£ 3 7 r-* - m ^ ¿ £ 3 7 9 1 3 X°S X _ ‘ s p 1 1 e C ' d 'O '-> 1 W 9 u i d uj 3 W ü d V z z o a u e d ui o ; 1 1 J- í j i V 1 & d O d 1 " 1 V l Da i l y T e x a n Vol. 87, No. 156 1 Section The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Tuesday, June 7,1988 25c Capital Metro OKs plan Final approval of shuttle service rests with regents By GREG PERLISKI Daily Texan Staff D espite questions surrounding future costs, the Capital M etro board of directors approved M on­ day a plan to m anage the UT shuttle bus system . Tony K ouneski, Capital M etro general m anager, subm itted a plan to the board that would place Capi­ tal M etro as m anager o f the UT shuttle bus system . If the plan is approved Thursday by the UT System Board of R egents, Laidlaw Transit Inc. w ould com ­ plete its contract, w hich expires in August 1989. Capital M etro would then service the UT shuttle system w ith 80 air- conditioned buses equipped with w heelchair lifts. Steve Bayer, the only board m em ­ ber to vote against the contract, said once C apital M etro vehicles replace Laidlaw Transit Inc. bu ses in Aug­ ust 1989, Capital M etro operation costs will be higher than those of Laidlaw. "T h e difference betw een w hat the U niversity would be paying Laid­ law and w hat they would be paying us is not a terribly big d ifferen ce," Bayer said. "H ow ever, we have additional costs, heavy m aintenance costs and appreciation costs added on to the contract, w hich m akes the costs about 39.5 percent higher. "T h e federal governm ent pays the lion's share of th a t," he said. G ene Stroop, a representative of Amalgamated Transit Union local 1549, w hich com prises Laidlaw bus drivers, said the Urban M ass T rans­ portation Adm inistration has grant­ ed Capital M etro $10 million be­ cause the bus line has a project that will increase m as§,transil ridership. But Bayer said he did not think Capital M etro will serve the com ­ m unity if the board approves taking a "su ccessfu l, in expensive" transit system and simply adding to Capi­ tal M etro m anagem ents costs, even if the federal governm ent is willing to pay for it. K ouneski said he has not com ­ pared Capital M etro's future costs w ith those of Laidlaw. "W e can make a lot of assum p­ tions on w hat the University m ight do or not d o ," he said. " I can't speak to w hat their [Laidlavv's] costs are going to be in the next five y ea rs." Jackie Block, secretary of the Cap­ ital M etro board, said she was not com pletely com fortable with the contract because it did not take into account the changing dem ographics of the University. "W e m ight start to see some changes in patterns w here students liv e ," she said. Block said she w as unsure if 80 buses will be an adequate num ber because Capital M etro cannot deter­ m ine w here students will live in the next five years. Block said she voted for the plan because Capital M etro set up a tran­ sition team , w hich will provide an avenue for future changes. " I think we can alw ays go back and renegotiate if it becom es n eces­ sary ," she said. "It [the team] is an expression of *he board's intent to have the input of the drivers and rid ers." Jane Hickié, the board m em ber w ho proposed the transition team , said there are "ro ck y and tough times ah ead " during the m anage­ m ent transition period. "A ll I am trying to say in this res­ olution, is that there will be a pro­ cess through w hich the con cerns of the drivers and passengers are going to be reflected in trying to make this tran sitio n ," Hickie said. Al Gm itter, vice president of Amalgamated Local 1549, said he is the plan because unhappy with Capital M etro did not negotiate with the union m em bers of both bus com panies and UT students. The transition team will not change the "vagu e access" em ploy­ ees will have to Capital M etro m an­ agem ent, G m itter said. "It's just another step in the lad­ d e r," he said. G m itter said he plans to attend Thursday's regents m eeting to try to dissuade the U niversity from adopt­ ing the proposal. ROTC to test for alcohol Defense Department policy expands drug screening By JIM KENNETT Daily Texan Staff Not only narcotic use — but alcohol use — can pre­ vent entrance into the UT RO TC program , RO TC offi­ cials said M onday. Policy adopted by the D efense D epartm ent last w eek m eans stud ents entering the U niversity's ROTC pro­ gram will be tested for drug and alcohol use. UT R O TC will also cond u ct random tests this fall on juniors and seniors already in the program , said Col. Stephen Sm ith, com m anding officer of the U niversity's ROTC Naval Science branch. If traces of narcotics or alcohol are found in the en ­ trance exam ination, the stud ent is not allow ed to enter the program , Sm ith said. Sm ith said testing for alcohol is com pletely new to the military. "W e all know if you go out and knock three or four back the night before your physical, it's going to show up. But if you d on't for tw o or three days, you can be an absolute alco h olic," he said. "T h e specim ens that have been taken, as they have been forever ... are now going to be further analyzed not only for drugs, narcotics but fo r drugs, alco h o l," he said. Sm ith said candidates entering the naval program in the fall will be tested for narcotics and alcohol during their physical exam . T here are no students entering his branch in the sum m er, he said. "W h at the D epartm ent of D efense has said is that they w ant to test everyone upon initial entry into the serv ices," he said. In the past, candidates volunteered inform ation con­ cerning their use of drugs and alcohol w hen they filled out an application, Sm ith said. "B efo re, you told us w hen you marked the X in the b lo ck ," he said. "N o w instead of you telling us, w e're going to test you to see if it's in your sy ste m ." The military has been random ly testing on-duty sol­ diers for years, and studen ts in the ROTC have been subject to the sam e random testing w hile away at cam p, Sm ith said. In addition, those R O TC cadets re­ ceiving com m ission m ust test negative for drugs six m onths before graduation, he said. Capt. Lew is Echols, an officer in the University Air Force RO TC branch, said his branch has begun testing im m ediately and that jun iors and seniors have been su bject to random testing for som e time. "F o r contract cadets, there is random drug testing, Before, you told us when you marked the X in the block. Now instead of you telling us, we’re going to test you to see if it’s in your system.’ — Col. Stephen Smith and that occurs once a y e a r," he said. C ontract cadets are those on scholarship and those com pleting their last two vears of the program , he said. Sm ith said the difference betw een the first and last two years is in the type of com m itm ent. "Y o u can only require m em bers of the D epartm ent of D efense to becom e involved in drug testing w hen they're on active d u ty ," he said. But students in their last two years, while not on active duty, are under a point of obligation, he said. "F o r your first two years, com m itm ent requires no pay back ," he said. But at the start of their junior year, cadets take an oath of enlistm ent that is binding, and are now subject to random testing ju st as if they w ere on active duty. "T h e y 're in the status w here th ey're going to work for the com pany one way or a n o th e r," he said. Students who fail the test in their junior or senior years, w hether from random testing or the pre-com ­ m issioning physical, will follow one of three possible routes, Sm ith said. They can be dropped w ithout any retribución, called to active duty for at least two years or, if on scholar­ ship, be made to pay back the m oney given to them . The military is not under the sam e laws, Sm ith said, and therefore d oes not have to grant the sam e liberties to its personnel as the general public. "T h e Suprem e C ourt in this country said in any n um ­ ber o f cases that the military is, by virtue of its tradi­ tional role in society and its m ission, not obliged to grant the sam e personal freedom s to its m em bers as the general public as a w h o le," he said. Before the military started random drug testing, drugs w ere probably more ram pant in the arm ed ser­ vices than anyw here else, Sm ith said. "A n d there's nobody ... that has probably w hipped that devil better than the m ilitary," he said. M aj. Mark Joosse, tem porary com m ander of the M ili­ tary Science RO TC, said he w as not aw are o f drug test­ ing policy for his branch of the program. M Freew heeling . u m Daniel Byram/Daily Texan Staff Austinite Cory Thornhold practices skateboarding at preparation for two competitions, one of which will be the Lone Star Skate Park on Research Boulevard in held at the park on June 18. TSU board sets new meeting By MIKE ERICKSON Daily Texan Staff The Texas State University Sys­ tem Board of R egents will m eet M onday to consider the firing of Southw est Texas State University President Robert Hardesty and other decisions a judge declared "null and v o id ," a regent said M on­ day. Board Chairm an Jack M artin said actions taken at a M ay 19 m eeting that included the Hardesty firing, a regent-ordered ban on the prescrip­ tion and dispensation of contracep­ tives from the SW T health center and a decision to dem olish a historic cam pus building will be considered by the board. State District Judge Jon W isser de­ clared the m eeting a violation of the Texas O pen M eetings Act and Order may clarify rights, see page 2. granted a tem porary restraining or­ der Friday preventing the regents from enforcing any of the decisions made May 19. W isser issued the order in re­ sponse to a lawsuit filed by four SW T students Friday afternoon. Student activists who filed the suit said students will attend next M onday's m eeting. "If there w as any meeting the stu­ dents of this university should be going to, this is the o n e ," said Jody Dodd, one of the students who filed the suit. Several hundred students may at­ tend the m eeting, but will not be dem onstrating or carrying signs, Dodd said. "T h is is not the place for that. If they vote for it again, the signs will come out real fast," she said. "W e want them to keep the status quo. We want them to keep things the way they w ere.” If the regents vote against student wishes, Dodd said the students who filed the original lawsuit may file a criminal complaint against the regents, charging them with viola­ tion of the Texas Open Meetings Act. "It's not an ultimatum, it's just something for them to think ab o ut," Dodd said. "If we find them not being responsive, our onlv recourse is to try to remove them through the criminal sanctions." But Dodd said no criminal com­ plaint will be filed unless students find evidence of criminal activity. "W e certainly wouldn't want to charge them with something they're not guiltv o f," she said Leaders say church ‘ostriches’ must face AIDS By JUNDA WOO Daily Texan Staff A handful of Austin religious leaders, speaking at a UT co-spon­ sored conference on AIDS, said Monday that churches have neglect­ ed the epidemic for too long and need to make am ends. “W e have been ostriches long en o u g h ," said the Rev. Rainbow Johnson, of the Austin Church of Religious Science. “Just because there w asn't somebody in our con­ gregation w ho had AIDS, didn't mean it w asn't our problem to o ." Earl Shelp, coordinator of the AIDS Interfaith Council of H ouston, said high AIDS-risk practices such as intravenous drug use and unpro­ tected sex may be identified with "b ack -p ew ," or infrequent, chur­ chgoers. That line of thinking lulled some clergy members into ignoring the spread of AIDS — which has infect­ ed about 1.5 million people nation­ wide — because church leaders felt it w as not a concern, Shelp told the conference. In w hat Johnson called a “very unusual" meeting between religious leaders of varying denominations, she and five other clergy members drafted a letter Monday morning encouraging Austin churches to ad­ dress AIDS directly. The letter takes a "spiritual point of view " and contains quotes from scriptures, Johnson said. "It will be from all the ministers, instead of from an organization, be­ cause we think people will pay more attention to it that w ay ," she said. All Austin churches will receive a copy of the letter, she said. Some local church leaders who did not attend the conference said they have not ignored AIDS. Dennis Craw ford, minister of the Church of Christ in H yde Park, said he holds discussions on AIDS in Bible classes. Dick Miner, communications di­ rector for the Catholic Diocese of Austin, said the Catholic Church regularly prints pamphlets about the disease. Miner would not com m ent on the proposed letter but said, "W hatever UT center faces fight for education ftyMCKTANQUM Daily Texan Staff Eliminating prejudices against victims of AIDS and educa g workers on transmission of the disease are goals of the UT Student Health Center, Sherry Bell, a of health education, said the center's - » Monday. "We try to educate employees regarding the trans­ mission of AIDS and at the same time deal with die personal and emotional issues/' Bell said. The issues of AIDS in the workplace and the Uni­ versity environment were covered in a Tuesday con­ ference co-sponaoced by the University and by Project Reach, or Regional Education on Aids For Communi­ ty Health. BeB told about 25 business representatives at the conference Rut the moat effective way to educate UT workers has been through a system of AIDS work­ shops. In addition to helping management, the UT work­ shops also focus on the individual's fears regarding AIDS and its transmission. "At the beginning of each workshop we try to sit down with the employees and find out where their worst fears lie regarding working with those who have AIDS," she said. Center officials began the workshops last year after some UT workers became concerned when they heard a UT employee had been diagnosed with AIDS. To educate students, the University has displayed AIDS awareness literature and more recently has con­ sidered sending out the same type of materials with a student's grade report. The health center provides confidential AIDS test- big for staff and students. can be done to help the problem of AIDS is a valuable p roject." The all-day conference, attended by about 80 people, w as a part of Project REACH, an acronym for Re­ gional Education on AIDS for Com ­ munity Health. The series of lec­ tures and workshops launched the project's yearlong education drive, which is funded by state and U.S. grants. Business and minority leaders, the targets of the conference, also will be trained to provide AIDS edu­ cation in the com m unity, said T. Demetri Vacalis, project grant direc­ tor and associate professor in the UT D epartm ent of Kinesiology and Health Education. The program has been in plan­ ning for one year. L— ................................... - --- -------------- Don't fire the canon it may be fash­ ionable to Knock the great books, but soo- ety shouldn't just get rid of its literary heri­ 4 tage A new re­ port shows Texas is making progress at bringing faculty saranes up to the nation a 6 average Getting better al the time WEATHER Final primarte* weather This is t Voters in California will go out mto the sunshine sunny and hot just ¡^e Tues­ day's weather They n p i c k jp then banots and exercise their sacred franchise mark­ ing a ballot for Whatshisname or the guy with the big oi' eyebrows It's good to be an American, to enpy the south 5-10 mph winds and highs in the 90s without fear of Soviet domination or a shortage of good lawn furniture But soon the ‘ows will be n the 70s, and the election will be over and the handwriting will be on the wall Oniy we can't read the handwriting because Unete Saul is standing in the way Damn God bless America anyway j j j INDEX Around Campus Classifieds Comes Editorials Entertainment In Depth Sports State & Local University World & Nation 13 i 10 j 13 i A 9 5 8 8 3 Page 2/THE DAILY TEXAN/Tuesday, June 7,1988 Soviet doctor addresses social ills Speaker emphasizes irrevocable medical impacts of nuclear war Hy RICK TANGUM Daily Texan Staff With the threat of nuclear war on the Soviet Union and the United States, a physician must be able to deal not only with physical disor­ ders but also with social ones, a vis­ iting Soviet physician said Monday. Dr. Elena Lukyanova, the director of the Kiev Institute for Pediatrics, Obstetrics and Gynecology, spoke before the Austin Chapter of Physi­ cians for Social Responsibility as part of a nationwide tour of Interna­ tional Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War. Today, with so many social or­ ganizations working for world peace, Lukyanova said she believes that IPPNW is the most effective group because of the ability of phy­ sicians to realize that nuclear war will have no winners — only losers. “What is most striking about our scientists is that the results of their research correspond with those of American scientists," Lukyanova said. Dr. Wes Wallace, national presi­ dent-elect of PSR, said the phys- cians movement is crucial because “only they can inform the public of how helpless the medical profession can become in the event of a nuclear exchange." "Basically, we can do nothing for the victims of nuclear w af," he said. Physicians must also communi­ cate the enormous amount of ne­ glect in consumer welfare to the public large that occurs with amounts of military spending, Wal­ lace said. "There are 37 million people in this country without any form of in­ surance, and the infant mortality rate is worse than it was five years ago," he said. Lukyanova said IPPNW enjoys 'W h at is mo t striking about our scientists is that the results of their re earch correspond with those of American scientists.’ — Dr. Elena Lukyanova, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War popularity in the Soviet Union and the support of the national govern­ ment. "Gorbachev recently praised the efforts of IPPNW in the Montreal World Congress," she said. Lukyanova said through a trans­ lator she was impressed with the large number of young people at­ tending the last week's world con­ gress, which she said reflects the concern of the younger generations of the threat of nuclear war. "Children are our future and must become aware of this threat," she said. With the constant threat of nucle­ ar war, she said a pediatrician's job becomes especially important be­ cause he or she must deal with so­ cial and physical disorders and calm children's fears. "W e should not forget that a little child has the same thought process as a grownup," she said. Her work as a physician and di­ rector of about 1,600 employees in the Soviet Union has given her a high sense of authority, Wallace said. It is quite common for a woman to be in a high position in the medi­ cal field in the Soviet Union, he Soviet Dr. Elena Lukyanova lectures groups on the threat of nuclear war. Daniel Byram/Daily Texan Staff said. "I believe she said 80 percent of the physicians in her institute are w om en," he said. Social problems such as infant mortality exist in the Soviet Union but are not as widespread as people may imagine, Lukyanova said. "In some of the better-developed republics, the infant mortality rate may not exceed that of the United States or Scandinavian countries," she said. Lukyanova said Central Asian re­ publics face higher infant mortality rates, which required an increase of 2,500 physicians the summer months. in Wallace said the infant mortality is problem much greater than people may real­ ize. in the United States Other social problems addressed included smoking, by Lukynova drugs and alcohol abuse. Attorney: Order may clarify students’ rights By MIKE ERICKSON Daily Texan Staff The recent court order invalidat­ ing a Texas State University System Board of Regents meeting may help clarify some student rights to chal­ lenge closed university meetings, an Austin attorney said Monday. But several questions about state universities and the Texas Open Meetings Act will remain muddled until courts or the Texas attorney general settle them. Article 6252-17 of Texas Revised Civil Statutes — the Texas Open Meetings Act — requires "govern­ mental bodies" to discuss, consider or make policy decisions in an open forum. Exemptions can be made if a meeting's agenda meets executive session requirements. Topics such as personnel evaluations and disci­ plinary action would fall under such sessions. The ruling may help define stu­ dents as "interested parties'' under the law, allowing them to bring le­ gal challenges to closed meetings, said Susan Morrison, the attorney who represented four Southwest Texas State University students in a lawsuit against the board. There aren’t very many court cases dealing with the Open Meetings Act. There hasn’t been a case involving students be­ fore.’ — Attorney Susan Morrison - t ........................................... J 1 %. 1r , i\ k Morrison said the students' case will help clarify future questions that might be raised on the open meetings issue. "There aren't very many court cases dealing with the Open Meet­ ings A ct," Morrison said. "There hasn't been a case involving stu­ dents before." The regents meeting violated the act because the regents did not post public notice of its actions, State District Judge Jon Wisser said. Under the Texas Open Meetings Act, lawsuits challenging meetings that may violate the act have to be brought by "interested parties" — T h e Da ily Texa n people who are affected by the law. A UT law professor disagreed with Morrison and said students are not "interested parties" under the law and cannot legally challenge a university action if a legal statute has not been violated. "I don't think they have what's called standing to bring a lawsuit," professor Edward Sherman said. Sherman explained the case will not help students as a special group and said any citizen can mount a le­ gal challenge to a closed meeting. "This case is not precedent-set­ ting or anything," he said. Wisser agreed students are not particularly helped by his ruling. "I doubt if it will help students much at all," he said. Besides the regents meeting, two recent incidents have revealed legal questions about the status of uni­ versity-affiliated institutions and their coverage by the act. Ronald Brown, UT vice president for student affairs, said the Univer­ sity follows the Open Meetings Act. "W e obey the law ," Brown said. But a question was raised about the extent to which the University obeys the law on May 31 when a committee appointed by UT Presi­ dent William Cumnningham closed its doors to the press and public. James Doluisio, chairman of the committee and dean of the College of Pharmacy, said he closed the meeting because he felt press atten­ dance would discourage discussion. UT Executive Vice President Steve Monti said the Doluisio com­ mittee does not fall under state law's constraints. The law has limited application at the University, Monti said. "O nly the Board of Regents and the M en's Athletics Council are deliberative bodies that make policy decisions," he said. And in April, Pan American Uni­ versity's newspaper and student government clashed over journal­ ists' efforts to have meetings abide by the Open Meetings Act. Members of Pan American's Stu­ dent Senate, a part of the SGA, say they are not a governmental body, and therefore should not be re­ quired to follow the Open Meetings Act. The staff of The Pan American, the student newspaper for the Edin­ burg campus, with the help of a state legislator, has asked Attorney General Jim Mattox for an opinion on the matter. Editors at the campus weekly claim the student government has conducted several meetings in vio­ lation of the Open Meetings Act by not properly posting agendas in ad­ vance or by conducting an un­ scheduled executive session to keep the newspaper's reporter out. Edltor .......................................................................................... Mike Godwin Permanent Staff ................................................................................ Siva Vaidhyanathan Karen Adams. Steve D Kevin McHargue ns, Mike Fannin, Tanya Voss Cheryl Laird. Dennis McCarthy John Council, Mike Enckson, Jim Greer, Garry Leavell, Greg Pertiski. Juro Woo Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors News Editor Associate News Editors General Reporters Special Pages Editor Associate Editors Entertainment Editor Associate Entertainment Editor.......................... General Entertainment Reporter Sports Editor 7 . Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporter Photo Editor Associate Photo Editor............................................................................................ Associate Images Editors University Editor Art Director Jeanne Acton Mark Grayson, Tom Philpott Steve Crawford Walker Joe Sims Steve Davis Jerr^ Gomander Clarence Hill Allen Brook John F° xworth Ben Cohen, Lee Nichols Joe Yonan Ashley Bogle Issue Staff Volunteers Images Editor Photographer Comic Strip Cartoonists Bret Bloomquist Danny Byram . . . Susan Boren. Tom King, Robert Rodriguez, Martin Wagner Joseph Abbott, Andrea Anderson, Sherri Lynn Bowers. Craig Branson, Knstie Brown, Kat Bussey, Rob Carranza, Erica Chang, John Clark, Shern Cole, Adrian Cotosberry, Rob D Amico, Hank Demond, Robert Duggan. Andres Eguiguren, Andres Epstein, April Eubanks, Leigh Floyd, Steve Gonzales. Paul Hahn, Scott Henson, Marianne Hubbard, Carol Huneke. Sam Jackson. Rachel Jenkins, Jen Kennett, Will Kitts, Julie Koshy, Joel Lane, Lauren Levi, Anand Pardhanaro, Deena Perkins, Shaun Powers, Frances Ramirez, Steve Ruken, Denise Shannon, Patrick Spong. Kathy Strong, Sean Walsh. Chris Ware. 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Spring and Summer) .............................................................................................. ... • • - ■ * S nn , » Sand orders « id address changes to Texas Student Pubkcasons, P O Box D Auslm, TX 78713 7209. or to To chatas by VISA or MasterCard, cat 471 -5083 ____ TSP Budding C3 200, or caM 471-5063 POSTMASTER: Send address cfwges to TSP, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209. Kaplan “Early Bircfclasses. lake one and fly fi^h on test day Want high scores on the MCAT, LSAT, GMAT, DAT, or GRE? Then get into high gear with a Kaplan “Early Bird” class. W2II prepare you for one of these career- shaping exam s and still leave you plenty of time to spare. So while the pressures off this summer, why not put a little of your free time to advantage? A scoring advantage. Don’t wait till the last minute. Sign up— today After all, everyone knows what the early bird gets. IKAPLAN STANLEY H. K API AN EDUCATIONAL CENTEI IJti. MCAT LSAT 9/17/88 10/1/88 Call 4 7 2 -8 0 8 5 Classes now forming Zipping, zapping worry advertisers By NANCY FAVOUR Daily Texan Staff Remote control and VCRs may be winning more TV viewers, but com­ mercials are losing out in the atten­ tion war. Technology now allows viewers to "zip " and "zap " commercials to avoid seeing them, causing some advertisers to fear that commercials may be playing to a much smaller audience than they expected. is fa st-fo rw a rd in g through commercials on prerecord­ ed shows. Zapping means switch­ ing channels while watching net­ work or cable TV. Z ip p in g A recent study completed by Pa­ tricia Stout, an assistant professor of ad v ertisin g , th at TV viewers who zip through commer­ cials were less likely to get a good impression from the ad. show ed Stout's study aimed to see how much viewers retained from zipped ads and the strength of the ad's per­ suasive power. More than 100 participants in the study saw one of four versions of an ad: The "regular" television spot, an edited version with an extra-long view of the product, the edited com­ mercial on fast-forward or a speed- ed-up version of the regular ad. "It's harder for people to process a speeded-by ad ," she said. People lose both visual and auditory effects when an ad is zipped, she said. "A t gut levels of information pro­ cessing, images become confusing," Stout said. The viewer gets confused because it is difficult to process the informa­ tion so quickly. The confusion cre­ ates a bad feeling for the viewer, which the viewer may project onto the product, she said. tactics, try new Stout said she expects advertisers will including shorter commercials, holding the product on screen longer and mak­ ing commercials look more like tele­ vision programming, to capture viewers' attention. But Frank Nicols, senior vice president of Creative Services for Gurasich, Spence, Darilek, and McClure — an Austin advertising agency — said ads are not changing much. "W e try to make ads as powerful as we can" at the start, Nicols said. Nicols said shorter ads are not very popular with clients. "The problem with 10-second ads is that they're very pre-emptable," he said. If the network does not have enough short ads to fill a block of the short ads commercial could get bumped by a longer ad, he said. time, Steve Schooler, a KTBC-TV em­ ployee, said he has noticed an in­ crease in the number of shorter commercials. Ads need to be short and concise to get the message across quickly, he said. But Linda Martin, sales promo­ tion manager for Cable Ads, said for zipping and zapping is good cable television companies. Safe Boating Week launches awareness By WILL KITTS Daily Texan Staff He is a young white male. He has been drinking, or is perhaps just careless. And he is unfamiliar with the vehicle he operates. This is National Safe Boating Week, and that is a profile of the dangerous boater given by local, state and federal officials. "M ost of the time, the weather is good, the water is calm, visibility is good and the wind is light," said Shirley Waiser of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. "[Boat operators] are just not watching out. It's usually operator error," she said. Al Vernon, a Travis County depu­ ty sheriff, said virtually all boating accidents on Lake Travis are alco­ hol-related. Another problem is that many people don't take the time to learn about their equipment, he said. "People don't use their heads. They buy a boat and they don't know a damn thing about it. And the next thing you know they're runnin' all over each oth er," Vernon said. Eight people drowned on Lake Travis in 1987, and about 15 were injured in boat-related accidents, said Vernon, who patrols the lake year-round. Statewide, 86 people died last year and 158 were reported injured in boating accidents, Waiser said. Ron Ruffennoch, a spokesman for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Fort Worth, said 65 percent of the drowning fatalities in his region are white males between the ages of 17 and 34. His office manages and maintains federal water projects. Lax laws were also blamed for many existing boating hazards. "That's part of the problem," Ruf­ fennoch said. "There aren't laws which prohibit your 10-year-old from getting behind the wheel. It doesn't require a license. You'll see dad in the boat, and a young tend­ erling operating it," Ruffennoch »said. Vernon said the state should re­ quire a boat endorsement on driv­ er's licenses, just as it does for mo­ torcycles. Although he said the issue "h as been discussed several hundred million tim es," there is no apparent effort to enact such a law now, he said. But Bob Basey, general manager of Myler Marine, an Austin boat dealership, said he sees no reason for the state to begin testing and li­ censing boaters. "That's pros and cons. The major­ ity of them [operators] are pretty good," Basey said. "My b6y started driving when he was 12 years old. I think it's really up to the parents to teach safety," he said. Basey said he has seen only three accidents on Lake Austin in his life. "A s far as I'm concerned, the state controls it as well as they can ," he said. In 1985, 1,085 people died in boat­ ing accidents nationwide, and 50 percent of all accidents involved al­ cohol abuse, U.S. Coast Guard statistics show. TRAFFIC TICKETS Miller & Herring Lawyers • Also Will Preparation • Pre-paid Legal Insurance Accepted • Licensed to Practice Before All Texas State Courts fri . 706W .M L K Blvd. Suite 11 Austin, Texas 78701 4 7 7 -3 2 2 1 Not cariJwd in aracn covorod by Toxo* Board of logoi Spoexdixolion Balfour Class Ring Sale Celebrate Tradition with a Balfour Class Ring! Hours Mon-Fri 8:30-5:30 Sat 10:00-3:00 Up to $65 Off $40 Deposit Required Deadline: Sat 6/11/88 2304 Guadalupe 476-8767 Balfour, No one remembers in so many ways. T h e Da il y T e x a n W orld & N ation Records show House speaker spent $2,000 on book Tuesday, June 7,1988 Page 3 Associated Press WASHINGTON — H ouse Speaker Jim W right used $2,000 from his congressional office account to pay expenses of a W ash­ ington aide he sent to Texas to oversee final editing of a privately produced book that speaker nearly eventually earned $55,000, according to H ouse records. the TTie records show paym ents of $2,078.27 to M atthew Cossolotto for hotel accommo­ dations, car rental and m eals "w hile on of­ ficial business" during the period Oct. 22 to Nov. 14, 1984, a time w hen Cossolotto said he was in Fort W orth to com plete w ork on the book. H ouse ethics rules allow w ide latitude in the use of staff m em bers, but they stipu­ late: "Employees m ay not be com pensated from public funds to perform nonofficial, personal or cam paign activities on behalf of the m em ber." Cossolotto said in an interview M onday that the trip was the culm ination of several m onths of on-and-off work in W right's Capitol Hill office to help the Texas Demo­ crat draft the m anuscript of the book, Re­ flections of a Public Man. He said he spent "a good chunk of time" — perhaps 150 to 200 hours — betw een mid-1984, w hen Wright assigned him to work on the book at a staff m eeting, and his trip to Fort Worth. "It was not full time in any particular w eek," said Cossolotto, w ho left W right's office earlier this year and now works for a private com m unications com pany in W ash­ ington. "I would collect some things, read some stuff, talk to the majority leader [the office W right then held]. It was hit and miss. The big crunch was dow n in Fort W orth." During the trip, w hich was arranged by W right's office, Cossolotto said he waited for the book to be typeset, read proofs and m ade final corrections on the book. He said he flew to Fort W orth on a commercial flight, but did not know how that was paid for. The House financial records for the p e­ riod do not show any air fare attributed to Cossolotto. Cossolotto told The Washington Post, which first reported the aide's work on the book Monday, that he was "a little uncom ­ fortable" with the assignm ent and did not know w hether it was proper urider House rules. Asked w hether he reported that uneasi­ ness to any of his superiors, or sought as­ surances from them, he answered: "That's sort of a touchy one. I'm not sure if I did." New reports have pointed out that Wright has collected nearly $55,000 in roy­ alties from the book, receiving $3.25 for each copy that sells for $5.95. It was p u b ­ lished by Carlos Moore, a Fort Worth friend of Wright who also was paid more than $250,000 by W right's re-election committee in 1985 and 1986, while W right was collect­ ing the royalties. Black workers protest South African policy First day of strike results in bombings; operation of schools, factories slows Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Bombs exploded on buses and trains Monday, the beginning of a three-day strike by hundreds of thousands of black w orkers and students in defiance of governm ent emergency regu­ lations. M anpower M inister Pieter du Plessis said the protest was illegal and that workers who took part m ight be fired. Many factories were closed, including all seven m ajor auto plants, but the mining in­ dustry said it was virtually unaffected, with only 9,000 of 550,000 blacks at major com pa­ nies missing work. M ining earns 80 percent of South Africa's foreign exchange. Police in the KwaZulu black hom eland said a firebomb w ounded five bus passen­ gers. The hom eland governm ent, which op­ poses the strike, said nine were hurt. No injuries w ere reported in several other bombings of buses and of railroad cars, tracks and stations. Scores of schools were em pty in black Johannesburg, Cape tow nships Town and Durban. Several universities de­ layed final exams or canceled classes. around Buses were stoned, and there were reports of police gunfire in G uguletu township near Cape Town. Police and soldiers patrolled in greater num bers and stood guard at some train stations. A three-day strike would be the longest nationw ide protest since an em ergency was decreed June 12, 1986, to thw art a black re­ volt against apartheid, the policy of race dis­ crimination that reserves pow er for South Africa's 5 million w hites and denies the 26 million blacks a voice in national affairs. It is the m ost ambitious opposition effort since the banning in February of political ac­ tivity by major anti-apartheid groups and the largest black labor federation. Among the main targets were those prohi­ bitions and proposed legislation that would curtail the ability of labor unions to strike. Black union leaders had called for a "na­ tional protest" without specifying a strike. They said they hoped to pressure business leaders into dem anding the governm ent ease restrictions on the anti-apartheid movement. "This expression of opposition is one of the few remaining avenues of peaceful and legitimate protest available to us," said Jay Naidoo, head of the predom inantly black Congress of South African Trade Unions, the nation's largest labor group. If the labor congress is barred from such protests, "then the new era of labor relations This expression of opposition is one of the few remaining avenues of peaceful and legiti­ mate protest available to us.’ — Jay Naidoo Congress of South African Trade Unions leader is doom ed and industrial stability is seriously jeopardized," he said in a statem ent. Unions have accused em ployers of aiding an alleged governm ent effort to w eaken the black labor m ovem ent, which became legal only nine years ago. The strike is viewed as a test of strength for the unions and their al­ lies. Employers normally have a "no work, no pay" policy in illegal strikes but have reacted more strongly this time. Some obtained court orders prohibiting calls for strikes at their plants. Others threatened to dismiss absen­ tees or cancel union contracts. An association of freight shippers said workers who joined the strike should be tak­ en off payrolls until Monday. A statem ent from the Cham ber of Mines, which represents the six largest m ining com­ panies, said "The overwhelm ing majority of our employees have rejected the confronta­ tional attitude urged by some union lead­ ers." The National Union of M ineworkers, larg­ est in the labor congress, attributed the fail­ ure to court orders and actions by security forces. Executives of a coal mine east of Johannes­ burg said about 80 men arm ed w ith sticks tried to keep workers from reporting for the morning shift and mine guards dispersed them with rubber bullets. Absentee rates for black workers ranged from 30 percent in Pretoria to more than 80 percent in Durban and 90 percent in Johan­ nesburg. Few milk or bakery deliveries were m ade in Johannesburg and surrounding areas, since m ost truck drivers are black. Supervi­ sors at an exclusive private hospital w ashed floors and cleaned toilets. W hite m anagers tended cash registers at grocery and depart­ m ent stores. Most black workers at the Johannesburg Stock Exchange stayed away and uncrow ded dow ntow n streets were like a w eekend after­ noon. Associated Press Back to school Israeli soldiers look on as Palestinian schoolgirls return from their first day of school in four months. The army closed the schools in and reopened them on Monday. the occupied territories at the height of the Palestinian uprising Bank board shuts S&Ls down Associated Press WASHINGTON — Federal regulators on M onday ordered paym ent of a record $1.35 billion to depositors in two insolvent savings institutions in California. In a rare move, the Federal Hom e Loan Bank Board closed American Diversified Savings Bank and N orth America Savings and Loan Association, both of Costa Mesa, w ithout arranging for a takeover by another institution. Only 10 of 235 failed S&L's handled since 1981 have been resolved with a straight payoff of depositors. Usually, the bank board pays a bonus to a healthy thrift to buy a sick S&L because it is cheaper. At the very least, the board ar­ ranges to transfer deposits to another in­ stitution. But bank board Chairm an M. Danny Wall said the unique characteristics of the two Costa Mesa thrifts m ade that im prac­ tical. They had little value as going con­ cerns because they had few retail deposits and lacked branch offices, he said. The m oney in turn w as lent out for speculative real estate ventures and other risky investm ents. Both institutions have been insolvent for some time. Regulators took over the m anagem ent of American Diversified in February 1986 and of N orth America in January 1987. The bank board is paying $1.14 billion from the Federal Savings and Loan Insur­ ance Corp. to American Diversified depo­ sitors in w hat Wall said was the largest cash payout his agency has m ade. It is covering $209 million in deposits at North America. Deposits up to the insurance limit of $100,000 will be available beginning Tues­ day. A total of about $500,000 in both in­ stitutions exceeded the limit. Those depo­ sitors will share in liquidation proceeds. "These two represented abuses," bank board m em ber Lawrence W hite said. "The whole essence of being a depository institution with governm ent-provided in­ surance is that there is a strong ... obliga­ tion to operate in a safe and sound m an­ ner. These two places did not." Prior to American Diversified, the larg­ est cash payout was $300 million in 1984 to close the Empire Savings and Loan of Mesquite. South Korean police arrest 148 students Protesters rounded up on way to prayer rally Associated Press SEOUL, South Korea — A stu­ dent w ho set himself afire during a w eekend anti-governm ent protest died M onday, and 148 radical stu­ dents were arrested while trying to leave for a rally near the N orth Ko­ rean border. After Park R ae-chun's death was reported, about 1,000 students as­ sem bled outside Seoul's H angang Sacred Heart Hospital, shouting "Yankee go hom e!" Park had been hospitalized there since his self-im­ m olation Saturday. Students formed a com m ittee and decided to hold a "dem ocratic peo­ ple's funeral" for the 24-year-old junior from Soongshil University. The burial site w as not announced. At one point M onday, about 500 of the students outside the hospital shouted slogans against the govern­ m ent and the United States. Police did not intervene. O ther police rounded up 20 dissi­ dent students at a Seoul bus term i­ nal and 128 students at the M unsan railway station 25 miles north of the capital, officials said. The students from Seoul National and Yonsei universities w ere en route to the south bank of the Imjin River near the border to attend a prayer rally for national reunifica­ tion. About 2,000 police were on the highw ay betw een Seoul and the riv­ er and set up several checkpoints in the effort to keep radical students away from the river, the northern­ m ost point to which South Koreans are perm itted to travel. The dem ili­ tarized zone betw een the Koreas is several miles to the north. Police turned away scores of stu ­ dents w ho tried to board trains at several railway stations in Seoul. The governm ent banned the riv­ erside rally, which the students in­ tended as as a w arm -up for a pro­ posed North-South m eeting of studen t leaders in the Panm unjom to discuss border village Friday reunification and a joint Olympics. North Korea says it will boycott the gam es scheduled for Septem ber in Seoul because its dem and to be co-host was rejected. Radical students in the South say making South Korea the only host will perpetuate partition of the p en ­ insula, which has been divided since 1945. President Roh Tae-woo's govern­ m ent has the North- forbidden South student m eeting and says anyone disobeying the order will be arrested. The planned march to Panm unjom is considered a serious challenge to the governm ent posi­ tion that it should be the sole chan­ nel for contact w ith N orth Korea. the student Officials say talks would harm the national interest and give the N orth a propaganda advantage. Associated Press 115 reported killed in Afghanistan clash ISLAM ABAD, P a k ista n — Heavy fighting raged in Afghani­ n o rth eastern Baghland stan 's province and one report M onday said more than 100 Soviet soldiers were killed battling guerrillas. There was no independent con­ firmation. Baghland City, the provincial capital, has been u n d er siege for weeks. G ulbaddin Hekmatyar, chairm an of seven-party the Moslem guerrilla alliance, saids the city's collapse w ould be a coup for his fighters. Agency Afghan Press, a pri­ vate-run Pakistani new s service, claimed more than 100 Soviets and 15 guerrillas w ere killed on the Salang Highway w hen the anti-Marxist guerrillas repulsed an attack on their headquarters near the city May 27. Sailor’s death questioned PENSACOLA, Fla. — A Navy recruit w ho a pathologist said died of "sheer terror" after being forced back into a sw im m ing pool had been found psychologically unfit for rescue sw im m er training. Instructors at the Navy Rescue Swimmer School were not told of the report by a Navy flight su r­ geon regarding Airman Recruit records Lee Mirecki, how ever, showed. Mirecki, 19, of Appleton, Wis., had a phobia about being dragged under w ater that m ade him unfit for the school, according to the report, surgeon's flight intro­ duced as evidence during an in­ vestigative hearing on w hether five of the school's instructors and their com m anding officer should be court-martialed. He died March 2 during a train­ ing exercise. W itnesses have testi­ fied he was forced back into the water by instructors after he left the pool and shouted that he was quitting the course. Students’ takeover ends BOSTON — Police arrested 19 people M onday to end an occupa­ tion of a law firm's office by a group of Harvard University stu ­ dents and alum ni protesting the firm's work for a com pany that has a subsidiary in South Africa. A group of about 35 dem onstra­ tors walked the office of into Ropes & Gray at 10 a.m . They chanted and sang songs while a group of supporters m arched out­ side the building chanting "Hey, hey Ropes & Gray, how m uch does apartheid pay?" Boston police entered the build­ ing about 7:45 p.m . and arrested the 19 people remaining. They were charged w ith trespassing and released on bail to await ar­ raignm ent Tuesday in Boston M u­ nicipal Court, said police Lt. John Boyle. "We didn't feel we had any other choice than have them re­ m oved," said Thom as O'D onnell, a m anaging partner at the firm and a principal target of the pro­ test. He said protesters had earlier refused his request for a m eeting with just a few of their representa­ tives. Filipino Senate bill favors nuclear ban of U.S. bases Associated Press MANILA, Philippines — The Senate passed a bill aim ed at U.S. military bases M onday that bans nuclear w eapons and nuclear­ armed w arships from the Philip­ pines. Similar legislation is pending in the House of Representatives. The vote w as 19-3 with one ab­ stention. Most senators favoring the bill spoke of the dangers nuclear w eap­ ons pose. The three opposed said the law would cause problem s with the United States over the futures of Clark Air Base, the Subic Bay naval base and smaller U.S. installations in the country. Sen. Edgardo Angara abstained and said the Senate should consider the position of President Corazon Aquino, w ho has pledged to respect the bases agreem ent until it expires in 1991 and to keep options open on an extension. In W ashington, the State D epart­ m ent declined formal com m ent but an official said: "W e've m ade our views on the subject clear in the past. There's nothing new to say now ." The United States opposes any prohibitions that curtail the ability of its ships and planes to carry nu­ clear weapons. It has objected to similar m easures in New Zealand and Denmark Provisions of the Philippine bill set prison term s of u p to 30 years for bringing nuclear w eapons into the country, and up to 12 years for im­ porting nuclear com ponents. Supporters said the m easure is di­ rected at the six U.S. installations w here nuclear w eapons are be­ lieved to be stored. The United States will not confirm or deny w hether it has nuclear w eapons in the Philippines, or w hether a ship or aircraft carnes them. Sen. Wigberto Tañada, the chief sponsor, said the law would force U.S. authorities to respect the Phil­ ippine constitution, which pres­ cribes a policy of freedom from nu­ clear w eapons "consistent w ith the national interest." He also said it would contribute "to the ongoing process tor detente, denuclearization and disarm am ent in this part of the world. " Jovito Salonga, the Senate presi­ dent, said "The Philippines should not be a prom oter of the deadly arms race. We should never be part of the problem. We should be part of the solution." O pposition Sen. Juan Ponce En- rile said he supported the bill to protest the Aquino governm ent's "inaction" on the constitutional n u ­ clear ban and because "the presence of nuclear w eapons in our territory is inconsistent w ith the national in­ terest." The bill forbids storage or transit of nuclear w eapons and the entry of nuclear-arm ed ships or aircraft, but it allows port calls by nuclear- powered commercial and research vessels after inspection by Philip­ pine authorities. U.S. officials have said such a law w ould severely limit American mili­ tary operations, particularly those of the Navy at the Subic Bay base northw est of Manila. Legalizing drugs would stop hysteria Drug hysteria in the United States has reached a new low. Power- high crazed bureaucrats have advocat­ in Page 4/THE DAILY TEXAN/Tuesday, June 7,1988 E ditorials \ñm*point opinions expressed in The DmOy Tmtan are those of the editor and the writer of the article They are not necessarily the opinions of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Opinions expressed in Second Opinion and staff or guest columns are those of the writer B o o k L ea r n in ' Core curricula should keep the classics Should we read Harriet Beecher Stowe instead of Herman Mel­ ville? Should young writers read Toni Morrison — and ignore Dante, Milton or Shakespeare? These questions are in vogue in the nation's universities. A growing revisionist movement aims to restructure the literature taught in core­ curriculum English classes to include minority, woman and non-West- ern writers. Both sides of the dispute agree that racism and sexism in our culture have resulted in white males' traditionally having been better educated and freer to be creative. But the revisionists, eager to set things right in the 20th century, are proposing measures that would distort the histo­ ry of preceding centuries. By seeking to equalize the representation of woman and minority authors at the expense of the writers that now constitute the core curriculum, the revisionists would promote a false vision of our cultur­ al history. There is no doubt that women, for example, have always been creative — but their creativity did not materially affect the direc­ tion of our culture until recent times. Yet the purpose of the core curriculum — and one of the major purposes of a liberal-arts education — is to show students the direc­ tions our culture has taken. Hence, the predominance of white male authors. Jane Tompkins, a leader of the revisionist movement and an English professor at Duke University, has justified her efforts by saying that “we wanted to talk about civil rights in the classroom, to prove that literature wasn't a sacred icon above the heat and dust of conflict." Tompkins' aim is noble and even necessary to a complete university. But while the academics should strive to unearth the forgotten classics by women, non-whites and non-Westemers, they shouldn't be doing so at the expense of the body of literature that says the most about what the dominant themes of our civilization have been. Virtually all of the works the revisionists are so eager to replace grapple with what one philosopher called the final question: "What does it mean to be human?" Yet there is no doubt that writers like James Baldwin, Flannery O'Connor, Toni Morrison and Richard Wright have tackled the same question. In core curricula, however, the academy must teach students to ana­ lyze the highest examples of literary achievement in Western culture — the works of Dante, Shakespeare and the rest of the greats. From this foundation, we can understand and place into perspective the works of more recent authors. To substitute for the classics more "representative" works of more immediate "relevance" is to mindlessly follow quotas. This sort of thinking subverts the kind of education it's attempting to enhance. — Tom Philpott — Mike Godwin ed mandatory urine testing of the general population. Elderly politi­ cians with paranoid visions of lu­ natic junkies running wild in the streets have called for the deploy­ ment of the military to stop the Great Drug Menace. Meanwhile, misinformation campaigns by the government ("This is drugs ... this is your brain on drugs") create cynicism among the masses. The First Lady's "Just Say No" slogan is used far more often as the butt of sarcastic humor than as a serious alternative to drug use. Why has the War on Drugs been so ineffectual? Mainly because the people fighting it do not have a re­ alistic view of the problem they try to confront. They encourage the perception of illegal drugs as a bo­ geyman that terrorizes individuals and communities. Drugs are de­ scribed as a national security threat, even though one-twelfth of the population uses illegal drugs on a regular basis. People who use drugs are not forced by some drug pusher to in­ gest them at gunpoint. Most make a conscious decision to use them, and in most cases no harm comes to the user. The Drug Warriors fail to distin­ guish between drug use and drug abuse. Any drug from alcohol to cocaine to marijuana to LSD can be used responsibly and moderately by someone who is mature and in­ formed enough to do so. Two former presidential candi­ dates have admitted to past mari­ juana use, and Supreme Court nominee Douglas Ginsberg used marijuana while he was a profes­ sor at Harvard Law School. Clear­ ly not all drug users are losers, no matter what the commercials say. Some college students use crank (speed) to study for exams, and never use it otherwise. Is this abuse? And how about the person who smokes grass rather than drinks to avoid the morning after hangover? Is this an irrational de­ cision based on addiction? Clearly not. Mature adults who know the ef­ fects, benefits and risks of using a particular drug will ultimately make their own decisions about drug use. But the Puritan influence on the VOTER'S GUIDE TO THE. CANDIDATES AND ISSUE.$, SO FAD. 4 i , a g DEMOCRATIC M REPUBLICAN LOCKED-UP WHO'S UFT J PARTV 1 GOVERNING STVLE | MAlN ISSUE. 1 SECONDARY ISSUE PERSONAL SWU DESTINY WIFE (OftUENPOuqUPEMNC IHUl wnh/esv* eM «*»• p* UhieneeM 1 NOMINATION VIRTUALLY LOCKLD-UP MANAGER TYPE JOB FOR EVERYBODY ALL FOR EDUCATION, MIND YOU NEVER WAS ONE MUCH FOR SPEECHIFVIN' HARD TO PICTURE ON US. CURRENCY SOMEDAY | I | 1 | AIN'T SHE SOMETHIN*» ? V 1 1 DEEPLY INVOLVED, OR NOT, DEPENDING! & PICK ......... S c o t t H en so n TEXAN COLUMNIST American legal system has caused most intoxicating substances to be banned in this country. Whether or not the lawmakers want to ad­ mit it, both legal and illegal drugs are as much a part of American culture as apple pie and baseball. There is, of course, a very defi­ nite problem with drug abuse in this country. In order to address this problem effectively, however, we have to isolate it from the hys­ terical ravings of the Drug Warri­ ors. Responsible drug users, like ca­ sual drinkers who don't drive, pose little threat to society. Drug abusers, like alcoholics, are vic­ tims of a disease who need profes­ sional treatment and compassion from their peers. If all of the money spent on drug enforcement in this country were used for drug education pro­ grams and treatment centers, drug consumption would ultimately fall. information A model for this type of ap­ proach is the national "stop smok­ ing" campaign. Although anyone over 16 is free to smoke tobacco at campaigns, will, health warnings on packages, ad­ vertising bans, the proliferation of affordable treatment centers and general public disapproval have caused millions to stop smoking and millions more never to start. Tobacco smokers and beer drinkers are free to enjoy their drug of choice as long as they do not infringe on the rights of others — they can't, for instance, smoke on airplanes or drive drunk. Drug use should not be illegal because the laws are unenforce­ able. Instead, society should pros­ ecute heavily for misbehavior un­ der the influence of drugs. rf Penalties for such violations should include professional coun­ seling. This is a far more construc­ tive approach to change human nature by banning something people really enjoy. trying than A unique case is the problem in America's impoverished inner cit­ ies, where drug addiction is off the scale and gangland murders are the norm. Legalization of all drugs would outlaw the sale of drugs to minors, usurp the markets of gangs and pushers and make our cities safe to live in again. Walter Kelly's comic strip char­ acter Pogo once said, "We has met the enemy, and it is us." The same can be said for the War on Drugs. Until our policy makers begin to look at drug use objectively, real­ istically and with respect for the rights and dignity of the user, America's drug problem will never be brought under control. a ..... Henson is an economics senior. UT needs to reinstate Bible study ' A t this moment in cultural history there is an urgent need to try to learn how to read the Bible again." This quote comes from The Literary Guide to the Bible, one in a number of recent, scholarly works that studies the Bible as Western scholars study the Koran or the Upanishads — as a culturally and historically influenced, literary discourse. Such scrutiny not only assists those who study the text for scholarly reasons, but also clarifies the relig­ ious message for those who believe it is the inspired word of God. What does our University donate to this vital intel­ lectual dialogue? Nothing. With last year's cancella­ tion of classes held at the Biblical Studies Associa­ tion, the University has officially banished biblical scholarship from the academy. Each semester, hundreds of students read Moby Dick, Wuthering Heights and the plays of Shakespeare — works that comment on Biblical historiography and structure — and thousands of students learn about historical events motivated by Biblical interpre­ tation (the Puritan movement, for example). Yet no UT student can take a class concerned pri­ marily with the Bible itself. The University could close this appalling gap in its educational offerings by bringing biblical studies into the University proper. If Bible courses were available within our commu­ nity, Biblical scholars could fully utilize the Universi­ ty's resources, and would become a re> ource them­ selves for both faculty and students. Ironically, both those who fear the smallest chink in the wall separating church and state, and those faithful who find critical study of their sacred text blasphemous form the main opposition to incorpo­ rating Biblical scholarship into the curriculum. J" " ■ ..... 1 A d r ia n C o lesb er r y TEXAN COLUMNIST Those fearing a breach of church-state separation could be placated by a system that would prevent advocacy of any religious position in the classroom. They should also consider this: Without biblical studies in college, non-churchgoing, educated peo­ ple will remain entirely ignorant of the source of many Western values and of the impetus behind forces now acting in our culture. Likewise, Christians who fear biblical analysis should remember that past criticism, such as that of Erasmus, has done little to discourage belief among the faithful; it has merely enlivened religious debate. Historical and literary examinations of the Bible simply use the tools of investigation developed in modem analyses of secular writings. Even if the writ­ ers of the Bible were inspired by God, as many be­ lieve, they still wrote in human language using human words, syntax and narrative techniques. If the Bible cannot stand up to secular analysis, how profound are the truths therein? As always, the objections to academic investigation prove much less compelling than the argument advo­ cating intellectual advance into all areas, regardless of sensitivity. Courses in the literary and historical significance of the Bible could reside in the Department of English, the Department of Religious Studies, or in their own department. Each of these options would suffice to reinstate biblical study in the UT community — where it belongs. Colesberry is a special student. Student service fees vary Jennifer Wong is wrong when she states that all students must pay $88.48 per se­ mester for student services fees ("Student shuttle bus fees overcharge non-riding payers for unused service," The Daily Tex­ an, June 3). The student service fee is composed of two components: student service fee-other and student service fee-health. Student service fee-other is prorated depending upon the number of hours a student takes. The rate for 1987-88 is $4.29 per hour; for 1988-89 it will be $4.45 per hour. Thus a student registered for one three hour class this fall will pay $13.35 for student ser- vices-other, plus a flat rate fee of $36.45 for student services-health, for a total of $49.80. Further, there is a cap placed on these fees. For 1987-88 the cap was $88.48, which is reached at the twelfth hour. Thus Wong's example implies that all students are registered for twelve semester hours, an obvious error. While her complaint about the inequi­ ties in the funding of the shuttle system may be valid, absolutely none of her fig­ ures are accurate. Indeed, a student registered for only one hour has as much access to the shuttle system as one who is registered for twelve hours, yet the former would only pay one- twelfth as much as the latter. Perhaps a flat rate, such as is applied for the health center fee, would be more equi­ table. Incidentally, all of the above financial in­ formation is available in the General Infor­ mation Catalog, page 52. Richard Lynch Student Accounting Office Paul true third candidate I agree with Tom Philpott ('The Third Man," The Daily Texan, June 3) when he says, "If the nation ever needed a third- party candidate, the time is now. With their vaguely centrist politics and their propensity talking specifics, George Bush and Michael Dukakis have blurred party lines into a hazy muddle." the perennially that But warmed-over liberal Eugene McCarthy of­ fers such a choice. I disagree to avoid A real alternative, Libertarian Ron Paul, has been off and running for months. McCarthy adds nothing new to the tired, failed policies of the Republicrats and De- mopublicans, just a cult of personality. In foreign policy, Ron Paul would return America to its historic policy of non-inter­ vention in other nations' wars and internal affairs. In the last 75 years, both Republi­ cans and Democrats have delivered Amer­ ica's bravest sons in body bags to their sobbing parents. Ron Paul would end all foreign aid and meddling. He opposes mandatory national service, as involun­ tary servitude of the nation's youth. Ron Paul would balance the budget by cutting expenditures not by raising your taxes. He supports tuition tax credits and would end the tyranny of the IRS. He fa­ vors a return to the gold standard. Ron Paul is a civil libertarian. He would end discrimination against lesbians and gays in the armed forces and in govern­ ment employment. He supports your right to live your own life and read what you want. He would end the farce of drug pro­ hibition, which acts as a price support scheme for the Mafia. He supports free­ dom for AIDS victims to use experimental drugs by removing governmental regula­ tion and red tape. Philpott says a third-party candidate will "introduce both excitement and the discussion of specific issues into the presi­ dential debate." But McCarthy's Consum­ er Party has never been on the Texas ballot and probably will not be this year. Ron Paul and the Libertarian Party are already on the ballot. McCarthy is an echo. Ron Paul offers a choice. Fred Ebner Austin Praise for ex-HRC director On May 31, a giant left the campus of The University of Texas at Austin. Stated in feet and inches, Decherd Turner's height is not awe-inspiring, but he stands very tall — at least to me. No matter how busy he was, Turner al­ ways made me feel that I was welcome in his office and that my idea, problem, or purchase request was worth his complete and concentrated attention. If the idea was good, he often suggested ways to improve it; if the idea was bad, he told me why. He helped me solve my problems both with good advice and, when necessary, with active participation. When I went to Turner's office with a purchase request, I knew that I had as fair a chance at available funds as any other curator on the staff. (And the Theatre Arts Collections acquired several magnificent collections during Turner's eight-year ten­ ure.) I didn't get everything I asked for. 1 didn't expect to. I knew very well that there were several other curators whose requests needed to be considered as well the occasional crucial as that appeared unexpectedly on the market. I also knew that Turner was committed to establishing and staffing a really first-class conservation laboratory. item I loved Turner's sense of humor. I loved his reminiscences and the stories he told to make his points. I loved the bursts of infectious laughter that erupted when his funnybone was tickled. In fact, I some­ times suspect myself of having taken com­ paratively simple problems to him just to get my spirits lifted. Like most men of achievement, Decherd Turner is a controversial figure and has made enemies along the way. (Gad! Has he made enemies along the way!) He has his faults. Who hasn't? He has made mis­ takes. Doesn't everybody? The Harry Ransom Humanities Re­ search Center will go on like the jugger­ naut. The HRC is bigger than all the peo­ ple who have worked, are working, and will work in it. But a great, good friend of mine has left it. I shall miss him. W. H. ",Deacon" Crain Humanities Research Center Editor's note: Dechard Turner, former di­ rector of the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, retired May 31. / T h e Da ily T exan Tuesday, June 7,1988 Page 5 In Depth Hospice care provides acceptance, comfort during final months " A dying man needs to die as a sleepy man needs to sleep, and there comes a time when it is wrong, as well as useless, to resist." Stewart Alsop felt sure he would go over the weekend, but he's still with us." Terry Groeneveld, a Hospice Aus­ tin nurse, begins her briefing as she nego­ tiates freeway traffic. The patient she will visit has been on the verge of death for several weeks, his tenuous hold on life exceeding all expecta­ tions. "Lester has gastric cancer, and it's spread to the liver and lymph nodes," Groeneveld says. "H e's really just cling­ ing right now. I think his wife is ready." After a 15-minute drive, Groeneveld wheels the car down a middle-class, sub­ urban street and stops. Margie Bennett, a small, round-faced woman, greets Groeneveld at the screen door with a bright smile. Mrs. Bennett leads her down a hallway and into her husband's room. "Got some visitors here for you, Daddy," she says and looks lov­ ingly at the man in bed. Tired of hospitals, Lester Bennett had wanted it this way. Central to hospice is the philosophy of in-home care to the terminally ill when curative treatment is no longer possible. Hospice seeks to enhance the quality of life during a patient's final months. This is accomplished by controlling pain, attend­ ing to emotional and spiritual needs, and generally letting patients make their own decisions. Patients entering the Hospice Austin program must be diagnosed as terminal within a six-month period. Families agree not to seek aggressive curative treatments such as surgery, radiation and chemo­ therapy. Emergency resuscitation also runs contrary to the intent of hospice care, which seeks to help the family ac­ cept and prepare for the death of a loved one. An emaciated, diapered figure lies on the bed. His shoulder blades and hip bones press out against tight, almost translucent skin. His nose points straight up at the ceiling. Portraits of the same man in good health sit atop a nearby dresser. Groeneveld approaches the bedside, takes a frail hand in heis, and shouts. "I think we can safely say Margie's done a beautiful job, Lester." She speaks as though to a small child. There is no re­ sponse. "He hasn't said anything today," Mrs. Bennett says. "H e's a little more out of it. "His little eyes won't close, you know," she says softly, "so we put these drops in. He hasn't eaten anything in six weeks, and hasn't had any water at all in a week. Usually we give him some shaved ice, you know, in a little cup, but he won't even take that now." Groeneveld checks the morphine drip at the bedside. Mr. Bennett's pain is well- managed by his wife, who explains her role in injecting the drug into his IV line. "I didn't think I could do it. I mean, I'm not a nurse or anything," she says. Mr. Bennett's eyes seem startled and distant. He is far away, deep within him­ self. From time to time he breaks the si­ lence with a quick, high-pitched squeak. Still at his side, Groeneveld tells Mrs. Bennett he is trying to communicate something. "Let go of all the tasks a little bit today, and do some listening," Groeneveld says. "Maybe what he needp is a lot of hands- on holding today." Mrs. Bennett drops her smile and asks how long her husband might go on like this. Groeneveld looks at him closely, touching his face. She speculates that it could be over very soon. "H e's seeing the angels, I just know he is," Groeneveld says. Mr. Bennett, at 53, died the next day. Organized in 1986, Hospice Austin was certified by Medicare in December of that year. Nurses, social workers, a chaplain and home health aides offer a combina­ tion of support services in the home. But the familly itself assumes primary respon­ sibility for patient care. This private, non-profit agency is part of a larger nationwide trend away from excessive, life-extending treatment of the terminally ill in hospital settings. With Medicare certification providing the stim­ ulus, 1,372 hospices were operating in the United States in 1987. It has been almost two weeks since the death of her husband. Mrs. Bennett is planting a garden memorial to her hus­ band in the back yard, using flowers from his funeral. She answers the door in shorts and a work shirt, a little soiled and sweaty from the job. "You got here just in tim e," she says with a broad grin. "1 just got done." She falla about her husband's passing at a small kitchen table. "It was so peaceful, so quiet. I was ex­ pecting a more dramatic ending, so to speak. 1 was fixing to change him — just as I undone his diaper — just immediate­ ly, there was nothing. I was kind of in S T O P V BY W I L L KÍTTS awe, I just stood there." She pauses. "I thought it would be several more days." The couple learned the cancer was ter­ minal after Mr. Bennett's stomach surgery in June 1986. She describes their reaction as one of "utter disbelief." Wagging her head slowly, she marvels at the memory. "We felt like we were dreaming." Hospice care was suggested. "I didn't know what hospice was. I had never heard of it. I couldn't face the fact that it was a limited time. I just thought he was going to live from now on — I couldn't put a time limit on it. Lester said, 'I don't believe we're ready for them.' " From the fall of that year to the follow­ ing April Mr. Bennett underwent che­ motherapy. "The doctor said, 'Soon you will come to where you weigh the quality of living.' Taking chemotherapy, your quality is zero." Mr. Bennett went off the chemothera­ py, and felt good enough to travel to Cali­ fornia in May. "He had a good summer, but then by last fall he started to feel bad," she says. "He had extreme pain breakthroughs. Lester didn't want to go back to the hospital. Then we realized we needed hospice. We started facing reality. "This is such a good organization — I really can't say enough," Mrs. Bennett says. "Hospice took care of everything. Lester had been in and out of the hospital so many times I practically needed a med­ ical secretary. She laughs and says, "Since October, they've filed all the insurance forms." Hospice Austin also lightened Mrs. Bennett's burden in another way. As her husband's condition worsened early this year, he began to need more and more care. A home health aide was sent three times a week to clean house and bathe him. Counseling was also provided. "They helped us from one step to the next," Mrs. Bennett says. "You just go through different emotions. Denial, frustration. The word 'cancer' was never in our vocab­ ulary." Now and then she breaks down, her face damp with tears. The hospice team brought the issue of death out in the open, she says, and that allowed the family to begin accepting it. "They helped us to grasp it, if that's pos­ sible. Otherwise, we would have been groping in the dark." In addition to this material and emo­ tional support, Mrs. Bennett is thankful for having had her husband at home. "We feel like we got the privilege of doing and saying to our loved one everything," Mrs. Bennett says. "My daughters had time. They never say, 'I wish I had said this to Daddy.' Lester and I said goodbye so many times. We covered all those ave­ nues." Mrs. Bennett dabs her eyes with a tis­ sue and weeps openly. Her grief is palpa­ ble. Now the adjustment must come on her own. "People say, 'Time'll take care of it.' 1 don't want them to say that, because I don't want the pain to go away yet." But as she continues to slowly let go and say goodbye, Mrs. Bennett takes comfort in having been at her husband's side, in having prepared herself as he gradually slipped away from her. "It helped me to grasp the idea of being alone." Tuesday, June 7,1988 Page 6 U n iv e r sit y Th e Daily Texan Faculty salaries on rise Texas universities close in on national average By JOSEPH ABBOTT Daily Texan Staff Faculty salaries at Texas public universities are moving closer to the national average, according to a re­ port issued Monday by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board. The report showed a 10.5 percent increase in the 1987-88 average sal­ ary of the top four faculty ranks — professor, associate professor, as­ sistant professor and instructor — moving Texas within 4.1 percentage points of the national average. Texas trailed the national average salary last year by 8.9 percent, ac­ cording to the report. The report also found the Texas average trailed those of the 10 most populous states by 10.8 percent in 1987-88, compared to 15.7 percent in 1986-87. Kenneth Ashworth, state higher education commissioner, praised the Legislature for its role in the in­ crease. "We're very pleased to see that the last session of effort by the Leg­ islature has made it possible to nar­ row the gap between Texas and the rest of the nation," Ashworth said. "It's important for us to do that in order to attract the best faculty and to retain the best faculty that we have now ." Ashworth said the board's goal was to bring Texas salaries in line with those nationwide. Texas could reach that goal by 1991 if the Legis­ lature accepts the board's funding formulas, he said. "If we can continue to move for­ ward, Texas will be able to maintain the educational system needed to support our econom y," he said. The Legislatu re will decide whether to approve the recommen­ dations in the 1989 session. H.M. Dougherty, board chair­ man, praised what he called "the state's commitment to higher edu­ cation" in a prepared statement re­ leased with the report. "I am hopeful additional im­ provem ents will be p o ssib le," Dougherty said. The board is the state agency re­ sponsible for oversight of the public higher education system. The report listed California as the state with the highest average sal­ ary, $47,220. New Jersey was sec­ ond with $45,196. Among the 10 most populous states — M assachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Ohio, Michigan, Flori­ da, California, Illinois, Pennsylva­ nia and North Carolina — only Illi­ nois' $35,687 average was lower than the $37,091 average in Texas. 40 30 20 10 Average Faculty Salaries 1987-88 50 r 47.2 35.7 J i in thousands of dollars Source: Maryse Eymonerie Associates Alan Friedman, chairman of the UT Faculty Senate, said he had not seen the report. After hearing parts of it, he praised it. "It suggests that we're doing bet­ ter than we had been doing, but that we need to do better," Fried­ man said. Ex-student blames birds for blindness By SALLY STROUD Daily T exan Staff A former UT student said Monday he was blinded by a respiratory disease caused by a common campus problem — bird droppings. Gary Fragelman, who is originally from Boston, said the disease can be linked to UT campus. Bird droppings gave him the disease, he said. Fragelman, an advertising student during the '70s, developed a blind spot in the center of the retina of his right eye last winter. He said he recently had laser sur­ gery and can now see out of his right eye, but not as well as he could before. Fungus spores from grackle droppings present a po­ tential health hazard to people who come in contact with them, said Paul Szaniszlo, a UT professor of mi­ crobiology. The spores, which grow in soil enriched with grackle droppings, can cause histoplasma capsulatum, a fungal disease, he said. "The University has a moral obligation to tell work­ ers about spores," Fragelman said. Fragelman said he thought about writing to UT Presi­ dent William Cunningham, but thought it would be thrown away. He does not plan to sue the University, he said. "Based on scientific experiments, no direct link exists between bird invasions we have here every year on campus and documented cases of fungal disease," Szaniszlo said. No current research on histoplasm osis is being done at the University, Szaniszlo said, partially because the grackles that commonly flock around campus are not the same species normally associated with histo­ plasmosis, the European Starling. Szaniszlo said Fragelman cannot "unequivocally, scientifically establish" that he contracted the disease on the UT campus. He said Fragelman told him that he also visits North Carolina, a place grackles frequent. But Jack Newman, a former UT student and friend of Fragelman, said Fragelman made no stops on his last trip from the University to Boston, where he later de­ veloped the eye lesion. "This makes me think that UT is faced with a moral obligation to carry out research on a possible link be­ tween Gary's disease and grackle droppings on cam­ p u s." Newman said. Russell Currier, an environmental epidemiologist in the Iowa Department of Public Health, said histo­ plasmosis is a common disease in the Midwest. Unless an infected person's immune system is defi­ cient, it is unlikely the disease will result in any serious consequence, he said. John Bum s, UT grounds maintenance landscape su ­ pervisor, said there are as many grackles at the Univer­ sity as there are complaints about them. R O LE X Best Prices On New & Pre-Owned R o le x Watches, All Genuine w/warranty J. Stern Diamonds 478-4649 Ffewt RepuMc Bank Tower th & C ongroM University M arket Facts... Students ot the university spend only two hrs daily watching w eekday television, faculty' staff spend an average of 2 3 hours per day in television viewing Source The University Market Beiden Associates 1987 coupon.. I ROFFLER SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN SHAMPOO a _ § C CUT BLOW DRY V Services p erform ed by supervised students1 5 3 39 Burnet 45 8 2620 fo r RESUMES PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS IMMIGRATION ffu rd etje 2532 GUADALUPE 477-5555 CO. Pennies Pound TO N S o f IRON a 4123 Guadalupe Next Door to Hyde Park Gym 459-4747 es Hm s 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1:30 Open 11:00am Mon-Sat Open Sun 3:00pm Happy Hour Mon-Fri 5-7 UNLIMITED LONG DISTANCE CALLING (4 9 .0 0 Houston/Dallas (0 9 .0 0 San Antonio Coll Now 0 4 6 - 7 6 6 0 Col or Morilyn Lemmon Flar-tase C orrvnu a flo ra o f Texas, ltd . AMNESTY for FOREIGN STUDENTS A U.S. federal court judge recently ordered the Immigration Service to accept amnesty applications from students who worked without permission before Jan. 1,1982 The dead­ line to apply for this legal residency is August 31,1988 toraMMmcecal: PAUL PARSONS p c Attorney at Law Board Certified Immigration A Nationality Law Texas Board of Legal Specialization 704 Rio Grande 477-7Í T IC K E T D IS M IS S A L ONLY $15.00 NEAR CAMPUS NO TESTS REGISTER BY PHONE (Don’t forgat to bring the coupon wMh you.) Budget Driving School 454-5077 4314 Medical Parkway 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 e p r o d u c t i v e C a r e • 1 l e e l ’ l c q n d l M A . I ( ' S t m q • P r o b l e m 1’ i e q n . t i u v t o t m s e l m q I <4 1 H •> . r> r r .aam am arnm am m * B i r t h C o n h n l • l ' . t p I e s t • A b < >! h e l l S t -1 v |( e s W r || R E P R O D U C T IV E S E R V IC E S # I ... ii, h .in e l . . . .,s. ,1 \ i • e n . K sI 4 5 8 - 8 2 7 4 1 0 0 ' ) I l O l l i U f l T D | l | C Yi.MAHA We main the difference HOT PRICE! a (till 6-13 only) $ 1149* ilsoDTSO on-off road $979* YAMAHA YSR50 O’Leary Yamaha 7 S 3 9 B urnet 453-4555 • .m Kasson Yamaha 1 8 0 7 S . Lam ar 444-7482 State Railroad Commissioner Kent Hance tells teachers and students the U.S. must recover oil price control. Daniel Byram/Daily Texan Staff Hance: Regain oil price control By MIKE ANDERSON Daily Texan Staff The United States needs a direct voice in OPEC price-setting if it wants to keep its economic base, Texas Railroad Commissioner Kent Hance told a group of high school teachers and students at the Univer­ sity Monday. Hance was the keynote speaker for the 28th annual Texas Energy Science Symposium, sponsored by the University and the Texas Atom­ ic Energy Research Foundation. During the presentation in Robert A. Welch Hall, Hance stressed the importance of regaining the control the United States lost over oil prices after the 1973 Arab oil embargo. "Texas produces more oil than 10 of the 13 OPEC countries," he said. "We produce virtually the same as two others. There is only one coun­ try in OPEC that produces more than we do. "A nd yet, for 15 years we've been sitting on the sideline reading the newspapers to find out what they are going to do to us next." Hance has been the subject of controversy recently for his s u g g e s­ tion that Texas should cut oil pro­ duction and cooperate with OPEC to shore up oil prices. Oil analysts have said the agreement raises se­ rious antitrust questions Hance said he wants to reduce world oil production by 500,000 bar­ rels a day and stabilize the price at about $18 or $19 per barrel. "If we stabilize the crude oil price at $18 to $19, we would stabilize the gasoline prices," he said. "Even if they went up, it would only be about 3 cents. "M ost people in Texas would be willing to pay the extra 3 cents if it m e a n t e c o n o m y around, if it got the unemployment rate down, opened up jobs and money for education," he said. t u r n in g the Hance will be traveling to Vienna next Saturday to meet with the Ni­ gerian OPEC' president, whom he hopes to bring to Texas sometime later this summer. Hance said critics of his meetings with the ministers favor continued reliance on the free market to stabil­ ize prices. "The large majority of the world's oil reserves are owned by Mexico, China, the Soviet Union, OPEC and Great Britain," he said. "They all have nationalized oil companies. "When 89 percent of the oil is owned by these countries, do you think that's free enterprise? It's not a question of setting the price, but who is setting the price, and for what reason." Hance said 40 percent of the oil used in the United States is pro­ duced in foreign countries. He esti­ mated that percentage will rise to 65 percent by 1990. "That's scary because it is a na­ tional security problem ," he said. "If a war broke out and you're get­ ting 65 percent of your oil from for­ eign sources, you are in deep trou­ ble." * Earn While You Learn Sales trainees are now being hired for open­ ings on the Daily Texan advertising sales staff for the Summer Session. Advertising sales experience is a real plus. Future employers value this experience. Gain money, experience and the opportunity to join the Texan sales staff after successful completion of the training. Application Deadline — Noon Thursday, June 9 Applications Available Texas Student Publications 3.210 Campus 471-1865 The Daily Texan The University o f Texas at Austin is on Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer T h e Da il y T e x a n Sta te & L ocal Tuesday, June 7, 1988 Page 7 Richards calls for tax limits By JOHN COUNCIL Daily Texan Staff State Treasurer Ann Richards called for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution Monday limiting con­ gressional taxation on state and lo­ cal bonds, including bonds for schools and prisons systems. services Bonds provided for state govern­ ment such as public schools, jails and prisons are cur­ rently exempt from federal taxes, but with the U.S. Congress search­ ing for extra revenue to battle the $3 trillion dollar deficit, it might dip into exempt funds, Richards said. Richards said a recent U.S. Su­ preme Court decision gave Con­ taxation control of future gress bonds. "Clearly, with the federal govern­ ment attempting to find additional revenues to reduce massive deficits, we need to protect this vital source of funds for building schools, high­ ways, water projects and prisons in Texas," Richards said. Richards proposed a change to the 16th amendment that would kill an additional $30 billion of federal taxation. It would result in­ creased state taxes for Texans, she said. in "Without the current federal tax exemption for local and state bonds, the taxpayers of Texas would have an additional $1 billion tax bill." The increased taxation would cost Texas households an additional $250 per year, Rkhards said. The treasurer's office is issuing a survey this week to more than 3,000 bonding authorities. The survey's purpose is to assess the impact on local governments. Richards said she will ask the 1989 Legislature to adopt a joint res­ olution calling for the U.S. Congress to adopt the amendment. If the Legislature approves the amendment, it goes to Congress, where it must receive a two-thirds majority vote from both houses. If Congress approves the amend­ ment, it would then have to be rati­ fied by three-fourths of state gov­ ernments. The 16th Amendment to the U.S. to Constitution allows Congress levy the federal income tax. Richards' proposal would add, "The right of states, their political subdivision oi authorites to issue general or special obligations for public purposes as declared by them, free from taxation directly or indirectly, shall not be denied by the United States." City asked to delay site choice Civic groups question ‘appropriateness’ of convention center vote By GARRY LEAVELL Daily Texan Staff A loose-knit coalition of civic leaders and concerned citizens asked the City Council Monday to delay a vote on the site and funding for the city's proposed civic center just one day before a public hearing on the issue. Representatives of seven organizations held a news conference Monday in City Council chambers to voice their concern about what they say is premature action by the council. The council has scheduled a public hearing regarding the subject for 4 p.m. Tuesday at its weekly work ses­ sion at the Central Library at 800 Guadalupe St. A motion is expected to be made at that time to approve the site recommended by the Gilbane consulting firm. But Councilmember Sally Shipman said last week she would propose a motion Tuesday to postpone the decision until after Mayor-elect Lee Cooke and Council- member-elect Robert Bamstone take office June 15. Site C, the one chosen by Gilbane, encompasses a five-block area at the intersection of West Second and Guadalupe streets. Seven of the eight speakers Monday indicated their support for a location east of Congress Avenue. The most often mentioned east-side location was Site F, at East Second and Neches streets near Waller Creek. "After studying all aspects of the matter, it is clear that Site F is the most appropriate," said Carlie Saun­ ders, a member of the Sector 1 council, a citizen devel­ opment group. "It is the site which best serves the needs of those trade attending and servicing conventions and/or show s," Saunders said. In addition to the center's location, group members expressed concern over such wide-ranging issues as the center's cost, its funding, the site's historical value and the center's influence on business in already strug­ gling areas, such as the Sixth Street historic district. Richard Meyer, a member of the city's Historic Land­ mark Commission, said that Site C will likely yield sig­ nificant historical items that could trigger a state review and, as a result, could require a permit from the state to build on the location. He added that Gilbane's report failed to address the "appropriateness of the site ' and the time delays re­ sulting from such problems. Susan Frost, president of We Care Austin, called for the project to be financed jointly with the private sector rather than through the exclusive use of public funds. Program brings touring Soviets to city By ROB CARRANZA Daily Texan Staff On the middle leg of a three-city American tour, four professionals from the Soviet Union arrived in Austin Monday evening as part of a citizens' exchange program. "For the first time I speak Eng­ lish," said Elena Kondrashova as she stepped off Continental Airlines flight 908 at Robert Mueller Munici­ pal Airport. for Kondrashova, a researcher at the Institute International Labor Study, Moscow, is traveling in the United States with another woman, Lubov Belkina, and two other men, Oleg Tishchenko and Boris Sevosti- anov. THE TEXAS DOZEN * 2 i * jsJHS, 15 roses arranged & delivered TFFIEST A FLOWERS 453-7619 3830 N. Lamar The four are visiting Austin through an exchange program, "So­ viets, Meet Middle America," spon­ sored nationally by the Center for U.S.-U.S.S.R. Initiatives and hosted locally by the Texas International Exchange Society. Tishchenko, an editor at the newspaper Molodost Severu in the city of Siktivkar, said he likes the United States because he received a cordial welcome when he first ar­ rived. "I found California to be a little w arm ," Tishchenko said. "I know here you have a strong Southern di­ alect." The four Soviets, management professionals in different industries, will be in Austin five days, visiting with their counterparts in American industry and touring the Texas Hill Country. in Sevostianov, chief engineer at the Donetsk Coal Mine Construction Trust the city of Donetsk, Ukraine, may tour a lignite mine in Bastrop, and Belkina, deputy gener­ al manager at the Moscow Shoe En­ terprise, may travel to San Antonio to visit a shoe factory. Belkina heads the 24-member del­ egation of Soviet citizens presently visiting other U.S. cities. The Austin delegation is part of the center's ongoing citizens' ex­ change project that is bringing 400 Russian citizens to the LInited States throughout the year. O P EN L A T E T IL L 8:00! R o ses $8.95 dozen Cask & C a rry N aar R * Raata Casa Verde Florist 451-0691 facing 41 a t t. Daily Special* F ID SUCH A D€ftU 15 WORDS FOR 4 DRVS ONLY < 3 0 0 * * Applies to ads In merchandise and transporta* tion categories, priced at $500 and under. Pri­ vate party ads onh _ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Iguana hold your hand Mark Hain, a firefighter from the Austin Fire Depart- a tree on 2108 Sán Gabriel ment, saved the 5-foot iguana that had wandered into owner, Jamie Miles. Daniel Byram/Daily Texan Staff St., restoring it to its RECREATIONAL SPORTS Intramural Sports Softball Entries open through Tuesday, June 7 Í3 pm), Gregory Gym 30. Entry fee is $15.00 for three games plus playoffs or $30.00 for six games plus playoffs. Play begins June 8. Men and coed divisions of play. Basketball Entries open through Friday, June 10 (3 pm), Gregory Gym 30. Play begins June 12. Five on five full court, no referees. No fee. Golf Entries open Tuesday, May 24, Gregory Gym 33. Entry fee is $3.50, payable at Morris Williams Golf Course. Tee time available upon registration. Men’s and women’s divisions plus a closest-to-pin contest. Other Tournaments Table Tennis Singles, Tennis Singles, Racquetball Singles, Handball Singles. Entries open Tuesday, May 24, in Gregory Gym 33. Outdoor Adventures A C TIV IT Y Kayak Beg Wkshp B. Mi* Cave Tour (B E ' Raft the Guadalupe * B. M » Morning Horseback ( B. E ) Canoe Evening i B E 1 Windsurfing (B E Bike Gamp Weekend t B. S 1 Snorkel San M arcos1 B< M > Rockehmb Clime (B< E> Kiver Ganoe (B.M) Nature Hk Ped Falls »B E 1 Rockehmb 1 B M 1 Bike Repair Clinic ( R E ' All Day Horseback ( B. E Effective Cycling (R M) Canoe Evening iB E ' F E E $48 62* $15 18 $17 24 $20 23 $5/8 $55/62 $28/35 $ 1 5 2 2 $5/8 $15 22 $7/14 $17 24 $18/25 $28/31 $5/8 $5/8 DATE June 1 .4 . 5. 8, 12 4 5 5 7 9 ,1 1 . 12 11, 12 12 14 18 19 19 1 9 .2 2 .2 6 25 26 29 June 18-25 August 16-20 16-22 16-23 DATE July 9 9 10 10 1 4 .1 6 .1 7 16 20 23 24 31 A C TIV IT Y Raft the Guadalupe (R M) River Canoe t B, M ' Hike West Cave KS (B E ' Kayak Day Trip IM ' Rockehmb I tR M ' Windsurfing B M' Morning Horseback t B E ' Canoe Evening i R E ' Hike Enchanted Rock (B E ' Snorkel San Marcos (B M' Rockclimb Int. iL M' F E E $17 24 $15 22 $7 14 $ 1 5 2 2 $17 24 $55 62 $20 23 $5 8 $7 14 $ 1 5 2 2 $17 24 Extended Trips Kavak Wk of Rivers 11 S ' $250/285 Climbing in OK (B S ' Canoe Buffalo River (R M' Bkpk. Pecos Wkimes (R S ' $160/1% $160/195 $180/225 H p r Rec Sports MMdoor Program gjSM Craaocv 6»m 31 g S B M I» 471-1003 — Priora bated are for UT-non-CT participant. Sports T h e D a i l y T e x a n Dorsett accepts new Denver home White upset by vet’s trade Tony Dorsett will be playing for Denver, which he helped Dallas beat in the Super Bowl in his rookie year. ver C oach Dan Reeves. Reeves w as an assistan t coach w ith the C ow ­ boys until he took the D enver job in 1981. R eeves has said he believes D or­ th e fourth-leadin g ru sh e r in sett, NFL history, has tw o good years left in him an d a n y th in g beyond th at w ould "b e a p lu s." W ith Dallas, th e 5 -fo o t-ll, 189- p o u n d D orsett gained 15,468 yards ru sh in g an d receiving, second only to W alter P ayton on the N FL's all- tim e list. H e scored 86 to u ch d o w n s, including 72 ru sh in g , n inth all-time. Last season, h e ran for 456 yards on 130 carries and cau g h t 19 passes for 177 yards, scoring tw o to u ch ­ d o w n s. D orsett said he h o p e d his pass- catching ability an d his presen ce in D en v er's backfield w o u ld take som e of the p ressu re off B roncos q u a rte r­ back John Elway. "M y style of play will fit in w ith this offense extrem ely w ell," D or­ sett said. "I d o n 't feel it's going to be a problem ad ju stin g to a situ a­ tion. "T his is going to m ake it fun a g a in ," he said. Q u arterback D anny W hite think s it w as a m istake for the C ow boys to u n lo ad D orsett. W hite said he offers lead ersh ip qualities th a t th e C ow ­ boys c a n 't afford to lose. "W e are a very, very y o u n g team right n o w ," W hite said. "Y ounger th a n any C ow boy team 1 can ever rem em ber. So th a t m akes th e lead­ ersh ip m uch m ore im p o rtan t. A nd T ony being gone is goin g to m ake it ev en to u g h er on th o se of us w ho have been aro u n d for a w h ile." W hite said he co n sid ers D orsett th ree the b est tw o o r am o n g ru n n e rs in the league. "I that think th e w hole deal stinks, to be real h o n e st w ith y o u ," he said. "T ony h as been a real big p art of o u r team for m any years. I've seen him in just a b o u t any situ ation a ru n n in g back can get into, and h e 's alw ays re s p o n d e d ." " • f t A Barkley shocks Hearns in third round Tuesday, June 7, 1988 Page 8 Fitch fired after early playoff exit Associated Press H O U STO N — H o u sto n C oach Bill Fitch, u n d e r fire from som e Rockets fans a n d star center A keem O laju w on, w as fired M on day w ith th ree years rem aining on his con­ tract. Fitch, w h o led the Rockets to th e NBA finals in 1986, d re w criticism from O laiuw on for his iron-fisted ap proach d uring the 1988 seaso n w h e n the Rockets slu m p ed in the closing m on th of th e season. a n n o u n ced The Rockets th ey w ould begin a search im m ediately for a new head coach and p erso n n el director. Fitch held both positions. The Rockets lost in th e first ro u n d of the NBA playoffs to Dallas this season. O laju w o n criticized both Fitch and H o u sto n guard Sleepy Floyd d u rin g th e late-season tails- pin "W e just felt that w e d id n 't m ake progress at the end of the year," Patterson said. Fitch could not be reached for com m ent. Bill Fitch, w h o has th ree years m aining on his contract, will take a m o n th 's vacation, after w hich som e decision will be reached as to his future d uties with the Rockets or a position with an o th e r o rg an iza­ tion," Patterson said in a n n o u n c in g Fitch's dismissal. "T he Rockets are grateful to Coac h Fitch for the contributions w hich he has m ade with the f ra n c h is e /' l’he Rockets were on the brink of becom ing an NBA p o w e r after the 198f season with the "I win T ow er" lineup of O lajuw on a nd Ralph Sam pson. But Sam pson w as traded to the G olden State Warriors this season, breaking up the tan dem , and the Rockets never were able to gain consistency the rest of the sea­ son. N ear the end of the regular sea­ son, b u m p e r stickers were dis- FITCH AT HOUSTON BV Fitch’s record as head coach of the Houston Rockets. W .29 . .48 . .51 . .42 . .46 .762 1983-84. . 1984-85. . . . 1985-86 . 1986-87 . . . . 1987-88 NBA Totals . OvanA Total Inducing Playoffs* Pet. Fin. 6th .354 2nd .585 1st .622 3rd .512 4th .561 .516 L 53 34 31 40 36 714 .815 .517 762 played "D itch Fitch." in The S u m m it reading P atterson said th e R ockets felt the positions of head coach a n d p erso n ­ nel director sh o u ld n o w be divided. "T he perso n n el d irecto r will have greater responsibility in the area of free agents, an d w e are doin g m ore w ith the E u ro p ean leag u es a n d the C ontinental L eague." P atterson said R ockets assistant coach R udy T om janovich, a form er H o u sto n forw ard, m ay be a can d i­ d ate for th e p erso n n el position. The Rockets will m ove quickly to nam e a coaching rep lacem ent. "I th in k w e'll h a v e a coach in place in tim e for the NBA draft, an d th a t's June 28," P atterso n said. Speculation ab o u t a new Rockets coach has cen tered a ro u n d K ansas Coach Larry Brow n. Fitch com piled a 216-184 record w ith th e Rockets in five seasons. Be­ sides the 1986 finals, w h ere H o u s­ ton lost to Boston in six gam es, Fitch led th e Rockets to the playoffs the p ast four seasons. Fitch ranks fifth o n th e all-tim e NBA coaching victories list w ith a lifetime record of 762-714. Fitch h ad a 242-86 record at Bos­ ton from 1979 to 1983. His Celtic team beat th e Rockets in the 1981 NBA finals. Fitch com piled a 304- 434 record at Cleveland. Associated Press DENVER — Tony Dorsett accept­ ed an orange Denver Broncos jersey with his N o. 33 on it M onday and said he will com pete for a starting job w ith D enver, w hich he vow ed w ould be the last stop of his career. Dorsett, w ho played 11 seasons with the Dallas C ow boys, said little about his contract w ith the Broncos at the new s conference M onday. con tract a g r e e m e n t w a s T he reached last Friday, and Dorsett flew to Denver on Sunday night. "My contract is on e I am extreme­ ly happy with," he said, adding that had he stayed w ith Dallas it w ould have been frustrating "wanting to play and not being able to start." The 34-year-old running back, w h o wanted out o f Dallas after he lost his starting job to Herschel Walker last season, w as acquired by D enver in exchange for a condition­ al fifth-round draft choice in 1989. The Broncos could end up paying as high as a first-round pick, d ep en d ­ ing on Dorsett's performance in Denver this fall. "I w as both happy and sad [about the trade]. Dallas w as a place w here I had a great 11 years," Dorsett said. "It's a great franchise and has a great coach. "I thought m y career w ould end in Dallas," he said. "Unfortunately, it didn't. But this is a new begin­ ning. It's refreshing." Reporters asked Dorsett whether, at 34, he still had the speed and run­ ning ability that m ade him one of the NFL's premier running backs. "I'll let you make the call," he said. 'T h e old flame is burning and it's burning pretty hot." Dorsett recently ran "a pretty good 40," he said, adding, "I'm still strong. I'm still quick." Dorsett will be reunited with his former offensive coordinator, Den- I Magic Johnson That man with the big smile knows what he’s up against Tuesday. The Anti-Establishment Boy^, the Detroit Pistons, are coming to The Forum in Los An­ geles for an 8 p.m. game against the Lakers. The Pistons dared to stuff the Establishment's hero, Mi­ chael Jordan, in a second-round NBA playoff series. Then they beat the Establishment team to end Es­ tablishment teams, the Boston Celtics, in a seven- game series. Now they face the team that has joined the Celtics in dominating this decade's NBA champi­ onships. The Lakers have four of them since 1980, and the quest for a repeat performance of last year's title — and such a repeat has not happened in 19 years — continues with Tuesday’s Game 1, televised on KTBC-TV, Channel 7, cable 2. Associated Press LAS VEGAS, N ev. — Iran Barkley knocked dow n Thomas Hearns and stopped him in the third round M onday night to w in the WBC m iddlew eight cham pionship in a shocking up­ set. Barkley, w ho w as taking a beating from the Hit Man from Detroit, suddenly landed a right to the head that dropped Hearns on his back. He struggled up at 8 and Barkley bulled him into the ropes. After a couple more shots to the head, the fight w as stopped and Barkley, a 4-1 underdog, w as the champion. The time w as 2:34 of the third round. After referee Richard Steele stopped the fight, Hearns fell through the ropes. The 28-year-old Barkley w as bleeding from a cut over his left eye and also w as bleeding from the m outh after tw o rounds. Dr. Donald Romeo w ent into his com er after the second round to exam ine the challenger. Barkley came charging out in the third round and launched a series of wild flings. Hearns fought back and w as not hurt. Then, Hearns scored with about a dozen vi­ cious punches to the body and several short punches to the head. Barkley looked like he w as ready to go but he lashed out with the right hand that m ade him cham pion. Hearns obviously w as badly hurt after stagger­ ing up at 8 and it didn't take Steele long to d e­ cide the only man to w in four world titles w as a beaten cham pion. Hearns, w h o has been a world cham pion ev e­ ry year of this decade, controlled the first round with his left jab as he opened the cut over Bark­ ley's eye. H eam s drew blood from Barkley's Thomas Heams falls through the ropes after being dropped for the first time by Iran Barkley. m o u th in th e second ro u n d an d c o n tin u e d to w ork on the eye cut. At this point, Barkley looked like he w as o v er­ m atched as a crow d of 8,541 cheered H e a rn s on. For H earns, w ho got $) .5 m illion, th e loss w as his th ird against 45 victories, 30 by knockout. He w as sto p p ed in the 14th ro u n d by S ugar Ray Leonard in a battle for th e u n d is p u te d w el­ terw eigh t title in 1981 an d w as kn ocked o u t in the third ro u n d by M arvelous M arvin H agler in a bid for th e u n d isp u te d m id d lew eig h t ch a m p io n ­ ship in 1985. Barkley, w h o said his only fight p lan w as to do w h atev er it took to w in th e ch am p io n sh ip , w as in his second bid at a w orld title. call the TEXAN classified HOT LINE RUN YOUR CAR or TRUCK CLASSIFIED AD UNTIL IT SELLS! for o n ly $ 1 0 5 0 * 15 w o rd s o r less. A d d itio n a l w o rds o n ly SI .30 each Call 471-5244 fo r com plete d etails. ALETAS p r e s e n ts $1.99 Enchilada Night Tuesday, after 5:00 you get two cheese enchiladas with rice and beans for the incredibly low price of only 5(K E x tra fo r C hicken o r B eef A l e t a S 1907 Guadalupe 479-0940 Remember: Daly Lunch Specials Starting at $2.991 2928 G uadalupe 477-6658 (Next lo Centennial Liquor Store 6929 A irpo rt Blvd. 108 A irp o rt a t L am ar j Highland Village Shopping Center (next to Tom Thumb) ^ - * • 3 4 5 1 - 6 7 6 4 Coupon mint be presented when Garment» are left for Proceaeing ___ SPORTCOATS or BLAZERS Dry Cleaned or Laundered | i j | only*lW (re g u la r $2 65) ■ « a w mem mem mm mm mem mm mmmmm * ¡ I PANTS or JEANS MEN'S or LADIES Dry Cleaned or Laundered only’ 1 " (regular $2 60) MEN’S SHIRTS Laundered only 8 9 0 < regular |1 00) MEN'S or LADIES NECKTIES Drydeaned nmi (regular 11 80) $5.00 OFF any order of $15.00 or more Cleaning and Laundry $100 OFF any order of $0.00 or more Cleaning and Laundry | J ¡ LADIES PLAIN SKIRTS Dry Cleaned or Laundered only *2*® t 10( per pleat (regular *3 50) ladTe " PLAIN BLOUSES Dry Cleaned or Laundered Í onty*l +11 farnttjlreg regular ^ 6 5 ^ 2 Pc. SUITS Men * or Ladie’s or Plain Dreaaes • + 61 forwlH (regular Sb.oui T h e Da i l y T e x a n A rts & E ntertainm ent Unfunny ‘Farm’ Chases dream of originality Tuesday, June 7 ,1 9 8 8 Page 9 Filmmakers imitate TV sitcoms in Chevy’s latest comedy vehicle By BRIAN CARR Daily Texan Staff Judging from th e quality of n e t­ w ork p rim e tim e p ro g ram m in g re­ cently, an y co m parison b etw e en the silver screen an d a 19-inch portable version w o u ld surely be a n insult. U n fortunately, W arn er B rothers' latest com edic su m m e r offering, Funny Farm, starring C hevy C hase, closely resem bles a 90-m inute NBC sitcom , only w ith o u t th e com , leav­ ing th e a u d ien ce w ith a fam iliarly p r e d ic ta b le s itu a tio n , 2 + 2 = 4 p e p p e re d by a few sp arse laughs an d th e ov erw h elm in g u rg e to get u p a n d chan g e th e c h a n n e l a t the first station break. In casting C hase as th e lead in this d om estic com edy, v e te ran H ol­ lyw ood director G eorge Roy Hill took a big gam ble, especially con­ sidering th e ill-fated box office fig­ ures of m any of th e co m ed ian 's m ovies. A n d th a t decision m ay have ro bbed ev ery o n e concern ed of th e likely payoff for a p rom ising production. N ev erth eless, die-h ard fans of the form er S atu rd ay N ight Live com edi­ an will likely revel in his peevish grins a n d slapstick h u m o r. But face it, ev ery o n e has an uncle w h o , at tim es, can be ju st as funny. in A ndy Farm er, Predictably, C hase revives a fa­ the m iliar role q u in tessen tial husband/successful N ew York sp o rtsw riter "leaving it all b e h in d " to com m u n e w ith n a ­ tu re w hile w riting th e G reat A m eri­ can N ovel w ith wife in tow . A long for th e ride, Elizabeth F arm er (Ma- d o ly n Sm ith), decides to p u t h er teaching career on h o ld in o rd er to have ch ild ren of h e r o w n an d raise th em aw ay from th e m ean streets of M an h attan . A nd given C hase as th e father, th a t would 4>e a great task. T ogether, they choose to begin an ew in a N orm an Rockw all-esque farm h o u se in R edbud, U .S .A ., "th e acorn capital of th e w o rld ." H o w ev ­ er, w h a t h ad originally started as a full co m m itm en t b e tw e en th e co u ­ ple to stick it o u t quickly disen- teg rates in to m aking an effort to deal w ith sh a ttere d realizations of rural u to p ia. If an y th in g saves th e en tire p ro ­ d u ctio n from th e fate so m an y o th e r hack-w ritten scripts, it is th e in d i­ vidual perform an ces given by m em ­ bers of th e ensem ble cast, sans C hase. A lth o u g h th e actor has m ore th a n e n o u g h com edy experience to h a n d le th e m eatless role, in stead of beefing u p his character, h e w im ps o u t like tofu. W h en screenw riter Jeffrey Boam do es give th e com edian an occasion­ al h o o k -lin e-a n d la u g h , C hase rep eatedly casts his reel an d loses th e fish. S om eone sh o u ld have told him th a t this farm w as su p ­ po sed to be funny. sin k e r Playing his w ife, M adolyn Sm ith skillfully avoids th e tra p of falling into Eva G ab o r's p u m p s by playing th e role of a m odern-city-girl-in-the- co u n try strictly d e a d p a n . You can 't By ELAINE PINCKARD Daily Texan Staff French d irector Jean-L oup H u ­ b e rt's The Grand Highway (Le Grand Chemin) joins a recent line of films th at dep ict th e early y ears of a b o y 's life. T he story so m ew h at resem bles a n d h as alread y d ra w n th e favorable c o m p a riso n s g e n re 's m ost celebrated e n tran t, Lasse H allstro m 's to u c h in g film, My Life As A Dog. to Like th at film, th e y o u n g p ro ta­ gonist in The Grand Highway is forced into a strange, n e w en v i­ ro n m e n t by a p a re n t w h o can no longer care for him . D u rin g the in n o c e n t y o u th sep aratio n learns a great deal a b o u t life an d grow in g up. the end lessly S te p h en S pielberg's Empire of the Sun also falls into this category. In th a t film, th e y o u n g boy quickly lost his innocence in o rd e r to su r­ vive th e rigors of a W orld W ar II prisoner-of-w ar cam p. But w hile Spielb erg's story seem ed to p ro ­ so m eh o w ceed reach ed its e n d long after th e story a n d th e characters h a d lost th e ir zeal, H u b e rt's Highway is ju st long en o u g h . W hen th e film com es to its conclusion, o ne feels a sen se of satisfaction n o t unlike th a t felt w h en com pleting a w ell-w ritten sh o rt story. an d Like Louis M alle's Au Revoir, Les Enfants, H u b e rt's Highway is som e­ w h at autobiographical. T he direc­ tor even used his o w n son, A n ­ toine H u b ert, to play Louis. T he nine-year-old is left by his p re g n a n t m o th er in th e care of h er b est friend, M arcelle, a n d Mar- celle's ro u g h , enigm atic h u sb a n d , Pelo. S u rro u n d e d by stran g ers, Louis m u st cope n o t only w ith a from his sep aratio n traum atic m o th er, b u t also w ith th e m y steri­ ou s n ew e n v iro n s of rural life. H ere, furry little rabbits are not kep t as pets, b u t are slau g h tered for d in n e r as Louis w atches. D uring his stay w ith Pelo and M arcelle, Louis un covers a trage­ dy th a t has p ro d u ced an ongoin g a ttitu d e of bitterness a n d e stra n g e ­ th e couple. The m e n t b etw een y o u n g boy soon finds him self ca u g h t in th e m iddle of th eir b at­ tles for his affection Before being cast in th e role of Louis, H u b ert h ad nev er acted. This m ay be o n e of th e m ost im ­ p o rta n t aspects in his portrayal, as H u b ert p erform s in such a fresh, h o n e st w ay th a t h e becomes Louis. H is p e r f o r m a n c e is m o v in g precisely because h e seem s to be acting so little. In m o m e n ts of so r­ row a n d rage, H u b e rt is especially effective as his face tu rn s blotchy red a n d h e spits o u t his lines in a tru e fit of childish p ain. L ouis quickly finds a playm ate, (V anessa G uedj), w ho M artine p ro v es to be an equally fascinating character. Being old er a n d w iser at th e venerable age of ten , M artine is m ore th a n h a p p y to reveal the ¿imc WESTGATE 8 BsSmR ^ tH(EOSOUNO^A^UOITORm5s W ILLO W e 11 i55-2>2S-(4tSS>-7i2S-*5S COLORSs) SHAKEDOWN IB 12:15-MS-{5sl5)-7il5-4t35 ABOVE THE LAW ü 1 2i2»-2«55-(5:23)-7i4S-*>45 UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING 13*5-|4>45)-4 5 (B THE LAST EMPEROR E&a 13.43 |M4) M S ____ BLOOOSPORT Bl DOLBY STEREO IN TQP FOUR AUDITORIUMS | CROCODILE DUNK! II h NSW 1: HJD-3i1S+MS>-7i3Mi4S KMMft IMMtlUMMiM-lM» WILLOW El1l*iW.MN*ilSH7dD.liilS ■ ¡■ ft 1 M H tm aum m MOONSTRUCK ta iftis-ft A L L D A Y ACL SEATS-ALL SHOWS J M A N N W E S T G A T E 4608 WESTGATE BLVD Uobkn MflWom* In GOOD MORNING VIETNAM 11:44 2:14 4:44 7:14 *44 [Rj Tom S0»mcK S*v Gvlfnborg. T*) Danon THREE MEN AND A BABY 1*00 2:14 4:40 7:14 *24 fVl WollDUn»y¡ THE FOX AND THE HOUND 11:44 2:004:447:44*14 II C TIMES PUBLISHED ARE FOR TOOAY ONLY ) | they are portrayed with depth and understanding so that the audi­ ence can see both their good and bad qualities. Although Pelo can be a brutish, violent drunk, he has a gentle side, too. He is also a skilled ar­ tisan, capable of creating a w o od ­ en toy that enthralls Louis. Marcelle presents herself as an overbearing maternal figure, in­ cessantly nagging both Pelo and Louis. But she also exposes a softer side tinged with grief as w ell to carry herself as a strength through adversities. The Grand Highway gives the au­ dience nothing new to ponder. The conflict betw een Marcelle and Pelo verges on the melodramatic som etim es, but the characters suc­ ceed in carrying their problem s to a satisfying conclusion. It is the combination of diverse personalities that makes this film worth seeing. Director Hubert has managed to w eave the dark and bright aspects of hum an nature into a coherent study of grow ing up and discovering life. W hen The Grand Highway reaches its final destination, the characters have not solved all their problems. They have m erely com pleted an import­ ant journey in through life. section their The Grand H ighway, p la y in g at th e V arsity T h e ate r, 2402 G u a ­ d a lu p e St. Texas Union Films N otorious Olrectmd by Alfred Hitchcock Today at 7:00 pm Unto Thoatra B uster K eaton’s The General Tonight at 9t00 pm Union Thoatra Woody Allen's Manhattan Toni|hta>7d0|m HomAinL is) Cocteau’s Beauty Aad The Beast T w U td M lp i Haw dad. Antoine Hubert stars as Louis in the defightful film, The Grand highway AUSTIN 6 a T 5 2 1 TH O M PSO N O FF 1 8 3 1 MILE SO. Of M O N T O P O LIS Phone 3 8 5 - 5 3 2 8 e n t ! r EO n D C K J U r t N 24 HOURS INTRUDER 2 (X) ADVENTURES OF ^ LITTLE DOVE (X) ADULT VIDEO SALES & RENTALS LOWEST PRICES-MAGAZINES VIDEO PEEPS IN A 6 CHANNEL THE V I r f h f l T U >402 GUADALUPE r I LE G RAN D CHEM IN (THE GRAND HIGHWAY) TOOAYi (5:15^53.00) 7:28,4:30 ALAN RUDOLPH’S THE M O D ERN S TODAY (5:10(0*3.00) 7:30, 9i4S 21st and Guadalupe 477-1334 IER NICOLAS CAGE MOONSTRUCK 4^S#1JD7:1M;3$^150 5:00-: 1 .50 9:20v: 2.50 HAIRSPRAY 7:25-12:00 VIZARDS 11:45 General Cinema SAMAHtNUmNEiS EVERY DAY ■ FIRST MARNEE SHOW OMLY H M D O Y O T = S « a i BARTON CREEK M O PAC a t LO O P 360 317-S2S1 SAMS DAY AM M O TKKST SMB ★ FUNNY FARM 1:30 3:30 5:3t 7:30 *30 90 ★ BIG 1*03:03 3:10 7:13 M OFO ★ PARAMEDICS 145 345 5.45 743 *45 PG BILOXI B iU K S 1:15 3:20 5:25 7:30945FO 13 BWttBLEUD "roB B íbmck D M ALL H IG H LA N D M ALL iL V D i 451-7316 ★ Bl Mt:2S 3:30 5:35 740 *45 FG BUMBLE U l I:* ft» Sí» aa C A P I T A L P L A Z A W J a t 145: ¡MPiMAMttlCS FGI3 i t s ! (11:10-1:35-3:40-5:50>-4:10-10:2 5 FUNNY FXWM R AM BO III (10:4 5-1:05-3:14-4:2 41-7:40-10:10 LUA N0 Mas!l® I n iA (11:50-2:25-4:501-7:30-4:50 MILAGRO BEANFIELD WAR (11:20-1:50-4:251-7:00-9:30 **< B E E T L E J U I C E <12:45-3:00-5:131-7:26-9:35 H S C O L O R S I ■7:15 -4:65 Q$ g 11 M I POUND PUPPIES (12:30-2:20-4:10-5:551 R I | j | n (12:20-2:S0-5:101-7:36-10H>0^^^B BULLETPROOF gg* ; "SNOWY -V --*38-5:001*0 ¡ -10:0* * i — H O N H G E L E T S L I N C O L N 3 *>4 >6 I* '.4ft1* R H ( 11:16-2:OO-4:3SI-7:40- 10:15^ H U U i ■ ! I CROCODILE DUNDEE 2 NO ■ 1(10:25- 12:35- 2:50- 5:051- 7:30-4:55 '' < * RAMBO III m i p I <11:00-1:06-3:10-5:251-4:00-10:25 IJ+X. KM ^ ”~ ~ ~ ~ H B H n É É M B B n i ^ H il É U * t *£ ■ .í'ÍííÍh B IL L O W " ° PAtata >«ii IBA "° > ~ N d i t o w t r l i i 7 0 — M A o t o rc y d a e 0 0 — O k y a o o ________________ - V a REAL 1ST A TI SA LIS 1 1 0 — l o r d coo - 1 3 0 — C o n d o o T o w rth o w o o o 1 4 0 — M o M t a H o m a a - L a t e 1 3 0 — A c ro o g o i o ta 1 0 0 — P u p d o iio o DCADLINE SCHEDULE M o nd a y T a x a n .......... Friday Horn Tuotday Toxon . . M onda y Horn Tuotdoyllom W ednesday Toxon Thunday Toxan. W odnotdoy Horn Friday Toxon . . . . Thunday llom 1 7 0 — W a n t a d 1 0 0 — L o a n s MERCHANDISE 1 9 0 — A p p N a n c o s 3 0 0 — 2 1 0 — S f o r o o - T V 2 2 0 — o r 4 o r s - n l t v MERCHANDISE o 40 ^ 0 . RENTAL o g A 4 9 0 ■— R t n V O I M r V K M 3 4 0 — 3 7 0 — U n f . J 3 0 0 — t o w . S e p t e n a s 3 9 0 — U n f . P u p tw o t 4 0 0 — C o n d o o - T o w n h o u o o o low ooa 4 1 0 — 8» 4 3 0 — U n f . M o u o o t 4 2 3 — R o o n w 4 3 0 — R o o m O o o r d __________ 4 3 5 — C o - o p o § 4 3 0 — M o b R o H o m o o - L o t o 4 7 0 — B o s o t t s 4 M a* S t O f O § § S p o c ® 4 9 0 — W o n t s d t o R o n t - L o a s o 3 0 0 — M l s c ANNO UNCEMENT S^ ^ H o o s o h o l d 3 2 0 — O o r s M M d s 3 3 0 — T r a v o l > > C a m o r a s 2 3 0 — 2 4 0 — B o a t s 2 5 0 — M u s i c a l In s t r u m e n t a 2 4 0 H o b b i o s 2 7 0 — 1 2 0 0 — S p o r H n g - C o m p I n g C p u lp t n o n t 2 9 0 — F u m H u r o - A p p H o n c o Bottled 3 0 0 — O o r o p o B u tn m o g a T r a n s p o r t a t io n 3 4 0 — L o s t A f o u n d 5 3 0 — U c s n s o d C h H d C o r a 3 4 0 — B u b B c N o t l c a — J o n s EDUCATIONAL 3 0 0 — M u s i c a l In s t r u c t io n 3 9 0 — T u t o r i n g 4 0 0 — In s t r u c t io n W a n t e d 4 1 0 — M l s c In s t r u c t io n SERVICES 4 2 0 — L o g o i S e r v ic e s 4 3 0 — C o m p u t a r S o n d e a s 3 1 0 - 3 2 0 — W a n t a d t o B u y o r R a n t 4 3 0 — M o v t n g - H a u l l n g a a a --------- o o v “■ J IU IU ( | R 4 7 0 — f a i n ti n g (oetm eots ehoufd b o m o d o n ot la te r It n 3 0 d a y s a lt a r putoM- P r o p a id kH tt rocotvo cr a d b »Mp H ro q u s s t a d a t d a ta a t to n ra M o - tton, a n d N a m o u n t a x c a a d s 0C S N p m u st b o a r s s s n t a d lo r a r e o r d e r w N M n 9 0 d a y s to b o v a lid . C r a d b t b p s o r a n o n - SERVICES 4 0 0 — O f Ü c o 4 9 0 — B a n t a l i p u lp a s a n t 7 0 0 — f u n d t u r a B a p a i r 7 1 0 — A p p N a n c a B a p c d r 7 2 0 — M a r a o - T V B a p a i r 7 3 0 — M a t a s B a p a i r 7 4 0 — B k y d a B a p a i r 7 3 0 — T y p i n g 7 4 0 — M is c . S o n d e a s EMPLOYMENT 7 7 0 — t m p l o y i w a n t A g a n d a s 7 V Q — H R p O y m I a f r Y K R » 7 9 0 — O o r t M a ta 0 0 0 — O a n a r a l H a l p W o n t a d 0 1 0 — O M Ic o - C la r lc * d 0 2 0 — A e c o u n H n g - a t 0 3 0 — A d m i n is t r a t iv a * s g 0 3 0 — R a ta N 1 4 0 — I n g l n a a r l n g - T a e n n k e d M t a l u r a • 7 0 — M a d k a l • 0 0 — • 9 0 — h ib s - l 9 0 0 — O o m a s t k - H o u s a h o l d 0 1 0 — P o s i t i o n s W o n ta d 9 2 0 — W o r k W a n t a d BUSINESS 9 3 0 — B u s i n e s s is O p p o r t u n i t i e s 9 4 0 — O p p o r t u n it ie s W o n t a d TSP BuÜding, Room 3.200 2 5 0 0 White M ondoy through Friday 8am -430p m 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 10— Misc. Autos 10 — Misc. Autos BILL BUYS CARS 4 5 1 -6 3 0 4 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ENJOYABLE DEFENSIVE DRIVING COURSE! • Traffic Ticket Dismissal • Weeknight & Weekend Classes CksNCTI 339-4781 TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR CAR! it ★ it ★ it ★ 'ir ★ it it ir ★ it ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ it ★ ir ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ it it it ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ C a l Tony @ 4 4 5 - 5 7 8 7 We Buy Cars 1974 V W F U N -8U G SuparSotela 2- door, (home)-258- 6306; (work)-823-9356. 6-10_________ sun-roof $950. 74 V O L V O wagon $800; 68 Carmongta $1200; 6 3 Rombter Classic station wogon (7 0 0 . All in goodcondition 371- 3 24 3 .6 -2 2 __________________________ •85 PLYMOUTH H O R IZ O N 26,000 milas. Excallant condition. Original CaR 1-491-9314 6-8 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ it it * it it it it ★ ★ it it ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ♦ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ - A AUTOMOBILES W e Buy Your Gar O r Truck Running O r Not. 251-2881 After 5 :0 0 p m : 2 4 4 - 1 4 7 7 6-8C ♦ ★ ★ ★ ♦ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ • A * ■81 EUICK Century, AT, PS/PE, AM/FM, liras, 6 0,00 0 mites, cántete, now $ 2 3 5 0 Call 32 3 -2 7 9 7 6-1C 1985 C A M A R O , AM/FM, casstete, AC, ente# control, now radial liras, low mita- oga, axcslant condition. 837-3145. 6-10 ______ 1984 FO RD M U S T A N G I X D o ii metallic gray, low milaoga, good condition . Coll otter 6pm. 445-3360. 6- ............................ low book, r X) 1975 FO RD TORINO. G o o d studant car. 1. Laova Mastoga. 6-10____________ »i milaoga. Runs good. $525. 447- 1981 O L D S O M E G A , 57,000 milas, ex calant condition. $2,100. 452-7536. 6- 10 67 M U S T A N G 6-cylindar, automatic, naw i nl, naw angina, redorad to orig- mol. $3500, neqohobte 4 7 7 -9 4 2 0 6-10 79 SC IRO C C O . 4-speed, oir, low mites, Pioneer system, moonroof, fog lights. 4 7 8 -4 0 3 4 after 6.6-10_______________ '6 7 BUG. Great condition, high perform­ ance engine, $ 9 0 0 or best offer. 443- 7895 6-10___________________________ FOR SALE: 1986 Honda CRX. excallant condition, 34,000 miles, AC, automatic cassette player, $6500. Dick, 388-1366 6-10 __ '71 M G 6 GT, great condition, runs good, looks good. Must sell. $1100 O BO . 282- 735 9 6-10__________________________ 1974 CORVETTE O R A N G E, T-Top, auto, air, superb condition, (6,100, book vol- ue, $5,900 1-262-2202 (Kyle) 6-10 1985 M A Z D A RX7 (GSL) 28,000 mites, fully loodad, all leather interior, gor- geous $ 9 4 0 0 firm. 389-3001 6-10 86 RX7 TINTED glass, excellent condi­ tion, low milaoga, $10,950. 244-0760, evenings and weekends 6-10 1973 V O L V O runs wal, dependable, >1,500.322-0358, Jerry 6-10________ 1980 B M W 6 3 3 C SI U S model AM op­ tions. Macham coly everything replaced; cosmehcoiy >10,750 480 -9 5 7 8.6-1 condition. 79 M O N T E C A R LO AT, AC, PS, PB, AM / F M conatte, crone, axcallant condition. >1300 obo 473-8934. 6-10___________ 1983 V O L V O D l wagon. AC, AM/FM, 5- speed, cruise, 8 2 K mites, tinted glass, >7,800. CoM 1-285-4238. 6-10________ ’8 6 REGAL Limited Loodad. Excallant condteon Unlimited milaoga. Worronty available 17,000 milas Must sail. 250- 8 20 5 6-10__________________________ 1984 SUBARU GL W agon. White, excel­ lent plush interior, power windows/ mir­ rors, new Michelins WiM negotiate. 472- 9911.6-10___________________________ LIN C O L N T O W N C A R S laothar interior, moonroof, series, 1984- $7500; 1983 ( 6 7 5 0 After 6 pjn 343- 0 4 5 4 6-10__________________________ signature 1957 CHEVY 2-door, runs thorp $5,000 negotiable 6-10 great, looks 892-3573 7 8 M ERCURY Couoor RX7. Power wm- dows and sun roof 95k miles. G ood condition—>1050. 499-8333. 6-10 1976 ALFA R O M E O Spyder Ivory, 1 owner. Rebuilt engine. N ew top, seats, battery, records. > 3,500 331-4860.6-10 1983 M A Z D A RX-7, 5-speed. A / C sun- roof, great cart >5950. Auto Trends, 6 72 4 Bumet Rd. 450 -0 1 2 8.6-10N 1983 CHEVROLET C A M A R O , 5-speed, A / C stereo. 39,000 miles. 1 owner Auto Trends 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rd. 450-0128. 6-10N_______________________________ RED HOT borgomsl Drug dealers can, Your boats, piones repo'd. Surplus Area. Buyen Guide. (1) 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext S-9413. 6-10_____________________ 1979 H O N D A PRELUDE. 5-speed, A/C, power sunroof. Great condition > 2 2 5 0 Auto Trends 6 7 2 4 Burnet, 450-0128. 6-10N_______________________________ 1976 C A M A R O V 8 New tires, A C AAA/ F M stereo, great condition. Best offer. >1500, coM Amy 4 7 9 -6 9 5 8 6-10 1976 M G M IDG ET Redi I stereo, 58,000 original mites. >1950. Auto Trends 6 7 2 4 Burnet, 450-0128 6-10N '81 FO RD ESCORT. 2-door, 4-speed, A/ C. >1,200 o< best offer 331-5532 6-10 1982 4 cyt Comoro, grey, A/C, AM/EM, radial tves. power windows, power brakes, low mileage, best offer. 343- 7 0 8 0 6-10___________________________ 1979 CUTLASS SUPREME Excellent run­ ning condition. Must seN Best offer over >1,700 CoM Lyso, 328-5131 days 6-10 1983 Dotson 2 0 0 SX Halchbock Great college car. SGL pockoge, looded Al­ pine Negotiable Must sell 280-3154 5- 1974 DA T SU N 2602, 4-speed, A/C Super dean, super condition. >2450. Auto Trends. 6 7 2 4 Bumet Rd 450-0128 , 6-TON______________________________ 1985 N IS S A N SENTRA Deluxe, red, 4- < or, loaded Must see > 4800. 448- _ 2661. 6-10 F IN A N C IN G AVAILABLE, 1985 Renault AMionca 1.7L Blue, 4-door, AC, new brakes Suson. 442-9603; 4 2 2 -5 5 6 3 6- 10__________________________________ 74 V O L V O 145 orange, good condition, >1400 480-0270. 6-10_______________ AAUST SELLI 85 Mustang convertible new tires, clean, > 8 9 0 0 or offer 331-4607 6-10________________________________ 1985 S C IR O C C O Super nice, looded Kamei XL sport pockoge, > 8 0 0 0 volue, asking only > 5 7 0 0 835-9098. 6 10 1980 AAERCURY CAPRI 2-door, 4-speed runs good A C A M / FM tope, 7OK, >2,000 negotiable 472 9484, Randy ___________________________ 6-10 1979 FO RD Fairmont Runs good, low miles, AT, PB, PS Call 346 5051 Any tenet 6-10 CO NVERTIBIEIII 1985 Renault Alliance, 46,000 mi, red w/wfute power top AT, looded, > 5 5 0 0 ,3 4 6 5 0 9 0 6-10 76 G R E N A D A > 4 5 0 negotiable 479 * 8 3 6 after 7 0 0 pm 6 10_____________ 1985 LASER TURBO 5-speed, very cleon, 36,000 tMt cruise, sunroof, bra m4es > 5 9 9 5 251 9 0 3 9 6-10__________ i louvres. 1957 PLYMOUTH Looks Great >1500 0 8 0 CoM to see Robert 477 1854 6 10__________________________________ 1977 CHEVY M onro, V 8, 2 dooc, AC, Auto, M ony new ports > 4 5 0 CoM 473- 2 7 2 5 6-8___________________________ '82 SUBARU GL station wogon G ood condteon Looks brand new >2,500 CaM 247 4 2 2 8 5 31__________________ *87 N E W Yorker Turbo, ufver/blue, lood­ ed, leather seals Like new, must seM. Only >11,500 3 28 -2 7 5 8.6-10 _________ 1985 FIERO S T 4-speed, low rate*. AM / F M c.oisette, naw AAtchekns, power doors and locks, warranty >7,200 4 4 7 7147 6-9____________________________ 1980 H A C K Regal A M / F M stereo. A/C, radkds, one owner, excaient condteon, 12,150/oHer 389-0676, 4 4 4 2 30 4 6 ________________ U l 1976 AAAC Station W o go n Exca«ent condteon, m condteonmg, > 9 7 5 452 8 4 5 0 or 4 9 5 9 2 8 6 6 15______________ H O N D A A C C O R D 1985 Hakkbock N ew brohei. dutch and liras CaM 448- 4085. *-15_________________________ 1970 CHEVROLET, run. great. >800. 0 8 0 C o l Derrick, 474-6318, evenings * - M ________________________________ A z­ 1973 MERCURY B R A G H A M FuMy lead- low milage Far 1 4 *7 8150 6-24 1985 C A M A R O Berinesta automate, T M O 2 5 9 2 2 6 8 ,8 3 2 5431 6-21 »| ^ ^ H A / vV F M cassette, P V P B Looded 1973 MERCURY B R A G H A M FuMy load ed, sxesters condteon, low mdeage For mere .nfarmetar cel 467-8150 6 -24V 1970 CHEVROLET Mokbu. tour door, tuns grate, $ 8 0 0 or bast after CoM Der risk 4 7 4 *3 1 8 onytene * - 2 7 1973 SUPERBEATLE, dependoble trans­ portation, spirited performance >995. 9 2 6 -8 9 7 7 6 10______________________ 1970 V W BUG. Rebuilt engine, Michelins, dented fenders Reliable transportation >1000 451 2 42 8 5-4________________ M O V IN G I MUST seM 77 Scirocco, runs looks great 4 -speed, new paint, tinted windows, engine solid Brand new brakes AM/FM. >1,750 negotiable 328-1905.6-10______________________ 8 6 SUBARU XT A M / FM cossette loaded, beouiifut, >8,500 negotiable. CaM Lou, 3 2 8 7 74 4 or 3 8 5 -3 6 0 8 6-10_________ 1987 V W GTI 16V, 7 8 0 0 miles mica blue, sunroof, rorfco, cossette 2-24 war­ ranty Beautiful performer >11,900. 453- 0 7 0 3 6-13__________________________ 1966 V W convertible, fuMy redorad. Red m color, mog wheels exceMent com * Son 1 2 9 5 -2 0 7 5 , Monchoco oreo. 8 12 1981 TOYOTA Célico Wtbock New brakes, battery, starter, carburetor, dutch, struts and alignment, tune-up >3100 CoM 471-0560 or 451-1453 6 14 ~~r~D Toyota C ExceMent condition, AM /FM , AC, $1200 343 6142 6 15 PORSCHE 9 4 4 AUTO M ATIC, rad, fuMy looded, power sunroof, suspension pockoge, under book. Negohafaie Ed, 385-9271 6-14______________________ 1984 Jeito GLI riAnSe, 4-door, 5 speed WeM cored for ExceMent conclhon. > 5 8 0 0 2 58-2444.6-17 _______________ 1973 VW. SQ U ARE back, new tees, new seals, runs weM. Qean. >800, 478-3044. 6-17 1984 SU BA RU HATCHBACK, 4-speed, AC, stereo ExceMent 79,000 mies, new ■ s , new inspection >2545. 4 5 4 -7 0 3 7 a l e a R O M E O Spyder, 1980 ExceMent condteon > 4 0 0 0 447 3747, ask ter Rod 1977 280Z. runs good M usi socrtece Best offer Coma and sea 4 4 5 -6 1 7 * 6 10 1978 RABBIT, « 7,00 0 | A / C stereo, runs grate able CoM 4 7 9 -0 B *v *6 2 2 >1200 80 — Bicycles •87 mount/un — HW CLOSEOUT! (while they tort) BUCK’S BIKES 4 6 1 S S p r i n g d a l e 9 2 8 * 2 8 1 0 VISA, sue. Am b p Decover Welcome M U ST SELL. Lod/s 12 speed bike. G ood condition > 6 0 4 69-9167.6-9 REAL ESTATE SALES 120 — Houses 7-8 B E D R O O M house, 4 both. Two blocks to law school with gorage aport- ment. Newly remodeled, >225,000. 327-2745. 5-9 Autos 40 MPG. Rated Best by Consumers Guide for Gas. 1980 VoMawogon Rabbit, Air Conditioned, 4 -doors, A M / FM, Cassette, 68,000 Miles Pnced to Sett Quiddy $950. 458-4307.6-10 85 T O Y O T A CoroMo GTS Twin Com Looded. $6000. 3 4 6 8818.6-24 1985 SU BA RU GL. All power, AM /FM cassette, low mileage, excellent condi­ tion CoM Gayle, 442-3621. 6-27 1981 V W S C IR R O C C O S 5-speed, oir, itero, new tires, weM maintained. $ 2 3 0 0 3 8 8 -2 6 0 3 ___________________ 1972 M G Midget. Great condition, new brakes, recent paint job, goot tires, wool seat covers. Alpine stereo optional >2200. CoM 4 7 8 -5 0 6 3 6-10__________ 85 CONVERTIBLE M U S T A N G GT lood­ ed. Low miles. Silver bullet. Sacrifice. >10,900. 450-0128. 6-10_____________ 83 V W Sdrocco WoHfburg ED. Red, black leather interior Sunroof. New transmisuon. 73K. $4,500. 477-6650. 6- 13____________________________ _ 30 — Trucks-V ans '8 6 D O D G E Ramcharger 250 SE Royal. 4x4, immocutate, low mileage, loaded, >12,988.280-2801.6 10______________ SURF/PARTY W A G O N '71 Ford Postal Von—reeks of charocter-loola, runs great >1,150.477-1834.6-10__________ 1986 SA M A R I SUZUKI JX, soft-top con­ vertible. Chrome wheels, loaded with extras. After 7pm, 474-5621. 6-10 70 — Motorcycles C O N D O S FOR SALE 17(i-7 7 (H) 2 4 0 Í R i o ( «rarnlc SPECIAL PROPERTIES PRICED WAY BELOW MARKET e 2-2 Contented 99,950 e 2-2 at Croix e 3-2 House Hyde Pork .108,500 45,000 e 1-1 loll W ed Campus C a ll K e e l h o r T h e r e s a T h e P a r k e C o m p a n y 479-81,° « 3 C UT CONDO 2400 SPEEDWAY #204 8 blocks from campus. 2 bedroom studio. 8 5 0 square feet. $54,000. 4 5 1 -6 9 6 1 . „ 6-2 3 160—-Duplexes Apartm ents FOR RENT unfurnished duplex off E. O i­ nces. ta rf O n shuttle, 3-1, CA/CH, fenced yard. $400/mo. 441-3729.6-11 M ERCHANDISE 6-78 200— Fumtture- Household H O N D A 459-3311 Full Selection of Motorcycles & Scooters Check on Our '87 C L O M O U T W O O DS H O N D A K A W A SA K I FUN CENTER 5 0 9 N . L A M A R Moped Special New 1987 Suzuki FA50H $ 3 9 9 w ith c o p y o f this a d . A u * - tin S u z u k i. 4 4 4 - 9 5 2 8 . S o u t h o f t h e R iv e n B e n W h it e a n d G illis. A l l p r ic e s + T T 4 L w 0 SELLING YOUR MOTORCYCLE? 444-4693 AUSTIN SPOUT CYCLE 2009 South Fint St Buy * SeM * Trade Service * Repair * Accessories TJ's SALES & SERVICE Austin's New Alternative for: USED MIKES, PARTS, ACC, * SERVICE H O N D A Y A M A H A KAWASAKI, SUZUKI SPRING TUNE-UP SPECIAL: 10% OFF W/AD Registered Technicians *721 NORTH LAMAR: 2 btecks soteh of Uunor * Airport Turn on Raymond. 4 5 3 -6 2 5 5 6-23B WHITESIDE MOTORS O eon Used Motorcycles Buy-Sole Trade for C o n Over 30 M /Cs in Stock Free Tank of Gas w/Purchars B Ad 5715 Bumet Rd. 458-5631 9-5:15 M -F 9-2 Sat 6-86 L E O C AM PUS, must rocnfica. 1986 Hon do Bile 80 Scooter \Múte with block occentv ExceMent condteon. >825. Laura, 327-1672 6 13_________________ 1978 B M W 1000 New plates, inspection, rear tee, battery. Mags, dual disk. 11800/otter 327 736 0 6-7___________ 1980 Y A M A H A 400 Speaal II. 3.000 mMes, Mke new, with helmet Recently tuned. $ 8 0 0 4 5 9 6169 6-9___________ 1985 H O N D A 2 5 0 Custom 7 0 0 0 mfes M usi seM $ 4 9 5 837 8 5 8 9 or 834- 0614 leove message 6 9 ___________ H O N D A SC O O TER 84 Ekte 125, Bnght red >1700 rmlet > 89 9 3 8 9 -0 2 8 0 6 10 H O N D A C M 450E 1982, dork b l u e , ^ dor 10,000 rates Atkmg > 7 0 0 nego* oble CoM 4 5 3 8 2 4 0 after 5pm. 6-13 G R A D U A T E D SELL 1980 Kawosaki 4 4 0 LTD G o o d condition, windshield, rates, > 5 0 0 Doytene. 472- 10,000 8285, otter 7pm, 452 7173 6 1 * 1982 Y A M A H A XZ 5 5 0 vraon bought new 1 9 8 * with two hebiwte and cover. >1000, O B O . 3 4 6 5 8 2 0 6 1 0 _________ 1982 H O N D A XL 5 0 0 Red D e p e n 6 afate, convenient campus transportation $ 5 0 0 or best otter 345 7225.6-10 1985 H O N D A A E R O 50, 2 5 0 0 raleé $ 3 7 5 ExceMent condteon CaM 4 * 7 - 0 3 * 0 . 6 1 0 80— Bkydes 1984 V W RABBft Convertibte, low rate age, look* beaitefai, grao# condteon > 9 0 0 0 o. bed atte. g 5 4 7 4 6318 any lima 6 2 7 M U ST SELL radraght blue rockhopper iiegainhte Laura cruaar tecyde 3 2 7 1672 6 1 4 te >150 n C A L L 4 7 1 -5 3 4 4 TO P 1 A C IA O A SM P ISO AO | CLA SS I ACTS! O ne B lock From C a m p u s M A H O G A N Y PIA N O , upright, tuned, $ 9 0 0 or bad otter Must m l. C o l 474- 6318 anytime. 6-10___________________ R A 0 A R DETECTOR -Bd Quantum, brand now, Psrtect condteon. N s s d to m l >175.00 or alter. 4 7 6 -8 4 8 8 .6 -7 COUTURE W E D D IN G gowrvmatchmg vaM-tize 6-condteRght cathadrd train- intricate t $ 50 0 .3 4 6-53 6 3.6-10 w $ 2 0 0 0 -n o w in' RENTAL 350 — Rental Services HOUSTON 2801 HempNM Porte— 472-8398 BRANDYW INE 2804 W hNbAve — 472-7049 DALLAS 2803 HempNM Potk— 472-8398 WILSHIRE 3 0 1 W 29th — 472-7049 Low Summer Rates! From $195 -$250 E D P A D G E T T C O . y 454-4621 i $ 1 7 5 i A B P ! i 2 B L O C K S UT I \ I \ V I Y U l M O I H I I I> ; * D O U M N T Y I . l . I I I I I I I N C I I S ; 4 7 6 - 1 9 5 7 / 4 7 4 - 2 3 6 5 i No i f pre-leasin g fu r fa ll , too! PRELEASING SUMMER/FALL LARGE EFFICIENCIES/1 BR. e Dishw iher/Disposol • Microw ave (optional) • Individual Storage • Pool & BBQ/Patio • Laundry Fodlilies e O n IF Shuttle • Hyde Park Area • Aero*» from city park • Resident M anager From $190/Month 1 0 8 P L A C E A P A R T M E N T S 1 0 8 W . 4 5 t h S tre e t 452-1419 if no answ e r 3 8 5 -2 2 1 1 ,4 5 3 -2 7 7 1 6-28L Reduced Summer Rates! W a* to Campus from thaw larga, newly pointed 2-2'sw4h: atom • W/D avafabilty e great furniture • microwave Mud Sea to Appredotol » olso pralaam g tortol» Col Mickey Days: 322-5660 Evenings 322-9449 6 -8 N C O M FO RTABLE A N D affordable effi­ ciencies. Easy walk to school—west side of campus Plenty of parking, pool. Fur­ nished and unfurnished 4 7 6 -8 5 9 0 2518 Leon. 6-10 SPECIAL $250 • On Shuttle • Fully Furnished • Security • Pool R io N u e c e s 26th @ Nueces (6 0 0 W. 26th) 4 7 4 - 0 9 7 1 4 5 4 -4 6 2 1 ★ BARGAIN LEASES ★ One Bedroom Remodeled • Clean, attractive • furnished o r unfurnished e w alk to UT or Capitol e w afer/gas paid 1010 West 23rd St. 4 7 4 - 4 4 1 8 , 4 7 8 - 5 4 6 7 6-10v ★ BEAUTIFUL CHEAPEST ★ 1802 W . Ave. This com plex is one of the ee apartments in W est Cam pus given its inexpensive rents. Great iriiw ei ihecs, G reat utm m ijhere, oM to UT Surrounded outiful houses, by beautiful houses. Pool with fountain. Free parking. Laundry room New fumitore FuM Sc her FuMy carpeted. Gas, water and water healers paid. Now Proleoeng. Summor/FaM rates: Few Left. 1- 1 ....................>295/(365 >425/(565 2-2. (5 entrances) . >625/(765 3-2s (5 entrances) O F F IC E HRS. Evenings only; 5 -8 p.m., M -F o r b y app. 478-7519 Pool atea just Eke in Barton Springs ALL BILLS PAID $245 N o w preleasing for summer a n d fall Large efficiency in H yd e Padt. N e a r shuttle, carpeted, draped, walk-in closet, built-in kitchen a n d pantry. Courtyard. 4 2 0 0 Ave. A. 4 5 1 -6 9 6 6 , 4 5 1 -6 5 3 3 . CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. B LO C K TO UT. Large 1 bedroom apartment. Ceiling fans, storage closet, built-in bookshelves. Quiet mature indi­ vidual. N o pets. 422-1212.6-2 3C W A LK TO C A M P U S SHUTTLE A N D CITY BUS. LARGE EFFICIENCY >180, I BED­ R O O M A N D 2 B E D R O O M EFFICIEN­ CIES FURNISH ED O R U N FU R N ISH E D M A U N A KAI 322 -0 3 7 4 6-24C MENTAL 360 — Fum. Apts. ENGLISH AIRE APARTMENTS Now Leasing for Summer Preleasing for Fall! Rent specials* Efficiencies 1-l’s 2-2’s Townhouses starting at: $199 $229 $299 $329 (• with a 9 mo. lease. Shorter leaaea alao available.) Amenities include: Fitness Center, Racquet- ball Courts, Tennis Courts, Basketball Courts, and more! Conveniently located on the UT shuttle and city bus routes between Riverside and Oltorf. 1919 Burton Dr. 440-1331 \ WEST CAMPUS STUDENTS ■ WELCOME! I J I |¡ FREE L O C A T O R S E R V IC E F r p e t r a n s p o r t a t i o n p r o v i d e d B e t t a n d f r i e n d ' i e s t s e r \ ¡ c e m t o w n T h o m a s (> T h o m p s o n Jr ^ R EA LTO R S ' f T i f * 4 5 2 -8 6 2 5 74 h o u r s a d a y ¿ r / V 360 — Fum. Apts. THREE OAKS APARTMENTS • FROM $200 • 1 Bdr/1 Ba t Furnished t Laundry Room t PRELEASE FOR SUMMER • PRELEASE FOR FALL LOW RATES! 451-5840 409 W. 38th St. HYDE P A M LUXURY H A R K S B E R E M A M B T H E N T S 3 1 st & S p e e d w a y Large 1 :>r’s, Furnished, 2 Ceiling Fans, Microwaves, Slid in g G la ss Doors, P atios and Balconies, Vaulted Ceilings, 2 Pools, Shaded Courtyard, Covered P arking, Quiet Complex. 4 7 8 -6 0 0 5 V.I.P. h x c l u s i v t * A - 2 \ & M ’ s v e r v c l o s e t o I I T s p e c i a l s u m m e r r u t e s 101 I . 33rd St. 4 7 6 - 0 3 6 3 SUMMER SPECIALS! EXECUTIVE SW IVEL C H A IRS 3 0 x 6 0 D ESK S GUEST C H A IR S F O L D IN G TABLES $48.88 $90.00 $28.00 $38.00 Cox Offica Products 346-1120 10938 Research, M-F 8:30- 5:30, Sat. 10-4 7-128 BUY O R SELL good used furniture I & E Furniture O pen 10om-6pm; closed Thursdays. 11423 North Lomar (in the Co-op) 8 3 6 6 6 4 7 . 6 -8 N ______________ SLEEPER S O F A Queensize plcxd (rad, yeMow, brown) $ 8 0 458-8421, leove mexsoge 6 - 8 ________________________ 6CT W ID E drafting table. Cover and por aMel bar inducted Electncol vertical lift. (4 5 0/ nog 343 1754 after 8 pm 6 10 O N E M ONTH FREE (100 Deposit; 3 blocks from UT, 1-1, Eff from $245. Furnished, pool, on-site mana­ ger and maintenance. FOUNTAIN TERRACE APARTMENTS 610 W. 30th 477-8858 7-1C ★ Two Bedroom ★ Summer Rate $330 WaMi to Campus, small quiet complex, ceil­ ing fans, pool. C a v a lie r A pts. 3 0 7 E 31st 220 — Comput#r*- 4 7 3 -2 5 1 3 4 7 4 - 7 7 3 2 6-21A iquipnrant ★ McCom puter * Let us Buy or Sell Your Macintosh or XT-AT CompaHbla Computer 2 1 0 5 Judin In, #111 (Judin Ptozo) Tuee-Sol 10 AM-6 FM 459-9009 6 1 3 B COM PU TER G A M E S! D A D rate pfaymg. N ew low rates. 300/1200 boud. B in e s 2 8 0 -0 2 3 0 6 2 4 _____________________ R A D IO SH A C K TRS 8 0 G o o d computer $ 5 0 or bed otter 4 8 7 8 6 1 6 330 — Pets HELPtt SPA YED S iameie cat, beoitetU, uttectionate, d«tp«ratety needs good home Days 9 2 8 3 4 2 4 6 9 CHIN ESE SH A R -P B puppms Two 14 > 37 5 each negoriabte B 3 6 4 6 3 2 6-15 ____ ONE-HALF BLOCK UT LAW SCHOOL ALL BILLS PAID Two bedroom/two both iim I qute property. Tree shaded baleóme» on baauliful courtyard. Now carpal, ap- pBancaA and paint. Hug* bedrooms w át buA-tn dads and booWwtvat. Large dotad wMt buft-in highboy». Cantal A/C, hoof and atedhdJy paid for ate pneas N< rñm. 476-5631 7-12A N O N S M O K IN G D IS C O U N T Clean, quiet Hyde Pork I bedroom, or a 1 bed­ loft • teykght Prate an or room w/ move-m today! > 2 5 0 > 3 B 5 4100 A ra C 453-0461 * 6 ____________________ BEST DEAL I 105 E 31d St EfBctenoe* Appkonre*, woter/got/haol paid. Start mg $ 2 4 0 477 4 0 0 5 after 5pm 6 > SPCCIAL LARGE C LEA N 11, 2-2, CA/ CH, tara, oppkoncas, pool, tundock XMh/ted Rirar > 3 5 0 > 4 5 0 4 7 7 3388, 4 72 2 09 7 6 IOC MPtwra-im mmxexmraJ INVvMrWOOa Apartments Largv Effff. From $250 1000 W. 26th 476-1623 La Canada Apcntatenis All Bills Paid Walk to Campus 477-3619 Offica 1302 W.2496 CheiJocfRcs 24th A Lam ar Tends Courts Nsar 4774811 ontciaeiw.Mrii OARDDKAn APAmans « HotTubt • ted 476-4992 ttB leM i | # - - M Diplomat Apartmcats Walk to Campus mom Mgr. Apt. 209 Si Boca Apartmoats “Student Ready” Move In Today 477-3619 OMce 1S02 f. 14245 Now preleasing for summer and fall. Large clean efficiency in Hyde Park. Near shuttle, carpet­ ed, draped, walk-in closet, built- in kitchen and pantry. 4000 Ave. A., 4 5 8 - 4 5 1 1 , 4 5 1 - 6 5 3 3 . CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC 7-12A EFF,H 2 BEDROOMS $2154315 N o w preleasing for summer a n d foN. Q uie t apartments in H y d e Park. N e a r shuttle, carpeted, draped, walk-in dosel, pool, gas/w ater paid. 4 2 0 0 A ve. A . 4 5 1 -6 9 6 6 ,4 5 1 -6 5 3 3 . CENTRAL PROPERTIES iNC. 7-12A . EFFICIENCY $215 ' N o w leasing for summer a n d f a l d e a n , quiet, well maintained apart­ ment. W a lk o r shuttle to UT. FuMy car­ peted a n d draped, queen size bed a n d w alk-in d o s e l W a te r paid. 2 0 2 E. 3 2 n d St. 4 7 8 -7 1 2 5 ,4 5 1 -6 5 3 3 . C E N T R A L P R O P E R T I E S I N C 7-12A 1 BEDROOM $225 N o w preieasing for summer a n d foN. Quiet apartm ent in H yd e Park. Built-in desk with bookshelves. Lots o f dosets, I carpeted, draped, gas/w ater 4 3 0 7 Ave. A 4 5 1 -6 9 6 6 ,4 5 1 -6 5 3 3 . C E N T R A L P R O P E R T I E S I N C . 7-12A 1 BEDROOM $245 N o w preleasing for summer a nd foM. L arge apartm ent in H yd e Park on shuttle. Carpeted, draped, ceiling fan, w alk -in closet, extra large w indow s that overlo ok courtyard a n d pool. O n shuttle & city b u s. Q u i e t c o m - p le x , C A C H , G & W a n d b a s ic ^ 0 9 Spe e dw ay. 4 5 2 -0 4 7 5 , 451- T V c a b le p a id . 462-0930,323-5982 ' 7-12L CENTRAL ATTRACTIVE efficiency, fur- nished/unfurnished. All oppliances, pool. 2 weeks free. 50.00 deposit. >225.00 + E. 459-4977.6-14 _________ CLEAN, CARPETED, AC, efficiency. >199.50 + electricity, shuttle 530 6 Guadalupe. Others: >169.50. House, >195.453-1327.6-7__________________ LARGE I8R apartment in quiet Hyde Park. > 175.474-7853. 469-0071. 6-10B 6 5 3 3 . C E N T R A L P R O P E R T I E S I N C 7-12A SM ALL PRIVATE cottage off patio. Near Paid. AC. 2 07 UT. > 2 50/month. AH Bit E. 35th St 472-1282.6-8______________ C LO SE TO UT north. Efficiencies, >165- >185. >275- IBr, $185 ( 2 2 5 2Br, $390. 404 E. 31st. 477-2214, 453-8812; 4 52-4516.6-30L_____________________ S P A C IO U S & NEATI Furnished 1 bed­ r o o m in attractive H y d e Park neighborhood. Some bids poidl M ark V, 3914 Avenue D. 3 2 3 -0 7 4 0 .6 -3 0 N YOU AND YOUR ROOMMATE NEED A TWO-BEDROOM!! T if t u m d H e te fiió H C & SU cúU c • NEWLY FURMSHED APTS. AVAILABLE • Designer Color Schemes • Microwaves • Sun Deck T lfi! • Mini-Blinds • Huge One • 2 Pools • On Shuttle • Spacious Bedrooms Available PRE-LEASE SUMMER/FALL Willow Creek Hills 444-0010 NORTH CAMPUS STUDENTS ^ W E L C O M E ! ^ MARK XX APTS. 3815 Guadolup* 1 & 2 BR* M ove In Today I 459-1664 W b S o U io Af —f ttBtl 5 1 1 A O u o d o t t j ovo In Today I ■ 4514*82 j m a n n t n n Lora* 2 M s M ove In T oday I 464-69)4 9101.40th Afpcswood \ rtacBts N ea r Intram ural 2 Foots 452-2447 VMo North Apartments Q u a t living 459-9131 4520 Duval Tugleivoo4 North A/C, Hoc. P aid 2 F ools 1 0 2 0 i . 4 5 th 452-0060 • S v j per S /fTtniff Ru t . » K r f p t u! .n ’hr P ■ • M u . n t i - 1 u n . i- P. - ■» p.. B r t i t M i q h 1 1 M u r - u j r - - RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 9 4 0 — Fum . Apts. 36 0— Fum . Apts. 360 — Fum . Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 3 7 0 — Unf. Apts. 37 0— Unf. Apt». 370 — Unf. Apts. T h e D a i l y TEXAN/Tuesday, June 7,1988/Page 11 400 — C o n d o s- Tow nhousos 400 — C o n d o s- Tow nhousos O N E HALF month free rent. 1-1, 300 0 Guadalupe. Ceiling torn, porting, and loundry. $?75/mo. Julio, 477-6131 6-17 EFFICIENCIES-$175. O ne bedroom* $ 2 7 5 Along Speedway Furnished or unfumnhed Call Brett Moody, 453- 0 5 4 0 .6 -I3 C _________________________ W A LK T O UT. O n e bedroom apartment Water/go* paid. 2108 Son Gabriel. 5190.345-1552. 6-10________________ A C R O S S F R O M Campu*. Large one bedroom apartment. Water/gas paid. $ 2 2 0 .5 0 0 Elmwood Place . 345-1552 6-10 370 — Unf. Apts. 7-6 S h o p p in g Center * Ideal for Student* NOW PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER! * 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Starting at $295 * ALL B IL LS P A ID * Located o n UT shuttle & City Bu» Line* * W a lkin g Distance to M a jo r CAMERON GREENS APARTMENTS 5700 Cameron Rd. 454-7007 $99 - Move In Woodlond Height*. No depout Open home on 20»h, 21st, & 22nd of May Rent itortmg as low at $229 for 1-1. Rent storting as low os $315/mo for 2-1 2 pooh, focuzzi W/D con reckons Basic coble paid, hot water paid Fire pioce, only minutes from downtown On site security Walk to UT shultie 8312 N. IH 35 837-9453 7-14B ZILKER AREA Efficiency, $175; 1 bed­ room $250; 2 bedroom, $275. Pool and laundry on site. 447-7525 or 440-0944 , A » A * T M I N T S 2124 lurton Orive NOW LEASING! PRE-LEASE FOR FALL • FURNISHED UNITS AVAIL e KITicH-nctes, One Bedrooms and Two Bedrooms avail e Large Pool'Patio e Microwaves e 2 Shuttle Routes e Clubhouse 444-7880 2 1 2 4 B u r t o n D r . • OMATIOW BATIS • SmaN. quiet complex, extra large • 1-1 5199 Al appliance*, new carpet, • mtmbRndt • 19403 2-1 $299 Huge Itvtng room - • Ike battv Lota ot wtndows-drapes ! Mullan Ptoca Apt*. 7920 a 7926 MuSen | ■ #102 484-2018 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ★ LOFT ★ Sptrol stair cose, mecrowov*, nxirtatad fire­ place, ceding fom, W /D connections, pod, focuzzi, units storting from $260. ADVANTAGE 443-3000 a a a EXTRA NICE EFFICIENCIES $ 3 9 5 Fall, $ 3 2 5 Sum m er A B P CALL KEETH AT PARKE CO. 479-8110 or 495-9605 7-131 6-16C $ 2 0 0 SUM M ER RATE with fall vacancies 3 clean quiet com plexes close to campus • 2 7 0 3 R IO G R A N D E 'efficiencies e 2 8 0 0 R IO G R A N D E M s e 2 5 0 8 S A N G A B R IE L 1-1/pool 331-4019 7-1C WALK TO CAMPUS AVALON APTS. 32ND AT IH35 Summer Rote* Eff $195 1 Br $225, 28r2Bo- $295 Convenient for iaw/eng»neenng students, low depovt ceAng fon$. walk-in closets, on-$i*e laundry/manager, qu»et, clean SmaN homey ploce 476-3629 4 5 9 -9 8 9 8 258-2176 7-11C 2 5 0 5 E N F I E L D efficiency a n d 1 b e d laundry, ro o m , c o n ve n ie n t, shuttle, p o o l, M o p a c , $ 2 3 0 - c a m p u s d o w n to w n , $ 2 6 0 4 7 8 2 7 7 5 6 - 8 7-111 Town Lake View Pool, Private Balconies Utilities Paid Furnished Rooms Free Parkin; ' g &. Free Cable : T . V . from $ 5 . 7 2 day f t M H S l f l M i # R I V t R S I D ! Q U A R T E R S Tours Daily 1001 S. IH-35 and Riverside Dr. 4 44 -3 6 1 1 EFF — 2 BR. STARTING AT * 1 9 9 ° ° !! Close to UT Shuttle • FREE utility hook-up • 10% discount for students a ll 9 2 6 - 6 6 6 4 $ 1 0 0 D e p e s h PRE-LEASE S U M M E R / F A L L • .. e*»*r*v4 * '¡"y r- , v n q k . ■’•'I j i ’O • .. Jf vV A *?C A B *- c A S C . N'?t K CN ' ’x a 1 ON ’’v ’ r * s e A t - L v < - •' e * - .. p ■ . e , • • • •, The Ashford j S m t t ík Sem m m T h a t! I * ALL B U S PAD* Privacy m ead Pool • I W alking Dlatanoa lo UT • I I N ewly Ram odalad a Fum iahad or Unfum ishad a Larga Effldandaa, 1-1‘s & 2 - 2 's a 476-8915 Pre-Leasing for Summer/Fall L1M W ftlÍH I? 1 Spacious 2B/2B units 4 blocks west o f U T Ceiling fans, bal conies, covered parking, fur­ nished ft w/all amenities. $ 2 15/mo + E (2 per apt ) 1906 Pucf 47( 5678 | T a n ^ fe fp o o d North W e S a y A l l Y o u r H e a t i n r A A / C NC-UASCSUMMil/FAU * RR Shuttle stop of Front Door * 2 Pools & Remodeled Loundry Rooms * Catling Fans/Microwaves * Furnished/Unfurnished * Quality Residents Frim ly Managers Who C a n 452-0060 1020 E. 45th ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ SUMMER SPECIALS W e're leaeng now for June-August '88. • 4105 Speedway: 1 bedroom efficiencies $195. See manager apt. #10 3 or col 451-4919 or 478-7355. e 104 E. 32nd. Efficiency $195 and up; 1 bedroom $ 2 2 5 and up. See M onoger apt. #103 or cad 4 7 6 -5 9 4 0 or 478-7355. e 4100 Ave. A Small 1 bedrooms $195. See M onoger apt. # 10 3 or col 451-1084 or 478-7355. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 7-1A CHECK IT OUT Suptr Low Kotos for wmmer/kl Effiasncy, 1 bed- room and 2 bedrooms kmsdmdfafamidwd. ( m UT, Solon, Hancock Center, Stale and City M i n t A l opptoncs*. pooL laundry room. Go* and water paid. 302 W. 38th 453-4002 6-13C 5 Blocks West UT Large, quiet immaculate one bedroom efficiencet. Kitchen, walk in closets, laundry, gas hecrt cooking, water/gas furnished. Owner managed. Summer— $225. Fall— $249. Red Oak Apartments, 2104 San Gabriel. 476-7916. CASA DESALADO One Bedroom Furnished Apts, e C LO SE TO CAMPUS/SHUTTLE e Vu r/gai/bo) T V. cable paid e Ceiling Fon* & A C e Swimming Pool e Laundry facilities *< mfo 477 253* UNITS AVAILABLE N O W i f * manogw #112, 2610 Saiodo St Fot mor. 7-1L MESQUITE TREE APARTMENTS O ne bedroom furnished apartment* d o s e to campu*, near shuffl*. Di*hwa*h- er, AC, ceiling (on. Loundry facilities and hot tub. Water and bauc T.V. coble paid. H o petal Rettdent manager #301, 2410 Longview St. For info. 478-2357. UNITS AVAILABLE N O W I 7-6L 26th & Red River 1 bedroom, 1 bath $265 2 bedroom, 1 bath, $295 plus electricity 4 0 ft. pooL ga s beat, covered parting, t o g a doseta, new opptonces, new car- p i t otmI complex. Call for appointment, 263-5560 6-15C A l l BILLS PAID. 3-2 Vi 1300 iq. ft. West Campu* area. W alk to campu» W C •hume. Control air. 474-7732. 6-10A EFFICIENCY A N D 1 bedroom $ 2 5 0 Carpeted, »tove, refrigerator. Window AC, tree*, water paid. 1008 We*t 25th; 1 0 0 9 W e *t2 5 1/2. 4 51-6533.6 -2 4A 1 BLO CK to campu*. 1-1 fre*hty pointed and carpeted. Small, quiet complex, ceiling fon», miniblind». FaH $285, *um mer rote* avoilable. 2711 Hemphill Park 478-1870.6-10K_____________________ REDUCEDI FOUR BLO C KS W EST UT Large, clean efficiencies - water, go*, fumnhed, go* heat cooking. $215. 476- 7916 6-7A FURNISH ED 1BR apartment. Central lo­ cation 4212 Duval 450-0368. 6-8 3 0 0 E. 33rd St; 3 2 0 0 Tom Green; and 9 0 6 E. 46th St. Large 1 + 2 bedroom*- furnithed and unfumithed. 345-7232. 6- 2 2 N W A L K IN G DISTANCE from campu* 2 70 6 Saiodo, 2-2, di*hwa*her, W/D, pool, two parking ipaces. 453-1514 6- 10K R IN T A L 370 — Unf. A pts. Town Lake Circle Apartments 2409 Town Lake Circle 447-5971 1-1 $289/month 2-2 $350/month June, July & August: $50 off every unit! Eimont * $ 1 0 0 refundable deposit C a n be m ade in 4 paym ents of $ 2 5 each * Shuttle bus/dty bus * S h o p p in g & entertainment * L au n d ry room * Pool * W /D connections * Special prices o n selected units CLOSE TO SHUTTLE S T A F F O R D H O l ’Sl: \i' ’ M i \ ' ' 2 1 s starting at SUMM ER FALL YR LE A S E $325 $3 50 $3 25 ^ / j € d L * j S A N D S T O N E I & I I A ¿50 1 Marx* Rd me '< «fM/ttJa "©•rxwl t% A c .ItifK'tajrr ufkdr> E t* irbAB wv mi JVt,r IUe/\dhJ*H' .*>> • Student Remeden! Marag#' • S4KUftt> Patro6®0 • Pro» .jndBLftpftd P'XJfterttWS You’ll Save a Fistful of Dollar$! • REphom hook-up _ n o H k • n B W B N I f w N l i l i R N I • Notom,bulTWOtamiicouli • Cxftoniofy M • Sporting pooll • O n U T S h u a o • OImmIb to Gotten IJa, It. 008* >1 r $ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ J 2400WICKERSHAMLN. o * u t e « a t t - 2 0 4 4 * ^ H Being only a freshman, Tony was unaware of what Oak Lodge Apartments has to offer . . . P»4u#tk If a rt ( W M * k $ a » N i iw i 8 k 6 kimte. What's your excuse' TW O P O O L S * W A T E R V O L U E Y B A L L TW O HOT TUBS * C E R J N 0 F A N S * O N s H u r n £ * n u v i A C E s FREE LAUNDRY 4 4 0 -0 1 1 8 2317 PIm m M VaBty IU. > i Jeftn taklcy Coapany U-T. AREA QUARTERS tad i anmena. Union*, affordable houses, dhgMCJ Mon with wood floors, faiu. loa of windows, many trees Historic charm, aaracdvety re­ done. responsibly managed g a r r e t a p t in h isto ric house. 8Z7fi.(X 708W. 26th: Large VI -1/2, upetaira bed ox w ood floor*, v e ry nice. 1 82 5 3)0 008W. Skadk Dffle ncy in irara 4-plea. 822BJOO I M l f f r o w s i N ic e in p re tty a re a neat o f H f f e P a n . w e e d floor*. | 3 9 0 * l/ k L a r g e 1/1 • w ith fireplace. 8 32 8 .0 0 call worn aim 4 7 2 - 2 1 2 3 r $ 9 9 N o M h ’o H m t ! LARGE 1 and 2 Bedroom» Apartment» and Townhomet e Ax# • Hot Tub • On CU Shut Me P R E-LEA SIN O F O R S U M M E R A N D FALLI! >108 Total Pepeen i . Irongate f Apartments \ 4 453-5300 f * 1225 Wesfhefmer Dr. ^ 1 i i i i WALKING DISTANCE T O CAMPUS Summer ipedol on 1 bedroom — $195. Quiet neighborhood wiling. O ne 2 bed­ room now ovodobi* 304 E. 33rd. C o l 320-0331 7-1A 2 BEDROOM -1 BATH, fonced yord, cen­ tral air, $ 3 5 0 phi* dopout Neor UT area CaM 892-1255 6-21 LARGE O N E bedroom garage apart­ ment, appliance*, AC, perfect For couple. Walk to UT 478-7892, 837- 8018 6-8_____________ BIKE TO UT. 3 3 0 5 M e m * lyn Ave. Sun­ ny 2-1, screened porch, hardwood floor*, room/work*hop, ftove, refrigerator $385/mo 926-5811 6-16N large hobby C O N V E N IE N T UT, IH -3 S brge uprioiry 1-1-1 gorage apartment A/C, yard 1003 E. 15th $ 3 0 0 472-2097 478- 573 9 7-1C $22 5 + T W O W EEKS FREE Very nice 1- 1 in small quiet complex Close to cam­ pu*, Water/gas paid Convenient to UT Shuttle/metro 4 7 2 -2 7 7 3 7-5B LOCATION LOCATION 380 - Fum. Duplexes ★ STUDENTS ★ e 1-1, 7 5 0 square feet, $ 2 6 0 large enough for roommate e 2 2,1025 *q ft $ 35 0 l*t month’* rent $70 Low deposit Extra Large Apartment Prompt Maintenance, very clean NR Shuttle Bus Swimming Pool Newly Decorated A nice small quiet community BRO O KH O LLO W APARTMENTS 1414 A re n a Dr. 445-5655 7-1N SUMMER/FALL LARGE EFFiCIENCIES/1 BR. e O n IF Shuttle e Dishwasher/Disposal e Microwave (optional) e Individual Storage e Pool & BBQ/Patio e Laundry Focilitie* e Hyde Park Area e Across from city park e Resident M anager From $190/Month 108 PLACE APARTMENTS 108 W. 45th Street 452-1419 if no answer 385-2211,453-2771 ALL BILLS PAID $214 1 -1 .................. $260 2 -2 .................. $364 SOUTH SHUTTLE BLOWOUT Call For O the r* PROPERTIES O N E 447-7368 6 - 2 2 C ARE YOU BORED with tacky-tacky apartment complexes that all look alike and lack character and style? Then please come see Rio House Apartments, a renovated 1920s apartment complex, located at Ihe northeast comer of 17th & Rio Grande Large pool, loundry, elevator and a relaxed comfortable ambiance. 1-1 available 6-10 fcr $295 472-1238 6 - 2 9 SU P ER S P E C IA L S I to 3 room s fumnhed/ unfurnished from $150, on shuttle A v a il­ able now) Will preieose, 4 6 2 - 3 3 0 0 6 -9 3 0 5 V2 E 38th - Convenient UT, shuttle, older 1-1, A/C, appliance», carport, yard $ 2 6 0 4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 , 4 7 8 - 5 7 3 9 6 -2 0 C A l bUs paid downtown, near UT and C apitel. O lder budding, renovated with large rooms and plenty o4 ambiance. 1 more reason to Iheire? W e have the best residents anywhere. Cafl owner at 4 7 4 -4 8 4 8 for a chance to experience convenient living at an affordable price. C o l us on weekends, too, we w ib e g lo d to help you. 6-16A MULTI-TIER POOLS WITH FOUNTAIN O v e rlo o k s densely w o o d e d ravine A ll G a s — G a s Poid. From $ 2 4 5 , 2-1 $ 3 7 5 . O n shuttle. PROPERTIES ONE 836-0727 6-13C ★ $50.00 Depo$it ★ Preleasing for summer A fall Efficiencies and One Bedrooms avaiiabta near shuttle, on 37th 6 Speedway and 35th & Guadalupe. • c.iting ton* e iwwwiwiq poats • thvplocSS • laundry noon From $ 20 0 -$ 2 7 5 / m o n th l C ai Now 495-9055; 480-0662; 453-8026 7 -3N 7-1L SUMMER LEASING SPECIAL $165 e Effkiencie* e N e w fy Remodeled e All Appliances e O n Shuttle 371-0160 S P A C IO U S (1600 sq. ft.) 4 bdrm apart­ ment W a lkin g distance to cam pus Will accom m odate 5 people Available June I and Septem ber 1. 2 5 8 -7 8 1 7 5 3 6 8 6 - 1 0 N __________________________ 8 3 7 T R O P 1 C A N A A P A R T M E N T S Extra large 1-Vs and 2-2 ’s available Pool laundry ER shuffle 2 6 0 6 Enfield #6. 4 7 4 - 6 3 5 4 or 474-1100. 6 - 2 4 K ____________________ H ALF M O N T H ’S R E N T FREE! Large 1-1 in small, ouiet complex near RR Carpet, flooring, & point like new $ 2 4 5 +■ elec­ tric. Leave messoge at 4 7 6 - 6 5 0 8 6 - 2 4 B R A N D N E W efficiency g a ra g e apart­ Private, nice n e ig h b o rh o o d , ment C L O S E to campus Attached carport FUmtshed or not, $ 2 9 5 , oH bills paid 4 7 4 - 5 2 6 2 6-7 _________________________ W A L K UT, 1-1, C A/CH, freshly painted di*hwa*her, large windows, covered parking, laundry facilities. $ 2 7 5 4 7 4 - 5 9 2 9 6-141 RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. C t -P R O P E R T IE S * y i m m M m m > m + 4 M § m mtmmmm á - ......... 2 0 0 0 W h ltis P la c e $ 4 2 5 - F a l l $ 3 2 5 - S u m m a r • Vs block from cam pus • microwaves • ceiling fans • washer/dryer • private balcony • covered parking • fully furnished 454-4621 The Cornerstone Place Condominiums flio Grande at Twenty Fourth V e r y Tasteful & V a r y d e a n ~ e On ‘ e ~Jm • Mra'FoatCedngs • WoWwn/Drvws e PM u iaffu n 1/Ti snrf ?/T. uwsfcet. far Swnmw FdKSenwg C artn d Greg or Steve for an tsppaadnm* 48043065 6-9A WEST CAMPUS W a lk to campus. N o pa rk in g hataes. 1 Bdr condos on Rio G ra n d e & N ueras. Sum mer iso ses o r Eofl/Spnng leases $275 a n d up Call Bill Rouse Property Management: 4 4 3 - 0 9 0 6 6-9 O R A N G E T R E E 2-2. F U R N IS H E D 0 8 j N F U R N IS H E D W /D C E IL IN G F A N S , ETC $ 8 5 0 / F A L L . C ALL a G E N T M IT C H O N L Y AT 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 6 -2 8 A $ 5 5 0 / S U M M E R S T O P ' C E N T R A L L Y ocatedt Teññ¡e courts oaol covered parking, W / D con- Teetions -mcrowave, 7-2, Pod d ock C a o - Finders- 4 5 8 - dos $ 5 2 5 Aoartm ent 1213 6 - 2 9 A ____________________________ CALL N O W ! -u m o n e d 1-1 only $ 2 9 5 - 5 u m m e r se e l $ 3 5 0 - F a l l Aoortment -jn d erv 458-1213. 6 - 2 9 A M u l l M E D E R N E O N V E N IÉ N T M . Fields shüü He 3-2 High efficiency C A / C H W asherf Dryer microwave. $ 6 9 5 0 0 summer 3 3 6 - 0 3 7 5 evenmq*. M 9 _______________ 'H E 9 0 IN T E . H uge 2-2 on snuffle N e a r .aw School Available summer 2 5 0 - 0 0 7 6 . 6 - 3 0 -umiuseO. p o o l $400. 811 W. 24th 474-480 3000 Guadalupe 1-1 /Ceiling Fans and Patio i r i r i r i r i r i r i r i r i r i r i r i r i r i r i r i r ■k ★ k * k ★ k ★ k * k * k ♦ k ♦ k ★ k * k k k k k k k k k k k k k k k k k k k k k k k k Starling at $325 454-4621 F u U y F u m i e h e d Hit Your Snooze Button Because your only 1 block from Itie UT Campus in this fully fur­ nished 1-1. Includes washer/ dryer, microwave, ceiling fans, and covered parking. Call 322- 9887 for leasing information. 6-¡3 MOVE IN SPECIAL!! VERY LARGE TOW NHOME ail a p p lia n c e *, C A / C H , fireptace. poo l, sa u na , pet* O K . 3-2, $ 3 9 5 2- 1V2, $ 3 4 5 N e a r IH 3 5 a n d William C a n n o n . 346-4392 7-11L ♦ SILVERADO ★ ★ Burton Drrve k • 1-1 e controlled access e p oo l e o cu zn e clubhouse e A C e ceding ton e -mcrowave e stove e refngerator e large d o se l* e sunny baicorry xkdmg glass d o o r e W / D e UT •buttle'M etra tu s line e wafltutg distance shopping, «rung e $ 3 3 0 e cable paid. 467-9168 6-10 $ 9 9 M C N E ‘N o n a o s Toctrve fireolace. acuzzj, shuffle. Sharon. 7 2 6 - 0 8 9 8 ___________________________ 6 - 3 0 L .oeciall JT area efflaencies: :edin g ran*. O n RR .usurious, at- WE ARE THE BEST IN THE WEST FOR PRELEASING * St 'Som a* e Benchmark e Fresen aeon Square e O ld Mam e Orange 'm e e Nueces Oak e M enda e Croix PLUS M ANY M ANY MORE RIO GRANDE PROPERTIES 476-7700 . 6 -2 3 C ★CROIX CO N DO * B e r t a j M 2 - 2 with firepsace F u iy fur- htshed, inckxJm g T V , rmcro w q v g . W D, re frige ra to r w d h < e m aker, dt*n*s. Snen*. p ool, ¡ocuzn, security g a te & c o v e r e d p a r k in g 8 0 6 W 24th. O n e y e a r lease, a v o d o b le Jun e 1. $ 9 0 0 / m c - utilities Call Eloine, 477-4002 6 - 7 N H IT Y O U R S N O O Z E B U T T O N ! B e c a u se y o u r o nly o n e o *o c k x r » n-orr U T c o m < x s r 4 h * *uiN ■’.m is n e d ' - r c o n d o in c iu d e * V/ D c e u r ^ tons, m icro w o ve , a n d c o v e r e d perking. £o r e a s in g rfo , cad 3 2 2 - 9 8 8 ' 6 -3 0 vAfl'Gc WEST Campus 2-2 S c C C - S ' X Ask tor Wayne Grx ins- 3- 4 '8 6 5 6 5 eveomg*. *6 2 -0 6 2 5 -V O E : A S * M K ro w a v e N e o r bus Owner Agenr 3 4 6 -4 2 2 0 6 -9 N W HY Be CRAMffED» Move mto a *po- aous 2-2 w4ta monev-savmg W /D and mcniwavs. firepioc* mxrors and fence*. oono. 3 4 6 -4 2 2 0 6 -9 N _______________ 2 9 ’3 REAJU S i Fsxnohed 2-2 condo, firepioc». ceifing ton. nvcrowove. W /D Availobie ictaooi «ear ;$ 75 ’0Y ' ’ $385 CeAng tore 335- _________________ C . Y K V S 2-2 «nth fir» x a * s poos mcvnty «stem mmmet i x v to* VvS.V 335 6083 6 'Ok ..Wit BtOftCVYM JO Yeten. Ceftng tons $ 45 0 wvvxh AvoAiPie AugwW ’ Nh. 131 '3 3 ft 6- HJ _________ _ "Vtt 5 ' L 4 . Y 5 LrtrtNG w4h a l toe in— ngs Ji VaudeitM* Apvx— oh 912 West .’3 h * New twmmei and tol ntoes - j* >eto tor -tohkto vENltNhUAL fO T A llk £UR- Ntsnto VY 0 n saROWAVE tic $8 0 0 'FALL w all $550/SUMMER. A v r t N i w i w H O n l y a t 4 7 * 2 * 7 3 . * 3«A ____________ 4 'V o O O * 6 3 4A 2 fuRNiSH EO O R UNFUR- ETC c a l l ¿ R O M 2 2 NtSHEO VY 0 maROWAVE, $500» Su m m e r A G EN l W tC H ONLY 4;’© ? © 7 3 * .'RA $ ’ 95, f a l l 2 >00 SAN GAMhEL Astease 7-1 V*, finr -5, fire- $550 j u x * nxiuw av» cmkng -4203. 327- $©50 «ai. m 44 TH A M ) CasweA Gorgeous 2-itoray 4-3. firepioc» central Heat and ax. W/ D, appfiances town service $1175 Cxv dy. 328-6138. 6 - U ___________________ M O R A C 4-2. C A /C H kA he n appfi- $850/month. 3 2 7 -4 7 8 3 .6 -8 3210 NORTHEAST Dr Large 2-1 a l pfionees uttaty room covere mce yord. $ 2 9 5 346-4392. 6-291 6 9 0 0 DU BU Q U E (norihea* areal Lara* 3-2. extra living me* rwghbortaooa neor Community, pool and tennis com». $ 4 9 V m o 346-4392. 6 791___________ FRENCH PLACE oreo 3 2 0 8 Larry Lone 3-1 M onytraas $ 4 5 0 4 7 7 - 3 2 * 4 477- _ 3~*99 6-30 W A LK To Low ictaooi 2 8 0 0 Oamcv 3 Bek 1 Ish plus énm e room « doors Hae^ vcwd Boors wove -» otor tonced vortt gorage 625»’ 9 2 6 5811 6-16 AY ARABLE N O W 3 hkecx Barker at vtoo . a 5 1-4386. 6-30 7 0 A * toft $ > ' * • C A C H paus O N SH U T T U 3-. W 'D .onneceons $ 3vV aemml 3 5 * C A O , V5v.XY.-o & ; > 4 -a w x w A utoieto t o I m awoei fineeoee 3-2-1 » y i » i Jetotl ! W A v S * C Lease or w tom jtop-omes Sato $ !K L 3 00 $ 6 .V tto w h o * 4 ’ft-3122 61© ftEDUCtO HYDfc Pert* Speedway 1 Ypaedwoy IflftlflA A t N t o S >17 floors $250 O 9 - 0 0 1 7 H ■ M t A H 4*14-8 k to WALK UT. West Campus 3-1 wood Room appfinmee. C o l * 1 0 4*9-91*7 ____________ 2-1 BATH and W o tormg ama* • Hyde Park anea- C A C H «4* a l ■-penan»,as 3 * 3 -2 2 7 * .» 10ft __ LARGE 4-2, «A apela)ame. C A .C K wakes Lonneckpns. Ideui tot muting. $600/mu. -to tome. 928-3775. >10 VERY CLEAN, áteoste© 3-2 hoI bseU. ; Spas s ios C A O i oed$ ■ eose. V » 7 » o 5 f t * N O R T H W E S T O F F For W **t/Pork Lane, near shuttle 3-2-1; fireplace, C F , $ 6 0 0 6 9 0 4 Thom diff Evergreen Propertie*, 331 1122 7 1C 390 — Unf. Duplexes T R E E S . T R E E S . T R É E S East Riverside 2-2'/?, quiet loca­ tion, microwaves, ceiling fans, W /D connections, water paid, maintained yards, $ 4 2 5 Call Michael at 4 5 9 -3 3 3 3 6 -9 N EX T T O UT Law School 1-1, hard-wood floors, ceiling fan*, w a sh e r'd rye r $ 3 2 5 summer; $ 3 9 5 fall 3 2 9 4 2 0 3 , 3 2 7 - 5 7 6 7 .6 - 8 _____________________________ SU P ER SP EC IA L5-*po cio u* 1 to 3 room*, appliance*, available nowfl From $150. 4 6 2 - 3 3 0 0 6-9 ____________________________________ firepioce. fenced y a rd , W A L K T O campu*. 2-1 CA/CH, dryer, shuffle, $4 5 0 / month ^ -nil* Available 6-1-88 Coll 4 7 8 - 4 8 9 7 6-9 TRIPLEX. 4517 Ave. C Call Cathv. 8-30-5:30. 6-10 Walk to shuffle. M -F 4 7 4 -2 4 4 1 L A R G E 1 bedroom W alk or shuttle to UT H a rd w o o d floors $ 2 7 5 3301 Duval, rear. 3 4 5-01 86 . 6 - 2 4 B EAU TIFU LLY R E M O O E L E G historical 4- piex. 3 0 0 6 Sp e e d w c y Large 1-1 with study $ 4 2 5 C ho b on and A iso a a le t, 4 7 6 -5 3 9 4 , C hn s 4 5 4 5 6 5 6 - 2 4 2 9 14 B E A N N A . across from Law Scho o l 2-1. H u ge trees. Apoirances. w in dow units, ceding fans, faux, fireplace, lots of 1 9 3 0 ’s charm $ 6 0 0 Cmdy 3 2 8 -6 1 3 8 6-14___________________________________ E F F IC IE N C Y - 2914 Beonnc A cro s* from Law School, w indow jmt ceding ton, appliances, w o o d floors $ 3 0 0 G n d y 3 2 8 -6 1 3 8 6-14________________________ 2-1, C A / C H carpeted carport 4 7 0 5 8 Caswell, 2 blocks UT Shuttle a rg e yard $ 2 9 5 4 4 5 -4 9 0 3 , 4 7 7 6194 7-13 3-2, 2-S T O R Y duplex, near Highland Mafl, fireplace, vaulted ceiling*, ceding ton, carport, loundry room $ 4 00 . Call 4 5 8 -1 0 6 5 6-3_________________________ W A L K TO UT. Both sides of charming older duplex. Available June >*t Each unit 2-1 arge rooms, CA/CH, h ard w o od floors, appliance*, nice yard. Special summer rale, $ 4 0 0 2 8 4 5 Sa n Gabriel. 4 7 6 - 3 7 4 9 6-14K______________________ M O D E R N D U P LEX tor rent Sp ee d w a y 3 -3 IF Shuttle Summ er rate $ 6 0 0 Catherine, 3 2 8 - 0 6 0 0 9am -5pm 6-14K__________________________________ 45 13 -A D A N D Y D U PLEX n pleasant n eighbor­ hood. 2-1, ceding tons. CA, carport, W / D connection*, wefl mamtoinec $ 4 25 . 3 3 5 -0 1 9 7 6 - tQ________________________ UT AREA. 3-i ceiling ton*, w ooden floors appliance*. $ 7 5 0 plus electnaty 3411-8 Cedar 4 4 4 - 7 4 6 0 4 4 2 - 8 5 8 7 6- 21K________________________________________ 1823 W E ST 36th St. O n e oedroom older house $ 2 6 7 3 4 5 -1 7 7 7 6 -2 8 ___________ M O P A C 3-2 C A/CH, fireptace :arpet Carport c on ne d * A/B units. $ 5 7 5 $ 6 2 5 3 2 7 -4 7 8 3 . 6 -8 __________________ R O O M IE S ' G R E A T 3-3, budt-m shelve*, walk-m doset* O n ly two blocks from shuttle Ceding ton. $ 7 5 0 Apartment Fm ders-458-1213 6 - 2 9 A H O M E ' S P A C IO U S 2 b edroom with cov­ ered parking. Close to campus! Lot* of window*, h a rd w o o d floor*. $ 3 8 5 Apart­ ment Finder*- 458-1213. Ó -2 9 A O N E B E D R O O M Duplex. N eat and cozy nosrdwood. floors, ceiling tins, ga rage n«at UT shuffle. $ 3 2 5 A 8 P 4 5 3 - 0 6 3 8 8 3 6 -1 8 0 2 6-1QV________________ 1012 E. 15th east o f IH-35). -arge 2-1 k.rksev-ievy h ard w o od floors $ 2 8 5 Realtors. 451-001*2. 4 5 9 - 5 6 6 * M L 5 6 0 6 JO E Sayers off North .o o c 2-1 carport $ 3 2 5 Kirkeey-Levy Realtors 4 5 1 -0 0 7 2 7-1L_________________________ 5 4 0 3 O V E R B R O O K ¡northeast! Exlra a r g e ' 1 High on He*, c arp e d $ 2 2 5 ICrfcsey-Levy ry Realtors. 4 5 1 -0 0 7 2 ZILKER ®A8K area. Luxury 2 floors, vaulted ceding*, deck, hrepicc» large oak trees. $45Q/nn ó-’OK cedi $4 2 6 3 -1 H Y D E »ARK. Large private 1-1 duplex. O n ly 2 blocks to H € B a n d bus. Tkiiat -eignoorhood. fenced yard, o n of stcr a ge and parking. 4 5 0 - 0 9 5 5 6-10 a N E IG H B O R H O O D T O C A c L m C m E 5 mm to campu*. 2 bed roo m duptexe*. °eocefui M a p le w o o d area, avadcote ->ow $ 3 2 5 - $ 3 T 5 N e w M an o ge m m -I Co.. 4 7 6-66 16 . 7 5L____________________ ST U O E N T m C c S i N G 4 8 H 2 3 A 2 3arv older rame. 5 mm. to campus. Greca ffudent neighborhood. Summer ate*. $ 9 5 0 Cad N e w M an a gem e n t C o 4 / o - 66 16 6-13 400 — C o n d o s- Tow nhousos _ WESTRIDGE C O N D O S 2 beúrootn, 2 bafh, pod, ho» too, «e- xalor 'fftcrowqve, Itepieo L w/C ceing fons, WC ihuMb d front door $ 700/mcrth an 9 month leaM. Great Summer Rates. Col 327-402*? jr 453-5237 > ¡ o c ★ OWNER/AGENT^ EXCELLENT SERVICE AFTER THE LEASE $800 * Nueces O de $460 * Oxford PVx© $800 * VulsnoQ $975 * Old Mom $975 * St Thomas. $*50 - * Cetffenmd, $500 * Orange Tree The P a * « C o m # a n y 479-8110 NORTH HILLS Spus-Ou* 2 r ? tOWIkhuilHt 0 IHO- jtm *o UT and downtown Situiffe stop* at H oot door Close to shop­ p in g venter, tbrory, reetout ontk- Gtaet neighborhood. Cofweteen! to HkoPoc and 183. W e Ü 0 u»« ano wen neuioled. New porni. -o q u e i* R e a s o n a b le rate-. P ickup, d e liv 4 7 7 5 5 6 9 FEE e ry orvoflabte K o re ri 331 1 7 9 2 7 6 IB E R IA N ¿ 2 ( x RENTAL 4 35 — C o-ops ”3 \ in tr o d u c in g The Campus Guild 2 blocks UT,ABP*Remode!ed‘Spacious rooms Cable TV*Delicious meals»Sundeck*Funfunfun $235 doubles • $330 singles A ls o p re -le a s in g fo r fa ll! 510 W. 23rd 472-0352 \ Call soon! 4 * * ♦ * 4- 4- Í ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ DOLLARS & SENSE! For high living at a low cost come by: Laurel House 1905 Nueces Taos Co-op 2612 Guadalupe 707 W. 21st 21st St. 1906 Pearl Opsis Apts. S u m m e r S i n g l e * f r o m $ 3 2 7 m o . (fo o d u i * * ♦ * * S u m m e r D o u b l e s f r o m $ 2 6 6 m o , f ir x w h m i*, . m i ) O p s i s : 2 B / 2 B $ 2 1 5 m o * E M ood ? per apt ) For more info, call: 4- * * 4 7 6 -5 6 7 8 NO W ! ♦ Í COLLEGE HOUSES CO-OPS Í As Tciated Press The Reds’ Tom Browning came within two outs of a no-hitter Monday. did n ot allow a b a se ru n n e r after the hitter in the N ational League since fourth in n in g until G w ynn got his 1986 before Tony G w y n n singled as hit. H e struck o u t th ree an d w as Cincinnati ro u ted the Padres. h elp ed by a spectacu lar diving catch by center fielder Eric Davis in the fifth inning. G w ynn g ro u n d e d a 3-2 pitch be­ tw een sh o rtsto p a n d th ird base for the only hit off B row ning, 3-3. H e then got Keith M oreland to p op o ut to sh o rt after w ild-pitching G w y nn to second, a n d John K ruk g ro u n d ed o u t to B row ning. It w as the second o n e-hitter of the 28-year-old le ft-h an d er's career — he one-hit the C ubs on June 4, 1986. B row ning, w h o had lost his last th ree decisions, w alked three an d Davis robbed S hane M ack by fully exten d in g him self as he ran tow ard left field an d m aking a sensational catch. B row ning's n ear n o -h itter cam e just short of 50 years after C incin­ n a ti's Johnny V ander M eer pitched consecutive no-hitters, the only tim e it has ev er been d o n e in the Rangers overcome mistakes for 6-4 win Associated Press A R L IN G T O N O d d ib e — M cDowell had a p a i r o f h i t s , d ro v e tw o in stole ru n s an d tw o bases M on­ d ay n ig h t as the T exas R a n g e rs beat th e C alifornia A ngels 6-4. Jose G u zm an , 6-4, allow ed eight hits a n d struck o u t eig h t in pitching his fou rth com plete gam e. H e o ver­ came th ree erro rs an d several m e n ­ tal m istakes by team m ates as Texas sent th e A ngels to their 12th defeat in 15 gam es. Texas took a 1-0 lead in the first on R uben S ierra's se v en th hom er a nd m ad e it 4-0 in th e th ird on RBI singles by Steve Buechele, C urtis W ilkerson a n d M cDowell. California scored in th e third on Jim E p p a rd 's RBI single an d then capitalized on Texas erro rs for tw o Fariss signs with Rangers ARLINGTON — S h o rtsto p M onty Fariss of O klahom a State, Texas' top pick in last w eek 's am ­ ate u r draft, signed M on day w ith the R angers. in The 20-year-old Fariss, th e sixth pick th e n ation, will w ork o u t w ith th e R angers at A rlington S tadium this w eek a n d repo rt next T uesday to Butte of the P ioneer Rookie League. ru n s in the fou rth. C alifornia's defense in tu rn fell ap a rt in the fourth. After W ilkerson singled w ith tw o ou ts, M cDowell hit a fly ball th at glanced off left fielder E p p a rd 's glove for a tw o- base error, scoring W ilkerson to m ake it 5-3. ■ Red Sox 3, Y ankees 2 — In N ew York, the p reg am e co n tro v er­ sy at Yankee Stadium w as n o th in g com pared to M anager Billy M artin 's postgam e p ro n o u n cem en t. th re e -g a m e M artin's tu m u ltu o u s retu rn from a su sp e n sio n w as spoiled by M ike G reenw ell's h om er an d tw o-run do u b le as Boston beat N ew York. The gam e w as o v ersh ad o w ed by th e turm oil su rro u n d in g M artin, w h o w as u n d e r th re a t of ejection by th e u m pires if he cam e o u t of the d u g o u t to argue. A fter the gam e, a seeth in g M artin said he p la n n e d to sue the u m p ire s' association a n d its general counsel, Richie Phillips. ■ R oyals 2, A th letics 0 — In K an­ sas City, Frank W hite singled h om e tw o ru n s in th e seco nd in n in g a n d late replacem ent S teve Farr p itched six in n in g s as the Royals beat O ak ­ land. Farr, 2-0, startin g for th e ailing Floyd B annister, h ad four strik eo u ts an d allow ed six hits. ■ T w in s 9, W h ite Sox 4 — In C hi­ cago, Tim L au d n er h o m ered tw ice an d Kirby P uckett d ro v e in th re e ru n s w ith a tw o -ru n h o m er an d tie- breaking d o uble as M innesota d e ­ feated th e W hite Sox. ■ In d ia n s 6, B lue Jays 3 — In C leveland, Cory S n y d er bro ke a tie w ith the only hit d u rin g a fo u r-ru n sixth in n in g as th e In d ian s beat To­ ron to, sn a p p in g th e Blue Jays' six- gam e w in n in g streak. ■ O rio les 5, T ig ers 2 — In Balti­ m ore, Cal R ipken broke o u t of a m o n th lo n g slu m p w ith four h its, in ­ cluding a th re e -ru n ho m er, a n d scored th re e ru n s as th e O rioles b ea t D etroit. ■ M arin ers 2, B rew ers 0 — In Seattle, “Scott B radley a n d H e n ry C otto hit ru n -sco rin g singles a n d th ree M ariners pitch ers co m b in ed o n a fo u r-h itter as Seattle d efe a te d M ilw aukee. It w as th e first s h u to u t of the seaso n for Seattle, th e last team in th e m ajor leagues to h o ld an o p p o n e n t scoreless. SERVICES EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 8 0 0 G eneral Help Wanted 800 — G eneral Help Wanted 820 — Accountlng- Bookk©eping 890 — Clubs- I sstaurants NEAR CAMPUS. FuB/Part-time. Gain bookkeeping experience. TYPIST (45 + wpm) RUNNER (your car). OOO JOBS " :alion 9am-4pm, 408 W . 17*h St. ★THE MOONDANCE^ 7 0 6 Congress Ave Accepting applications to r 840 — Sales ACTORS, STUDENTS, Modolsl Zachary Scott Theatre needs telephone repre­ sentatives FUfl/Port time fund raising. Don, 469-0044. 6-9N ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE for advertising firm Must be independent, self-starter Excellent commission. 451-8728. Sales experience necessary. 6-13 760 — Misc. Services 790 — Part Time HOUSE CLEANING by experienced re­ sponsible thorough gradual* student. S8/hour Phone Mary, 370-8994. 6-10 GARAGE PARKING «poce on compu* completely enclosed with locked door. 474-2930. 6-10 OFFICE JOBS VARIETY O F O FFIC E A S S IG N M E N T S A V A IL A B L E . 6 M O N T H S O FFICE EXPERIENCE R E Q U IR E D N O FEES EMPLOYMENT TODAYS TEMPORARY 790 — Part Time NORTH 346-1440 SOUTH 448-2223 6 16B CHALLENGMG OPPORTUNITY, COMPETITIVE PAY lor verifying translated Scientific Docu­ ments Need uppet-dtvtsxxt or grad stu­ dents who have completed first-yeer Jape nese language course Adequate knowledge ot Ertgkah and good attention span necessary WordPerfect experience preferred but not a must Flexible afternoon or evening hours FW shuttiebus route Send name, phone No and quaMcations PO Box 27624. AuMbv TX 78786-2824. $ TELEMARKETERS $ J 4 0 0 -$ 5 0 0 /w e e k New office opening — necessitates immedi­ ate |ob opportunities here in Austin N O SELLING-appointment setting only Salary or commission avoitobte ♦ generous bonuses Vocation m Batíamos for mote who qualify! Call anytime, osk for Pete. ★ 251-5556 ★ 6 -2 3 N Responsible student needed for summer care of my 2 children, ages 6,8. Excellent job to work around your studies. Will adjust hours to meet your schedule. Refer­ ences required. Salary $ 6 0 / week. 441-7 978 after 6 pm.6-10 Budget Rent-a-Car it now hiring for a port-time counter agent. Potion available it Saturday and Sunday evenings We are looking For o motivated, de­ pendable person with customer service expen ence Apply in person. 3 3 3 0 M anor 4 7 8 -6 4 3 9 Health Club cafe needs energetic and enthusiastic individuals. Some food experience preferred. Benefits include use o f finest club facilities in the area and a free meal. Call M ike at The Hills Fit­ ness Center, 4615 Bee Cave Rd., at 3 2 7 -9 8 8 3 , M onday June 6 to Friday June 10. 6-10 6 8 7 ★ Vendors ★ • Part-time/Full-time, Days/ Nights selling hot dogs and fajitas downtown locations. • Must be clean-cut, sober and bondable. $3.50/ • Coll 282-6721,473-2612 after 12:00 noon. 6-7V T jieed t o e a r n STEADY INCOME FOR THE SUMMER? Lomas Telemarketing is looking for qualified individuals with excellent communication skills to market premium credit cards nationwide. WF GUARANTEE Í6 /H R Great atmosphere! Great people! Great hours! 9 1 M-F, 1-5 M-F, or 5-9 M- Th and 9:30-1:30 Sat Apply in person at 3 0 0 W. 5th St. Suite 8 4 0 M BANK PLAZA 6 301 Tax manager for o group of growth oriented coble televisión entities to oversee federal and state income tax planning and compliance CPA with a minimum of 4 yean tax experience. Addi­ tional experience in financial ac­ counting; auditing is preferred. Part time position, approximately 30 hours per week. Salary commen­ surate with experience, EOF. Send to: Controller, Prime resume' Cable, 3000 1 American Center, Austin, TX 78701 $5/HR. 450-0187 $5/HR. TELEMARKETING SUMMER J0BS-STUDENTS CONCERT TICKET SALES 6-9:30, M-F 9-12, SAT Apply: 5555 N. Lamar #G 0 7 7-131 TELEMARKETING POSITIONS avaibbW near campus evening shifts only. $5 $ 10/hour CaN PBC Marketing. 477 3808 6-148_______________________ PART-TIME WORK m pool «lore. Flexible hours. Several locations ovoiable. Coll 835 4947 6 9_____________________ BILINGUAL INTERVIEWERS Sporash/ English telephone survey No sales. Sal­ ary $5.35/nouf Send resumes to: Office of Survey Reseorch, College of Commu mcahons CMA 6 144 Austm, TX 78712- 1044.6 10_________________________ WHAT'S NEW crt W end/s? Jobs for per sonatfy, that's what. Competitive pay, flexible hours and meal benefits. Apply at 415 West MLK. EOF 6 10K NEAR CAMPUS Ful/Part-time BOOtT KEEPER (W e Tram). TYPIST (45 * wpm) RUNNER (Your Cor) O DD fOBS Appl. cation 9am-4pm, 408 W 17th St. 6- 9C___________________________ HELP NEEDED with housekeeping Hafl day per week. Car necessary. $4/nour 3 44 1984 6-8 N orth Research Bfvd area. N o w hir­ ing fo r im m ediate em ploym ent with N ational Com pany. Must be able to work Tuesday-Fnday 4pm -9pm and Saturday 9am -2pm S alary plus bonuses Id eal to r students, hom e­ makers or moonlighters. Earn excel­ lent income in short hours. 331-1473, 4pm -9pm . 7-12N TELEMARKETER Dynamic marketing office has opening fo r EXPERIENCED tele­ m arketer. Must have strong tele­ phone skills and ability to m otivate people. Daytime hours. Salaried position with bonus op­ portunity. Call 328-3311. 6 7 Fall positions available tor M O N TES- SORI CLASSRO OM ASSISTANTS in an internationally certified, w ell-es­ tablished Austin school, with a dedi­ cated staff ot trained professionals. Excellent opportunities tor observa­ tion and experience with children age 2 -6 ,6 -9 , or 9-12 yea n . Fall ond part- tim e positions available $ 4 .2 5 /h r 4 4 2 -3 1 5 2 6-IO N 6 - 9 BABYSITTER FOR oerotxes class M W ! 8 15-9 15am and/or 9 15 lD15am $47 hr * five aerobics. C ol Kathy 454 2145 6-7 BE O N TV. Many needed tar commer­ ce!* Costing mfc> 0 ) 805 6 8 7 -60 00 Ext TV 9413 6-10 any n aois. Casting Ext. TV -9413.10-27 into. (1)905-687-6000 OVERSEAS JOBS. Also Cruaesfxps. $15,000-$95,400/yr. Now Hirtnal 320 + opening (1) 8 0 5 -68 7-60 00 Ext. OJ- 9413.7-19 _____________ _ THE BAZAAR has an opening tor a K4I- time salesperson. $4.5Q/hr, 4-day w ort week. Apply ot The Bazaar, 2404 Gua- dolupe. 6-7________________________ EARN $$$ as a nail technician. Untque now product in the Austin am a. Experi­ ence helpful but not required C o l Lisa 255 -34 43.6 -10____________________ $20 0 PER DAY! People w * call you 499 8543, Extension L I 6-13 8 1 0 — O ffko- Clerical Library dark/stata ogoncy 20 hours/waok. Afternoons only. Dubas include recording, shelving, retriev­ ing government documente; work with public. Qualifications: applica­ ble library or office experience; must pass filing test with 90% accu­ racy. $488.50/m onlh. Col person­ nel 463-5474. EOE. 6-» I NEAR CAMPUS Pul/Port time. BOOK I KEEPER (W e Train) TYPIST (45 ♦ warn) RUNNER (Your Cart. OOO JOBS Appli­ cation 9am-4pm, 408 W . 17th St .... 6- 9C 880 — Professional CITY O F AU STIN INTERNAL A U D ITIN G DEPARTMENT INTERNAL AUDITO R JOB ORDER: B8-3 74H MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS This position wS b e lle d at one of ihe M owing level* dependmg upon qualification* Note: Pndee- sional Certification (CPA CIA CMA) w« sub­ stitute for one (1) year of the experience re INTERNAL AUDffQR y : Any combination equivehnt to e Bachateo degree in Business, Accounting Public Xdmmelration or related field plot four (4) years of profosnonnl level experience in oudtting one (1) of vdiicfi teas in o lead/senior capacity Salary m commen­ surate wüfi uuatifk atiom with o minimum en­ try rate of $2,34l/monlfi. INTERNAL AUPfTOR Mt Any combination equivalent to o Bachelor's degree in Busmen, Accounting Pufatic Administration or rstoled field plus two (2) years of professional level enperience m auditing. Salary cummensuntte with quutiBcgtiow w ill a of $2,083/montit •q u fw a w w VO a Accounting Public Administration or related field plus one (1) year cd pnofominnid level enperience in audting Salary is common-1 «urate with quotificatiom with o minimum on- j Iry rale of $l,934/mattth. CMA) is preforrad. Experience in perform once auditing or program evatuakon is pre ITIEi: Serve on a team ra- | conducting audfe program Id improvement efforts in the HKTOtftijUl vpondbb fot OaadBwe for appfinng e June 10,1988 V4> mti epptcation or resume to the Gty of Asotin Human Resource* Deportaiont. Empf Dmeon P O Box 1088, Austin. 78767 8808 6-10 TYPING A RESUMES O M N 7 D A Y S S U N -T H U B S T IL M ID N IG H T 4 7 2 * 6 6 6 6 8 1 3 W . 2 4 t h ( T r f - T o w a r i ) EX-FORTUNE 500 EXEC W ill writ© K©sum©$, busm en Letter*, W o rd Processing, T yp© Term Papers, etc I utilize the M a g n a v o x Video W o rd Processor 8 differ im m ediate, Professional ent styles o f pnnt U t s t u d e n t d is c o u n t 251-7033 6-ioe A f TYPING 11 0 0 pm d a ily Rush jo bs 7 0 0 a m a n y tim e F o re ig n students O K. $ 2 . 0 0 / p a g e N e a r UT 4 7 3 -2 9 4 8 MICHELE MICHAEL 7 12 I'D LIKE to tend to your bu*me*J on my IBM w o rd p ro cess.i McC all O ffice Ser v ire * 3 4 6 -6 1 5 0 7 5 B _ __________ A5AR TY PING /W O RD P ro ceiu n g pa pen, thew i, diuertotvom, madouti, with o personal touch $! 6 0 /p o g e Condace 451 4 8 8 5 6 29 M llllF 'S W O R D PROCESSING popen, th e te v dissertations -nofloats tra n w rip hons, p ro ofre ad in g 15 years experience South A uM n 2 8 0 -6 3 0 4 .4 -3 0 ________ M Y COMPUTF R /e»tenw e experience corre will provide spondenre. resumes,etc You expect 251 0412 6 13 the piofesuonot reports, 760 — Misc. Services $$$ CASH FOR $$$ $$$ THE NEW YEAR $$$ JSJWf PAY T0f 0011** ÍS5 Don't awe your «kxibtei owoyt We p«rt"«>r» coim, jewelry, gold, ek feta l iMermMonal Gold lm 309.4 N I amor 370 CA91 30th & N. Lamar 320-0191 6-108 i t cooks 6 wails ★ bus/dish ★ hosts t i coshiors M on-Sat 9 am -5 pm 6-8 DECA N O W occepfing applications for wortpeople. Apply in perron 709 E. 6lh Street, from 12-4pm. 6-10 ________ CO-ED WANTED for port-time barten­ der. No axparionce necessary .But TABC certification very helpful. Apply in perion M -W -F 2-4. T-tH 3 5 606 Maiden Ln. 6-8 WANT TO be a bartender! Forget about the schooll ID train you while you make money. Apply in person at The Legends Sports Bar. 912 Rad River between 2 _________________ and 4 pm. 6-10 900 — Donrastic- HouM hold NANNIES WANTED for Now York area lom tes G reat salary, benefits, So vol. Must be matura, responsible. C a l KC • Nanny Solutions 3 4 5 -5 3 2 3 .6-7C AU PAM naadad; room and board in ex­ change for childcare. Several evenings eoch weak. Rebec co 467 -90 10.6 -8 9 1 0 — Positions Wantod HOUSE SITTING OPPORTUNITY Vermont couple, mid 30's, entering ta l MBA program No children, pats. Thom- as. (802)257-9441 $ 1 1 0 ~ I pay cash fo r old High school rings Paying $ 4 0 $110 (men's) $15 $3 5 (lady *) ^ 14k & 18k gold condition 26 39, (9am 6 pm) ^ 7 10k. |ew #lry Any James Lewis 458 6 / J o 800 — G eneral Help Wanted SMILING VOICES ORGANIST FOR a smafl congregation Ideal student hours. Full time . a n d working with 6-8 member chorr pay. Part time worV. Close to For mora wtormanon coi 4 5 9 -7 7 4 7 ______ r r f Campus 10:00-2 0 0 pm 6-13 7 , Call JD at 454-0025 DRIVE I NEEDED for M tal have ew afieni drmng record 474 -86 66 6-8 C a l 6 7L TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK — FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5244 Austin safety groups battle child fatalities By JAMES WINDOLF Daily Texan Staff Something of a grass-roots m ovem ent has ar­ isen in Austin, involving autom obile salesm en, disc jockeys, corporate executives, health offi­ cials, police officers, governm ent workers and other concerned citizens. They've joined in an effort to decrease the num ber of child fatalities and injuries resulting from car accidents. D epartm ent of Public Safety statistics show that 53 children under the age of 4 were killed on Texas roads in 1987, while 6,082 suffered inju­ ries. O ut of the 53 dead, 36 w ere not restrained by car seats or safety belts. The Legislature enacted a child-safety law in 1984, making the use of car seats m andatory for children 2 years old and younger. The statute also requires safety belts for chil­ dren aged 3 and 4, even if they ride in the back seat. Texas was the 49th state to pass such a law. A 1985 state law that m ade safety belt use m anda­ tory applies only to front-seat passengers. A March 1988 study conducted by the Texas Transportation Institute reported that 67 percent of Austin drivers restrain child passengers in some m anner. The figure is the highest of the 14 Texas cities studied. But the TTI statistic m ight mislead people, said June M oriarity, head of A ustin's division of KidSafe, a federally funded program of child- safety education. "From that statistic, people m ight get the idea that a lot of children [2 years and youngerj ride in car seats — w hen th at's not tru e," said Mori­ arity, who is also a com m unity education spe­ cialist in the UT D epartm ent of Hom e Econom­ ics. Only 25 percent of parents comply with the car-seat law, she said. Moriarity worked at the UT H ealth Science Center in San A ntonio before com ing to Austin to begin a local division of KidSafe. Since November, Moriarity said she has made 75 presentations on child safety before audiences of businesspeople, health officials, new parents and parents-to-be. "I'm trying to m otivate people to p u t children in car seats each and every time they drive," she said. "The overw helm ing evidence is that most deaths occur w hen children are not restrained." Besides conducting car-seat safety checks and setting up displays on child safety at fairs, Mori­ arity said she has also established a program to lend specially designed car seats to parents of physically handicapped children. W hen parents do not comply with the child- safety law they "are putting a young child at risk — a child who is not old enough to make a deci­ sion," Moriarity said. She said she sees the use of car seats and safe­ ty belts as preventive medicine. "To me it's like getting a child im m unized," she said. Moriarity recently helped form the Austin Car Seat Program with Linda Allison, an Austinite whose interest in child safety grew after she hit a cow while her 1-year-old son was sitting safely restrained in his car seat. that Allison said she believes legislators should strengthen the child-safety statute to in­ clude m andatory wearing of seat belts by chil­ dren in schoolbuses. Also, the law should prohi­ bit children from riding in the beds of pickup trucks, she said. "The other day I saw a 9- or 10-year-old boy riding on top of two double m attresses in the bed of a pickup. I have hauled m attresses in a truck and lost one in the wind. That driver — the depth of stupidity is just am azing." Medical examiner rules toddler’s death accidental By JIM GREER Daily Texan Staff An autopsy show ed the Sunday drow ning death of a 2-year-old boy in a large pond behind his grand­ parents' Austin hom e was acciden­ tal, the Travis C ounty medical ex­ am iner said M onday. Tim othy Barron of G rapevine was visiting his grandparents' East Aus­ tin hom e, at 6600 Betty Cook Drive, w hen the accident occurred. Barron was found dead at 12:16 p.m . by Austin Fire D epartm ent divers, 8 feet from the edge of the pond u n d er 5 feet of w ater, said Kellye Norris, an Austin Police De­ partm ent spokesw om an. Divers w ere called after family mem bers reported Barron missing, she said. Dr. Robert Bayardo, the medical examiner, said he did not detect any signs of foul play or suspicious be­ havior in the incident. Barron was in his grandparents' back yard w ith his two brothers, ages 5 and 9, and w andered off after the older boys w ent som ew here else, Norris said. No w itnesses ob­ served Barron entering the pond, she said. To reach the pond, Barron m ight have slipped between a small gap betw een his grandparents' fence and a neighbor's fence, Norris said. The grandparents' fence was over 6 feet high, she said. The pond, adjacent to Dottie Jor­ dan Park, is a stock tank 120 yards wide and a city block long, Norris said. "The pond was a little higher than usual because of recent rain," she said. Norris said Barron was pro­ nounced dead at Brackenridge Hos­ pital at 1 p.m . after paramedics' at­ te m p ts u s i n g s a v e cardiopulm onary resuscitation were unsuccessful. him to Norris said it was the first report­ ed drow ning death of a toddler in Austin this year. Definition of ‘capitalism’ escapes most Americans By WILL KITTS Daily Texan Staff A UT professor discovered m any Americans have trouble defining the word "capitalism ," the cornerstone of American economic develop­ ment. Robert Peterson, professor of m arketing ad ­ m inistration, led a nationw ide phone survey of 1,200 adults that found only one in three could give a "rem otely accurate" definition of capital­ ism. Peterson, recently nam ed O utstanding Educa­ tor for 1988 by the Academy of M arketing Sci­ ence, said his study results showed "people are as likely to describe socialism, com m unism or bureaucracy as they are to give a correct defini­ tion" of capitalism. A subsequent mail survey conducted by Peter­ son found that Americans tend to view the term capitalism negatively, but have a more favorable opinion of "private enterprise." Capitalism is "an economic system character­ ized by private and corporate ow nership of capi­ tal goods, investm ents determ ined by private decision rather than state control, and by prices, production, and distribution determ ined in a free m arket," according to Webster's Third New International Dictionary. "You came to the w rong person," said a 47- year-old supervisor at the Texas Union. "I'm not into religion, and I'm not into politics," she said. "I'm the one in the middle, remem ber? "I better go look in my dictionary, I guess," she said. O ne UT engineering senior laughed off the question. "Gee, I got a test question and school hasn't even started yet. I d o n 't really have a for­ mal definition. Kind of like a democracy?" "G overnm ent. I d o n 't know, freedom ," said an Austin 10th-grader. "Capital. W hat's the word I'm looking for? People that ru n things." But several people near the University Co-op were quite sure of their answers. "It's free enterprise — a lot of m oney," said Mike Willis, 15, another Austin 10th-grader. "It's the American way to achieve, and to be rew ard­ ed for w hat you achieve." "I w ant to be a millionaire by the time I'm 30," Willis said. Another man, selling jewelry, said, "That's a heavy-duty, philosophical question. It's the liv­ ing that you make off the work of your own hands or brain," he said. "I've been a capitalist since I was 12." Helen Spear, 60, a counseling specialist at the UT Counseling/M ental Health Center, said, "The m eans of production, and the m eans of distribution are in private hands." "I could add a bunch of propaganda, but I w on't," Spear said. Some others chose to avoid the question. Two young wom en, asked to define capital­ ism, turned and walked away. "N o way. I wish I could help you," one said. "It's too hard," the other said. Tmmm T THE D a il y TEXAN/Tuesday June 7, 1938/Page 13 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED F ; F; ATM Z E R ¡0 a irT e Ia p a ' s T 29 D efam ers 30 W ; i. overly fond Puts into service Dull person Tiny one Seif-esteem s / / H !t fig ure M iles W o rr/w a rts 42 Asian weight s C 0 w | T A R o E L A n | A L L M A S c 0 D E C 01 1 C O n i E R N M U S c C A L A R D A R I D K E P 1 E S T E 63 Kin of aves 64 S teev es 65 Pronoun D OW N 1 Currency 2 Pine 3 S p ace 4 Prizes 5 Insect 6 Court group 7 Margin 8 Flounders 9 Since 10 Dictionary 11 Third-rater 12 Rowed 13 So Africans 18 Land body 23 Quixote 25 Tot up 26 Ta'er 27 State 28 R eactor ACR088 1 Magna — 6 Bike part 11 Sad sound 14 Nut 15 Saw 16 Chinese leader 17 Hunter’s lodge 19 Have reality 20 Fiber 21 Understands 22 Non-worker 24 Large room 26 Reprimands 27 — down cake 30 Big name in Delaware 32 Laid floors 33 Boatswain 34 Choler 37 "So sorry!” 38 Hauled 39 Confident 40 Layer 41 Ancestors 42 Narrow: pref 43 — swiss 45 Red suit 46 Tape player 48 Forest plant 49 Indicator 50 Greek coin 52 Trickle 56 Shame' 57 Deprive of (a possession) 60 Hearing 61 Badger’s cousin 62 Noted Canadian doctor 1 2 3 4 14 17 20 5 | I ...... ■ 6-7-88 Around Campus is a daily column listing University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and registered student organizations. To appear in Around Campus, organizations must be regis­ tered with the Office of Student Activi­ ties. Announcements must be submit­ ted on the correct form, available in The Daily Texan office, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions to conform to style rules, although no sig­ nificant changes will be made. MEETINGS Staff Parents Network will hold an organizational meeting at noon Wednes­ day in the Texas Union Building East­ woods Room. Santa Brown, UT Presi­ dent William Cunningham's Child Care Committee representative, will speak. KTSB's sports department will hold meetings for any students interested in BLOOM COUNTY sportscasting at 6 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday in the KTSB office in the old Varsity Cafeteria. No experience need­ ed, just an interest in sports. For more information, call KTSB at 471-5106 or Rob Stevens at 459-2201. Campus Crusade for Christ will hold a prime-time meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.304. SHORT COURSES Computation Center User Services will offer several short courses this week in Computation Center 8. They are: In­ troduction to Graphics at UT, from 1 to 3 p.m. Wednesday; VAX/VMS, from 3 to 5 p.m. Wednesday and Friday; The IBM 3081-D for New Users, from 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday. Also, Introduction to the Computation Center Microcomputer Lab will be held from 8 to 9 a.m. Friday in Peter T. Flawn Academic Center 29. Courses are free to anyone with a valid UT ID. Register at W.C. Hogg Building 8 (471-3241, ext 253). The Student Health Center will spon­ sor a Methods of Contraception Class for men and women from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Student Health Center 448. Call 471-4158 to register. LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS The Student Health Center will spon­ sor "Eating for a Healthy Heart," a nu­ trition workshop, from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Wednesday in Student Health Center 456. To sign up, come to Room 456 or call 471-6252. ____________OTHER ______ The Student Health Center is now in­ terviewing students to be accepted into the Methods of Contraception Peer In­ structor Program. Upper-di vision course credit is available for training in the fall and performance in spring 1989. A two- semester commitment is required, and lower-division students will be consid- by Berke Breathed ered. Call M itzi H en ry at 471-6252 for inform ation or to set u p an interview The Wheelchair Maintenance and Re­ pair Program is available to all stu d en ts, faculty an d staff from 8 to 10 a.m . M o n ­ day th ro u g h Friday or bv sch ed u led ap ­ p o in tm en t. For m ore inform ation, com e by D orothy G ebauer S tu d en t Services Building 2.116B o r contact R andv Clarke at 471-1205. The Baptist Student Union will spon­ sor a Bible stu d y an d fellow ship at 7 p.m . T uesd ay at 2001 P aram o u n t in S outh A ustin. Rides will be available at 6:30 p .m . at the B aptist S tu d en t C enter, 2204 San A ntonio St Call 474-1429 for m ore details. Services for Students with Disabili­ ties is seeking v o lu n teers w ho can sp en d one to five h o u rs a w eek this su m m er V olunteer a little tim e reading, w riting, test-taking, etc., w hile sipp ing coffee For m ore inform ation, call Marv O 'D o n ­ nell at 471-1205. u 3 . O Vj V C 000 Hfi.QPL* KNOtL I KNOtL OTHBR 9UTA51 TOW ^B 5c r WHO ANS6U6RW iO U * Ph&JB Z a m t o j vt/KB i m w r z HAVBY0UR BABY1 ^ N c l ^ / ■5* - s \ t \ Z < V T * \ J —\~*L W S R\CMr 80V<; TUCT LET m DfilFT M1NUTT AGO. T S B£AL CLOSE . . 1 U E A RD T A M AINTAIN S ILENC E T\£ T WAtT THE!" OUT - £ U . sexlife by susan borer» M A R T I N W A G N E R ' S D o n 11* l.«*u the m a g ic ia n lW O SSSSSM k b > t o r n k t n ^ j Page 14/THE DAILY TEXAN/Tuesday, June 7,1988 The Three Amigos? Johnson: Friends are now enemies Associated Press INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Magic Johnson came out on top in a battle against one of his best friends. He gets to face another pal in the NBA finals, and he's looking for the sam e result. Johnson and the Los Angeles Lakers will m eet Detroit for the NBA title starting Tuesday night. The Pistons are led by Isiah Thom ­ as, who along with Dallas forward Mark Aguirre is am ong those clos­ est to Johnson. "H e's not my friend w hen I walk on the court, he's my enem y," Johnson said of Thomas. "I'm going for the world cham pionship and so is he. If he comes in (the lane) I'm going to have to put him on his rear." Johnson had 24 points, 11 assists and nine rebounds Saturday to lead the Lakers past Aguirre and the Mavericks 117-102 in the seventh game of the W estern Conference fi­ nals. "My eyes w ere set on a world cham pionship," Aguirre said. "It d id n 't h ap pen." Aguirre said he has chosen sides betw een Johnson and Thomas. for "My two best friends will com­ p e te th e c h a m p io n s h ip ," Aguirre said. "I w ouldn't m ind Magic w inning another, but I'd like for Isiah to have one." Johnson has led the Lakers to four NBA titles since joining them in the fall of 1979. The Pistons, on the the other hand, haven't reached league finals since 1956, w hen they were based in Fort Wayne, Ind. The franchise m oved to Detroit the next year, and was rarely a contender until Thom as joined the team in 1982. Not only will Johnson be playing against one of his best friends, he'll be returning home during the fi­ nals. "Going back home is fun in a sense," said Johnson, who grew up in Lansing, Mich., and attended Michigan State. "It's special, but it's that's for sure. I d o n 't different, Summer in Austin Detroit’s Thomas, left, is the second dose friend Johnson will face. Associated Press GAME TIMES Tuesday June 7 at L.A. Thursday June 9 L.A. 8 p.m. 8 p.m. 8 p.m. 8 p.m.* Sunday June 12 at Detroit 2:30 p.m. Tuesday June 14 at Detroit Thursday June 16 at Detroit Sunday June 19 at L.A. 2:30 p.m.* Tuesday June 21 at L.A. Lakers 8 p.m.* * If necessary think I will [think about it] until we get there. "I'll have to be even more focused because of all the distractions. There's more pressure with all your friends and family there, and peo­ ple asking for tickets. I just have to keep focused on w hat I have to do while I'm back there and that's help us win. "It's good, but it's b ad." The Lakers are trying to become the first NBA team to repeat as cham pions since the Boston Celtics won back-to-back titles in 1968 and 1969. In recent years, the Lakers and Celtics have provided a great deal of excitement and interest w hen they've m et in the finals. "I m ade a statem ent that they [the Lakers] would have to separate them selves from the pack," Lakers Coach Pat Riley said. "W e're alone at the top because Boston's not there. O ur identity, our tradition, it's ours." W hat if the Lakers-Pistons series comes dow n to a seventh gam e, as the last two series have for Los A n­ geles? g a m e , w e "M ost of the tim e w hen it's a m u s t- w in c o m e through," Johnson said. "W hen we have our backs against the wall, we play better, I think we respond bet­ ter in the seventh gam e." T h e y ’re not all gone! Nearly 23,000 students are still here for the summer. They’ll be at the lakes and pools, restaurants, clubs, and shopping malls — anywhere things are going on this summer. Reach the summer market at UT with The Daily Texan’s Summer in Austin Publishes: Wednesday, June 15 Ad deadline: Wednesday, June 8 T h e D a il y T e x a n Retail Advertising 471-1865 L.A. wants to change history Lakers can become first repeat champions since ’68 Associated Press INGLEWOOD, Calif. — The last time an NBA team repeated as champion, four of the five current Los Angeles Laker starters were children. But not the fifth. Kareem Abdul- Jabbar was 22 and about to begin his long, brilliant pro career. In the 19 years since the% Boston Celtics won their second consecu­ tive title, nobody has accomplished such a feat, and such people as Magic Johnson, James Worthy, By­ ron Scott and A.C. Green have grown into adults and starters for the Lakers. Abdul-Jabbar, now 41, is still around and has set many NBA records. Despite his advancing years, he's still a key to the Lakers' chances. "I'm very excited about the fact that we've done what we had to do to get here," Abdul-Jabbar said Monday after a team practice, refer­ ring to the NBA finals, which begin Tuesday night. "I'm just taking it one step at a time." The Lakers, who are playing in the finals for the seventh time in nine years and have won titles in 1980, 1982, 1985 and 1987, were ex­ tended to the full seven games in each of their last two series, against Utah and Dallas. But as Abdul-Jab­ bar put it, they're here. The Detroit Pistons, on the other hand, have advanced to the finals for the first time since 1956, when they were the Fort Wayne Pistons. The franchise moved to Detroit the following year. The first two games of the best-of- seven series will be played Tuesday and Thursday nights at the Forum, starting at 8 p.m. CDT. The series then shifts to Michigan for the third, fourth and, if necessary, a fifth game. If necessary, the sixth and seventh games will be played at the Forum. Abdul-Jabbar has been a member of five championship teams, the four Laker squads which have pre­ vailed in the last eight years and the Milwaukee Bucks of 1971, his sec­ ond NBA season. Because of the circumstances, a sixth title sometime in the next two weeks might be the sweetest of all for him. But if so, he wasn't talking Major League Baseball AITbnaaCOT AMERICAN LEAGUE Em MvMon W 35 34 31 29 26 27 13 L Pet. GB 648 — 618 iVfe 585 3Vi> .518 7 500 8 474 9 ’¿ .236 22 VS 19 21 22 27 26 30 42 L Pet. GB 691 — 528 9 509 10 500 10V& 426 14VS 421 15 357 18VS 17 25 27 28 31 33 36 WaatDMaion W 38 28 28 28 23 24 20 Monday's Games New York Cleveland Detroit Milwaukee Boston Toronto Baltimore O akland Minnesota Texas K a n sa s City C h ic a g o Seattle California B oston 3, New York 2 Baltimore 5. Detroit 2 Cleveland 6, Toronto 3 M innesota 9, C h ic a g o 4 K a n sa s City 2. O akland 0 Texas 6. California 4 Seattle 2, Milwaukee 0 Tuesday's Games Boston (Boyd 5-4) at New York (Leiter 4-2), 6 30 p m Detroit (Tanana 8-3) at Baltimore (Tibbs 2-3). 6 35 p m Toronto (Stottlemyre 2-7) at Cleveland (Bailes 5-4), 6 35 M innesota (Lea 1-3) at C h ic a g o (Perez 5-2), 7 30 p m Oakland (C Young 4-2) at K a n sa s City (Power 2-1), 7 35 p m p m California (Finley 3-7) at Texas (H o ugh 5-6), 7 35 p m Milwaukee (W e gm an 4-5) at Seattle (Swift 5-2), 9 05 p m New York Pittsburgh St Louis C h ica go Montreal Philadelphia Los A ngeles Houston S an Francisco Cincinnati San D ie go Atlanta ........................... 30 NATIONAL LEAGUE m 38 31 w L 17 24 26 27 28 31 27 26 22 WaatOMatan W 30 29 28 25 20 18 Monday's Gomss L 22 24 27 30 35 33 Pet. GB 691 — 7 564 536 B'/t 10 VS 500 11 vs 481 415 15 Pet. GB 577 — 547 509 455 364 353 1V5 3 VS 6'/i> 11 VS 11 vs Philadelphia 5, Montreal 4 Houston 10, Los A n g e le s 4 New York 6, St Louis 2 Cincinnati 12, San D ie go 0 Only ga m e s sch eduled Tuesday's Games Philadelphia (Carm an 3-3) at Montreal (Heaton 2-3), 6 35 C h ica go (M a ddux 9-3) at Pittsburgh (Fisher 4-2), 6 35 New York (Cone 7-0) at St Louis (Tudor 1 -1). 7 35 p m Cincinnati (Jackson 5-2) at S a n D ie go (Whitson 4-5), Houston (Darwin 2-4) at Lo s A n g e le s (Belcher 3-2) 9 35 Atlanta (Mahler 7-4) at S a n Francisco (Dow ns 3-5), 9 35 p m p m p m p m 9 05 p m League Leaders AMBVCAN LEAGUE B A T T IN G (158 at bats)— Lansford. Oakland, 402 Win field, New York, 373, B o g g s . Boston 349, Puckett, M inne­ sota, 347, McGriff, Toronto. 339 R U N S — C an se co . Oakland. 51. R H enderson N ew York. 46. Lansford. Oakland, 45, McGriff, Toronto, 42 Mattingly New York. 41, Moiitor Milwaukee. 41 R B I— Winfield, N ew York, 49, Brett, K a n s a s City, 46, Canseco , Oakland. 45. Puckett. Minnesota. 43. Carter, Cleveland. 40. Pagliarulo N ew York. 40 H IT S — Lansford O akland, 92. Puckett, Minnesota, 78. Wmfield. New York, 72: Brett, K a n sa s City, 69. 5 are tied with 66 DOU BLES— Gladden, Minnesota. 21. Brett, Kansas City. 17, Gruber, Toronto. 17, Lemon, Detroit, 17. McGriff. To­ ronto, 17, Ray. California, 17 TRIPLES— Reynolds. Seattle. 5, Wilson, Kansas City. 4, 11 are tied with 3 HO M E RU N S— Canseco, Oakland. 14: Calderon. C h ic a ­ go. 13. Incavigtia Texas, 13. Hrbek, Minnesota, 12. Win­ field, New York. 12 STOLEN B A S E S — RHenderson, New York, 41. Penis, Detroit 25. Canseco Oakland 17 Moseby. Toronto. 16 Moinor Milwaukee 15 PITCHING (7 decisions) -Viola. Minnesota. 9-1. 900, 2 65. Dotson. New York. 6-1. 857. 2 89, Swmdell Clave land. 10-2. 833, 2 51 Candelaria. New York. 7-2. 778. 2 41 Robinson. Detroit. 8-2. 750. 4 22. Stewart. Oakland, 9-3, 750 3 52 STRIKEOUTS— Clemens. Boston. 125. Langston. Se at­ tle. 102, Guzman, Texas. 79 Hurst. Boston. 77, Viola, M in­ nesota 76 SA VES— Eckersley. Oakland. 19. Reardon, Minnesota. 14, DJones Cleveland. 13. Plesac. Milwaukee. 12 Henne- man. Detroit. 11 There are lots of teams who play physi­ cal and don’t get things done. That’s how we’ve been played all year. I don’t expect it to change.’ — Kareem Abdul-Jabbar about it. "We have to win it first before we can talk about the significance," he said. "I'm that w e're just glad here." Lakers Coach Pat Riley guaran­ teed last June, after the Lakers had won the title by beating the Celtics in the finals, that his club would re­ peat. "I think that was a little prem a­ tu re," Abdul-Jabbar said when asked about Riley's statem ent of 12 m onths ago. "We d id n 't say it, Riley said it," Green said. "So it d o esn 't p u t any extra pressure on u s." Green did say that the idea of repeating gave the Lakers extra in­ centive. "The victory hasn't been granted to us yet, but I think w e're going to do it," he said. "W e're going to go out and try to repeat and make his­ tory." Riley expressed confidence again the Lakers' M onday concerning chances. "I'm not worried about any­ thing," he said. "W e create prob­ NATIONAL LEAGUE B A T T IN G (15 8 at bats)— Galarraga, Montreal, 336, B o n ­ illa, Pittsburgh, 333. Palmeiro, C h ic a g o 332, B runansky, St Louis, 321, Colem an, St Louis. 321 R U N S — B o n d s. Pittsburgh, 45, G alarraga. M ontreal 45, Strawberry, N e w York, 4 0 Bonilla Pittsburgh 39. Clark. S a n Francisco, 38; G ib son, L o s An geles, 38 R B I— Bonilla. Pittsburgh, 45, G D avis. Houston, 45, Clark, S a n Francisco. 39. Parrish, Philadelphia. 39, Brunansky, St L ou is 36 H IT S— Colem an. St Louis, 77. G alarraga. Montreal, 73, Palmeiro. C h ica go , 70. M cG e e . St Louis, 69, Bonilla, Pitts­ burgh, 68 D O U B L E S — Palm eno. C hica go , 18 H a ye s. P hiladelphia 17, G alarraga, Montreal, 16, Sa b o , Cincinnati. 16, Bonilla, Pittsburgh, 14, Bream. Pittsburgh, 14. G ib so n , L o s A n g e ­ les, 14 T R IP L E S — C olem an, St Louis, 8 V anSlyke. Pittsburgh, 7; Mitchell. S a n Fran cisco, 5. Sam uel, Philadelphia, 5. 7 are tied with 4 H O M E R U N S — G alarraga, Montreal. 15, Clark, S a n Fran ­ cisco. 14. B on d s, Pittsburgh, 13, Bonilla Pittsburgh 13. G D a vis. Houston, 12. Strawberry, N ew York 12 S T O L E N B A S E S — G Y o u n g, Houston, 34, C olem an, St Louis, 26. OSm ith, St Louis. 18; Raines, Montreal, 18, L ar­ kin, Cincinnati. 17 P IT C H IN G (7 d e c isio n s)— C one. N ew York, 7-0, 1 000, 1 53. G ood en , N ew York, 9-1, 900. 3 17; Knepper, H o u s ­ ton, 7-1, 875, 1 58, Ri|0. Cincinnati. 6-1 857, 2 25, Scott, Houston, 6-1, 857. 2 97 S T R IK E O U T S — Ryan, Houston, 87 ScotL Houston, 87 K G ro ss, Philadelphia, 74, D e L e o n St Louis, 71; G ood en , N ew York, 71 S A V E S — Worrell, St Louis, 15, DSmith, Houston, 10 M y ­ ers, N e w York, 9, Sutter, Atlanta, 8. M a D a vis, S a n D iego. 7 Rangers 6, Angels 4 Amarican at Texaa CAUFORMA TEXAS ab rh b i M c D w e l cf 5 1 1 0 Fletchr s s 4 1 2 1 4 0 1 0 Sierra rf 4 0 1 0 Incvglia If 2 1 2 1 Petralli dh 4 0 0 0 Steels 1 b M Stan ly c 3 0 0 0 B ue ch ie 3b 1 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 W ilkrsn 2 b B row ne 2b 4 0 0 0 34 4 8 2 Totaia ab rh b i 5 0 2 2 4 0 0 0 4 1 1 1 4 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 2 1 0 0 3 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 31 6 7 5 D w n n g dh E p p a rd If Joyne r 1b C D a v is rf R a y 2 b How ell 3 b A rm a s cf C W a lkr cf Miller c Schofild s s Totals CaMomia Taxaa G a m e W inning R B I — Sierra (4) E — Arm as. Steels, W ilkerson 2, E p p a rd D P — T e x a s 1 L O B — California 6, T e x a s 8 2 B — C D a v is H R — Sierra (7) S B — M cD o w e ll 2 (13), Incaviglia (3) Schofie ld (6) S F - R a y H R B I BB SO 7 5 2-3 0 1 1 1-3 0 Fraser L.4-5 Corbett Minton Texas G u z m a n W.6-4 W P - G u z m a n B K — G u z m an T— 3 05 A — 24,469 lems for them . W e've been there be­ fore, this isn't a new experience for us. "W e've been here before and maybe their first time could create a sense of real urgency. The finals can do th at." Much has been m ade about the series m atching a physical team — the Pistons — against a finesse team — the Lakers. Abdul-Jabbar d id n 't seem concerned about such a m atchup. "There are lots of team s w ho play physical and d o n 't get things done," he said. "T hat's how w e've been played all year. I d o n 't expect it in to change. Things happen gam es that you can't predict." M ight tem pers flare? "It's always a possibility," Abdul- Jabbar said. "W e expect that from them , the physical gam e," G reen said. "I d o n 't think they expect that from us. They m ight be in for a little surprise. "W e know how to play. I think w e've proved we can play both styles." Detroit's Vinnie Johnson said the Pistons' game w asn't limited to a physical style. "W e can play the physical gam e and we can play the finesse gam e," Johnson said. "People underestim ate our ru n ­ ning gam e," Detroit center Bill Laimbeer said. "W e've got some young guys who can get out there and ru n ." The Lakers' Magic Johnson and the Piston's Isiah Thom as, point guards for the two team s, are best of friends. But both m ade it clear that business will be business in the series. "I love Magic, he's my friend, but I w ant to win the cham pionship," Thomas said. "I'm going for a world cham pion­ ship, and so is he," Johnson said. "H e's not my friend w hen he walks on the court." The Lakers beat the Pistons both times during the regular season, w inning 106-104 at the Silverdome on Jan. 8 and 117-110 at the Forum on Feb. 21. But that was then, this is now. "N othing's easy," Riley said. "A nything w orthw hile in this life, you have to earn." Royals 2, A ’s 0 OAKLAND KANSASCITY Lan sfrd 3 b Javier rl C a n s e c d h Parker If M cG w ir 1 b D H e d s n cf H u b b rd 2 b H a ss e y ph Baylor ph G a lle go 2 b W e is s s s M e rc a d o c Totals Oakland Kansas CHy , Stllwll s s ab r h bi 5 0 2 0 5 0 1 0 W W ilsn cf 4 0 2 0 3 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 Brett 1 b Trtabll rf Seitzer 3b B u c kn r d h FW hite 2b E isnrc h If M acfarln c ab rh b i 3 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 3 1 0 0 4 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 2 2 2 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 35 0 S 0 Totaia 27 2 6 2 000 000 0 0 0 -0 020 000 OOx— 2 G am e W inn ing R B I E — H ubbard, Tartabull. D P — O a kla n d 2 L O B — O a klan d 11 K a n s a s City 6 2 B — C a n s e c o 2 S B — W ilson (11) S — B uckn er E isenreich -F W h ite (4 ) IP H R E R BB SO Oakland Ontiveros L.3-3 Plunk Kansas City Farr W,2 -0 M o ntgm ry G !e a to n S ,2 T— 2 3 0 A — 36.724 7 1 6 1 2 - 3 1 1 - 3 5 2 1 0 6 0 1 0 1 0 Astros 10, Dodgers 4 LOSANGELS HOUSTON G Y o u n g cf BH a tchr If W alling 3 b G D a v is 1 b D o ran 2 b Pnko vts 2 b A s h b y c A n d e rsn p B a s s rf Ram irz s s K n e p p e r p Puhl ph Trevino c ab r h bi 2 3 2 0 5 2 2 2 5 2 3 3 5 1 2 3 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 5 1 1 1 5 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 S a x 2 b M H tc h r rf Holton p M iD a v s ph G ib so n If M a rsh l 1b S h e lb y cf Ham ltn 3b D e m p sy c A P e n a p C re w s p H e e p rf A n d e sn s s S t u b b s ph Sutton p Sc io sc ia c ab rh b i 4 0 1 1 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 1 2 2 4 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 3 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 1 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 35 4 8 4 2 1 0 1 Houston Los Angales 000 100 252-10 010 010 011— 4 G a m e W inn ing R B I — G D a v is (4) E Ram irez A n d e rso n D P H o u sto n 1 L O B — H ouston 12, L o s A n g e le s 7 2B-— G ib so n . BH atcher, W alling S t u b b s 3 B — S h e lb y H R — G D a v is (12) G ib so n (10) S B — G Y o u n g 3 (34) Puhl (3). B a s s (12), B H a tc h e r (16) S — BH atcher 8> H R E R S B SO Houston K n e p p e r W, 7-1 A n d e rse n S.2 i m Angolas Sutton A P e n a L.2-3 C re w s Holton 2-3 1 1 1-3 H B P — G D a v is by Sutton W P — C re w s B K — Sutton T 3 3 2 A — 19,327 Reds 12, Padres 0 CINCINNATI SANDIEQO S a b o 3b Tredw y 2 b Da n ie ls If E D a v is cf ONeill rf E s a s k y 1 b B D ia z c C n c p c n s s B ro w n n g p a b rh b i 1 2 1 2 2 0 2 3 1 3 2 3 1 3 2 1 1 1 2 2 1 5 0 1 0 5 0 1 2 M a c k cf RAIom r 2b Gw ynn rf M oreind if Kruk 1b Santiago c Brown 3b Tmpltn s s Grant p Thon ph Sterra p CM rtnz ph Leiper p R e ady ph G B oo k er p Totaia ab rh b i 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 28 0 1 0 San Otago 212 000 208-12 0 000 000 000- G a n e Winning R B I — E D a v is (6) E — Sab o, Templeton D P — S a n D ie go 1 L O B— C in c in ­ nati 7. S a n D ie go 5 28— ONeill,, BD iaz B row ning HR— E D a v is 2 (8) Darnels (7) ____ ________ H R B I BB SO 1 0 0 P 001 210 000— 4 130 101 OOx— 6 Totals 40 10 14 9 Totaia Red Sox 3, Yankees 2 BOSTON NEWYORK ab rh b i 4 0 2 0 5 1 2 0 4 1 1 0 4 0 0 0 4 1 2 3 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 38 3 • 3 RH n d sn If Rndlph 2b Buhner cf JCIark dh Winfield rf G W ard 1b W sh gtn ph Pglruto 3b Santana ss Cruz ph Skinner c Totaia ab rh b i 3 1 0 0 4 1 1 0 4 0 1 1 2 0 1 1 4 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 32 2 8 2 B o g g s 3b Barrett 2b Burks cl Dw E vn s rf Grenwl dh Rice If Flomine It G e d m an c D o d so n 1b SO w en s s Near York G am e Winning R B I — Greenwell (7) D P — Boston 1. N ew York 1 LOB- -B o sto n 8, New York 6 2 B — Burks, Greenwell. Barrett H R Greenwell (7) 002 010 000-3 200 000 000-2 Totals 43 12 17 11 H R E R BB BO 2 2 0 0 8 5 1 1 -3 1 1 2-3 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 Browning W.3-3 San Otago Grant L.1-5 Sierra Leiper GBooker T— 2 48 A— 37,244 W P - Browning P B - B D ia z T— 2 17 A — 8.053