T h e Da il y T exa n Vol 84 No. 158 iw spaper of The U niversity of Texas at A u s t i n ______________________ T h ursday, J une 13, 1985 25c UT may develop West Austin land By THANHHA LAI Daily Texan Staff rhe University may develop some of its land in West Austin near Town Lake if the city does not renew the 1987 lease on the property, a UT official said Wednesday. I he land, owned by the Univer­ sity and termed the Brackenndge Tract, contains a golf course, a stu­ dent housing area and the Brack­ en ridge Field Biology 1 ah. G Charles Franklin, vice presi­ dent for business affairs, said the golf course area being leased by the city possibly would he consid­ ered for development, hut the stu­ dent housing area and the field lab would not he affected. Franklin said the University has no plans to sell the Brackenndge Tract, hut it might consider devel­ opment. During the last legislative ses­ sion, a hill sponsored hv state Sen. John Leedom, R-Dallas, was passed, allowing state agencies, including universities, to sell or lease land. Joe Moraban, assistant director of public works, said he does not know it Austin will renew the lease. The primary discussion has been with the Parks and Recre­ ation Department, Morahan said. Park officials could not he reached for comment. Alston Boyd, manager of I ong Canyon Developers, said multi­ family and commercial construc­ tions, such as apartments and re­ tail offices, probably would he developed the Brackenridge Tract. in "It will be up to the owner to determine what to put (in the area), then some city committees will determine if it is feasible," Morahan said. Depending on whether the Uni­ versity chooses to develop for its own purposes or for a private rea­ son, Morahan said different regu- Lions Municipal Golf Course Brackenndge Apts Research Area Colorado Apts | UT'S I Brackenridge I Tract A UT lands shown in orange ^ f o r e v,s ,_______ lations would be enacted. I he city will not enforce all regulations if the development is for university purposes, Morahan said. Franklin said he does not know wh.it form the potential develop­ ment might take, but said it would require master planning. "It will be a political football like Austin has never seen before," Boyd said. Bert Pence, president of Bert is ideal Pence Developers, said the loca­ tion for development, causing every developer to keep an eye out for the t (instruction possibilities. "A s long as I was aware that the Brackenridge Tract might become available to the developers I've had my eves on it," Pence said. "It makes for attractive real estate is a very popular West Austin area." Brian Zabcik Staff Graphics The 445 a c re s of land could he worth SKXJ million, Pence said. Morahan said the lease could be for whatever period contracted both parties agree on Steve Hansen, executive com­ mittee member of the Sierra Club, said if development is going to go up in the Brackenridge 1 ract, there should be technology to stop pol­ lutants that could run into the riv­ er. U.S. aids S. African nuke program United Press International U N IT ED N A T IO N S — A U.N. re­ port said Wednesday the United States has allowed South Africa to receive equipment needed to dev el­ op its nuclear weapons program and said other Western nations also aided the project. But the General Assembly's deco­ lonization committee report on South West Africa or Namibia - a uranium-rich territory administered by Pretoria — stopped short of say­ ing South Africa had developed a nuclear weapon. "South Africa has reportedly con­ tinued to develop its nuclear tech­ nology and installations and to ac­ quire nuclear weapons capability," the report said. "These actions, which constitute a manifest threat to international peace and security, take on particu­ larly ominous overtones in view of South Africa has reportedly continued to develop its nuclear technology and installations and to ac­ quire nuclear weapons capability.’ —- U.N. report the highly aggressive stance which South Africa has adopted towards the Namibian people and the neigh­ boring African states," it said. These The report said that since May 1980, the U.S. Department of Com­ merce approved five export licenses for equipment that can be used to produce a nuclear explosion. include vihration-test equipment, multichannel analyzers for nuclear testing, helium and a Cyber 170-750 computer that can be used to "m odel" a nuclear explo­ sion, the report said. Helium is used to manufacture tritium, a form of hydrogen used in thermonuclear weapons, it said. "U .S. officials have stated that notwithstanding the requirements regarding the stated end use of such exported items, it would be impos­ sible for U.S. officials to certify that certain exports, such as Cyber 150- 750, would not he utilized to design a nuclear explosion in South Afri­ ca," the report said. "W ith the help of certain Western countries, South Africa has en­ hanced its nuclear capability in com­ mercial areas such as accelerated ex­ ploitation of Namibia's uranium resources and their enrichment, an essential component of South Afri­ ca's nuclear weapons program, it said. South Africa has the third-largest reserves of raw uranium ore in the world, the report said, most of them in Namibia. The report said uranium enrich­ ment in South Africa is carried out at the pilot plant at Valindaba, near the National Research Center at Pel- mdaba, and a hot-cell laboratory is under construction at Pehndaba. The report was circulated on the third dav of a Security Council de­ bate on Namibia during which Afri­ can, Asian and Latin American min­ isters pressed for mandatory sanctions to force Pretoria to give the territory’ its independence. In the debate, Cuba pledged more help to Namibian guerrillas and refused to pull out any of the 30,000 troops it placed in neighboring An­ gola until Namibia is free of South Afruan rule. t , ’s» Nearly 700 protesters arrested nationwide United Press International Nearly 700 people were arrested Wednesday in nationwide demon­ strations against U.S. aid to Nicara­ guan rebels. The protesters cut the telephone lines to an Francisco drew nearly 300 people and ~2 were ar­ rested trying to block an entrance into the federal building Helmeted police arrested b7 people blocking the driveway at the State 'Depart­ ment in Washington. In Iowa Citv "orne 2D1 demon­ to the federal strators marched building chanting 'W e shall over­ eóme' About bC were arrested for occup\ mg the building Police in Buffak arrested 24 of about 100 protesters at the federal building and Rochester police ar­ rested nine of about 50 at a sit-in in the federal building there About 100 people demonstrated in front of the federal building in Kansas C ity Mo Police arrested 15 and released them on signature bond, officials said. In Vermont 22 of o0 demonstra­ tors were arrested tor refusing to leave an Air Force recruiting office in Burlington Three others were ar­ rested at the General Electric arma­ ments division in Burlington after they scaled a fence and began plant­ ing 6,000 corn seeds to symbolize the 6,000 rounds a machine gun can fire per minute. House votes to resume contra aid United Press International W A SH IN G T O N The House gave President Reagan a major for­ eign policy victory Wednesday bv approving a $27 million in non-mili­ tary aid for the anti-Sandinista guer­ rillas fighting the Nicaraguan gov­ ernment. The final vote of 271 I % reversed Reagan's stunning defeat seven weeks ago, in which the House voted down 303-123 all assistance for the contras, including a $14 mil­ lion aid package. The package now faces considera­ tion by the Senate, which has ap­ proved $38 million in non-military aid for the contras. President Reagan issued a state­ ment saving the 1 louse had taken "an historic vote to support democ­ racy and liberty in Central America. " A clear bipartisan majority has shown that our nation s t a n d s with those who are determined to pursue a political solution and seek a demo­ cratic outcome to the crisis in Nicar­ agua," he said. The But in Managua, Nicaraguan gov­ ernment radio interrupted its regu­ lar program to blast the House vote, saying it will bring "more massa­ cres, more suffering" to the nation. radio broadcast also de­ nounced the presence of Eden Pas­ leader of the rebel group tora, ARDE, in Washington, saying: "The traitor Pastora asked for part of that help, which is a bowing down to the House." As word of the vote arrived, sev­ eral dozen U.S. citizens living in N i­ caragua gathered outside the U.S. Embassy in Managua to protest the House action, chanting slogans and singing songs. Reagan said the vote w ill strengthen the democratic center in Nicaragua against the extremes of the left and right. Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega's visit to Moscow to appeal for aid and Reagan's pledge not to seek the overthrow of the Managua regime helped reverse the House decision. In another major decision, the House voted 232-196 against ex­ tending a law that bans the C IA from extending any assistance to any group for the purpose of over­ throwing the Nicaraguan govern­ ment, which Reagan charges is ex­ porting communist subversion in Central America. Rep. Edward Boland, D-Mass., sought unsuccessfully to attach the proposal that bears his name to the $27 million Reagan-backed non- lethal aid package proposed by Rep. Bob Michel, R-Ill., and conservative Democrats. The House then defeated 254-174 an alternative offered by Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., and other Demo­ crats to restrict assistance to $14 mil­ lion in relief to unarmed combatants outside the Nicaraguan war zone. "A vote for the contras is to make constructive change likely,' Hamilton said. "It is a vote for Yan­ kee interventionism. It is a vote tor more bloodshed.' less Michel, shouting at the Demo­ crats, asked where and when "do you finally draw the line on our southern border." "1 lere we are on our doorstep not willing to face up to reality. And I cannot understand how we be so blind to what the communist con­ s p i r a c y and communists govern­ ments are all about." W ORLD & NA TIO N Bitching already — Senate and House budget negotiators hit their first snag Wednesday over a Senate-passed provi­ sion to impose new fees on those who get government-guaranteed loans, such as farmers and homeowners. The disagreement on the relatively non-controversial issue and in the second day of inter-chamber talks foreshadows even greater discord on several topics acknowledged to be much tougher — in­ cluding military spending and Social S e ­ curity raises. Story, page 2. W EATHER C o d er, sort of — The forecast for Austin and vicinity Thursday calls for partly cloudy skies and mild temperatures with increased cloudiness at night The high temperature will be in the upper 80s, with a low in the upper 60s More weather on page 15. IN D EX 15 Around Campus 11 Classifieds - 1 5 Comics 15 Crossword 6 Editorials 9 Sports 7 State & Local University..............................................4 World & N a tio n ..........................................2 Still No. 1 Bill Bates, UT second baseman, holds back tears while signing autographs at Disch-Falk field Wednesday night during welcome home ceremonies e Longhorns, who lost to the Miami Hurricanes 10-6 Tuesday for the illege World Series title, were welcomed by Austin Mayor Frank Cooksey Morris uoen, uany i exan oian Pací*' 2 The Daily Texan Thursday, June 13, 1985 Hijackers free hostages, blow up airliner United P re ss International BE IR U T Five Shiite Moslems w ho hijacked a Jordanian airliner freed 67 hostages at Beirut airport, blew up the jet and fled VN ednes- dav, ending a 30-hour ordeal. T w o American hostages aboard narrowly escaped a second hijack­ ing hour" later when a Palestinian tried to sei/e a Lebanese plane in Cyprus The Shiites who sei/ed the first plane demanded that all Palestinian fighter" be ousted from Beirut, where Palestinians and Shiite" have been battling for control of three ref­ ugee camps. Andreas Papasolomontos, acting c o m m u n ic a tio n s m in is t e r of Cvprus said the second hijacker, a 25-year-old Lebanese citi/en, acted for Tuesday’" hi­ in retaliation jacking. Officials at the airport in Larna- caa, Cvprus, s a id the Palestinian, armed with a hand grenade, tried to hijack the jet of the M iddle East A i r ­ lin e s — Lebanon's flag carrier af­ ter it flew in from Beirut. All the passengers including the two Americans — had left the plane when the Palestinian took the five crew members hostage and de­ manded to be allowed to board a Jordanian jet bound for Amman, airport of tic ials said. But a short time later, the man left the plane, dropped his hand gre­ nade on the tarmav and freed the ttve hostages, officials said. There were conflicting reports on the fate of the hijacker. \ police spoke man said he "ur- rendered to C vprus police U ncon­ firmed reports said authorities al­ lowed him to board an Alia Jordanian Roval airliner accompa­ nied bv an unidentified Arab offi- s. ial I .S. authorities identified the two Americans aboard the plane as I an- drv Slade vice president of the \merican I niversitx of Beirut, and his 16-vear-old son, W illiam . I he two had been aboard an Alta lordanian Roval plane hijacked bv five Shiite Moslems in Beirut Tues­ day and taken on an odvssev that ended Wednesdav back at Beirut \11- i being treed from the airport Jord mian plane, the S l a d e s took the Í ebanese plane to Cvprus. i ¡i- Slades were among 67 people held hostage for 30 hours bv the Shiites w ho hijacked the Amman- bound jet. (hat ordeal, which began when the S h i i t e s shot their w av onto the tarmac at Beirut airport a s the jet was about to take off, ended when they treed the hostages, planted ex­ plosives in the cockpit and left the plane The aircraft blew up and there was "a hail of heavy machine gun and anti-aircraft from sand d u n e s near the ru n w a y ," a witness said. fire United Press International Shiite Moslem hijackers blew up the cockpit of a Jordanian airliner Wednesday after freeing 67 hostages. "T h e hijackers drove aw ay from the ain raft in the car ahead of u s ... with an escort/' said the Swedish captain of the airliner. " M y im pres­ sion w a s not that thev were in cus­ tody, but they were with f r ie n d s " that The wreckage of the red and white plane lav burning on the tar­ mac tor several hours, sending a pall of blac k smoke over the airport. The Shiites twice threatened to kill the hostages, but Slade told re­ p o r t e r s after his release: " W e were well treated, all th e passengers, in­ cluding m y son." I ight Jordanian sky marshals kid naped briefly by the hijackers were later released. After commandeering the plane Tuesday, the Shiites ordered it to stop in Larnaca for refueling and then to fly on to Tunis, Tunisia, headquarters of the Palestine I iber- ation Organization. W hen Tunisia refused permission to land, the plane then went to Palermo, Sicily, where it refueled again; returned to Tunis, where landing permission was denied again; and returned to Beirut, hav­ ing spent nearly 13 hours flying around the Mediterranean. Gandhi, Reagan discuss future relations United P re s s International W A S H IN G T O N - Indian Prime M inister Rajiv Gandhi and P r e s i ­ dent Reagan began what Reagan "voyag e of discovery ; called a j W ednesday to work out differences | between the two nations, especial- ly over the Soviet invasion of A f­ ' ghanistan. j Under extraordinary security and against the background noise of 1,000 chanting Sikh demonstrators 300 y a r d s aw av from the outdoor ceremony, Reagan welcomed the voung Indian prime minister and his Italian-born wife, Sonia, by re­ calling that G and hi's grandfather, Jawaharlal Nehru, came to the United States in 1949 on such a mission. G andhi is the son of Prime M in ­ ister Indira G andhi, who was as­ sassinated Oct. 31 in N ew Delhi. At least two m e m b e r s of a group ot overseas Sikhs plotting to kill G a n ­ dhi in the United States are still at large, the FBI has said. Security officials dosed off the street in front of the State Depart­ ment in response to w hat one offi­ cial said was a truck bomb threat. O n e veteran security official "uth African officials. Lew ellvn Landers, recently named Depute M inister of P o p u la tio n [developm ent, u n ­ derwent emergency surgery to re­ move shrapnel from his back s h o r t ­ ly after a rifle-launched grenade exploded in hi" h o m e at Mitchell" Plain, Cape Town. Moments after the first explosion, two grenades destroyed t h e sitting room in the home of mixed-race Member of Par­ liament Fred Peters at Grassy Park, near Cape Town. Police said Peters narrowly escaped injure. About the same time, another grenade explod­ ed on the roof of a police station in the nearbv black township ot la n ­ ga. Police "aid there were no lasual- ties and damage was minimal A previoush unknown group calling the W estern Cape Suicide itself Squad i laimed responsibility for the attacks. China announces entry into new space program they speculated PEKING — China, boasting it is capable of putting a man in orbit, announced W ednesday a new com­ its mercial space program using own satellites, carrier rockets and ground stations. Western diplomats said Peking's entry into the lucra­ tive commercial pace market was it expected but would be some time before the C h i­ nese could compete with the United States and W estern Europe The of­ ficial C hina Daily newspaper, quot­ ing a spokesman for the Ministry' ot Space Industry, said China "is capa­ ble of manufacturing and launching space shuttles as well a" carrying But out space travel programs spokesman /hang jiqing "aid there would be no manned flight" "for some tim e" because ot the expense, lack of practical benefits and Pe­ king's aversion to entering a space race w ith the superpowers. Defense secretary says spies ‘should be shot’ if W A S H IN G T O N Defense Sec­ "aid retary Caspar Weinberger W e d n e s d a y m em bers of the accused W alker spy ring "should be thev are convicted of shot" espionage, although I suppose hanging is the preferred method But he lamented almost immediate­ ly afterward that there is no death penalty tor espionage in peacetime — the maximum punishment i" life remark bv im pri"onm ent Weinberger, a the strongest official response to the busted spy ring allegedly headed bv retired N a v y communications ex­ pert John V\ alker Jr It w as deliv ered almost off-handedlv during an in­ terview with United Press Interna­ tional, I he Associated P r e s s and R e u t e r s N a vy Secretary John Leh­ man called Tuesday tor changes in military «jnd t« < make itxii espionage punishable bv death, even in peacetime. I he lawyer, was law Gloomy IBM prospects initiate market decline N E W Y O R K Stock prices lost ground in moderately active trading W ednesday A gloomy pronounce­ ment on I B M ' s earning prospects spurred the move down. I he Dow Jones industrial average closed down 7 50 to 1,306 54. Broader indi­ c a t o r s also declined. I he N ew York Sttx'k Exchange composite index tell 0.72 to 108.87 The Standard & Poor 500-stock index fell 1.43 to 187.61 The price of an average share fell 23 cents The volum e of NYSE-listed issues on all U .S. Exchanges and over the counter totaled 120,938,840 shares compared with 119,425,700 W ednesday Spanish colonel killed in attack; police suspect Basque terrorists The Daily Texan/Thursday June 13 1985/Page 3 M arco s to be challenged United Press International M A N IL A , Philippines Presi­ dent and Mrs. Ferdinand Marcos held a massive Independence Day celebration W ednesday as the nn tion's largest opposition group chose a possible challenger to Marcos in the next election. About 15,(XX) delegates and supporters of the opposition coali tion United Nationalist Democrat­ ic Organization, or U N ID O , ap­ proved the selection of U N II ) 0 President Salvador l aurel, a 56- year-old Yale-educated lawyer from one of the country's most politically powerful families, as the party's standard-bearer. Laurel, a former senator, ran unopposed at the convention — the largest opposition meeting in 13 years - held in a stadium in suburban Quezon city. The country's major opposition parties, to work together, have agreed to each select a candidate to chal­ traditionally unable lenge Marcos in elections sched uled for 1987. At a convention later this year, one of the candidates will be cho­ sen to run against the president, w ho has already announced his intention to seek another six-year term in office. “ There must be a complete change in government. Mr, M ar­ cos and his entourage must go," Laurel the cheering dele­ gates. told A platform calling for a referen­ dum on whether the treaty per­ mitting U .S. military bases in the country should be extended be­ yond 1991 was approved. The convention coincided with the celebration of the country's in­ dependence. Philippines, I he ceded to the United States by Spain in 1898 after the Spanish- Am erican W ar, gained independ ence on ju lv 4, 1946, but the offi­ cial celebration was moved in 1962 to June 12 to lommem orate the start in 1898 ot a Filipino against Spanish rule. revolt At uite c'O 0, H o lly w d A n n s A , Student Publications ng i tassihed advertís ... . ' w'"' ‘ “ i I' . ______ , ' 1 ’ ’ ’ ’ i of Texas at Austin 7209 The Daily Te n pern ids Second cl publ by in is publ shod , p< sslage paid A v e n u e West. Seattle, W A 9 8 1 1 9 t x . T « .. n « > The Daily Texan s u b s e n b o s to U n ite d P r e s s international a n d N e w Y o rk T im e s N e w s S e r v ic e T h e T e x a n is a N e w s p a p e r m e m b e r ot the A s s o c ia t e d Collegiate P r e s s the S o u th w e st J o u r n a lism C o n g r e s s A s s o c ia t io n a n d A m e ric a n N e w s p a p e r P u b lis h e r s Associa tion C o lu m b ia Se t the T e x a s D a n y < tic P re s A: «nation _ C o p y rig h t 1 9 8 5 T e x a s S t u d e n t Publications The Daily Texan Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring) T w o Semesters (Fall a n d S p rin g ) Summer Session One Year (Fall. Spring and Summer) Texas residents add 5'/D°o sales tax Building C3.200 or call 471 5083 S e n d o r d e r s a n d a d d r e s s c h a n g e s to Texas Student Publications P O Box D. Austin TX 78 13-7209 $ 2 8 5 4 66 I 7 18 5 5 71 14 to TSP ■ D I A M O N D S A P P R A IS E — B U Y — SELL T.D. 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No group immediately claimed responsibility for the killings but au­ thorities said the 9mm parabeilum bullets and “ Goma 2” explosives used in the attacks pointed to the Basque separatist group ETA ET A , an acronym for Basque Homeland and I ibertv, has killed nearly 500 people, most of them army and security targets, since it began its campaign for independ­ ence of the northern Basque country 16 years ago. E I A has claimed responsibility for the killings of 14 people since the start of the year, and police also have linked the group to the April 12 bombing at a steakhouse fre­ quented bv U.S. servicemen, which killed 18 people. In a separate attack a few hours later, a lone gunman opened fire on Petty Officer Jose Millarengo, 47, as he walked to his home in an indus­ trial suburb outside the northern Basque city of Bilbao. Millarengo was pronounced dead of a bullet wound to the head on arrival at a nearby hospital. 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The R a nge r is legal-pad sized, with an easy- access outer pocket for pens, calculator ana sm all personal item s Lifetime guarantee whole barth Provi sioii Company Where Quality Makes the Difference h i 8868 Research 453-6333 478- 1577 2410 San Antonio 4006 South Lamar 444-9975 ié y ih i i i 1 iar M / Page 4 ^n e D a y Texan I ’ jrs d a y June 13. 1985 UT-SA favors computer fees By M IC K Y IN O U E Daily Texan Staff S o m e o f t h e 13,000 s t u d e n t s at U T -S an A n t o n i o will h a v e t o p a y a n e x tra fee in a d d i t i o n to th e r e g u l a r tu i ti o n a n d fees if th e UT S y s t e m B o ard o f R e g e n t s a p p r o v e s th e c h a r g e T h u r s d a y . U T - S a n A n t o n i o h a s r e q u e s t e d a fee for s t u d e n t s w h o u s e u n i v e r s i t y c o m p u t e r s a s p a r t o f th e th e i r c o u r s ­ es. T h e fee w o u l d ta k e effect th is fall, b u t o n lv o n t h e S a n A n t o n i o c a m p u s . Joe R o d d y , S y s t e m p u b li c in f o r ­ m a t i o n d ir e c to r , said U T -S an A n t o ­ n io h a s r e q u e s t e d a fee o f S2Ü p e r s t u d e n t , w h i c h will be c h a r g e d o n ly to s t u d e n t s ta k i n g th e c la s s e s t h a t r e q u i r e th e u s e of c o m p u t e r s . T h e e x tr a fee will be u s e d to " d e ­ fray th e c o s t o f a d d i t i o n a l s u p p l y n e e d , " R o d d y sa id . M a r i o n P e rr y , a d m i n i s t r a t i v e a s ­ s is ta n c e in C o ll e g e o f B u s in e s s at U T - S a n A n t o n i o , s a i d th e s t u d e n t s p l a n n i n g to t a k e c o m p u t e r c o u r s e s will n o t c h a n g e th e i r c o u r s e p l a n s r e g a r d l e s s o f w h e t h e r th e r e g e n t s a p p r o v e t h e fee. B u s in e s s s t u d e n t s a re r e q u i r e d least fo u r c o u r s e s th a t i n c l u d e c o m p u t e r u se . to ta k e at to ta k e T h e s t u d e n t s a ls o will n o t sh ift th e th e i r class p r o g r a m s c o u r s e s in t h e s u m m e r — b e fo r e th e fee g o e s i n t o effect - in s t e a d o f fall, "in c e it is to o late t o en ro ll in c o u r s ­ e s d u r i n g t h e first s u m m e r s e s s io n , P e rr y said . S h e sa id s h e d o u b t s t h a t s t u d e n t s will be a b le t h e c o u r s e s d u r i n g th e s e c o n d s u m m e r s e s s io n . ta k e to " M a n y p r o f e s s o r s w o u l d like to t a k e a v a c a t io n ( d u r i n g th e s e c o n d s u m m e r s e s s i o n ) , " P e rr y said. G e r h a r d F o n k e n , vice p r e s i d e n t for a c a d e m i c affairs a n d re s e a r c h at t h e U n i v e r s i t y , sa id t h e U n i v e r s ity d o e s n o t p l a n to r e q u e s t a sim ila r fee th is for c o m p u t e r c o u r s e s a t p o in t . C u r r e n t l y , t h e o n l y s p e cial fee s t u d e n t s h a v e to p a y fo r sp ecia l c la s s e s — in a d d i t i o n to tu i ti o n — is a $4 fee for la b o r a t o r y c o u r s e s . B ut t h e lack of a fee r e q u e s t p l a n said. is n o t p e r m a n e n t , F o n k e n " W h o k n o w s ( w h a t c a n h a p p e n to t h e p l a n ) y e a r s f r o m n o w . " Provisional program offers opportunities By JANE THOMPSON Da v Texar Staff Sti ro l In a sec th e tio L n iv M O O ' i d e n t s w h o d id n o t m e e t e n - ¡roment.s will b e g i v e n •nt reqi >nd c h a n c e to g e t a c c e p t e d to n iv t rsity d e s p i t e a d m i n ¡ " í r a - >lans to cut e n r o l l m e n t at th e rMty, a U T O ffic e o f A d m i s - oiticial ■'aid \\ e d n e s d a x . !{ H a r t m a n a s s i s t a n t d i r e c t o r ser­ ien s U n i - tr a n s it io n a l ío n a l a d m i " u s e d at th e o f no Ti s v ic e s sai p r o ;• im v e r s p r t '\ ■ beer tl e r sine e pr< that d o n ■ nr reqi >ve 1 la r t m a n p ro v is io r th e \ a ff o rd " Texas res- m e e t t h e r e g u l a r r e m e n t s a c h a n c e th e w o r k a n d o m is s io n s p r o " hig h school viM onal s t u ­ d ie d as liberal e n ro ll d u r i n g sc m e s t e r fol- h o o i g r a d u a - idt e n • to her g r‘ g r ‘ d e i art- tht km tu S lO 1*11 nit. h » I - L'U I d e i th e to. m e nit th I the official n u m b e r t u d e n t > fo r th i s s u m - et b e e n d e t e r m i n e d t h e r e a r e 1,000 to in t h e p r o g r a m , r o f p r o v i s i o n a l s t u - .1 d r a m a t i c a l l y a f t e r r e q u i r e m e n t s w e r e led thrc i v e a r s a g o , " H a r t - lid. H e s a i d b e f o r e t h e e n r o l l- requi it r e q u i r e m e n t s w e r e c h a n g e d , w ere o n l y 200 to 300 p ro v i - nts e a c h s u m m e r , studi s t u d e n t s m u " t a t t e n d a th r e e - d a . o ■rientation p r o g r a m to r e g i s t e r te s ts o u r s e s , fur 11 learn a b o u t c a m p u s se r v ic e s . a n d I ■ a ls o vva*' a n o r i e n t a t i o n p r o - T h re to r th e ir p a r e n t s , g r a m r t m a n said t h e s t u d e n t s a r e re- I la quire, d to ta k e E n g li s h 306 — u n l e s s if it in t h e e n t r a n c e p la c e o u t the v exam m d a n v t h r e e c o u r s e s o u t fo l lo w in g f o u r g r o u p s : m a t h e - o f the in atics , fo r e ig n l a n g u a g e , social a n d b e v >ral s c ie n c e " a n d n a t u r a l sc i­ e n c e s , ta k e p l a c e m e n t P l a c e m e n t e x a m s a r e tire to d e t n m u s t u d e n t s h o u l d b e p la c e d in a n d to se e if ta k e n level t h e t h e \ c a n p la c e o u t o f th e c o u r s e . s t u d e n t s w h o h a d fo r e ig n l a n ­ g u a g e in h i g h s c h o o l a r e s tr o n g ly e n c o u r a g e d to ta k e th u f o r e ig n l a n ­ guage- e x a m t o se e if t h e y c a n p la c e o u t o f it," H a r t m a n said. A t th e e n d o f t h e s u m m e r , p r o v i ­ s io n a l s t u d e n t s will be g r o u p e d bv g r a d e p o i n t a v e r a g e . A c c e p t a n c e will be d e t e r m i n e d bv th e i r G P A . " T h e s t u d e n t " w h o m a k e a 2.0 o r b e t t e r will h a v e r e g u l a r a d m i s s i o n in t h e fall H a r t m a n said. s t u d e n t " w h o m a k e a 1.3 to 1.99 G P A m a v c o n t i n u e in th e fall a> p ro - \ i " i o n a l s t u d e n t " a n d still m u " t ta k e t h e r e q u i r e d c o u r s e s S t u d e n t " w ith le s s t h a n a 1.5 G P A a r e u n a b l e t o c o n t i n u e a t tht- U n i v e r s ity The s u c c e s s r a t e ror p r o v i s i o n a l s t u d e n t s v a rie s . " I n th e p a s t few v e a r s a b o u t 30 to 66 p e r c e n t m a k e t h e 2 0 in t h e s u m m e r , " H a r t m a n s a id . L a s t s u m m e r , 30 p e r c e n t m a d e a 2 0 or b e tt e r , 25 p e r c e n t w e r e c o n ­ t i n u e d . a n d 25 p e r c e n t m a d e les" t h a n a 1.5 G P A , H a r t m a n said. T h e s u c c e s s ra te for th e c o n t i n u ­ in g s t u d e n t s in t h e fall is o n l y a b o u t 15 t o 20 p e r c e n t , H a r t m a n said. H e "aid c o n t i n u i n g s t u d e n t s a r e g i v e n a s e c o n d c h a n c e b e c a u s e th e v n e e d ti m e to a d | u s t to c o lle g e s t u d y i n g . H a r t m a n s a id t h a t in s p i t e of p r o - v is io n a l s t u d e n t s lo w s u c c e s s rate, it i" a g o o d p r o g r a m a n d s h o u l d be c o n t i n u e d . S a r a h S h e r m a n , a n in t e r i o r d e ­ sig n s e n i o r w h o p a r t i c i p a t e d in th e p r o g r a m th e s u m m e r of 1981, "aid " h e a p p r o v e s of th e p r o g r a m . in "I f ( p r o v i s i o n a l s t u d e n t " ) a r e th a t i n t e r e s t e d t h e y in p u r s u i n g s h o u l d b e g iv e n a c h a n c e , " S h e r ­ m a n said . it, C o u r t n e y D v s o n , S o n v a R e n e b e r g a n d B e c k y V a n d i v e r , w h o a re p a r ­ ti c ip a t in g in th e p r o g r a m , s a i d t h e y a p p r e c i a t e tht' c h a n c e to p r o v e th e y a r e c a p a b l e o f c o m p l e t i n g t h e w o r k at t h e U n iv e rM tv A n d all t h r e e a r e c o n f i d e n t thev will be a b le to m a k e th e g r a d e . " It f a r , " D y s o n lo o k s p r o m i s i n g s a id . s o B e m y n e ig h b o r George Leake, a representative of the Inter-Coopera- tive Council, speaks at a rally on the West Mall Wednesday about the advantages of co-op living, such as sharing chores and reducing costs. Robert Cohen. Daily Texan Staff UT students may have problem s finding homes in N orthw est Hills By DANIEL HUTTON Daily Texan Staff W h il e m a n v b t u d e n t " a r e l o o k i n g f o r w a r d to t h e r e c e n t ly a d d e d s h u t ­ tle b u s s e r v ic e to N o r t h w e s t Hills, h i g h o c c u p a n c y in a p a r t ­ m e n t s in t h a t a r e a m a y force m a n y s t u d e n t s to lo o k e l s e w h e r e fo r h o u s - in g . le v e ls D o n M a u , a s s i s t a n t to t h e vice- p r e s i d e n t f o r b u s i n e s s a ff a irs a n d U T s h u t t l e b u s a d m i n i s t r a t o r , e s t i ­ m a t e d 850 t h e s t u d e n t s N o r t h w e s t H ills a r e a . U T a d m i n i s ­ t r a ti o n officials e x p e c t t h e n u m b e r to i n c r e a s e in t h e fall. live in K eith W a r n e r , c o - o w n e r of C e n - t u r i o n P r o p e r t i e s , sa id t h e q u a l i t y of in b o t h a p a r t m e n t s a n d h o u s i n g t h e N o r t h w e s t H ills in d u p l e x e s a re a is h ig h . " T h e u n i t s a r e n e w e r a n d b e t t e r b u ilt b e c a u s e city b u i l d i n g r e q u i r e ­ m e n t s w e r e t o u g h e r t h a n w h e n R iv ­ a p a r t m e n t s ) w e r e e r s i d e b u i l t , " W a r n e r sa id . ( a r e a R e n ta l r a t e s in N o r t h w e s t H ills a r e s l ig h t ly h i g h e r t h a n t h o s e in th e R iv e r s id e a r e a , sa id a p a r t m e n t m a n ­ a g e r s in N o r t h w e s t Hills. P rice s for o n e - b e d r o o m a p a r t m e n t s r a n g e fr o m $315 t w o - b e d ­ t o $450, a n d r o o m a p a r t m e n t s r a n g e f r o m $380 to $545. S in c e t h e a n n o u n c e m e n t o t t h e th e n u m b e r o f n e w s h u t t l e r o u t e , " t u d e n t " a p p l y i n g l e a s e s h a s i n c r e a s e d . for a p a r t m e n t T e r e s a D e r k s , a s s i s t a n t m a n a g e r of R id g e H o l l o w A p a r t m e n t s at 600 W o o d H o l l o w D riv e , sa id 15 p e r c e n t of r e s i d e n t s a r e s t u ­ d e n t s , w h i l e 92 p e r c e n t o f th e le a s ­ in g traffic h a s b e e n s t u d e n t s . t h e c u r r e n t R id g e C r e s t A p a r t m e n t s , 3456 N o r t h H ills D riv e , r e p o r t e d 20 p e r ­ c e n t o f its r e s i d e n t ^ a r e s t u d e n t s . The o c c u p a n c y level is 100 p e r c e n t . Ja n ie S eib , a s s i s t a n t m a n a g e r of R id g e C r e s t A p a r t m e n t s , said th e c o m p l e x h a s n o w a i t i n g list, b u t th e n u m b e r o f s t u d e n t t e n a n t s is n o t e x ­ p e c t e d t o i n c r e a s e b e c a u s e th e y a r e s o t r a n s i e n t . U •G B O O K S A L E B IG B O O K SA L E B IG B O O K S A L E SALE®; H© S j Mi CD We en Cfl mu D U * 1 BOOK SALE BUY & & SAVE RED TAG PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE * YE 10% MONDAY SAVE 20% TUESDAY ViÉM n 69 © © X 08 M V S3 O O* > M S3 m © S3©o * SAVE 40% FRIDAY AVE 50% SATURDAY >’() PHONE ORDERS PLEASE...First Come, First Serve Basis r y ^ r r . f r A ' t* ',*■r ,■ *» • *■* *- - \rJ iirr ■’ T R A D E B O O K S • SE C O N D LEVEL SAVE a t t h e UNIVERSITY CO-OP 2246 G uadalupe V isa/M astercharge Accepted ph o ne 476-7211 t j B I G BO O K S A L E BIG BOOK S A L E BIG BOOK S A L E BIG MY & $ SIZZLCR WANT ADS 20Words C doys $700 C ñll T h e Da il y T e x a n CLASSIFIED HOT UN€ 471-5244 TO PIRC€ VOUR RD. SRV ”CHRRG€ IT!" H e re s on exciting o o s s ifie d a d v e rtis in g sell ing p o c k o g e for re a d e rs of TH€ DAILV T6XAN ujho w o u l d like to turn u n w a n t e d items into cash! f o r only $3 p e r h a p s the most p r o f i t a b le $3 you ever spent -th e Texan w ill run your 2 0 w o r d a d for five day s . AND THAT S NOT A U ! If your item doesn t sell, give us a call a n d w e II run your a d on ADDIT IO NAL f lV € DAVS f R € € ! T h e Da il y T e x a n SUPCR SUMMER SIZZICR DCTRILS 1 ’ Advertisements moy be billed to individuals listed in either the university directory or the Austin telephone directory Prepayment moy be mode by cosh (in person), check. VISA or MosterCard (Certoin classifications always require advance payment ) 2 These rates are not available to businesses dealers or institutions and are for private party advertising only Aates apply to all classifications €XC€PT 1 10 through 180 JSO through SOU and 620 through 940 Value of items odvertised for sole must not exceed J500 and price MUST appear in the r,dvertising copy J Minimum ad is 20 words Additional words i< per word per day Although ads moy be cancelled short of full run. no refunds con be mode ot this low rote 4 If on Rem offered for sole remains unsold after five days, on additional five day run moy be obtained free by colling 471 5244 w ithin two working days of the ocfs expiration NO COPS' CHANGES con be perm itted (except in prices) 5 All advertising placed under this offer must run BCTOAC September 1 1985 Cold dessert sparks battle for business B y DAVID SC H W A R T Z Daily Texan Staff The number of ice cream retail stores along G uadalupe Street re­ cently has been c hanging as often as Baskin Robbins' the month. flavor of During the last three months, Udder Delight and Swenson's have gone out of business; Steve's Ice Cream has opened and Dane Cone in Dobie Mall has been sold and re­ opened as Cone Appetit. A m y Miller, co-owner and mana­ ger of A m y's Ice Creams, said the changing image of ice cream has sent ripples through the ice cream retail industry. "Ic e cream used to be thought of as a cold dessert for a hot d a y ," M il­ ler said. "N o w ad ays, it's a gourmet dessert eaten year-round. Ice cream's become trendy, making ice cream retail more competitive in the process." rhe U T area should expect even more ice cream retail stores to open in the future, said Dennis Passis, publications manager ot National Dipper — the magazine ot the ice cream retailing industry. "T h e U C LA -W estw ood campus area, an area similar in si/e to the University, supports 15 ice cream stores," Passis said. "Larg e cam­ puses can support these kinds of for more stores. grow th." I here's room Passis said ice cream retailers face the same problems that other small- to medium-si/.e businesses encoun­ ter. "According to Dun & Brad street, 80 percent of the businesses started today are not in existence five years later. The ice cream business is no "La ck of different," Passis said. managerial expertise and underfi­ nancing are the primary culprits." Because of high rents and the low average sale of the product, G u a­ dalupe Street ice cream merchants must sell a high volume to survive, M iller said, rhe proprietor must re­ spond to the tastes and interests of the consumer, she said "Peo ple don't go out for ice cream just to eat ice cream anymore. They want atmosphere, a place to lighten u p ," M iller said. important that the store has personality." "It's Passis said a store also needs to develop a consistent taste to draw customers and keep them. "Selecting the right ingredients for your determines everything store," Passis said. " A store can't buy a mix or cream base from one supplier one week and switch to an­ other supplier the next." i i i i i i i i l Steve fceCream HT Clinic serves ‘working poor The Daily Texan/Thursday, June ' 3 1985/Page moto am MMWfíMJimm wsmiovmm m m a B y D ELIA B C E R V A N T ES Daily Texan Staff i ew students are aware of The People's Com m unity Clinic and that is exai tly how the clinic 's manage- ment would like it to remain, an of­ ficial from the dim e said W ednes­ day. The People's Clinic, .in alternative health care facility at 408 W. 23rd St., is quite accessible to the U niver­ sity, but less than 5 percent of its patrons are L I students, said Kathy W illiam s, counseling toordinator at the clinic. " O u r target area is what we call the working poor," W illiam s said. "Because we are limited in the num­ ber of people w e can see, we prefer to see those1 w ho don't have any other source for health care. " W e are not trying to have a lot of U I students as patients," William s said. to come across as 'this is a great place,' which I think it is." " W e don't want William s said the clinic would not refuse service to anyone and would welcome students' families and stu­ dent-. who preferred the clinic over the L I Student Health Center. The clinic was opened in 1970 by a group of volunteer doctors and nurses, W illiam s said. These volun­ teers saw a need to care for the street people who could not afford medical care. Lhe clinic has evolved into a com­ prehensive medical facility offering a variety of health care services general medicine, women's health i are and a teen-age clinic. The clinic also offers special services including counseling; a herpes support group, fertility awareness classes; Lama/e classes and nutrition i hildbirth counseling, W illiam s said. I he clinic is known for its unique philosophy, which is "providing quality medical care with a strong emphasis on health education in an atmosphere that is supportive of pa­ tients and staff," W illiam s said. " I think we have an image of being a hippie clinic, but I think we are very professional," she said. Medical costs at the clinic are as­ sessed on a sliding fee scale. The higher the income of the patients, the more they will pay for the care they receive. The clinic is funded by the state, city, county and federal governments. Priscilla Boston, appeals coordi­ nator with the Austin-Travis C oun­ ty Health Department's medical as­ sistance program, said the clinic fills a gap for persons who normally cannot afford health < are "T h e clinic fills an important role in our com munity network of health care services," said Boston, also a former employee of the clinic Boston said the clinic is an alter­ native for people without health in surance, and for people who cannot afford private physicians but a r e not poor enough for government-fund ed facilities. The clinic, in affiliation with the national Herpes Resource Center, sponsors Austin HI I P, a herpes support group. I he group offers a place for people with herpes tn Improv#m#n! afté» lesson Take home cassette*» to ' fSt i skills Timé a n o study m an a g e m e n t te c h n iq u e s S u b sta n tial alum ni d iscount I -H N AUSTIN: 1801 LAVACA 78701 472-8085 DALLAS: 11617 N. CENTRAL EXPY. 78243 CALL TO RESERVE SEAT IN INTRODUCTORY SESSIONS JUNE 17 & 24 i El HOUSTON POST is back with Sizzling Summer Specials r ™ Only $105# Call in Austin 442-8761 JOE R. NEELEY, JR., D.D.S. GARY H. WILLCOX, D.D.S. SCOTT A. SAMUELSON, D.D.S. Are Pleased to Announce the Associat in c 1 S. S. KHALIL, D.M.D. G eneral Dentistry Office Hours: M O N D A Y -T H U R SD A Y 8:00 a.m .-8:00 p m FR ID A Y 8:00 a.m .-5:30 p.m. SA T U RD A Y 10:00 a.m .-4:00 p.m 2205 South Lamar Austin, Texas 78704 443-616' EVERY WOMAN’S CONCERN C o n f i d e n t i a l . P r o f e s s i o n a l R ep ro d u c tiv e C a re • Free Pregnancy Testing • Problem Pregnancy Counseling • Abortion Services i- m BSESSSSSSi • B irth Control • Pap Test I l O b II REPRO D UCTIVE SER V IC ES • B o a r d C e r t if ie d O b - G y n e c o lo g is t * • I ¡c e n s e d N u r r i n f S t a ff a E x p e r ie n c e d C o u n s e l o r s a O n O R s h u ttle 458-8274 1009 E. 40th. Free Samples ofYobla Win Yo lYoplaft ifYogurt, T - s h ir t s June 13 Texas Union a 1 0 0 % NA T UR AL $y 40 Acres Dining ¡,9 Room 8a.m.-ll:30 am >6plail‘ YOGURT I K . jj v V .-*■** ! . i - _ < - V, • ‘ J’ * V i t X & J t t f f t '- .In ? t G u y ü u t/ * y , • - v * . . . . Page 6 The D aily Texan Thursday, June 13, 1985 Effect of ecstasy remains unclear / \ cry th in g in m oderation Inscription on the temple of Apollo at Delphi The R o m a n s w ere prolific in s u c h hypocritical p re a c h in g s T h o u g h in struc tin g how life sh o u ld be lived, the etc h e d p h r a s e s far o utlived the d e ­ c adent society from w hich th e y cam e. C o n s u m p ti o n of food, d r in k a n d in d u lg e n c e in sex ev olved, for them , from p re o c c u p a tio n s to obsessions. T hese d a y s w e h a v e s o m e th in g better — a n easily ac- Cessable chemical device that ind u c e s the state Rom e p u r s u e d th r o u g h o u t its existence — p ro lo n g e d ecstasy. M o d e r n chemical ecstasy climbs d e e p into the b ra in 's cellular m etabolism . It plays w ith n e u ro - tranSmitters. the juices that n u k e the brain go — m a k ­ ing ecstasy w o rth y of respect. M a n y u se rs d o not give the d r u g d u e respect, u p p in g d o se s to near-toxic lev­ els a n d , p rob a ble most d a n g e ro u s ly , u sin g the d r u g w ith ferocious frequem v Q u ite often a distorted logic t a k e s ov er w h e n a n ew d r u g te c hn olog y is m a d e available. C ocaine w as to pro v id e i n s i g h t into th e in ner c o nscio usn ess. L S D w as seen in the s a m e light. Thalidomide, consid ered a w o n d e r d r u g , w as f o u n d to c a u se birth defects. Even antibiotics, after d e c a d e s of o v e ru se , have b e g u n to bre e d m u ta te d , im m u n e bacteria. All these d r u g s w ere at o n e time th o u g h t to be harm less. T h e fact th a t ecstasy is curren tly legal m ay be c o n ­ trib u tin g to this attitud e. But that is c h anging . H o p e fu lly , the d isre g a rd held for the u n k n o w n lo n g -te rm effects of ecstasv use will ch a n g e as well. — R ussell Scott ‘Reforms’ offset AISD pay raise W hile th e 69th Legislature fum bled o ver fine- tu n in g e d u c a tio n reform s set out in H o u s e Bill 72, school districts a r o u n d th e state filled in the details the m se lv e s. I heir asso rte d accom ­ p lis h m e n ts p ro v id e case stud ies for reform in o th er states a n d at th e collegiate level. A u s tin 's scorecard is m ixed. S ta n d a rd iz e d test scores are u p , but m o re s tu d e n ts are failing their class­ es. A n d w'hile the A ustin I n d e p e n d e n t School D is­ trict's c ia m p d o w n on extracurriculars sent ath le te s back to the classro om (the Crockett High School g i r l s ' track te a m lost % p e r c e n t of its m em bers), s o m e g e n u ­ in e ly ed u c a tio n a l p ro g ra m s such as the A cadem ic De­ ca th lo n , F u tu re Problem Solvers a n d the Write Place w e r e e lim in ate d at several schools. T h e bill's b road impact on A ustin is a s tu d y in ex­ tre m ism . W hile AISD quietly assim ilated th e required " n o p ass, n o plav" rule a n d 10-absence limit, the d is ­ trict v o lu n te e re d even m ore red tape. Individual pass- fail g ra d e repo rts w e re req uired for all off-cam pus ex­ tracurricular activities, a n d ab sences w e re allocated by se m e s te r a n d p u rp o se . U n avo id ably, s tu d e n t m orale suffered. S om e A ustin s tu d e n ts disqualified from c ontests a n d d u b m e e ting s called the reform s " c o m m u n is m " a n d said they w ere read y to " th r o w in the towel, b ecause effort d o e s not c o u n t in this s y s te m ." Still, for s t u d e n t s , high school tribulations have a te n d e n c y to fade a w a \ quickly, But w h e n teachers find th e school svsfeem u nbearable, they quit a n d d o n 't c o m e back. Tragically, that is exactly w h a t is h a p p e n in g . In Feb­ ru a ry , a s u rv e y d istrib u te d to all teachers at A ustin H igh School fo u n d th at 96 p ercent co nsidered the overall m o ra le of the faculty " s o m e w h a t low " or "v e ry lo w ," a n d 65 p e rc e n t w o u ld not choose teaching if th ey w e re m a k in g a career decision now. It m a \ be too late lor the "career la d d er" b o n u s a n d pay raise a d o p te d by the A ustin school board late M o n d a y night. In an u n u su a lly decisive a n d c o m ­ m e n d a b le action school trustees voted to increase teachers' salaries by $2,250 to -3,000 next vear. Still, th e district's v ete ran teac hers are qu itting in record n u m b e r s . W ith its volu ntary a u g m e n ta tio n an d acceleration of HB72, AISD mav hav e h a m m e r e d th ro u g h o n e b r e a k ­ neck c h a n g e too m anv. Austin's school-age children can only h o p e their best teachers are able to see be­ y o n d the price of reform. — A n d r e w C hin •ON THE OTHER HAND, IF WE CUT POWN ON THEIR VOPKA,THERE'S HABLE TO BE A SIS INCREASE IN RUSSIAN ROULETTE" Tv. ! ! i f t f t I- - \ ¡fJUlSGRAitlWUL * Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or the author of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Live your home-building fantasy I f a little girl in a strangely old- L eslie Burleson Texod." Tht• committee, which is expected to cost a minimum of $511,000, is to make a preliminary report in a year. But even a s peace and reconcilia­ tion were being preached from the podium the convention hall, leaders on both sides of the acrimo­ nious doctrinal and political light said thev expected the struggle to continue. in Paul Pressler, ot Houston, a chief strategist for the fundamentalist fac­ tion that maintains the church is rid­ dled with liberalism, said there is room for differences in the denom i­ nation "bu t no room for calling Cod a liar," a reference to the fundam en­ that some Baptists talists claim totally the Bible as don't accept w ithout error. "I'm not willing to com prom ise on what Cod said ," Pressler added. Russell Dilday, presid ent of Southw estern Baptist Theological Sem inan in I ort Worth and a leader of thv moderates, was equally un­ compromising. I support the peace com m ittee," Dilday said, but added, "there are still great issues that can't be solved bv personal reconciliation." C b a r g e s of liberalism, he said, are "sm oke si r e e n s to cover a different a fundamentalist takeover a g e n d a ot the church's administrative ma­ chinery. M oderates, after losing Tuesday's pivotal presidential election, m ount­ ed their own parliamentary attack, designed the presi­ to undercut d ent's chief power, with a w hole­ sa le challenge to President C harles Stanley s proposed "com m ittee on board ," the key group that controls appointm ents to the boards of trus­ t e e s of the denom ination's sem inar­ ies and Jgencies. I he moderates, who controlled voting during Wednesday morn­ i n g ' s session, are seeking to replace the fundamentalist-dominated, 62- member slate proposed by Stanley with an alternative slate made up of Baptist state presidents and leaders of the w om en's auxiliary ot the church. Teacher group decries practice of bypassing certification laws By BRIAN ADAMCIK Daily Texan Staff school Texas public teachers routinely teach outside their special­ ized areas against their will, even though they are often not qualified to teach in those areas, the presi­ dent of a prominent state teacher or­ ganization said W ednesday. John Cole, president of the Texas Federation of Teachers said at a Capitol p r e s s conference that many school districts in Texas regularly ig­ nore state certification laws and re­ quire teachers to teach subjects o r in grade levels in which they are not certified. Cole called upon the state Board of Education to limit the practice and presented a set ot guidelines he said the board should adopt to com ­ bat the abuses. Cole said many school districts with a shortage of teachers in a sub­ ject often require teachers certified in another subject to teach in the area in which there is a shortage. He said school officials often avoid certification laws by taking advan­ tage of loopholes in the form ot em ergency permits that school ad ­ ministrators mav issue. C ole said these permits often al­ low school officials to assign teach­ ers to teach as many as six classes a day in subject areas in which thev are not certified. "In theory, such permits are used by a school district to cope with temporary shortages of qualified fact, p erso n n el," Cole said, manv school districts abuse these "in permits by using them as a m eans the state's certification to avoid ru les." Cole said the most widespread abuse involves the temporary class­ room assignm ent permit. He said the permit allows a school district to assign a teacher to teach one class a dav in a field in which the teacher is not certified, even if the teacher has no college credit in that field. 1 le said school officials can use an em ergency permit, which allows a teacher certified in a subject area to teach that subject to grade levels in which the teacher is not certified. He said another option is a special assignm ents permit, which allows a teacher certified in a specific grade level to teach in that level, but in a special area in which the teacher is not certified. "In all of (these) cases, the par­ ents believe is a qualified there teacher in the classroom , yet there is n o n e," Cole said. "It should be em ­ phasized that the individual teach­ ers have no choice in such circum ­ stances. They must submit to an assignm ent or lose their |obs." that 8,000 Cole said the federation has no exact figures on how many teachers are teaching with the perm its, but estim ates temporary classroom assignm ent permits were in 1984, along with 5,000 issued em ergence permits and 1,000 spe­ cial assignment permits. He said TFT also estim ates that as many as 500,000 students in Texas may have been taught for at least part of the dav by teachers teaching under the permits. Cole said the superintendent or other representative of a school d is­ trict must first sign an affidavit be­ fore a temporary permit may be is­ sued. He said an administrator must sign j statem ent stating that a qualified applicant cannot be found tor that position, and that the per­ son placed under the temporary permit is the best-qualified person available. "In fact, there is almost no way to verify the truth of such o ath s," Cole said. "T h e TEA (Texas Education Agency) does not even see the T( AT unless the district is audited, and there is no procedure to verify the veracity of the statment made by the adm inistrator." Cole said the state Board of Edu­ cation should enact a set of guide­ lines the TFT has written, called the "truth of education" rule. The guidelines call on the board to en ­ force all present rules governing the permits, to require all districts to make formal applications before u s ­ ing a tem porary permit, and to pub­ lish the names of school districts that have teachers teaching under the permits. Brad Ritter, spokesman for the Texas State Teachers Association, said the problem may get worse as to more leave the profession in the wake of low salaries and the controversial reforms mandated by last year's ed ­ ucation reform bill. teachers an* prompted "It's an ongoing problem, and it's going to get w orse," he said. Local musicians raise funds for Africa By BRIAN EDWARDS Daily Texan Staff As s h i p m e n t s of aid generated by the USA for Africa project started M onday, Austin for Africa is in­ creasing its own fund-raising efforts to assist starving people in African countries Sherry Bovd, president of the board of directors of Austin for Afri­ ca, said though the group onh h a s existed since M ax, it has made prog ress. "W e are learning about what s going on o\’er there, about what is realistic and what isn t ,” Box'd said The group has received contribu­ from "50 cents to tions ranging $10 ,0 0 0 ," Bovd said. Elementary schools such as Pond Springs and Dawson have donated money, and M aplewood Kindergarten contribut­ ed $72.12, she said. "Som e of the letters we get with donations are heart-wrenching, Boyd said. O ne man sent a $200 check w'ith a note that said it was the "first of m anv." Another wom­ an sent a donation xvith a letter say­ ing she had promised God she would help figh* hunger. ‘We are learning about w h at’s going on over there, about what is real­ istic and what isn’t.' — Sherry Boyd, Austin for Africa director Austin for Africa has sponsored a music festival and is trying to put together an Austin for Africa album featuring Austin m usicians. Among musicians com m itted to the project is Janet Bellinghausen, w'ho wrote the Austin for Africa song and has given the copyright to the group. The group also is selling T-shirts and bumper stickers. Rita Renken, a member of Austin for Afrit ,i, said Austinites are show ­ ing great enthusiasm tor the fund- raising effort. "It's |ii->t incredible how manv people are getting in- volved, she said. "W e didn't antic­ ipate such a tremendous resp on se." Boyd said the group has about 65 all volunteers. "N o one members - is getting paid a th ing," she said. O ne m em ber of Austin for Africa, Turu W orkineh, is from Ethiopia, and her parents still live there. I he USA for Africa group, which includes such musicians as Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan and Tina I urner together to record "W e are the W orld” to raise money for African aid. cam e "W'e are the W orld" was the No. 1 single in the United States earlier this year. Monex generated from sales ol the record and related mer­ chandise1 is being used to buy food, clothing and medical supplies for A f r i c a n s affected by the drought that has gripped parts of that conti- nent for about two years. But sales of the "W e are the W orld" record, which a l s o includes previously unreleased songs by Huey Lewis, Springsteen and oth­ ers, have slowed. Kim Loe, an em ployee of Hast­ in g s Books and Records at 2338 G uadalupe St., said the "su rge is o v er." "But every now and then we sell o n e ," Foe said. THE STUDENT TRAVEL CENTER AT THE EDGE OF CAMPUS NORTH s C lu tte re d skies No, this American Airlines plane is not traveling in the wrong direction on Airport Boulevard. It is actually tak- Morrts Goen, Daily Texan Staff ing off from Robert Mueller Municipal Airport, ignoring nervous drivers on IH 35. MHMR panel praises work By RUDY SUSTAITA Daily Texan Staff M embers of the legislative over­ sight com m ittee on Mental Health and M ental Retardation W ednesday said the com m ittee has had a pro­ ductive year of recommending changes in m ental health programs. "W e got everything through (the Texas Legislature) that we w anted,” Karen Hale, director of tin1 Mental Health Association and member of the oversight com m ittee, said dur­ ing the com m ittee's final meeting W ednesday. "It w as a marvelous and hardworking group." The Legislature last June estab­ lished the com m ittee for one year to propose changes in mental health programs. The com m ittee made several rec­ o m m end ations, nin e of which passed the Legislature. Gov. Mark W hite signed one of those bills into law W ednesday. through "T h at's the im portant o n e ," said state Sen C het Brooks, D-Pasade- na, the sponsor of the bill. "It's a general law authorizing standard changes for the way the TDMHMR (Texas D ep artm en t of M ental Health and Mental Retardation) works with com m unity services." The law calls for a six-year plan to replace state grants and aid, ob­ tained through MHMR, with bind­ contracts as an alternative ing source of financial support for com ­ munity m ental health centers. Com ­ munity services now will have more flexiblity in obtaining money and no longer will have to rely on M H M R for funding. They now can work out contracts with profit and non-profit organizations. The law also establishes 24-hour em ergency screening, rapid crisis stabilization services, and com m u­ nity-based residential services or hospitalization. ‘It’s like the prison situa­ tion, where th e re ’s a lot of state money required. Nobody does anything until th e re ’s a crisis.’ — State Sen. Chet Brooks, D-Pasadena "T h e law opens new doors for op­ portunities," Brooks said. Oswin Chrisman, chairman of the oversight committee, said he was not pleased with the overall funding for the new law. "O bviously w e're u n d e rf u n d e d " Chrisman said ."T h ere's no sugar daddy in Austin. There are just not enough fu nd s." Chrisman said he hopes the next legislative session will yield more money for mental health programs. Another recom m endation made by the committee, which passed through the Legislature and is ex­ pected to be signed by W hite, is a law that establishes group homes for the disabled in residential areas. The homes are to contain no more than six beds and are not to be grouped closer than IV2 miles. Brooks, who sponsored two of the com m ittee recommendations in the Senate, said group-hom es l e g i s ­ lation ran into some opposition "b e ­ cause — and this is probably not a good way to put it — many were afraid it would overrun neighbor­ hoods institutional create zo n es." and Similar legislation waiting to be signed into law requires thv state to place 60 community beds for the mentally retarded in communities with a population of 100,000 per­ sons or more. Another proposal that cleared both houses calls for the creation of detoxification programs to divert admission of alcoholic pa­ tients away from state hospitals. Although Chrism an called the com m ittee's work excellent, he said the recommendations "should have been made 20 years ag o ." Brooks, who said his first year in the I egislature was 196.3, said the Legislature did try to cope with the problem 20 years ago. "W e piddled around, making changes here and th e re," Brooks said. "B ut it's like the prison situa­ tion, here there's a lot of state money required. Nobody does any­ thing until there's a crisis." The Legislature was required to improve conditions in the M H M R facilities under a court order by U .S . District Judge Barefoot Sanders. Rachel C heynev, board member of the Texas Alliance for the M ental­ ly III, said she was pleased with the com m ittee's work. " ’They've made a lot of good pro­ p osals," C hevney said. "O ver 80 to 90 percent of their recommenda­ tions passed. Som e were picked up and some were not. They ve done a fairly good job considering the situ­ ation. It (the mental health system) is like the education system — it's so far in the ru ts." Chrisman agreed. "O bviously, this is an evolving area," he said. The committee also was able to pass through the Legislature a bill which would request the M H M R and the Texas Department of Cor­ rections to collaborate in moving mentally ill patients from state pris­ o n s to mental health facilities. O verall, Chrisman said he was happy with the way the Legislature acted on the com m ittee recommen­ dations. Cool Down C— P c— P TEXAS UNION RECREATION CENTER 471-1944 Bowling, Pool, Videos, and Pinball, Shuffleboard, Darts, Table Games, Beer, Soft Drinks, Snacks and More Bring this ad and bowl 2nd game FR E E STUDENTS REGISTERED FOR THE SUMMER SESSION Last d a y a student (except in the School of Law) m ay change his registration in a first-term , n in e-w eek, or whole-session course from a letter grad e basis to a Pass- . Fail basis or from a Pass-Fail basis to a letter-g rad e basis is Tuesday, June 18,1985. MEXICO• EURAIL PASSES' STUDENT TOURS ‘ AIR TICKETS DOBIE MALL 4 6 9 -5 6 5 6 —O ffice of the R egistrar— The Daily Texan/Thursday, June 13, 198S/Pag« 9 W eaver returns to O rioles United Press International D ETRO IT Edw ard B< nnett W illiam s, one of the most per suasive barristers in Am erita, final ly has talked Earl W eaver into com ing back to manage his Baltimon Orioles. likely will Announcement of W eaver's ap pointment most ( om* Thursday in Baltimore when tin Orioles return home from a three the Detroit game series against Tigers In finally agreeing to return to th« job he gave up at the end of fhe 1982 season, W eaver replaces Joe Alto belli, the man w ho replaced him and led the Orioles to a World Cham pionship in 1983. Williams, the Orioles' owner and one of the foremost trial lawyers in the country, had to call on all his eloquence to lure the 54-year-old W eaver out of retirement W eaver preferred to come back to the Huh as a consultant but apparantly an estimated $1.5 million salary over three years changed his mind. W i t h o u t pinpointing Altobelli, h a s said the Orioles are W i l l i a m about to make personnel changes. W eaver met with W illiam s in W ashington W ednesday, then went to Baltimore to visit his daughter. That makes it convenient for the Orioles to introduce him there as their " n e w " manager. W eaver guided them to four pen­ n a n t s and one world championship. His successor, Altobelli, took the team to the world championship in 1983, but plagued by poor hitting, the club fell to fifth place and fin­ ished 19 games out of first in the American League Last last season. This year, the Orioles jumped in front with an impressive 18-9 start, but trailed the division-leading To­ ronto Blue Jays by seven games and had lost six of their last 10 games and into W ednesday night's contest against the Tigers. row going in a four W illiam s has always been one of W eaver's biggest boosters Ht even g a v t him a job a s a scout with the Orioles after W eaver quit managing them, but that contract had to be terminated because of a possible conflict of interest when W eaver went to work a s a color commenta­ tor for A B C . W eaver has been sounded out by the Montreal Ixpos, N e w York Yankees and lexas R a n g e r s about in the past few managing them months, but he turned down those offers. " I don't know if I'm ready to go back to managing y e t," W eaver said luesday. " I might accept some job as consultant, but I don't think I want to manage again. Not vet, a n y w a y ." Pacer dilemma: Tisdale or Benjamin? United Press International IN D IA N A P O L IS — The Indiana Pacers, with a draft history of bad luck, face pressure to take O klaho­ ma U niversity's 6-9 forward Wav- man Tisdale with the second choice overall in Tuesday's N B A college draft. N ew York was awarded the top pick, almost certain to be George­ last tow n's Patrick Ew in g, at month's N B A lottery. I he second selection went to the- Pacers, a team that in recent seasons lost a coin flip for the top draft choice and traded aw ay a pick that became a No 2 choice. I ans who have suffered through those pains and the N B A 's worst seasons each of the past three y e a r s have anxiously awaited the draft. A newspaper poll showed lisdale an overwhelm ing favorite among the fans, and " W e W ant W aym an " h a s become a catch-phrase for T V re­ ports. But for Tom Newell, the Pacers' director of player personnel and the main scout of college talent, the choice isn't so clear. Indiana, a team NBA Draft O d e r of selection m annual college draft at New York June 18 (As of June 12) First round /asbmgtor 13. Utah »a*ias (fron XI 20 Bo Second round T, Portland (frorr G< >den Slate 2f (fromNew 28 Chicago (trorr ',<■ 29 Chicago (from Sacramento) » O ipoers) 3! G o td e r state (from Ana 32 Bhoer ■ 33 Philadelphia ftrom Cíe 38 San Antonio (frorr iWashir gson vis i* Se w Jersey (from San Antonio ton )9 Poh 37 Utah 38 New Jersey Third round 4ft India t V i' ran 5? Hous (from I ¡'a i, Del ia LA ( le ip h ia 6 8 M /. : ■ ' ‘ desperate for a dominating center, might need 7-foot Benoit Benjamin of Creighton more than Tisdale, N ew ell said. " W e all know W aym an from the Olym pics last year. He's obviously the most visible of the tw o," Newell said. "Y o u 'v e never seen Benoit Beniamin play on national televi­ sion. People id w him PI isdale) play m the Olym pics and he has a char­ ismatic personality.” Tisdale and Benjamin both chose to use the N B A hardship rule and bypass their senior seasons in col­ lege to be eligible for this year's draft. " If you look at the draft over the next five years, in t e r m s of college centers, no one comes close to his ability," N ew ell said. " W e are a team with a legitimate need for a center in the post. It has made us look really, really hard. N ow we're looking at films from his first two years of college." Tisdale, who turned 21 Sunday, averaged 25.6 points and 10.1 re­ bounds a game and became the Big Eight's all-time top scorer in just three years at Oklahoma. is Benjamin, 20, the N C A A 's third-leading cart-t-r shot-blocker, averaging 4.6 a game in just three seasons with at least one in every game. He finished second in the na­ tion in rebounding last year with 451, TUTOR Econom ics Finance Math Royals’ Greg Pryor helps Oakland catcher Mike Heath remove his mask with a body block in Royal’s 3-2 win. United Press International Royals trip A ’s in 14th inning United Press International O A K L A N D — Jim Sundberg ripped an R B I single in the top of the 14th inning W ednesday to score Pat Sheridan from third base and give the Kansas C ity Royals a 3-2 decision over the Oakland A's. W ith one out in the 14th, Sheri­ dan hit a shot to the center field wall that glanced off D w ayne M urphy's glove for a triple. Greg Pryor fol­ lowed with a walk off loser Steve McCatty, 2-3, who had hurled 5'A innings of scoreless relief. Sundberg then followed with his single just over the glove of a leaping Alfredo Griffin at short. • Red Sox 7, Brewers 2 — In Bos­ ton, Glenn Hoffman drove in two runs to spark a four-run second in­ ning and Al Nipper scattered 10 hits to lead the Red Sox to a victory over M ilw aukee. in their The Red Sox, w h o got their ninth victory last 10 games, jumped on Moose Haas, 5-3, by sending nine men to the plate in the second. • Tigers 6, Orioles 2 — In Detroit, John Grubb s two-run single capped • c orn er o f M iK a n d N i m c h 4 7 * -1 1 7 7 What’s the second best thing you can do for your computer? Simple. Keep that computer or word processor clean and error free with Verbatim's Datalife Head Cleaning Disks. In 60 seconds or less, it removes most of the dust, dirt and debris that can gum up system performance and cause data loss and errors. And it works for both single and dual head drive systems. So what's the first best thingn Use only the finest quality flexible disks in y<>ur system Datalife b\ Verbatim Buv them both here Verbatim VERBATIM D IS K E T T E P R IC E S 5 0 " SS D D Disk> $25 Box of 10 5' 4" DS DD Disks $291 Box of 10 V2" M AC Disks $30" Box of 10 V is it o u r E x p a n d e d COM PUTER D EPARTM EN T featuring Com puters, Books, Soft­ ware & Accessories University Co-op M ajoring in Service Since 1896 EOTIPUTERS second level UNIVERSITY CO-OP Majoring in Service since 1896 M asterC ard 2246 G uod a iup f Phone 4 6 e , ’ . ' L 2246 Guadalupe 1 Hour FREE parking at 23rd & San Antonio with any $3 purchase. 1 hour FR EE Parking at 23rd \ San Antonio w any S3 purchase 476-7211 Page 10 The Daiiy Texan Thursday, June 13, 1985 Aussie’s ‘Monkey Grip’ sensitive, exciting By BRAD BECKMAN Daily Texan Staff for a Sta nd ing h e re in the midst of the craze is probably a little 'boy tos m ad d en in g few of you fem m es. Just this w eek "M a d o n n e r L a n d " was o p ened at Blooming- dale's in N ew York That's right, a line of clothing just for her. And can vou imagine 8 ,(XX) scream in g ad o­ lescents that tu rned out for a M a­ d onna look-alike contest; all of them w earing the sam e art-deco tonnage that I g u e ss they 're calling jewelry aw. But it you'll just go see the A u s ­ tralian film plac ing at H og g M e m o­ rial A u d itorium this w e e k e n d , those 'Material Carl" values that may be eith er un d erm ining A m erica today or heralding a new age will be tem ­ porarily waylaid. " M o n k e v Grip" h a s got to be the stro ng est w o m a n 's film to co m e from that cou ntry since " M y Brilliant C a r e e r ." as m uch It is not u n co m m o n for men to fail w h en they direct w o m e n 's films. S co fce s e 's "A lic e D o e s n 't I ive Here A n y m o r e " w a s n 't a mishap a s an aberration. Mazur- sky's " A n U n m arried W o m a n " w a s the kind of quirkv ’70s cinem a that tend s to land a little heavy after 90 m inutes. Invariably, w o m en make better films a b o u t them selv es than men can ever hope to do. I h i s film marks the directorial d e ­ but of K e n C am e ron a male. The film is about one w o m a n and how she relates to others. C a m ero n lets his female lead d o all the talking and " M o n k e y " escap es from its ex­ the story o f pected Nora, a div orcee-m other-jo urnaIist w h o ca n 't see m to find the right man to settle d ow n with. Don't m isu nd ersta nd Nora: she doesn't w ant to get married, sh e |ust wants fate. This is CBS won’t go broke By ED COMBS Daily Texan Staff lu n c E ffectivI* ( &■* Records /Y w ill charge MTV and o th e r video m i l'll p rogram ^ fo r the use ot CBS video c lip v The ne w contract also has a clause p ro h ib itin g síg­ neos anv m a te ria l w h ic h p ro m is e s the sale o r use o t blank tape re co rd in g e q u ipm e n t fro m a irin g re co rding tape o r 1 sat in my grimy office, wide- brimmed h.it pulled low o v er one eve. A half-emptv bottle of b our­ bon rested on mv de^k next to the file from mv last case I s journal­ ists often -ot a ro und like this "S p a d e , umm, 1 mean C o m b s " G o o d morning, is C BS Records public relations retu rnin g your call from three weeks ago thi> "G rea t,' 1 said as I dredged up the recollection of my original call. "1 isten. I need ^ome information. 1 work w i t h The Daily T e\an and . " O n e second, sir, I'll have to turn on the m e te r." "M e te r? W h a t m e te r’ "T he meter we use to calculate your bill "Bill? What bill?" Mv wits were as sharp as usual. " T h e bill we're going to sen d vou for the information you're re­ q u e s tin g ," the voice said. " I a s ­ sum e vou want inform ation." 1 threw d ow n my s hot of b ou r­ bon without twitching a muscle. "W ell, y e s , " I said as I regained my footing. "B u t I usuallv don't pay for information of this sort. I'm not Bob W oodw ard and you're not Deep Throat. I |ust want to know the release date for " A n d you expect us to tell you lust like that. For free." "W ell, yeah." "1 low' are we supposed to make money it we --tart g i v i n g e v e ry ­ thing aw ay for free? Us record com panies are sick and tired of supplying vou new sp a p e r people with som ething to write about so you can make m oney w'hile we get s q u a t." " H a n g on j u s t a m in u te '" 1 itali­ cized. "Y o u guvs d o get s o m e ­ thing out of thiv You get free publicity. 1 don't think we should have to pay vou for the right to give you publicity." The voice was getting testy. "A ll you freeloaders are the sam e 'G im m e, gimme, gim m e.' That's all we ever hear from you people Not e ven an ou nce of concern for C B S 's profit margin. Jesus, we don't even know where our next meal is co m in g from and all you can think about is yourself. You should be asham ed . You n ew spa­ per people are |ust like t h o s e vi­ deo netw ork clowns They actual­ ly expect us to let them use our videos for free!' I w a s shocked, but I tried to maintain an air of casual non -in­ terest. You have to be careful to avoid letting these people k now how you really feel. Show just a hint of surprise, and they'v e got you right where thev want vou. "Y o u 'r e charging for vid eo s!" I screamed " Y u p . " "R e a l m oney? " Y u p . " "B u t aren't videos full- length com m ercials for the s o n g s ’ Don't videos help sell more al­ b u m s ? " just " O h , sure. Just because 86 out of the Top KM) songs last w'eek had videos, vou try to draw som e correlation betw een video t han- nels p lacing our clips and record sales. You people never tail to ' a m a / e me. You don't even u>n- sider tor a single second the astro­ nomical production costs involved in m ak ing a video. Do you realize how much it costs to produce the - subtle special effects of a Quiet Riot clip? W hy , d eveloping alone s om etim es puts us in the red, and that's w hen we go to ( ckerd 's to for the price of get one tw-o prints " G e e z , next thing you know, you g u y s are going to start charg ­ ing radio stations to play the sin- g l e s " "Y e p . Five ninety-five a shot And that's not all. W e also get to pick what com m ercials they run. For e xam p le, since every single blank tape and every single tape recorder in the entire universe is used to m ake bootlegs, we won't let any o f our outlets show c o m ­ mercials for th ose products. We also get to pick the color of all their offices " Y o u 'r e kidding. " N o p e , " the voice said "N o w , don't you th ink you 'd better ask what you called to ask. You ve al­ ready run up a bill of $ 24.95. And I'll bet you d on't have a c o u p o n ." The independent Nora finds romance with the restless Javo, a cocaine junkie in ‘Monkey Grip,’ debut of Australian director Ken Cameron. to find the right man. T h e quirkiest characters frequently m ake tor the the best films and, a s it happens man Nora decides is the right one is an irresponsible junkie. I h i s film is adapted from a b e s t ­ selling Australian novel bv the sam e nam e, and the original novelist and the directo r collaborated on the script. \'om Ha/.elhurst, who plays Nora, t u r n s in a trulv shin in g per­ smack-ridden male formance in her first lead role. Javo, the is played by another new com er, Colin I riels, and Alice Garner is w o n d er­ ful as the daughter. lead, I w o n 't fool you. 1 managed to catch most of th e slang th.it was used, having onct lived in A u stra­ lia, but it will see m almost a foreign tongue to many people. The film takes place in and around the m u si­ cians' and acto rs' underground in the C arlton-1 itzroy suburb of M el­ b ourne. T h e characters are q u intes­ sential exa m p le s of the young A u s ­ tralian adult. Aussie men are often notoriously brash and sexist while y o u n g Aussie w o m en tend to be very in depend en t. M usic, sex, and drugs — ev e ry ­ body is looking to get w h atev er they can. T h e s e elem e n ts m ake for a vol­ atile reaction. There's no avoid ing it, since everybody needs s o m e ­ body, even if it's your lover's best friend. I he film makes ino bones about b ein g quite Ih e y o u n g serious. adult them es are familiar, but the and e n v iro n m e n t is Australian " M o n k e y " gives us a w indow into a culture that too m any of os know too little about. think, T h e " m o n k e y grip' of the title may be the grip o f love or it may be the grip of smack. That issue is left, intentionally am biguous. 1 All I d o know is that this is an e x ­ ceptional film if you want to cop a couple hours of a culture that's ju st a little alien to our own. " M o n k e y G r i p " ; directed by Ken C a m e r o n ; s h o w in g in Hogg A u d i­ toriu m , Friday through Saturday at 7:30 p.m. ‘ 1984’ finally hits big screen The John Hurt, probably the actor with the m ost painful store of ch ar­ a c t e r s in Hollywood history, once again gives a stun ning portrayal of a tormented individual, O rw ell's u n ­ f o r tu n a te p r o ta g o n i s t W in s to n indifference twisted Sm ith. painted on his face perfectly m atch ­ e s the stoic front that Smith must preserve before the state as he holds back the emotional torment in his mind. Hurt's pale, figure seem s stooped in a palsy from car­ rying the great b urden of totalitari­ anism on his back. stark Sm ith's tragic love, Julia (Suzanna Hamilton) matches W inston's frail­ ty H am ilton's lovely, vet tragic fea­ tures and her attem pts at strength through her defiance in speech of the system are believable in all cas- in his fatherlike But the most amazing perform ­ ance in this feature com es from the late Richard Burton, final screen appearance. As W inston's seem ing salvation and ultimate tor­ mentor, Burton is superb, wielding a affection while he grinds W inston's body in crippling tortures. The ability of Burton's character to actually destroy W in­ ston's defiance and skew his mind toward the 11 logic of love for Big Brother is so realistic as to be fright­ ening. Burton's character portrays a torm ent m ore horrifying even than the constan t image of Big Brother, looming from every poster, video screen and wall of the flattened, bombed-o ut city of London. " 1 9 8 4 " ; starring John Hurt and Richard Burton, at the Capital Pla­ za Theater and available on vid eo­ cassette. Rating: ★ ★ ★ G By BRIAN BARNAUD Daily Texan Staff the last year, ce le b ratio n It's nice to see that the latest film version of "19 84 h a s finally made it to local screens With all the hoopla of s u r o u n d in g O r w e l l ' s vision there s eem ed to be a lack of interest in the storyline of the novel itself. W e all talked about Big Brother theories, "d o u b le sp e a k like, but and w h o really dealt with the life of W inston Sm ith? His story? W ho re­ ally read the book? the i think it highly probable that not a s m any people w h o talk about "1984” have actu alh read it, and that's a real sham e. It's on e hell of a good story, fear theories and w arn ­ i n g s aside. the The great h o p e b ehind bringing a literarv piece to the silver screen is that a gob of people will, after see­ ing the book. O f course variables like cover-art tie-ins for the " m o v i e " edition of the book and how m an y folks go see the film can influence this. film, read U nfortunately, not many people are going to see this production of the classic. It's a real sham e, for " 1 9 8 4 " is o n e hell of a film. N ob od y 's g oing to see it because Hollywood is sneak ing it around from theater to theater, city to city, like a d eform ed child that, as lov­ able .is it is, just c a n 't be taken out into the light Inexplicable behavior for an industry that h a s no qualms about releasing all the double-barrel crap theaters through the sultrv su m m er months. that will the till In any case the film is here and can be seen at the theater or, as of Ju ne 7th, on videocassette. " 1 9 8 4 " is a m ovie that at first makes for a visual grab, but soon seduces the aud ien ce with its char­ a c t e r s and their perform ances. The successful mix of th ese elem ents is the movie's strong point. T h e film is dressed in stark tones. The burned-out, cratered im age of "A irstrip O n e " (L ond on) is left in such cold grays and melted whites that the film b eco m es a black-and- white image, only lightlv illuminat­ ed m the w a sh e d -o u t tones of hand coloring. The only true color com es from a d ream veil where W inston sees his freed om , a grassy hillside that seem s to yellow like aged film stock as the dream lades and the torture of society increases. I he film's set design graphically displays a society in total sta gna­ tion. M achinery from com puter ter­ to helicopters conveys a minals 1940s feeling in a 1980s world. In the world of Big Brother, the indi­ vidual cannot survive and thus ac­ com plishm ent becom es nil. I he film lets the viewer believe that 40 years of history include nothing in the way of accom plishm ent or innova­ tion. Battles are fought in a Victori­ an mode with the deadly addition of atom bom bs and prop bombers. C o m p u te rs have punch keys and telephone dials. m eans that w h en the screen isn't filled with information on the goals latest Five Year Plan, Big of the B r o t h e r ' s im a g e watches menacingly. c o n c e n t r a t e d friendly "User Katrina and her Waves will play at the Austin Opera House Friday night. Waves to hit Austin By DAVID MENCONI Daily Texan Staff an O n e of the early contenders for this year's Best S u m m e r Single* is Katrina And The W aves' "W alking O n S u n s h in e ," irrepressibly b ouncy little song that conclusively proves a well-worn riff can still be a good riff, if you treat it right. It also show cases guitarist lead singer Ka trina Leskam ch 's big, belt-it-out voice (an unusual find in a pop gui tar band like this), and is only one of the manv pleasures to be found on the b and's self-titled, American debut LP. it an The album in d e p e n d en t-lab e l agreeable, is straight-ahead set of traditional pop confectio naries, not too sweet, slick or heavy a perfect sum mer soundtrack In addition to "W alking features such O n S u n s h in e ," standouts as the original version of " G o in g D ow n To I iverpool" (cov­ ered by the Bangles last year) and " G a m e O f L o v e ." Since it's a com pi­ lation culled from the band's two C a n a d ia n re­ leases, it could use a bit more focus, but that's more than alleviated by the* sympathetic production and ar rangem ents, which put Leskanich's boom ing vou e out front w h ere it b e ­ ltings. About the onlv real problem is L esk an ich 's occasionally uncanny similarity to other w om an singers particularly Pat Benetar on " D o You Want C rying' and the Pretenders Chrissie Hynde Kerr on "M ach in e Gun S m ith ." And som ew h ere in a much better place than this world, Jam s Joplin is smiling over "C ry I or M e . " As far as vocal role models go, she could do a lot worse (and she plays a hell of a lot better guitar than H ynde, too) The b a n d ' s current lineup solidi fied in 1981 in Cam bridge, Lngland, although there were earlier versions of the g roup as tar bat k as 1973 Leskanich, born in Kansas and raised on U.S. Air Force bases all over E urope, had originally met bassist Vince de la Cruz, another Air Force brat, in a Catholic folk choir directed bv his mother. They hooked up with a couple of former Cam bridge students, d ru m m er Alex C ooper (with a degree in history) and guitarist Kimberley Rew (an A nglo-Saxon archaeology special­ ist). " U n d e r w a t e r in 1980, after Rew, formerly of the seminal Brit­ ish new wave cultists the Soft Bovs, was available after his band's reg ret­ table breakup the m u c h - h e r a l d e d M o onlig ht" album Rew h a s h a n ­ the majority of the Waves' dled songwriting the beginning, and while h i s com positions rarely approach the twisted brilliance of h i s old b andm ate, Robvn Hitch cock, they're at least proof positive of the beauty to be found in simplic­ ity. from first I heir But back m the early part of t hi s decade, synthesizers, haircuts and pretentious angst ridden attitudes w ere all the rage, and Katrina And Ih e Waves went bv and large un- noticed two albums gained the band a nominal cult fol­ lowing, and v. itli the attendant rise of American garagt bunds such as R I M , l e t ' s Active and the dBs, as vvt II a s tin* a c c e s s of the Bangles cov er of " G o in g D ow n To Liver­ p o o l," the Waves found them selves right on top of the latest trend. I he b and's c urrent headlining A m e m an tour is their lirst, and the\ will also do a series of dates o p e n in g for Don H enley Liter in the sum m er. Their show at the Opera House will also be the* first roadshow after its recent remodeling. In addition to cosmetic im provem en ts, Arlyn S tu ­ dios has installed a new sound sys­ tem with 48-track facilities for live tapings, and the O p e ra House also boasts facilities for video produc­ tion. Supergirl’s execution party This Friday, DC Comics, the people who brought you S u p e r­ man and hundreds of other im ­ mortal com ic heroes, will cele­ brate their 50th anniversary by killing off the Man of Steel's c o u s ­ in. T h a t's right. After 20 years, three lousy com ic series, and one te rrib le movie, Supergirl really bites the dust. T o mark this m em orable occa­ s io n , Phoenix Books and C om ics, in the Guadalup e 34 S h o p p in g C enter, will hold a bring-your- ow n -b ev era g e funeral wake on Su n d a y afternoon. From 2 p.m . to 6 p .m ., all m o urners of the d e ­ ceased can say the Maid of Steel with all the a p p ro­ farewell to priate jocularity she deserves. — Bob M o se l y III Laguna Gloria Art M u seu m 's sum m er film series begins at 9:30 p.m. Friday in Hogg Auditorium. The June 14 show ing includes Bel­ gian director Chantel A kerm an's " T h e Eig hties" and Robert B e n ­ ton's 1964 short, " A Texas R o­ m a n c e ." " T h e Eighties" is a w ide­ ly a b o u t musicals and is reportedly s y m p a ­ thetic to the style of the old m u si­ cals while undermining the tradi­ t i o n a l s e r i e s continues every Friday at 9:00 p.m. for the next nine weeks at Laguna Gloria's outd oor theater. a c c l a i m e d c o n t e n t . f e a t u r e T h e — Jack Meredith & “ R E B E L DRIVE IN T H EATRE 8 9 0 2 B u rl0 t o n Rd. PH. 385-7217 ORIGIN A L/JJNCiJT_ _ A D U LT S _ QNLY_ I W ANT TO BE BAD { S tarring : KAY P A R K E R I SHOW YOUR LOVE ( X X X I >1 O P E N N IG H TLY ~ ~ ~ S D U S K vC r J 2 N E W M O V IE S W E E K L Y VIDEO PEEPS IN 6 CHANNEL L A R G E S E L E C T I O N M A G S A N D T A P E S TAPE SALE AND RENTAL H • F T ’ I ■ B a f f i n « I A defense g a in s t cancer can be cooked up in your kitchen. Call us. IAMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY es Mmts N E W A G E B O O K S 2 4 th A S a n A n to n ie Op«iKv«ryMght Unlfll^O Open 11:00am Mon-Sat Open Sun 3:00pm Happy Hour Mon-Fri 5-7 Wf SPEC I At l/F l \ Y O U P tR S O N A I Í , S P IR IT U A L G R O W T H MfcDI IA IIO N n MFTAPHYSK S ( O S M O L O O Y fit ( ASSF IT F T A P tS T H E U R A N T I A B O O K S T O R E 10 6 R U N SAI 441 *794 10.0 I SOI Ml LAMAS A! LAMA» FLA/.A I I RN I N H U R t t N I S ! i >Y S A S H O R I S I O F FREE PARKING IN DOBIE GARAGE Desperately Seeking Susan |4:45 7:00 9:30__ Killing Fields 4:30 7:109:40 Future Kill 11:45 Mommie Dearest 12:00 2 1 S T & GUADALUPE I it SHOW S I.00 & b e ü l b b e p 3 n n Save 25% on self-serve copies until the 4th o f July! It's like buying three ( opies and getting a fourth one free! Hurry sale ends Independence Day, 198 >. D o b ii Mall .’02 I ( lU.ichilufx* •4 78-01 s a l e a t l o c a t i o n o n l y t h i s e T M B A c r n e e s2 5 0 TW I1 ITE SHOWS & MATINEES MON SAT ALL SHOWS Bf f 0RÍ 6 PM SUNDAY A HOt IDAYS 1ST SHOW ONLY ÍXCL SPfCIAl FNGAGÍMFNTS m ¿ f e y r i f t i n £ A / / ¡1 hiD S LfL C L'Jlfl June 12-29 , ' E nr K r w r v a t i o m 1 7 / 2H«« vSL. < npit< > |! rtv I 'lH v h o u * 214 W e s t 4 th S lr r .- t Yv * m BEVERLY HILLS COP R) ( 3 : 0 0 - 5 : 1 5 $ 2 . 5 0 ) - 7 : 3 0 9 : 3 0 O p e n lla m -M id m g h t H a p p y H o u r 4 -7 M o n -S a t and All D a y Sunday! tEtjc & b b e p 3 n n O ffe rs D ra ff Beer in i< e d mugs, p o p u la r im p o rt a n d dom estic longnecks, wines, soft drinks a n d 2 5 c set-ups fo r B Y O 's1 Ctic Hbbep 3nn O f f e r s a ! 7 lb c h a rb ro ile d b u n ) '' you w o n 't fo rg e t, as w e ll as e x c e p tio n a l roast b e e f a n d sm oked sau sage sand w ich e s to satisfy a n y a p p e tite ! £tjc ¡Hbbfp ilnn o ffe rs an a tm o sp h e m w h e re p e o p le cun g a th e r fo r darts, b o a rd gam es, p o o l a n d vin ta g e p in b a ll b a cke d u p b y the tunes yo u g re w up w ith ! Come on inn, and you'll come back again and again...! C lir Sibbcp H im 21 0 0 -B Riverside 4 4 1 -0 1 0 0 (East of Safeway Next to Godfathers) $2« SPECIAL Vi lb Burger & B everage o f Y o ur C hoice (1-4 Persons Per Coupon) BREWSTER'S MILLIONS (PG) SCREEN I SCREEN 2 1 1 5 -3 3 0 -5 :4 5 1 2 :1 5 - 2 .3 0 - 4 :4 5 52 50 -7 00 9 15 52.5 0 1 -1 0 15 S H O W IN G O N 2 SCREENS! FLETCH (PGj SCREEN 1: ( 1 2 :1 5 -2 :3 0 4 45 SCREEN2: (1 :1 5 -3 30 5 45 $ ¿ .5 0 ,-7 :0 0 -9 :1 5 $ 2 .5 0 10:15 S H O W IN G O N 2 SCREENS! RAMBO(R) (12:45-3:00-5:15 S2.50)-7:30-9:45 SHOWING ON 2 SCREENS! J A D U A R I Ü 8 4 M M 4 . K I A M N T V A U J T 4443222 ___________ BEVERLY HILLS COP (R) $2 5 0 1 -7 :3 0-9 (1 2 :3 0 -3 :0 0 -5 :1 5 R A M B O (R) ( 1 2 :3 0 - 2 :4 5 - 5 :1 5 - 7 : 1 5 -9 :3 0 $ 2 .5 0 ) A VIEW TO A KILL (PG) (1 :0 0 -3 :3 0 $ 2.50: 6 4 5 -9 :3 0 PERFECT(R) (1 2 :0 0 -2 :3 0 -5 :0 0 $2 .5 0 )-7 : 3 0 -9 :5 5 2.501-7: T O N I G H T S o u l N ig h t F r id a y Two of Austin's Hottest Bands: Zeitgeist & The Dharma Bums S a t u r d a y P a t i o P a r t y w itF i: Eloise Burrell & Trickle Down n o cover ix m H ALL MOVIES I C a re B e a rs ! G 12 3 0 -2 :3 0 P o lite A ca d II P G 13, 5 :0 0 -7 :4 5 -9 55 B a b y (PG ) 1 :0 0 -3 :0 0 P la t e s In The H e o r l PG l 4 :1 5 - 7 :0 0 - 9 :3 0 A L L 5 H O W 5 1 1 :3 0 -1 2 :1 5 A n n B A R G A I N P R I C E m ■ y n n $ < U U M f'N Ht U< V AT' - ••• •. ' Life June 6-8 \ 12-15 A fter Death 8pm at Boyd's Fork 1 h< un Room in the Road Winship Drama fa Charles Bell. I l l Building Adujh Sfi; Students, Senior (liu/eris, I I Fat ultv k Staff S3-, I H keb .nailable Inlurrnatinn. 171 1444 Summer Season tu kets available! 23rd k San Ja(into at the dooi El College of f f The D a 1 / Texan T h u rs d a y J u n e 13. 1985 P age i 1 P R E S I D I O T H E A T R E S I? 0 0 - 4 0 0 - |6 0 0 - 1 0 15_______ ' THE B R EA KFA ST C L U B h 1 3 0 - 3 : 3 0 - AMADEUS I go txx.»> I t i m '» ’ «. 3 0 0 - 6 1 5 - 9 : 3 0 71lcKcm,H I nS 15 3 0 7 3 5 - 9 4 0 2 1 0 - 4 1 0 - A V I L L A G E 2700AN0BBON • 4614352 6 1 0 8 0 5 1 0 0 0 - ------------- -— r t r ' (•• v H ? ' t m ' + 5 3 0 - 7 4 5 - 1 0 : 0 0 1 3 0 - 3 4 5 - 6 0 0 - 8 1 5 - K r . t f H H F A K F A T C L U B 0 1 : 3 0 - 3 : 3 0 - 5 : 3 0 - 7 3 0 - 9 3 0 R I V E R S I D E S • 441-6409 1930 RtVBFSlOE J V I 1 4 0 - 3 : 4 0 - I 5 4 0 - 7 4 0 - 9 4 0 RÍC F TARD PRYOR I h x n i . 12 0 0 - 2 3 0 - 5 0 0 - 7 3 0 - 1 0 0 0 :a c - P G Q f! OOLBV 5TEPEO 1 0 0 0 - 1 2 3 0 - 3 : 0 0 - 5 3 0 - 8 : 0 0 - 10 3 0 A (Jactus A|; TO N IG H T J a n e G illm a n no cover Friday and Saturday Nanci Griffith with Special Guest: Robert Keen 2 ''0 2 G U A U A L V 4 7 4 - 4 3 5 1 ¡ I 11 f íé f t l» 12 4 5 - 2 4 5 - 5 0 0 - 7 1 5 - 9 : 3 0 L A K E H I L L S A 24MNNWMTC • 44*0662 I f N | ) S POMORROU *1 AN RATE» IT k 'Return of tf* tytkhrr THE COOS' MUST BE French Bicycles from 1 4 9 A ll'85 TR EK S-on Sale 95 t O A ll trainers reduced f H 1- L ycra S horts - U -B o lt Lock — 1 9 95 1 3 95 H 2 O B ottle w / a llo y c a g e : 9 5 5 < 5 t o I a i i i l u w J e r s e y W. 24th St. Next to Tri-Towers 477-2142 Shop the Renaissance Market for those one of a kind Father s Day gifts V A C S i r ^ 4 7 4 —1.351 ¿ 4 0 2 Ü U A ü A l ^ r * STARTS TOMORROW! " P H I L I P P E N O IR E T C O M M A N D S TH E S C R E E N ." -B ru c e W illia m s o n , P la y b o y W I N N E R O F 3 F R E N C H A C A D E M Y A W A R D S (C e s a rs ) In c lu d in g B est P ic tu re , B e s t D ir e c to r m MY NCW P A R T N E R ( s 3 I-» I P» O U X ) A Film Bv CLAUDE ZIDI DIÑO DE LU.Rf.STUS PRESENTS THE BOUNTY T o d a y a t U n io n T h e a tr e 2 .0 0 U .T. 2 .5 0 N o n U .T. O n e D e a d l y S u m m e r A u s tin P r e m ie r T o d a y a t 7 : 0 0 p m H o g g A u d . 2 .5 0 UT 3 .0 0 N o n UT ?0th Century Fo« presents M A S H VIEW TO A KILL ’<■ 2 :0 0, 4 :3 0 , 7 :0 0 , 9 :4 5 N O PASSES HA.8K it; 13 2 :1 5 ,4 :4 5 ,7 : 1 5 ,9 : 5 0 WITNESS k 2 :3 0 ,7 :3 0 LADVHAWKE PG 13) 5 00, 9:55 892 277b BENTRLV HILLS COP « 2 :1 5 , 4 : 4 5 . 7 : 1 5 , 9 : 3 0 PERFECT i< 2:30, 5 :0 0, 7 :3 0, 9 :50 N O P A S S E S VIEW TO A KILL 2:0 0, 4 :3 0 , 7 00, 9 30 N O P A S S E S ‘“ CAM I LA’ m ayb e the hottest politically correct love story ever filmed. Beguilingly frank in its eroticism!’ —J, Hoberman, VILLAGE VOICE “ ‘CAMILA’ offers chic, vigorous entertainment...the film’s fever is contagious’.’ —Richard Corliss, TIME MAGAZINE “ A remarkable film, exploring the connections between personal and political freedom in the most human terms’.’ - Ir m a Velasco. PEOPLE MAGAZINE “ ‘CAMILA’ IS W ELL W O R TH ATTENDING...Susti Pecoraro gives an unusually strong performance of an intelligent woman who embraces her passion without hesitation!’ —Vincent Canby, NEW YORK TIMES from the people who care about the gifts they make to the people who care about the gifts they give. 23rd and Guadalupe just west of the University of Texas open Monday-Saturday, 8 am-dark "0€1<3HTEUI o film o ts u m m e » sunfcgrt e c re skin a n d escalating am orous misunderstandings - wit a n d »onv a b c x jrd :•»*> * ' *■ ■ ■ T o d a y a t 1 0 :1 5 p .m . U n io n T h e a t r e 2 .0 0 U.T. 2 .5 0 N o n U T . T o d a y a t 6 & M id n ig h t U n io n T h e a tr e 2 .0 0 U .T. 2 .5 0 N o n U .T. F ren ch w ith s u b title s T o d a y a t 9 : 3 0 H o g g A u d . 2 .0 0 U .T. 2 .5 0 N o n U .T . j g S o a r d i v a i f c JOIN O U R B A C K T O S C H O O L B LO W O U T A T J BOARDWALK BEACH CLUB 5 0 $ W E L L • 7 5 $ C A L L $1 0# P R E M I U M $3.00 COVER FOR WOMEN $4.00 FOR MEN CO M E AND ENJOY THE BEST IN MUSIC AND DRINKS 215 E. 6TH 479-8601 /M a s t e r c a r d Accepted For Word ads call 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 / F o r Display ads call 4 7 1 - 1 8 6 5 / 8 a . m . -4 : 3 0 p.m. M o n d a y - F r id a y /T S P Building 3 .2 0 0 / 2 5 0 0 Whitis Ave. V is a /M a s te rc a rd Accepted Page 1 2 íh e Da y Texan Thursday June 13 1985 REAL ESTATE SALES REAL ESTATE SALES REAL ESTATE SALES MERCHANDISE RENTAL 110 — Services 130 — Condos - 140 — M o b ile H o m e s- 2 4 0 — Boats 3 5 0 — R en ta l Services CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Consecutive Doy Rates D E A D L IN E SCHEDULE In th e e v e n t o f e r r o r * m o d e in o n a d v e r tis e m e n t, u n m e ­ e t c*te n o tic e m u s t b e g iv e n os r e - th e p u b lis h e r s a r e s p o n s ib le f o r o n ly O N E i n ­ c o r r e c t in s e r tio n . A ll c la im * fo r a d ju s tm e n t* s h o u ld b e r o d e n o t lo te r th a n 3 0 d a y s c T ie r p u b lic a tio n P r e - p c i d k ills r e c e iv e c r e d it s lip if r e q u e s te d a t tim e o f c a n c e lla tio n , a n d o! 6 9 1 . FOB HOC 9 0 '- Only i 197.- law Bee cfte 197v noti 521 14 7 5 den’ 5 7 : Ekx 4*stc. tSflc LeM casst S 239 837 20 Efjv * 5 3 198 Céfle 1979 H O N D A 4 0 0 Must sell. G o o d co r dition, mags new tires new battery great fo r the student* $ 5 0 0 Call 459- 3 3 4 6 6-14___________________________ famng, saddlebags $1450 offer 81 SUZUKI GS 6 5 0 G N e w Startin g sys tem 82 Yamaha M A X 4 0 0 3 5 0 0 mi $ 7 5 0 ' offer Both run perfect 462 0 5 2 3 6 14 H O N D A PASSPORT 1981 G reat shape 5 0 0 0 m.les S3 0 0 /firm 4 7 6 -7 7 6 9 6-17 1981 SUZUKI GS 1100 E G oo d condition New chom and rear bre Simpson hel­ met and fam ng included $1400 Carter 458 9 4 1 0 ,3 2 7 -1 7 4 2 6-17 ___ 82 Y A M A H A 4 0 0 Special G reat shape Must see $ 9 0 0 negotiable 447 -0 61 0 anytime 6-13 1978 KAW ASAKI 400, has been used only occasionally runs great, no bod y dam age $ 5 0 0 cash 4 74 -8 40 9 , keep trying 6-18 (8 0 0 0 miles), 1981 H O N D A C B 6 50 G raduating sen 7 0 0 0 miles, tor, must greot condition $1200 Coll Brian, 4 69-5715 work, 472-8411 leave messoge 6-21 sell MOPED H O N D A Express 1983 model very g oo d condition, $250, day 4 99 8 006, for Dennis 6-19 evenings 4 7 2 -3 8 7 9 ask 84 H O N D A AERO 125 moped Pur­ chased 11-84 Runs perfect W ith helmet $ 8 0 0 After 5 30, 482 -8 14 7 6-19 80 — Bicycles BICYlE NiSHlKI O lym pic 12-speed tou r­ ing b»ke Excellent condition O ngmatty $280, asking $180 Coll A ndrew 450- 1549 afternoons, evenings 6-17 O ne Qwner O nly -ood condition Cash :O R D 01 A M F V. AC Ye! in vmyl top 7 0 ,0 0 0 miles lo u p e f o r sole C o m p le te w ith b o o tie in 1 9 7 9 P o n tia c 2 d o o r, A C , A M / FM, stereo , PS/ PB ve ry g o o d c o n d itio n C o ll D a v id a fte r 7 p.m . at 69 CORVETTE RECONDITIONED clas­ sic 3 50 $12 0 0 0 firm 7 13 -8 7 0 -9 8 8 7 C a rm Austin 6-24 ’ 981 DATSUN 200SX hatchback Auto mat»c A lp in e $ te r eo. g o o d lo n d ’tion. dependable, $ 4 7 0 0 Make offer 8 3 6 -7 3 7 4 6-14 AC SAAB 7 4 99LE Looks good, runs good, runs good Asking $1050 4 47-3041 6 14 1980 TOYOTA Tercel Deluxe 5-speed, AC, 40 MPG highway, 6 4 0 0 0 miles, $ 2 2 0 0 4 67 9194 6 14 1981 DATSUN 280ZX Excellent condi­ tion Silver on blue T-top, A M FM cas­ sette Beautiful car. G o o d gas mileage Must sell hove company car After 6, collect 1 -8 56 -2 68 0 6 -1 8 _____________ '9 8 0 TOYOTA COROLLA SR-5 Irftback with extras $ 4 5 0 0 o r best offe r 451- 0 3 0 4 454-1003 7-11 _____________ 1977 SUBURU, 4W D station wagon. N e w motor, runs great* $1250, 474- 7 5 0 8 6-14 6-14 1976 DATSUN B 210 hatchback New transmission and tires Needs body work $ 3 0 0 o r best offer 8 3 5 -6 5 7 6 6-19 S p o rts -F o re ig n A utos t shape with new brakes $ 2 5 0 0 7W Rabbit convertible, ex­ on, 6 2 ,0 0 0 miles, phone 82 CA M A R O Z28 black, M fy loodedi 5 speed AC, hit steering, T-tops. A M FM alarm and more* Asking $ 9 5 0 0 negotiable Ten 4 43-7413 6-19 74 V W Bug, A M FM 8 -track, semi-auto­ matic, not fency fust rel*able $1000 or make reasonable offer Ten 443-7413. 6 19 R L ESTATE SALES 130 — C on d os-To w nh o u ses 7 s ---------------------------------- S T O N E L E 1G H 2409 1 oon 1 1 • 1 - 1 1 - i * i 1 1 1 N ew Condos For Lease Pre-Leasing For Sum m er & Fall iyh is 2 0 0 452 3 8 0 9 after 5pm 6-18 200 F u rn itu re - H o u s e h o ld M A TC H IN G DINETTE and sectional sofa plus matching desk and dresser. $ 45 0 4 5 8 -6 7 0 0 or leave messaqe for Smith 6-13_________________________________ SOLID O A K dining table, square wrth matching chairs $ 2 2 5 4 4 3 -3 8 2 8 6-17 FREE 9 0 day layaw oy Discount prices All new furniture, 7 02 Montopolis, 385- 5 5 7 7 6-19 _ NEW 5 piece dinette Complete and as sembled $ 88 M any others to choose from 702 Montopolis, 3 85 -5 5 7 7 , Austin Furniture M arket 6 19 BRASsTTlEADBOARD & King size bed $ 2 0 0 Also negotiable separately 452- 3 8 0 9 after 5pm 6 18 NEW O A K finish 4 draw er chest, $ 39 702 Montopolis, 3 8 5 -5 5 7 7 , Austin Fur­ niture M arket 6 19 LARGE W O O D E N DESK G oo d cond. ______ hon $100 4 78 6051 6-14 2 1 0 —- S t e r e o - T V TOSHIBA MODEL S A 7 2 5 stereo receiv er, 25 watts per channel less than one yeor old, perfect condition, need cash bad, $ 6 5 .4 7 4 8 4 0 9 6-18 BUNK BED O N E YEAR OLD $ 2 0 0 Call 4 41-5890 evenings 6-18 K E N W O O D HOME speakers with pas radiators G o o d condition and sive great sound $ 2 0 0 4 7 2 -5 8 6 9 6-18 2 2 0 — C o m p u te rs - E qu ipm ent VERBATIM MAC Disk $26. 10 SS/DD $17 10 DD 'D D $ 22 Bonus di*k SS/DD $10 Epson ribbons $5 Cali 8 36-1506 or 450-1253 Free delivery 6 -2 0 M A C IN TO S H DISKS-Verbat.m 3 .5 ' rebate 512K Upgrades, $ 26 .39 with $ 34 9 External Disk Drives, M aclotes Disk Banks and more MAC PRODUCTS, 813 West 24th 4 99 8 0 0 6 6-14 Tl-99 4 EXPANSION BOX, 32K memory card, disk dnve and controller card, pnnter cable, disk m anager module $ 3 2 5 /o ffe r 447 -0 17 9 6 18 BRIEFCASE-TYPE computer terminal with built-in 3 0 0 Baud modem and 80/132 $ 3 4 0 444 column 9 206, evenings. 6-18 thermal pnnter HAZELTINE 1500 CRT~ terminal with pnnter port and 3 0 0 Baud acoustic coupled modem 4 44 -9 20 6 , evenings 6-18 $ 2 6 0 NORTHSTAR HO R IZO N Ó4K. dual disk dnve with Tl printer and Zoroc screen $ 1 3 0 0 o r best offer 2 8 2 -7 9 5 9 6-14 NE W 5 piece bedroom suite $179 702 M ontopolis 385 5 577, Austin Furniture Market 6-19 NEW SOFA Loveseat and chair, $188 Choice of colors 702 Montopolis, 385- 5577, Austin Furniture M arket 6-19 NE W FULL SIZE mottress and foundation, $98 7 02 Montopolis, 3 8 5 -5 5 7 7 , Aus tin Furniture M arket 6-19 3 0 0 — G a r a g e - M O V IN G --C O U C H , credenza. Fender guitar amp, 10-speed bike, dryer Cheap, negotiable Call Linda or Jim, 4 78-7241 for details 6-14 chair, SATURDAY, 6/14, 9 5, 8 07 l E 47 Ster eos, desk, bicycles, camping equipment, typewriter, household items, misc 6-14 3 4 0 — Misc. ELECTRIC TYPEWRITE R l^ T s o le G o ^ d condition $ 30 .00 Raul 4 7 3 -2 4 5 9 . 6 14 RENTAL 3 5 0 — R ental Services T h n b i f a f b c jn frw rt a ♦ # FREE + L O C A T IN G SERVICE + ♦ C o n d o s » A p a rtm e n ts ▲ Houses • D uplexes Leave the H u ntin g To Us1 ♦ 482-8651 J 4 ▼ RENTAL 3 6 0 — Furn. Apts. FR EE LOCATING A P A R T M E N T S ANI) CONDOMINIUMS FOR L E A S E — S P R I N G S E ­ M E S T E R . WEST AND C A M P U S N O R T H AR EAS . 476-2673 1 3 60 — F urn. A pts. NEAR LAW School room, CA7CH, share baths. $ 2 2 5 ABP 476 3 6 3 4 6 -2 0 __________ large furnished SUMMER RATE efficiency near laundro mat ond shuttle $ 2 3 5 t bills 453 0 5 4 0 6 14 ACT III, 4321 Speedway Summer rote ef ficiency $ 2 3 5 * bills 4 5 3 -0 5 4 0 6 14 CASA DE SALAD O APTS 1 BR furnished. Gas and water paid. N o pets. Swimming pool. West of Campus near shuttle. $375 to $395. Summer rates available. Lease required. Phone 477- Salado Street. 7-5 41st & Ave. C 1 BR 1 BA, furnished apartm ent, a va ila b le now . Q u ie t com plex s h u ttle . C a ll C a r l, n e a r 4 5 9 -9 5 9 2 . 6-14 108 PLACE FUR N ISH E D EFFICIENCIES • D ish w a sh e r/D isp o sa l • S w im m in g P ool • P a tio /L o u n g e /B B Q G rill • In d iv id u a l S to ra g e • B ookshelves • H a lf Block IF Shuttle • L a u nd ry Facilities • Resident M a n a g e r M o v e In T o d a y Furnished Efficiency 2 6 5 + 4 5 2 -1 4 1 9 o r 4 5 3 -2 7 7 1 108 W e st 4 5th St. 6-14 R um m ag e Sales 2534.2610, and 2612 W e s t C a m p u s L u x u r y L e a s in g N O W f o r S ú m m e r & F a ll • S p a c io u s F loorplans • All New A ppliances • B arbeq u e A reas • Extra L arge Pool and Sundeck • Hot Tub • Convenient to C am p u s C a m in o R e a l C o n d o style at a price y o u can afford . M ak e an a p p o in t­ m en t to s e e C a m in o R e al s o o n a n d find ou t a b o u t o u r sp e c ia l S u m m e r Fall rates. A v ailab le for a lim ited tim e only. Cmlt-in a "p ast" on which you can build a future. 3L ( ) I ) M A I N 807 W 28th Austin. It s.is 7870.S (512)472-8608 Avail.ibie A ugust 15, 1085. • . ' Furnished 1 bd-1 ba 2 b d -1 ba . . . $290 . $375 Unfurnished . 1 bd-1 ba . 2 b d -1 ba . . . . $275 $355 472-4893 Professionally m anaged by Johnston Properties Inc. RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 3 9 0 — U n f . D u p le x e s 400 — Condos- 4 1 * — Furn. Houses 420 — Unf. Houses Townhouses 400 - Condos* Townhouse* The Daily Texan/Thursday June i i '9 8 5 Page 13 • S p a c io u s F lo o r p la n s for fall 478 4271 302 W. 38 S u m m e r/F a ll le a s in g Efficiency. 1BR, c o n v e n ie n tly lo c a te d . F u n s h e d /u n fu r nished A ll a p p lia n c e s , p o o l, U blk. to shuttle G a s a n d w a t e r p a id 4 5 3 - 4 0 0 2 7 1 6 S270 PLUSE SUMMER RATES W» ore looking lor quiet, conscientious non smok ing students interested in o large efficiency near campus CA/CH, laundry, deodbotl, no pets $300 F O U N T A IN - TERR ACE A P A R T M E N T S Summ er rates for large one bedroom apartm ents W a lk in closets, w all to wall carpet, ceiling fans, C A /C H , w ater and time gas p aid m aintenance W alking distance to UT 6 1 0 W est 3 0th M a n a g e r's A partm ent # 1 3 4 4 7 7 - 8 8 5 8 Deposit $ 1 0 0 la r g e p a tio /p o o l Full 458-2488 S U M M E R RATES Esquire A partm ents just north of campus AC, appliances, suite m ate efficiencies $ 2 2 0 + E 451 8 122 W est W o d d Real Estate 6 2 8 6-2B LOW SUMMER RATES $275 + Furnished 1-1 N e a r U.T. Shuttle Pecan Square Apartments 506 W. 37th Call 459-1597 W EST CAM PUS-shuttle or walk to com pus O ld e r 4 unit com plex 1 bedroom $ 2 8 0 ‘ E 451 8 12 2 W est W o d d Real Estate 6 2 8 2BR 2BA condo like apartm ents three blocks campus All amenities $ 6 5 0 t E H o w ell Properties 4 / 7 9 9 2 5 6-18 EFFICIENCIES. O N L Y 3 lift N o rth Com pus $ 2 4 5 * E H ow ell Properties 4 7 7 9 9 2 5 6 18 TREES P leasant, furnished e fficiency, up o n th e trees o v e r W a lle r C re ek Q u ie t, m ostly g r a d students. $ 2 7 5 a m onth, w a t e r p a id 3 ? 7 5 0 2 0 6 -1 4 3 BLOCKS W est campus Loft efficiencies $ 3 8 0 • utilities H ow ell Properties 4 7 7 9 9 2 5 6 18 N EA R L A W school C arpeted , ceiling Ians, built-in desk and draw ers, 2 clo­ sets lease 9 2 6 / 2 4 3 6 2 8 3 2 N Ü 8, IH 3 5 A V A L O N APTS S U M MER RATES 2 BR, 2 BA, $ 4 4 5 1 BR, $31 5 E E f , $ 2 9 0 W a lk to Compus Ex fro large, extra nice O n site loundry 4 7 2 4 2 4 5 6-14 6 13 S AN D P IP ER A P A R TM E N T S 2810 Rio Grande V ery la rg e 2 b edroo m 2 bath, fully fur nished V ery stylish M icro w ave, ceiling fons, intercom, pool, covered parking surtdeck Three blocks from campus for only $ 4 9 9 fo r summei Call 4 7 7 4 6 2 2 , 4 7 4 - 6 6 8 3 or 4 4 4 2 7 5 0 SUBLEASE 1BR efficiency, July August, $ 3 1 5 E, single occupant, $ 1 8 5 each i E, double occupancy Close UT 4 7 9 0 7 0 9 anytim e 6-14 C O N V E N IE N T U T-Sum m er leasing $ 5 2 5 o r per diem a rran g ed la r g e clean 2 2 C A C H Ceiling fans Pool 2 9 0 0 Swisher 4 7 7 - 3 3 8 8 4 7 2 - 2 0 9 7 6 2 8 ____ h BLK off 2 6 ,1 1 ? T ■ E Pool, covered parking, larg e closets N o pets, small com plex 2 9 0 0 C ole 4 8 2 9 1 5 4 . 6 -1 4 6 -13 Salado Apartments 2704 Salado Large, luxurious 2 bedroom , 2 bath opts Fully furnished, M icrow aves, intercoms, ceiling fans All the luxury o f C ondo living w ithout three blocks from campus Summer starting at the condo price O n ly $ 4 9 5 4 7 7 - 4 6 2 2 o r 4 4 4 - 2 7 5 0 FU R N IS H E D 2-1, $ 4 1 0 * E. frost-free re frigerator, dishwasher, loundry, pool, UT shuttle, Antilles, 2 2 0 4 Enfield 4 7 7 1303, 2 5 8 5 0 6 5 6 -21____ _______ ALL BILLS p aid N e a r campus, on shuttle Effu nncies and one bedroom s in small, quiet com plex $ 2 9 5 to $ 4 0 0 451 8 5 3 2 , 4 4 2 4 0 7 6 .6 - 1 4 _______ I bedroom . 1 CLOSE TO UT 6 0 3 H am s bath, upstairs g a ra g e apartm ent N o pets $ 3 5 0 i bills A v ailab le July 1 4 5 9 4 5 5 0 . 6 18_____________________________ 6 13 Casbah Apartments 2 2 0 0 S an G a b rie l fully Large, beautiful, fur­ nished 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Intercoms, microwaves, ceil­ ing fans, Bar-B-Que pits, en­ closed courtyard. Very Ele­ gant. Summer Rate 495 f E 4 7 3 -8 5 3 3 or 4 4 4-2 750 6 - 1 3 W EST C A M P U S Small, attractively de signed an d furnished complex Laundry facilities 1-1 fo r $ 3 0 5 to $ 3 1 5 • f lectn. i ly 4 5 1 -8 1 2 2 . W est W o rld Real Estate 6 - 2 8 _ W A LK T O Campus furnished efficiencies an d 1 bedroom s Appliances, carpet $ 2 7 5 to $ 2 9 5 451 81 2 2 W est W o rld Real Estate 6 2 8 ____ FU R N ISH E D 1 B E D R O O M ap artm ent un e n d o f A u g u s t, R io N u e c e s til Apartments. # H 2 7 7 . C all Jean 4 7 4 - 0 9 7 1 6-19 ______________________________ F U R N ISH ED EFFICIENCY ($ 2 5 0 la rg e 1 BR ( $ 4 30P), or single room with shared bath ($ 1 9 0 ABP) 1 9 0 /, 1 9 0 9 Son G a b rie l Call Bruhl Blood Realtors 3 4 5 - 5 4 4 2 6 - 2 8 ______ ___ !)* * EFFICIENCIES $ 2 5 5 2 8 0 . IBP $ 2 8 0 3 0 0 ?BRs $ 3 5 0 3 6 5 6 0 3 Elm wood 3 1 0 4 Duvol 5012 D uval 4712 D ep ew 3 8 1 2 S peedw ay 5 5 0 5 Jeff Davis O ffice 4 / / 2214, 4 5 3 -8 8 1 2 , 3101 Benefvo 4 5 ? 4 5 1 6 A 5 ______________ $ 4 7 5 ABP, SP A C IO U S 2 2 , on e block to Law School, 2 9 1 0 M e d ic a l Arts Call now , 4 7 6 -5 6 3 1 , The Elliott System 7 -2 3 LE A S IN G FOR Summer Large furnished on e b edroo m apartm ent $ 3 2 0 0 0 /m o t lo w electric. O n e block from UT School. ’To w erview Apartm ents', 26th St betw een O ld h a m and Red River 6 - 14 R EN TA L 3 6 0 — F u r n . A p ts . ACT VII Apartments H yd e park location Large 1BDRM fur nished apartm ents $ 9 9 deposit special a nd V? otf hrst months rent ACT VII 43 03 DUVAL 451-7132 Lease n o w fo r S u m m er o r Foil, 2 BR, 2 BA I y e a r o ld , e x tr a la r g e attra c tiv e ap o rtm e n ts A ll w ith fire p la c e s , t eilm g fans, electric o p p lia n c e s The best c o m b in a tio n o f p n c e & s t / f m Austin just 4 blocks N o r th o f In tro m u ro l Fields B e tw e e n 8 & 5 r a il 4 5 8 1122 6 14 6 21 Student Rates L a rg e 1 a n d 2 BR a p a rtm e n ts , $ 3 9 5 5 0 5 , a ll a p p lia n c e s , w / d h o o k ups, c o v e re d p a rk in g , access to CR shuttle, p o o l Just o ff C a m e r o n R o a d n eo t 2 9 0 C a ll 4 5 2 4 3 9 8 or 8 3 5 0 3 0 3 UNIVERSITY AREA, A BP, C A /C H , no p eh, pool, 3011 W httn 4 7 / 173 4 6 14_____ I BR. loundry. 5 3 8 5 /m o n ih _ 6 2 8 SUBLET 2BR 1BA Summer apartm ent Pnvate pool $ 4 5 0 * E AC pan) Electricity, phone hookup paid 4 5 8 3 8 8 2 E 4 5 6 14 Furnished _____ _ MATURE PERSONS, large, cleon, quiet effu lencies on shuttle $ 2 8 5 t E 111 W 38, 4 5 ? 8 0 0 / 7-10 _ HYDE PARK beautiful secluded furnished efficiency with patio, $ 2 6 5 Summer, $ 9 9 deposit, availab le now 4 5 8 4 3 9 2 6 2 6 _________ EFFICIENCIES 2 5 0 ? Nueces 2 bits from UT $ 2 5 7 /A B P A /C Calf 4 7 4 2 3 6 5 , 4 7 6 1 9 5 / 6 19 370 — Unf. Apts. T he Attic A p ts L a rg e e ffic ie n c y in 1BR units a v a ila b le A ll a p p lia n c e s , la u n d ry ro o m , p o o l N e a r C a m e r o n Rd , shuttle, a n d Lrusi nesses Efficiencies fro m $ 2 8 5 , IBRs fro m $ 3 0 9 P ro fessio n ally m a n o g e d b y M a r tin e P ro p erties, Inc 9 2 6 6 6 6 4 TEXAS PROPERTIES 6 -1 7 HYDE PARK efficiencies $ 2 7 0 rty Close UT Q u iet complex, pool Available no w P/fe leasing Coll 4 5 2 3 5 9 0 6-18 electric- NEAR UT Law School, on shuttle la rg e 1BR, $31 5 to $ 3 2 5 plus E Small com plex in quiet neighborhood Pool 4 74 124 0 , 4 4 2 - 4 0 7 6 6 -1 4_________________ UT W ALK 1 1 in historic hom e Upstoi»'. $ 3 0 0 per month, utilities 4 / 8 7126, 4 6 7 8 2 5 0 , availab le now 6 17 B A R TO N S PR IN G S area, small efficiency apartm ent, private entrance, all hills paid $ 2 6 5 4 4 3 6 0 7 6 , after 6 6 I 7 N O HASSLE 1-1, on shuttle, near shop ping, $ 2 9 5 Summer C all 4 6 7 9 4 9 7 , or 451 8 9 6 4 The Elliott System 7 23 CLOSE T O campus, overlooking Hem phill Park D uplex, o ne b edroom , appliances $ 3 8 5 4 77 8 1 7 2 6 17 NEAR UT Seeking m ature student to lease exceptional duplex on shuttle route ( 8 0 5 ) 2 5 8 6 1 6 0 6 17 Secluded beautiful trees $ 4 5 0 !BR 1BA duplex near campus,, all bills paid $ 3 9 5 C all David, 4 77 4 9 8 3 and (n.ght) 4 7 7 - 5 8 4 8 6 17 HYDE PARK fo r a * remodeled 1BR with w o o d floors, tall ceilings, ceiling fans, lots of windows, m any tall shady trees, large closet, and storoge $ 4 2 5 9 0 9 5 6 - 2 8 4 5 9 2-1 C A /C H , appliances 2 blocks east of Capitol P ta /a $ 4 2 5 7 7 6 7 M r B»b. 6 19 * utilities 4 / 4 LARGE 2BR 1BA with ref.nished w ood floors, tall ceiling fans, laundry hook up, stained w o o d w ork and cabinetry, big rooms, fenced yords, new canvas aw n mg on porch $ 5 9 5 4 5 9 9 0 9 5 6 28 H yd e Park C h a r m in g o ld e r o n e b e d ro o m o n e bath, Living room , dining room, kttch en, stove, refrigerator, w asher/dryer, ( , H / f A fa n h a r d w o o d floors, c a rp e t, $ 5 9 5 /m o Lease Calf Fvertyn H ere f o r d 4 5 9 3 3 5 9 /. 5'? block o ff G o a N e a r university 1 br, 1 b a d u p le x o f 6 1 2 -A W 31 r e n o v a te d A /C , d a lu p e N e w ly h e atin g , o ff-s tree t p a rk in g $ 4 1 0 / m o n th W r i t e r p a id N in e m o n th lea s e re q u ire d A v a il im m ed. C o n ­ t a d L a u ro or D e b b ie a t I 7 2 4 1871, M F, d ays only 7-1 G A R A G E A P A R T M E N T , $ 2 8 5 " bills Five blocks west of campus Call after 6p m 4 7 2 3 4 0 2 6 17_________ _________ 4 0 0 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e s U n iq u e b a s e m e n t a p a rtm e n t In fa m ily h o m e , 6 blocks W e s t U T C a p ito l L a rg e 2 B R 1 B A B ack w alls, w in d o w s , g a lle y kitchen, G r e e n w ic h V illa g e a t m o s p h e re Lease, 1 m o n th 's d e p o s it & re fe re n c e s re q u ire d A v a il im m e d $ 6 5 0 plus E 4 7 7 - 4 3 4 8 6 -1 4 W a lk To UT O u ts ta n d in g re s to ra tio n o f 6 5 y e a r o ld lig h tp e x V/2 blocks n o rth o f c a m pus 1 BR a v a ila b le July V C o v e r e d p a tio , 9 fo o t, ceilings, 2 brass c eiling fa n c y s ta in e d w o o d w o r k Big fans, closet A ll n e w h e a tin g a n d c o o lin g , p lu m b in g , w irin g , s tain ed cabinets, tile m ini c a rp e t, vinyl, w a llp a p e r , blinds a n d m o re A ttra c tiv e e a r th to n e d e c o r $ 3 9 5 4 5 9 9 0 9 5 WEST C A M P U S , 6 blocks UT, one and tw o bedrooms, carpet, CA, stove refng erator, off street parking Summer rotes or 1 year lease, 1010 W est 23rd, 4 7 2 2273 6 17________________ ____________ G A R A G E EFFICIENCY apartm ent, applt anees, lots of windows, curtains, newly pointed, quiet residential neighborhood off Koenig an d W o o d ro w N o pets. $ 2 2 5/A B P 3 4 5 -1 0 2 2 6 14 nT w I p a C IO U S IBRs, 6 0 0 sq f t , all op pliances (high efficiency), 3 blocks to shuttle, east of UT baseball stadium, avail ab le July 1, $ 3 5 0 4 6 7 7 18 ? 6 - 2 6 390 — Unf. Duplexes HYDE PARK are» N e w 2-slory l- lf ? A p ­ pliances, tile, carpet, ftrep lo/e, C A / CH, decks Sum mer rate $ 5 6 0 , fall rate $ 6 2 0 4 5 1 -8 1 2 2 W est W o d d Real Estate 6 28 DUVAL VILLA • In H y d e i'.trk A n • / B P ¿ i ’.A • I.a H r t I ’" ' • H i • l u l • Si u riiy C n .tu • i u iv e n ic n t t> 'Shuttle Special S um m er Rates Available 4 3 0 5 Duval S treet 4 5 1 -2 3 4 3 6 -2 8 W A L K IN G D IS TA N C E to campus, avail ab le im m ediately 4 -3 , m odern duple** W /D , 4 7 7 - 5 0 2 2 6 2 8 I A N G L E W O O D FOREST 4 pJex,~2BR 2 BA, fireplace, refrigerator, microwave, W /D hookup $ 4 5 0 /$ ? 2 5 , availab le June 1 C all 2 5 5 - 0 1 0 3 or 2 4 4 - 2 0 4 0 6 2 8 NEAR UT Speed w ay shuttle Large 2-2 nicely rem odeled C A /C H , appliances, mini blinds $ 5 9 5 4 7 9 6153. N o pets 7 12___________________________________ VERDICT IS IN H O T SU M M E R ! 2 Bdrm 1 BA You need our amenities 5 0 'po o l, spa, rec room, volleyball, security bldg clothing optional 3 blks to UT shuttle G e t in now for Summer fun 4 7 6 - 5 8 7 5 6 - 2 8 10 W A LK T O UT Large rem o deled 1 b e d ­ fo ot ceilings, new paint, room coverings, carp et an d vinyl, w ind ow rear ceiling porch, $ 4 5 0 4 5 9 - 9 0 9 5 .7 - 1 fenced yard _______ fans, covered front and carport, ^ 1 an d 2 bedrooms. W est campus, $ 3 2 5 4 0 0 * utilities. H o w ell Properties, 4 7 7 - 9 9 2 5 . 6 18 3 BR 1BA, appliances, deck fireplace* $ 5 5 Q /m o , 2 8 2 5 San G ab riel. #1, 4 / 4 6 3 3 0 6 -2 4 ]/2 BLOCKS O FF 2 6 th 11, 2-1 * E. Pool, co vered parking, lorge closets. N o pets Small com plex. 2 9 0 0 Cole 4 8 2 9 1 5 4 6- 1 ________________________________ 4 1 BR 1 BA apartm ent, appliances, C A /C H , $ 3 5 0 * E 4 7 4 6 3 3 0 6 2 4 HYDE PARK are a. Rem odeled 11, A /C , appliances, new carpet, $ 4 2 0 8122 W est W o rld Real Estate 7 2 451 HYDE PARK area. 1-1, appliances, carpet AC $ 4 4 5 451 8 1 2 2 W est W o rld Real Estate. 7 -5 ___________________________ yiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiitiitiiimiiiB ¡ ¡ ★ NEW ★ Now Leasing f Silverado ¡ 1 Condominiums I 1 840 Burton Dr. = s • O n U T S h u t t l r - • 1 B d r m C o n d o s E • 3 S i / . T o C h c x ! n n i = • W . i . h e r D r y e r M i E s c r o w a v e f 4 4 8 -2 6 0 6 —i 1111111M 111) 1 ■ I ■ 1111111111111111111111 iT = 2 s j V0U N€€D AN C o n t i n e n t a l . s u m APflRTMCNT FOR €ITH€R OR ROTH SUMMER SESSIONS? U l€ H fiV E T H E M ! DflLLRS, 8RRNDVUJINE, HOUSTON, UIILSHIRE ftPTS. ★ $275 month for summer leoses * 1 bedroom apartments furnished and unfurnished. Call Phil 480-9358 2803 HCMPHIU PftRK # 1 0 5 K€€P TRVING A p t s . F a n t a s t i c S u m m e r R a t e 2 Bedroom Furnished . . . $400 • Shuttle Coiner • Nice Pool UTArea 9 1 0 E . 4 0 t h 4 6 7 - 8 3 7 2 TIMBERWOOD A P T S . — Summer Rates — • Large Eff. $310 • Finest Location in • Shuttle or Walk to Campus • BETTER HURRY! 26th & San G ab riel 499-8712 Nueces Comer Condo for lease Southwest Comer of 28 and Nueces Luxury 1 BR w/loft Suitable for 3. Texas Income Property Investments 346-9533 M-F 9-5 E X C F P T lO N A l 3 7 7 SPA C W c sac fu n v jtw d /u n fu m iih e d Clove to campus O n e year i*ove 4 2 0 8 //i q . , , » P arkw ay $ 8 5 0 0 0 451 4 5 / 0 A p p a de m «n falfy.:.6-14 3119 w k l U N G #1, 2BR 4 / 6 - 0 6 8 2 6-18 'BA $ 4 9 ', S U M M E R H O U S F rental for UT fa c t» , affiltat»* Tw o b e d ra o m i onri C lo *e to campen Rent negotiable C 4 5 0 - 1 9 2 9 6 - 1 4 ___ jtudy Tarrytown Houie for Rent-Short Terr Profeuo/t fumohecl. attractive older home q-iv- tree-kneci street oeor MG PAC JT -towntrr*- 4 BITi, imng roo1» énmg 'oom Aqpkorve-, r." A In g w , ctlmg fon-, «osher dryer (tehwofher Large pnvate deck Avokobfe immediate»» ihrougf late Augult $900/m- u liies Cd . 4 fne mae 45'-2573, 345 '008 EFFICIENCY CONDO O ld C astle H ill a r e a C o n v e n ie n t to U T /D o w n to w n A ll a p p lia n c e s , e tc h e d glass. H O A fe e p a id $ 3 4 0 / m o 4 7 2 6-14 420 — Unf. Houses Prelease W a lk to UT 8 0 8 5 a n d 4 5 3 7 1 0 0 B eau tifu l res to ra tio n o f 3 b e d r o o " 2 6 - 1 7 b a th h o u se C A /C H . fo u r ceiling ‘ o ' •. 7 3 2BR 2BA furnished condo, five blocks from campus Pool hot tub, loundry fa cilrties $ 4 5 0 /m o Summer, $ 7 0 0 Fall Call M rs Conti, 3 4 5 -8 1 3 5 6 14 C O N D O FOR rent, small, quiet complex, pool, m icrow ave walk to compus, 2BR V? BA 4 5 4 - 5 4 7 7 , 3 4 6 -1 5 9 0 (Leslie; 6 14 9 0 9 5 Lots o f b tg w in d o w s , m in. blinds, in s , la te d 12 fo o t ceiling, refim sh ed w o o d flo o rs C o m p le te kitch er o u n d r , ho o ku p s, lo rg e closets a n d s to ro g e sp ace Btg c o /e r e d p o rch , p riv a c y fe n c e d y a rd , e a rth to n e d e c o r e n te - o r A v a ila b le S ept 1 $1100 4 59 6 - 2 8 c o n d o m in iu m , W m d r id g e la rg e rate, sum m er 7 7, m o n th *o month lease, $ 6 5 0 , deposit $ 2 5 0 , fireplace, ce il­ ing fans, m icrow ave, very close to campus H ope P rop­ erties, 4 5 3 -6 6 7 3 6 - 2 0 UT AREA 1 /2 /3 bedroom s Security tacuzzis, ceiling fans, covered parking Summer 8 6 5 1 7 4 0 rates* H ab itat Hunters, 4 8 2 _ _ _ _ _ _ 1-1 LUXURY C O N D O for lease 3 blocks from N orthw est $ 4 5 0 /m o . $ 1 5 0 deposit nego tiable Pets ok Call 4 74 9 6 4 7 b efo re 1pm or after 8pm 6 2 4 campus _ LUXURY C O N D O , 2BR 2BA, fully fur mshed w asher/dryer, m icrow ave alarm system, near campus 3 5 0 6 S peedw ay $ / 5 Q A vailable Septem ber 1 Call 8 0 9 2 , after 5 or weekends A g ent 6-19 ? 1 BLOCK FROM CAMPUS S m all 1 BR a n d la rg e ' BR — 2 BR P o o l, C A /C H , C o m p le te ly fu rn ish ed a n d n o w le a s in g fo r su m m er a n d Fall C a ll Rio N u e c e s 4 7 4 - 0 9 7 1 WALK TO CAMPUS DOS RIOS 2818 GUADALUPE N E W ! BR BA Covered porking, microwave individu­ al wosher/dryer ceding fans, CA/CH pressing G U A D A LU P F SQUARE condo, furnished 1BR efficiency, ceiling fans, all appl* anees D a y 4 7 6 7 6 5 7 , evenings 3 2 7 2 0 5 0 6 14 NEAR H A N C O C K CENTER Centrally lo coted luxury condominiums Applionces, ceiling tons fireplace, adequate storoge From $ 2 8 0 ARCH Properties 4 6 / 2 3 / / 7 2 _____________________________ 7-3 2 B E D R O O M 2 BATH unfurnished condo w alking distance from compus W oshei dryer m icrowove $ 4 5 G /m o Summer $ 8 0 0 /m o Fall/Spnng Call M r M o yer ________________ a t 4 / 9 8 9 9 8 6 14 P E N T H O U S E C O N D O M IN IU M S Now L***tngl • 1 & 2 Bedroom s • '6 ilkinq Jistani > dow ntow t i 6th ' >t UT • . 4 H r Security guard • Multi level qat lge FINEST IN BI0H USE UVTNC Condo Connection 4/9-6618 L R O B B IN S PLA C E Now Leasing! 2 bdrm./2 bath Four Floorplans JUNE FREE w/ 1 YR. LEASE Condo Connection 479-6618 LU XU R IO U S Bl level, 2BR72 /JBA condo Enfield at Exposition M o d e m kitchen, ceiling fons, pool, souno. goff course across street A v ailable storting August 2? Unfurnished $ 9 0 0 /m o 4 5 4 ¡091 6- 21______________________________________ 1 BR, S T O V E , dishwasher, m icro w ave 3 5 0 6 S p eedw ay. Ten 4 5 3 -3 6 1 1 . 6 2 7 re frig e ra to r, stove, shuttle on 18 2 - 2 C O N D O , S TO VE, re frig e ra to r dishwasher, m icrow ave, W /D fireplace on shuttte 3 5 0 6 S peedw ay, Ten 4 5 3 3611 6 - 2 7 ____________________________ N IC E O N E bed ro o m plus large loft as second bedroom , w alking distance to UT, $ 5 0 0 Summer $ 5 3 0 Fall 3 4 6 - 1515 6 14______________________________ O L D CASTLE Hill Condos 1113 W est 10th E fficien t, excellent condition oil appli onces $ 3 0 0 Call B arbara 4 7 2 -6 1 0 0 6 - 19 = RENTAL 3 6 0 — F u rn . Ap ts. LAKE AUSTIN 2 b e d ro o m s 1 b a it- C A / r> * S h c re pool and b o a t ra m p N e a r p a rk $ 5 2 5 4 8 2 - 8 3 0 4 6-17 H IG H L A N D MALL 3 bedrooms, 2 Oat* C A /C H , no pets new p a ir ' $ 3 5 0 ease 9 2 6 7 2 4 3 . C arp eted 6 28 N EAR L A W school O ld e r hom* onr! rooms, 2 bath C A /C H Living, dmmg breakfast Screen porch Lease $ 9 5 0 9 2 6 7 2 4 3 6 -2 8 W EST C A M P U S 3 ? hordw ood floors ceiling fans, W /D large com er proper ty availab le .m mediatety 4 6 9 5 6 1 0 ' _ _ _ _ _ W ALK T O campus 3 2 house tight, h ordw ood Boors JUST OREA A vailab le August for 2 m -nt» $ / 0 0 deposit 3 2 7 8 8 8 0 Able 3 2 8 1 488 evenings and weekends 6 lots of $ Í pool. 6 14 43 rd STREET house $ 3 2 5 b arg am ¡ « r sto ve rooms and o kitchen refngerator A /C unit. Agent 4 5 3 - 4 5 0 0 , 4 5 3 - 4 6 5 0 6-13 _______________ C O N V E N IE N T UT, 1-35. Brockenndge Large older 2 ' Attic far Lease $ 5 5 0 1 4 0 5 W a lle r 4 7 7 - 3 3 8 8 4 7 8 - 5 7 3 9 6 - 28, _ REN TA L 3 7 0 — U n f. Apts. for free ro am an 6-14 3119 W A L L IN G # ! 4 7 6 0 6 8 2 6 18 2BR 1BA. $ 4 9 5 ____ 'iff Enfievi a la p p lia n c e s new 2BR IB A $ 6 7 5 irghted carport ly red eco rated C A /C H , P em b erto n g re a t Heights 8 9 2 341 7 leave messoge 6 -1 3 lo catio n DOLL HO U SE near campus Eostvde Perfect for student/- oupte O n e mo ru­ ff e * M a rt 6 14 ¡ 7 0 2 Salm o 4 / 9 84 $ 2 / 5 5 2 0 6 G U A D A LU P E , n ear shuttle 2 Irving 3 -2 G o ro g e Appliances $ 6 2 0 2 9 2 2 otter 6 p n 4 5 3 5 / 3 9 6 )8 4 5 4 3 COMPLETE i f H M O D E L E D e n e rg , efficient C A /C H skylight-, o ne minute trail from Town $ 5 2 5 m onth 2 2 0 5 Haskeii St 4 6 9 9 4 9 1 6 2 6 la k e hike-arid btke $ 3 0 0 d e p n si’ O L D W EST Austin, 2-1 aeros M a t t h e w s Clarksville 4 4 2 1 8 9 0 6 19 'o m m u r ty 5 r t shuttle bus A vaila b le 6 16 from C O N V E N ! 'N - ENFIELD M O P A C , UT large 2-1 C A /CH, g a ra g e shuttle Rongt- ¡ 6 0 8 W etbershe'd refrigerator $ 6 0 0 4 / 6 5 7 3 9 4 7 7 3 3 8 8 7 12 4 2 5 — R o o m s FEMALE W ANTED to rent room m Soufl- Aoshn $130 00/m ontk - 4 bills W / dryer Solly 4 4 4 6 4 6 0 w o fk 4 6 2 -7 9 *2 9 5 30 6 14 od FURNISHED RO O MS for boys fOfnirvg bath Three blocks From campus $ 2 2 0 /M o ABR How e* Properties 4 77 9 9 2 5 6 18 _ _ _ _ _ RO O M POR rent Targe pavate home Women only University Hills anea Cali before 2pm, 9 2 6 -0 4 4 6 6- 4 HYDE PARK room for non smoking grad One blk shuffle, all bills pa»d, $150 Sum mer, $195 Fall Agent 453 4 50 0, 4 5 3 4 6 5 0 6 13 THREE FURNISHED bedrooms for 'e m r a large house 3/7 blocks From campus Flexible leases ■ easonabie 4 78 9 7 4 4 , Danny 6 )4 jte WEST AUSTIN home Nice room with p riv ate both A ( $ 2 5 0 4 7 7 *8 1 7 ? 6 17 furmshec shuttle PRIVATE DORM rooms W a m e ' m er K itche n p riv ile g e s AC a v a ila b le Summer rates CONVENIENT Col 4 7 7 -1 5 2 9 6 21________________________ RO O M A N D bath, pool, m p ' /ate home N earU T $ 2 0 0 472 2 6 9 6 6 2 0 RO O M WITH private entrance, bath t family home on W est Ave six blocks from campus, capítol ABP $ 2 4 0 O p portumty fo r paid babysitting txrt can be eased fo r Summer without hus 4 7 4 3 4 8 6-14 MALE, iA D U A T ABP %i 4 3 0 — R o o m - B o a r d 1 H I I I I I I I I I I I M I I ! H I M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I £ I M A R K 1 | X X E S u m m e r S p e c i a l = ACT IV APARTMENTS SIMMER SPECIAL • 1BR Furn. $280 plus E • N ear Law School • Shuttle Bus C orner 3 3 1 1 RED RIVER 474-8125 ! • 1 BR Furn. S290 | • 2BR Furn. $370 ¡ • Shuttle 2 Blks. = • Nice Pool-Patio J I 3815 G u a d a l u p e | 459-1664 | T l l l l l l l l l l H I I I I I I l l l l l t l l l l l l l l l t l l l l l l ' r \ = | i | i You be the judge... B ro w n sto n e P a r k offers more. • Efficiencies, 1 & 2 B e d ro o r- e 1 b lo ck to UT tenms c o v —v e Five rnmutes fro rr H ig n ia n c M e B ea u tifu lly la nd sca pe d • • • G as is. w - • 5 :.■ * M r : & M a n ten a n c e e Hours 9-5:30 M-F, 10-4 Sot & Sun Give us o look you It like the pork 5 1 0 6 N . L A M A R 4 5 4 - 3 4 9 6 P r o f e s s io n a lly m a n a g e d by P y r a m id P r o p e r t it - ♦ V i l l a ! S o ; N o r t h j ♦ A p a r t m e n t s ♦ ♦ SUPER SUM MER ♦ ♦ ♦ SPECIALS J • Kft \ u rn . $2=>^ J ^ • 1 BR F urn. J i t o c o A p t s . Sum m er Special ♦ $290-5310 J * 2 B R F u r n . ♦ J • 1BR Furn. $320 • Walk to Campus $360-380 4 + ♦ Small, friendly Complex ♦ * 4 5 2 0 D u v a l * J 4 5 8 - 3 6 0 7 ¡ • Nice Pool — Lawn 2400 Longview 477-3619 l e t n RENTAL 3 7 0 — U n f . Ap ts. NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL! m t a r A P A R T M E N T S 2124 Burton Drive “SUPER” Summer Rates • Efficiency $280 • 1BR Furn. $325 • 2BR Furn. $410-5430 • Large Pool-Patio • Luxury Club Room • 2 Shuttle Routes • Furnished or Unfurnished CLUBHOUSE POOL 4 4 4 - 7 8 8 0 D a v is & A s s o c ia t e s M a n a g e m e n t Co. A v o id the Last M in u te Rush — Prime Locations A v a ila b le Willowcreek Apts. “S u p e r ” S u m m e r R ates 1911 Willowcreek SUPER SUMMER SPECIALS 444-0010 444-0014 Unfurnished - Furnished Large Apartments 1 Bedroom Furnished $3 10 -$ 3 1 5 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Furn. $ 3 9 0 Bedroom 2 Bath Furn. $ 4 2 0 - $ 4 3 0 2 * L arg e Pools P r o f e s s i o n a ll y M a n a g e d b y D a v is A s s o c mmm m u n m i i i i i m L L i m f t 1f t f f f t f t P la z a C o u rt 9 2 3 E . 4 1 s t 2 b ed ro o m s lovely furnished • Microwaves • Ceiling Fans • Hancock Shopping Center • Goli Course • CR Shuttle 4 5 2 - 6 5 1 8 A v a ila b le N o w ! f t f t 1 Chez J a c q u e s 1 BR Furn. $320 + E %% I V La C anada 1 BR Furn. $350 all bills paid F a n ta s tic s u m m e r ra te s! • N ice Pools • W a lk to C am pus • A cross the Street fro m Tennis C ourts O ffic e O p e n D a ily • Mon-Sat 8:00 am-5:30 pm • Sun 1:00 pm-5:00 pm 4 7 7 -3 6 1 9 D O N ' T W A I T A fe w choice a p a rtm e n t locations a r e still a v a ila b le — b ut th e y a r e g o in g fast. A s p e n w o o d A p t s . 4 5 3 9 G u a d a l u p e 4 5 2 - 4 4 4 7 Sum m er Rates 1 Bedroom Furnished $300 2 Bedroom Furnished $400 Shuttle Bus at Front Door! Intramural Fields across street Professionally Managed by Davis & Assoc. A n t s . SUMMER SPECIALS • 1BR Furn. S315 • 2BR Furn. $460 • Walk to Campus • Nice Pool & Patio 2207 Leon 478-1781 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ \ Hyde I Park \ Apts. ♦ SUMMER RATES ♦ • Eff. Furn. J $255-5260 ♦ • 1BR Furn. NEW AND LUXURIOUS 1 -1 $ 3 2 5 .- 3 3 5 . * Vaulted ceding & skylight, ceiling fa: píete kitchen, mirrored close' parquet entr. private arc : j laundry facilities BROADWAY APTS. 511 Woodward Located B etw een IH -35 & Congress Directly Across Fron S' Edwards 447-7077 458-2577 j Leasing Office Open Mor, -Fn 9-6 Sat. 9-5/Sun 1-5 Apartment Locator Co-op C.A.S. Management 458-2577 L A M A R P L A C E A P A R T M E N T S • Efficiences. 1 & 2 Bedroom s • C en tra lly Located Near IF S hut: - & H ighland M a il • F loorplans u ith Fireplaces. S ky lig h ts and Vaulted C eilings • On S ight M anagem ent and M a in n u • 2 Pools and Laundrv F a cilities • Prices from $295 to $455 4 5 1 -4 5 6 1 4 4 2 -4 0 7 6 e V . J V I I A J v l I G G 4 5 0 5 D U V A L 4 5 4 - 4 7 9 9 NOW PRELEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL e Reduced Sum m er Rates • Newly Remodeled • Pool e G ym • Recreation Room • On CR IF Shuttles • EfT., One, Two Bedroom s and Tow nhouse Units CALL US ABOUT OUR 12 MONTH LEASE! • 1, 2 , 3, 5 B e d ro o m s • P o oK tde K estroom • 2 L ig h ted Tennts Cou rts • D e lu x e A t C o n d P 'o n e a • Shuttle Bus S to p SR • S ecurity S erv ic e • Ctty T ra n s p o rta tio n • Putting G r e e n • O u t d o o r Joe uz2h s • Bar B -Q u e s & Picnic Facilities F o r F ach la u n d ry Room s • C e ilm g Fans ,n AH Living Room s & B e d ro o r • E xeryise Room s • C a r W a s h in g A re a • C a b le TV H o o k u p e Two Sw im m ing Pools Budding • BasketboH & V o M e*b a:i Open For Business M o n-F ri 8-6, Sat 9-5, Sun 12-5 V i l l a g e / l e n Se Habla Español uíifTí^ ? 447-4130 l ^ ^ a f l o r C o m e B Y T o d a Y ^ ^ S ffiíS S S in o 2101 BURTON DR. Phone Work L o c a l m a rk e t c o m p a n y n e e d s p e rso n s to c o n d u c t su rveys N o re s e a rc h selling e x p e n e n c e p re fe r re d b u l w ill tram H o u r ly w a g e a n d b on u ses C o n tact B ru c e at 4 7 7 - 9 8 4 1 E O F S e c u rity C R O F T S E C U R IT Y n o w h irin g com m rs s io n e d rin d n o n c o m m is s io n e d g u a rd s . U n ifo rm s furnished. R o o m for a d v a n c e m e n t. 3 9 0 9 N o r to n IH 3 5 , 6-18 D e lw o o d S h o p p in g C e n t e r , Su ite G EM P LO Y M EN T E M P L O Y M E N T 800 G e n e ra l H elp W an te d 840 — Sales 900.00 Per Week Public Relations This is w h a t o u r o v e r a g e Public R e la tio m R e p re s e n ta tiv e s e a r n e d last w r .e k I If y o u c o n s id e r you rself, intel- le g e n t, a ttra ctiv e , a rticu la te , a n d a m brtious w e m a y h a v e a p osition fo r C a ll D a v e P e te rso n 3 4 3 - 1 0 3 2 6-18 6-19 you 880 — P ro fe s s io n a l Pari time disc |Ockey. 1 year on air experience Schedule will vary Send resume and air check tape to M eg an Bishop, P O Box 1208 Austin 7 8 7 6 7 . N O P H O N E CA LLS 6-18 890 Clubs- R e s ta u ra n ts P O S S E FA ST Full lime days for sandwich p reparation. A p p ly 2 9 0 0 Duval. 6 18 810 Office- Clerical R E C E PT IO N IST - E X C E LLE N T Summer ,ob for college student Must Ese a b le to d eal with public: an d handle busy phone C all M arth a 4 5 9 110V 6 14 Are you on outgoing, friendly person who kkes meeting people t> hovmg lun? W e need a vibrant personality to represent our radio stations as a fe ceptionisl This positron requires heavy phone work & light typing. fWmguai (English/Spanish) pre­ ferred Apply in petson, M-F, 10 am to 3 pm at Equol Opportunity Employe' 6 14 Sears Authorized Driving School S e c r e ta r y / R e c e p t io n is t E n e t g e tic , flexib le, frie n d ly p e rso n n e e d e d to w o rk full o r p a rt time. G e n e r a l offit e w o rk m e n jo y a b le a tm o s p h e re 4 5 6 - 6 5 0 0 . KMMM/K0KE, 3108 N I omo' No phone colls Equal Opportunity Employer. Oak Hills Clerical Support F o r fast p a c e d o ffic e Excellen t o ffic e skills a must T yp in g 5 5 w p m 10 k ey b y tou ch N o n - S m o k e rs o n ly P le a s e c a ll Jo n i a t 2 8 8 - 3 8 8 ? 6-17 900 Dornestic- H o u seh o ld IIV E IN hou'-f sitter needed, child care on weekends Must be ab le to travel Su m m i" . and holidays Student pretered with references Send resume with refer enr es to Linda, P.O . B ox 5 0 0 8 4 , Austin, Tx 787 6 3 . 6 14 ___________________________ 6-14 N E f U E D B A B Y SIT T E R S 7 small children 4 7 4 References required C all Lindo Part time accounting assistant needed Analytical skills a big plus. Hours can be flexible to suit doss time Will assist Controller of State Trade Associo lion m preparation of audit work papers month! / financial statements, investment reports, etc Bne( resume helpful Accounting maior preferred last student worker received 8 offers from the big 8 Apply in person Texas Od Marketers Association 70T West 15th. f, IH 4 3 4 4 6-15 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ R ELIA BLE R E S P O N S IB L E person to clean house an d do od d jobs. Must like large dogs 4 4 3 1861 6-14 M O T H E R 'S H E L P ER n eed ed All d ay Tuesday and Thursday, transportation references required 442-1770 6- an d 19 _ __________ N E E D D E P E N D A B L E person to t>abysit my 2 ? month daughter So m e study time goo d (xry Must h a ve o w n trans portation Flexible hours, some days/ nights For further info 441 0 5 4 2 be tw een 9am an d 10pm. 6-21 C H ILD D E V E L O P M E N T aid w an ted at renter n ea r UT, to assist teachers in classroom time hours M f 3- 5:45pm . Coll M rs Reed, 478 54 2 4 6 18 Part 820 Accounting- B o o k k e e p in g P a g e 1 4 T h e D a i l y T e x a r T h u r s d a y , J u n e 1 1 3 . 1 9 8 3 RENTAL RENTAL ED U C A T IO N A L E D U C A T IO N A L SE R V IC E S SERV ICES E M P LO Y M E N T 435 — Co-ops 440 — R o o m m ates 580 M usical Instruction 610 Misc. Instruction 750 — Typing 760 — Misc. Services 790 — Part Time G R A D U A T f M O N hu ge U n b elievab ly peH 4 7 2*5646 47- room m < c S E N E C A 10-ye a r f* •n i co-op is look» t a r g e old house n«. sun deck, pom ol A C •rtable house \e p eople N o nsp*red w o n housemates 2 0 5 / N E W G U IL D vacancies for all bills paid call 472-035* C O - O P has m ale/fem ale lummer Close to campus, lom e by 510 W e s t 23rd or for m form ahon 6 2 5 Newly H O U S I ha$ Renovated L A U R E L anc»es thn for women aijo accept ing Fall (applicant* W e < profit). ■i#H-govermng community (actively} practicing ren the campert areo 44 (pinvate) fur enteen (prepared; HUKjlv wk, '{re- verved) parking. occe$ Summer $ 319/ mo C 3179 1905 N uece» 477- 440 — Roo m m ates N E E D A com patible room m ate? time and effort with professional a n ce fo r N orth South call Aiison ment Selector. 451 2 4 9 5 fee 6 28 Appl LIBERAL F E M A LE student to share 1 house. Duval a n d 51 furnished 2319 6-14 H YD E PARK room m ate wan ted to sh 3 bedroom house $ 3 2 0 plus 3 b C A C H W D 400 2 A v e C Call 4 2 0 5 0 immediate move*in 7- 2 ___ F E M A L E N E E D E D immediately for 3 2B A house -Hyde Park $ 2 4 5 bills N o pets 451-6305 6 13 * 2-2 LU X U R Y weights, pool, to /ourself shuttle $ 300/m o • 7 M is D avid ¿ condo, hottub room soi 5416. 6-19 ______________________ R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to share 2-11 story con d o on SR route A vaila b le m ediately Call Ten 443 7413 6 14 M A L E R O O M M A T E non* share fully furnished 2 2 S house unhl Dec A C , W.- D f $250, bills G r a d student 4 4 4 -2269 6-13 ,oke te d yard referred G R A D U A T E N O N S M O K E R 4&R. 2B A house CR shuttle $ 2 50/mo 14 bills David G a r y 4 7 7 2154, 459 7199 6-14 furnished F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n eed ed afte nice d uple* close to campus $2 75 Patsy or H elen 4 7 9 6 9 5 8 6-14 Cali F E M A L F (S ) wanted Lenox condo with pus CaH G i G i coll (8 1 7 )3 3 ? 7801 7-8 for Summer 22 W a lk to cam 0 2 3 6 8101 or ________ LIBER AL m inded F E M A LE, n eeded to share 2 2 con d o Austin plus *2 utilities Lau ra 4 5 9 -3 5 2 6 6 13 roommate in N 'A S25C im mediately A v aila b le H O U S E M A T E FO R beautiful 3 BR house H yd e Park, close to UT shuttle graduate student p referred $ 2 0 0 month 453 4 5 0 9 6-13 L O O K I N G F O R room m ate to share con do or house for July thru Spring $3C max Prefer grad student Do* 8 6 3 9133 6 17_____ T W O F E M A L E room m ates shar to w n h o m e E n fie ld / E x p o s itio i amenities A vaila b le July 1 Terr 9 6 9 5 after 6 30pm 6 21 F E M A t J H ouse near R E S P O N S IB L E campus $215, 5 3 utilities N o smoking/ Prefer older housem ate 4 76 pets 8 3 6 6 6 24 _____________ C E N T E N N IA L C O N D O need s 3rd fem ale non smoking room m ate to share furnished con d o 477-4552. 2BR 2 BA 6 25 _______ __________ P O W D E R M IL K BISC U IT eaters house mate n eeded tmmedi' ately Sh a re 3BR house with m ale student C A /CH , h ard ­ w o o d floors, g a rag e : lots of windows N e a r Eastwoods Park and La w School $312 5 0 plus utilities C all Rose or David at 477-7166 6-25 Private F E M A L E nonsmoker Q U IE T , room, furnished $ 2 7 5 A B P 451-2224 mornings or lea ve message for C arol. 6- H Y D E P A R K 1 Fem ale non-smoker for 7BR 1 B A house IF route $175 0 0 A B P 453- 4 6 6 4 everungs. 6 1 7 V l( T0 « i A N A R I S H O U S E humans will love N e a r campus, tike 'tf 4 7 9 8414, osk for M a r k 6 14 Creative vanted lot N O N S M O K I N G M A L E room m ate need ed for nicely furnished Tarrytown 3-2-2 house |QcuiLZi, W /D , security N e a r shuttle lo t e Austin All bills paid A v a ila b le now 472-1240 Hurry! 6-14 Pool, THREE G IR L S need fem ale roommate, new furnished apartm ent near campus $ 3 0 0 month plus utilities nine month lease August 15. Coll M arti 8 34-8783 6 21 __________ H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D by graduate stu dent 2 1 house Quiet, bedroom AC, la rge rooms, fenced close to UT, shuttle Sue 4 9 9 8 0 2 0 6 14 ^ _ _ _ _ _ R O O M M A T E W A N T E D for 38R71BA house C A /CH , wosher an d dryer, ceiling fans Close to campus Contact Ed or Randy, 4 7 2 -6 7 3 9 $ 2 5 0 plus utilities 6 19 _________ ____ _______ responsible R O O M M A T E W A N T E D nonsmoking, M /E. to share 7BR 2 B A apt w a r RT 3 6 0 and 183 $305/m o plus ]*2 utilities A v aila b le Central Lab 3 4 3 2987 6-19 immediately Call 460 Bu sin e ss Ren táis H E Y C R A f T M E N ! Sh o p space a vailable for era8m on of all kinds in Buda Too Vil la g e next to Texas Hatters Ask for M a n ny or Phyllis 441 428 7 95-4287 6-25 D Í Í G N E R S S P A C E has several artist studios for lease at 9 0 ? East 5th Street an d 1704 South Congress Call 447 S M A L L 3 room office for compatible business W e s t UT campus How ell Pro p ­ erties 4 7 7 9 9 2 5 , 452 4212 6 20 490 — W a n te d to Rent Lea se S M A LL H O U S E w onted or independent apartment, not complex, blocks from 24 G u a d a lu p e 2 6 6 9 2 6 6 9 4pm 7 9 A N N O U N C E M E N T S 510 Entertainm ent- Tickets R O B ER T P LA N T an d Tom Petty concert tickets Floor an d a re n a seats, $ 2 0 and up Call Je ff at 4 52-8565 6-18 520 — P e rs o n a ls N O P L A C E to turn fo r help? Try opinions ■by mail Personal, professional, and confidential $ 4 5 per response W n te So cratic M ethods, 3 3 3 Perry Brooks Building. Aushn 1x 7 87Q I 7-3___________ B U Y , SELL, RENT, TRADE... W A N T ADS... 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 P IA N O 'G U IT A R a d v a n c ed U t Music degree UT area O n shurtte route 4 5 9 40 8 2 6 28 instructor beginners G U IT A » I E S S O N S » & B rock, fan country, yo u r choree o l material Seven y e a rs te a c h in g e x p e n e n c e reasonable ra te s A n d y Bu ilin g to n , 4 5 ? 6181 7-2 V O IC E L E S S O N S given by doctoral U1 student lots o l exp enence in oH styles CaH Jam es 454 8165 6 14 590 — Tutoring MATH TUTOR 504 W . 24th St O ffic e 477-7003 IH £ g9|,n<37'’ it C O M P S C IE N C E « T E R M S CS304P F CS?06 e n g i n t M306 l M it t EM306S EM314 EM319 FF316 F F 411 EF318 t F ? t ? EE323 E N G L IS H CS410 CS4tO CS3?8 CS336 CS345 CS35? * s i,*. C H E M IS T R Y ENUM- CHF M3Q1 302 f NG307 CHf M61BA FT [ NG310 B U S IN E S S A S T R O N ACC311 312 AST301 AST302 AST 30: AST30- F R E N C H G E R M A N S P A N IS H A C C 364 STAT309 PSY317 SOC317 M ATH M301 TO? m :k>v P H Y S IC S phy:k)?k L PH Y303K I 3? 7K I D ATA P R O DP A310 PA333 K E C O ÍC0303 C0 3 20 K I In 3 M O N T H S U M M E R speool $ 3 9 tense w ork out program . Top 40 tunes D a n ce studio-harciwood Boors A C. e« - cellcnt music system N e a r UT 482 8 7 8 6 Je o n M arte 6-18 SERV ICES 630 C om puter S e rvices STATISTICAL C O N S U L T A N T will provide help with S P S S , EDIT, quantitative meth ods, statistical analysis, and research m ethodology Tobey Koop, P h D , 4 5 1 8152, M TH 7 8 750 — Typin g ZIVLEY’S THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE PRINTING, BINDING D on t put t h « oft untit the night before an e *s m It ■ too kite then - t o f f o f p a tie n c e a la n g u a g e 1 t ik K k to U T F r e e P e r k n y V e ry re a a o n a b ie rafea A ia o htgh sc h o o i c o u r a e a in the a b o v e a u b fe rfa a n d S A T A G R t R e v ie w y o u can undaratantí N e x t d o o r to M a d D o g & B e a n s BURG1R XING Z 1 V L E Y > B iu e b o n n e l ► g ‘ P ia r a I .XJ | § -T I if ¡ V UT campus 9 TUTORING SERVICE M A T H TUTOR-any math course from A lg e b ra to Calculus C o llege instructor with seven years tutoring expenence 46 2 9518 6-17 S u re , w e ty p e FRESHMAN THEMES Why Not Start Out With Good Grades? 472-3210 472-7677 F R O M $1 15 P A G ! professional quality IBM , them e to thesis R U S H SER V IC E overnight, some d a y o r w hile you woit Located South 9 9 every d o y D onno 443-5613 5 6 K A T H l S W O R D Processing 15 years professional expenem e Theses, disse, tations, legal, etc Competitive rates Pei sonali/ed servir e 2 8 ? 6139 6 28 " W O R D S P R O F E S S IO N A L L Y Typing and W o r d Processing resumes, business, legal, professional Competitive prices Free pickup an d delivery 331-5 7 6 ? 6 21 RESUMES 2707 Hemphill Park Just N o rth of 2 ?th at G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 text p ro c e s s in g IN T E L L IG E N T P R O F E S S IO N A L compu f e n c e d E n g lis h assistance (spelling, punctuation, gmm- marj Beautiful results get higher g ra d es C reative Services, 2 4 2 0 G u a d a lu p e , 4 /8 36 3 3 7-1 P E R S U A S IV F R E S U M E S with ft, in your coreer with confidence 1 invest Project achievem ents effectively. Profes sianal insume consultancy C rea tive S e r ­ vices, 2 4 2 0 G u a d a lu p e , 4 7 8 3 6 3 3 7 1 24 H O U R typing an d worci processing Rush w o rk only. In an d out; k eep trying 4 7 7 -6 6 7 8 7-8 __________________ P R O F E S S IO N A L TYPIST Theses disserta lions, professional reports leg a l G ra d u ate school quality From $115 B a rb a ra Tullos, 453-5124 7 12 g . v i R A T E E S St I r,t -S • B • K M S I M E S • ( O V E R L E T T E R S • F R E I s O K A G I ñ i 1 S $ 2 • - 4 .t v s .t w 1 2707 HEMPHILL PARK At 27th & Guadalupe Plenty of Parking 472-3210 472-7677 SPEEDWAY TYPING 3701 Speedway O Nighr Superftush IF Shurrle Parking 472-4009 INFOPROS U J O R D P R O C E S S I N G «ST, flCCUfifiTE AND IXPENDflBli ST A R T IN G RT $1 ¿ S PflG C LUITH V O L U M E DISCO UN TS AVAILABLE 288 1930 j/TT.m .M C i v 6 - ; - - A ° -V XL et#703 E 499 886 443 6344 836-S i/ e x a H ee j :m Y E A R S O F I K U A L K X I ’E R I E M h WORD PROCESSING XEROX ÜB0 • STORAGE ETC 454-1532 W ith Us, You re #1 5 1 2 E . 3 8 142 ( O f t O u v a t ) 7 D a y s a W e e k WOODS TYPING WORD PRany needs part-time help on as n eed ed ’ basis $5 per hour If interested tall 3 8 5 -4 9 7 0 G len n 7-8________________ B A N K R E C O N C I L IA T I O N clerk, 1pm to through Friday 6pm M o n d a y bonk account recon ciliation , 6 1 recon cilia tion. CRT entry Lake Austin N a tion al Bank Call Rusty at 4 / 7 817 ' 6-18 P O S IT IO N port time A C C O U N T IN G Sa la ry low or M P A student Prefer com m ensurate on experience Prefer 2 tax classes o r exp erien ce M r Sefton, 4 77-4983 6 -M _ L A W O F F IC E needs receptionist, light typing an d filing, some study time, 2 30 to 5pm, all d a y W e d n e s d a y or Thursday 477 8 0 7 ? 6-17__________ __________ W A N T E D part time waitpersons for an English style pub Pick up applications at ♦he A b b e y Inn, 2100 E Riverside (|ust east o f S a fe w a y , next 1 6 to G od fath er's P ir ro __________________________ 4 - W A N T E D ST U D E N T to answ er phone m a smoll offn e East Austin Student may study at w ork Afternoons Ask for M r Jones, 4 7 8 9 9 8 8 6 14 S P O R T S C O M P L E X needs part time ev<- ning help in sports concessions a r e a O r shuttle route G e ra ld 4 4 5 75 9 5 6 18 I xciting atmosphere Call _ THE L A W Firm of Kidd Whitehurst and Harkness has op en in g for part time filing Jante e. clerk/recephomst 4 7 6 -4 3 4 6 6-14_____________________ Please coll SuEiStitute teachers need ed at d ayca re center University area, flexible hours __________________ Call 472 3 4 6 7 6-18 H E LP W A N T E D earn $5 6 an hour as usher A p p ly m person, 1/00 B Smith Rri 385 4010 5 6pm only, Tues Sa t 6 18 Flex ib le evenings IN S T R U C T O R n eed ed A F R o Il C S N orthw est Fitness Center Experience p referred C a ll D eird re at 345-8 8 0 0 6 for 19______________________________ ___ receptionist/secretary PART T IM E grow ing real estate com pony Typing required Sche du le flexible 4 4 7 -7700 _ _ 7-2 for H E LP N E E D E D with housekeeping one or tw o afternoons/wk. C a i necessary $5/ hr Enfield a r e a 4 7 7 - 0 7 0 2 .6 19 800 G e n e r a l H elp W a n te d R E C O R D E X C H A N G E is accepting appli anees for part time bookkeeping and clerical Kelp. 6-20 A U T O P A R T S counter help needed, full an d part time, W e s t side 4 7 7 -4 37A, N orth Side, 452-9441 6-26 FULL TIME and part time help for check cashing service W a g e s a b o ve minimum H W Y 183 2 9 0 a re a 4 41 3616 6 17____ .nter- A U S T Ín T M A R R IO T T Hotel now viewing for a full time position as night auditor Hours a re 11pm to /am Jo b re quires basic bookkeeping skills and 10 key e x p en en ce A p p ly Personnel M-F. 9 to 4 3 0 E O E-M /F/H /V 6 17 N E E D IN D IV ID U A L to work M o n Thurs, app roxim ately 31 hours weekly, pulling orders, packing, shipping and receiving freight Starting salary, $3 85/hr Call 4 5 2 -7 6 7 6 for appointm ent 6-21 $150-5350 Week Summer Jobs Exciting n** promotion headed by established Austin firm needs 20 enthusiastic individuals NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY, we w,l¡ («un AM/PM 6-18 PART TIM E clerical position. Stanley H K aplon Educational Center Phone and office exp en en ce p re feren ce So ph o more or Junior Hours W e d n e s d a y 4 30-9 and alternating Sund ays 1-9. Call Tracee 472 8 0 8 5 6 28 PART TIME job M o n d a y Friday 1 30- 5:30pm Ticket delivery an d clerical. N e e d ow n cor $3 65/hr * car a llo w ­ ance Capitol Travel, 458-8231. 6-14 H ELP W A N T E D part Individual needs goo d tutor for G e n e ra l Physics and Calculus courses. Call Rick at 477- 0 702 6-14 _____________________________ time IM M E D IA T E PART time opening in ceil mg fan sales position Hours 9 am to 1pm (M-F), flexible Also requires w o rim g 9 5, a pproxim ately 3 Satu rdays a month Retail sales experience a must Contact G reg, 454 8601 6-14 PART-TIME credit clerk N ight hours only Tuesday, Thursdoy, an d Sa tu rd a y eve ning 4 45 to 9pm O p tio n a l hours on Sunday are noon to six pm. C all 476- 6511, N a n cy Kelly, for appointm ent Yar mg's downtown, 5 0 6 Congress 7-1 C H O IR D IR EC T O R an d/o r organist n eed ­ ed for small church n ea r UT Experience required 452-4364, 4 78-2565. 6-14 T E L E P H O N E IN T E R V IE W E R S n eeded for evening and w eeken d work, no sales involved but must be a b le to communi­ cate with a w ide variety o f p eople P ay ranges from $4 $6 hr For an interview contact Lone at 4 7 4 7514 or D avid at 4 74-2719 6-13___________________________ D A Y C A R E N E E D S part time teacher, e x ­ perience with children p refered South 444 78 7 0 6-13___________________________ P LA Y E R S H A M B U R G E R S n o w taking a p plications for full and port time counter help All shifts a va ila b le A p p ly at 3 0 0 W M LK 6-19 FULL TIME/PART TIME. STUDENTS, WE W ill WORK WITH YOUR ClASS SCHEDULES CAIL JOY NOW----- 345- 6450, between 10 & 5 6-13 RESEARCH SUBJECTS N e e d e d to rate speech samples for tnteli- gibility Private research com p any Start mg salary $ 3 .75/hr * good attendance bonus p a y W o r k 1? hrs per week, M W F , 8 a m -noon o r 1 p.m 5 p m (schedule not flexible), Perm anent position Must be English speaking and h ave a o o d hearing For further information call Tues F r i, 8 a m -3 p.m., Dynastat Inc 2 7 0 4 Rio G ra n d e, Suite 4, Austin, Texas 78705 476-4797 6-13 INSTANT CASH ANDBONUS If y o u n e e d ca s h to h elp y o u out w h ile a tte n d in g co lle g e , w h y not d o n a t e b lo o d p la s m a ? Y o u co n d o n a t e tw ic e in a 7 d a y p e rio d — fo r th e 1st d o n a tio n r e c e iv e $10, fo r th e 2 n d d o n a tio n in a 7 d a y p e r io d re c e iv e $ 1 ? Plus with this a d y o u ’ll re c e iv e a $2 b on u s o n y o u r first visit A lso ask a b o u t b o n u s p ro g ra m s S o h e lp others w h ile h e lp in g yo u rself M ust h o v e v a lid ID a n d som e p ro o f o f A u s tin re s id e n c e D r a w in g h eld o n c e a m on th fo r tw o $ 2 5 b on u ses C a ll 4 7 4 7941 Austin Plasm a Center 2 8 0 0 G u o d atu p e Safeway Employment Office 8610 N Lamar #112 E X P E R IE N C E D M A R K E T $10/hr 458-5188, ask for Diane 6-18 researchers 6-13 f t j o u te r sp a c e W e g iv e y o u M O R E in n e r & • R ecreaFonu! facilities (pool, sauna, gam e room) • Lots of G O O D M E A L S 19 meals a week • Across the street from cam pus • Housekeeping services • O ff street p arkin g a v a ila b le • C all or w rite for IN F O R M A T IO N (512) 472 8411 Preleasing for Sum m er Pick ap on the»* »um m «r h o m in g w in ners! El C am po. El D orad o. La Pa* and El Cld ar« cu rren tly le a s in g for sum m er at R educed S um m er R ates L ocated in H yd e Park th e s e stu d en t c o m p l e x * * h a v e all the am en U tics you lo v e Best o f All th ey re lo c a te d on th e sh u ttle b u s ro u te s o y o u c a n ’t L ose w hen you deal w ith us Call or sto p by T oday! El Campo 305 W . 39th Street U n fu m is h e i $290 1 bd 1 ■ $375 ¿ bd 1 t ; F u r n i s h e d 1 bd 1 ba 2 bd-1 ba El Dorado 3501 Speedway Furnished $270 1 bd 1 b;t fwail unit1 $355 1 bd 1 ba (CACH) 3 bd 2 ba $280 $290 $425 Unfurnished 1 bd-1 ba (wall unit) 1 bd-1 ba (CACH) $260 $270 La Paz 401 W. 39th St. El ad 3704 Speedway Furnished 1 bd 1 ba 2 bd 1 ba U n fu rn is h e d $290 1 bd-1 ba $ 3 7 5 2 bd-1 ba Furnished $270 1 bd-1 ba $355 2 bd 1 ba Unfurnished $290 1 bd 1 ba $375 2 bd 1 ba $270 $355 472-4893 452-8537 professionally managed by Johnston Properties Inc. Now Leasing For Summer! Rates Starting at $725 12 weeks including meals Fall & Spring Combined Starting at $3300 W e ’ll M a k e You Feel Likih One o f The Family! M ADISON H O U SE 709 W.22nd Austin, Texas 7H70.) (512)478-9891 "T O U R S D A IL Y " b m m - " im 8 ir a w .- w Now Leasing For Summer! Rates Starting at $900 for 12 wks, meals included Fall & S p rin g C om bined Rates Start at $3660 inc. m eals "T O U R S D A IL Y " O O B K E C E N T E R 2021 Guadalupe Austin, Texas 78705 “Good friends don’t let g o o d fr ie n d s smoke cigarettes.” Larry Hagman Cigarettes aren t good for your friends. Adopt a friend who smokes and help 'em quit today. You'll both be glad tomorrow. A M E R IC A N kU C A N C E R ? S O C IE T Y SERV ICES 750 — Typin g NEED YOUR RESUME FAST? Call us for an appointment and we'll type it while you wait. • q in n y s 454-6874 7 J 5417 N orth Lam ar . S E R V IC E S 760 — Misc. Se rv ic e s E M P L O Y M E N T P R E P A R A T IO N L E A R N BA R TEN D IN G • 1 O r 2 W e e k Course • D a y O r Evening • Jo b Placem ent Assistance ..C A L L N O W ! 458-6000 S P E C I/ l STUDENT DISCOUNTS! Legal Serving Age 18 yrs. old P R O F E S S I O N A L B A R T E N D E R S S C H O O L E M P LO Y M EN T 780 — E m ploym ent Services EASY M O N E Y W ork 80 hours as a V o lt T e m p o r a r y and receive a $25.00 bonus. If you refer a friend after you apply, you will receive up to a $50.00 bonus. Ail types of jobs available. W eekly paychecks. Never a fee'to you. VO LT TEM PO RA RY N O R T H 400 E. Anderson #431 834-9921 SO U TH 611 S, Congress suite 106 443 8905 NEED FLEXIBILITY ^ W o rk a day, a week, or a month at a time. I here's a job waiting for you. W e h ave tem porary assign­ ments in all a rea s of Austin for the following: • G e n e ra l Clerical • Receptionists • Secretaries • D ata Entry • W o r d Processors O f f i c e H |p g c ia lis ts W o offer h ig h hourly pay, w eekly p a y c h e c k s a n d m uch m o re C a ll to d a y 458-3111 8705 Shoal Creek #207 a The Daily Texan ?r jraday June 13 1985/Page 15 TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5244 Doonesbury UJHAPPAYA MEAN, YA OOTTA SHUFFLE 7 PEAL,SISTEP ' I'M SOPPY, RP SINATRA, MOST. AFT THEHOUSf PUt£S. I I fOUlVLOSf PEAR MY UPS, HON T V MY JOB, PP. I 5 AIR PEAL THE CAPPS' SINA I PA ^ ^ t> /> /" YOU'PI RAMN RJ6HT10U CJOUil U0%. YOUP JOPO Oi l M l YOUP (EXPLETIVE) p o s o ' BUT I e e r m e y o u p FOBSCENE 0EPUNP) OB%EM b o s s , yo u u m e Í ANATOMICALLY , EXPLICIT EPITHET)'s o e p u n p ? t Economists say tax plan faulty 1985 The New York Times W A S ! U N G I O N Leading econ­ omists, including former top advis ers to President Reagan and Presi­ dent Ford, told Congress they had found major in President faults Reagan's tax plan. They urged changes in several of its most important provisions. In