The Daily Tfyan $*7ZS¿ X I 9£*?$*? OJ Vol 80, No, 11 (USPS 146-440) S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The U n i v e r s i t y of Texas a t A u s t i n plember 16, ouj Council defers rate issue, adopts development limits By MARK HENRICKS Daily Texan Staff The issues of environmental controls and energy rate hikes brought hundreds of Austinites out Monday night to try to in­ fluence City Council at a special meeting. The council approved a watered-down version of development constraints proposed last week — attracting roughly 150 con­ struction workers to Monday’s meeting — and held public hear­ ing on new utility rate structures. The construction workers, just off their job sites, mingled with utility advocates wearing black buttons supporting lifeline rate Proposal 7 and equally numerous opponents of the con­ troversial rate proposal. Proponents of both sides of the utility controversy received uniformly loud and lengthy ovations from the standing-room- only crowd. COUNCIL MEMBERS listened to reports and speeches from city staff and members of the Electric Utility Commission and questioned speakers at length on specifics. But the council took no action. The issue will again be brought up at the council’s regular meeting Thursday. Seth Searcy, president of the Save Barton Creek Association, said the environmental group was disappointed and surprised at the council’s action on development controls. He said council members bowed to the financial interests of powerful builders and developers. Instead of a six-month moratorium on approvals of further development in the Slaughter Creek and Bear Creek watersheds in Southwest Austin — proposed last week — the council voted 5 to 2 for 60-day controls. A motion to place a 30-day non-extendable moratorium on Williamson Creek development was approved on a 4-to-3 vote after much debate among the council members. The narrow margin requires that the motion be read a second time at Thursday’s council meeting before being formally adopted. A FTER DECIDING onion Creek is outside the city’s ex­ traterritorial jursidiction, the council went on to endorse the formation of an Edwards Aquifer Task Force. The nine-member task force will consist of one landowner, two environmentalists and two developers, all chosen by the council, and four more chosen by the Planning Commission and the Environmental Board. The task force will within 30 days report recommendations for interim and permanent development controls for the sensitive watersheds. Searcy charged that the time available for the task force is too short to allow meaningful work. It is “ not going to have enough time to do anything but say grace over the ordinance that’s already being drafted by the developers' engineers,’’ he said. Council member Betty Himmelblau suggested that the moratorium be amended to exempt large a r e a s of the watersheds that do not lie in the recharge zone of the Edwards Aquifer. This amendment, along with exemptions for already approved final p relim in ary plans and applications, appeared to be a substantial victory for the development interests. tem porarily d isap p rov ed ONE REAL ESTATE agent said he was not surprised that ‘a great number’ of construction workers were there but said con­ tracting companies had not prompted them to appear. EUC member Peck Young had proponents of Proposal 7 on their feet as he asked them to stand if they preferred “ a utility bill they could afford’’ to “ going to the city, with hat in hand, begging for charity.’’ He said the proposal’s inverted rate structure, which would charge more as consumption climbs, would be a powerful incen­ tive for energy conservation. “ This country is called on to wage the moral equivalent of war on saving energy, and the City of Austin is working for the other side,’’ he said. EUC member Jo Anne Midwikis spoke against Proposal 7 and in favor of direct payments to needy utility customers. She said the restructuring would give an “ incorrect conservation signal,’’ prompting customers to use more energy while keeping their bills the same, “ I don't believe it is the intention of this city to distribute wealth through our electric rates,’’ she said. Turks arrest terrorist suspects Military junta strengthens hold on country ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) - Turkish security forces marching three abreast swept through cities and slums across the country Monday and arrested hun­ dreds of suspected terrorists in an ef­ fort to stifle resistance to the 4-day-old coup. The crackdown on Turkey’s left- and right-w ing e x tre m ists cam e am id reports that the country’s six-man rul­ ing military junta had selected a new prime minister to replace the deposed Suleiman Demirel. Government sources said Turgut Ozal, undersecretary for the office of prime minister and the coordinator of Turkey’s economic recovery program, was likely to be tapped for the job. Ozal has been placed in charge of all economic affairs by the junta but has not been appointed a minister. An of­ fic ia l ju n ta emphasized no new prime minister has yet been named. sp o k esm an the for The sources said Haluk Bayulken, a career diplomat and former CENTO secretary general, was a dark horse candidate for the post. The announcement about a prime minister could come at a news con­ ference slated for Tuesday by the head of the ruling National Security Council, Gen. Kenan Evren Turkey’s new military rulers began their first full week in power by order­ ing all of the country’s 60,000 striking workers back to their jobs and conduc­ ting a nationwide search for those the su sp ected of political violence that caused 20 deaths per day before F r id a y ’ s m ilitary involvem ent in takeover. Late Monday, police sources reported several apparent acts of resistance to the military regime. In Beytepe, near Ankara, an outbreak of shooting was reported. In Yozgat, in central Anatolia, 50 s t u d e n t s w e r e f o r a r r e s t e d demonstrating against army rule. In Mersin, Tarsus and Adana, witnesses said movie houses were filled with peo­ ple who had been arrested. Sources close to the junta said they expected a m ajor purge of civilian provincial governors and mayors In the coastal city of Antalia, sources said the left-leaning mayor was already deposed and replaced by an army colonel The strikers, who were granted a 70 percent pay boost pending the outcome of their labor negotiations, returned peacefully to work the s t r e e t s , In the heart of Ankara, soldiers arm ­ ed with M-16s marched three-abreast s e a r c h i n g t hr ough buildings, apartments and even a hotel for terrorist hideouts and arm s caches. In the capital 10 people were arrested near the parliament building when they tried leafl ets titled to distribute “ Fascism is Rising “ Pedestrians were stopped by soldiers, asked for their identity card s and searched while helicopters hovered overhead Government sources said similar operations were conducted in Istanbul, Adana. Izmir and other large Turkish cities and “ hundreds” of persons have been arrested. During the night, when the curfew in effect, soldiers raided the was “ Gecekondu” and rounded up suspects in the shanty towns around all m ajor municipalities that spawned so many of the count r y’s rightist and leftist terrorists. The south and southeastern areas of Turkey, where martial law was lightly imposed, is reported to be rife with op­ position to last Friday's military coup. Police sources said Adana and other major cities in that region were virtual­ ly sealed off. The m artial law command in six eastern provinces, where Turkey 's Kur­ dish minority is concentrated, said 182 people had been picked up for suspected terrorist and other offenses and 108 were taken into custody. in U r f a , S i m i l a r r o u n d u p s in southeastern Turkey, and Mainisa, near the western port city of Izmir, netted 35 terrorist suspects, large quantities of arm s and explosives. There was no indication of how or when those in custody would be tried. But Evren might address the issue in his news conference The army appears to be trying tc crack the leftist and rightist terrorist groups — whose membership is believ­ ed to number as high as 20.000 — before any organized resistance to the military takeover can be initiated Although the army is coming down hard on the extrem ists, its rule is being accepted passively by the majority of inhabitants and Turkey's 43 million curfews have been relaxed in many cities. 37,400» 36,400 35,500 34,600 32,800 31,800 Older citizens advocate Lyle Hamner supports lifeline revisions. Rocky Kneten, Daily Texan Staff Students quit housing committee By KATHY SHWIFF Daily Texan Staff Three student members of the Advisory Committee on Brackenridge/Deep Eddy Construction resigned Monday to protest the University administration’s “ failure to take timely and responsible steps toward maintaining low cost housing.’’ In a letter submitted to UT President Peter Flawn, com­ mittee members Catherine Baris, Karen E arle and Scott Spradlin said, “ It has been over six months since that regents’ meeting (where construction of new family housing units was appproved) and no active efforts have been made by either the board or the UT Austin administration to explore possibilities of rent reduction. “ Repeatedly we have urged the administration to form a committee to look into the financial aspects of the project; repeatedly we have been ignored,’’ the letter states. ROBERT COOKE, director of housing and food administra­ tion and chairman of the committee to which the three students were appointed in April, said the University has applied for a college housing loan from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. No final cost estim ate for the construction has been received, and it is uncertain whether HUD will grant the loan, he said. Spradlin said the committee has received projections of rent charges that were “ awful high even with the HUD loan. Rough projections said monthly rents would be $200 to $300 and up with HUD money and $300 to $450 with conventional bond financing. Rent for the family student housing units currently costs about $88 to $165 a month. The resignation letter said the average income for members of the Brackenridge/Deep Eddy community is less than $400 a month. “ Student income comes from fixed sources and rarely rises to meet inflation Will we be expected to pay 100 percent of our income in rent,” the letter states. SPRADLIN SAID the students have a lot of creative ideas for easing rent costs and for alternative subsidies but that there is no outlet for students’ suggestions. “ We had plenty of input into what type of housing was built but no outlet whatsoever into what type of financing,” he said. “ We tried to create something that was livable and to create something that was affordable. We managed to do half of that. ’ Cooke said the advisory committee was charged mainly with construction of the new housing units but will be looking at financing. “ Any guesstimate on rent would be premature at this tim e,” Cooke said. The letter said the students had no serious complaints about the committee or its work, but that they found the ad­ ministration’s refusal to investigate possible methods of lower­ ing rents on the project “ absolutely inexcusable.” “ We contend that the University administration has broken faith by refusing to consider the most important aspect of this whole project. We see no reason to continue our involvement in a project that neither we nor any of the community we repre­ sent will be able to afford to take advantage of.” Faculty salary erosion undermines UT’s academic position Carolina, Ohio, Washington and Wisconsin, ac­ cording to the Roose-Andersen report. 43,500 40,500 Editor’s note: This is the first of a two- part series comparing UT faculty salaries with other schools around the nation. By MELISSA WARD Daily Texan Staff Though the University ranks among the top 12 public universities in the nation, its position is eroding because it is not keeping up with national pay scales, a University official said Monday. The University is the lowest of those 12 univer­ sities when comparing professors’ salaries, ac­ cording to the Roose-Andersen report. “ If the University keeps losing ground, our comparative academic position will be hurt,” said William Lasher, director of the Office of Institutional Studies. When we look at situations in the other states that we have to compete with, our position is already eroding.” Lasher said. The University has lost faculty members in engineering, business and pharmacy because academic salaries are not competitive w ith those paid by the government and private businesses. L a s h e r e x p e c t s the gap bet ween the University and other top institutions to widen, he said. In a report made to President Peter Flawn last week. Lasher said the University is falling behind national trends. Salaries at the public un­ iversities which grant doctoral degrees were 6.8 percent higher in 1979-80 than in 1978-79. The in­ crease at the University was only 6.1 percent. The University ranked in the upper 35 percent in a comparison of faculty compensation — salaries plus benefits—at the university level, according to a survey compiled by the American Association of University Professors. The study compared compensation at 2,400 colleges and un­ iversities. N a t i o n a l l y , f ul l professors averaging $34,015 at the university level. UT professors’ salaries for 1979-80 were es- s u r v e y s h o w s t he “ If the University keeps losing g round, our c o m p a r a t i v e academic position will be hurt,” William Lasher, director Office of Institutional Studies timated in the top 30 percent at $36,400 l> Full professors’ salaries at the University fell 10 percent below the weighted average of the other top public in California, Illinois. Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, North institutions Those figures differ slightly from the AAUP survey because the AAUP report includes fringe benefits when calculating salary compensation. Two of the highest paying public univer­ sities are in California, the University of Califor­ nia at Berkley and UCLA. The University of Michigan and Michigan State University are also ranked among the top 12 schools. UT salaries last year were the highest in the state at the university level. Full professors average $36,300 at Rice University, $35,600 at the University of Houston, $35,000 at Texas A&M University, $34,100 at Southern Methodist University and $33,800 at Baylor University. Nationally, associate professors earned $26,270 in 1979-80, while at the University they averaged $27,000. The AAUP survey put them in the upper 40 percentile. The national average salary for assistant professors was $21,150. At the University, the $22,000 average was in the top 30 percentile. Instructors earned an estim ated $16,770 in the upper 40 nationwide They averaged percentile with $17,300 at the University. The figures combine salary and fringe benefits for full-time faculty members, adjusted to a nine-month basis. 29,800 1247600a UCLA SUNY OSU UT UofOre. UofMd. Ga.Tech OU Professor Associate Professor Assistant P r o f e s s o r * * I n s t r u c t o r * Graphic by Karen Hurley, Daily Texan staff * Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, September 16, 1980 J O B E S S H A M M E R M D A N N O U N C C S T H I O P E N I N G o r H E P o r r i c t r o n t h e p p a c t i c e o r O B S T E T R I C S A N D G Y N E C O L O G Y 8 0 5 E A S T 3 2 N O S T R E E T A U a r i N TEXAS 7 8 7 0 5 * AHO HER ASSOCI ATI ON WITH D O C T O R S R O B E R T F U L M E R J O E M c l L H A N E Y A N D M A R I O N S T A H L TCLI*mo*< <»l*l 477.1»>4 IE NO »MW«« CALL <5. 112! The buck starts here. We can help you create your career. Come by the Career Center for a com plete workshop and recruitment schedule. G etting the Job You Want Interview ing R esum e W riting R esum e C ritique Lab 9/17 9/23 9/16 9/24 9/17 9/24 9/18 9/19 9/26 4-5:30 4:30-6 4:30-6 12-1:30 12-1:30 4-5:30 12-1:30 2-2:30 2-2:30 TfcXAN PERMANENT STAFF Mark McKinnon John Haven* Managing Kditor Assisiant Managing Brian Dunbar. Don Puffer Editors Robert King Assistant to the Editor Joe Tedirw News Kali tor Associate News Editor Alisa Hagan Assistant News Editors Diane Ballard Pat'K-k Jankowski Senior Copy Editors Wendy Farb Ron Sey bold Jimmy Burch Reid Laymance Victoria Barnaart Xavier Garza Tirn Wentworth Jeff Latcham Karen Hurley Alex Ptaza Kelly Cash Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Entertainm ent Editor Photo Editor Asst Photo Editor Feature Editor Graphics Editor Images Editor Images Associate Editor Campus Activities Suzy Lampert ......... Editor Jennv Abdo, General Reporters Karen ann Broe. Suzanne Brown. Scott Lind Dianna Hunt. David Pyndus, G ardner Selby Kathv Shwiff, Melissa Ward. Mark Henncks Newswriters Steve Vinson. Klaus H erring Cyndy Slovak. Pam Nester ISSUE STAFF News Assistants Mike Mac A bee Entertainm ent Assistant Assistant Sports Editor Sports Assistants Make-up Editor Wire Editor Copy Editors Dianna Hanna Laurel Brubaker Jenny Benedict Roger Campbell Susie Woodhams Ken Rodriguez Craig Czerwinski Vicky Thomas K H Moore Jeff Howard Kay Litchfield. Mark Doll Karen Hurley. Mike Fry Rocky Kneten Ralph Barrera A rtis ts Photographers TFXAN ADVERTISING STAFF Kathy Begala Joel Carter Kim Cooper Lisa O rso n . Janem arie Hagan Laura Manning. Gina Montgomery Peg Moody. Jam es Theall Jim Wells, Jeffrey Whitehead The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications Drawer D, University Station. Austin, TX 78712 The I>aily Texan is published Monday. Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday, and F ri­ day. except holiday and exam periods 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 A 4 136 ¡ Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in TSP Building 3 200 ( 471 52441 and display advertising in TSP Building 3 210 (471-18651 The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students 6330 N Pulaski. Chicago, IL 60646 The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journalism Congress the Texas Daily Newspaper Association and American Newspaper Publishers Association Copyright I960 Texas Student Publications THE DAILY TEXAN SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Semester (Fall or Spring! 1980-81 ...................... . By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within USA Two Semesters (Fall and Spring) 1980-81 By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within U S A 17 50 18 SO 32 00 34 00 Summer Session 1981 By mail in Texas $11 50 By mail outside Texas within U S A 12 00 Send orders and address changes to TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS, P.O Box PUB NO 146440 D Austin Texas 78712, or to TSP Building C3 200 IF University honors ‘Mr. UT’ B y G A R D N E R S E L B Y Daily Texan Staff Amo Nowotny, described by three generations of University students as “ Mr. UT,” tells a story about his most recent honor, being named the University’s dean of student life em eritus. While attending a conference at the University of Wisconsin several years ago, Nowotny recalls, a president em eritus of the university described his title as meaning “ out of a job. and he ought to be.” Despite the jokes, on Sunday Nowotny was heaped with praise from form er University students, a m em ber of the Board of Regents and an audience composed of representatives from stu­ dent organizations he helped organize during his more than 60 years on campus. Those attending the luncheon included representatives from the University chapters of Alpha Phi Omega, a service organiza­ tion, and Phi Eta Sigma, a freshm an honor society. Nowotny is national president of both groups. The F riars, a scholastic honor society, joined the Texas Cow­ boys (the pep squad Nowotny and the Longhorn Band president organized in 19221 in presenting Nowotny with a plaque for his service to students. Regent Jane Blumberg announced the em eritus designation, calling Nowotny “ as individual as a thumbprint during his years, first as a student earning bachelor's degrees in arts and law and a m aster's degree in arts, and later as dean of student life from 1943 to 1964 “ This (presentation) is not a common practice, Mettlen, executive assistant to President P eter Flawn. said Bob "He deserves it He has been a marvelous fixture on this cam ­ pus for a long time, and this seemed an appropriate way to honor him ," Mettlen said. After retirem ent, Nowotny worked as a consultant to the University Development Board until he reached the age of 70. Now 81, Nowotny said Monday he plans to “ enjoy doing l i t t l e in contact with student chores" on campus and “ keep organizations. “ This is one of the greatest schools in the country, he said “ It's been awfully good to me over the years.” Prigogine to speak at seminar By C IN D Y W ID N E R Eight experts in the sciences and hum anities, including Nobel P rize winner Ilya Prigogine, will gather at a two-day conference at the University to seek a “ new alliance between science and literatu re.” “ S cience and L ite ra tu r e : Two Cultures or One,” a conference spon­ sored by the College of Liberal Arts and the College of Natural Sciences, will be the held the Knopf Room of in Academic Center on Sept. 22 and 23 and is free to the public. The sem inar will engage social and natural scientists, philosophers and literary scholars in open discussion about the relationship between science the humanities, with particular and em phasis on P rigogine’s theories. Prigogine, now regental professor in the d e p a rtm e n ts of physics and the 1977 chemical engineering, won Nobel Prize in Chemistry. “ We ll be trying to draw out some of the implications of Prigogine’s theories in relation to literature," said Dr. Carl Rubino, associate professor in the Department of Classics and conference organizer. He said some of P ngogine’s dis­ coveries “ display striking connections with contemporary critical thought” in literature u i i s f i n B m o n i e v s o r i s c h o o l S upervised by Association M ontessori Internationale Pre-School & Elem entary Levels explore — e x p erim e n t — discover free d o m w ith discipline p la n n e d le a rn in g experiences exte n sive m ate ria ls • moth • music • lan gu age • art t o f o w op m n in g t fo r c o r t a m o g o t o n ly ) • social studies • science A v e . H (UT Ar»ai 442-3152 J o n * * Rd . (W ottgatm Moll Aroa) A l p i n e Rd . (St U l Ar»o) IMMIGRATION PAUL PARSONS Attorney at Law 2200 Guadalupe, #216 Austin, Texas 78705 (512) 477-7887 Se Habla Español U S E T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D S All workshops in Jester A223 Career Center Je ste r A 115 4 7 1 -1 2 1 7 E. H E N R Y M E Y E R JR. D V M A n n o u n ce s the Relocation of R I V E R S I D E V E T E R I N A R Y C L I N I C 1421 A R E N A D R I V E (N o rtheast Corn er of E. R iv e rs id e D r iv e and P a r k e r La n e intersection) H o u rs by A p p o intm ent 444-3111 m L J X J J L j u S m i í S E The Chicano Culture Committee In Celebration o f M exico’s Independence Day, el diez y seis de septiem bre, Presents T A C O S de FAJITAS Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1980 11 a.m.-2 p.m. North of Hogg Auditorium $1.25/taco 50*/glass of homemade lemonade! i l RICH SPORTS Fall 1980 Snow Ski and Store-Wide Clearance Sale! Three Davs Onk Sent 18.10 ALL SALES FINAL • NO EXCHANGES • NO REFUNDS Extra Bonus on all cash or check purchases of $200. or more get an additional 5% discount. Credit Card purchases do not apply for this discount. 1979-1980 PARKAS ft SUITS Alpine Designs, Bogner, Cevas, Fera, Head, Hot Gear, Levi, Serac, Slalom, Skyr All ‘/a Off 1979-1980 PANTS & WARMUPS Bogner, Fera, Gerry. Head, Hot Gear, Levi, Peter Frank, Slalom, Skyr All Vs Off 1980 SKIS Very Limited Amounts Hexcei • K2, l / 3 OFF 1980 BOOTS Very Limited Style & Sizes Vendramini V3 OFF Nordics & ScoD V t OFF Hanson Citation & Stiletto Vo OFF Hanson Avanti & Esprit $ 1 0 0 . 1981 SKIS 10% OFF Hexcei • K-2 • Rossignd Pre ■ Yamaha • La Groiz 1981 BOOTS 10% OFF Nórdica • Hanson • Salomon BINDINGS Gene * Salomon • Tyroha 10% OFF EARLY BIRD SPECIAL One Day Only, Saturday Sept. 27, 10 AM-6 PM 10% off all rentals reserved that day for use through December 31, 1980 Bargains on 1979-1980 Sweaters & Turdenecks POLES Allsop, Kerma. K-2, Scon Va OFF TENNIS Racquets Va OFF Mens & Ladies Tennis Clothes */3 OFF Selected Tennis Warm l«ps V* OFF Socks • Buy 6 get one FREE BACKPACKING Frame Packs: Jansport Cascade & Rainier lU OFF Kelly, Nova & Sonora lU OFF Teats: Royal Arch Vs OFF Misc Tents */a to */a OFF Hiking Shorts V* OFF Last years down & synthetic parkas & vests Vs OFF WATER SKIS Jobe, Bassett, Sport, Tech, EP */s OFF Demos Vi OFF SCUBA Tanks: 80 J & K’s from $214. to $235. SALE $112. to $120. Regulators: Conshelf XTV lists $183 SALE $101. Calypso VI, lists $210. SALE $124 l .S Diwrs BC-2, lists $172. SALE $105. other BC’s on Sale Also Also Great Buys on: Depth Gauges • Dive Lights Scuba Bags • Books • Dive Knives Waiches • Guns • Wet Suits Hoods • doves Underwater Photo Equipment 10% OFF Sale Hours 9 A.M.-9 P.M. J.B2CH SPORTS ltd NORTHCROSS MALL • AUSTIN, TEXAS “ Y o u r A n s w e r to P e r fe c t i o n in Fashion' NEW FALL ARRIVALS 2 0 % OFF Come in and see yourself f it into the fall picture. Free accessory with s20 purchase. 2514 Guadalupe Open 9:30-6 Monday-Saturday 478-6077 J INVENTORY LIQUIDATION SALE ~ Continues Daily 20-50% OFF on Arrow Shirts 40-50% OFF on Jeans & Slacks ALL LEVI'S DENIM & CORDUROY FLARES $ 10.99 40% OFF on Clothing & Suits 50% OFF all Neckties Large Group of Shoes Values to *45 51 5 a pair Athletic Sport Shoes Reg. *27 $ 1 0 a pair Socks Reg. $1.75 on Sale for $1 .25 a pair 2512 G u a d a lu p e — O n the D rag Open 9:30-6 ( • U n s e t Tuesday, September 16, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN World in Brief Iran approaches hostage issue From Texan news services Fam ilies of the 52 American hostages appealed for the release of their loved ones in a letter delivered Monday to Iran s parliam entary speaker who call­ ed for a U.S. apology for past actions in Iran on the eve of the first official debate of the captives' fate. ' We are w riting to you privately as p aren ts, w ives and c h ild re n ," the fam ilies' letter said, appealing to “ the people of Iran, a people with a profound sense of family ties." But Iran 's parliam entary speaker, Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani, in a Tehran radio broadcast monitored in London, warned: “ The Majlis (parlia­ ment! cannot disregard condemnation of previous policy by the present U.S. governm ent." RAFSANJANI. who said the parlia­ ment would consider the hostage issue Tuesday, “ expressed his hope that the U.S. media will convey the M ajlis’ reply to the m essage of the U.S. congressm en without any censorship,” Iran radio monitored in London said. Neither the congressm en’s letter — the second of two sent to the parliam ent — nor the M ajlis response have been released in Washington or Tehran. No c o n g re s s m e n h a v e a c k n o w le d g e d writing the second letter. The letter from families of all 52 hostages, w ritten and signed Sept. 6-7 in W ashington, w as delivered to R af­ sanjani by the Algerian government, Tehran radio said. The hostages entered their 317th day in captivity. OPEC deadlock that "W’e understand the people of Iran have suffered untold indignities and wrongs in the past." the letter said. The families said they “are willing to m eet on any ap p ro p riate occasion w here an open dialogue m ight be useful." Secretary of State Edmund Muskie told a State D epartm ent news con­ ference in Washington. “ I think it would be a mistake to raise expectations" on the basis of specific statem ents out of Iran President Carter, in Texas, said the Ira n ia n a u th o ritie s “ a re m ak in g statem ents in Iran that might very well lead to a resolution of this problem in the future." In Tehran, P resident A bolhassan B a n i-S a d r an d P r im e M i n is te r Mohammed Ali Rajai met for the first tim e Monday with their Council of Ministers. IRAN RADIO said only that “current national issues and the governm ent's policy were discussed. " badge, M u s k ie , w e a r in g a “ f r e e th e hostages took a cautious, reserved view of new overtures from Tehran, saying no negotiations are un­ der way with the Iranian government. Muskie s caution at his news con­ ference contrasted with a more hopeful statem ent by President C arter, who said in Texas Monday, “ They (Iranian authorities) are making statem ents in Iran that might very well lead to a the resolution of future.” this problem in World &Nationai Page 3 Klan rallies; wizard jailed By United Press International The tiny northeastern Connecticut farming town of Scotland tried to return to normal Monday, but officials said the memory of two weekend Ku Klux Klan rallies won’t be erased for some time. “ We'll be back to normal in a couple of days. But the memory will linger on for a few months anyway, maybe into years," first selectman Nelson Perry Jr. said. Several hundred people gathered in a rented cow pasture Saturday and again Sunday to watch three dozen robed Klansmen, most with their fa c es hidden, burn giant crosses in the first public KKK rallies in the state in more than 70 years. NINE PEOPLE were arrested and eight were injured in clashes between anti-Klan marchers and sympathizers and area residents before the Saturday rally. Klan Imperial Wizard Bill Wilkinson was arrested before the Sunday rally on a gun possession charge but was releas­ ed in time to lead the Klan prayer before the second cross burning. Wilkinson. 38, of Denham Springs, La., said his group signed up several new members and collected $20 dues from each during the weekend. He said Connecticut was chosen as the site of the rallies because it was the New England state which had shown the most positive response to the KKK. BUT PUBLIC officials, including Gov. Ella Grasso and several town and leaders city officials, and church blasted the Klan's activities in the state. “ We would have been happier if it had not been in our town,” Perry said. “They were not welcom e, simply because they're violent.” “ We’d like to just forget it happened, but it will take a little while to do that,” town clerk Rosilda Lasch said. “We would like to be known for something besides the Klan rally.” A force of 200 state troopers — many on overtime — was on dutj^in the town through the weekend. An unofficial es­ timate put the cost of police protection for the two days at $150,000. M eanwhile, in Greenboro, N.C., Superior Court Judge James M. Long agreed Monday to allow the testimony of an FBI identification specialist in the trial of six Klansmen and Nazis accused of killing five communists. DONALD G. HAVEKOST, an FBI lab specialist based in Washington, had testified that metal fragments found in the body of a victim appeared to be of the same size buckshot found in the defendant’s van. The Klansmen and Nazis are accused of killing the communists Nov. 3, 1979, shortly before a “Death to the Klan” march organized by the communists was scheduled to begin. Defendants Roland Wayne Wood and Jack Wilson Fowler Jr. of Winston-Salem, Lawrence Gene Morgan of Lincolnton, David Wayne Matthews of Newton, Coleman Blair Pridmore of Lincolnton and Jerry Paul Smith of Maiden could receive the death penalty if convicted. A hooded Klansman poses at a Connecticut rally. UPI Telephoto Ministers debate prices, production VIENNA, Austria — The OPEC ministers ended the opening session of their meeting here in deadlock Mon­ day night over the issues of unifying the current price of oil and establishing a long-term policy for oil price in­ creases. Saudi Arabia’s oil m inister, Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, indicated a further hardening of the Saudi posi­ tion by insisting to reporters that no decision would be m ade by his country to reduce production and raise prices to the level of other OPEC nations until agree­ m ent has been reached on the long-term pricing strategy. The Saudi oil minister made his comments to journalists afte r the ministers of oil, finance and foreign affairs of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries had ended their opening session at 10 p.m., three hours behind schedule. SAUDI OFFICIALS, including Yamani, had said Sun­ day that unification of OPEC crude oil prices was the only condition they wanted met before they would agree to reduce their oil production by one million barrels a day and to raise their base price to the $32 a barrel charged by other OPEC nations. “ We are prepared to sit down with the others and study the m arket realities and the prices of various yields of crude,” the Saudi minister said Monday night. “ We are hopeful that a compromise can be achieved at this meeting. Otherwise another meeting has to reach the compromise. In this case it will be the Bali m eeting.” That meeting, scheduled for December, is one of the regular meetings of OPEC’s oil ministers at which they usually discuss prices. Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s largest producer, raised its out­ put last summer by one million barrels a day, to 9.5 million barrels. The Saudis have kept their basic price at $28 a barrel, $4 below the benchmark $32 a barrel of other OPEC nations. YAMANI’S COMMENTS marked the first indication from the Saudis that they were prepared to maintain their production rate until the end of the year and thus continue the oversupply of oil on world markets that has kept downward pressure on prices. The Saudis had im­ plied before this week’s meeting that they would cut back production sometime during the fourth quarter. Yamani made clear that his country’s primary condi­ tion for a production cutback was a narrowing of the widespread differentials between prices. This was an allusion to the fact that, although the floor price for much of OPEC oil is $32 a barrel, members of the cartel have added premiums that reflect quality and proximity to markets. These premiums have pushed some prices up to $37 a barrel. “ DEFINITELY THE $5 differential is far from reality,” Yamani said. The oil minister of the United Arab Emirates, Sheik Mani Said al-Otaiba, echoing Saudi Arabia’s views, reinforced this opinion of the two most moderate members of the oil-exporting organiza­ tion. “I think the maximum differential between the floor and the ceiling should not exceed $2,” Otaiba told reporters. The opening session of the meeting in the Hofburg Palace here was marred by a political dispute between Iran and Iraq, whose armed forces fought a border bat­ tle Monday. The Iranians objected to the appointment of an Iraqi as chairman of the meeting — an appointment that had been previously scheduled — and threatened to veto the agenda. A compromise, proposed by Venezuela, in the appointment of Algeria’s foreign resulted minister, Mohammed Ben Yahia, as chairman and the Iraqi oil minister as alternate chairman. OTHER MINISTERS to the delegation issued conflic­ ting statements about the likely outcome of the meeting, scheduled to end Wednesday or Thursday. Qatar’s oil minister, Abdel Aziz Bink Khalifa al-Thani, said Monday night that the ministers had agreed that the estimated world oil surplus of 2.5 million barrels a day would be cut by the cartel in a joint action. But Kuwait’s minister of oil, All Khalifa al-Sabah, said there was no such agreement. Indonesia’s oil minister, Dr. Sobroto, raised the prospect that no agreement on pricing and production is expected at this meeting. “At least if we cannot reach unification today, we will reach it at the Baghdad meeting.” he said, referring to the Nov. 4 summit meeting where OPEC chiefs of state will gather to celebrate the organization’s 20th anniversary Plutonium: U.S. faces possible shortage ® 1980 The New York Times WASHINGTON — The Carter administration is facing the sensitive question of whether to increase production of plutonium at the very time the United States is discouraging foreign governments from acquiring stockpiles of bomb-grade materials. According to government officials, the Defense and Energy Departments have concluded the United States is not producing enough plutonium and other bomb-grade substances to build a new generation of nuclear weapons over the next decade. Ac­ cording to documents obtained by The Ne w York Times, top administration officials, including Secretary of Defense Harold Brown, have reported that existing stockpiles of bomb-grade materials are so low that delays have already occurred in some nuclear weapons programs. THE GROWING shortage in plutonium and another nuclear weapons material, tritium, is thus said to have put heavy pressure on President Carter to approve a plan for expanding American production of bomb-grade substances for the first tim e in over 15 years. Brown and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in internal interagency discussions, are said to have supported this course of action. But in recent interviews, some State Department and arms control agency aides asserted that this step would severely un­ dercut the administration's policy of curbing the spread of nuclear weapons to other countries. The United States has produced only small amounts of plutonium and tritium since 1964, when President Johnson clos­ ed several government-operated nuclear reactors, in part to persuade other nations to give up bomb-related activities. Since 1977, C arter has pressed a num ber of countries to forego the production of plutonium and the construction of so-called nuclear reprocessing plants, which can be used to extract bomb-grade substances from fuel burned in civilian power reactors. THE PLUTONIUM issue has prom pted a lively debate within the adm inistration, with State Department and arms control aides maintaining that any decision to increase production would be viewed abroad as hypocritical The question has also stimulated congressional concern, and the House and Senate Armed Services Com m ittees have inserted funds in the ad­ ministration s fiscal 1981 budget request to increase plutonium production In a m eeting at the White House last month, senior ad­ m inistration aides decided to defer a decision on expanding production until after the conclusion of the review conference of the 1968 Nuclear Nonproliferation T reaty in Geneva. The conference ended two weeks ago and officials said that Carter was likely to make up his mind on the question in the near future. Zimbabwean factions explode into violence (U PI) SALISBURY, Zimbabwe - Followers of Zim babwe’s two m ajor fo u g h t w ith a u to m a tic fa c tio n s weapons, grenades and stones over the the w orst outb reak of weekend violence since Rhodesia becam e in­ dependent Zimbabwe, police said Mon­ day. in The fighting in Salisbury, neighboring Chitungwiza and Smoia. 65 m iles west of the capital, left one m an beaten to death by a mob and 42 others injured. The clashes were between supporters of Prim e M inister Robert Mugabe, who won a British-supervised election this year, and his m ajor opponent, Joshua Nkomo. Z im babw e’s home a ffa irs m inister Mugabe and Nkomo for years headed competing guerrilla forces seek­ ing to overturn a white minority govern­ ment. In S a lis b u ry 's H a ra ri tow nship, two grenades w ere hurled into the home of an Nkomo supporter Sunday night, in­ juring six occupants, one critically. Ten minutes later, two grenades sm ashed into the home of a Mugabe follower but caused no injuries In Chitungwiza, eight miles from downtown Salisbury. Marufu Tsvande, a Nkomo supporter, was struck repeated­ ly by a mob arm ed with pipes and stones Saturday after Mugabe party m iltants told a gathering that Zimbabwe should be a one-party state, witnesses said. A fter T svande s d e a th , M ugabe followers looted seven huts occupied by Nkomo supporters at a refugee cam p and gutted the dwellings w ith grenades and molotov cocktails. In apparent rep risal, a grenade was lobbed into a crowded beerhall frequented by Mugabe su pporters, wounding 27 people — three critically. On Sunday night, a grenade about to be hurled into the home of an Nkomo supporter exploded prem aturely woun­ ding four people, two critically, police said E arlier, the house was pelted with stones. Tension in Chitungwiza has been ex­ acerbated by a government plan to move 17.000 arm ed Mugabe guerrillas into vacant houses in the town until barracks are built for them. In Sinoia, the offices of M ugabe's p ar­ ty cam e under autom atic fire Sunday night, causing some damage but no casualties The night before, Nkomo militants showered the offices with stones and Nkomo and Mugabe supporters battled in the streets after an outdoor party staged by Nkomo s party, police said. Four people were injured and another four arrested I n f o r m a t i o n M i n i s t e r Na t h a n Sham uyarira. a senior aide of Mugabe, blamed Nkom a's party for the violence. He said Nkomo s party, “ having lost dism ally in the last general election” was now seeking to intim idate Zim­ babweans into voting for it in district council elections next month. Presidential contenders concentrate on Texas By United Press International and Houston. President Carter and Ronald Reagan traded accusations of “he’s isolated” and “he’s under wraps” Monday as the two candidates cam­ paigned for votes in Texas, a state considered vital to both. At a town meeting with a largely Mexican-American audience in Cor­ pus Christi, Carter needled the altered campaign tactics of the GOP contender. Reagan has been accompanied by senior advisers on recent trips and has avoided oppor­ t u n i t i e s for e x t e m p o r a n e o u s remarks or answering questions. “ The cam paign staff of my Republican opponent has put him under wraps,” Carter said. “ He’s not having meetings like this. He’s not having press conferences any more, because when he has spoken on his own the last few days, he's gotten himself into trouble." CARTER SAID he will hold his 59th press conference Thursday. Told of Carter's remarks, Reagan responded: How would he know? He hasn't been out of the Rose Garden to know what I’m doing,” Earlier, Reagan told a massive gat her i ng of Republ i can c o n ­ i n c u m b e n t s and g r e s s i o n a l challengers on the steps of the U.S. Capitol that the president is “often isolated and unable to fulfill the primary' responsibilities of his of­ fice ” legislative chaos “The result,” said Reagan, has ... Never been before in history' have so many proposals from the White House been ignored and defeated by the Congress Never before has a presi­ dent been more remote from the members of his own party.” Reagan planned to travel to Texas later Monday and campaign Tues­ day in San Antonio. Corpus Christi “The last thing that any political candidate ought to do, including an incumbent president, is to get into I r a n i a n n e g o t i a t i o n s w i t h a u t h o r i t i e s t h r o u g h p u b l i c statements or through the news media,” the president said. Over the weekend Reagan ad­ vocated accepting most of the Ayatollah Khomeini s latest con­ d i t i o n s f o r r e l e a s e of t he Americans. “ It would be a serious mistake for m e to m a k e s p e c i f i c publ i c statements about what I accept or do not accept,” Carter said. “ It is not a good way to negotiate with the government (of Iran), through the public media ” JOHN A N D E R S O N wa s in Portland, Ore., Monday, but he has cut short an extended campaign trip to return to Washington and prepare for the League of Women Voters debate with Reagan scheduled for next Sunday. At a news conference Monday, Anderson said he would certainly let “financial considerations not in the way of freeing the stand hostages In San Francisco Sun­ day, he was not willing to say whether he thinks the new demands by Khomeini are acceptable — and made it clear he doesn’t think Reagan should be doing it either. The independent candidate told reporters he would not comment on the matter because he did not want to make the hostages a campaign issue. “ I think the extent to which Governor Reagan sought to leap into the fray and issue a statement on that and get the drop on Presi­ dent Carter is some indication there may be a very strong temptation to politicize that issue,” he said. From Texan news services Treatment slows MS SYDNEY, Australia - A new form of treatm ent for mild cases of multiple sclerosis based on repeated injections of white blood cells slow­ ed the spread of the crippling dis­ ease in some cases, researchers reported Monday. Conviction reversed W ASHINGTON - A fe d e ra l appeals court Monday reversed the convictions of three men convicted in the m urders of Orlando Letelier, former Chilean am bassador to the United States, and his assistant on grounds a Supreme Court decision last spring barred the use of trial evidence from government infor­ m ants who shared their prison cells. Waste conversion funded WASHINGTON - The House Mon­ day approved a $5 million authoriza­ tion to sta rt a cleanup demonstra­ tion project at a defunct nuclear waste reprocessing plant in New York state. The purpose of the pro­ ject is to dem onstrate techniques for converting high-level liquid nuclear wastes into glass-like substances that would be safe for long-term storage. Alien control debated to control WASHINGTON - The m ajority of a sharply divided U.S. Commission on C ivil R ig h ts s a id M onday em ployer sanctions and w orker identification cards should not be used the flow of un­ documented aliens into the country. T h e c o m m i s s i o n m a j o r i t y acknowledged illegal aliens that appear to have an adverse im pact on employment in the United States. Jury selection begins WASHINGTON - Jury selection began Monday in the long-delayed trial of two ex-FBI chiefs accused of approving illegal break-ins in the early 1970s — and a defense lawyer said he “ very lik ely ” will call Richard Nixon to testify. Carter faces questioning WASHINGTON — Investigators of Billy C arter’s Libyan dealings will again q u estio n the p re s id e n t's brother and an associate, Randy Coleman, to clear up alleged incon­ sistences and memory lapses, Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., said Monday. Activists’ trial ordered KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa. - Peace activists Daniel and Phillip Berrigan and six others charged with acts of violence and trespassing a t General E lectric’s m issile warhead division last week were ordered to stand trial Monday. Cuban sponsor beaten TOMAH, Wis. — A Cuban im­ m igrant was held Monday in the beating death of a wom an who became his sponsor three weeks ago, and Police Chief Don Fisher urged calm among residents of this town near the Fort McCoy refugee camp. Abscam defense rests PHILADELPHIA - The defense in the nation's third Abscam trial its case Monday abruptly rested after character witnesses testified that two city councilmen charged with bribery were “ honest and law- abiding’’ citizens. Hoffman jailed NEW YORK - Abbie Hoffman, facing a charge of selling cocaine, was ordered back to jail Monday un­ til a judge receives all contracts he holds involving book and movie rights to the story of his 612 years as a fugitive. Big Thicket threatened SOUR LAKE - The R ailroad Commission has asked 25 oil com­ panies to explain on Sept. 25 why their perm its to produce 1 million barrels of oil annually from one of the state’s oldest fields should not be canceled to avoid an environmental d is a s te r The p ro d u c e rs w ere to appear for an Austin notified hearing after the commission found s a ltw a te r w as seeping from a sinkhole in the Sour Lake field and threatened fresh w ater in the Big Thicket National Preserve. Dogs discover cocaine HOUSTON - U.S. Customs Ser­ vice officers making a routine search of a docked Colombian ship Monday were led to an e-aimated $14 million two drug- sniffing dogs. Stock market gains in cocaine by NEW YORK — The stock m arket, overcoming investor fears about ris­ ing interest rates, scored a modest gain Monday with a late rally that was led by railroad issues. Trading was m oderate. The Dow Jones in­ dustrial average, down m ore than five points in the early going after F riday’s 4.78-pomt loss, rose 1.11 points to 937 63 in the late rally. It lost 4.44 points last week. THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, September 16, 1980 Viewpoint Rags to riches to rags The University has ushered in the new decade attired with some new rankings. Harvard can no longer claim the title of the nation’s richest universi­ ty. Texas oil lands finally pumped enough green into the big orange to make the University the wealthiest in the land. Wearing fine silks and expensive jewelry at the academic ball, however, can­ not hide the Univerity’s academic wart Five years ago the University was ranked fourth nationally with comparable institutions in regard to faculty salaries Today the University is not even in the top 10. There are a number of factors that add to the quality of a university. While the recipes can be negotiated and juggled, there is one essential ingredient vital to the mixture. There cannot be a quality university without quality instructors. And quality instructors are attracted by quality salaries. It should surprise no one that there is a direct relationship between the University’s poor faculty salary ranking and a recent drop in academic standings. Administrators are somewhat at the mercy of the Legislature which has tied up the Permanent University Fund for construction purposes rather than for faculty benefits. President Flawn, however, seems to recognize the problem and appears to be making an effort to circumvent the Legislature We support his plan to add 100 new professorships and endowed chairs to the University by next year. While it may not be enough to win the “ war on mediocrity,” it is at least a shot in the right direction. Mark McKinnon Merging toward power The union of Libya and Syria into a single state “ with complete sovereignty over the two countries” could mean trouble for the United States in the in­ tricate power plays going on in the troubled Middle East. Skepticism regarding the m erger’s effective implementation is based on the failure of similar past efforts. But should the union be successful, the contract will give the Soviet Union additional muscle in the Middle East as it is the ma­ jor arms supplier to both countries. Because Libya and Syria share no common borders or defensible air and sea lanes western experts have not exhibited much concern. They would be wise, however, to keep in mind that incompatible and geographically divorced coun­ tries have joined in the past to make powerful allies. Given the shifting political sands of the Middle East, it would be shortsighted to ignore the geopolitical significance of such a merger. The enigmatic leader of Libya, Col. Qaddafi, has long sought to succeed Nasser as the great Arab unifier, but his efforts have been thwarted. Throughout much of the political world Qaddafi is perceived as an offensive zealot who lacks the diplomatic ability needed to ascend to a greater position of power. Libya's increasing oil profits and burgeoning quantities of Soviet military equipment, however, bolster Qaddafi’s image and fuel his clout in the Arab world while the perception of Israel’s power increases. The merger appears to be designed to allow Syria, with military and economic support from Libya, to claim leadership of the Arab world by assum­ ing a strategic position and confronting Israel. We can only hope that the political leaders of the world do not simply view the merger of Libya and Syria as an insignificant and inconsequential event. As we have painfully learned in the past the pooling of power is not always merely Robbie King for the diplomatic purposes cited. Editorials Page 4 Solar power future held hostage By MARY HEARNE " i There’s another hostage being held. This one isn’t in Iran, however. It is in the heart of is Am erica's energy corporations. The hostage ► America's future energy source — solar energy Liberating the individual from dependence on energy f conglomerates is the most attractive feature solar energy has to offer. Energy independence however threatens the 80-year trend that concentrates wealth énd power into corporate hands. If this trend were to reverse, the oil industry would have a lot to lose Oil companies aren’t worrying though When solar energy makes its debut, they intend to be directing the play. Why not0 They're writing the script. The oil companies have an important ally in the quest to gam control over the solar industry; it is the I Departm ent of Energy. Instead of encouraging development of energy resources, this conspiracy is trying to create a monopoly on solar energy by restraining or even eliminating the small inventive ; solar companies from the market. This is simply ac- .<• comph-hed by “ starving the opposition.’’ . SM VI.L COMPANIES need money to market their produet properly and expand their production capabilities. The company might turn first to the Department of Energy hoping for an appropriation he DOE’s budget is easily earmarked for nuclear and fossil technology however. The 3.7 percent saved for renewable resources is usually dispensed to large cor­ porations working on centralized aspects of solar energy — aspects which fit easily into their present < apital-incentive facilities. Not getting any help or encouragement from the DOE, the company might try to get money through conventional channels. Banks however tend to be suspicious of companies not endorsed by the DOE. The company might have a system that the DOE says won't exist until the 1990s. and they might have it at a com­ parable cost, but without the money to produce it, they are. well, starving. OF COURSE THERE are other ways the solar in­ dustry is being monopolized. Large corporations are buying solar companies in an attempt to mesh them as a branch in the corporate market. Once the companies or their ideas are bought, the emphasis is placed on predirection and distribution of solar energy under the careful guidance of public utilities. The advantage of home owner independence might be lost, but at least the oil corporations have something to sell. The oil industry is also trying to deter the public from thinking of solar energy “ as a means of altering the economic structure” of the United States. They want us to remember who is boss Mobil Oil even went so far as to run a “ public interest” ad the day after Sun Day (a day promoting solar energy). The ad described solar power as a delightful yet impractical idea whose supporters were either dreamers or science fiction fans. THE PROSPECT OF a community declaring its in­ dependence from utilities and energy corporations by developing its own renewable energy resources must be pretty frightening to the oil industry. Science-fiction fans? Contrary to belief, oil companies aren’t particularly interested in developing future energy resources: they are interested in buying them. So far the oil industry owns 50 percent of the nation’s coal and uranium reserves. Half of the photovoltiac cell industry is own­ ed by Exxon and Atlantic-Richfield alone But energy isn't the only thing oil companies are in­ vesting in. Exxon has been buying heavily into the elec­ tronics industry and Mobil Oil recently bought Montgomery Ward and Container. John Sweringen of Standard Oil explained that oil companies aren’t “ in the energy business We re in the business of trying to use the assets entrusted to us by our shareholders to give them the best return on the money they’ve in­ vested.” That’s great if you’re a shareholder, but most of us aren t. As customers, we depend on the oil in­ dustry to provide us with cheap and efficient energy for the future It is hoped that funds from the windfall profits tax will aid reseach and development Since the oil industry takes in more revenue in a few hours than the entire solar industry does in a year, it isn t difficult to see why solar companies sell out. It's also pretty obvious why solar energy is “ blacked out” until profits from conventional fuels are first maximiz­ ed. We’ve learned the hard way that a resource needs to be renewable. Solar energy is. We’ve also learned that raping the land or contaminating it has hazardous con­ sequences. namely pollution Solar energy is a clean energy You land except materials for the collectors, and you release no pollutants. take nothing from the But freeing the individual from depending on an un­ stable industry is still the best advantage. The oil cor­ porations are determined to use solar energy to their advantage — not ours. Hearne is an editorial assistant. Firing Line Co-Op cuts absurd Of all the low-down moves to pull on its clientele, “ the University Cc¿Op Society Board of Directors voted on Wednesday night to cut patronage refunds for the 1979-1980 year by 64 percent.” This^ sounds both absurd and idicuious. Clearly the whole idea of the refund policy is a marketing strategy to in­ crease patronage of the Co-Op by the University community. The com­ munity buys from the Co-Op in the spirit of a cooperative, rather than ! from Wallace s or any of the other stores on the Drag which carry a > mi lar stock. After the students, faculty and staff have been saving their receipts and patronizing the Co- Op for a year, because of the attrac­ tion of a refund (which was peanuts anyway), to turn around and deckle to cut these refunds is a gross infringe­ ment of an agreement between the Co-Op and the University community. One begins to question the idea of this place being called a co-op. In a real sense of a cooperative, the University Co-Op does not qualify to be called by this name. \ parable period The board, in its monthly meeting, set the refund at 1.8 percent, blaming “increased costs and inflation.” In­ creased costs and inflation — this is a phrase that is beginning to sound very much like a cliche, and a very con- j vement scapegoat at that. In the same breath w e are told that “sales of the fiscal year were up 8888,043 over *879.” The CoOp president, Mr G L. i Mathews, reports, “sales for July and August were 8310,806 over the com- last y e a r .” Mr. Mathews then goes on to tell us that “We want to be of service to the com­ munity.” Sir, to do this, you have to operate Eke a cooperative and stop giving excuses such as “It’s a loting in textbooks.” proposition dealing What is the discrepancy in prices of textbooks at the Co-Op and Wallace’s? Furthermore, a student director, Mr. A. Richter, proposes that the < money reserved for the patronage I refunds should be returned to the Co- Í Op. “ to.work towards a better return next year,” What of the people who \ handed in their saved receipts and * will not be here next year? Also, what guarantee do we have that next year the board will not be blaming “in­ creased costs and inflation?” In fact it is hijd* time we recon- I sictered what the University Co-Op | really is about: a profit-motivated s business. This being the case, let it be I run like one, instead of in this in- I ddious manner, wider the guise of a (cooperative designed to fool us into patronizing the place through a bogus ; refund policy Change the name from U niversity Co-Op to U niversity Bookstore; then we will know who we are dealing with. Pepa W. A won International Business l %- tUn . . 1 mmKMk I § irresponsible I Last F rid a y Mark M cKinnon rhalitaged the IM wertity’s handling t i the &«W8 vs. U n e n affair He nade an m u tin g comment upon the egal process to which Fiasen has had that recourse and further implied Martinson acted in a racist manner ami that the University supports his racism. It is McKinnon s privilege as editor to express opinion, but he has also the duty to speak responsibly. His state­ ment, "To hell with the letter of the law and technicalities ...” was not responsible. It is the letter of the law, as currently implemented, which is affording Finnen his avenue of grievance and possible redress If we dispense with the letter of the law, what will serve as substitute? Mr. McKinnon s sense of racial justice? Or Mr. Finnen’s? Mr. McKinnon s presumption of white racism on Martinson’s part is distressing. He seems to think Martin­ son is a racist because Finnen’s 20 years on the job obviously indicates his suitability for promotion, else, “ why has he been retained by the University for 20 years?” Why? It might well be because UT is an affirmative action organization, and affirmative action organizations are extremely loath to fire black per­ sonnel. Adherence to government policy is necessary to retain govern­ ment support. Much Mack ineptitude is tolerated today because affirmative action is a reigning policy. A more responsible approach to this situation would involve a challenge to affirmative action itself. For Mr. McKinnon’s benefit, I might point out that in regards to affirmative action, the letter of the law bad already been consigned to the fire. If he doesn’t believe it, be can read Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1984, and see if he can discern anything even remotely approbating racial advantage. Bob Byron Graduate in Business Photo sensationalizes I was extremely disappointed in the photograph which appeared on the front page of the Texan on Monday. Sept. 15, depicting Ms. Kathleen Kelleher and the flagrant abuse of the freedom of expression painted on the wad of Burdine Ail the efforts of the Texan to show Ms. Kelleher s side of the case and gamer support for it w e r e m a d e u s e l e s s by t h i s photograph The medium of photography asks the viewer to draw conclusions from the picture and any additional com­ ments or captions the staff chooses to add. ! interpreted the photo to imply Ms Keileher supports this type of ex­ pression. Until the printing of this photograph I had ti» utmost respect for Ms Kelleher s plight, but my ideas have g o n e e x t r e m e metamorphosis t h r o u g h a n Thank you for the opportunity to gain some much needed insight into an interesting situation I only regret I can no longer support Ms KeUeher and the avenues she chooses (or the Texan chooses for her) to use in her fight for reinstatement James ¡S Holloway Communication student Conservative right splits into two camps I________ By FRANK VIVIANO __ On the surface, things have never looked better for American conservatives. Ronald Reagan holds a com­ manding lead in the polls, and the nation's drift to the right seems more like and all-out sprint. But what that really means is anybody’s guess, because the very definition of the political right is up for grabs right now Behind the facade of unity, a fierce struggle is under way on the Republican right, between two camps with much greater differences than those which separate the GOP center from the Democrats. The stakes in­ clude a huge, undecided constituency of alienated American voters — and perhaps a central role in the U.S. political future. One camp is based in the Northeast. It is committed to a strong, centralized form of government and a cost­ ly. aggressive foreign policy. In its concern for protec­ ting established institutions at almost any price, it is include explicitly “ c o n serv a tiv e .” Washington insiders, many former Democrats and a group of intellectuals who are at the forefront of what has come to be known as the “ neo-conservative movement.” ranks Its ACROSS THE COUNTRY however, “ right wing” in­ creasingly means something altogether different: a California-bred populist revolt against the very in­ stitutions which the neo-conservatives are out to preserve. It draws its strength from grass roots movements and its leaders from the business world rather than intellectual circles or Washington offices. It emphasizes unrestricted than authority and is unvaryingly committed to the shift of power from centralized bastions to local communities or individuals. In the truest sense of the term, it is more “ radical” than conservative. freedom rather these At the moment, two camps are publicly downplaying their differences, largely because neither knows what to expect from Reagan. The GOP can­ didate comes from the West and gives frequent lip ser­ vice to huge tax cuts, states’ rights and other tenets of right wing populism. But his foreign policy statements, his record as California governor, the management philosophy of his chief adviser Ed Meese, and his sup­ port for beefed-up FBI and CIA budgets identify him with the neo-conservative East. THE ENTIRE RIGHT no m atter how broadly defin­ ed. is also temporarily united by the conviction that the time is ripe to move against the liberal Democratic forces which have dominated the federal government since 1932. Neo-conservatives and the populist right alike scorn liberalism for its indecisiveness and its ef­ forts to insure social equality at the expense of un­ hampered independent enterprise. They share at least a nominal attachment to the free market economy after half a century of erratic government fiscal in­ tervention and regulation. But the cease-fire cannot last forever, because these areas of agreement are so minimal — and the outstan­ ding differences so profound. * Neo-conservatives like to speak favorably of the average American and to deplore elitism ,” observes Kevin Phillips, author of The E m erg in g Republican Majority. “ But neo-conservatism itself is profoundly elitist and tends to look down its urbane eastern nose at the populist politics — single issue cultivation, use of referenda, judicial recalls and constitutional petitions — increasingly practiced by the new right.” THE EASTERN CLIQUE Phillips has in mind is centered around Irving Kristol, editor of the Boston- based Public Interest magazine, which along with C om m e n ta ry magazine, The N ew Y o rk R eview of Books and a few other low circulation/high influence periodicals has played a key role in forging neo- conservatism. Although its leaders are frequently veterans of Democratic Party politics — and in some cases the radical Left — today they are firmly allied with the old conservative eastern establishment, with the readers and ideas of William F. Buckley’s National Review. In addition to Kristol, they include scholars like Samuel P. Huntington and Nathan Glazer, economist Herb Stein and — despite his membership in the Democratic Party — New York Sen. Daniel Moynihan, For the most part, they are people with strong ties to traditional institutions: Harvard, Columbia, the City University of New York, The Hudson Institute. THE NEO-CONSERVATIVE movement has at­ tracted a great many academics and writers — from Jewish and Roman Catholic circles particularly — who have parted company with the left on the m atter of Israel. For them, there is simply no bargaining on the subject: no acknowledging the Palestine Liberation Organization, no challenging the West Bank settlement policies of Menachem Begin or the move of the Israeli capital to Jerusalem. As universal support for Israel has waned with the oil crisis and diplomatic gestures toward the Arab world, their feelings about the issue have grown even more intense. This deeply emotional attachment to Israel is ac­ companied by an equally deep mistrust of the Soviet Union, which is perceived to be brutally expansionist and anti-Semitic. AS A RESULT, neo-conservatives are firm sup­ porters of an expanded American military presence abroad and — nominal free market beliefs notwithstan­ ding — the taxation necessary to m aintain an aggressive international posture. The evolution of the New Deal liberals into neo- conservatives owes something to the urban social crisis which developed in the Sixties and has since worsened. Although many neo-conservatives helped erect the welfare state, they have come to despise its social byproducts, and especially the large population of welfare clients whom affluent Easterners blame for a host of their urban problems. In the balance, they feel, hangs the national quality of life, measured chief­ ly according to their own taste for formal education, high culture and abstract intellectual debate. THUS, the second m ajor plank the neo­ conservative credo calls for reduced spending on social programs, based on the theory that government efforts to aid the poor generate a resentful and dangerous dependence on the public dole which the middle class should not be asked to pay for. in In effect, neo-conservative opposition to social programs stems less from anti-tax views than it does from the same suspicions of mass democracy — of the people at the bottom — which separate it from the pop­ ulist right. "We have come to recognize that there are potential­ ly desirable limits to economic growth,” Harvard scholar Samuel P. Huntington wrote in an influential I ublic Interest article. “ There are also potentially lim its to the extension of political d esirable democracy.” 1980 Pacific News Service f Editor s note: On ihursday, Viviano will assess the other camp on the right: the pop­ ulists.) by Garry Trudeau Columns & letters DOONESBURY 50 MIND tP IHAVB A SeAT, J.J.? Columns should be 70-typed lines (60 character lines) or less and triple­ spaced; letters 20-typed lines. All material submitted on the editorial page must have the author s name, college status and telephone number to letters Mail columns and the Editor, the Daily Texan. PO Box D, Austin. Texas 78712. or drop them by the basement offices of the Texas Stu­ dent Publications building at 25th Street and Whit is Avenue VL71 fc Tuesday. September 16, 1980 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page 5 School Supplies Gifts • UT Items Greeting Cor^ • Stomps Cigarettes • Candy Magazines • Paperbacks T I X A S l S I O N General S t o r e O p en M-F 7:45-5:30 R iVEe CITY ELEMCNTARV SCHOOL • G rad e s PG» • Mew doss begins R-»5 - H u m a n Develcprrtfrrf * S 4 ro n ^ A eod e *r*c5 C u r ¿ktden+5 are hcwpv Model P£.Proaram ■fe sime, -te 5Chcol * ' A AcreCu+dccrSNuircnircnmerF N?- ’’■'Ore r r * c r * n Q n c * * CflL: I O f Uf"3 * 4 5 0 Ó 3 £, i?iwar.5irte Dr. 386- Police defend pay raise request By M A R K H E N R IC K S Daily T ex a n S ta ff Austin police are standing by their request for a 20 percent pay raise despite a fairly cool reception to the proposal by City Council It was pretty much expected.” Sgt. Jerry Spain, president of the Austin Police Association, said Monday of the council's delay in acting on the request. He said opposition to the raise was inevitable and not just because of the timing. “ Any tim e’s a bad tim e Last year was bad, this year's bad. next year’s w orse,” he said. The council has directed City Manager Dan Davidson to prepare a report on the impact of the request on next year's budget. Davidson’s office had already recommended a 9.5 percent across- the-board raise for city police and firefighters as part of the 1980-81 suggested budget. Firefighters have also asked for a raise, which would average 14 percent Davidson said the pay raise request would re­ quire ‘‘a larger tax increase” than the 6 percent increase already included in the new budget But Spain said the police association is taking the stand that no tax increase would be required by the raise, which would average 20 percent, more than twice Davidson's recommendation. One thing we will not be looking at is striking. It’s a nasty word to us,” Spain said. But he added, "There are o,ther rem edies.” Davidson said he will be presenting the report on the police and firefighter raises to council within two weeks. Last week, Joe Colbert, attorney for the associa­ tion, made a detailed comparison of the Austin Police Department with others in the state in ask­ ing for the increase. He said the rate of em ployee turnover among Austin police averages more than tw ice as high as that of the better-paying Houston department. This hurts m orale and costs the city more in train­ ing costs, which run $10,600 per trainee, Colbert said. Colbert said Austin police officers were more productive, despite receiving $365 less each month than Houston officers. World tour ‘labor of love’ for Irishman By S T E V E V IN S O N Daily T exan S ta ff From V ietnam ese refugee camps to the A r m a d illo World H ead­ quarters, 23-year-old Irish architect and journalist Brendan Kilty has literally been around the world in 80 days. tou r on Though the main purpose of the trip, which began on July 8, is a lecture and rather unpretentious r esea rch in tern a tio n a l building law and arbitration, Kilty's stopovers have included London, Bangkok, Singapore, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Honolulu, Los Angeles, San F ran cisco, P hoenix, D allas and Austin. Between stops, he has packed in lectures and talks at Toastm asters International and numerous trade and technical organizations. “ It’s a sort of labor of love,” Kilty said Sunday over white wine and jet lag. “ I’m not expecting to write a million-copy best-seller on building law It's something that I think has to be done.” OF ALL HE has seen on his tour, Kilty seem ed most interested in the r e fu g e e c a m p s he v is it e d in Southeast Asia, namely in Vietnam and Thailand. “ The reason for that is a friend of mine was the architect who designed the cam p.” Kilty said. “ He had to design the camp in less than 48 hours for 120.000 people. I spent about four days visiting several cam ps. i n Thailand, I went along and took photographs and talked with people. The refugees just plop down in their tents wherever they can.” Kilty told ston es of horrendous cruelty in the concentration cam p” atmosphere of the area. “ The people are scared. They suspect everybody, with due cause The Thai soldiers would kill the refugees without mak­ ing too much bother.” Kilty said that w hile his ex ­ in p e r ie n c e s th e c a m p s w e r e frightening they weren't all of death and famine. “ I had lunch with a fam ily in their bamboo hut, and it was the greatest experience of my life ,” he said. “ We tend to think that these peo­ ple are refu gees and there are always going to be refugees anyway; but five years ago, these people probably lived better than what I would be used to. Some of these peo­ ple were quite well o ff.” AFTER HIS TOUR of the Far East, Kilty toured California and delivered lectures to, among others, the Hollywood Toastm asters club. “ It w a s b ille d a s ‘N u c le a r D e str u c tio n and S u b terran ean C ities’ — the whole thing being that I was suggesting that the only way civilization could survive was to self-contained build underground, c it ie s in stea d of building odd shelters where politicians could sur­ vive, since there’s no use in them surviving if everyone else is dead.” Kilty said he was underwhelmed by California — or at least by its architecture, which he considers cheap but overpriced. “ I find people, especially a house buyer, very incapable of buying a house of quality construction,” he said. “ They buy more by location. K ilty’s impressions of the United S ta te s , though, w e r e g e n e r a lly favorable since the language is no barrier. “ I quite enjoy Americans, and I w as looking forward to coming to A m e r ic a a f te r th e F a r E a s t, because I knew for once people would understand everything that I said. If I wanted a steak, I could get a steak. When you’re in Japan and you want a steak, raw fish won’t suf­ fic e .” “ I ’ve en joyed A u stin . I t ’s a different sort of city from the others I ve been in. Generally we hang around Maggie M ae’s pub. ’X*X%,X*X*X%',X ,,X ,X v ,X *X ,,X ,X *X ,X *X *X 'X *X v ★★★ Come see and hear ★★★ m S T U D Y A B R O A D AT THE IT H A C A C O L L E G E LONDON CENTER ■ SEM EST E R OR YEAR PROGRAM ■ ITHACA COLLEGE CREDIT ■ BRITISH FACULTY C O U R S E S — British and European studies are offered in literature, history, art history, drama, music, sociology, education, p sych ology and politics Special courses offered in: ... International Business.. Drama. Com m unications Visits to the theatre, museum s, galleries, scho ols, social and political institutions are an integral part of the curriculum. For further information write: Director of Foreign Study Muller Faculty B u ild in g -S P Ithaca C o lle ge Ithaca, New York 14850 TEXAS UNION FINE ARTS COMMITTEE PRESENTS AN Exhibition and Sola of FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS MONET CEZANNE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC ROTHKO ROUSSEAU KLEE, VAN GOGH DEGAS VERMEER REMINGTON FRANKENTHALER GAUGUIN COROT DALI PICASSO RENOIR WYETH AND OTHERS LOCATION Texas Union Art Gallery DATE: Sept. 15-19 TMAE: 9 a.m.-6 p.m. ALL PRINTS ARE $3.50 EACH, A N Y 3 FOR $8.00 YOU CAN FLY! ^ ^ s B i s « ^ § S S e 1 - - - - The U niversity Flying Club Offers The Louest Hates In Austin To Learn To Fly, in d We A re Eagerly L o o kin g Forward 1 <> I he Pur( hose O f Our Second Airplane. For This i n d f u rth er I n fo r m atio n . T here It ill B e A Meeting at 7 p.m. ft ednesday in Texas I nion B uilding Hoorn 4.116. All Are Urged To Attend. >XyX* W A V , III >*XyX X vX% >XvX; mX-X-X X :X X •v.w. vXv!* M k ivXx *x*x*x :*&l $11 •XyX* X \v X •y iv X w >X*Xv i l l v X ’X* III I P m g WM Ite u m .v.v.v mw¡X X v X ¥x\“*> :yx:::: •v.v.v IPm ,v.v.v President GERALD FORD Ambassador GEORGE BUSH at a special public rally supporting Ronald Reagan’s campaign for President to make America great again! On the steps of Main Mall, at the Tower on the campus UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, at 12:00 Noon M usical entertainm ent begins at 11:50. To join the Reagan-Bush campaign, V.V.V •v.\v. v .v .v lü XvX;:1111 IvXv! Xvlv! WvX mlyyly. w .v.; I call: 477-8700 or write: TEXANS for REAGAN-BUSH 1100 Colorado Austin. Texas 78701 SPONSORED BY: SILVER SPURS; UNIVERSITY R EPl BLICANS; YOUNG CONSERVATIVES OF TEXAS. Page 6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, September 16, 1980 16 V A R IE T IE S OF H O T or C O L D S A N D W I C H E S served on whole wheat or French roll 5 Locations )200 Guadalupe (just north ot Campus) 1608 Lavaca (just south of C am p u s) 201 E Riverside (between Congress (across from the IH 35 at 290 í and IH 15) Marriott) Burnet Rd at Anderson (W A nderson PI a/a) "GIVERS, TAKERS and other Kinds of LOVERS" Come see this newest film featuring JOSH McDOWELL Tonight 8:30 p.m. Free refreshm ents in the A1 K iva Room (104), Education Bldg. Each Tuesday A lpha Omega M inistries brings to cam pus the fin est in Christian music, film and en terta in m en t. Same tim e and pla ce all sem ester. P.S. Josh is com ing to City A uditorium Sept. 3 0 -O c t. 2 COMPUTATION CENTER SHORT COURSES The Computation Center announces the fall series of free non-credit short courses. These courses are open to all facul­ ty, staff and students. For information and to register for any of the courses, pick up a registration form in the Computa­ tion Center, Room 5, or in the User Services offices (W CH 8, HRC 3.360, GSB 1.224). All short courses meet in COM 8 (ex­ cept where noted). Intro, to T im e sh arin g (D E C - 10) Se p t. 15, 17, 19 ( M W F ) DECsystem -10 Courses CDC C yber System Courses Intro , to Text Processing In tro , to T EC O (Text Editor) In tro , to S O S (Text Editor) R U N O F F (Text F o rm atter) A d v a n c e d T EC O DEC* 10 G ra p h ic s Intro, to UT-2D Control L a n g u a g e in tro , to T im e sh a rin g (T A U R U S ) B e g in n in g EDIT (Text Editor) B e g in n in g S P S S In te rm e d ia te S P S S A d v a n c e d S P S S D a ta B a se s & Sy ste m 2 0 0 0 C o n tro l C o m m a n d M acros S P S S R ep o rt W rite r T ektro n ix S o f t w a r e / H a r d w a r e Z e ta P lo ttin g S e p t. 17, 19 (W F ) Sep . 23, 25 (TTh) S e p t. 22, 24 ( M W ) S e p t. 29, O ct. 1, 3 ( M W F ) Se p t. 26 (F) O ct. 1 (W ) Se p t. 15, 17, 19 ( M W F ) S e p t. 16, 18. 23 (TThT) Se p t. 22, 24 ( M W ) Se p t. 30, O ct. 2 (TTh) O ct. 7, 9 (TTh) O ct. 14, 16 (TTh) Se p t. 29, O ct. 1, 3 (M W F ) O ct. 14, 16 (TTh) O ct 6, 8 (M W ) Se p t. 30, O ct. 2 (TTh) Se p t 29, O ct. 1, 3, 6, 8, 10 ( M W F ) A d va n ced G rap h ics Lab Courses (m e e t in E N S 529) T our o f A d v a n c e d G ra p h ic s la b E a s y D is p la y of 3-D D a ta O v e r v ie w of R S X - 11 M F O R T R A N In te ra c tiv e 3-D G ra p h ic s In t e r a c tiv e C olor R aster G ra p h ic s Sep t. 25 (Th) Oct. 1 (W ) O ct. 2 (Th) O ct. 6, 8 (M W ) O ct. 13, 15 ( M W ) IB M 370 Courses Sep t. 15 (M ) V ir t u a l M a c h in e C o n ce p ts C o n tro l P ro g ra m C o m m a n d s a n d C o n v e rs a tio n a l M o n ito r Sy stem C M S EDIT D is p la y E d itin g F a c ility (E D G A R ) IB M E X E C (m a cro c o m m a n d la n g u a g e ) Sta tis tic a l A n a ly s is S y s te m (S A S ) Sep t 22, 24, 26 (M W F ) So p t. 16, 18 (TTh) S e p t. 16, 18 (TTh) S e p t. 30, O ct. 2 (TT h) O ct. 6, 8 ( M W ) In tro to S ta tis tic a l C o m p u tin g G e n e ra l Courses So p t 23, 25 (TTh) 1 pm-3 I0 a m - 1 2 10 am -12 10 a m - 1 2 10 a m - 1 2 10 am -12 1 pm-3 3 pm-5 3 pm-5 5 pm-7 5 pm-7 5 pm-7 5 pm-7 3 pm-5 5 pm-7 1 pm-3 5 pm-7 1 pm-3 3 pm-5 3 pm-5 3 pm-5 3 pm-5 3 pm-5 10 am -12 3 pm-5 10 am -12 1 pm-3 10 a m - 1 2 1 pm-3 1 pm-3 Refusal to debate spurs reaction Reagan campaign blasts Carter; Anderson supporters laud decision By PAM NESTER Daily Texan Staff The reaction to President Carter s decision not to participate in the presidential debate sponsored by the League of Women Voters varies between Republican. Democratic and independent presidential candidate supporters The debate, which will be nationally televised Sunday, will feature Republican Ronald Reagan and independent John Anderson in a round-robin format. “ From what I understand. Carter refused to participate in the debate because he wants to take on Reagan in a one-to-one debate, not round- robm,” said Brendan Boyd a member of the University's Young Democrats organization ''Carter evidently does not feel Anderson has a chance to win,' he said “ Therefore Carter feels a debate only between himself and Reagan would better emphasize their differences ’Carter also thinks that in a debate between the three candidates Reagan would try to hide behind Anderson's issues Boyd explained. However. Gary Hoitsma of Reagan’s Texas campaign headquarters, called Boyd’s statement ridiculous. ‘ Reagan has accepted the debate terms and the idea of him wanting to hide behind Anderson’s issues is ridiculous “ Hoitsma said adding that the de< ision not to debate will definitely hurt Carter. "He (Carter) is afraid Anderson will gain the liberal Democratic vote amd he doesn't want to give Anderson that opportunity," Hoitsma said. ‘ That s why he’s not in favor of the debate." Ray Spivey, president of the University Republicans, said he thinks all the candidates should be involved in the debate. Bruce F.lfant, state executive committee member of the Young Democrats of Texas, agreed “ Carter needs to debate Anderson." he said. * He can’t just debate Reagan.” However. Anderson cannot prove in the debates that he is a born- again liberal, Elfant said. “ We are very, very happy about Carter’s decision," said Stephen Schurtz, a volunteer for Anderson's Texas campaign. "His decision has given Anderson a lot of publicity." A six-foot television screen will be set up at the Anderson headquarters. 513 W. Sixth St., for peo­ ple who would like to watch the debates, Schurtz said Jeff Berkhouse, a University Republican member, said Carter stands to lose if he sticks by his position not to debate. "The reason he’ll lose is because Anderson will take his (Carter’s) position on issues.” Despite all the controversy surrounding the debates, Jon Ford. Gov. Bill Clements’ press Secretory, said Clements. Reagan's Texas cam­ paign chairman, has not made a statement on the issue. “ I ’m sure he feels Carter should go ahead and debate," Ford said Utility commission reviews rate hike From staff and wire reports The Public Utility Commission Tuesday will continue its hearing on Southwestern Bell’s proposed rate hike totaling $326 million, the largest request ever presented before the PUC. The hearing, which began Mon­ day, is expected to stretch as long as six weeks. Before the hearing Monday, Jim Hightower, president of the Texas Consumer Organization, criticized Bell’s request as being too high. "The phone monopoly just can’t seem to get enough from us,” Hightower said. “ They are re­ questing the PUC to guarantee them an outrageous rate of profit, which is to come right out of the pockets of hard-pressed small businesses and residential users.” Bell s request includes an increase in monthly telephone rates for in­ dividuals of $1.75 per month, from $7.65 to $9.40. The rates for businesses would be increased $4.25. In addition, Bell proposes to reduce the number of free directory assistance calls from 20 to five per month and increase the cost of direc­ tory assistance calls which exceed the monthly maximum from 20 to 25 cents each. Bell has also asked the PUC to grant a 16.8 percent rate of return for its stockholders. Hightower said the highest return rate granted most utilities is 12.8 percent. The PUC staff has recommended an increase of $152.8 million. The Texas Municipal League, an in* t e r v e n o r the c a s e , has recommended a $68 million in­ crease. in Marvin Jacks, of Houston, said Bell asked the PUC for twice what it needed. '?>n » n » n » n ??n ?>n » n ISLAM & JUDAISM A talk p r e s e n t e d by Arnold Leder, Professor o f P o litic a l Science, Southwest Texas State University Tuesday, Sept. 16th at 8:00 p.m. Hillel Campus Jewish Center 2105 San Antonio 476-0125 » n » n » n LAZY DAISY RESTAURANT offers the following breakfast specials Monday through Friday 5 a.m.-II a.m. EARLY BIRD SPECIALS 2 »g g s a n y s ty le h a sh b ro w n » t o a ! i or biscuits c r e a m g r a v y on re q u e st w it h 2 p ieces o f b aco n or s a u s a g e 1.15 1.55 .25 * ? b iscuits or toast je lly — c re a m g r a v y coffee # y j * w it h 2 p ieces b aco n or s a u s a g e ♦ C h o ic e of hot h o m e m a d e s w e e t roll or 1 b re a k fa s t to co s e rve d w coffee 1.35 .95 * C h ick e n Fried S te a k I I a m -9 :3 0 p i 7 D a y s S e rv e d w it h S a la d , fre n ch fries & rolls w it h b a k e d p o ta to 1.75 2.25 LO CA TIO N S: 2801 G u a d a lu p e (2 8 th & G u a d a lu p e ) 2201 C u lle n A v e . (C o n g ress & U v e O a k ) Alpha Kappa Psi The Professional Business F raternity For Men and Women Y O U R A RE CO RD IALLY IN V IT ED TO ATTEND THE RUSH FUNCTION Tuesday, Septem ber 16 4-7 p.m. Pecan Street C afe 310 East Sixth Casual A ttire Paradigm Books & Lecture Notes Paradigm Lecture Notes Service is offering notes in over 70 courses. Current Notes $14 Subject Areas: • A nthropology • Art History • Astronom y • Biology • C hem istry • C om puter Science • Economics * Geology • G o vern m en t • M icrobiology • Pharm acy • Physics • Psychology • RTF • Sociology • Statistics • Zoology 407 W . 24th St. 472-7986 M o n . - F r i . 9 a .m .-8 p.m Sat. 10 a .m .-6 p.m . Anti-beautification drive moves ahead By STEVE VINSON Daily T exan Staff T h e l e a d e r o f d o w n t o w n m erchants determ ined to force a public referendum on the Congress Avenue beautification plan adopted by the City Council said Monday that they are close to “ halfway th ere" in gathering the n ecessary signatures in a petition drive. in hand," Right now I d say we have about 10,000 signatures said Robb Southerland. “ We've been told by G race Monroe, the city clerk, that we ll need about 15,500 to 16.000 signatures to qualify, and we re hop­ ing to get about 25,000 signatures in all ” The plan, which is scheduled to go into effect next year, would reduce Congress Avenue from six lanes to four, widen the sidew alks, and plant trees and shrubs along the avenue. FOR THE petition to become a referendum question, 10 percent of the registered voters who reside within the city lim its m ust sign, Southerland said for the question to appear on the ballot next Jan uary, the the city c le rk m u st h av e signatures “ purged and certified ” by Nov. 5. The plan has already been ap­ proved by City Council, with only council m em ber Betty Himm elblau and Mayor Carole M cClellan voting against the proposal. Council m em ber Lee Cooke, a leading proponent of the plan, said Monday he supports it “ because basically I think that we can handle the traffic flow better” once the plan goes into effect. “ There will be a less than five per­ cent loss of traffic on C o n gress,” he said, adding that m ost of that will be re -r o u te d on o th e r dow ntow n streets. ‘‘ R ETA IL DOWNTOWN is declin­ ing, and will continue to decline. We will h ave ju st a s te r ile o ffic e building environment (If the plan is adopted), economic vitality will be in creased.” Cooke pointed out that npw park­ ing garag es will soon be built in the downtown area, providing space for more than 2,200 cars. “ What we need to be cognizant of is the fact that people can ’t spend money from moving c a r s ,” Cook added. Southerland disputed Cook’s posi­ tion. “ In my opinion, there are three things the City of Austin needs to do before it explores any beautification o f C o n g r e s s . to do something about the congestion, it It n e e d s needs to provide greate r acce ss, and it needs to do som eth in g about parking.” THE FO U R NEW g ara g es will do the problem s, to allev iate little Southerland said. “ The parking g a ra g e s are basical­ ly for the te n a n ts of the new buildings that are going up," he said. ‘ Parking used by shoppers will not be increased by those g a ra g e s.” Southerland said that over 200 peo­ ple are actively working on the peti­ tion drive and that he thinks he has public opinion on his side. “ Right now, 95 percent of the peo­ ple we are approaching on this have signed the petition. Lee Cooke has admitted to m e that we have public sentiment on our side. My question to him is why, when the people he’s to be representing are supposed a g a i n s t i t , ” t h i s , Southerland asked. is h e fo r Feminist drama: life as women see it Local troupe reveals ‘sides of ourselves people haven’t seen’ BY LAUREL BRUBAKER There is one theater group in Austin that presents sexually biased d ram a — and does it on purpose. Word of Mouth, a fem inist collective dram a group, shows life from a w om an’s point of view, said Daryl C ates, director of the group. “ We’re showing sid es of ou rselves that people haven’t seen before, even other women,” said B arbara C ossie, one of the women who helped get the organization off the ground. The group is involved in the production of Susan G riffin’s “ V o ices,” the story of five women of different generations and circum stances, each fighting again st her own personal trap. Lauri Raym ond, director of publicity and public relations for Zachary Scott T heater Center/Austin Civic Theatre, said that, although the plot begins with each w om an’s story being separate, the dialogues intertwine by the end of the presentation to tie the ch aracte rs together. SH E SAID the play, which opens at Zachary Scott Sept. 21, is presented in poetry rather than in traditional spoken English. The play will be per­ formed at 8:15 p.m . Sept. 22-23 and 28-30. Cossie, who portrays a m iddle-age woman balancing college and single parenthood, w as the chief organizer of WOM but refu ses to identify herself a s its founder. “ I could design the set, but I couldn't put it to “ We re all founders in our own w ay,” she said, claim ing only to have put up a few notices and in­ vited people to a meeting. “ Those people who cam e are the real founders,” she explained Cossie said the group operates on a collective basis, no one person m aking all the decisions. The group m eets to decide on which scripts to do, which perform ances to rehearse. to accept and when She said the m em bers, of whom eight are per­ manent and seven or eight are transient, take care of all the business operations a s well. “ IT ’S NOT AS IF we can go from one theater to another and leave the business to someone e lse ,” she pointed out. “ We have todo the business ... We are the som eone e ls e .” She said m ost of the m em bers are new to the collective p rocess, and therefore the m em bers have to be conscientious when presenting new ideas and when dealing with each other. The idea is working well, she said. Even though the play is about, and produced by, women, one man is associated with the production as well. William Lan cer designed the sets and lights for the show, because, C ates said, no one else knew how. sc a le ,” she said. TH E CO LLECTIVE m em bers range in age from 24 to 45, and many are w riters a s well a s per­ form ers. C ates hopes WOM will soon be able to present original dram a by the WOM m em bers as well a s other fem inist playw rights. When commenting on the group’s name, Word of Mouth, C ates said, “ We had a deuce of a time coming up with som ething.” They were aw are of many other sim ilar groups around the nation, she said, and felt all the dynam ite nam es had been taken. So the m em bership decided that, since it had formed by word of mouth in the first place, that is what it should be called. C ates said the nam e also provided the collective it with the identifies with an acronym that fem inist movement. Sh e a f f ir m e d th e p r e s e n t m embership might be sm all, no one in the group expects her reputation to rem ain sm all. th o u gh th a t, C ates plans to build a company repertoire of full-length dram as, a s well a s special pieces. Cossie w as even more emphatic about her goal for WOM. “ I want it to become the best darn fem inist theater if not the United in T exas, S ta te s,” she said. “ But I'll start with T ex as.” F a c u lty - G ra d u a t e Bagel & Lox Lunch Wednesday, Sept. 17th at Noon S p e a ke r: D eena M ersky Ca Hillel Jewish Center 2 1 0 5 San A n tonio 4 7 6 - 0 1 2 5 12.50 members $ 3 .5 0 others 7 7 n » n » n > 7 ¡ : 7 7 n 7 7 n GET INVOLVED ON THE CAMPUS w ith one of 4 5 0 student organizations STUDENT O R G A N IZ A T IO N FAIR Tuesday, Septem ber 16 West M a ll 1 0 :0 0 a .m . - 2 : 0 0 p.m . IN THE C O M M U N ITY w ith one of 1 3 0 volunteer agencies VOLUNTEER FAIR W e d n e s d a y , Septem ber 17 West M a ll 1 0 :0 0 a .m . - 2 : 0 0 p.m . CHECK IT OUT! 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He'll help you make the great exchange in: CLASS RINGS street level 7¿*U ven4¿U f Free 1 hr. parking t w $ 3 .0 0 purchase EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS A URS COMPANY EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Page 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, September 16, 1980 Entertainment committees launch planning project B y KATHY SH W IFF Daily Texan Staff For those people who agonize about whether to spend a Friday night attending a faculty piano concert, the current production of the Depart­ ment of Drama or a performance of a touring m im e company, hope is in sight But those who feel torn between a concert of the New York Philharmonic and a match-up between the Houston Rockets and San Antonio Spurs may not be as lucky The three major programming entities on campus — the Texas Union’s Cultural Entertain­ ment Committee, the Special Events Center and the partially opened Performing Arts Center — have begun a project of program coordination in­ itiated by UT President Peter Flawn last fall. THE PROJECT was initiated to ensure that two groups do not schedule two programs appealing to the sam e type of audience on the sam e or consecutive nights, said Clinton Norton, director of the Performing Arts Center. “But if you have a chance to book a basketball gam e in the Special Events Center and the New York Philharm onic the Performing Arts in Center, that is likely not the sam e audience,’’ Norton said. Janet Bauerle, chairwoman of the Texas Union Program Council and head of CEC last year, said there was a need for coordination of all program­ ming on campus. ment of agreem ents concerning publicity, promotion and financial matters. “ There was the possibility of a lot of overlap,’’ she said. Meetings were held from October to April to help define if there would be a division of types of performances and to look at what facilities were available. EDWARD SHARPE, assistant to G. Charles Franklin. University vice president for business affairs, was appointed convenor of the program in the spring and charged with setting regular m eetings of the three programming units and helping with plans for co-sponsorship of events, facility scheduling problems and the develop­ “ The value of having a convenor,” Norton said, “ is so that we re communicating with each other and not each booking independently without consultation.” Representatives of the CEC, SEC and PAC have met three tim es since May and there has been a great deal of cooperation between the un­ its which are all pursuing their own interests, Sharpe said “ This is not an effort to instruct program­ ming “ he said. THOUGH THE program coordination project was spurred by the addition of five theaters in the soon-to-be-com pleted Perform ing Arts C enter, the CEC and the SEC already have had some experience working together. The SEC has begun to do things which at one time CEC had done but was now unable to do,” Bauerle said. Dean Justice, director of the Special Events Center, said the program coordination project is basically the sam e policy the SEC worked out with the CEC. Sure there will be som e events that will go to the Performing Arts Center. From the purist standpoint, there are som e people who think sym phony and c la s s ic a l things need to be presented there,” Justice said. B O R Z T A I T T A A A uir 45&2720 OPEN 10 a .m .-9 p.m. A Y 0 m E A 1 O BECOME A MEMBER OF THE NAVAL AVIATION TEAM ON YOUR TEXAN W ANT ADS! EXAMPLE 15'tf 5 Days For O N LY $ 3 4 5 TOTAL! C o m e to the T S P Business O f f i c e , T S P B u i l d i n g 3.200C, place your ad and sa ve 50% off the r e g u l a r r a t e s . T e x a n c l a s s i f i e d i n d i v i d u a l L i m i t e d h o u s e h o ld ad s o n l y , no c o m m e r c i a l . All ads m u st be paid in ad van ce. U n i v e r ­ sity I D. re q u ire d . T S P of­ fice hours: 8 a . m . -4:30 p .m . 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For fu rth e r inform ation on this unique opportunity contact: JERRY E. YOST 102 W. RECTOR SAN ANTONIO, TX 78216 OR CALL 1-800-292-5703 FLY N A VY ; THE BEST ALWAYS HAVE. •AUDITIONS* N I I y We are a p e r fo r m in g / com p etin g dance group involved w ith touch (b a llr o o m ) and ja z z . Come to one o f th e follow in g session s: Tuesday, S ep t. 16 Wednesday, S ep t. 17 D A N C E T E A M A n n a H iss Gym 136 No exp erien ce n ecessa ry B oth m en and wom en are w elcom e D iv . of R e c S p orts 8 to 9 :3 0 p m i uesday, September 16. 1980 □ T H E D A IL Y T EX A N Stabler guides Oilers past Browns, 16-7 Sports Page 9 C L E V E L A N D ( U P I) - When the Houston O ilers wanted to control the ball Monday night they had the right man for the job — quarterback Kenny Stabler. Stabler, an 11-year-veteran in his first season with the Oilers, was able to eat up the clock through most of the se­ cond half, and the Oilers went on to a 16-7 victory. The O ile rs, rugged on defense, provided Stabler with the points he needed on three field goals by Toni Fritsch and a touchdown run by Tim Wilson. “ K en n y’s got so many weapons, he’s bound to do well this season,” said Houston running back Earl Campbell. S T A B L E R ’S STA TISTIC S were indicative of his perfor­ mance as he hit 23 of 28 passes for 187 yards. In the third and fourth q u arters, Stab ler engineered two drives that kept the Browns off the ball — one a 15 play, 54-yard drive that consumed 8.19 and another march of 16 plays for 77 yards that ate up 10:46 off the clock. ‘‘We were able to run the ball and use the play-action pass. We were out there a long time,” Stabler said. “ It builds confidence when you can stay on the field and see the chains moving.” running back Calvin Hill. Don Cockroft’s extra point made it 7-0. Houston’s running game back in gear. time from 29 yards. The Oilers featured a stingy defense that stym ied the Browns throughout the second half and an offense that ate up the clock on three time- consuming drives. FRITSCH SE A LED it with a 17-yard field goal midway through the fourth quarter after the Browns had staged a goal-line stand. Cleveland's much maligned defense kept Stabler and the Oilers bottled in their end of the field much of the first half, and Houston could only muster a 25-yard field goal by Fritsch with 4:35 left in the half. The kick came after a 15- play, 56-yard drive by the Oilers. The Browns opened the scoring early in the second quarter with Brian Sipe taking his club on an eight-play, 57- yard drive that ended with a three-yard pass to veteran The first half ended with Cleveland leading 7-3. The Oilers started to take com­ mand in the third quarter, however, when Campbell almost single-handedly got T H E O IL E R S took the seond half kickoff and march­ ed 67 yards in 10 plays, scoring on a 1-yard plunge by running back Tim Wilson with 9:08 left in the third quarter. Fritsch’s kick gave the Oilers a 10-7 lead The Houston defense, meanwhile, held the Browns to a paltry nine yards total offense in the third quarter. In the game between two AFC Central clubs, Houston evened its record at 1-1 and the Browns dropped to 0-2. The Steelers, who slipped past the Baltimore Colts 17-14, re­ main in sole possession of the lead in one of the National Football League’s most com­ petitive divisions. The Cin- cinatti Bengals, 0-2, are in last place. The Oilers widened the lead early in the fourth quarter on a penalty-aided, 15-play, 53- yard drive that set up another field goal from Fritsch — this Heism an Trophy winner Charles White from USC had his second straight lackluster game for the Browns, carry­ ing four times for 16 yards. Alabama No. 1; Texas fifth N E W Y O R K ( U P I ) - Alabama, the defending national champion, bolted ahead of Ohio State and into the No. 1 ranking following Monday's balloting by U P I’s Board of Coaches. The Crimson Tide, idle last week, moved ahead of Ohio State, which had to rally from a 21-3 deficit before posting a 31-21 triumph over stubborn Syracuse, on the basis of total points. Although the Buckeyes received 21 first-place votes to 19 for Alabama, Coach Bear Bryant’s team garnered 598 points to outdistance Ohio State, which had 585 points. The balloting is done by 42 head coaches, six from each section of the country. A l a b a m a , r id in g the nation’s longest winning streak at 23 games, defeated Georgia Tech 26-3 two weeks ago and is preparing to play at Mississippi this weekend. Upon learning of Alabama’s elevation to the top spot, Bryant wished the news had come later in the season. “ Well, I ’d rather have just woke up from dreaming and it was Jan. 2 and you had told me we were No. I, ” said the 66-year-old Bryant. “ I ’ve always felt like the defending champion should be first until they get beat. I don’t mean just us. I felt that way about S o u th e rn C a l , T e x a s , Oklahoma and others that have been champions.” The Buckeyes held the No. 2 position, followed by No. 3 Oklahoma, No. 4 Southern California and fifth-rated Tex­ as. Rounding out the top 10 are No. 6 Nebraska, seventh- ranked Pittsburgh, No. 8 Notre Dame, No. 9 Georgia and 10th-rated Florida State. Texas and Pittsburgh each received a first-place vote. Missouri is ranked 16th and Georgia, on the strength of U C L A , w hich w a llo p e d its recent 42-0 shellacking of Colorado 56-14. entered the previously ranked Texas Top 20 for the first time as the A&M, made the biggest jump 17th-ranked team. South among Top 20 members, dim- Carolina is rated 18th, follow- bing from No. 15 to No. 9. ed by Houston and No. 20 Pittsburgh, which turned the Arkansas, ball over nine times but held on for a 14-6 victory over Boston College last Saturday, fell three notches to No. 7. Texas A&M was the only team to fall from the ratings. f l l f Southern California, a last- second 20-17 winner over Tennessee, moved up from No. 5 and Texas, idle last week. Nebraska and Florida State each jumped up one position. Houston, ranked . , ninth last week, lost to Arizona State 29-13 and plummeted to No. 19. . , , , , . Penn State heads the second 10, followed by No. 12 Michigan, No. 13 North , , , Carolina. No. 14 Stanford and No. 15 Washington . _ . . . , 1 Alabama (19) (1-0) 2 0m0 state <211 n <» * Oklahoma (t ot ¡ e Nebraska n - 7 ° ,,,sbur9h <0 <10> 6 Ncrfre Dame (1-0) 9 ceorp.a (2-o> 10 Florida s«. <2-o> " 13 North Carolina (2 -0) It ^anl n V ? ?! m 15 Washington (1-0 ) ie Missouri n-o> Vi-o* a n o 18 S '- "i Carolina (2-0) 19 H... «ton io-n ?0 Arkansas (0 1) fcdV/ o ) S .............101 598 sss 456 am 424 403 331 ?bs ^ 83 65 45 43 33 k C U J T O m h i-fi Earl Campbell runs through Browns’ defense. UPI Telephoto Padres rally to defeat Houston, 6-3 HOUSTON (U P I) - Gene Richards hit a two-run double to key a fourth-inning rally Monday night, and the San Diego Padres fought from behind to defeat Houston, ending the Astros' five-game winning streak. The defeat left the Astros tied for first in the National League West with Los Angeles, 9-0 losers to Atlanta Monday night. Houston took a 1-0 lead in the first when Enos Cabell and Cesar Cedeno walked and scored on Art Howe’s single to left. Further damage was averted when Richards threw out Howe trying to stretch his hit into a double. San Diego tied the game in the third inning when Ozzie Smith was safe on a fielder's choice, stole second and came in on a Je rry Mumphrey single. However, the Astros came back in their half as Joe Morgan tripled off the right field wall and scored on Enos Cabell’s dou­ ble to left. Richards’ arm came into play again, gunning down Cabell trying to take third on the play. San Diego moved in front 4-2 in the fourth, scoring once on consecutive singles by B ill Fahey, Luis Salazar and Tim Flannery. Padre pitcher Bob Shirley took first on a fielder’s choice, setting up Richards’ two-run single to left. The Padres added a run in the seventh when Randy Bass singled in a run and added a run in the ninth when Jerry Mumphrey delivered an R B I single. Gary Woods of Houston hit his first major league homer in the ninth inning. It was the second complete game in 10 starts for Shirley, 11- 10, who struck out four and walked three while giving up six hits. Houston starter Nolan Ryan, 9-9, surrendered seven hits and four runs in six innings. He left with a pulled hamstring ten­ don in his right leg. @ v s p e c m l I M E j j f g S ONLY EXTEN D ED LIMITED 10 YEAR WARRANTY! A $50 VALUE, YOURS FREE With the Purchase of any Pair of EC I Speakers!! g f I 99 A A D 6001 420 C O M P A C T 2 WAY SPEAKER with 8 ” WOOFER. 10 YEAR LIMITED WARRANTY! Mon.-Fri. 11-7 g50 VALUO I FREE I I I WITH PURCHASE! ONLY 4 620. ■ 3 \NM ■■ kl2” WOOFER a ■ P1E I 0 1 tí EtfCTWC I ■ tjeeuüI FOR COMINO IN TO LISTEN TO SPEAKERS, WE WILL LET YOU RUY 2 EXTENSION SPEAKERS FOR ONLY y iM L Y l ■ 95 L e g e n d i n IMAGE XII e a ., , /a— 3 W t Y 1 Ü m *peaker 1 t o W O O FfB, 4 x 9 W K IH m I ■ HOMf Ü 11% ''5u "s' \ ' { ■ V,' ¡ W . 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(These schools are presently represented.) 3 You must fully anticipate attending U T and be able to fill this position through May 1981. A pplications are a v a ila b le at the Co-Op from G ra ce Howard or C.W . W alker in the o ffice at the top of the sta irs behind the A p­ parel D epartm ent. DEADLINE FOR A PPLYIN G : 5:30 p.m. FRID AY, SEPT. 26th By JOE MULRY Daiiy Taxan Staff In the up and down world of college football, players are often thrown into the frying pan in a moment of crisis When Texas Vance Bedford went down 10 plays into the first quarter of the Arkansas game. Levi Mays was thrust into the comerback position It wasn’t easy replacing the only returning starter from l a s t y e a r ' s d e f e n s i v e backfield before a national television audience Mays took it in stride but admits the pressure was on “ I was nervous, because I they d be throwing.” knew Mays said. Indeed, Arkansas had in­ tended to test the young Longhorn secondary even before Bedford was injured That fact did not bother Mays, who said he was ready to plav. “ I WAS READY, I felt I could do the job if they called on me.” he said. Levi Mays Mays was involved in three of the game s most crucial plays. He recovered a fumble that set up T e x a s ’ f i rs t t ouchdown and wa s the defender on the Tom Jones-to- Bobby Duckworth bomb that Sports Shorts By United Preea International Saints sign kicker to help Erxleben N E W O R L E A N S — The New Orleans Saints, frustrated at the feeble attempts of punter-kicker Russell Erxleben, Monday signed former Detroit Lions kicker Benny Ricardo to take over that half of Erxleben’s job. Erxleben was the team’s No. 1 draft choice in 1978 but missed all but one game in 1979 with injuries. Coach Dick Nolan cut veteran kicker Garo Yepremian after training camp this year and said Erxleben would handle both chores. But he has punted only fairly and kicked poorly — missing a 35-yard field goal attempt Sunday and missing two short shots in the Saints’ first game, including a 34-yard field goal attempt with four seconds left to tie the score. Nolan said he talked with Erxleben about the decision and “ I think he understands.” “ Erxleben certainly wanted to kick, too We told him we set up an Arkansas field goal in the third quarter Mays was with Duckworth on the 52- yard bomb but “ just lost the ball.' enabling Duck worth to make the catch. The sophomore comerback was also called for pass in­ terference late in the game on a play leading to the Razor- backs’ final touchdown However Mays was pleased with his performance “ I did pretty good. I could have done better.” he said H E A D COACH Fred Akers felt Mays’ performance was good considering the c ir ­ cumstances. “ He didn t play perfectly, but I thought he did w ell" Akers said It is somewhat ironic that Mays replaced Bedford in that both players are from Beau­ mont Hebert High School In his sophomore year of high school Mays played safety. Bedford was comerback. (another Maurice McCloney Longhorn player) was a wide receiver and Bedford’s father was a coach for the team If not for Coach Bedford. Mays might have quit football A f t e r a d i s c o u r a g i n g freshman year of high school, Mays was considering quitting the game However. Coach Bedford talked him into play­ ing his sophomore year He has been at it ever since AN IM P R E S S IV E high school career caused much attention to be focused on Mays Not only were the S o u t h w e s t C o n f e r e n c e recruiters knocking at his door, but Notre Dame, I SC and U CLA, among others, showed interest in the 6-0. 195- pound defensive back. .After being highly recruited it was difficult for Mays to accept being relegated to third team “ It ’s all right, but being third team Mays said, shaking his head as he recall­ ed the disappointment of his freshman year. However Mays realized that not everyone gets to be an understudy in an impressive secondary like last year s. “ I P IC K E D up a lot. es­ p e c i a l l y f r o m D e r r i c k Hatchett. Mays said He is one of the best comerbacks around Vance ( Bedford i helped me learn my plays. He took time out to tell me what I was doing wrong. " Mays intended to “ study” Bedford this year and learn from the veteran comerback. but now he is adjusting to the starting role with the help of the other players in the secon­ dary. “ Practice has been coming along real good." Mays said “ All the guys have been giving me support and helping me out.” Akers believes that Mays is starting to come around. “ He didn t make a great deal of progress last fall, but in the spring he showed more, he said “ He kept get­ ting better The last week before the game, he really started to come on ” Whether Mays or the rest of the secondary is ready will be tested when they face Utah State Saturday. “ He s got a real challenge in Utah State,” Akers said T h e w h o l e d e f e n s i v e backfield will. They do a lot of different things “ “ Utah State likes to throw a lot — thirty to forty times a gam e.” Mays added. ‘We really have to be on our Ps and Qs this game. I'm looking forward to the next game." wanted him to get his punting down and to concentrate on that one area at this time.” Nolan said. “ He may still end up doing both jobs We have not given up on him as a kicker. But for now he’ll handle our punting; Ricardo our kicking." The Saints waived third-string quarterback Ed Burns to make room on the roster for Ricardo. Man arrested in NTSU slaying D EN T O N — Police Monday arrested Terry Wayne Williams, 21. and charged him with murder in the slaying of North Texas State University football star Bernard Jackson Justice of the Peace Jam es Erw in arraigned Williams and denied bond in the case. Police Lt B ill Cummings said officers were seeking a second suspect in the slaying Murray, Davis honored N E W Y O R K — Baltim ore’s Eddie Murray and New York's Ron Davis, two key participants in their team's drive to the American League East pennant, were named co-winners of the Player of the Week, the league office announced Monday. Murray, who had six homers including three in one game, had 16 hits in 35 at-bats with a slugging percentage of 1.057. Davis, who has won three of the Yankees' last five games, allowed only two hits in the 10 1-3 innings he pitched. He im­ proved his record to 8-3. Others nominated were Milwaukee’s Ben Oglivie and Mike Caldwell and Toronto’s Lloyd Moseby. Gullickson NL Player of Week N E W Y O R K — Montreal pitcher B ill Gullickson, a strong can­ didate for Rookie of the Year honors, was named National League Player of the Week, the league office announced Mon­ day. The right-hander established a strikeout record for rookies by fanning 18 against the Chicago Cubs. Gullickson won his other start of the week and taken nine of his last 10 decisions. UNIVERSITY SKI CLUB MEETING!! sign up to S K / PU R G A TO R Y P C J flG A TO t=r K 10%0 FF All Ports ond Lobor Whether it s maintenance or major repairs, you can save 10% during September in our service department In times of high inflation we re one car dealership that's lowering its prices. So come by and save. VILLAGE TGYOTA-BMW 200 E. Huntland Drive, just north of Highland Mall 454-561 5 Free Pick up G Delivery Coupon must be presented for discount ¿ id T^U *195 THANKSGIVING, Nov. 26-29 includes - 3 DAYS SKIING, LIFT TICKETS, TRANSPORTATION ON SLEEPER/PARTY BUS Thurs, Sept. 18 7:30 p.m. RLM 4.102 G et info about Texas Ski w e e k trip a t Crested Butte Jan. 1 0 -1 7 * Welcome Back Sale * 6-10 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 16th _ _ 1 5 % OFF EVERYTHING (e xc ept 10K J e w e lr y ) SHOES Tennis Basketball Running G reat for Classes! SHORTS Tennis Running r isual W ear Windbreakers — Support the Horns! Jerseys — For your Sorority & Fraternity, or your club! RACQUETBALL EQUIPMENT BaMs Racquets BAGS Your Choice of Nike or Adidas *H g g j adidas ^ Ideal for P .E . Classes! Remember, Everything is 15% OFF! 6-10 p.m. * 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c PROBLEM PREGNANCY? A re you considering Abortion? Confidential Free P r eg na nc y Testing & Referrals For in fo r m a tio n call PROBLEM PREGNANCY of AUSTIN (5 1 2 ) 474-9930 507 Powell Near West Lynn and West 6th Brandéis University AMERICAN SCHOOLS OF ORIENTAL RESEARCH ARCHAEOLOGICAL ^ SEMESTER IN ISRAEL \ What does It offer you? • o semester of study in Israel in the spring term • course work m English in archaeology both history and m ethodology ond in related fields • several weeks of active participation m on on-going dig • study tours to important archaeological s*tes • optionoi language study in H e b re w or Arabic Application deadline: November 1 For further information see your study abrood advisor or wnte Office of International Programs Drondets University Waltham AAA 02254 617- 647-2422 DrandPis Urwvervry admits «odents of any ace coto» or « tv * c angr> se* age ex ,x»xJ0 p WALK-IN — RIDE-OUT ALL BIK ES ASSEM BLED AND A D JU ST E D TO YOUR SPECIFICATIONS YOU’LL FIND ALL THIS & MORE • Quality bicycles, accessories and back packs • P ro m p t e x p e rt r e p a irs on all m akes • Friendly service • Patronage refund to members* • Easy Time Paym ent Plans SALE PRICE ON IN-STOCK BICYCLES ONLY F STO R E HOURS M ON S A T t 10 a rr. í> J6 p m This is mil a liquidation sale Limit one bike per customer Please no dealer inquines •when one is declared 476-7211 E X T . 223 JUNIORS - SENIORS - GRADS IF THIS C A T C H ES YOUR EYE, YOU M A Y Q U ALIFY TO EARN ‘740 PER M O N TH DU RIN G YOUR LAST 24 M O N TH S OR LESS OF STUDY. W E ' R E L O O K I N G F O R P E O P L E W I T H A Y E A R O F C A L C U L U S A N D P H Y S I C S T O T R A I N IN T H E N U C L E A R P O W E R F I E L D A F T E R G R A D U A T I O N , A N D W E ' R E W I L L I N G T O P A Y Y O U A S A L A R Y O F $740 P E R M O N T H F O R U P T O 24 M O N T H S D U R I N G I F Y O U H A V E T H E Y O U R L A S T 2 Y E A R S C A L C U L U S A N D P H Y S I C S A N D D E C E N T G R A D E S , DON'T R U L E Y O U R S E L F O U T B E C A U S E O F Y O U R M A J O R . G O A H E A D A N D S E E I F Y O U C A N Q U A L I F Y . C A L L T H E N U C L E A R P R O G R A M M A N A G E R A T (512) 341-0224 C O L L E C T O F W R I T E I N S C H O O L . NUCLEAR PROGRAMS M A N AG ER NRD 102 W. RECTOR SAN ANTONIO, TX 78216 W E'LL BE INTERVIEWING AT UT O N 23-25 SEPT. Soap Creek Saloon THE DESIRES < ★ ★ TONIGHT ★ ★ $1.00 Highballs / *•' ~ .1 1 3 0 6 N. L A M A R i .... k. , ■ 8 3 5 -0 5 0 9 A 8» STUDENT NIGHT TUESDAY KEG BEER 7-9 P .m‘ NO COVER CHARGEI T t a t t ? t v * { T H E v'/,lD W E S T NIGHTCLUB 86 11 N M o P a c on Loop 1 3 4 6 -2 1 3 4 3 4 5 -0 9 72 FOR THE RIDE OF YOUR LIFE I m \ r i 1 + S K I P ' S ' A RENTAL, INC. THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, September 16, 1980 Entertainment W©6 k©n d music MilsaP leaves audience hungry Beck still firmly rooted in rock Page 12 By L A U R E L B R U B A K E R Daily T e xa n Staff to town, When a country music star the m a g n itu d e of Ronnie Milsap comes it’s only fair for folks to expect great things from him. But unfortunately for those at his show Sunday night, Milsap p ro m is e d m o r e th a n he delivered. Things started out well enough when Milsap opened on time at the Silver Dollar North with a rousing version of What a Difference You’ve Made in My Life.” Everyone settled back in their chairs and nodded to each other that this show was going to be worth the $9 admission price But when the lights came on a scant 50 minutes later, leav­ ing many Milsap classics left unsung, more than one dis­ gruntled fan the hall without even slowing down at t a b l e s e l l i n g M ilsap th e left m e m o r a b i l i a — a l b u m s , tapes, T-shirts, photographs and who cares what else. Part of the blame for the un­ satisfactory evening lies with the promoters who provided no dancing space. But the main problem lay with M ilsaps performance. Not only did Milsap sing too briefly, but he spent half his p r o g r a m s i n g i n g o t h e r people’s songs. He cram m ed a good half- dozen of his solid gold classics (like “ Day D ream s About Night Things” and * I’m a Stand By My Woman Man” ) into a lengthy medley early in the show The crowd was itching for more Then he had the audacity to spend almost the entire last 20 minutes of his show singing songs by The Eagles and, of all people, The Rolling Stones The n e g a tiv e c o m m e n ts N£WiY#RK S l i t E\-szm 1 9 1 4 G u a d a lu p e 4 7 6 - 1 2 1 5 Aus-Tex B KATHY 1 4 The B B KILOWATTS 1920 S. C o n gre ss 4 4 4 -9 0 8 8 Desserts a n d coffee I a . m . til *th e best cheesecake in town 1200 West Lynn 472-3790 shouldn’t leave the impres­ sion that the concert was a total loss When Milsap was singing Milsap. what the peo­ ple paid to hear, he was ex­ cellent. His powerful voice easily filled the crowded hall, and when he w a n te d to, his delivery was emotional and compelling Some of his most famous songs he sang in their entirety — “ It Was Almost Like a Song,” “ Legend in My Tim e” and “Once In Every Life.” tune which gar­ nered the Song of the Year award for him in 1977. the M i l s a p s p o w e r a n d r e s o n a n c e c a m e th ro u g h whether he was singing his own songs or not. But he would have done better to have left the Rolling Stones alone. Milsap relied heavily on other artists' songs. Had he includ­ ed more of his own stuff, the c o n c e r t w o u l d ’ve b e e n everything the fans expected. But the half-baked teaser he served up Sunday night just left everyone hungry. By J E R R Y M c C U L L E Y D aily T e xa n Staff What happens to old rock g u i t a r i s t s ? J i m m y P a g e bludgeons away, oblivious of trends and advancing age. P eter Townshend painfully matures, filling his work with bittersweet insight. Eric Clap­ ton fizzles into the terminally mellow sunset of too much cocaine. And some — too many — die. Then t h e r e ’s Jeff Beck. Acclaimed as one of rock’s few true innovators for his work with the Yardbirds dur­ ing their better years, Beck stubbornly remains true to his own vision. In the ’70s, while several of his former lesser colleagues, Page, Ron Wood an d R od S t e w a r t , w e r e becoming millionaire mass idols. Beck plodded along creating interesting m usic that met with little com m er­ cial success. “ Blow By Blow” changed that status, but only m arginal­ ly. Its all-instrumental ap­ proach was a major departure from rock the mainstream norm. Beck was, and still is, in accused of participating that infamous bastardization, “ jazz/fusion.” But in his show at Municipal Auditorium F'riday night, Beck showed that there is an important dis­ If in his w ork. tin c tio n anything, it’s r ock/j azz fu­ sion. Nitpicking9 Not really. But no m atter how far Beck appeared to stray into alien (“jazz” ) territory, his basic rock roots held firm. “ El Becko,” from his new album “ There and Back,” for in­ s t a n c e . B eck , t h e amateur guitarists (and a lot of local pros) in the audience by alternating effortlessly between co n v e n tio n a l and slide the lead work within piece, bounced about like a happy kid. No “ serious” jazz artiste pose for Beck. f r u s t r a t i n g His animated demeanor was a refreshing change and in­ dicated that critics be damn­ ed, Beck is co n te n t with himself and his place in the music world. He curiously seemed to shy the audience’s away from ovations, but his timidity dropped away when he threw himself into his craft — his in­ credibly fluid style of guitar And nobody plays it like Beck God only knows enough have tried to tended Like most shows, problems were evident. The mix, over­ powering in the bass range, freq u en tly lose Beck. And why, oh why, do we have to listen to yet another drum m er flog his ego for 10 minutes? But his enthusiasm and virtuosity — when you could hear him — won out in the end. Opening the show for Beck were the Kings, a Canadian group that thinks the “ power" in power-pop m eans more amperage. Whatever clever hooks and harmonies these boys m ay h ave had w ere mashed their Ted Nugent sound mix. flat by By his determination, incon ceivab le it’s not t h a t 25 years from now we may find a little gray-haired man with a S tan L a u r e l gr i n, g u i t a r a c r o s s h i s k n e e , s t i l l delighting faithful in some urban nightclub. That would seem to please Jeff Beck just fine. It sure beats some of the alternatives. fans BEER (Um it J per customer with coupon) expires Sept. 19th Sandw iches Frozen Wine Coolers I i I ( G o o d M on .-Fri.) 1 1 -7 4 7 6 - 9 1 8 7 I DAVID CHILES! BAND $1.50 Cover 1201 S. Congress 443-1597 S 7Z¿zzzz¿znjrzzzz2zrziD> 7777^ Salads Soups I 17th & I | San Jacinto 58/6 l aIu A l s i í n Blvd Bo 4 f ÍOU. M ON I A k f Al 5IÍN Op » N D a ¡I\ * II A M - 8 p . M Ri n i a I by l»p * * üa v v i s * MASII KC bAH<,J A l C i p i l d I’boNi 1 /6 -7 Í/ J Skip P» ! I v OvL Nl l< AUSTIN B3LLÉT TWEctTKE s m m m m FALL TERM CLASSES R E G I S T R A T I O N POR IN S E P T . BALLET J A I X S X £ P C IS E adidts be^innmci-thru advanced dU AU rv b o U it Jfa ta P w fc h o c l i m < J e t i Z 3 n t W 8 W S 1 YdW rby. HaLL ■ cw lu kc cu lm on. Tuesday & Wednesday N ig h t Special Catfish & Boiled Shrim p ALL YO U CA N EAT! 5-10 P M $ 6 9 5 Served W ith S a la d Bar, Sean s, French Fries A H u sh P u p p ie s N o w Serving Cocktails! THE BRANDING IRON m ■ Mi l es Past O a k Hill on H w y. 71 West — »r y v tm ■■ tm 6 nxxxiKinnnK 2 6 3 -2 8 2 7 LIBERTY LUNCH 405 W. 2nd a t G u a d a lu p e EXTREME HEAT - « < < i i r r - o : Tonight A L V IN CRO W W e d n e sd a y Rick Stein Revue Lon gest H a p p y H our in T ow n D o u b le Sh ots — 2 for 1 — 11 a .m .-8 p.m . NEVER A COVER CHARGE TAVERN I S SN H Tonight C H IC A N O I I N IG HT -AÜ41- Presents * Tonight ir In the Beer Garden THE LOTIONS * Thursday * LEON REDBONE Kiwi An Evening with ... STEPHANE GRAPPELLI An Evening with ... THE DAVID GRISMAN QUINTET The Historic Armadillo Beer Garden open daily, weather perm itting f t f ' A B A R T O N S P R IN G S R D . 4 7 7 - 9 7 6 * GRAND OPENING WEEK! Business Hours: M o n d a y through Saturday 11 a.m.-11 p.m. j (closed Su n d ays and Holidays) 512 W. 29th St. (corner W. 29th & G uadalupe) The W illo w Tree - n W 29th Special d a te ? • Special lunch or d in n er? or just a ch a n g e of p a ce ? DO IT with The Willow Tree! 7 sp ecia lty sandw iches and salad bar B ut all w ith that "special difference ” S. B A R B E C U E N ’ B E A N S FEED YOUR FAMILY^ or your friends GROUP RATE DINNER B E E F • SAUSAGE • RIBS • BEANS POTATO SALAD • ONION • PIC K LE • BREAD SERVED FA M ILY S T Y L E $Jt25 per person M I N IM U M O F F O U R M IXED DRINKS • COVERED PATIO • OPEN 11-11 DAILY CLOSED SUNDAY 2330 S. LAMAR 444-8461 □c in G e o rge to w n p r e s e n ts Johnny Dee & The Rocket 88 s and The Dale McBride Show Hot Air Balloon Races A n tiq u e Auction C a r S h o w s Boat Sh o w s M e ch a n ica l Bull Riding C a sh Prizes Sept. 19, 20, 21 Tickets S5 — A v a ila b le at Zebra Records Inner San ctu m Disc Records Forties feminist film to show Dance, Girl, Dance’ ends ambiguously Judy becomes a refugee from her cracked ivory towrer of ideal love and a perfect career She learns the finer points of ‘ prostitution’’ need­ ed to harden shimmering into reality while dreams Bubbles, the borderline floozy, garners some dignity. When Judy finally joins the ballet company, she has merged some of Bubble's lessons with her own in­ nocence. Even if the film’s more overtly “feminist moments s o m e t i m e s t r i p o v e r themselves, after 40 years, tew “ feminist oriented” films have climaxed the tension aroused by this film s am­ biguous ending By G W EN RO W LIN G “ Dance, Girl, Dance” at 7 and 9 p.m. Tuesday in Batts Auditorium. She looked a t the photographs of the 1930s mansion. "I was a famous Hollywood director then ” — Dorothy Arzner Dorothy Arzners “ Dance. G irl, D an ce" straddles a seesaw. First, the film dips toward stereotyped women’s roles, and then it flips your ex­ pectations. breathing fresh air into those stereotypes. This 1940 film is feminist, yet never touches the cheap cologne that stifled such films as “ Ju lia " or “ The Turning Point. Bubbles (Lucille Ball) and Judy (Maureen 0 Hara) per­ form in the same burlesque act. Judy is the stooge for Bubbles’ act. When Bubbles takes a break, Judy performs an innocent ballet, pirouetting in a flouncy tutu. The male audience heckles and shouts for Bubbles. Couple innocent Judy together with a tough broad like Bubbles, and an in­ teresting feminist movie emerges. As the film progresses, Judy unloads her bubble-gum- goo and hones her goals and desires to a fine, steely point while Bubbles lands on her fanny and gets some of her immaturity knocked out of her. A tough ch a ra c te r. Bubbles doesn't change easi­ ly But Arzner is interested in more than just refereeing a virgin-whore battle between Judy and Bubbles. Throughout the film , Arzner depicts women as spectacles who strut their stuff for a living. She shows us the spectators avidly watching Judy twirl and Bubbles grind The sear­ ing gazes are intrusive, and Judy lashes out at the burles­ que audience. But Judy longs to be on stage fo r the American Ballet, performing for another audience in vir­ tually the same costumes Everyone exposes their body: it’s a question of purpose. Around Town Arzner(l) consults with Ball. Around Town is a listing of the daily entertainment ac­ tivities in and around Austin. C A M ER A WORK: Selec­ tions from an early 20th cen­ tury avant-garde photography magazine published by Alfred Stieglitz. At Laguna Gloria at First Federal, 10th and Brazos streets. R E A L IT Y OF ILLU SIO N : A survey of contemporary illu­ sion paintings at the Hun­ tington Gallery, 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard. M IC H E N E R G A L L E R IE S : L a t i n A m e r i c a n and Czechoslovakian art is on dis­ play at the Michener Galleries in the Harry Ransom Center, 21st and Guadalupe streets. IN D IA N S OF ORINOCO: Photographs of Indian tribes of Colombia. On view at the Texas Memorial Museum, 24th and Trinity streets. YOUNG A R T IST S: U T ’s Department of Art presents an exhibition by “ Young Ar­ tists” in the Art Building’s se­ cond floor gallery. C IN EM ATEX AS: “ Steam boat Bill J r . ” with Buster Keaton at the helm of a com­ edy classic. At 7 and 9 p.m. in Jester Auditorium; Dance, Girl, Dance” with Maureen O’Hara and Lucille Ball at 7 and 9 p. m. Auditorium. in B a t t s U N IO N F I L M S ; Alfred Hitchcock’s “ Notorious” with C a r y G r a n t and I n g r i d Bergman at 3 and 9 p.m.; “ The Bicycle Thief,” a neo­ realist film about the vicious cycle of poverty in postwar Italy at 5 and 7 p.m.; “ King of Hearts” with Alan Bates and Genevieve Bujold at 11 p.m. All are in the Texas Union Theatre. Correction Studs Terkel. author of “ Hard T i m e s ’ ’ and “ A m e r i c a n Dreams: Lust and Found,” will not stop in Austin on his current promotional tour as reported in last Tuesday’s Daily Texan , D a v i d Hisbrook, sales represen­ tative for Random House, said Friday. “ Shogun” will be shown at 7 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday and at 7 p.m. Friday. Images in co rre ctly reported the feature times Monday. presents JESTER AUD. 7 & 9 p.m. Only $1.50 TO NIGH T ONLY THE K IN G OF SILENT CO M EDY BUSTER KEATON in STEAMBOAT BILL JR. USED “R-Merfy CABS funny- Trust us. 2________ (5:45/51.75)4:00 •VttUAM MTHr «ATTY S TW IN KLE TW INKLE KILLER KANE (5:45/51.75)-7:45 ^ *2^ Thank God if* only a motion picture' i ^ A I R P L A N E I A Feud Between Two Hi ver boat Owners On the Old Mississippi In clu d in g one of K E A T O N s fu n n ie st a n d m ost sp ectacu lar stunt seq u en ces: a cyclone hits to w n a n d Bu ste r w a n d e rs (5:30/51.75)-7:JO aro u n d fly in g roofs a n d w a lls . Robert Redford is B R U B A KER Plus: The Short, "The Waiter's B a ll/' Starring FATTY ARBUCKLE (5:30 .$1.7 5)4:00 SEASON PASS Still A Bargain AT $18 a m c th e a tre s T IM £ $ S H O W N FO N T O D A Y O N LY dam LlMilfcL TQ SiAHNG iflCiAi iNvAál T H E BLUES BRO THERS ^ (5:45/51.75)4:15 J O H N T R A V O L T A U R B A N C O W B O Y 4 4 2 2 3 3 3 1423 W BFN WHITE 6LVO wtluam Mtt* «utrrv * TW INKLE TW INKLE K IL L E R K A N E («40/5175)4:00 4 4 4 3 2 2 2 BRUCE DERN ANN MARQfiET MIDDLE AGE CRAZY jk \'Tk\ (5:30/51.75)4:00 (440/51.75)4.-00 The story of Herschel He wanted to be Moses WHOLLY M O J E S ! 4 *C4*r. Of#: (5:45/51.75)4:15 DON'T GO IN THE HOUSE (4:15/51.75)4:15 4 5 4 5 1 4 7 „ M ID D LE I I t l l . W T i 9 x * * 4 o n HOY (5:15/51.75)4:00 AGE __ _ _ c r a z y H JfcAx (4:15/51.75)4:15 AMERICANA 4 5 3 - 6 6 4 1 MARK HAMILL HARRISON FORD CARRIF FISHER 7 0 M M Dolby (4:00/32.00)4:30 >200 HANCOCK DRIVI S P E C IA L E N G A G EM EN T S3.7S I witf AMC ID ... . S3.25 Ch. Ur*n...........12 .00 Twilil» . . . . . . . 12.00 j No PolH* or p j r * P R E S I D I O T H E A T R E S ^ The Bandit Frog and Justice are at it e&ttw m the ah new adventures of THE FVN#L| N U W TBKWI DOLBY STEREO N o w — you w ill be '. ** we... 2:48 5:10-7:40-10:10- V I L L A Q E 4 2700 ANDERSO N • 451*352 3:05 5:25 7:55 10:15 rhe Bandit hot/a nd Just* e a re e t -t mum m the eh ne w adventures of 5:45-7:45-». 50 T H E F I N A L C O U N T D O W N □ □ [ DOLBY STER EO | K I R K D O U G L A S 6:00-8:00 10:00 o f i he ’ Htwr L / M C E H I I —L . S 2429 BEN W M IT I *44*4552 5 00 7 3 5 -10:10 1 C H U C K N O R R I S J J i l l L i i i J l I ' r i m i t I - fx It f e I A C A D E M Y a w a r d W I N N E R A maeNKworti AU I HAT JAZZ a >0» vw.v I mod mdtoonSmorv thm ' * r m M L ... uo - .0 1 0 ouI r i v e r s i d e i 1930 RIVERSIDE • 441-5699 6 40 9:00 f R ED U C ED P R IC E S UNTIL 6:00 MON THRU FBI. | CINEMA 2130 S Congress • Open 11 J O H N i . n o r m s 1.1 O I I O I M s p r i . % i n I Mí I .IK I I lili y HI t N PLUS r T H E c m A cm DAMON CHRISTIAN PRESENTS A BOB CHINN FILM Starring John C Holmes as Johnny Wudd Spec id Guest Sim Kyrtto at China Cd Tuesday, September 16, 1980 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page 13 onn FOX TRIPLEX 6757 A IR P O R T BLVD. 454-2711 :HARLT0N HESTON BRIAN KEITH T H E [M O U N T A IN @ M E NWCTU««S *«LCAS« (6 :0 5 )-8 :0 5 -1 0 :0 5 SOME PEOPLE IUST DON T BELONG C a d d y s h a c k O rR] (6:20)-l 0:00 Ste ve M cQ ueen T H E H U N T E R " 8:15 P e te r S e lle rs “BEIN G TH ERE ” (6:00)-10:10 (PC) P e te r S e lle r s THE FIENDtSH PLOT OF DR. FU MANCHO 8:20 MANN 3 WESTGATE 4608 W E S T G A T E BLVD. 8 9 2 -2 7 7 5 What's (lower than a speeding bullet? A IR P L A N E PARAMOUNT PtCTUAf m ( 6 : 5 0 ) - 8 : 2 0 - 1 0 : 0 0 CHARLTON HESTON BRIAN KEITH THE M O UN TAIN 0 MEN :0| uMBi* PlCtunf 5 Af If (6 :0 5 )-8 :0 5 -1 0 :0 5 C H e v y C h a s e '.addyshack O (6 :2 0 ) - 10.00 Steve M cQ ueen T H E H U N T E R " tec, 8:15 R E D U C E D A D U LT A D M IS S IO N All Features in (Brackets) L IM IT E D TO S E A T IN G C A P A C IT Y Daily Times M ay Vary TODAY Tuesday, Sept. 16 STERLING C O U N T R Y KOKE DAY ALL SEATS * 1 .0 0 MANN WESTGATE R £ B £ L D r i v e - I n 385-7217 6902 Burleson Road New Cine-fi Sound System Privacy of Your Auto XXX Original Uncut Note: Theatre sound operates through your car radio. If your car has no radio, bring a portable n m e H ' V C d Pleasure $ 1 . 5 0 1*1 M A T IN EE S H O W H IG H LA N D MALL EV ER Y DAY CAPITAL PLAZA SAT & SUN Í I 1/1 C A P I T A L P L A Z A I H 35 N ORTH 4 5 2 -7 6 4 6 1 " XANADU Olivia N e w to n John J 6:05 8 : 00 - 9:55 H I G H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT KO ENIG IN . 451-7326 T H E B U J E b A f i O C N ® 1 70-3 30-5 40-7 50-10 00 H I G H L A N D M A L L IH 35 AT KO EN IG IN . 451-7326 A re aft y g o o d hit! C H E E C H A N D C H O N G S NEXT M O V IE " (R) 2 00-6:10-10:10 ^1 V £ The Blues Brothers C IN E M A T H f E A T P E S OPENS 7:30 STARTS DUSK TONIGHT ONLY) In BATTS AUD. 7 &9 p.m. Only $1.50 c m e m f l T e x f i s 2 DANCE, GIRL, DANCE By the Astonishing Feminist Director Dorothy Arzner Demure MAUREEN O 'H ARA Aspires to Ballet, LUCILLE BALL (as "Bubbles'' Aspires to the Burlesque — and Each is Rewarded. LUCILLE BALL MAUREEN O 'HARA M A R IA 0USPENSKYA "Arzner gets at the subtleties of what divides women and, better, what unites them." T h e B o s t o n t v l o b *1 ^ 0 “In a truly unprecedented monolo g ue at H w W m • clim a* O H ara m ake» explicit th e u n d ercu rren t issue* of m a le fa n ta s y a n d the a b u se of art. V “ This m ay turn out to be the w arm est co m e d y of the year.” ‘‘ H ilariously funny an d su p erb ly p e rfo rm e d dow n to the tin iest d e t a il s .’ C ism» “in any lan gu age , the film is la u gfi-o u t-lo u d h in n y f i l •WorKlerfully < “A sparkling comedy!” íü i ii s f-'ioetdú i.jf a 6 30 8 I S 10 00 R H A RO LD and M A U D E RUTH GORDON BUDCORT 6 15 8 00-9 45 m LA CAGE AUX FOLIES — The strangest things happen when you wear polka dots. ALL SH O W S $1.00 EVERY TUESDAY a . T I PC * M I I * VI I I N I t V M t I V H N S t a rrinc i THE R A M O N E S 1 2:00-4:00 6:00-8:00-10:00 1 :45-3:455:4S-7:4S-9:50 LINDA WONG FKFL PRRXING IN D08IE GAR461 D 0 8IL MALL «77 1324 " A FOR SALE F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T S ■ F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T S ROOMMATES SERVICES MISCELLANEOUS TYPING Page 14 □ THE D A ILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, September 16, 1980 tx : ’• -H - ‘ . C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G C onsecutive D a y Rates $ 17 $ 3 7 s 46 15 w o rd m in im u m E a ch w o rd 1 tim e E a ch w ord 3 tim e s E a c t * o r d 5 tim e s E a ch w ord 10 tim e s 1 c o l x I Inch 1 tim e 1 cot x l inch 2-9 tim e s ! col x 1 Inch 10 or m ore $1 00 c h a rg e to change co py. F irs tw o w o rd s m a y be a lt c a p ita l le tte rs 25 fo r each a d d itio n a l w o rd In c a p ita l te tte rs .75 *5-17 $4 66 tim e s S4 41 S T U D E N T F A C U L T Y /S T A F F fa c u lty and s ta ff of S tudents, the U n iv e rs ity m a y p urch a se c la s s ifie d a d v e r t is in g a t one h a lf th e a p ­ p ro p ria te ra te in d ica te d above Ads m u s t be placed m person a t the TSP business o ffic e , TSP B u ild in g 3 200, b etw een 8 a m and 4 30 p .m M onday id e n tific a tio n th ro u g h F r id a y . U T a nd a dva n ce p a y m e n t a re re q u ire d W ch a rg e to change copy F ir s t tw o w o rd s m a y be a ll c a p ita l le tte rs 25 fo r each add it onal w ord in c a p .ta l le tte rs DC ADUNE SCHEOUIE Friday 2 00 p.m. Monday Texan Monday 1 I 00 a m Tuotday T»«on Wodnotday Toian Tuooday 11:00 a.m. Thursday Texan W«dn*sday 1 I 00 o.m, Thursday 11:00 a.m. Friday Texan In th* «vent of otrort made in an adver­ tisement immediate notice must be given os the publishers ore responsible for only ONE incorrect insertion All claims for ad­ justment' should be made not later than 30 days after publication AUTOS FOR SALE VW E N G IN E S re b u ilt S459 in s ta lle d , e x ­ change G e n e ral VW re p a ir R easonable ra te s 452-382! We buy b roke n VW s 78 H O N D A A C C O R D A M F M T ~ a lr,’ a u t o m a t i c , 30 m p g . B e a u t i f u l , e c o n o m ic a l, w e ll m a in ta in e d O n ly *4295 C a ll 442-8819 '75 A U D I F O X A u to m a tic , 4-door R e g u la r gas, 28 m pg Good co n d itio n , clean, 59,000 m ile s . A s k in g $1895. 442- « 8 1 9 . _____________ _________________ '71 B U IC K S K Y L A R K ’ ~ T d o o r dow n, 454 4914 a fte r 5 p m s i 000 ta ke up p resent p a ym e n ts C all 1973 P IN T O R U N A B O U T AC, AT. new fire s . 79,000 m ile s 443 8888 a fte r 7 p.m . 1969 l T D H f O R D A u to m a tic $350. C all 476-1091 fo u r d o o r h a rd to p pow er ste e rin g F o r sale 1975 V O L K S W A G E N D A S H E R 4-door, AC, F M stereo. E x c e lle n t co nd itio n. $2850 926-3366, keep fry in g ,__ 1969 T -8 IR D . V e ry good c o n d itio n . PS, PB, AC A cla ssic. $900 473-2331 a fte r 5 30 E la in e . I960 C H E V R O L E T B IS C A Y N E , lo w m ile a g e N ot p re s e n tly d riv a b le but easl- ly re p a ire d $200 473-2213 6-9 p.m . o n ly. 1974 VW BUS, SS, 7-passenger. Clean b o d y , S o u n d i n t e r i o r , c a r p e t e d m e ch a n ica l c o n d itio n , low m ile a ge , high r \p g P ric e d fo r q u ic k sale $2500 474- 6259 ___ ___ D O D G E V A N '72 m o to r N ew tra n s m is s io n and c a rb u re to r. F ixe d -u p in te rio r $700 441-7410, G reg. 69. 1978 T R IU M P H T R 7 W hite, 5 speed,’ * M 'F M , AC, v e ry clean P rice d below - t i l 442-7105 FOR S A L E 1967 P ly m o u th B elve d e re • Cheap, re lia b le tra n s p o rta tio n $400 o r best o ffe r. C all 441-2801 a fte r 7 p.m . '67 F O R D L T D 4-door, a ir, PB, PS. runs w e ll, dependable $500 471-1761,327-5728. H a ro ld . D Á rS U N B-210, 1975 2-door, 4-speed, A M - F M , e x c e lle n t e n g in e . $2000 Telephone 474-1693 a fte r 7:00 p.m 79 SCIROCCO AC ,’ B ia u p u n k ! cassette.' c lo th seats. $6500 C all B re n t a t 458-3551 w o rk ), 345-8989 (h o m e ). V O LK S W A G E N W IN D O W van, ca m p e r bed, good ra d ia ls , good M P G , m a n y e x ­ tr a p a rts . $600 474 6320. 1973" C H E V R O L E T " IM P A L A R e b u ilt e n g in e , AC , F M A M 8 - tr a c k $450. R ich a rd ^ 471-7596 7 9 p.m __ 1967 C H E V Y II , $600 2-door, 305 V-8, low m a in te n a nce s ta n d a rd . R eliable, tra n s p o rta tio n . Steve, 454-4872 9-5. 1969 IM P A L A , $800 2-door. AT V-8 Runs fin e , g re a t low rid e r vehicle. Steve, 454 4872 9-5 74 M A Z D A GOOD condition, AT, new tire s , new M id a s m u ffle r, 36 m pg $1600. 476-3001 1975 DODGE VAN , new tire s, c o m p le te ­ ly loaded $3000 441-1405 a fte r 5:30. C L E A N 1970 L E M A N S . AC, PS. P B A T . Runs good, v e ry re lia b le . 452-5995, 454- 9417, keep try in g . M A Z D A RX4 '74 Low m iles, good shape $1200 C all 471-5092. C H E V R O L E T V AN 1966." Good condi tion, 6 c y lin d e r, g re a t m ile a g e 477-7935, leave nam e and n u m b e r. $725. 1969 VW C A M P E R New p a in t, re b u ilt engine M u st sell $1500, n egotiable. A fte r 7 p m 477 8276 1976 C H E V R O L E T TR U C K . O range and w h ite , s te r e o c a s s e tte , m a g s a n d m u d g rip s. S lid ing w in d o w dual tanks. E x c e lle n t shape $3495 443-6457 1968 B E L V E D E R E New tra n sm issio n , tir e s , s te re o 476-7600 22 m p g, new nights, 475-8262 days P h il. 73 DODGE R O LA R A V e ry clean $1100 Phone 472-6690 a fte r 7.00 p .m A ir, AM , F M B e a utiful 1973 T R IU M P H ~S PT i F IR E A M F M stereo, good co n d itio n , c o n v e rtib le w ith r o ll bar new tire s 288 0699 C O S T L U X U R~Y L O W T R A N S P O R T A T I O N '6 6 D o d g e C oronet O range and w h ite L o n g h orn special. Runs g re a t, o r ig in a l in te rio r. $500 See a t 4908 Lynn w o od 5-7 p.m . FOR SALE M oforcycle-For Sale 79 BATA V U S M O P E D, S ta rt i ¡te $450 478-6171 evenings. 1976 H O N DA CB400F " 'E x c e ile n t'c o n d i- tio n , 18,000 m ile s , K o n l sh ocxs, o il cooler, m a n y e x tra s $900 444-9649 1977 H O N D a ' c j -360 8000"mMesT new tir e s , b ra k e s , e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , m aroon $825 474 7879, 453-1101 1978 H O N O A T w I n ’s T A R C M I8 5 T B ought new F e b ru a ry 1979 5,300 m iles. 85 m og, e x ce lle n t c o n d itio n $750 452- 2996 75 H O N D A CB400F Superb co n d itio n E x tre m e ly re lia b le q uick, e co n o m ica l 4-1 exhaust, new K-Bis $800 442 9508 1975 H O N D A C L 360 e le c tric s ta rt, sissy ra ck, crash bars, new b a tte ry , oar, helm ets. $875. 443-7930 a fte r 6 p m . 1977 Y A M A H A XS7S0D One ow ner, 10.- 000 m ile s. New b a tte ry . H ig h w a y pegs. Bes^ offe r 926 3182 1979 S U Z U K I GS-750 E x c e p tio n a lly w elt m a in ta in e d P e rfe ct co n d itio n . New K- 81s M o vin g , m u st sell 478-2756 a n y tim e Stereo-For Sale C IR C L E S T E R E O ; p ro m p t, reasonable audio vider se rvic e Used e q u ip m e n t bought and sold P a rts and accessories 1211 Red R ive r 476-0947 C LA S S IC A L^R E C O R D S ," p la ye d only once S3 each, 10 fo r $25 B u d ge t $1 50 each, 10 fo r $10 Bob, 477-0867 G A.S. A M P Z 1 L L A p o w e r a m p lifie r , G a s Tha e dra p re a m p lifie r C a ll E rn ie a t 471 2597 o r 471-1091. L eave m essage P IO N E E R S X Í5 0 1200, T E A C A-100 c a s s e tte $100, p a ir o f E C l 6 -w a y speakers $200. 476-6875 G R E A T S T A R T E R syste m . Toro N o r­ m an L ab M odel 8 speakers, Sansui 350-A re ce ive r $295 C all G reg, 452-6501 M A R A N T Z 5420 stereo cassette tape deck w ith D olby M a n y p rofe ssio n al f e a tu r e s $190 443-0108 r e c o r d in g a n y tim e Musical-For Sale A U S T IN 'S BE S T selection of sonabooks and sheet m u sic A lph a M u s ic C enter, 611 W 29th 477 5009 S P R IN G S T E E N . WHO. K inks. Beatles bootlegs A lie n N atio n used Records, 476-8348 D ow ntow n Flea M a rk e t, 601 E a st 5th F rid a y , S aturday, Sunday 9-6 P IA N O K E E P t r y in g 1 836-0207 P A S P E A K E R S a n d a m p l i f i e r speakers cu sto m b u ilt at low cost. C all 453-0356 or 453-3701 H o m es-F or Sale H Y D E P A R K rem odeled tw o s to ry 4 2, CA CH, new kitch en , hardw oods, three s ittin g areas, la rg e wooded lots 459-9468 $129 500 ____ E N F IE L D . 1BR and e ffic ie n c y co n ­ d o m in iu m s $25 000-$38,000 F inanc ing W e n d a ll C o r r ig a n 478-7005, A m e lia B u llo ck 346-1073 HOUSE FO R sale 2-1, larg e p riv a te y a rd w ith trees 'i block fro m s h u ttle bus stop a t 51st and G uadalupe. $39,950 M a rtin , 454-8755 R obert B ro w n Com- pany.____________________________ '72 12 x 60 m o b ile home E x c e lle n t co n d i­ tio n AC, dish w a she r, rem odeled P riced fo r q u ic k sale $10,000, n egotiable 453- 8565. ___ W O O D B R ID G E , 3-2 plus s ittin g ro om , 1 y e a r old, u n d e r $70,000 C all M a x Bazer- m an 836 0002, 471 3676 M iscellaneo us-Fo r Sale IN D IA N S A L E ! is 25% o f f N elson's G ifts, 4502 S. Congress, 444 3814 10-6, closed M ondays ,e w elry FOR SALE tw in size box sp rin g s $10 Good c o n d itio n . 266-2775 L A T E S T R AG E - su rg ic a l scrubs, co lo r tade, SM L. S h irt $9 95 d ra w s trin g pants S9 95, plus $2 00 postage and h a n d lin g Send check to M W D esign, Suite 108, PO Box 107, 5080 Beltw ood P a rk w a y E., D allas, TX 75001 COUCH. G R E E N , y e llo w , w h ite , p la id , H ercu lon G re a t co n d itio n . $100 C a ll 476- 6782 a fte r S.________ A N T IQ U E W H IT E w aterb e d co m p le te , 1 y e a r old. U re ta il $150 327-1280 GOD IS fe m in in e , c re a tiv e e ne rg y. Sex is w o rsh ip . D e ta ils $1 - sta m p e d self- addressed envelope P.O. Box 6432. E L E C T R IC T Y P E W R IT E R E x c e lle n t co nd itio n, used 1 ye ar. New case and r ib ­ bon 346-0838 a fte r 5 J A C K S O N B R O W N E tic k e ts F lo o r seats best in house. C all M a rc, 327-6786 D avid, 474-7803 JAC K SON BR O W N É tic k e ts E xcelTent seats M a ke o ffe r. C all 459 7507 o r 1-285 4238 in E lg in . SPO R TS M IN D E D ? E q u ip m e n t and c lo th in g on c o n s ig n m e n t fo r re s a le G O LF , B A C K P A C K IN G , T E N N IS , ETC w e also b u y ! IN S T A N T R E P L A Y , 5256 B u rn e f Road a t N orth Loop Plaza. 10-6 T u e sd ay-S a tu rd a y. Come see! L .B .J . SCHOOL of P u b lic A ffa irs , fir s t ye ar te xtb o o ks. G uaranteed - n eve r us­ ed 345-6246 F U L L S IZ E D bed fo r sale. V e ry fir m . $65. C all 477-6251 a fte r 6 p.m . FOR S A LE 2 cu ft r e frig e ra to r, $80 or best o ffe r A lso 3 a q u a riu m s, best o ffe r C all 476-7088 SOFA 2 C H A IR S , ta b le $5 m o nth , $20 deposit R ic h a rd , 471-7596 7-9 p.m G E O R G E B E N S O N a n d J a c k s o n B ro w n e fr o n t flo o r seats. C all K e ith at 474-7803. D o n 't m iss these g re a t co n ­ c e rts ! TW O G E O R G E Benson tic k e t* 452-90927 D U A L T R A C E bench oscilloscope, 20 M H z In clu d e s e x tra e le c tro n ic e q u ip ­ m e n t Open p ric e 459-945) e venings. K E L T Y T IO G A backp a ck, 2-m an te n t, Svea gas sto ve $150 447-5069 Q UITTING BUSINESS O ur N o rth A u s tin Store's lease is ex­ piring a n d w e a r e Q U I T T I N G B U S IN E S S We m u st L IQ U ID A T E a ll re m a in in g m e rch a n d ise a t a fr a c ­ tio n o v e r d e a le r's cost Thousands of d o lla rs of n am e b ra n d m e rc h a n d ise w ill be sold on a f ir s t com e, f ir s t served b asis in c lu d in g L A N C E R , B R O Y H I L L N E W O R L E A N S , H AR TS, S H E L B Y , M A Y O BROS., K R E B S S T E N G E L . A S T R O L O U N G E R and D O L L Y M A D IS O N D e a le rs a re w e lco m e ! B rin g ta x n u m b e rs! LIQUIDATION! IN N E R S P R IN G M A T T R E S S E S T w in size F u ll size Queen size K in g size $54 95 $59 95 $94 95 ...................... $109 95 $9 95 Bed r a ils $79,95 Solid wood b u n k beds 4 -d ra w e r chests ...................... $39 95 5 -u ra w e r ch ests ..................... $49 95 $109 95 3 pc. b e d ro o m ensem ble . $69 95 5-pc. d in in g set .. $89 95 7-pc. d in in g set D in e tte c h a irs ....................... $8 95 ... $149 95 2-pc liv in g ro o m suite $89 95 L a rg e re c lin e rs Solid wood ro c k e rs $59 95 U p h o ls te re d ro c k e rs (s o ld o u t) $59 95 Odd h ea d b oa rd s ................. $5 up (a fe w o n ly ! ) TEXAS FURNITURE OUTLET 1006 S. LAMAR (Lamar Plaza) UNITED FURNITURE SALES 6535 N. LAMAR W e buy je w e lry , estate je w e lry , d ia m o nd s and old gold. Highest cash prices paid. C A P I T O L D IA M O N D SHOP 4018 N, L a m a r FURNISHED APARTMENTS O L D M A iN A p a rtm e n ts , 25th and P e a rl IB R e ffic ie n c ie s F o u r (Mocks U T, sh u t­ tle , ca ble pool 476 5109 IM M E D IA T E M O V E U N 1 Í , $)9S S hut­ tle u T West N o pets, c h ild re n . 700 H earn. 476 0953 P A L L I P F i C l i t i C l E S ' Qu>et. sh uttle " car, <* d o u b le bed gas hea* O n ly $199 plus E * 0 5 A ve n ue ft 453 2676, 444-1269 1 1 1 . ~1BA $235 A p e rtm e n n t 450 4 fi ,rr sn»d o r u n fu rn is h e d . C e l e s t e A v e n u e a S3 3520 or 45* 5301 E F F IC IE N C IE S a n d 1BR s a v a ila b le , $173 $725 p s i C a r pus a r e a 478 5624 IB P a p a 'tm e n t a v a ila b le im ­ N IC E m e d i a t e l y H 3 5 a n d 290 Reasonable - e r r w * r tre e h e a tin g and c o okin g gas 459-5916 - e a r L A R G E 2BR 7n « .v e rs -d e S h u ttle U p s ta irs ana d o w n s ta irs $360 m o n th plus e le c tr ic ity 443-5181, 444 7880 (N a n c y ) , te y No. 14*. M U S T S E L L 2BR 2BA T r. T o w ers c o n ­ tr a c t to f fe ll and o r s p rin g C all 473-2171 THE G A R D E N A p a rtm e n ts 1BR, fu r- n.shed CA CH good lo c a ro n . C all 451- 2586 a fte r 3. i b r a p a r t m e n t and e f' cien cy, 45th and D uva l A v a ila b le now 478-7355 2BR $275 L a rg e b e d ro o m fu lly c a rp e te d and drapes a h b u ilt-in kitch en , CA CH, pool and s e c lu d e d I n ­ tra m u ra l F ie ld s W ate r, gas cable M id 5606 R oosevelt 454-2448 451-6533 lo c a tio n , w est o f C e n tra l P ro p e rtie s Inc. S t ill A v a i l a b l e 2 la rg e IB R s 33rd & Red R ive r 2 E f f 's 45th & Duval 1 E ff. 38th St. P ro fe s s io n a lly m anaged by G e ra ld W in e tro u b Co. 478 7355 ACT VII 4303 D U V A L U n ex p e cte d v a c a n c y . F u r ­ nished IB R , near U T , shop­ ping, and shuttle. 453-0298, 345- 8550 IB R - $245 Hyde P a rk a rea and on sh u ttle Pool, screen doors, lots of glass W a te r, gas and ca b le paid 4209 Speedway 458-2367 451-6533. f u lly c a rp e te d , C e n tra l P ro p e rtie s IB R - $245 Hyde P a r k a r e a and on shut­ tle. Pool, screen doors, fu lly carpeted, lot of glass. W a t e r , gas, a n d c a b l e p a i d . 4209 Speedway. 458-2367 451-6533 304 E. 33R D S T R E E T • 1 B d rm . F u rn is h e d $215 plu s E. • New c a rp e ts and p a in t • L a u n d ry ro om • Close to U T • Q uiet DORIS APTS. 478-6148 L A W S T U D E N T S G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S U P P E R C L A S S M E N U nique IB R a nd e ffic ie n c y suites, ta s te fu lly designed w ith b u ilt-in boo k­ cases and a m p le storage. T re e co ve re d grounds W ith in w a lk in g d ista n ce of cam pus C o n ta ct D a v id S tapleton, 472- 0100 or 345 0326 B a rry G illin g w a te r M a n a g e m e n t C om pany 3 8 th /S h u ttle 302 W. 38th St., I B R , e ffic ie n ­ cies, Le M a r q u e e Apts., pool, study, furnished, 453-4002. 6607 G ua dalupe S195 plus E., 910 W. 26th, 454- 477- E fficien cy, 9958. Also, 2160. Hunting? Still Hunting Tor a Habitat? We can help. * Free Service * Habitat Hunters 4 7 4 - 1 5 3 2 6 1 1 W . 1 4 t h GOING BANANAS? We rent apartments, duplexes, houses all over Austin. F R E E Real World Properties 443-2212 South 458-6111 N o rth 345-6350 N o rth w e st 2BR $245 L a rg e b e d ro o m f u l ly c a rp e te d a nd drapes. A ll b u ilt-in kitc h e n , C A /C H pool a nd s e c lu d e d In - eg - — - " . m u r . l F ieid s w » . e r 5606 R oosevelt 454-2448 451 6534 lo c a tio n , w e s t o f C e n tra l P ro p e rtie s Inc I B R - $240 S m a ll q u ie t a p a r tm e n t c o m m u n ity . L a rg e s tu d io a p a rtm e n ts a v a ila b le now. P riv a te b a lco n ie s, 1’ ¡ baths W ater, gas, ca b le paid . 701 W N o rth Loop. 453 2230, 451-6533 C e n tra l P ro p e rtie s Inc. I I I I I I I I I I I I M A R K -K M B K R S 3 1 0 7 Speedw ay 4 7 7 -1 6 0 7 H Y D B P A R K 4 5 th & Speedw ay 4 5 8 -2 0 9 6 L A C A N A D A 13 00 W. 24th 4 7 7 -3 0 6 6 BL D O R A D O 3501 Speedw ay 4 7 2 -4 8 9 3 Now Leasing for F all B R O W N L E E F A L L R E N T S175 2 B L O C K S T O C A M P U S 2502 Nueces 447-2897 N E W F U R N IS H E D a p a rtm e n t in Lake A u stin re sid e n ce re n t fre e to upp e r level Texas stu d e n t o r couple w ith o u t c h ild re n in e x c h a n g e to b e n eg o tia te d M u s t be a b le to p ro vid e good re fe ren ce s and ow n tra n s p o rta tio n 263- 2111 f o r s e r v ic e s W H IL E A V A IL A B L E , v e ry nice IB R u n ­ fu rn is h e d $209/m onth fu rn ish e d , $199, plus E $125 d eposit. 458 1857 UNFURN. APARTMENTS roommate "Find the Person an d /o r ♦he Place to live" Call 473-6891 network NOW O V E R 600 LISTINGS Roommate Selector 4 5 2 - 0 4 2 0 The computerized locator een ice ORAL SURGERY PATIENTS S tu d e n ts in ne ed o f having th ird m olars (W is d o m te e th } re m o v ­ ed a n d w h o w o u ld be w illin g to p a rtic ip a te in an analgesic drug study a t redu ced fees, please c a ll Donald R Mehiisch, M.D., D O.S. 451-0254 S u rg ery can be arra n g ed to be do ne a t the U niversity o f Texas if S t u d e n t H e a lt h S e r v ic e d e sired Skydive this weekend! train and jump in one cloy (AC 512) $ 7 5 ° ° coll 459-0710 au/tin parachute center West of C a m p us E x tr a larg e IB R w ith stu d y. 2 people ox C e ra m ic tile , bath and kitch e n O ld e r but c o m fo rta b le b u ild in g C lean a nd lig h t $ 25 0 /m o n th No b ills p a id R e q u ire m a tu re students w ith re fe ren ce s and no pets Ja ck Jennings 1 '3 0 -3 :3 0 o nly 474-6898 C on solidated R ealty IB R a p a r tm e n t a v a ila b le .m - N IC E m e d l a t e l y . N e a r IH 3 5 a n d 290 R easonable re n t w ith fre e h ea tin g and co okin g gas 459-5916 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D lib e r a l p e rso n In te r e s tin g to sh a re h andsom e 2 b edroom a p a rtm e n t. E x ­ c e lle n t lo c a tio n in E n fie ld C la rk s v ille area n e a r g ro c e ry and E R s h u ttle Non- sm o ker $120 m o nth plu s 'x e le c tr ic ity C a ll Louts, 477-2513 F E M A L E G R A D to sh a re n ice hom e in q u ie t n o r th e a s t n e ig h b o r h o o d AC , w a s h a te ria N ear CR s h u ttle P riv a te g a ra g e S l5 0 /m o n th plus 1 3 u tilitie s By a p p o in tm e n t only C all R ob e rto , 465- 5003, even in gs c a ll C a ro l, 928-2475. SOUTH C L IF F A p a rtm e n ts now leasing b ra n d new IB R u nits $235 plus e le c tr ic i­ ty 453-6942 o r 451-0046 F E M A L E SH AR E 3-2 condo w ith one o th e r o ld e r or g ra d s tu d e n t. F ire p la c e . $225 A B P 345-4125 a p a r t m e n t ’n e a r 15th a n d R io G ra n d e F u lly rem odeled y a rd , no pets, non-sm okers, $275. 478-3824. L A R G E 1 and 2BR a p a rtm e n ts th re e b lo cks fro m sh uttle , close to Hancock C en te r, h osp ita l and U n iv e rs ity Pools and la u n d ro m a t A d u lts o n ly IB R $225 plus E. 2BR $295 plus E 459 1361 UNFURNISHED HOUSES th re e A V A IL A B L E N O W 1 T w o and bedroom o ld e r homes, a p a rtm e n ts C all now fo r 24 hour in fo rm a tio n 452-5979. W O O D 5 T O N E V IL L A G E , 3807 L e a f la id . N ew 3-2-2, CA CH, e n e rg y e ffic ie n t, f ir e p la c e . A ll b r ic k A v a ila b le I m ­ m e d ia te ly . $475 m onth, $200 deposit D avid , age n t 447-5512, o r c a ll R oland a fte r 5, 441-8272 H Y D E P A R K . A ttr a c tiv e , redone, 2-1, AC, c e ilin g fan, a pp lian ce s, w a llp a p e r, h a rd w o o d L e a se a n d flo o r s . $425 deposit. Ja ck, 478-9521 W E Associates CLO SE IN C lean 2BR house, la rg e fe n c ­ ed y a rd . C onvenient lease. $350 m onth. 476-4770, 478 1078 ( s o u t h o f 415C E A S T S t E l m o T ra c o u s tic s ). Clean, re d e co ra te d 2-1 C on scie ntio u s couple Lease $225 478- 5739 472-2097 M A T U R E F E M A L E g ra d s ta ff share la rg e W est A u stin d up le x F ire p la c e , y a rd , s h u ttle $150. 6538 1 e le c tr ic ity 474 W A N T E D : 1-2 housem ates in b e a u tifu l n ew 4B R h o m e F u r n is h e d , G r a c y Woods area , 10 m in u te s n o rth of cam pus. 1 u tilitie s C a ll 837-3632 or 459- $190 plus 8350. __________ _____ ________ 10/1. N O N -S M O K IN G , r e s p o n s ib le fe m a le F u rn ish e d 2 1 d u p le x south Fe n ce d y a rd M u s t e n jo y a n im a ls . D iann, 442-7387, N E E D R O O M M A T E to share new hom e w it h s o m e b o d y r e s p o n s ib le , n e a t, p re fe ra b ly fro m L a tin A m e ric a 444-9223 in sist 4 * ^ 3 3 7 ÍM M E D I A T E L Y N 0 n - N E E D F D sm o kin g fe m a le ro o m m a te to sh are 2BR fu r n is h e d s tu d io a p a r t m e n t on IF . $137 50 plus i e le c tr ic ity 452-6730 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed 2-2 a p a rtm e n t, NR s h u ttle $180 plu s 1 3 e le c­ tr ic it y . E ve n in g s, 443-5044* 5 M IN U T E W A L K c a m p u s Q u ie t loca ­ tion Separated fr o m ro o m m a te $210, a ll b its pa»d P re fe ra b ly o v e r 20. No slobs. 471-5378, Tom R O O M M A T E N E E D E D "fo r~ 3 B R 2BA R iv e rs id e a p a rtm e n t. S h u ttle . $150 A B P 441-3168, keep tr y in g ! SO U TH , 2 -s to ry , 3 B R , 2’ ¿ B Á " Den, C A /C H , ca rpe ted , app lian ce s, W D con nectio n s. $400 R eferences, deposit 458 3630 N E E D R O O M M A T E S . C h ris tia n Share la rg e 2BR a p a rtm e n t A B P , $ 35 0 'm o nth. 1 b lo ck la w school C a ll P a u l, R ollie , 474- 2818 4-2-2 Q U IE T , p a rk lo ca tio n . C A /C H , d ir e c t c ity bus UT, possible sublease 1-1- 1, se p a ra te e n tra n ce $500 478-9936 N E E D M A L E ro o m m a te to sh are f u r ­ nished 3-2* s-2 co n d o m in iu m $ !7 0 'm o n th plus 13 e le c tric 453-8683, 453-7400 S M A L L C A B IN 1-1, tre e s, creek, good neig h bo rs. South on B lu ff Springs Road. S ingle m en p re fe rre d . C a ll 453-2781 a fte r 6 p .m . S180; m o nth ROOM AND BOARD S T O N E H E N G E CO-OP F e m ale va ca n ­ cy We a re 5 w om en and 5 men liv in g in p o s t-V ic to ria n hom e 3 blocks fro m c a m ­ pus. 611 W 22nd 474-9029; 477 7181 _ N E W G U IL D Co-op has fe m a le and m ale va can cie s 510 W 23rd 472-0352 H E A L T H A N D n u tr itio n o rie n te d co-op in d iv id u a ls We o ffe r seeks respo n site q u ie t r e s id e n tia l n e ig h b o rh o o d n ea r c a m pu s, v e g e ta ria n sm o ke-free e n v iro n ­ m e n t, sundeck, open fie ld and garden W om en o nly. R oyal Co-op, 1805 P e a rl. 478 0880 __ V A C A N C IE S A V A IL A B L E a t F re n ch speaking c o o p e ra tive 3 ? blocks fro m c a m pu s F re n ch House, 710 W. 21st, 478- 6586________________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ N E W COOP G re a t food, house S till has fe m a le vacancies C all o r com e by. 1909 Nueces, 478-6763 P R A N A C O -O P F e m a le v a c a n c y , v e g e t a r ia n n o n - s m o k e r . 2510 R io G rande. 476-7905 S E N E C A F A L L S F e m m ls t C o -o p : openings fo r fe m in is ts S u p p o rtive e n ­ v iro n m e n t, p le n ty of p riv a c y /c o m p a n y . Tw o blocks U T. 2309 Nueces, 477-0225 ROOMS A L A M O H O T E L " A n A u s t i n E s ta b lis h m e n t.'' R easonable and con v e n le n t to c a m p u s w it h e x c e lle n t re s ta u ra n t and bar 476-4381 - F E M A L E V A C A N C I E S f a l l sem ester. E d u c a tio n a l and c o o p e ra tive e n v iro n m e n t L a u re l House Co-op. 1905 Nueces, 478-0470. f o r 2 BLOCKS U T. N ic e ly fu rn is h e d room s E ffic ie n c y and a p a rtm e n ts . L y le House, 2800 WJhitis, 477-7558. f u r n is h in g s , CO E D D O R M n ext to c a m p u s has space s till a v a ila b le fo r w om e n Rem odeled, new r e c r e a tio n a re a , sundeck. W ide screen T V , re frig e ra to rs . 24 h our s e c u rity No m e als. Taos, 2612 G uadalupe. 474-6905 O N E ROOM fo r re n t in 3/2 house Clean, responsible, fe m a le stu d e nt. E x c e lle n t lo ca tio n . 474-7771. N E A R L A W school F u rn ish e d room , share baths CA CH. $120 A B P . 3310 Red R ive r, 476-3634 __________ A T T E N T IO N O N E fe m a le c o n tr a c t ( r o o m /b o a r d ) now a v a ila b le a t The Contessa R easonable p ro -ra te d rates H u rry , c a ll 476-4648 w eekend n ig h ts 472- 2882 F U R N IS H E D , S T U D E N T larg e house, y a rd C la rk s v ille a rea $150, 1 5 b ills 478- 6810. UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES T R A V IS H E IG H T S a re a , b e a u tifu l co lo n ia l sty le d up le x. 2BR, l'z B A , $485 plus b ills fo r a w e ll ce nte red person. C all 444 0632, 451-7841 FOR RENT M O N T H L Y P A R K IN G c o n ve n ie n t UT or d o w n to w n R eserved spaces 17th and San A n to n io , $25 m o n th ly 454-7618, 477- 1279______ P R IM E D O W N TO W N re n ta l spaces fo r a rtis ts , c r a ft people, re ta ile rs Cheap m o n th ly o r w e e kly ra te s 478-7923, 478 6940 IN D IV ID U A L needed to oc­ N O R M A L cu p y new 3BR 2BA d u p le x. P riv a te b e d r o o m , F i r e p l a c e , b a t h . w a s h e r/d ry e r. South. $138, Va b ills . 442- 6819 SH A R E L A R G E c h a rm in g o ld e r hom e Q u ie t s tr e e t, w a lk U T L a r g e n ew k i t c h e n , c e il i n g t i l e b a t h . $ l6 5 /m o n th , share b ills . 478-1340 ta n s , E A S Y G O IN G , R E S P O N S IB L E fe m a le h ousem ate w anted N ice 3BR house o ff CR $90, ' i b ills . 458-9479 R O O M M A T E TO sh are tw o b edroom , fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t 1 m ile lV i b ath IF Pool. $117 5 0 /m o n th plus Vz fro m b ills 454-3472 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D C e n ’t r a fly located NR sh u ttle . 2BR, 1 BA, C A /C H . Please keep tr y in g , 445-0079. N E A T R E S P O N S IB L E person to share th re e b e d ro o m house S !3 3 /m o n th , : j u tilitie s . C all Abby, 474-6049. W A N T E D W H IT E m a le fo r 3 bed ro o m ' 3 e x ­ c o n d o m in iu m $150 m o n th p lu s penses. O lto r f a rea F r a t p re fe rre d 442- 0300 IB R A P A R T M E N T to sh are $100/m onth plus e le c tr ic ity W a lk, s h u ttle ca m pu s. U n fu rn is h e d 1801 M a n o r, 477 5910 A M L O O K I N G r o o m m a t e , p re fe ra b ly a UT s tu d e n t C lose to c a m ­ pus. C a ll 452-5847 e venings. f o r a ' 2 e le c t r ic it y , M A L E R O O M M A T E : phone, re n t Close to ca m p u s. C all Tom at 477-6052. 3 - 2 n e w B E A U T I F U L h o r n e W asher d r y e r , etc 15 m in u te s to UT F e m a le g ra d or p ro fe ssio n a l p re fe rre d . $200 p lu s '/s b il l s . P e ts , c h il d r e n n e g o tia b le . C a ll C h ris, 441-7572. Keep tr y in g R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to sh are la rg e one bed ro o m stu d io on sh u ttle . C all R ick 476-6866, a n y tim e . R E S P O N S IB L E W O M A N needed as housem ate O ld er stu d e n t, please. F u r ­ nished 2BR house N e a r U T. 3 blocks sh u ttle AC, ya rd g a rd e n , sto ra g e. $110 p lu s h a l f u t i l i t i e s . S t a r t i n g m id - S ep te m be r. Jenny a t 458-9406 befo re noon, a fte r 11 p.m . L O O K IN G FOR lik e -m in d e d , c o m p a ti­ ble w om a n to share p le a sa n t 2BR house n ea r IF G ra d o ld e r u n d e rg ra d 459- 9652 _ F E M A L E SH A R E la rg e fu rn is h e d tw o b e d ro o m house on s h u ttle T r a v is H e ig h ts fa n s , b e a u tifu l y a rd . $165 C in d y, 447-1861 No c ig a re tte s F ir e p la c e , c e il i n g TUTORING F R E N C H P R O F E S S O R w i l l g iv e lessons a ll levels. P a ris ia n c u ltu r e In* eluded. 478-5369. N E E D E D : M ID D L E E a s te rn Studies s p e c ia lis t 474-0123. N E E D E D : TU TO R to h e lp c r itiq u e and typ e pap e rs fo r a ll su b je cts and e s p e cia l­ ly fo r R T F 474-0123 F R E N C H B U G G IN G you? E xp e rie n c e d te a ch er, M . A , w ill tu to r : g ra m m a r, co m p o sitio n , jite r a lu r e , c o n v e rs a tio n . M m e D a ttn e r, 926-6318 T U T O R IN G IN Spanish a nd F re n ch R elaxed a tm osphere, re aso n a ble rates. C a ll C hris. 451 0420 TO P L A C E A C L A S S I F I E D A D C A L L 471-5244 P R O B L E M PR E G N A N C Y C O U N S E L I N G , R E F E R R A L S & F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T I N G Texas P ro b le m P re g n a n cy 507 P o w e ll St M -F , 7:30-5 30 474-9930 A S T R O L O G Y Student Special A c c u ra te b lr th c h a r t plus one hour taped a n a ly s is of b asic c h a ra c te r fo r $25 B asic h a n d w r itin g ' a s tro lo g y com bo fo r $35 C ara e r tre n d s, p a rtn e rs h ip s m y s p e c ia l­ ty- A S T R O -G R A P H C O N S U L T IN G 474-6538 W ed din g Receptions, P a r tie s in a G rac iou s Setting L a rg e b a llro o m fo r dances. M a ke re s e r­ v a tio n s now fo r the F a ll and C h ris tm a s '-easons Texas • m of W om en s C lubs b u ild in g , 2312 San G a b rie l a t 24th St 476-5845 A R T 'S M O V IN G and H a u lin g any area 24 h o u rs, 7 d ays. 447-9384, 477-3249 J E N N IN G S 7 M O V IN G a n d H a u lin g D ependable personal service, la rg e or s m a ll jobs 7 d a ys/w e e k. 442-6181 D A N C E C L A S S f o r m e n t a l l y o r e m o tio n a lly d is tu rb e d . C all Donna C lift a t 445 1652 fa ll e xam s. G R E P R E P classes C o m p le te m a th /v e r b a l re v ie w . E x ­ c e lle n t m a te ria ls Q u a lifie d in s tru c to r, 443 9354. fo r A L T E R A T IO N S , O R IG IN A L d e sig n s ■md sp e c ia ltie s 474-6826 between 8 a m - 2 p .m . A M A T E U R P HOTOG R A P H ER seeks fe m a le m odel to e xchange se rvice s No e x p e rie n ce n ece ssa ry A fte r 6 c a ll 836- 3784 G E O L O G IC D R A F T I N G a n d p e tro le u m e n g in e e rin g . 6 y e a rs e x ­ p e rie n ce C ha rts, graphs, m aps, le tte r- ing. $5 ‘'o u r C all 512 693-2295 a fte r 6 p.m . R egina C alton. DJ A V A IL A B L E fo r p riv a te p a rtie s L a rg e re c o rd c o lle c tio n in c lu d in g pop, ro ck, c o u n try , 50s m u sic. R easonable ra te s Phone 835-2721 a fte r 5 30 the p e rs o n a lity E V E R W O N D E R w h a t m a kes you tic k ? L e a rn tr a its you a c ­ q u ire d a t yo u r tim e of b irth . Some are now d o m in a tin g , some have been sup­ pressed, and som e tr a its a re s till to s u r­ fa ce Send s e lf-a d d re s s e d e n ve lo p e , b irth d a te , place and h our of b irth (if kn o w n ) and a $5 00 check o r m oney o rd e r to S.S.S., P.O Box 18053, A u s tin , TX 78760. LOST & FOUND LOST 2 K IT T E N S M a le - o ra n g e /w h ite ; fe m a le - g re y w h ite W est ca m pu s a rea O w n er fr a n tic . 474-1726. LOST Day, gree n c o lla r {">), R e w a rd 1 C all 478-6051 (e ve n in g s). IR IS H setter, m a le Lost L a b o r tag. F ra n tic . R E W A R D - L O S T 9 -6 -8 0 . G o ld e n R e trie v e r w ith c lip p e d ta il and b la ck L a b ra d o r H ave h e a rt p ro b le m - could die C a ll 477-4213 and keep try in g . Radio City Dance Hall Presents in Classes ta p c h a ra cte r-ja zz, b a lle t, D a n c e rc is e and R ollerd a n ce B e g in n in g , levels in t e r m e d ia ^ an d professional F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n , W endy, 474-6477 W R IT E B E T T E R papers. Send $1 fo r o u r b o o k le t, " T ip s on A c a d e m ic W r i t i n g , " a n d o u r c o m p r e h e n s iv e , d e s c rip tiv e c a ta lo g of th o u sa n d s of re search to p ics Box 4241, B e rkele y, CA 94704 (415) 586-3900 L O O K IN G FOR p a r t ic ip a te S h irts 443-9634 in d iv id u a ls to lea g u e tro p h ie s, e qu ip m en t p ro vid e d team s, fla g fo o tb a ll in PERSONAL P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y 9 F r e e preg n a ncy te s tin g and re fe rra ls 474- 9930 A IL U R O P H O B IC ? G E T help: K itty T o r­ tu re <*2.25) re tu rn s w ith KTQ m agazine, SI. A t O at W illie 's ; b e tte r bookstores; S&S Press, Box 5931, Austin, TX 78763. IN T E R N A T IO N A [T PR O B L E M S con- c e rn you? We need y o u r ideas and sp are tim e to help shape new g rou p devoted to im p ro v in g h e a lth and edu ca tio n co n ­ d itio n s a ro u n d the globe. C all D avid , 477- 1220 G A IL M A N G H A M is b a c k a t U T F rie n d s and fo rm e r students c a ll 445- 2092 WANTED CLASS R IN G S , gold je w e lry , old p ocke t w a tche s, c u rre n c y , sta m p s w a n te d . H igh p rice s paid. Pioneer Coin C om ­ pany, 5555 N o rth L a m a r, B ldg C-113 in C o m m e rce P a rk , 451-3607. B U Y IN G W O R L D gold, gold je w e lry , scra p g old, old coins, antiques, p ocke t w a tc h e s P a y in g f a ir m a rk e t p ric e C ap ito l Coin Co., 3004 G uadalupe, 472- 1676 P h ilip N ohra, ow ner. ÍX -O Ü T ic k T t s w anted Top d o lla r paid 476-9202, keep try in g W A N T E D T E X A S - O lT tic k e ts . T o p p rice s paid C all c o lle c t, 214-742-9196, ask fo r B lake. SFAST CASHS No c re d it checks. We w ill pay cash fo r a n y th in g of va lu e - gold- silv e r, housew ares, etc. 444-6500. LO O K GO OD in shorts? P h o to g ra p h e r seeking w om e n fo r A u stin a d v e rtis in g p ro m o tio n . F le x ib le hours. $5-15/hour. 472-2866 WE B U Y a nd sell gold, s ilve r, d ia m o n ds and coins. We pay cash. C on sig nm e n t of fin e le w e lry w an te d . S an dcliffs, second level D oble M a ll. MUSICAL INSTRUCTION E X P E R I E N C E D P IA N O G U IT A R t e a c h e r . B e g in n e r s - a d v a n c e d U T degree A fte r 1 p.m . 459-4082, 451-0053 V 1 O L i n T v I O L A le s s o n s . B eginners, a d u lts w elcom e. E x p e rie n c ­ ed in s tru c to r G ro u o lessons a v a ila b le cheap. C a ro l, 926-6318. f i d d l e P R IV A T E VOICEf, piano, and m u sic in ­ s tru c tio n ; stu d y cia sslca l o r p o p u la r m u sic; 327-6479 fo r S U B T E R R A N E A N S R8.R B and yo u r p a rty . L ate '60s, e a rly '70s R8.R R easonable ra te s. 441-7410, G reg P IA Ñ Ó LESSONS. A ll ages, levels. E x ­ perienced te a ch er C all e a rly , d in n e r- tirn e or la te Anne. 453-8275. MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS UPPEROOM FELLOWSHIP Bible Study and Discussion SUBJECT: SPIRITUAL POWER open to all Tonight, 8 p.m., Union Rm. 2.404 For m ore in fo rm a tio n call 4 7 7 - 9 0 8 7 (anytim e) or 4 5 8 - 8 8 0 0 SERVICES ■ SERVICES J T Y P IN G P R IN T IN G B IN D IN G The C o m p l e t e Professional FULLTIM E T Y P IN G SERVICE 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 2707 HEMPHILL PK P l e n t y o f P a r k i n g eeoem om m om eoeooeoee : econotype : : econocopy : • Typi ng Co py i nq , • Bi ndi ng, Pr i nt i ng I BM Correct ing Selectnc « ? Re nt a l & Suppl i es 5 C copies North Mon.-Fri. 8 :3 0 -5 :3 0 Sat. 10 0 0 -4 :0 0 137th and G uadalupe 4 5 3 -5 4 5 2 * South Mon.-Fri. 8 :3 0 -5 :0 0 E. Riverside and Lakeshore 4 4 3 -4 4 9 8 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • O WOODS T Y P IN G S E R V IC E When you w a n t it done rig h t 472-6302 2200 G ua d alu pe , side e n tra nce HOLLEY'S 1505 L a v a c a 478-9484 P ro fe ssio n a l T yp ing , C opying, B in d in g Color X e r o x T Y P IN G : T H E S E S , d iss e rta tio n s , te rm papers, re p o rts, etc. E xp e rie n c e d , IBM S e le ctric. N ea r N o rth c ro s s M a ll. 458- 6465 C A L L DeAnne at 474-1563 8-5 M -F o r 345- 1244, 453-0234 w eekends and evenings. N o rm a lly l-d a y se rvice . P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IS T , e con o m ical - e xpe rie nce d A ll ty p e s o f w o rk accepted. 251-4454 a fte r 6 p .m . T A Y L O R T Y P E S ; p r o f e s s i o n a l , te ch n ica l, l day s e rv ic e UT d e liv e ry . IB M S e le ctric, ca rbo n rib b o n . 458-2649 a fte r 5 p.m . T Y P iN G , R IV E R S ID E area . One day service . Ire n e 's Business S ervice. 443- 4684 Q U A L IT Y T Y P IN G at low ra te s E x ­ c e lle n t spelle r, g ra m m a ria n . N ea r 45th and B u rne t. 451-7086. P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P I N G - m a n u ­ s c r ip t s , r e p o r t s , s t a t i s t i c a l . G uaranteed. Y vonne, 474-4863. lo n g FAST, FAS T P ro fe s sio n a l, e x p e rie n c ­ ed $1 page, d ouble spaced. C all Bonnie, 441-6657 A N Y T H IN G T Y P E D ! In c lu d in g fo re ig n language and m a th C o rre c tin g Selec­ tric . F ro m $ l/p a g e . 478-2243. Í Y P IN G D IS S E R T A T IO N S , theses Ten y e a rs e x p e r ie n c e . F a s t, a c c u r a te L o rra in e 473-8536 9 a .m .-9 p.m . FAS T, A C C U R A T E , p ro fe ssio n al, in e x ­ p e n s iv e ty p in g . A ls o p r o o fre a d in g , w ritin g , tu to rin g R esum e com po sitio ns, D hotography. 2420 G uadalupe, 478-3633 sure we DO type FRESHMAN THEMES w hy M l sta rt o v t w ith %—d f r w te t 2707 Hemphill Just North of 27th at Guadalupo 472-3210 472-7677 K A T H E 'S Q U IC K T Y P E sam e day or o v e r n ig h t s e rv ic e M o s t cases No checks please 443-6488 theses, Q U A L IT Y T Y P IN G , p ro o fin g d isse rta tio n s re p o rts S e le ctric O v e r­ n ig h t ER sh u ttle P a t M ills , 475-4593, 472-3450. A fte r 5, w eekends. TYPING S E R V IC E Special p ro je c ts , te rm papers, speeches and so fo rth 276- 7944 m o rn in g s, 474-5921 a fte rn o on s. A sk fo r E ve lyn . N E E D A fa st, a c c u ra te ty p is t? I have a BA in E n g lish , a c o rre c tin g S e le ctric and 12 years s e c re ta ria l e xp e rie nce . C all Ann a t 447-5069. T Y P i N G * T H E S E S re p o rts. R easonable 327-6697 d is s e r ta tio n s , t y p i n g A L L $1.0 0/p ag e S p e cia l papers ty p e s U T p ic k u p la rg e ra te s fo r IB M S e le ctric Phone 835-1398 In m y h om e A C C U R A T E T Y P IN G M a n u s c rip ts , re p o rts e tc 6 y e a rs s e c r e t a r ia l e x p e rie n c e S e lf- c o rre c tin g ty p e w rite r $1 page. K e n d ra M ., 478-1806 ___ theses, T Y P IN G BY ex-school te a ch e r P apers, ♦ heses, books. A c c u ra te , dependable $1 25 double spaced page 444 8160 RESUMES w ith or without pictures 2 Day Service 2 7 0 7 Hemphill Park Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 TRAVEL TW O R O U N D -T R IP to A lb u ­ que rq u e on Texas In te rn a tio n a l D epar tin g Sept II , a fte rn o o n R eturns Sept 21, m o rn in g $90 p er tic k e t 458 5059 tic k e ts R iD E R W A N T E D to so uth ern M e x ic o or G u a te m a la la te Septem ber e a rly O ctober C all 476-2600 L e a v in g TO P L A C E A C L A S S IF IE D AO C ALL. 471 5244 FURNISHED APARTMENTS 1 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS UT AREA Unexpected Vacancies E A R N s l l ° ° C A S H ( o n y o u r f irst v i si t ) 1st Donation - $8,00 & a 53.00 BONUS (w ith student I.D .) 2nd Donation - $10.00 Each d o n a tio n a lte rn a te s : $8.00 then $10.00 plus on yo u r 10th v is it you receive a $10.00 BONUS AUSTIN PLASMA CENTER 2800 G uadalupe 474-7941 Coupon v a lid on 1st visit only $ 2 6 0 $ 3 1 5 $ 2 1 0 $ 3 1 0 $ 2 3 5 I I I I I I I I I I I I i d 1 BR FURN 2 BR FURN Efficiency FURN 1 BR FURN ALL BILLS PAID 1 BR FURN HONDA OF AUSTIN 1901 E. 1st 4 7 6 -7 5 4 7 Btcycle-For Sole N E A R L Y N E W Schwinn T ra ve ler 111. h a h t . cable, lock Excellent condition. (199 C all C raig 476 «626 IB R A P A R T M E N T $240 3704 Speedw ay Gas w a te r ca pte paid S h u ttle . C e ll 457* 1740 or 453-7105 k i Tuesday, September 16, 1980 □ THE D A ILY TEXAN □ Page 15 Governors propose waste sites READING AND CONCENTRATION Tuesday, Septem ber 16 6:30 -7 :3 0 p.m. Jester A 323 4 7 1 -3 6 14 I frev discussion group covering a systematic ap­ proach to academic reading and tips for better concentra- t i o n . b y H I SSL Learning Services. s p o n s o r e d W ILLIA M SBU R G , Va. (U P I) - The Southern Governors Association voted unanimously Monday in favor of establishing regional dump sites for low-level radioactive waste. Gov Richard Riley of South Carolina submitted a resolution calling for congressional approval of such a plan, which would rule out most federal oversight of low-level waste The Riley plan, which won the immediate favor of John F Ahearne. chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, ask­ ed that the states “ be authorized and encouraged by Congress to enter into interstate compacts for disposal of atomic garbage. If given federal approval, the plan would leave the federal government with regulatory powers primarily over high-level HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED Riverside Twin Cinema Pa rt tim e m aintenance person needed 10 a m.-2 p.m. $3 25 hour. Experience preferred Apply in person after 6 p m . 1930 E R iversid e Drive. G R E A T O P P O R T U N IT Y Get experience in the restaurant business. Salad Works t a k i n g a p p l i c a t i o n s for a s s i s t a n t N o * closing manager. $4 00 hour 5-9 30 p m Monday F rid a y . S atu rd ay day shift Apply after 2 p m 2937 w . Anderson Lane ~ M O T E L N IG H T C L E R K Two personable, able bodied individuals to work from 9 p m to 7 a.m. Each will work three to four nights per week. E x ­ perience preferred, but we also tram Excellent for university students work­ ing their way through college Apply at 10 a m West Winds Motel, Interstate Highway 35 at the Airport Blvd. intersec­ tion 452-2511. F u l l c h a r g e b o o k k e e p e r sought by Laguna Gloria Art Museum Perm anent position to begin 9-2-80. Salary depen­ dent on ex p e rie n ce . Send resume with references to Bob Hatch, P.O. Box 5568, Austin, 78763. E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity Em ployer. L V N t. Graduation from an accredited program in vocational nursing as ap­ proved by the Texas State Board of Vocational Nurse Exam iners At least two years experience Experience w ork­ ing with the m e n ta lly retarded and B ilin g u a l b e h a v io r m o d ific a tio n (En glish Spanish) abilities required S a la ry S807 m onthly Apply Austin Travis County Mental Health Mentai Retardation, 1430 Collier, or call 447- 2166 E . O E D riv e rs Transportation Enterprises now accepting ap plicatio ns for bus operators M ust have good d riving record and be 21 years of age Please in­ quire 1135 Gunter St. Tues and Thurs. 10 12 only. No phone calls, please. E O E W est Winds Part-time night clerk needed to work every other night from 9 p.m. to 7 a.m. To qualify, applicant must be willing to work Christm as holidays and through the summers Apply in person at 10 a.m. West Winds Motel, Interstate Hw y 35 at ♦ he Airport Blvd intersection. 452-2511. Room - Board - Stipend Independent lady with men­ ding broken hip desires live-in student. One block from UT shuttle. No nursing involved. 266-1793. E A R N E X T R A CASH Neo Life Company, established 1958. needs part-time distributors for finest natural/ organic vitam ins, m inerals and protein. H ighest com m issions paid Purchase own vitam ins and m inerals at minimum of 32% off. W ork own hours W ill train. F R E E information. 452-5620 P A R T - T I M E COOK To Prepare Evening Meals For Bachelor E a t Dinner W ith Him, Wash Dishes. Stay after Dinner for Drinks-Conversation and Date on Weekends R E P L Y TO: P . O . B O X 18153 A U ST IN , T X 78760 Senior Clerk Typist Requires High School completion plus 1 year office experience as a clerk typist. Duties include providing back-up to d ire c to r's s e c re ta ry , re ce p tio n ist, answering phone, typing and filing To a p p ly , co n tact UT P e rso n n e l, 2613 W ichita, 78712. 471-3656. A L L Y O U F O L K S th a t need e x tra money can sell flowers with The Original Flo w er People Pa id daily 288-1102 P A R T - T IM E H E L P wanted cashier/ g ro ce ry tie r k . Evenin gs, weekends, some days Tom Thumb Grocery, 206 E Bee Caves Road, five minutes from downtown Austin 327-1881 M A R R ! E D C O U P L E to live and work on ranch 25 miles from Austin 2BR house rent free in exchange for services. W rite: Ranch P.O Box 3274, Austin, 78764 for details and'or send resumes, pictures and references t h e C O U N T Y Line on the Lake is now accepting applications for part-time bus and kitchen nelp. 346-3664 Cali between 9-5 S E C U R IT Y P O S IT IO N ' full-time o pe n - mg for plain clothes security. Must be able to pass pre-employment polygraph and previous law enforcement or related background preferred. Apply in person to M s Leggett between 2-5, Y aring's Highland Mall. P A R T T i M E cred it m anager, night hours only. Prefer business student for credit authorization work 5 p.m .-9 p m. Good G P A a must. Excellent opportuni­ ty to learn. Phone 476-6511, Be ck y Harrison for appointment. s c i É N T i f Tc t r a n s l a t o r s "’ P a r t or full tim e Hours flexible, good pay Japanese Chinese, Hungarian, R um a­ nian, Portuguese, Italian and Scandina­ vian languages Send qualifications to Translators, PO Box 7552, Austin, T X 78712 D A L E 'S AUTO Pa rts counter help need­ ed full or part time. 1 year experience in auto parts store required. Leon or Pete, 452-9441; Randy. 926 0401 N E W D O R M IT O R Y on campus needs assistant manager to live on site. Must be able to work 40-hour week. Good com ­ pany benefits No experience necessary. Apply in person 1000 W est Avenue P H O T O G R A P H E R N E E D S model with petite features tor portfolio Paym en t in cash or photos. Send snapshot, Box 130, Cedar Park, T X 78613.__________________ M E D I C A L R E A D E R s ! note tak e rs $2.50/hour P a id cash C lin ical ex­ perience helpful. M rs. Dahl, 24 hours, 474-8541. P A R T T IM E maintenance position 8 l p.m . M o n d a y - F rid a y B a c k ­ a m ground in lanitorial, minor electrical and carpentry work needed Apply in person V illage Cinema Four, 2700 W Anderson Lane. _________________ a7 ?E Y O U crazy - or at least kinda? New retail store opening on the drag needs experienced store m anager Call 454- 5156 for more information W O R K E R F O R after school children D rive standard van. Ex perience with children's tumbling, crafts, games. 472- 3437 M O D E L S N E W hair salon needs models for portfolio advertising Call Albert, _______________________________ 472-7400. C IN D Y 'S R E S T A U R A N T now hiring for part and full time positions Apply in person 9-5, Springdale Plaza, 7150 Ed Bloestem Blvd. E .O .E . P A R T T IM E business minded person needed for delivery. Call 451-7301 S E N IO R IN T E R IO R design or architec­ tural student to help plan m ajor interior remodeling of large W est Austin home. Call 472-2799 after 5 p m C L E A N C O B W E B S , ca rp e tii clothes, everything in between once a week, 5-6 hours Reliable dependable, other es­ tablishment things Call 6-9 p.m , 926- 5114 _ _ P A R T T IM E caretaker needed for small apartment complex. W ill accept single or couple P a rtia l rent paid on unfur mshed apartment. Call between 1.30 and 4 p m . M-F No pets 443-5859. I A M A handicapped student interested in finding someone to assist with part time care If interested please call 474- 1333 T E L E P H O N E S A L E S T w o s h ifts available. Nationally known product Flexible work hours Call 458-9306 T W O P A R T - T IM E security officers in TriTowers, 801 W. 24th Street. Night work only Apply m person, bring recent photograph for file with application. All applicants considered tor employment will be checked through local police files if you qualify contact Director of Security, F e rris Holmes, after 5 p.m. No telephone calls. C H U R C H O R G A N IS T needed, South A u stin a re a C all D r M a rk Doty, M anchaca United Methodist Church, 282 1271 W A IT P E R S O N N E E D E D Weekdays, part-time. Apply in person Szuechuan Chinese Restaurant, 3704 N. IH-35 No calls, please C A S H IE R N E E D E D flexible hours ac: cording to schedule. Courteous, sharp, dependable Apply G .M . Steakhouse, 1908 Guadalupe, after 2 p.m. B U D G E T REN T-A-CAR needs part time service agent 8 a.m .-12 noon five days a week Apply in person at 3330 Manor Road. P A R T - T IM E H E L P wanted Call for ap­ pointment 451-4606 W A N T E D . P A R T - T IM E dishw asher D ays and evenings availab le Call or come by between 8 a.m .-5 p m. 453-5062, 4811 Burnet. W E N E E D 10 people for our advertising department Excellent commission plus bonuses Call M r Harris, 458-8510 P A R T T IM E |ob 15-20 hours week F le x ­ ible schedule $5.25/hour Call between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. only. 459-3440. C H IL D C A R E work e a rly evenings, weekends part time, to work in foster home for teenage boys. Experience not necessary Call John after 6 p.m., 263- 2239 L O O K IN G F O R s tu d e n ts manage, officiate weekend league S alary negotiable 443-9634. to help football W A N T E D P L A Y F U L , c r e a t i v e , reliable, experienced sitter for 3 year old afternoons evenings 477-4823. T H E R E D Tomato Restaurant hiring cooks, table busers, and dishwashers No experience necessary. Apply in per­ son 4 30 to 5:30, 1601 Guadalupe R E M O D E L I N G H E L P wanted 20-25 hours a week afternoons, evenings and Saturdays. $4 hour Skillern Drug Store, 458-8261 or 447-5137 t e a c h e r . E x c e lle n t e x p e rie n c e as preparation for work in psychology, sociology, education. Monthly stipend $140 Hours 12-4 A ustin M ontessori School, 442-3152. 892-0359. F O R p r i v a t e n u r s e r y a I d E kindergarten school 1-6 p.m. W estlake Hills area. $3 50 minimum. 327-1530 after 5 p.m. H€LP W A N T ED HELP W A N T ED C olum bia Records College Representative Position A va ilab le VERY DEMANDING $50 per w e e k plus expenses Career Potential Record industry experience a must Serious inquiries only Phone: 494-0582 If intereste d a fte r 6 p .m . M-Thurs GET YOUR FALL JOB NOW You can m a k e $ 4 .0 0 to $ 5 .0 0 per hour • A g re at p a r t tim e or fu ll tim e job • Work in your o w n n e ig h b o rh o o d • Free meals A m y AFTER 4 :3 0 404 W. 26th St. 4/6-7181 4115 Guadalupe 458-9101 • 2011 f . Ri»er»id* 4 4 7 -6 *8 1 • 1110 W e s t ly n n 4 7 4 -7 * 7 6 B . C . — - n 9 oo CASH s9.00 DOLLARS CASH! You can save a M e by be tag a blood plasm a donor It only ta ke s l ' i hours, and you can donate every 77 hours. You w ill rec e iv e $8 00 for your firs t donation and $ 1 0 .00 for a second dona non in the some w eek. If you bring this od in w ith you, you w ill receive a SI 00 bonus a fte r your firs t donation AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, INC. I Phone 477-3735 | 510 W est 29th ^ ^ J Hears BU* & Thurs. • o » .- * p."».; Tues t H . I o.« 2 JO p.m PLACE YOUR WANT ADS IN PERSON AND SAVE University students, faculty and staff only w ith University identification FOR EXAMPLE ONLY FOR 5 DAYS 45 15 WORDS M o nd ays thro ug h Fridays. *3 To place your ad , come to the TSP Business O ffice, TSP Building 3 .2 0 0 C , 2 5 th Stree* a n d W hitis A ven ue, 8 a .m . to 4 : 3 0 p.m . No selling. Everyth in g furnished E x ­ cellent potential For application facts, send stamp Markco, P.O . Box 323, Grapevine, T X 76051. SO U T H A U S T IN Bab ysitter wanted oc­ casional evenings for six year old girl. Own transportation. 441-4846 A F T E RN OON C A R E Tor toddler, 10 15 hours/week Near law school. Call 472- 4052 T H E A V E N U E is interviewing bussers, cooks and host/esses. Apply in person, 908 Congress P A R T -TI M E T Y P I ST S needed 4 hour shifts a n ytim e of day Robinson & Associates appraisers, 472-3802. M a ry. W R I T E R S - N E E D experience? W rite for the F a ll Fashion Guide. Come by T S P 3.210C to apply Please bring a short example of your work if possible. M O D E L S N E E D E O for the F a ll Fash ion Guide Apply at T S P 3 210C. Please b r­ ing recent photo. PH O T O S W I L L NOT B E R E T U R N E D . TO P L A C E A C L A S S I F I E D A D C A L L 471-5244 PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz library 1 124. LOOK, P0 YOU THINK I ENJOY B05SIN6 YOU AROUND? T DO YOU H0NE5TLY THINK THAT JU5T BECAUSE I'M YOUR OLDER 5I5TER, I ACTUALLY ENJOY TELLIN6 YOU WHAT TO PO? yp *£A-hE« dOTOCtsr I A ll locations hirin g tor back to sc bool ru th Austin area weather will continue to be sunny and hot through Tuesday. Tuesday’s high tem peratura will be In the mid 90s with no mention of precipitation. W ind* should be out of the south at 10 to 15 mph. Conditions W ednesday through Friday will be part­ ly cloudy and warm with highs in the low to mid 90s and ovarnight Iowa in the low to mid 70s. Showers a r t expected in the Great Lakes region and the Ohio Valley Tuesday. W eather will be fair elsewhere in the nation. 9-16. P0 YOU REALLY THINK I ENJOY IT? 7 r- H HOW PIP YOU KNOW? b y jo h n n y h a r t wastes that are generated in fuel rods at nuclear reactors and in atomic weapons research. Low-level wastes primarily result from related activities at nuclear plants and medical research. Gov John Dalton of Virginia, host of the three-day summit, warned that serious low-level disposal problems could develop if the federal government does not act quickly. “ The hospitals in my state are filling up with wastes and I ’m sure yours are, too.” he told the governors. Until recently. South Carolina accepted most of the low-level wastes from the southern states, but has since decided to curtail such shipments from outside its own borders Speaking of high-level waste disposal, Ahearne predicted it could be as late as 1990 before permanent federal disposal sites are in operation He said it would take the Department of F.nergy until 1985 to select the sites and until about 1988 to license them, U.S. oil reserves to be stockpiled WASHINGTON ( U P I) - The a d m in is tra tio n has resumed filling the Strategic Petroleum R eserve at a “ symbolic’* rate of 10,000 barrels daily and should meet the congressional target of 100,000 barrels a day by late fall, the official in charge said Monday. But Abram Chayes, special adviser to Energy Secretary Charles Duncan, also said the reserve — designed to keep the nation s vita! services functioning in the event of another halt of Middle East oil exports — will not be truly effective for several years. Chayes made his comments after members of the House energy and power subcom­ m itte e accused the ad ­ ministration of caving in to pressure from Middle East oil nations and not resuming the reserve program while there is a worldwide glut of oil. C H A I R M A N J O H N D IN G ELL, D-Mich., declared that “ everyone in the world has oil except the Department of Energy” and said he will in­ troduce legislation “ to take the (reserve program) away from the D epartm ent of Energy and transfer it to an independent agency.” Chayes said, “ I am pleased to report to this subcommittee that oil is now on its way” to the reserve from Naval Petroleum Reserves No. 1 at Elk Hills, Calif. He called the current 10,000- barrel-per-day deposit “ sym­ bolic” but said the 100,000- barrel daily minimum target set by Congress will be reach­ ed “ by late fall at the latest. If we don't have it by Dec. 1, I will have wasted a lot of time.” President Carter halted fill­ ing the reserve last year when western European allies com­ plained it was causing world oil prices to rise during a tight market. SAUDI ARABIAN officials later said they would cut production if Carter resumed filling the reserves. Pierce Bullen, the State Department’s director of energy-producing country af­ fairs, denied the Saudis were blackm ailing the United States, “ We are not dealing with a situation of blackmail by anybody,” Bullen said. “ Our policy is set on national in­ terests and market factors.” William Hovis, senior vice p r e s i d e n t of A t l a n t i c R ic h fie ld ’s ARCO Crude Trading Inc., told the subcom­ mittee, “ Now is the time to purchase quantities of crude to assist in filling the SPR. There is no better time to do this than in a surplus condi­ tion. ” Campus News in Brief Speaking class offered ANNOUNCEMENTS RASSL LEARNING SERVICES Conversational English Class, beginning Sept 22 Class runs Mondays rid Wednesdays, noon to 1 15 p.m . for five weeks Enrollment is in Jester Center A332. 10 a m to 5 p.m. through Sept. 22. For information, call 471-3614 LIBERAL ARTS COUNCIL Interviews for prospective mempers 9 a m to 5 p m Tuesday and Wednesday in West Mall Office Building 110 For Information, call 471-4707 TEXAS UNION RECREATION CENTER Galaxian Shoot Out. 4 pm, Tuesday This is a com­ puterized game Fee is $1; Double Spades League. 6 p.m. Tuesday TEXAS UNION Chicano Disco Night, 7 to 10 p m Tuesday. Texas Tavern MEETING8 CAREER CHOICE INFORMATION CENTER JoD Interviewing Workshop. 4 30 to 6 p m Tues day. Jester Center A223. LIBERAL ARTS COUNCIL 6 30 p.m Tuesday, Sutton Hall 210 UT ADVERTISING CLUB 7 30 p.m Tuesday, Union Buiidmg 2 102 CSAROAZ INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCE GROUP 8 to 9 30 p m teaching 9 30 to 11 p m recreational dancing, every Tuesday. Quadrangle Room in the Texas Union Buiidmg UN IVERSITY Kl-AIK IDO C LU B 5:30 to 7 pm every Tuesday, Bellmont Hall 966 GAMMA DELTA EP8ILON Sept 16 time and location to be posted around campus For infor­ mation. call 447-2739 Economics Building 370. FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY STUDENTS 6 to 7 p.m Tuesday. Business GENERAL LIBRARIES St ■ g the Information Puzzle 3 p.m Tuesday, Perry-Castaneda LECTURES ACROSS 1 Estuaries 5 — Pendle­ ton 9 Luges 14 Yen 15 Norm: Abbr 16 Outdoor area 17 Transaction 18 Sting 19 Queues 20 Go in 22 Criminal 24 Reverberate 26 Fathered 27 Amphibian 29 Mafia title 30 Traitor 33 Fragmented 37 Penalty 38 Want badly 39 Transfix 40 Angry 41 Tops 42 Reptiles 44 — Ems 45 Fish eggs 46 — log 47 Educate 49 Boredom 53 Choice 57 Income: Fr. 58 Make amends 59 Sterile 61 Courage 62 Sloshes 63 Bind 64 Bavarian weight unit 65 Gashes 66 If not 67 Burn DOWN 1 Less polite 2 G irl's name 3 Type size 4 Part of S.S.S. 5 Taxi 6 Eager 7 Doles 8 High office 9 Spite 10 Scottish VIP 11 Stove 12 Perished 13 Only fair 21 Swiss river 23 Nudge 25 Grain 28 Lose value 30 Oman money UNITED Feature Syndicate M onday’s Puzzle Solved □ a o a a □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ J O B □ □ □ □ □ □ □ j o □ □□□□□ □B □ □ □ □ □ □ a □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ S3QBQ □□□□□□□□□ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ d o b □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □□□□□□□ □ □ □ BO O B □ □ □ □ a a a a □ □ □ □ □ □ 3 U Ü □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ a □□□□ □□□□b 31 Poker term 32 Letters 33 Mange 34 Malay boat 35 Acreage 36 — de Janeiro 37 Breakfast fare: 2 words 40 Non-worker 42 G a rm e n t 43 Um p's call 45 Coffee break 47 Principle 48 Hourly 50 Habituate 51 — Pradesh: ind state 52 Middle 53 Hand tools 54 Etc.’s kin 55 California city 56 Bites 60 Scottish river / I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ! i _I I ■ ■ H I I 1 i I I I 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ft *v'- 21 R I 1 I I I I I I« 1 1 % I / /wI I t \ If vou think you could pick your oeer with your eyes dosed, here’s your chance. Probably just one beer drinker in 3 can pass this test. How do Schlitz, Budweiser and Miller compare on taste? That's for you to decide. Simply rate each beer from 1 to 10 on the flavor characteristics below. When you're finished, try to guess the brands by name. Very, very few people can do this. Does the taste o f a beer ever change? Yes. All beers have changed over the years. One example is Schlitz.Two years ago a master brewer nam ed Frank Sellinger came to Schlitz. He came to be president. And to brew a Schlitz that was sm oother than any other beer. Taste that beer for yourself. Because taste is what it’s all about. The best beer is # 1 I I * | i g n h s e r f e R y l t n i a F t e e w s l l u F d o i d O b £ O o E CO 3 o q5 5 ;o i T3 __ CD -- 3 O LL > i253 All three major premium beers are distinctly different in taste. After all, they’re made by different brewers using different ingredients and different brewing processes.Still.it takes a pretty educated tongue to tell them apart. You may not win, but you can’t lose. CO CD CD V.—CD>O oo i5 C L TD C CO CDC T5 CD O ~o Ü)c o co =3 o 10 8 1 r This test requires a blindfold.That's so your eyes won't influence your mouth. Because taste is all that counts —in this test, and in a beer. Here's how the test works.You pour Schlitz, Bud and Miller into identical glasses. Have a friend label them 1,2 and 3 and switch them around. Now, taste.The one you pick may not be your beer, but it s the beer with the taste you want. See? You can t lose. What is that taste you’re tasting? Maybe beer tastes so good because you're really tasting each sip more than once. First, the lively, refreshing character of beer com es from the arom a and flavor of the hops. Next, as you swallow, you sense the rich­ ness — the body — that barley malt adds. Finally, the finish. Now the balance of tastes becom es clear. No one taste should intrude on your total beer enjoyment. t a l F o o T r e t t i b y r e t a W g n i t i B o o T g n o r t s Place beers num bers on each scale from 1 to 10 B e e r #1 is. B e e r #2 is. B eer #3 is. y l r e v O d e t a n o b r a c d n a l B brand brand brand Today’s S ch litz • Go fo r it! (R) 1980 J o s Schlitz B rew in g Com pany. M ilw aukee. Wl . I I 1 I I i I I I I I I I I 1 * ---------------- i I i i % * ------------- i «