• l t m - 9 0 0 9 ¿ Xi JO e z e i d n o n o i | ) | o o j 0 10n I IV ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ Da ily Tex a n ‘ u o ; 6 u n - * V OOC oui ‘6 u i q s i i q n d o J o j w i s a n q ^ n o s Wdd 7 ¿ ¿ 0 31V1S 80 3 Vol. 88, i w . i \jáL i o tju u u n The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Friday, February 17,1989 250 Senate votes unanimously to approve regent nominees By RANDY KENNEDY OaHy Texan Staff Two of Gov. Bill Clements' recent ap­ pointees to the UT System Board of Re­ gents were confirmed unanimously Thurs­ day by the Senate, ending more than two weeks of speculation the men would be voted down due to the board's lack of mi­ nority representation. Former U.S. Rep. Tom Loeffler of Mason and accountant Robert Cruikshank of Houston were both approved by votes of 30-0. Sen. Hugh Parmer, D-Fort Worth, was the only senator absent. Several lawmakers who had publicly op­ posed Clements' three original nominees — Cruikshank, Loeffler and Mineral Wells oil­ man Chester Upham Jr. — because their appointments would create an all-white, male board, expressed qualified approval of the nominees Tuesday. Former Texas GOP Chairman Upham bowed out of the confirmation process Feb. 8, saying that senators were using racist cri­ teria to oppose his nomination. He was re­ placed by Rio Grande City physician and businessman Mario Ramirez. Upham had been slated to replace outgo­ ing Hispanic regent Mario Yzaguirre of Brownsville, whose term ended Feb. 1. Sen. Carlos Truan, D-Corpus Christi — who had lambasted Loeffler's congression­ al voting record as "anti-higher education" at the Jan. 31 Senate Nominations Commit­ tee hearing — said Loeffler assured him in a meeting last week that he was "totally devoted to quality education" in the UT System. But Truan said if he were governor, he probably would not have chosen Loeffler in the first place. "I am not about to tell you that someone with Congressman Loeffler's voting record on the issues affecting higher education would have led me to nominate him for membership on the board of regents of our most prestigious university system," Truan said. "In fact, I still don't know how he can be expected to argue in Austin and in Wash­ ington for increased funding for higher ed­ ucation in view of the votes which he cast," he said. At the Jan. 31 committee hearings, Truan dted three instances in which Loeffler, a Republican, was in the minority of both Democrats and Republicans in voting against higher education-related bills. However, Truan said he would "hold Loeffler to his word" and vote for his con­ firmation. "I will vote to confirm what I hope is a kinder and gentler Tom Loeffler," he said. Loeffler also initiated meetings last week with Sens. Eddie Bernice Johnson, D-Dal- las, and Craig Washington, D-Houston, to convince them that his congressional votes were made under different pressures and for a different constituency than his deci­ sions on the regents' board would be. Loeffler was not available for comment. Johnson, who made an impassioned speech for increased minority sensitivity on all state boards at the Jan. 31 hearing, said she believes Loeffler was sincere in his comments. "I was convinced that he was serious," Johnson said. "I'm convinced that to sup­ port him would not at this point be making a mistake." Ramirez was expected to testify before the nominations committee Tuesday, but was unable to travel to Austin because of recent gallbladder surgery. He is expected to be confirmed Feb. 23. After the vote, Cruikshank said he is "looking forward, very much, to being one of the regents." "It's my goal to strive to be very much aware of the needs of all Texans, regardless of race or creed," Cruikshank said. "I want to make certain that we have the highest quality of scientists and teachers at the UT System schools to bring in the highest qual­ ity students." He said the new appointees will probably meet soon with other regents to go over issues to be discussed during the upcoming April 13 board meeting. Austin hires city manager Council concludes search by selecting first woman By ALAN HINES Daily Texan Staff After more than 15 months of searching, the City Council on Thursday ended its quest for a per­ manent city manager by hiring the first woman to hold the job in Aus­ tin. Camille Barnett, former deputy dty manager and assistant city man­ ager for the City of Dallas, will take over the city's day-to-day opera­ tions March 20. She also is former director of finance and administra­ tion for the City of Houston. The seven-member council voted unanimously to hire Barnett. "I'm very excited and ready to get to work," Barnett said. "I thirik this job will be not only a challenge, but a lot of fun." "My priorities right now are to get acquainted with the organiza­ tion, to assess the main priorities of the organization in terms of ideas and plans, and to bring some sense of enjoyment to the work environ­ ment," she said. Barnett said she also will focus on major dty projects such as construc­ tion of a new airport near Manor and plans to break ground on a dvic center by late December. The council set Barnett's salary at $110,000 a year — $10,000 more than Jorge Carrasco earned before resigning in November 1987 and $8,000 more than the council offered Craig Kodan, assistant dty manager of Oakland, Calif., when it ap­ proached him about the job in Janu­ ary. In addition, the council gave Bar­ nett a severance package that will provide her six months' salary in the event she is fired. If the dty charter is amended, creating a "strong mayor" dty government, the package will increase to one year. Mayor Lee Cooke said he is "de­ lighted" that Barnett accepted the job and called her hiring "the most important decision that this council can make." "This decision will impact the dty of Austin long into the future, and it will provide stability to this organi­ zation," Cooke said. "She brings a wealth of experi­ ence in munidpal government cov­ ering all areas, including manage­ ment of money, people and resources," he said. Councilmember George Hum­ phrey said Barnett's 19 years of gov­ ernment service as well as her wide range of experience made her an ideal candidate for Austin's top management position. "I don't think we could have got­ ten a better manager," Humphrey said. "Camille is a top-grade per­ son. She has the vision Austinites want for the future, she's a team builder, and she's someone who is very finandally responsible and en­ vironmentally aware." Humphrey and Councilmember Smoot Carl-Mitchell said Mayor Cooke managed to unite the council in support of Barnett. "On this one he [Cooke] did a very, very fine job of bringing us to­ gether," Humphrey said. Carl-Mitchell said, "Sometimes the council has not been united on the process of hiring a city manager. But at least we came together and finally made this decision." Councilmember Robert Bamstone praised Barnett's record of public service and said he is ready to begin working with her. "She's got good credentials and has been a big-league player in other cities," Bamstone said. Cooke said Barnett's hiring fol­ lowed about three weeks of negotia­ tions, adding that he first discussed the job opening with her in October. No-war corps RobertKlrXhanVDailyTi a n S t f Members of the “Austin Coalition to stop the war in El Salvador,” CAMILA and the University Central America Peace Initiative, CAPI, listen to CAMI­ LA coordinator Gilberto Rivera read a press release about recent alleged attacks on a hospital and union hall in El Salvador. The two groups were protesting in front of the Austin Federal Building at San Jacinto Boulevard and Ninth Street. For the story, please see page 2. Court allows North trial to begin WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court lifted its stay del ping the start of Oliver North's trial Thursday, but North's lawyers complained he cannot get a fair trial under a deal struck by his prosecutor and the attorney general for handling testimony involving national secrets. ' "Defendant North still faces two govern­ ments, rather than a single prosecutor with full power to make all trial decisions," said Brendan Sullivan, the head of North's defense team, in papers filed with U.S. District Judge Gerhard GeseU. The Supreme Court, meanwhile, lifted a stay that had been requested by Attorney General Dick Thornburgh while he was still arguing with independent counsel Lawrence Walsh over whether rules on disclosing classified informa­ tion were tight inough. There was no word from Gesell about when he would summon the jurors, who are already select*d, to his court to begin the trial of the former Marine lieutenant colonel and White House aide. However, a meeting was scheduled in GeselTs courtroom Friday, meaning the jury would not be impaneled until Tuesday at the earliest — after the Washington's Birthday holi­ day observance. The newest Thomburgh-Walsh arrangement "would impose intolerable burdens on the court, the witnesses, and the jurors," Sullivan said. He asked Gesell to tell the attorney general he can take action to dismiss the entire case or any of the 12 criminal charges but that he will not "have the right or the opportunity to intervene in the trial." Sullivan recalled that Gesell had said earlier in the week that Thornburgh would have no right to intervene " y bits and pieces" to object to the introduction of classified material. But Sullivan said the new arrangement does give Thornburgh that ability. Under the arrangement announced Wednes­ day, Walsh agreed to ask Thornburgh for an affi­ davit whenever Walsh believed undisdosable se­ crets were about to be spilled in the trial. The attorney general would stay out of the court­ room while fiie independent counsel carried the battle. Sullivan said under the independent counsel's proposed plan, the attorney general will have the right to step in "whenever the going gets tough, precisely what the court has forbidden him from doing." In response, Walsh said North's lawyer is un­ der a misconception of how the prosecutorial plan will work. "The day-to-day conduct of this case will be by the independent counsel and only the independ­ ent counsel," he said. He likened his relation­ ship with fiie Justice Department to that of a lawyer who checks with his client "to find out whether some supervening policy requires a ter­ mination of the litigation." Sullivan said the new arrangement would guarantee frequent interruptions, as challenges are made and resolved. "This procedure will recur constantly during the trial — possibly even question-by-question for a critical witness," he said. "Defendant North cannot receive a fair trial if the attorney general is permitted to intervene in the trial through bits and pieces of affidavit as the inde­ pendent counsel's plan contemplates." Gesell and lawyers in the case held a closed hearing, lasting more than two hours, to discuss what the jury can be told about secret Reagan administration efforts to get help from other countries for the Contras fighting the leftist Ni­ caraguan government. Lawyers, would not say what happened at the hearing, only that the same subject matter will be discussed at another closed session Friday morning. They said Gesell had not issued any orders and shook their heads when asked when opening arguments might be held. Polish authorities take step to allow union registration WARSAW — Negotiators agreed in principle Thursday to amend the nation's labor law so Jhat the banned Solidarity union could be registered immediately — if an ac­ cord' is reached on other political and economic reforms. The announcement, which appenred to sat ify Solidarity's de­ mands for quick reinstatement, fol­ lowed an ting of a working group dew ed to trade unions — part of broad negotiations between officials and the op ositkm. "That's a Jot. That's a lot. That's great/' Solidarity leader Lech Wale­ sa said by telephone from his home tat Gdansk, after the agreement was describe 1 to him by a reporter. The Communist Party mide the poitfcal decision to make Solidarity legal again during a hotly contested tin b d Committee meeting last month. The working group decided the union could.be registered na­ tionwide in one step, under an rnnemlod labor law Jo be passed by A resolution passed by the work­ ing grou also said the new Solidar­ ity would have freedom to create its own organizational structures, but would have to negotiate jointly with other existing unions during talks with management. Government spokesmen have said since the talks began Feb. 6 that legalization of Solidarity must be part of a "package deal" with the opposition. ' Authorities also require agree­ ment on a program of economic and political reforms and on "non-con- frontational" elections this year, af­ ter which the opposition would as­ sume a minority role in i ir m nt. Solidarity had wanted to be leg 1- ized under a new act, and not be bound by the Id labor law that took effect in 1962 which restricted how quickly a n Ik nwide union could "I think that there is dü r prog­ ress, although the rond is still a long one," Alekszander Kwasniewski, a government minis­ ter who led the authorities' side in the.tallm. said WEATHER Satanic Varaaa weather — Psst. Hey, you! Yeah, you. Come here. Have I got a sweet deal for you. Here, step into the car where we can talk safely. Let's take a drive. Wait, put on this blindfold. You can’t see where we’re going. OK, here's the deal. I want you to ghostwrite a book. Really, it’s all finished. You’ll make a fortune, and receive lots of publicity. Come on, pal, with profits like the highs near 50, you can't lose. So what if it's cloudy and cold with a 70 percent chance of rain? You'll probably be in­ side a lot, anyway. But don't get me wrong. You’ll be comfortably protect­ ed, at least from the near 40 lows and northeasterly winds at 10 mph. There’s just one small catch.... IN M X Around Campus. .................13 v 11 Classifieds . . . 13 Com ics Editorials .............. 4 Entertainment . . . . . . . . . . 9 7 Sports . 6 ípteA Local 5 University............. World ft N ation ................... 3 Bomb in radio-cassette player responsible for Pan Am crash Associated Press LOCKERBIE, Scotland — A radio-cassette player held the bomb that brought down Pan Am Flight 103, but the identity of the bomber still is not known, the top investigator of the bombing said Thursday. Investigators believe the explosive that shattered the Boeing 747 on Dec. 21 was placed aboard the aircraft in Frankfurt, West Germany, where the flight began, said detective Chief Superintendant John Orr. It apparently had been put on the aircraft as checked baggage. "New positive lines of inquiry are unfolding," he said at a news conference in this southwestern Scottish town where the jumbo jet crashed, killing all 259 peo­ ple aboard and 11 on foe ground. "While there is insufficient evidence at this stage to establish the identity of the person or group resp ú ble for this dreadful crime, the progress made and the evidence obtained have been substantial," said Orr, an investigator from Strathclyde police, a Scottish regional policeforce. Asked whether the investigation would point to a specific country, Orr said, "It may." On Feb. 8, the Jerusalem Poet repor id the bomb that destroyed die jet was hidden in a radio-cassette recor­ der and was traced to Frankfort. That report < toted unidentified investigators as say­ ing the device was similar, but not identical, to one found earlier in the possession of members of Ahmed Jibril's extremist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command. The group has denied in­ volvement. Orr said the brand name of the radio-cassette player had not been established and would not say whether it was a pocket-sized device or a larger model. Nor did he say whether investigators had located the detonator. Anti-terrorist experts have said the explosive most likely used was Semtex, an odorless, highly malleable substance made in Czechoslovakia and known to be used by terrorist organizations. Orr said he was "aware of some aspects of the explo­ sive that was used" but declined to elaborate. The discovery of the bomb's hiding place followed pain taking reconstruction of a baggage container from peces — some no larger than a table knife — strewn over 40 miles of Scottish countryside. "The reconstruction of the baggage container sug­ gests that the explosive device may have been among foe baggage from the Frankfurt flight," Orr said. "The particular bag which contained the device has not been identified at this stage, but there is the most detailed work under way with forensic assistance to achieve this identification. I believe this can be done," he said. Page 2/THE DAILY TEXAN/Fridav, February 17.1989 T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff EdNor..................................................................................................................................................... Mike Godwin Managing Editor.................................................................................................................... Stacey Freedenthal Aeeodafe Managing E d ito rs .........................Karen Adams, Steve Crawford, Steve Dobbins, Jennifer Horan News Editor...................................................................................................................................Dennis McCarthy Associate News E d ito rs ........................................................................................... Mike Erickson, Linda Milch News Assignments E d ito r................................................................................................................... Kim Homer Genera! Reporters......................................................................... Randy Kennedy, Greg Perl ¡ski, Diana Williams Special Pages Editor.................................................................................................................... Bruce McDougall Associate Editor ................................................................................................................................Tom Philpott Entertainment Editor......................................................................................................................Robert Wilonsky Associate Entertainment E ditor........................................................................................................ Carol Huneke Sports E d ito r..................................................................................................................................Bret Bloomquist Associate Sports E d ito r................................................................................................................... Gregor Sauer General Sports R ep o rters ..............................................................Ray Dise, Schuyler Dixon, Jerry Gemander Photo Editor.......................................................................................................................................John Foxworth Associate Photo Editor............................................................................................................................... Jeff Holt /buyes E ditor.........................................................................................................................................Rob Walker Associate Images E d ito rs ....................................................................................... Mike Clark, Jeff Turrentine Graphics E d ito r................................................................................................................................... Kathy Strong Mindy Brown Around Campus Editor , Jim Greer, Kevin Hargis, Alan Hines, Issue Staff News Assistants.......................... Mark Brandon, Susan Hightower, Cathy Leigh, Ron Lubke, Kiki Tsakalakis Sports Assistant............................................................................................................. Sports W rite r............................................................................................................. Derek Castillo, Jamie Aron Entertainment A ssistan t...................................................................................................................Gilbert Garcia Editorial Columnist.................. Rob Tharp Editorial A ssistant............................................................................................................................Greg Weiner Editorial Cartoonist Makeup Editor.................. Wire E d ito r......................................................................................................................................Jennifer Melton Copy E d ito rs .............................................................Deke Bond, Corina Fuentes, Heather Pruitt, Brian Shults P hotographers...................................................... ................................. Robert Kirkham, Ted Warren Graphics Assistant.............................................................................................................................. Henry Jemg Comic Strip C arto o n ists........................................ .............................................................................................................. Rob Aitchison ................................................................. Christian McDonald Van Garrett, John Keen, Tom King, Robert Rodriguez, Martin Wagner, Chris Ware Tracy Freeman, Denise Shannon V o lu n teers............................................... Mark Babineck Advertising Local D is p la y .............................................................. Eric Ashford, Deborah Bannworth, Matthew Beechhold, Tony Colvin, Cary B. Cook, Betty Ellis, Sam Hefton, Sue Hwang, Denise Johnson, David Lutz. Beth Mitchell, Mike Motal, Gina Padilla. Cindy Pels, Bryson Read, Jody Ruhberg, Jeff Satterwhite, Alan Selby, James Stewart, A.C. Webb, Chris Wilson Classified D isp lay ...................................................Asi Chitrarachis, Brandy Cochrane, Ricardo R. Fernandez Classified Telephone Sales.............................................................Robert Acosta, Art Carrillo, Charles Hyman, Melanie Neel, Juanda Powell Classified Telephone Service..................................................................... Susan Fleischaker, Jennifer Head, Linda Martin, Shawn McMinn, Toni Schmitt The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University ot Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications. 2500 Whitis, Austin, TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2.122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4.136). For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865. For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471-8900. For classified word advertising, call 471-5244. Entire contents copyright 1989 Texas Student Publications. The Daly Texan M ai Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring). . $30 00 Two Semesters (Fa# and Spring).................................................................................................................. 55.00 Summer S ession............................................................................................................................................... 20.00 . 75.00 One Year (Fa#, Spring and S um m er)........................................... . . To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471 -5083. Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P.O. Box D, Austin. TX 78713-7209, or to TSP Building C3.200, or call 471 -5083 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to TSP, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209. INSTANT CASH AND BONUS If you need cash to help you out while you are in school, why not donate blood plasma. You can donate twice in a 7 day period and receive $ 10 every donation. Plus with this ad you'll receive a $2 bonus on your first visit. • Must have valid picture I D. & some proof of Austin residence (student I.D. accepted] • $ 2 5 bonus, drawing every Friday. • New donors will receive a $5 bonus on their 3rd donation. Call 474-7341 Austin Plasma Center 2800 Guadalupe NEW ORLEANS 3 Nights, 2 Days ‘14900 per person includes airfare from Austin, accommodations at the Clarion Hotel, and hotel transfers BONUS FEATURES; 2 for 1 admission to the NATCHEZ Steamboat Cruise, Super Dome Tour, Audubon Zoo, and more... UNIVERSITY 453-TRIP NORTH. . .452-0145 SOUTH. . .325-8747 DOWNTOWN320-7272 University Market Facts... 78% Of all U T students live in ofl-campus housing. 15% live in dormitories The ave r­ age non-dormitory student household is 2 ,4 persons Source The University Market Beider. Associates. 1987 i ¡ FREE INITIAL LEGAL ¡ ¡ CONSULTATION (with this ad) | IMMIGRATION ASSISTANCE | I Labor Certification s 5 • Permanent Residency i s • Changes ot Status g • = g E # H-1 Work Visas • Relative Petitions • U.S. Citizenship • Asylum • Consular Processing Gloria Lee Vera | Attorney at Law s E ¡ 443-4788 ¡ f 2S12S.H-3S.Ste. 100,AuMln, 1X78704 | E LICENSED BY THE TEXAS SUPREME COURT SINCE 1976 S S Not certified by the Texas Bd. of Legal Speoakzaton g niiiiliiiiiillllllllllllllllllllllMllllMlllllllllllllllimir V tfD E PAH/f No Chrom e No C on tracts Open Every Day 4121 Guadalupe Next door to A u s tin B a rb e ll C o . 459-9174 Board certifies ‘Texan’ editor candidate By DIANA WILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff Karen Adams, a Plan II junior, is virtually assured The Daily Texan 1989-90 editorship, making her the newspaper's first female editor in seven years. The Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees ap­ proved Adams, who will run unop­ posed, in a certification -meeting Thursday night. Because TSP codes do not provide for write-in candi­ dates, Adams will most likely get the position. The 1989-90 Texan editor term be­ gins June 1, when current editor Mike Godwin steps down. Laura Sanderson, TSP board president, said although, she is pleased with Adams' certification, she is disappointed the race is un­ contested. " I think it is a shame students don't have two candidates to pick from," she said. The last female Texan editor was Lisa Beyer, who held the position in 1982-83. Adams' Texan experience includes associate managing editor, associate editor and University general re­ porter. The board waived a Journalism to certify 322 class requirement Adams' candidacy. The reporting course is one of four waivable quali­ fications. Mandatory qualifications for Tex­ an editor include a minimum 2.5 GPA on UT-Austin course work and management experience at the pa­ per with supervisory responsibili­ ties for at least one semester or sum­ mer term. Also, 10 TSP board candidates certification Thursday received night. The TSP board oversees UT stu­ dent publications including The Tex­ an, Cactus and Peregrinus yearbooks, Utmost magazine and KTSB student radio. In addition, board members dis­ cussed a fire that occurred in the Texan editorial office late Wednes­ day night. UT police records state two Texan staff members ignited crumpled paper torn from an Aus­ tin telephone directory. "We got up to the L's," said Jun- da Woo, state general reporter for The Texan. The staff members were suspend­ ed one week without pay. Godwin said the case has also been forward­ ed to the Office of the Dean of Stu­ dents. With reports from Kevin Hargis, Dai­ ly Texan Staff. Group protests bombing in El Salvador By KIKI TSAKALAKIS Daily Texan Staff A dozen protesters rallied outside the Federal Building in Austin Thursday to increase Austin residents' awareness of U.S. involvement in the Salvadoran civil war. Gilberto Rivera, a representative of The Coali­ tion to Stop the U.S. War in El Salvador, said the rally was called "because of the blatant attacks on the health-care personnel." A pamphlet distributed by coalition members states "death squads" in that country killed six people Monday in a hospital in Chalatenango. "The situation as it exists right now is unpre­ dictable because of the government's despera­ tion," Rivera said. Renee Trevino, government senior, said the Salvadoran people are fighting to obtain the same rights as Americans. "What I see is that our country has a right to these things we hold so dear and is not allowing others to have these privileges," Trevino said. Trevino belongs to the Central America Peace Initiative, a UT organization affiliated with the coalition that promotes U.S. humanitarian assist­ ance for Central America. "The U.S. government seems to be funding bombing and murders of civilians as well as mili­ tary personnel. It is time for the people to see what our government is doing and to get further involved," Trevino said. Brian Wordell, financial director of The Young Conservatives of Texas, said he disagrees with most of the protesters' views. "I would agree on how they protested on the bombing, but I don't think they should stop aid to El Salvador," Wordell, a marketing junior, said. Paul Bartley, YCT chairman and accounting senior, said the group supports complete aid to El Salvador to create a stable form of democracy in the country. "We support sending aid to El Salvador be­ cause El Salvador is moving toward democracy." Lady Bird Johnson encourages aspiring politicians By DENISE SHANNON Daily Texan Staff The widow of former President Lyndon B. Johnson said Thursday more graduates of the school named in his honor should follow in his footsteps. "I have felt slightly surprised and slightly disappointed that there ha­ ven't been more people who hit the cold water and ran for public office as graduates of this school," Lady Bird Johnson said during a brown bag luncheon at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs. "I still wonder if there's anything that we are not doing that might make some of you think it would be a good thing to put everything into it and run for public office," she told a group of about 100 LBJ school students, faculty and staff. Johnson acknowledged it is hard­ er to run for office now than when her husband started his political ca­ reer in 1937. "I wish there was a sensible way to run for office so it didn't last for a year and a half the way it does now, and didn't cost so much money," she said. "There's got to be a better way to do it. I hope some day we learn how." Johnson said the media make pol­ itics less fun than it used to be. "I think we're getting sort of a salacious taste nationwide that I could sure do without," she said. The public should care more about how knowledgeable, caring, courageous and judicious a public figure is, she said. "You do need to know something about them, because you want a good, steady person," she said. "But we are too anxious to peek through the window." Leo Gomez, a second-year LBJ school student, said Johnson's talk might help his political aspirations. "She gave me hope," he said. "Rather than just having bad news for us, she was I've thought a lot about running for pub­ lic office. After listening to her, I don't want to give up." inspiring. Johnson said her husband decid­ ed to help establish the LBJ school because of frustrations he experi­ enced while filling government po­ sitions. Most candidates suggested by aides were from the East Coast. "He didn't think the Lord distrib­ uted brains or patriotism or willing­ ness to work for your country in quite that uneven a fashion," she said. Foreign Student Graduates Research Associates and Faculty IMMIGRATION ASSISTANCE H-1 Professional Visas Permanent Labor Certifications PAUL PARSONS pc Attorney A t La w Board Certified • Immigration & Nationality Law Texas Board Of Legal Specialization .7 0 4 RIO GRANDE 4 7 7 -7 8 8 7 ; for RESUMES PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS IMMIGRATION ffiini eye 2 5 3 2 GUADALUPE 477-5555 % ) I I / 1624 Barton Springs fid (2 Blocks West of Lamar) 477-5053 • | | l gm m I . A J U N \ V i l SEAFOOD & DELI MARKET COMPLETE LINE O F FRESH ^ 'V Great w/Beer and Good Company! i m ^ > Live C rayfish ............................... I Fresh Crayfish T a i l s ....................$79V ♦ Broiled Crayfish . . . *69B(BpeciaiPrice3ibB ) I S h rim p ...................................4o/5oct.f4 96ib. > Oysters by the Sack.......................$1996 and of course Hot Boudin Sausage. . . .% ................. $2 75ib. _______ For Your Entertainmentr-Zydeco Tapes Now Available N O W O P E N SPECIALTY CAJUN FOODS. SEASONINGS 8 MIXES AVAILABLE ALLERGY SUFFERERS NEEDED for an ALLERGY-RELIEF MEDICATION SURVEY EARN $50 for participating in a 8 DAY research study evaluating the effectiveness of a NEW ANTIHISTAMINE/DECONGESTANT COMBINATION medication in relieving allergy symptoms. Healthy adults with at least one of the following symptoms may qualify: • nasal congestion • nasal Itching • runny nose • sneezing e Itchy eyes • tearing eyes P H A R M A C O Research for Better Health For More Information 4 4 7 -3 5 9 5 WORLD MUSIC DANCE EXTRAVAGANZA w ife The Cactus Yearbook staff is now accepting nominations for the 1989 OUTSTANDING STUDENT AND GOODFELLOW AWARDS Pick up nomination forms at Texas Student Publications, 25th and Whitis, Room 3.200, weekdays, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Nominations deadline is Feb. 17 F L O P P Y ’ 5 J O E S o f f w ck i- 1 r e w f 6. | Once A year Clearance Sale Friday - Sunday 17th 18th 19th All Computer Software 50% off 2904 Guadalupe • 477-9075 Mosh it up and get in the groove! PAN DEL SANTO Live • In-Person When: Friday, Feb. 17th, 8 - 11 pm W here: 26th & Guadalupe, Studio 6 -A Com m unication Bldg. B 6th F lo o r Admission: $5 P e r Person C h ild ren U n d e r 12 A d m itte d Free Bring the whole family and dance till you drop. Three non-stop hours o f Reggae, Soca, Zouk, Soukous, Chimurenga, Mbaqanga, Afro Beat, Rai, Ziglibithy, and much, much m ore hot, Hot, HOT! Bob Mar ley • Mighty Sparrow • A rro w Thomas Mapfumo • Kassav • Fela • Mighty Diamonds Tune into Dan Del Santo’s World Music show every Friday night from 8 to 11 pm on KUT-90.5 FM , PubMc Radio• The University of Texas at Austin (Not printed at State expense.) I] Thun lay’f Dow Jones Industrial Average: UP 7.50 to 2,311.43 Volume: 177.45 million shares WORLD & NATION Waldenbooks to stop display of Rushdie book Associated Press NEW YORK — Death threats against the author of The Satanic Verses and bomb threats against its U.S. publisher prompted Walden­ books, the nation's largest booksell­ er, to take the book off its shelves Thursday. Telephone calls by The Associat­ ed Press to Waldenbooks stores na­ tionwide Thursday night found that the novel that has outraged Moslem fundamentalists was available for sale on request in a few stores but was not on display. "This is not a freedom of speech issue — the sole reason is the pro­ tection of our employees," Bonnie Predd, executive vice president of Waldenbooks, was quoted as saying in Friday's editions of The New York Times. "We've fought long and hard against censorship," Predd said. "But when it comes to the safety of our employees, one sometimes has to compromise." The novel also prompted Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to call for the death of its 41-year-old au­ thor, Salman Rushdie, a British citi­ zen who was bom into a Moslem family in India. Because of the threats, Rushdie canceled an 11-dty promotional tour of the United States which was to begin Friday, the book's U.S. publisher, Viking Penguin Inc. an­ nounced. About 10,000 copies of the book were distributed to Waldenbooks in 660 cities nationwide, stores Predd said. A memorandum au­ thorized by Harry Hoffman, the Stamford, Conn.-based company's president, was sent to all the stores ordering the book off the shelves, she said. "Our manager told us today if we happen to get Satanic Verses we are not to put it on the shelves," said a worker at a Waldenbooks in Mi­ ami's Omni International Mall who declined to give his name. An Associated Press reporter pur­ chased a copy of Satanic Verses Thursday from a Waldenbooks outlet in Jackson, Miss. The store had a few copies of the book behind the counter, but a store employee said she had been instructed to re­ move it from display shelves. Other book stores reported their biggest problem with the book was obtaining enough copies to meet de­ mand. "Sales are incredible," said Brian Weese, general manager of Encore Books, a Harrisburg, Pa.-based chain of 47 stores in mid-Atlantic states, several of which have sold out their allotment. Six people died this week in Paki­ stan during riotous protests against the book, which some Moslems say b lasp h em es p ro p h et Mohammed. The book has been banned in countries with mostly Moslem populations. th e The novel, published in Britain in September, has been available in the United States for several weeks. "The fist-shaking is happening elsewhere, thank God," said Weese in a telephone interview Thursday. "The ironic thing is that it's working against what Khomeini and others want to accomplish. "It's piqued ev­ eryone's interest and sparked the sales, rather than forcing people to remove it and not sell it." Viking Penguin Inc. began a sec­ ond printing of the book last week, said a company spokesman who asked that his name not be used be­ cause the publisher has received at least nine bomb threats at its New York headquarters. The first run was 50,000 copies. "We're printing to meet de­ mand," the spokesman said. He said the $19.95 hardcover has hit five regional best-seller lists — in this week's Chicago Tribune and Bos­ ton Globe and next week's San Fran­ cisco Chronicle and The Washington Post. A fast-selling book usually gets special treatment from retailers — window displays, a separate table or a prominent place on shelves. B ooksellers the uproar said wouldn't deter them. Of five large midtown Manhattan bookstores, only a Bames & Noble outlet on Fifth Avenue had copies left Thursday. "I don't have it in the window, but I have it prominently displayed on both floors," said Alex Ostrow- sky, the store's assistant manager. "There's no particular fear of that kind of thing. There's some con­ cern, but it's not stopping any kind of merchandising." Friday, February 1 7 ,1 9 8 9 Page 3 Fed punishes Continental for failure to serve poor Associated Press WASHINGTON — A Federal Re­ serve Board decision that for the first time penalizes a bank for failing to serve poor neighborhoods ap­ pears to signal a new willingness by regulators to enforce a 12-year-old law against such practices, commu­ nity activists said Thursday. The Fed rejected a request by the Chicago-based Continental Bank Corp. to purchase a small Arizona bank because it said Continental had not fulfilled its duties under the Community Reinvestment Act, which requires banks to meet local credit needs, including those in poor neighborhoods. The law, on the books since 1977, is aimed at preventing "red-lining," the practice of denying loans to an entire neighborhood based on the predominant race or economic class of its residents. "We hope this is the beginning of a trend," said Allen Fishbein, gen­ eral counsel of the Center for Com­ munity Change, a Washington- based group concerned with housing and community develop­ ment. Continental's 14-month-old peti­ tion to acquire Grand Canyon State Bank in Scottsdale, Ariz., was re­ jected on a 4-2 vote Wednesday, with board members H. Robert Hel­ ler and John LaWare opposed. Ed­ ward Kelley did not vote. "W e feel that the Fed has finally put teeth into the law," said Mi­ chael Zucker, an international rep­ resentative of the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Un­ ion, which had lodged a formal complaint against Continental's ap­ plication. Zucker said Continental "never has done a good job of lending to the low-income and minority com­ munity of Chicago." He described Grand Canyon as a "boutique bank" catering to affluent custom­ ers in suburban Phoenix. However, Thomas Theobald, the chairman of Continental, said he was "astounded and outraged" at the Fed's decision. Theobald said Continental has not decided yet whether to ask the Fed to reconsider its decision, but said it was not practical to allow the acquistion to remain pending much longer. Follow the leader Associated Press Two girls run through a field of teff, Ethiopia’s staple grain, at an orphanage in Nollo, Ethiopia. The two sur­ vived the famine of 1984-85 that killed their families, and were brought to the orphanage as babies. More than 20,000 orphans live in 106 orphanages through­ out the country. U.N. approves liberation of Namibia, sends peacekeepers T he decision also marks the last major step toward deco­ lonization.’ ence through free and fair elections under the supervision and control of the United Nations," said Ambassador Jai Pratap Rana of Nepal, council president for February. calls for sending 4,650 U.N. peacekeepers, 500 police supervisors and at least 1,000 ci­ vilian election monitors to Namibia. ing, head of the UNTAG's police unit, was expected in Namibia on Friday for talks with Gen. Dolf Gouws, the police commis­ sioner. Associated Press "The decision also marks the last major step toward decolonization. We look for­ ward to welcoming Namibia as a fellow member of this family of nations before long." April 1 was set as the date to begin the one-year plan for Namibia's transition to a nation ruled by its black majority. The reso­ lution adopted by the 15-member council implements an independence plan for the — Ambassador Jai Pratap Rana of Nepal territory, also known as South-West Africa, that has been ready since 1978. Approved along with the resolution was a recent report by Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar on implementation that Which countries will provide personnel for the peacekeeping force has not yet been decided, but China has offered to send up to 20 election monitors as its first participa­ tion in such an effort, an Asian diplomat said. The Namibian independence mission will be called the U.N. Transition Assist­ ance Group, or UNTAG. Martti Ahtisaari, Perez de Cuellar's rep­ resentative for Namibia, said Steven Fann­ Namibia's police will continue to be re­ sponsible for civil order, supervised by the U.N. police. Perez de Cuellar has estimated UNTAG will cost $416 million in its first year. That would make it the most expensive U.bf. peacekeeping mission since the Belgian Congo operation of 1960-64, which cost more than $400 million and involved 19,828 soldiers at its peak. UNITED NATIONS — The Security Council gave unanimous approval Thurs­ day to an independence plan designed to free Namibia from 74 years of South Afri­ can rule, and it dispatched the first U.N. peacekeepers to the region. A warm round of applause and handshaking after the vote was a departure from the usual decorum of the council chamber. "This decision sets in motion the process of transition of Namibia toward independ­ Associated Press Coalition proposes Medicaid overhaul WASHINGTON — A coalition led by the American Medical Asso­ ciation on Thursday proposed sweeping changes in the Medicaid program to expand coverage to 11 million more poor Americans, im­ prove benefits and raise reim­ bursement rates for physicians and hospitals. The proposed expansion of the federal-state health assistance pro­ gram for the poor would cost at least $13.2 billion and as much as $28 billion above current Medicaid expenditures, with most of the ad­ ditional cost borne by the federal government, the coalition.said. ‘Tent city’ planned for Texas WASHINGTON — The Justice Department plans to set up a "tent dty" detention center where it will hold Central American refugees while their applications for politi­ cal asylum are processed, congres­ sional officials confirmed Thurs­ day. Rep. Lamar Smith, a San Anto­ nio Republican, said in a state­ ment issued by a spokeswoman that the tent dty on isolated brush- land 15 miles from the U.S.-Mexi­ co border would meet basic human necessities — adequate housing, food and sanitary condi­ tions. There will be no fence around the facility, another con- gressi nal aide said. A second congressional aide said the Justice Department hopes word of the tént-dty detention center quickly reaches Central America and discourages the thousands of amnesty-seekers from coming into the United States. Shiite says hostage still alive TYRE, Lebanon — A Shiite Moslem leader said U.S. Marine Lt. Col. William Higgins, abduct­ ed a year ago Friday while serving as a U.N. observer, is alive despite his captors' statement that he was sentenced to death as a spy. "He'll be released eventually" by the pro-Iranian Shiite extrem­ ists who seized him, said Abdul Majid Saleh, political officer of the Amal militia in this ancient port 50 miles south of Beirut. Higgins, from Danville, Ky., commanded a 76-man U.N. ob­ server group monitoring the Leba- non-Israel border. He was kid­ napped by gunmen who stopped his car, 20 minutes after he had met with Saleh, on the highway south of Tyre. GOP assails ex-Klan leader NEW ORLEANS — The Repub­ lican Party rolled out its big guns Thursday — President Bush and former President Reagan — to keep a former Ku Klux Klan leader from being elected to the Louisi­ ana Legislature as a member of the GOP. Letters touting Bush's endorse­ ment of ex-Klansman David Duke's opponent in the state House race were circulated throughout the district, while ra­ dio featuring familiar voice were Reagan's tout the day. broadcast throi com m ercials Black leaders condemn Winnie Mandela By LAURINDA KEYS Associated Press JOHANNESBURG — Three years ago, anti­ apartheid leaders launched a campaign to pro­ mote black activist Winnie Mandela as "the mother of the nation" and a symbol of resistance to government repression. Since then, her image has been tamishéd by controversies over her lifestyle, public state­ ments and involvement with a group of youths who have been accused of crimes. In recent weeks, the wife of jailed African Na­ tional Congress leader Nelson Mandela has been linked with alleged beatings of black activists, disappearances and the death of a 14-year-old boy. On Thursday, black leaders of major anti-apar­ theid organizations publicly abandoned and con­ demned her. They told of many attempts to rec­ oncile the conflict between Winnie Mandela and the black community, and said they were out­ raged by her "compUcity" in abductions and as­ sault. The government, which isolated and banned her for nearly 23 years, has run several TV news programs on her troubles. As far as the government is concerned, the most effective way of discrediting Winnie Mandela may have been its 1986 decision to lift the ban on quoting her and remove all restric­ tions on her activities. The government has ex­ ploited Winnie Mandela's foibles in its propa­ ganda war against her husband. But in many cases, she has provided the ammunition. Public reports of battles between her body­ guards and other Soweto youth groups go back to January 1987, when police questioned her about the death of one of the young men who congregate at her home under the name of the Mandela United soccer team. She formed the team in 1986, saying the youths were getting into trouble and she wanted to get them off the streets. They have played few soccer games. For two years her name has been popping up in court cases involving charges of assault, mur­ der and robbery by people alleged to have stayed at her house or used her car and van. Police occasionally have announced they were investigating charges against her, but have never brought her to court. Anti-apartheid newspapers sometimes de­ layed for weeks printing negative stories about her or her bodyguards for fear of being used in an anti-Winnie Mandela propaganda campaign. But journalists have grown uneasy about Mandela's refusal to comment on the events and her continued support of the unpopular Mande­ la United, whose members have threatened re­ porters as well as residents of Soweto. The government lifted the ban on quoting her shortly after she made one of the most contro­ versial pronouncements of her life. At a rally in the township of Kagiso, Winnie Mandela said, "With our boxes of matches, and our necklaces, we shall liberate this country." The exiled leadership of the African National Congress disassociated itself from the statement. But her declaration was seen by the government as proof the ^N C supported the "necklace," a burning tire around the neck that was used on suspected black collaborators. Marxist guerrillas attack Salvadoran army bases Associated Press SAN SALVADOR — Leftist guer­ rillas attacked six military posts in El Salvador Thursday, killing at least 12 soldiers and wounding 14, the military said. The fighting was the first since Jan. 24, when the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front said it would participate in elections if they were delayed six gionths. The gov­ ernment said it opposed the propos­ al. About 60 guerrillas attacked the army base at the Entré Rios cotton cooperative outside Zacatecoluca V with mortar and rifle fire, said Col. Benjamin Canjura, commander of an army engineers detachment in Zacatecoluca, 22 miles southeast of San Salvador. Canjura told a news conference that nine soldiers were killed and 11 wounded during the two-hour at- . tack that began at 2 a.m. He said the rebels had many casu­ alties, but he said he could not pro­ vide figures. vador, Col. Jose Tejada said by tele­ phone. They also launched four bombs at the headquarters of the elite Atonal battalion about a mile from the 6th Brigade, he said. Three bombs cleared the wall around the headquarters, but did not explode, he said. The one that fell outside the base exploded be­ side a house, wounding two civil­ ians, he said. The Marxist-led insurgents also launched four bombs at th? head­ quarters of the 6th Army Brigade in Usulutan, 68 miles east of San Sal­ Canjura said rebels also attacked Civil Defense posts before dawn in Jerusalen, Ostuma and Barrio Nuevo, three small towns in his central military region. He said three soldiers were killed and three wounded in those at­ tacks. The guerrillas, in a drastic turn­ about, offered last month to partici­ pate in this year's presidential elec­ tion and respect its result if the vote were postponed from March 19 to September. The rebels had boycot­ ted and condemned as shams the five previous national elections this decade. They sharply reduced their offen­ sives while the proposal was being debated. Page 4/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, February 17,1989 EDITORIALS Viewpoint opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those ol the editor and the writer ot the article They are not necessarily the opinions of the University administration the Board ot Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board ot Operating Trustees lisl t h e - n ew s TtoDAY... SALMAN RUSH DIE, AUTHOR O F THE CONTROVERSIAL SATANIC VERSES j ¿ANCEkED HIS 8óc>K T&UR OF THE . . . H e i s , h o w ev er , o c o t in o in * h is TOOR OF BRITAIN - SEEN HERE AT A 6coK SkSNiNfi- L o N D c M S H o P R N ó - M A W -. IN A H aunted H ousing Blacks still live with segregation T here's a widespread notion in this country that racism has been defeated — that with an education and a steady job, a black person can easily move into the colorblind American main­ But as a new study by University of Chicago sociologists shows, that stream. notion is patently false. The study, based on 1980 census statistics, compares the residency patterns of the three largest American minority groups — blacks, Hispanics and Asians. Its conclusion: Hispanics and Asians are far more likely to live in an integrated neighborhood than blacks, even after the statistics are adjusted for levels of education and income. The study reveals, for example, that a black person with a doctoral degree is less likely to live in a racially mixed neighborhood than an Asian or Hispanic person with a third-grade education. Further, black people who earn $50,000 have a lower chance of living in racially mixed neighborhoods than Asian or Hispanic people who earn sub-poverty wages — $2,500. The study shows that a subtle, pervasive anti-black sentiment still haunts the nation, even after the cataclysmic civil-rights movement of the '60s and the resulting feel-good Sesame Street era of the '70s. It's tempting to attribute the residency disparities to underlying rac­ ism in the real-estate industry. Developers, this reasoning goes, con­ spire to filter well-off blacks into better, more expensive black neigh­ borhoods, while not showing them houses in comparable white neighborhoods, thus preserving the racial status quo. That scenario does contain a kernel of truth: Real-estate agents are concerned far more with boosting their profit margins than with in­ tegrating neighborhoods. But in the end, such conspiracy theories only cloud the issue. They let people believe that some malign, larger-than-life force — the real- estate industry — lies at the root of the problem. That, of course, is a fantasy. The blame lies much more with individ­ uals than with institutions. If, when black families do move into white neighborhoods, individual white families would simply stay put, the problem would disappear — no matter how evil the real-estate indus­ try might want to be. Before we can defeat racism, then, we must first admit that it exists — not just in faceless institutions like the real-estate industry but also in everyday people. And nowhere is that racism more obvious than in the ongoing ghet- toization of black people. — Tom Philpótt SA photographs, profiles and endorsements The Daily Texan will run profiles of SA candidates next week. All candidates are encouraged to write essays outlining their platforms and turn them in to the Texan offices in the basement of the Texas Student Publications Building at 2500 Whitis Ave. The deadline for essays is 6 p.m. Sunday. Candidates for representative are requested to write an 80-word essay and candidates for president and vice-president are re­ quested to write 250 words. Portraits of the candidates will be taken at the Texan offices between 6 and 10 p.m. Monday. Candidate profiles are in no way related to endorsements made by the editorial staff. Candidates for president and vice president who haven't made an appointment for endorsement interviews should contact Tom Philpott or Mike Godwin Sunday at 471-4591. Pay Texas judges what they're worth L ike an airplane low on fuel and miles from an airport, the Texas Legislature has begun throwing out unneeded bag­ gage to make it home safely. ries for both the judiciary and the Legislature, isn't it? But while this might work for the judiciary, unfortunately it has no chance of changing the Legislature. The legislator' job is to examine the dead weight and figure out just what should be saved and what should go overboard. The proposals for raising the salaries of both lawmakers and Texas judges have surfaced and are similar in idea, but each should be treated differently: The legislative pay raise is too flawed to save, and the judicial one is too im­ portant to throw away. Salaries for both lawmakers and the judiciary would increase, if the world were a better place. But the money just isn't there for both. Given the choice between the two, the money would be better spent on the courts. Over the last decade Texas courts have seen a skyrocketing number of cases, while the judges' salaries and resources have not responded. In the appellate courts, for example, the number of cases has risen more than 300 percent since 1978, but the number of appellate judges han­ dling those cases has increased only 63 percent. Without adequate salaries and money for re­ sources like computers and clerical help, how can we expect to attract and keep the high-qual­ ity judges that the state needs? The situation is the worst on the trial-court level, where judges make an annual salary of $57,000. County and local governments supple- R o bert T h arp CAPITOL COLUMNIST * ment that income, but often at unequal levels. This salary might seem adequate on the sur­ face, but when considering the amount and complexity of their work and their comparable worth in private practice, it is simply not enough. Texas should provide total state funding for judges — not rely on local supplements — and make those salaries more competitive with the private sector. As Chief Justice Thomas Phillips said in his State-of-the-Judiciary address Tuesday, Texas should raise the pay of appellate judges to 95 percent of the $80,371 that state Supreme Court justices make, and raise district judges' salaries to 90 percent of that figure. Raising their salaries would eliminate the need for the unfair and inconsistent county and local additions to state judges' salaries. These extra funds are necessary to prevent ineptitude from entering the ranks of the Texas court system because of the current low pay and poor benefits. The proposed increases to raise lawmakers' salaries are not enough to approximate that goal. Lawmakers want to raise their pay from the pathetically low $7,200 per year to around $22,000. Although this increase would triple their current salaries, the raise stilLisn't enough to attract anyone but the very rich or make the Legislature something besides a wealthy social club full of posturing amateurs. Sure, there are exceptions in the Legislature. A few lawmakers are not rich and some have noble intentions. But the exceptions are few, and everyone knows about the low pay before running for a position in the Legislature. Simply put, a pay raise that small won't work. The state needs to provide more money for its workers, but unfortunately the money isn't there and more important items also need funding. If money turns up for one of the two groups, the judiciary should get the raise. The money would be better spent and lawmakers should wait for a more meaningful proposal. That, after all, is the purpose of raising sala­ Tharp is a journalism senior. Future grad students should be warned of health-benefits tangle A s you may know, the cri­ sis in graduate-student 'employees health bene­ fits that arose at the University last spective graduate-student em­ ployees nor anyone else will bene­ fit from such a letter. Sta n G aines GUEST COLUMNIST general or the council in particular as has premium sharing. this spring remains unresolved. Although bills have been filed in the House and Senate of the Texas Legislature that would make graduate-student employees eligible for premium sharing once again, the future of premium shar­ ing for graduate-student employ­ ees remains in doubt. In an effort to inform prospec­ tive graduate-student employees of this situation, the Council of Graduate Students approved a let­ ter at its Feb. 9 meeting that would target those prospective employees and summarize the health-benefits crisis. Several members of the Faculty Senate voiced opposition to the letter at the Faculty Senate's Feb. 13 meeting, although no official action was taken at that meeting regarding the Council of Graduate Students' letter. As president of the Council of Graduate Students, I would like to address the concerns voiced by Faculty Senate members. First, there is concern that the council has blown the premium- sharing issue out of proportion. My response is this: Although the council has served as the forum for a variety of issues (i.e., child care, student housing, tuition waivers), no other issue has galva­ nized UT graduate students in Furthermore, issue has prompted inquiries from other universities outside (i.e., Penn State) as well as inside (i.e., UT Arlington) Texas. Simply put, the council has an obligation to pres­ ent this issue to graduate students who either currently attend or plan to attend the University. Second, there is concern that the council has alienated faculty and administrators who have pur­ sued this issue in good faith. My response: The council has thanked, and will continue to thank, the Faculty Senate (for its resolutions on our behalf), the UT system (for acknowledging the premium-sharing issue as a legis­ lative priority), and UT adminis­ trators (for establishing lines of communication with the council). The fact that the council has in­ vited UT administrators to discuss ways of informing prospective graduate-student employees is ev­ idence that the council wishes to work with, not against, adminis­ trators on this issue. Furthermore, the fact that the council chose the Faculty Senate as a forum regarding the letter in­ dicates the council's respect for the opinions of that body. Finally, all council meetings (including the Feb. 9 meeting at which the letter was originally presented) are an­ nounced well in advance and are open to administrators, faculty and students alike. Third, there is concern that the council has created a "no-win" sit­ uation by approving the letter. That is, critics say, neither pro­ My response: Those prospective graduate-student employees who choose to attend the University de­ spite the uncertainty of the premi­ um-sharing situation do so with the knowledge that the University has acted in good faith by provid­ ing them with this information. Those prospective graduate-stu­ dent employees who opt to go elsewhere do so because they can­ not afford to provide themselves (or their spouses or children) with adequate health coverage. In addition, the University as a whole stands to gain by acknowl­ edging the gravity and urgency of this situation and by moving one step closer to unequivocal com­ mitment to the restoration of premium-sharing benefits for its graduate-student employees. In conclusion, I encourage ev­ eryone who has at least a passing interest in the premium-sharing issue to communicate their inter­ est to their state legislators. After all, the best-case scenario would be legislative restoration of gradu­ ate-student employees' premium- sharing benefits prior to the Coun­ cil letter's scheduled March 15 release. The worst-case scenario, in con­ trast, would be the permanent loss of such benefits — with new graduate-student employees dis­ covering, only upon enrolling at the University, that they must fend for themselves. Gaines is president of the UT Coun­ cil of Graduate Students. That crazy commie comic The quality of the student comics in The Daily Texan has been declining for years, but I see you've found a way to offset that problem. The letter from a communist complaining about "forced-labor" propos­ als was really funny! ("Plan enslaves the masses," Firing Line, Monday) Keep it up! Kevin P. Gutzman Law/public affairs Skills tests questionable UT student government and the UT stu­ dent newspaper will do a real service if they follow the excellent example set by Tom Philpott7 s Viewpoint on the» freshman skills test ('Test Out: Delay the freshman skills test, The Daily Texan, Feb. 1). At least the following questions need better an­ swers than the bureaucrats have given. What is the nature and quality of the test? Is even the best test fit to carry so heavy, a burden of decision? Who will give the remedial courses — the four-year colleges and the universities, or the community colleges? If the community colleges are to give the remedial courses, doesn't the test b come an admissions test for four-year institu­ tions? (Failure to pass it will send students to community colleges and ban them from upper-division courses.) What will be the nature and quality of die remedial courses? Are staff, materials and money available to provide diem? is the evidence that remedid IF GUNS PONT Kill PEOPLE■h i f&WHOfWHWA 'A OMWRPWHH- ^ / _ J ■■■■_ AGON, scmotfii ?tmr otr a n i courses are more effective than special tu­ toring in regular undergraduate pro­ grams? Since more blacks and Hispanics than Anglos are expected to fail the test, won't the test reduce the proportion of minority students in regular programs, thus rein­ forcing segregation? Since die relatively high failure rate for blacks and Hispanics has been attributed to attendance at poor schools, isn't i| im­ perative for the Legislature to give poor schools the resources they need? Since the requirement of remedial cours­ es will make college education longer and more expensive for blacks and Hispanics, doesn't the testing prog tm punish the victims of inferior schooling? Why do advocates of die testing pro­ gram say so little about remedying the so­ cial conditions in which many minority students have to live and study? James Sledd Professor emeritus of English Truth finally out on arms R.D. Earp,jl salute you! It is nice to see finally someone on die Texan staff who doesn't just fill articles on firearms issues with misinformed prattlings and tired cliches ("New handgun rule makes more sense than the television-news piedia tell you," The Daily Texan, Monday). Since I will agree that some gun control is neces­ sary (although I don't like setting pre­ cedents for more oppressive legislation), I •f. believe that this bill you describe is one of the better proposals that I have heard. It still has its bad points, however. In addition to setting the aforementioned precedents, the bill will make already out­ rageously priced pistols (median price about $400) more expensive, and therefore less accessible to the lower-income fami­ lies who need a firearm for protection in the high-crime areas in which they usually reside. Also, you describe a rider to the bill which would force the licensee to pur­ chase a separate license for each pistol he owned of different caliber. A slightly bet­ ter idea would be to have different size classes of pistols, much the same way mo­ tor vehicles are classed as "A ," "B ," "C " or "M ." This is because firearms of the same general size are handled in more or less the same manner. At any rate, I want you to know that at least someone at the University appreci­ ates your responsible journalism. Robert Dennett Electrical engineering Upham racist, not victim In his bitter statement last week upon removing his name from consideration, re- gent-not-to-be Chester Upham falsely accused state senators who pledg 'd to vote against confirming his nomination as the ninth member of the all-male mono­ chrome Bt und Of Regents of racism. It is true that the underlying reason for the Senate opposition to Dements' three wealthy white male appointments is n o ism. But the racists in this case are those, such as Upham and Gov. Clements, who see nothing wrong with excluding women (51 percent of the population), Hispanics (about 25 percent), African-Americans (about 18 percent) and homosexuals (15 percent) from the highest policy-making body of the University system. Even Okla­ homa has an African-American regent. The senators who refuse to rubber- stamp a board of regents composed solely of wealthy, white, heterosexual men seem to be the only force in Texas politics will­ ing to ensure that the majority of p >ple in this state (who are not wealthy, white, heterosexual and male) will ever be repre­ sented on such a body. Any man who has gotten as far as Up­ ham from white, male privik ge who has the gall to claim to be a victim of xadsm when denied yet another success is either ignorant of his privilege, or quite aware of it and willing to use it to further his own personal power and prestige at any cost. fnMn We have all mown to expect this kind of behavior from 1 11 Dements and most Tex­ as 'leaders." What is disquieting is that the overwhelmingly opposition white University community was practi­ cally non-existent. Such apt hy in a sup­ posedly enightened endave paints a sad picture of a people of privilege who have no «palms about passively supporting tao­ ism. As long, of course, as they continue to benefit from it. M arc Salomon G a S fTXBMSÉ - — "I" T h e D a i l y T e x a n Health center finds 1 in 90 positive rate for HTV screening By CATHY LEIGH Daily Texan Staff Only one out of 90 students par­ ticipating in the Student Health Center's first three months of anonymous HIV screening has tested positive for the virus, a health center official said Thurs­ day. Dr. Melinda McMichael, the center's associate director of medi­ cal services, said the test is for an­ tibodies to the human immunode­ ficiency virus. "If; a student tests positive, that does not mean they have AIDS," she infection progresses, then AIDS is the ill­ ness caused by HIV." said. "A s the the McMichael said health center of­ testing ficials anticipated might begin slowly because of misconceptions about AIDS and fears about the testing's anonymi­ ty- She said officials made sure the testing /is Í totally anonymous be­ cause students believe that "som e­ one will know if they have some­ thing done at the health center." In an effort to retain anonymity, students use fictitious names and bypass the front desk by going di­ rectly to the Nurse Counseling and Special Services office. They are encouraged to pay the $10 fee in cash to avoid disclosing their names with checks. Specimens identified by number only are sent to the Texas Department of Health. "The testing is a very good ser­ vice, and I hope to see it grow. I would like to see us advertise it more and explore how we can get more students to know it exists," McMichael said. McMichael said that until three months ago, HIV testing at the center was confidential rather than anonymous. Confidential testing becomes part of a student's per­ manent medical record. "After a student who took the test graduated, a prospective em­ ployer might want to see his health records," she said. "They will look and see that you have been tested and say, That's interesting.' Some insurance agen­ cies will not cover you even if you have only been tested for HIV," McMichael added. McMichael said students who consider themselves at risk should be tested, especially anyone who has experienced multiple sexual encounters or used intravenous drugs. Also, anyone who received blood or blood products between 1979 and 1985 should be tested. Cindy Smith, head nurse for nurse counseling and special ser­ vices, said the procedure takes about 30 minutes. Two weeks lat­ er, students come in for follow-up appointments to receive the re­ sults, she said. McMichael said center officials counsel students who test positive to inform them of resources. "They can go to UT's counseling center for help in handling the many emotions a positive test cre­ ates. There are also various re­ sources available to them in the city," McMichael said. However, when the test is posi­ tive, students must decide if they want to disclose their anonymity for treatment. "If the students choose to work with us, then they give up their anonymity. If they do not want to do that, then they can go to a pri­ vate practitioner," McMichael said. U N C S S I f t NO LONGER AT HÑIR D€CO FOR HAIR CARE APPOINTMENTS CALL: 478-4213 OR 462-2401 EARN MONEY ASTHMA SUFFERERS NEEDED Free medication and medical care for your asth­ ma for 6 months. Adults with asthma ages 18-65 are needed to participate in a clinical research study. This study involves FDA approved medications and lasts for 6 months. Compensation is $475.00 upon study completion. For more information: HealthQuest R esearch 345-0032 H S pring B reak ISotmi P adre Island Fladical Radisson Ftesort formerly the HILTON Booms Avalefte Limited Time Cal Now: r 1- 800- 292-7704 STUDENTS with FEVER... EARN $175 in 6 HOURS!! If you hove a fever of at least 100° F associated wHh upper respiratory cold or flu symptoms, you may q u a lify to partici­ póle In a ilngi* d e »search study done .In the home or dnlc setting evaluating a IEWFEVII REDUCING MEDICATION. Far further information, please call < all Clinton, M.D. 478-3991 onice loconon near campus: rant sv. d«¥hi t o . tktq. corner ov and E. 30lh SI. UNIVERSITY Foreign military officers tour campus Friday, February 17,1989 Page 5 By MARK BRANDON Daily Texan Staff Military personnel from 64 coun­ tries — ranging from neighboring Canada to the tiny oil nation of Oman in the Middle East — visited the University from the U.S. Army's General Command Staff College in Leavenworth, Kan. Maj. Monte Mingus, an Army ROTC instructor at the University, treated the officers to a tour of the UT Sports Complex, College of En- gineei ng and the Lyndon B. John­ son Library. The tour included lunch in the the Texas Union Building, where the of­ ficers discussed their impressions of the United States. Lt. Col. Stein Gundersen of Nor­ way, whose family is accompanying him in the United States, compared the education available in this coun­ try with the Norwegian system. Gundersen said American stu­ dents are "more guided" to the cur­ riculum. He added that multiple- ineffective choice method of testing students, but said in an institution the size of the Uni­ versity, there is no choice. tests are an The University "would be one of the biggest cities in Norway," Gun­ dersen said. said Several officers they disagreed with the U.S. media as­ sessment that Europeans receive a better education than U.S. students. Maj. Patrick Nopens of Belgium said European educational systems follow cycles set by the United States. "We are at the point now where America was five years ago," No­ pens said. "Now that American ed­ ucation is improving, we will hope­ fully soon follow." While strolling from the Texas Union Building to the LBJ Library, a former UT student from Somalia caught up with his countryman, Col. Abdi Osman. Jama Abdirah- c o u p o n __________ I----------------- ¡ ROFFLER SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN 1 I ! SHAMPOO a CUT s $ BLOW DRY From left, Maj. Thebe of Nepal, Lt. Col. MMan of Senegal, Maj. Shakour of Lebanon and Mai Masisi of Botswana share an elevator at the Lyndon B. Johnson Library with students from Zilker Elementary School. Ted Warren/Daily Texan Staff man, a 1988 graduate of the Uñiver- sity, heard that Osman was in town and finally found him at the LBJ Museum. Osman updated Abdirahman, who has not been in Somalia for five years, on current events in their country. in Looking at a picture of John F. Kennedy the museum, Col. Mohammed Outeh of Djibouti said JFK is his "favorite" U.S. president. In the early 1960s, Kennedy's newly established Peace Corps went to Djibouti. Outeh said a Peace Corps volun­ teer taught him when he was a child. The group has been in the United TICKET DISMISSAL ONLY $12W/THIS AD States since June learning U.S. poli­ tics, military strategies and culture at the tactical college. U.S. Army Lt. Col. Rob Kornacki, deputy director of the program, said the goal of the program is to help the officers "gain an appreciation of the American system from all as­ pects," and to remove all "miscon­ ceptions" about the United States. Maj. Muhanna Al-Nabhani of Oman said the trip was "a learning experience." "You meet the people, learn the culture and eat different food," Al- Nabhani said. Maj. John Garnett of New Zea­ land said the thing he liked least about the United States was "get­ ting used to driving on the wrong side of the road." Several of the officers said they are enjoying United States culture. "It's been a great experience," said Gundersen. But, he added that he could not wait to get back to his home in Norway. Maj. Ken nan Kocak of Turkey ex­ pressed his views on his stay in the U.S. in another way. "It's not necessary to compare countries and cultures," he said. WISDOM TEETH If you need the removal of wisdom teeth... 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C flS fld fiL lT lfiR Hotel Condominiums 6102 Seawall Galveston Island, léxas 77551 The rapid expansion of our fleet already one of the largest in the skies has created new career opportunities for men and women interested in becoming flight attendants It's the best career choice you can make if you like the excitement of travel, enjoy meeting interesting people, and don t want to oe tied to a 9 to 5 routine American offers you a most rewarding future because theres more room for professional growth w ith an airline that's first in the air and second to none on the ground M INIM UM QUALIFICATIONS_______________ □ Friendly, outgoing personality with neat, well-groomed appearance. I 1 Willing and able to relocate. [ J You must be a U.S. citizen or already possess the legal right to work in the U.S. [ J High school diploma or GCD. □ Height: S 'I’/b" to 6 0 without shoes. Weight In proportion to height. [ 1 Age: 20 yean minimum. □ Vision: 20/S0 minimum (each eye). Corrective lenses acceptable. Two years college or two years public contact experience preferred Ability to communicate in Spanish, French, German, Japanese„or Swedish desired If interested, please send a self addressed, business size envelope for an application and career information to American Airlines, Inc. Flight Attendant Recruitment P.O. Box 619410, MD 412S Dallas/Fort Worth Airport, TX 75261-9410 ATTN: Depl. UT217BB AmericanAirlines An equal opportunity employer Friday, February 1 7 ,1 9 8 9 Page 6 STATE & LO CA L T h e Da il y T e x a n Bush promise fails to deflate local S& L interest rate wars Tobacco issues light up state lawmakers’ agenda By JIM GREER Daily Texan Staff Tobacco issues drew attention from different angles Thursday as a state lawmaker pushed her smoking bill on the senate floor while the Texas comptroller's office promoted a cigarette tax hike. Sen. Cyndi Krier, R-San Antonio, discussed a bill she sponsored to outlaw the provision of tobacco products to minors. Krier said her legislation would prohibit minors from obtaining to­ bacco. "Despite the growing body of evi­ dence indicating the harmful health effects of tobacco products, children have begun to use them at a much younger age," she said. Current law allows anyone 16 years or older to obtain tobacco products. The senator's bill, filed Jan. 11, would raise the legal age to 18 Despite the growing body of evidence indicat­ ing the harmful health ef­ fects of tobacco prod­ ucts, children have begun to use them at a much younger age.’ —•Sen. Cyndi Krier, R-San Antonio years. The American Cancer Society, American Lung Association and the American Heart Association sup­ ported Krier's legislation in a Feb. 13 report. "At least 60 percent of all current smokers began smoking before 14 years old," and "90 percent of all new smokers are under the age of 20," the report states. "Approximately 390,000 Ameri­ cans died as the result of past and current smoking" in 1985 — the most recent figures available — ac­ cording to the report. State Comptroller Bob Bullock — Texas' chief financial officer — and his staff continued to support rais­ ing the state cigarette tax by 7 cents to 33 cents per pack. Merrell Foote, a Bullock spokes­ woman, said the tax boost would add $440 million in the 1990-91 budget period. She said $274 million of the additional revenue would come from federal matching funds. "The federal money would have to be used for health care — such as Medicaid services, pregnant women and the needy," Foote said. "It could also help keep more hospitals open." For every $1.15 Texas sends to the national government in taxes, the state receives only $1 in federal spending, she said. Associated Press HOUSTON — Despite assurances from President Bush that deposits in troubled savings and loan associ­ ations will be protected, a few Texas thrifts are staging an interest rate war to attract outside investors ac­ customed to receiving a higher "Texas premium." Federal regulators say large depo­ sitors continue to demand higher rates from Texas thrifts because of uncertainty about financial condition, although interest rates their offered on average certificates of de­ posit are line with national trends. in "The marginally insolvent sav­ ings and loans have been paying what is sometimes referred to as the 'Texas premium,' which is just a re­ flection of the price the market has demanded," Alan Whitney, spokes­ man for the Federal Deposit Insur­ ance Corp. in Washington, said Thursday. "Since Bush made his statement, the rates have not yet seemed to re­ act by coming down, but I think as we go forward the administration's plan will have that effect," Whitney said. "The fact is that, in light of the president's statements and other statements by the administration, there is no excess level of risk in placing deposits in Texas institu­ tions," he said. The Bush proposal to rescue trou­ bled thrifts, many olí them in Texas, was intended partially to remove those institutions that were driving up deposit rates for the rest of the industry. ALL WEEKEND DRAFT, SCHNAPPS KAMIKAZES FRI HAPPY HOUR BUFFET U-PEEL-’EM SHRIMP and LATE NITE FASHION SHOW LIVE M U S IC 10-2 $1.00 cover THURS. TKO (no cover) FRi. CAT IN THE HAT * and LAST TANGO s a t . JEFF ANDERSON BAND TAKE A BREAK... ...WITHOUTGOING BROKE! 215 E. 6th S t.-477-3771 (across from Jorge's) REPAIR • Boots • Shoes • Leather Goods • Luggage CUSTOM MADE • Boots • Belts • Chaps • Etc. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca • AuMn •478-9309 WHAT: WHEN: WHERE: YOU ARE INVITED WORSHIP & LUNCH (HOME COOKED &FREE) EVERY SUNDAY 10:30 AM-1:00 HYDE PARK CHRISTIAN CHURCH 610 EAST 45TH STREET STUDENTS AND YOUNG ADULTS BETWEEN AGE 18-23 BECAUSE GOD - LOVESYOU . (C OM M UNIO N OPES TO ALL. DENOMINATIONS) S » ii:m \ S t y l i HAIR D F S I G N Reg. $15 In c lu d e s S h a m p o o , C o n d it io n e r A B lo w Dry 3701 Guadalupe 454-5774 OPEN 10-5 Mon-Sat C o u p o n EXPIPES 3 2 89 C o u p o n n o t v a lid w ith K e n n y C haracter sketch Chuck Bryan, an Austin author and artist at the Lone Vale. He worked Thursday on the illustration of the Star Art Gallery, paints Frea and Rean Running in the characters in his most recent novel, The Vale of Unika. Robert Kirkham/Daily Texan Staff But two insolvent Houston-area thrifts have led a small, regional bidding war that drove interest rates as high as 10.75 percent for six-month jumbo deposits since Bush's plan was announced. That trend, which already is sub­ siding, was described by officials for high-bidding BancPlus Savings As­ sociation and Commonwealth Sav­ ings as a temporary, cyclical cash drive for mortgage operations. The rates, however, drew the scrutiny of regulatory and industry officials, who say such, bidding serves as an example of the linger­ ing problem of attracting capital and of the practices that could make the bailout of the industry more expen­ sive. "Paying a premium rate has an ef­ fect on the total cost to the govern­ ment in resolving these insolvencies and, in the meantime, others in the region have to compete with these institutions," Whitney insolvent said. Continuing rate battles could have a broad, adverse effect on the financial system, he said. "One of the primary objectives of the government is to stabilize the situation, and it certainly doesn't lend stability when there are rates out there of such size," said Doug­ las Valdetero, executive vice presi­ dent at Houston-based University Savings. "There's no way you can buy that kind of money and turn it out and make any profit on it." University Savings tried to keep up with the increasing rates for CDs, which were limited to deposits of $95,000-$100,000. The thrift raised its six-month rate from 9.8 percent to 10.1 percent Monday be­ fore dropping back the next day to 9.875 percent. Valdetero said the thrift retreated on its own from the rate battle, but Whitney said University is under FDIC jurisdiction and that the agen­ cy stepped in to reduce the rates. Currently, 11 of the top 25 yields on six-month jumbo CDs are avail­ able from Texas thrifts, according to 100 Highest Yields. M acProducts USA CMS 20 Meg Hard Drive 499.00 ♦ ♦ ♦ ~fim .itLc.i X 9 r e4. Sru.tA.LLn. S tg L x 6 4 1 6 N L A M A R A U S T I N . TX 1 Meg Simms 229.00 2 0 2 1 G u ad alu p e, S u ite 2 3 . D obie Mall, A u stin , T e x a s 4 6 9 5 0 0 0 All-you-can-eat-buffet $3" Now you can satisfy your It’s a great Italian feast at a Longhorn appetite with a Tex- great American price! You get as-sized meal for a very small all-you-can-eat Pan or Thin ’N price. Introducing the multi- Crispy® pizza, spaghetti with item buffet at Pizza Hut®, now savory sauce, hot garlic bread available on Sundays from and a salad bar. Come to the 5:30-8:00 p.m. and on Tuesday Pizza Hut® buffet...and come evenings from 5:30-8:00 p.m. hungry! Sunday 5:30 ’til 8:00 p.m. Tuesday 5:30 ’til 8:00 p.m. KICK UP TOUR HEELS IN AUSTIN THISWEEKEND. Break away for a footloose and fancy free weekend at the Austin Doubletree Hotel. Relax and enjoy being waited on. Shop to your hearts content. Dine magnificently in our restaurants. Or see the city sights. At night, you can paint the town red. Then in the morning, sleep late and have breakfast in bed. So kick up your heels this weekend at Doubletree. Rate is valid Friday, Saturday and Sunday, subject to space availability. For reservations, call 512-454-3737. 6505 IH'35 North, Austin, TX 78752. 9 DELIVERY COUPON 1 MEDIUM: THIN CRUST PAN PIZZA HAND TOSSED (and I Topping) IXXJBLETREEHOTEL AUSTIN Good at: 1811 Guadalupe 320-8000 Sxpirea 2/21/80. T h e Da il y T exan s p o r t s Bryant seeks redemption against Sun Devils Friday, February 17,1989 Page 7 ting .346 with one home run and a team- high 12 RBI. "I'd like to go in there and show them I really can play the outfield," said Bryant, who has no errors so far in seven games — five in right field. "After making three er­ rors in one game, I'd like to come out and play well in the field. They're ;oing to think it will be kind of the same thing un­ less I show them different." "Well, last year was last year," ASU Coach Jim Brock said Thursday. "Unfor­ tunately, we can only live on that for a few more hours." The Longhorns will see a somewhat dif­ ferent Sun Devil team, though. The pitch­ ing, so dominant in last year's series, is in transition. One of the top four starters from last year's College World Series runner-up team, Brian Dodd, is back. Reliever Rusty Kilgo is the No. 2 starter, and Brock is still deciding on a third starter from several newcomers. Freshman right-hander Kip Yaughn will start Sunday's third game of the series. Dodd and Kilgo will provide the Longhorns with a stiff challenge. Both are left-handers, don't throw very hard and use mainly breaking pitches — the very stuff that has given Texas hitters problems in past years. "It's a new test for this ball club," said Gustafson. "It's the first time away from home. It's the first time on. natural grass. That's where the pitching becomes so im­ portant. It can make up for a lot of things. "I don't know what to expect after that fiasco we had [Tuesday]. We didn't do much very well. Our bubble kind of burst." But Brock is not applying too much sig­ nificance to Texas' second loss ever to TLC. that [Gustafson] didn't "We assume want us to somehow give him his first loss," he said. "W e think it's a fix." The Longhorns lead the all-time series with Arizona State, 15-12. Two years ago, Texas beat the Sun Devils in two of the three games at Packard Stadium. ASU has two All-Americans, second baseman Kevin Higgins and right fielder Dan Rumsey, back from last year's 60-13 team, along with stalwart starters John Finn (third base) and Steve Willis (first base). But, since Willis and starting catcher Eric Helfand each broke a wrist in a collision just before the season started, newcomers have been leading the Sun Devils to their current 8-3 record. "There's no doubt we can beat those guys," Bryant said. "We have to combine good hitting with good pitching, which we haven't done." And don't forget good fielding. By JERRY GERNANDER Daily Texan Staff The Texas Longhorns in general, and Scott in particular, Bryant would like to make a better impression on Ar­ izona State this week­ end than they did a year ago. The Longhorns, 6-1 after splitting a dou­ bleheader Tuesday with Texas Lutheran, will be on hostile ground in the upcoming three-game series in Tempe, Ariz. But so were the Sun Devils last year when they embarrassed Texas with the first three- game sweep of a UT team in 16 years. But ASU did not need to embarrass Bryant in last year's series. He did all of that himself. The bad memories of one error in right field in the opening game and two at first base in the third game were not quite wiped out in Bryant's mind by his two home runs and .400 batting average in the series. A year later, Bryant is the veteran leader on the team, still the leading run producer and still the starting right fielder. He is bat­ Raiders thrive on home floor Horns await rude welcome By SCHUYLER DIXON Daily Texan Staff Texas guard Travis Mays has been to Lubbock twice. He knows what happens to T exas Tech when the Red Raiders get on _________________ their home floor. On the road, Tech is the intimidated young cub just getting a feel for the den. At Lubbock Municipal Coliseum, how­ ever, the Red Raiders quickly be­ come papa bear. "When they're at home with the crowd, they have a tendency to take it to you a lot more," said Mays, the leads Longhorns and who Southwest Conference in scoring at 21.6 points a game. "On the road, they tend to lean toward stopping the opponent, but at home, they take it to you offensively." Arkansas was the most recent big shot to find out. The Razorbacks, the SWC leaders at 10-2, suffered an 84-73 loss at Tech two weeks ago. On Saturday, Texas will be the next among league leaders to test the trap. The Longhorns are 2-8 in Lubbock in the last 10 years, and the two games Mays has witnessed weren't even close, a 62-50 defeat two years ago and another 64-55 loss last season that was over early. "Everybody talks about how hard it is," said freshman forward Winn Shepard, who sat out last season as a redshirt. "I can't visualize it. Peo­ ple go up and look past that Tech game. But Tech is the kind of team that plays hard and well at home." The Longhorns face a crucial point in their season after suffering a 105-96 loss to Houston at home Wednesday. Right now, a Texas team on the NCAA bubble needs a big road win in a tough arena to help solidify an invitation to the post-season fun. A sellout crowd of 8,174 in Tech's "Bubble" will not help matters for the Longhorns. "W e haven't put any pressure on by saying how important it is," said Shepard, who is averaging more than 10 points a game in the last five SWC games. "Everyone knows what needs to be done. We don't want to think of it as a pressure game." So far this season, Texas has Tech is the kind of team that plays hard and we I at home.’ — UTforward Winn Shepard made a living out of recovering from losses. The Longhorns have not lost two in a row, and one of their big­ gest wins of the year — a 94-84 vic­ tory at TCU — came after a blowout loss at Vanderbilt on national televi­ sion. "Coach [Tom] Penders won't let us stay down," Mays said. "He has a tendency to let us forget about the losses. We correct the things we do wrong, and that showed [Thursday] in practice." In the Longhorns' 90-86 win over Tech last month in Austin, Mays and Lance Blanks combined for 36 first-half points as Texas ran out to a 51-34 halftime lead behind some red-hot field-goal shooting. But Tech, despite playing at Tex­ as' tempo, slowly came back in the second half and trailed just 78-77 with 3:32 to go. The Longhorns re­ covered in time to escape with the win, but the memory of the Red Raiders lingers. "W e know Tech is a good team and we can't let up just because we're coining off a loss and we're expected to play hard," Shepard said. "W e've got to get it done natu­ rally." Tech features one of the best guards in the league in Sean Gay (16.7 points a game), but Gay has had some solid help from Jerry Ma­ son, a three-point specialist, and center J.D. Sanders. Both are aver­ aging more than 11 points a game. In the first Texas g me, Mason led Tech with 22 points, including four of seven three-pointers, and Gay and Sanders each added 21. "Tech is a good outside shooting team ," Shepard said. "W e've got to be able to hold down Sanders inside and not three-point their shooters get shots o ff." let Feeling Blue Now York’s Bryan Trottier and St. Louis’ Paul Cavallini duel for the puck during New York’s 7-3 win. In other NHL action, Montreal beat Philadelphia 7-4 and Vancouver and Quebec seated to a 3-3 tie. See standings, page 14. Associated Press Lady Horns to face well-rested Tech By RAYOISE Daily Texan Staff They've had plenty of time to rest and to think kbout the next game, maybe too much. It has been seven days since the Texas Tech Red lay Raiders took the floor to a game. Seven days to think about their next opponent and the things that opponent can do. Women On Saturday, the Red Raiders will return to the court to meet eighth-ranked Texas. It will be the 32nd meeting between the two schools. The Lady Longhorns won the first meeting 89-54 in January of 1977 and every con­ test since, but that is not surprising since UT has won 113 consecutive Southwest Conference games and 164 straight against conference oppo­ nents. With all the time she has had to plan, Tech Coach Marsha Sharp hopes she's come up with a good one. "I think anytime you play UT you have to rec­ There is a group that haunts the Lubbock Mu­ nicipal Coliseum. They call themselves the bleacher creatures and they try to make their presence felt at every game. "We have to go in and take control of the game," Anderson said. "I think in all the confer­ ence games, if we play our game, we will win." NOTES — Senior forward Clarissa Davis is nearing another milestone in her brilliant career, which has been limited by various injuries. Dav­ is is closing in on the Southwest Conference's career scoring record of 1,798 career points. The record belongs to former Lady Longhorn Fran Harris, who is now serving the Texas program as a graduate assistant. Davis trails Harris by 67 points with a total of 1,731, and if she continues to score at her present pace of 25.7 points per game, she should eclipse the record by the end of next week. With her next blocked shot, junior center Ellen Bayer will break Texas' single sea­ son record of 69 set by Retha Swindell in the 1975-76 season. Earlier in the season, Bayer be­ came the all-time shot blocking leader with four blocks against Rice. She holds the UT record with 176 career rejections. ognize all the different factors they have," she said. "We haven't reached a point were we can take away all of them. We will try to take away as many as possible." Sharp hopes to do three things against the Lady Longhorns — limit Clanssa Davis' point production, keep Texas from making extended runs, and keep them from building momentum. "We feel we must attack them offensively in order to limit them," Sharp said of Texas. "We feel if there is a place they're vulnerable, it is on the defensive end." Another factor that leans in the Red Raiders favor is that they will be playing at home. "I remember last year there wTas some fraterni­ ty group yelling at us," Longhorn post player Susan Anderson said. "They do have a vocal crowd." Texas begins SWC title defense, serves up opener at Texas Tech By PAUL HAMMONS DaMy Texan Staff Going . . . . Women be into the Southwest C o n f e r e n c e th e se a so n , Texas L ong­ horn women's te n n is team will probably th e con- sensus pick to win its fifth consecutive confer­ ence title. In fact, Texas has won die conference tournament every yeqr that it has been held. It al­ most seems like just another for­ mality to go through en route to the nationals. So as Texas prepares to travel to Lubbock for its conference opener against Texas Tech, the question arfees: What's the big deal about winning the conference, anyway? "It's a real big deal, because usually there's at least one other team in the tc > 10 or 15 in the country in the conference besides u s," Texas Coach Jeff Moore said. "In some of the other sports, there aren't any other nationally teams. The winner of the ment will be considered above anyone else as far as the nationals are concerned, even if the second- placed team is higher-n deed, na­ tionally. "We need to win the tourna­ ment to go [to nationals] unless the team mat beats us is also high­ ly nationally ranked." Moore does concede that the Longhorns should be favored to win the conference agpin this year, but he thinks that the balance of power in the rest of the conference may shift some. "I think AJcM and TCU might be the next two tou jhest Moore said. "SMU does not have the depth this year to ch allare, although they are very strong in the top two positions." Conspicuously absent from that list are the Red Raiders. But ac­ cording to Moore, the trip to Lub­ bock, as it seems to be in any other sport, can pose troubles for oppos­ ing teams. "They're always difficult to | (day, especially in Lubbock, be­ they play indoors and cause they're accustomed that," Moore said. "And they also have a pretty decent crowd, usually." to The biggest .question mark of the meet is whether Diana Dopson will return to action from a chronic back injury, which will determine doubles pairings for the meet. If Dopson is able to play, she will play with Diana Menrett in the No. 1 spot. If not, Merrett will team with freshman Alicia Hallmark. That should be the only ques­ tion in Texas' doubles lineup, which Moore said has shown marked improvement since the pairing changes earlier in the year. "It's like rright and day," Moore said. "What will hopefully be our No. 2 team, or No. 3, actually, got to the finals of the Milwaukee Ten­ nis Classic. [Caria] Cossa and [Joanna] Plautz,. and [Lanae] Renschler and [Stacie] Otten reached the quarters of that same tournament, so I'm really excited Horns make run at conference crown By CRAIG DOUGLAS Daily Texan Staff The drive for five. This week­ end, the Lady Longhorns will try to extend their record of c o n s e c u t i v e Southwest Con­ Indoor ference Championships to five in a row at the championship meet hosted by TCU in the Tarrant County Convention Center in Fort Worth. According to Texas Head Coach Terry Crawford, there really isn't that much pressure involved as a re­ sult of the streak. "It's really great to have a tradi­ tion; the streak is a good motivator for our athletes," Crawford said. "But teams change from year to year, and we have to go to the start­ ing line just like everyone else, and it doesn't matter much after that." Texas has competed in some of the top indoor meets in the nation in the past few weeks, including the woridclass Millrose Games in New York City, which provided an op­ portunity to face some of the best athletes in the world. Next tó events like that, the Southwest Conference might not seem that important to the everyday fan, but it is a different story for the athletes. "The conference meet is always important to us," Crawford said. "The girls have had some good indi­ vidual efforts and have acheived some goals this year, but there is al­ ways a good team effort in the con­ ference meet." The SWC may not be that widely known for women's track, but ac­ cording to Coach Crawford, the conference meet is full of great com­ petition. "That's the great thing about the Southwest Conference — the talent is spread out," Crawford said. "Teams that may not be that great in one event will be great in a few others, so there is always good com­ petition in every event." Crawford believes that because of that good competition, Texas will not absolutely dominate any aspect of the meet. However, the Lady Longhorns made a fairly good case for domination last year by winning the meet with a record total 185 points. That total broke the mark they had set in 1986. Crawford thinks that Texas can repeat, but its toughest competiton may come from Rice. "We have what it takes to win it again, if we run solid in all events and have no surprises," she said. "Rice can also be tough as well. They could win some big races if they come, through." Texas will also have two of its competitors trying to defend indi­ vidual titles this weekend. Junior Angie Bradbum will attempt to hold on to her high-jump championship, while Sophomore Carlette Guidry will defend her titles in the 55-meter dash, the 200, the triple jump and the elite position of individual high point scorer. Guidry has the best times in the conference in both the 55 and the 200, but has not compet­ ed in the triple jump this season. Texas would also like to qualify some additional athletes for the NCAA meet this weekend. The Lady Horns have already qualified in nine events, with Guidry placed in four slots for the NCAA meet. "We would like to be optimistic," Crawford said. "W e have some [athletes] that are right on the edge [of qualifying], but I think that we'll get some more in." The next meet for the Lady Horns will be the Athletics Congress Na­ tional Championships beginning Feb. 24 in New York City. It has yet to be determined which athletes will attend. Competition in the SWC meet be­ gins Friday afternoon. > Page 8/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, February 17,1989 O P E N T IL 8.'00! R O S E S R O SES R O S E S CaafctCarrv Naar Ml Maaaa Casa Verde Florist 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 faalay 4 1 rt H . Daly SpdcMa FTD GET RID of that TICKET wNhad only No Fie-raQ. - JuM Show Up Sal — 8 am - 3 JO WsdStlhun— 6 pm-M 0 ISA Darby’s - 4000 M mcMcoI Pkwy "Simnwk batoja* tmostajty fc” HUM Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts BBS Electronic Mail, Computer Matchmaking and Public Boards 836-9678 Daytime Voice 836-7552 300/1200 Baud The move to personal size electronics is being led by SONY. Come see hand-held TV's, walkmans, camcorders, discmans and more. 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I i 9 9 6 for 3 . 4 9 o a a Women’s swimming After an 80-60 win over Houston Sat­ urday, the UT women's swimming and diving team now has less than one week to go before the. Southwest Con­ ference Championships. And as Coach Mark Schubert said, "Everybody's get­ ting excited." Quite a bit will be at stake for the No. 3 Lady Longhorns in the meet begin­ ning Thursday at 11 a.m. in the Texas Swimming Center. For starters, much of the team will be trying to get good enough scores to qualify for next month's NCAA National Championships in Indianapolis. Each take as many as 16 school can swimmers and four divers. Already headed for Indianapolis are seniors Courtney Madsen (100-meter freestyle) and Stacy Cassiday (200, 500 freestyle and 100, 200 butterfly), junior Andrea Hayes (200 backstroke, 500, 1,650 freestyle), sophomores Leigh Ann Fetter (50, 100 freestyle) and Kristi Kiggans (200 butterfly), and freshmen Katy Arris (400 individual medley) and Dorsey Tierney (200 breast stroke). Texas is also sending the team of Fetter, Madsen, junior Jeanne Doolan, and freshman Julie Cooper to swim in the 200 and 400 medley and the 200, 400 and 800 freestyle relays. The entire diving team, which Schu­ bert calls a "very strong unit", will com­ pete in the NCAA Zone Diving Meet in Lincoln, Neb., next month. Only divers finishing in the first or second spot will be able to compete in Indianapolis. If a shot at the NCAAs isn't enough motivation for the team, the Lady Long­ horns have an additional factor to con­ tend with going into next week’s meet. Texas will be shooting for its seventh consecutive SWC title. It would certain­ ly be a dubious honor to be the first Lady Longhorn team not to capture the trophy, so pride is working on the Texas side. Besides, as Schubert said, "we’re ex­ pected to win.” While Texas has the inside track on yet another title, Schubert warns that SMU and Arkansas are not to be taken lightly. Both are strong teams, and the Razorbacks defeated the Horns in the SWC Relays last October. So with both the SWC and NCAA championships coming up, the last vic­ tory over Houston was an important one for the Horns. "It was a strong win." said Schubert. to put “We swimmers in events other than their best events” to get extra experience. "It also gave us an opportunity to swim the 200 relays." tried Schubert added that it was good to the “ high pressure get away events of the past weeks.” He was re­ from ferring to UT's tough meets with top- ranked Florida and No. 2 Stanford. Along with getting a chance to rest, the Lady Longhorns are using the extra week to practice on areas Schubert be­ lieves need work. The relay exchanges are not quite up to par, according to Schubert, and the turns are being emphasized, too. Schu­ bert cited the Stanford meet as an ex­ ample of an instance when Texas need­ ed better turns to be succesful. The SWC Championships will begin with the preliminaries Thursday. Events will run up until the finals at 7 p.m. Sat­ urday, Feb. 25. — compiled by Sam Jackson Men’s track The Longhorn men’s indoor track team heads to this weekend's South­ west Conference Indoor Track & Field Championship in Fort Worth with re­ newed confidence. After a first place finish at the Paper Tiger Indoor Track & Field Classic, the team feels it has what it takes to de­ throne Arkansas as conference cham­ pion. "We had a real good meet at LSU two weeks ago," Coach Stan Huntsman said. "If we show up ready to run, we should be able to duplicate that per­ formance." Behind distance runners Chris Zinn, Reuben Reina and defending NCAA champion Jose Falcon, eight-time de­ fending champion Arkansas is favored to win the title once again. The Razor- backs' triple combination will provide a test for Longhorn All-Americans Harry Green and Jeff Cannada. "Everybody is going to have to per­ form at their best if we are to win," Can­ nada said. "Arkansas has some great distance runners and we are going to have to dent them in the distance races and score some key points in the sprint events.” Cannada will go up against Falcon in the 3,000-meter run. Falcon leads the nation with a time of 7 minutes, 46 sec­ onds in the event. "He [Falcon] leads the 3,000 by al­ most 15 seconds," said Cannada. "The closest time to his is 8:01. I’ll have my work cut out for me, but I can’t have the attitude that I’m going to come in sec­ ond. I’ll have to go at him and refuse to think that he is unbeatable." Green, undefeated this season, will also be relied upon to tally some points. Winthrop Graham, a silver medalist at the Olympic Games in Seoul, is expect­ ed to fare well in the 400 and possibly qualify for the NCAA Indoor Champion­ ships March 10-11. High jumper Jon Shelton hopes to keep his string of placing in every con­ ference meet alive. Shelton placed sec­ ond last year and cleared 7-3 V2 at the Eastman Kodak three weeks ago. Invitational Other Longhorns to watch include Warren Smith, Shea McClanahan and Craig Case in the pole vault; half-milers Rod Elliot, Marcus Reed and Sean Kel­ ly; distance runners Shaun Barnes, Alex Dressel and Ernie Shepard; and Rey Ramirez in the 200 and long jump. — compiled by Derek Castillo Men’s [ olff The Texas men's golf team will partic­ ipate in its first tournament of the spring at the fourth annual Taylor Made/Doral Park National Collegiate Invitational in Miami this weekend. The 18-team tournament hosted by the University of Miami will be at the Doral Park Country Club's Silver Golf Course. Teams will play 18 holes each day, Friday through Sunday. The Longhorns’ top five players com­ ing out of fall play will compete this weekend. Leading Texas will be senior Brian Nelson and recent Massingill Tro­ phy winner junior Brad Agee. Joining them will be sophomores Kyle Jerome and Omar Uresti, as well as freshman John Sosa. Texas Coach Jim Clayton is looking for one of the four experienced players to become consistently good enough to challenge for first place at every tourna­ ment and enhance the team’s chances for high finishes. Nelson, who was a two-time All Southwest Conference selection in 1986-87, but sat out last year because of back surgery, is the most likely can­ didate to take the leading role for the Longhorns. "Brian is really the same caliber of player as Bob [Estes, now on the PGA tour] was back when he was playing well, which was two years ago," said Clayton. Clayton says that the Silver Course at Doral is quite difficult. "It s a hard golf course. It’s real tight and not very long, but there's a lot of water," he said. — compiled by Wayne Hardin VoNeybaH recruiting The national champion Lady Longhorn volleyball team added to its recruiting haul when it received a letter of intent from Errica Hibben Feb. 10. Hibben was a first team Prep All- America on both the AVCA and Reebok lists. As a senior, the 6-1 middle blocker from Las Vegas, Nev., led Bonanza High to the state finals where the team finshed second. Hibben was named most valuable player of the Las Vegas zone playoffs and was a member of the 1988 Junior national team. — compiled by Ray Dise FA IRG RO U N D ATTRACTIO N THE FIRST OK A MILLION KISSES includes *J Tha Woridwtd* #1 Mitt '•Parted" A “Find My Lote" ■ x Y o u r c h a n c e to c h e c k o u t t o d a y ’s n e w m u s ic . . .a n d s a v e ! $ 1 0 " 1 " COMPACT DISC CASSETTE OR LP NO RISK DISCS & TAPES: If not completely satisfied, we’ll exchange it for an item of equal value! C O W B O Y J U N K IE S THE TRINITY SESSION F u t u r e s í á Á s, . . X . - Walking Aliar Midnight ' f i A t A * ® NOW ONLY SOUAD WAREHOUSE JJALE^PFUCE^jOO^rHTOOGI^TUESOAYj^FEBRUAR^ZSTI^QUANTITIESJjIMITEIT BY BAUSCH & LOMB Regular Wayfarer $52.00 Wayfarer II Baiorama Olympian I Olympian II Street Neat Wayfarer Regular $62.00 75.00 108.00 88.00 62.00 Saie $46.50 56.25 81.00 66.00 46.50 S u n G e a K 2420 Guadalupe Sale ends March 5. 1989. Sal# prices good while supplies last. T h e Da il y T e x a n This is a con’s, con’s, dbn's world!: Day 65 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Friday, February 17,1989 Page 9 RITICl HOIC SWEET HONEY IN THE ROCK Sweet Honey in the Rock is a five-woman a cappella singing group (a sixth woman signs lyr­ ics for the deaf) devoted to rais­ ing the consciousness of Ameri­ cans through song. Their music blends gospel, jazz, blues and African elements to create a rich pattern of beautiful sound that is truly unique. Several of the group's mem­ bers hold Ph.Ds, and all are com­ mitted to social service in one form or another. Their songs of­ ten deal with such issues as racial and sexual oppression — but many of them are optimistic in their outlook. Like South Africa's Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Sweet Honey in the Rock is a rare commodity and an electrifying live performance. With all the history that's put into their music, it'U be surpris­ ing if this group doesn't make a little history itself. Sweet Honey in the Rock, at 8 p.m. Saturday at Palmer Audito­ rium. ‘LETTERS FROM A DEAD MAN’ A riveting, nightmarish march through post-apocalyptic Russia, Letters from a Dead Man eulogizes human existence, in all its arro­ gance and humility, with a grim, breathtaking epitath. Soviet filmmaker Konstantin Lopoushansky's morose dirge not only presents the stark deci­ mation of the post-bomb waste­ land with startling immediacy, but also a philosophical retros­ pective of mankind's intellectual and emotional essence — his place as an inhabitant and muti­ lator of the earth. Driven underground by the nuclear assault, a small group of museum employees, as well as a Nobel Prize-winning scientist, ponder the status of the earth and its m ost destructive inhabit­ ants. The shell-shocked scientist mentally composes letters to his dead son while he watches some of his friends die around him and others lose hope. In their final hours, they be­ come sick and dismayed by m an's atrocities. Frustated and resigned, they find themselves questioning the innate hum an senses and drives that created the bomb as well as the need for it. Their pointed musings are powerful and natural — no one makes stilted grand speeches or heroic gestures. In fact, Letters is remarkable not for w hat it says but for what it doesn't say. In addition to mak­ ing everything believable, Lo­ poushansky's restrained script leaves room for individual con­ jecture by the viewer. It's a medi­ tative, brooding study, one that raises poignant questions and ideas about the nature of man­ kind. Even though the subjects are so lofty and powerful, Letters never drops into sentiment or cheap theatrics. Real emotions pour out, and true hum an nature is shown through the group's fi­ nal thoughts and actions. For all thq attacks the shameful and resentful characters make upon mankind, they are actually, in themselves, celebratory exam­ ples of the traits that make man­ kind beautiful. Lopoushansky brings out the best in humanity while his char­ acters angrily point out the worst. By far the most intelligent and contemplative film to hit Austin in some time, Letters is a hauntingly memorable grave­ stone for humanity. Letters from a Dead Man, at 9:40 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 6:30 p.m. Sunday at the Texas Union Theater. Also at 7 p.m. Monday in Hogg Auditorium. Paul Morrissey (shown here with Andy Warhol on the set of My Hustler on Fire Island in 1965) says the Factory’s leader was only interested the producing of films, not in the directing TRASHING CONVENTIONS By R06 WALKER Daily Texan Staff T en me a little L 1 1 9 i I I What made I I 1 I bit about Trash. it from the ¥ 1 other films of that time? . 1 1 i t f l different I I mm | som e o f . It was nothing fascinating. It was just an idea I had to make a film about, basically, hip­ pies. Drug trash. In New York they were never taken seriously as a way of life like they were in California, or England or Germany. They were always just drug addicts. The only thing that I remember at the time is that it always seemed to me that they were a fad. At the time that I made it I thought well, it's one of those funny things, one of those fads that people are so dopey and foolish to believe in. I wanted to do a movie to show people that they're very hum an and live out their life according to their dopey ideas. And that's what it was. The surprise to me was that all the basically trashy ideas of the peri­ od of the '60s went on to become the establishment ideas of the '80s, and they're still in power. That sort of fits in with Spike of Bensonhurst. Yeah, I think I tend to make the same film over and over Again, touch upon the same thing. People who live outside the law make fools of themselves and they're better off inside the law. But the counterculture was kind of foolish and that seemed to be good for a comedy. And it always will be. It was a foolish thing and their ideas were foolish and they were just selfish ideas. Has that time been romanticized? Totally. I think the only accurate picture of it is Trash. You look at other films of that period and you know they sort of try to pass it off as some worthy cause, and that's why they were taking the drugs and de­ stroying their lives. But they never believed in any­ thing, they were just, you know, freaking out on drugs. It was all a bunch of bullshit about having some cause, but that's what they had to justify the story of the mov­ ies with. I'm not against them at all, you'll see in the movie that I really like all the people in the movie but the world they inhabit is just silly. The world of Spike of Bensonhurst is silly, too. In Spike, everyone does the right things for the wrong reasons. Spike is the one who does what he wants, and everyone else is doing what they're supposed to do. He's the one who's the troublemak- The Paul Morrissey Interview Faul Morrissey tells funny stories. Having worked for 14 years with Andy Warhol, conceiving and directing scores of films like Trash, Flesh, Lonesome Cowboys and Chelsea Girls, Morrissey is xiay perceived as a key figure in Warhol's notori- ¿otisly nihilistic Factory. Consequently, his name in­ evitably comes up in discussions of New York's rich underground counterculture arts scene of the mid- 4*% I a 4 a But hum or, a decidedly conventional tool, is the most essential ingredient to Morrissey's tales. Since file earliest of the Warhol films (basically experi­ ments that featured a static camera trained on a sin­ gle object for grueling periods of time — Empire was an eight-hour shot of the Empire State Building), M o rrissey h as evolved into a unique writer-director whose more recent works —■ particularly his 1988 film Spike of Bensonhurst — have gained him increas­ ing critical respect. Yet the early films, though steeped in their cultur­ al context, have stood the test of time. Critic Danny Peary called Trash — the 1970 docs film shirring Joe Dallesandro as a directionless junk­ ie named Joe, and female impersonator Holly Wood* lawn as Joe's 'scavanging nymphomaniac live-in girlfriend — "oddly moving, because here are rare screen characters whose predicaments are worth caring about." ntar Morrissey discussed Trash (currently showing at Dobie Cinema), Spike of Bensonhurst, and his peculiar philosophies on film in a recent phone interview from his home in New York City. er. He's the one who might've been a hippie 25 years ago. But in a good community they knock down that stupidity and that overbearing thing, people doing what they want to do. Were you surprised about the positive press on Spike? I was amazed. I thought I got all my good reviews on Trash and Heat and that I'd never get those reviews again. I gave up years ago thinking that I'd get good reviews. Are you conscious of picking such beautiful people to be in your films? I don't know if they're beautiful, but I'm very conscious that people in movies should look like they be­ long in a movie, not just sort of somebody on the subway. I do a lot of stylization in the mov­ ies I make because in one sense they're almost more realistic than any other movies I've ever seen. I think I tell the story realistically about the way life is. For some rea­ son too many movies are frightened about being truthful about the way people are. In the past 20 years, good looks have been sort of pushed into a bad category, and people like Burt Rey­ nolds are made fun of. But the peo­ ple who have dominated the film in­ dustry from the beginning to now are people like Clint Eastwood, peo­ ple who have a larger-than-life ap­ pearance. And there's something more hon­ est about making a movie with a movie-type person in it than a per­ son who's passing themselves off as just "real." All that passing yourself off as "real" is a lot of crap. And I love also the idea that they pass off these actors as real in these phony stories. I'm also reactionary against so much that goes on, not just the do­ pey fads of things like hippies but the fads of things like acting and the" Trash director Paul Morrissey fads of storytelling and styles of be­ havior. My movies can be defined by what they don't do, almost more than what they dd. I never have people scream at one another, I never have people get emotional, which I find abhorrent. If you watch Gone with the Wind, no­ body ever screams at one another, nobody ever makes faces. You know, actors now, they all love to make faces, and this is bad acting of the worst kind. Just over and over and over again you see these people on the. clips promoting there Academy > Award-nominated performances, they're screaming with their face twisted in agony while they sincere­ ly scream some shit at some other actor. This, to me, is horrible. And I leave all these things out and go for lightness and spontaneity. So do you draw on influences from that period of film history, more so than contemporary films? Well, I don't do that consciously. I just think traditionally it's so in­ grained in me I couldn't do it any other way. I've never used people from the school of acting where they're all mooding it up, you know what I mean? All that method shit. "Really living the part." Or the other thing where they're living the part 24 hours a day, preparing for the part, studying for the part. Can you imagine Clark Gable or Gary Cooper studying for the part? Humphrey Bogart living the part af­ ter hours? This is the phoniest shit, from actors who can't act. Yet, I'm in the minority. People never talk about the good acting in the movies I make, they always talk about how good these other people are, so you know, obviously I'm doing something wrong. How did you find some of these like Sasha Mitchell as people, Spike? When it comes time to make a film you just keep your mind open to know that people have personali­ ties and if you look for them, you'll find them. You know, I had written the thing and there he was and I said, you know, "You're perfect, that's it." I didn't cast him, I didn't put him on tape or work with him on the part. Garbage. I'm not part of the film industry, and I'm not even part of whatever would be the independent film in­ dustry. I'm not even sure what there is or if there is one, but I just do it my own way. And I find myself doing it my own way, very isolated. People always ask me, "Those films, they were very well-known. Didn't you think they influenced people?" And I've always said, "No, I don't think they influenced anybody." I don't think anybody picked up the idea of these as per­ sonalities as opposed to these pho­ ny acting school actors. Why'd you go into film? I like to tell stories, I like to tell comical stories about people's lives. You see life in a humorous way, that's the movie. Where did the story for Spike come from? (Laughs) Oh, I made it up. What about Trash? That's what they were like, peo­ ple were dopey. But the journalistic idea, and all these awful movies in the past 10 years about how these people in the '60s get together and think about how they wasted their opportunities to do good in the world, all that's shit. People weren't doing any good, they were just taking drugs as much as they could and having orgies be­ cause they thought it was fashion­ in San Francisco able. Morons might've thought they had a big message, but they were all so drugged up, how could they figure out what was what? I never thought so much of the period. I think there's an endless number of stories about people whose lives are mixed up. And they're both treated humorously, and the actors are spontaneous and they say things you wouldn't expect them to say. So I think you know, I'm kind of repeating the same kind of thing, just in a slightly different way. Was Trash made at a point when Andy really didn't have much di­ rect involvement? I made it by myself, and Andy paid the bills and he saw it when it was finished and pasted together, and he liked it. Andy financed it; it didn't cost very much. But Andy, no, he was never in­ volved in directing or storymaking. He wanted to produce films, only. The early ones were experiments, and he produced those and I made them for him, and they were little bit minus direction and minus plot, then eventually came more story, more direction. But I've always played down the role of the director and played up the role of the performer and the character. The character carries the story, not the brilliant technique of the director. I think with director's technique, the less there is the bet­ ter. The more of it there is the more it calls attention to itself, the more time it takes up, the less time the characters and the actors have. Those things are consistent with the experiments. I helped him do what he wanted and he let me do whatever I w ant­ ed. And everything couldn't have been nicer. Not many people could ever find a producer like that. He was a nice person. People who worked for him usually stayed working for him. The real story wasn't that excit­ ing. It was amusing but nothing, you know, extraordinary. We were just a little bit outside of doing what everybody expected you to do. But that doesn't make you so extraordi­ nary, it just makes you a little bit different, that's all. Danson, Rossellini make surprisingly good ‘Cousins’ By ELAINE PINCKARD Daily Texan Staff \Cousins, th e newest remake of a French origi- ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ nal to arrive on th e A m erican m o v ie s c e n e , may be the most successful trans­ lation of the burich. Other films that have recently made the transition from French farce to American comedy indude ¡The Toy, Three Men and a Baby and 1Three Fugitives. While these films fell somewhat flat on their American­ ized faces, the light-hearted Cousins, inspired by Jean-Charles Tacchella's Cousin, Cousine, keeps itself upright [by using subtle ethnic flavorings provided by accomplished Italian- pn bo: ■ m actress Isabella Rossellini and the breathtaking scenery of Van­ couver, British Columbia. Joel Schumacher (St. Elmo's Fire, 'The Lost Boys) directs this whimsical view through the silk stocking of love where everything looks sort of gauzy and filled with light. Cousins jdtpicts life as a lovely fanfs&sy full of weddings — not one, not two, but three nuptial beginnings are fea­ tured — babies, feisty old people and video performance art. This film puts a new twist on the meddlesome problem of how to deal with philandering husbands and straying wives. When Tish (Sean Young) and Tom (William Petersen) begin a mindless, superfi­ cial liaison, their respective mates Larry (Ted Danson) and Maria (Ros­ sellini) strike u p a warm friendship. This drives the first pair into a jealous (not to mention hypocritical) rage which spoils their licentious fun. The real attraction of the movie centers on Larry and Maria's budd­ ing relationship. Both characters are impossible to dislike, since neither one possesses any bad qualities. As the understanding husband who ends up falling for the wife of his own mate's lover, Danson seems to have finally broken free from his "Sam Malone" persona. He pre­ sents himself here as an adept actor portraying a guy who is charming, handsome and courteous to old la­ dies. One has to wonder why Tish would collapse into the arms of a brain-dead simian like Tom with such a swell husband as Larry. Rossellini would probably be dif­ ficult to hate in any rote. This is es­ pecially true with her rendition of Maria, an adoring mother and de­ voted wife. She performs glowingly as a kind woman whose childlike at­ titude allows her to cope successful­ ly with her husband’s infidelities C O U SIN S Starring: Ted Danson, Isabella Rossellini, Lloyd Bridges Director: Joel Schumacher Playing at: The Arbor 4, 10000 Research Blvd.; and the Westgate 8, 4521 Westgate Blvd. Rating: ★★★ (out of four) and her daughter's precociousness. Her grace coincides perfectly with Danson's charm to create a picture- perfect pair. With the recent press Sean Young has received as being a "difficult" actress, it is tough to separate her role here from her public persona. As Tish, Young is little more than annoying. She is an insecure, wit­ less woman who feels short­ changed by her own good looks; Young handles this confused per­ sonality perfectly. In smaller roles, Norma Aleandro portrays Maria'a^, mother Edie, and Lloyd Bridges plays Larry's father, Vince. Both add an extra dimension of appealing hum or to the film and provide insight into what the older generation thinks of all this ro­ mance stuff. inclusion of Larry's son, The Mitch (Keith Coogan), provides Cousins with its ultimate American flair. Coogan percolates in his goofy portrayal of a politically disenchant­ teen-ager-video-performance- ed Lariy and Lada share a romantic rendezvous in the charming Cousin*. artist. The attention paid to these smaller roles helps fill out this mov­ ie and allows it to escape the danger of appearing hackneyed and flat. ground of British Columbia pro­ vides a final statement that life is full of sunsets and afternoons drip­ ping with sunshine. The story's odd twists and idiosyncratic characters make Cousins feel like a long-await­ ed spring breeze. It is to Schumacher's credit that these actors perform with such flair and style. The gorgeous back­ T A V E R N ~N - s-— ..... * * — - - •N Tonight ★he R e iv e rs J a v e lin B o o t Satúrela y S h o u ld e rs W a te r the D o g H a n d o l G lo r y ^ a r c FEAST FOR TWO * $ 1 4 . 5 0 * (tpguior $19.40) ■ 0MS(M) Vino ds Can ■ M y id chotee o f entrece: • Spaghetti smothered in tomato mushroom sauce e Buttery spinach noodbs Pvmesan e Pasta with sauleed mushrooms a Sinful Chocolate Layer Cake a I I I I I 6 2 4 W . 3 4 th S t . M-Sat 11:30-11:30 Sun 11 00-10:00 V . 4 5 1 -9 6 6 5 Tonight Grammy Award Nominees T h e N a s h v ille B ln grass B and Special Guest: Mike Landechoot Saturday The Best Band Hi the Universe T h e Lounge L izard s Texas Union 24tty & G u a d a lu p e T e x a s U n io n 2 4 t h & G u a d a lu p e BACK ROOM CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD TONITE: LIVE IN CONCERT C I N E M A R K T H E A T R E S C L U B HAPPY HOUR: Mon.-Fri. 5 to 8 40 Foot Buffet LADIES NITE: TUESDAY & THURSDAY LADIES DRINKS FREE 8 to 11 75C LADIES DRINKS 11 to 2 A M EVERY WEDNESDAY CHEAP THRILL NITE All D rinks 75* $2 C o ve r 0 -1 1 (Exciud Bet-U-Can t & bottles of champagne) EVERY THURSDAY $200 SEXY LEGS CONTEST SUNDAY SINGLES HOTLINE PARTY C O M IN G A T T R A C T IO N S FEB. 22: GIANT STEPPS MARCH 22: LATOYA JACKSON M A N O W A R plus: Skullduggery and Zero Tolerance 2 4 0 D ra ft 7 -2 Tomorrow: A 4 Band Party Tues: SACRED REICH 110 E RI VERSI DE 4 41 - 5 4 9 8 ■ 2015 E. Riverside 4 4 4 -R O C K ★ ★ ★ ★ ! WARM, SENSITIVE AND FUNNY!” C B S - T V L O S A N G E L E S “Passionate, sincere, funny and honest.” J o hn H R i c h a r d s o n . L O S A N G E L E S DAILY N E W S T H U M B S UP!” R o g e r Ebert. S I S K E L & E B E R T “Funny and touching. Harvey Fierstein and Anne Bancroft are excellent. YOU SHOULD SEE IT!” D i x i e W h at l e y AT THE M O V I E S Torch so>g Trilogy NEW LINE CINEMA PRESENTS A HOWARD G0TTEKIED/K0NALD K. FIERSTEIN PKMIM ITIUN f PAUL BOGART n, . “TORCH S0NC. TRILOGY” starring ANNE BANCROFT, MATTHEW BRODERICK, HARVEY FIERSTEIN BRIAN KERWIN ALSO STAKKJVi KAREN YOUNG . Ml Ml ADAPTED RY PETER MATZ • ASS1KIATE PROIMCEK MARIE CANTIN EXE 11 TIYE PKOIM ( EK RONALD K. FIERSTEIN • SCREENPI AY BY HARVEY FIERSTEIN RASED ON His PI AY PKOIM t ED RY HOWARD GOTTFRIED • DIRECTED RY PAUL BOGART ORM.INAI nO| N0TKAI k t'N I 0 0 ( nourv snwo ’ R -: j . NEW LINE CINEMA PR ESID IO THEATRES 1 1 : 2 5 - 1 : 5 5 - 4 : 3 0 I H X 6406 IH 35 North 454-6469 7 : 2 0 - 9 : 5 5 C E [ DOLBY STEREO General Cinema [BARGAIN M A T IN IIS EVERY DAY ■ A ll SHOW! BEFORE 6 PM ■ H IG H L A N D 10 M IDDLE FISKVILUE ROAD 454 SAME DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES ★ BU RBS pq ™ x 12:302:505:107:309:50 [ t h x * I’M GONNA GIT YOU SUCKA n 12:45 2:55 5r05 7:25 9:35 HX ★ BEACHES 3 12:15 2.-40 5:05 7:30 9:55 ★ TRUE BELIEVER n 12:453:005:157:309:45 ★ HER ALIBI n 12:392:455:007:309:30 ★ THREE FUGITIVES Pon 1:003:155:307:409:50 ★ TAP M213 12:002:254:507:159:40 ★ BILL & TED’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE k 12:00 2:00 4:00 6:00 8:0010:00 ★ WHO IS HARRY CRUM B? P013 12:00 2:004:00 6:008:0010:00 ★ WORKING GIRL n 12:00 2:30 5:00 7:3010:00 H IG H L A N D M A L L HIGHLAND MALL BLVD. 451-7326 SHIS ' ★ FLY Hr ‘ ’ 003 105:207:309:50 ‘ TW INS m 1:103:20 5:30 7:409:50 B A R T O N C R E E K M O PAC o f LOOP 360 327-8261 SAME DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES ★ B U R B S Po 1:003:105:20 7:309:40 « ★ ACCIDENTAL TOURIST pq 12:002:254:507:159:40 ★ BEACHES Pats 12:302:555:207:4510:10 ★ FLY Mr 12:35 3:00 5:35 8:0010:15 TW INS po 1:003:155:30 7:4510:00 I JOIN THE TSP EXPRESS! J ftü fU ilM h I_______ Texas Stndent P u b licstlon s M O V I E S 1 2 I Village @ 3 Points 251-7773 Tues. A l Show s $2.50 Except The R v I I 1 T H E B U R B S ™ 1:003:155:307:4510:00 H E R A L IB I @3i tnx 12:30 3:00 5:15 7:30 9:45 THE FLY II ® 12:15 2:30 5:00 7:45 10:00 B E A C H ES E m 12:00 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 BILL & TED S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE 12:452:454:45 7:009:00 gel TRUE BELIEV ER m 12:002:154:45 7:009:15 G LEEM IN G THE CUBE 12:302:455:00 7:159:30 RAIN M AN m 1:304:15 7:009:45 TW INS m 12:002:30 5:00 7:309:45 M IS S IS S IP P I BURNING 1:154:30 7:159:45 W HO’S HARRY C R U M B ? m m 12:45 3:155:15 7:159:15 THREE FUGITIVES tPcTai 12:152:455:30 7:4510:00 $2.50 All shows before 6pm | N O P A S S E s j ( 1 2 : 2 0 - 2 :3 0 - 5 :0 5 ) - 7 :4 0 - 1 0 :2 0 - 1 2 :2 5 M I u v I DANGEROUS J n A LIA ISO N S I III! DOLBY STEREO j 1( 1 1 :5 5 - 2 : 2 5 - 4 : 5 5 ) - 7 :3 0 - 1 0 :0 5 - 12:35 JAMES WOODS ROBERT DOWNPf, JR. J f J H X I X IfnoiB. | <1 2 :4 0 - 2 :5 0 - 5 : 1 5 ) - 7 :4 5 - 1 0 : 1 5 - 1 2 :3 0 TRUE BELIEVER NO ___ P ASSES C a ifa s ( 1 2 :3 0 - 2 :4 5 - 5 : 1 0 ) - 7 :5 0 - 1 0 :3 0 - 12:40 NO FREE P A S S E S M H f u g it iv e s b HNO FREE P ASS ES ( 3:00-5:15) -7:40-9:45 ¡p^l5| H E R A L I B I ( 2 . 5 5 - 5 : 1 0 ) 7 :4 5 - 1 0 : 0 0 D ir t y R o t t en S c o u n d r e l s ( 2 : 5 0 - 5 : 2 5 ) - 7 : 5 0 - 9 :5 5 - L J = ! A UMij J " GLCAMINC THE OOtBY STgP1€0~) m c u b e ^ ^ H ( 2 :4 5 -5 :3 0 ) - 7 : 5 5 - 1 0 : 0 5 _______ (2 :3 Q - 5 : 0 0 ) - 7 : 4 0 - 10:05 f l l . g r üBEl A N K S B i l l a n d T e d ’s E x c e l l e n t A d v e n t u r e DO 1 OQtBV STEREO | P G ¡ N Q E R E E | t i [001 by SI tnrp] N O F R E E P A S S E S IPG) ( 2 - 5 5 - 5 : 2 0 ) - 7 : 4 5 - 1 0 : 0 0 Page 10/THE D A IL Y TEXAN/Friday, February 17,1989 n A n *100 ALL DAY^I ALL S E A T S -A L L SH O W S J V WESTGATE U v H j p 4P08 W ESTGATE BLVD cfra» G Jodie Foster and Kelly McGKHs In THE ACCUSED »:00 7:30 10:00 lit! Walt Disney's OLIVER & COMPANY 5:00 7:00 9: JO I I Golden Globe s Best Actor/Comedy Tom Honks In 4:45 7:15 9:4ft E3 B ,G ^ y J C TIMES PUBLISHED a r e f o r TODAY ONLY ") I Bridge Creek 8 Behind Chilis Restaurant HWY 183 at I-35 467-9772 Student Prices $3 Mon.-Thurs. With ID Same Day Tickets on Sale When Box Office Opens N A K E D G U N PoTsi 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 O L IV E R A N D C O M P A N Y 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 PHYSICAL EVIDENCE 1:45-3:45-5:45-7:45-9:45 D E E P S T A R S I X ® 1:40-3:40-5:40-7:40-9:40 M I S S I S S I P P I B U R N IN G 1:00-3:15-5:30-7:40-9:55 F IS T S O F S T E E L 1 1:00-3.00-5:00-7:00-9:00 G L E E M IN G T H E C U B E m 1:10-3:15-5:30-7:30-9:30 c o c o o n ii m 1:00-3:10-5:20-7:30-9:40 A U STIN 6 A D U L T V I D E O C E N T E R O P E N 24 HOURS 5 2 1 T H O M P S O N O F F 1 0 3 1 M IL E S O . o f M O N T Q P O L IS Phone 3 8 5 - 5 3 2 8 M 69 PU M P STREET 7 x T x ) B INSIDE LAUREL C A N Y O N (XXX\ 2 FOR 1 TAPE RENTAL MON. WED. A FRL $ 14.95 TITLES d e v i l in m ie s j o n e s D E B S IE D O E S D A L L A S DEEP T H R O A T OTHER TITLES IN STO CK i TA PES A S LOW A S Stt.M. THE 3402 QUAPALUPBW ^J/IRSITY 474-4351 $125 All Seats I All Shows, TOM H A N KS B IG FolJl 5:109:30 11:30 ______________ JOOH POST THE ACCUSED SCROOGED MYSTIC PIZZA 515 7:15 11:30 Departm ent of DRAM A C o lle g e of Fine Arts, The U n iv e r sity of T e x a s at A u stin MAN IS MAN by Bertolt Brecht Galy Gay, a simple docker in British India, sets out to buy a fish and encounters three soldiers who transform him into a human war-machine. Join us for a savage comedy about the manipulation of human personality, with music by Paul Dessau. February 16-18, 21-25 Theatre Room Tickets are on sale at all UTTM TicketCenters. Charge-a-Ticket: 477-6060. Advance Sales. Sweet Honey in the Rock! 1st Austin Concert Since *84 P.A.C. Sellout Sat. Feb 18th 8pm Palmer Aud. $10.50 in adv. $12.50 at door Tickets at Waterloo, Book Woman, Sound Exchange, Harmony House, Bookpeopla's Gaia Records, Oet Willie's, or Sundance in San M arcos C osp onsored by KAZI Community Radio, the Austin Chronicle, and the Peace & Justice Education Fund Signed for the Hearing Impaired T A D O R "An insistently raffish comedy...The movie looks terrific, acted with absolute, straight-faced conviction by tne excellent cast." -Vincent Can by, New York Times "Hilarious and outlandish!" -VA Musetto, The New York Post "One of the most original and entertaining of the new films from abroad... A fantasia of passion!" -Pauline Keel, The New Yorker "Outrageous and hilarious! Keeps you gasping and ing chuckling at tne same time." -David Arisen, Newsweek A " L 0 V E ÍT T O D E A T H ” comedy from the Director ■ of "W hat Have I Done .', and "L a w of Desire" 4 :4 5 -7 :1 5 -9 :3 0 m m t u É M I V >u»4 mi0ih«irh»>»wl in Amtrin x H 4:30-11:45 H ANDY W ARHOL'S TRASH 12:00 D Q B IE A T B 1 H E [ 2 1 St and Guadalupe 477-1324 W OM EN'S FILM FESTIVAL A W I N T E R T A N V I R G I N M A C H I N E 7,00 «.is Calor Oaky Showtlre s ¡TODAY’S TIMES THE BEST MOVIE PRICE IN TOWN ¿ n m c THERE IS A DIFFERENCE 4:30-6 PM EVERY DAY DESIGNATED BY ( ) MATINEES IN ITALICS [$075 CHILDREN H U H TWILITE I [$ 0 7 5 STUDENT 1 MATINEf I WESTGATE MALL S LAMAR & BEN WHITE 892 2696 BLL A TED’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE 22P(5: IS (d S2.75)-7; 20-9:35 COUSINS _____ 2:OD<5:15 (d $2.751-7:30-9:45 TRUE BELIEVER B ______ 2: >0(5:28 fe 02.76>-7:4O*:66 WHO'S HAHRY CRUMB? Eoiftl * >0(4:56 @ 52.78>-7:104:25 I I H H r a m m a n ^ H >50(5:06 @ 02.75)-7:4O-10:16 WORKMGGRL B 2.-00(5:06 @ <2.78)-7:a04:46 ■ 1:50(5:28 @ 9 p mm m 249(5:36 «S2.7S) W 540-1046 I RIVERSIDE 8 RIVERSIDE & PLEASANT VALLEY RD. 448 0008 I’M GONNA GET YOU SUCKA Q 230(6:46 (a S2.78h6:16-10:30-12:30 TRUE BELIEVER (B 2:20(5:10(g>2.75)-7:40-10:00-12:06 GLEAMING THE CUBE Ipgjs] 20X6:20 @ >2.75)-7:26-9:30-11:80 2:29(5:36 (a FLY II ® “ ' >-10:20-12.30 TAP pern 2-20(5:26 ® 82.76)-7:36-10:10-12:20 BEACHES ¿ E ll 2 >0(5:00 g S2.7S)-746-0:46-1246 IS P P I BURNING IS 2>2.76>-7:16-0:46-12:16 H ER A LIBI m 200(5:20 @ t ? 1220 NORTHCROSS MALL ANDERSON 4 BURNET 4S4-5147 THE BU RBS m 240(5:16 ft >2.75)-7:3fr0:46-11:60 BLLATHTSEXCaLBrrADVENTURE iffl 2 1 0 ( .71 ■ ' 1:86 ■ GUEAMMOTMiCUK FCBI 200(540 « 63.75^7:40-1040-1214 (HORROR (40 AM B Al >45(4:30 ® 9 2 / 0 : 6 6 HER ALCII B IB 21*446 ® TAP EB ■ >.<0 (540e 927M.740G46 > :1&1216 Í Ü O U M M 4 I 1500sP U E A S A lTnJA nFV M ^^^^^^^^^^^5^1 j i 1 f 9 4 A 2 1 M 4 0 m T N E ^ C U M B BSO 9 00-10: QUMRAOO. m 1 t o v m w o o o 2 11423 W BEN WHITE L _ " i P *90-740 1 an H I _______ 540-740*45________ in ia o o im d B ____________ M O_________ lal1 fcj*?:***11** ® OLNMUCO. I I *1*7:16 442 2 3 3 3 1 | E T h e D a i l y T e x a n CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING M For Word Ads, cail 471-52i4/For Display Ads, call 471-8900/8 a m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitis Friday, February 17,1989 Page 11 VISA/MasterCard Accepted THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS J M N S F O E T A T J O N ^ TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 1 0 — M isc. A utos 2 0 — Sports-Foreign 7 0 — M otorcyd— RENTAL —I RENTAL ■ RENTAL 3 5 0 — Rental Services 3 6 0 — Pum . A pts. 3 6 0 — Fum . Apts. Autos '81 TOYOTA CEUCA GT LB Excel Con D sun roof, 70,000 mdes, AC, Power brakes, $2900 Firm. 448-3375 2-8-15- NC 73 PORSCHE 914 Exceden! condrton, AC, adoy wheels, Pirodi's, 100% stock, kept $2995. 280-3085. 2-8- 1988 TOYOTA TERCEL 2-door Sedan, «vise, central AM/FM castalia, PS 5- •paad, 24,000 mdes. 442-3747. 2-16- 15NC Í988 FORD ESCORT GT PS, PB, crusie control, AAA/FM cassette, 5 speed, 16.000 rules. 442-3747.2-16-15NC PORSCHE 924 New motor, 4-speed, AC, AM/FM cassette, sun roof, Ptoedi tiros, «rierior excallont $3950 331-0067. 2-9- 15NC 1973 MERCEDES 450 SIC super buy, new paint, tiros, sunroof. Below loon, hurry! >8500. 1-847-3619. 2-15-15NC 1980 AAAZDA 626. Rum groat, 5-speed, oc, om/fcn, $1400 or best offer. 258- 6551.2-1S-1SN C_________________ 77 LANCIA SCORPION. Rebuilt engine, 53.000 original miles. Needs minor body work. $3,750 060 . 451-8916. 2- 16-15NC_______________________ 1980 VW SCIROCCO: 5 speed, V C , V - pine steroo/cosselto, $2450. 6724 Bur- nat, 450-0128. 2-17-15NC-F_________ 1979 CHEVROtET CORVETTE: 350 LT1 tops, automatic, loodad, romovobb $6950. 6724 Burnat, 450-0128. 2-17- 15NC-F 1985 NISSAN 300SX T-top, automatic, loodad, evan tolb to youl $8950. 6724 Bumat, 450-0128. 2-17-15NC-F_______ CAMARO Z-28 79. Block, axcaotionnl condition. Potant 305. Auto, VC , Posi- ♦roction. 79,000 miles. $3600. 477- 7208.2-17-15NC BLACK 88V5 SuZuki Samurai rogtop, 5- speed, cassette, $8500. 451-8441 (leove messoge). 2-13-5B____________ 1978 HONDA Civic: Rum good. New fires. $750.480-9479. 2-14-5B-F 1980 BLUE HONDA 2-door, hatchback, 5-speed, AAA/FM cassette, AC, excellent mpg. Rum great. $1000. 495-9494. Leove messoge. 2-14-58 1978 TOYOTA COROLLA hatchback. 5- speed, good condition, AC, AAA/FM cassette, new tiros. $500. 476-9017 leove messoge. 2-16-5B____________ .'82 ACCORD. AC, stereo, 5-speed, cloth interior, $2000, 447-6893 leave 1 m e s- soge. Owner. 2-16-58 1980 MAZDA 626 5-speed, AC, stereo, doth interior, $1500. 447-6893 owner. 2-16-58________________________ 1984 CRESSIDA 73,000 miles, sunroof, leather, 5-speed, loaded, $5,900. 472- 2299.2-17-1B____________________ PORSCHE 914 - '87 Iroch red, 916 front end, 911 hubs, Pirodi's, excellent interior, $2795. AAust sed soon. 477-5843. 2-17- 58_________________ 1984 FIREBIRD Perfect, immaculate, V8- 305. New Pirodi's, $4850. 335-6745. 2-17-58________________________ 3 0 — Trucks-Vans 1984 Bronco II. Low mileage, 4-speed w/ OD, 4X4, AAA/FM, AC. Exceden! condi­ tion $6650.836-2110. 5-9 CLASSIC 1962 Ford Vi ton truck. Desir­ able uni-t able uni-body style. $1000 or best offer. Cad 453- 3-4990 2-14-5P 1983 FORD RANGER, V-6 camper shell, one owner, well maintained, solid, strong, $2495, 474-8567 2-14-5B '86 TOYOTA CARGO VAN. Original owner. Clean. 21,000 miles. Cod Fred Getchell-474-1902. Use answering ma­ chine. 2-14-5B 7 0 — M otorcycles Check-out our 21-point Tune-up 1 Ctaerv replace air cleaner. 2. Check fuel system, c in pefcock bond. 3. Change edB Nler. 4. Change spark plugs 5 Adjust cam chain. 6. Adjust vetoes. 7 CtoarVteptoce points & set > 7 6 AAUSTANG V6 RUNS goodl could >*• some work. $750 or beet offer 451- $549. Christina 2-10-15NC__________ ¿987 CUTLASS SUPREME Brougham Coupe gray exterior V8 one owner 18.000 miles $8900. 327-8490, 892- 0383 2-10-I5NC-E________________ 1984 NISSAN AAAX1AAA ExcdUnt condi- •ion.NieeFamdycar. Fudyloaded.AAust sed. $4500.476-4011.2-3-20NC 1981 BUICK Century fimited, 4-door, Mperdean, 49,000 miles. $2400,836- 5629.2-15-15NC_________________ 1985 REGAL LIMITED, loaded with oil option excellent condition. Rodials, S & íS T a T ” M5-7’” X CHEW C A H K E donfc n M c bronze, 4-door, automatic A/C AM/ EM, new trammiseon, great on lona trips, 99,000mi, $1200. 338-4898. 2-17- 15NC 1984 BUICK REGAL Limited. 2-tone grey, 55.000 mdes, wire wheels, cassette, ex- cedent condition. $5,295. 288-2659. 2- 16-58 __________________ 1983 FORD Escort V C PB, PS, new ex- houst voivas, bock brakes. Best offer. 451-4157.2-17-5S-F_______________ 2 0 — Sports-Foreign Autos 1984 NISSAN 200SX AC, 2-door hatehbock,loaded, 5-speed, AM/FM cassette, dean. $4950. TK 3421 N lomor 453-5306. 5-9____________ CLASSIC 1966 MERCEDES 230SL Rood- star. Serious inquiries only $12,000. CPI book overage $14.500.264-1616. 5-9 1983 DATSUN 280ZX 5-speed, T-tops, low mileage, Alpine A/C AAA/FM, Alarm system. $7000 453-1359 12-19 1978 MGB BEAUTIFUL blue body. Many new parts, rum and looks like new, 42.000 mi, $3450.441-0735 5-9 1979 MERCURY CAPRI Cleon cor, V-6, AM/FM, peed. $1290. Robin,343- 0557. 12-19 _____________ 1978 FIAT SPIDER convertible. Deep bur- gondy. New paint job, top, Pirelli tiros. Leather interior. AM M cassette stereo. Air conditioning. Rebuilt engine. $2950. 448-7296 5-9________ _________ 1978 CEUCA. 5-SPEED, VC , FM/AM, rum spectoculor. $1395. Cad 78K m 837-9216. (Weekdays offer 7pm) Best offer! 1-31-15-8-D__________ 1973 PORSCHE 914 rebuilt engine and Jrammission i ay an, biktoins, stain­ less steel heat exchangers $3100 day- 338-3253 Night-454-42S4.1-31-15-8 1984 RED NISSAN Pulsar: 5-speed, per­ fect condition inside/ out, original owner, never wrecked, 70,000 miles $4000. 442-5331 leave message. 1-31- 1S-B-C ______________ ^ 1985 318* BMW, black, sunroof, 5-speed, knmoculatel $9750 or best offer. 452- 2813. 2-1-15NC_________________ 1987 BLUE HYUNDAI, Excel GL, groat AM/FM/Coss, A C sunroof, 5 speed, $5600, must sed 477-9842. 2-2-15NC-K 1978 TOYOTA CELICA Uftbock. Super condition, rebuilt engine, A C AM/FM cassette, 5 speed. $2,850. 467-7633. __________________ 2-2-15NC 1973 VOIKSW AGON KARMANA Ghia, Good condition, new brakes. Make offer. Rondi 467-0963 2-2-15-NC 1982 RED RX7 GS, 5 speed, sunroof, al- by wheels, A C Alpine stereo, CD play­ er, 51X Groat condition. $4,900 negoti- obto. 469-0700 2-3-72NC-A_______ 7 8 FIAT SPIDER red convertible, 5- speed, AM/FM cassette, like new, $3100.259-5559.2-3-15NC________ '87 YUGO 5-speed AM/FM radio, 30.000 mdes, rum groat, extra dean. $2,925.259-5559.2-3-15NC_______ 1980 0ATSUN 210 5-speed, 4 door, AC, rod. 88,000 mdes. Ajana $800. Call 482-0954 after 6pm. 2-3-15NC 1984 MITSUBISHI Station ES, immocu- k 59K, loodad, 5 spaad, turbo, onti- bek brakes, custom point, tint, louvers. sadl $5975. 499-0448. 2-7- Must 15NC-K________________________ 1982 HONDA Accord, 4-door, 5-spaad, A C PS, AM/EM, cassette. Groat sht $3,800. 450-1987 after 5:00. 2-6- 15N£________________ 1988 HONDA CIVIC. 4-door, 5-speed, A C low miboga. Excellent condition. $10,000. Between 6-11 pm. 445-6227 after 11pm 444-1912.2-10-15NC 1982 MAZDA RX-7 GSL Block, 5-speed, boded, adoys, sunroof, AC, 61X per­ fect. $450Q/neg. 442-0441. 2-13-15NC * Q a n d by Aw word. 15 word minimum. Sal in 5 pi typo only. Rots» ora for comacu- ttvadoys. m . ih W ^ A i H H H H Ifime . 6 t* Eoch ward S h w Cadi word 10 frees Each ward 15 frets Eoch word 20 Sms» w . . . $ M . . . $ .90 . . . $1.35 . . . $2. . . . I2.7Ü • ■.par marión . y. Fad two laáarv 25t for <1.00 chergs to dionaaM ^ B may ba ol capad IHaw. 2! oddMonol wocj in capital Imitare. by Iba Ena. Ona column inch mini- *Ch mum. Awolable in 5 to 14 pt type, 1 eoL x 1 indi 1 Tana................ $7.80 . . .Friday 11am . .Monday 11am . . Tuaoday Horn Wednesday 11am . Thursday 11am TO FIA C S A W O O O O t U N I AO C A U i 471-5244 c L A s n ra o O EO M A IT A D O A m _____________ * O by Am cofcjmn inch. Ona column mdi minimum. A variety al typa focan and ÉMondbonlifisvaibBli. Fal Rala* Sapt 1-May 30 1 to 49 cobawn india* N r Month ................$7.80 Far Column Indi Ovor 50 coi. in. par month, col for rots*, n A11W TD M IF T A T PCAPHN8 QCM BBUil Monday............... Wodnatdoy, 4 pjn. Tumdoy . '................ Thursday, 4 pjn. Wodnssdoy.................Fridoy,4pm Thursdoy.................. Monday, 4 pm. Tuandoy, 4 pm. Fridoy.............. T O M A C IA C IA O M F IID DISPLAY AD, CALL: 4 7 1 - 5 9 ______ In Am mm* alanatn mad» in an adnaidnnmnid. ndlce mud be pken by 11 am. die *rd day, ■ die pAfcban am laipomMi lor only ONE Inconad fen At dakm for adhfisnl» ahovid be moda nal loto dwn 30 dayi oftsr puMcoSon Repaid Mb lawtm aadd dp d laqueded d fin el eanmldton and I amount encaadi $2jOO.S8p mud baprmemedfaro reorder adb- dee ore non- bi 90 dam to ba w8d Cr CLASSIFICATIONS 1 I 1 0 -M la c.A w to a 1 0 — Sporta-Fore ign A u fo t * - 4 0 — V aM d e e toT re sto 9V — 9 V rY m -n p a N wmmmm AA—e----- t- _ 'W “ m »nw%7**99 0 0 — O kyd u A dr _d ---—a l im RIAL ESTATE SALKS 110— So rvk o o 13 0 — H o u a m 13 0 — Con d oa Town h eu— a 140— AAob Wa H ew aa Lota — cr n r lo ta 1 *0 — Puptoxu— 1 70— ¡¡¡SST** 1 0 0 -L o o n s MERCHANDISE 10 0 — AppW oncos 3 0 0 — Fum H uro -H ouaahold 1 1 0 — O o ro o TV 2 2 0 — C onvp utirs* 3 7 0 — 4nory- Iq iilp n M n l 3 0 0 — C porHn f Com pin g 3 0 0 — F u m d u rs-A-AppNa 3 1 0 — Trodo 3 3 0 — W ontod to B u y MERCHANDISE 3 3 0 — Fdta RENTAL ANNOUNCIMINTS 5 1 0 — H e r N i meant Tkfcote $ 3 0 — T r v d l - $ 4 0 — Loaf A Found 5 5 0 — Uconaod C h id C orn 5 7 0 — M u sk M u sld o n a EDUCATIONAL 5 0 0 — TutoH no ¡¡¡|| y * 0 0 — In s t r v c H o n ^ K * 1 0 — AAlac. In stru cHon SERVICES * 3 0 — U g n H arvtcae B * 7 0 — Po in tin g SERVICES 7 1 0 - TV . M 7 70 TOO— n 7 0 0 — Fo rt Haas U M ^ * ------ 1 U aL. m —— m w ™ a a n m o im p w o n vo o 0 1 0 — O flko-C tortcol rm sn t C rateos B o o k ko o p in g ■ 3 0 — A Gm lntel rtf *• O SO -R o to N 0 7 0 — AtodDcnl 3 3 0 -F h o d o -C o r 7 4 0 — I c y d o i sptdr 3 * 0 — Fum . Apts. 3 7 0 — Unf. Apts. O d d , . ■-___ A 8_____ rlffTla WipOSJKRB 3 0 0 — Unf. D u p lsx ss 4 0 0 — C o n d o s-Tow n h ou s as 4 1 0 — Fum . H o u so s 4 3 0 — Unf. H ou ss s 0 0 0 — Pom asd t-H ouaahold 0 1 0 — FosWlon s W ontod 0 3 0 - W ork W onted BUSINESS 0 3 0 — P u tin ess O p po rtu n lWss 0 4 0 — 0 wtunlHas mid opmmi abdnd dl tom kiddy. Harness aad septate at ufrtto anr ndwa mb- dm out a* Asearte» ptMn» or puUddng alia mdni Ala dtanmi's Inn m-5O0pm 8:OOom-5 m TRAN SPO RTATIO N TRANSPO RTATIO N TRANSPORTATION 1 0 — M isc. A utos 10 — M isc. Autos 1 0 — M isc. Autos 1973 CADILLAC. LOADED. Leather iiria- rior. New bran. BoWary cdtamoiar. $959. 469-0828. Leave men age to Michael. 12-19 _________ ________ 73 CADILLAC Loaded leather interior, now tiren, battery, ahemater, $959. 459-1979. Leave meanoge to Michael. 12-19___________ __________ 1977 DODGE Monaco, dependable $500 «¡rut 320-8626.5-9___________ 1983 NISSAN PULSAR N X Great condi­ tion, nunroof, ondard,good body. >3900. C al Rone 474-6616. 5-9 1967 MUSTANG convertible, blue sharp, PS/PC, AT, 289dd, 106K, $4,000 firm. 495-2833. 5-9__________________ 1986 COUGAR IS. 1 owner, exceden! condition, power windows, white w/ loundau roof, red interior, nice 251-4454 after 6.5-9______________________ GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100. Fords. Mercedes. Corvettes. Chevys. Surplus. Buyers Guide. (1) 805- 687-6000faS-9413. 3-1-178 1979 61NCK 4-DOOR. Very safe, very comfortable, very reliable, b o b good, runs wed. $1200.478-8900.5-9 1981 REGAL LTD. A/C, AM/Cam, electric windows locks. New brakes, tires, dean 88,000 $2,500 478-6860.1-20-73NC 1977 MERCURY MARQUIS. Rum per- fecdy. FS/P6/AT, AC, AM/FM, couetto. Powerful V8, $1200/080 447-2405 Roger. 1-24-15-P a B ill B uys a J C A I S f 247-4728 “ 84 FORD ESCORT, 49,000 ml, white with light blue interior, excellent condi­ tion, $2500 0 60 , cod 448-3562 . 2-2- 15-NC '85 DODGE O M N I 5-speed 24,000 miles, like new$3,450. 259-5559. 2-3- 15NC 1984 DODGE Daytona, 58000 miles. Excellent condition. $3900. Please cad 335-8810. 2-6-15nc______________ 1984 DODGE Daytona, 58000 miles. Excellent condition. $3900. Please cad 335-8810. 2-6-15nc______________ 1981 CHEVROLET Molibu Wagon. High performance, cusióme 400 + H.P. Cus­ tom suspension, much more. Cod 282- 4279-evening». 2-7-15NC__________ '82 8UICK RegoL very dean, PS, PS, cruise, AM/FM cassette equalizer, new brakes, springs, battery. Very ratable, 67,000 miles. $4000,080.474-6986. 2-7-15NC 1976 TOYOTA COROLLA, Rum great, very dependable, not pretty, $400. Coll 495-9021 mornings. 1-31-15NC GREAT WINDSURFING vehicle. 1977 VW Bus excellent shape, rum good. Pat 458-8787. $1500, negoliable7l-31- 15NC_____________ ___ _________ 1975 VOLVO 244DL automatic, 4-door, good condition. $1200. Cad 928-8449 after 6pm. cnk for Bill. 2-1-15NC-C '86 PONTIAC FIERO, V-6, black, sunroof, PW, AM/FM cassette, $7200, Cheray, 495-3612.2-1-15NC_______________ 83 CHEVY CAVALIER hatchback, 2-dr, blue, AT, AC, PS, AM/FM, 86kT$1800. 345-4739 evenings-weekends. 2-3- 15NC ______________ BURNT ORANGE AMC Hornet. Good toomportolion, AM/FM tape, low miles. S9 9 S 445-2767.2-16-15NC________ 1984 VW QUANTUM FWD 5 speed power; sunroof, windows, locks, such good condition, $4575 469-0403 mes- soge. 2-13-58____________________ 1984 VW QUANTUM FWD 5 speed power, sunroof, windows, locks, such good condition, $4575 469-0403 met- soge. 2-13-58____________________ CARS, TRUCKS, JEEPS. Under $100. 444-1912. EXT J45. 2-13-58__________ 1978 CHEVY CAPRICE dassic. melodic bronze, 4-door, automatic A/C, AAA/ EM, new transmission, great on Iona trips, ------ 338_4898.2-13-sF 99,000nx, $1200.; TRANSPORTATION 5 0 — Servic«-R«pair Before you Go.... Tanglewood North We Pay A ll Your Heating A A /C Pro te o se N o w F o r Sp rffsg-Su m m e r-F a lt * RR Shuttle dop at Front Door * 2 Pools & Remodeled Laundry Rooms * C ín g Fans/Microwaves * Fumshed/Unfumshed * Quafey Residents Friendly M anagers W ho C are 452-0060 10201.45th Villa Solano Apartments 51 st & Guadalupe e Shuttle Bus/City Bus e Shopping Nearby • 2 Laundry Areas • Nice Pool 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Across From Intramural Fields 451-6682 M o v e IN L T O M T J P rm lm m m e N o t F o r S p r im g S m m m m r - F a l Su Roca Apartaents • lBdr • Nice Pool • Tennis Courts across the street • Walk to Campus 1302 W. 24th 477-3619 M N K - M B B 3101 Cedar at Speedway • Walk to Campus • Shuttle at Curb • 2 Pools • Manager on Site You W l Love Living Here Prelease Now For Spring-Summer-Fat 478-6005 r * WEST CAMPUS* ' at a discount! Only 2 left. Nice, smell, cozy apt. complex minutes from UT. Pool, laundry, shuttle, owner-manager on site, assigned perking, re­ laxed atmosphere. 2-1's avail­ able now. Call 4964477; You71 SPECIAL! HYDE PARK Spacious, quiet, dean, shuttle, cov­ ered parking, 2BR/2BA, $325. Ceiling fans, mini-blinds, built-in desks, all gas paid and morel PLEASE LEAVE MESSAGE. 451-5825,4306 Ave. A 2-14-208-D * K A U T IF U l CHEAPEST * 1802 W. Ave. The complex it one of <* nice* aporimentt m rent» Great . warn to UT. Surrounded by beautiful Pool with fountain. Freo parking, laundry KimSure. Ful bichen Fully corpeted. ■ given ib expei 11-1 darting $29 5 >5 O FFICE HRS. Evening» °"*y; • h Pm- M-F 01 to app. 478-7519 cp p 478-7519 J a re o pot Ike in latían S$°i?-20B-F Salado Apartments 2704 Salado Unexpected vacancy, fully famished, large (1000 sq. ft), 2-2 with leporote an- fiance», fal bichen with microwave, ceil­ ing fens and intercom in each room cov­ ered parking, wafting distance to campw, «nal quiet complex, $525 + E, RENT REDUCTION IF WILLING TO WORK AS MANAGER. Col evening» 444-2750. 1-26-206-D LARGE CLEAN carpeted efficiency, CA/ CH, ceiling fon», quiet mature individual. No pak. 35lh St. 453-5417. 2-14-20-BF Aspenwood Apertmente SPECIAL RATES FOR 1989 K a t e a f • Water/Gas Paid • Shuttle at Front Door • Intramural Fields Across the Street n « iN o w F o r Spring-Summer-Fall 452-4447 4539 Guadalupe M ARK XX Prelease Now For Spring-Summer-Fall • n c i a l i a t u Beat Ihe High Electric Rales! 1 B e d roo m s & 2 B e d ro o m s A v a ila b le 459-1664 3815 Guadalupe Davis & Assoc. SEQUOIA A PA RTM EN TS 3 0 1 W . 3 8 T H Prelease Now • Spring • Summer • FaH Quiet - N ear Shuttle 323-6526 LA CANADA FURNISHED ALL BILLS PAID e Pool e Walk To Campus e Across From Tennis Courts Pre-Lease Now For Spring-Summer-Fall CALL TODAY 477-3619 1302 W. 24th Olfice At Cliez Jacques STUDENT SPECIAL $ 2 2 0 A B P ! $50 deposit R e n *s from $195 r B'CChS JT New . ^ T j j e . e o p - r - r 5 % :e 1*1 470 1957 or 474-2365 2502 NUECES ONE EFFICIENCY LEFT! 108 PLACE APARTMENT Furnished apartmant with dishwasher, microwave, individual storage, pool and barbecue patio, Vi block to IF shuttle, laundry facilities and resident manager. $225/month. 452-1419 If no answer: 385-2211 or 453-2771 108 W. 45th Street 1-24-20B-D • • LOOK! NOW LEASING Vi Mo Spring Semester Large 2-2'» — Furnished Microwave» Ceiling Fans Excellent Location Washer/Dryer Facilities CASBAH 2200 San Gabriel C ol Mickey: 322-5660 Manager. 322-9449 458-5438 ^ 1-25-206-F NEW MOPEDSI As low as $575 at Hyde Patk^det. 4222 Duvcd 451-7252. 2- 1983 HONDA V45 Saber, Block, immac- idato, perfect condition, $1350, Ask for Akin. 440-8442. 2-16-5B___________ RED HONDA Aero 80, seals two. Perfect running condition. Electric starter, wire basket, groat gas mileage, 473-2772. Leove messoge, $550. 2-17-5P______ 8 0 — Bicycles 88 CANNONDAIE 8R500, only 64 mdes. Look pedals. Cat Eye computer, AAodolo bon, Nitto stem, perfect condi­ tion. $550,477-0942. 2-15-58 MOUNTAIN BIKE 21' Raleigh El- khomjdee new, $250 would consider o trade /todies 10-speed. 345-0599. 2-15- 5B SCHWINN BIKE. Good condition. $75 or bast offer. 926-1255. 2-16-5B MOUNTAIN BIKE, Man.s 22“new from Btcycle Sports Shop, Specialized har- drock, 18 speed Funtour oc shifts rid­ den only twice, perfect condition, $250. 837-7100 2-16-5B BLUE SCHWINN Traveler 10-speed, Good condition, new Avocett seat, $125 or best offer. Cod Robert 442-6692, 443-2966 after 6 pm. 2-17-5B FREE LOCATOR SERVICE Apartments Condos Duplexes Houses T F S R EA LT Y 451-5066 © FREE LOCATORS C o l today. THOMAS G. THOMPSON JZ REALTOR 452-8625 REAL ESTATE SALES 3 6 0 — Fum . Apts. 1 3 0 — Condos - Tow nhouses FORECLOSURES ¡ 477-2867 \ ñ m iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin iiiiiiH iiiE BUENA VISTA 1-1 second floor condo, small complex, 2 bib. SW of UT main campus, patio balcony, all appli­ ances (including washer/dryer) security gates, covered paricing, twin bed/desk coordinated furn­ ishings with LR sofa bed. Avail­ able June 1.(512} 472-9244. ______________________ 2-14-5 MERCHANDISE 2 0 0 — Furniture- H ousehold BEAUTIFUL HONEY-colorsd pme 4- postor woterbed super single. Perfect condition. Set up and delivered. $300. 259-2804. 2-13-5B-E DESKS $27/$65. 6 FT x 2 ft bookshelves $39. Vacuum $25. Lamp tables $18/ $25. Bedside tables $19. Mirrored dress­ ing table $48. I BAA typewriter $48. Shornpooer $19. Lawn mower $28. Guitar $39. Trombone $38. AIWA Short- wove cassette $68. Bor chair $25. Clothing S1-S25. Tools, frames and more. 477-3218. 2-16-NC__________ EXCELLENT COUCH small, brown with dark floral, matches anything, o steal at $35. Coll Craig at 444-7283 or Erik 444-4435. 2-14-5B BROWN & WHITE plaid sofa, loveseat, chair and ottoman. Good condition $195 cosh. 442-7863. 2-15-5B QUEEN SIZE, extra firm, inner mattress/box spring. Never used Never used (worth $550). Selling for $185 indudes delivery. 185 indudes deli Usually home 892-7080.2-16-108-C 5 PIECE BRASS and glass octagon- shaped dinette set. Still boxed, never used, $157,892-7080.2-16-108-C SINGLE BED, near new mattress, fitted cover. }65.443-3620.2-16-58 2 1 0 -S te re o -T V RECONDITIONED COLOR TELEVI- SK IS friom $89.95. $5 off with ad. Bond's Television. John 459-6673, 476-385). 1-30-20NC_____________ LARGE CD Collection for sale, invidual or whole set. Dance, top 40,progressive $8-$10 eoch. Call Michael, 448-3476. 2-15-208_______________________ 2 2 0 — Com puters- Equipo» nt ^ M acintosh Support^ S ervices | PROBLEMS Sctvud • E xpw th u lp I Macs as low as $2,50/hour t I 25*/p*fl* at 3701N. Lamar V 451-7575 , IBM COMPATIBLE boro bone system. (Power supply 10 mhz mother board and cose) tor XT, $160 for AT, $360. 440-1064.2-2-158 supply 10 XT, $ DISK-DRIVE, IBM compatible. Almost new. $40 or best offer. 482-8719. 2-13- 58 DOUBLE SPEED of your XT $29. Up­ grades to AT $350. Jett Computers 346-2914. 2-14-108_______________ IBM COMPATIBLE XT Completo system includes 256K memory, keyboard, 8 mhz mother board, monochrome moni­ tor, one 360K floppy, only for $460 plus tax, 440-1064.2-17-58_________ 2 5 0 — M usical Instruments ROLAND JUNO-106 Keyboord/Syn- Ihesizer, 160 presets or make your own sounds, midi compatible, $595 477- 5843. Tom. 2-17-58 y_____________ 3 4 0 — M isc. ARI t_AXVtU ctaas ring, 1989 6S ring, $200 338-1133. 2-7-10-B_______ BICYCLE $60 080 . Electric typewriter at « $ 5 0 0 6 0 . Filco Block/white teleririon $35 OBO. Teaching suppkes- magazine dhplayer-mofe. 482-8719.2-13-5B EEL SKIN briefcoMl New, burgandy col­ ar, expondoble with combination lock, from Korea. $100. Ca« 459-6651 offer 5pm. 2-14-5B-C__________________ RIDE INDOORS in the roin-bicycle train­ er-quiet, magnetic flywheel (new) $120. Compact Oxford dkfionary (new) $75. Pioneer cassette deck CT-F750 with outo-roveoe. $50. 476-9780.2-17-58 RENTAL 3 5 0 — Rental Services COMPUTERIZED COMPREHENSIVE Lirt- inp,: A l Type» - A l Prices • A l Sizes - Fast Free Servicel Habitat Hunters, 482- 8651.2-15-28P V illa Arcos 3 301 Speedw ay • Shuttle at Curb • Nice Pool • Laundry Area • M anager on Site • Q uiet Area Pretease Now For Spring-Summer-Fall 476-1619 SPECIAL RATES Furnished Efficiencies 1-1's & 2-2's • 3 Pools • 3 Laundry Rooms • G as and W ater Paid • Shuttle at Front D oor Ideal tor Student» Beet the High Electric Ratea a n g le w o o d W e s t s i d e A p a r t m i t s W d fm w e Now For Spring-Summer- Fall 1403 Nom lk Ln. 472-9614 DIPLOMAT APART IENTS BARGAIN RATES 478-2250 M onogerApt. #205 Davis & Assoc. G r a n a d a A p t s . r 3- • >i.« >#ioe F icent to Hancock Center. Shuttle at door, all sizes, beautiful freshly deco­ rated units. iGc location C e n t u r y F l a s a A p t a . « M a iM e r ★ 5 Blocks West UT ★ Large, quiet, immaculately dean semi­ efficiency. Kitchen, wolk-tn closet, laundry, gas heat cooking, water/gas furnished. O n site manager. $235. Red Oak Apartments, 2104 San Ga- hnal ★ 476-7916 ★ 1-26-20B-F $225.00 ~~ 1 bedroom/carp rtud, dis­ La posal, CH/CA, ceiling fans, wo- Mr/gas $ id Large pool and polio. Walk to UT. Fountain Terrace Apartments 610 W. 30lh/Manager #134 477-8858 1-26-20B-F ★ TWO BEDROOM ★ $395 W alk to Campus, small quiet com­ plex, ceiling fans, pool Cavalier Apts. 307 E 31st 474-7732 473-2513 2-7-20B-K v m CAAAFUS compact efficiency ASP, privrte perisng, 1 person, no peto, $200, $150 dopoaR, 2512 #2 (roar) Feari Street 459-8935.1-26 206-K 340* SfEEOWAY-Lorge efficiency unit in «nal 12 unit camplex. quiet stove and mfrigeratoi, on shuRk $175/mo. Col 444-114*. 1-30-15*-0 •LOCK TO UT: Vary loige one bedroom qaeet to y e y d l laundry. No pels. 453- f t .. 2-1-201 WEST CAMFUS1-1. SmaL quiet cómeles Laundty, banc cable, $260-$2*0 + bedridty. A>no4obis now. C ol 454- 7900. LOCAnON, LOCATION, LOCATIONI Speaai- pte-laosa now. Lange eaataot- hto 2-2,0 „ , pool sundeck, 30*Aed Iktar. $500. 477-33M/472-2097. « f a n S # REAL ESTATE SALES 1 2 0 — H o u s m RENTAL 3 6 0 — Fum . Apts. Next Time ... Next Time ... A ' A't5 Ct's ' \ T H E ( A S T I LI AN THK ( ASTI LI AN V ' ' ' ' \ A ' (512) 478-981 1 (512)478-9811 9. AGust dutch. 10. Adktot bnkss. 11 AtRusl chain or check rssroi. 12. Acjuatoipump 13. Aijuot ipokit A chock wheote. 14. AGuet* lube cedes. 15. Chacktvohtoopsraion 16. Check al duds. 17. Check hod tissrwapsnskxi. Id. Check ballsy eetoritsnrtnd condt- lan. 1». Check dm prsssure 20. Check lor cottor pins 6 loase nuts end tadto 21. Road test. T J ’s Cycle Sales end Service 6215 N. Lam ar 453-0255 H O N D A . Come ride wHh us I 459-33H | Full Selection of Motorcycles A Scootorsl I WOODS I HONDA I KAWASAKI I FUN CENTER I * 5 0 9 N . L A M A R VESPA Sales, parts, service. All new accessories. Hyde Park Cycles 4222 Duval St. 451-7252 2-13-58-C RED AERO 80 Seati two, excelent corv dWon, two hakneh, $600. 477-0828. 2-13-58 De sure your Car is ready! The Daily Texan AUTO GUIDE offers helpful information concerning all your Auto needs-from Tires to Tune-up to Transmission service to Insurance, Financing, or even a Brand New Car. WATCH FOR THE FIRST OF SIX PUBLICATIONS BEGINNING MARCH 1ST IN OUR CLASSIFIED SECTION Page 12/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, February 17,1989 RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. ^ 7 0 — Unf. Apts, l l f j 370— Unf. Apts. 400 — Condos Townhonras 425— Rooms II 425— Rooms 435— Co-ops RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL CHEZ JACQUE APARTMENTS THUNDEBBRD APARTMENTS 4510 Duval Prelease N ow For Spring-Summer-Fall ■ P release N o w Foi S pring -S um m er-F all ^ Y O U ’ R E ^ ■ C R A Z Y » It you don’t ill • 1 BEDROOM-1 BATH20O00 • 2 B E D R 00M -2 BATH 3 0 0 °° 18% Student Dlocount • Washer/Dryer Connections in each unit e Hot Water Paid e Swimming Pool e BBQ Grite • $10000 deposit Convenient to shopping, entertainment, A atoo Four U.T. Shuttles. TOWN LAKE CIRCLE APARTMENTS 447-5971 2409 T ow n L a k e C ir. (off Riverside) ^ V CREEKS1DE 615 Upson Preheee Now For SpringSummor-FNI • Shuttle Bus • City Bus • Jogging Trails • Town Lake • Quiet Area • All Efficiencies • Move in Today WILL NOT LAST LONG -BARGAIN R A TES - CaHNow 499-0491 $150 MOVE-IN SPECIAL Nice convenient 1-1 in smaN quiet com­ plex V5 block off Sixth Street. CLARKS­ VILLE I Nice carpet with ceiling fans 1 month free to qualified residents. Kemp Management 3 2 7 -9 6 3 5 4 7 2 -6 6 3 5 2-17D Hyde Park - IF Shuttle LARGE efficiencies with walk-in dosets ★ LAUNDRY * VERY Quiet * GREAT Rates! Call MIKE 2-6 p.m. or leave message: ★ 3 2 3 -6 5 2 6 ★ Sequoia Apartments - 301 W. 38th St. ______________________2-15-20B-F ★★★ RENT SPECIAL ★★★ Near Northcross Mall Large 1-1 Large 2-1 * all appliances $225 $325 * carpet * miniblinds 454-3018/835-0166 2-10-20B-F into apartments ARE YOU BORED- with ticky tacky apartment com­ plexes that all look alike? Then please come see Rio House Apartments, a 1920's hospital renovated in 1958. We are centrally located at the northeast comer of 17th & Rio Grande and offer a large pool, a laundry room, storage and very interesting and com­ fortable apartments. Small 2-1 for $360. Call or stop by any­ time, 472-1238. GREAT DEAL Large 1 Bedrooms, 5 blocks from campus. $295. Laundry facilities, on-site manager. Fur­ nished also available. 474-2215. 2-14-208-C Lay back and let us pay ALL those pesky utility bills. You can't get it any easier! You can literal-. !y roll out of your bed and into your UT class room. Why spend an hour or so a day commuting? Call now at 452-1121 or 472-9516 1-27-208-K ★ ★ $250.00 ★ ★ only a few leftl dean, quiet complex close to compus carina management freshly painted laundry facilities 1-1's - Fum. or Unf. new carpet 2800 Rio Grande GAYNER PROPERTY MGMT CO. ★ ★ 331-4019 ★ ★ 2-17-20B-F CENTRAL AUSTIN Walk/UT efficiencies in old house, gas/water paid, 504 Elmwood, across from Posse East. Matthews Properties 4 5 4 -0 0 9 9 8 3 5 -5 9 2 8 M 7K THE LEASING SOLUTION FREE LOCATOR SERVICE W e have the solution for your apartment needs. Many specials available. Call 832-0313 2-15-20B-K WALKING DISTANCE to Campus. 1 Bed- roorr $225+ E. Quiet neighborhood setting. 304 E. 33rd. Call manager 320- 0331. 1-27-20B-C________________ UT WALK, very large 1-1 in historic house. Oak floors, flagstone porch, lot* of win­ dows. 1903 Nueces, $350, 472-2123.1- 31-20B-F________________________ UT WALK Large 2-1 in Victorian house, fans, frreploce, stained glass, ceiling 2110 San Gabriel. $490.472-2123.1-31- 208-F CLASSICAL COMFORT cheopl 1 BDRM $225, 2 BDRM $275 -$305 $99 move-in. Full security Bldg, pool, spa, pool table, laundry, shuttle, Capitol Metro, bookshelves, ambiance, history 476-5875.2-3-20B________________ THE LOWEST EVER!! On UT shuttle-l-35 & Woodland. 2-1, pool, laundry. GAS & WATER PAID. ONLY $2951! The Elliot System: 451-8964. 2-7-20BC_________ UT AREA-1 Bedroom garage apartment, water paid. 2831 Pearl. $225/month. Back and Company. 458-1777. 2-7-98- K UNIQUE EFFICIENCY! Saltillo Hies, ceil- ing Ian, fireplace, windows, wolk-in closet, pool, shuttle. $225-$260. $50 deposit. Pre-leasing. Step Savers. 476- 3028.2-9-20B-D__________________ PLEASANT QUIET spacious Hyde Park efficiency, beautiful pool and courtyard, gas and water paid. Call David 458- 8893. Ken. 2-9-20B-D_____________ GREAT OAK-spocious, immaculate 2-2, CA/CH, ceiling Ians, dishwasher, pool, sundeck, 30th/Red River $500. 477- 3388.472-2097. 2-9-10B-D_________ DEL PRADO apartments. 303 W. 40th. Large 2-1 townhouse, all appliances, carpet, miniblinds, pool, laundry, gas and water paid. 458-3361, 835-0166. 2-10- 208-F TOWNHOUSE 3 -2h , shuttle, fireploce, W/D, gas and water paid, $600 ras- ing Solution, f ----------------------- . 832-0313. 2-15-10B-K SPACIOUS 1 BEDROOM, 618 sq. ft., close to UT shuttle, $238/month. No de­ posit. Coll offer 5 :0 0 . 451-0857. 2-16- ____________ 7B ENFIELD ROAD, on shuttle, large 3BDR (available now). Loundry on premises. $475/month. 478-2775. 328-1809 2- 17-2B-F 2-17-20B-K 390 — Unf. Duplexes • Shuttle Near • Quiet Area e Manager on Site e Close to Shopping • Big Trees PRELEASE NOW 451-1244 VILLA NORTH 2 Bedroom Apts Prelease Now For Spring- Summer-Fall 4520 Duval 4 5 9 -9 1 3 1 D a v i s & A s s o c Ceiling Fan • Microwaves • Fireplaces* 2 Laundry Facilities • 2 Pools • 2 Jacuzzis • Clubhouse • Ice Makers EASY ACCESS TO: UT Shuttle • Shopping Centers • City Busline • The Sports Park • IH-35 TRESTLES 453-4968 1071 Clayton Lane Iv a n h o e V illa g e A p a r t m e n t s — In Travis Heights -N e x t To Park — Quiet Neighborhood — Ideal For Grad Student — Recreation Areas — Pool/Laundry — Excellent Rate — Move in Today 1500 East Side Dr. Vi Month's Rent FREE 4 4 1 -4 3 7 5 New Carpel, flooring, miniblinds and paint. Large 1-1'* in small, quiet complex nearRR. • 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. • Pool • Next to Tennis Courts e W oik to Campus • ABP except electricity 1302 W. 24th St. 477-3619 LOW RATES • NOW LEASING I St. M o ritz Apts. 800 W . 25th 1-1 s & 1-1 tofts. Security gates, cov­ ered parXlng fireplaces, pool ceiling fat,s. CA. CH * * carpet, vaulted ceil- ings, tornished. balconies, and more! Small cozy apt complex 2 1/J blks of campus - friendly neighbors Rales starting ai $290 You must see them Cal Now! 476-4060 V .I.P . A PTS. SPUING, SUM. LLASING luxrvKKK 1 bdrrn, 2 both- -two level unit, $ortabie for 3 d go* ptnd • POOL • PATIO • NEW CPARET « FURNISHED • WALK e IF SHUTTLE AT DOOR B Y A m . 4 7 6 . 0 3 6 a 1 0 1 E .3 3 B O FRONTIER APTS.-$210 SUMMER RATES ALL YEAR! ' I l l AVE. A. Large efficiencies. O n shuttle & city bus. Quiet com­ plex, CACH, G & W and basic TV cable paid. 4 Ó 2 - 0 9 3 0 , 3 2 3 - 5 9 8 2 2-17-20B-C S P E C IA L R A T E S Leasing N o w on 1 Bedrooms Furnished/Unfurnished C o n v e n ie n t to H a n c o c k C e n te r, '-«♦on, UT, & H y d e Park. H a lf a b lo c k to shuttle & city bus line. A ll a p p li­ ances, p o o l & la u n d ry ro o m . G a s & w a te r p a id . 3 0 2 W e s t 3 8 th 4 5 3 - 4 0 0 2 1-27-20B-F V IE W P O IN T A P TS W a lk o r shuttle to ca m p us! Just 5 r locks w e st o f G u a d a lu p e a t the e n d o f 2 6 th S treet. Then c o m e h o m e to y o u r a ttra c tiv e a ff o rd a b le e ffic ie n c y w ith a lo v e ly w o o d e d v ie w A tte n tiv e m a n a g e m e n t ensures Q uality livin g . 1 o o l, la u n d ry fa c ilitie s F u rnished o r u n fu rn ish e d . 4 7 6 - 8 5 9 0 1-27-20B-C W ALK TO campus, shuttle bus, la rg e effi- - iencies $ 25 0, a ll bills paid 3 2 2 -0 3 7 4 1-25-20B F L O S t TO LIT N orth. Efficiencies $165- S175. 1 oed ro om apartments, $185- $ 2 3 5 O ffice 4 04 East 31st 4 77 -2 2 1 4 45 3-8812, 4 5 2 -4 5 1 6 2-1Q-20B-A WALK. ' O UT Unique luxury large fur- '.‘shed 1 BR garag e apt Sunporch, boilt- m flo o r to ceiling bookshelves, $ 4 0 0 , m a­ ture, petiess individual, 4 53 -2 1 3 5 2-13- 2 0B SHO AL CREEK Apts 2 5 0 4 Leon. Unique 1-bedroom, quiet atmosphere. Glass w all front, stone fenced privacy patio S 3 0 0 -$ 3 2 5 . 4 8 0 -8 3 0 5 2-14-20B-C FURNISHED OR unfurnished EFFICIEN CY $ 2 0 0 /m o , close on Speedway M ove-m special available. Bret. 4 53 0 5 4 0 . 2 15-iOB-D to campus 0 5 EAST 31st (AT Speedway) efficiency w a ter/ya s stove and heat paid. $ 2 2 5 . 4 7 4 -5 4 5 3 3 28 -1 80 9 . 2 -17-2B -F 370 — Unf. Apts. ★ $70 Move-in Special ★ * lo w deposit a extra large apartments * p ro m pt m a intenance/very clean • NR shuttle bus • swim ming p oo l • newly deco ra ted ® large 1 b ed ro om - 7 5 0 sq. ft » large 2-2 - 1025 sq ft BROOKHOLLOW APARTMENTS 1414 Arena Dr. ★ 445-5655 ★ ___________________________ 2-13-20B-F AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY! 1-1 a p a rt inent with w o o d floors, $ 3 0 0 . Also tw o efficiencies fo r $ 2 8 0 in W est Campus. Call 4 8 0 -0 9 7 6 . 1-25-20B-F a n d UT WEST AUSTIN 4 -p le xl C onvenient to L o v e ly d o w n to w n 2-1 refngerator,C A /C H , m i­ crowave, covered parking. $ 5 9 5 4 7 6 - 4 4 7 7 1-26-20B-C e igh b orho od , WEST AUSTIN West Austin unique 2-1, atrium, fireploce, Satillo tile throughout, skylights, applianes, gas/water paid $475. 1603 Woodlawn #4. Matthews Properties 4 5 4 -0 0 9 9 8 3 5 -5 9 2 8 2-17K SPACIOUS 1-4 BEDROOMS. All appli- ances, W /D connections. Fenced yard. Fireplacel Pels O.K. From $295. 462- 3300.2-9-20P___________________ 5 MINUTES UT, cozy, 2-2, stove refriger­ ator, quiet area, $275. 472-9019. 2-10- 208 FREE RENTI Near CR, 2-1, hardwood floors, miniblinds, pets allowed, water paid. $365. 928-3585 evenings. 2-15- 1 0 B - C ________________ COMPUTERIZED COMPREHENSIVE Availabilities; All Sizes - All Prices • All Locations. Fast Free Servicel Habitat Hunter*, 482-8651. 2-1S-28P_________ REST of FEB. FREE. 4-Bdrm., 2 bath. March, April & May. $600 each. Call 477-7479.2-17-2B 400— Condos- Townhouses BEST PRICES, QUALITY, & LOCATION. West Campus, Enflied, & Hyde Park. Condos/houses. C al now! 478-6565. Cty Properties. 1-31-208-F___________ ORANGE TREE 2-2'S AND 1-1's, FUR­ NISHED OR UNFURNISHED, W/D. CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY. 476-2673. 2-2-208-D_______________________ PRE-LEASE CENTENNIAL 2-2, FUR- NISHED OR UNFURNISHED. W /D, MI­ CROWAVE, ETC. SIOOO/MO. CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY. 476-2673. 2-2- ________________________ 206-D PRE-LEASE 1900 SAN GABRIEL, 1,2, AND 3 BEDROOMS. ALL AMENITIES, LIMITED AVAILABILITY. CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY. 476-2673.2-2-20B-D PRE-LEASE WATERFORD 2 AND 3 BED­ ROOMS. ALL AMENITIES LIMITED AVAILABILITY. CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY. 476-2673.2-2-20B-D THREE GABLES 1717 W est 35th S u p e r L arge , 2 B e d ro o m - 2 Bath, C A /C H , C a rp e t, M in i Blinds, W a lk -in C loset. C o n v e n ie n t fo S h o p p in g . M u s t see to a p p re c ia te . $300 328-4829 0,327-2160 2-1-20B-A LARGE 1 bed ro om garag e a partm ent on quiet street N e a r UT, $ 3 4 0 ABP. 3 5 0 7 Liberty. 4 7 6 -3 6 3 4 . 2-9-20B -F RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. Next Time... Choose the best for a great summer! T H E C A S T IL IA N Austin s Premiere Student Residence Hall 2323 San Antonio (512) 478-9811 $205 Efficiencies • Large efficiencies on UT Shuttle. • Newly redecorated • Door to door trash service. • Executive suites available. • Ask about our specials! Now leasing for Spring & Summer Stonewood Village Apts. 454-5903 4558 A v e . A WATER AND GAS PAIDI $ 2 2 5 4 2 4 5 For appointment coll 4 6 7 -6 5 0 8 2-17-2B-A WALK TO BEAUTIFUL WEST AUSTIN PARK — efficiencies on quiet just 2 blocks street, from shuttle. 452-1121/ 472-9516. 1-27-20B-K GIGANTIC ELM TREES gave this community Hs name. Absolutely perfect North Central location where anything you want is near by. Gas/h jtinj and water paid. 452-11216,453-1804 6-K 1-' QUIET CUL-DE-SAC Efficiency, $235; 1-1, $265. Ceiling fans, aas-water paid. N ear shuttle. 452-1121; 467-9709. 1-27-20B-K $99 SPECIAL BEAUTIFUL large efficien- cies and 1 bedroom on mal, quiet com­ plex. Fireplace, Ion, W /D connections, tocuzzi On RR shuttle, from $250. Sharon. 926-0898. 2-1Q-20B-D ALMOST NEW! West Campus, smaller, 2-2, ceiling fan, wtWripoo! bath, w o* in closet. S395-S425 now or pre-lease. Step Savers. 476-3028.2-15-206-D STRETCH OUTI Large 1-1 super dean, aas paid, remodeled, West Campus, S259-S299. $99 deposit. Step Saver*. 476-3028.2-15-208-D 1115 W. 10lh-Qutet, huge efficiency, new point. CA/CH. Gas, water paid. Ceiling fans. NO pets. $225. 476-3121. 2-15- 108-F STUDENT SPECIAll Large 1 bedroom apartment for $200/month. N. Lamar area and near a bus stop. Gas and water paid. Col 834-9629. 2-15-38 RENTAL 435— Co-ops PRE-LEASE NOW. Best projects go quick- — - Y A I size* complexes. Col KoraTot W IM B ER LY FU R N IS H E D H O M E I Campus Condos. 474-4800.2-7-206-A PRE-LEASE DESIGNER 2-2. W /D, M I­ CROWAVE, ETC TWO BLOCKS TO CAMPUS. S675/MO. CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY. 476-2673.2-8-20B-D PENTHOUSE CONDOMINIUMS 1-1 ABP, security $425 + deposit. Available now Monarch Management 445-7111 leave messoge on recoraer. 2- 13-5B-K CROIX 2BR/2BA FURNISHED W /D, M l- CROWAVE, ETC S750/MO. CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY. 476-2673. 2-13- 20B-D A T T E N T IO N FACULTY Attractive 3 BR 2 BA furnished home available A p ril Ist-O ct. 1st. A ll conven­ iences, Runs fo r pels, h ill country views, dose to shops, Mercedes Benz car, near g o lf, tennis and health dub. 35 minutos to Austin. 15 minutes to San M arcos. References required. $85G /m onlh. C all 1-847-9666 2-15-3B 420— Unf. Housas NEW GUILD CO-OP 2 blocks UT»ABP«$padous rooms Cable TVeDelidous meals*Funfunfun Doubles ÍM StyesfttMIO 510 W. 23rd 472-0352 PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER, FALL/SPRING A UNIQUE. COMPLETELY RENOVATED 3000 SQ FT, THREE BEDROOM TWO AND ONE- HALF BATH HYDE PARK HOME LOCATED ONE BLOCK FROM THE UT SHUTTLE. AMEN­ TOS R4CLU0E: ALL APPLIANCES, CEMJNG FAN, JACUZZI WHIRLPOOL. RECESSED UGHTMG. TWO CAR GARAGE, FENCED YAR0T AND HUGE DECK. $1500*10. MITCH 467-9211. 2-16-20B-0 2-1 HAROWOOO FLOORS,] V J ■ » n u n o m o o c n#Of IN tS8> ‘ V «riel _ bee. S 3 » . 4504)955.2 - ¿ | | | f S t e f j 3309 CHERRYWOOD, NEAR com m . N n * 2*1. uaptoxc** éém ed m , e ir $ 5 T ^ 3 m T i 3 - S T ^ , COMPUTERIZED COMPRKHENSIV E I I rnutrm. * —A J A :— A i a Afl &o^ • MR n o i • MR U eaflom . Fm L Free, Servicet Habito» Hue**** 482-8651 2 -15 -2 » PRESERVATION SQUARE 1900 San Gabriel Centennial Orangetree St. Thomas Waterford Croix CALL M A H # 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 # Campus Condos, fast, friendly service _________________ 2-13-20B-A LIK E N E W ! Spacious, private 2-1 ga­ rage apartment just north of UT. Shuttle 1 block. Qui­ et neighborhood. N ear park. $5 7 5 . 2 7 2 -5 7 8 3 , 2 7 2 -4 0 7 6 . 2-1-20B-F The Cornerstone Place Condominium Designer interiors, 9-foot ceil­ ings, washers/dryers, ceiling fans, microwave ovens, dishwashers. On-site, attentive management. Rio Grande at 24th Street. 480-0065. _____________________ 2-14-208-C ★ L U X U R Y ★ 1-1, 2-2, 3-2. M ANY PROPER­ TIES AVAILABLE. CALL N O W FOR BEST SELECTION. ASK FOR M A H . ★ 474-4800 ★ CAMPUS CONDOS 2-7-208-A CONDOS! CONDOS! CONDOS! BEAUTIFUL 1, 2 & 3 BDRM C O N D O S , ALL WEST C AM PUS PROPERTIES AVAILABLE. CALL AGENT DAVE ONLY. 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 ,4 7 2 -9 6 9 9. 1-31-200 ★ ORANGETREE ★ ★ 2 - 2 ★ Pre-lease summer $700/ $1000 Fall. Washer/ Dryer included. Great roommate plan! ALPS 331-0445. 2-17-20B-K CROIX URGE 1-1, W/D. MICROWAVE ETC. S550/MO. CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY. 476-2673.2-13-20B-D 2 WEST CAMPUS 2 BDR/3 BA. FUR­ NISHED, STORY, W /D , MICROWAVE, ETC. S800/MO. CALL AGENT MITCH ONLY. 476-2673. 2-13- 206-D__________________________ BEST DEALI 2 bedroom condo, has ev­ erything! Furnished, big screen TV, belter. Agent, Ask for 480 0 .2-17-20BF_______________ Gerard, 474- 410— Fum. Houses AVAILABLE NOW, 2 through 5 bedroom homes for ron». 452-5979 (24 hour*). 2-17 BICYCLE TO UT, 2-1 garage < forge fenced yard,*pets ok. $: 4866 2 8-88 TWO BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS nice 2-1, CA/CH W/D, cp. $450, Move-in spe­ e d available. Bret. 453-0540. 2-15-108- D ENFIELD-BLOCK-SHUTTLE, 3-1, appfi- oncos, finplocs, hardwood floors,1 W/D connections. 1604 Wethersfield. $595 Shomrock 478-5588. 2-16-10B-F HUGE YARD, trees, University home, 3-1 1/2 near park, hardwood floors, newly pointed, mini bfrnds, 476-4755. 2-17- 208____________________________ 2 BD/1 BA hard woods, ceiling fans, high ceilings, gris heat, wait to campus, need to sublease soonl $425/mo. 454-8987. 2-17-6P HYDE PARK. Lame 2 BDR with formal dining. Beautiful floors throughout. $450 per month. Austex Realty. 345-8585.2-17-20B-E_______ hardwood including SPACIOUS 2-1. Appliances wosher/dryer. Fenced yard, garage. Ceiling Ion and mini-blinds, near shuMe. 5311 McCandless (Near N. Loop and lomor). $425/month. 454-4254. 2-17- 1B-E 425 — Rooms Beautiful historic home 2 blocks UT. Quiet, studious, re­ laxed. Doubles $293-$300; singles $325-$354. Includes all food, bills. Call soon! Helios Co-op, 478-6763, 1909 Nueces, or call ICC Co-op: 476-1957.510 W. 23rd. NEAR UT Law School on RR shuttle. Large, raom*-$150-$195 ABP. CA/CH, share bath*. 3310 Red Riv- er-476-3634.2-2-20B-F___________ furnished ROOM DETACHED from house. Private bath, no kitchen. Quiet neighborhood, off-street parking. $185 ABP. 258-3336. 2-iaiOB-Fy______________________ 430 — Room-Board SHORT WALK UT. Your own summer room. Quiet, non-smoking, pellets. Shared kitchen. Call 474-2408 for pri­ vate bath, ABP $225-$275 Col 472- 5646 to share bilb. bath. $120-5200. 2- 7-208 IMMEDIATE OPENING in Castilian Dor­ mitory. Contact Wendy Beveridge. 474- 4522. 2-17-4P____________ 435 — Co-ops FRENCH HOUSE! $ 2 8 9 d o u b l e s $ 3 4 6 s in g le s A ll b ills ( í r r a t m e a l s I b lo c k s I T 478-6586 CALL 471-5244 T O P L A C I A C L A S S IF IID A D Doubles $285-295 Singles $327-377 Great veggie meals 5 blocks UT Friendly & fun! House of Commons 12610 Rio Grandel I 1 476-1957 ■ TAOS CO-OP J 2612 “The Drag” I $420 Single $320 Double I PEAHL CO-OP I 2000 Pearl I $389 Single $302 Double Prices include ¡ J AI Meals&BHs I CaN: 476-5678 ANNOUNCEMENTS 530 - Trovel-Trans ■ S P H P t e B H E A K m l n i c u ■ i 2-17-206-K e ■ m K K M z D o A / r m r. SOUTH PADRE ISLAND ¿ .'M m W$Mm$TEAMB0AT WSm DAYTONA BEACH Í^MÍMUSTANG ISLAND W$mHILT0N HEAD ISLAND m W Í Ic a l l 70D A Y I• D0N7 WAIT TIL ITS TOO LATE! M 1-800-321-5911 e W. 21st Street Co-op $ 3 9 9 Slngle/$31 0 Double Induót» at meals A MBs | CALL 476-5678 tme*10T ■ SHORT WALK UT. Your own summar room. Quiet, non-smoking, peMet* Shored kitchen. Call 474-2408 for pri vote bath, ABP. $225-5275. Call 472 5646 to shore bilb,, bath. $120-$200. 2 7-20B___________________________ FEMALE ROOMMATE non-smoker, share 2 BDR, 2 BA. On PV route $182 + V3 bids. Call Jennifer or Melanie. 440- 8218.2-17 4 4 0 — R o o m m a te s tr-*136r§ "Depending on break dates and length o f stay U N C E M E N T S 5 3 0 — T r a v e l-T r a n s p o r ta tio n NON-SMOKING female for large 2-2Vj condo. Fireplace, security, pool, W /D, ceiling fan, microwave, answering ma­ chine, mom. Near PV. $200/month plus Va bids. Security deposit. Louml. 385- 4391. 2-13-106 M OVING f NEED a pfoce* O r a room­ mate! ROOMMAIE5BROKERS flnds compaRble noommeto» %/or placee 477-5569. fee. 2-3-20B-F WEST CAMPUS home, $150-1250, washer A dryer, hardwood flo e a c a l and leave a messoge. 320-8858.2-10- •F FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to sham 2 BR/2 BA an FW route. $11150 plus Vs bMs. Rent paid until March 1*. C ol Una 258-8622.2-15-2NC______________ SHARE 3 BR house, quiet neighborhood, tree* A /C Prefer nansmaber. $200 + Vsbfll John.474-4373.2-13-5B CENTENNIAL 2-2. YOUR own bedroom with both. Beoutihifly frimlshed (TV, VCR, Remo, micrawove) poobide condomini­ um. Can smoke. Femóles only please. 482-8251.2-13-10B_________ BEST DEAL evert 2-2 Condo fo r $260. I W/D, microwave; CA/CH, >oL 2 blocks campu* IF. ChrisNne I 480-8008.2-14-8P FEMALE. APPROXIMATELY $150 ABP. Own room. Exceptionally nice. Shuttle. Laurie 346-5209 (home). See city paper ad fo r work number. 2-14-11P ZIIKER VIEW 2-2•2 Fireploce. large deck, r gets suite $220 pfosVs M * 447-0767.2-15-3P NON SMOKING Female wanted to sham famished duplex. OF shuttle, or 479- w a*. $175/month plus Vi uli 6542 2-15-4P FEAAALE ROOMMATE 3-2 Duplex Vi b ii* Far West, fenced yard, ____ 346-2142 (hm), 338-6734 (wkL Gndy 2-15-7P NEIGHBORHOOD CONDO, 4 BDR, garage, private use, 2 BDR/2 BA. $325+ Vi uliM e* 467-0142 after 5pm. 2-16-3B __________________ OWN ROOM/ Bath, Huge balcony, hat tub, PV route, M/F, $225/mo. plus Vi b il* February Freel 385-16497 leave ige. -St A N M O U M C IM IW T S 5 1 0 — E n te r ta in m e n t- T ic k e ts CHICAGO; AMY Grant; Sandi Patti; REM Up front floor ticket* Showtime Tickets - 478-9999.2-15-108-F 5 3 0 — T r a v e l Transportation SOUTH PADRE ISLAND Royale Beach & Tennis Club 2 BR C O N DO March 11 - March 18 $1800 Call 713-493-4170 2-15-58 FRIENDS/RELATIVES visiting» Rant M y equipped vocation-condo at lofcevray/ Loke Travis off season rale* 2 night* minimum. 261-5335.2-17K INTERNATIONAL STUDENT TRAVEL Low flig h t* rates on scheduled worldwide. STA TRAVEL 1-800-777- 01121-31-208-F JJaui i, (Express 2001 CentonDr. Fort Worth, Tx 76112 ~ Medese Peabody U.T. Rap. 472-9457 VS‘v--* \ V v- 5 a m H u v l 790 — P a rt Tlmo (OAT SUPPUES BUSINESS days fo r defcvering, doctrina ttym and general retofciu dudo». N a o tlll pearonce o wm t. G o o d ta B Ü l * * 1 ' g d g e o fo rin tera d in i « person at L“ *ñr> 5upptes 10435 Burnet id . #106. A fter 3 p m Pay S5.50/Kr. *■ 2-14-68 TELEMARKETERS J5/HOUR Reputable Notional Company direct sate* no experience necoHory. Mu be enlhuiiaclic and outgoing. Hours: Mon-Fri 5 pm-11 pm. C ol today for appointment. North: 345-2999 South: 441-4214 Round Rock: 244-7735 2-17-16-F PROJECT ASSISTANT Needed fo r downtown law firm. Must have exceptional organizational ddb with ability to toko instructions weff. Reliable typing 50 wpm, preferred. Non-smoker. 8-12, M-F, $4.25/hr. Submit resume in per­ son to 98 San Jacinto Blvd. Suite 1700, Austin. transportation, 2-13-56 - Ful/part time. TYPIST NEAR CAM (4 5 + wpm). BOOKEEPER (we train). Runner (your cor). O D D JOBS. Apptfco- tions 9om -4pm _408 W 17th. 1-27-¿08-F PART-TIME curtodid position. 3 hn/w k. C ol 478-8559. 2-15-5B_____________ DELI PERSON and boolalore ottendowt through needed 1 10 0-2 00. Monday Fndc^r. Contact Cyndl at 328-7755. 2- Men’s Top 20 How The AeeoctotodPteee'Top Twenty ooffege beeket- bell teems tored Thursday (21-6) dto not play. (21-3) beat Mtohigan State 75-56. VOktohome (22-3) dto not play 2 Arizona (19-3) beat Southern CaNtomia 93-70 3. Mteeouri (21-5) 660 7VS» 612 583 9 229 26 Houston Utah Dallas Denver San Antonio Miami L.A Lakers Phoenix Seattle Qokton Stele Portland Sacramento L.A. Clippers P W k O M d o n W L 29 18 30 20 26 21 26 24 13 35 42 5 0 * P et .617 __ 600 553 520 .271 106 24 Vi 3 4V6 16V5 33 16 30 17 29 19 26 20 25 22 14 34 11 38 673 — 2 638 604 31/2 5V2 565 7 532 292 18V5 224 22 Thuratey'a Oamaa Late Qame N at M u d a d Chicago 117. Milwaukee 116 Dallas 93. Miami 80 Utah 129, Boston 114 Golden State at L A. Clippers, (n) Detroit 95. Sacramento 84 LA. Lakers 110. Portland 101 Friday'a Oamaa New Jersey at Philadelphia. 6:30 p.m. Charlotte at Miami. 6:30 p.m. Cleveland at Atlanta. 7 p.m Denver at Houston, 7:30 p m Boston at Phoenix, 8:30 p.m Washington at Seattle. 9 p.m M u R k y 'iQ iR iii New Jersey at New York, 6:30 p.m. Indiana at Charlotte, 6:30 p.m Philadelphia at Cleveland. 6:30 p.m Houston at Dallas. 7:30 p.m. San Antonio at Utah. 8:30 p.m Washington at L A. Clippers. 9:30 p.m. Detroit at Golden State. 9:30 p.m Phoenix at Sacramento. 9:30 p.m. Seattle at Portland. 9:30 p.m. Sundey*a Oamaa Chicago at Milwaukee. 1:30 p.m. Boston at L.A. Lakers, 3:30 p.m. Atlanta at Miami. 6:30 p.m Mavericks 93f Heat 80 DALLAS — Jamas Donatoaon acorad 16 down 22 rebounds and Mocked four shots Thursday night as tha ( i trade of al-time toadng scorer Mark Agubra, downing tha expansion Miami Heat, 93-60. tea Mavaricka won thsir Brat gama foNouring i Agubra was deaR to ( i t Detroit Platons on Wadnaaday tor Adrian Oanttey after two we aka of rumors. Danttey la scheduled to report to OaBas Fri ly afternoon. "AM tha chaos is over," seid Mavaricka guard Dtrek Harper. “It's going to take a Httte more adjuetment but R was a good team tor us to play after a l that's been going on." M U M (90) Long 2-3 4-5 8. Thompson 3-7 7-1013. Cummings 2-10 0 0 4. Sparrow 1-6 0-0 2, Edwards 8-19 0-0 16. Washing­ ton 0-2 0-0 0, Hastings 1-8 2-2 4, MHcheM 2-6 5-6 9. Sund- voto 6-10 0 6 14. Shaaky 2-4 2-2 6. Neal 2-4 0-0 4 Totals 29-7920-2580 DALLAS (93) Tyler 5-10 3-4 13. Perkins 3-3 0-0 6. DoneMeon 7-12 2-4 16. Harper 4-13 3-4 12, Blackman 6-15 5-5 17, Schrampf 3-6 5-611, Davis 5 -1 3 0 0 1 2 , Warmington 3-90-1 6, WHey O t 0-00. Blab 0-0 0-00, Jones 0-0 0-0 O Totels 36-6218- 2493 28 14 18 2 3 -6 0 28 22 23 2 1 -3 3 3-Point goals—Sundvoto 2. Davis 2. Harper. Fouled out—None Rebounds—Miami 50 (Thompson 14). Dallas 57 (Donaldson 22). Assists—Miami 26 (Edwards 5). Dallas 20 (Harper 7). Total touts—Miami 24. Dallas 20. Techni­ cal—Miami Megs defense A—17.007 NHL Standngs M U m e e O T WALES Pittsburgh NY Rangers Washington Philadelphia V L T f i t 20 5 69 21 8 66 22 10 66 28 3 59 32 29 28 28 OP 262 227 213 222 flU 238 206 199 201 New York Wanders 7 .3 t.Loute3 Vancouver 3. Quebec 3 M B PlttaburQhalBufteto.6!g p m ^ ^ » & f J i i Toronto at New York Ranoars. 9:35 p.m i M l Chicago at Detroit, 6:36 p.m. New Jersey at Winnipeg. 7:36 p.m. Washington at Etenqnton, 8:36 p.m. 4:06 p m Philadelphia at Nm?¡Xrt! tetó New York Rangers at Pittsburgh, 6:36 pm. Boston at Calgary. 74)6 pm. Hartford at Mbmesote. 7:36 pm . Montreal at S t Louie. 7:36 pm . New Jersey at Toronto, 74)8 pm . Chiebec at Loa Angelas, 936p.m . Detroit at Buffalo. 124» pm. New York Wanders at PNtedafpNa, 12:35 pm . Boston at Edmonton. 74» pm. Hartford at WInnipag. 74» pm . Montreal at Ch igo. 7:35 pm. Washington at Vancouver. ¿05 pm . Page 14/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, February 17,1989 ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICES EMPLOYMENT 2-10-20-F MRS .TOMBLIN (Formerly Pin's Needles) is doing alterations again. 836-8102. 2- 13-208 COOK FOR dormitory. Weekends only ' Non-smoker, App^M ondoy-Friday. 709 W 22nd. 2- 530— Travel 750-T y p in g T ra n sp o rta tio n If you're thirsty 4 the beach in Corpus Christ! c t u i i M i a b u r j S i t t w 4 a b o a c h ln ’ tim e 1-800-678-SLU ? ★ SPRING BREAKS ★ CANCÚN ★ Group Rate Available. Space Limited. Call Now For Details. Cheryl 346-7587 L O N G H O R N COPIES • R e s u m e s • T h e s e s • T e r m P a p e r s • W o r d P r o c e s s i n g • B i n d i n g • L a m i n a t i n g • L a s e r P r i n t i n g • K o d a k ' C o p i e s 2518 G u a d a lu p e 476-4498 I - BALCONES BUSINESS SERVICES pi tran­ scription, proofreading. $1.50/pg IS yra » » 2 8 0 -6 3 0 4 .2-1S-Í0Ü -D u w ta to , 2-15-3B expertonee. SOUTH PADRE/ SPRING BREAK 7 DAY STARTING AT $119 Per person/first come, first getllll CALL QUALITY WORD Proce of aH Save 15% - February. Southwest) Col W ordwoHa anytime 442 -76 93. 16-5B PROCRASTINATOR'S DREAM 24-hour word-processing. Term papers, reporte and graphics. Col G ray 444-2219. 2-16- 106 --------- DICKSON PR0DUGI0NS 760— Misc. Sarvlcas 1-800-782-7653 ext. 186 _________________________ 2-10-6B-A SPRING BREAK PADRE STYLE Beachfront Special 7 Nights - $219.00 per per­ son including FREE parties - sailing. Call Trent; 477-9637 CANCÚN COLLEGE TOURS SPRING BREAK 7 Nites, 8 Days, Hotel, Airfare, Night­ ly Cocktail Parties, Beach Tourna­ ments, Discount Coupons, $399, plus LOTS morel Veronica 4 7 4 -9 5 0 6 Brandy 4 9 5 -3 1 4 8 2-13-5P SOUTH AMERICA R/T Open $495 ond $595: Anchorage, Alaska R/T Open $500 OBO; Austin to LAX R/T $130 and $170. 453-7628. 2-15-3P____________ BEACH SIDE luxury condo in Mazarían, Mexico. Sleeps tour. Available March 11-18. $450. Coll 345-6166. 2-16-2B SPRING BREAKI Ski Steamboat. Luxury condo, sleeps 6 Bargoinl March 11-18. 1-800-888-0356, Ask for Sutherland Unit. 2-17-6B_______________________ 540 — Lost & Found ★ REWARD ★ Thursday, February 9 — a mi­ crophone w ith radio transmitter attached was lost at MLK and Guadalupe. If you have info., please call 892- 2118. Leave message. No questions asked. 2-15-5B EDUCATIONAL 580 —Musical In stru ctio n GUITAR LESSONS: R & 8, Rock, jazz, country, things in between. Ten years teaching experience Andy Buffington. 452-6181. 2-6-20B PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTOR to teach woodwind instruments. Call Denise 4 7 6 -6 4 5 9 .2-13-5B-C________________ 590—Tutoring DESIGN YOUR own s w e a t* * Hand- knrt yokes, cuff* and appliques. Abo La­ kes' & men's. Alterations. 836 -97 07. 1- 24-20-B-F PRIVATE MAILBOXES-AvaRable Nowt No waiting-lceys made tool 477-1915 504 W 24th M-F 10:30am .5:30p.m . Sot 10:30-3:00p.m . 2-1-18P H O U SEC LEA N IN G ; REASONABLE rates, reliable, references, 5 yean expe­ rience. Estimates over phone. 441-5187, (keep trying). 2-13-106-F EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part Tima TELEMARKETERS Needed immediately for evening work. 5pm-llpm $5.00/hr. No experience required. CALL TODAY! Talent Tree Personnel EOE RESEARCH POSITION! For properly tax research firm. Need responsible individual for property tax research position. Need real estate, or real estate related major; sophomore- graduate student. 2-6 p.m., M-F. Please call 444-6625 between 9:30-11:30 am. 2-15-3B-C THE PRINCETON REVIEW IS LOOKING FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS WHO SCORED EXCEPTIONALLY WELL ON THE LSAT GMAT GRE WE ARE HIRING THE BRIGHTEST, MOST DYNAMIC TEACHERS FOR THE PREP CLASSES THAT REALLY RAISE SCORES! LSAT'S UP 9 POINTS GRE'S UP 220 POINTS GMAT'S UP 85 POINTS (ON AVERAGE) WE OFFER GREAT PAY, FLEXIBLE HOURS. AND THE REWARDS OF TEACHING STUDENTS HOW TO BEAT STANDARDIZED TESTS! CALL US TODAY AT 469-6336 THE PRINCETON REVIEW W E SCORE M O R EI 2-15-20P ★ KENNEL ★ ★ TECHNICIAN ★ Sundays and possibly some Sat­ urdays part-time. More hours in summer if desired. Must be self­ motivated, enjoy onimais, reli­ able, neat. Own transportation. Min. $4.00/hr. in Oak Hid 288-0515. Kelly's Tutoring Now expanding into new subjects ★ ALL MATHS ★ e Statistics e Spanish e English e Physio, • EE e Chemistry e Physics e Biochem. e Orgornc e Special help (or Computerphobes e ★ I want you to succeed it 24 hr* 474-7801 ________________2-3-206-K SPANISH TUTOR: All courses. W i help in grammar, composition, and conversa­ tion. $12/hr. Don't wait until it's too latel 322-0849. 1-25-206-F___________ PRIVATE TUTOR: Physics, math, chemis­ try. The Cambridge method. 345-0778 evenings and weekends. 2-2-15B in CONFIDENTIAL PRIVATE business math, calculus, physics, pascal, statistics and economics. Caff 251-8626. 2 - 7 - 2 0 B _______________________ tutoring STATISTIC TUTOR wonted for graduate level slots course. Will pay your aoina rate. 476-8628 2-17-2P 610 —M isc. In s tru c tio n ~ CPA AUD ITING REVIEW Feb. 25, Mar. 25 Apr. 8, Apr. 22 8:00 a.m-5:00 pm Taylor Hall, Rm 2.006 Register at first class or call 835-5165,473-6390 2-15-5B SERVICES 6 5 0 — M o vin g - H aulfng ABBEY MOVERS: absolutely profossion- ai. Piono moving, households, offices, aportmsnte Specials to Dallas, Houston, etc 479-9301. 2-8-208-D 720 - S tar o-TV R epair f WE REPAIR * TELEPHONE RECORDERS, VC R* TELEVISIONS STER­ EO COMPONENTS TYPE­ W RITERS CALCULATORS BERKMAN’S 4 8 4 4 7 1 1 7 5 0 —T yping • ! PLEASE !e A llow me to PERSONALLY tend to your typing needs on my IBM Word Processor. Fast and accurate to save you lime and money. McCALL OFFICE SERVICES 346-6150 2-6-2 i-D W ORD PROCESSING/typing. Reporte resumas, theses, mo monuscnpts. $15 0/ popo and up. Pick up and pond daevary ovoi- I able. Diana 3 3 5 -7 0 4 0 .2 -17D1- *- ^ ' 7 typow riteri, Mac with WOODS TYPING & word procmdng. Momory Lonnrwriter. 25 yaan nnpartenca. 2200 Guadakpa: 472-6302.2-17P_______ DO YOU nond quafity Bunh w ort O X C al fa r i'/.W V 0031,892-0439.2-1-58 THE STB40 PAD. II II I II M O L * 4W-7710 or837-3212.2-7-208C | 10ft^ ftftO: WOfé pfOCMMS Ih OP Olft#* C A U 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 T O P L A C I A C L A f t f t f M D A D CAR WASH Attondont position weak- nigNs and weekend hours available. Caff 441-0988.2-16-38 JANITORIAL COMPANY looking for part m, W -F, 2:30- m parson, Imoge*. 2013E E. m - Maff. 2-16-58 5:30 at side, m PART TIME Leasing Agent needed for 336 unit apt community. Tusidayi, Thursdays, and every weekend. $5/hour plus bonuses. Please come by 8 9 0 0 N IH 35 ond complete application. 2-17-26 DELIVERY DRIVER port time during lunch Monday thru Friday. Downtown. Use own cor. Co* Michael at Colorado Street Cafe 4 7 9 -6 3 4 6 .2-17-5BA___________ 800— G eneral H alp Wo it d TELEMARKETERS NEEDED, ASAP! Flexible hours. Will work around your classes. Day, evening A weekend work available. AUSTIN TEMPORARY SERVICES 454-5555 ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE The Public Affaire Deportment o f the Federal Reserve Bonk o f Dalas has on immediate openrng fo r on Account Representative who functions as an occount executive fo r the bank's inter­ nal client groups. The rasponsiM Mies include managing Communications programs, writing and dxecfing lite production of a variety o f communi­ cation pieces, and « r anging appro­ priate media contacts to gain expo­ sure fo r the Bank. Qualifications include: • Bachelor's Degree m Journal­ ism or English, MBA or equiva­ lent work experience. • Excellent w riting and oral com­ Looking for work thoTi ton? TEACH DANCING! Part-timo (evenings) o r fuff-time, with corear potential, no axpatenca nacas- *ory - wa train. Earn $6.00 to $10.00 an hour one# tramad. Mud bo w o l groomed, plooront poreonotty. Apply in poreon. Arthur Murray Donco Studio 2700 W. Andanon Lon# #504 NO PHONE CALLS 2-17-1B-K Young, Successful business exec­ utive desires personal assistant. Some of the duties will be: han­ ding in/out correspondency screening phone calk, market research, tending to bank ac­ count and bilk, local errands in Austin, help with interior design­ ing. Some assistance with 316 year old son will be required. Successful applicant must have neat, rafes 15-20 hrs/wk, lookings for a one year commitment. Please send resume with cover letter to: d appearance. J.M. Carney 3019 Alvin DeVane #400 Amlin, TX 78741 ________________________2-16-58 343-6400 2-16-56-D munication skills. a Working knowledge of graphic oris sufficient to direct produc­ tion of newsletters, brochures or other communicotins pieces. We provide competitive salaries and Upscale residential real es­ tate company needs staff as­ sistants. 12:30-5 p.m. M -F. $5/h r. Must have some m a- excellent benefits. Pleaso sand cintosh experience. Conven- !?: Fodnrd R ient to UT. Free paricing. Friendly atmostphere. Tom o r Beth 4 7 2 -3 3 3 6 . Ddk“' * * ” K * * * n Call Equal Opportunity EmpioyorM/F/H/V 2-16-2P-D 2-16-28 This Spring Break, For just $25 each way, you and your friends can afford to pile on Greyhound. Whether it’s the beach, the slopes or your hometown, going Greyhound won’t cramp your style. $i each way based on round-trip purchase. fl& R S S S B S S B 916 E. Roen \ Street *458-4463 Must present valid college I D. Card upon purchase. No other discounts apply. Tickets are nontransferable and good only for travel on Greyhound and other participating carriers. Fare is valid for destinations up to 60) miles from point of origin. Offer limited. Greyhound also offers low Money Saver fares. Some restrictions apply. Spring Break fare available 2/15/89 through 5/15/89 and is subject to change without notice. © 1989 Greyhound Lines, Inc. 8MM.OVMINT BMPLOYMKNT EMPLOYMCNT KMPLOYM8NT 8MKOYM8NT IMPLOYMIMT 800— On t n lH » > W m M I TELEPHONE INTERVIEWERS Needed to conduct business to business research. 8 am to 7 j».m . M < > ^ S ra F r i- b o p ^ r f o ^ ^ u y /p ó d - a 2 0 - 0 0 1 5 prop el U n a y 27,7 8 « d March d a y . C a ll M a iy a l ★ INVENTORY/ ★ ★ PRICING ★ f o r m o re in fo rm a tio n . l.M udbeavaiaRrfe9am.-6pm. 2-16-3B-A Call 441-4214 2-17-58 8 1 0 -O ff i« - Cfcrical . RHONE RECEPTIONIST. North Auten Company noorii o porMimu recqphorat for morning * 8 . 9on»-1pm. Good m ak-1 m m . (Amm temre moMogi about youraW). 2-16-38-f r». TYPIST NEAR CAMPUS • ATbe (45+ wpm). mXMMWk (wo train). Rwmor (your oari. ODD JOBS. Apofico- 208-F t¡om9«Mpm_4C 59-4 . I m 71 *B 9-1 Monday tfiru ^■ ^toG oodJvpia 65-75word»-nomr- NEAR CAA4PUS • FdVnart Wm. TVPST mm 'X'T'.>-«*H 145+ w w * lOOKEBER (wa Ira k i |mm Rumor (your cw). OOO JOBS. Apples- 8 2 0 — A c c o w n t ln g - ¡________ O o o k k — p i n g FASHION ACCESSORY MANUFACTURER : im Ib conadonlioM, cJstaB-oriantocL orgonizud poopla to do figkl anon Wy work and oid o r prooMwig. Non- — i . . . . HllUUIIg onvco. 452-4861 ______________________2-14-38-C ENTREPRENEURS! BE YOUR OWN BOSS 18 Yoar old company is seeking mofivafed persons. SALES & MARKETING SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY! CALL ROD 837-9303 ____________________ 2-13-208-F ★ STUDENTS! ★ Eon) $200-$500 a wmk p a rt-n m e . Work your own hours selling a great now product that sols itself. Call Ben Bates O O O I7 7 C ¡ - I / / D ¡ . 2-16-58 860— tn q in o iln g Tuchnkal I CONTINUUM I COMPUTER OPERATOR TRAINEE ml P A D T T 1 M F ,MVIC CHILD CARE MdMreCm ferffw flb Pick up fw o chBdran from (chool and inAxta; Poto ccmldirnMi me- ^ ^ mofhnr conwa homa tram Canffraum Company • y t »■ ? i SSdtel work. Hour* appTOK. 3-6 p jn . M-F. t o «entere cmnor ara«tete- Mud lava U k M ud ba abb to cook. ^ Light bouamuork. M ud kora car. k f - tomcho wmmmM mrenrIndktenreiinidng arancan raquirad. G a l aftar 6 p m Ikk fdtama podffon tomtom dm work «ü l ^ «« « tftírt» IOIM WMlwidi w8h M l fftftstaORfll COM- -15-3 MU V . -. . . .. . ■ - ■ - and 3090 ---------- < sP li w talw N B i E S 2 « -¡ í t admnw. * « * > * and tkiffim iiip -S *" * ^ * The Continuum Co. Inc Hum aniin urra - » AudteTX 78759 801 2-1 78-K FULL-TIM E B A B Y/ U ^ l IC C ^ C C D C D n U U D C C To Mbean Mordí 1, 1989. No ^■m ^m pM tecttbr^ouw of UT student Mmt be dependable li coring wlh young chldren. Col 331-4170 between 8-5. Hove refcror 8 9 0 — C lu b e - BABYStTTBt FOR tete» nBamonn» dan»- R es ta u ra n ts 6J0pm 339-7347.2-15J8 AN EXPBHB4CB) h t e I r a * to am K 5 S í $ « $ . i s é * 2 - 5 8 ? EXCHANQf ROOM and beerf ta r ac- cndonal d id ra ra U#d ta w d te ra ta ^e^e^k 08^8018 ^P8W8 984D 2-17-68 ' HHDCHRDiOM NGparsantebabydt my 2 yam aid son an k fn 442-7979.2-17-28 2-14-45# m o im m ft l o n f t m u n C al Capteln Fay w 477-5706.1 r J é S i NATIONAL COMPANY EXPANDING 2-15-48 _x_ 1 n o t oponinai n rounb 1 n A m x » - « — k » _ _ m bousaworos 8 iport- -.1 1 X. _ avaaoBW vor : q ¿ « a d appfconte >u ' I Bom 90m am 1.30pm. K X M M L 2- 13-58 Q T siU B T O i ^ M h w ta ta BSkmCdi Nnncy. 476-5477. 2 -M -flt 2-2-208# 810 OfflCB- f l n h g | 328-7828 SHOMW Aa CAPE now kkteg MHtew ' I « id parí Urna coda and caditem A ralv lüll íf! P^non only. Located Jndda I THE AUSTIN PEACE & ' Skawpteca Lanm-9616 K M 35.2-7- ["■ JUSTICE COALITION ^ /' : 0 VB8 EAS JO BS. Abo Cn w orking In on A Tom Thumb ptmerwdy Accounts Prindpab I modmL Ftenbte f and N. 5311 Bdoonas. Mopac at Northland Dr. Skfls raquirad: 10 bay, 6 0 + typ- Apply in pawon only. 2-17-58________ » ing, input knowtadqa o f CRT fiffff# required. B ra quira a t a •'•'f Ptaarasand raaums and aalary ra- Iw . V UBHJU rW W N b U r V " ! v -in nr- mm nil ir ~f ffi 1 2|ii mflng 1 * 11 1# - PV BARTENDING LÍARNH0W IN2W KKS Morning, aftamoon and eve­ ning dosses available. Job pk « bt owkfance. Taxaa School of l ottanderi . 440- 0791. Approved by Tenas Edu- COftOO AftDACYt 3-14-20M MKE and CHAM #$ teito» ea* now C ÍM pNlÉMpdR» INftfeMMMI 8MÍ 4pm. Q O fm S iliM M IC ne iiBiini i f inti m k | j¡ü ¡ 90PÚB37-7177.W748 45». ES C M & 4 1 4 M 4 90# € A USE TEXAN CLAS­ SIFIEDS DIAL 471-5244 UeeYour VISA or M aderCaM l to charge your Texan B f t R N i m i ■ C a l 471-5344