they will be capable of reaching their goal. Luis is dead but the struggle continues, stronger and stronger. Guillermo Delgado-P. Ph.D. candidate, Anthropology Presently doing field work in Bolivia I would like to extend my sincerest personal con­ gratulations to Mark McKinnon on his election as next year’s D a i l y T e x a n editor. At the sam e time I would like to thank the many students who worked on my own campaign and the hundreds of others who supported my claim to that office with their votes. 1 am also asking that my supporters give Mark their most sincere cooperation. The T e x a n editorship is an incredibly demanding position, but I believe Mark will rank among the best who have filled it. Though I think he perceives correctly the T e x a n ’s problems — both internal and external, Mark him self has admitted he isn't confident of the solutions. He therefore needs — and has graciously indicated he will w elcom e — advice from all sectors of the student communi­ ty. I hope that even those — perhaps especially those — who didn’t favor Mark for editor will not sit and mope for a year, but instead will extend to him the benefits of their ex­ perience and knowledge, in order to help him fulfill his promise to make the T e x a n the best student newspaper in the country. Mark, should you accept only one suggestion from m e con­ cerning those solutions you seek, make it this one: Initiate (or support) m oves on the TSP board to reintroduce a T e x ­ a n ombudsman, I am convinced that no conscientious jour­ nalist will advance an argument against you. Robert R. Hamilton Journalism C ourt m ishandles Salvation case 1 would like to extend and amplify these com m ents later, but now I must work through the Phogg 1. Please note, for the present, that Judge Matthews granted a T.R.O without the statem ent of more than ownership and an a c c u s a t i o n of trespass What he was not told was that we had already been tried and acquitted of that very charge, and therefore, deserved the benefit of the doubt on that question. 2 The most heinous abuse, however was the e x - p a r t e nature of the hearing, i.e . without my presence or knowledge. Under Texas law *his is perm issible only for the most extrem e em ergencies since a man is presumed inno­ cent and alw ays allowed to face his accusers b e f o r e punish­ ment or satisfaction is rendered Roland DeNoie Austin Afghanistan conflict is nothing new Personally, I’d like to see as many people as possible go to the Olympics in Moscow. The world situation is tense. But then isn't som e neo-isolationist withdrawal, especially cut­ ting off people to people exchange and travel, one of the last things we want? Certainly the Russians are making a m ess, are indeed in a mess, in Afghanistan. But the fighting there didn’t just start in this election year. (Although you wouldn’t know that from the yelling of the Republicans or the blustery actions of Carter.) The fighting there has been going on for years. In fact the Russians have been in Afghanistan since the ’50s. Indeed since the ’50s it has been U.S. m ilitary policy, and that of NATO and CENTO, that Afghanistan is on the Rus­ sian side of the U.S. forward military perim eter. And relative to the projected crisis that the latest fighting might be part of a Russian m ove from Afghanistan into Iran, the Wal l S t r e e t J o u r n a l has noted (Jan. 23, 1980, Page 1) that the Russians have always had a long border with Iran, a long, flat and rapidly crossable border, whereas the border between Afghanistan and Iran is rugged mountains. (The Russian tanks aren’t that good.) At any rate, the Russians have been in Afghanistan since the ’50s, and the current fighting began before this election year. And I’d sure hate to wake up, after the Olympics, to find that I'd been stampeded by election year hysteria about Reds into cutting off my nose to spite my face. Consider the Russian hockey team. VVe want to beat them in hockey, but do we want to kill them? Dave MacBryde Austin No interest, no voters, no Texan Using the sam e logic as those against student government, I hereby conclude that the campus does not want T h e Dai ly T e x a n due to the fact that a m ere 3,199 voted in the editor’s race. Carlton Spears PLM Chilean killings dem and response I read with great interest the N e w Y o r k T i m e s editorial on the Letelier assassination reprinted in the T e x a n Thurs­ day. It is a sad reflection on the power of the foreign policy of the Carter administration that following a crim e com­ mitted by agents of a foreign government in the streets of Washington, the only recourse left to the fam ilies of the vic­ tims is to sue the Chilean government in a civil court. The assassination of Orlando Letelier and Ronnie Moffit was a crime of international terrorism committed by the govern­ ment of Pinochet using his secret police DINA. However, he rejected the petition of extradition for the culprits. The response of the Carter administration to that refusal was one of too little, too gently and too late. Thanks to congressional concern there is no bilateral aid or military assistance to the Pinochet regime. And yet, the U.S. private bankers and in­ vestors, with the silent complicity of the administration, are busy trading, investing and providing credits to prop up the dictator. Right now, the produce sections of local supermarkets like H.E.B. and Safeway have begun to sell nectarines and grapes from Chile. That is one way in which U.S. businesses help to maintain Pinochet in power. Since it is unlikely that the U.S. will enact an embargo on Chilean exports, it is up to us, the consumers, to react. We can send a m essage to Pinochet by letting his nectarines rot, and in the process tell Safeway and H.E.B. that we would rather not eat fruit that is stained with the blood and sweat of the exploited Chilean workers. Just like with the Letelier and Moffit fam ilies, it is up to us, the people, to act, since the government lacks the will or ability to do so. Renato Espinoza 1971 UT Graduate Letters & colum ns The D a i l y T e x a n e n c o u r a g e s its r e a d e r s to s u i g u e s t c o l u m n s or l e t t e r s to the e d i t o r on a n y sub. C o l u mn s and l e t t e r s m u s t be in g oo d t a s t e , a c c u 1 r e e f r o m libel, m a l i c e a nd p e r s o n a l c o nt ro v e Si nce u e r e c e i v e m a n y m o r e c o n t r i b u t i o n s t han ca p r i n t e d d ail y, l e t t e r s and c o l u m n s m a y be editec b r e v i t y a nd c lar it y. C o l u m n s should be 70 t y p e d lines (60 c h a r a < lines) or less a nd t r i p l e - s p a c e d ; l e t t e r s, 20 t y p e d iti Al l m a t e r i a l s u b m i t t e d f o r p ub l i c a t i o n on t he edi to p a g e s m u s t include the a u t h o r ’s n a m e , c o l l e g e s u a nd t e l e p h o n e n u m b e r . Mail c o l u m n s a n d l e t t e r s to the E d i t o r , The Dc 7 e xan, P O Box D, Austi n, T e x a s 78712, o r d r o p th Í í h l t í * t h e T e x a s S t u d P u b l i c a t i o n s B u i ld i n g a t t he c o r n e r o f 25th S t r e e t < Whitis A v e n u e . e^ eP j. ° f f l c e s o f by Garry Trudeau M cK innon needs support, advice Friday, April 11, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 5 A third party doubtful, Carter v. Reagan likely By TOM WICKER Just before the IIlinoT^primary, I wrote that probably nothing would a lte r the prospect that "next November American voters will have to choose between Jim m y T arter and Ronald Reagan for president of the United States. So far, nothing has. That earlier article suggested that the most likely — but still rem ote — possibility would be for Rep. John Anderson to “ somehow reshape the Republican p arty ” enough to win that hasn’t and obviously its nomination; won t happen. Meanwhile, however, the reprieve granted Sen. Edward Kennedy in New \ ork and C onnecticut has raised another possible — but rem ote — alternative to a Carter-Reagan match. ANDERSON’S FAILURE to win in either Illinois or Wisconsin — crossover states where he conceded he had his best oppor­ tunities — appears fatal to his hopes for the Republican nomination. Democrats and in­ dependents did not flock to his cause in ex­ pected numbers; they supported instead, Ronald R eagan sufficiently to discredit Anderson’s contention that Reagan cannot win in November. Now A nderson is reduced fo rlo rn to hopes, such as attra c ­ ting a big write-in vote in P e n n s y l v a n i a , where he is not on the b allo t, and g e ttin g in thousands of D em ocrats the California Republican party in order to vote for him. Nor is there much likelihood that he can provide a third-party alternative. A Gallup poll found that 21 percent of its respondents would support Anderson on a third-party ticket. But the extent to which Congress and the state legislatures have worked to rule out third-party candidacies discourages even the idea of one. to re g iste r IT IS ALREADY too late, for example, for such a party to get on the ballot in Maryland, Ohio and New Mexico — which cast 38 elec­ toral votes. No new party ever could have got on the ballot in Michigan (21 electoral votes), since that state perm its no such dem ocratic procedure. At least 13 other states make it exceptionally difficult to gain ballot status. Worse, where would Anderson get to m ake a cred ible the third-party money challenge? The 1974 campaign reform act went far to build in the two m ajor parties as “ official” parties by denying federal subsidy to any others during a campaign. Yet, a non­ m ajor party candidate would have to abide by the $1,000 lim it the act imposed on individual contributions. That would make it impossible for him or her to equal or even come near the $29 million federal subsidy each of the m ajor party candidates will receive. Under the act. private citizens could con­ tribute up to $20,000 to a new party, rather than to a candidate; but to qualify for this privilege, such a party would have to select delegates, hold a convention and nominate candidates, a cumbersome procedure that would only burden Anderson with more organization problems, while yielding him no federal subsidy. Of course, if he got as much as five percent of the national vote, he would qualify for partial federal reim bursem ent of his expenses — but next year, too late to buy TV time for his campaign. THESE INDEFENSIBLE restrictions on third parties and independents probably would rule out an Anderson challenge to the two m ajors even if he could be sure he wouldn’t be helping elect Reagan. Thus, the slim possibility that Sen. Kennedy might yet unhorse C arter now seems the only hope for those repelled by a Reagan-Carter choice — if, indeed, they would not be just as repelled by a Reagan-Kennedy match C arter’s big victory in Wisconsin seems to refute what had appeared possible after New York — that the tide might finally have turn­ ed against the president. Still, Wisconsin’s crossover rules and maverick tradition, as well as Pennsylvania’s proximity to New York, make it imprudent to rule out that possibility ju st yet. the It s e e m s lik e ly , moreover, that C arter influenced Wisconsin su b stantially voting last-minute f l u r r y of h o p e he the r e ­ s tirre d fo r lease of the American hostages by Iran. It will not be easy for him to do so again; and if the Iranians dash the public’s hopes once the president might pay a severe more, political price for having so often m arched up the hill, only to come tumbling down again. PENNSYLVANIANS DEPENDENT on the steel industry are said to be upset with C arter for not doing more to protect it from competi­ tion. Cuts in federal spending for social program s will hurt Philadelphia and other aging P en n sy lv an ia c itie s. K en n ed y ’s the C arter adm inistration’s emphasis on economic failures should find an audience in this heavily unionized, old-line industrial state. His campaigning is more polished these days, he has been drawing large crowds, he has three weeks to make his case, and he has adequate if not lavish finances, plus labor support. On prim ary day, April 22, he and C arter will confront each o th er among Democrats only, with no one to siphon crossover votes from either. Kennedy will have no chance m ore promising — which is why he can expect C arter and his campaign lieutenants to mobilize all their power to finish him off in Pennsylvania. ®1980 New York Tim es . Congress and the state legislatures have worked to rule out third-party candidacies . . Census violates rights, aids business By JE FFR E Y H U M M E L ___ FR jjj Y _, HUM MEL________ On April Fool’s Day the American people were dutifully supposed to return their 1980 census forms. These forms subjected the public to prying questions of professional busybodies and file cabinet voyeurs who use the coercive power of the federal government to extract desired inform a­ tion. Most people receive the short census form, which requires them to fill out a minimum of 19 questions. A lucky 20 percent of the public gets to fill out the longer, 65-question form. This form in­ cludes such questions as: Are you m arried to the person with whom you reside? Do you have a physical, m ental, or other health problem which has prevented you from working? How many tim es have you been m arried? Did you work at any time last week? Where? How long? Does your residence have complete plumbing facilities? How many babies, not counting stillbirths, has each woman in your household had? Recognizing the clear violation of privacy en­ tailed in such questions, the House of Represen­ tatives in 1976 passed a proposal to abolish all penalties, civil and criminal, for refusal to answer to census questions. Unfortunately, the Senate rejected this move toward freedom. THE CENSUS BUREAU contends that all the information it gathers is “ handled with absolute confidentiality,” and federal law prohibits access to individual census returns by anyone except cen­ sus employees for a period of 72 years. This prohibition rings hollow, however, when one notes that Census Bureau officials have been in the forefront of bureaucrats calling for a unified national data bank and have attem pted to have * ------ Social Security numbers required on census forms Social Security numbers required on census forms to facilitate this move. im portant information required by During World War II the census provided the most the federal government in order to round up and in­ tern in concentration cam ps all the Japanese- Americans living on the West Coast. Although the individual census forms of Japanese-A m ericans were not delved into, the Census Bureau reproduc­ ed a duplicate #set of punched cards for all Japanese-Americans in order to make crucial tabulations. More recently, President C arter has darkly hinted that census information will be used to hunt down those who refuse to register for his new draft. THE CENSUS ALSO provides a valuable case subsidy to big business, which can be ranked among the staunchest advocates of the census. Businessmen use the census to tell them how many people in various areas are white or black, adults or children, living in small families or large, big homes or small, are renters or owners, and how much money they make. The Census B ureau even p ro v id es co m p u te r to businesses a t nominal charges. ta p e s The penalty for refusing to answer the census ranges from $100 to $500. Nevertheless, census resistance is a growing problem for the bureau. In 1970, by the bureau’s own estim ates the census missed roughly 5.3 million people. Only in Hawaii did the Census Bureau take any census resisters to court, and the single conviction was overturned in a higher court. This year, the Census Bureau has beefed up its staff and engaged in a massive publicity hype in order to overcome the refusal of ■ « U « U VI , » V .W W U I » Americans to fill nut the form* Americans to fill out the forms. to civil liberties and an unjust, Libertarians oppose the census on principle The census constitutes an invasion of privacy, a threat tax- supported subsidy to business. Even if the censuís were confined to the constitutionally m andated goal of simply counting heads, Libertarians would still object. We deny the right of the state to comr- pel individuals to give any information whaC- • soever. TH EREFO RE LIBERTARIANS organized nationwide census resistance this year. The Socie­ ty for Libertarian Life in California solicited c e n ­ sus forms which they then burned or shredded ik front of government census offices and press cor{- ferences. The Society for Individual Liberty ip Pennsylvania has issued Census Resistance Carc¿ which suggested to the individual the option c | three levels of protest: (a) returning the censuk form under protest, (b) returning the form wití» only certain questions answered and (c) returning the form unanswered Other L ibertarians r e tu r n ed their forms with blatantly false or ridiculous information. To dram atize my opposition, J publicly burned my census form on the West MaH \ on April I. Of course, those who fail to turn in their censug forms will then be personally visited by a censul taker. I invite everyone who receives such a visijt to join me and trea t the census taker with the dish courteousness they deserve — by slam ming the Í door in his or her face. H u m m e l is the c h a i r m a n o f S tu d e n t s f o r a L ib e rta ria n S ociety. I LJUK l KL y . Brackenridge groups present unique housing plans to regents — By M YRA B R A C K E N R I D G E -----------------j Benson. He suggested the use of egg cartons covered by heavy- Benson. He suggested the use of egg cartons covered by heavy- duty aluminum foil. _______ By M YRA BR A C K EN R ID G E E d ito r s note: T he a u th o r w ish e s to a tta c h the a b o ve p s e u d o n y m to this sa tiric a l c o lu m n b ec a u s e o f s e v e ra l in s ta n c e s o f h a r a s s m e n t co n c ern in g this issue. Approximately 14 groups from Brackenridge and Deep Eddy Student Housing appeared before the Board of Regents at their meeting in Dilley, Texas. After Dr. Flawn and Chancellor Walker m ade a brief presentation to the regents asking for spit­ toons at every regents’ m eeting (to avoid spitting into the faces of students), Regent Law of the Buildings and Grounds Com­ m ittee asked for the recommendations of the students who were, he said, “ the best qualified experts we could find in the fields of architectural engineering, plumbing, contracting and electrical w iring.” All but one of the neighborhood groups subm itted a virtually identical plan of construction which would utilize the garbage discarded by the citizens of Austin. This plan, according to spokesperson Helma H im m ler of the Brackenridge/Deep Eddy Neighborhood Group, would call for the construction of clusters of six huts which would be arranged in a sem icircle with a hogtrot in the back where the residents could raise their own food. These huts would be constructed from tires, covered by heavy-duty corrugated cardboard and powered by windmills arranged in front of the huts. A REPRESENTATIVE of the Deep Eddy/Brackenridge Neighborhood Group stated that they approved of the above plan, with some reservations. “ Alternative plans should be provided in case the city of Austin runs out of tire s,” said R.Z. Benson also stated that this plan would lower the cost of con­ struction from $5.97 a square yard to $1.97 a square yard, in­ dicating that this is consistent with his group’s view that low cost housing should not cost more than $12 a month rent and that poor people should live as uncomfortably as possible. “ This way we can ally ourselves with the people of the Third World as well as insure that we can live on a low incom e,” Benson predicted. He stated that he and his wife live on $138 a sem ester by eating mimosa leaves and cattails from the nearby Deep Eddy Park. PROPOSALS BY other groups included: the arrangem ent of huts in uniform rows fortified by clotheslines which would serve to hold up the buildings as well as a security device (the Group at Brackenridge/Deep Eddy Neighborhood); and outdoor toilets (the Group a t Deep Eddy/Brackenridge Neighborhood). Sigrid Flout, the representative of a group calling itself Sovereignty-on-Poverty (SOP) declared, “ The 4,000 people and dogs who signed our petition did so in the hope that outdoor laundry facilities would be created from the gorgeous natural rock formations so that we can wash our clothes naturally and get brighter, whiter wash.” The veteran Deep Eddy/Brackenridge Neighborhood Council (VD-DEBNC) issued a warm welcome and groveling statem ent of support for “ our friends, Dr. Flawn, Dr. Brown and Dr. Cooke,” as a prelude to suggesting that their organization be designated to approve any and all plans submitted by the Ad­ ministration in a plot to rid the University of m arried, poor peo­ pie. "We are determ ined," said spokesperson Lvdia Goodsoout. ple. “ We are determ ined,” said spokesperson Lydia Goodspout, “ that the University take a stand against middle-class m orality and the nuclear family, even if we have to co-opt all our other goals.” THEN, IN AN unprecedented move, the Board of Regents un­ animously voted to devote every future regents’ meeting to the topic of family student housing at UT Austin and to turn the ac­ tual running of the University over to an elected com m ittee of qualified students and any of their dependents over the age of 24 months and 4 days. The provision that Dr. Flawn be an ex- officio m em ber of the newly created Committee of Qualified S tudents drew sh arp c ritic is m from E lm a B um stead (B/DENG), who claim ed that Dr. Flawn should be a full-time student before he is allowed to make any decisions that affect the students of this University. Dr. Flawn declined com m ent on the allegation that he is not a full-time student. Regent Law attem pted to adjourn the meeting with faint praise for most of the neighborhood groups, and no praise at all to VD-EBNC because of their stand against the American fam i­ ly. In fact, the meeting would have ended had not Brackenridge r e s i d e n t P e i , l i n e resident Pauline Spuds delivered a 7-pound boy. Spuds stated that she had become so confused by the preceding events that! she had forgotten she was in labor. d e i , „ „ ™ i „ a k„ THE NEW BABY will be named Walt-Jeff-Tom-Jesg- Sterling-John-Dan-Jim-Howard-Jane Spuds, and called Foui¿ Eyes after his proud father. This announcement failed to appease Regent Sterling, who declared that he did not think childbirth was the work of the regents and led the entire boar0 in a protest m arch to Tony’s Bar and Grill, where they ate enchiladas. The B/DENG promptly issued a press release stating, “ This action is typical of the lack of concern the regents have for stu­ dent families at UT Austin Little Four-Eyes led the group in a chorus of “ Nobody Knows the Troubles I ’ve Seen.” The presi got out while the getting was good 1 B r a c k e n r id g e is the single p a r e n t o f n ine c h ild ren who \ live in squa lo r in the d u p le x e s at F a m ily Housing. Call 471-5244 to place a Classified Ad in The Daily Texan O O N ' T M I S S NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING SALES Student e xpe rie n ce d in a d v e rtis in g sales to sell space in The D a ily T e xan on c o m m is s io n . P r e fe r a d v e r tis in g m ajor, but a ll q u a lifie d a p p lic a n ts w ill be considered. P le a s e give fu ll d e ta ils in a letter, or send your resum e. Ap p o in tm en ts w ill be a rra n g e d w ith a p p lic a n ts who q u a lify . WRITE TO: ADVERTISING DIRECTOR P.O. Box D, A u ttin , TX 7 8 7 1 2 - “ *9 .0 0 C A SH "” " *9 .0 0 DOLLARS CASH! t I I I You can sava a life by b« mg a blood plasm a donor. ' It only takes 1' i hours, | and you can donate eve ry i 72 hours. i You w ill receive M .flO lo r I your firs t donation and I $10.00 tor a second dona­ tion in the some week. If you bring this ad m with you, you w ill receive a SI 00 bonus after your firs t donation. AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, INC. I Phone 477-3735 | >10 West 29th H The o f­ ficial Cuban news agency said Thursday the hijacker of an Am erican Airlines Boeing 727 w as a dental school dropout fleeing “ informal slavery In a dispatch monitored in Mexico City. Prensa Latina identi fi ed the g r i my , the taciturn gunman as G erald Leland Merity, 35. originally of Minneapolis, and said he dropped out of dental school at the University of San Fran cisco last year. The University of San F ran ­ cisco, however, has no dental school, and the only dental school in the city, the Univer­ sity of California’s San F ra n ­ cisco cam pus, said it had no student of that nam e who had dropped out in the p ast 20 years Prensa Latina said Merity w as a converted Muslim and uses the name Muhammad Ja la l Deen Akbar IT QUOTED him as saying. “ In the United States slavery form ally ended a little m ore than 100 years ago. but it con­ tinues in form ally. Until a short tim e ago we blacks had to struggle against the Ku Klux Klan, but now we have to do it again st the police that accost us, and against the Nazi P a rty .” He said the “ free world” is not for blacks. He said he quit unspecified studies last year because of “ political and religious con­ flicts with the educational authorities.” “ The c o n flic ts re v o lv e d around my being black, my re lig io u s b e lie fs and m y political id e a s,” he said. “ We b e e n h a v e assassin ated , raped, robbed, reduced to the m entality of a child,” P ren sa Latina quoted Merity. It said he went to Cuba because it is “ a country t h a t d e m o n s t r a t e s t h e goodwill of men that can be done, and because it is a test of what a sm all people is capable of doing.” AN F B I SO URCE in Miami said aboard the plane during the 10-hour hijacking from On­ ta r io , C a lif ., to H a v a n a , the grimy-clad Wednesday, gunman “ behaved m ore like a than a f ugi t i ve c rim in a l political fugitive.” “ P o l i t i c a l t e r r o r i s t s gen erally a re verbose and spend the time telling their hostages of their resentment and their reasons for their ac­ tion,” the source said. “ This man said nothing at a ll.” Radio Havana said the man “ spoke fluently to the people of Cuba through the press. He abandoned the United States for political and religious reasons. “ He said any (black) leader who tried to show the right road to the black people was exposed to death. “ In the U.S., black people the hi­ live without hope,” jack er was quoted as saying. The F B I prep ared co m ­ posite sketches of the hijacker in an effort to identify him. The gunman, wearing dirty jean s, a flowered shirt and karate jacket, leaped a fence a t an a irp o r t in the L o s A ngeles suburb of O ntario W ed n esd ay mo r n i n g . He entered the door of the plane being readied for a flight to Chicago, > held a 45-caliber pistol to ‘the head of a flight attendant and demanded to be taken to Havana. Winedale festival begins Friday The 13th annual W inedale Spring Festival will be Friday through Sunday at the U niversity’s Winedale Historical Center on FM 2714, four m iles east of Round Top. This y e a r’s festival will feature a G er­ man play, the fifth annual T exas C rafts Exhibition, traditional and folk m usic and an old-fashioned barbecue. “ D e r Zerbrochene Krug,” a play sponsored by the Departm ent of G er­ manic Languages, will open the festival at 8 p.m. Friday. T exas a rtists will exhibit their work from 10:30 a.m . to 5 p.m . Saturday and Sunday. C rafts, m ost of which will be on sale, include stained g lass, soft sculp­ ture, jewelry, basketry, silversm ithing, b rass and weaving. The Peaceable Kingdom C raft School of Washington, Texas, will dem onstrate blacksmithing, fireplace cooking, w eav­ ing and woodworking Winedale staff m em bers will dem onstrate spinning and soapmaking. Saturday’s m usical perform ances will feature the Bayou City Attic Singers of Houston, the E a st T exas String E n sem ­ ble and the Polka Dot Band from Bur­ ton, The Jo y B ell G ospel S in g e rs of Brenham and the University Varsity Singers will perform Sunday with the Roadrunners Square D ancers of La Grange. The barbecue will be served at 5 p.m. Saturday. Tickets are $4 for adults and $2 for children under 12. In addition, restored early Texas buildings will be open for viewing dur­ ing the festival. Festival tickets are $2 for adults and 50 cents for children. Come see all the great spring and sum m er fashions fo r college and career. Plus, the sportswear and activewear for ‘ when the good times roll. ’ Included will be the sensational new Preppy looks that are taking the country by storm . Here, the Preppy polish of madras plaid walking s h o rts, 21.00, and a navy seersucker blazer, 41.00. Both in cool cotton by Happy Legs. 5 to 13 sizes in the Junior Shop, Northcross Mall. FROST BROS. “SORORITY SALUTE FASHION SHOW, 2:00 RM. SATURDAY AT NORTHCROSS MALL V ita t t M atfarC harfla W a lco m * Fr«« 1 hr. p a rk in g w / $ 3 . 0 0 p u rc h a *» Friday, April 11, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 Constitution prevents fair trial, O ’Hair says By ALISA HAGAN Daily Taxan Staff The F irst Amendment to the Texas Constitution overrules any chance of an atheist receiving a fair trial in the state atheist leader Madalyn M urray O’H air said Thursday. 0 H air says the equity of the judicial system toward atheists w ill be tested in a hearing Monday before County Court at-Law No. 1 Judge Brock Jones Jr . O’H air w ill stand trial for disrup­ ting a public meeting Nov, 3, 1977, a misdemeanor charge. 0 H air, who disrupted a prayer with which Mayor Carole McClellan began an Austin City Council meeting, losi an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court to transfer the case from state to federal court. The Am erican Atheist Center, 2210 Hancock Drive, published a news release on O’H a ir’s trial which is titled: “ Invitation to an Inquisition.” O’H air said she w ill attend an “ inquisition” rather than a trial because under the First Amendment to the Texas Constitu­ tion all attorneys, judges and jurors must profess a belief in a supreme being. Although O’H air said her atheism w ill keep her from receiv­ ing a fair trial, she w ill make no specific predictions concerning the decision. I ’m 61, and I never forecast — I'm not a m agician.” she said. The charge against O’H air carries a maximum penalty upon conviction of 180 days in ja il and a $1,000 fine. She professes "com plete indifference to public opinion sur­ rounding her personal life and Monday’s trial “ I am indifferent in the respect that the public of the United States is actually un­ informed (about many issues). BAU8CH & LOMB (£) “ Where are they supposed to go to get informed — high schools?” she asked rhetorically. “ Austin is not a cultural city; it’s a little hick town.” Center helps blind to achieve independence Total Glare Protection! Rehabilitated man hopes for career as darkroom technician By GARY COOK Blindness can strike an individual at any time, and learning to cope with a vision loss can be difficult. Ju st ask 26-year-old Mark Tuck, who made his living driving a truck in Bastrop until last September when he lost his sight Fo r Tuck, it also meant the loss of his job, his career and his future. Now, almost six months later, Tuck has turned his life around largely because of help from the Criss Cole Rehabilitation Center, an Austin center sponsored by the Texas Com­ mission for the Blind. Tuck entered the Criss Cole Center in January hoping to learn how to adjust to his blindness and to get a fresh start. Now he hopes to have a career as a darkroom techni­ cian. The Criss Cole unit was built in 1969 by the TC B as a personal adjustment center to aid visually disabled Texans in achieving in­ dependence and productivity When it was constructed, the center was touted as the best in the nation for rehabilitating the blind. That reputation, ac­ cording to center director L a rry Reiber, gave the center some big shoes to fill. “ People expected a lot out of the center, because of the reputation it got even before it opened,” Reiber said. “ The reason they ex­ pected so much is because it had a lot of money behind it and other centers for the blind in existen ce at that tim e w ere somewhat outdated. Everyo n e expected Criss Cole to be so good because it was modem and expensive.” But with a budget of approxim ately $1.2 m illion this year, the center is barely able to maintain its client services, although Reiber said they are reluctant to cut back on anything. “ If we had to live strictly within the money appropriated to us, we would have to cut back,” Reiber said. “ The counselors and teachers here are just like my fam ily,” Tuck said “ I feel like this is a second home for m e.” As far as rehabilitation services are con­ cerned. Criss Cole operates much like a school. There are two programs operating during the year — the regular living adjust­ ment program and a special “ sum m er for TC B clients who are preparing to school attend college in the fall and want to learn how to cope with college. In addition, the center has programs designed to train TC B counselors and rehabilitation teachers. The main priority of the center is the living adjustment program, which most of the clients are involved in. Each client of the center is a resident for the duration of the 125 blind persons yearly at an average cost of $8,000 per client. “ The needs and expectations of each client a re d e te rm in e d through a s e rie s of evaluations, which begin even before that person has been admitted to the center,” rehabilitation counselor M arilyn Buck ex­ plained. “ None of the clients are walk-ins; rather, each client is referred to us by a TC B counselor in the field. Before he is admitted to the center, the client undergoes an evalua­ tion to determine his needs. Then, when he arrives at Criss Cole, a program is developed to meet those needs,” Buck said. The center also serves clients that have multiple handicaps, with the greatest number of these being both deaf and blind. There are five m ajor training areas in the living adjustment program, including orien­ tation and m obility, personal and home management, manual arts, communications and recreation. The resources of the center are vast, which allows a great deal of flex­ ibility in developing individualized programs. In addition, the center provides food service, rooms, medical services and counseling con­ sultants from other state agencies. Ray-Ban lenses are scientifically formulated to protect your eyes from even the harshest glare. Precision surfaced lenses eliminate waves and distortion for perfect vision. See our complete collection of Ray-Ban Sun Glasses for every out­ door activity! VISA A M atldO w rf* W»lcom« i'fW AApparel 9 n o p Rr*t Uv«J Froo 1 hr. parking f w /$ 3 .0 0 purchase color your summer spectrum with rainbow-bright activewear by Jantzen The sun's warming up the city, and everywhere people seem ch arg ed with a kind of new-found energy. You're no exception; those warm breezes are tugging you toward the active, outdoor life, too. For summer's spirited arrival, choose Jantzen® activewear. Peppy shorts and tops that are comfortable, easy to move in and ready for nonstop action. And they com e in radiant rainbows of color to reflect your energetic, sunny disposition. So, get going to foiey's where summer is just around the corner and Jantzen's bright cotton active-wear is ready now. Tops, sizes S, M, L; shorts, sizes 5 to 13. A. Rainbow b a n d eau top; blue or red, 13.00; Rainbow short; blue or red, 14.00; B. Interlock short-sleeved top; blue, red and yellow, 18.00; Interlock dunker short; blue, red and yellow, 14.00 JUNIOR SWIMWEAR. FIRST FLOOR, FOLEY'S IN HIGHLAND MALL. SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. Page 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, April 11, 1980 I ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Detach registration form and mail to: The Division of Continuing Education The University of Texas M A I 2 5 0 0 Austin, Texas 78 71 2 INTERMEDIATE MATH SKILLS NAME: HO M E ADDRESS: _ OFFICE PHONE: _____ H O M E P H O N E : _____ ZIP: Paym ent by: C h e c k V o u c h e r M o n e y O r d e r V I S A N O . ___ _ M A S T E R C H A R G E N O . D a te C a r d E x p ir e s / C a r d h o ld e r 's A d d r e s s / C a r d h o ld e r 's N a m e The University of Texas at Austin INTERMEDIATE MATH SKILLS offered by the College of Natural Sciences D epartm ent of M athem atics with support of the Division of Continuing Education — For persons who require proficiency in m athem atics tests — Good for GRE review (in tim e for special administration of May 3rd G R E ) Dates: Time: Place: Fee: Mondays, April 14, 21, 28. May 5 7:15 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Joe C. Thompson Conference Center (26th & Swisher, North of LBJ Library) $35 00, includes m aterials & homework analysis For fu rth er inform ation, call 471-3123 BE ON THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AT 22 M l : ' I : % Jm wJ - i .• u i ¿pe >•*" P*. Think of a ship as a corporation, and it’s not farfetched at all. A destroyer may have fifteen officers, other ships even fewer. Even the m ost junior officer get to share in running the show. You become part of the management team when you get your com m is­ sion as an ensign after just 16 weeks of leadership training at officer candidate school. Choose to be a Navy officer and you are responsible for peo p le and equipment almost imm ediately. Many officers go on for further advanced schooling. The Navy has literally dozens of fields for its officers — everything from nuclear propulsion to system s analysis, oceanography to inventory manage ment. In graduate school, this training would cost you thousands, but in the Navy, we pay you. As a college graduate, you can get management experience in any in­ dustry. But you’ll get it sooner — and more of it — as an officer in the Navy. For Further Info rm ation Contact JO H N SONDERGAARD, B iB PLACEMENT OFFICE APRIL 1 4 - /7 9 A M -2 PM or C a ll I -8 0 0 -2 9 2 -5 7 0 3 INTRODUCING THE ALL-EUROPEAN LIMITED EDITION fNJTROMinLCR- from SPECIAL PURCHASE YOU Inflation concern symposium topic By PATRICK JANKOWSKI Dally Texan Staff Business, civic and student leaders will examine questions concerning inflation, energy, business ethics and capital form a­ tion Friday and Saturday at the Joe C. Thompson Conference Center. The conference, titled: “ Economic Crises in the 1980s — Are There Solutions? will be in the conference center mam auditorium beginning at 7 p m . Friday. On F riday, inflation will be discussed by U niversity economics professor Stephen McDonald and Jerom e Gilbert, an economist in New York. University economics professor Jam es McKie will m oderate the discus­ sion. for Chemical Bank The first session is free and open to the public, but rest of the symposium is by invitation only The symposium is sponsored by the College of Business Administration Student Council, the Institute for Constructive Capitalism and the Texas Union Ideas and Interactions Committee, with funding from a grant from the Charles Edison Memorial Youth Fund. The symposium will deal with questions of interest to college students today, Paul Nagy, symposium coordinator, said. Nagy, a senior m arketing m ajor, said lists of questions on each issue were mailed to approxim ately 1,670 students at 30 colleges across the nation Students were asked to list the questions in order of im por­ tance to them, and those questions which appeared highest on the list will be focused on at the symposium, he said. The Friday session will address the following questions: • Can American society, as we know it, survive with double­ digit inflation9 • Is there any effective way to m anage inflation? • How will inflation most dram atically change our lifestyle? • Is inflation a condition that will be with us forever? • How much of the inflation rate can objectively be attributed to governmental policies? Thirty students from 23 different universities and 120 Univer­ sity students will attend the entire symposium, he said. University participants were chosen through interviews earlier this year. Council . . . (Continued from Page 1.) force. The ordinance the task force presented asks the council to choose between different a lte r­ natives to control urban runoff. The developer faction on the task force took the approach that if the w ater quality m eets “ perform ance standards’’ then development should not be restrained by inflexible density restrictions. The environm entalists on the task force recommended a maximum density of 2-acre lots for most of the watershed “ In the name of w ater quality (the en- vironm enalists) ask that control be adopted that would be harmful, oppressive and con­ said task force m em ber Gibson fiscatory, Randle, referring to a part of the ordinance that would limit the density of impervious cover. CHAIRMAN NEAL GRAHAM said the den­ the sity of 1 unit per half acre, which developers on the task force recommend, would increase certain types of pollution — 400 tim es (m o re pollution than is currently reaching the creek." The 88-acre zoning request which would have allowed up to 15 units an acre, would have been considered too intensive a development by all m em bers of the task force. The m ost per­ missive zoning allowed under both recom m en­ dations for the Barton Creek ordinance would be 2 units an acre. Regents . . . (Continued from Page 1.) Dallas Health Science Center Ambulatory Care Center. Chancellor E. Don Walker and Charles Sprague, presi­ dent of the Health Science C enter, recom m ended th at a p p r o v e t h e b o a r d prelim in ary plans for the structure at a cost of $12 million. “ ENERGY IS NOT abun­ dant.” Blumberg said “This building might turn out to be a great source of unhappiness if the air conditioning gives out,” she said. O ther action during the hour-and-a-half-long meeting included • Approval for the prepara­ tion of final plans for two ad­ ditional floors in the Dallas H e a lth S c ie n c e C e n te r 's F lo r e n c e B io in fo rm a tio n Center. • At an estim ated cost of $9.5 m illion, ap p ro v al of prelim inary plans for a new San Antonio Health Science Center Library Building, with authorization to prepare final plans. • Authorization of a UT San Antonio feasibility study for a student union building, pen­ ding the board’s expected F ri­ day approval of a student fee. The board is scheduled to conclude its meeting Friday, beginning at 9 a.m. Market conditions cause LCRA bond cut By MELINDA M AGEE Daily Texan Staff The Lower Colorado River Authori­ ty slashed its plan to borrow $60 m illion for construction p ro jec ts through the issuance of revenue bonds because of unfavorable national m arket conditions. Deteriorating m arket conditions, along with Texas’ 10 percent ceiling on interest rates, prompted the LCRA Board of D irectors to reduce the the bond program to $30 million, with a shorter pay back period on borrowed money. the Under state law, the LCRA cannot pay an interest rate higher than 10 percent on bonds sold The board said it would be difficult to sell the bonds with a 10 percent interest ra te since it would not be com petitive with rates offered by public authorities in other states. The bonds will m ature in 20 years rather than in the planned 28 years so that lower interest ra te bonds going on the m arket April 24 will be “ more attractiv e,” said Milton Y. Tate, chairm an of the board. An alternative the board considered but voted down was to take out a short-term loan at a local bank to cover pressing projects. If the bond m arket then improved, bonds would be issued to pay off the bank loan and finance the remaining construction projects. This is the first tim e the LCRA has attem pted to issue bonds to finance construction projects. In previous years projects were financed through rate increases approved by the Texas Public Utility Commission. Some of the construction projects include numerous transm ission lines, the expansion of a local service center and the construction of a new operations and controls building. The deteriorating m arket and Tex­ a s ’ 10 percent limit on bond interest ra te s hurt a housing loan bond program last month. A N N O U N C E M E N T T h o m a s L. K o l k e r , f o r m e r l y o f th e S tu d e n t A t t o r n e y ' s O f f i c e is in a s s o c ia t i o n w i t h M a l c o l m Gree nstein fo r the p ra c tic e of C I V I L A N D C R I M I N A L L A W including felonies and m isdem eano rs 472-6270 1402 E 1st Call fo r a p p o in tm e n t Rates a v a ila b le upon request looking good feeling good 4 7 8 -6 7 5 4 2408 San Gabriel IMMIGRATION ASSISTANCE • Relative P e rm a n e n t Resident Visas • Labor Certifications • P ra ctica l Training • N aturalizations • Visa E xtensions Paul Parsons Attorney at Law 2200 Guadalupe Austin, Texas 78705 (512 ) 477-7887 Se Habla Español Public fo ru m s b roadcast live fro m KLRU-TV18 and KUT-FM 90.7 N ational P ublic Radio fro m The U niversity o f Texas at A u stin PBS Affiliate life in Our uture: austin’s nexf fifteen years Join on-air discussions at 8 p.m. April 11 BUSINESS & EMPLOYMENT April 18 GOVERNMENT Call 471-1631 to reserve seats fo r studio audience participation. Studio 6A, UT Communication Bldg. B, 26th & Guadalupe. r 6 b . | ROOM SERVICE Relax! Call Domino's Pizza and have a hot, delicious, New York style pizza delivered thirty minutes or less. i t ’s just like Room Service. in tf'NC /WJTRO-MinLCR fl-bJ Suggested R etail 92 1 9 00 n o w * ! 5 9 °° WHILE THEY LAST ! Other 10 speeds priced from only 9°° ASK A B O U T O U K UNNEB T I M l P A Y M I N T ------ H A N S C0'0 P C O M E BY S O O N FOR BEST SELECTION 4 7 6 -7 2 1 1 505 W. 2 3 rd Street tree 1 hr. parking in Co-Op lot w /$ 3 .0 0 purchase O Cam pus 476-7181 O Enfield 474-7676 O Riverside 447*6681 O Hyde Park 458-9101 BEAUTY IS YOURS w i t h i n d i v i d u a li z e d skin care b y E r n o ImszIo. F re e D elivery HOURS S u n T h u 4 00 p n .- 12 (X) pm F n S a t 4 00 pm - 1 00 am N o . 5 Jefferson S quare C a ll 4 5 2 - 8 8 4 6 No closing date set for Night Hawk The Night Hawk restaurant at 1907 Guadalupe St. - a University area landmark for the past 47 years — plans to close its doors soon, Night Hawk restaurants president Lela J. Akin said Thursday No definite closing date has been set yet,” Akin said, but the University area location will close within the next three or four weeks. Evolution disturbed The restaurant. Night Hawk’s second Austin location, was opened in 1933 by Akin’s late hus­ band Harry, who founded the business. The restaurant is closing because the communi­ ty in which it operates does not support a full- service restaurant. The company will continue to operate its three other Austin restaurants, including the original location at 336 S. Congress Ave., and its frozen foods division, Akin said. “ There are three other restaurants, and we ask our friends to please come and visit us at one of those locations,” Akin said. Tropical forests face quick destruction W A S H IN G T O N ( U P I ) - The world’s tropical forests are being wiped out so ra p id ly that hot weather plants and animals face ex­ tinction at an unprecedented rate, a National Research Council com­ mittee reported Thursday. The panel said an area of tropical lowland the size of Delaware is per­ manently converted to other uses each week, and an area the size of Great Britain each year. “ If this destruction continues at its present rate until the 21st cen­ tury, it will lead to alteration in the course of evolution worldwide, to widespread human misery and to loss of the very knowledge that might be used to moderate the other consequences,” the report said. It said the only extensive areas of undisturbed forest expected to re­ main by the end of the 1900s. primarily in western Brazil and in central Africa, will probably sur­ vive only a few more decades. T H E REPORT, based on a two- year, $200,000 study, was prepared for the governm ent’s N ational Science Foundation The panel was headed by Dr. Peter H Raven, of the Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis. The committee found that nearly two-thirds of the original area of tropical moist forest in India, Sri Lanka and Burma already has been turned into agricultural and other uses. “ It is anticipated that the lowland forests of the Philippines and the Malay Peninsula and much of those of Indonesia, w estern A fric a , Madagascar, Central America and the West Indies will be converted to other uses within the next 10 years,” the report said is an There often immediate economic gain when the forests are turned into farmland, the com­ mittee said, but existing technology has not been able to sustain produc­ tivity for long periods in most tropical soils. “ C O N S E Q U E N T L Y , T H E likelihood of in sta b ility, both ecological and human, is increased dramatically as the forests are altered and eliminated.” The report said two thirds of the world’s species of most groups of plants and animals live between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn. The panel estimated that perhaps 2 million or more kinds of tropical organisms have not even been dis­ covered. Their elimination would result in a “ drastic decline in genetic diver­ sity" which would cause a perma­ in the course of nent alteration evolution and lead to an irrevocable loss of an opportunity to gain knowledge. The committee called for an im­ mediate increase in research on an international scale in the tropical f o r es ts , i n c l u d i n g a g r e a t l y accelerated biological inventory of the threatened lands and an expan­ sion of s t u d i e s of t r o p i c a l ecosystems. “ It is our collective tragedy that only a small effort is being devoted to alleviating this drastic situation whilst a number of people roughly equal to the population of France or of the United Kingdom is being add­ ed to the tropics every year,” the report said. The National Research Council is the operating arm of the private and prestigious National Academy of Sciences. ms m m m Friday, April 11, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 ^Students . ____ ■\ You Have a Voice in the Affairs of Your UNIVERSITY CO-OP Through the Student Members Of the Board of Directors CP Three Student Members Will be Elected on April 15. Platform s of the Candidates Will be In the Texan Mon. & Tues., April 14 & 15. VOTE FOR THREE Monday & Tuesday, April 14 & 15 T H E R E WILL B E FO UR VOTING LOCATIONS' University Co-Op on Guadalupe At 26th and Speedw ay Co-Op E a s t on R ea R iv er Littlefield Fountain on 21st DON’T FORGET TO VOTE MAKE YOUR VOTE COUNT "W H Y DO THE H EA TH EN R A G E ? Psalms 2:1 and Acts 425 in Are you concerned and troubled about the g reat in­ law lessness? Violen t hold-ups, s te a lin g , crea se ch eating , sw indling, murder, rape,, adultery, and other kinds of violence and anarchy! At tim es these things strike m ighty close to our hom es, loved ones, and friends! And they will get closer unless some change is m ade. In the days of Noah God destroyed the earth and everything w herein was the breath of life excepting the eight m em bers of N o ah ’s fam ily, and the anim als he kept alive in the Ark according to G od’s orders. The cause of this jud g m en t w as for causes sim ilar to the ones th at ex­ ist today: ‘‘Man corrupted G od’s way on the earth, and the earth w as filled w ith violence.” ‘‘MY SPIRIT SHALL NOT ALW AYS STRIVE W ITH M A N — ,” The Alm ighty announced in the days of Noah, and sent the flood. Gen. 6:3. It may be the tim e has about arrived when His Spirit will quit striving with you, and me! Until th at tim e com es we would do well to rem em ber that Christ told us to do some striving: “ STRIVE TO ENTER IN AT THE STRAIT GATE: FOR M A N Y, I SAY UNTO YOU, W ILL SEEK TO ENTER IN, AND SHALL NOT BE A B LE !” Luke 13:24. W e can strive to be “ faith ful unto d e a th ” to the vows made to God in joining His Church. W e should strive to be faith ful in our testim ony that The Bible is the W ord of God, and be careful not to get in the “ broad w ay” of unbelief of those who both in and out of the Church atta ck the B'ble. W e should strive to be faith fu l in our testim ony that the Ten C om m andm ents reveal the m orality, righteousness, and very c h arac ter of God: and strive to be workers together with His Holy Spirit in w riting these C om m andm ents in our hearts to the end we may accom plish the whole duty of man, which is “ To fear God, and keep His C o m m an dm en ts.” Concerning God's jud g em ents and slaughter of the w icked, the w riter has had Divines, or Dry Vines, say to him: “ God is not like th a t!” Perm it this com m ent on that: Consider the slaughter, death, and suffering going on all the tim e in all the world: surely as the Scripture says: “ The whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain and death even until n ow .” Think of the death, suffering, and sorrow in our own city, in our own g en eration , and the w ars of former generations history, and antiquity. If your god don't control all these things, then surely your god must have lost control. Surely you need to seek and find the God who has not lost control, even the true C h ristian ’s God — not one sparrow falls to the ground w ithout His perm ission. He explain s why all this death, slaughter, suffering: THE CAUSE IS SIN: D IS O B E D IE N C E TO HIS LAW S AND C O M M A N D M E N T S : “ FOR TH E W AGES OF SIN IS D E A TH !” BUT, BUT, “ BUT T H E G IF T OF GOD IS ETERNAL LIFE TH R O U G H OUR LORD JESUS FOR GOD SO LOVED THE W ORLD, T H A T HE CH RIST - GAVE H IS O NLY BEG O TTEN SO N THAT W H O SO EVER BELIEVETH IN HIM SH O U LD NOT PERISH, BUT HAVE EVERLASTING L IF E .” John 3:16. P.O. BOX 405 D E C A TU R , G E O R G IA 30031 Harvard alumnus to establish $500,000 fund for endowed teaching position’ in astronomy A Harvard alumnus plans to donate $500,000 over the next few years to establish the first “ endowed teaching position” in the University’s astronomy department. The ‘‘funded chair,” donated by Curtis Vaughan Jr . of San An­ tonio, will be one of 18 at the University, said Val Dunnam, associate director of the University’s Development Office. Harlan Smith, director of McDonald Observatory and an astronomy professor, hopes the chair w ill draw “ top astronomers” to the University. “ Nobel prizes are not given in astronomy, but if they were, this would be the level of the persons we’re seeking for the chair,” he said. The fund’s interest will guarantee the income of the chosen professor while freeing him from the mandatory teaching load to do research and work on special projects, Smith said. Universities often recruit for such positions by advertising in academic journals, but the University astronomy department will also probably slate three to four individuals and negotiate with them to come, he said. While Vaughan builds the fund up to the $500,000 mark, the in­ terest will be used for “ innovative projects” and special equip­ ment for the department, Smith said. Vaughan is a member of the McDonald Observatory Advisory Council, which is composed of businessmen and professionals. Thurt., Fri. & Sat. Special Opon 7 Days A W eek — 2 4 Hrs. A Day Shoe Shop W e m ake and repair boots shoes belts leather goods SHEEPSKIN CO W & CALF ★ SADDLES ★ ENGLISH WESTERN LOCATIONS: • 2801 Guadalupe (28th & Guad.) • 2201 College Ave. (S. Cong. A Live Oak) “ ALL YOU CAN EAT" 4 P.M. - 9 :3 0 P.M. F rie d T ro u t F ille ts , F re n c h F rie s , Hush puppies, Cole Slaw , R e d a n d T a r t a r Sauce, plus Rolls. Capitol Saddlery Austin, Texas 4 7 8 -9 3 0 9 W X 4 * 1614 Lavaca Children 8-11 y e a r s Children 5-8 y e a r s • . $ 2 .5 0 $ 1 .5 0 ain? MAKE IT WITH JUAREZ TEQUILA IMPORTED & BOTTLED BY TEQUILA JALISC O S A ST LOUIS M0 80 PROOf G010 OR SILVER BLACKFEST COMING! Games, Music, Poetry, Plays, Lectures, FUN TODAY South Mall ( in b etw een Littlefield Fountain A Statu e) Produced by The Texas Union Afro-American Culture Com mittee and The Black G raduate Students Association GOING AWAY FOR THE SUMMER?? GOING TO TAKE COLLEGE COURSES TO PASS THE TIME?? WANT TO GET APPROVAL IN ADVANCE?? F o llo w These Easy Steps (1) Call or write the Registrar and Admissions Office at the college you want to attend this summer and obtain a copy of their summer course schedule (the UT Admissions Office does not have copies of these) along with a catalogue containing course descriptions. (2) P ick out the courses you think you want to take. (You may want to see your dean or department advisor for degree requirements in your m ajor.) (3) Bring the schedule of courses to the S U M M E R C O U R S E P R E ­ A P P R O V A L D E S K in the Lobby of the Academ ic Center April 21-25 for certification of transferability. (Rem em ber, preregistration for F a ll 'SO classes at UT is taking place at the same tim e.) (4) Have a great Sum m er learning experience! Office of Admissions Page 10 □ THE D A IL Y TEXAN □ Friday, April 11, 1980 Britain expresses regrets for showing documentary LONDON (U P I) — B ritain said Thursday it had exp ressed its “ profound re g re t” to Saudi Arabia, an im portant trading partner, over a TV m ovie about a Saudi p rin cess who w as e x ­ ecuted for adultery and her lover who w as beheaded independent The screening of the d ram atized docum en­ tary on B ritain’s television network Wednesday night apparently offend­ ed the Saudis b ecau se of its unflattering por­ trait of their royal fa m ily and the Islam ic system of justice. The affair seem ed lik ely to touch off a storm in the House of C om m ons as m em b ers of P arliam en t criticized F oreign S ecretary Lord Carrington for sending the m essa g e of regret. “ If the Saudi regim e is a cessp ool in which w om en are treated w orse than ca ttle, then anyone who exp oses it should have our sup­ p ort,” said opposition m em ber Raym ond F letch er. “ The foreign secreta ry should keep his nose out of m atters w hich are the concern of jou rn alists and b ro a d ca sters.” The $440,000 m ovie, “ D eath of a P r in c e s s,” w as based on the public execu tion in 1977 of P r in c e ss Misha, 19, the granddaughter of P rin ce M uhammad Bin Abdul Aziz. T h e h e a v ily v e i l e d p r i n c e s s , s a id to have fallen in love w ith a fellow student after being m arried to a cousin in an arrang­ ed m atch, w as shot to d eath in a public park­ ing lot. Her lover w as forced to w atch the shooting, and w as then beheaded P roducer-director Antony T hom as said he w as able to accu rately recrea te the e x ­ ecutions b ecau se a British engineer had secretly shot film of the event. Much of the m ovie, two years in the m ak­ ing w as shot in Cairo using E gyptian actors Saudi F oreign M inister P rin ce Saud sum ­ moned the B ritish ch arge d ’affaires last week and m ade known his governm ent’s “ deep concern” about the proposal to screen the film , a Foreign O ffice spokesm an said. Subsequently, B ritain ’s A m bassador to Saudi Arabia J a m es Craig had to cut short his vacation in F ran ce and ordered back to his post last w eekend with a m essa g e of regret from the d ep uty foreign s e c r e ta r y , the spokesm an added. television channel, Then Carrington, in Portugal for a Council of Europe m eetin g, also sent a m essa g e ex­ pressing “ profound re g ret” to P rin ce Saud and explaining the British governm ent had no control over any the spokesm an said Beyond that, there w as no description of the contents of the m essa g e s T h e y w e r e c l e a r l y d e s i g n e d t o lim it d am age to a relationship, w hich, the foreign o ffic e said, “ w e greatly v a lu e .” At stake w ere hundreds of m illions of dollars worth of con tracts and about 10 percent of Britain’s oil supplies. Tatum O’Neal Kristy McNichol Loans available to tornado victims By ROBBIE SABO Dally Taxan Staff P arts of Bastrop, T ravis and W illiam son coun­ ties w ere declared d isa ster areas Thursday by the U. S. D e p a r tm e n t o f A g r ic u ltu r e , m a k in g residents eligib le for low -interest loans to help com p en sate for lo sses suffered from M onday’s tornados. The loans b ecam e availab le Thursday for those who are “ unable to obtain com m ercia l cred it at rates and term s they can be exp ected to m e e t,” Robert F erris, d istrict director for the F a rm er’s H om e Loan program , said. Lund, in Travis County, and Round Rock, in W illiam son County, suffered the w orst dam age, although sp ecific dam age e stim a te s w ere not availab le, he said. To apply, d isaster area resid en ts m ust bring d am age estim a tes to the loan office. Program of­ ficials w ill then a sse ss the hom e and property d am age and m ake appropriate loans “ We ca n ’t sit behind our desks and m ake those e s tim a te s,” F erris said. P hysical losses as w ell as production losses — such as crops or livestock — are considered in aw arding the loans The production loss m ust be at lea st 20 percent of the person’s property at the site, he explained. If a person has insurance whjrh w ill pay for part of the dam ages, the loan is m ade on the d am ages not covered by insurance, F erris said The loans, which have a $1.5 m illion lim it, m ust be paid back within seven y ears for equipm ent loss and within 40 y ears for property loss. In addition, Travis and W illiam son county residents w ill soon be eligib le for Sm all B u sin ess A dm inistration Loans, Frank Cox, sta te d irector of d isaster em ergen cy se rv ic es, said. B efore th ese loans are approved county jud ges m ust com p lete lists of the dam ages. Gov. Bill C lem ents m ust then approve the program before it is sent to W ashington for final approval, he said. Cox said he w as already w orking with rep resen ­ tatives of both county judges The loan program for uninsured lo sses provides 3 percent loans for physical loss and 7 percent loans for econom ic loss. The m axim um for hom e construction is usually $50,000, with a $25,000 m ax­ im um for hom e contents, he said. “ This is a com p licated p rocess and can be ad­ justed either up or dow n ,” Cox said. Cowboys sponsor Special Olympics Handicapped athletes will compete in track and field events Once a year, m en tally retarded and w heelchair bound ath letes of Central T exas get the opportuni­ ty to pit their physical prow ess a g a in st one another in a Special O lym pics. Saturday, proclaim ed “ S pecial O lym p ics D a y ” by the Austin City Council, w ill be highlighted by the 1980 Austin Area Special O lym pics, sponsored by the UT Cowboys. Burger Stadium , on Highway 290 W est, w ill host approxim ately 3,500 local handicapped ath letes who w ill com p ete in 17 sp ecialized track and field even ts beginning at 9 a.m . "We stress participation am ong the a th letes in the area m e e t,” D ebbie Walton, T exas Special O lym pics ad m in istrative assistan t, said Thurs­ day. “ We try to get aw ay from having the need to win' as a g o a l.” E very con testant re ce iv e s a ribbon as do the top three finishers in each heat. M edals are awarded to the top three finishers in each event, Chrysa Wikstron, a Special O lym pics coach for the Austin State School, said Thursday. Those who p articipate in the Special O lym pics re ceiv e an autom atic invitation to the sta te track and field m eet this August at M em orial Stadium in Austin. “ There w ill be no entrance fee for those who w ish to w atch the e v e n ts,” Martin P ayne, a Cow­ boy organizer, said Thursday. “ But, w e w ill ask for a dollar donation, that isn ’t m andatory, to help finance the Special O ly m p ics.” Any extra m oney the se rv ic e organization gar­ ners w ill be donated to the Joseph P. Kennedy Foundation, under w hose au sp ices all Special O lym pics are sanctioned. The Cowboys began the sp ecial w eekend w ith a dance Thursday night for ap proxim ately 300 of the a th letes in the T exas Union Ballroom . Money from next M onday's annual Cowboy- sponsored T exas M instrel con cert, featuring Ron­ nie M ilsap, w ill be donated to the Austin A sso cia­ tion for R etarded Citizens. Mall figures accused of engineering violations By D IA N E B A L L A R D Dally Texan Staff Crim inal ch arges have been filed a g a in st th ree m en in clu d in g an Austin arch itect and draftsm an as a result of the in vestigation of the collap se of a shopping m all in Round Rock under construction last year. When the Sam Ball Square m all collapsed on July 10, 1979, two con­ struction workers w ere killed and an investigation began to d eterm in e the structural flaw s which caused the catastrophe. Two m en involved in the m a ll’s construction planning — arch itect Leon Chandler, of Leon Chandler A ssociates, and draftsm an R obert J a c k s o n , e m p l o y e d by P J a n s U nlim ited — have been accu sed of m aking structural changes that only licensed en gin eers would have the authority to m ake although neither of the m en w ere licen sed. IF CONVICTED, Chandler and Jackson, and Rick Ashbacher, the construction supervisor from Round Rock, could be forced to pay a fine from $100-$500 and could spend up to three m onths in jail for violating T e x a s’ E ngineering P ra c tice Act. The tw o Austin resid en ts w ere charged in J u stice of the P ea c e Court P recin ct 2, Judge C harles Webb presiding. Bond has not been set. A s h b a c h e r w a s c h a r g e d in W illiam son County. W illiam son County A ttorney Bill Stubblefield said although the m a il’s t he c o l l a p s e b r o u g h t t o ch arges, d ecision s to depart from original building plans did not cau se the collap se or the tw o w ork ers’ deaths. l i g h t Chandler is charged w ith authoriz­ from original plans ing ch an ges drawn up by registered en gin eers, a decision only another registered engineer can m ake under sta te law. JACKSON HAS been accu sed of changing plans for an elevator and instead creating a sta irw ell in its place which would in terfere with one of the m a il’s supporting b eam s, A ssistant Travis County A ttorney R uss B ailey said. The longer beam which would have been used in con­ jun ction w ith th e e le v a to r w a s replaced w ith a shorter but h eavier beam which would then provide enough sp ace for a stairw ell. Graduation Announcements and Invitations are now available L.G. Balfour Co. 2430 Guadalupe 476-8767 (quantities are limited) dl um u é *A i t i 0f 3:e x a A . j f r y J Í i Í ■ A BURNET ROAD BUSINESS PARK FIRST MONTH FREE! Welcome, New Businesses Karm Repair Ebony Innovation Model Industrial Service Capitol Airlines Rich Carpets Niece Equipment H.I.C. Inc. Hudson Glass Co. Showcase Galleries H.A.S. Inc. Frost Fine Art Co. Shotwell Construct» Perfect Mold, Inc. Airwick of Austin Mechanical Concept Waterbed Factory Insulators and Supp Chamberlain Electri Wood Magic Wagnar Gallarías BRAND NEW OFFICE-WAREHOUSE PARK LOCATED AT 183 AND BURNET ROAD 837-8686 lilkx * THE BET ISON*f WHOEVER M CATCHES A GUY FIRST WINS. DON’T LET TI C TITLE FOOL NOU. m m w m Nm im m m iM m m KM w in n r m mmmrmmism fflomiaB by ggg j mm mmi by m m m mm mine siquy gy m gg tsm 8* m \ maxwhi p i w r c m ® m i m i u u t i u mCOPvntGHT f MC.Mt ] MILD O V IR 4 t h WEKK BV PARAM OUNT P*cT U B E S CO RPO RA TIO N A il R»C*h T 'I R f S f R V f 0 «puuuni new imim TONIGHT at 6 : 15 - 8 : 15- 10:15 POX TRIPLEX L E X f V éiMOt» 84vD M ivD mmmmrn 4 S 4 2 7 1 1 TONIGHT at 6 : 15 - 8 : 15- 10:15 This Summer Earn College Credits in New York City h it esign This summer come to New York and study in Greenwich Village, at a school famous in the art world as well as in a city world famous as a cultural and art center. Parsons School of Design offers a series of summer courses designed for college students who wish to supple­ ment their art studies. These courses are taught by some of New York’s most distinguished professionals and run from July 7th thru August 1st, Monday thru Thursday. They allow students ample time to see how theory is put to practical application in the great arts capital of New York. Each course carries 4 credits. Dormitory space and scholarships are available. For more information on courses, registration and accommodations mail the coupon below or call (212) 741-8975. Courses of study include: Drawing Painting Graphic Design Illustration Environmental Design Photography Fashion Design Parsons School of Design Assistant Dean’s Office 46 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10011 P lease send me more information on college courses in New York this summer. N a m e --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- — —---------------- A dd ress---------- C ity /S u te /Z ip WALKING WOMEN Exercise your rights. And lefts. The Vasque W alkabout is sp e c ia lly d e sig n e d for walking w om en flagged a s a h ik in g boot, yet fle xib le as a. casual shoe. A c u sh io n insole so fte n s pavem ent A n d a stee\ s h a n k give s y o u r fo o t s u p e r s u p p o r t . Available, in c h u k k a o r o x f o r d b t ^ le s . I g 0ft o*oú WHOLE EARTH , PROVISION COMPANY , ( ^ 2 4 1 0 S a n A n t o n i o 4 7 6 1 5 7 7 - f v m - i K i i r a n n t É i . . i m i n r - ¡ ■ - i n i v t t t n * f > i . ht 8 6 6 & R e s G A K c u 4 4 6 U V 5 3 j J Fli, A Sat. 11 a.m .-2 a.m. 1914 Guadalupe 476-1215 ■ Friday, April 11, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 11 Six Iranians stranded in Mexico border city CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (UPI) - Six Iranian students stranded in this border city by President C arter’s order revoking their passports will be allowed to stay in Mexico up to six months, the head of Ciudad Juarez im­ migration said Thursday. Juan Jose Gutierrez said he knew of at least six Iranians who were turned back by U.S. immigration officials when they tried to return to the United States after the E aster holiday. But Gutierrez said all six had six- month tourist cards issued the first week of April. “ I don't know how many we have in all and I won't know until some later tim e,” the Mex­ ican official said. “ They all have permission to stay six months, but I don’t know whether ‘Playing politics’ they will stay in Mexico.’’ These students under the present cir­ cum stances cannot enter the United States because they are not in possession of valid said U.S. Consul General Franklyn visas, Stevens, ‘‘The local reports around here are there were a total of five or six Iranian students from the United States who were in Ciudad Juarez or nearby parts of Mexico at the in relations and therefore they were not able to re-enter the United States because their visas were in­ valid.” the break tim e of Stevens said three of the Iranians visited the U.S. Consulate on Monday and Tuesday but that it did not appear they qualified as "hardship” cases which C arter said could be exempted from the passport invalidation. Rural program funds cut By TOM BAKER Daily Texan Staff A tto rn ey G e n e ra l M ark White has charged Gov. Bill C le m e n ts w ith “ p la y in g politics” in urging President C arter to continue Law En­ forcem ent A ssistance Ad­ ministration funds after cut­ ting the ru ral P ro secu to rs Assistance grants to White’s office. Clements recently axed ap­ proximately $500,000 in aid for th e r u r a l p r o s e c u t o r s ’ program in ordering its phase­ out in March but since has criticized C a rte r’s plan to slice $400 million from LEAA in his anti-inflation budget proposal. The state should be able to make up the m inim al amount of LEAA funds lost through C arter’s proposal, White said, r, f l Rf g^ noting that some program s funding for a G irls’ Adventure have to be cut if the budget is T rails’ expansion program at the sam e tim e he cut the rural to be b a la n c e d , a g o a l Clements himself has stressed prosecutors’ funds, as necessary. ., . 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Use Our Interest-Free LayawayU • M in im u m c o n tin u o u s p o w e r o u tp u t R M S a t 8 o h m s fro m 2 0 -2 0 .0 0 0 Hz * * T M D o lb y L a b o r a t o r ie s CUiTOm hi-fi DIJCOUnT center* SPORTS More records highlight meet THE DAILY TEXAN Friday, April 11, 1980 Page 13 Astros take opener Richard leads win over L.A. By JOE C H E M Y C Z Daily Texan Staff This year the U.S. Indoor Swimming Championships in­ stituted two new events for the national meet, the 50- and 800- meter freestyle races for both the men and the women. The 50 would be the premier event, becoming track’s equivalent of the 100-yard dash. Jill Sterkel left little doubt as to who is the the fastest woman in the water. Sterkel swam the fastest woman’s time in history Thursday night at the Texas Swim Center, becoming the first female in the world ever to go under 26 seconds for the distance. Her time of 25.96 lowered the existing American and U.S. Open records for the race, giving her two wins in two tries in the national meet but will not be recorded as a world record because the ruling international body of swimming (F.I.N .A.) does not recognize the 50-meter race a s a championship event. THREE OTHER swimmers, Tracy Caulkins, Mike Bruner and Kim Linehan, also won Thursday night, thus joining Sterkel as two-time winners in the four-day meet. What would normally be considered a m ajor achievement by is becoming commonplace in Sterkel’s “ I’m happy with it (the tim e),” Sterkel said, “ but it’s not as other’s standards career. fast as I can go.” “ I THOUGHT I could go under 26,” she said. “ I felt pretty good in warmups and felt a lot higher in the water. This mor­ ning I felt low in the water, almost like I was swimming at an angle.” In the men’s 50-meter race, 25-year-old Gary Schatz of the Longhorn Aquatic Club pulled a mild surprise by taking first place in the sprint with a time of 22 86. The record book took a severe beating by the men in the 50 free. A total of 18 of the morning’s swimmers tied or bettered the old record of 23.66 set by Chris Cavanaugh in February. All 16 of the evening’s contestants were under Cavanaugh’s old mark, too. ROWDY GAINES, Wednesday’s 100-meter winner, took se­ cond behind Schatz with a time of 22.91. Bruce Stahl placed third in the championship finals with a 22.92 clocking. Cavanaugh had to settle for eighth in the finals with his time of 23.25. Earlier in the evening Cavanaugh won his first national title ever, surprising even himself, by capturing first place in the 200-meter indivdual medley. “ I knew I would do well,” he said, “ but I always thought the only way I would win nationals would be in the 50 free.” As it turned out, Cavanaugh’s freestyle is what gave him the victory. Bruce F um iss took the lead after the first 50, Peter Rocca lead after 100 m eters and Graham Smith was in first at the 150 mark, but Cavanaugh was not far off the pace. HIS FINAL 50-meter split of 28.1 seconds in the freestyle gave him a time of 2:04.77, just missing the meet record of 2:04.39. Smith was second in 2:05.09 and Fum iss was third in 2:05.34. “ I knew if I was up with them at the freestyle I would have a good shot at it,” Cavanaugh said. “ I usually come back well. There were so many good guys in there I kind of thought they would be way out in front of me. I knew it (the final 50 m eters) would be fast but I didn’t think it would be that fa st.” Caulkins lowered yet another record in the meet, this time in the 200-meter individual medley. In constrast to Cavanaugh’s win, the 17-year-old Nashville flash, who broke the American standard in the 200-meter breaststroke the night before, led from the start and was never seriously threatened. Her 2:14.73 clocking was off her own world, U.S. and American m arks of 2:13.69.but was good enough to beat Sippy Woodhead’s final time of 2:17.39. KIM LINEHAN joined Sterkel and Caulkins as double winners, taking the first race of the night, the 400-meter freestyle. Linehan stuck to her race strategy, staying close to the pack for the first 200 meters before pulling away to win with a time of 4:09.58. Marybeth Linzmeier was second in 4:10.54. Following Linehan’s lead, Mike Bruner won his second race of the meet. Bruner added the 400 freestyle crown to the one he took on Wednesday night, the 200-meter butterfly. Bruner’s time of 3:52.24 did not break any records, but it did give him his first victory over current American record holder Brian Goodell of Mission Viejo at that distance. Goodell finished third in the race (3:55.51) behind team m ate Djan Madruga (3:53.91). In the final two races of the evening, the Longhorn women’s “ A” team of Sterkel, Carol Borgman, Becky Kast and Linehan took the 400-meter freestyle relay race with a time of 3:48.23, setting a new meet record in the process. In the men’s race, the Florida Aquatic team also set a new m eet record as they finish­ ed ahead of the Dr Pepper team from Dallas with a time of 3:21 93. By DA VID KING Daily Texan Staff HOUSTON — Everyone kept waiting for the Astros’ J R Richard to crack up Thurs­ day night, to hit one of his famous wild streaks and walk the entire Dodger lineup and move them over three bases with a dozen wild pitches And waited. And waited. And waited. And after eight innings it never came, and the 6-8 right-hander came away with the win. 3-2, over Los Angeles in the opener for both clubs before 34.000 fans. For the record. Richard, who is 12-0 against the Dodgers in 15 starts, struck out 13, walked none, and threw no balls into the stands. In fact, he had a perfect game going through 6-1/3 innings before Dodger rookie center fielder Rudy Law singled to right passed second basemen Joe Morgan “ He was tough,” said a subdued Dodger m a n a g e r Tom m y L a so r d a . “ He had everything — the hard stuff, the hard slider. Just tough " The Astros’ hitters were also tough — at least off former Longhorn pitcher and Los Angeles starter Burt Hooton, the loser. Houston’s Terry Puhl banged Hooton’s se­ cond pitch of the game against the right field facing for a homerun, and Jo se Cruz lined a shot to the same area to lead off the second. Enos Cabell dribbled to first base after Cruz’s shot, but Art Howe then tripled to right center and scored when Alan Ashby hit a roller through the drawn-in infield “ I could have jumped on top of the Dome after those two," Richard said, while relax­ ing in the dressing room. Astros manager, Bill Virdon, not prone to such excitability, observed that “ it probably took us a month to get two homeruns last year.” “ It really su rp rised me to get two homeruns in one gam e,” he said dryly. The last time Houston had two homers in one game in the Astrodome was July 26, 1978. “ This place is a bandbox; anybody can hit it out of here,” said relief pitcher Joe Sam- bito, grinning. Sambito came into the game in the ninth after Richard strained his back slightly on a*slide the inning before. " J R. hurt himself trying to slide back into second,” Virdon said. “ I don’t think it’s second, Virdon said. “ I don t think it s serious, he was just tired and he jarred himself. “ He was getting it appeared to be a good time to get Sambito into the gam e,” he added. tired anyway and The ace reliever retired the Dodgers on five pitches in the ninth to earn his first save. For a while, it looked like Richard was not going to need any relief. He struck out 11 in the first six innings, and had four pitches timed at a fearful 98 miles per hour — no flukes, since he had 11 at 97 mph and 13 at 96. He struck out the side in the second and got several other Dodgers with razor-sharp sliders which stirred up dust behind the plate. But he wasn't thinking (and he sure wasn’t talking about) a no hitter or a perfect game. “ I didn't think no hitter I knew I had one, but I was just trying to get guys out,” Richard said Richard has been working on his control — or lack of it — especially hard during spring training. He has found not only the strike zone but part of his old problem “ I m paying more attention to what I’m doing now; I guess that’s a sign of maturity. “ I don’t want to cheat myself out of some physical ability with any mental gam es,” Richard added. The big right hander seem to tire some in the seventh, as Dave Lopes led off the inning with a ground out after striking out twice before. Law then broke off the no hitter, and Reggie Smith followed that with a shot squeezed between Howe’s glove at first base. Law scored when Steve Garvey reached on a throwing error by Cabell, and Dusty Baker hit a sacrifice fly to score Smith. Richard then struck out Ron Cey for the third time to end the inning and the threat. Jerry Reuss pitched five innings of one-hit relief to shut down the Astros in the middle inning He only gave up a two-out single to Morgan Relief pitcher Bobby Castillo gave up the other Astro hit, a single by Richard in the eighth. But the Dodgers couldn’t get enough help for either pitcher, not with Richard on the mound. “ H e’s tough. T o u g h ," L aso rd a kept repeating repeating. Matlack opens seaso with 9 strong innings íw I I M M V n i l Q C k l By JIM M Y BURCH Daily Texan Staff A R L I N G T O N - Y e s , Ranger fans, Jon Matlack is back. After missing most of last season because of bone chips in his elbow, the big left hander left no doubt that he has fully recovered from his injury. Matlack started and pitched nine innings in the Rangers’ 1- 0 victory over the New York Yankees Thursday. He gave up only three hits, didn't walk a batter and struck out five, including strikeouts three against Yankee centerfielder Ruppert Jones. j u s t “ E v e r y t h i n g fel l together well,” Matlack said. “ I had good movement on the ball. I was able to run the ball inside, then sink it aw ay.” “ THE CHANGEUP cam e along about the fourth inning, and I was really able to throw it practically at will and have it do what I wanted it to. That was good, because I started to lose a little of my fastball toward the end and was able to mix in the other pitches ” J i m Sundberg said Matlack pitch­ ed a s wel l a g a i n s t the Yankees as he had ever see him pitch R a n g e r c a t c h e r “ His ball moved m ore it ever has,” than tonight S u n r l h p r p Sundberg said “ His balls h a l l e were up around the letters but they were jumping all over the place. You can get by with that when your pitches are moving ” Matlack was quick to point out that the gam e was not a test for his arm but a test for himself. “ WE TALKED about this before the gam e,” he said “ There was no feeling in any way, shape or form that this was an additional test for my arm. It was more of a test for me to mix up my pitches and work in a game situation. The arm felt very good ” Matlack's most severe test came in the first inning, when he al l owed back-t o-back singles to Bob Watson and Reggie Jackson He got Lou Piniella on a fly to left field to end that inning, and allowed only one more base runner (on a fourth-inning Watson single) the rest of the night. In fact, Matlack retired the last 18 batters he faced. “ Yeah, I made a couple of bad pitches early,” Matlack confessed. “ I was ramming and jamming a little bit early on and I was forcing som e.” HOWEVER, Matlack sur­ vived his shaky start and lasted the full nine innings — something neither manager Pat Corrales or Matlack ex­ pected him to do. “ Sure, I had plently of “ S u r e f h a d nlpr doubts (about finishing the gam e),” Matlack said. “ I was told before the season that I ’d have to be a seven inning pitcher this year. But really, we h a d n ' t d e t e r m i n e d whether that was seven in­ nings in terms of number of pitch es or seven innings period, “ So after seven, we put our heads together and decided to try another one. That one in six pitches, so I went figured, ‘We’ll. I’ll go one m ore.’ Let me tell you, 1 was really tired at the end of the ninth inning ” Matlack said he feels like the seven inning question will be resolved before his next start. “ They even asked me to call the Doc and see how to gauge this thing,” he said. “ So I call­ ed this morning and left a m essage for him to call, but I never heard from him. I guess I’ll try again tomorrow.” Matlack was relieved in the 10th by Jim Kern and then Sparky Lyle. Although he didn't get credit for the win, Matlack was pleased with his performance and happy to start the new season off with a win. “ I think this is the farthest I’ve gone (since the injury) and I really feel good about it now,’ Matlack concluded Tracy Caulkins enroute to win in 200 IM. Harley Soltes, Dally Texan Staff in 12 probably the best spring I’ve ever had.” So the Rangers get the 1980 season off to a good start, and in more ways than just win­ ning the ballgame. “ If anything was especially pleasing about this gam e,” Oliver said, “ It was that our attitude was good throughout the game. No one was pushing the panic button.” Rangers sneak by Yankees By JO H N R O O K E Daily Texan Staff ARLINGTON - It might be a little early to tell if Jon Matlack’s arm is healed from off-season su rg ery . Or it might not. How about Ron Guidry, who supposedly had a “ off year” of 18-8 following his Cy Young season? Is he back? Both went a long way in say­ ing yes to those questions Thursday night. They each went nine innings before the bullpen took over and neither won nor lost. The Rangers, for the pennant hopefuls umpteenth year, squeezed past the Yankees 1-0 in 12 in­ nings. before a crowd of 33,- 196. A wild pitch by New York’s Rich Gossage — his first and only pitch of the night — sent home Mickey Rivers with the winner. “ I’m going to have to call Matlack, and next year we re going to have to pick our own days to pitch,” Guidry laugh­ ed “ He’ll pitch the opener and I’ll pitch the second one.” If either is to win against the other, that may have to be the case. Matlack, who hasn’t often been the beneficiary of Ranger bats, struck out five and walked none in his nine in­ nings while giving up only three hits. Two of the hits cam e in the first inning on back to back singles by first basem an Bob Watson and Reggie Jackson with two out Matlack got Lou Piniella to fly out and end the only real threat of the night for New York. “ He’s (Matlack) throwing the ball well,” Jackson said, who went one-for-five on the night. it better now since the 1973 World Series — still one of the toughest lefthanders around.” Matlack retired the last 18 “ H e’s throwing batters he faced. And what about Guidry, who gave Texas just two hits over his nine innings? “ I felt good t o n i g h t , " Guidry said. “ Don't know why people say I was off last year. I didn’t throw a lot of pitches. last week helped Resting more than anything else.” Besides a couple of fine defensive plays by second baseman Bump Wills, third basem an Buddy Bell and Y a n k e e ’ s third b a s e ma n Grai g N ettles, both team s looked rested the entire night. Matlack and Guidry had con­ trol throughout until the relievers took over in the 10th inning. T e x a s c a t c h e r J i m Sundberg had three of the Ranger’s four hits, and Wat­ son had three singles for New York. “ The pitches were up and I saw the ball well,” Sundberg explained “ I’ve been thinking about this game for a week The first one, you always have the jitters. “ Before the game, Ruppert Jones (Yankee centerfielder) cam e up to me and asked. Man h a v e you got any butterflies?” ’ Sundberg con­ tinued. “ I said. Oh yeah but it’s okay when you’ve got but t er f l i es . That me a n s you’ve got your strength.’” Evi dentl y Sundberg had something no other Ranger had, getting an infield single in the third, another single in the sixth, and a double off Yankee loser Tom Underwood in the 11th. The double cam e with two outs, a line drive over Jones’ head in center- field. “ They (the outfielders) were playing short because of the wind.” Sundberg said. “ If I’d hit the ball any higher, he would have caught it. “ I really hit that ball good The pitch was low and away from me. I really thought he’d catch it. But when I rounded first, I could see that he couldn t.” Rusty Staub, acquired by the Rangers just before the cancellation of the spring s c h e d u l e , pi nch hit for shortstop Pepe Frias. Run­ ning the count to 3-2, Staub grounded out second to first to end the first Ranger threat of the evening But it wasn' t the only threat. After Sparky Lyle got out of a jam in the top of the 12th, Texas went right back at Underwood. Rivers lead off with a si ngl e, then wa s sacrificed to second on a bunt by Wills. Underwood was then i n s t r u c t e d by Y a n k e e manager Dick Hawser to in­ tentionally walk A1 Oliver and Bell, in order to get to Richie Zisk Zisk, who in the past has grounded into game-killing doubleplays, never got the chance to win or lose it. Gossage cam e in to face him and the first pitch skipped by catcher Rick Cerone. sen­ ding Rivers home from third. “ I should have caught it,” Cerone said, offering no ex­ cuses. “ It was a fast ball away and it caught the tip of my glove. I should've had it “ In warmups he was throw­ ing it right down the middle,” Cerone continued. “ I only caught him one inning in the spring but I still should’ve had it.” G ossage was understan­ dably upset after the game ended. “ I was just trying to throw a strike. (Bleep) it,” He said. “ I just blew it and the ball got away. If Zisk was to hit it, I wanted him to hit it on the ground. I don’t even know if Cerone had a chance ” The Rangers' chances bank­ ed on the relief work of Lyle, who went two and two-thirds innings to pick up the win. He cam e in for Kern in the tenth after Kern hit a batter and given up a walk “ I’m a three pitch pitcher “ I now,” Lyle explained don’t have to rely on my slider if I’m not going good. Tonight I was getting everything over. “ I like to win in a situation I’ve worked real i t ’ s like that hard this s pr i ng — Jill Sterkel celebrates after her American record in 50-meter freestyle. kreg Vlmont. Dally Texan Staff Page 14 □ T H E D A IL Y TE X A N □ Friday, April 11, 1980 Horns play Cougars in Houston 3 3 rd & G u a d a lu p e 4 5 1-85 0 8 So convenient you don’t have to get out of your car! 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Houston '4-10-1 in SWC play), however, is having its problems Although the Cougars have been hitting the ball extremely well ¡ 302 season average), an old nemisis — pitching — has taken its toll on the team. Houston pitchers have combined for a 5.87 ER A in the SWC. No pitcher on the staff has more than two wins. In comparison. Texas has compiled a sparkling 1.46 ERA , giving up only 29 earned runs in 15 games. And that basically is the difference between first and last place. “ W E ’V E R E A L L Y been hurt in the pitching department,’’ Houston coach Rolan Walton said “ We had four key injuries and it’s been difficult to adjust.’’ Houston lost Tom Luckish with an injured tendon in his pitching arm before the season got into full swing Luckish was 7-3 with an impressive 2.87 E R A in 1979. Not only did Walton lose his ace, but three other talented pitchers as well. “ It was extremely hard to turn it around right in the middle of the season.” Walton said “ Bentley was a bonfide starter, but the three kids (Noble, Muno and Minielly) that have filled in have done an outstanding job ” Noble, who is the Cougar regular center- fielder when he isn’t pitching is 2-2, with a batting average of .307. Equally impressive are Muno’s stats. He also is 2-2, but is batting 343. Minielly is 2- 1 and is also over the 300 mark with a .305 bat­ ting average. “ It’s really encouraging the way they are pitching now,” Walton said. “ Last weekend they all turned in fine performances in losing efforts Those games (against A&M) could have gone either way.” Despite all the injuries and setbacks, Walton said he and his club are optimistic. “ We re not really dowrn, just frustrated,’ he said “ How can you not be? “ After five or six weeks of it though, I guess you could say we’ve gotten used to it,” Walton added “ But the team has lparnprj that they have to play with that burden — and at this point we re doing that.” Walton expects a very good series between Texas and Houston. That is, if his pitching comes through. “ IF W E G ET the pitching, it should be an excellent series,” Walton said “ But if we don’t, it’s going to be tough for us. “ We’re all aware of the well known fact — you have to have the pitching to make it in the Southwest Conference.” The two teams will meet in a single game F riday at 3 p.m. with a doubleheader schedul­ ed for 1 p.m. Saturday. Keith Creel is the probable starter for the Longhorns Friday against Houston’s Kevin Muno (2-3) Creel will be making his 12th start with a record of 9-1 and an ER A of 1.71. Walton will use Rayner Noble (a freshman from Houston Spring Woods) and sophomore Brent Bentley. Starting pitchers for Texas have not been selected yet. The Longhorns play Texas A&M in Austin next weekend which will probably determine the conference champion. But Walton doesn’t think that Texas will be looking past his club. “ I don’t think they will do that (look ahead),” Walton said. “ I expect the same team they have every year — well balanced and well coached. “ We re hurt and thin right now, but we’re playing tough,” he added. “ We’re definitely not going to be an easy touch.” NOW CANADA WE HAVE ANOTHER REASON TO THANK YOU! CHRIS’S LKH10R STORES North 5201 Cameron Rd. 451-7391 South 2418 So. Lamar 442-3562 I Enjoy Tour Shopping While You Enjoy Your Savings! Best Selection In Town - NO LIMIT - Open 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. OLD FORRESTER 86 Pr B o u rb o n W h is k o y KAMCHATKA VODKA 8 0 Pr Fin # V o d k a BACARDI RUM 8 0 Pr P u o rfo B k o n l u m PINCH SCOTCH 12 YRS. 86 Pr Im p o r te d Scotch BEEFEATERS GIN 9 4 P r P ro d u c t o f E n g l a n d DRAMBUIE LIQUEUR 8 0 Pr P ro d u c t of E n g la n d 1.75 liter 1 0 . 9 9 1.75 liter 6 . 6 5 1.75 liter 1 0 . 9 9 750 ml 10.99 5th 6.79 23/32 qt 1 1 .99 . 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LONE STAR BEER 24 12-ox P tu t D o po w t SHINER BOCK BEER 24 12-ox P lu .D e p o t it HEINEKEN BEER 12 o t 1- W a y P ro d u ct o f H o lla n d ....................... *................. OLD STYLE CHICAGO BEER 12 oz C a n t or R o t u m o b lo B o ttlo t I Prices tor Warm Beer Only BEER ........ 6 for 3.79 6 for 2.49 5.79 case * S Q C 0 5 e U e U / 6 for 3 , 9 9 6 for 1 . 9 9 Distributed By (LCAPITAL BEVERAGE CORP. j '¡Hñ*re+Ttp** Texas’ Robert Culley slides into home against USC. M ich a e l Hults Texas faces SMU Tennis team defeats Tech By REID LAYMANCE Dally T e x a n Staff After trouncing Texas Tech 8-1 in Lubbock Thursday, Tex­ as returns home to face tough SMU in the Longhorns’ last home match of the 1980 season beginning at 1 p.m. Saturday at Penick-Allison tennis courts. The Mustangs, preseason picks to challenge for the Southwest Conference title, have fallen on hard times los­ ing one of their top players, Tom Cain, and dropping an 8-1 decision to conference-rival Houston to start the season. SM U’s problems have caus­ ed the Mustangs to drop from fourth to 12th in the college rankings. Texas ranks 15th in the nation and third in the SWC with a 16-5 record and 32 conference points (two points behind second place Houston) after five SWC matches while SMU, winner of the past two SWC championships, is 10-9 with 20 points after four matches. T H E LO N G H O R N S and Mustangs have already played once this season with Texas taking a close 5-4 win in the Corpus Christi tournament March 7. In that match, the M ustangs w ere p la yin g without Cain, who coach Bill McClain had hoped to be one of SM U’s top players. Cain has now recovered from the hernia which had kept him sidelined for six weeks and should play against the Longhorns. “ That (Texas’ win) can work both w ays,’’ Texas coach Dave Snyder said. ‘ Where we may have gained a little confidence in beating them, they will be out for revenge. “ We’ve been up and down, but SMU has been up and down more than we have,” he added. “ They’ll be a lot tougher with Cain back.” IN SMU’S last match, a 6-3 loss to No. 4 Trinity Monday, Cain lost to the Tigers’ John Benson 6-2, 6-3, dropping his season record to 0-8. The Mustangs’ top player is Ja i DiLouie, a senior from Dallas White, who is the defending 1979 SWC singles champion. So far this season, D iLouie has S M U ’s best record with an 18-6 mark. SM U’s two other top players are Drew Gitlin, 18-7, and Jeff Turpin, 14-12. Jakes Jordaan, Eric Van’t Hof and Roman Kupchynsky round out the Mustangs lineup. The two teams will line up differently Saturday than they did a month ago in Corpus Christi. ta k e n FRESH M AN PA U L Crozier ( 16-5) has the Longhorns’ No. 1 position, and Sam Fotopoulos (17-0) has moved up to No. 3 for Texas. Crozier played No. 2 in Corpus Christi and Fotopoulos No. 6. SMU will have Cain back in its top six to go along with DiLouie, Gitlin, Turpin, Jo r­ daan and Kupchynsky. After losing to Houston in its first SWC match, the Mustangs have won three straight conference matches posting wins over Baylor 9-0, No. 20 Texas A&M 5-4 and Rice 5-4. “ It was good to pick up the wins in conference,” McClain said. “ We need to get as many points as we can going into the conference tournament (April 25-27 in Corpus Christi) so every match and every point is very big for us.” Including Saturday’s match the Longhorns only have three matches remaining before the SWC tournament and are also in need of SWC points. Each team receives one point for each singles and doubles win in SWC competi­ tion to determine the stan­ dings. “ It looks like it ’s between SMU, TCU and us for third,” Snyder said. “ We’re aiming for third, if not higher. “ We're just trying to put on a good finish to the season.” Texas started its stretch run with its 8-1 win over Tech. “ I was pleased with the win since it was on Tech’s home courts,” Snyder said. “ I just hope our guys can keep their heads up the rest of the way.” Crozier easily defeated Tech's Chow Wah 6-1, 6-2 in No. 1 singles play while Guillermo Stevens cruised past Jose Rivera 6-4, 6-4 in No. 2. Fotopoulos won his 17th straight match downing Jeff Bramlett 6-2, 6-7, 6-1 in No. 3 and Bill Berryman trounced Zahid Maniya 6-2, 6-3 in No. 4 FR ESH M A N Craig Kardon swept past Mark Thompson 7- 6, 6-1 and Doug Snyder beat Greg Davis 6-2, 6-1 for Texas’ other singles wins in Nos. 5 and 6. In doubles, Crozier and Kreg Yingst combined to defeat T e c h ’s Wah and Bramlett in three sets 2-6, 7-6, 6-4 in No. 1 doubles play. “ Yingst really came on and made some crucial points to give them the win,” Snyder said. “ He hit some very good volleys to pull them back.” Fotopoulos and Stevens defeated Maniya and Thomp­ son 6-3, 6-2 for Texas’ other doubles win in No. 2. The Red Raiders scored their only other win in No. 3 doubles with D avis and R i v e r a sq u eak in g past Berryman and Kardon 2-6, 7-5, 7-6. U/ilderriEss Whitewater Supply Short Classics Vie have s h o rts for walking, running, swimming, hiking, loafing, or ju st plain wearing, in a wide range o f sty le s , c o lo r s and sizes for women and men Quality w orkm anship combined with carefully selected and designed fabncs make our shorts com fortable, durable and functional This s e a s o n s selection is better than ever, s o s t o p by s o o n WHOLE EARTH PROVISION COMPANY 2410 Saw Antonio 47ft 1577 8 8 6 8 R iessakcw 45&-C*%33 30th & Lam ar 476-3712 Gv SALE! ( N o w through Saturday) ALL PAR K A S & VESTS CHAMOIS SHIRTS Reg. *21.50 WOOL SHIRTS ALL LONG UNDERWEAR, GLOVES, WOOL HATS 30-50% OFF saie$ 14.95 40% OFF c 50% OFF D West Anderson Plaza (Across From Northcross) 452-8339 Baseball begins By United Press International Pete Vuckovich, who earned the Open­ ing Day assignment for the St. Louis Car­ dinals, started off the 1980 campaign Thursday in mid-season form. The 27-year-old right-hander tossed a three-hitter at the defending world cham­ pion Pittsburgh Pirates in pitching the i ardinals to a 1-0 victory before a Busch Stadium crowd of 43,867 fans. Vuckovich, a 27-year old right-hander, got the only run he needed in the second in ning With one out, Bobby Bonds walked and scored when George Hendrick lined a double into the left field corner off starter and loser Bert Blyleven. IN THE ONLY other afternoon game in the NL, New York defeated Chicago 5-2. Craig Swan pitched seven strong innings and delivered a two-run single in a four- run sixth inning, helping the Mets beat the Cubs in their debut under new ownership. Swan, who was relieved by Neil Allen at the start of the eighth inning, came through with his two-run single after a throwing error by second baseman Lenny Randle with the bases loaded and none out opened the gates for New York. A crowd of 12,129, most of whom walked from nearby Long Island Railroad points because of the transit strike, saw the Mets play their first game under the ownership of Doubleday and Co. San Francisco was at San Diego in a later game. MILWAUKEE Brewers right fielder Sixto Lezcano showed how to send a chill­ ed Opening Day crowd home happy. Lezcano smashed a grand slam — his se- cond homer of the game — with two outs in the ninth inning Thursday to give Milwaukee a 9-5 victory over the Boston Red Sox in a homer-filled game played in 43-degree weather at County Stadium. Oglivie, Molitor and Don Money also h o m e r e d f o r the B r e w e r s . C a r l Yastrzemski and Butch Hobson connected back-to-back for Boston off starter Jim Slaton to enable the Red Sox to tie the score 5-5 in the top of the ninth. In the only other day game, Eddie M urray’s two-run double keyed a four-run inning to give the defending first American League champion Baltimore Orioles a 5-3 victory over the Chicago White Sox in their opener. JIM PALMER, who has won 13 of his last 14 decisions against the White Sox dating back to 1974, scattered six hits through the first seven innings. Tim Stod­ dard picked up a save by allowing only one hit over the last two innings. A crowd of 35,539 braved 40-degree cold to attend the opener at Comiskey Park. In a night game, Detroit defeated Kan­ sas City 5-1. The Yankees intentionally loaded the bases and summoned Gossage, whose first delivery broke off the glove of catcher Rick Cerone, giving form er Yankee Sparky Lyle, 1-0, the victory in relief. Rookie Kirk Gibson homered, tripled and scored two runs for Detroit. Jack Morris, 0-1, pitched a in besting Dennis Leonard, 0-1. Morris struck out five and walked three to help the Tigers win in Kansas City for only the third time in its last 12 attempts. three-hitter In a late game, Minnesota was at Oakland. Friday, April 11, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 15 .........................................................................I. ....,., . 1.1, ■■■,.■■. ii„ — ,n. .in..!— ,.......................... ...... .................. * ■" " ■-* ............ ..,.11.11,1....,..., — —. NiMH, ill " ........................................................................n—i- i-M. i m. . ■. ■ ■ M — l. .ll.gi.MIH Soviets support boycott Nationalists liken Games to 1936 DAN’S D E N V E R (U P I) - Three former Russian nationalists, led by journalist Alexander Ginzburg, said Thursday the 1980 Summer Olympics should not be held in the Soviet Union, even if Russian troops a r e w i t h d r a w n f r o m Afghanistan. Ginzburg, the dissident poet-journalist who came to the United States last year as part of an exchange for two Soviet spies, said the Summer Games should not be held in Moscow because “ there is a strong parallel between these Olympics and the 1936 Olym­ pics in Germany.” Speaking through an inter­ preter at a news conferene, the three former Russian citize n s said the Soviet Union’s history of aggression against other nations and its own people violated the prin­ ciples of the Olympics. GINZBURG, who in 1978 was tried and convicted of “ anti-Soviet agitation,” also said he would meet privately with U.S. Olympic Committee Executive Director F. Don Miller this weekend to urge that the USOC support Presi­ d e n t C a r t e r ’ s b o y c o t t proposal. Ginzburg has asked to ad­ dress the USOC’s House of Delegates at its meeting this weekend in Colorado Springs, but Miller turned down the request, noting that the decision-making body would hear from neither opponents or supporters of the boycott. However, the White House late Thursday announced Vice President Walter Móndale would address the delegates shortly before it votes on the boycott issue. GINZBURG said he and other Soviet dissidents have opposed having the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow ever since the International Olympic Committee awarded the games to the Soviet Union. “ The problem of the boycott has a long history,” said Ginz­ burg “ The opposition existed long before the invasion of Afghanistan ” “ The war in Afghanistan is not the only immoral on which the Soviet regime is carrying out," said Ginzburg, whose wife and three sons remain in the Soviet Union. “ It is con­ ducting a permanent war against its own people.” Ginzburg said the pleas of dissidents like himself to have the Olympics held outside of Russia had been ignored by in­ ternational public opinion for Jo in in g G inzburg w e re Yefim Faibusovich, a U.S. handball referee inter­ national events and Evgeni Rubin, a former senior sports columnist for the newspaper, “ Soviet Sport” , and currently a m e m b e r of R u s s i a n “ The language newspaper New American” in New York City. 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J,__ C C ra b L e g s $ 7 .9 5 T e r iy a k i C h ic k e n $ 5 .5 0 C lu b S i r l o i n $ 6 .2 5 P e t i t e N ew Y o rk S t r i p T e r iy a k i $ 5 .7 5 R e d S n a p p e r $ 4 .7 5 S t u f f e d T ro u t $ 6 .2 5 P r im e R ib - N u g g e t C u t $ 5 .5 0 P r im e R ib - M in e r ’s C u t $ 6 .9 5 T h e s e s p e c i a l p r ic e s are for c o m p l e t e d in n e r s in c lu d in g sa la d bar, b a k e d p o t a t o with all the t r i m m i n g s and br ead. COMPLIMENTARY CHAMPAGNE WITH ALL D IN N E R S FROM 1 2 NOON ’TIL 5 PM MONTANA MININO RESTAURANT 1 -3 5 a t O l t o r f “There are so many funny lines you have to go see the picture twice. A rk in is h il­ arious. O ne of the best m ovies of 1980. It is called SIM O N . Rem em ber it, SIM O N .” —Gene Shalit. NBC-TV Today Show ‘Superbly nutty!” — Vincent Canby, New York Times A MARTIN BKGMAN Production 1 ALAN ARKIN “SIMON” With MADELINE KAHN {o* XÜ T O N IG H T Friday, April 11 8:00 PM $9.00 $8.00 $7.00 Tickets at SEC Doors open at 7:00 PM CHARGE-A-TICKET Austin 477-6060 San Marcos 392-2751 Temple 774-9176 Killeen 526-2881 THE u w r m s iiK or re x 4 i 4T *osTir< SPECIAL EKENT5 CENTER S O U T H W O O D 2 4 4 2 2 3 3 3 1 4 2 . 1 W B E N W H I T E 8 1 V D "Little I S E R I A L " D a r l i n g s 1 (4:15/$ 1.50)4: IS-10:15 “Honor thy wife •“ *- and everyone elses (5:45/51.50>-7:4S-M5 Kramer ^ Kramer (6:00/$ 1.50)4:15-10:15 Alan Arki n M a de lin e Kahn (5:45/$ 1.50)4:00-10:1S w^Cco/fH+n&i'j Da u g h t er SISSY' SI*A< KK TX JMMY IJ£EXIN Vi (5:30/$ 1.50)4:00-10:30 J A C Pl EA T - , n i r i L U R O C K Y / hits V /R O C K Y n PO [ I dK4d»0/$1.50HM)0:1S^I)10:30 N O R T H C R O S S 6 4 5 4 5 1 4 7 ANO,‘S?r,LT»"4V.“ i Kramer Kramer j s c a f T ■ m e * . - THE MOTION RC T 'JRC (6:15/$ 1.50)4:30-10:30 b (5:30/$ 1.50^4^0-10:30 F R A N C IS FO R D . r n o t t n i a c MARTIN MULL TUESDAY WELD ¡6:00 $1.50(4. !5-10 30w L M I A f C R JOHN & OLIVIA A R E B A C K ! (fc00/$ 1.50)4:30 T R O C K Y IS 1 G R 0 { £ ¡Sts B S m m m s ^ n (1X5:45/$ 1 ROCKY n .50HH)S: 15-0)10:30 A M E R I C A N A experience beyond total fear (5:30/52.00)4:00-10:30 4 5 3 6 6 4 1 GEORGE C SC0I1 TRIbtt VAM DtVLRE There are three sides to this love story. m AMERICAN MULTI CINEMA T I I , l I I ^ r ra I / M i l <► I P A A D U L T S $ 3 0 0 I W I - L I I C J V W j p l l U J l i S P E C I A L E N G A G E M E N T S E X C L U D E D T W I LITE S H O W 1I M I T E P TO S E A T I N G S T U D E N T S & SR C I T I Z E N S W I T H A M C C A R D $ 2 5 0 TIMES SHOWN FOR TODA Y ONL Y A Q U A R I U S 4 444 -3222 '500 s p u a s a n t v a u í y r o jk i f EVEN THE CRITfl AREl SCARED! WITLESS! “ IT’S THE BESTl 'GHOST STORY MOVIE IN| YEARS. GUARANTEED TI FREEZE THE BLOOD.’ Bernard Orewl Gannett Newspaper* CHILLING AND UTTERLY HAIR-RAISING. IT CONTAINS THE BEST SEANCE IN H0RR0R- M0VIE HISTORY.” David Aneen Newsweek | PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A SIDNEY BECKERMAN PRODUCTION MARTIN MULL TUESDAY WELD SALLY KELLERMAN CHRISTOPHER LEE O p U M G S L W C , An experience beyond total fear. G EO R G E C. SCOTT T R ISH V A N D E V E R E □ □ ¡ D O L B Y STEREO! “ DUSTIN HOFFMAN MERYL STREEP JANE ALEXANDER Kramer Kramer nOMIAATCD FOR (6.-00 $1.50)4:15-10:30 (5:45 $ 1 50k- 7:45- 9:45 t His whole life was a million-to-one shot. ROCKY j5:30/$2.00)440-10JO m The story continues... SYLVESTER STALLONE TALIA SHIRE r o c k y n HIGHLAND MALL HIGHLAND M A L I BLVD 451-7326 WATCH THE ACADEMY AWARDS 9 APRIL 14 OH ABC HCHDRMY H t lH H D S ! (5:45>4:00-10:l5 1:45-3:45-5:45 7:45-9:45 (6:15/$!.50)4:30-10:30 <6.00 $1.50HI: 15-10:’5 (1X5:45/$ I SOMlI4 1 $41)10:30 (IXfcOO/$1.50H1l*1$- WALT ó e fA R IA TC R R 1 OGISU , H IR O U U TSUGAWA Executive Producer S H IN T A R O TSLUI Narration wntten b . N O R M A N C O R W IN Anim a t,on D irected by TAKA S H I M usic by A L E C f t C OSTAND/NOS L y n c s by E N O C H A N O E R S O N O rig in al S o u n d trac k A lb u m on C A S A B L A N C A R E C O R D S A N O T A P E S ’' H a a r P A T T I B R O O K S k m g R E D H O T R I V E R O f E IR E M A N N T HE AT RE S MANN WESTGATE TGATE 3 1 ■re fltvo I H a e a J 4 6 0 8 vV E ST G A T E 892-2775 9 ACADEM Y AW ARD N O M IN A T IO N S BEST PICTURE BEST DIRECTOR Page 20 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, A pril 11, 1980 Ken K esey’s vision of conformity in American society. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest A dap ted by Dale H a H ir m a n M arch 26 - April 26 Wed , Thur.. Sun - $3.50 Fri , Sal - $4 50 Curtain 8 p m . , Sunday 2 p m Reservations, tickets - 476-4536 “ This is a fine production of a powerful d r a m a ....’’ D iane Holloway Austin A m erican-Statesm an “ A shattering, jolting ex p erien ce...." John Bustin Austin Citizen See him before he sees yon. The Great Austin Dollar Movie Deal is Here! All seats are only $1 all the time! Only at the I S M 9 0 X T E E N TOM HORN Based on the True Story f w r i AxU+U presents STEVF McQUEEN n "TOM HORN A SOLAR-FRED WEINTRAUB Product,on Music by ERNEST GOLD Filmed in Panavision Technicolor OslritK •*/ 4 [ * ■ ' . * * } . y - T ' f ? * 4 ¿-. ^ ^ E - r * * * ■ « < > * * * « * * ■ W POOL SIS B. Sixth HELD OVER! ESTHER'S EASTER FOLLIES NEW TIMES 9 & 11 p.m . Fri. & Sat. $ 1 .5 0 R rtt S ho w O n ly f 1 H ig h la n d M a ll Every Day I C a p ita l P ta io Sol. A Sun. / ■ I I I C A PIT A L P L A Z A 452-7646 I H 35 NORTH III— INI \\M\ 7:25-f-. 56 Jamas Caan - M arsha Mason C hapter Tw o H IG H LA N D M A LL /U m ilM i,1 U 'lllih -rtJ N I H 35 AT KOENIG LN. 451-7326 M S - T W ¿ r ,, w a u t m ~ O T H E R F R I E D T H IN G S (Fried Chicken, Fried Vegiet 6 Other Good Stuff) ^24th at R io G ran d e^ ( S C H B D 8 * ACADEMY ^ ’S5wNALSc»ffMnA w nouns «■*** ROY SCHEIDER b o b fo sse > U 44TJ42_ JESSIOIWNGe 4MMRENKMG LEMNDB4LVEP QJFGOOVWN kwo* o nrx it /ttvtk: tme eswcaws* «B0NvHs tar «ueortor M> Tba SSory 04 J o a n n a ’”. IIU BtCKLtr/mJSrUk H A O A J IM JCMHtf ER WELLES m a Miy looAing epmc- V A fH fJf mson." JENNIFER WELLES la svtiat tSvn giory o< a a t K atl bout SERENA is c srta h i to bocoma SRS o« Rm Wading am Mtcfc gua a rsa Sal on N. S a n sa Y a sm a M a piece of HONEY WE N is ■ laaty traaL ehom pm t BOB SALUIAQQi t SAMI Sick aurmg J B M FU1 W H IE S TERRI HAU um oi T>* s to ry of jo u * m reveuxm XXX t dprdm 0* SERENA Flus S Novar So So*, l oan Frolic BoowSiao X AO m TS ONLY 2224 OUADALUPf • 477-18*4 1 OPEN II A M A j e J E l l I H o t jrÁ//i6£A~ss£t : M.itinee*» D.nly Nn v '• i• 11>>rl* Í ’ *• « ?n ¡,> t r i 1 I at*1 Show s Frirl.iv A S.itui f1av Su«u ; v i »(ii*n M... R lfM I.C H n o t | ! !1 l4i*r'|*ir I*. - - * A.)» am a m A C A D E M Y A W A R D N O M IN E E B E S T A C T O R - Peter Sellers W rnm it 5 an image that lingers long after this fr ig h te n ­ ing, exotic, endlessly fascinating ‘Arabian N ig hts' fo r adults is over. " Jo h n H artl/S e a ttle Times imagery that is both spell-binding and memorable. Few film s are as rewarding as this one. Y ou should make a p oint o f seeing it. ” Stanley E ic h e lb au m /S an Francisco Herald ■ j m m k m those who like th e cult film s ‘K in g o f H earts' and ‘H a r o l d a n d M a u d e ' s h o u l d d e f i n i t e l y se e SOSaragossa. Ted M a h a r / T h e Oregonian "T here are several com edic narratives w hich have the spirit o f kDon Q u ix o te ' a n d th e bawdiness o f Rabelais.... The dovetailing o f so m an y divergent narratives is perhaps one o f th e cleverest m om en ts in screenw riting." J o h n S tan le y /S an Francisco Examiner and Chronicle E ixWSj mm li lj l i v.H ■ mm m m KvXvi III 2 WINNER OF GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS "A beautifully acted satire that m oves handsom ely and ingeniously to make a whimsical dream of a story com e true... played with brilliant understatement by Peter Sellers, who never strikes a raise note. The other fine actors — Shirley MacLaine, Mefvyn Douglas, Jack Warden and Richard Dysart, form a superb ensemble!’ -J A N E T MASUN, NEW YORK TIMES “You really think so...” —C h a n c a th e g a rd e n e r T H e M O T I O N ! P I C T U R E The Human Adventure Is Just Beginning. ÍG $ l a a a m i a a 5:25- 7:45 10:05 5:30- 8:00 10:30 John Travolta O livia Newton-John i s t h e w o r d A ROBERT STIGWOOO/AUA^CARR PWXXJCTlOfl JOHN TRAVOLTA OLIVIA NEWTON JOHN «"GREASE" rtSTOCKARD CHANNING »««. • **.« (MW« K.*EVE ARDEN, FRAM E AVALON JOAN BL0NDELL, EDO BYRNES, SID CAESAR ALICE GHOSTLEY DOOY GOOOMAN, SHA NA NA L A K E H I L L S 2428 BE N W H IT E • 444-0552 5:35 7:40-9:45 (5:45/$ 1.50) 8:00-10:15 AMERICA'S NO. 1 BOX OFFICE HIT “Coa/ M iner's D aughter is an a ch ie v e m e n t in A m erican cin e m a ." R i c h a r d G r e n i e r . C o s m o p o l i t a n M a g a z i n e “Sissy Spacek gives th e best p erfo rm a n ce o f her career. She not o n ly sings co n vin cin g ly, but she gives her ch ara cter a spine o f strong em o tio n , o f p u r e in n o cen ce and in stin c tive wit. •. 11 F r a n k R i c h , T i m e M a g a z i n e a story of chance BEING THEREp^ i i i t í v í : PETER SELLERS SHIRLEY MacLAINE JACK WARDEN-MELVYN DOUGLAS .NV.VX V I L L A G E a 2 7 0 0 A N D E R S O N • 4 5 1 8 3 5 2 1 12:25-2:50 5:20-7:50- vXv:;:;:;:vv.y.y.' L A K E H I L L S 2 4 2 8 B E N W H IT E • 4 4 4 - 0 5 5 2 (SAT-12:25-2:50)- 5¿20T|50JO¿10J Ü R IH Academy/ Nominations “AN ENTICINGLY BEAUTIFUL •Kona Barrett. ABC-TV N il O O B I E T S lS 4 7 7 1 3 2 4 D O B IE M A I L • (SAT-12:00-3:00) 6:00-9:00 |- ;S\V,V.: “For c o u n tr y m u ­ sic fans, is a major e v e n t not to be missed... this H u s s B e r n a r d C o u n t r y M u » ic M a g a z i n e T H E S U S P E N S E B UI L DS W I T H E A C H S T E P '.V.V. mm: C-.vX is a s t u r d y , " I t suspense f ul l filling t h a t k e e p s t h e viewer on the edge o f his seat — and in his seat fr o m begin­ n in g ... a to e n d m ust f o r th e d evoted spy thriller fan. " Patrick Taggart Austin American-Statcsman SISSY SPACER TOMMY LEE JONES V I L L A G E A 2700 A N D E R S O N • 451 8352 T H E 3 R I V E R S I D E 1 9 3 0 R IV E R S ID E > 4 4 1 5 4 8 9 9 S T E P S (SAT- 2:45-1 5:00-7:20-9:40 12:30 2:60 5 10 7 40 10:05 5:30-8 :00- 10:30 NO D IS C O U N T M A T IN E E S W E E K E N D S PC V I L L A G E 4 2700 A N D E R S O N • 451 8352 12:40*2:55* 5:10 7:25*9:50 D D B I E 1 S 2 D O BIE M A L L • 477 1324 FREE P A R K IN G IN D O B IE G A R A G E Storv e f 0 in Jiw ry o t u m (SAT 12:00-2:00-4:00 6:00-8:00-10:00 ' MIDNIGHTERS n v t E A S Y K f l WIZARDS (pgi RRHRRR V I L L A G E 4 2 7 0 0 A N D E R S O N • 4 5 1 - 8 3 5 2 2:45 2:20-3:55- 5:30-7:05-8:40- L A K E H I L L S 2 4 2 8 B E N W H IT E • 4 4 4 0 5 5 2 [(SAT-12.-45-W 1:15- .QW PC SISSY SPACEK, V I L L A G E a 2 7 0 0 A N D E R S O N • 4 5 1 8 3 5 2 12:30 2:50- 1:10-7:40-10:05 yX ’Xvl L A K E H I L L S 2 4 2 8 B E N W H IT E * 4 4 4 - 0 5 5 2 S A T .12:45-3:05] 5:25-7:45-10:05 I ^ ipgI iw.v.vm®. m 1 I Is th e w o rd j ^ S T E R E O L A K E H I L L S 2 4 2 8 B E N W H IT E • 4 4 4 - 0 5 3 2 |(SAT-1:25-3:30-)l r5j35-7j40j9^45M i IS li HÍ£ÍliiiiÉÍÉÍMÍM O S C A R N O M I N E E B E S T P IC T U R E APOCALYPSE NOW (it) D O L B Y S T E R E O M l R I V E R S I D E 1 9 3 0 R IV E R S ID E - 3 * 4 1 - 5 6 8 9 [SAT-12:30 3:1 H 6:00-8:45 wm v.*.%vASV ‘ •iiíl R I V E R S I D E 1 9 3 0 R IV E R S ID E • 441 5689 MIDNIGHTER Page 22 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, April 11, 1980 W FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS TYPING C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G C o n s a c u tlv e D a y R a te s 15 w o rd m in im u m * 15 E a c h w o rd 1 tim e I W E a c h w o rd I t im e s I *2 E a c k w ord 5 t im e s * 68 E a c h w o rd 10 t im e s M 10 1 col. x 1 in ch 1 tim e I col. * 1 In ch 2-9 t im e s »4 24 I col * 1 Inch 10 or m ore tim es $4 01 I I 00 c h a r g e to c h a n g e co p y F ir s t tw o w o r d s m a y be a ll c a p it a l le tters 25' for e a ch a d d it io n a l w o rd In c a p ita l — — l e t t e r s S T U D E N T / F A C U L T Y / S T A F F C o n s e c u t iv e D a y R a te s 13 w o rd m in im u m E a c h d a y ................................... $ 91 E a c h a d d itio n a l w o r d e a ch d a y S 07 1 col * 1 in ch e a c h d a y *2 40 P a y m e n t In a d v a n c e a n d cu rre n t I D m u s t be p re se n te d in T S P B u ild in g 3 200 ( 25th 8. W h it ls ) fr o m 8 a m to 4 30 p m M o n d a y th ro u g h F r id a y T h e re is a 50* c h a r g e to c h a n g e co py F ir s t tw o w o rd s m a y be a ll c a p ita l le tters 25‘ for e a c h a d d itio n a l w o rd in c a p ita l le tte rs DCAOUtM S C H fO U U M onday T a u t n .............friómy 2:00 p m Twotdoy T o xa n ..........M on day 11:00 a.m. W id n n dcry Taxan Tuaxday I 1:00 a m Thursday Taxan ... W adn asdary 11:00 a m Thursday 11:00 a.m. Tridey Taxan "In tha a v an t a f arrars m o d a in a n advar- tlsam ant, im m a d ta ta n a tk a m ust ha fhran a s tha p u M ish a i » ora r a ip a nsWda far ardy O N I iiKarract Inaartian Ait d e h n t far od- jwstmants sho uld ha m o d a n a l latar than 30 d a y s afta» p u b licatio n ." AUTOS FOR SALE i74 C U T L A S S S U P R E M E , fu lly loaded, e x c e lle n t co nd ition , ru n s gre a t, $1750 n e g o tia b le 459-4026, Jett ,1972 V O L K S W A G E N S q’u a r e b a c k a u to m a tic . E x c e lle n t body, in te rio r, new re b u ilt e n gin e w ith six m onths/6,000 m ile w a r r a n t y tra n s fe rr e d . $1850 453- 3244 1972 P O R S C H E red 914. 5-speed, lift-off top, A M / F M radio, S2700 441-7297 1972 O P E L M A N T A , 28 m p g. A T $700 n ego tia b le, m u st sell. 443-9073 e ve n in gs, j ) l N . _____________ M U S T S E L L • c o lle c t o r 's c a r - '72 LT-1 C o rvette. 4-»peed, 350, A C , A M / F M 8- tracfc C B , T-top, d a r k blue. Im m a c u la te . A s k in g $9950 474-9444 a fte r 7 p.m . 1977 G R A N D P R I X T-top*, A M / F M c a sse tte stereo, pow er an ten n e, w hite le ttered tires, b e a u tifu l sp o rts c a r In top co n d ition . 477-1521. '76 M A R Q u i T w A G O N A ll pow er nice, 42500 345-9592 __________ _____ 4 V W S L O T m a g s w ith B F. G o o d ric h Steel r a d ia ls , G R 6 0 x 13 $150, n e go tia b le 472 0040, C h risto p h e r. 1968 D O D G E D A R T , 62 000 m ile s E x ­ ce lle n t engine, ru n s gre a t, 4600 474-4254 ,(5-7 p m .). D a le 1976 C O Ü G Á R X R 7 A M / F M ste re o cassette, 49,000 m ile s, c r e a m w ith c r e a m v in y l top, cru ise , A C , 42800 454-6994 ‘C L A S S I C '67 C A M A R O c o n v e rtib le E x - ’c e lle n t m e c h a n ic a l co nd ition, 41950 478- ,2775 or 478-9767^ •1972 A U D I. Good co ndition , A M F M •cassette, A C , 29 m p g , r e g u la r g a s $2400 385-0396 interior", 1971 B M W 2002 A C , m a n y m o re e x tras, e n gin e stro n g, rid e s sm o o th $4500 452-1297, 4517285 _____ le ath e r 77 M G B C O N V E R T I B L E A M / F M 8- lu g g a g e ra ck , goo d condition, track , 44100 n e g o tia b le 397 4638 betw een 7:30- 4 30, w e e k e n d s 327-3745 M U S T S E L L I M S V o lv o 122, 2-door C a ll *478-9387 d a y s, a s k for L a r r y ; 836-6821 'a f t e r 6 p.m .____________________________ V O L K S W A G E N R A B B I T D e lu x e 1978 A T E x c e lle n t co nd ition , 23,000 m ile s, m e ta llic paint. C a ll 282-5054 it's 1979 V W ’C O N V E R T I B L E , kin d R e d - sa n d top b la c k In terior, 10,- 700 m iles, $8000 447-4256. la st of Motorcyde-For Sold 1978 H O N D A 400 H a w k . 6600 m ile s, p erfect co n d ition . C a ll T o m 4-7 p .m 472- 6383 4950_____________________ _ 75 K A W A S A K I 750 H2. $850"neg oftab le C a ll P eter, 471-5876 e v e n in g s b efore I I p.m . L e a v e m e ssa g e , 1978 H O N D A 750-F S U P E R S P O R T . L e ss t h a n 2,5 0 0 o r i g i n a l m i l e s , $2050 n e go tia b le 928-4877, 926-8789 t w o " 1975'S Su zu k i TS400 (s t r e e t / t r a il) $650, Y a m a h a R D 35 0 (s tre e t) $600. B o th ex ce lle n t co ndition . 452-0122. H O N D A 175, 1972 m o d e l R u n s grea t, lo o ks gre a t, re lia b le ! 474-7730. H O N D A X L 7 5 p lu s a c c e s so rie s . 100 m p g, low m ile a g e $400 excelle nt co nd ition , C a ll a n d le a v e m e s s a g e fo r John 7 a m .-7 p.m ., 445-1614 1975 D U C A T I 750GT E x c e lle n t ‘ c o n d i­ tion, R90F b a rs, D u n st a lls, an d K80 ttres, $1100 454-3761, B r u c e H u d so n , 8-5. Bicycle-For Sale U S E D P E U G E O T 10-speed G r e a t c o n d i­ tion C o m p le te ly rebuilt, $75 474-4582 W O M E N 'S T H R E E speed M u r r a y , $50. C a ll 474-4579 S C H W I N N T E N spe ed S p o rts T o u re r 24 inch fra m e , $145 or b est o ffer D e a n 452- 2 8 5 4 .__________________________________ Stereo-For S o le N A K A M I C H l 582 c a ss e tte d eck N ew T h re e heads, m e ta l tape, $750 or best offer 837-3757 C A S H FO R y o u r b ro k e n stereo! Buy, sell, trade, r e p a ir use d stereo e q u ip ­ m ent. C a ll M ik e at 445-2636. 1977" S A N S U I Q R X -8 0 0 1 4 - c h a n n e l re c e iv e r N e e d s w ork. S e ll a s is, $300 476-6128 a fte r 3 00 p.m ., w e e ke n d s SA -5 07 0 r e c e iv e r , S L -2 3 T E C H N I C S tu rn ta b le . C la s s ic L 350 s p e a k e r s E x ­ ce lle n t c o n d itio n $400 477-3607, C h u c k . A M / F M C A S S E T T E c a r stereo w ith sp e a k e rs. C h e a p 444-4346 a fte r 5 30 Muticol-For S o ld T H E S T R I N G S H O P . D is c o u n t s on strin g s, new a n d use d g u it a r s 911 W, 24th, 476-8421. _ D Í S C Ó Ü R A G E D 7 W I T H a good In s t r u ­ m ent, p la y in g g u it a r is m u c h e a sie r and so u n d s better M o v e up to th is hand m a d e c la s s ic a l g u it a r W ill s a c r if ic e at $325 443-0314 E L E C T R I C P I A N O key $650 C a ll Jeff at_451 3686 1976 R h o d e s. 73 U N C L E S a m 7! U s e d B O O T L E G S R e c o rd s, D o w n to w n F ie a M a rk e t , 601 E a s t 5th, F r id a y , S a tu rd a y , S u n d a y , 9-6 s e le c tio n o f sh eet A U S T I N ' S B E S T m u s ic a n d so n g b o o k s A lp h a M u s i c C enter, 611 W 29th 477-5009 in C L A S S I C A L G U I T A R hand" m a d e P a r a c h o M ic h o a c a n . M e x ic o B e a u tifu l tone, e x ce lle n t co n d itio n . A ste a l a t $100 451-7816, keep t r y in g N E E D B A S S p l a y e r C a l l 928 0 5 U betw een 5-10 p.m . _________ V I O L I N , G E R M A N (Excellen t c o n d i­ tion F u ll, ric h ton es Bow , c a se $1200 C a ll for a p p o in tm e n t, 451-2464, d Ts C O U N T C O U P O N S in A p r il 9th T e x ­ a n lu p p le m e n t e x p ire M a y 3rd not 31st a s liste d A lp h a M u s i c C e n te r, 611 W 29th R E A L I S T I C T U N E R one sp e a k e r $60 C o m e by 4300 A v e G N o 3 M u s t se ll this w ee ken d Photography-For Sale T Ó P C O N U N I 3 5 m m c a m e r a p lu s 20 0m m telep h oto B o th in go o d co n d itio n $120, b e st o ffe r Bit, 453-3163 Horn»*-For Sol* E N F I E L D . O N E b e d r o o m a n d e ffic ie n ­ c y c o n d o m in iu m s $25,000-138,000 W en - d a ll C o r r ig a n , 478-7005. A m e lia B u llo c k R e a lto rs , 346-1073 N E A R U T , b a r g a in 2 1 L i v in g room , d in in g ro o m , b r e a k f a s t room , sle e p in g p orch $79 500 472-8052 M O B I L E H O M E 1968 ! 2 * 60 2 B R 2 8 A fu lly fu rn is h e d U T P a r k A v a ila b le A u g u s t 477-9405 M O B I L E H O M E , 10 x 55 H e n sle y , 2 B R . s t o r a g e p o rc h , U T P a r k . A v a i l a b l e A u g u st E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n G o o d b u y FOR SALE H o m e s - F o r S a l e O W N E R T R a N S F E R R E D C a s t le wood, la r g e 3-2 S L A w ith gre e n h o u se , pool w ith la n d sc a p e d y a r d w ith trees rock d e ck 9103 C o llln g w o o d D r 282-0567 G r e a t T A R R Y T O W N E X C L U S I V E loc atlon w ith pool N e e d s w ork $115,000 B ill S m ith an d A s s o c ia t e s 477-3651, 474 5100, _______ For S o l e - G a r a g e Y A R D S A L E D e sk , ru a s, b o o k s tables, m u c h m o r e ' A p r il 12th a n d 13th, 2409 P ru e tt, 474 7730 M i s c e l l a n e o u s - F o r S a l * _____ I N D I A N is 2 5 % off! S A L E 1 N e ls o n 's G ifts, 4502 S C o n g r e s s 444 3814, 10-6, c lo se d M o n d a y s le w e lry S E G E P T I C K E T S , 2nd a n d 3rd row s. 474-9304 6 00 to 7:30 e v e n in g. N o lo ke s S I N G L E B E D for sale, $50. M a t t r e s s an d t r a m e in clu d e d C a ll 477-6769 B R A N O N E W C O D E - A - P H O N E 14S0. R e m o te c o m m a n d telep hon e a n s w e r in g sy ste m , $199 95 A r t 's E le c tr o n ic s , 443- 7864 R E F R I G E R A T O R , W H I T E 14' G E , not fro st-fre e T w in bed set w ith c o rn e r tab le 443-8797 d a y s, 445-2015 e v e n in g s S H O R T W A V E R A D IO , new, D X -3 0 0 d ig ita l re a d o u t in c lu d e s M o s le y a n te n ­ na w o rth $50 A ll th is $275 W a y n e 472- 7837, a fte r 7 474-5850 D O U B L E B E D , 6-foot couch, ch a ir, $100, W ill se ll s e p a ra te ly C a ll 385-0396 lo u d s p e a k e r s p a i r A D V E N T w a ln u t w ith sta n d s, e x ce lle n t c o n d itio n ; H P -2 5 c a lc u la to r $50 C a ll 477-9967 A Q U A R I U M 4 sale. 55 g a llo n . S a lt o r fre sh . A lm o s t new in c lu d e s a ir pum p, f il t e r s , h e a t e r , h y d r o m e t e r , s t a n d , ca n o p y , lig h ts $300 value, o n ly $150 477- 7888 L O V E L Y W E D D I N G d r e s s a n d three b r id e s m a id d re ss e s E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tion. C a ll 458-9700 M O p m W I N D O W A I R c o n d itio n e r: R e c e n tly re w ire d 110 v $85 o r best offe r C a ll M a r k , 472 3380 We buy jewelry, estarte jewelry, diam onds, and old gold. Highest cash prices paid. C A P I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4018 N. La m a r I B R U N I V E R S I T Y N E I G H B O R H O O D a p a r t m e n t S h a g carpet, off street p a rk in g Ca b le , w ater, a n d g a s p a id 1010 W 23rd N o pets $240/m o n th p lu s E N o p re le a sm o for fa ll 472-2273. P R E LE A SIN G EFF. THROUGH 4 BRMS. SUMMER AND FALL SUMMER RATESI SHUTTLE BUS MODERN, SPACIOUS FURNISHED, UNFURNISHED POINT SOUTH 7200 WIU0WCREEK ( Riverside Arma) 444-7536 Habitat Hunters Free locating service to residents Apartments, Houses, Duplexes N ew location: Corner of Rio G ran d * & 14th 611 W. 14 474-1532 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS How to Afford Northwest Hills P r e le a iln g for S u m m e r a n d F a ll B R O W N L E E D O R M - $150 A B P F A L L R E N T $165 2 Blocks to Cam pus 2502 Nueces 477-0883 C O U P O N F O R S U M M E R G O O D T IL L A P R I L 21 ST E n | oy A u st ln t a t io u s su m m e r a n d school, Le M a r q u e e A p ts (302 W 38th). S p e c ia l If you low s u m m e r p re le a sin g p ric e s I B R $169, 2 B R sig n up b efore A p r il 21st $239 eft $149 D o n 't delay, sa v e m o n e y ! 453-4002__________________________ _ $185-5210 S U M M E R R A T E S ' B R f u ll y c a r p e t e d , w a lk - i n L a r g e closet, d isp o s a l. C a b le T V , w a te r and g a s fu rn ish e d . N ic e pool an d p a tio W a lk ­ in g d ist a n c e to U T N o pets, no ch ild re n . Fountain Terrace Apts. 610 W. 30th M a n a g e r a p t no 134 477-8858 S U M M E R R A T E S A L L B I L L S P A I D Efficiencies $159 Sma ll 2 B R ' s $240 2215 Leon W a lk or sh u ttle to c a m p u s, c e n tra l air, a n d new c a r p e t in g 474-7732 G O I N G B A N A N A S ? W e rent a p a r t m e n t s , d u p l e x e s , h o u s e s all over Austin. F R E E Real World Properties 443 2212 South 458-6111 N o rth 345-6350 N o rth w e st S U M M E R L E A S E S G E T Y O U R C H O IC E NO W 1 a n d 2 b e d ro o m s O n shuttle, re se rv e d p a rk in g , pool, la u n d ro m a ts. Soft w ater. A B P ex cep t E $190 an d up C a ll T o m or L a r r y now T H E S P A N I S H T R A I L 4520 Bennett 451-3470 t h e a t e r s , L O C A L IT Y P L U S L o o k in g fo r a hom e close to sh o p p in g lo c a t e d on r e s t a u r a n t s , sh u ttle 7 V a n t a g e P o in t A p a r t m e n ts 1$ now p r e le a s in g for s u m m e r a n d fall T a ke a d v a n t a g e of o u r red u ce d s u m m e r ra te s a n d r e s e r v e y o u r new ho m e now W e re lo cated on B u rto n D r off R i v e r ­ is open sid e T h e M o n d a y - F r i d a y 9 a .m .-6 p.m ., S a tu r d a y s 10 a m -6 p .m , S u n d a y s 1 p .m .-6 p.m W e 'll look fo r w a r d to m e e tin g you 442- 6789 in fo rm a tio n ce nter R E N T F O R S U M M E R C A S A D E S A L A D O A P T S. 2610 S A L A D O F o u r b lo c k s to c a m p u s , one b lo ck to W C I B R a p a r tm e n ts , C A / C H , pool, sh uttle la u n d ry room , p a id cable, off street p a r k in g 477-2534 o r c o m e by 2610 S a la d o A p t 110 A B P E F F ., IB R s Fro m $177.50 L e a s in g for su m m e r. 5 b lo c k s to c a m ­ pus, shuttle, pool C H A P A R R A L A PT S. 2408 L e o n 476-3467 ~SLJPER R A T E S S U M M E R / F A L L / S P R IN G U T a re a 2/1 a n d 2/2 sp a c io u s d ish w a sh e r, d isp o s a l C A / C H . pool la u n d ry fa c ilitie s p le n ty of p a r k in g c o n g e n ia l a tm o sp h e r e 47N-'T‘V>T 4-»4 tono O L D M A I N A p a r t m e n t s I B R an d e f­ fic ie n c ie s a v a ila b le now F o u r b lo c k s U T, sh u ttle 474 2958 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS Come by today and see for yourself You'Ll Like the view from our hilltop. And you'll like getting your money s worth in Austin’s nicest neighborhood t a k e It s easy when you live at Rjdge Hollow, Northwest Hills' most affordable apart­ ments.Here's what you get for very reasonable rent Hilltop location Fireplaces Washer/dryer tonncaxxis Balconies and patios with storage Tennis courts Swimming pool Malls and shopping centers Efficiency, 1 and 2 bedroom plans a c h a n c e . . . . . . on winning a color TV or 10-speed. With signing a one year s lease, you will be eligible to win a color TV or 10-speed bicycle. Swimming pool, billiards, sauna, and gym. Efficiency, one and two bedrooms. A.B.P. From $205 . . . MiAmigo Apts. 45th & Duval / 451-4119 or 451-4037 Free Sum m er A partm ent G iv e -A w ay M a y 3 Preleasing Summer/Fall Sum m er eff. — 2 /2 $190 to $245 Fall eff. — 2 /2 $210 te $320 unfurnkhmd pkn I * Summer Special * 2/1 Fum. $235 A K. 2 /2 Fum. $245 A K. hitnnhed by Gran 7,m 2 0 0 5 W illo w C ro o k 447-6696 M-F 9-6 SAT. 10-4 SU N . 1-5 R id g e h n H n iii 6805 Woodhollow/Ausun, Texas 78731 345-9315 APRIL SPECIAL mm Managed By Fred Goeke & Associate! (. A PARTM EN TS I H 'A OFF FIRST MONTH'S RBNT • 6-12 month lease • 1 BR-1 BATH • $230 per month • limited to 10 apartm ents WITH C O U P O N Expires April 30 1601 Rogjal Crest 4 4 4 - 7 7 9 7 J r i i i i i i i i i i i i h i EN G LISH A IR E A P A R T M E N T S EFFIC IEN C Y & 1 B E D R O O M Starting at *185. Som e Utilities Paid On shuttle route FR EE Racquetball & Tennis Courts Free Cable TV See one of A u stin's F IN E S T A P A R T M E N T C O M M U N IT IE S 1919 Burton Dr. English Aire 444-1846 9-8 M o n -S a t. 12-6 Sunday V i l k g e O e n Preleasing for fall SUMMER RATES I.e a sin g for S p r in g • s e c u r i t y s e r v i c e . r o o m m a t e s e l e c t i o n s e r v i c e • • • • 7 l i g h t e d t e n m t c o u r t * * p u t t i n g g r e e n » s h u f f l e b u » ( t o p * • t h r e e p o o l * e x e r c i t e r o o m * m u ñ o * f r e e c a b l e TV • f u m » » h e d u n h r n n h e d • a rca d e room 21 01 Burton Dr. 447-4 13 0 CASCADES • •« ., 1, 2, 3 A 4 • from $195 • 2 pools & clubhouse • room m ates welcom e 1221 A lga rita 444-4485 *nan ommcw xrn mar. co. P R E L E A S I N G F O R F A L L A N D S U M M E R M A U N A K A I 405 E 3 IS T 2 B R , 2 B A efficie n cy , s in g le e ffic ie n c y I B R W a lk to c a m p u v sh u ttle a n d c ity b u s 472-2147 V . I . P . A P T S . S U M M E ’R & F A L L L E A S IN G P lu s h 3 b edroo m , 2 b ath stu d io N e w c a rp e t a n d fu rn itu re L o v e ly pool, patio F r e e cab le . w a te r an d g a s p a id F o r a p ­ p o in tm e n t c a ll 476-0363 N o c a ll* after 6 00 p .m 101 E 33rd 2505 E N F I E L D RD . (on shuttle) Q u ie t c o m p le x , f u r n is h e d o r u n f u r ­ nishe d. O n e bed roo m , on e e ffic ie n c y la u n d r y 478 (w ith o u t kitch e n ) Pool, 2775 W A R W I C K A P T S . C L O S E T O C A M P U S Beautiful landscape: pool with waterfall, fully furnished 2 bedroom and 1 bedroom apts. now available. Call 477-1630 anytime. T H R E E E L M S A P T S . Furnished • Unfurnished 2 B R • 2BA L e a s in g fo r s u m m e r a n d fa ll S u m m e r L i/ n it e d n u m b e r of o n e y e a r r a t e s le a s e s 451-3941 S U M M E R R A T E S A L L B I L L S P A I D L a r g e I B R $230 2212 San Gabriel W a lk or sh u ttle to c a m p u s C e n t r a l air, d ish w a sh e r, d isp o sa l, a n d n ew c a rp e t 474 7732 N O W P R E L E A S I N G fa ll, s p r in g M ' s n e a r U T ; a ls o o n w e s t s h u t ­ tle R a t e s f r o m $159 L e a s e now , a v o id s h o r t a g e 476-0953, 700 H e a r n . S u m m e r , t o e a m p u ’s E F f T c T E N C Y C L O S E C a r p e t e d , d r a p e s , a p p l i a n c e s . C a l l C h r is , 478-5489, 2302 L e o n E F F I C I E N C I E S , 6 6 0 7 a n d 7 1 0 2 G u a d a lu p e G a s pa id , f u r n is h e d , d i s ­ h w a s h e r , a c c e s s ib l e s h u t t le , p a r t i a l le a s e s a v a ila b le . 454-3414. N E A R S H U T T L E , e f f ic ie n c y In s m a ll c o m p l e x . C a r p e t , C A / C H , l a u n d r y f a c ilit ie s C a ll m a n a g e r , 453-0876 a ft e r 5 p m ., o r 451-8178, E llio t t S y s t e m . F R E E A P A R T M E N T a n d h o m e lo c a to r s e r v ic e N o c o st to in d iv id u a ls C a ll F . N R L o c a t o r s at 478-0003 M A U N A K A I now le a s in g for s u m m e r an d tall. R e d u c e d ra te s fo r su m m e r. W a lk to c a m p u s , sh u ttle a n d c it y bus. 472-2147 F A N T A S T I C L O C A T I O N - one b lo c k law sh uttles. L a r g e 2-2, sun d eck, school, pool, la u n d ry , cable . S m a ll, q u ie t c o m ­ plex $360 p lu s E (J u n e 1st). G r e a t O ak, 2900 Sw ish e r, 477-3388 N E A R L A W school. L a r g e , a ir c o n ­ d itioned, fu rn is h e d ro o m S h a r e baths, $125 A B P 3310 R e d R iv e r 476-3634 2-1 A B P $3607T2T280 p lu s ¥ . " P ool, shüT- tle, ca b le , 2606 E n fie ld 474-5930 S P A C I O U S 2 B R a p a r t m e n t . F o r su m m e r, clo se to c a m p u s , A / C , pool, r e a s o n a b le rate 477-4859, 474-4294 2 B R , 1400 sq u a re feet. Salad o-2 8th. A C , pool, c a b le V e ry re a so n a b le ra te s for su m m e r . 474-5796 S U M M E Í R A N D fa ll le a s in g . A tt r a c tiv e m o d e rn c o m p le x n e a r c a m p u s , n ice ly I B R s , b a lc o n ie s , p a tio s, f u r n is h e d , la u n d r y v a u lt e d c e ilin g s , fa c ilitie s S u m m e r ra te s $200-$250 plus L e a s e a n d d e p o s it C a l l C h a r l e s E R e g a n , 476-7261, o r W . E A s s o c ia t e s , 478- 9521 f ir e p la c e , S U M M E R S U B L E A S E N ic e 2 B R , 1 B A , $200 p lu s b ills. N e a r c a m p u s , W C sh u ttle N o ra , 472-7554 M A Y - A U G U S T L a r g e 2-2 w ith pool $270 p lu s E L isa . 7-11 p.m., 476-5652 $140 P L U S E s u m m e r rate. W e a r e lo o k ­ ing for quiet, c o n sc ie n tio u s stu d e n ts in­ la r g e e f f ic ie n c y . T w o te r e s t e d lo c a tio n s n e a r sh u ttle C A / C H , la u n d ry , d e a d b olt, d isp o s a l. 476-2812. in a R J R M I I S H É D ~ E F f 7 c 7 É N C y ! g r e a t w ln- dow s, pool, c lo se to shuttle, th re e b lo ck s to c a m p u s C a ll 476-7934 o r c o m e b y 709 W . 26th, T h e R o c k c r e s t A p a r t m e n t s S P A C IO U S , 2 B R , b lo ck f r o m c a m p u s , $300 M o v e In A p r i l- M a y 509D W 25th 478-9394 S P A C Í O Ü S, C H E A P , N E A R C A M P U S s u m m e r su b le t C o m fo rta b le , quiet, 4 r o o m s P a r k in g , la u n d ry fa c ilitie s $230 m o n th ly . 472-5112. W A L K T O U T T-T, $169. N o ch ild re n , pets. 304 E . 33rd 476-0953 U N E X P E C T E D V A C A N C y 7 E ff ic ie n c y C A C H , cab le , g a s stove, d isp o s a l, sh u t­ tle O n ly $175 p lu s E 3805 A v e n u e B 453- 2676, 444-1269 W A L K U T one b lo ck E ff ic ie n c y , f u r ­ n ishe d, A C , A B P , $140 Im m e d ia t e o c ­ c u p a n c y 926-5026 Id e a l e f f ic ie n c y A V A I L A B L E N O W n e a r c a m p u s A C / C H . A B P $145, $100 d e p o sit 2703 R io G r a n d e 477-8103 N E E D N E W a p a rtm e n t m a t e R C sh u t­ f a ll. tle R i v e r s i d e a r e a N o n s m o k in g . S in g le room , u n fu rn is h e d $125. E W a r g a m e r s w e lc o m e 443-9073 S u m m e r , E F F I C I E N C Y A V A I L A B L E 5-14-80 F o u r b lo c k s fr o m c a m p u s , C A / C H , p a r t ­ ly fu rn is h e d F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n c a ll 476-7868 W A L K L A W school, L B J L ib r a r y , s h u f­ fle I B R s - s u m m e r $165 p lu s E . ; fa ll $220 p lu s E O n e b lo ck e a st of R e d R iv e r on 26th T o w e rv ie w A p a r tm e n ts , 478-5105 fin d H A N D I E S T L O C A T I O N y o g 'l l B lo c k c a m p u s , s u m m e r a n d fa ll le a s in g Q uiet, cool, A B P N o pe*s E ff ic ie n c y $180, ro o m $150 205 W 20th (o p p o site D o b ie G a r a g e ! 453-4082 fo r a p p o in t­ m ent. R I V E R O A K S A p a r t m e n t s " 2 B R A B P , la w school, s p a c io u s A v a ila b le n e a r now, $325 472-3914 C A M P U S A R E A s u m m e r fa ll 1904 S a n G a b r i e l C a ll 472-9559 fo r I B R , 2 B A a p a rtm e n ts . le a s i n g N o w L A R G E E F F I C I E N C Y C lo se c a m p u s , sh u ffle A v a ila b le 5-1-80 $170, e le c tric S c o tt I. C a ll R o n a ld , 478 4742 S U M M E R 3 B R 2 B A studio, $140 p lu s E . O n e b lo c k C R H a n c o c k C e n te r 474-5412, 478 5844 458 3736 O N E B L O C K la w school S u m m e r su b le t for n ic e ly fu rn ish e d 2 B R , 1 B A stu d io a p a r t m e n t C A C H , d ish w a sh e r, $225 p lu s u tilitie s N o sm o k in g , pets 477-5720 IN A N old h ouse Clean, p riv a te , la r g e I B R L iv in g room , kitchen, bath, $250 p lu s e le c tric ity . Jun e 1st 1705 N u e c e s 477 2755 I B R ~ fu rn ish e d S U M M E R S U B L E T betw een C R I F sh u ttle $185 p lu s E 459- 9548 e v e n in g s ROOMS fo r s u m m e r C o -e d N O W L E A S I N G d o r m n ext to c a m p u s R e m o d e le d , new re c re a tio n a r e a , su n d eck, f u r n is h in g s w id e sc re e n T V r e f r ig e r a n s, no m e als, 24 hour se c u rity T a o s 2612 G u a d a lu p e 474-6905 s u m m e r N O R T H E A S T , S H U T T L E , v a c a n c ie s Q uiet area, w a lk to C R , 3-2, fen ced study, A C i u tilitie s John, 452- y ard, $100-5135, 2071 ___________________________________ a ttic fan, c a rp o rt, N I C E R O O M , C A C H , w a lk in g d ist a n c e U T $115 and up C a ll «77 9388 River Park N o w le a sin g 1, 2, & 3 BRt Starting at $200 & E. 1102 Trace Dr. 444-3917 T R A V I S HOUSE APTS. O n e a n d tw o b e d ro o m s F ir s t sh uttle stop, la r g e pool, free c a b le 1600 Royal Crest 442-9720 A C O M M U N I T Y of frie n d s. C lo th in g o p ­ tio n al A p a r t m e n t liv in g th a t is! W e 're not the s a m e $180-5215 a ll b ills excep t e le ctric H B O / c a b le free, h u ge pool, 24- hour se cu rity , three b lo c k s fr o m shuttle, l a u n d r o m a t , N e w M a n o r b o o k s t o r e / h e a d s h o p A p a r tm e n ts , 2401 M a n o r R o a d , 474-4319 or 477-3125 p l a y g r o u n d , T H E F R E N C H P la c e . S p a c io u s u n f u r ­ n is h e d I B R , C A / C H , d i s p o s a l , d i s ­ h w a sh e r , c lo s e U T , Vt b lo c k s h u ttle $205 p lu s E 474-1240 a ft e r 6 p.m . $240 P L U S E . L a r g e 2 B R , 2 B A n e a r N o r t h c r o s s M a ll . W e a r e lo o k in g for qu ie t, c o n s c ie n t io u s s tu d e n ts o r fa c u lty . Pool, patio, C A / C H , la u n d ry , d e a db o lt, d is h w a s h e r , d is p o s a l. 476-2812 sh u ttle . 1-1, pool, C L O S E C A P I T O L , tre e s $230, e le c t ric it y . A v a ila b l e n o w S a o P a u lo , 1218 B a y l o r 476 4999 C L O S E C A P I T O L , sh u ttle . 2-2, pool, frees. $290 e le c t r ic it y S a o P a u lo , 1218 B a y lo r. M a y 1st. 476-4999 E F F I C I E N C Y A P A R T M E N T n e a r c a m ­ $16 0 p l u s E . A v a i l a b l e M a y . p u s E v e n in g s , 459-0116 ROOMMATES W A N T F E M A L E h o u s e m a t e $100, J b ills. O n shu ttle , c ity b u s. A f t e r 6, 476- 787r_________ ____ R O O M M A T E W A N T E D fe m a le , n o n ­ s m o k i n g to s h a r e a n a p a r t m e n t w ith for s u m m e r 453-2730 S H A R E N I C E s p a c i o u s 3 B R h o m e S h u t ­ tle 397-2513 b e fo re 2 00 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E - C h r is t i a n non- s m o k e r , s u m m e r o n ly . 2 b lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s . C a ll S u z a n n e , 474-2423 M / F W A N T E D . S h a r e lu x u r io u s ly f u r ­ n is h e d tw o s t o r y t o w n h o u s e fo r s u m m e r , Po o l. $145. Pete, 459-4598 R O O M M A T E f ñ T r a v is H e ig h ts . $ 10 0 /m o n th p lu s Vi b ills 441 - 5345 - H O U S E F E M A L E R O O M M A T E f o r " N o r t h A u s t in d u p le x . N o dope, s m o k e , o r pets. $97.50 454-3462,_ w o rk : 837-8434 N E E D R E L A X E D , c o n s e r v a t iv e , non- s m o k e r to s h a r e S o u t h A u s t in 2 B R , 2 B A t o w n h o m e $150, ! i e le c t ric it y . Jo h n , 471- 2193 _________ N E E D T W O m a le s to s h a r e 3-2 d u p le x, R iv e r s id e a r e a C A / C H , o n e b lo c k o ff R C / S R b i l l s . Q u i e t VS n e ig h b o r h o o d 447-8208 $ 1 1 6 , F"e m Ta l E " n o n S M O K E R h o u s e m a t e ne e de d S u m m e r , fall. 2 B R , $120 p lu s b ills. S h u ttle . R a c h e l, 454-7066 F E M A L E , 4 B R a p a r tm e n t, p lu sh s u r ­ ro u n d in g s . $95. Vd b ills O n e b lo c k S R a n d T r a v i s H e ig h t s b u s. D ia n e , 444-2670. 2 B R S S U B L E A S E , b e a u tifu l, s o a c io u s h o u se W e st c a m p u s . A v a ila b l e 5-27-80 fo 8-27-80 E a c h $ 13 3 / m o n th p lu s e le c t r ic i­ ty W o m e n o n ly. K e e p t r y in g ! 478-3407. O N E O R tw o m a le h o u s e m a t e s fo r S F S , w a sh e r , d r y e r , fre e z e r, C R s h u ttle A B P , $125. 454-9380 M A L E , S U M M E R . Sp M t $205 p lu s b ills ’ R C sh u tt le C a ll M ik e , 447 8067 H O U S E M A T E . P E R C E P T I V E 7 lib e r a l ju n io r , s t u d e n t s e n io r o r g r a d u a t e P r iv a t e r o o m $140 A B P 452-4429 Q U I E T , M A R R I E D co u p le , h u s b a n d in la w sch o o l, lo o k in g fo r h o u s e to s h a r e w it h p e r s o n ( s ) n e e d in g h o u s e m a t e s . S u m m e r / f a ll. 478-7395 S U M M E R H O U S E M A T E n e e d e d to in q u i e t s h a r e s p a c i o u s h o u s e 454-8073 n e ig h b o r h o o d a fte r 6 $167.50, b i ll s N I C E D U P L E X , ch e a p , M a y 2 sto ry , 2 B R , $102 50, 2 u t ilit ie s J u s t n o r th of I F 452-6869 A U D I O P H I L E L O O K I N G fo r tun lo v in g , c o n s e r v a t iv e , n o n s m o k in g m a le to s h a r e a p a r t m e n t o r d u p le x n e x t ta ll 473-6977 L e a v e m e s s a g e L A R G E D U V A L T w o s t o r y L ib e r a l. $92 p lu s b ills C a ll 12 a m -10 p .m 476- 1137. M A T U R E ‘ H O U S E M A T E ~ L a r g e p e a c e fu l h o u s e n e a r 45th, S h o a l C r e e k I 'm 31, $147, h a lf b ills N o t o a c c o pe ts g r a d u a t e stu d e n t. Joh n , 458-8451 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E to s h a r e a p a r t ­ m e n t H y d e P a r k a r e a B a c k y a r d a n d m a n y w i n d o w s , $ 1 4 0 m o n t h p l u s u tilit ie s D e b b ie a fte r 4 p m 458 8649 W A N T E D S T A R T I N G 5-15 3 8 R. 2 B A h o u se 15 m in u t e s f r o m c a m p u s Q u ie t n e ig h b o r h o o d $130, < u t ilit ie s 837-6692 a fte r 5 W A N T E D A P A R T M E N T H O U S E , s u m m e r f a ll w ith p r iv a t e ro o m , A C , d o s e to c a m p u s N o n s m o k in g u p p e r d iv is io n p r e f e r r e d C a ll D a n a , 458 2427 S H A R E I M M E D I A T E L Y S U M M E R s u b le a s e S h a r e n ic e o ld h o u s e O w n b e d ro o m , b a t h r o o m C e n t r a l $115 472-6429 M A L E R O O M M A T E s h a r e 2 B R h o u se $150 A B P N e a r I F R ic h a r d b e fo re 4 p .m . 451-0796 F E M A L E G R A D s tu d e n t s e e k s r o o m ­ m a t e to s h a r e 3 2 h o m e in U n i v e r s it y H il ls a r e a on U T s h u ttle A v a ila b l e M a y 1st 928-2563 UNFURNISHED HOUSES C A / C H , 3 B R f e n c e d b a c k y a r d , w a s h e r d r y e r c o n n e c t io n s . P e t s o k a y . C a ll 445-2982 to see E N F I E L D 3-1 f r e s h ly p a in te d 1613 N e w - field, c lo se sh uttle , $450 A v a ila b l e A p r il I D a y s 472-1155 n ig h t s w e e k e n d s 472* 5007^__ C O U N T R Y L I V I N G la r ^ e 3-1 F o u r t e e n m ile s e a st on 969 C o n s c ie n t io u s c o u p le L e a s e $300 478 5739 472 2097 V E R Y N I C E la r g e 3 1, c lo s e la w sc h o o l N o p e t s $ 3 0 0 M a r x G o o d r ic h b e tw e e n 10 a .m .-n o o n 474-6898 R e f e r e n c e s F A M I L Y S P E C I A L N e a t 3-2-2 fenced, a p p lia n c e s s t a y 443-2105 a fte r 6 p m $385 H u r r y it w o n 't la st 2-1, 1005 R O M E R I A , r e d o n e , fe n c e d y a r d , p o r c h , r e f r ig e r a t o r $325 345-2665 c a r p o r t , u t i l i t y N E A R Z I L K E R 3 B R . I B A , fe n c e d ya rd , a p p lia n c e s , c a rp e t, q u ie t n e ig h b o r h o o d $450 p e r m o n t h 453 8356 L a r g e 3 2 N O R T H C E N T R A L f i r e p l a c e , a p p l i a n c e s t o w n h o m e , T a s t e f u lly d e c o r a t e d T e n n is a n d s w i m m in g $450 258-9240 T Y P IN G , P R I N T I N G , B I N D I N G The Complete Profmaional FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 H E M PH ILL PK P le n t y of P a r k in g e^onotype econocopy Typing Copying, Binding, Printing IBM Correcting Selectric Rental & Supplies NORTH M on .-T h u rs. 8 :3 0 - 8 :00 Fri. 8 :3 0 - 5 :3 0 Sat. 9 :0 0 - 5 :0 0 Sun. 1:00 - 5 :00 37th & Guadalupe 453-5452 SOUTH M on .-T h u rs. 8 :30 - 8 :0 0 Fri. 8 :3 0 - 5 :0 0 Sat. 9 :0 0 - 1:00 E. Riverside & Lakeshore 4 4 3 -4 4 9 8 • ' • • a a a a e a a a a a a a a WOODS T Y P I N G S E R V I C E When you want it done right 472-6302 2200 Guadalupe, side entrance H O L L E Y 'S 1505 Lavaca 478-9484 P r o f e s s io n a l ty p in g , c o p y in g , b in d in g Color Xerox O L S T E N T E M P O R A R Y S E R V I C E Typist needed im mediately. You can work one day or five days. Please apply at III C H E V Y C H A S E 313 E. A nd ers on Ln. 458-4266 T Y P I N G : T H E S E S , d is s e r t a t io n s , t e rm p a p e rs, r e p o rts , etc. E x p e r ie n c e d , I B M S e le c tric . N e a r N o r t h c r o s s M a ll . 458- 6465 C A L L D e A n n e a t 474-1563 «-5 M - F o r 345- 1244, 453-0234 w e e k e n d s a n d e v e n in g s . N o r m a l ly 1 -d a y s e rv ic e . P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I N G Q u a l i t y w o rk , p r o m p t s e rv ic e , tw e n ty y e a r s e x- I B M p e r i e n c e . s e I f - c o r r e c t ¡ n g t y p e w r it e r L in d a , 459-3349; 478-3381 (a fte r 6 p .m .). P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I S T "o n c a m p u s " t e r m p a p e r s , T h e s e s , d i s s e r t a t i o n s , r e s u m e s , t h e m e s I B M C o r r e c t in g S e le c ­ t r ic II 445-0052 P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I S T e c o n o m i c a l e x p e r ie n c e d A ll t y p e s of w o r k a c c e p te d . 251-4454 a ft e r 6 p.m . F A S T , F A S T p r o f e s s i o n a l a n d e x ­ p e r ie n c e d I B M S e le c tric . $1 00 a p a g e C a ll B o n n ie , 441-6657 T I R E D O F h a lf -f a st t y p i n g ? I h a v e a B A in E n g l i s h , 12 y e a r s s e c r e t a r ia l e x ­ p e r ie n c e a n d a C o r r e c t in g S e le c tric . C a ll A n n at 447-5069 P R O F E S S I O N A L Q U A L I T Y C a m p u s p ic k u p a n d d e l iv e r y C o r r e c t in g S e le c t r ic II. H e le n , 836-3562 t y p in g . I B M E X P E R T T Y P I N G re p o rts , fast, a c c u r a t e U T d e liv e r y . I B M S e le c ­ tric, c a r b o n r ib b o n 458-2649 a ft e r 5 p m . T h e se s, T Y P I N G C O R R E C T I N G S e l e c t r i c , p a p e rs , re p o rts , th e se s. $1.00/ p a ge . 327- 1488 B o x 904, A u s tin , T e x a s, 78767. RESUMES w ith or w ith ou t picture* 2 D a y Service 2 7 0 7 H e m p h ill Park Ju*t N orth of 27fh at G u a d a lu p e 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 P E R S O N A L I Z E D Q U A L I T Y t y p in g to fit y o u r n e e d s 90* p a g e F r e e p e k - u p a n d d e liv e r y W e a ls o w r it e r e s u m e s K e n d r a , 282-3167 T Y P I N G A N D p r o o f in g 801 p a g e O v e r ­ n ig h t s e r v ic e a v a ila b le 7 a m -7 p.m . E liz a b e t h , 472-2865, le a v e m e s s a g e Q u a l i t y T Y P I N G , p ro o fin g . T h e se s , d is s e r t a t io n s , re p o rts, p a p e r s S e le c tric , o v e r n ig h t s e rv ic e , on s h u ttle P a t M il ls , 675-4593 , 472-3450 a fte r 5, w e e k e n d s E X P E R I E N C E D T / P I S T S . D o u b l e sp a ce , $l p a g e 452-6923 P R O F E S S l O Ñ Á L T Y p T s t w ith ¡e g al e x ­ p e rie n c e D is s e r t a t io n s , t e r m p a p e r s , r e p o r t s I B M S e lf C o r r e c t i n g t y p e w r it e r. C e l l Dottie , 327-0754 e t c T E R M P A P E R S , th e se s, d is s e r t a t io n s , b o o k s V e r y r e a s o n a b le . C a ll a fte r 4 30 442 7360 T Y P I N G . R E A S O N A B L E , n e a t a n d a c ­ c u r a t e C a ll P e g g y at 926 3279 926-5678 a fte r 5:00 T Y P I N G B Y e x - s c h o o l t e a c h e r A c ­ c u r a t e , P a p e r s p a g e 444-Bt6n d e p e n d a b l e t h e s e s $1 5 0 / d o u b ie s p a c e d r e s p o n s i b l e ty o A jd k t f in sure w e D O type F R E SH M A N TH EM ES wtry met start eat wttk §a a d gra de* 2 7 0 7 H e m p h ill iv t i North of 27th at Guadalupo 472-3210 472-7477 SERVICES SERVICES WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED Friday, April 11, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 23 NEED A JOB THIS SUMMER? W«'ll Pay You To Try Army ROTC. $ 4 5 0 p lim room, board an d tran spo rtatio n costs to a tta n d a J ACK OF A L L T R A D E S im m e d ia te ly N e e d e d f u ll- t im e a p a r t ­ m e n t m a in t e n a n c e e m p lo y e e N o r t h A u s tin lo c a tio n S e lf m o tiv a t io n a n d m e c h a n ic a l a b i l i t y a n e c e s s ity E x ­ p e r ie n c e p r e f e r r e d M u s t h a v e o w n t r a n s p o r ta t io n . S a la ry n e g o tia b le C a ll fo r a p p o in tm e n t, 452-5178, 2-6 p m Groups extend deadline for student applications A m I sN m m » UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES PHOTOS ♦or PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 m in u t e se rv ice M O N -S A T . 1 0 - 6 4 7 7 - 5 5 5 5 THE THIRD EYE 2 5 3 0 G U A D A L U P E I f y o u 'r o a n t i o u t d o o r o t t o d o r r a n t t lo o p , th e Fob/» C li n k o f A u t t i n m a y no o b U to h o ip T r o a t m o n l i t b o o For t h o u w h o m o o t t i m p lo o n t r y e n to r to t x r t o d o o io fy o n m o d k o l o r a l u a t i o m T h n o p p o r t u n i­ t y t t a v o k a b lo d u o to t o t t in g p e o t o d v r o t r o p u ir o d b y tb o f o d o r o l L a w r o g a t d in g I h o d o v o lo p m o n l o f n o w m o d k a t io n t f o r t o m p io t o in f o r m a t i o n a n d t o f i n d o u t i f y o u q u a lif y , c a ll ________ 4 T T .2 W I 7 . P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y C O U N S E L I N G , R E F E R R A L S & F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T I N G T e x a s P r o b le m P re g n a n c y , 600 W 28th, S u ite 101 M -F , 7 30-5 30 474-9930 F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T S C o u n s e lin g on a l l p r e g n a n c y a l t e r ­ n a t iv e s , b i r t h c o n t r o l m e th o d s a n d w o m e n 's h e a lth c o n c e rn s W a lk - m b asis, M o n - F r i. 9-5. W o m e n 's R e fe r r a l C e n te r 1800B L a v a c a 476-6878 All r e f e r r a l s ma d e locally. G R E C L A S S E S fo r Ju n e e x a m - c o m ­ p le te m a t h v e r b a l r e v ie w H i g h l y q u a lif ie d in s tr u c t o r - re a s o n a b le r a te s 443-9354. M E N D I N O , A L T E R A T I O N S , ~ a n d c u s to m s e w in g 12 y e a rs e x p e rie n c e S o u th A u s tin 444-2842 M U S IC IA N S R E F E R R A L s e rv ic e . C a ll 443-5398 Y O U R N A M E M e a n in g a n d H is to r y V4 to S ta m p e d , s e lf-a d d re s s e d e n v e lo p e N a m e s, B ox 904, A u s tin , T e xa s, 78767 G E T S N A P P E D p e rs o n a liz e d p o r t r a it s a t lo c a tio n o f y o u r c h o ic e R e a s o n a b le ra te s C a ll M s S m a r t a t 472-2866 G O M E Z A N D Son P a in t a n d B o d y Shop. C o m p le te p a in t |ob, $150. Spot r e p a ir s p e c ia lty . 443-1221 305 E S a in t E lm o R oad N E A R C A P I T A L P la z a , 2-1 c a r p o r t, a il a p p lia n c e s , c a r p e t, d ra p e s , W /D c o n n e c ­ tio n s , fe n c e d p a tio , CA C H , q u ie t c u l-d e - sac, $275 837-4808 F O R R E N T 3B R , 2B A R iv e r s id e a re a L e a se s u m m e r / f a ll. C a ll 441 5042 f o r in ­ f o r m a tio n . A T T IC A P A R T M E N T . 11 a b e d ro o m s , $210 p lu s E . S p a cio u s, a p p lia n c e s , on s h u ttle 3400B S p e e d w a y L o u is H in e s P r o p e r ty M a n a g e m e n t, 458-6757 W E L L A P P O IN T E D 2B R 2BA S o u th A u s tin to w n h o m e G a ra g e , e n c lo s e d p a tio C a ll Jo h n , 471-2193 P R O F E S S O R IA L C O U P L E w a n ts to r e n t y o u r c o m fo r t a b ly fu rn is h e d hou se n e x t a c a d e m ic y e a r P r e fe r w ith in 4 m ile r a d iu s U n iv e r s it y , n o r th o f r iv e r b u t W e s tla k e o r N o rth w e s t p o s s ib le 476- 8866 W E S T A U S T IN , 3-1, a p p lia n c e s , p a r t ia l­ ly fu rn is h e d , $400 A v a ila b le Ju n e 1st D a ys, 475-3097 N ig h ts /w e e k e n d s , 451- 4203 24 h o u rs ,_ 7 jJ a y s 447-9384, 477-3249 ---------------------- n g : r T n G S S I Z E D w h ile U - W a lt, 13607 R e s e a rc h B lv d . 258-4425 $1 00 d is c o u n t w ith th is ad. E V E N IN G D R E S S E S , a lte r a t io n s . N e c h e s . 442-6904 512 C O N S C IE N T IO U S I N D I V I D U A L w i ll do y o u r p r o o fr e a d in g fo r yo u . 836-6517. L O A N S O N a n y th in g o f v a lu e U sed m e rc h a n d is e 5134 - b u y, s e ll, B u r n e t R d . 454-0459 t ra d e E L PASO JCC 1980 s u m m e r s o ftb a ll b e g in s J u n e 1st ( m e n ), J u n e 8 th ( w o m e n ) . C o n ta c t R o c k E l li s fo r a ll in fo r m a tio n a n d s c h e d u le s . JC C o f E l P a so / 405 M a r - d i G ra s / 79912, P O O R D I S A D V A N T A G E D A u s t i n s tu d e n ts w ith o u t p la n e t a r iu m in s p a c e a g e S h a m e ! H e lp ! H e lp ! 476-6598 J O IN T H E T e x a s B lu e s S o c ie ty . 5398 443- SERVICES SERVICES YOU'RE NOT TALKING TOO MUCH YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH S A V E 3 0 % - 7 0 % On Long-Distance Phone Charges CALL 477-8050 *5 BONUS (on first donation only) BRING IN THIS AD & I.D. WITH PROOF OF AUSTIN RESIDENCE, OR STUDENT ID Austin Plasma Center 2800 Guadalupe 474-7941 *8.00 — First Donation *10.00 — Second Donation *10.00 — Bonus on 10th Donation HELP WANTED HELP WANTED REGISTERED NURSES!! NURSING OPPORTUNITIES IN R U ID O S O , N E W M E X IC O , R U ID O S O H O N D O V A L L E Y H O S P IT A L O F F E R S Y O U C A R E E R O P P O R T U N I T I E S I N O N E O F T H E S O U T H W E S T 'S F A S T E S T G R O W IN G H O S P IT A L S Y S T E M S C O M E A N D W O R K F O R A H O S P IT A L T H A T S T R IV E S F O R T H E B E S T IN P A T IE N T C A R E A N D IS N E S T L E D IN T H E S C E N IC , Q U IE T , C O O L M O U N T A IN S O F R U ID O S O - T H E P L A Y G R O U N D O F T H E S O U T H W E S T 1 E N J O Y Y O U R D A Y S O F F IN T H E W IN T E R B Y S K IIN G D O W N T H E S L O P E S O F N E W M E X I C O S S E C O N D M O S T P O P U L A R S K I R E S O R T A R E A OR IN T H E S U M M E R B Y A T T E N D I N G T H E E X C I T IN G H O R S E R A C E S , P L A Y I N G T E N N IS A N D T H E M S W IM M IN G A T O U R R A C Q U E T C L U B , O R , B Y S I M P L Y R E L A X I N G A N D E N J O Y I N G T H E B E A U T I F U L , B R E A T H T A K I N G S C E N E R Y A N D C L E A N A I R I N T H E W IL D E R N E S S O F T H E L IN C O L N N A T I O N A L F O R E S T . I F Y O U F E E L Y O U C A N Q U A L IF Y A N D A R E I N T E R E S T E D IN T H IS E X C I T I N G JO B O P P O R T U N IT Y A T O U R H O S P IT A L , C O N T A C T J U D I W H IT E C O T T O N (505! 257-7381, x 251 TOP CASH ★ ★ for G old A tilvo r coins, N o ticea b ly m a rk e d sterling tilv o r fla tw a r e , G old J e w e lry I W o b o at a n y ad vertis ed price. We pay CASH! 10 0 0 - 5 .0 0 d a ily 4 5 8 -2 1 8 6 Austin Gold & Silver Exchange 3 1 4 H ig h la n d M a ll Blvd. Suite 2 1 2 C o m m u n ity Bank Building C L A S S R IN G S , g o ld je w e lr y , o ld p o c k e t w a tc h e s , c u r r e n c y , s ta m p s w a n te d . H ig h p n c e s p a id P io n e e r C o in C o m ­ p a n y , 5555 N o r th L a m a r , B ld g C-113 In C o m m e rc e P a r k , 451-3607 B U Y IN G W O R L D g o ld , g o ld je w e lr y , s c ra p g o ld , o ld c o in s , a n tiq u e s , p o c k e t w a tc h e s P a y in g f a i r m a r k e t p r ic e . C a p ito l C o in C o., 3004 G u a d a lu p e , 472- 1676 P h ilip N o h ra , o w n e r T O P P R IC E S p a id f o r f r o n t ro w s on flo o r t ic k e t s to S e ger c o n c e rt. C a ll 288-0609 LOST & FOUND F O U N D O R L O S T a p e t? S p e c ia l P a ls H o tlin e , c a ll 258-0408 L O S T C A T , p r e g n a n t ta b b y in need o f a tte n tio n a r o u n d 28th a n d R io G ra n d e 476-4900 L O S T A D U L T f e m a le W e lm a r a n e r , " M e a g a n ," w e a r in g b lu e c o lla r . 1 r e a lly m is s her 459-7496. $50 R E W A R D B la c k f e m a le D o b e rm a n , lo n g ea rs, s h o rt t a il, no c o lla r , 6 m o n th s , "N o v a " L a s t seen n e a r U n io n . 476-4062 S H A U N A , P L E A S E c a ll m e a b o u t m y s tr a w p u rs e a n d w a lle t y o u s a id yo u fo u n d . 1 need m y c h e c k b oo k a n d id e n ­ t if ic a t io n . C a rla , 452-4301. S U B V E R S IV E C A R P E N T E R S te ve L C o m e s tre e t d a n c e F r id a y 7 p .m . - f r o n t c e n te r b y b a n d L u v , J e r i. S U IT C A S E L O S T : b r o w n a n d b e ig e s trip e d to te b a g w a s le ft in s tre e t in f r o n t of K in s o lv in g D o r m on th e F r id a y b e fo re E a s te r , H a s in it ia ls K D B . R E W A R D . P le a s e c a ll 471-7578 o r 452-9942 W O M E N - M E N W e need yo u . T h e A r k h a s v a c a n c ie s fo r th e s u m m e r f o r w o m e n (a n d m e n ). O u r co-ed c o o p e ra tiv e w o rk s b e tte r w h e n th e g r o u p b y th e po o l is e v e n ly m ix e d . Y o u 'll l i k e o u r m e a l s , o u r s o c i a l a n d e d u c a t i o n a l e n v i r o n m e n t , a n d th e fre e d o m to be y o u r o w n p e rs o n . $574 w i ll g e t y o u a p r iv a t e r o o m a n d 19 m e a ls a w e e k f o r th e w h o le s u m m e r . A n d yo u a re in c o n t r o l ; a l l o u r d e c i s io n s a r e d e m o c r a tic . A p p ly b y c o m in g to 2000 P e a rl o r c a ll 476-5678 M A L E A N D f e m a le v a c a n c ie s . T w o b lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s . L a u r e l H ouse C o­ op, 478-0470 F E M A L E V A C A N C Y , d o u b le o c c u p a n ­ c y . T h re e b lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s . F r e n c h H ouse, 710 W 21st. 478-6586 S125-S 155/M O N TH p lu s 4 h o u rs la b o r / w e e k 3 b lo c k s c a m p u s . M a le / f e m a le v a c a n c ie s 478-5043 N I N T H P E R S O N to h e lp m a k e o u r co-op a h o m e B e a u t i f u l o ld h o m e n e a r E a s tw o o d P a r k t o r h a p p y , t e r m m a tu r e n o n s m o k e r. P r e f e r c o m m itm e n t M o v e in M a y 1st. C a ro l 474-2487 e v e n in g s L o o k in g lo n g TRAVEL B I C Y C L E T O U R T O A L A S K A V ia A u s tin , T e llu r ld e , T e to n s , C a lg a ry , F a irb a n k s . L e a v in g a f t e r M a y fin a ls . L o o k in g f o r p e o p le to r id e w e e k a t a t im e th ro u g h o u t s u m m e r N e e d s tro n g bod, good b ik e , no e x p e rie n c e n e c e s s a ry . K u r t, 476-0249 o r B o x 7137, A u s tin 78712 - B Y C A R G u a te m a la - C o sta R ic a - P a n a m a N e e d good s k ille d d r iv e r , s h a re d r iv in g . 474-1097 a f te r 4 30 t o P a n a m a M e x i c o - N ic a r a g u a - S a lv a d o r PERSONAL P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F r e e p re g n a n c y r e fe r r a ls . 474- 9930 te s tin g a n d M A L E P R O F E S S I O N A L / S T U D E N T w o u ld lik e to m e e t s tu d io u s fe m a le fo r m a n y h o u rs o f s tu d y t im e to g e th e r P .O Box D-2, 78712. G E T S N A P P E D p e rs o n a liz e d p o r t r a its a t lo c a tio n o f y o u r c h o ic e . R e a s o n a b le ra te s . C a ll M s . S m a r t a t 472-2866 MUSICAL INSTRUCTION E X P E R I E N C E D P I A N O / G U I T A R t e a c h e r B e g in n e r s - a d v a n c e d . U T d e g re e . A f te r 2 p m 459-4082, 476-4407 P IA N O L E S S O N S . A ll le v e ls . E x p e r ie n c ­ ed, q u a lif ie d te a c h e r . F o r in fo r m a tio n , pho n e 451-3549 P R IV A T E IN S T R U C T IO N in th e p e r f o r ­ m a n c e o f v o ic e , p ia n o , a n d m u s ic t h e o r y ; c la s s ic a l o r p o p u la r m u s ic , m u s ic d r a m a ; s tu d io r e c o r d in g . 327- 6471 TUTORING T U T O R I N G IN E n g l i s h , S p a n is h , I ta lia n , F r e n c h , G e rm a n , m a th e m a tic s . In d iv id u a l o r g r o u p sessions C a ll 442- 842L 451-8710 o r 477-7312 a f te r 6 p .m P H .D . M A T H t u t o r w i ll h e lp yo u m a k e th e g r a d e o n t e s t s , a s s i g n m e n t s . V e te ra n s f r e e 443-9354 w ear your blue jean s .. L o o k in g fo r a h ig h - p a y in g t e m p o r a r y jo b 7 J o in V ic to r T e m p o r a r y S e r v ic e s — W E A R Y O U R J E A N S ! W e n e e d p e o p le fo r N o r t h , S o u th , a n d E a st A u s tin ! H ig h p a y . N o fe e . V a c a tio n b o n u s .... R e fe r y o u r fr ie n d s a n d w h e n t h e y w o r k 4 0 h o u r s — e a r n a n e x ­ t r a $ 1 0 . 0 0 VICTOR T e m p o r a r y S a rv ic a s N O R T H 1 11 W A n d e r s o n N o 3 2 8 4 5 4 - 5 7 3 1 S O U T H 1 3 0 1 S. I n t e r r e g io n a l N o . 101 4 4 5 - 2 5 2 5 B .C . WU •i h - u Now hiring Competitive salaries for Waiters, Waitresses, Hosts, Hostesses, Bookkeeper, Cashier, Prep Cooks, Line Cooks, Bussers and Dishwashers. Excellent benefit package associated with mdjor hospitality/food service company. I • Apply Monday through Saturday in person between 9:00 AM and 5:00 PM. No phone calls. Adjacent to Holiday inn North 6911 North Interregional Highway — I 3 5 Equal Opportunity Employer cam p a t Fort Knox, KY. 19 M a y -2 6 Juna 9 J u n e -17 July 7 J u ly -14 August N O M ilita ry o b ligatio n lim ite d opening» CALL NOW! 471-5919 NEW LADIES' CLUB NOW HOLDING AUDITIONS FOR DANCERS Full or part-time. U n l i m i t e d i n c o m e possibilities. 477-3361 EVENING JOBS FOB STUDENTS 4-9 p .m ., g u y s o r g a ls , no e x p e rie n c e nee ded, w e s t c a m p u s , go o d s t a r t in g s a la r y , c o m p a n y bon uses, w e e k ly p a y , I n te r e s t in g w o r k C a ll M r . S to n e r, 451-3147 a f te r 2 p .m . Banker's Hours 9 a .m .- l p .m . Pelican ’ * Wharf it now taking application» for food preparation. A p p ly in p o r t a n 9:00 ro 11:00 a m 4 2 5 W. R iv a n k k An t q o a l O p p o r t u n it y t m p l o y o r STAY IN A U S T I N w ith f i r m t h a t needs p a r t - t im e p e rs o n f o u r h o u rs p e r d a y a n d S a tu r d a y s . P o s s i­ b le f u ll- t im e p o s itio n u p o n g r a d u a tio n . O n ly h ig h ly m o tiv a te d s h o u ld a p p ly . $3- $6 u p o n p e r ( E . O . E . ) Send re s u m e ; q u a lif ic a tio n s . C o n s u lta n ts In t. C o rp ., P .O . B o x 5641, A u s tin , 78763. d e p e n d i n g h o u r T H E R A P E U T I C C A M P C O U N S E L O R Y e a r r o u n d r e s id e n tia l t r e a tm e n t w ith d is tu r b e d boys L iv e - in p o s itio n , 5 d a y s p e r w e e k . O u td o o r s e ttin g . S a la r y $)0,- 600 00 s t a r t in g . E x c e l l e n t b e n e f it s , c a r e e r la d d e r. P u rs u e M .S . in S p e c ia l E d u c a tio n t h r o u g h w o r k C a ll K e n t S k ip p e r, P h .D ., 214-521 4891 A T T E N T I O N A L L I E D H E A L T H G R A D U A T E S ! N E E D A JOB OR F U R T H E R H E A L T H E D U C A T I O N ? F O R F R E E A S S I S T A N C E IN S ta te -W id e J o b P la c e m e n t H e a lth E d u c a tio n P r o g r a m s H e a lth C a re e r C o u n s e lin g CON TA C T: Texas Pr oj ect M E DI HC Olin Teague V A Cent er Bldg. 21B Eas t R m . 258 T empl e, Tx. 76501 Or call collect (713) 792-4461 M E N T A L H E A L T H W O R K E R S S O U T H A U S T I N Be p a r t o f a tr e a tm e n t te a m s u p e rv is e d b y a p r o fe s s io n a l a t T h e R a n c h T r e a t ­ m e n t C e n te r a t T h e B ro w n S ch o o ls W e a r e n o w f u l l - t i m e p o s itio n s . M u s t be o v e r 21 C a ll 478-6662 f o r m o r e in fo r m a tio n . E .O .E . in t e r v i e w i n g f o r MHMR AI DE r e ta r d e d $580 $620 p e r m o n th ( d e p e n d in g on e x ­ In d iv id u a ls to p e r ie n c e a n d t r a in in g ) ¡ u v e n ile w o rk w ith s e v e re ly m a le s R E s p o n s ib illtie s in c lu d e d ir e c t t r a in in g , Doth w ith in d iv id u a l c lie n ts a n d in c lu d e s k ills s m a ll g ro u p s T h is w i ll t r a in in g a n d b e h a v io r m a n a g e m e n t. I n ­ d iv id u a l m u s t be s e lf- m o tiv a te d a n d in ­ te re s te d in th e d e v e lo p m e n t o f t h is ty p e of p r o je c t E x p e rie n c e w ith th e m e n t a lly r e ta r d e d o r re la te d b a c k g ro u n d h e lp fu l 6-2 30 a n d 2-10 30 s h ifts . If in te r e s te d , c o n ta c t A u s tin S ta te S chool P e rs o n n e l O ffic e , 2203 W . 35th St., A u s tin , T x 78767 A n E q u a l O p p o r tu n ity E m p lo y e r A L L Y O U F O L K S t h a t n e e d e x t r a m o n e y c a n s e ll flo w e r s w ith T h e O r ig in a l F lo w e r P e o p le P a id d a ily 288 1102. P A R T - T I M E C O O K to p r e p a r e e v e n in g m e a ls to r b a c h e lo r, e a t d in n e r w ith h im . f o r w a s h d is h e s , s ta y a f t e r d in n e r d r i n k s - c o n v e r s a t i o n a n d d a t e o n w e e k e n d s O n ly s in g le w o m e n p le a s e P h o to , a d d re s s , a n d p h o n e n u m b e r, f ir s t le tt e r p le a s e W r ite to P o st O ffic e B o x 18153, A u s tin , T e x a s , 78760. M E N ' S U M M E R c o u n s e lo r p o s itio n s fo r h a n d ic a p p e d D a lla s a re a C a m p S a la ry , ro o m , b o a rd , in s u ra n c e . C a ll o r w r it e C a m p S o ro p tim is t, 7411 H in e s P la c e D a lla s ^ T x 752351 (2 1 4 U 3 4 -7 5 0 0 R E L A X A T I O N P L U S M a s s a g e is n o w a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r m a s s a g e rs F o r ju s t 24 h o u rs o f y o u r t im e e a c h w e ek, y o u c o u ld be e a r n in g $200 to $400 N o e x ­ I f y o u a re d e p e n ­ p e rie n c e is n e c e s s a ry d a b le , p e rs o n a b le , a n d w e ll g ro o m e d , w e w i ll p r o v id e o n -th e -io b t r a in in g A ll in ­ t e r e s t e d a p p l i c a n t s a p p l y 2 7 1 6 G u a d a lu p e o r c a ll 476-5541 D Y N A M IC S A L E S p e rs o n nee ded A p p ly in p e rs o n b e tw e e n 10:30 - 3. Im a g e s B y B o b E llio t t , on D r a g O V E R S E A S J O B S - S u m m e r y e a r ro u n d E u ro p e S. A m e r ic a , A u s tr a lia , A sia , e tc . A ll fie ld s , $500 $1200 m o n th ly E x p e n s e s p a id S ig h ts e e in g . F re e in fo - W r ite IJ C , B o x 52-T E , C o ro n a d e l M a r , Ca 92625 e x - C R u '7 S E S H I P S 1 / S a T l ' i N G p e d it io n s ! ' s a i lin g c a m p s N o e x ­ p e rie n c e G o o d p a y . S u m m e r. C a re e r. N a tio n w id e , w o r ld w id e ! Send $4.95 fo r a p p l i c a t i o n / i n f o / r e f e r r a I s t o C r u is e w o r ld 189, B o x 60129, S a c ra m e n to , C a. 95860 C O U N S E L O R W A N T E D f o r s e v e n -w e e k t e r m a* b e a u tifu l H i ll C o u n try c a m p fo r bo ys . S m a ll s ta ff, q u a lit y m in d e d , e n ­ v ir o n m e n t a lly c o n s c io u s A p p lic a tio n s a n d s ig n -u p in E d u c a tio n P la c e m e n t O f­ fic e , E d u c a tio n B u ild in g , R o o m 294 In te r v ie w s A p r i l 14th. L I B E R A L , A T T R A C T IV E I a d i e s ' W o r k o n ly 32 h o u rs p e r w e e k a n d e a rn u p to $250 W e need d e p e n d a b le p e rs o n s to f i l l f iv e p o s itio n s F o r p e rs o n a l in te r v ie w , c a ll 477-1815.__________________________ F U L L A N D p a r t - t im e h e lp nee ded. A p p ­ ly a t 100,000 A u to P a rts , R iv e r s id e and L a k e S h o re B lv d H A N O I C A P P E D G R A D U A T E s tu d e n t is s e e k in g p a r t - t im e a tte n d a n t to p r o v id e c a re . 474-1333 S T U D E N T N E E D E D M u s t h a v e T e x a s R e a l E s ta te lic e n s e s . C a y w o o d L o c a to rs , 458-5301, 4501 G u a d a lu p e , S u ite 20' C O O K W A N T E D K e rb e y L a n e C a fe is lo o k in g fo r a f u ll- t im e c o o k . E x p e rie n c e n o t n e c e s s a ry b u t d e s ire to le a rn e sse n ­ t ia l, C a ll 451-1436 N U R S E S - W E need R N 's a n d L V N 's to w o rk a v a r ie t y o f p a r t - t im e p o s itio n s . F le x ib le h o u rs , to p p a y Q u a lity C a re , 459-1331 P A R T - T I M E , E A R N e x t r a m o n e y h e lp ­ in g p e rs o n s in t h e ir h o m e H e a lth e x ­ p e rie n c e p r e f e r r e d - n o t r e q u ire d . Q u a li­ ty C a re , 459-1331 K E R B E Y L A N E C A F E , new r e s ta u r a n t h ir in g fo r a ll p o s itio n s . C a ll 451-1436. S U M M E R H E L P , f u ll- t im e , e x p e rie n c e w ith dog s. C a n in e H ilto n , 926-8905. M U S I C C A R E E R A t t r a c t i v e s a le s r e p r e s e n ta tiv e n e e ded f o r fin e g u ita r s a n d a c c e s s o rie s . S m a ll A u s tin based c o m p a n y . U n lim ite d p o te n tia ls . S to ck o p t io n s , b e n e f it s , t r a v e l , w a r d r o b e a llo w a n c e . 477-4563, M r . F a h re n th o ld . M O N I T O R E Q U I P M E N T w e e k ly . C le a n p o lic e r e fe re n c e s F re e s tu d y a f te r 10 a .m . w e e k d a y s t i m e s f o u r r e c o r d , lo c a l t im e 452-5763 IT p a y s to be y o u r s e lf Y o u d o n 't A V O N need a to s e ll " s e l li n g '' p e r s o n a lity A v o n . Y o u d o n 't need e x p e rie n c e , e ith e r. C a ll 477-8261 A V O N . S T A R T y o u r o w n b e a u t y b u s in e s s . B e c o m e an A v o n r e p r e s e n ­ t a tiv e f u ll - t im e o r p a r t - t im e . Be y o u r o w n boss E a r n goo d m o n e y . C a ll 477- 8261 A V O N G R A D U A T E to a s e c o n d in c o m e S e ll A v o n a n d e a rn th e m o n e y you need to g e t a h e a d o f in fla tio n . C a ll 477-8261. to IN S T R U C T O R P A R T - T I M E te a c h m a t h / v e r b a l c o u rs e s . M u s t h a v e h ig h L S A T s c o re , m u s t h a v e u n d e rg ra d u a te t e a c h in g e x p e r ie n c e d e g r e e , p r i o r p r e fe r r e d . O n ly q u a lif ie d in d iv id u a ls need to a p p ly . C a ll M o n d a y th ro u g h F r i ­ d a y 10-3^472-8085 W E E K E N D N E W S a n c h o r n e e d e d E x ­ p e r ie n c e r e q u ir e d . C o n ta c t J e a n n ie V i li m N e w s D ir e c to r , K O K E A M / F M , P O B o x 1208, A u s tin , T e x a s , 78767 E .O .E . S T U D E N T S : T H E S ilv e r D o lla r Is now a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s N o rth a n d S o uth f o r w a itp e rs o n s , c a s h ie rs , b a r b a c k s A p p ly d u r in g c lu b h o u r s A s k f o r m a n a g e r P A R T - T I M E B O O K K E E P E R needed, f le x ib le h o u rs . C a ll fo r a p p o in tm e n t - G if t s m it h - C a r d s m ith - B o o k s m ith , 444- 1273 P O S I T I O N S A V A I L A B L E $105 p e r w e e k V a r i a b le h o u r s . P r o f i t p la n a v a ila b le . C a ll M o n d a y th ro u g h F r id a y o n ly b e tw e e n 10 a . m . -2 p .m . o n ly . 442- 7285 e x t. 65. D E S K C L E R K S / n ig h t a u d ito rs N o e x ­ p e r ie n c e n e c e s s a ry . C o lle g e s tu d e n t p r e fe r r e d C ro s s C o u n try In n , 6201 US 290 E . 452-8861.__________________ P E R S O N A L C A R E a s s is ta n ts nee ded f o r U T s tu d e n ts f o r s u m m e r a n d f a ll. 1-20 h o u rs /w e e k , o p tio n f o r ro o m a n d b o a rd . in fo r m a tio n , c a ll S h e rr y F o r A lle n a t 471-4955 e x t. 167 b e tw e e n 8 a m - 4 p .m . f u r t h e r L O V I N G W O M A N to c a r e fo r n in e m o n th o ld g i r l M -F , 7 :30-5:3 0 P r e f e r v ic in it y m a r r ie d s tu d e n t h o u s in g , $ 1 4 5 /m o n th M u s t be a b le in 474- D e c e m b e r. R e fe re n c e s 9960 e v e n in g s . to c a r e fo r n e w b o rn r e q u ir e d E X P E R I E N C E D B A R T E N D E R S A t ­ tra c tiv e n e s s a n d p e r s o n a lity a m u s t. A p p ly 1800 E . 6 th 4-6 o n ly 472-3519 By J E F F M cC R E H A N The deadline for applying for faculty and presidential com m ittees has been extended to allow more time for students to file for the 76 positions open. Richard Helle-, coordinator of student activities and organizations, said Thursday. currently serving on the various com m ittees, seeking applications from students wishing to serve. The com m ittee appointments are m ade in the spring for a one year term beginning in Septem ber. By Thursday afternoon, less than 15 students had applied for the positions on the University C ouncil, G e n e ra l F a c u lty and S ta n d in g Presidential Com m ittees. Heller said. if the number of students required by the Handbook for Operating Procedures is not fulfilled, the com m ittees m eet anyw ay,” B a rr said. A secretary said there were “ m aybe 10 or 15“ in the folder. “ I don t expect 100 applications to com e through the office by Friday (the original deadline),” Heller said. M argaret B a ir, asso ciate dean of students, th ere have been m ore the p a st said applicants than slots available. in But, the abolition of student government has com plicated the application process, B arr ex­ p lain ed A fter stu d e n t gov ern m en t w as abolished the Board of Regents authorized the U n iversity p residen t to seek co m m ittee nominees through the dean of students office. Heiler said three nominating com m ittees will screen applicants and m ake recom m en­ dations to the dean of students. The nom inating co m m itte e s a re co m ­ prised of three students and two sta ff m em bers from the dean of students office. Com m ittees include the Advisory Council on Student A ffairs. Student Health, Educational Policy and Parking and T raffic Policies, among others. Standing Presidential com m ittees include Intercollegiate Athletics Councils for men and women, the shuttle bus com m ittee, com m ittee on energy conservation and the council on the status of women and m inorities. “ It’s an interim procedure — one we hope will end if and when the Students’ Association is reconstituted in the fa ll,” Barr said. Ja m e s Hurst, dean of students, sent a memo April 4 to the G eneral Faculty and to students Applications are available at the T exas Union Information Desk, the Information Desk in the Main Building and from the Student Organizations and A ctivities Office, Union Building 4.130. HELP WANTED S U M M E R W O R K - t r a v e l - U T s tu d e n ts - b u s in e s s a d v e n tu r e - g oo d m o n e y - to a p p ly f o r in te r v ie w p h o n e 454-2275 S U M M E R C A M P c o u n s e lo r p o s itio n s ope n fo r g i r l 's c a m p 35 m ile s s o u th of r e g is t e r e d n u r s e a n d W a c o N e f d s p e c ia lis ts s w im m in g , in h o rs e b a c k , s a ilin g , a r c h e r y . F o r m o re in fo r m a tio n c a ll 472-3186 N E E D P E O P L E to h a n d o u t s a m p le s In g r o c e r y s to re s A p r il 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, 10 a . m . -6 p .m . C a ll C a th y a t 472- 5579 b e fo re 2 p .m . P R E P R O F E S S IO N A L S T U D E N T S N a tio n a lly k n o w n c o m p a n y in te r v ie w in g s tu d e n ts f o r s u m m e r p o s itio n s S tu d e n ts s e le c te d c a n e x p e c t $292 p e r w e e k F o r in te r v ie w , c a ll 472-2866 F U L L - T I M E P O S ÍT ÍO Ñ o pe n, c a s h ie r - h o s tp e rs o n . See H e n r ie tta , V illa C a p ri R e s ta u ra n t, b e tw e e n 8 a . m . -2 p .m . 2400 IH 35 S A L E S C L E R K . F U L L - T I M E n ig h t p o s i­ tio n a v a ila b le E x c e lle n t b e n e fits A p p ly in p e rs o n S k ille r n 's , 1917 E . R iv e r s id e B A B Y S IT T lN G A N D lig h t h o u s e k e e p in g 5 d a y s /w e e k , 1-7 p .m . T w o b o y s age s 5-7 M u s t h a v e c a r $ 3 .1 0 /h o u r 453-5023 a f te r 6 p .m . F U L L - T I M E P O S IT IO N o p e n / P e rs o n fo r t y p in g a n d f ilin g . C a ll D o n D e an, V illa C a p ri H o te l, 476-6171. C H IN E S E R E S T A U R A N T w a n ís w a it e r o r w a itre s s p a r t- o r f u ll - t im e 454-9228 ( C a p ita l P la z a ) . D E L I V E R Y S Y S T E M ne e d s c a r r ie r s . Set y o u r o w n h o u rs . P a y m e n t w e e k ly . 454-5244 H E L P W A N T E D . W a itp e r s o n s a n d b a r- in p e rs o n , T h e b a c k s nee ded A p p ly B a c k R o om , 2015 E R iv e r s id e D r . in R iv e r to w n e M a ll. A s k f o r A a ro n . P A R T - T I M E H E L P w a n te d in s ta llin g s h e lv e s . A p p ly to F lo y d B e e r, 6 th flo o r N e w L a w L i b r a r y , T h u r s d a y - F r id a y a fte rn o o n s . la n g u a g e W O R K IN M a in la n d C h in a , J a p a n , T a iw a n ! N o e x p e r ie n c e , d e g re e , o r f o r m o s t f o r e ig n p o s itio n s T e a c h c o n v e r s a tio n a l E n g lis h . S end lo n g , s ta m p e d , s e lf- a d d r e s s e d e n v e lo p e fo r d e ta ils E S L-18, P .O B ox 336, C e n tr a lia , W a 98531 r e q u ir e d JO B S F O R s u m m e r A p p ly n o w b e fo re it 's too la te . Los T re s B o b o s is a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s f o r f u ll- a n d p a r t - t im e w o rk A p p ly in p e rs o n a t 1206 W . 38th. P A R T - T I M E H E L P w a n te d , g o lf c a r ts . W e e k e n d , a fte r n o o n . L o s t C re e k C o u n try C lu b 892-1207, a s k fo r B ill fo r f i r m C a r n e c e s s a ry . P le a s e c a ll M O R N IN G M E S S E N G E R n e e ded la w Je a n n e , 472-8355. F U L L - O R p a r t - t im e co o k s , w a it p e r ­ sons, bus h e lp a n d k itc h e n h e lp w a n te d fo r V ik a s h m o 's , too. im m e d ia t e ly 442- 0287 L E G A L S E C R E T A R Y n e e d e d p a r t - tim e S p a n is h flu e n c y a n d 65 w p m r e ­ q u ir e d O ffic e on th e D r a g . S ta r t M a y 14th. 477-7887 - n e e d e d T H U N D E R C L O U D S U B S e n e r g e tic p e r s o n to w o r k p a r t - t im e w e e k d a y s a n d w e e k e n d s A p p ly 8 30- 9 30 m o rn in g s , 2-3 a fte r n o o n s A s k fo r K e ith , 32nd - G u a d a lu p e . F R E E R O O M a n d b o a rd in e x c h a n g e fo r c o o k in g a n d c le a n in g f o r h a n d ic a p p e d g r a d u a te s tu d e n t a n d s c h o o l a g e c h ild N o r t h A u s t i n O w n t r a n s p o r t a t i o n S ta b le p e r s o n a lity , lo c a l r e fe re n c e s 837- 2343, 837-6478 F U N L O V I N G , h a r d w o r k i n g p e r ­ f o r p a r t - t i m e s o n a l i t i e s . A p p l y w a it e r w a itre s s p o s itio n s , T .G . B a n a n a s R e s ta u r a n t a n d B a r N o e x p e r ie n c e n e c e s s a r y in p e r s o n 1601 G u a d a lu p e b e tw e e n 4 30-5 30 A p p ly Campus News in Brief SOTA to meet for lunch Students Older Than Average will hold a luncheon from noon to 1:30 p.m. Friday in the Hickory F la ts Room in the T exas Union Building. Happy Hour is at 4:30 p.m. Friday in the Dean’s Room in the Union. A N N O U N C E M iT S T E X A S A C H IE V E M E N T A W A R D D A Y V O LU N TE E R S are rem inded of Saturday s program in W elch Hall 2 224 beginning at 8 a m. The speakers are Dr. Ron Brown, Dr David Hershey and Shirley Binder C H A B A D H O U S E announces Sabbath candlelighting time is at 6 38 p.m Friday Ser­ vices are at 6 40 p m Friday, 7 15 p m. Friday and 10 a m. Saturday S tudy groups will meet at 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Saturday. TE X A S U N IO N R E C R E A T IO N C E N TE R will feature a perform ance by the Longhorn Jai i Band from 1 to 2 p.m pnday in the Texas Tavern Three gam es of bow ling cost $1 25 from 9 a m t o 6 p m Friday Red head pin bow ling ts from noon to 6 p.m and bow ling for bucks begins at 7:30 p.m Saturday T E X A S T A V E R N will feature a perform ance of recorded soul m usic Irom 9 to 11 30 p m M onday M E E T IN G S U N IV E R S IT Y C H E S S C L U B will meet to play in a la d-m ate speed chess tournam ent at 7 p m Friday in B urdine Hall 228 Veteran and beginner players are welcom e RO G ER M U D D S O C IE T Y O F S E M I-P R O F E S S IO N A L J O U R N A L IS T S will m eel at 4 p m Friday in the Texas Tavern to define the term s to discuss the rote of production technicians in new spaper m anagem ent today C H I A L P H A C H R I8T1A N F E L L O W S H IP will meet at 7 30 p m Friday at 2604 Red River St. L E C TU R E S D E P A R T M E N T OF A N T H R O P O L O G Y will sponsor a lecture by Dr Patty Jo Watson. of W ashington University, on "T he O rigins of H orticulture in the Eastern W oodlands" at 3 30 p.m. Friday in Burdine Hall 602. D E P A R T M E N T O F P H IL O S O P H Y will sponsor a lecture by R ichard A Watson, of W ashington University, on “ W hat Moves the Mirvd? An Excursion in Cartesian D u alism " at 3 p m Friday in W aggener Hall 316. D E P A R T M E N T O F G E R M A N IC LA N G U A G E S will sponsor a lecture by Reiner Kunze, Germ an film director, on "D ie W underbaren Jahre" at 4 p.m. Friday in Batts • Hall 201. C H IC A N O C U LTU R E C O M M IT T E E will sponsor trie following lectures Friday in Union B u ilding 4 118 Paul Rich, on "The Process of C onducting a Polittcai C am paign," from 1 1 a m to noon. Jarme Perez on "New Perspective on Chicago Politics" from 1 to 2 p m Dr A rm ando Gutierrez, on "C urrent issues In C h icano Politics." from 2 to 3 p.m . IN S T IT U T E O F L A TIN A M E R IC A N S T U D IE S will sponsor a lecture by William R H udson, of UT, on "D evelopm ent of Brazilian Highway System s" at 3 p.m. Friday in A ca dem ic Center 405 SE M IN A R S D E P A R T M E N T O F P H Y S IC S will sponsor a sem inar by R Eugene Collins, of UT, on O n The Statistical Basis of Q uantum M echanics" at 3 p.m Friday in Robert Lee M oore Hall 9.326 D E P A R T M E N T OF ZO O L O G Y will sponsor the following lectures Friday Dr. Steve H ubbell, of trie University of Iowa, on "Com petition Theory in the Context of Resource Dynam ics and the Kinetics of Functional Response" at 4 p.m. m Biology B u ilding 112: Dr. G unther Stent, of the University of California at Berkeley, on D evelopm ental Neurobioiogy of the Leech" at 4 p.m m Expenmenta! Science B u ilding 115.___________________________________________________ Rabies cases increase The state Departm ent of Health had some good news and som e bad news Thursday — no diphtheria or polio ca se s were reported for the second straight year in 1979, but the n um ber of a n im al r a b ie s c a s e s ro se th ird fo r straight month in March. the Dr. Foy McCasiand, Bureau of Veterinary Public Health chief, said 116 cases of rabies in March has hiked 1980’s three-month total to 290, a pace ahead of last year when a total of 1,195 were reported. No cases were reported in T ravis County. Skunks wene named a s the p rim e c u lp r it s in th re e - fourths of the rabies c a se s while 22 dogs, 18 cows ami nine horses have been iden­ tified a s rabies carriers. CROSSWORD PUZZLER Answer to Thursday’s Puzzle HEY, MANA6ER, I SOLD TWENTY-THREE HOT P065Í — -------------- how coulp you po THAT?NO ONE C0ME5 TO OUR GAMES... i 50LP 'em A ll to YOUR SEC0NP BASEMAN Y WA6 Ybug 1C?vVM ? J \ ^--------------- N j------------ ------------- V f o x M WA£ 6 0 _) ^ ....... . ■■ ' V ( THe 6IKE “SHOP o h lY 1 HAP o tie . tlVtASEK. ^ ) 1 .... -------- by jo h n n y h a rt <_>«. 1 <»■(/ p e r T A N K ¡ ^ Ñ A M A R A by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds water 34 Imprison­ ment 35 Save 36 Conjunction 37 City official 40 Pedal digit 43 European mountains 44 Lampreys 47 Enemy 48 Fast plane Init. 51 Conjunction 53 Tellurium symbol 4 Sod 5 Beer mugs 6 Tradesman 7 Remunerated 8 Feminine suf­ fix 9 Three-toed sloth 10 Capture again 11 Wherewithal 13 Perch 16 Confederate general 19 Ingredient 21 Assembles 23 Raise the spirit 25 Stage whis­ per 27 Caustic sub­ stance 29 Employ 32 Transactions 33 Land sur­ rounded by ACROSS 1 Spars 6 Lance 11 Elephant trainer 12 Simpler 14 Teutonic dei­ 15 Latticework ty frame 17 Preposition 18 Mature 20 Recreation area 21 — Zedong 22 River in Afri­ ca 24 Born 25 Diving birds 26 Parts of fish­ ing lines 28 Reddish-yel­ low brown 30 A month 31 Occupy chair 32 Ate sparingly 35 Buy back 38 Slave 39 Southwest­ ern Indian 41 Silkworm 42 High: Mus. 43 Got up 45 Pigper. 46 Scale note 47 Despoils 49 Exclamation 50 Looks prytngly 52 Long, loose overcoat 54 Frock 55 Chemical compound D O W N 1 Border 2 Exclamation 3 Drunkard Page 24 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, A pril 11. 1980 Evangelist Jerry Falwell speaks on the steps of the Capitol, backed by the 7 Love America' Team singers. NIGHT OF THE LIVING WORD Lester Rolotf, who attended the rally nal has named the fastest- growing m inistry on televi­ sion. He spoke in Austin last week on the steps of the state Capitol to a rough assem b lage o f m i n i s t e r s , C h r i s t i a n ed u cato rs, fu n d am en talists and assorted zealots. “ Christian leaders I know in con- in terested a re not the fastest-grow ing television m inistry. He is also one of the m ost overtly political, as well a s one of the m ost controver­ sial. Falw ell claim s he m ain­ tains the traditional sep a ra ­ tion of church and state. He de f i ne s his in t e r e s t s e x ­ clusively in m oral term s. “ I T stay totally on spiritual issues. I don't talk to n es — Everything “Faith la ballevlng In thlnga whan common aanaa talla you not to." — “M irada on 34th Straat" is all wrong. The am bience is m isplaced. T h e r e a r e no r e l i g i o u s signifiers here, no clerical im ­ agery. We are m issing the rich oils of the R enaissance, the so m b e r the soothing delicacy of line, the warm effusion of light into shadow. This lacks subtlety; it is lack s textu re. There nothing here to suggest grace. too b rig h t. Bright and obvious. The edges of shapes are too hard. The colors are blaring. Everything is like latex — Am erican flags s m i l e s a n d a n d p atrio tism and m ech an ical sin cerity — with a crowd s p r a y - p a i n t e d on a s an afterthought. And it all pivots on Je rry Falw ell. And God. T h in g s a r e r i g i d Je r ry Falw ell is pastor of the second larg est church in A m erica (Thom as R oads Bap­ tist Church in Lynchburg, Va., second only to W.A. Crisw ell’s F i r s t B a p tis t in Da l l a s ) , m ainstay of “ The Old-Time Gospel Hour” (broadcast by 350 stations to m ore than 3 million people weekly), and what The Wall Street Jour­ politics. ” —Jerry Falwell trolling anything,” he states right out front. “ We’re ju st in­ terested in creating a m oral clim ate, a return to m oral sanity, that can m ake it e asier for politicians in A m erica to do right than to do wrong.” Toward furtherance of this m oral clim ate, Falw ell has undertaken a pilgrim age to all 50 state capitols before next Novem ber s election. the o f Falw ell ranks No. 5 on the t o p - g r o s s i n g l i s t falling behind evangelicals, A r m s t r o n g ’ s H e r b e r t Worldwide Church of God (an i nt ake of $75 mi l l i on a n ­ nually), Oral R oberts ($60 million annually), CBN ($58 ( $5 0 m i l l i o n ) a n d P T L m illion), but he is named by The Wall Street Journal a s it on their foreheads and send them all back to R u ssia .” Now that Falw ell is begin­ ning to take off in his own right, he is making m arginal attem pts to tone down his more outrageous com m ents, but he still stay s easily within the realm of controversy. On the eve of a particular expan­ sion project in 1971, Falw ell in sold alm ost $6.6 million bonds for his Thom as Roads B aptist Church to the con­ g r e g a t i o n . T w e n t y - t w o months the SE C a c ­ cused him of “ fraud and deceit.” Falw ell now claim s the SE C w as “ out to get him .” In his own defense, he points out that he w as given five years to pay off the bonds and did it in four, with interest, but rum or has it that the debt w as paid off prim arily by his congregation, som e of whom m ortgaged their homes. later, F a lw e ll w as fo rm ally in Austin to discu ss the statu s of the Christian school m ove­ in A m erica, thus ex­ ment plaining his appeal to Chris­ tian e d u c a to r s. T h e re is nationally a growing d isaffec­ tion underfoot with President C arter because of his use of the Internal Revenue Service to attem pt the enforcem ent of racial quotas in privately own­ ed religious universities. In this con text, F a lw e ll heralds church-state sep ara­ tion a s a p a rad ig m . “ We believe in the separation of church and state. We accept no government money. And for that reason , we don’t much want their ad vice.” At this m eeting, L ester Roloff w as present in the audience with a busload he’d brought from one of his children’s homes. Falw ell greeted him a s a returned w ar hero, called “ Brother R oloff” up to the front to sit with the state legislators, and to the stage to g r e e t the a u d i e n c e . The audience treated him like a m artyr. t o Th i s c u r r e n t r ound of Falw ell rallies is an offshoot of an e a rlie r rally a t the nation’s Capitol called “ The C lean Up A m e ric a C a m ­ paign,” which w as designed for his follow ers to m eet with c o n s e r v a t i v e m e m b e rs of d i s c u s s C o n g r e s s A m erica's perceived m oral decay. But the m ore im por­ tant business of the rally this to organ ize an week w as Austin chapter of Moral Ma­ jority, his m in istry's private political action arm . There are two such m ajor political- religious affiliations active to­ day in the evangelical com ­ munity, the other one being Christian Voice. J a r m a n , A l t h o u g h t e c h n i c a l l y separate, there are a number of tie-ins between the groups. Ga r y l e g i s l a t i v e director and chief lobbyist for Christian Voice, is also on the advisory board of Moral Ma­ jority. The sam e bulk of con­ gressm en are affiliated with both groups. The groups have now traded com puter lists. Christian Voice has 187,000 registered m em bers and up­ ward from a $3 million dollar budget. They have targeted potential spots for concentra­ tion of support. This entails both direct financial backing of appealing candidates, a s well as providing trained staff volunteers to man cam paigns. intend to draw up a They “ m o r a l r a t i n g ’ ’ f o r a l l m em bers of Congress, acco r­ ding to respective stands on a issu e s. ch eck list of m o ral From there, they intend to select a list of 40 incumbents to s t r a t e g i c a l l y t a r g e t against, in hopes of overtur­ ning the congressional m ajo ri­ ty. “ The beauty of it is that we don’t have to organize these v o ters,” say s Ja rm an . “ They already have their own televi­ sion networks, publications, schools, m eeting places and respected leaders who are sym pathetic to our n eeds.” Christian Voice has already come out in support of Ronald R e a g a n . It m a ile d out 5 million R eagan letters in mid- March and plans to buy televi- appearance in Playboy and what they see a s “ w affling” is s u e s . C e rta in on m o ra l nam es have com e up a s poten­ tial v ice-p resid en tial can ­ didates which m ight secure their endorsem ent of Reagan. Among these a re Rep. Ja ck K e m p o f N e w Y o rk and form er presidential hopeful Phil Crane from Illinois, both of whom have strong ties to the evangelical community. Falw ell h an dles his con­ t r o v e r s y wi t h a c e r t a i n amount of flair. “ I know I ’m controversial. I w as born that w ay.” He sm ugly to sses off his growing num ber of weekly columns like a Ja c k Anderson would, or a Huey Long. His rallies are an am algam ation of every bit of sensationalism and five-and-dime patriotism that he can squeeze from the heartstrings. He leans heavily on gratuitous referen ces to ta p s f a mi l y and c o unt r y, s h a r e d e x p e r i e n c e s l i ke m ilitary service or the deaths of loved ones. r e d flags behind His chorus w e a rs a lte r ­ a n d w h i t e n a t i n g t h e r e a r e 32 c o s t u m e s , Am erican the program , he sings “ God B less A m erica" and a m edley of m ilitary songs, the P l e d g e of A l l e g i a n c e — obscures the division between church and state by residing on it. He u s e s h om esp un charm and down-home humor to disguise his points. And he turns all of those back toward the Bible, which he say s the recites Counting both Catholics and Protestants, we have enough votes to run the country. And when the people say ‘We’ve had enough' we are going to take over.” —Pat Robertson sion time for a 30-minute pro- R eagan docum entary, which has already been com pleted Falw ell refused to m ake a direct political endorsement, perhaps because of the poten­ j e o p a r d i z i n g o f hi s ti al currently delicate tax-exem pt statu s (the rally w as con­ ducted under the auspices of the Old-Time Gospel Hour), but even so he did so winking- iy- “ I spent a lot of tim e last week talking to a man. A man who m ay be president of this nation one day. He s ai d, Je rry , if we don’t have a spiritual awakening and have it soon, it’ll be too la te .’ ” Speculation also has it that e v a n g e lica ls feel betrayed after having backed C arter in the 1976 cam paign, given his country was founded on. t ha t f o l l o we d Ju st before the peak of his perform ance, Falw ell m ade the statem ent in an emotion- i s f or torn v o i c e , “ Go d fre e d o m . F r e e d o m is the i s s u e of all b a s i c m o ra l issues. During the applause t ha t l ine, someone raised a cam paign placard, appropriately done in red and blue, which read, “ F o r c o m p l e t e r e l i g i o u s f r e e d o m , e l e c t C h a s . A. Ni chol s , C o rp u s C h r i s t i . ’ ’ T hat’s probably the prim ary contradiction th at F alw ell runs on An A m erica that is free to be m oral is not the sam e as one that is m orally f o r f r e e . And Christians is certainly not the sam e thing as freedom from them. f r e e d o m s t a y t o t a l l y on s p i r i t u a l issues. I don’t talk p olitics.” But such a use of the word is a fairl y lib e ral one. He h as plans to publish in every m a­ jo r n ew spaper and fam ily publication in the country a questionnaire containing only three questions: 1) Do you approve of known, p r a c t i c i n g h o m o s e x u a l s teaching in public schools? 2) D o you a p p r o v e of federally funded abortions on dem and? 3) Do you approve of the open display of pornography, in b o o k s , m o v i e s a n d television? O n c e t h e r e s u l t s a r e tabulated, he plans to dis­ tribute the findings to every m em ber of Congress, every m e m b e r of the e x e c u tiv e branch of governm ent, all the fe d e r a l Suprem e Court down, all state legislators, the m ayors of all m ajor cities, all prominent m edia representatives and the top 50 prim e tim e television a d v e r t i s e r s . The p e o p l e behind the poll predict they will receive over 6 million responses. ju d g e s , fro m Falw ell takes sides on m ost issues, that side usually being the extrem e right one. He takes standard shots at Ja n e Fonda and her ilk. supports V ietnam , supports n uclear p o w e r a n d b e l i e v e s t he Soviets are dedicated to world aggression. “ I do not believe we shoul d have mi l i t a r y e q u a l i t y wi th the S o v i e t Union. I feel we should have mi l i t a r y su p e rio r ity o v er them ” the He calls the federal govern­ ment the No. 1 enemy of the fam ily. He is against the ER A b e c a u s e “ it d e g r a d e s wom en.” His criticism of gun co n tro l brough t the m o st a p p l a u s e l o c a l f r o m crowd. He has used ph rases like “ that m urderer C astro ” and is reported to have an­ nounced to his congregation, with Anita Bryant at his side, that they could look forward to a return to the “ McCarthy e ra w here we re g iste r all C o m m u n i s t s ’ ’ a n d t h a t m oreover, we should “ stam p Fa/well's singers lead the crowd In an uplifting rendition of ‘Qod Bless America Story by Paul Cullum Photos by Rocky Kneten