£ Z 7V ~ l 8 ¿ 5¿ x i S A T I V O £.179 18 xoa *0 *d a n c h o o w l I d 0 y 0Q^93 y J, ^ 3Da il y T ex a n Farm workers on strike at UT-connected winery By BARBARA LINKIN Daily Texan S taff Almost 30 farm workers, backed by the Union of Ag­ ricultural and Industrial Workers, went on strike Satur­ day against a Fort Stockton w inery on UT-owned land. lorn Child, manager for the Ste. Genevieve W inery, said operations have not been affected because the strikers were brought in from the outside and have little com m unity support. Union spokesman Sabino Arm endariz said if the workers' demands are not met, several lawsuits against the University, the winery and the Pecos County Com ­ missioners Court may be filed. Arm endariz also said the union is calling for a boy­ cott of Ste. Genevieve wines The union w ill intensify their campaign to boycott all Ste. Genevieve and Llano Estado wines until the contract is signed between the workers and the wine m en," he said. W orkers' demands include the release of information on the use of pesticides, disclosure of pay records, bet­ ter sanitation facilities and information about ties be­ tween Fort Stockton police and the w inery. Steve M cIntyre, the attorney handling the case for the union, said two lawsuits already have been filed. M cIntyre said one of the suits was filed after the Ste. Genevieve management refused to disclose documents and written material concerning their use of pesticides on the fields in which the farmers work. Child said the w inery has not been notified of the 'W e've yet to receive anything that w e've been suit. served," he said. Child also disputed the contention that the winery refused to provide information about pesticide use. All of our records have been made available to the Texas Department of A griculture," he said. The pesticide in question, Sevin brand X LR Carbaryl insecticide, may have long-term effects on workers who are exposed to it. A U T study reported effects of the pesticide include increased instances of miscar­ riage, impotence and chromosomal aberrations, M cIn­ tyre said. M cIntyre said the workers feel they should be aware of the risks of their w orking environm ent. They may not want to w o rk ," he said. "T he w ork­ ers ought to know if they should take the risk ." M cIntyre said the suit was filed in the 126th District Court in Austin. The same request to disclose information was made to the U niversity and the Pecos County Com missioners Court. Both agreed to release their information on the use of the chemical, he said. M cIntyre said no suits have yet been filed against the University. H ow ever, if the U T Board of Regents fails to respond to other com plaints, the union w ould file suit, he said. However, the UT System cannot be named in a law ­ suit until legislative permission is given, M cIntyre said. M cIntyre said he had requested a meeting w ith W .O . Shultz, the L T System attorney, but so far he has heard nothing from him. Shultz was not available for comment. The second suit was filed against the Pecos County Commissioners Court after indications that the sheriff's office and the w inery were working too closely togeth­ er, M cIntyre said. 'O ur question is what is the sheriff's office doing there?" he said. M cIntyre also said there had been several instances of harassment of union members but he refused further comment, saying he was afraid he would endanger un­ ion members. On A pril 23, a petition was filed with the Com m is­ sioners Court to investigate the ties between the sher­ iff's office and the winery, M cIntyre said. O n A p ril 25, the commissioners met in closed session about the peti­ tion but refused to disclose the details of the meeting. McIntyre said he filed suit after the closed m eeting because the commisioners court is required to reveal the details of all official meetings. No commissioners were available for comment. The suit was filed in the 83rd District Court in Fort Stockton during the first w eek'of Ju ly, M cIntyre said. President to announce findings Free speech committee expected to push relaxation of rules By LORRAINE CADEMARTOR! Daily Texan Staff LT President W illiam Cunning­ ham w ill make public Tuesday the recommendations of the ad hoc committee on free speech. The committee, appointed by Cunningham in M ay to study free speech rules on campus, is expected to recommend making the W est Mall a 24-hour free speech area, a source who requested anonym ity said The indude recommendations permitting demonstrators to use sound am plification on the West Mall between 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p m and between 5:30 and 7:30 p m weekdays, the source said Mark Yudof, committee chairman and dean of the U T Law School, and student committee member Da­ vid Quan refused to confirm or deny whether the committee had recommended the W est M all be­ come a permanent free speech area. T udof said the corruqrutfee s findings w ill be made publif 1 rftesday by Cunningham. Cunningham formed the commit­ tee, which consists of three faculty to members and study the free speech situation on campus and to make recommenda­ tions on how' to improve it. two students, The issue came into question as a result of the April anti-apartheid ral­ lies on the West Mall. The committee met for three hear­ ings during June, the first of which offered an opportunity for the pub­ lic to give their opinions on the sub­ ject. Although the first meeting was attended by about 35 students, fac­ ulty members and Austin citizens, the next two meetings were attend­ ed by only a half dozen students. Members of the committee were given two reporte», one compiled by the Students' Association Task Force on Public Demonstrations and one compiled by a group of stu­ dents who were among those ar­ rested at the April rallies. Both reports called for the rem ov­ al of free speech constraints on the West M all, as well as an immediate halt to the arrests and the removal of disciplinan charges against ar­ rested U T students. Dole may sidestep second vote on contested Manion nomination Associated Press W A SH IN C T O N — The Senate battle over whether to confirm Daniel Manion as a federal appeals judge es­ calated M onday when M ajority Leader Robert Dole said he may prevent a second confirmation vote — al­ lowing Manion to be seated without a full-scale, pre- soheduled Senate vote. Derru>cratic W hip Alan Cranston responded that if Dole follows that strategy, Democrats may block votes on two Suprem e Court nominees in retaliation. There is the option that we do nothing," Dole said, as strategies that were discussed during the Ju ly recess spilled onto the Senate floor. "1 haven't foreclosed that option." Failure to reconsider the 48-46 vote in the nominee's favor last month would mean confirmation of Manion, a conservative whose nomination has sparked the most bitter debate yet over the quality of President Reagan's judicial nominations. In demanding reconsideration, Democrats have ar­ gued that the m ajority of the Senate has yet to express its w ill on the candidate for the 7th U .S. Circuit Court of Appeals. A half-dozen senators missed the initial vote — which came up on short notice — and a second \ote reportedly would be very close. Several senators who did not vote that day have suggested their posi­ tions were misrepresented to colleagues, possibly skewing the vote. C ranston, D-Calif., told Dole on the floor that if there is no second vote, "W e would ha\e to consider other options, such as doing our best to prevent any nom ina­ tion until there is a vote on M anion " Cranston said the counterattack would include stall­ ing the nominations of W illiam Rehnqusst as chief jus­ tice and Antonin Scalia as an associate justice of the Supreme Court. The high court begins its new term in October. In a related development, Dole wrote M inority Lead­ er Robert Byrd that it may be necessary to d elay" the Senate's scheduled August recess "so we can complete our business, including the nominations of Justice Rehnquist and Judge Scalia." Democrats generally argue that Manion lacks the ex­ perience for a federal appeals court, w hile Republicans contend the real issue is the nominee s conservatism. The Senate's first vote on M anion was left in parlia­ mentary limbo after a maneuver by Bvrd. W ith the count tied at 47, and Democrats facing a tie- breaking vote for Manion bv Vice President George Bush, Byrd switched his vote to "y e s ." That gave him the right under Senate rules to request reconsideration, a motion that is still pending. But Dole, as m ajority leader, controls the schedule. If the Senate recesses for more than 30 davs as it would do at the end of the session, M anion would be con­ firmed autom atically. Basketed ball Canos Moreno Daiiy Texan Staff Amono Castillo. English sconce Kin,of reaches unoer the goal net to retrieve a soccer ball ,ust locked into the goal Castillo and two fnends were takinq turns oractic- ng at being goal>e at Clark Field Monday morning Jets bomb Palestinian targets Israel retaliates against attacks, kills four, wounds 12 Associated Press A IN A B , Lebanon — Twelve Is* raeli jets rocketed and bombed Pal­ estinian guerrilla targets in hills southeast of Beirut Monday in retal­ iation for rocket attacks on northern Israel. The raid killed four people and wounded 12, officials said Police and the International Red Cross reported in separate commu­ niques that two Palestinian fighters died and 12 people were wounded dunng the 30-minute late-moming raid on the hill towns of Aitat, Buvs- sour Shim lan and Amab. Druse spokesmen said later that two Druse m ilitiamen were also killed. The Druse, who dominate the Ainab regum, are a secretive offshoot of Islam Prime M inister Rashid Kara mi claimed the attack was aimed at sa­ botaging a Beirut security plan launched under Svnan auspices two weeks ago to reinstate government authority m the capital Syria has sent about 500 troops to west Beirut to help enforce the plan, intended to end a 27-month reign of Moslem m ilitias characterized by as­ sassinations. kidnappings, aircraft hijackings and bank robbenes. A squadron of 10 F-15 and two Phantom F-4 fighter-bombers deliv­ ered their payloads in five passes over targets m the mountains about 12 miles southeast of Beirut, police said. The Israeli command in Tel A viv said its pilots reported ' accurate hits ... (on an) area of terronst con­ centrations." It said all planes re­ turned safely. The raid appeared aimed at Syr­ ian-backed Palestinian factions ac­ tive in the region. It came after overnight rocket at­ tacks on Israel s northern Galilee re­ Israeli m ilitary sources con­ gion firmed an Israel Radio report of the attacks, but said no injuries or dam ­ age resulted. I he sources demanded anonym i­ ty Palestinian guerrillas periodically fire Soviet-made Katyusha rockets into Galilee from bases in Lebanon. O ne building destroyed in Ainab was an office of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, headed by M arxist physician George Habash. The three-story' stone house was left flattened and smoldering. M onday's was Israel's second air strike in Lebanon in five days and the fifth this year. A ll were directed against Palestinian targets. Shuttle may fly in 1988 with new boosters Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — N A SA said M onday it doesn't ex­ pect the space shuttle to flv again until 1988 and that its engineers are working on a totally new design for the ____________booster rockets that caused January's crash of the Challenger. The new design w ill be developed as a con­ tingency in case no other approach is found suit­ able for the joint seals on the boosters, the space agency said in a report to President Reagan. "W e are going to take a look at designs that assume we can't use the existing base hard­ ware, Richard Truly, head of the shuttle pro gram, told a news conference. If a new design were required, he said, the first-flight schedule would be pushed back even further. "The reason we are doing it is that if we get into testing and we should have a test tailure that shows our design analysis was inadequate, I ruly said. we d have a head start on an alternate ap­ "H ow ever, everybody proach, that s been involved in the redesign believes there is a design available with the present hard­ w are." The news conference was held after Adm inis­ trator James Fletcher delivered a report to the W hite House on N A S A 's response to the changes recommended by the presidential com­ mission investigating the Challenger accident. The commission report was issued 30 days ago W e have responded favorably to each of the nine recommendations in the Rogers report," Fletcher said. "There is one negative piece of news that came out after studying the problem in some depth." That, he said, was the necessity of scheduling the first launch in the first quarter of 1988, in ­ stead of Ju ly 1987, which had been the target date. " It now appears that was a little optim iftic in view of the extensive tests that have to be done on the solid rocket motors before we feel com­ fortable flying again," Fletcher said. The interim report is expected to help the ad­ m inistration decide what to do about b u ild in g a replacement for Challenger The accident left the shuttle fleet with only three vehicles and a halt in satellite launch capability. A replacement for Challenger and enhancing the shuttle spare parts inventory would cost $2.5 billion "A s I said, I'm not sure I want to go ahead with the fourth orbiter if it comes out of N A SA 's other program s," Fletcher said. The first recommendation of the Challenger commission, headed by former Secretary of State W illiam Rogers, was that "th e faulty solid rocket motor joint and seal must be changed" and that no design options should be prematurely pre­ cluded because of schedule, cost or reliance on existing hardw are." In its report, N A SA said safety is the prim ary objecto ' for the rocket boosters. U H IV E R S IT Y Summer enrolment down — There are fewer of you guys out there who are reading this right now than there would have been this tim e last year if we had ran something like this Want to know why^ Seems there’s this really official woman who fold The Daily Texan it was because of tuition increases and new application deadlines if you want to find out the really, realty, really good juice hke if there are 12.408 unde-graduates and 5,702 graduates, or if it s the other way around check out the story on page 6 W EA TH ER Phi Coftns weather, Day 2 - II s gon­ na be partly cloudy cloudy cloudy, gorma be partly cloudy, ciow-ow-ow- oudy 30 percent chance of showers but it's p a rty cloudy ohhh gonna be partly cloudy, cloudy, cloudy, highs m the low 90s. cloudy gonna gonna gonna be partly cloudy lows in the nrxd 70s and it s ctowwwwwwwwwwwwwww-dy. partly cloudy cloudy cloudy, ckxidy cloudy ohhhhh. cloudy winds from the south at 10-15 mph gonna be partty cloudy, cloudy, cloudy cloudy, cloudy cloudy, cloudy, cloudy, cloudy cloudy, For more local cloudy, cloudy, cloudy and national weather see page 16 IN D E X .................................... 12 .................... ........................................ . Around Campus Classifieds Comics . Editorials Entertainment Sports . State and Local University Weather World and Nation 3 16 4 \ 1 9 7 $ jg % Thousands boycott jobs, school in South Africa Associated Press JO H A N N E S ­ B U R G , So u th Africa — Tens of th o u s a n d s o f black w orkers sh u n n e d jo b s sc h o o ls an d Monday to pro­ test South Africa's state of emergen­ cy, but the main effect appeared to be in areas noted for anti-apartheid activism. The government said at least 80 percent of the nation's 1.7 million black students returned to school for resumption of classes after a six- week vacation. That would mean up to 340,000 stayed away in re­ sponse to a call from militant youth leaders. Black trade unions proclaimed a national "day of action" against the detention of more than 200 labor leaders, who are among an estimat­ ed 3,300 people held without charge. Participation appeared spotty in the first concerted mass protest since the nationwide state of emer­ gency was imposed June 12, accord­ ing to employers and academic monitoring groups. Up to 70 percent of workers stayed off the job at Port Elizabeth, or reported briefly and left. The in­ dustrial city on the Indian Ocean has been a center of protest during nearly two years of racial unrest in which more than 2,000 people have been killed. Elijah Baraji, president of the C ongress of South African Trade Unions and vice president of the National Union of Mineworkers, was released Friday after two weeks in detention, said Marcel Golding, spokesman for the mine workers. ! hat s probably one reason why there hasn't been widespread action today in the m ines," he said, add­ ing that Baraji was granted freedom on conditions that bar him from leaving his house or bt'ing quoted. Restrictions under the emergency include rules that prohibit journal­ ists from reporting actions of securi­ ty forces without official permis­ sion, publishing the names of detained people and quoting "su b ­ versive statem ents," which are va­ guely defined. In calling for the day of action, in­ cluding sit-down strikes and other on-the-job protests, the 500,000- member union Congress said deten­ tions of labor leaders were causing havoc in industrial relations. Employer groups have made the I * §t* ■ »» .v No p e tite fe a t Associated Press o w u Ch|*^ 9J 1j ' í reJart!?t Ph,llipe Pet,t walks on a rail,n9 at the World Trade Center in New York. Petit plans a crossing of the Grand Canyon, but a National P ark spokesman said permission has not been granted U.S. tentatively OKs SALT meeting Associated Press WASHINGTON — The United States gave its qualified approval Monday to a Soviet proposal that the two superpow ers meet next week to discuss President Reagan's controversial decision to abandon the SALT II treaty limiting nuclear weapons, a U.S. official said. A White H ou se spokesm an refused to say whether the Soviet invitation to a meeting July 22 in Geneva had been accepted or reject­ ed. But ¿Mother U.S. official, who demanded anonymity, told The As­ sociated Press the United States had agreed — but only if other issues could be raised at the session. These include charges that the So­ viets violated the unratified 1979 Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALÍ II) by withholding informa­ tion about their missile tests and de­ ploying an illegal long-range mis­ sile, the SS-25. The Soviets have denied the charges. issues U.S. The U.S. response did not specify the representatives would want to bring up in the dis­ cussion, the official said. 1 he Pentagon had recommended President Reagan reject the Soviet request as likely to produce what one U.S. official last week called "a public relations circus." However, the State Department was reported, to be in favor of a ses­ s io n o n the unratified treaty, while Kenneth Adelman, the U.S. arms and Edw ard control director, Rowny, senior presidential adviser, took the position the United States should be free to accuse the Soviets of flouting the accord. Blsck envoy oon side red Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Reagan is considering a administration black businessman from North Carolina for nomination as the U.S. am bassador to South Africa. Robert Brown, 51, a public rela­ tions and management consultant from High Point, N .C ., would succeed Herman Nickel. Earlier this year, Brown led a group of black educators to South Africa to help develop a U.S. pro­ gram for training teachers and otherwise improving education opportunities for blacks in the country. Brown would be the first black envoy to the white-ruled country. A black, John Burroughs, is the consul general in Capetown. same complaint to President P.W. Botha's government, but also ap­ pealed to the unions to stop job ac­ tions that have plagued several in­ dustries since the emergency took effect. The outlawed African National Congress endorsed the day of pro­ test. A statement issued at its head­ quarters in Lusaka, Zambia, said: "Let us make July 14 a day on which we bring our might to bear on the Botha regime. ... Let us act in unity, intensify the mass and armed ac­ tions, spread ungovernability to all corners of the land and move to people's power." A provincial supreme court hear­ ing began Monday in Durban on a challenge of the emergency's legali­ ty by the Metal and Allied Workers Union. The union argued that Botha did not inform Parliament of the emergency decree, as required, and that the ban on "subversive state­ ments" was too vague. Militant youths called the school boycott to protest emergency deten­ tions and new secunty measures at black schools that allow' authorities to turn away suspected troublemak­ ers with no nght of appeal and re­ quire students to produce new iden­ tity cards on demand. Car bomb kills 8 in Madrid Governing Socialist Party blames separatist group Associated Press years as a political refugee. Police arrested him several months ago on charges of violating refugee regulations by keeping arms in his home. MADRID, Spain — A van rigged as a shrapnel bomb was detonated by remote control Monday as a busload of civil guards passed, killing eight guards and wound­ ing 44 people, including 12 civilians, officials reported Police said the operation probably was carried out by the ETA's "Spain Com m ando," which is based in Ma­ drid and is believed responsible for at least 20 attacks this year. No group claimed responsibility, but the governing Socialist Party blamed the explosion on "ETA assas­ sins The Basque separatist group ETA has carried out many similar attacks on military and police targets, the most recent a car bombing April 25 that killed five para­ m i l i t a r y civil guards. ----- -------------------------- The blast was so powerful It threw me against a wall as I was coming up from the subway. There is broken glass all over the place.’ Twisted metal, man­ gled cars and shards of glass littered Dominican Republic Square in a fash­ ionable residential district about three miles from the center of the capital. ___ I he bomb exploded at 7:48 a.m ., shattering windows around the square and damaging street-level shops. Monday's assault was the most costly in lives of any since since the ETA began killing police, civil guards and military officers in 1968 as part of its campaign for an independent nation in the three Basque provinc­ es of northern Spain Fhe initials ETA stand for the words "Basque Land and I ibertv the Basque language —Carios Cofrades, radio announcer An angrv crowd gath- ered at the scene soon af­ ter tin- explosion Mam shouted slogans against the government and ETA Some raised open palms in the fascist salute popularized during the long dictatorship of Gen Francisco Franco, who died in 1975. The blast was so powerful it threw' me against a wall as I was coming up from the subw ay," radio announcer Carlos Cofrades said. "There is broken glass all over the place." ITu* deaths raised to 29 the number of victims of po­ —— ------------------— -------- in litical violence in Spain this year. An officer nding next to the bu^ driver was blown from the vehicle by the force of the blast, but landed on his feet unhurt. Diego Cortes Valdes told journalists he had no idea what happened, but the next minute 1 was standing, unhurt, next to the wrecked b u s." A spokesman t o r the civil guard, whose distinctive gray green uniforms and patent leather tricorne hats set t h e m off from other police, said 70 young officers were being taken to a highway patrol training center in the bus and a trailing van He said the vehicle that exploded contained shrapnel and about 110 pounds of plastic explosives. I he spokesman would not allow his name to he used. Some wounded officers were reported in s e rio u s con dition. The injured civilians included a street sweeper cut down by living glass State television speculated that the bombing w a s a n ETA response to France's deportation of the separatist group s reputed military leader to Gabon on Sunday. Domingo Itrube Abasolo, who is 42 and uses the code name I xomin, had been living in France tor 1H Civil guard officials say 164 guard officers have been killed in terrorist attacks since 1968. All major political parties condemned the attack, but no comment emerged from the H em Batasuna, or Peo­ ple s Union, the radical Basque partv considered to be the political arm of ET A The Basque faction won five of the 350 seats in the lower house ot Parliament in general elections June 22, up from two previously, its elected deputies haw not claimed the s e a t s because the\ will not swear allegiance to the S p a n i s h constitution H em Batasuna has called on the government of I’nme Minister Felipe Gonzalez to negotiate with ETA to r an end to the violence. Gonzalez refuses to talk u n t il the ETA lays d o w n its arms, Since January 1984, France has deported 36 alleged 1 1A members to Latin American and Afncan countries and has extradited three to Spain. Two of the three extradited were acquitted of charges by Spanish courts for lack of ev idence Senate tax bill criticized Associated Press W A S H I N G ­ TON — Presi­ dent Reagan is badly misguided about the whole tax o f id e a overhaul if he thinks the only important factor is cutting the top individual tax rate, Rep. Richard Gephardt, chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, said Monday. "There is no magic about the 27 percent rate" in the tax plan passed by the Senate, said Gephardt, a Mis­ sourian and member of the tax-writ­ ing House Ways and Means Com­ mittee. "And the statements from the administration serve only to raise false expectations" about the Senate-House conference that will write the final tax bill, he added. Reagan has endorsed the Senate bill in preference to the House ver­ sion. In doing so, he repeatedly pointed to the fact the Senate plan has lower individual rates than does the House bill, although the House plan would provide proportionately greater relief to middle-income peo­ ple. "Late last week, the president said he will do just about anything to get that (top) rate down to 27 per­ cent," Gephardt said in remarks prepared in Fort for a meeting Worth of governors and legislators from 16 Southern states. "If that is the president's only wish — and it seems to be — he is severely mis­ guided about the whole idea of tax reform." The most important issue facing the tax conference, he said, is not the top rate but the best way to cut taxes for the middle class. In that regard, Gephardt added, the House bill is better because it would reduce the burden on middle-income earn­ ers by about 10 percent, in contrast to about 5 percent under the Senate plan. The conference of top tax-writers from the two houses is expected to begin work on a compromise tax bill later this week. Congressional lead­ ers have set a goal of getting the fi­ nal bill to Reagan for his signature by Labor Day, although there is considerable doubt that timetable can be met because of the complexi­ ty of the legislation. PAN supporters occupy Juarez bridges Associated Press CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico — Thousands of opposition party supporters claiming election fraud Monday took over bridges connecting this border city and El Paso, and soldiers moved in to push them back with riot shields. The bridges were thick with members of the National Action Party (PAN) who were running up and down the street with b a n n e r s and shouting, "Barrio Si!, Baeza, N o !." Fernando Baeza Melendez was the Institu­ tional Revolutionary Party gubernatorial can­ didate in Chihuahua who was declared victor over Francisco Barrio Terrazas, the PAN can­ didate. The scene became tense as anti-riot police began lining up with riot shields and pushing supporters back off one bridge which arches over a river. The soldiers were called back, but police stayed nearby as supporters chant­ ed political slogans and began singing the Mexican anthem. A PAN supporter led the crowd in cheers with a loudspeaker. According to a Juarez city police officer, Antonio Sigueroa, the PANistas had taken every bridge connecting Juarez and El Paso by 10 p.m. Monday. Dozens of U.S. Border Patrol agents in riot gear were standing guard in El Paso, I he protesters split into two groups from a rally in front ot C itv Hall that had assembled at 6 p.m. I he runs on the bridges were prompted by a call from Gustavo Elizondo, candidate for mayor of Juarez for the National Action Partv (PAN) "I want you to promise me that we will neither provoke violence or accept violence," Elizondo told the crow'd just before directing them to split up, with each group going to a different bridge. Earlier, ir» Durango, south of here, about 1,000 PAN supporters took over the city hall to protest alleged fraud in state and locaí elec­ tions, a government spokesman said. The Durango takeover, which occurred without violence about 1 a.m ., came amid an­ nouncements of sweeping victories by the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in July 6 elections held in six states, said Jaime Lopez, Durango state government spokes­ man. He said the PAN supporters threatened to stay there indefinitely. 1 wo of the bridges are one-way, one to El Paso and the other into Juarez. They are among several connecting the United States and Mexico. Before the takeover, the crowd had gone wild as two government helicopters carrying soldiers watched over the rally PRI had nearly 62 percent of the vote in the race for governor of the state of Chihuahua, according to partial results announced by the in Ciudad State Electoral Com m ission Chihuahua, the state capital PRI, which hasn t lost a presidential or gu­ bernatorial election since its founding in 1929, also won the mayor's seat in Juarez, said I orenzo Gonzalez Lechuga, president of the Municipal Electoral Comittee. L hihuahua is Mexico s biggest state, bor­ dering on New Mexico and Texas Juarez, with a population ot 1.2 million, is the largest city in C hihuahua or along the U S.-Mexico border. Of 67 mayorships at stake, PRI had won 22. PAN had won one and a leftist coalition won another, according to partial official results. PAN claims the July fe elections, where vot­ ers also chose 14 state legislative seats, were ngged. Jaime Bermudez, a wealthy industrialist running for Juarez mavor on the PRI ticket gathered 111,640 votes, said Gonzalez. Ber­ mudez defeated PAN candidate Elizondo, who garnered 78,961 votes. Elizondo s campaign was hurt the week be­ fore the July 6 elections when his 1985 drunk­ en driving arrest in neighboring El Paso be­ came known From Texan news services House veteran becomes senator in filling of North Carolina seat WASHING I ON — James Broyhill, a 23-year House veteran, was sworn in as North Carolina's newest sena­ tor Monday. His GOP affiliation notwithstanding, Broyhill vowed to lobby House members to override President Reagan's veto of a bill tightening import q u o ­ tas on textiles, apparel and shoes. Broyhill met briefly with Reagan to accept the presi­ dent's congratulations on being named to the seat left vacant by the death of Sen. John East, R-N.C. Chinh named Vietnamese p a rty c h ie f BANGKOK, Thailand — Truong Chinh, a partv founder, a key figure in five wars and the man regard­ ed as Vietnam's strictest ideologue, was named Mon day as leader of the ruling Communist Party in Viet­ nam. fhe 79-year-old Chinh succeeds Le Duan, who died last week, as the all-powerful party's secretary-general. C hinh already headed the State Council, the su ­ preme body of government, and his selection as party chief was seen as an indication that liberalization would not follow Le Duan's death, as some observers had speculated. C onvicted spy gets tw o life sentences LOS ANGELES — A federal judge Monday sen­ tenced Richard Miller to two life terms plus 50 years in prison for spying for the Soviet Union, saying he hoped that the only FBI agent ever convicted of espionage would "not walk again in this country as a free m an." U S. District Judge ! )avid Kenyon said he imposed the harsh sentence to set an example that espionage should not be taken lightly. Kenyon also fined Miller the maximum $60,000, and he ordered that Miller serve his terms concurrently, and spend at least 16 years in prison before being con­ sidered for parole. Navy chief advises ambassador change SAN I IACiO, C hile — Navy Adm. Jose Tono Merino, a member of the ruling military junta, said Monday the Reagan administration should change its ambassador to Chile. Merino said Ambassador Harry Barnes was responsi­ ble for relaying bad information to Washington. "Tell the State Department of the United States to change the am bassador so it can get better informa­ tion,' Merino told reporters. They had asked the admi­ ral about recent comments by Reagan administration officials urging a faster transition to democracy after 13 years of military rule. Court b a ttle against textb o o ks begins GREENEVILLE, lenn. — Parents who say a school district's textbooks violate fundamental Christian be­ liefs opened their court battle for alternative texts Mon­ day by charging that lessons drawn from The Wizard ot Oz undermine religious education at home. Vicki Frost testified that her children's teachers use reading books steeped in the occult, humanism and the supernatural, that the texts contained lessons on evolu­ tion, an d that the readers tell children to be skeptical of religious beliefs. Grants aw arded for ta le n t and promise CHK AGO — Twenty-five Americans, recognized for outstanding talent and promise, have been awarded between $164,000 and $300,000 to spend as they please in the latest batch of MacArthur Foundation grants. Rtxdpients of the so-called "genius grants" an­ nounced Monday range from composer to poet, from civil liberties activist to physicist. Recipients, who didn t know they were being consid­ ered until they were informed they had won late last week, will receive five annual stipends One of the un­ usual characteristics of this grant is that there are no U i n n l ^ h i t n c Departm ent of Energy to apply for state permit Federal government still considering Texas dump site By SEAN S. PRICE Daily Texan Staff The U.S. D epartm ent of Energy has agreed to apply for a state permit before drilling test holes for a P anhan­ dle nuclear waste dum p, state Sen. Bill Sarpalius, D- Canyon, said Monday. The departm ent's announcem ent earlier this year that a site in Deaf Smith County is one of three finalists for a the nuclear repository was followed by strong protests from Panhandle residents and virtually all state officials. Vou're going to be placing a repository over the Ogallala aquifer which provides water for all N orth­ west Texas," said Joel Brandenberger, Sarpalius' legis- latne aide. If anything happens and the aquifer gets contam inated, that's it. The only ones left in the region will be there to m onitor the radiation." However, under a law enacted by the 1983 Legisla­ ture, the departm ent m ust obtain a license in order to drill into an aquifer. Brandenberger said the departm ent is still interested in the Deaf Smith site, but said the letter is a step for­ ward for dum p opponents. It's the first sign that (the departm ent) has shown willingness to cooperate with the concerns of the com­ munity, Brandenberger said. The letter dated July 3, states "the DOE will consult with officials of various state agencies regarding the applicability erf state laws and regulations to the devel­ opm ent of a nuclear waste repository. In carrying out its site characterization activities the departm ent will comply with all applicable laws and regulations." Brandenberger said although federal law usually supersedes state law, in this case the departm ent needs the state's approval. I he state isn't trying to make law reserved for the federal governm ent," he said. "W e're trying to protect the Texas w ater supply, and that's a duty that's tradi­ tionally been reserved for the states." Brandenberger said the area being considered is one of the most agriculturally fertile in the country and that even testing the area could harm crops. "O ne of the reasons the area is so intriguing to DOE is that they'd be putting waste in a bedded salt dom e," he said 'Well, what happens if you loosen up some of that salt, and it blows around? It's just deadly to crops." Brandenberger said several groups are sure to op­ pose the application process, but he said governm ent will probably not be deterred. If the permit gets dragged out or is refused, they'll take it to court," he said. "They've got too much invest­ ed in the Deaf Smith site to let it drop now ." He said a more "outlandish" possiblity would be for the federal governm ent to start drilling and let the state take them to court VVe're not going to send in storm troopers, but if they start drilling I assum e the attorney general would have filed suit in five m inutes," he said. Two shot; police searching for suspect By DON D BROWN Daily Texan Staff Police searched M onday for a man th ou g h t to be resp on sib le for the shooting of his employer and a co-w orker in North A ustin. Hyman Needham, 40, of 110 Na­ vajo St., and his employee, Imdad Adem, 28, of 1806 W. Rundberg Lane, were shot in a parking lot be­ hind a North Austin business while waiting for it to open Monday morning. Needham was treated at Bracken* ndge Hospital Monday for a gu n sh ot w o u n d to the neck and w as in good condition. Adem, listed with a w ou n d to the ch est near his arm also w as listed in good condi­ tion Police said N eed h am and A dem were shot w h ile w aiting in a truck behind Cardinal P ools, 9513 B u m et Road, when* N eed h a m 's em p lo y ee s e v e n m orning N eed h am m eet owns a business that subcontracts for the pool company, police said. Police said Needham identified the suspect as jemal Mohammad All, a 29-year-old Ethiopian who has worked for Needham for seven months. Several people who knew’ Ali, in­ cluding Adem, described him as "emotionally disturbed." Police said they did not know if Ali had ever been treated for mental illness. W itnesses told police the suspect pulled into the parking lot, came up to the truck and started talking to N eedham . The suspect said he was sick and wanted to know about insurance coverage, Needham told police. Police said they do not know- the subject ot the argum ent that fol­ lowed but w itnesses told police the suspect pulled out a gun and began shooting through the partialiv open passenger window where Adem was sitting. The suspect then fled north in his brown 1981 or 1982 Toyota, witness­ es told police. Cles Perkins, an em ployee of Car­ dinal Pools, said N eedham and Adem stumbled into the business after the shooting and said thev had been shot. "They w eren 't bleeding too badly," he said. "W e tried to have them sit dow n and relax until EMS got here." He said the two men were "dazed and shocked ." Police estim ated the suspect fired six rounds from a 25-caliber auto­ matic pistol. Police sp o k e sw o m a n Kellye Norris said police went to Ali's North Austin apartm ent and found a box of .25-caliber am m unition and a receipt for a gun bought from an Austin paw n shop Norris said she did not know the date of purchase. a u % l i n m o n i t ' S M i r i . . s r h o o l v + Accredited by A M I. Donna Brant. Director Founded in 1967 Preschool and Elementary Levels Afterschool Programs North & South Locations For more info call 442-3152 M acProducts “ We Really Know Your Mac Box of 10 Sony SS Sony DS Kodak SS Kodak DS SAVE UP TO $4 O N K O D A K DISKS P ¡ S STANLEY H. KAPLAN A REPUTATION THAT SPEAKS FOR ITSELF! LSAT MCAT GRE GMAT 9/86 9/86 10/86 10/86 SPEED READING EARLY BIRD CLASSES STARTING N O W CALL! ¿KAPLAN STANU r H, K API AN 1WKAT10NA1 CENT1R LTD. AU STIN : UNITED BANK MALL, LOWER LEVEL 1904 GUADALUPE, SUITE F AUSTIN, TX 78705-5607 472-8085 SECOND SET OF PRINTS F R E E ! H H 3” X 5” or 4” X 6” FROM ANY COLOR PRINT FILM H urry, offer expires Ju ly 18,1986 M-F 9am-6pm Texas Union Lobby The Daily Texan/Tuesday, July 15, 1986/Page 3 around Critics voice concern on sexism, violence in English textbooks By JOHN CLARK Daily Texan Staff Speakers appearing before the Texas State Textbook Committee Monday voiced concern about sexism, religion and violence in elementary and m iddle school English reading textbooks. The committee is in the pro­ cess of selecting $114 million in textbooks for the state to use d u r­ ing the fiscal 1986-87 year. Jane Boyd of Grapevine, repre­ senting the National Organiza­ tion for W omen, told the com­ mittee an unbalanced male- female is in ratio detrimental to children. textbooks "Heroes can and should be shown overcoming difficulties without gender stereotyping," Boyd said. The stories with por­ trayals of wom en as hand maid­ ens and nursem aids are harmful because they imply limitations of the genders, she said. Boyd said textbooks should emphasize problem solving and creative use of imagination to present positive messages to both girls and bovs. Eleanor H utchinson of Fort Worth, representing the National Organization for Daughters of the Republic, criticized violence in some of the texts she re­ viewed. She quoted the following lines from Ray Bradbury's short story The FJyirtg Machine in one of the textbooks: "Off with his head. The executioner whirled his sil­ ver ax.... Bum the kite and the inventor's body and burv the ashes together." Michael Hudson, a spokesman the American for People V\ay, asked the committee to be for careful about presenting biased views to children. "I ask that you examine these books to make sure they are not dramatically al­ tered to conform to religious or political view points." Because many of the textbooks chosen in Texas are also used in other states, H udson said critics trying to censor ideas in the books can affect the quality of ed­ ucation in states other than Tex­ as. Mel Gabler, a long-time critic of several textbooks considered by the committee, stressed the use of phonetics in teaching chil­ dren how to read. leave high "Ninety percent of beginning readers use the eclectic m ethod, which is a combination of 'look- say' and phonics. Millions of school Americans only able to read w ords they had m em orized," he said. Gabler, who lives in Long­ view, prom oted the use of an "intensive phonics" m ethod of teaching children to read. "Chil­ dren are drilled until they learn sounds. They m ust m aster 42 then reading be­ sounds and comes easy." Publishers have 21 days to file rebuttal remarks concerning criti­ cism of their books before the committee. Hearings will continue at 9 a.m . Tuesday and W ednesdav in Room 1-104 of the William B. Travis State Office Building, 1701 N. Congress Ave. The committee will hear discussion of Texas his­ tory, geography, earth science, environm ental science and career exploration textbooks. A round Cam pus is a daily col­ umn listing U niversity-related ac­ tivities sponsored by academic de­ partm ents, student services and registered student organizations. To appear in Around Cam pus, or­ ganizations m ust be registered with the Office of S tudent Activities. Announcem ents m ust be subm itted on the correct form, available in The D aily Texan office, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit subm issions to style rules, although no significant changes will be m ade. to conform Tuesday Great Commission Students will hold a rally on the West Mall at noon Tues­ day. The Lucy Parsons Club/Young Com­ munist League will hold Happy Hour at 5 p.m. every Tuesdav in July at the Beach Cabaret, 2911 San Jacinto Blvd. There will be radical folk music and liq­ uid commodity consumption. The Baptist Student Union will hold dinner and Bible studv for students at 5 30 p.m. Tuesday at the Baptist Student Center, 2204 San Antonio St. Cost is $1 for dinner. The Student Health Center will pres­ ent a Methods of Contraception" class from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Stu­ dent Health Center 448 The Department of Music will pres­ ent pianist Paul Parmelee in a free per­ formance Tuesday at 8 p.m. Parmelee, a faculty member of the College of Music at the University of Colorado-Boulder, will present a rental of music dedicated to his late wife, Phyliss. Works by Gib­ bons, Dallapiccola, Bach and Schumann. Classes The Learning Skills Center will hold registration for a study techniques class from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday in Beau- ford H. Jester Center A332. For informa­ tion call 471-3614. Wednesday The Baptist Student Union will hold Bible study at noon Wednesday at the West Mall fountain. Contact the BSU at 474-1429 for more information. Bring vour own lunch. It'S Coming! KINKO'S ANNUAL t/h COPY SALE Medical Hair Center Pr ■ ' 1 otal Hair Restoration Y As Seen ‘*20 ‘20’ And Replacements Park St. David Prof. Bldg. 800 E. 30th at Red Riv er Suite 210 472-6777 We care ■ We can help SCULPTURED NAILS CW THE DRAG IN T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff ................................ Editor M anaging Editor A sso ciate M anaging Editors N ew s Editor A sso ciate New s Editor * e w s A ssig nm e nts Editor A ssociate Editors Editorial Gestures Editor Sports Editor A sso cia te Sports Editor G eneral Sports Reporter E-itertamment Editor Entertainm ent A sso cia te Editor Gen era Entertainm ent Reporter S p e a a i P a g e s E d ito r. . . , (mage* E ditor...................................... A sso ciate im ag es Editors Photo Editors G e n e ra Reporters Around C a m p u s Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ................................ D avid Nattier Tim M cDougan M artha A sn e D avid G a d txx s Brian Zabctk ................... K yle P o p e ........................T ra cy D u n ca r Dan Jester . . Matthew M atejow sky Todd Pratt .................................................. . P atrick M urray ....................To m C le m e n s .................................................................... 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Keith Berry M ary T arpey Rita DeWitt M iles M athis K e vin Sherw ood . . . . . . . . . -o n RuSZkOWSK; Dorothy A dam s Ja * W akaca DebOte Barm worth Display Advertising Matootm G luckm an Je a n n e HiM Julie Serb e r D em se Jo h n so n C h n sta Johneon Patnc* M om s E dy F inter K a y C arpenter Sh am e e m P a t e Tam m y H atovsky T 2?** *5?r U S P S 146~A4C! • stuoeni newspap* at The University ot Texas at Austin » putniahec bv exas Student P^pecenons Drewei D Umversih Station Austin TX 78713 7209 The Daily Texar s putokahec »*arn penoOs Second d ase postage paid Thur* * y and « A uaN r T X 7S71 R b a ld in g 2 122) or «í the m w t M o ra to ry (Com m unication Budding A4 136 471^ 591>- « •*» « * ° n * office (Texas Student Publications Inquinas conoenvng oca, national anc .iass,iec display advertising should be dnectec to 512 471-1865 ©ass, ted wore advemsvig questions shouia be dnectec to 5' 2 47’ 5244 Emus consents copyright 1986 Texas Student Publications O ía Semester Fa* or Sprngs Two Semesters ¡Fa* anc Spnngi Sommer Session One Tear (Fa* Spnng and Summer) T>te Oe*r Texan Subacnpeon Hatea $30 00 56 0C 1950 75 00 fSfSSStSUSS^X *° T“ “ S*U * r” Pubte*,wns P 0 To charge by VISA or MasterCard, caff 471-5063 0 Aus*,n TX 78713-7209, or to This is it! Final Reduction of Entire Stock CP SHADES JIMMY Z PERRY ELLIS CALVIN KLEIN CODE BLEU EDWIN and more! W o m e n 's \ p p a r v l 411W. 24th at Geadalape 480-9474 Mon-Sat 1 M ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ DANCERS WORKSHOP H O T JA Z Z JAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZ taptaptaptaptaptaptap Summer Classes Start Now Adult Beginners Thru Professionals a * a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a «.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa 2110-C White Horse Trail 4 5 9 -5 7 6 6 (Bumet Rd. G Koenig Lane) Speciai MEN’S Classes TAÜGHTBY DAWN WEISS Mac Golf Mac Lightning 800K Dnve 128K-512K 512K-1024K 47.00 59 00 259.00 149.00 249.00* *229 é you Kov# «•w Appl# R A M i 473-2604 2200 G u a d a lu p e Low er Level 2995 * MANICURES * FRENCH TIPS * CAPS AND WRAPS AMPLE PARKING 2414 GUADALUPE 476-6960 NEXT 70 YARtNGS y MARTYRS WITHOUT A CAUSE JIM l HENDRIX PRÜG9 Elvis PPESLEY Janis JOPLIN DRUGS Elliot unveils Secret Plan: H ouse Speaker Gib Lewis, Governor- until-January Mark White and Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby obviously are too cowardly to explain to their constituents how DAVID ELLIOT TEXAN COLUMNIST we can balance the budget without raising tax­ es. But I'm not. And I'm also not up for election. So here's my Secret Plan, and you can bet the farm it's just as realistic as Uncle Bill's Secret Plan, or any other Secret Plans advanced by state leaders: First, some background. Already, Texas is falling $2.3 billion short of meeting its planned, $37.2 billion two-year budget. By the end of July, state Comptroller Bob Bullock will inform lawmakers that the deficit has grown to $3 bil­ lion — and perhaps more. The amount Texas has budgeted for fiscal year 1987, which begins Sept. 1, is $13.385 bil­ lion. Of that, $7.8 billion involves expenditures mandated by the Texas Constitution or by state statutes. That leaves $5.5 billion in general appropria­ tions. But remember that two agencies — the Texas Department of Corrections and the De­ partment of Mental Health and Mental Retarda­ tion — are under court order to get their act together. Combined, these two agencies spend about a quarter of the $5.5 billion in general appropriations. Next month, Federal Judge Wayne Justice is expected to issue a ruling again holding Texas in contempt for the sociallv conscious manner in which we run our prisons. So, we can't cut spending on prisons or on mental services — in fact, we may be required to increase spending in these areas. Theoretically, I suppose you could cut $3 bil­ lion out of the remaining $4.175 billion. Here's how: • Graduate every student after ninth grade. Graduates will probably lack som e fundamen­ tal skills, so encourage them to attend college out of state. Meanwhile, shut down the Univer­ sity of Texas and Texas A&M Systems, • Lay off one of every four teachers Elimi­ nate all teacher pay hikes and don't fund the career ladder program. History shows that local districts will provide generous raises by in­ creasing property taxes. • Impose night school kindergarten Because this is when most toddlers Heep, we will need less superv isory personnel and can cut down on the teacher-student ratio. • Lav off at least 10 percent of the state's 240,000 public employees A good place to be­ gin would be the prisons, as inmates could re­ place guards. • Eliminate the $7 m million indigent health care package passed in 1985. That money was supposed to alleviate the financial burden felt by community hospitals who often ha\ e to care for the indigent free of charge. The funds would have undoubtedly resulted in more poor people receiving treatment — and that's bad economic policy, given the situation at hand. • Carefully trim the $57 monthly Aid to 1 am- ilies with Dependent Children payment. (In this category, Texans can be proud they rank fifth in the nation in the amount of AFDC funds they do not distribute. If we cut the $57 pay­ ment to $43, we would rank third, behind only Alabama and M ississippi.) • C ut back, ever so gingerly on th* S26 mil­ lion targeted for poor sick folks who can't quali­ fy for Medicaid. masses exult We've already imposed some pretty' hefty cuts but v\e re still in the red So, it ^ time to take bloodied, gorv ax in hand and get down to serious bud get-cutting Let's talk railroads As in, nobody rides them anymore and the\ may even shut down Am- trak. We could save untold fortunes if we abol­ t he Railroad Commission. Ihis would ished upset D e m m ratio nomine* John Sharp and Re­ publican nominee Milton f ox greatly but face t h e r e s no oil left to regulate anyway, a n d it well operators are very conscientious about where they spill the stuff. Abolish the T e x a s Department of Highways and Public 1 ransportation. This is our version of the Pentagon, and this is an area where we could realize some \ery substantial say ings. Our roads should hold up for a couplt of vi.irs After that, place the Texas Aeronautics C o m ­ m ission in charge of transportation Eradicate the T e x a s Education Agency. Let local school districts choose their own text­ books, courses discipline methods and teacher evalúa — Whoops! Did I say that" There are other cuts which could be made, of course, but these should get us doss* to a bal­ anced budget. Lewis, Hobby and White seem determined not to raise taxes until all of this tat is cut out of the budget Gubernatorial chal- lenger Bill Clements has actually managed to out-bluster Lewis White and Hobby on tin- no- new taxt-s issue. He could pick up Mime valu able brownie points if he were to release, say, his secret plan detailing how he's going to bal- ance tin* budget. Ot course, there's always a personal or cor­ porate income tax But let s be realistic hlhot is nor a visiting pmtessor in the I H) School or Public Affairs Page 4/The Daily Texan/Tuesday, July 15, 1986 O p in io n s e x p re sse d in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or the writer of the article and are not n e cessa rily those of the U n ive rsity adm inistration, the B o ard of R egen ts o r the T e xa s Student P ublications B oard of O p e ra tin g Trustees Intolerance lives Why UT-Permian Basin was censured F or a while, it looked like the Select Committee on Higher Educa­ tion might recommend that the state close down UT-Permian Basin and other small colleges to save money. But on Friday, the committee gave the school a new lease on life, voting unanimously to recommend that UT-Permian Basin, Texas A&M-Galveston, East Texas State University and Sul Ross State University be allowed to stay open. That's great news for UT-Permian Basin and its supporters, but in all the discussion about whether or not to keep the school open, one item never seemed to come up: for about six years, UT-Permian Basin has been censured by the American Association of College Professors be­ cause of academic freedom violations. Now, being censured by the AAUP isn't what you can call a trivial detail. When our very own university was cen­ sured in the 1940s, it was be­ cause the UT System Board of Regents had fired UT Pres­ ident Homer Price Rainey for refusing to get rid of four professors the regents didn't talking major- like. We're league academic freedom vio­ lations here. So what kind of academic freedom violations put UT-Permian Basin on the AAL P censure list? Apparently, its faculty tenure system needs some work, mainly because there isn't one. Jonathan Knight, an AAUP spokesman, said UT-Permian Basin got in trouble because it uses what it calls a "term-tenure" system, mean­ ing faculty members sign contracts that have to be continually renewed by the administration. In other words, it's not actually tenure. And as Knight said, faculty members don't have the freedom to criticize ad­ ministration officials — which is a pretty important element of an open academic environment — when they depend on these officials to re­ new their contracts. Anyway, that's why UT-Permian Basin is still censured after six years. The series of incidents that got the school censured in the first place, however, is even more damning. The May 1979 issue of Academe, the AAUP newsletter, reports UT- Permian Basin fired three professors without academic due process. The administration cited lack of money as its reason for firing two of them, but it never produced any evidence that the school actually was short of money. And one — Thomas Nicholson, an associate professor in the UT- Permian Basin College of Management — was fired after the local AAUP chapter asked him to investigate the firings of the other two professors. UT-Permian Basin President R. V. Cardozier asked AAUP to take Nicholson off the investigation, saying Nicholson had criticized the administration before and therefore couldn't do an objective job on the investigation. Nicholson stepped down, saying he wanted to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest. Shortly thereafter, he was fired anyway. When supporters of UT-Permian Basin lobbied the Select Committee on Higher Education earlier this summer to keep the school open, most of them said closing the school would rob the state of a high-quality higher education institution. But after six years^feTT-Permian Basin still doesn't have a tenure system, so you have to wonder whether the school learned anything from the incidents that put it on the AAUP censure list. Now that UT-Permian Basin is out of danger — at least for the moment — of being closed down, it might be a good idea for the school to set up a normal tenure system. That way, the next time the school's supporters try to tell state committees what a blessing the school is to the state, we might believe them. Now that teacher testing is becoming in issue in several states, we'll be hearing a lot about an argument Texas has already been through: how much good do the basic skills tests actually do? The common answer is that they don't do a lot of good, because a paper-and-pencil test can't evaluate teaching ability or show whether or not teachers know their subjects (or whether they even know who Phil Collins is). That's true, but we're missing a basic point here: if you don't at least give teachers the basic skills test, you don't have any way to weed out the teachers who can't even pass that. The basic skills test shouldn t be the only way of evaluating teachers, because you do have to find out how well the teachers can teach and how well they know their subjects. But if you don't give the basic skills test at all just because it doesn't solve everything by itself, you run into some serious forest-and-trees problems. The May issue of Campus Report, the Accuracy in Academia newsletter, takes on a professor from Miami Dade Community College for criticizing historical figures like George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. Among other things, Accuracy in Academia is upset because the professor said Lincoln wanted to send the ex-slaves to Africa. The group admits that Lincoln did want to send the ex-slaves to Africa, but it says it could not find the actual quote the professor allegedly attribu­ ted to Lincoln: "I wanted to send them all back to Africa." Great point, guys. Lincoln probably never said those exact words. So if you're a lecturer who uses a conversational style while lecturing, watch it. There's a fine line between right and wrong. — David Nat her Phil: F un Facts And Lies About 1. What was the first Gene­ sis song Phil Collins played on’ (Answer: Nursery Cry me) I 2. What was the first Genesis song Phil Collins sang lead vocals on? (Answer: More Fool Me, from Selling England By The Pound) 3. What band was Phil Collins a member of before he joined Gene­ sis? (Answer: Flaming Youth) 4. Did that band display any musi­ cal talent? (Answer: We don't know. We've never heard them.) 5. What is the name of the Jazz/ Fusion group that Phil Collins has played with concurrent with Gen- (Answer: Damn straight.) 7. Name the three drummers (besides Phil Collins) that have played with Genesis live since 1976 (this includes ANY live perform­ ance). (Answer: Bill Buford, Chester Thompson, and Peter Gabriel — the last at the Genesis reunion concert in 1984 on the song Turn it on Again.) 8. How many of these drummers have spontaneously combusted since then? (Answer: All of them) 9. Who were the backup singers of Phil Collins' song Take Me Home? (Answer: Sting and Peter Gabri­ el) (Answer: Brand X) 6. Does Phil Collins play with the above-mentioned group to dispel widespread beliefs that he is shal- 10. Who is the only current mem­ ber of Genesis who is not a found­ ing member? (Answer: Phil Collins) j esis? I low? Single-member districts will help blacks, Southern Republicans B lack political leaders were under- i standably pleased by the Supreme Court decision the other day up­ holding a North Carolina plan for electing ocrat. Two years later, with the district split into eight single-member distncts, the voters elected three white Democrats, three white Republicans and two black Democrats. a reflective representation of the whole population." Moreover, Spaulding points out, when a black Democrat wins a seat, it is likely to remain safely Democratic much longer that it might in white hands. more state legislators from single-member i districts. In the long run, however, the prime beneficiaries may be Southern Re­ publicans. For years, blacks running for state legis­ latures have been disadvantaged in a number of Southern states by a system of multi-member districts. Because blacks make up a minority in such large districts and because the voting has been racially polarized, they have rarely been able to elect as many legislators as their share of the electorate might seem to dictate. It has been that perceived inequity that has been behind a movement to single­ member districts in several states that now may have gained som e new impetus from the Suprem e Court verdict in the North Carolina case. In the majority decision up­ holding a lower court ruling, Justice Wil- JACK GERMOND and JULES W1TCOVER BALTIMORE EVENING SUN liam Brennan wrote that the lower court had been correct in considering "the totali­ ty of the circumstances" that served to "impair the ability of ... black voters to participate equally in the political process and to elect candidates of their choice." The possibility of Republican gains is obvious in an analysis by the Raleigh News and Observer of the results in the districts involved in the Supreme Court case. In one eight-member house district in Mecklenburg County, for instance, the voters in 1982 chose six white Democrats, one white Republican and one black Dem­ inference One obvious that can be drawn from that example — and from other similar cases across the South — is that in many urban areas white Democrats need black votes to defeat Republicans these days. And the movement toward single-member districts will make that in­ creasingly difficult. But, unsurprisingly, most black politi­ cians are far more concerned with winning their own elections than with the question of whether the side effect will be the dilu­ tion of the strength of the Democratic Par­ ty that — for this generation, at least — has been far more supportive of their goals than the Republicans. As Kenneth Spaulding, a black Durham it: lawyer and "What is more important is that you have legislator, puts former What makes the single-member district question so pertinent is the fact that it is but one element of several trends that in threaten Democratic Party pnmacy much of the South these days. The first of these, obviously, is the movement of white voters toward Repub­ licanism, at l e a s t a s defined bv Ronald Reagan, and awav from the traditional Democratic liberalism s o vividly represent­ ed by Walter Móndale in the 1984 presi­ dential campaign. Although it clearly would not be accurate to say there has been a thoroughgoing political realign­ ment below the level of presidential poli­ tics, the Southern reaction against the "n a­ tional party" has been pronounced enough to concern any Democrat who doesn't have his head buned in the sand. Secondly, black political leaders have shown an increasing tendency to go their own way. This has been particularly obvi­ ous in cases in which white Democratic leaders have calle d on blacks to hold their noses for such candidates as Gov. George Wallace of Alabama in 1982 and then, for their own part, refused to show a corre­ sponding loyalty to the party when it was a question of supporting a candidate with broad black support such as Fritz Món­ dale. None of this has reached the point at which the Democrats are in any immediate danger of losing their supremacy in state capitals in the South. But one of the w'ays the Republicans might achieve such a presence is by win­ ning more seats in state legislature and lo­ cal governing bodies. And single-member districts can be a valuable tool in achieving that goal. 1986 tribune Media Services, Inc. Deficit bill a good solution In his editorial concerning Gramm-Rudman ("Don't fix Gramm-Rudman," Texan, July 8), David Nather complains that the law i's "a clumsy way to cut the deficit because "you have to be pretty desperate to resort to Gramm- Rudman to cut your federal deficit." Well Dave, it seems that a national debt in excess of $1 billion would constitute desperate. Over the last five years no majority (Republi­ can or Democratic) has voted for a net decrease in the deficit. Until our elected and appointed officials real­ ize that we cannot afford contra aid and SDI, and do not have the funds to continue welfare and education at current levels, these official*; will need an easy out like Gramm-Rudman. 77 m Carlsson Marketing Drug ban restricts freedom In a society where pom = rape, it's obvious­ ly logic dictating that American universities purge themselves of drugs because, some­ where, two athletes died of cocaine. Education Secretary William Bennett's tirade ("Campus drug bans urged/' Texan, Wednes­ day) is but the latest in a senes of misguided phobias threatening to squelch the uncon­ trolled pnvate activities of U.S citizens His crackdown on drugs stems from a self- appointed knowledge of "what would be good for our youth, gixxi for our society ... institu­ tions of higher learning " I wonder if this conception of what is "good includes anv trace or civil for the population nghts or individual expression. Nowhere does Bennett talk of freeing the American populace from the administration's addiction to increased defense spending South American mihtarx involvement, or cuts in aids and services to the poor The modem landscape proliferates with mas- intol­ sive unemployment military escalation erance environmental malaise — but little progress in understanding how to meet the needs of America's citizens. to sexual diversify If neither legal coercion nor this morality movement hvsteria to legislate out af existence Ufes uncomfortable diversity" i> working, perhaps it's time to embark cm overhauling the system itself Mv interest in changing the status quo to ac- comrmxiatt human needs and desires might simply be as undesirable, though, as any ídeol- ogv not as expedient and logically "good” as pom = rape or "drugs = evil incarnate." Ke\ in West ITT statt Lines of justice overdrawn Justice was served Thursday bv the 14th Court of Appeals in Houston to Gabnel Cua­ dra, t h e \CM Corps officer convicted of tamp­ e r i n g with ev d e r i v e in t h e Bruce Goodrich h a z ­ m e tr i al OML m I GOT TUL NE.W SM&.T AND I RLAUZLD TMLQÍ ABC NO GUA&ANTU-S, JUST OPPORTUNITIES i— / j rcjí&ds I'D MAvt lo take some disks. PND TWIN i MAUZLD THAT TO fatT v : 7 AND TH IN 1 BECAME a DOER NOT A DOO&TEft. Well, actually it was something along the lines of justice, if you draw them wide enough — Caudra received a year's probation and a nominal tine The cadets who actually dragged Goodrich out of bed in the middle of the night tor "moti­ vation" paid onlv $320each and had to give the community a hundred hours of their time. You can't find an apartment that cheap. But their crime wasn't all that serious was it' After all, the whole idea of the Corps is to de- velop true character, the Few -Good-Menish something that plebe training stuffs down vour throat I mean, it w a s onlv pushups and such, even it they did last for four hours ... 'les, you got st I'm appalled. If hazing is supposed to instill confidence or espnt-de-corps, then maybe 1 }ust don't know mv assault-and-battery from mv combat train­ ing This nation s military academies, however popular thev may be seem to be of the opinion that hazing is a crime. it an officer hits a plebe at the \aval Acade­ my in Annapolis, he receives a good long cruise to Lebanon, or perhaps Nicaragua and gets tv' see his officer's stnpes npped off his shirt tv' before anv court-martial no­ boot. And this tions are entertained Needless to say, hazing is a rather rare bird in today's Army So why do pnvate academies and fraternities still insist that brotherhood is onlv found on a path of blood1 1f our L I Greeks avoid the prac­ tice only because the nasty regents might take away then their right tv' party on campus might they not be a little insensitive? Come now, guys, sadism is a no-no. Bruce Goodrich died a long time ago, and people have generally forgotten the incident. But there are a few people who have seen haz­ ing at its best and we haven't forgotten. Maybe one of these days our judicial system will recog­ nize that senseless infliction of pain is nv't really a good thing to do. And perhaps hazing will then become something that people look back on and chuckle and remark about the ignorance of their forebears But until then our courts will continue hand­ ing out token punishments to hazers — on those few occasions that thev are brought to court — and drunken, shouting pledge-masters will persist in forcing incoming freshman to im­ bibe toxic levels of alcohol and sweat until their hair tails out Sounds like fun to me. No Goodrich's three trainers did not commit murder Thev re slightly below murderers, down there with the people who taint capsules with cyanide and laugh at the headlines The Aggie Cadets didn't kill their subordi­ nate m a rage for for anv feigned attempt at building character; they did it because it was run Darrell Burgan Business EVERY WOMAN'S CONCERN S»»»# 1*71 • Free Pregnancy Testing • Problem Pregnancy Counseling • Abortion Services • Birth Control • Pap Test REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES i 458-8274 1009 E. 40th. • O.CX.W». 3 3 3 3 3 3 i m r 3 T ¡332 DOUBLE DEAL ^ V A N Z , ROSES only ‘ 1oc each coupon L >rmt one dozen Cash and Carry 20% OFF any plants you buy mi coupon D OB IE MAL L Low«r L«ve« 21st & Guadalupe 474-7719 Mo* Sot. KL9 Expires Aug. 15 1986 / F F 04t ALL NEW STYLE CHOICES ONE WEEK ONLY * THRU SATURDAY JULY 19 I J N I V E R S I T FRO N TD O O R • MAIN CONCOURSE Phone 476-7211 2246 Guadalupe Free Parking 23rd & San Antonio w $3 Purchase M cwterCorO i p x « i i K V i T n i . m i . i m x x r P i T i w 4 w r f w T T m m t m i r r M v « « « ............... The Daily Texan/Tuesday, July 15,1986/Page 5 Victorian laws deny our right to privacy T he Supreme Court's deci­ sion early last week to up­ hold a Georgia law that prohibited ANN KENDRICK TEXAN C O L U M N IS T sodomy between homosexuals and heterosexuals will force gay-rights groups across the country to take their battle to the state legislatures. Sodomy, defined by the Texas law as the contact of the genitals of one person and the mouth or anus of another person, is illegal in Texas only for homosexuals. The Supreme Court has failed. Its role in the American political system of checks and balances is that of the government body meant to uphold the law of the land and to protect the rights of all American citizens. Now, the weight of the decision and the needs of many Americans will fall on the legislative bodies of the country as gay-rights groups across the nation turn to state legislatures to rectify’ the Supreme Court's misjudgment. Once the sodomy issue enters the legislative arena it will be sub- iect to the wishes of the electorate. In Texas, homosexual sodomy, a subiect that most people assume affects only a minority, will be voted upon by the Texas Legisla­ ture, a body controlled bv the ma­ jority. But, is homosexuality really’ the practice of only a small fraction of the population? Current evidence would suggest that a large portion of the population has engaged in some type of homosexual act. Ac­ cording to the research of Kinsev in James McCarv's book cited Human Sexuality, more than one- third of all men and one-sixth of all w'omen have experienced some form of homosexual relations to the point of orgasm. Moreover, almost twice these numbers have experienced homo­ sexual contact which stopped short of orgasm Fot the average student at the University of Texas, this suggests that out of a class of 60 students (30 male and 30 females, of the male students, 20 will have had a homosexual experience — 10 to the point of orgasm — and, of the women, 10 will have had a homo­ sexual experience — 5 to the point erf orgasm. So, the next time you enter a class, look to the left and then to the right. Chances are at least one of the two students seated next to you has engaged in illegal erotic activity’ with a member erf the same sex and is, therefore, a crimi­ nal. It is to be hoped that w'hen the sodomy issue is brought to a vote in the Texas Legislature, and for that matter in all state legislatures, the right to individual liberty will carry' the daw Sodomy is not, as many believe, a moral issue. Rather, it is a question of per­ sonal rights. Nor is homosexual sodomy an action condemned by most Americans. As discussed above, Kinsey's statistics suggest that at least 50 percent of the population has at one time engaged in a homosexual act. Furthermore, according to a re­ cent poll a ted in Xewsweek, 57 percent of the population believe that the state should have no nght to regulate the sexual practices of consenting adult homosexuals. Thus, with the failure of the U.S. Supreme Court to restrict the power of the state to interfere with individual freedom, it becomes the responsibility of our legally elected state representatives to uphold the American tradition of personal liberty The court's decision, which has enraged and stung gay-rights groups, has placed a government approved homophobic stamp on the gay community — a stamp that many fear mav further limit already fragile gay rights to hous­ ing, employment, and child custo- dy. In Texas, according to Gara LaMarche, the executive director of the Texas Civil Liberties Union, the Supreme Court's dismissal of a Texas sodomv case last Monday will spur gay right's activist to turn to the Texas Legislature for help in repealing the antiquated law. Legislators will be forced to de­ cide whether they want to limit government encroachment on in­ dividual privacy’ or uphold Victo­ rian standards of government-im­ posed morality. K en d rick is a govern m en t sop h - more. SUNHANDLERS SUMMER SPECIAL: 2 DOOR AUTO T IN T :*! 1 9 00 Did you know auto tint can: — protect from vandalism — protect life in case of accident by holding shattered glass in place — reduce heat and glare — improve fuel efficiency — stop upholstery from fading 473-8366 508 E. 5th at Red River G r a d u a t i o n QUALITY ANNOUNCEMENTS BEAUTIFULLY STAMPED WITH THE SCHOOL SEAL >z z o c z o MsMz NAME AND DEGREE ON YOUR CARD 50» PER ANNOUNCEMENT 75» PER NAME CARD INCREM ENTS OF TEN ONLT ORDER NOW IN TIME FOR GRADUATION ABSOLUTE DEADLINE JULY 19 U N IV ERSITY CO-OP M L 0 N 6 1 0 R N COUNTRY • UTTER LEVEL I'hua» «:«?„*!! Err# H «**>«** £3r4 A S*» AMmiki *. S3 hutV.M Page 6rThe Daily Texan/Tuesday, July 15, 1986 Thurgood Marshall invited to civil rights symposium By CHRISTINE JUHNG Daily Texan Staff Justice Thurgood Marshall has been invited to partic­ ipate in a civil rights symposium planned by the Heman Sweatt Steering Committee, said Edwin Sharpe, UT vice president for administration. A letter, signed by UT President William Cunning­ ham and several students, was sent to Marshall two weeks ago. Marshall was unavailable for comment. Heman Sweatt was the first black law student at the University. Sweatt sued the University to gain admis­ sion to the Law School in 1950. Marshall, the chief Counsel for the National Association for the Advance­ ment of Colored People, came to Austin to represent Sweatt's case. "It would be grand to have him (Marshall) for our first symposium," Sharpe said. "A lot will revolve around him, like how he wants to participate in the symposium, as the keynote speaker or part of the panel or what." Sharpe said Marshall was sent a list of dates in hopes one will be convenient for him. He will be the "central focus" of the event should he attend, Sharpe said. Be­ cause of the uncertainty involved, a formal date for the symposium has not been scheduled. David Filvaroff, professor of law, said it would be impossible to predict whether Marshall will accept the invitation. news in brief The symposium will examine segregation and will look at the civil rights struggle today, said George Wright, chairman of the Heman Sweatt Steering Com­ mittee. "We want the Heman Sweatt Symposium to honor the forgotten little people of the civil rights move­ ment," Wright said. T his was the students' idea and they did most of the work — enough credit can't be given to them ," Wright said. Wright said the steering committee was planning to invite a wide range of people active in the civil rights struggle. Among those who may be invited are lawyers who worked with civil rights groups, scholars who have studied civil rights issues and politicians who play a prominent role in civil rights legislation, Wright said. Specifically, Wright suggested inviting John Hope Franklin, a black scholar, should Marshall not be able to attend. There are white scholars we are interested in also," Wright said. Sharpe said more planning has to be done before the committee can invite others. Wright said he hopes to bring many different views to the program, but he is confident support for the event will still exist even if the committee cannot get top people to attend the symposium. Students participate in Shakespeare class The University's 16th annual Shakespeare-at-Winedale program began its second phase last week near the East Texas community of Round Top. Students in the course will per­ form three weekends in August. This summer's program includes Love's Labour's Lost, The Winter's Tale and Romeo and Juliet. James Ayres, professor of Eng­ lish, and 20 UT students and recent graduates spend 60 days studving three Shakespeare plays. The first phase of the program re­ quires the students to w'ork inde­ pendently, reading and comparing the plays. During the second phase the students and Ayres live at the Winedale Historical Center, where they study up to 18 hours every day, including designing and mak­ ing their own costumes. Performances will be last three weekends in August in a con­ the verted mid-19th century bam on the Winedale property. All seats are $2. for Reservations are encouraged Thursday and Friday performances and are required for Saturday and Sunday For reservations and more infor­ mation about performance times, individuals can call the Winedale Histoncal Center at (409) 278-3530, or write to Shakespeare at Wine­ dale, P.O. Box 11, Round Top, TX 78954. T w o s tu d e n ts a w a rd e d te a c h e r s c h o la rs h ip s Two UT students in the College of Education have been selected to receive Metropolitan Life Founda­ tion Future Teacher Scholarships for the upcoming academic year. Brenda Beams, elementary educa­ tion senior, and Elizabeth Yeager, secondary education social science graduate receive student, will $2,000 each. The program is managed bv Citi­ zens' Scholarship Foundation of America, Inc. This year's scholar­ ships have been awarded in mem­ ory of Chnsta McAuliffe, the New Hampshire teacher who died in the explosion of the space shuttle Chal­ lenger. S u m m er prog ram helps u n d e rstan d in g of Poles Nine UT student* are among 19 from the United States and West Germany in Krakow, Poland, par­ ticipating in a two-month program designed to provide a better under­ standing of Polish life. Co-sponsors of the program are the University and the Jagielloman and Technual universities o! Kra­ kow. The students live in dormitones with Polish students while they study Polish language, geographv, society and public policy. Program coordinators are David Eaton, professor in the Lyndon B. Johnson School erf Public Affairs, and Gilbert Rappaport, associate professor of Slavic languages BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471 -5 2 4 4 Thus spoked Bartula Gary Bartula, aerospace engineering senior, tries to enlarge the air stem hole of his newly purchased bicy- cle rim. Bartula made the repair Monday morning un­ der some shade trees near the Main Building. Carlos Moreno Daily Texan Staff Enrollment in first summer session drops By CHRISTINE JUHNG Daily Texan Staff Tuition increases and new application deadlines caused fewer students to enroll in first summer session this year than did last year, according to the director of the Office of Institutional Studies. Marsha Kelman Moss, director of that office, said preliminary figures show that 18,110 students enrolled for the first summer session, an 8.5 percent drop from last year. Moss attributed the decrease to the earlier summer application deadline, the effect of the tuition increase on out-of-state and foreign students and the declining number of continuing students attending summer school. Shirley Binder, director of admissions and assistant vice president for the Office of Admissions, was una­ vailable for comment. Included in the preliminary figures are students who were enrolled in the first summer session, in nine-week courses and 12-week courses. Of this number, 12,408 are undergraduates and 5,702 are graduate and law students. Moss said. Further statistics, such as the number of minority students, transfer students and freshmen who are enrolled this summer, will not be available until the end of the sum­ mer. 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For only $3.00, perhaps the most profit­ able $3.00 you ever spent, the Texan will run your 20- word ad fo r five days. T h e D a i l y T e x a n Call the Classified Hot-Line.. .say "Charge It!" 471-5244 j 1. A d v e r t is e m e n t s m ay be billed to individuals listed in e ith e r the U n ive rs ity Directory o r the Austin SWB tele p h on e directo ry. P rep aym en t m ay be m ode in cash (in person), check, VISA o r M as te rC ard . (Certain classifications a lw a y s re q u ire advan ce p aym en t.) 2. These rates a re not a v a ila b le to businesses, dealers o r institutions a n d a re fo r p riv a te p a r ­ ty a d v ertis in g o n ly. Rates a p p ly to classifica­ tions 10-80 ; 190-340; a n d 510 o n ly. V a lu e of item a d v ertis e d must not exceed $ 5 0 0 a n d pHce must a p p e a r in the ad vertisin g copy. 3. M inim um a d Is 20 w ords. A d ditio n a l w ords 3e p e r w o rd p e r d a y . A ltho u g h ods m a y be can­ celled short o f full ru n , no credit slips can be Issued a t this low ra te . A d vertising placed u n d er this o ffer must run b efo re Sept. 1 ,1 9 8 6 . Lawmakers argue trips beneficial By M ARTY HOBRATSCHK Daily Texan Staff Although Congress spent more than $4.7 million on trips abroad last year, som e Texas congressm en said the benefits the trips bring are worth the price. Critics o f congressional junkets have said reducing or elim inating the trips would be a good first step toward slashing excessive govern­ ment spending. But Rep. Albert Bustam ante, D-San Antonio, said congressm en gather valuable infor­ mation w hen they go overseas. "P eop le have got to decide w hether they want their representa­ tives in W ashington to have the op­ portunity to get the information the representatives need to do their job correctly," Bustam ante said. Bustam ante traveled with Rep. Marvin Leath, D-Waco, to Italv, Turkey and France on congressional business. At least nine congressm en from tnps Texas took publicly funded overseas last year. Rep. J.J. "Ja k e " Pickle, D -Austin, went to 11 cou n­ tries: Portugal, Belgium, Israel, Denmark, Canada, Japan, China, Nepal, India, Thailand and Hong Kong. Rep Eligió "K ik a " de la G arza, D- Mission, traveled to Brazil, A rgenti­ na, M exico, Finland, the Soviet Un­ ion, G erm any and Portugal, and Rep Mickey Leland, D-H ouston, went to Ireland, Sw itzerland, Italy and Ju g oslav ia with M ajonty Lead­ lim W nght, D-Fort W orth er W nght also took a separate trip to Switzerland Rep Solom on Ortiz, D -Corpus Christa, w ent to Yugoslavia Tuni­ sia. M orocco, Algeria, Spain and Portugal, and Rep Charles W ilson, D*Lufkin, traveled to M orocco, Ita­ ly, France G erm any and Sw itzer­ land Celia Hara Martin, de la Garza s press secretary, said de ia Garza does not consider the trips he takes overseas as pleasure tnps. The congressm an s sole and to­ tal interest is to be acquainting his peers in o th er nations about Am eri­ ca'» agricultural problems. ' she said The Daily Texan/Tuesday, July 15, 1986/Page 7 EUC votes to stop STNP payments F ro m staff re p o rts The Electric Utility Com m ission voted M onday to recom m end that the Austin Citv Council stop weekly $2.5 million payments on the troubled South Texas Nuclear Project. "T h is is a drastic m easu re," said com m is­ sion m em ber Bill Oakev. " It will be interest­ ing to see w hat the City C ouncil does with it." In a 6-1 vote, the com m ission asked that the payments be discontinued. An am endm ent to the resolution recom m ended the paym ents be placed in an escrow account. "T hat is just a security m easure to make sure we maintain the solvency of our ac­ counts because it is possible there might be some legal repercussions if we take this ac­ tio n ,'' said O akey, who proposed the am end­ ment. " I felt it would be safer if we have the money in the acco u n t." Com m ission Chairm an M erle M oden said the vote cam e as a result of tw o lawsuits in­ volving the STN P. The City o f A ustin, which ow ns 16 percent of the project, currently is suing H ouston Lighting & Pow er, the m anag­ ing partner, contending the project was mishandled. Another suit v.'»s filed in 1983 against Brown & Root, the form er engineer and builder of the project, claim ing delays and cost overruns. In D ecem ber 1985, the city ac­ cepted a $120 million settlem ent in that suit. "HLAtP really led us down the path on this just some th in g ," M oden said. point w here you say 'let's stop th is.' " "T h ere is A June report from the Public Utility C om ­ mission stated Houston Lighting & Power wasted more than $1 billion on the $5.5 billion Nuclear Project because of m anagem ent blunders The STN P originally was budgeted to cost less than $1 billion. "Y ou can sum it up in one single w o rd ," Moden said. "F ru stra tio n ." Jon Fisher, director of research for the Tex­ as Chemical C ouncil, an Austin-based trade association o f m anufacturers, said Sunday his organization predicts the project will cost as much as $7.5 billion by the time of com ple­ tion. Mayor Frank C ooksey said he was not aware of the specifics in the decision. "I'll have to find out w hat the legal effect of this is ," Cooksey said. " I d on't think I could rec­ ommend engaging in a default in our obliga­ tio n s." Cooksey said the recom m endation proba­ bly will be considered at the July 31 council meeting. "W e're not advocating defaulting our b o n d s," O akey said. "A ll this suggests is that we take the m oney that would have gone to HL&P and put it in escro w ." "T h e City o f Austin is in danger of losing some of its custom ers because of high utility rates, and the STN P m akes up over 50 per­ cent of our rate b a s e ," O akey said. "A s a re­ sult, our rates are approxim ately 25 percent higher than they would be w ithout the nuke. We can't afford this nuclear alb atro ss." The other partners in the STN P are the city of San Antonio and C entral Pow er & Light Co. of C orpus Christi. Trial begins for Austin man By LISA BA K ER Daily Texan Staff Travis C ounty prosecutors told prospective jurors M onday they will seek a life prison term for an Austin man who told police he stabbed his 2-month-old daughter in April. Testim ony is scheduled to begin Tuesday morning in the murder trial of Paul Thibo­ deaux, 25. Raquel Harris' body was found in a brushy South Austin area April 11 — less than o n e w eek after the baby's m other, Eliza­ beth H am s, told police Thibodeaux had taken the child from her apartm ent and returned to confess the killing. Assistant District Attorney Terry Keel said Raquel H am s's death was "the most horrible ri pe of m urder short o f being a death penalty case. That's why w e're going to seek the max­ im u m ." "W e 're going to ask for life ," Keel said. "H e abducted this child, w ho was his own child, and cold-bloodedly stabbed her to death. The only reason he isn 't facing the death penalty is because you ... can't kidnap your own ch ild ." A capital m urder charge requires that a murder be com m itted in the com m ission of another crime. Prosecutors said before T hibo­ deaux was indicted in April thev believed the kidnapping charge would not hold up in court. Defense attorney Patrick G anne declined com m ent on the case. Raquel H am s died of multiple stab w ounds in the back and sides, according to Travis County medical exam iner's records. She ap­ parently died soon after she was taken from her m other's house April 7. Elizabeth Harris, 17, told police Thibodeaux took the child from her living room sofa in her apartm ent at 6501 S. First St. ju st before 5 p.m . She said Thibodeaux returned to the apartment about 15 m inutes later and told her he had killed the baby, the youngest of the couple's four children. Austin police spokesw om an Kellye Norris said Thibodeaux then adm itted the m urder to several police officers. I GREATB I BOOK ■ BLOWOUT ASSORTED TEXTBOOKS GENERAL BO O KS FICTION NONFICTION HEALTH & FITNESS MYSTERIES Etc. H ardback & Paperback Values Up To $50 (Select Group) UNIVERSITY CO-OP VISA T E X T B O O K S • LO W ER L E V E L 2246 G uadalupe P h on e 476-7211 Free Parking 23rd & San Antonio w $3 Purchase C a m e r a ’ s - e y e v i e w Bnan Adamo* Daily Texan Staff Michael Sullivan focuses ntentty on the Capitol Sullivan said he was photographing the build- dome while hning up a shot from the grounds mg Saturday for a textbook company. B U Y , SELL, RENT, TRADE. . . WANT A D S . ..471 -5244 ORIENTATION STUDENTS MARKTHE PUBLICATIONS PACKAGE AT REGISTRATION Select Option»! F « « 01 Athletics 02 Locket &****' 03 C E C O tscou n i w Drama Dept tee * P ^ a W « P W f e > © l® i 06 C * c '“ * T e * '* 0 0 * 07 utmost #»0a! ine 08 stuOtntOnM'0'1' 08 pereii'™“ ,e a ' !K>0‘ 10 c P a * 'n« 13 MParkmQ ® © I © © I®! m i t CLEANLY . . . Mursm«StuOnU* * $52 00 $ 2 00 $25 00 $12.00 $31 0® $26 00 $ 6 50 $ 1 50 $13 60 $12.00 $ 8 00 Y t s w o ©o ©o ©o ©o ©o ®o ©o ®o ©o ©o ©o ©o @o ®o ©o ®o ©o ®o @o ©o *270* U , i i SÍ _ © ® ® ' j 3 © ® ® THE PUBLICATIONS PACKAGE WILL PROVIDE YOU WITH A SUBSCRIPTION TO UTMOST MAGAZINE, THE CACTUS YEARBOOK AND THE UNIVERSITY DIRECTORY YOU’LL SAVE $12.95 Page 8/The Daily Texan/Tuesday, July 15,1986 Bills could save state millions, official says By SEAN S. PRICE Daily Texan Staff About $46.8 million in state funds can be saved if Texas creates a layoff and recall policy and grievance pro- ceedures for state em ployees, state Rep. Lloyd C riss, D-La Marque, said Monday. Criss, chairm an of the House La­ bor and Em ploym ent Relations C om m ittee, called on Gov. Mark W hite to include two bills creating the programs in his expected call for a special session. 1 oppose laying off state em ploy­ ees who provide services to Texas citizen s," Criss said. "U nfortu nate­ ly, we must confront the possibility that some layoffs may o ccu r." White said June 27 he is prepared to call a special session to deal with the state's budget deficit, which Com ptroller Bob Bullock estim ates will hit $2.3 billion by end of the current two-year budget cycle. Bullock is expected to issue an­ other forecast by Aug. 1 that will put the deficit at $3 billion or more. W hite said M onday no date has been set for the session. "C om pared to $2.3 billion, $47 million seem s a small am o u n t," Criss said. "B u t in these times, we cannot afford to turn our backs on any savin gs." Criss said a grievance procedure would reduce the state's court costs and a layoff and recall plan would reduce cost of training new em ploy­ ees. W hite could not be reached for com m ent. Danny Fetonte, organizing coor­ dinator for the Texas State Em ploy­ ees Union, said although the union is opposed to any layoffs, it sup­ ports putting the bills before a sp e­ cial session. Fetonte and Dwight Lusk, the un­ ion president, sent a letter dated July 14 to W hite saying the state cannot afford to lay off any workers. "T o cut the budget without rais­ ing taxes would throw thousands of state w orkers out of work at a time when the state's unem ploym ent rate is at an all-tim e high, not to mention the services which the citi­ zens of Texas would no longer receiv e," the letter stated. In addition to supporting Criss' proposal, the letter recom m ended raising state revenue through a lot­ tery, pari-mutuel betting or corpo­ rate incom e tax, laying off em ploy­ ees close to retirem ent and giving severance pay to laid-off em ployees based on their years of service. City, Laguna Gloria reach agreement on funding By DAVID ELDRIDGE Daily Texan Staff A stalem ate holding up progress on a new home for Laguna Gloria Art M useum may be over now that officials have decided w ho will pay the m useum 's annual $3 million budget. Laguna Gloria officials agreed that the City of Austin will not be responsible for 35 percent of the annual operating budget of a proposed downtown m useum — unless new- sources of city revenue can be found by 1988. Assistant City M anager Barney Knight said bonds for the construction of the m useum will be issued after the Austin City Council approves the agreem ent, probably later this sum m er. Laguna Gloria requested more than $1 million annually from the city to help operate and m ain­ tain the new museum . The current Laguna Glo- na m useum , at 3809 W. 35th St., received $195,000 from the city in 1986, 20.4 percent of the city's entire arts budget. According to the agreem ent, the city will not increase Laguna G loria's annual share of the city arts fund beyond 20.4 percent, but will work with m useum officials to establish new sources of funding for the proposed museum , which could open as early as the spring of 1988. In June, museum Director Laurence Miller said alternative funds for Laguna Gloria could com e from new taxes on developm ent, tourists or entertainm ent. But Knight said any new taxes on develop­ ment are unlikely. Knight said the annual operating budget of the m useum may have to be scaled down. "If they can 't raise the m oney and we can't find other potential sources, well, they'll just have to have a sm aller operating b u d g et," he said. Miller could not be reached M onday to com ­ ment on the agreem ent with the city. Knight said construction on the new m useum , which will be in the 400 block o f W est Fourth Street, could begin next spring. Bonds for the construction of Laguna Gloria were approved by Austin voters in early 1985 Miller estim ated in June that first-year opera­ ting costs would be alm ost $3 million. According to the partnership agreem ent that the city and Laguna Gloria w ere operating under prior to M onday's agreem ent, the museum was expected to raise 65 percent of its yearly budget. Man pleads guilty, gets 10-year term By LISA BAKER Daily Texan Staff A 19-year-old Austin man pleaded guilty and received a 10- year prison term M onday for the attem pted murder of his ex-girl- triend, w hom he shot in the ab­ domen April 17. District Judge Bob Perkins found Rusty Squires guilty of shooting Crockett High School senior G ena Beaver, 17, outside the Texas State Teachers Associa­ tion Building at 316 W. 12th S t., w here she worked as an intern. Because Squires used a deadly weapon in the commission of the crime, he m ust serve at least one- third of the sentence and will be eligible for parole in about three years. Attem pted murder is a second- degree felony, punishable bv up to 20 years in prison and a $10,000 fine. A ssistant D istrict A ttorney Carla Garcia said she discussed the plea bargain with Beaver's family', and they approved of the 10-year B eaver's agreem ent. m other, Nancy Flarris, and step­ father, Bill Harris, could not be reached for com m ent. "She (Beaver) was willing to testify, but it's been very painful for her, physically and em otion­ a lly ," Garcia said. Garcia called the plea bargain appropriate in light of Squires' age and the na­ ture of the offense. "I don't think it's ever enough, but 1 think it's what was appro­ priate under all of those circum ­ stan ces." Squires had been ordered by a peace bond to avoid all contact with Beaver or her family, or be jailed until he could post the $5,000 bond, according to court records. Bill and Nancy Harris report­ edly requested the peace bond because Squires continued to harass the family after Beaver broke up with him in March. Squires remained at large for a week while police searched for him and news media publicized the warrant for his arrest. Ac­ companied by an attorney, he surrendered April 24, after police received a tip from a caller w ho had seen Squires in an area south of Loop 360 along Barton C reek. D efense attorney Brady C ole­ man said Squires has remained in jail on $25,000 bail since the shooting W hite, C le m e n ts a c c e p t League of W om en V o te rs ’ d e b a te invitation By SEAN S. PRICE Daily Texan Staff Gov. Mark W hite and his Republican op­ ponent Bill Clem ents accepted invitations Monday from the League of W om en Voters to a debate. Staff m em bers from both cam paigns will be m eeting with league representatives to work out the details of the debate. Both candidates wasted no time in get­ ting in som e early shots. C lem ents, w ho lost to W hite in the 1982 election, said he has called for a debate re­ peatedly during the last two m onths. " I am delighted that Mark W hite finally has decided to accept my offer to a d eb ate," Clem ents said. W hite said voters deserve exposure to both candidates' views and that a debate is "in the best interest of all T e x a n s." "P erhap s Bill C lem ents, if he accepts this challenge, will take this opportunity to fi­ nally divulge the details of his secret budg­ et p la n ," W hite said. Clem ents also said M onday the apparent failure of W hite's austerity plan indicates W hite is building a case for the creation of a state corporate and personal incom e tax. Today Mark W hite adam antly says he is against a state income ta x ," Clem ents said. "B u t this is the sam e man w ho promised during the 1982 cam paign that he would not raise taxes. This is the sam e man w ho vowed not to increase college tuition. This is the sam e man w ho prom ised he would lower utiity ra tes." But W hite spokesm an Mark McKinnon said the governor has "g o n e out of his way to oppose an incom e ta x ." "1 wish som eone would call down there and find out w here h e's getting that stuff because it's really pissing me o ff," M cKin­ non said. 'T h e y 're trying to scare the electorate into thinking W hite w ants an incom e tax, there's absolutely no proof o f it," and M cKinnon said. "1 could run around saying C lem ents wears it would be the same thing. 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(Near Highland Mall) ADVENTURES 467 0059 * 2 0 00 O F F with coupon On Prescription Eyewear Alpha Omega Optical 23rd & Rio Grande One hour service on most single vision eyeglass prescriptions a n d soft co ntact len ses T 451-2020 E x a m in a tio n s by a p p o in tm e n t CHICKEN FRIED STEAK DINNER WITH PVRCHASt O f ANOTHER Every Tuesday Night 5-11 p.m. 311 W. 6th Street HALF PRICE BURGERS * ht 4 :0 0 -1 1 :3 0 BANANAS IE ST A URANT Sc BAR RESTAURANT & BAX NOT VALID FOR TAKE OUT ORDERS • EXP. 7 30 86 1601 G u a d a lu p e FBJB e Toasted R avioli 6* F ried Cheese P latter with the purchase of our "Show it before we bake it" T ) T 7 7 A Jt» X Z i / ajH l Tuesday or Wednesday nights V U A R . N E T . 7 .4 N < M I n r x p i r r s 7 2 9 S . * J 57th All-Star game showcases youth Associated Press HOUSTON — The two managers made it official: Roger Clemens vs. Dwight Gooden in baseball's 57th All-Star Game Tuesday night at the Astrodome. American League Manager Dick Howser start said he would Qem ens, a former Longhorn, de­ spite the fact that Qem ens pitched nine innings Saturday, snapping a two-game losing streak. Gooden, 10-4, has won two of his last three and has not pitched since last Wednesday. "I saw Dwight throw against us in spring. He's in a class of his own out there," said Clemens, who will make his first All-Star appearance in his hometown. "I think I have the advantage being at home." Howser said he would use Ted Higuera of Milwaukee and Charlie Hough of Texas after Qem ens. "It might just be those three," Howser said. Hough w ill be appearing in his first All-Star Game at age 38. Howser also announced a batting order of center fielder Kirby Puck­ ett, Minnesota; left fielder Rickey Henderson, New York; third base­ man Wade Boggs, Boston; catcher Lance Parrish, Detroit; first base­ man Wally Joyner, California; short­ stop Cal Ripken, Baltimore; right fielder Dave Winfield, New’ York; second baseman Lou Whitaker, De­ troit, and Clemens. Boggs is replac­ ing Kansas City"s George Brett, who was elected to start but has a sore arm. Howser said there was no partic­ ular significance in his decision to use Puckett to lead off instead of Henderson. "It doesn't really make a lot of difference," he said. "Both of them are little guys who can run." Herzog's batting order was left fielder Tony Gwynn, San Diego; second baseman Ryne Sandberg, Chicago; first baseman Keith Her­ nandez. New York; catcher Gary Carter, New York; right fielder Dar­ ryl Strawberry, New York; third baseman Mike Schmidt, Philadel­ phia; center fielder Dale Murphy, Atlanta; shortstop Ozzie Smith, St. Louis, and Gooden. Herzog said he might follow Goo­ den with either Fernando Valenzue­ la of Los Angeles or Mike Scott of Houston, but he had not decided for sure yet. He also thanked the National League for allowing him to take 10 pitchers. "It wasn't because I'd use 10 pitchers," Herzog said. "But there are so many who deserved to go. I really feel bad for guys like Bob Oje­ Jesse Orosco and Roger da, McDowell (all from the Mets), and my own guy, Todd Worrell. In the near future, I would like to see the roster expanded to 30 (from 28) and make it mandatory to take 12 pitch­ ers." Although Gooden has been in a mild slump, splitting his last four decisions, Herzog said he chose the 1985 Cy Young winner as the NL starter because "he is the best pitch­ er in baseball. I don't want to take anything away from Clemens. I've never seen him pitch. But in our league, Dwight is the best, and he's going to start." tying Clemens, who had shoulder sur­ gery last August, came within one victory of the American League record when he won his first 14 starts of the season. Along the way, he set a major league mark by striking out 20 batters in one game. The winning streak was stopped when he lost two in a row, but he won his last start on Satur­ day against California. "He (Gooden) is going on six days rest and I’m going on two, but if I feel good, I'll bring it," said Clemens, adding that facing Goo­ den was "the type of challenge you want." Gooden, selected to his third All- Star team but making his first start, said he was honored to pitch against Qemens. Tw enty strikeouts in one game is hard to imagine," said Gooden, who is not striking out batters at the same clip that saw him lead the ma­ jors in that category the last two seasons. "I struck out 16 in a game and thought that was hard. He struck out 20 and made it look easy." The Nationals have won 13 of the last 14 and two in a row. The last American League victory was in 1983 w ith Herzog as manager of the Nationals. "I want to win," Herzog said. "I'm the only one who's lost in the last 14 years, and Chub (NL Presi­ dent Feeney) got all over me." Tigers Lance Parrish. Red Sox' Roger Clemens and Rangers Charlie Hough at the AJt-Star workout Monday Assoc*3t6d Press $15,000 kept Clemens from Mets Associated Press HOUSTON — Dwight Gooden and Roger Clemens berth pitching for the New York Mets? It might have happened except for three days of rain and $15,000. Gooden will represent the Mets as the starting pitcher for the Na­ tional League in Tuesday's All-Star Game, and he will face Clemens, the Boston Red Sox star w ho came very dose to becoming a National Leaguer five years ago. I he Mets drafted Clemens in 1981 after he had attended San Jacinto Junior College for one year. A first- year scout in the organization rec­ ommended signing him. The Mets sent a veteran scout for another look, and Clemens was not impres­ sive, but Joe McBvaine, the d u b 's director of scouting at the time, de­ cided to see for himself He flew to Texas, but Clemens start with a summer-league team was rained out twice. Then Mcll- vaine flew down again, and once again, rain kept him from getting a look at the nard-throwing right­ hander. "He asked for $25,000, and we thought $10,000 was the most we could offer," Mcllvaine s a id Mon­ day So c lemens enrolled at th e University of Texas and helped pitch the Longhorns to the College World Senes title in his second year The Mets thought they still had another chance at getting Clemens, who went back into the talent pool after not signing a professional con­ tract. After selecting infielder Eddie Williams with the fourth overall pick in the 1983 draft, the Mets were going to select Clemens with the 20th pick, according to Mcllvaine, now the Mets vice president of op­ erations. But the Red Sox had the 19th choke, and it was goodbye Clemens. "Some things aren't meant to be,” Mcllvaine said. Clemens said he thought he was close to signing with the Mets, "but 1 guess no t.'' That's when his mother and brother stepped in. "They decided it was best for me to go to college," Clemens, who won his first 14 starts this year, one short of the American League record, said. "It looks like it was their (Mets') loss, not mine " Qem ens won the championship game of the 1983 College World Se­ nes for Texas and then pitched one year in the minor leagues, moving up quickly from A to AA to AAA in that one season. The next year he was a member of the Red Sox, and in his second sea­ son he is the rage of the majors, be­ coming the first pitcher in major- to strike out 20 league history batters in one game. Actually, the Mets weren't the only team that missed a chance at the AL's starting pitcher. Qem ens said dunng the All-Star news conference Monday that the Minnesota Twins also looked at him as an 18-year-old high school senior and a scout told him he had better sign then or he wouldn't get anoth­ er chance. Horns help U.S. m edal count at Goodwill Gam es By HOWARD DECKER Daily Texan Staff The United States may be the Goodwill Games medal race to the Soviet Un­ ion But thanks in part to nine Longhorns, the L.S gained world recognition in both wom­ en's basketball and swimming losing Longhorns Kamu* Ethndge, Fran H a m s and CUnssa Davis helped the United States women's basketball team rout the Soviet Un­ ion 83-60 Last Thursday to win the gold medal It was the Soviets' first loss in a major tournament in 28 years. I think it's kind of like the greatest interna­ tional accomplishment you can have," Harris said Tew people beat the Russians and no­ body beats them in Russia " The U.S. team won the gold medal without losing a game and, w ith the victory over Rus­ sia, established itselt as a world powerhouse. Our team is a lot like the one we had at lexas last year except that this team has defi- mtely got a lot more height." Hams noted depth and talent as the main similarities with last year's national champion I ongfioms. But with UT point guard Kamie Ethridge leading the offense, the similarities are no coincidence. She runs the show, again," Harris said of Ethridge who is presently working at a bas­ ketball camp in Kansas. "We have two point guards, but they don't split their time evenly. Kamie plays a lot more. She's plaving really well nght now." 1 he v ictoiy over the Goodwill Games may have marked the begin­ ning of a big rivalry' between the two teams which continues next month at the world the Soviets in women s basketball championships in Mos­ cow. In swimming, Longhorns Bill Stapleton and Ken Flaherty combined to win three silver medals and a bronze medal as the U.S. swim team ran away with the overall meet title and trounced the Russians by 41 points in an unofficial duel-meet scoring. "I think we did very very well," Stapleton said, considering the U.S. was using its sec­ ond team because its first team was in Madrid competing in the World Swimming Champi­ onships. "Only one American team has ever lost to the Russians (a junior team in 1982) and we really didn't want to be the second. In all, six Longhorns participated in the U.S. effort. Stapleton's two silvers came in the 200- and 400-meter individual medley races. He swam 2.03.30 in the 200 and 4.23.40 in the 400 and w'as bested by Russian record holder Vladim Yaroshchuk in both races. Flaherty swam the 100-meter butterfly in 54.20 to earn the silver and 2.01.00 in the 200- meter butterfly tor his bronze medal. Andy Gill, the other Texas man at the Games, didn't win any medals. For the women, Stacy Cassiday won a gold medal in the 400-meter medley relay and UT recruit Andrea Hayes won silver in the 400 individual medley with at time of 4:51.47. Tori Trees failed to win a medal. There w ere six of us from Texas, so we got pretty obnoxious about it," Stapleton said We even said a few* Longhorn cheers instead the of U.S.A. cheers when we were on blocks. It was a lot of fun." Geddes wins Open playoff over Little, gets first-ever LPGA tournament victory U.S. O pen S co re s Associated Press KETTERING, Ohio — Jane Geddes had never managed a victo­ ry in her four years on the LPGA Tour. That was until Monday, when she finally won a tournament and it was a major. Geddes carded a 1-under-par 71 to capture the U.S. Women's Open golf championship by two strokes over Sally Little in an 18-hole playoff at the NCR Country Club "1 just felt I had something to prove," Geddes, 26, said. "I had played well in the past. You can have a lot of high finishes, but when you come into the interview room, they always ask you, 'OK, when are you going to win?' " Geddes' time came Monday and resulted in a $50,000 payday. It was anything but expected, since she had never been in a playoff as a pro­ fessional or amateur and Little was unbeaten in four previous playoffs on the tour. "After a while (the doubts) start­ ed rubbing me," Geddes said "It started affecting my golf game and my demeanor on the golf course be cause I started putting a lot of pres­ sure on myself. "But 1 really felt I had this to prove to myself and the people kE H E H in g O n e — f « * i scorw and money «wwngs **>< Monoay s p-ayot* e f f * 41s: Womans U S Opart Goit Champenahtp pwyod or the 6 243-yara par 7? n c r CtXAtfy O u6 course {«-«nun ’ 8 ho*- ptevofl Monday a-de notes amataur) «■Jane Oedda» JSOOOO Sally s. tne S2S.OU3 4yafc©OMmoto 1 6 534 M a y K«q. t'6 S 3 4 P r B>adork, ^uch as CBS ... wait he couldn t pull that one off. Then, one settles for smaller things like movie studios, such as MGM; he pulled that one off, but ended up $2 billion in debt. Ves, you rig h t, $2 000,iHX< 000 in debt What then do rich reople do when they're so deep in debt? Well, it you're Ted Turner you put on expansive and expensive sports festivals in a for­ eign country'. re a d it In 1985, irked by the inability of the American and Soviet govern­ ments to allow their athletes to compete against each other in ei­ ther the 1980 Moscow Olympic s or the 1984 L. A. Olympics, Turner decided to put on his cm n party I um er proposed a deal to the So­ viet officials which basically said he would pay it they would play. The Soviets, not being stupid, agreed. Other countnes were in­ vited, and the Games were set. The tab for this attempt at world peace is estimated at $50 million, which to Turner must be petty' cash Losing a good portion of that investment is almost guaranteed In fact, he expects to lose about $10 million, which is OK by him He's lined up corporate spon­ sors (ala Peter Ueberroth and the L A. Olympics) which include Pepsi Cola, Gillette and Prudential insurance, all of whom have paid a great deal to have the nght to plas­ ter their logos every where And I mean everywhere. But unlike the L A. Olympics, the corporate logos are obvious to the point ot being annoying. They surround the skating nnk. the bas­ ketball court and yes, even the swimming pool The sponsors would surely bt- getting their dol­ lars worth if Amencans were watching however, they're not. Amenca’s avoiding these Games in droves from Overnight last ratings week s opening weekend (which included last Monday) were 50 to 60 percent lower than the 5 per­ cent of the watching public TBS expected and they promised advertisers when adver­ tising rates were determined. from what However, do not get the idea that apathy is an Amencan inven­ tion The Soviet public couldn't care less either From simply view­ ing the Games on WTBS, one no­ tices that the seats at the track and held events and women's basket­ ball games are so glaringly empty it's embarrassing to watch Well, could the empty stands and inactive TV sets be from the lack of outstanding athletes? No, the Soviet athletic community sent their best athletes to the Games. And the Americans, although they had some top swimmers pass up the Moscow tnp to prepare for the World Championships in August, sent world quality athletes to the Games. But, you really can't blame the Soviet fans for not attending the Games, nor can you fault the Amencans tor not watching. The Games, w ith some exceptions, are just not exciting. What Turner for­ got to consider when he planned this was the fact that sports fans don't want an all-encompassing sports festival every year. If we did, the Olympics would be held yearly. It's supply and demand, and at the moment there is simply no de­ mand for another multi-event ex­ travaganza. The 1990 Goodwill Games have already been award­ ed to Seattle. TBS executive vice- president Bob Wussler hopes to have those Games sold out by 1988 or 1989. Good luck, Bob, you'll need it. Page 10/The Daily Texan/Tuesday, July 15, 1986 Associated Press imposed. Austin Open begins match play Mike jasnau, a former collegiate star for W ichita State University, rolled a 299 his final game of the third round Monday afternoon and took the lead in the $115,000 Austin Open. Jasnau, who rolled a perfect game during the qualify­ ing for non-exempt players earlier in the tournament, had games of 214, 242, 207, 233, 247 and 299 for a six- game total of 1,442, a 240 average. For the first 18 games, Jasnau averaged 229.7 and had a pinfall total of 4,135. John Gant, the 1984 Sporting News Profesion al Bowlers Association Rookie of the Year out of Cincin­ nati, rolled a 300 in the third round and moved into second place with 4,064. W ayne Webb, a 16-time PB A winner from Indianapo­ lis, was in third place with 4,036, followed by Bob Learn Jr. of Erie, Pa., at 4,030 and Kent Wagner of Palmetto, Fla., at 4,029. Second-round leader Butch Soper fell to sixth place, another pin behind Wagner. NCAA penalizes Bradley program PEO R IA , 111. — Bradley University was penalized Monday bv the N C A A for recruiting violations and unethical conduct by head Coach Dick Versace, who prom ptly signed a one-year contract that school offi­ cials announced would be his last. The N C A A sanctions bar Bradley from competing in postseason play and off-campus recruiting for next sea­ son only, although the school officially was placed on probation for two years. N o television sanctions were The N C A A Committee on Infractions said violations in the case involved im proper recruiting inducements like the use of a car, paid transportation for fam ily members, entertainment and extra benefits to a stu- dent-athlete and his fam ily. It also said Versace, who has guided the Bradley pro­ gram for eight years, "failed to deport himself in accor­ dance with the generally recognized high standards of honesty normally associated with . . . intercollegiate ath­ letics." Under Versace, the Braves were 32-3 and M V C cham­ pions last season, reaching the second round of the N C A A tournament. Watson defends USFL decision N E W Y O R K — As his counterparts at the other two networks did earlier, the president of N BC Sports testi­ fied M onday that the N FL never pressured him to deny the U SF L a contract for the fall and said the denial was based purely on the netw ork's business considerations. Arthur Watson, a 30-year veteran of N BC who has headed the sports department since 1979, was the first witness of what may be the last week of the N FL's defense in the U SFL's $1.69 billion antitrust suit Watson cited N BC 's commitments to baseball — the playoff and W orld Senes through late October, plus golf and horse racing as w ell as N FL games on Sunday. Fie also noted court decisions in 1984 that opened up the market for college football and led to as many as eight or nine games per weekend in major market areas There just wasn't any more room at the in n ," Watson said. 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Hocslcx ’ 35 o m Thursday s Gam es O tcago at New York 6 30 p 'T> Texas a’ Det'tx! r 36 p rr Minnesota at Baltimore 6 35 p m C evetand at Kansa* Crty 7 3 5 cm B- sti m at Sean » 9 35 p m Toronto«■ Calitorma 9 j ‘: pm O v games s< heduied NATX3NAE LEA G U E East Ohrtaron New • -* Montrea FYmadeiphta Chicago St L0UÍS Putsfturgh San F ranosco Houston Sar . Neg Atlanta Cincinnati Cos Angeies W L 59 4* 4. 16 * 35 25 38 4 46 50 5C Pc* QB 702 546 13 494 429 23 419 24 412 i ' i W est Ohitaton 46 4’ 45 42 40 40 Tuesday s Gam e 40 43 4f 44 41- 545 534 5 1 ; 4 ’7 470 458 6 j- $ A;- Sta' Game at Houston Thursday a Gam es ago * 20pm Sar- F*anctsa. a-C Atlanta ar M. mtrea 6 35 p m '•.i >egt atPm stxirgr 6 3 5 pm adeiphoi at Cincinnati 6 36 p it. u d s Angla** at St tout* Z35p m New - • at Houstor ’ 35 p- m All-Star S ta ts AL A*-Star StaQants ST A RT ER S Catcher Pamsh . let First Base dtoyn©f Cüi Sacond Base >••• • i>-- Oet Th«ra Base Boggs Bos Shortstop RipFer Ba AB R M HR RBi AVG 297 46 74 ? ’i 59 ?49 348 55 '09 X j 73 •. 4 53 (36 15 36 265 100 56 109 S 43 36* 49 _ WE RENT, SERVICE, SELL- • TYPEWRITERS • PERSONAL COMPUTERS • SUPPLIES 450-1925 i AL’S TYPEWRITERS \ ASK ABOUT OUR tU R M W SA T IS 302 51 70 362 83 100 36 i 65 129 232 284 338 53 22 68 6 30 266 •’ 3 54 118 313 44 84 »1 61 130 289 38 85 346 54 97 ’ 06 332 50 134 58 » 344 52 93 34’ $1 * 350 6fc 1 • ' » 316 50 m 63 52 294 M 280 51 2T9 134 j G G * L S t 39 ’ 8 19 19 41 19 39 14 9 10-2 i 4 10 7 9-4 ’3 31 0 91 0 133 0 112 ■6 61 0 120 19 49 ¡24 308 N 0 8 9 0 ERA ’ 8 AC 2 4. .16 46. 3C 0 45 24 13 - 66 A AB R M MR REM AVG ■ *4 1946 1949 1960 ■95- . 195; ■ • 953 •:*4 1955 1966 1967- Amine ar . 1 Am anear 5-2 Amanear 11 ? Natsona 4-3 14 «swigs Na&ona 6 3 Atahona 3-2 5 «pwigs n Nation* 5-1 Amanean 11 9 Nation* t 6 1 W -sr J 7 - 3 Amant ar 6-5 Amencar 4 3 Nation* 5 4 Am»*«car 5-3 - -tys -I 4 5-3 Nancy* Nab rv< Nati. m 1966 Nat or 10 c . * * . 1 *6 mrungs 1973 Nsfttona "-0 „ - « N atter* 5-4 1?mn«ng* Ama» car 6 4 Nanona 4 • 10 mmng* Nahan* 7 1 N a je n * 7-2 N aaor* 6 3 Nanona * ’ Nani * 7 5 -4 I 3 ' f Nata n a Nanona 4 . 9& Nanona G 41 19 36 1 7 %$ 'Ob 44 ’46 4? 106 4-3 HAT7R4G Moat Runa jop Mmwci C-Ofi ¥o®t $ tew t M od Tot** fteeet M o * Home csoafegr A, '\*M «OKI tAÉeiar? ‘964 Wé Moert Cmu0N Stemfeng 2 A' -m M-a*-* Ser- **onci*co Nt *SN 2 - ■ Tony 0*mi Mmimarn i Al *96? • Aftaa H&ornmaM* Sen $ flameo N Son ff8A£M9 ^ PIT C H U G Momt Hurse Hoe* E om od Rum Alftee Moot Hte Moo* Aeftii * f t 5 Car hmxmp Nat* *>» N l Inc ana* Nt 6 Mee- i960 Farguaon Mr*.m traanruata . .m • n> V Moat ConaaouRva StfWaouta "484 n l >•-, ag> N. -m * O a ’ 9.34 Johnny vw idai i943 carry Janaar Nee *an A. f « N M C » *w . * C a PiuCMNE Moat Home Rune Aiow ao '•■-*. *^(v N l ’S634 3 -Am Paimar OaRnv ■* A, '9 " 2 ( \K VI 1)1 \ M O N l)S I RO M .47 ct. >4611 4S ct. $450 .52 ct. $495 .56 ct. $550 Russell Korman selh diamonds (he silver jewelry — a( the heM praL's Austin has ever seen' Come hv and talk with Maurice Schwartz, former owner of Diamonds I nlimited. jtviut vour diamoml purchase You U he pleasantly surprised at the quality diamonds you can buy . ia ij he sells pearls. gt»ld ¿k sterling . for .1 lot less money . Russell Korman Ci»mpany You can't buy tine diamonds for a better price D u a f t e l l K o r t n a n k j r j c o m it a n \ -ItAt I1 U? ,1 * TJ3 South Congress 441 9246 Open M on-Sat 10 -6 CLASSES B EG IN N IN G NOW DAY OR N IG H T SESSIONS AVAILABLE INTENSIVE ENGLISH ANGLAIS INTENSIF INGLES INTENSIVO N IN E LEVEL C O M PR EH EN SIV E CO URSE SMALL C LA SSES, IN D IV ID U A L ATTENTION NEW LEVEL EVERY 4 W EEKS A U T H O R IZ ED UNDER FEDERAL LAW TO EN RO LL N O N - IM M IG R A N T A LIEN STUDENTS (1-20 FORM) DURHAM -NIXO N-CLAY COLLEGE 119 W. 8th at Colorado 478-1602 Bulgaria s Borislav Kesev spikes the ball past U.S. blocker Charles Kiraly at the Goodwill Games Monday. Associated Press Soviets widen lead in medals race MLB S,andin9s Associated Press M O SC O W — Am erican wrestlers captured three gold medals at the Goodwill Games M onday, w hile So­ viet gymnasts swept the medals in all-around competition, again shut­ ting out a disappointing American team. John Sm ith, Dave Schultz and Bruce Baum gartner each defeated a Soviet opponent in their gold-medal matches, boosting the Am erican medal count to 99, 34 gold. But the Soviets took seven wres­ tling golds M onday, widening their lead in the medals race with a total of 145, 59 gold. Sm ith defeated Khazen Isaev 6-3 in the 136-pound class, despite com­ plaining of a bad call in the second t h e r e is MONEY IN SALES period. "They have the home-court ad­ vantage," Sm ith said of the Soviets, inaugural who are hosting Goodw ill Games. " I accepted it and tried not to let it get me d ow n ." the Schultz and Baumgartner were both gold medalists in the 1984 Olym pics. Schultz rallied from a 2-0 deficit to down Adlan Varaev 4-2 in the 163- pound class. Baumgartner scored the final point w ith just 22 seconds rem aining, edging out D avid Gobedzhishvili in the 286-pound match. The score ended in 4-4 and Baumgartner won on criteria. Baum gartner said he was looking forward to meeting Gobedzhishvili again in the 1986 world cham pion­ ships to be held in Budapest, H un­ gary, in October. " I always like it when I win, esp- cially against a So viet," Schultz said. Am ericans Kevin Darkus, at 126 S r P H V T K 2420(jUcicLcUupe = - i i i f I- i s | | i | pounds, Andre Metzger at 150 pounds, and James Scherr at 198 pounds, all took silver medals. In gymnastics, held before just 3,000 people the cavernous in Olym pic Stadium Hall, the Soviets swept the gold, silver and bronze medals. The top American finisher, Charles Lake, was seventh. "W e were all a bit disappointed," said Bart Conner, a member of the gold-medal Am erican team at the Los Angeles Olym pics and a com­ mentator here for Turner Broadcast­ ing System. "U nfortunately we got off to a terrible start yesterday." A t the end of the first day of gym ­ nastics competition M onday, the United States was fifth in the six- nation event. "W e have a lot of work ahead of us," Lake, of New hall, C alif., said. Lake praised the meet and said it would help Am erican gymnasts prepare for the 1988 Olym pics. 1 he United States opened the men s volleyball tournament with a 15-8, 15-9, 15-10 victory over Bulgar­ ia. The Soviet Union defeated Brazil 15-9, 1 ^-n, 15-3, and Czechoslovakia rallied to beat Japan 10-15, 8-15, 15- 11, 15-11, 16-14. A re you w illin g to w o rk for y o u r m o n ey? We offer UT students the H IGHEST PAY­ IN G PA R T T IM E JOB ON CAMPUS You need a car and a lot of ambitious en­ ergy A p plicatio n s availab le in T SP 3.210. Our part-tim e salespeople m ake $750- $1000 per m onth and more!! 4 7 1 - 1 8 6 5 -tmrfMttH action, tool Opportunity ¿ F E V E R B L IS T E R S ? • (rt*i iasi relict from pain and itching mth • DISSA-FEER T A BLET S • I available at \'a u Pharmacy 2406 San Gabriel ]j C o m p u t e r T im e ™ iE l! Rent a Macintosh System LaserWriter, Hard Disks, Drives, Printers, Etc. 4 7 2 - 5 8 3 3 (D a y, W e e k , o r M onth) IMMIGRATION H. vs. PRACTICAL TRAINING Know the Difference before Filing PAUL PARSONS e, Attorney at Law BOARD CERTIFIED IMMIGRATION & NATIONALITY LAW TEXAS BOARD OF LEGAL SPECIALIZATION 704 Rio Grande 477-7887 c * , -m illlir BUMPER STICKER DISCLAIMER 3 for $5, 8 for $10, 20 for $20 UNITEX, B o , -4 6 4 V,do ne TX 7 ’ 9i es Mm 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1:30 Open 11 :00am Mon-Sot Open Sun 3:00pm Happy Hour Mon-Fri 5-7 Httcvmcfy AMOCttóÍM f t c p a I re vie w (a sub5*J»ary of Haicourt Brae* Jovanovfcri) caM : I M i i i (a t fciefi 471-5284 TWO FER TUESDAY Payment Plan 0 76% Pass Rate ^ F re e In tro d u c to ry C la s s e s ^ C o n c is e , B o un d S tu d y V o lu m e s ^ C o n tin u a l R eview S e s s io n s i^ R e a s o n a b le T u itio n Exam T e c h n iq u e s C lin ic s 0 3 MONTH INTENSIVE FORMAT and I— c o n v i ser - m ille rcpa■ review $ 5 0 CO UPO N PrtM A t Hh i coupon for tuition discount Major cradit cards accepted Audio Cassatt* Program available Compara our passing ralas, pne* and mataríais to olftar CPA ravrew s"1 G ° CaW tor course locations, dates information, and a free Conviser-Milier Sam pie O utline 1 >— fW-5441 Course Locations: AUSTIN. BEAUMONT. C O LLEG E STATION. C O RPUS CHRISTI. DALLAS. EL PASO, HOUSTON. LUBBOCK. SAN ANTONIO. N EW O RLEAN S. PHOENIX, TULSA PRINTS IN 1 HOUR FREE-EVERY TUESDAY HOLLEMAN PHOTOGRAPHIC LABORATORIES, INC 2002 Guadalupe store Only 469-0949 U ncom m on A ustin trio M inus G ra c e e x p lo re s th e fa r sid e of fo lk music Read some books The Daily Texan/Tues>day, July 15, 1986/Page 11 Jim Sigmon Daily Texan Staff Love beads and btuegrass: Pam Peltz and Scott McKenzie of Minus Grace have very different backgrounds. music four people who wanted to be in a band — but never the same one," Peltz said. But perhaps Scott McKenzie has expenenced the most frustrating ripe of artistic angst — trying to find a niche in a somewhat prolific Austin music scene, or the music world in general. His work as a roadie for Atlanta Rhythm Section out of high school and his four years with Arkansas keyboardist and songwriter Geo Bartiett were influential but trying experiences for McKenzie. After recorded (but not releasing) work with Bartlett, some of which was produced bv Rik Ocasek, McKenzie found a place in A u s tin a few1 years back, when he first met Pam "I was in my first Austin band, Ha Ha. We had just played at the Beach, and 1 saw this girl stand­ ing there watchin' the show*. 1 asked her. Well, what d you think about the band?' She said she liked it, but I song really the sucked last thought that was an honest an­ swer " said McKenzie "Ha Ha was the most interesting band in Austin to me 'cause of this incredible guitar/bass interaction," said Peltz. "Someone at the Beach mentioned that it was their last show. That really struck me. As Scott was putting his guitar away I walked up and told him that 1 sang and wrote songs, then said 'If you want to make music, well, my name is Pam/ 1 immediately split — he managed to find me," Peltz said. From that point on, Peltz and McKenzie have been together writ­ ing songs. McKenzie's association with his second Austin band, Moto- X, thrust him into the limelight as they developed recognition, but Minus Grace w*as waiting in the wings. Songwnting became their first priority. "There aren't as many real songwriters as there are musi­ cians, McKenzie said. They're accompanied by bassist Steve Bernal of Basically Speaking, who adds an R&B angle to their sound. "He plays a lot like Ry Cooder," McKenzie said The recent break-up of Moto-X left McKenzie looking at yet another possible ending to a story that never really was. In late April, Moto-X member and Grammy-nominee Frankie Camaro (for Big Guitars from Texas) left the band and Aus­ tin behind for Bloomington, Ind. With a record already paid for and set for release on Wrestler, Moto-X was no more. But for Minus Grace, the setbacks were a blessing in dis­ guise. McKenzie and Peltz answer­ ed to the opportunity. "There's an order to the universe,"Peltz said about the exit of Moto-X. Later she added, 'T want to make a record." Minus Grace has just a few gigs behind them, the first in early May at the Black Cat and several others at the Beach, the South Bank and Cactus Cafe, but they'll be perform­ ing a lot in the near future. Of the scheduling McKenzie picked-up said, "See, |ust like magic." Tuesday night Minus Grace plays at the Continental Club, 1315 S. Congress Ave., with Nice Strong Arm, and Thursday they'll play with the new improved Meat Joy at Trinity Studio, Sixth and Trinity streets. We hate Phil, but boy do we love Philler! Something s coming in the air to­ night i>h lord I can tee! it in the .nr tonight, oh lord. Or something like that Now that the U S. Supreme Court has issued its ruling on that sodomy case in Georgia, it's time to discuss the im­ portant contributions Phil Collins has made to the music industry Tracing Collins career back to its Genesis, one sees the obvious bibli­ cal connotations inherent in the s u ­ perstar smger-songw riter's work 1 think my 2 inches are up. — David Elliot Sure, it was fun for awhile. Write about Phil Collins. Put his picture in the paper. Glorify the man. Well, I'm sick of it. Phil Collins makes me puke. He is boring and generic, like vanilla vogurt. He embodies all that is dis­ gusting about pop music nowa­ days. He should be replaced with a synthesizer, or better yet, a robot. This probably would increase the creativity in his music. Oh, yes, 1 am also sick to death of seeing 4,000 images of the man in every video he makes. He is ugly, and probably should be shot. Garry Trudeau once called the 19~0s a "kidney stone of a decade." There is an analogy here. Collins probably liked the 70s. I wouldn't doubt it. God, 1 hate the man. — Todd Pratt By K.K.FELVEY Daily Texan Staff The musical combination of an Ithaca, N Y., native with a passion for Michelangelo Antonioni and a cosmopolitan folk-influenced gui­ tarist may at first thought seem un­ likely. Add a passion for the man­ dolin, and the combination falls nothing shy of ingenious compati­ bility. V\ hen Pam Peltz performs live the songs she and Scott McKenzie have written, her shoes are off by the end of the second song. McKenzie can transcend his on-stage environment and delve into his past — as if the scene were a bluegrass jamboree from his youthful days in Russel- ville. Ark. Recently, Austin has caught its first glimpses of Minus Grace — vMth the band s musical references to the far side of folk, "Our music is on infinite, though, like a fairy tale — Mother Goose and the Brothers Grimm," said McKenzie. the dark side. It's But it s exhiliratmg instead of depressing," Peltz added, quick to loosely existential point out the groundwork for their uncommon sound No matter how many peo­ ple stand next to vou, vou're still alone, she said. Life is a ship and vou're about to miss it — landlocked in your vester- da\ —Between Cknid and Evil "You'll catch a litie whiff of sunshine in the comer of your ese you II ascend and I 11 pretend that you could never make me high" — Moody Ocean For the most part, the musical and artistic pasts of the members of Minus Grace are as diverse as their upbringing. By |unior high Peltz had a solo in the movie Godspell be­ hind her "I wa> the only one who loudly enough " she said sang aN>u? the audition Reminiscing about ‘ Í high si htH'l she added, m\ spent life sneaking inti .o n - certs. Around 1983 1 was in a band that played Club Foot and Nitelife called the Love Pretzels We were mn. ri SHOWS*»***» EVERYDAY ALL SNOWS M’ OMt I PW IA C K TO SCH O O L * • ! ) I M M a S S I I 52 * > •> k ’ ! • ------------------------- ABOUT LAST NIGHT * — O N T V O K t lI M t I I 11 -3 j4 6 - $ 1 5 U M 7 4 » 1 * 1 1 — FIBtlS BUILlirS DAY Off po-u t « » a i » s>4 s s s - js - - a i s - i s i i KA K A Tf KID II m , 11 M 1 I 5-4.-4S S 3 J 8 7 ii-**» Ü Ñ D C I THE CHfKRY M O O N 11 Ml * 00- 1 * 0 5 A Q U A R I U S 4 sos 3232 LAIYWNTH >- ii M-»M t; xn-7 i» « At By DEBORAH KELT Daily Texan Staff The end of the first summer ses­ sion means only one thing — the summer is officially half over. This means there's only half the time to do those things before September — half the time to get a really good tan, half the time to save some money, half the time to look de­ cent in a bathing suit, and half the time to do all that summertime reading you've been meaning to do. But don't despair— just because it's already July doesn't mean you have to read Danielle Steele be­ cause Charles Dickens just takes too long. So the next time you're headed for Barton Springs, take one of these books instead of Scruples. They're all easily found at any used bookstore, and who knows, maybe you'll actually learn something before September rears it's ugly, academic head. Lady Chatterly's Lover — This controversial novel was published in 1928, only to be banned by the U.S. government and panned by the critics. Although explicit, it's tame by today's General Hospital standards, and actually has a lot more going for it than just raw flesh. Lawrence does write about Lady Chatterly's affair with her groundskeeper Mellors, but also about the class struggle in Eng­ land, and women's struggle for equality. It's a must for the sum­ mer — just don't take it on any family vacations to Georgia. In Cold Blood — A gothic novel scarier than anything by Stephen King, mainly because it's true. Truman Capote tells the haunting tale of Dick and Perry, two misfits accused of killing an entire family in Nowheresville, Kan. Capote ac­ tually went to Kansas to interview the townspeople as well as the accused killers for this 1965 chiller. His details are flawless and his writing immaculate. Read it with all the lights on. Happy to Be Here — Although Lake Wobegon Days has yet to be published in paperback, Garrison Keillor fans on a budget can still find some comic relief. Happy to be Here is a collection of Keilior's best short stories, many of which were first published in The New Yorker. All the stories have Keil- lor's dry wit — a wit old fans will instantly recognize, and new read­ G eneral Cinem a BARGAIN MATINEES-EVERYDAY All SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM $2.75 r< fc CLUB PARA DISE PCM3 | 1 30-3:35-5 40-7 45-9 50 LE G A L E A G L E S w 12 40-3 00-6 20-7 4 0 -1 0 0 0 CAPITAL PLAZA I-35 o'CAMERON ML 453-764* P S Y C H O I I I k I 3 0 -3 4 0 -5 5 0 -8 0 0 - 1 u Or ■ BIG T R O U B L E IN L I T T L E C H I N A pen 12 2 6 2 « 4 0 6 7 2 6 * 4 5 RUNNING SCARED * ¡ 00-3 16-5 30-7 46-10 00 ers will surely grow to love. It's wonderful midwestem humor, and the book fills A Prairie Home Companion's void quite well. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn — Remember when you read this in the ninth grade and didn't understand why your teacher thought it was the best thing since the Bible? Try picking up your battered old copy again, but this time savor the wonderful descrip­ tions of the nver, and understand all the implications of Huck and Jim's journey down the river. Er­ nest Hemingway once said "All modem literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called Huc­ kleberry Finn," so more than like­ ly, it's worth a re-read. Goodbye to a River — Another river story, only this time told by a middle-aged John Graves on the Brazos, not the Mississippi. For three weeks Graves floated down the nver in a canoe, accompanied by only a dog and the history of the lonely Texas waters. He shares this history with the readers — a history that includes the stories of the Indians, the stories of the pioneers, and most importantly, the story of the land. Graves has been called one of the greatest Texas writers alive, and Goodbye tc a River stands not only as a Tex­ as classic, but an American classic. Getting Even, Without Feath­ ers, and Side Effects — With all the fuss lately over Woody Allen's movies, it's easy to forget that the short New Yorker is not only a great director and actor, but also a great wnter. Stories like "The Ku- gelmass Episode," (which was the basis for Purple Rose of Cairo) prove Allen can be just as funny in "The print as on the screen. Whore of Mensa" in Without Feathers is another gem, where frustrated husbands pay big bucks for an intellectual conversation floo zies. with horn-rim m ed ("Symbolism's extra," says one bespectacled bimbo.) The list could go on and on, but hey, you've only got a month and a half left, so get reading. If you can't look decent in your bathing suit, at least you can be the most well-read sun bunny at Barton Springs. A U S T I N 6 aT e Tn t k 0 821 THOMPSON OFF 183 1 MILE SO. o* MONTOPOLIS Phone 385-5328 in r ii OPEN 24 HOURS P H Y i i C A L ^ T ^ C T i o N ^ J U S T A N O T H K R P R E T T Y F A C E ( X ! 1 /2 PRICE SPECIALS! TUESDAYS AND SUNDAYS ADULT VIDEO SALES & RENTALS LOW EST PRICES-M AGAZINES VIDEO PEEPS IN A 6 CHANNEL A d e fe n se again st c an ce r can be co o k ed up in y o u r kitchen C all us. i AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY P R E S I D I O T H E A T R E S LAKEHILLS 4 • 444-0652 2428 K N WHITE B A C K SC H O Q í 1:00-3:00 5:15-7:30-10:00 w Ri « Ñ M Q l SCA RED 2:30-5:00-7:45-10:10 S IL L Y C R Y S T A L O R E O O R T NINE S ( i f 41 MA € SI P ,0:00-11 45 , I I f < ¥, ' f 1 30-3:15-5:05-6:4 5-8:30-10:1 “ A b o u t la st n ig h t 12:00-2:30 5 10-8:00-10.30 ac - • Summer Glut dren \rJiim j-téih'od I ¡££§ 1 1:48-1:15-4:30-7:00- I,H(i.\l. L V illv S § ’ ’. i r 2:0? :4 * 5 I H X p _ 7:25-10:00 '/yy. HO, Ú R l t h l e s s P T h x E — - fly H 00-2 00-4 00-6 OO-I 10-1 J 10 P K 7PLE tr%M f818J884^> 8M.1.Y C R Y S T A L A fU N R V V V l G REG O RY H IN E S SCA RED '//A ik 12 2 5 - 2 4 5 - 5 1 0 - 7 3 0 - 9 55 a d v a n c e t i c k e t s m a y b e Pu r c h a s e d AT ANY TIM E D U R IN G T h e b u s i n e s s d a y AT t h e 4 R 8 0 R FOUR a n d L IN C O L N 3 a d u l t s ss 00 CHILDREN S2 75 *2 75 REDUCED PRICE R e d u c e d p n c e s lor fe a tu re s sta rtin g at or b e fo re 6 0 0 p m. w e e k d a y s a n d th e first fe a tu re o n ly o n w e e k e n d s at a.' P re sid io th e a t r e s e x c e p t * t o p e u t r a c t a d r /y l S H O W T I M E S A R E F O R T O D A Y O N L Y I t lw t S H I C H A I V il f M 6 D E T E C T I V E F E R R I S B U E L L £ R * S 3 ’ 2 4 5-3 00 5:15-7:45- 10 O0 Q£j a*.»» I H iA L FlU iLE rS 12:00-2:25-4:45 (D «-• 7:10-t:35 Sa B g Z Z g g g Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z S \\\\\\\\v \\v \\\v \\\\\\\\\\w \\v { Visa/Mastercard Accepted For Word ads call 471-5244/For Display ads call 471-1865/8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitis Ave. Visa/Mastercard Accepted Page 12/The Daily Texan/Tuesday, July 15, 1986 RIAL ESTATE SALES REAL ESTATE SALES MERCHANDISE MERCHANDISE MERCHANDISE 1 3 0 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e s 130 — Condos- Townhouses 200 — Furniture- Household 230 — Photo- Cameras CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Consecutive Day Rates 15 word nrwnum Each word 1 hm* Eoch word 3 time* Eoch word 5 hmes Each word 10 times Each word 15 times Each word 2 0 tm ti 1 col x 1 inch 1 time $ .28 J .774 $ 1.17 $ 1.90 $2.295 $ 2 48 5 6 85 $1 0 0 charge to change copy, first two words may be a# capítol letters 25c for eoch oddihoooi word in capital letters. Mastercard and Visa accepted D E A D LIN E SCH ED U LE M onday Texan Tuesday Texan Wednesday Texan Thursday Texan Wednesday 11am Friday Texan Friday 11am M onday Horn Tuesday llom Thursday llom In th e e v e n t of e rr o rs m ode In an a d v e rtise m en t, n otice m ost b e g iv en b y 11 a.m . th e first d a y , a s th e p u b lish e rs a r e r e ­ sp o n sib le for on ly O N I incor­ rect in sertio n . All claim s for od- lustm ents sh ou ld b e m ode not la te r th a n 3 0 d a y s a fte r pub li­ catio n. P re -p a ld kills re c e iv e credit slip if re q u e ste d a t tim e of c a n c e lla ­ if a m o u n t e x c e e d s tion , a n d $ 2 .0 0 . SHp m ust b e p rese n te d fo r a re o rd e r w ithin 9 0 d a y s to b e valid. Credit slips a r e non - tra n s fe r a b le . C L A S S IF IC A T IO N S T R A N S P O R T A T IO N 10 — Misc. Autos 2 0 — S p o rts-F o re ig n Autos 30 — T ru cks-V an s 4 0 — V eh icles to T rade 5 0 — S e rv ice -R e p a ir 6 0 — P a rts-A cc esso ries 70 — M otorcycles 8 0 — B k y r i e : 9 0 — V eh icle L easin g 100 — V eh icles W anted REAL ESTATE SALES 1 1 0 — Serv ices 120 — H ou ses 130 — C o n d os-T ow n h ou ses 1 4 0 — M obile M om es-Lots ISO — A creag e -L o ts 160 — D u p lexes- A p artm en ts 1 7 0 — W anted 180 — L oan s M E R C H A N D IS E 190 — A pp lian ces 2 0 0 — F u rn itu re-H o u seh old 2 1 0 - S te reo -T V 2 2 0 — C om puters- Equipm ent 2 3 0 — P h o to -C a m e ra s 2 4 0 — B o a ts 2 5 0 — M usical In strum en ts 2 6 0 — H ob bies 2 7 0 — M ach ine ry - Iq u ip m en t 2 8 0 — Sp o rttn g -C am ping Equipm ent 2 9 0 — F u rn itu re-A p p lian ce R ental 3 0 0 — G a ra g e -R u m m ag e S a le s 3 1 0 — T rad e 3 2 0 — W an ted to Buy o r Rent M E R C H A N D IS E 3 3 0 — Pets 3 4 0 — Misc. RENTAL 3 5 0 — R ental S erv ices 3 6 0 — Furn. Apts. 3 7 0 - U n f . Apts 3 8 0 — F u m . D uplexes 3 9 0 — Unf. D uplexes 4 0 0 — C on d os-T ow n h ou ses 4 1 0 — Furn. H ou ses 4 2 0 — Unf. H ou ses 4 2 5 — Room s 4 3 0 — R o o m -B o ard 4 3 5 — C o -op s 4 4 0 — R oom m ates 4 5 0 — M obile H om es-Lots 4 6 0 — B u sin e ss R entals 4 7 0 — R eso rts 4 8 0 — S to ra g e Sp ace 4 9 0 — W anted to R e n t-L ease 5 0 0 - M i s c . A N N O U N C E M E N T S 5 1 0 — E n tertain m en t-T lck ets 5 2 0 — P e rs o n a ls 5 3 0 — T rav el- T ran spo rtatlon 5 4 0 — Lost & Found 5 5 0 — Licensed Child C are 5 6 0 — Public N otice 5 7 0 — M usic-M usiclans E D U C A T IO N A L 5 8 0 — M usical Instruction 5 9 0 — T u torin g 6 0 0 — Instruction W anted 6 1 0 — Misc. Instruction SER V IC E S 6 2 0 — Legal Serv ices 6 3 0 — Com puter S erv ices 6 4 0 — E x term in ato rs 6 5 0 — M ovin g-H aulln g 6 6 0 — S to ra g e 6 7 0 — Pointing SE R V IC E S 6 8 0 - O f f i c e 6 9 0 — R e n ta l Equipm ent 7 0 0 — F u rn itu re R ep air 7 1 0 — A p p lian ce R ep air 7 2 0 — S te re o -T V R ep air 7 3 0 — H om e R ep air 7 4 0 — B icy cle R ep air 7 5 0 — Typing 7 6 0 — Misc. Serv ices E M P L O Y M E N T 7 7 0 — Em ploym ent A g en cies 7 8 0 — Em ploym ent S erv ices 7 9 0 — P a rt tim e 8 0 0 — G e n e r a l H elp W anted 8 1 0 - O ff ic e - C le r ic a l 8 2 0 — A ccou n ting- B o o k k e e p in g 8 3 0 — A dm intstratl ve- M an g e m e n t 8 4 0 — S a le s 8 5 0 — Retail 8 6 0 — E n g in ee rin g - T echnical 8 7 0 — M edical 8 8 0 — P ro fe s s io n a l 8 9 0 — C lubs- R e sta u ra n ts 9 0 0 — D om estic-H ou seh old 9 1 0 — P o sitio n s W onted 9 2 0 — W ork W anted B U S IN E S S 9 3 0 — B u sin e ss O p p ortu n ities 9 4 0 — O p p ortu n ities W anted TSP Building, Room 3.200 2 5 0 0 Whitis M onday through Friday 8am-4:30pm 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION REAL ESTATE SALES 10 — Misc. Autos 10 — Misc. Autos 30 — Trucks-Vans 80 — Bicycles possanc cassette stereo $ 2 9 0 0 Call Sharmyn 4 78-6042, 473-4186 7-28___________ M E N S 21" off brand 10-speed bicycle Good condition seldom used $30 or moke offer 4 6 7 -6 0 3 8 7-16 1985 BLACK B M W 3T8i. four door, mint condition asking $15,600 Talk to Elks. 835-0134 7-14G 1983 CAVALIER S-W auto, AC. PS, PB, A M /FM stereo, 43,000 miles, gold and white, $ 49 9 5 Call Frank 272-5517 7- 15H 1985 B E A U V lll! 8 passenger von, fully looded duo I air, running boards, red and white, 21,000 mdes, $10,595 CaH Frank 272-5517 7-15H_______________ 1981 DA T SU N king cab five speed, AC, PS, A M / FM stereo, camper, $42,000 miles, white Co» Frank 272-5517. 7-15H 10 — Misc. Autos 1984 CUT LASS Ciera, 4-door, automatic, AC, PS, PB, A M / FM stereo, tilt, cruise, 37,000 miles, extra nice, coll Frank 272- 5517 7-15H_________________________ 1984 FORD Mustang, automatic, AC, PS, P8, 25,000 miles, black and silver AM/ FM cassette, coll Frank 272-5517. 7-15H 1972 FORT Thunderbird. Running $500, 8 32-0656 7-16G____________________ 70 — Motorcycles ‘83 H O N D A 750cc Satire for sale. 11.70C miles Asking $1800 must sell, 467-1632 after 6pm 7-16 1983 CUTLASS Cruiser wagon dark blue, fully looded, luggage rock. 31,500 miles, Janice 9am - 5pm 478-7165. 7- 16G________________________________ SOLVE P A RK IN G problems and save money. Like new moped, low mileage Bargain price at $140. Even­ ings phone 452-7358. 7-16 low, 1978 C O U G A R 2-Dr. green, 8 track, very good condition All options. Pnce negotiable 836 -8 6 4 4 7-16G 1982 K A W A SA K I CSR 305. bought new Fall 85, excellent condition, low mile oge, $ 85 0 Coll 476-2013 7-18 '81 CAPRI, block, silver, Pirelli tires, tinted windows, A M /FM cassette sunroof, 4- spd., $ 37 0 0 neg Steve 458-9400. 7-16 85 H O N D A Spree red, excellent condi­ tion, 700 miles, $ 4 5 0 neg 476 -4 2 3 3 7-16________________________________ 1983 D O D G E Colt hatchback, 30,000 miles, great little car. $3000. Excellent condition. 263-5186. 7-17 1979 Y A M A H A Enduro-125, $500/i 1982 Hondo MBS/neg. both in condition 258-7571 7-18C____________ L O S I N G M O N E Y ON TRAFFIC TICKETS!! • Figh tin g Police R a d a rs • K e e p in g in s u r a n c e rates d ow n • Figh tin g tickets to k e ep y o u r license e E x p la n a tio n s o n C o u rt­ ro o m P roced u res e B e n e f i t i n g f r o m e r r o r s In t r a f f i c t i c k e t s M a il nam e, a d d re ss a n d $10 to: Ticket P s M k M e i Ce. P .O B O X 5 0 0 1 2 A u s t in T X 7 8 7 6 3 85 CHRYSLER Le Baron convertí We, tur­ bo, gold, all options, warranty, below book, $10,500, 478-1256, 472 9321 7- 22__________________________________ 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 79 Datsun 210 Wagon. RELIABLE 62,000, AC, cassette, new Pirelli radiáis, dutch, rebuilt corb, $1900, 452-4979. 7-15________________________________ '6 9 BLUE Volvo, good running condition, new tires, $ 5 0 0 neg Co» Susan 458- 8441 7 16 '82 V W Rabbit IS, PS/PB, AC, A M /FM cassette, 4spd, sunroof, sporty, $2995, 339-0909.7-18______________________ 1966 V W Beetle Great running car Bog) Bug styling Makes for fun recreational or street vehicle $375. Co» John 477- 1257.7-21___________________________ 1973 SUPER Beetle, new paint on straight body, new chrome, new rodial tires, ___________ $1200 442-1704 7-17H 1982 M A Z D A RX-7, white, sunroof, A/C, 5-speed, alloys, excellent condition, many extras. 836-6109. 7-18 MUST SELL 2 8 0 2 X clean, great running condition, asking $ 5 7 0 0 neg. 444- 3315 7-16__________________________ 10-YEAR owner offers mechanically ex­ cellent 1975 Saab 99 4-door $ 2 0 0 0 O B O., 476-7252. 7-21 H O N D A FT-500, excellent condition, less thon 5 0 0 0 miles $ 8 5 0 8 35 -9 8 9 5 after 6pm 7 -15 1984 INTERCEPTOR 500 with headers lusted completely tuned great condition $2000neg 4 7 2 -3 3 7 7 Joe 7-15 Y A M A H A 3 5 0 reRobie, excellent condi­ tion, 1500 miles on re-built engine. G ood brakes, tires. $45 0 442-1704 7- 21 80— Bicycles - Y . * * * * * * * * * * * LOWEST PRICES ON QUALITY * MOUNTAIN BIKES, CRUISERS, Z 10-SPEEDS &BMX Mongoose • Diamondbock ^ Cenhinon • Panasonic HELPFUL FRIENDLY SERVICE jL. UT DISCOUNTS South Austin Bicycles ^ * . GiTANE C H A M P IO N 63cm. micro odjust post, quick change front and bock. Soli­ do crank set plus occessones Barely nd- den, $ 2 5 0 Co» 480 9 4 0 9 ask for Bob between 12-6pm. 7-16 TREK R A C IN G Wcyie,19", 560-83 mod- el, excellent condition, barely ndden, $250. needs a good owner. 462-3606. 7-17________________________________ U N IV EG A 10-speed, good condition. 57cm. $100, Craig 458-1854 7-17 l'J81 MIYATA 310, excellent condition block with Blackburn rock, perfect for Cummuting $150. Co» David Philips 480-8343.7-17 GIRL S BIKES. 2 fumnhed C ol 472-8299 onytime doy or reght 7-14 TARRYTOW N 2 50 8 Enfield two story two bedroom, one and two hat* baths, laundry microwave ceiling fora CA/CH, rmmbhnds, covered parking, pool, con­ venient shuttle golf, dow ntow n $99.000 Ow ner 261-6930 7 31D N E W 2 BR 2 BA condo, on 2100 San Gobnet. Close to compus, firopioce. ca i­ ma fon, all appliances $800» month 329-0011 7-24H ______________ . NORTHW EST HILLS, ipoctou» 3 2, shot lie pool, hrapiose top condition, $61,900 Betty 345 8 0 3 0 345 3003 J B G oodwin 8-8 PRICE SLASHED! Owner says se». W e say look for yourself and moke us an offer on this spacious town horn* 343- 6620, Henry S MiHer Realtors 7-25 ROCK O f Gibraltar! This is a we» built 1 0 0 \ bndi home on lovely street This one needs a family 343-6620, Henry S MJler Realtors 7-25 HYDE PARK chormer* Beautifully main­ tained owner occupied 2 bedroom home on quiet street 1 block from Hancock Golf Course 343-6620, Henry S Mile. Realtors 7-25_________________ BUY N O W , move m for fa» semester Luxury condos below market Terry 451-5200. Elkott System, 45! 81?8 7-to 140 — Mobile Homes- Lots 8-; 14’ x 70 3 6R/2 BA mobile home tor sole in University Mobile Home Pork 1984 Fleetwood $ 500 down ond assume pay ments 4 78 -6 3 8 2 7-18________________ 160— Duplexes Apartments B Y O W N E R 2 BR BRICK DUPLEX IN HIGHLAND PARK fenced void, ceding fans ■nee o k M neighborhood own/occupy or rant bath U / «toes 0 4 Ctovid 451-8833 \Sj (k MERCHANDISE 190 — A p p lian ces CARPTT R E M N A N T S avaiobi* Vanom colors and sizes Pnces vory (ram $q $ 1 0 per yard B e r g e n Corpet 37 01 G uoooiupe. 4 7 7 - 7 8 5 7 7 - 2 8 0 _________ FOR SALE, Seon Kenmora stackable washer and dryer SMi unde» warranty like new $ 50 0 ca» 474-4617 7-15 W A SHER A N D dryet Excellent cond. bon $29 5 for the sed Wí» det ver 258- 5214 8-27E R E N T A L 3 6 0 — Furn. A p ts. s n r 1 W E S T C A M P U S 1 & 2 Bdrm. Fur­ nished, Private Parking. Fireplaces, and Sundecks, iMundry Room. Prices Start At $350/Month Call Carroll Marcus at 451-8412 THE 3 0 5 APTS. P re -L e a s in g F o r S u m m e r & Fall 8 6 • 'Lar¿>r ftlitie n cie s • $ ¿ 7 5 + I • Sm all Friendly Com plex • S t ar Shuttle Corner Move In Todav! 4 5 9 - 4 9 7 7 Davis A Asscxiates ’ S * M * t R a t e s e e e e e e e e e e e e e e # G A R D E N G A T E APARTMENTS C O C I ) NOW PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1986 j* ó m V j t S ^ J 5 s'- < v / 4* 4? o * -v' * \ ^ ^ C* M O V E IN T O D A Y L u x u r y 1 B R F u r n is h e d 2222 Rio G rande 176-4992 Oef ¡kftelW ROCA • Nice Pool • Walk To Campus • Across the Street from Tennis Courts Office Open Daily 477-3619 1302 W. 24th (24th and Lamar) T H E ^ r w .i a i i v ^ ^ X a p a r t m e n t s * - J 2124 Burton Drive • Efficiency From $300* » 1 BK Fum From $310* t 2 BR Fum From $400* • Large Pool and Patio • Ceiling Fans & Microwaves Available • 2 Shuttle Routes N O W P R E L E A S I N G F O R F A L L ‘Current M o v e In Rates 444-7880 Davis and Assoc M anagem ent Co. EKTAFtEX PRINT processor, $75 or best offer Exceker* condition Make 5X7 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ and 8X10 color pnnn worn negatives and transparencies Ca# Sharon 451 0 33 7 after 5pm 7-15 3 4 0 — M i s c . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 18th CENTURY STYLE fURNITURE m oil ih beouty! Decorator's show home of­ fer mq bedroom sets of 4 potter beds and all (hot goes with it! Also, contemporary onentaI bedroom suite Dimng and living room sets of exceptional beauty and sovn gs by appointment Delivery available 3 43 -8 3 3 3 7-15L MAPLE D IN IN G table 4 0' round one leaf, $ 7 0 Double bedspraods Solid blue quilted, two toned blue or rad $10 eoch 836-1821. 7-15C________________ GREEN S O f A good condition, $50 Small white desk $10 Hoover corpet sweeper $30 343-1292 7-17________ TOR SALE modem wood desk, formica covered, will sel and deliver for $ 9 0 Great for computer desk 331-1808 458 2605 7-18D_________________________ 7 PIECE Irving room set $ 2 0 0 247 -3 9 0 8 before 1pm ok day Tues., Sat. and Sun 7-18C___________________ MAPLE BUTCHER block table from Store­ house 36X 72 inch beautiful $195 Nat­ ural finish flruer choirs $25 ec 472- 1601 7-18C_________________________ D IN IN G R O O M table and 6 chairs glass ond chrome, good condition, perfect for Itodenh. 7-18E bed offer 288-0796 $ 25 0 or t Q U EE N SIZE extra firm mnenprtng mat­ tress and box springs stik packaged Never used (worth $4501 Selling for $207 Includes delivery cadi only 443- 4712 7-21___________________________ 210 — S te r e o -T V ZENITH 25 console color TV 6 yrs old, excellent condition good color 250, 448-3061 7-15C__________ ____ SHARP STEREO, turntable radio, receiv­ er, tupe deck, two speakers record stond, $ 2 5 0 4 80 -9 3 4 7 goad condMton 7 16______________________ __ STEREO SYSTEM- Sanyo • asset»» deck. 30 waft race.ver, record plover, 8-track recorder 4 way speakers * stand $176 451-0427 7-17_____________________ TW O PIONEER rtPM 100~ speakers he a vy w alnut cabinets w o o fe r, mtorong# tweet*, ana supertweete. wrfh bo lone* control. $135 eoch C a l 467 0 7 7 1 7 4 7 _____________________ A U D IO TECHNtCA comport dec player olmos! new, never out of ban. $275. 258 7617 or 331 893c, 7 S8C 240 — Boats HOBIE 16 sadboct, traitor, Me lockets, $1500 2 5 8 -3 6 0 9 7-18_______________ 2 5 0 - M u s i c a l In str u m e n ts LAB SERIES 5 a m p lOOw 2 12" condition, with oce*sones, $40 0 458 1854 7-17 graai Cram UPRIGHT P IA N O to. sale, $ 40 0 ec Ca» after 6pm 444-5190 7-18 2 70 — M a c h in e r y - E q u ip m e n t Includes o*c workshop ELECTRONICS TEST ope power complete supply, wavegenerato. w orttovti di ghol counter transrtor checker, ond much more including ports For detail» ca# Lhck Smith 454-0491 $500 neg valued or $ 8 0 0 7-17 ______ 280 — S p o r tin g - C a m p in g Equip. B A C K P A C K IN G C A m P'N. geor Twits mots nesc $1 to $150 C a l 452-508C -16 leave messoge A L U M IN U M S O f T B A . r b a h 'tor'' *sale brands Bom ba' Dudtoy Easton and Worth Eight m at tor $ 5 0 258 6791 7 17______________ Spoidtng nctude 2 MIFtY IMndsurfer for sole Great far tieginner or intermediate 1985 model excellent condfltor $ 4 5 0 per C o l Carter « 4 9 9 -8 3 1 4 7 2 5 _________________ 320 — W a n te d to B u y o r R ent I BUY paperback books Romances, to enc* fiction westerns mysteries, W c k 15coa ch 251 350 4 282 954 3 7 15 W A N T E D TO buy -«joe wraer o ivint*. ‘at Moontosh Cat 4 bidé CALL 471*5244 T O 9 L A C E A C L A S S I F I E D A D W A N T E D A M E R IC A N tanvfy far Sand lor three mor4h*. *o 445-4 789 7-18 R E N T A L 3 6 0 — Furn. A p ts. 330 — Pets D O G S RATIWEILER puppies, excellent watch dogs dogs will weigh approx 120tbs $250 Bastrop, 1-321-3684 7 15 W E IG H T BARS ond 130 lbs o f ptosbc werghtsll! $25 Racquetbaf racquet" 1 $8 W ilson tonm s racq ue t!" $10 Coffee m aker11! $7 4 7 7 492 4 7-15 ___ S O N Y C O M P A C T stereo, $50. srt up bench, $12 toble, $10 coffee Stlverstone bakeware cheap sm ok iom - box w/otorm, $25 478 -3 0 6 4 4-10pm 7-17________________________________ N E W S N O W cone shoved ice p arty m o­ chines Tod, 452 1840 $ 35 0 7-18 E LEC T R IC T Y PEW tlTER -O b v e * go o d condtoon used very Mke, $52 D esk col cuiakx, Monroe, good conrhtson lots of fvnchons. $20 452 4176 7-18C R E N T A L 3 5 0 — R enta! S e rv ic e s • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a J Austin Locoting Service • • Ttoraponaeon A prtded • • kp a n m e n Ckjptexet • Condos b Mouses • • Fm service ; ; Open Seven Doys • CALL 459-0228 • a a a B E V O S A Y S : LFT US LOOK FOR YOU FREE APARTMENT & CONDO LOCATOR SER­ VICE CAU FINDERS KFYPERS 447-9955 jitfM ittiM H H H u tH H itn H n ttttn m tm i Home Quest locator i m k r F R E E 454 1 #79 I * U rtM tH v tor A « 1 ñ llii i'iii iii ii iit ll lH Ill ll iil t i ii ill iil il in r L e a s in g N o w Fo r S u m m e r & Fall 1986 MARK XX 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 * 3815 Guadalupe One Bedroom Apartments 2 B e d r o o m 1 B e d r o o m F r o m $ 3 0 0 F r o m $ 3 7 0 * 4 5 9 - 1 6 6 4 _ 'Su m m er Batas 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 III / I < I I I LEASING fO ft SÜMMEF i FALL • 1 BR Fum $3 0 • 2 BR Furn • Walk to ( ar.pu-' • Nice Poo 5 Pat» 2207 Leon 478-1781 R a te * VILLA ARCOS NOW LEASING • Q f t C o m m u & n y • . B d n n s • Front j o c : • h o c . P o o l 9 Laundry Room 476-1619 3301 Speedw ay C o m e By T o d a y 1 C ontinental Living C o n t i n e n t a l A p t s . 910 E. 40th N ear 40th 6 R ed River The Continental Apartments are Close to Campus, Convenient to Employ­ ment, Shopping and Transportation • L a rg e Furnished 2 B ed ro om s • P o o l • C eU ing F an s M o v e In T o d a y 452-4639 t > v T o t ^ a\Y O Y f\Xve o , t v e o \\V*e ^ee\ C P 41 f t - Welcome to Madison House Fall/Spring Rates From $3400 ah included RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 350 Rental Services 360 — Furn. Apts. 3 60 — Fum , Apt». 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Fum . Apts. The Daily Texan/Tuesday, July 1 5 ,1986/Page 13 ic n s c C O N N E C T IO N ! C O N D O S CAMPUS AREA NORTHUJCST HILLS BARTON HILLS 467-2771 RENTAL H O T L IN E Condos • Apartments Houses • Duplexes fre e fin d e r s s e n n e Jo Campus Area s Best Listings C a ll 4 77-5 3 1 2 TIREDOF LOOKING? FREE REN TA L HELP S U M M E R RATES f a i l p r e - l e a s e s 452-5785 dO w* SELECTO 3S Best Apts., Price In W est Campus $ 4 5 5 Month (Summer Rate) N o w Preleasing l BR — S 3 8 5 2 B R — $ 5 8 5 3 B R - $ 7 8 5 fla t »n#y Ramodatod fkaoufrM Pool wrti Fountain — — Fwa Entroncas — — Longa Tonn.ng Grounds — Tnaas — lo u n d ry Room 3'-7 Stocks From Campus — 1 — N a w F u m * » — Sap Studanl M o n o g a r f q.xqpad X k W A B P e x c e p t e fe c tn c ity 1802 West Avenue, 478- 7519 7-150 Best Apts, Pnce In West Campus Now Preleasing ! M $3*5 2 M I 5 8 5 3 M S 7 R S FcxAHmr -Rncn##y 8«mctóukttí Hm Entronen» - AncwliKil R o d Axtrgm ^onnmg Ground» —T im —loundry t o o * jV ? Btocta From Campus -Fj*. Ftjupsxsd KJctian -N a» ‘ m r u n - • a * SludmK AAonopar *A F ax< apt atadncity 1802 W as! Ava«ua 4 7 8 7519 8-28 SANDPIPER APTS 2810 Rio Grande Why Pay Condo Prices For Condo Living? 2 Bdrm/2 BA M Fum. M tc ro w w w Ceding Fans Intone om System BBQ Pit», Pool. Sundeck Covered Parking O nly 3 Biocti From Campus O rtc e Hrs 3 pm-5 pm M-F 2 pm 5 pm Sal 8 Sun CoK 4 7 4 6 6 8 3 , 4 7 7 -4 6 2 2 , or 4 4 4 -2 7 5 0 AVAILABLE IMMfDVkTftY Clear one bed'oom near Lm aruty *007 Avenue C 453 8538 451 5096 8-120 Large 2 Bedroom • Small com plex • W alk to campus • Pool • N ew ty refurbished • $3 70-Summer Rate CAVALIER APARTMENTS 3 0 7 E. 31ST 4 8 0 -9 6 3 9 4 7 4 -7 7 3 2 7-21 3 2 K D AT IH-35 SUMMER RATES EFFICIENCY-$295 1 BEDROOM-S325 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH -$445 Ex*o nca long. «rotk m ciosatv tailing Ions Qmal, homay complax On uto loundry 4 7 6 9 1 9 9 8-60 ONE BLOCK FROM UT 2910 Medical Arts Spooous 2-2 at Summer Ratos A J IB tH s P o s d C o l Star 476 -56 31 7 22 West Campus Savings $ 7 5 off first month's rent when you (xetease for foil by Jufy 30. Spacious 1-1 $ 4 6 5 $495; 2-1»/4, $ 6 6 0 $ 7 0 0 fresh pamt and carpet, microwove, pool and lots of porting Ebert Leasing 3 2 7 7 56 0 CASA DE SALADO APTS. 1 BR furnished, gas 4 water poid, no pets, swimming pool, west of campus, near shuttle Summer rotes available Lease required, apply in person 2610 and 2612 Salado St., resident mana­ ger apt # 1 1 2 ,4 7 7 -2 5 3 4 ____________________________ 7-30 HYDE PARK 2 BDRM $36 0 fioov p io r w ith Summar rola, $ 4 6 0 f o l («tarting: O pan. spo longa room» Sma* a o m tn an dF y com ptax w if i Hyda P o r t c h a r m C losa to e a ig ftb o rto o d s h o p p y pool ports, goIf, a ty a n d U1 «hurta post o rtc a , A m ora 8u4l r bookihatvas daskx fo u r dcnats C o l l u now. 458-9809, o r 451 2747 /-2 5 Second Summer Session Special 2 /2 , microwaves, ceding fans, inter­ com system, pool, covered porkiog 3 blocks from campus Sandpiper Apartments 2810 Rio Grande 477-4622 or 474-6683 N o Reasonable O ffer Refused 7-15 Best 2-2 in West Campus 1, 2, 3 Bedrooms Storting at $ 3 8 5 i wih Founftan -Gargn ?an»wig G rounds “-ioundry toon* 3^3 Btocto Ero#*» Comput -~Ew*Y Equipped K*chm n —■New Fum tfur* 7 22D $ 3 0 0 D epot*. AJM* except eiecfncity 1602 W e rt Avenue 4 7 » - 7519 S-26 io n W. 25th O ne Block From Shuttle Efficiency, Duplex, Partially Furnished Gas and W ater Paid Agent 451-8271 _____________ 8-AT) CENTRAL, N £ A l cotnput, one bedroom $250 Htiowioei $2X5 N»c« d w a ^rmNty pointed and rtody for mov# m Coi Woyfm, 462-9514 7-170 $ 2 9 5 $100 Deposit Summer Rates F o u n ta r Jervoce Apartm ents Large one bedroom aportments, walk ?' 7 3f RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. T U c C fo o v - C ie e té " rfc C id A fx ir tn te H ti L E A S I N G F O R S U M M E R & F A L L 1 9 8 6 1 n f u r n i s h e d a n d F u r n i s h e d L a r g e A p a r t m e n t s 1 B e d rtx im F rom $ 3 1 0 2 B e d ro o m 1 BA F rom $ 3 5 0 2 B e d ro o m 2 BA F rom $ 3 7 0 • Sttirwwrf K a lr» • 2 Pool* • Baiconie* • View Apt». • Shuttle Stop • Microwave» & Ceiling Fans Available 1 9 1 1 W illo w c re ek Davis & Assoc Management Co. 4 4 4 0 0 1 0 4 4 4 0 0 1 4 RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. GREAT SUMMER RATES M O V E IN T O D A Y ! Pre-Leasing For Fall El Campo 305 W 39É Sl^et LaPaz 401 W 3Stli St El Dorado Furnished I Bdrm 1 Ba 2 Bdrm 1 Ba 3 Bdrm 2 Ba CASBAH APARTMENTS 2 20 0 SAN GABRIEL Condo living at Apt pnce», luxury, «pace, convenience (wot! or shuttle) Spacious 2-2 with ceiling fans, mi­ crowave, intercom, BBQ prh and 2 separate entnei NOW LEASING 2ND SESSION $500 OTHER DEALS FOR SUMMER AND FALL CONTRACTS 4 7 3 -8 5 5 3 4 4 4 -2 7 5 0 * * * * * * * • * # • * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * +*-«*# 7-15D Summer Special 108 Place F u rn is h e d E F fic ie n c ie s /$ 2 6 5 • dishwashers/disposals • sw im m ing p o o l • p a h o /lo u n g e /B B Q g n ll • individuo! storage • boo kshelves • • lo u n d ry fa cilities • reside nt m a n o g e r ' i block to IF shuttle ALL BILLS PAID Summer Rates Efficiency $ 2 7 0 O ne Bedroom $ 3 6 0 Sm. Two Bedroom $ 3 8 0 Lrg. Three Bedroom $ 7 5 0 C A/CH , W alk or Shuttle to U T 2212 San Gabriel O ffice Hours 12 3 0 -5 3 0 Also pre-leostng fo r Fall 8-1 $ 23 0 + E. Summer Rate W e are looking fo r quiet conscien­ tious, nonsmoking students interested in a large efficiency Two locations: H yde P rt o r near campus. CA/CH, laundry, deodboh, no pets. 4 5 8 -2 4 88 7-18 $295 $1 0 0 Deposit S u m m e r R ates Free M o n th Rent O n Year tease 452-1419 if no answer, 453-2771 108 W 45th St 7-150 SALADO APTS. 270 4 Salado O n ly 1 le ft, fu 8 y fu rn is h e d , 2 - 2 w ith fir e p la c e , m ic r o w a v e , c e il­ in g fa n , s e c u rity in te rc o m system . 3 b lo c k s f r o m UT c a m p u s 4 7 7 -4 6 2 2 , 4 4 4 -2 7 5 0 , 4 7 4 -6 6 3 8 FO U N TA IN TERRACE APTS. Large 1 bedroom aportments walk-in dosets. carpeted drapes, disposal, ceftng fans, large patio and pool Wator/gas paid. 610 West 30th Monagen apartment #134. Wafting distonce to UT 4 7 7 - 8 8 5 8 __________________________ 7J3 302 W. 38th S u m m e r/F a ll le a s in g . E ffic ie n c y , 1 BR, 2 BR C o n v e n ie n tly lo c a t ­ e d . F u rn is h e d /u n fu rn is h e d All a p p lia n c e s , p o o l, h a lf a b lo c k to shuttle. G a s /w a te r p a id , g. 7 7-25 453-4002 RENTAL 3 7 0 - U n f . Apts. J U S T C O M P L E T E D ! ! CLOSE TO CAMPUS/SHUTTLE BUS M O V E - I N S P E C IA L S M w i ' n m i e w m s T M e M i i • Seme ster leases • 2 0 % Summer discount • \0% Student discount • Stortng at $ 3 6 0 'month • 5 6 2 to 9 0 6 Square Feet • lorge W aft-.n Closets • laundry Room' e Jacuzzi Spo • Secunty Petroled \ i ' / ■ A A P T S . 2 4 0 8 M a n o r R d . 478-0955 NEAR UT Law School on RR iht/lie Fur- ntshad room for rant CA/CH, share baths $195 ABP 3310 Red River 4 76 3634. 7-23 2204 Enfield Rd 2 B e r t w i T i 2202 bath $445 plus electricity Nicely fur­ nished pool, laundry and quiet On ER shunte Available August 1 Call owner 477-1303 258 5065 7-160________ porting, WALK TO doss 2BR IRA water 9 0 s poid, new carpe* new appliance large closets, 40h covered pool. Lo Casita Apts 2900 Coke 482 9154 8-29_________________ _ TARRYTOWN. 16R studio and efficiency surrounded by trees, convenient UT/ downtown/Mopoc, no pets $270/$375 478-9767 453-6673 8 6 ___________ SUMMER RATES, waft to compos, city and shuttle bus, large efficiency, also renting for Fol. M ourn Kcx Apts 472 2147.7 -18 EFFICIENCY, CLOSE heoting/cookmg/centrol air S2 6 0 mo + E Summer rate 477-4005 (after 5 30 or weekends) 8 - 6 to compus, gas WEST AUSTIN - Lorge dean, efficiency New Carpet point and ceiling fans $275, etas and water poid Near shuttle No pets 1115 W 10th 476 714 5 480 9546 7-25C UT WA JC, efficiencies 1, 2 and 3 bed­ room units remodeled and furnished ABP Chaporosa Apts 3110 Red River 474 1902 8 29____________________ ACROSS FROM UT, student efficiency $190; large I BR furnished apt summer $280 fd i $320 500 Elmwood Ploce 345-1552.7 21_____________________ NEAR UT.smai efficiency cottage off pa ho. utilities poid, gradual# student AC, E 35, 472-1282 7-21________________ 2709 MANOR Rd Nice efficiency Close ( r,' r Rq’l ’qWy hjr^.g salon • Exercise room expansion O N E r M O N T H I X l 5 6 0 S q . F t. F R E E t l L l j -i 2X2 985 Sq. Ft. Ideal Roommate Plan V H I a g e O l e n Se Habla Esponol WirSprechen Deutsch Nokakoinhndi rtg Ptltptno 447-4130 2101 BURTON DR. M-F 8-6, SAT 9-5 SUN 12-5 • I is 1 vi • y< >ut c n jii s t ( cist o f th<* La M a n s io n H o tel! • id e a l lo r < a m p u s p r o ie s s i o r u i ls a n d n t a t m e s t u d e n t s l u d e < i [ h » r k l i k e s e t t i n g , y e t c l o s e t o s t x j p p i n g , d n i n g , a t x 1 t f i o a t t t e s • s < i « • ( in e a n d tw o In «ir< k >r 11 a p a rtm e n ts p lu s o u r exx itin g C a lifo r n ia s t v lr one* b e d ro o m lo ft. • 1 i g h t e d t e n n i s < o u r t s a n d s ^ > a r k l i n g j x x ) l T h é V i l l a s ▼ o f L i i C o s t a 4 5 4 - 5 6 3 8 1016 C a m in o LaC osta OFFICE HOURS: Mon. - Fri. 9-7 Sat. 10-6 Sun. 1-6 RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. CARRIAGE HOUSE SPECIAL RATE One bedroom Two brckixvm four botikvHjMrm frtendh *ruM%§(femer*i f *S i m»ir e*vt on tivwudr t« V *Me> 1 bftux k sooth to th* Hooie 2*#4 I V * # r r t Vallen 4 4 2 - 1 2 9 8 v m n » n n t C Vi PRICE — CLOSE T O UT - O N SHUHLES CALL CAROL 499-8055 CIRCLE OAK X APARTMENTS Central Locmon Gmwrarnl to Fftghiand MaR and Mafor Thuratar*» • S « a lc < w # ln a t h t o f t a Lrthng Emm • Vaufcrd Ccfttop ft Firegiacn a 1 ft 2 Brtrm SUMttM Al $3306 $4S 459 1995^ Break Away From The Ordinary Enjoy G>ndo Luxury At Affordable Prices. S p r in g . T h e r e 's n o buffer rim e m lea ve b e h i n d rbe m u n d a n e a n d heyin n » en joy th e pi ice \**u call hi>me. I ike t h e larye n\\ im n u n y ps x>|, hot tub, v . a n d t a n n i n g deck s. S p a c k m s floor- plan-» with n ew l\ r e n o v a te d interio rs. L o a d s ot k x > k c a se s, closers, a n d i ahinetpy A n d lo c a t io n s rh ir are close to c a m p u s , p o p u la r re sta u ran ts, ,hc^»ping, a n d sh u ttle bus - ^ ' isn't it rim e \ o u set yourself ar *rr tnu n rhe pack C a l l us todav tor details. LJm m v ilia A p a r t m e n t s in H v d e P irk 4 Í 0 S H u va l A u s t i n , T e x a s 7 ^ 7 ^I 4si I I I I i 1 H N Apartments in W es( Campus 2 M 0 s a la d o A u s t i n , T e x a s 7 S 7 0 S 4 7 2 - i M d Fri in tin m ili, nun I tut kin Pr« ip»rr n s The Wildwood “Be as special to you rself as you are to u s ” Furnished or unfurnished luxury 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments from $325-550 *N o a p p lic a t io n f e e s • W asher/dryer connections • W alking/jogging trail • Security pcrtroi/professional on site m anagem ent • Fireplaces • Swimming pool/jacuzzi • Clubhouse/Laundry Room • C onvenient to shuttle and shopping • TAA Member We have various floor plans, with one especially for you... 4 5 9 - 6 5 5 7 7610 Cameron Rd. o m tC H M w in f I } r * P a g e 14/T he Daily T ex a n /T u esd a y , July 15, 1 9 8 6 R1NTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. Small, very clean com plex near IH-35, 51st. walk to CR Shuttle, Capitol Plaza Shopping 1-1, only $315; 2-1, just $ 3 65 ($85 o ff in summer). Prelease also. Fast response to maintenance requests 1200 E. 52nd (one block o ff Cameron Rd.) 48 0- 9191. 7-16 $250/5325 W alk to UT. Renovated efficien­ cy. O ne block to Law school. Two ceiling fans. Laundry facili­ ty. Small complex. D o u g 459 -9095. 4 8 0 - 8 2 7 3 / 7-31 SUMMER RATE SPECIAL! Casa D« Barcelona Apartments Efficiencies, 1, 2 & 3 bedrooms, UT shuttle Minutes from BAFB. Conven­ ient to shopping. Community pool, club room/foundry On-srte manage­ ment. 2201 Elmont Drive. 4 4 4 -2 4 6 8 . ______________________________ ehTB RENTS REDUCED Call A UT Specialist For efficiencies, apts., c o n d o s , a n d houses. * Comanche Apts. * Leasing for Fall-Spnng semester one bedrooms (a 300-310 W ater and gas paid From $310-$1300 H o w e ll Properties 4 7 7 -9 9 2 5 Call Frank (a 479- 7 -1 5 D 8-15 0 928 ONE MONTH FREE TW O MINUTES from Zilker Park, newly renovated ap art­ ments starting at $2 95; 2 BR/1 BA, $ 3 95. Come by Barton Ridge Apartments at 1501 Ken­ ney Ave. o r call 4 4 7 -7 5 2 5 . 8-11B Pre-Leasing N o w For Fall Large efficiencies, quiet Hyde Park, close to UT, pool, gas and w ater paid, sunny, nice, good study environment. 4310 Ave. B, 4 5 8 -8 8 9 3 . ____________________________________ 7 .1 8 N O R T H C E N T R A L n e o r 51st S treet 1BA Living, d in in g , kitch e n c o m b in a tio n w ith A C a n d h e a t A ll a p p lia n c e s 5 0 1 0 B Evans $ 3 3 5 + E. C o ll 2 5 8 - 2 8 3 8 o r a t te r 5 :0 0 p m 2 5 8 - 8 1 9 9 7 3 0 IBP W EST UT S u m m e r rates. O ld e r, sm all 1BR asn d 2BR a p a rtm e n ts . H a rd w o o d flo o rs . $ 3 5 0 - $ 4 5 0 * utilities. H o w e ll P ro p e r­ ties. 4 7 7 - 9 9 2 5 . 7 3 0 THE BROOK OF TRAVIS HEIGHTS Nestled among the lush trees of Travis Heights you'll find easy access to IH-35, w e're on the UT shuttle, convenient to hike/bike trails, and 6th Street. W e offer aerobics, jazzercize and swim- nastics classes. If seeking tran quility in the city, come live with us. 1, 2, and 3 bedroom ap art­ ment homes and duplexes avail­ able now. Come talk to us about our move-in specials. 4 4 4 - 24 86. ____________________________________7-22_ Are You W orth Your Weight? A t N o rw o o d A partm ent Homes you ore Lease one o f o u r apartm ents and y our first month's rent is equal to your w eight (f you lease w ithin 2 4 hrv o f your first visit you w ill get an ad d itio n a l $100 o ff your first month's rent C ali 451-1917 o r com e by 5 6 0 6 N. Lam ar fo r m ore inform ation 7-25D RENTAL 3 7 0 - U n f . Apts. 20'r SUMMER DISCOUNTS NOW PRELEASING FOR FALL SAGEBRUSH ONE BEDROOMS START AT $285 LARGE POOL AND SU N DECK SPACIOUS APARTM ENTS CLOSE TO CC SHUTTLE CLEAN LAUNDRY ROOMS 478-0992 2604 MANOR ROAD FREE RENT FOR ONE MONTH FR O M $295 Efficiencies and 1-1's available offenng: • Large, roomy floorplan • Lots of storage • Gas and hot water paid • Close to UT and IF shuttle • Private • Wrought iron gates • Ceiling fans 7»S 2S72 4400 Avenue A 458-1985 Griffith Property M anagem ent EFF. & 1 -2-3-4 BDRM APARTMENTS Starting At $295 ALL BILLS PAID 5 M in . To D o w n to w n FurVUnf. Shuttle Bus Modem M ic ro w a v e s Lofts W /F a n s Spacious Riverside OHorf 4 4 4 - 7 5 3 6 POINTSOUTH-BKIDGIHOILOHI/ Rental Office: 19 10 W illo w c re e k 2 - 2's reduced/1010 sq ft 1-1's reduced/715 sq. ft W ere $ 4 5 0 , now $ 3 4 6 * W ere $ 3 7 0 , now $ 2 8 6 * *Lim#ted to 20 units. (O ther size units reduced) Gourtfand I & II 1200 Broadm oor 4 5 4 -2 5 3 7 4 5 4 -2 5 3 8 _________________ 7-31 WOODCREEKAPTS 837-5556 8600 N. Lamar Preleasing For Summer & FaN Luxury oportm ont» conveniently located in (tie he a rt o f north Austin Just minutes aw ay fro m a ll m aior freew ays S TUDIO FLATS — $ 1 9 9 -$ 2 9 5 1 BEDR O O M S — $ 2 7 5 $ 3 3 5 2 BEDROOMS - $350 $405 $365-$415 7 -2 1 D ______________________________ Town Lake Village Apts, 1201 Tinnm Ford, 444-3411. Beat the back to school rush. Prelease now and choose your color scheme. Come see our models. All new interior. 2-1, 3-1 Vi, and 2-1V? flats and T.H.s. Starting at $415 + Electricity. Large pool, shuttle stop, close to shopping and security gate. Open Sun­ days, 1-5. 8-7 Tw o Bedroom Tow nhom es on Infield Shuttle across the street, gos & water paid. Swimming pool and laundry fa­ cilities. Move-in special — $ 4 0 0 per month through October then increas­ es to $42 5. _________________________7-24D 288-5451 ONE MO. FREE with 7 m o . lease O N SHUTTLE. Pre-lease for fall, quiet mature community ideal for students. G as/w ater paid Spanish Troce Apts., 452 6 0 4 7 . 1212 Westheimer, Austin 7 8 7 5 2 8-15 WALK TO campus. One bedroom apart­ ment. Pool, laundry room, water-gas paid Summer rcrte $295. B & G Prop ertm. 459-0156. 7-18 BARGAIN, WEST campus, 1 BR small, quiet complex, 2508 Son GobheL pool, bundry Summer $260. foil $315 - bills Call Sid. 478-3518 7-15 370 — Unf. Apts. 1 T r e s t l e s i 2 A p a rtm e n t* — ; — — 1 a n d 2 B e d ro o m s o n S h u ttle Bus R o u te CALL TOD AY 4 5 3 - 4 9 6 8 1071 C la y to n Lan e z Horn P r o - lo o tin g fo t f o i l — TI 11 ■ 11111111111111 ii 1111111111111 • 1111117. 400 — Condos* Townhouses Leasing For Fall • Furnished • Great Location • W a lk to Campus • Adi Kitchen Appliances • Microw ave • B uilt-in desks • W asher & D ryer • Covered Parking Cornerstone Place 2 4 th & R io Grande Call 4 S 0 -0 0 6 5 Ed Padgett, Co. 370 — Unf. Apts. % Racquet Club/Creekhaus Apartments RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 390 — Unf. Dupltxss 390 — Unf. Duplex»» 400 — Condos- UT W A L K , « fh c io n c y m 1 9 2 0 » 4 - p le x $3 1 5 , 9 0 6 W 2 2 , 4 7 2 -2 1 2 3 7 - 2 5 1 BR a n d e fh c w n c iM . UT shuttle bus. 3 5 th a n d S p e e d w a y a re a . $ 2 7 5 - $ 3 5 0 4 5 8 - 8 7 4 0 , 4 8 2 - 9 3 0 5 7-16 C A M P U S & c a p íto l close, fa m ily e n v ir o n ­ m ent, 2 c o u rty a rd s P o o ls id e w ith h e a t­ e d spa a n d re c re a tio n r o o m . S e cu rity c o m p le x a n d cto m m y o p tio n a l 2 b d rm s $ 3 5 0 , 1 b d rm s $ 2 9 5 N o gim m icks, iu it lo c a tio n a n d volue, 4 7 6 - 5 8 7 5 . 7-31 T H U N D E rI J rcT a PA R TM E N TS V a c a n c y , re a d y $ 2 3 5 1 BRs From $ 2 7 5 . O n D u v a l n e a r 4 5 th C o m e b y ! C o ll 4 5 1 -1 2 4 4 7 - 2 9 in E fficie n cie s fo m o v e fr o m 5 >CH A D E A LI E fficiency o p a rtm e n ts o n 3 8 t h a n d b e t w e e n G u a d a l u p e S p e e d w a y $ 2 3 5 /m o . N ic e C le a n . C a ll 4 5 8 -4 5 1 9 , S e q u o ia A p a rtm e n ts . Y o u c o n m o v e m to d a y . 7 - 2 9 W EST A U S T IN -6 1 5 U ps on, n e a r shuttle, g o lf course, a n d riv e r D ish w a sh e r, r e ­ fr ig e r a to r , d is p o s a l. F u r n is h e d /u n fu r ­ nished, n e w c a rp e t a n d p a in t, q u ie t cre e k sid e e ffic ie n c y $ 2 8 0 . 3 4 6 - 9 5 5 7 7 - 15___________________________ 7 M O N T H S re n t tre e fo r 6 / m o n th lease 2 B drm o n ly $ 3 5 0 , 5 6 /p o o l, h e a te d spa, p o o L 'ta b le , o p e n 9 a m - 9 pm , b y a p p t w e II s h o w o u r u n iq u e a p ts Ask fo r Judy, 4 7 2 - 4 8 1 6 . 7 -3 1 ___________ S P A C IO U S C O O L p o o l 5 /m m u te s fro m cam pus, 2 B d rm o n ly $ 3 2 5 , 5 0 ' p o o l, spa, p o o i/to b le , vo lle y b a ll, d o th m g o p ­ t io n a l a v o ii n o w S em e re a s o n a b le ra te o il y e a r 4 7 6 - 5 8 7 5 7-31 C EN TR AL L O C A T IO N C le a n h im ,s h e d a n d u n fu rn is h e d e ffic ie n c ie s c o m p le x . A p p lia n c e s , c a rp e l tresh p a in t, d ra p e s , c o v e re d p a rk in g O n shuttle W a te r p a id . $ 2 2 5 . V ,sta P ro p e rtie s 4 7 5 2 - 3 4 5 3 8-1______________________ im a fl in 3 4 3 1 N O R T H H ills D r , p re tty , 3 -2 , f ir e ­ p la c e , 1 2 5 0 ”, p o o l, $ 6 4 5 ; $ 6 9 0 , utilities p a id S huttle B o b Block, 4 51-5711 8 1 W EST SIXTH S treet C o s m o p o lita n 1 BR/1 shuttle, B A in h e a rt o f A ustin W o lk to restaurants, s h o p p in g W a te r p a id $ 3 3 5 ,' m o n th . C a ll D io n o 3 2 7 - 4 1 9 2 , 9 -6 , o r O th e 9 2 6 - 4 2 0 2 S a turdays, 9 2 7 -2 2 G R A D U A T E STU DEN T c o m p le x . M S d e a n , q u ie t b e a u tifu i p a rk d o s e 1-1 $ 3 3 0 , 2-1, $ 4 5 0 ; 8 0 9 W i n f b 4 9 9 8 0 5 5 8 -5 UT W A L K . G a rre tt A p a rtm e n ts , a p a r t­ m ent in V ic to ria n house, $ 3 7 5 1 9 0 3 N ueces, 4 7 2 - 2 1 2 3 8 - 5 CLOSE T O UT, 1-1 c o n d o , $ 3 4 5 . C A /C H , re frig e r a to r, c o v e re d p a rk in g d ish w a sh e r, # 1 0 5 R alph Louis P ro p e rty M n g t 4 5 8 6 7 5 7 8 - 6 ___________________________ stove, 3 4 0 0 S p e e d w a y A V A ILA B LE S M A LL e ffic ie n c y c o tt a g e , ca n y o n , p h e r $ 2 5 0 , 4 4 1 - 0 6 4 6 7 -1 6 in sto n e o v e r lo o k i n g n e a r C oliseum , 8 0 2 C h n s to - p a t i o h u g e a p a rtm e n t, M O N T H FREE w ith o n e - y e a r lea se O n e b e d r o o m sum m er; $ 3 1 5 M L + e le c tric ity 3 0 4 E 3 3 r d (n e a r S p e e d w a y a n d 3 3 r d ). See n u m b e r 18 n o p ets 4 7 9 - 6 3 3 1 8 - 6 $ 2 7 5 W EST 2 6 th St C risp, ro o m e v e ffic ie n c y Sit d o w n kitch e n c irc a 1 9 5 0 P o o l o n d b u n d r y B ike rock, lim ite d a u to p a rk in g , re n t $ 2 2 5 a n d $ 2 6 5 D e p o s it $ 2 5 0 P re-lease O K 1 0 % d is c o u n t o n 9 m o n th lease 1 5 % d is c o u n t o n 12 m o n th le a se Jock Jennings, 4 7 4 - 6 8 9 7 , C o n s o lid a te d R e a lly 8 -1 5 In tra m u ra l F ie ld I b lo c k a w a y , 1-1 UT, 4 0 5 B Z e n n ia , $ 2 9 5 , 4 5 2 1188 3 2 7 - 3 4 0 0 8 -2 9 L ___________________________ 2-1 V i, c e ilin g b n , p a tio , fire p lo c e , 8 0 0 S outh 1st, m id $ 4 0 0 s , 4 4 8 - 0 2 9 5 tim e 7 -2 3 a n y B R A N D N E W e ffic ie n c y a p a rtm e n ts m the h e a rt o f w est ca m p u s C o n ta c t Jo h n Pettit, J B G o o d w in a t 8 3 7 - 7 8 8 0 8 8 19 3 0 'S LAR G E 2-1, n e o r L a w S ch o o l, o a k flo o rs , trees, c e ilin g b n s o n d A C , 501 4 7 2 -2 1 ~ ~ H a m s, $ 6 2 5 , 212 3 8 - 2 9 E fficiency, p riv a te e n tra n c e deck, A C , a p p lia n c e s $ 2 7 0 - d e p o s it 4 6 7 - 9 9 3 2 7-15 n o pets, a v a ila b le 7 /2 1 SPECTACULAR SPECIAL, g re a t 2-1 m H y d e Park, c o rp e t, p o o l b u n d r y , o n ly $ 3 5 0 f o r sum m er C o ll P etn ck o n d D e o - m an 4 5 8 -1 6 3 4 8 8 Interests, 3 2 8 -4 0 4 1 o r m a n a g e r S H O A L C R E E K /S eton 2 Ü R T q u « t n e ig h b o r h o o d , d ish w a sh e r, n e w c o rp e t $ 3 9 5 - E , 4 5 2 - 2 4 0 1 , 4 5 9 0 0 4 0 7-18 UT W A L K - E fficie n cy m 1 9 2 0 's 4 -p le x , $ 3 5 0 , 9 0 6 W 2 2 , 4 7 2 - 2 1 2 3 8 2 9 c a rp e t o n d c e ilin g la rg e d e a n e ffic ie n c y , W EST A U S T IN , new p a in t $ 2 9 5 , g a v w a te r p a id , n e o r shuttle no p e t» 1115 W 10th, 4 8 0 - 9 5 4 6 7 1 4 5 .7 - 2 5 fo n t 4 7 6 - PRIVATE AND q u ie t on g re e n b e lt o n d c re e k S e to n a r e a 3 choices, 2 - Is Eoch is u n iq u e , $ 5 2 5 , $ 5 3 5 , $ 5 6 5 4 7 7 - 9 0 9 0 7-18______________________ UT W A L K 2-1 m 1920s 4 -p le x , ce ilin g fans, w o o d flo o rs , h ig h ceilings, 9 0 4 W 22, $ 4 9 5 , 4 7 2 - 2 1 2 3 8 29 ______________ b M O N T H 'S RENT FREE L aroe 1-ls n e a r re m o d ­ RR shuttle Sm all, q u ie t, n e w fy e le d c o m p le x n o w p re te o sin q $ 315, 4 6 7 6 5 0 8 7-31 kitchen, LARGE EFFIC IEN C Y w a lk m closets, d o s e to IF shuttle, call D e b b ie a n d ask h e r a b o u t h e r m o v e m sp e cia l 4 5 3 - 5 7 3 7 8-11 buitt in A V A IL A B L E A u a 1. L a rg e u n fu rn is h e d e f fic ie n c y m C b rk s v tlle Fresh p o in t e n d new carpeting, a b t o bills 4 7 8 3 7 3 4 7-18 a b t o t lig h t $ 2 7 5 /m o . t- 380 — Furn. Duplexes N E A R L A W S c h o o l. 2 1 C A /C H C e ilin g fans. S m a ll b a c k y a r d C a rp e t $ 5 7 5 / m o n th 3 4 5 - 9 4 4 2 . 7 - 1 8 390 — Unf. Duplexes D O N ' T R I N T I BUY THIS A ffo rd a b le 2-1 Back Duplex. Fenced Yard. Ceding Fans. N ice O ld e r N e ig h b o rh o o d 5019 H igh­ land Q . D ow d 4 5 1 -8 8 3 3 y The Best!! South duplexes, ideal for grod sfu- dentsll Shuttle two blocks, pets okay Quiet Trees Roommate floor plans 2 /2 ’/9, as low as $61811 W on't test long Coll Alan, 45 1 -2 2 4 2 7-15 RE/MAX Capitol S P A C IO U S C L E A N ^ id e r 2 1 D m m g r o o m P o r c h e s W / D c o n n e c tio n A C * O n M S shuttle 1 8 0 4 W 6 th a t M o p o c $ 6 0 0 9 2 6 - 1 9 9 9 7 28 F i r e p la c e RENTAL 4 0 0 — C o n d o s -T o w n h o u s e s SUPER CLEAN UNIVERSITY AREA 404 FRANKLIN A UNIT 3-1 C ACH W .'O connections, new oppkoncet, including dishwasher covered poho and parking. Me both, mce maintained yord. available n o w — $ 5 9 5 B U N IT —3 -2 CACH, W /D connections, all new unit, huge w aA -m dosel, larg e master bedroom w ee with private bath & cerfmg fan, fireplace large patio and boefcyord, covered p o rtin g A variable July 1— $ 6 7 5 Prefer m om ed couples o r g radúale students 1 ye o r lease N O PETS 4 5 4 3 2 5 0 ________________________________ 7 - 2 5 Focutty/graduate students: 2-2 duplex located |ust 4 blocks north of the Uni­ versity AM brick with n .any windows ond backyard W ood floors through­ out, fireplace CA /C H Large master bedroom ond separate dining orea. 9 block to shuttle or park. 2 adults or couple only. For appointment cad Hugh ot 472-9154. ____________7-18 P R E -LE A S IN G fo r ro o m m a te s . 2 - 2 ’ 2 Shuttle r o u te n e o r R yon investm ents, 3 2 7 - 8 7 9 9 7 -1 6 f o r M l G r e a t p fo n 1 9 4 0 's 2-1 o n q u ie t d re e t yord, flo o rs fo rg e w in d o w s . $ 4 8 0 1 3 0 7 w o o d 4 7 2 -2 1 2 3 8 4 oak Kirk CLARKSVILLE A R E A 1 9 4 0 's 2-1. C A /C H upstairs, C o p tto i 1 2 0 9 W in d s o r, 4 7 2 - 2 1 2 3 8 4 _________ v ie w , $ 5 5 0 , LARGE 1-1 g a r a g e a p a rtm e n t, b e a u tifu l, re s to re d 2 b lo c k s fro m UT L o w S chool, c e d in g fons W /D , $ 4 0 0 / m o 4 5 4 - 6 7 4 4 h o m e 3 2 7 o ffic e , 3 2 9 - 4 2 0 3 o ffic e 5 7 6 7 7 18 arae, qu I floors. m 4 -p le x , h a r d w o o d flo o rs, a p p lia n c e s ra c k p a tio g os o n d w a te r p a id $ 2 7 5 . V ista P ro p e rtie s 4 7 2 - 3 4 5 3 8-1 T A R R Y T O W N T u X U R v 2-2 (o r th ir d b e d r o o m ) L arge deck, ce ilin g to n s m ic ro w a v e fe o c e d y a rd O n ER shuttle ;N e o r L ake A ustin) 3711 M e re d ttfi 4 8 0 -9 1 9 1 7-1 5 f i u i study R E M O D E LE D H YD E Pork 3 2 n e o r 45th- G w o d a b p e Q u ie t lo c a tio n , tots o f w in ­ d o w s $ 6 7 5 4 8 0 -9 1 9 1 7 15 NORTHWEST HILLS Beautifui 3-2, 2 -s to r y N e a r M u rc h is o n F ire p la c e 6911 A Thom c k ffo , $ 8 9 5 4 5 2 -1 9 3 8 8 - 2 6 D stove, T A R R Y T O W N 2 /2 , study $ 6 7 5 , C A /C H , fir e p b c e re fr ig e ra to r, W /D , d ish w a sh e r, c e ilin g fons, 2 4 0 9 A S h a ro n R a lp h Louis P ro p e rty M n g t 4 5 8 - 6 7 5 7 . 8 - 6 2 BR/1 BA + lo ft study o r th ird b e d ro o m P riv a c y fe n c e d b o c k y o rd O n e - c a r g o fir e p b c e , W /D h o o k ups, $ 4 8 0 / ra g e , 9 5 0 9 - m o . Free M o n th 's rent a v o ilo b te B A b e rd e e n W a y 2 5 9 - 0 5 6 8 , 3 2 7 - 3 5 0 2 7 -2 3 ____________ 4 7 4 - 2 3 6 3 2-1 o n shuttle, cu l-de -soc n e a r R n a g a n H ig h potso a n d fe n c e d b o c k y o rd C o v ­ e re d p a rk in g , A C , W /D ; ceding fo n , $ 3 7 5 2 6 3 2 8 7 9 e ve n in g s 7-17 N E A R UT, shuttle, b e o u tifu l 2-1 lu x u ry d o P*ex. C A /C H , n e w carp e t, fire p la c e cex­ p o rt, W /D co n n e c tio n s , p o h o secluded b e o u tifu l tre e s 1 8 4 7 - 5 4 2 0 , 6 1 6 0 N o pets $ 5 0 0 7 -2 4 ( 8 0 5 ) 2 5 8 1 2 0 7 LO R R A IN E (o ff E nfie ld ) L o rg e 2-1 upstairs, h o r d w o o d flo o rs $ 5 0 0 IGrk- sey-Levy R e a lto rs 4 5 1 - 0 0 7 2 8 - 8 2 BR d u p le x e s c a r p o rt C A /C H , 2 M u fr o m UT shuttle 4 7 0 9 C a s w e ll. $ 3 5 0 plus depo sit, n o pets, 9 2 8 - 3 8 2 9 2 8 2 - 4 6 4 4 7-18 O N CITY bus ro u te fo u r m iles fro m c a m ­ pus, 2-1 hou se w ith o ffic e / d e n a n d d e c k W a te r p o b $ 3 7 5 /m o ♦ d e p o s it 9 2 6 - 9141 7-18______________ HYD E PARK UT shuttle re m o d e te d 2 -2 , C A /C H , mim -bfcnds, g fo a m m g h o r d w o o d flo o rs , a p p lia n c e s $ 5 9 5 , 4 7 9 - 6 1 5 3 8 15__________________ la rg e , b e a u h tu i c fie e rfu ty C EN T R AL L O C A T IO N r e m o d e le d p a t io 2 -1 , AC o p p h o n c e s g a r a g e $ 4 9 5 , 4 7 9 6 1 5 3 8 fa n s UT p re stig io u s street, LIT rfm t- H Y D E PARK f l* b e o u tifu h v re m o d e le d la r g e 1 1 go ra g e , a p p lia n c e s , AC*, fans, h o r d w o o d flo o r s $ 5 2 5 , 4 7 9 -6 1 5 3 8 15 4 0 0 — C o n d o s- T o w n h o u se s W E S T UT c o m p u t N e w sum m er rates F u m a h e d u n fu rn is h e d 2 2 C h o te e o f fo r 1-4 p e rso n s flo o r $ 6 0 0 $ 1 0 0 0 4 7 7 - 9 9 2 5 7 - 3 0 • E H o w e t P ro p e rtie s p te n t S u ita b le Town houses C O N D O S F O R U A S C • G reat Selection • 1, 2 , 8 3 B edroom C0ND0C0NNECTI0N 3 0 7 W MLK 4 7 9 -6 8 1 » Free Locating Service (o n 4 o t • Apartm ent* Houm* • D u p U ir t It't * iiangi* out ther» L **v * Lhr hunting to u*' 4 8 2 - 8 6 5 1 90S W SOth L l i u h i f o f h c j r i f c u s 3 MONTHS FREE RENT LIMITED OFFER OPEN HOUSE DAILY townhomes, Luxury convenient Lomor/Anderson ln ./lH -3 5 2-1, 2-2 appliance», firapioc# garage pool, quiet from $ 4 9 5 ARCH PROPERTIES 4 7 6 -2 3 9 0 ,4 5 0 -1 4 1 4 * • * * * * • * • • * • • « • • • * • • * • • • • • • * * § 8 Condo! Condosl! Condomimum$!!! W e e Camps» N o r * Com put o r S M i t O n e le d -o o m ' « Bedr o oms an# even ih o te te w three bedro o m * C e l N o w For P e l 4 5 6 1 2 1 3 Apartm ent Finders Service 4 7 7 1313 7-M Now Preleasing For Fall Located conveniently in West Cam pus • Furnished Units A vailable • Jacuzzi/Pool • Private C o urtyard • W a s h e r/D ry e r In Each U nit • Self-C leaning O vens • M icro w a ve O v e n Ranges • W hirlpoo l • C overed Parking • Individual Storage Rooms * * * * * 4 4c 4c * 4 * ¥ ¥ * * ¥ ¥ * ¥ * ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ * ¥ * S p ecia l R ates for Summer— Preleasing for Fall 1 ake your pick from one of these fine condom inium s. 2000 Whitis Place * * * • 1 2 block from cam pus • m icrow ave • individual wrasher dryer • ceiling fans • private balcony • covered parking • fully furnished * 4c 454-4621 * * Salado Condominiums • m icrow ave • individual washer dryer • ceiling fans • private balcony • fully furnished • private parking • near shuttle 454-4621 3000 Guadalupe Place • ceiling fans • private balcony • near campus • fully furnished • laundry room • private parking 454-4621 * * * * * * 4c 4r 4t 4t 4r 4c 4c 4c 4c 29th Street at Pearl • 327-9202 2884424 Evenings Marketed by McIntyre Associates RENTAL 4 3 0 — R o o m -B o a rd / ,ta v e n . . . ó tu d ie c / u i / l i th e h e n e jit o j' a jr e e t u t o r , . . . e n jo y e d w id e S e le c tio n s d e lic io u s e n tre e s , . . . w a t c h e d dd. w . w i ■it f . nepicLs ipt y o u r p r i v a t e A( n ' tin a r o o m , ... r e la x e d h y thte p o o l th e a f t e rn o o n S un, ... on Town Lake 2 m onths FREE RENT with a one year lease. 1V2 m onths FREE RENT with a 9 m on th lease. 1 m o n th FREE RENT with a 6 m on th lease. 3 month lease on specified units Preleasing specified units for fall. Reduced sum m er rates for June, July, and August. 1 72 0 S. L a k e s h o re B lv d . A u s tin . T e x a s 7 8 7 4 1 (5 1 2 ) 4 4 4 -2 8 8 2 S U M M E R R A T E S F R E E R E N T S P E C IA L S _________________________ OPENSflT A N I.S U N _____ Íjo u h / lived a t DOBIE CENTER dome IJry Us! 472-84JI 4 0 0 — C o n d o s - 4 2 0 — U n f. H ou ses 4 4 0 — R o o m m ates 5 1 0 — E n te rta ln m e n t- 7 5 0 - T y p in g 7 5 0 — T y p in g 7 5 0 — T y p in g 7 5 0 - T y p in g RENTAL RENTAL A N N O U N C E M E N T S SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES The Daily Texan/Tuesday, July 15, 1986/Page 15 HYDE PARK, golf course View, uruque, all new, fully equipped targe 1-1 with ga­ rage Avoitable August 1, $600/month Col 452-4421. 7-18 CENTRAL LOCATION, 4 1 targe fenced yard, fireploce Fiordwood floors, trees, appliances W /D connechons, $725, 479-6153.8-15_____________________ 4 2 5 - Room s PRIVATE ROOMS for boys SFwre bath wrrfi one other person 3 blocks west UT CA/CH N o kite Fien $230 ABP Howe* Properhes 47 7 9925 7 30 ONE BLOCK to UT Lorge, daon, freshFy painted ReFngaratOf. hot piafe ABP, $ 20 0 /mo 9 2 6 -7 2 43 7-31 HYDE PARK rooms For non-smoking grod $150 and $175 N euman Mngt 453-4500 7-18 FREE ROOM m west Austin residence available to quiet, liberal non-smoking Female m exchange For light Fiousekeep ng 451-8728 ext 700, Richard 7 21 LOOKING FOR graduate student to r®nt room in targe south central Frause Living roam dmmg room, backyard, W /D oc- cess $250 ABP Male O' Female Cat Ion, 8-5 452-0361, ext. 320, after 5pm, 444 6426 7-17____________________ LARGE CLEAN private room, refngera tor, no kitchen, prtvale entrance/both, qu«e. mature indtviduol Two blocks to shuttle N c pets 474-1212 8 7________ ROOMS FOR men, 2 fo o room, $125 Neor campus, kachen shared 477-0045 7-15 ________________________ GRAD N O N SMOKER Your own huge room C o m fo rta b le house fig h t housemates. High ceilings Big windows h block north UT $160 $2 30 month 472 5646 474 2002 7-18 ROOM FOR rent in 2 story bnck face home Mtcrowove, W /D; pool and tenon courts ocrosa the street Bds poid $21Vmo 926 7820 Jock 7.18 4 3 0 — R o o m -B o a rd GRAD N O N SMOKER Your awn ro a m C o m fo rta b le heps®. Etg Fsoscsei iales High ceilings Bg w Vj block norttv/UT $160 $230 i windows huge Eight 4J 2 '>6At t?* 2 0 0 2 8 S______ 4 3 5 — C o -o p s I I O P S I S C O O P i 1 A P A J R T M E N T S S 2 k jr-n 2 Both w m A/C Fu« Krtch | £ an Furrwn®d 4 I to c u lo U 1 Res z : «kent OamecJ 6 O p a io to c A 5 5 £ CotnmuhR* Not A M A C o m p ito 1 * 0 6 R edd 4766474 o» 474-8199 718c ^ H fifH ilM M IM IIM IttM tM tllttlllllliU lta R e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e * TAOS C O O P • 474-4404» t ' a 647* FREE JULY RENT Very la rge nice room with pnvate en­ trance ond both H a rd w o o d floors, AC, ceiling fon, 2 targe closets in targe house Prefer fem ale profes­ sional, graduate student o r serious un- dergrod W ill consider couple. $ 2 8 5 / mo., fa bills, $150 depo®* 453-7181 evenings/ week ends ______________________________7-21 *■ 2BR HOUSE neo' campus, $220 '3t)»ls, nonsmoker, share w/coople mornings or evenings until 12 0 0 478 9128 7-18 _ FEMALE NON-smoking roommate need ed for luxury condommtum one block from campus $350 per month, 474 7 505. 7-17__________________ looking for some FEMALE GRAD shore ceilmg For Summer session 453-7938 7-15 to furnished house W aft to CR, tans, W /D, AC $230 - fa b«Ms FEMALE ROOMMATES wonted Luxury 2-2 condo, pool hot tub, security RR Avofloble now/EaN 482-0521 7-18 FEMALE -3-2 mobtle home, single room 150 + fa bills, pets OK. mornings 385- 0106 7-18_________________________ FEMALE N O N smoking student shore 2/ 2 an CR Includes (OCUZZI pools hre place $272 50/m o, Cathy 458-9704 7-18 HYDE PARK nouse, 2-lfa. CACH, W/D. fireploce, 30" vaulted ceding, many skylights, windows $325/m , 458-6668 7-15______________________________ $131/mc FALL/Spnng. Own room in 4 ' 9R apt SR shuttle Femóle nonsmoker C aí Sherry 459 1584 444-3666 or M arg e 1-623-4453 7-17 HOÜ5ÍMATE NEEDED io shore 2-1 ^ stoirs duplex on tXruai with male Pretar a young nonsmoker M-F protasaionai or grod student m Art/Arch or Libero) Arts $25 0/me rent $200 Depose fa utilities Lots of windows bokony H / 477-7678 W /4 76 040 0 Ask tat Dirk Aug . i 7 18 _______________________ HOUSEMATE WANTED: Large 3-2, near Fkancodt Center Seek ’ etponsibie «- Wrestmg non-smoker $210/ me 452- 5943, m m g , 7-18 COOP SEEKS sadh 2 4 - M/F n o jm o most welcome W ood floor* Fans, trees shutfle bus. 474-2828 eves 7-25 RESPONSIBLE STUDENT professional female wanted fo ihore 3 M l 2 BA Tor- home near Enfield ihutfle. CA/ H hardwood floors yord gorage mi crowave, o a Ja b le 8-31 86, $ 30 0/me fa deposit ond bdb. Caí 476-4337 8-8 2-2 M O M N G at end of October so apartment yours afterward 1/2 block £8 shuttle 46V 9484 ? 2 NEED 3rd Female to shore 2-2 condo f a l and Spring, own room or dtore. 21 and Peon Atao 452 6518 7-25_______ ROOMMATE NEEDED Shore new 3-2 townhome N IH 35 10 minutes UT. $260 C oi cokect (512)647-0718 7-21 2BR $135 per bedroom. ■?£ temvs courts ■von-smoker vegeto non 1205 w 33 A -102 ollei 5 7 18 451-6878, 2 FEMALES seek fe d , emocutote 3-2 am Fwti apt NE, pocx Rent $148 mo $50 move ,n 928-2272 5 8pm, ask fo r Scarta# 7-16 tauna. dubhoiee RESRONSSuE FEMALES to shore Hyde Fait house ico-ed. Near RR shurtte food $255 mo 4$*-4»4S 7 -H ____________________ includes jth hes. 'em Tickets STEVIE WONDER/Jufio Igiesias! Great tickets $25-60. Co for great pnces. Floor/arena -2182 7-17 Zan454-T 5 2 0 — P ers o n a ls TURN TO tfie dork side Write Temple of Set Box 7622. Austin. 78713 7 15 SEEKING HUNK Also mtelligen! sponsible, Fionest, Anglo, 20-25, for fun, possible relationship Moil to short cute, blonde at P.O Box D-16, Austin TX 78713 7-18________________________ re­ 5 6 0 — Public N o tic e Hxjher Educational Costs Soaring The solution _ W e w ill locate from 5-25 fin o n a a l otd sources fo r your higher education o r your service fee w ill be refunded For applications c o i University Scholar­ ship Committee ot 3 8 9 -0 7 6 7 Leave name, time, oddress, ond phone num­ ber 7-180 SERVICES 6 3 0 — C o m p u te r Services COMPLETE COMPUTER fooimes tar rent by the hour including software, assist ,a> ond daisy wheel once HP pnni nnfers 469-5632 PC Station # 2 3 Do- b*« t iMoD T-24 loser 6 5 0 — M o v in g - H a u lin g ABC Apt. Moving Moving Students as Low as $39 95 10% DISCOUNT 339 6683 M O V N G 8 I con help Reotonabie rofei flexible hounv good tervice. Cafl Rk K 467 8283 7-18____________________ ABLE BOO) ED Mo ven umpty A i d n i Fine® mover wrth reference! to prove rt Reedenha), commercial, antique!, p»ono! Free estimates 441-2622 8-8 7 5 0 — T y p in g PROfESSIONA. QUALITY word pro­ cessing lerter ouahty pnnter Neor campus Resumes. Term papers Thesei Dissertations 478-5485 7-15 IBM-PC flATFD ACCURATE word processing. term papen, reports Professional theses senpfc 448-4106 (before 'lpm¡ 7-17 TYRtNG NONPAREIL, lypmg spelkng, on honors prove peertessness Neorby BF A (honors), M .td Joe 4 7 / 3684 7-21 TYPING/W 08D pmretong. $' 50rpg Rushes welcome Anytime Candoce ___________ 451 4 8 8 5 .7-2» TYPING OF resumes reseorch or legoI pope's theses esc C ol Cyrdfwj or 445- 6937 rushes accs®M 8-4 m t A R K I S D I F F E R E N T 4 6 0 — Business R en tals Itortk m w * : •« AC s asas» ■ am ampie Ax» su S n > . . . . : >e i e u »c two v w .< P» *» u ( u : S U h Z lr» ' mo Joutm S7»s-. CXoub® S SJtóm t . - a t r y . I tv mees we C®> 4#» «tos ,x 4 ’ s i s l l ja a » v -t ^sstsssm tM stssusisiisssiititiissiiiiitiM sr S 2 l e t S t. C o -o p IO g N K * t> ? N « l W tr»s i ,• s. w » ’ »•;*-■ rejn- andkw fl I o w a " ,<■ s*s QM anekj '«as»"»*- Aik k AC Hop- • large WALKrtsiG DtSTANQ UT compus and wise® ijtfo.es ovaipfata 9-1-86 C a l •me « 4 % 7.17 rtfS T UT exceten' *ronr o flk e far pnp- tassKvss» leñar» $38C A8P Apestotos® offices aksc avcwabf» HowieD R 'opertet 477 9925 8 -4 0 _______ ____________ SHARE OFUCLskxho Oow-vowr ¿38 E 3 and Red le e r $30Ckmonlh Parfona port aneo ptaeeer# asmosphere 4 /6 - 9! 19 ' 16C CALL 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 T O K A C f A C L A S S IF IE D A 0 RENTAL 4 3 0 — R o o m -B o a rd ZIVLEY’S THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE PRINTING, BINDING We offer professional typing without the professional price. Call and ask fo r Cathy between 5-9 pm. 3 3 9 - 2348. 3 7 0 1 S p e ® d w a y SPEEDWAY TYPING O 'N ig h t/ S u p e r R ush IF S h u ttle P a r k in g 4 7 2 -4 0 3 9 S u m n e r H o urs: 7 5 0 — T y p in g • DISSERTATIONS • M KR S • RESUMES In by 11 Out by 7 Open 'til Midnight t f K S & K 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 We Never Stop! NEED YOUR RESUME FAST? CaJl us for an appointment and we II 9 type it w hile you wait. 467-883 8 5417 North Lamar 0 ^ 1 1 7 ^ THESES, DISSERTATIONS & P.R/S W e guarantee our typing will meet graduate school requirem ents. 4 6 7 8 8 3 8 5417 North Lamar ( 1 1 ^ ^ / / r 2707 HEMPHILL PARK At 27th & Guadalupe Plenty of Parking 472-3210 472-7677 RENTAL 4 3 0 — R o o m -B o a rd Let The Castilian Cater to Your Dining Needs We Have Your MEAL PLAN - 10 Meals Per Week (Lunch and Dinner M-F) $225 For Six Week Session. - Payment per semester or month - Convenient hours - Newly renovated Dining Area - Unlimited Seconds Stop by and Fill Out an Application Today 2323 San Antonio St. 4 7 8 - 9 8 1 1 bodkyere SdSOFeweA C at Meaad®y Fad®# t O O S O b pn. 8 3 4 * 8 0 5 7 IS 4 4 0 — R o o m m a te s La naven 7C 8 8 8 u ° K IN T A L RENTAL 4 0 0 — C o n d o s- T o w n h o u s e s CENTENNIAL One block off Drag. 2/2. Pool. W /D . Fireplace. M i­ crowave. Three parking slots. Luxurious! Furnished Call Pat, 3 4 5 -7 0 3 0 . T o w n h o u ses IUXURY C O N D O M IN IU M S NEAR HANCOCK CENTER Effioenc.es, 1 and 2 bedrooms. Applioncei fireplace, ceiling torn, from $365 ARCH Properties 467 2390 8 8 1-1, unfurnished, microwave, washer/ dryer Sot tub, w ait to compus, $425 Available August 1, 478-0643 7 18 7-22 CONDO FOR sole, below market, dose to compus, 1 BR/1 BA exceflent condi­ tion cheap) (409) 273 2757, (409) 756- 8191 8 8_________________ MEWS C O N D O M IN IU M S Luxurious west campus con­ dominiums, 2 BR/2 BA, all amenities, starting at $900. P enthouse to $1250. Call 476-8111 or 477-7424 ______________________7-2® re d u c e d Trees and Sun Quiet Travis Heights 1, 2, 3 bedroom condominiums m park like community All Save mt- c ro w a v e i new carpel patios or boi- cootai, tiled bathroom s Fin» stop on shuffle. p o o l C o l now to tee 451- 2242 or 441-5500 RE/MAX Capitol SUMMER RENT-FREE Move in now Rent free tí August 15 with 1 yr lease Storltng Aug 15. Benchmori has 4 a l, security go­ rg es. ip , c. fans, W/D, ig pool & iocuzzi Begont 2/7%, 1100 + *q. f*, $1?00» mo C al Condo Connection 479-Ó618 7 18 Luxury condom inium , com plete­ ly furnished, 2 blocks fro m Low School, o d fO tn tn g St. Davids H ospital C athedral ceding m Sv- mg room , ceding fans, fire ploce m tcrow ove, W /D , covered p a rk­ ing, p o ol h o t tub. A va ila b le Sept. 1. N o pets $ 6 5 0 /mo C all (713) 4 9 7 -3 4 3 7 . 7-1* P'e-taaung *or to*, luxurious 7 2 “3 Enheéd Rd Condo with ceding fans, microwave deck, compfes amenrhes «etude hoi tub, sauna pool, weight room secured underground porfang and tele^ii deo entry system On dM tte $900 others ovadobie far $700 Investor» Ready 472-368* or 450- W J N O U t AWARD « r v v ^ «ende J 7 tw torv evkng 10 0 » w u v m many •1 * 0 » Mvd* Fork S 8 V ; 4 5 * ,'6 8 9 7. JC ____________________ M U 2 2 C O N D O S three blacks bun- campus A l * w amen to s $45C worehty Sun. ■ w oré, ta t UrwerW y H o p e wes 4 54 ’ 0 6 S 7 22 L U x u fY C O n O O w n ío m s prwf gpr iie w e« compu* Autoctoe now O *cv Fol pre Warn Ceti U r n e w Pnop ertee 4 S 4 -7 0 6 S 7 2 2 ________________ le tto e d n 2-1, U W N C rate s towng ano techen e> evtoort, laundry - « * K it pool cavww * p a rtin g weynh large ruome n e w e l h e '8 0 0 L e v a ra few er a l utMhes p.»# leerí a # 6 0 * Avertable ' J 4 ‘ 2 3 7 5 21 PVfLEASMG POR. a . y. »i tusur> ondrn ae 2 84. 2 BA ■ # a t arm -we. pool |p a lecunsy « a t . estr­ ene# pans»-a much w ont O rty e oou- tee w e 4 5 * 4 g ’ 4 7-29 OCT A W A T N e e d e an pcwwed 7 1 roninhiijun 1008 eq b Relax mg poo. 145 326Ó 4 - 3 Y e c to H fl 7 29 N O R TH CAMPUS Condos - one, hue one t* • e« b e d 'o o n . c e n d o i AM wpnanx e* A vakaue «aw or pre-xnave k - M i A e e rtts ® fw d a n W w e 4 5 8 1213 7-1*0 C iO S f T( O o -re o -n J 2 J W / t ) m awl S-vmnwtg pen* toft t m i $?25 458-1213 7 1*0 ?H I .IN C H hat (2: 3 ML 2 U / n # ft» koi preteawtg Gator v> ato n wW M a n e w n package $ XXX. « o C id 4 6 1 9 * T - 2 6*. 1 18 |A c w r y «and® ■ * fe e pwx® -war . amps*. $ 1 5 per toorto pke e *« 1 1. ►•eternJAan Square. 4 7 4 0 1 0 6 . A di tar Story *■)_______________ f A l l P t t wat, a N W * campus 2*13 Pwm -ih e * , Pe®rt fo o t b a p u a - ixrter and « o t rae . a $ p e o Bu t 2 -2 $900 B 8 G •‘•aportes 4 59 ■2156 8 T tA V ft M IG H T S 317 87 9 9 $ 4 9 S » ro r . 2 2 m, to. 8 5 w f 5 ’ CAMPUS 2 7 0 6 ! 2 2, 2 panting apocas f.-npaxe .aAng *on potx y«r ufc x x n o y AvaeaOW wr 8 15 86 1 7 7 V .n o C M 4 5 3 1514 or 454 3387 laktmmcea -leceeaarv 7 1R WE5 T CAMPUS 2 w a b o r u x it e .®e w ed parkwg teArntg bans •-■ $69 5 mo 2809 7 1* * i itn h ia 15-86 4 74 SPAOOUS CO NO O J545 Noññ « 0. 2-1 7 targe b n y dnwvg brepaoc * t ) conrwctone deck vwu UT búa «una Oou> $550 346 934' or 328 3636 ennat n m a d a t ’ -17 3 BR/1 *6 I A torge govoge puo m at mwtte AM r * pw age puo naa 4853 ’ Ja 32 7 4 8 ' room rwp cor BRAND NEW, 3-2 condo off Speedway Beoultfu) condo, luscious location Load­ ed Fireploce CA/CH $795 452-4189 8 IE____________________ _ WEST CAMPUS 1-1 with loft, accommo­ dates 2 W /D 708 Grohorr Place. $650 255-6395 Avoiiobte now 7-28 SPACIOUS CONDO 3545 North Hills Dr , 2-1 Vi, large hvmg/dmtng, Fireploce W /D connections, deck, view UT shuttle bus Front door, avail $550 346-9341 or 328-3636 7 17 immediately SP1FFY 1-bedroom loft-type condo O ft Mo pac Pool Convergent to mails and shuttle Gas, water poid $475 Evenings and weekends 836-6245 7 16 BEST LOCATIONS 1 and 2 bedrooms furnished and unfurnished - $1100 Cok Proven Properties 474- 5891 7 28________________________ $395 CONDO FOR rent, 2 bedrooms 6 blocks UT $550 Co» 473 2286 7-15 15 7 -1 5 VISITING FACULTY west Austin Esconal Condo 2-2. a l appliances, marble hre pfoce, cudo® cabmetr, pnvate pono, central courtyard, pool, (ocuzzi Mid- Aug through May $1000. mo C o l Shor- myn 478 6042 473 4186 7 28 420 — Unf. Houses UT Students beat the rush, lease a place now and don't pay too much. Get it done soon so you can relax. Just pick up the phone and call Fred at Re/Max R e M a x C apitol 4 5 1 -2 2 4 2 _ _ _ _ _ _ 7-» UTAREA * Real me* 2 bedroom 1 both, cerv b o l a#. ¡U4» pointed m and o u t $ 6 0 0 Refe r encea * 1 bedroom floors, avq dabta Augu® I® * 4 or 5 bedroom *, 2 *: bo ds, hard w o o d flo o n References $1800 1 bath hondwo o d C d l Don, 467 -72 12 HPO Real Estate, Inc. $150 CASH REWARD For renter or referring renter 4- 2, den/ftrepioc® mirrored krtch e n /h a l. fenced yord. excellent nt ghborhood/Vondkxd Avo 4- obta August 1, don't word 442- 1890 NORTH CENTRAL off 55# Street 2BR 18A, CA/CH, afove re frig e ra to r, c arp eeed e«fru xarge bedrooms 901 A Copdol Court $ 4 *5 . E Co* 258 7838 7.30 9 0 * t 546 hordauood floori cefvsg \y -t • jn : go-tage Ja '* 9 2 * '999 •»-- ’ 28 3 Bft/7 BA hw -if s eed floorx very wee 5 Mock from UT Low Scho-c Summer t a- y 6 'a, aa; -3C5 7. -.jam 16 J ’ aS vTO W N -S F Ía tv " " nomea "'omd duptoaoa Umury fianng V AudM’s «to® iveaaquxui kxaOan. a t arm a 454 -70 *5 7 .}2 . muersrry Ñ is ftG O U S AXJORE55ES Ttoae p ro. m#» a- . c m x t • -V Sow aw-.-vi Aflord ah*> pnced C o i Unmertoy 454 7Q65 ? 32 * v A-uABil NO W 1 2 3 ■art 452 59 -9 24 hours, 6 2 ’ 6 3 CXDER houw k® ^w ® a* floerv,' daw a®** tire e Mocfca «e® UT «®e $ 8 0 0 me mo " 9 9 /5 7-30 ♦ eMws N * $1t60i if l U et. H owel Ptopeiket 477- O N V IN IE N T NORTH Ce now $500 French PY*« 3 . Aug $ 9 5 0 Habeos Ñ u t e n 4 82 * 6 5 ’ 7 I * N t A f UT neimmidted 2-1 O n #*e JT ban 3 8 8 1 BA mood Boon., CA C H - O k «0 campus nor®, of ww achoot qtner m eet r w woa* jvertatXe Awgu® h t $ '1 2 $ 4 H r » 5 • i e N Í.A Í LAMA* and Noath le apt ®07 Gignard large 2 -^ h a t IhMtg areas carpeeedL AC. kemeo yard j - ooocm now veer n tn M e $610/0(0 4$1-2*1* 4 5 1 -0 * 7 4 8 -7 15 IWNUltS UT 4 2. ®r 3 wdb eudy M M Fvepnxe C A C H barge y o n * $ 6 5 4 3 wo 4 58 6 0 3 4 1R ME U A S M G M r Ml“ 3-1 m r N a m e d to m e appbances $850. me C e n te p a n k e p o a r y e a r . w aae p re fe rr e d 4 5 4 - 7 3 2 $ 7 I t _________ ___ N L A * 51® o n fl Krpof 2 ' *erv e d y a rd avaéaMe nnmeaaeeh * 04 E w s Cat 4 $ : 3639 3 4 V 7 4 7 9 7 18____________ S lQ f l SHUTTLE ban «ontM k tc s t® * 3- l - l ver-y wee Fera.ec; C A 'C H w uahw d-va- I $ 6 2 $ 452 4 89 8 n a - o m oe uaedscaped n o t W f v 6#> spectocuKx news horn #vsm decks A m w w h e . $ 7 0 0 283 9 6 6 ' 7 18 r w h 2 m a r, 1.1 fa, N K X 3- 2-1 home Fenced r o t a a C /h ®o—4 rto ig e ro so i CR shusto 6 71 5 H o ts®yD> $ 5 6 0 25: 4 * 9 0 7 6 NEAR CAM TO J 2 -2 or 2-1 w D «% tAX #«u®to •.no*WOV# turvaslved -»®Jwsd House C a n d to 45'• 3 2 2 0 7 24 le to ifi tans Spo fenced yard 2 1, CA/CH, flo o rs i c m w w n tocador- $ 4 ’ 5 $ 2 7 5 to p o s# 266 2 7 * 6 Dor: 4 7 - 9 4 8 7 7- 28 t a n l a u ® QUARRY CO N O O A M V UMS trdwac and EapoaAor ¡area. 2-2 waahet and dryer « c i t v o e ccyvereo parkmq and poor Aber 6 X .a l 4 78 S310 7 F BiAUTFKll 3 ÍR 2 BA. bfoaa bom thu* te W /D a t appbonces honh»ood ia o r s Kreened perch 4 $ 8 -8 6 0 ' 2 72 - 5 783 7 2! RENTAL 4 3 0 — Room - B o a rd ... exfyei'iencect ci / oiijneSicin o i.u a u, / ... b ra v e d /be ra p id s o j the Cj n a d a (upe, ... e n io u e d I ( K e i i b a d i n /be Sun, ... e xplo re d .—jo u t ii /- a d re w ith u o u r P / 7 / S I / / i THREE DORM S INC. i ■frie n d s , ... GRAO N O K SMOKER tg ® own huge s o * C o m to 'to b ia bouse Eight houw - '-gtet N o * cedmgs Vc - nck>-c 5 biocf «ortfbVI $160 $230s'mort#i a 7.2 5646 a a . 002 I 5_ VEGETARAN C O -dp Houae té Cam mom, w®s pool nundeck, - w a ASP Hove femare w c w n r i 4 7 6 -7 *0 $ 7. 21______________________________ NEED A raawmtoaR Cof Roommate Bro seo Lite 4 7 * 5096 9X1 W MLR # 2 0 ’' 7 I * NEED A femase ’ oommow sc dsare hmr- ry e n * - 3 • * 2 t BA. $315/e». ♦ fa taflt Mory, 445 234 0 7-24__________ _ _ _ _ _ W f HAVE Ha® ro o m Ovouotsle «I Our -aouse Greut h - n-aanos $ ' '’ V'Hto * V 5 umbaea * 2 8 1034 7 t* W AL* TO dam Newt i t o n d i to dsore 2-1 condes ,c»ge bedroom poof to a «ww of 1 ower parkng, m ere . se- $395 a##y Nonsmo4e» pr®tened __________ A8R 480-8115 7-18 M A . t ROQ MM A ’TS anjrted tea auittmw ono «at 2*1 condo 5 M ode f o n UI, w 0. Tucrowoae derfwg a> $2$0rt®e pan deposit Co* evenings, 345-2320 7 22 hOha Sm O KIN G femows to ahore fur­ nished Ri enrde conde 2 2 5 p o o ae - ur#y ly t o e , ewng fans microwave W C $225 • ’ < uh.taw haws ahuMe CM Wendy 386 439 o 454 3898 8 6 VICTOR IAN ARTS houto creuave Wwng ermnronmerd H r ackv» o rti pereorta Room for luto® now Smal efficiency houae Auguar hr® $275 Alto pre b aa mg to» 1 r foe 4 79 ( M l7 7 17 YOUNG PROFESSkONAi seefung uber o « w » graduate dudem Fo> nsce 2 apt m Sw Autbr $30C mondi ASP Cal Bor ry 3 28 -2*08 nn oiabfe 7- 17 4 2706 Nueces, three b lo i ks tro n i ^ j J f l l a O C A campus and o n a shuttle bus stop. N ineteen d elicio us meals per w eek, m aid ser­ vice, p arking, sw im m ing p o o l, lounges, m an\ ex­ tras. C oed. 477-9766 @ w e s s r W 7& s t I Z J Z n iZ Z ty houses and sh op ping , parkin g on prem ises, m aid service, n ineteen meals per w eek, p o o l, sundecks and lounges, kitchenettes in suite. All w om en . 476- 4648. s l j , 27(H) Nueces, on the* shuttle bus r out e. Small and q u ie t, no trills " f — housing. Meals served at the Contessa, m aid service and parking in clu d e d . All private rooms. C oed, up- perciass. 472*7850. SPACE AVAILABLE FOR SUM M ER & FALL SEMESTERS CALL O R W RITE FOR A D D IT IO N A L IN F O R M A T IO N O R STOP BY FOR A T O U R I H R i f Ü O R M S . IN C . • 2 7 0 7 R IO ( . R X N D i . A U S 1 IN . T f XAS 7 8 7 0 S • S12 I ' h 4 i.A H Í I j o u lia v e n I l i v e d a t DOBIE CENTER c Ji * ome xfoin U s ! 4 7 2 - 8 4 1 1 Page 16/The Daily TexanTTuesday, July 15, 1986 HI, THIS tS YOUR m o o w s m .& tr ÍTT I'M AFRA/PI 6RABeeprr. y o u DONTMíNP, DO y o u 7 1 CAN MOVE. UH...NO, HO,THAT'S OKAY. \ THANKS,YOU'RE A PREAM BOAT. SO WHAT'S YOUR NAME7 MINE'S MARCIA FEIHdLOOM, TM CONKER, VISCOUNT ST.AUS7ELL- INTHEMOOR 3I66LESWADE BRJXHAM. t r r \~ z P y VERA T E E ’S Wonl Processing Publx Notary MAY I JUST C ALI YOU ZONKER? TM AFRA IP NOT. SORRY. SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 750 — Typing 750 — Typing 760 — Misc. Services 790 — Part Time 840 — Sales PART TIME te o th e r aide p o u lio n w o r i mg w ilti 4 a nd 5 ye or olck Experience prefaced University Presbytanari CDC 4 7 2 -4 9 8 4 7-16 PART-TIME help, Ixxtrs, mud hove tronsportcrtion C o* 4 6 2 -3 3 4 4 7 18 flexible 800 General Help Wanted BEST PHONE JOB IN T O W N Ticket sales, part-time, 5:30-9:30pm , $ 6 /8 per hour guar. Paid cash weekly. Call 4 7 4 -5 7 5 9 890 — Clubs- Restaurants DANCE AU D ITIO N S- The Fait and Cool Club 2 22 E 6, Thur July 17, 7pm For m ore info M ichelle B ardw e l, 4 7 6 -6 0 3 4 7-16________________________________ MIKE A N D Charlie s Resteuront n o w tw mg experienced cooks A pp ly between 3 o nd 5pm 1206 W 34 7-18_________ LASER MINTING COPIES TYPING WORD PROCESSING Guaranteed Sotefertor longhorn Cop» Co located wíh (Xt Rite Dupfcotag 2518 Guodaiupe 4764498 M B A RESUMES 2707 Hemphill Park Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 472-3210472-7677 D o n n e * T y p in g & Rush Service 7 Day» a Week O t t m t e wim t 5 0 C Free Grammar and Spelling Check 7 4 6 -B W . Stassney Ln. 4 6 2 -1 1 1 1 Mon Thun 9*9 Fn «M. Wnktndk 1J* 760 — Misc. Services PHOTOS for PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS ■ n la h a a ^ e S A M jI a A 4* ^^Wee%RWw wRf wxr MrW M O N -F R I9 -6 SAT 10-2 47 7-5 555 THIRD EYE t l t H m i d m THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE r g i o , . ^ R e ato na b l* Home n sih For the fin e r teuch, Hart's Dekght 3 9 7 -6 6 4 4 4 7 8 - 6 9 0 8 # 10 42 7 16 PHO TO EN LAR G IN G C o lo r o r BAW; iltd e s e c o n o m ic a l prO feuional, cu ite m a e d Tarry lib e rty P o ria r 4 7 8 -4 3 2 8 7 17 n e g a tiv e i, o r ASSURE YOURSEIT a to p q uality th a w A ccurate and 4 74 4 4 0 0 . 7-16_______________ rekobie pro ofre od m g STOP IO S IN G hoir I did. CoN for in fo 4 4 0 -1 7 6 0 o r 4 5 8 9 5 7 8 7 21 EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part Time IN S T A N T CASH A N D B O N U S in N y o u n e e d co sh to h e lp y o u o u t w h ile a tt e n d in g c o lle g e , w h y n o t d o n a t e b o f o o d p la s ­ m e ? Y o u c o n d o n a t e tw ic e In a 7 d a y p e r io d — fo r th e U t d o n a t io n re c e iv e $ 1 0 . lo r th e 2 n d cxOfKJtkon th e s o m a w e e k re c e iv e $ 1 2 . W u s w ith th is a d y o u 'l l re c e iv e a $ 3 b o n u s o n y o u r H r it vUM . A le o a » k a b o u t b o n u s p r o g r a m s So h e lp o th e ra w h ile h e lp in g y o u rs e te . M u t l h o y e v a lid ID a n d r e s id e n c e . p r o o f o f A u s t in D r a w in g h e ld o n c e a m o n th f o r t w o $ 2 3 b o n u s e s . CoN « 7 4 - 7941 Bright Ideas, a high-tech con­ furnishings tem porary home store, is seeking a friendly, per sonable individual with g o od communications skills fo r parf- hme light delivery/sales help A pply at Bright Ideas, 6 4 0 6 N. IH -35 m Lincoln Village. __________________ 7-18 _ Port hme telephone recruiter» needed valory + bonuses Please ca í 4 76 -0 89 1 Phormo t o Dynamic» Research. In c 7-16 Phone work. SS.OOYhour ♦ bonuses and incentives 4 4 2 -5 9 4 2 9 A M -5 P M 7 18 450-0151 450-0151 Public relations— phone soles, part-time/evenings. $5.00/hr. 7-18 $ 1 6 .0 4 0 - G O V E R N M E N T JO BS $ 59,23 t e l semealer, 1986 Must be UT student A p p ly Student Health Center rm 212 or c a í Johnny M em kow A y a l 4 7 1 -4 95 5 ex* 2 4 5 o r 4 9 5 -5 8 8 9 7 -2 5 _________________________________ 8 1 0 — O ffice- C lerical N eed tmmedtately port-nm e help M-F 10-4 CoR M ike G ro d y a t 8 3 5 -4 1 0 0 7 21 N E A R C A M P U S F U lL /p a rt tim e f le x ­ ib le hours, A M , PM. e v e n in g TYPtST $ 5 0 0 0 + , my associates make the and more Port-hme opportunities available indm duais Co** for active, motivated 4 7 3 -3 6 2 0 , M o n d o y Fnd a y . 5pm fo r oppom lm eni 7 -2 3 8om PART TIME hvo evenings a nd weekends W e tram Con work into mancuernen* Send resume to Port Time P O . Box 123 52, A ustin Tx 78711 7 15__ ATTENDANT FOR com o p Nights and weekends 2 50-0821 7 18 la undry ENJOY W O R K IN G wrth children? A re you dependable, w l.n g to w o rk Sunday m o m tn gsl $ 4 + hr Nursery exper ience helpful M rs C ook. 4 7 2 3111 7 17 Y O U N G C O M P A N Y a lo oking fo r an ervftxiuoific student with ofhee expen ence, must type and w o rit on IBM-PC, etc A fternoon hours and Sots. C o l Thomas at 3 8 5 -8 4 4 4 7-16 6 5 + W P M PRINTER set le a d ty p e h o i stom p, som e m echorw cal a p titu d e wnM fro m R U N N E R m u tt h a v e cor e x p e rie n c e o n d /o c BO O K K EE P ER a c c o u n tin g hours. A b o lig h t c a rp e n try p ro te c ti A p p ly 9 a m -4 p m 7 1 2 -A East 2 6 fh 8 -5 EASY MAIL hondfcng work, excellent pay no experience required. c a t 4 8 3 -8 0 7 9 7-31 840 - Sales Telemarketing— $ 3 0 0 or m are/w eek, gob o p p o rtu n e ,e s fo r o chve a v a ila b le m o*v<*ed n dm du ats 3 8 9 -0 7 6 7 Leave name, kme a nd phone number 7-17D 7-22 900 — Domestic- Household DAILY TEXAN ADVERTISING SALES. This is Ihe highest paying part-time |ob on campus. But you will w ork fo r the money. In house training fo r one month. Apply m person at TSP 3.210 in the TSP Buildmg. For infoim ation call lisette at 471-1865. "A ffirm a tiv e A c tio n , E O E " __________________ ^ 8 29 URGENT! A V O N representative needed -n these oreos 7 8 7 0 3 7 8 7 0 4 787 35 , 7 8 7 44 , 7 8 7 46 , 7 8 7 4 8 7 8 7 4 9 and 78617 Start w orking im mediately C o l Oebtxe 3 85 -8 5 1 9 7-241_____________ PART-TIME soles; Ascot Tuxedos has an ■mmednW part-tim e position available Must be aggressive and professional Im coin ViHog* Center 4 5 3 0 7 9 8 7 18 Separate apl m home pius taiory for momea couple with no chidrer or pets ResponubAtn ndude housekeepmg childcare jogei SVj and 2L lawn and pool core and kghi momte nance Mutt be energetic experienced weh small children, speak English and be non smokers. Must abo have ra id drivers Icense, beget Aug 1 contact Leake Lawton at 327 0156 between 9 am and 7 pm 8 -4 N e ed childcore, 2 0 hours per w e ek 4 54 -1 4 3 9 4 7 8 -8 7 6 8 7 -7 ’ BABYSITTER NEEDED M-F. 8 unfl noon. UT A id an ts only need app ly 4 7 4 -4 4 1 3 7 -1 8 __________________________ BABYSIT for aerobics d o ts M -W -F. 9 15 10 15 om ut a rea $5 0 0 /h o u r C o l K o ih y 2 82 8 0 6 0 2 63 -9 7 1 9 7-18 8 7 0 - M e d i c a l 8 8 0 — P ro fe s s io n a l R eceptionist, a fte rn o o n s p a rt-tim e a n d S a tu rd a y A M f o r v e te rin a ry clm tc in c e n tra l A ustin W e i g ro o m e d inch « d u d w ith p le a s a n t sp e a k in g voice, d e ta il-o n e rrte d a n d a b le to w o rk un d e r p ressure 4 5 w p m CRT a n d p u b lic c o n ta c t e x p e rie n c e a plus Please c o l 4 8 2 8 6 0 0 ? 15 890 — Clubs- Restaurants LONE STAR CAFE a l L IN C O L N V IL L A G E a n o w o c c u p f m g a p p k e abo rts f o r t x p t n a n c a d w o tfo 9 fs o o i M u s t b e a b le to w o rk o ffttrttm tfftt o f 2 -3 w e e kd a ys. A p p fy m person M-Th between 2-4 at 6406 N 105. C H I L I 'S Now excepting applications, daytime food servers, daytime cooks, apply in person M-Th, 2 - 4 p.m. Brodte Oaks Center and Crossroods Shopping Center EOE 7-17 BUSINESS SCHOOL STUDENTS ONLY Ten positions avail­ this able beginning fall Work 3 hour to 9:00 shifts, 6:00 p.m., three evenings a week Re quires the ability to talk comfortably over the phone. Opportu­ nity for advancement Beginning salary is $4 58 per hour. two to Student Financial Aid Office 2606 Whitas The IJte m rm iy o f T n m a t A w u r. w ax CgueJ d g p e n tu u ty A / Sr»et,"w» A rp w i ffngtfciww 7-1 * To Apply, C o n ta ct: l?\aNCÁn A nri /\cv(íhj M BA V S u re , w e ty p e FRESHMAN THEMIS Why Not Start Out WHh Good Grados? 472- 3210472-7677 20 Y e a n Legal Experience • Term Papers • Law Briefs • Theses • Dissertations • Cover Letters • Resumes 5 1 2 ' A E . 3 8 * /2 S t . (O ff Duval) 4 5 4 - 1 5 3 2 • 7 days • week MILLIE'S TYPING SERVICE Word Processing-! L65 IBM Frintmg-J .25 page 15 years experience Dissertations. Theses. PRs. Term Technical, Resumes. Cover Leften Tree speitmg check Free pick up/delivery Rush work accepted 7 days a week Satisfaction guaranteed 288*4678 T Y P I N G WORD PROCESSING Southwest Services 4 5 3 - 0 3 2 3 4 3 1 1 A v e n u e F m o m Pt c k u p / D e liv e r y J B a i italics • word procrvsing • IBM-compatible printing • term papers, theses, dissertations, resumes C A L L 459-1120 O pen M -F . 10-5 W eekends by appointm ent O ve rn ig h t service a vailable T V M O w N A D T A C Y H S 1PC STATION------- Term Papers • Reports Theses • Rush Service WORD PROCESSING Resumes only $10 Laser Jet Printing 4 6 9 -5 6 3 2 .23 DOBIE MALL BY CHARLES SCHULZ 9 0 High Temperatures 1 0 “Would you knock off the ★%$?!□ Hosannahs already? It’s three o’clock in the morning!” PEANUTS I JU5T FOUNP OUT SOME THING, SIR..TMAT ISN'T A BOVS’ CAMP ACR05S TWE LAKE..IT'S A 1‘SURVIVAL CAMP" THEV TEACH KIPS M0U) TO EAT BU6S ANP CR0S5 A RIVER ON A ROPE... POOR CHUCK..I CAN JUST IMA6INE HIM TRVIN6 TO CROSS A RIVER ON A ROPE.. I U10NPER HOW HE’S P0IN6... B.C. T N H O N A S > T H £ F l ^ r to Cl£CUMNAVi6>AT£ THB P Associated Press NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST UNTIL 7 A M WEDNESDAY Austin skies Tuesday will be partly cloudy, with a high in the mid-90s and a low in the mid-70s Winds will be from the southeast at 10-15 mph The National Weather Service forecasts showers m a band from the Dakotas to Nevada from Minnesota to the Great Lakes, and from the Virginias to Florida Showers are also expected for parts of Texas. Anzona, New Mexi­ co and Colorado BY J O H N N Y H A R T TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED ' w l B R E D l s ' i R f M l u V l V e I I P a * s ' a > V e d ' D O E R S a O o £ o n U J X C O Z > U J > - a o y j Z C O " mémm o 2 m a rt < Wet — A C R O S S 1 Unadorned 5 Fastener 9 Exfoliate 14 Yankee: abbr 15 Wine city 16 A Ford 17 Epistle 18 Clod 19 Firearm 20 Waste 22 Poor rhymer 24 Felt 26 Sacred song 27 Dusk times 29 Wife abbr 30 Denver time abbr 33 Separation 37 Much loved 38 Come about 39 Interrogate 40 — Hawkins 41 Noose 42 Lucidly 44 Within: pref. 45 On behalf of 46 Vehemence 47 Pamphlet 49 Cigarette slang 53 Milk source 57 Glower 58 Set free 59 Now Thailand 61 Actor Ladd 62 Cruel look 63 Tan 64 Apportion 65 Signs of sorrow 66 Plant ovule 67 Yacht area D O W N 1 Music groups 2 Love in Napoli 3 Pretend 4 Primps 5 Harridan 6 Very wet 7 Crouch 8 Hookah user 9 Leaf parts 10 Light refractor 11 Dill herb 12 Insects 13 Smirk 21 Disunite 23 Hillside lake 25 Next to Jan 28 Flights of steps 30 Asian of old 31 Jib 32 Three-spot 33 Welfare 34 Image 35 Kiltie 36 Adherent 37 Post office item 40 Narratives 42 Bakery unit 43 Jazz piece 45 Young hens 47 Examiner 48 Short time 50 Whiter 51 Clio's kin 52 Start again 53 Apply powder 54 — Hathaway 55 Willow 56 Ranch animal 60 Slander BLOOM CO UN TY by B e rk e B re a th e d im sem -cm e S T ffll0 N 5 H W C R E A L N e R V E 5 C R M 0 U N 6 T H E IR E tb M L E , L E T M E T U L Y O U ... H E R E W E S A E N P A 3 ¡0 0 0 O V A P IS H 7 0 S TE A L T H E /R R R 06R A M S A W TH E V S T E A L T H E M R K A T T P A C K ... )O U K N O W W H A T T H /5 IS f W E U r u . T E H Y O U M iA T m s ... F A S C IS M . T H E Y U 0 € K /U -IH U "J U S T P E S S E K T S * S A B LE S N E X T . — J EYEBEAM BY SAM HURT SQUIB BY MILES MATHIS „ 1 D O N 'T c a r e w h a t ~S,C H/\R i t S DARWin I SHV5! 'rOUR MOTHER, 7 » ^ \ AMD X 6 4 Y 6 6 T O ) T ^ --v p F TH09t 5 IU Y cumes - m i s i N s m N T / r 0J <*5 g 6 c »N GO e s c D t o ao «P 4 4 i i t « # 5 9 0 — Tutoring MATH TUTOR 504 W. 24th St. Office 477*7003 ***-#* *t * - mr. mi p w . . . . . . '* •• « • * t u i t x u # * * # > • « i t i i . U l u i t l t sag tis g “ F rs * akU *>i , OM# v. * * » i S •» teM6 w e M . r - * < ■ M • » $ 1 0 HR $ 85 10 HR BLOCK ! TUTORING S r SERVICE TUTORING Most Sub«ecf$ All Levels Large Tutor Selection • EXAM PREP GRE. LSAT MCAT GMAT • QUALITY GUARANTEED FREE HKf V) hr lutonng w 5 other sessions within 30 days HOURS ORCN M-Th fri Sat Sun. 7 am-12 mid 7 am 5 pm f0am -3 pm S pm-12 mid 472-6666 • 13 W. 24th St. Tri-Towers Free Parking t m T i f f T E X A N C L S s I F 1 E D S 4 7 1 5 2 4 4 & Sf WERE FIGHTING FOP 'vOUPllFE A m o fic a n H eart A sso cia tio n