T h e Da i l y T e x a n l U7 ¿ - 9 UÜ9 / XJ Vol. 88, o u t ' U1 6 u Í M S i ¡ q n d o j u í w 1 d n ü [ í ° M > | O 0 j g - tn «A, 0 0 2 * T i ne w y d 7 ¿ i o . 7 i S <Üüd i v The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Tuesday, March 28,1989 25C H i ) ¥ ¥ ¥ * * * ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ * ¥ ¥ ¥bances unexpected, manager says Have th eir Mea l l a Rb To ATTEvib T he Me F T W With bitBEkws By RANDY KENNEDY Daily Texan Staff The Dobie Center general mana­ ger said Monday he was unaware that renovation work at the complex would cause extensive inconven­ ience, but some residents said they believe he is using an “ignorance is bliss" excuse. About 65 residents of the 29-story building gathered Monday in a closed meeting with the dormitory's managers to complain about what they say are contract violations caused by renovation work. Jason Flowers, RTF freshman, said after the meeting that Dobie General Manager Richard Berns said repeatedly he did not know that preparations for renovation would be so extensive. "H e was running this whole thing on ignorance is bliss," Flo­ wers said. “He said he didn't know about anything and yet he's the manager. It's his job to be around here and know what's going o n ." The meeting — called by Bem s in response to student complaints dur­ ing the past week — was character­ ized by many students as "ineffec­ tive." But Bem s said he believed the meeting gave many students a chance to express their dissatisfac­ tion with the inconveniences and he said the m eeting's tone was not hos­ tile. "I think there were some resi­ dents who were unhappy," Bem s said. "I'v e attended worse student meetings at our place and at other students' residences." Students last week complained that restricted use of the dormitory swimming pool and other recre­ ational facilities because of the con­ struction violated provisions of their lease agreements. Bems said he was aware that con­ struction workers for the principal contractor, Masonry Arts, Inc., would begin preparations for major renovations, but he was not in­ formed that they would begin work Chris Oathout/Daily T exan Staff Dobie Center General Manat er Richard Bems says he had not been completely informed about the construction schedules. with large machinery. "I really didn't know that it was going to mean all the noise and the jackhammers and all th at," Bems said. “And I didn't know that 21st Street was going to be blocked with the crane, but it was at a point where they'd already done it so I said go ahead and do it and get it over w ith." Bems said that the work on the roof and parapet areas, which was suspended by city inspectors after a T h u rsd ay a ccid en t, aftern o o n should resume within the next two days and be completed by early next week. He said the swimming pool and recreation areas will be reopened af­ ter the roof work is finished. On Thursday, workers removing the parapet wall accidentally dropped brick pieces from the top of the building, breaking two win­ dows and damaging a car in a near­ by parking lot. The Austin Building Safety De­ partment ordered the roof work to stop until stricter safety measures could be developed. Ted Willmore, a music freshman, said several students have contact­ ed UT Students' Attorney Mitchell Solomon and may file a class action suit against the complex's owners to get “retroactive compensation for three m onths" of restricted use of the recreation facilities. Willmore said the suit could be filed later in the week if Bem s does not respond favorably to a letter being prepared to send to him. Dobie Center security guards stood outside the resident-only meeting with the management Monday. Chris Oathout/Daily Texan Staff may face dismissal for missing By DIANA WILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff Students' Association Vice President James Ray said Monday he may kick three SA representatives out of the organization Tuesday for "excessive absences" from the group's bi-weekly meetings. Ray said one-year at-large Rep. Ryan Franco, College of Education Rep. Mary Huntzinger, and Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs Rep. Kevin Morrow are in danger of being ousted from the or­ ganization because of poor attendance. "I've given u p ," Ray said. “I think it is bad that this is happening but they've been elected to attend the m eetings." "I'm not saying they're not representing well, but they ju st aren't attending," he added. Ray said the three representatives had at least two unexcused absences this semes­ ter. Section 7 of the SA bylaws states that "members of the assembly are allowed a maximum of one unexcused absence per semester and a maximum of four total ab­ sences, unexcused or excused, per year." Ray said the representatives will be given a chance to contact him before they are re­ moved from the organization. He said he will ask the three to attend the next SA meeting scheduled for Tuesday night. Huntzinger said she will attend the meet­ ing. Franco and Morrow could not be reached for comment Monday. Also, Ray said two other SA representa­ tives may be in danger of being ousted from the organization if they do not attend the next meeting. He would not disclose the two representatives' names. The SA constitution states that three- fourths of the assembly must vote to re­ move a representative, executive officer or judicial commission member from their po­ sitions. But that rule is geared toward an impeachment process rather than removal for absences, Ray said. “If a representative were to run around the campus naked or something like that, then it would be time to use the the three- fourth rule," Ray said. Bob Palacios, SA attorney general, said Ray is within his rights as the assembly pre­ siding officer to remove the representa­ tives. Palacios, who is responsible for inter­ preting the the SA constitution, organization's bylaws are as important as the constitution. said Palacios said the impeachment process would be used in “extreme cases for gross mistakes." "It would have to be so vile that it would take the whole assembly to kick the person out," he said. Soviets voice discontent in parliamentary voting Associated Press MOSCOW — Boris Yeltsin and other anti-establishment candi­ dates rode a wave of popular discontent to victory in parliamen­ tary elections that gave Soviet vot­ ers their first real choice, according to returns Monday. Communist Party chiefs in the nation's second- and third-largest cities were defeated in Sunday's voting, and a top member of the Soviet leadership apparently was rejected in his home district where he ran unopposed. Results trickling in from across the country indicated Soviets took advantage of new electoral free­ dom to express their dissatisfac­ tion with shortages of food and consumer goods, rising prices, the bureaucracy and officials who promise reform. join The winners will those picked earlier by the Communist Party and other organizations in a new 2,250-member Congress of People's Deputies. The parliament is still certain to be dominated by the ruling party and an entrenched Kremlin lead­ ership that assured itself of seats without having to face opposition at the polls. Yeltsin, the burly, 58-year-old former Moscow party boss, won a landslide victory after a populist campaign against the special privi­ leges afforded the party elite at a tifne when most people can find practically nothing in their stores. The one-time Gorbachev pro­ tege amassed 89.4 percent of the vote against Yevgeny Brakov, a factory director, in a race for a seat to represent all of Moscow, ac­ cording to Igor Orlov, chairman of Moscow's election commission. Brakov, 51, who also cam­ paigned for improvements in the food supply but whose factory limousines that makes the ZIL symbolize privilege, received just 6.9 percent of the vote, Orlov said. Yeltsin's win marked a stunning political comeback after his dra­ matic fall from grace in 1987, when he was ousted as Moscow party chief and later fired as a non-vot­ ing member of the ruling Politbu­ ro. He was accused of political mis­ takes and personal ambition after he criticized his fellow leaders and complained that perestroika, Gor­ bachev's reform program, had not fulfilled the people's needs. "It's hard to say what my spirit is more full of, joy or concern about what I realistically can do to told help M uscovites," Yeltsin hundreds of workers at the State Construction Committee, where he still holds ministerial rank de­ spite his ouster from the party's top ranks. The workers applauded warm- ty- But Yeltsin's victory carries little power. The congress to which he was elected will meet ju st once a year to elect a president and a frac­ tion of its own membership to a full-time legislature, the Supreme Soviet. Gorbachev has said he wants all members of the congress to serve one year of their five-year terms in the Supreme Soviet, but there is no guarantee when Yeltsin will move up to the lawmaking body. The congress will be made up of 1,500 deputies elected in Sunday's territorial balloting and 750 mem­ bers chosen earlier by various par­ ty, social and professional organ­ izations. Elsewhere, other longtime off­ iceholders who traditionally won in uncontested elections went down to defeat. UT-Pan Am bills to undergo further study By JUNDA WOO Daily Texan Staff The long-planned marriage of the UT and Pan American University systems bogged down Monday as lawmakers detoured the necessary merger legislation. The House Higher Education Committee sent to a subcommittee three bills letting South Texas' Pan Am System join the UT System, while it quickly approved legislation merging the Texas A&M University System and University System of South Texas. Rep. Wilhelmina Delco, D-Austin, chairwom­ an of the education committee, said she expects the UT-Pan Am legislation to emerge with one major change — it will no longer create a free­ standing UT System campus at Brownsville. The border city currently holds a satellite school of the Edinburg-based Pan Am System. Gov. Bill Clements and the UT System sup­ port a merger but oppose a Brownsville campus. They say creating one will muddy an agreement the two university systems hammered out dur­ ing most of 1988. "A s soon as the enrollment and academic pro­ grams at the Brownsville campus warrant it, we in will support a free-standing institution Brownsville," said UT System Chancellor Hans Mark. "W e should not do that now and jeopard­ ize the whole merger proposition." Two bills, including one already passed by the Senate, establish a Brownsville campus. The third merger bill, by Rep. Alex Moreno, D-Edin- burg, holds no such provision. the Senate-approved merger bill, Rep. Eddie Lucio, D-Brownsville, a co-sponsor of said to Clements and "shortchange" South Texas by removing the campus provision. the UT System want Delco disagreed, saying, “The bottom line is to get the [UT-Pan Am] governing structure in place." The UT and A&M mergers are aimed at quell­ ing legislative and legal pressures to boost edu­ cation in South Texas, one of the nation's fastest growing and poorest regions. The House committee unanimously passed the A&M merger, but not before Rep. Gary Wat­ kins, D-Odessa, also a member of the Appropri­ ations Committee, reminded members of the state's budget crunch. The appropriations com­ mittee has allotted nothing so far for South Texas mergers, although educators want $10 million. "W hat it boils down to is dollars and cents," Watkins said. "W hat will you do if there is not money in the budget for South Texas, and there is a merger bill?" Mark told Watkins the UT-Pan Am merger would go through even without state funding but would evolve more slowly. Watkins later said he does want to fund the mergers, but was testing the systems' commit­ ment, particularly A&M's, to South Texas. Even if both mergers pass the Legislature, the groups suing Texas with charges of “discrimina­ tory" South Texas education may not be satis­ fied. John T. Garcia, state director of the League of United Latin American Citizens, or LULAC, said Texas must address South Texas' lack of profes­ sional schools. " If the Pan Am board is simply going to be swallowed up by the UT Board of Regents, that won't be sufficient," Garcia said. The Higher Education Committee also ap­ proved legislation to establish a law school at Texas A&I University in Kingsville, but a Senate committee narrowly defeated a similar proposal last week. McAllen lawyer Morris Atlas, a former chair­ man of the Pan Am Board of Regents, said he believes South Texas residents are clamoring for the university mergers. North unable to call Reagan to stand T o d a y Associated Press WASHINGTON — The judge in the Iran-contra trial Monday reject­ ed Oliver North's bid to have for­ mer President Reagan appear in court Friday as the defense's first witness, but held out the possibility he might be called later. U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell said he wanted "a succinct particularized statement of facts" from North's lawyers on what they want to elicit from Reagan before he would decide whether the former president must testify. In a two-page order, Gesell said the defense should file that state­ ment under seal by late Wednesday afternoon. The prosecution will not be permitted to see it. North lawyer Brendan Sullivan asked the court last Friday to enter an order enforcing a subpoena is­ sued in December directing Reagan to appear at North's trial. Sullivan sought to have Reagan appear this coming Friday as the defense's lead- off witness. "There is insufficient time to re­ solve the pending questions relating to President Reagan's personal ap­ pearance to contemplate his appear­ ance by Friday, March 31, as re­ quested," the judge said. Gesell said a hearing date on the questions concerning Reagan's pos­ sible appearance will be scheduled "based on developments at trial." Gesell also said he wants other is­ sues regarding North's subpoena for Reagan "to be resolved expedi­ tiously this w eek." The trial was in recess Monday and was to resume Tuesday. Gesell said he wanted to know whether the ex-president personally objects to appearing at “a later date convenient for him" or whether other arrangements for his testimo­ ny could be substituted. These could include a videotaped deposition or excerpts from person­ al diaries, said the judge. The Justice Department, acting on Reagan's behalf, opposes North's subpoena. Sullivan is trying to show that Reagan and his advisers approved North's actions. The fired National Security Council aide is charged with 12 crimes, including making false statements to Congress by de­ nying he was involved in secretly assisting the contras. North's lawyers have brought out at the trial that Reagan personally approved a secret deal to slip $110 million in extra aid to Honduras to entice the country's government to back the contras. WEATHER Significant other weather — What a perfect day to stay at home in bed with boyfriend/girlfnend/spouse/lover/ your partner/date/room mate/one-mght-stand/ better half/pooh bear/hot babe/bed- m ate/cheap thing/ sex kitten/love slave, never venturing out into T uesday's m ostly cloudy skies with highs in the upp er 70s, lows near 50 and a 60 percent c h a n c e of thunderstorm s Suddenly c la s s d oesn t seem all that im ­ portant, d o e s it7 thrill/inspiration/hot INDEX Around C am pus Classifieds Com ics Editorials Entertainment Feature Sports State & Local University............................................ World & Nation . 15 12 15 4 11 5 9 7 5 3 Page 2/THE D AILY TEXAN/Tuesday, March 28, 1989 San Antonio policeman killed with own weapon Associated Press SAN ANTONIO — A patrolm an answering a report of a suspicious car was shot and killed with his own weapon early M onday, and police immediately began searching for two suspects after one left his driver's license with the officer, au ­ thorities said. Gary Williams, 37, died at 9:31 a.m. M onday while undergoing surgerv at Brooke Army Medical Center, police spokesm an Sgt. Paul Buske said. Williams, a two-year departm ent veteran, was shot once in the lower abdom en below his bulletproof vest and once in the left side of the neck, apparently with his own .357-cal- iber M agnum revolver, Buske said. It was the third time in three weeks that an area patrolm an has been shot and the second fatal shooting. "We have a very intense police search going on now ," Buske said. Investigators said one suspect is believed to be awaiting trial on a Septem ber 1987 m urder charge. Williams was sent to the city's northeast area about 3 a.m. Monday after police received a call about a suspicious vehicle parked behind a closed restaurant, Buske said. When Williams approached the car, a 1967 beige M ercury, it pulled onto the access road of Northeast Loop 410. Two men got out of the car and met Williams betw een their vehicle and the patrol car, he said. Williams was m aking a check on the car and one driver's license, and the two men jum ped Williams, took his revolver and shot him twice, Buske said, quoting an unidentified security guard, w ho w itnessed the shooting. Mayor Henry Cisneros, w ho visit­ ed the officer's family, said he will speak to police officials about more training on gun retention and to study guidelines to determ ine w hether officers should draw their own weapons. "I just do n't w ant officers feeling that there are so m any sanctions against them if they do fire, with adm inistrative leave and suspen­ sion possibilties and worse, that they are risking their ow n lives u n ­ necessarily with that few-seconds hesitation with people w ho clearly have a m urderous in ten t," Cisneros said. MCorp banks to file for reorganization Associated Press DALLAS — A move by three mi­ nor MCorp bondholders to have the holding company liquidated could toss a wrench into federal regula­ tors' efforts to rescue MCorp's sub­ sidiary banks, say analysts who blame regulators' slow pace for forc­ ing the creditors' hands. MCorp has said it will file for re­ organization under Chapter 11 of the Federal Bankruptcy Act, superseding the creditors' Chapter 7 petitions for involuntary liquida­ tion. Either way, the action could hamper a six-month effort by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to rescue the 25 banks owned by MCorp, though the banks' assets would not be affected. MCorp sought federal recapital­ ization assistance from the FDIC last October. Since last fall, officials of the Dallas-based holding company also have met with noteholders sev­ eral times, urging them not to take action despite a moratorium on pay­ ing debts while the company tried to recapitalize. "We all knew this type of action could be taken," said Frank Ander­ son, a Little Rock analyst who tracks MCorp. "It only took the actions of three bondholders that held at least $5,000 to throw the holding compa­ ny into involuntary bankruptcy. "I think inaction by the FDIC led to this," Anderson said Monday. "They made everybody nervous. Banks continued to lose money. Time is money, and I think the longer you wait to come up with a solution, the greater the cost is going to be. "It complicates things even fur­ ther. You can't put the toothpaste back in the tube. N ow everybody has to live with this filing." Analyst Robert Rieke of Rauscher Pierce and Refsnes Inc. in Dallas TICKET D ISM ISSA L ONLY$12W/THISAD guaranteed to beat competitors PRICE BY $2 W/THEIR AD NEAR CAMPUS N0TESTS REGISTER BY PHONE BUDGET DEFENSIVE DRIVING 4! 4-5300 4314 M edical Parkw ay It complicates things even further. You can’t put the toothpaste back in the tube.’ — Frank Anderson, financial analyst the agreed liquidation petitions probably were prompted by credi­ tors' concerns that the FDIC is mov­ ing too slowly. "I think a more expedited deci­ sion process would have resolved the problems and the bondholders' just fears," Rieke hasn't been any apparent desire by the FDIC to resolve the issues, and that caused a buildup of uncertainty detrimental to all involved." said. "There FDIC spokesman Steve Katasnos in Washington discounted the ana­ lysts' contentions, saying FDIC pro­ cedures have been relatively swift. "You're talking about asking someone to buy a banking organiza­ tion that has rather substantial loss­ es and a massive portfolio to re­ view'," Katasnos said. "You don't ask someone to engage in a multi- million-dollar transfer without giv­ ing them ample opportunity to re­ view documents and operations before they submit an informed bid." Katasnos said he wouldn't specu­ late about the filing's impact on plans to sell the banks until the April 3 FDIC deadline for bids. "We'll see then what interested parties have to say about it," he said. MCorp, Texas' second-largest bank holding company, has 20 days to file for reorganization after being served with the creditors' petitions, company officials said. IF IMMIGRATION Permanent Visas H-l Work Visas Naturalizations Relative Petitions Labor Certifications Marriage Cases Adjustment of Status Consular Processing PAUL PARSONS pc A ttorn ey A t Law Board Certified a Immigration <6 Nationality Law • Texas Board O f Legal Specialization 704 RIO GRANDE 477-7887 S hear S t y e i 1 0 HAIR D E S IG N 95 CUTS Khj, * r . I N ( I l ' H R S S H A M I I k I < ' o s n r r m s a s h HI d W H R ) 2 9 95 PERMS A H H I T H I S A I h i ‘R H M R l I 7 i iR 11 ‘ S t : H A I R W A IK IN S W£ l C O M Í — o - i & 3701 GUADALUPE O P f N 9 30 6 ,iO M F 454-5774 SAT 9 s C O U P O N E X P IR E S 4 /1 6 /8 9 T h e Da i l y T e x a n Permanent Staff ........................... ................ Editor Managing Editor. Associate Managing Editors News Editor Associate News Editors . News Assignments Editor General Reporters ........................ . ............................................................................Mike Godwin ................................ Stacey Freedenthal ............. ........... Karen Adams. Steve Crawford, Steve Dobbins, Jennifer Horan Dennis McCarthy Mike Erickson, Linda Mitch ............................................. Kim Homer Jim Greer, Kevin Hargis, Alan Hines, . . . ........................................... .............. ........................ ............................................................................................ Bret Bloomquist Randy Kennedy, Greg Perliski, Diana Williams, Junda W oo Bruce McDougall Susan Boren, Tom Philpott .............................................. Robert Wilonsky Special Pages Editor Associate Editors Entertainment Editor Associate Entertainment Editor Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporters Photo Editor ..............................John Foxworth Associate Photo E d i t o r ............................................................................................ Jeff Holt Images Editor Associate Images Editors Graphics Editor Around Campus Editor ................... Ray Dise, Schuyler Dixon, Jerry Gemander Mike Clark, Jeff Turrentine . Carol Huneke Gregor Sauer Kathy Strong Mindy Brown Juan SNva cleans the stairway at MBank in Dallas despite MCorp’s deci­ sion to seek reorganization. Rob Walker Associated Press Susan Hightower, Christian McDonald, Deena Perkins, Debbie Simon Issue Staff . . . . . . . . . Jaime Aron, Craig Douglas Bobby Ruggiero . . . . . Joshua Berry . . . L. Dean Webb Tom King, Brian Sipple . . . Laurie Rogers INSTANT CASH AND BONUS George Bridges If you need c ash to help you out while you are in school, why not donate blood plasma You can donate twice in a 7 day period and receive 8 1 0 every donation Plus with this ed you'll receive a M bonus on your first visit e M u s t have valid picture I D & som e proof of Austin residence (student I D accepted) • M B bonus, drawing every Friday Rob Tharp a N ew donors will receive a M bonus on their 3rd donation Call 474-7941 A ustin Plasm a Center S A V E 20-70% n * I s u n o l a s m s WE BEAT ANY RETAIL PRICE IN AUSTIN (Bring us the proof: we II match the price1) BIG DOG SUNGLASSES D0BIE MALL 2nd Floor 2021 Guadalupe 476-0171 g J P — I W m Y K f c f . . 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Webb, Chris Wilson Classified D is p la y ......................................Asi Chitrarachis, Brandy Cochrane, Ricardo R. Fernandez Classified Telephone S a le s ........................................... Robert Acosta, Art Carrillo, Charles Hyman, Classified Telephone S ervice ....................................................Susan Fleischaker, Jennifer Head, Melanie Neel, Juanda Powell Linda Martin, Shawn McMinn, Toni Schmitt The Daily Texan (U SPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis, Austin, TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session. Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. 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For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471 -8900 For classified word advertising, call 471 -5244 Entire cbntents copyright 1989 Texas Student Publications The Daly Texan M a i Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spnng)............................................................................................. $30.00 Two Semesters (Fall and S p rin g )...................................................................................... 55.00 Summer S e s s i o n ........................................................................................................... 20.00 One Year (Fall, Spring and S u m m e r)................................................................................. 75.00 To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471-5083 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P.O. Box D. Austin, TX 78713-7209, or to TSP Building C3 200, or call 471-5083. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to TSP, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209. A * * : V I N T A G E W A T C H E S R E S T O R E D and FINE WATCHES REPAIRED ROLEX AUDEMAR - PIGUET CARTIER PATEK - PHILLIPPE I hr Service on moat Electronics WISDOM TEETH If you need the rem oval of w isd om teeth.. C A L L B I O M E D I C A L R E S E A R C H G R O U P in c T H E S H E F T A L L C O . JE W E L E R S G EM O L O G IS T S 2236 Guadalupe 477-4924 On the Drag naxt to Waflaa Highland MM 468-9256 across from Scarbroughs at 451-0411 Financial incentive provided for your opinion on a pain m edication M on.-Fn. 8:30-4:30 2304 GUADALUPE 476-8767 Balfour. ROUND-UP RING SALE o r d e r b y SATURDAY Ai m 8th AND WEAR YOUR RING AT GRADUATION ABSOLUTE DEADLINE FOR MAY GRADUATION $4000 OFF 14kt *20°° OFFJOkt ★ ATTENTION SEN IO RS ★ INVITATIONS, CAPS & GOWNS, ACCESSORIES For the finest in Graduation Announcements & caps & gowns compare Balfour and order today HOURS MON-FRI 8:30-5:30 SAT 10-3:00 Balfour. No one remembers in so many ways. S E Christy Sloane REPAIR • Boots • Shoes • Leather Goods • Luggage CUSTOM MADE • Boots • Belts • Chaps • Etc. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca. AuMn #478-9309 i University Market Facts... UT students spent $1.422,136 over the past thirty days for alcoholic beverages at Austin clubs, bars and retail stores Source The University Market f den Associates. 1987 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471-5244 THUNDERBIRD AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Glendale, A rizona 85306 USA A representative will be on campus THURSDAY, APRIL 6 , 198* to discuss G R A D U A T E S T U D Y Interviews may be scheduled at CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT THANK YOU! Project Reach Out, U.T.’s second campus-wide community service day, occurred on Saturday, March 4. Students participated in a variety of one-day volunteer projects to help children, the elderly, the handicapped, and many social service agencies in Austin. In the final tally, over 2,100 students signed up to volunteer!! Thank you to the following organizations and Austin agencies for participating in Project Reach Out: Organizations AIESEC-Austin Alpha Epsilon Delta Alpha Epsilon Pi Alpha Gamma Delta Alpha Phi Omega American Institute of Chemical Engineers American Marketing Association Amnesty International Anchorettes Angel Flight (Cherub pledges) Association of Latin American Students Bellwether Betterment of the University Environment Bevo’s Babes Business Council Campus Pro-Life Movement Catholic Student Association Chi Epsilon All-Austin Co-op Nursery American Heart Association Association for Retarded Citizens Austin Junior Women's Federation Austin State Hospital Boy Scouts Capital Area Food Bank Capital Area Mental Health Association Casa Marianella CEDEN Child Inc./Headstart Chi Omega Chinese Bible Study Circle K International College Republicans at Texas Delta Delta Delta Delta Gamma Delta Sigma Phi Dobie Center Education Council Eta Kappa Nu Freshman Student Association Gamma Delta Epsilon Hamagshimim Hispanic Pre-Law Association IEEE Intervarsity Christian Fellowship Kappa Delta Malaysian/Singaporean Christian Fellowship Mexican American Student Leadership Council Mexican Student Association Mu Epsilon Theta National Chicano Health Organization National Society of Architectural Engineers Orange Jackets Phi Alpha Epsilon Phi Kappa Theta Pi Sigma Pi Plan II Students Group Posse Preoptometry Club Resident Assistant Council RLDS Liahona Rotaract Saint Austin’s Collegiates for Christ Sigma Chi Sigma Phi Lambda Silver Spurs Spooks Student Council for Exceptional Children Student Involvement Committee Students Association Tau Beta Pi Tejas Club Texas Angels Texas Society of Professional Engineers Texas Wranglers University Democrats UT Air Force ROTC Association UT Leadership Board UT Management Association World Student Service Corps 3rd floor Blanton 6th floor Jester 11th floor Jester Agencies Community Outreach Faith Presbyterian Day Care Four Seasons Nursing Center Heartland League Rehabilitation International Hospitality Committee Jerry MacClifton Center Junior Helping Hand Home Juvenile Diabetes Laguna Gloria Art Museum Lifeline Lone Star Girl Scout Council Marbridge Villa Nursing Home Mary Lee Foundation Math Counts Open Door Preschool Ortega Elementary Our Lady of Guadalupe Social Services Pebble Project South Austin Adult Day Care SPCA Animal Shelter Special Friends Special Olympics St. George’s Court Texas Fine Arts Commission Texas Head Injury Foundation Texas School for the Deaf Texas State Library Texas Youth Commission Travis State School United Action for the Elderly University Methodist Childhood Center Widen Elementary Williamson County Literacy Council Woodside Trails Therapuetic Camp Wooten Elementary And thank you to all the individuals who participated in projects! Special thanks to the following sponsors and supporters: Office of the President Office of the Vice-President for Student Affairs Office of the Dean of Students Students Association Campus Activities Office The Volunteer Center, Inc. Texas Union McDonald's Alpha Phi Omega Rich Heller Melanie WHson And all others who made Project Reach Out possible... Tuesday, March 28,1989 Page 3 High court considers teen cases Attorney urges justices to ban death for youths Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court was urged Monday to find a national consensus "against execut­ ing our young" and ban the death penalty for all juvenile murderers. "There is a consensus of opinion in this country against executing our young," argued attorney Nancy McKerrow in behalf of a Missouri death row inmate condemned for a murder he committed when he was 16. But questions from the bench during two hours of arguments in cases from Missouri and Kentucky suggested the justices doubt that any clear consensus exists. The high court is to decide by July whether imposing the death penal­ ty on murderers who committed their crimes before reaching the age of 18 represents the "cruel and unu­ sual punishment" banned by the Constitution's Eighth Amendment. In the Missouri case, Heath Wil­ kins was condemned for a murder he committed when he was 16. In the Kentucky case, Kevin Stanford was sentenced to death for a killing he committed when he was 17. Anti-capital punishment forces are attaching enormous importance to the issue. The justices were told that of the 36 states with capital punishment laws, only 12 ban the death penalty for killers who were under 18 when they committed their crimes. the Noting lack of unanimity among state legislatures, Chief Jus­ tice William Rehnquist asked, "W hy should we set the bright line at 18?" In other matters, the court: ■ Without comment, turned away arguments in an Iowa case that spending taxpayer money for a hos­ pital chaplain's job violates the con­ stitutionally required separation of church and state. Three atheists had challenged the $23,000-a-year chaplain's position maintained by Polk County's Broad- lawns Medical Center in Des Moines. In the chaplain case, self-de­ scribed atheists Larry Henry Carter, his daughter, Courtney, and Mau­ rice LaBelle said their rights were vi­ olated because the government was sponsoring religious activity. ■ Agreed to use a Pennsylvania case to restudy how far states may go in limiting a jury's discretion to choose life or death for convicted murderers. ■ Let stand a $300,000 award won by Oregon's former chief medical officer from the State Health Divi­ sion's administrator who fired him over an alleged "slush fund." ■ Refused to review a lawsuit by a Pennsylvania Supreme Court justice against two newspapers that report­ ed on what was to have been a con­ fidential state investigation on his fitness for office. A f^i Monday’s Dow Jones Industrial Average: UP 14.82 to 2,257.86 Volume: 112.96 million shares W ORLD & NATION Guatemala beset with prison riots Hundreds of inmates’ relatives stay inside walls during turmoil Associated Press SANTA CATARINA PINULA, Guatemala — Rebellious inmates Monday night allowed 15 adults and four children to leave a prison where armed convicts and hun­ dreds of family members are stand­ ing off army and police forces. The inspector-general of the Na­ tional Prisons System, Carlos Ra­ mos Moneada, said he does not con­ sider as hostages the more than 600 non-inmates still inside Guatemala's biggest prison, 15 miles east of Gua­ temala City. "They remain there by choice," he told The Associated Press in an interview outside the prison's main gate. "The family members still inside the m ovem ent," he are backing said. Ramos Moneada said the last peo­ ple considered hostages — four doc­ tors and two firemen held for 24 hours — were released at midday. At least four guards and three in­ mates were killed and 20 people wounded in battles that broke out as prisoners tried to escape on East­ er Sunday afternoon. The 19 family members escorted out at 7 p.m . Monday spent about 30 hours in the Pa von prison. Like the 607 family members believed still inside, they were paying Easter visits to jailed relatives when the uprising began. Ramos Moneada said the prison mutineers had about 75 M -l car­ bines taken from prison guard dor­ mitories. He said from 75 to 100 inmates belong to what he repeatedly re­ ferred to as "the m ovem ent." Officials said about 1,350 inmates are at the 2 V2-square-mile prison farm and up to 100 joined in the re­ volt. Prisoners who did not take part apparently remained in areas not controlled by the rebels. The inspector-general said prison­ er demands — for better food and sentences — had not reduced changed since Sunday. He said they did not demand a plane to fly to Cuba as reported by a local radio station. Clementina Diaz and her 2-year- old son Miguel Angel were among those leaving the prison Monday night. Diaz, who was visiting her eldest son Gerardo on Sunday, said she was escorted out because her little boy had a fever. She said rebels asked visitors if they had health problems that made their stay im­ possible. Alicia Rodriguez, who was visit­ ing her husband, cried as she spoke from inside a Red Cross van outside the gate. "I was sick from nerves," she said, explaining her departure. Ramos Moneada said President Vinicio Cerezo ordered prison and other authorities "to exhaust every alternative" in negotiating a solu­ tion. "Peace and tranquillity is the strict order," he said. Ramos Moneada said "serious problems rem ain" in resolving the crisis. The rebels "m ust reform their conduct and surrender the weap­ on s." told reporters Prison spokesman Conrado Mon- roy earlier family members "fear that if they leave, authorities will reprisals against the rebel inm ates." take Troops were rushed to Pa von when the insurrection began, and on Monday about 1,000 soldiers and police were reinforcing the prison's 180 guards as officials negotiated with the rebels. Monroy said the rebels added to their demands on Monday, saying they wanted to be flown to Cuba. He did not elaborate. Federal Human Rights Director Gonzalo Menendez de la Riva spent about five hours inside the prison farm Monday negotiating with the inmates. He reported later that the women and children there need food. Stoned Environmentalist Leo Hund protests logging in the W il­ lamette National Forest by encasing himself in rocks. Hund and 12 other protesters were arrested on disor- derly conduct charges when they attempted to block a road near the logging area about 60 miles southeast of Portland, Ore. Associated Press Shamir to propose elections in occupied lands Associated Press JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir will propose elections in the occupied lands as a step toward beginning peace talks with Palestinians while avoiding direct con­ tact with the Palestine Liberation Organiza­ tion, a senior official said Monday. Shamir, who is bringing his peace plan to Washington next week, is being pressed by the United States, European countries and opponents in his own government to find a way to end the Palestinian uprising in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Also Monday, an Israeli policeman caught alone in a West Bank village opened fire Mon­ day on young Arabs who pelted him with stones, killing a 4-year-old boy, the army re­ ported. Arab hospital officials said Amjad Ahmed Hassan died of a chest wound. The death toll In the land of Israel there can be just one country, the state of Israel.’ — Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir since the uprising began in the occupied terri­ tories more than 15 months ago now stands at 412 Palestinians and 18 Israelis. A military spokesman said the policeman came under stone-throwing attack in Beit Kad, a remote West Bank village, and "w as forced to use his w eapon." He did not say why the policeman was there. Israeli policemen are assigned to the occu­ pied territories only for investigative duties and the army handles patrols. The military command said police and the army were in­ vestigating the shooting. Shamir's plan, meanwhile, calls for the 1.7 million Palestinians in the occupied lands to choose local leaders in the next few months who can negotiate an interim peace agree­ ment, said the senior official, who asked to remain anonymous. But Shamir said his proposal would not lead to an independent Palestinian state. "In the land of Israel there can be just one country, the state of Israel," Shamir said Monday at a gathering of senior members of his right-wing Likud bloc in Tel Aviv. "In the coming days, I'm going on a mis­ sion for the country. I'm confident because I know the majority of the country is behind m e," Shamir said of his trip to the United States. The official said Shamir's vision of the tem­ porary settlement resembles the five-year pe­ riod of Palestinian autonomy outlined in the U.S.-sponsored Camp David accords that led to the 1979 peace treaty with Egypt. Other reports have said Shamir might pro­ pose administering the West Bank and Gaza with neighboring Jordan as part of a con­ federation. Israel captured the West Bank from Jordan and Gaza from Egypt in the 1967 Middle East war. Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who pro­ posed several months ago that elections be held, told high school pupils near Tel Aviv on Monday his center-left Labor Party and Shamir's conservative Likud bloc must coop­ erate on a peace plan. "W e can of course gore each other, the two main blocs ... but let's put aside differences and seek the area where we can move the peace process forward in a joint, cooperative way among u s," he said. Labor, led by Finance Minister Shimon Peres, and Likud formed a "national unity" coalition after elections in November. Associated Press Ueberroth considering purchase of strike-plagued Eastern Airlines NEW YORK — Peter Ueberroth, the financial wiz­ ard who made millions for the Olympics and baseball* is discussing a purchase of Eastern Airlines in a deal to be financed by Kirk Kerkorian, The Associated Press learned Monday. An offer from Ueberroth and Kerkorian may be pre­ sented to the board of directors of Eastern parent Tex­ as Air Corp. within the next few days, airline and baseball sources said on condition of anonymity. Ue­ berroth's term as baseball commissioner ends Satur­ day. The Texas Air board is holding a regularly sched­ uled meeting Tuesday and Wednesday, said a source close to the company. Texas Air spokesman Art Kent in Houston refused to comment on whether a board meeting was scheduled. Ueberroth was approached last fall by officials of Eastern's unions to consider taking over the troubled airline five days after the start of a machinists' strike that was supported by airline pilots. The unions have said they would make concessions If Ueberroth took over, possibly in return for owner­ ship of part of the airline. Anti-nuke activists recall plant meltdown HARRISBURG, Pa. — Anti-nuclear activists marked the 10th anniversary of the Three Mile Island nuclear plant accident with renewed warnings Mon­ day that the health effects were hidden and the les- Sons forgotten. Scientists and nearby residents held news confer­ ences at the state Capitol and a vigil was planned outside the plant late Monday and for 4 a.m. Tues­ day, the time the accident began. "The so-called accident at TMI was an act of vio­ lence againt mankind, an act of violence against the unborn," said Jane Lee, an activist from nearby Etters, referring to the March 28,1979, incident. The nation's worst nuclear accident occurred when a series of human and mechnical errors allowed the plant's 150-ton radioactive core to lose cooling water. Ozal vows to keep job despite party losses ANKARA, Turkey — Premier Turgut Ozal on Mon­ day pledged to stay in office until the end of his term in 1992 despite the stunning defeat suffered by his Motherland Party in nationwide local elections. Opposition parties had cast Sunday's election as a referendum on Ozal's free-market policies, and Ozal had vowed to resign if opposition gains were large enough to make it difficult for him to govern. The governing party came in third in provincial as­ sembly elections behind the leftist Social Democrat Populist Party and the conservative True Path Party of former premier Suleyman Demirel. The Motherland Party won only three mayorships in Turkey's 67 provincial capitals. Demirel called on Ozal "to be true to his word" and resign. U .S., Iraq near compensation agreement WASHINGTON — The United States and Iraq have reached agreement in principle for Iraq to pay com­ pensation for the 37 U.S. sailors killed aboard the frig­ ate Stark in a May 1987 Iraqi missile attack in the Persian Gulf, sources said Monday. The compensation package still needs the formal approval of both governments, said the sources, speaking on condition of anonymity. Progress on the stalled claim request was made when a U.S. delegation, led by State Department legal adviser Abraham Sofaer, went to Baghdad last week. The talks ended Monday and Sofaer was headed back to Washington, said Margaret Tutwiler, a State Department spokeswoman. No shelter possible from federal income tax WASHINGTON — It will take something more than a nuclear attack to wipe out your obligations to the Internal Revenue Service. However, an addition to the Internal Revenue Man­ ual, which is supposed to guide the conduct of all IRS employees, acknowledges that tax collection might suffer if the bomb is dropped. Once the emergency is over, the manual declares, "operations will be concentrated on collecting the tax­ es which will produce the greater revenue yield." Violence flares up in Yugoslavia Associated Press PRISTINA, Yugoslavia — Thousands of ethnic Al­ banians clashed with police throughout Kosovo on Monday in the province's worst ethnic violence in eight years. Two police officers were reported killed and at least eight people wounded. State-run media said violence spread to at least seven Kosovo towns in the fifth straight day of protests of constitutional changes that would reduce autonomy in fhe southern province. Helicopters sprayed tear gas on demonstrators in one town, the Tanjug news agency said, and gunfire was reported in at least three others. Tanjug said officials closed schools and universities and banned gatherings of more than three people. Au­ thorities also imposed an 8 p .m .-5 a.m. curfew on the province, permitting only movement authorized by po­ lice, the news agency said. Shots from handguns and automatic weapons were heard Monday afternoon in the suburbs of Pristina, the provincial capital, 160 miles south of Belgrade. State-run media said a paramilitary officer was shot and killed in clashes with thousands of Albanians in Podujevo, 20 miles north of Pristina. Another police officer was fatally shot in the town of Titova Mitrovica, Belgrade radio said. In addition, unconfirmed reports said two demon­ strators were killed in Podujevo. Two Associated Press reporters traveling through Kosovo on Monday saw hundreds of military vehicles, including modem Soviet-made T-72 tanks, on the move. Helmeted riot police carrying shields and wearing gas masks used tear gas, batons, water cannons and even armored personnel carriers to disperse thousands of ethnic Albanians. Police road blocks ringed Pristina and at least one other town, Lipljan, was reported temporarily sealed off by police during a fierce battle with demonstrators hurling rocks and bottles. There were similar battles in Gnjilane, according to television reports. Environmentalists gear up after oil spill Associated Press WASHINGTON — The massive oil spill that threatens waterfowl and fish off the Alaska coast is ex­ pected to give ammunition to envi­ ronmentalists fighting to keep oil developers out. of a pristine arctic wildlife refuge. Congress must approve oil explo­ ration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in northeastern Alaska where the petroleum industry be­ lieves much oil is hidden. President Bush endorsed oil drill­ ing .along a 1.5-million acre coastal strip of the refuge if it can be done within environmental guidelines, and legislation allowing exploration passed a Senate committee earlier this month. But aides for senators on both sides of the issue suggested Mon­ day that the momentum is likely to slow considerably in light of the ac­ cident involving the tanker Exxon Valdez and the oil spill in the envi­ ronmentally sensitive Prince Wil­ liam Sound. White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater, asked Monday about such speculation, said that "at this point, we would not try to make any sweeping judgments based on the oil spill, certainly not policy judgm ents." With more than 10 million gallons of oil flowing into the sound, it is the worst oil spill in U.S. history and threatens waterfowl, fish, sea otters and other wildlife as well as the Alaska fishing industry. The Exxon oil tanker that ran aground was carrying petroleum which had been shipped from Alas­ ka's North Slope through the trans- Alaska pipeline to Valdez and then put aboard the tanker. The contro­ versy over drilling in the Arctic Na­ tional Wildlife Refuge involves a coastal plain just east of the North Slope oil fields. Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., chair­ man of the Senate environmental protection subcommittee, said Mon­ day the spill puts into question the oil industry's assurances that they can protect the environment. "The oil and gas industries have been very willing to provide as­ surances that the [arctic refuge] will be developed in an environmentally responsible m anner." Page 4/THE DAILY TEXAN/Tuesday, March 28 , 1989 EDITORIALS V ie w p o in t o r ■ ...... Thev ite r h >* n* .e s s .im y the < ifv n io n s of th e I Jn'versity ,idm ini5>tM tion ft» ' Hi m u í of R e g e n ts n- the 1ox;v S tu .ie o l P u b ic a fio n s B o a rd of O p e ra tin g T ru s te e - x p r p s - .fii !h o ‘ »> of th e «»ií>í • «:<1 'f t< *m < » >f tfio V iew p o in t F ish y E xped itio n s Parks department needs policing charged to protect and m anage the state's natural areas. Y ou may think the Texas Parks and Wildlife D epartm ent is But if you've been follow ing the state's new spapers lately, you know that the departm ent is charged with another, far more im portant duty: keeping Texas politicians happy. The Dallas M orning Nexos and the Austin American-Statesman, am ong other papers, have reported several instances in which pow erful state legislators have received special services from the parks departm ent. Most of the attention has focused on Texas House Speaker Gib Lewis, D-Fort W orth, for w hom the d epartm ent stocked a pond with 100 black bass and two ranches with 137 deer at no charge. Lewis says the departm ent has been defamed by the press and hasn't given him any special favors. "A n y other citizen could have received the same treatm en t," he told The Daily Texan W ednesday. If you think that sounds incredible, you're not alone. Parks and wild­ life departm ent em ployees express a lot of skepticism — anonym ously, for fear of losing their jobs — about Lew is' claims that ju st anyone could have gotten 100 fat bass from the d epartm ent's fisheries division. But even if these em ployees w eren't willing to talk, there's a lot of other evidence underm ining Lew is' position that the departm ent is being m isrepresented. The m ost recent evidence com es from Saturday's American-Statesman, w hose story about the departm ent doesn't just dem olish its claim of not providing political favors — it also suggests that some of the agency's current officials have taken active part in a cover-up. The American-Statesman story concerns not Lewis but another power­ ful Texas legislator, Rep. Robert Saunders, chairman o f the H ouse Envi­ ronmental Affairs C om m ittee, which oversees and appropriates money for the parks and wildlife departm ent. Gary M atlock, director of fisheries for the departm ent, has told the press that the more than 500 rainbow trout with which his departm ent stocked the pond of one of Sau nd ers' relatives were part of a research contract" to see w hether such fish would survive hot Texas sum m ers. Although the A merican-Statesman story contains a lot of inform ation, two bits of evidence are particularly com pelling. First, the "research contract" claim is clearly questionable. As one departm ent em ployee asked in Saturday's story', "W h y do we have to take them and throw them in som e dam ned stock tank in Columbus, Texas? Why not put them in an aquarium and turn up the heat? Second, the "research co n tract" itself seems to have been contrived to give som e pseudo-legitim acy to the transaction. Dated Jan. 12, eight days before the delivery, the contract specifies the exact num ber of fish that w ere delivered to Saunders' relative: 518. T here's one small problem with that figure — departm ent records show that 52Ü fish w ere loaded on a departm ent truck in Tyler and that two died en route. How could the contract have predicted how many fish would survive the trip? Clearly, th ere's som ething pretty fishy going on in the parks and wildlife departm ent. And Sen. C het Edwards, chairm an of the Senate Nom inations C om m ittee, has delayed hearings on nom inated parks and wildlife com m issioners until the departm ent com pletes an internal study. But given the departm ent's apparent w illingness to play fast and loose with the facts, an internal study is not enough. The state's top law- enforcem ent officials should investigate the d epartm ent, lest the big ones get away. — M ike Godwin fit? 1Úí ArttRCAtl KttiO -lo P&SiK/t OUR GOPLY MV fo 1M (W AtV MlCtfO CUlPS AU7-4JY : Mi n&xw. (D IlSkiáiiliffiiiilS Think the blues rules now? Just wait P erhaps the greatest influence on m od­ ern politics was Lee A tw ater's blues- playing. Throughout the Bush years, and well beyond, his style of m usical vote-gath­ L. D ea n W e b b TEXAN C O L U M N IST ering set the exam ple for an en tire generation of politicians. Soon after A tw ater's successful stint as open­ ing act for Robert Cray's 1990 tour, California Gov. G eorge D eukm ejian decided to increase his popularity am ong younger voters — the 18 to 24 range. So, he took the stage with Poison and David Lee Roth in a series o f four sold out shows at the Long Beach A rena. The result w as political magic. In the follow­ ing election, D eukm ejian was able to carry the "m e talh e ad " districts by a near-unanim ous vote. But D eukm ejian w as not the only person to reap benefits from "playing to the gallery." In Utah, several state legislators joined U.S. Sen . Orrin Hatch in a guest appearance on the radio M ormon Tabernacle C hoir's w eekly broadcast. D espite a mixed critical reaction, "O rrin's M o rm o n s" w ent on to becom e a local favorite. N ot only did their independently pro­ duced tape sell well, each politician attained higher popularity in Utah. Hot on the heels of his previous successes, Lee Atwater released a solo album that featured the work of other musically inclined Republi­ Jam es cans. Featured on Baker's searing lead guitar on Supply Sighed and Bob D ole's sem inal vocals on th e epic In the Minority (With a Moral M ajority). Critics and fans alike raved, and the approval show ed up at the polls. the album were The D em ocrats were n ot slow to pick up on the growing trend. Although Jesse Jackson was the first D em to begin work w ith a group — Public Enem y — it was Georgia Sen. Sam Nunn w hose work cam e out first. N unn took up the fiddle alongside the C harlie D aniels Band on its 1991 release W e’re in the Big Time, Now. Surpris­ ingly, the album did n o t do all that well nation­ ally, despite critical acclaim. It w as Jesse Jack son 's guest rapping on Pub­ lic Enem y's Yo! Bum Rush the White H ouse that was the first breakthrough for the D em ocratic party. The heavy dem and for the album con­ firmed what m ost political pundits suspected: Jáckson was the D em ocrats' best hope for 1992. Jackson was quick to follow up on his sm ash hit with a double set, We A re Overcoming. The nation w as caught off-guard by Jackson 's release, which was a very serious concept al­ bum that borrowed m usical influences ranging from rap to gospel to soul and jazz. Initial sales w ere slow, but eventually the album picked up in popularity, and eventually garnered several gram m y awards, including Best New Artist of 1991. To counter Jack son 's strong threat to his re- election cam paign, G eorge Bush turned to Lee Atw ater for support. C ourting a wide spectrum of voters, Atw ater released another blues al­ bum alongside Bush's first solo release, White Noise. The album s, how ever, were not well- received and barely cracked into the low er ranges of the Billboard charts. The desperate Republicans began to try just about anything to reverse their chart setbacks (which by now had replaced national polls as a i illii 11ii 11 m u m mmmm m eans of m easuring public opinion). D euk­ m ejian won back som e lost ground with his successful tour with Bon Jovi and C inderella, but John Tow er d id n 't help much w ith his bi­ zarre mariachi release Eat Your Heart Out, Linda! Ultim ately, it was the vice-presidental can d i­ dates who decided the '92 presidential elec­ tions. On the one hand, Jackson had w isely chosen Bruce Springsteen as his running m ate. Even so, the polls w ere still close w ith B u sh 's surprise release of a collection of progressive country tunes with Jerry Jeff W alker and Lyle Lovett lending a hand. The die w as cast w hen Dan Q uayle cam e out of enforced hiding to tour in support of his dism al Flowers in the Field. His Pat B oone-in- spired white bread and m ayonnaise croonings alienated everyone o f taste in America. F o r­ tunately, it drew everyone o f no. taste. The Republican landslide was th e biggest ever in the history o f Am erican politics. U nfor­ tunately, m ost of the voters had w ritten in D an Q uayle for President. His adm inistration saw a great cultural exodus from Am erica, as artists and critics alike fled the country for C anada, w hich extended open arms to the "n o u v eau x refu g ees." As for Q uayle, he becam e the m ost popular perform er since Elvis. Q uayle's last w ords w ere, "T h an k s, Lee for all you 've done. It w as you w ho show ed m e how to win votes by play­ ing music that catered to the audience you w anted to pander to. The w orld will never for­ get you for w hat you 've done for p o litics." Q uayle w as right. But the world also n ever forgave Atw ater, either. Webb is a history senior. Column stirs emotions I was surprised at how appalled I found myself after reading Lisa S w an 's article ("Tru m p-hating left truly hates capitalism, The Daily Texan, M onday), considering I am no strong advocate for the hom eless or see m yself as having anything against Donald Trum p. I believe he has every right to participate in the national econom ic m arket as do the rest of us, although very few individuals are capable of com peting with Trum p at his level. Yet I also believe that individuals who are sincere in their attem pts to aid the less fortunate have the right to ask for his help. the vast m ajority of It seem s though, that in a society of which less than 10 percent of the popula­ tion controls its w ealth, som e responsibility could be ac­ know ledged by factor toward a segm ent of the nation w hich finds difficulty, not in buying goods, but in simply providing m eals or shelter for their families. that controlling I d on't believe that the poor w ant to cap­ ture Donald T ru m p 's w ealth, m aybe they would ju st like a chance to survive. I find M iss Sw an 's references to "p a ra ­ sitism ," "th ie v e ry ," "g re e d " and other such adjectives concerning the efforts of those interested in aiding the unfortunate, to be calloused and detracted from the re­ ality of the situation. And I sincerely hope that such a nar­ row, ruthless m entality is not predom i­ nant in our society. Lee T. Bullard Biology Trump no Howard Roark Although I am not a Trum p-basher, nor an anti-capitalist, I take issue with Lisa Sw an's com parison ("T ru m p -h atin g left truly hates cap italism ," The Daily Texan, M onday) of Donald Trum p to Howard Roark (the architect protagonist in Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead). Donald Trum p is m otivated by the thrill of business and the prospect of fortune, which is fine. Howard Roark was driven by a passion to create great architecture, and, if you rem em ber, worked as a stone-, cutter rather than com prom ise his values as a designer. The buildings Trum p has financed ex­ emplify the mediocrity and ostentation that Roark rallied against — miles of m ar­ ble and lights, but no substance. Great ar­ chitecture, I believe, is much simpler. Architect Frank Lloyd W right believed that great architecture was the result of "a man loving principle more than himself and willing to eat the dirt throw n into his mouth every time he opens it rather than let the principle in him go by d efau lt." As s e n t F r o m flts. d o s t ükI t Ac o n A L\AS T l \ \ s T(y J o s e p h V\tafciv4oot>, c A tffA ^ o f T d £ W vUv jl VAtpEZ, S vXv p r a n A < jf? o o N p ABovrr vUS> v lU tK e A e o u T S : t CAUSING, TvVL N A TIO N S £>\<*Ge^>T o\\_ S P D -L l a J e r , " 0 O o ° o O l 4 I ~Tv\C- 0 X M/AS B A T v X ^ O O M , Y o o F K V c S r V X ^ X T T L E n v t ^ - hJOVvl CrO avjay'I! I do not see much principle in Donald Trump. Trump is a clever man w ho has m an­ aged to make a great deal of m oney, but he has m ade no contributon to architec­ ture, public or private, and he is no H ow ­ ard Roark. After Winn Weiner Graduate student Instead, he's the Antichrist reading Lisa Sw an 's editorial left truly hates capital­ ("Tru m p-hating ism ," The Daily Texan, M onday), I felt that I should inform her, and all the others of the deceived m ultitude w ho toot Trum p's horn, th at Donny Trum p is Satan Incar­ nate, or at least that is th e best explanation I have found for his behavior and the large follow ing he has am assed. I qu ote scrip­ ture: " . . . Satan shall be loosed out of his prison, and shall go out to deceive the n a ­ tions w hich are in the fou r quarters of the Earth, ... to gather them together to battle: the num ber of whom is as the sand of the s e a ." (Revelations 20: 7-8). If he isn 't the A ntichrist, and o n e would have to look long and hard for a better candidate, then he is at the very least a false idol, and as such should be cast out. R em em ber the Third and Fourth C om ­ m andm ents? A ctually, I am really quite glad that Trum p is as rich as sin, for w e all know well Jesu s' (the m ost fam ous liberal of all!) adm onition that " It is easier for a camel to go through the ey e of a needle, than for a rich man to enter the kingdom o f G o d " (Mark 10:25), and his prom ise th at the m eek shall inherit th e Earth (M atthew 5:5), and I am beginning to like the idea of a w orld-wide cooperative ow nership of the Trum p Tow ers and that god-aw ful dingy Trum p Princess. Rem em ber Trum p and Trum peters: "Y e cannot serve God and M am m o n ." It ju st ain 't kosher. Erick "The M eek" Kelemen English In praise of capitalism I would ju st like to take this chance to thank Lisa Sw an for her objectivist colum n on Donald Trum p. It was great to finally read a capitalistic point of view in The Dai­ ly Texan. I would also like to reiterate a statem ent m ade by Ayn R and that w e all w ould do well to rem em ber: The problem w ith our society is not a need to return to capitalism but to turn to true capitalism . I'm su re eve­ ry objectivist know s w hat I mean as well as most o f the "seco n d -h a n d ers" of the world. W here is Jphn G alt? Richard Beed Biochemistry Thanks for the memories To C larissa D avis and the Lady Long­ horns, w e would like to say: T h anks for th e mem ories! As graduating seniors, we w atched our last live Lady Longhorn basketball gam e Saturday n ight, as w e are m oving out of state in M ay. W e have enjoyed w atching the upper-class players develop their tal­ ents and abilities over the years, as well as w itnessing th e Lady H orns o f the future begin their careers. To Clarissa Davis, w e'd like to say that of all the public figures in sports, politics, movies or TV , there is no o n e w ho can equal the character and leadership both on and off the court that you exhibit. Your strong C hristian faith throughout all your trials has been an inspiration to us both. In addition, we are proud to have been able to see and m eet the b est w om en 's basketball player of all time. Special thanks also to Catarina Pollini for giving up your last year o f eligibility so that you could give your all the playoffs. W e cou ldn't have m ade it this far w ithout you. in To the returning players, w e w ish you the very best next year. We plan to see you in the playoffs, and if you get to the Final Four, we'll be there. As staunch supporters of all the U niver­ sity's athletics, we rarely m iss a hom e event in any sport. W e can hon estly say that, of all th at the U niversity has to offer, we will miss Lady Longhorn basketball the most. We know how hard y ou 've w orked, and we appreciate it. Keep the Streak alive! ]im Wilborn Aerospace engineering Susan Wilborn Math Bernhard is funny ... really If all Katrina Brow n gets from Sandra Bernhard's com ic persona is "ab rasiv e sar­ casm " and a "p u g fa c e ," no w onder she can't understand w hy Bernhard is o n e of David Letterm an's m ost frequent guests. N or is it very surprising that Brow n like Bernhard's book ("San d ra d oesn't Bernhard's 'C o n fessio n s': so w ho w ants to k no w ?," Images, M arch 20). Perhaps Brow n w ould have been m ore com fortable w ith a conventional "g re a t ce­ lebrity b iog rap h y ," one w ith everything neatly explained, buffed up and stripped of the ickiness that made Confessions o f a Pretty Lady such a "g r o s s ," "d isg u stin g " and "n a u sea tin g " experience for Brow n. Apparently the book's repugnance also made it impossible for Brown to pinpoint exactly what is w rong with it. At one point Brown complains of "to o m uch introspec­ tio n ," yet she concludes the review by maintaining that "B ernhard only teases ... without ever getting down to b usin ess." Brown's glib and erroneous "form ula" for Bernhard's Letterm an appearances be­ lies the entire problem: W hat’Sandra Bern- hard is insulting, with her incisive wit, gender-bending and sophisticated satire, is not David Letterm an or the band (usual­ ly a willing accom plice to her mischief), but you, Katrina, and the shallow, com ­ self-satisfied mindset you so placent, shamelessly embrace. Christian McLaughlin RTF Editor's Note: This letter was signed by four others. Editorial divinity offensive I feel pressed to express m yself in re­ gard to the "Firing Line Policy" box of M onday, March 27. The editor is entitled to express himself how ever he w ants, but I feel this box, in particular the last line which uses a capi­ talized pronoun referring to the editor, a practice which connotates divinity, was in poor taste. Again, I am not calling for censorship or a sudden merging of church and state; rather, I am responding to a section of The Texan I feel w as insensitive to a Christian audience. Thank you for your time. Ross Richie Communication Hooray And so is Gary Trudeau for Doonesbury (M arch 27). Once, jokes about AIDS and the grim facts surrounding the issue w ere limited only to narrow-minded bigots. Now, w hat w as once a decent comic strip has done the same. I'll never again read Doonesbury or an y ­ thing by Gary Trudeau again. David Reed Home economics Come talk environment On W ednesday at 4 p .m ., the Students' Association and the Natural Sciences Council of the University will sponsor an Environmental A w areness Forum in the Texas Union Presidential Lobby. This forum, focusing on the use of fossil fuels and nuclear pow er and their effects on the environm ent, will include the fol­ lowing distinguished speakers: Dr. Dale Klein, technical director of the Bureau of Engineering Research at the University; Christi Stevens of Austin's Earthfirst!; and Dr. Eric Pianka, Denton C. Cooley C en ­ tennial professor of zoology. We believe this is an excellent opportu­ nity to express concern for our environ­ ment and to becom e well-informed. For m ore information contact the Stu ­ dents' Association at 471-3166. Kim Kochman Psychology Editor's Note: This letter was signed by four others. The Daily Texan FEATURE Bellying up at the bar Tuesday, March 28, 1989, Page 5 Wednesday night belly dancing has become a tradition at the Tavern th ro u g h o u t the dance. After a sh o rt tim e of th e g ro u p dance, all the w om en m ove off th e stage. A n o th ­ er voice com es over the speaker. "A n d now , introducing o u r first solo act of the night, the lovely 'v alen tin e' Jean ette." Jeanette com es out in a colorful cos­ tum e, dom inated by red for the V alen­ tin e's Day perform ance. She sw ays her body a ro u n d in a circular m otion and m akes luring gestures w ith h er cvm bal- laden fingers. H ite uses a sw ord in her routine, w hich she said "is a typical prop for dancing. It is a M iddle-East- ern-style sw ord m ade especially for dan c­ ing. T hey're a little h ard er to find than just a norm al sw o rd ." "Y eah," King joked, "s h e had to kill a guy for it, an ancient M iddle Eastern w ar­ rior." "T here are som e real technical term s in belly d a n ce ." Maxwell said, "S haking a n d m oving. You either shake or you m ove, one or the o th er." M irage also perform s at private parties, w ed d in g s and conventions, but n o n e of the dancers m ake a living th ro u g h th e art exclusively. "N ot m any people can do belly-dancing for a living. The popularity has d ie d out and it d o e sn 't pay very well a n y m o re ,” Hite said. Hite an d Scott are instructors of belly dance for th e Texas U nion, but th e y also have o th er interests. H ite o w n s a shop called Killer Beads, w hich d esigns and m anufactures jew elry, and Scott paints designs for a w holesale porcelain dealer. C un n in g h am desribed th e various uses society h ad for the art of belly dancing before it becam e en tertainm ent at Greek restau ran ts and college drinking estab­ lishm ents. in o rd e r "Belly d an cing originated th o u san d s of years B.C. to praise female deities. Then later on it w as used by w om ­ en to give respect an d praise to other w om en. It w as also used as a celebration of a fem ale com ing of age. O ne im portant thing it w as used for w as childbirth, kind of like a Lam aze m etho d, you know , breathing exercises an d m uscle contrac­ tions. "T he u se of belly dancing to entice m en d id n 't com e along until m uch later, and then of course cam e H ollyw ood. The rest is histo ry ." By JOSHUA BERRY Daily Texan Staff Smoke and conversation filled the dark room. An occa­ sional shout echoed above the general din of the Texas Tav­ ern. The wooden tables were arranged in no particular order, and the chairs, filled with peo­ ple, were strewn everywhere except for a small area in front of the stage. The music in the background was that of the bel­ ly dance group Mirage. Webster's dictionary says a mirage is "something insub­ stantial or illusory." Not many people in the Union had dic­ tionaries on their mind that night. They came to be enter­ tained, and the dancers turned out to be very real. There is some ambiguity about how the group got started working at the Tavern. Tavern manager Tom Bowie, who has been working at the bar about seven years, said, "As long as I can remember working here, the belly danc­ ers have been coming." "It seems there was a mutual agree­ ment between the original belly dance teachers and the old management of the Texas Tavern," Bowie said. The Texas Union offers informal classes in belly dance, and some of the of the dancers come from those classes. Bowie said the belly dancers are good for business, usually drawing a crowd of 70 to 100 people every Wednesday night. Bowie said the dancers don't receive a huge sum of money for their popularity. "I pay them, you know, a modest amount of money ... enough to buy a few bangles worth," he said. In his description of the dancers' usual performance, Bowie said the dancers "dance around on the stage, and in an area just in front of the stage." But, he said, "they don't stand on tables or any­ thing like that." Florence Hite, who has been with the group the longest and is the unofficial leader, put it a little differently. Belly dancer Nancy Maxwell performs for an appreciative Texas Tavern audience every Wednesday night. "There are basically two types of belly dance, ethnic and cabaret," said Hite, who joined the dance troop in 1981. "We tend to lean more toward the cabaret be­ cause it is a freer style and we tend to incorporate some m odem jazz into our routines." Dancer Nancy Maxwell believes cabaret is "kind of flashy," and said, "I don't see myself as flashy, but a little more artistic. Pure cabaret is entertaining on more of a mid-range level." The group started about 12 years ago when classes in belly dancing started at the Texas Union. The instructors got the idea of having a recital-like performance at the Tavern to give the students more opportunities to practice. Eventually, the recitals became a permanent Wednesday night fixture. Bowie said they had been coming for so long that it was "just understood" that Wednesday nights from 7:30 to 8:30 were reserved for belly dancing. Outside Bowie's office behind the showroom small there secluded area near the side of the stage. Here, six women are warming up for their routines. Bowie makes some brief introductions before the dancing starts. is a Melissa A m m ann/Daily Tex a n Staff Hite an d Maxwell are joined by regular dancers Julieanne King, Jean ette C u n ­ ningham , Patsy Scott and a g u est dancer w ho goes by the nam e of M argeta. The troop has a different guest d an cer each week. The lights dim a little a n d the m usic gets a little louder. A sen su o u s voice com es over the lo u d speaker an n o u n cin g the first dance. T hen, from th e side of the stage em erge four dancers. T hey m ove gracefully to w ard the m iddle of the stage an d begin a serpent-like d ance in w hich all of their m otions are sy nchron ized . A dding to the excitem ent, the dancers yell in a high-pitch ed , yodel-like m an n er m All-you-can-eat-buffet $2 (Including Salad Bar and Hot Garlic Bread!) Now you can satisfy your Longhorn appetite w ith a Tex­ as-sized meal for a very small price. Introducing the m ulti­ item buffet at Pizza Hut®, now from available on Sundays 5:30-8:00 p.m. and on Tuesday evenings from 5:30-8:00 p.m. It’s a great Italian feast a t a great American price! You get all-you-can-eat Pan or Thin ’N Crispy® pizza, spaghetti w ith savory sauce, hot garlic bread and a salad bar. Come to the Pizza Hut® buffet...and come hungry! Tuesday 5:30 ’til 8:00 p.m. Sunday 5:30 ’til 8:00 p.m. Ease Your Housing Search with Texan Classifieds EVERYONE TALKS ABOUT CHANGING THE WORLD. THIS YEAR 3750 PEOPLE WILL ACTUALLY 00 IT Not everyone is cut out to change the world. After all, it takes education, skills and a spare two years. Also a willingness to work. Hard. This year 3,750 Americans will join the Peace Corps to do just that. They'll do things like build roads, plant forests and crops, teach English, develop small businesses, train community health workers, or even coach basketball. However, what they'll be doing isn't half as important as the fact that they'll be changing a little piece of the world... for the better. And when they return, these 3,750 Americans will find that experience doing hard work will have another benefit. It's exactly what their next employers are looking for. So, give the Peace Corps your next two years. And while you're out changing the world, you'll also be making a place in it for yourself. Peace Corps representatives will be on campus to talk about opportunities for over­ seas service. BA/BS candidates in MATH, SCIENCE, & EDUCATION are particularly needed for summer. To learn more about how your skills can be put to work, plan to stop by or call: 1-800-442-7294 ext. 134 INFO TABLE Tues., Weds., Mar. 28 & 29 8:30 - 4:00 Jester Center West Mall FILM SEMINAR Tuesday, Mar. 28 6:30 pm, CBA 4.238 Grad School Business INTERVIEWS Wednesday, Mar. 29 Career Planning & Placement, Jester Please bring completed application to interview DELIVERY COUPON 1 MEDIUM: THIN CRUST $K»9 PAN PIZZA HAND TOSSED (and 1 Topping) PEACE CORPS S T ILT H E TOUGHEST JOB Y0U1L EVER LOVE Good at: 1811 Guadalupe 320-8000 E x p ires 3 31 89 Tuesday, March 28 1989 Page 6 UNIVERSITY T h e Da il y T e x a n Student still missing despite TV broadcast By KEVIN HARGIS Daily Texan Staff peared, said he believes the re-cre­ ation w as "pretty good." Police have no new leads in the disappearance of UT pre-med junior Mark Kilroy despite receiving more than 90 phone calls after a segm ent of America's Most Wanted profiled the case, the Cam eron County sher­ iff said Monday. "I'm hoping som ething will turn up pretty quick," said Sheriff Alex Perez. After Sunday's broadcast, the of­ fice received 89 calls, including one or tw o calls from M atamoros, Mexi­ co — where Kilroy vanished March 14 at about 2 a . m . from a main street near the border city's nightclub dis­ trict — Perez said. The departm ent received about 10 calls M onday, but m any of those were false leads. The segm ent, w hich featured a re-creation of the events that night, w as aired Sunday nationally with a special broadcast from Brownsville and Matamoros. Perez said he hopes for more re­ sponse from M exico after the show is rebroadcast in Spanish M onday night in Brownsville. Officers will wait to see if any phone calls provide positive leads before re-evaluating the investiga­ tion at this w eek's end, Perez said. "We have really worked hard on this case," he said. The segm ent also show ed inter­ view s with law enforcem ent offi­ cials working on the case and a live interview w ith James and H elen Kil­ roy, Mark's parents. Bill H uddleston, a Texas A&M University-Galveston student w ho w as with Kilroy the night he disap­ "I hope som e­ thing com es out of it," he said. H u d d l e s t o n s a i d h a d h e spent every day in B ro w n sv ille h e l p i n g t h e search since the disappearance. Filming the re­ creation w as an KHroy em otional expe­ rience, H uddleston said. "It w as the first time I broke dow n," he said. H uddleston, a chemical engineer­ ing/business m anagem ent junior, said he is "a little behind" in his classes, but his professors are let­ ting him make up m issed work. H uddleston, w h o returned to his Santa Fe, Texas, residence Friday, said the media attention to the case and work in the search have been tiring. "I'm kind of stressed out," H ud­ dleston said. Police have not found the H ispan­ ic male seen talking to Kilroy shortly before his friends noticed his disap­ pearance. The man w as described as being about 5 feet 8 inches tall, w ith a thin build and wearing a blue plaid shirt. He also had a cut on the left cheek. Viewers w ith inform ation in the case are asked to call either 1-800- CRIME-89 or the Cam eron C ounty Sheriff's Office in Brownsville. M oney from Kilroy's parents and Brownsville businessm en w as com ­ bined to form a $15,000 reward for information leading to Kilroy's re­ turn. Michener’s writing grants to help graduate students By CHRISTY SLOAN Special to the Texan A fellow ship program established by Pulitzer Prize-w inning author James Michener will help ease the financial burden on second-year RTF, English and drama graduate students pursuing writing projects for their departm ents. The program, created by a "sub­ stantial" from Mi­ contribution chener, will grant individual finan­ cial gifts to graduate students and bring in visiting experts to aid those students, said Joe Kruppa, associate dean of the C ollege of Liberal Arts and one of the program's coordina­ tors. Kruppa said the program "should attract som e very good students around the country," and "enable us more flexibility." T he fe llo w sh ip s , w h ich are awarded for one year in the second year of graduate work only, are for $8,000 apiece, Kruppa said. Other visiting lecturers and UT pro­ fessors will teach special courses on a sem ester basis. Kruppa said the com m ittee is in the process of choosing those stu­ dents to be awarded the fellow ­ ships. The program will begin this fall, Kruppa said. Rolando Hinojosa-Sm ith, director of the Texas Center For Writers and head of the program, said the U ni­ versity will supplem ent M ichener7s grant, and enough interest should be raised those com bined funds to run the program. from M ichener worked at the U niversi­ ty for four years w h en w riting his novel Texas. Students apply for the fellow ­ ships during their first year of grad­ uate school and m ust work as teach­ ing assistants to support them selves at that time. The program w ill allow students to concentrate on their w riting proj­ ects and free them from having to hold outside jobs, said Tom Schatz, associate professor o f radio-televi- sion-film and a m em ber of the pro­ gram's organizing com m ittee. The C enter for T e le co m m u n ica tio n Services thanks its staff and c o m m u n ity vo lu n te e rs w h o w o rk e d so w ell to m ake KUT's S pring I 9 8 9 First Class A ir Fare Fundraiser the m o s t successful o ne yet. Particular thanks are in o rd e r for the 2 ,8 3 7 individuals and businesses w h o p le d g e d their s u p p o rt to ta lin g $133,978. — W illiam S. G iorda, D ire cto r N o t p r i n t e d at S t a t e e x p e n s e Taking aim Tom Stevens/Daily Texan Staff Yang Lai, engineering sophomore, practices with the UT Longhorn Arch­ ers for the Silver Leprechaun tournament at the intramural fields. The tournament Saturday will be hosted by a club in Australia but clubs from around the world participate. Nursing school offers alternate graduate degree By DEBBIE SIMON Daily Texan Staff A new graduate program in the UT School of Nursing is the first in the state to allow students with any undergraduate degree to pursue a m as­ ter's degree in nursing. The alternate entry m aster's program will en ­ able students to complete undergraduate, up- per-division nursing courses while taking gradu­ ate nursing courses, said Betsy Bowman, an associate professor of nursing and the graduate adviser for nursing m aster's program s. The school created the program to give the growing number of people w ho have decided to switch into the nursing field the opportunity to pursue nursing w ithout needing another u n d er­ graduate degree, Bowman said. "This is a creative step in alle hating the n u rs­ ing shortage which has become a national cri­ sis," she said. "It is not an instant solution, but it gives students who want to study nursing the kind of professional flexibility that hasn't existed before in Texas." Nursing School Dean Billye Brown said she is pleased about the opportunity to offer the pro­ gram. "It will provide many excellent students for us," Brown said. Bowman said students will save time by not having to complete prerequisites necessary for a bachelor of science in nursing. The program could be completed in eight or nine semesters, she said. Students can eliminate any deficiencies over the summer before beginning the program through modules — self-paced learning pack­ ages done on an individual basis or at home. The modules, which will stress important concepts, have not yet been fully developed, she said. "If we feel a student is capable, they may not need to make up any prerequisites," Bowman said. "Each application is reviewed individual- ty " Any applicant with an undergraduate degree and a 3.0 upper-division GPA will be considered for the program, Bowman said. She said appli­ cants must be "capable academically" because the full-time accelerated program might be over­ whelming for some students. Bowman said the department seeks a wide va­ riety of students for the program. "We don't dis­ criminate," she said. "But we prefer people who have a human services orientation. We look at what their goals are and look at their work and volunteer experience." Students who complete the program receive a master of science in nursing and become eligible to take the state board examination to become a registered nurse, Bowman said. To be eligible to take the exam, one must have completed a de­ gree in nursing. Awareness week focuses on acquaintance rape By DEENA PERKINS Daily Texan Staff Dealing with acquaintance rape this year's Rape will highlight A w areness Week, being held through this Friday, the coordinator of University NOW said Monday. "It's important to understand that rapists are people that you know ," said Danalynn Recer. Rape Awareness Week, which is sponsored by University NOW and the Students' Association, will fea­ ture speakers from the Austin Police Department and the Austin Rape Crisis Center. A Thursday discussion, "Sexual Assault: It's Not Just for Strangers Anymore," will focus on acquain­ tance rape and will be held at 7 p.m. in the Texas Union Ballroom. Pame­ la Cook-Kinney, coordinator of the public education program for the Austin Rape Crisis Center, will be the feature speaker. Cook-Kinney, with her assistant A1 Jones, will talk about relation­ ships and acquaintance rape, focus­ ing on identifying potential rapists. Danger signals to look for in men, Cook-Kinney said, are a propensity for violence, overpossessiveness and jealousy. Members of the crisis center trav­ el in male-female pairs when giving lectures to encourage men to partici­ pate, Cook-Kinney said. "We don't think this is just a w om en's issue," she said. It is im ­ portant for m en to know the danger signals so they discourage that kind of behavior. Thursday's discussion is being co­ sponsored by the Panhellenic C oun­ cil. Recer said it is very important that is the Panhellenic Council sponsoring one o f the discussions because it has been difficult to cre­ ate rape aw areness in the Greek com m unity. "Half o f all rapes take place through people w h o m eet in organ­ izations," she said. A long with discussions and film s scheduled for 7 p.m . Friday at T.S. Painter Hall 2.48, there will be the annual "Take Back the Night" march through cam pus. The march will start outside of Painter, by the biology ponds. "The march is for w om en to say T h e se are our streets too,' " Recer said. EVERY WOMAN S CONCERN C o n fid e n t ia l, P r o f e s s io n a l R e p r o d u c tiv e C are i«7a • Adoption Services • Free Pregnancy Testing • Problem Pregnancy Counseling • Abortion Services • B irth Control • Pap Test REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES B o a r d C e r t if ie d O b - G y n e c o lo g is ts Lic e n s e d N u r s in g S ta ff e x p e r ie n c e d C o u n s e lo r s O n R K S h u t t le 458-8274 1009 E. 40th JEWELRY REPAIRS AND MANUFACTURING GOLD - PLATINUM - SILVER • RESTORATION ANO ANTIQUE REP AMS • RBCUTT1NG and REP0U8HMG GEMS • M0M0UAL OESIQNS T H E S H E F T A L L C O . J E W t-L E R S G E M O L O G IS T S 2236 GuadNuf» 477-4824 On 6w Drag nort to W M an Highland I M 456-6255 acroaa Irom Scvtrougha University Market Facts... During the past 30 days, students of the university spent $2,445,136 for clothing and shoes at Austin stores. Source: “The University Market” Belden Associates, 1987 One-ni: IStanl Every Tuesday evening until six, you'll find special student dis­ counts on even' product in our store—and that includes Polk Audio, Sony, Carver Bose, Denon, and more. From speakers and TV's to personal electronics. At MarCum. M arCum Electronics 6009 Burnet Road at Koenig Lane • 458-8277 prepare for the G R EA T W ALTZ Susan Marshall, associate profes­ sor of sociology, w ill present a dis­ cussion at 7 p.m . Tuesday in Robert A. Welch Hall, on pornography and the relationship it plays in rape. Under the program, award-win­ ning authors, poets and play­ wrights will visit the University and assist the participants by presenting readings, lectures and m ini-courses. Banquet Facilities REHEARSAL DINNERS, FAMILY REUNIONS WEDDING RECEPTIONS Thousands of Country Store and Saloon Treasures From Old Austin and Central Texas Priced from $1 to $42,000 6416 N. LAMAR • AUSTIN, TEXAS 451-5440 Tall Come Visit! 7:30 pm TUESDAY, MARCH 28 and continuing on Tu 4-4 and Th 4-6 NO PARTNER REQUIRED $5.00 for 3 nights of Waltz and Polka teaching SPRING CLEARANCE! SAVINGS N EVERY DEPARTMENT — SOME ITEMS BELOW COST RINGS EARRINGS WATCHES DIAMONDS Finer Quality at Fantastic Prices Come see what you can buy for as little as *4 9 . *9 9 n * 1 4 9 . H 9 9 . *2 4 9 . and more of course CHARGE IT F YOU WISH MCVISAAMX 90 day and up to 36 mo». T H E S H E F T A L L C O JE W E L E R S G E M O L O G IST S Sponsored by Csardas - UT International Folk Dancers 2236 Ouadaiup* 477-4924 H OntfwDragnart tc Highland Mafl 456-9255 Lowar Lavai aaroaa trocn Scartiral» T h e D a i l y T e x a n Lawyers argue over relevance of case evidence By GREG PERLISKI Daily Texan Staff Defense and plaintiff's attorneys spent more than an hour M onday arguing the validity of evidence that a state district judge so far has ruled inadm issible in a law suit seeking m onetary dam ages for a w om an's 51-year stay in state m ental institu­ tions. Toni H unter, an assistant attor­ told Judge Harley ney general, Clark in District C ourt th at testimo­ ny relating to a previous federal lawsuit is not relevant to Opal Pet­ ty's lawsuit. Petty and two relatives are suing the Texas D epartm ent of Mental Health and Mental Retardation and four individuals w ho have worked with the departm ent for failing to end Petty's prolonged stay in both the Austin State Hospital and the San Angelo State School. State attorneys argue that Petty was diagnosed as a schizophrenic and constantly needed professional supervision. But Petty's attorneys allege that the w om an, who was first for depression, adm itted received inadequate care. Deborah Hiser, Petty's attorney, asked Clark to allow testim ony re­ lating to Lelsz vs. Kaveanagh, a case filed in 1974 involving the MHMR. She argued that the case makes m any of the same com plaints that Petty now claims against the state. Hiser directed the court's atten­ tion to a phrase w ithin the Lelsz case that asks for the right to "indi­ vidualized treatm ent and m eaning­ ful and appropriate habituation." "There is a lot of overlap" be­ tween the cases, Hiser said. James H arrington, w ho also rep ­ resents Petty, said reference to the federal case is necessary because the plaintiffs m ust prove MHMR offi­ cials — such as Gary Miller, former MHMR com m issioner — show ed a conscious disregard for Petty's con­ dition. But H unter said the federal case's allegations had gone to court only in parts and consideration of its re­ trip levancy would be "a through hearsay." total PROFESSIONAL STUDIO T i n i r j f ? I N S T A N T 1 C T T T fo r RESU M ES • PASSPORTS APPLICATION S • IM M IG R A T IO N C O L O R • B&W Hwrfege 2532 G u a d a lu p e- 477-5555 FREE P A R K IN G ¡N PfcAR I------------------c o u p o n ___________ j ROFFLER SCHOOL I OF HAIR DESIGN ! SHAMPOO * _ ; $ C : CUT BLOW DRY V ! Service» perform ed by tupervlsed students! 5339 Burnet 458-2620 | es rtm s 24th & San Antonio Open Monday-Saturday 11 am-until 1:30 at night G/M STEAK HOUSE DELIVERS! 474-GM GM f t V P E P A H # No No Chrome . Contracts Open Every Day 4121 Guadalupe Next door to A astia Barbell Co. 459-9174 STATE & LOCAL Tuesday, March 28,1989 Page 7 Commission delays Hyde Park decision By ALAN HINES Daily Texan Staff The Austin Historic Landm ark Commission on M onday postponed for one month a decision on w hether to grant landm ark status to a Hyde Park house slated for dem o­ lition by a neighborhood church. H yde Park Baptist Church, 3901 S peedw ay,, wants to destroy the building — a duplex built in 1899 — along with six other houses on church-ow ned Hyde Park land to make room for parking facilities. But neighborhood representatives opposed to the church's expansion plan convinced the commission that more time is needed to conduct a full study of the 90-year-old build­ ing and to determ ine its historical value. "W e will try our dam nedest to prove this house is historic," said W anda Penn, a Hyde Park resident. "If we fail, fine — w e've failed be­ lost some houses. But fore and w e're going to try." The com m ission's action is the latest in a contest that has smol­ dered for more than a decade in the Hyde Park neighborhood, creating a rift between residents and the 10,000-member church. Residents of the neighborhood have long complained about park­ ing problem s created by the church, is de­ a problem signed said Dan G ardner, the church's business coordinator. the expansion to alleviate, "W e w ant to provide for more growth dow n Speedway and get rid of the cars on the streets," Gardner said. "W e're trying to do w hat they [residents] said they w anted." For the past two years, the church and the Hyde Park Neighborhood Association have negotiated an agreem ent on which direction the church g ro u n d s will expand, G ardner said. But James Allman, president of the neighborhood group, said the church has dodged recent negotia­ tion efforts and avoided discussion of a recent settlem ent that his or­ ganization has offered. "W e're open to discussion with the church," Allman said. "A t the current time, we are waiting for a response to a draft agreem ent we subm itted to them last December." That draft agreem ent, dated Dec. 12, 1988, was subm itted to the head of the church's long-range planning committee, Robert Liverman. It stipulated that the church should expand into a 2 V2-block area just southw est of its main building if it wants the neighborhood associa­ tion's approval. The draft agreem ent also states that the church m ust divest from land it owns to the northeast of its main building — w here the house in question is located — as well as some small parcels of land im medi­ ately to the east and w est of its cen­ ter. Allman said the church has bla­ tantly ignored the draft agreem ent and continues to plan expansion into the northeastern parcel of land. "They've said they w ant to ex­ pand south along Speedw ay, but they continue destroying houses to the northeast," Allman said. "It's specifically against w hat w e pro­ posed." G ardner the confirm ed church received and subsequently ignored the neighborhood associa­ tion proposal. th at "We have not responded to that," G ardner said. "It outlined a sort of different direction than we have dis­ cussed on the long-range planning committee, so we are not planning on following that." He said the church does plan to expand south along Speedway, but it will move only onto land that it already owns — not the 2}h blocks that the neighborhood association wants the church to buy. Reptile rapport TomStevens/Daily Texan Staff Michael Perez, 8, is captivated by the mechanized mo­ tions of a model baby apatosaurus at the Dinosaurs Alive! exhibit at the Austin Nature Center. Perez made the 74-mile trip from Troy with his family. Finance committee OKs funds for Hinson-Hazlewood loans By JIM GREER Daily Texan Staff Despite a deficit-plagued budget, the state Senate Finance Committee Monday followed Texas Higher Ed­ ucation Coordinating Board wishes in funding a popular college student loan program. Mack Adams, the coordinating board's assistant commissioner for student services, said funding set aside by the committee for opera­ ting the Hinson-Hazlewood college student loan program "is going to be just about what we would have wanted." Legislative Budget Board officials Monday advised finance committee members on how to best earmark state money for miscellaneous high­ er education programs, including student loans administered by the coordinating board. The committee approved budget board recom m endations of $2.3 mil­ lion for 1990 Hinson-Hazlewood op­ erations and the same am ount for 1991. About 10 percent of state univer­ sity students use the program , which provides loans at lower inter­ est rates than commercial lenders, Adams said. "W e believe the program fills a very vital need in terms of loans at reasonable rates," he said. Hinson-Hazlewood services in­ clude guaranteed student loans at a 7 percent interest rate and college access loans at 10 percent. In January, a legislative advisory commission discussed eliminating the loan program to free funds for other budgetary uses. Adams said coordinating board officials were "very pleased" the commission recom m ended continu­ ation of Hinson-Hazlewood loans. "It is the largest program we op­ erate in term s of the am ount of m oney we handle in a year," he said. While current funds specified for Hinson-Hazlewood services are in line with coordinating board re­ quests, a tuition grant program to benefit students at private universi­ ties received a little less m oney than board officials w anted, Adams said. C o m m itte e C h a irm a n K ent Caperton, a Democratic senator from Bryan, said the committee should take an "across the board approach" to allocate program fi­ nancing by acting with equal fair­ ness to all higher education com po­ nents. LONDON PARIS ROME MADRID RIO TOKYO $309 315 355 320 380 507 One Way From Austin Plus EURAIL PASSES, USSR/EUROPE TOURS, LANGUAGE LEARNING CENTERS, AND MUCH MORE. CALL T O D A Y FOR FREE STUDENT TRAVEL C ATA LO G U E Counántavei 1904 Guadalupe, Austin, Texas 78705 1-512-472-4931 • :m A BEHIND THE SCENES LOOK AT THE Tuesday, March 28 - Wednesday, March 29 The Texas Union Tuesday, March 28th: Wednesday, March 29: 10:00am - 12:00pm A National Agenda for The FBI John Otto, FBI Associate Director Texas Union Sinclair Suite, 3.128 1:30pm - 4:00pm Recruitment and Training Byron Sage, Sr. Supervisory Resident Agent Austin / Waco Texas Union Theatre 11:30am - 1 :00pm The Role of Libraries In Investigations Kathleen Eisenbeis and Erika Mittag Texas Union Eastwoods Room, 2.102 7:00pm - 9:00pm Domestic Covert Action and Security Investigations Jack Ryan, FBI Agent, 1966 - 1987 Texas Union Ballroom, 3rd Floor 7:00pm - 9:00pm Crime Resistance Clarence Kelley, FBI Director, 1973 - 1976 Texas Union Ballroom, 3rd Floor For more information call 471-1945. A Presentation of The Texas Union Distingished Speakers Series. Sponsored by The Texas Union Student Issues Committee. NEW ! FREE DELIVERY* *$500 Minimum delivery order 'Limited Delivery ana VISIT OUR NEW R I V E R S I D E LOCATION ! 441-9103 Page 8/THE DAILY TEXAN/Tuesday, March 28, 1989 .iff COUPON $1.00 Plus Tax BUYS YOU 2 SCOOP WAFFLE o r a ANY FLAVOR o r a 16 ©^ ' - SUNDAE CONE SMALL MALT EXPIRES 4/4/89. Please present coupon w/purchase GmdOp^^ m S i — “ — * «P _ p i iir F " T f CARRY P V T V f o - f V V J 2 Locations 2410 Riverside Next to AMC Theater < r Westgate Mall Next to AMC Theater ICE CREAM MADE THE OLD FASHIONED WAY 2 f o r 1 DINNERS BUY 1 DINNER AT REGULAR PRICE, AND GET 2ND DINNER OF SAME OR LESSER VALUE FREE WITH COUPON. EXPIRES 4 * m . U M tT I COUPON PER VISIT. mi MADRE fS MEXICAN POOD RESTAURANT 11 AM-8 PM MON-SAT 2201 MANOR RD. 7 BLOCKS EAST OF DM5 Y O lF L L U K E m ^ - ^ - w t f w - w v C O U P O N ^ - - -COM COUPOI Q / M S t e a k h o u s e 1 1908 Guadalupe Announces A Dinner Special! (5 PM-10 PM Good Thru 4/3/88) G rilled Chicken Dinner includes Baked Potato or Fries, Salad, Texas Toast and Iced Tea $4.99 C/M STEAK HOUSE DELIVERY! 11 AM-10PM Sun-Wed 11AM-3AM Th.-Sat 474-G M GM I SAVE BIG WITH TEXAN COUPONS l^iM«aV^aMaa^|W —* COUPON w * ~ •s^frsiu ee^^g FREE KEY THIS IS YOUR INVITATION TO ACTION KEY SHOP. BRING THIS COUPON TO OUR SHOP AND WE WILL GIVE YOU ONE FREE DUPLICATE KEY (NO PURCHASE NECESSARY) SINGLE CUT AMERICAN CAR, HOME, OFFICE CREDIT GIVEN TOWARD: BOAT, MOTORCYCLE, LUGGAGE, RUBBER HEAD, FOREIGN CAR, DOUBLE CUT A c t i o n 459-5151 . v _ _ 5256 BURNET RD. ■ NORTH LOOP PLAZA 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE Expiras 4-3-39 ««-COUPON Movies 12 Cinemark Theater 1-35 at 1825 251-7773 Buy One Ticket At Regular Price & Get a Second Ticket VALUABLE COUPON $ b « a ^ |W *reg. $22.50 w/coupon only Walk In Welcome Insurance Discounts WE GUARANTEE TO BEAT ANY COMPETITORS PRICE BY $2. BRING THEIR AO WITH YOU. 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Premium ON * — In ■ IrJI ■ rl wtmMwu • Chauna Hinges Lubricated • AN Fluid Levels Checked a Filled * »«■ «-*-»— « -* u |r,A m rj YñnotnmK2 womeo • Car Vacuumed I /: : /: • ; / r- OUR 15-POINT FULL SERVICE OIL CHANGE M0 ¥sMwSh«nrOhm atm Exp 4/1V88 W r new • C CCué* IHE ELECTRIC BEACH (new members only) 40 DAYS for * 4 0 “ 7 SESSIONS for *18°° SOUTH 447-7171 2121 E. OLTORF ■ É n á ia ftM iE M e u i S u n ^ exp 4/10/9$ M utt prwm nt coupon T h e Da ily T exan s p o r t s UT’s Jordan succeeds with maturity, dedication turned out, Jordan definitely made the right choice. But before Jordan began on his path to success, Long­ horn men's swimming Coach Eddie Reese had decided it would be best to redshirt Jordan. “I didn't give up anything," Jor­ dan said. "Had I swum in a meet and not scored at NCAAs, it was a waste of a season. Ed just put mus­ cle on me by lifting weights. I ma­ tured physically. I got a free year." Now Jordan can talk about that year as a positive experience. But at the time it wasn't very pleasant. “It got old being at the dorm when no one else was there because they were all at a swim meet, but it was definitely worth it," Jordan said. When Jordan began competing, it was obvious that his year of appren­ ticeship had put him on the right track. Not only had his tools been polished, but he was able to mental­ ly adjust himself to swimming. “After conference [SWC champi­ onships] of last year, I knew I could compete," Jordan said. “NCAAs last year was an incredible learning experience. I was seeded second going into the finals and it scared me. I kind of choked a little [he fin­ ished seventh in the 50- and 100- yard freestyles]. Being seeded first w on't scare me anymore." Jordan has already reached the upper echelon of his sport, but most important to him, he has met the goals he set out for himself. "I'm pretty goal-oriented. I want­ Tuesday, March 28,1989 Page 9 Horns searching for better play against Huskers By JERRY QERNANPER The way Texas Coach Cliff Gustafson figures it, his seventh- ranked Longhorns should be p e tty pum ped up for their dou- bleheáder at 4 p.m. Tuesday against unranked Nebraska. Huh? “Normally, 1 would expect a little bit of a letdown," Gustafson said. "But after the way we played at Baylor, I'm looking for us to establish that we're better than that." As in better than a .224 batting average, with only six extra-base hits in 98 at bats; better than a, 4.68 ERA, with no starter lower' than 3.60; and better than 30 whiffs at the plate to Baylor's 19. In fact, Texas' lackadaisical showing in being outscored 13- 11 in its first SWC series so dis­ gusted Gustafson that he had to think for a few seconds before coming up with a positive result from the weekend. "I thought the defense played very well," he said. “One error in three games isn't bad." Kirk Dressendorfer and Mark Smith probably will pitch the first two games of this weekend's series against Rice, but the third spot is up for grabs. "I just wanted to be satisfied that I did the best that I could," Jordan said. "I didn't want to change per­ sonality-wise. to change my training habits or any­ thing else after coming off a suc­ cess." I didn't want Last year, Jordan was one of many Texas swimmers to shave their heads before the NCAAs, hop­ ing to reduce their times. He hasn't decided his hair's future yet this year. “I might be leaning that way [toward shaving]. I don't think I'll swim any faster because of the 'aqua-dynamics' of the whole thing. I think it has some psychological ef­ fects and it's just kind of fun. If you shave your head, you've got some­ thing on the line." Looking to this weekend's NCAA Championships in Indianapolis, Jor­ dan knows that his swims will go a long way towards deciding if a third national championship in the 1980s is in store for the Texas Longhorns. "I'm confident, I'm ready to go. I think we need to get another flag up there and there's no reason we shouldn't. I'm convinced its going to come down to the last leg of the [400 freestyle] relay." And what if that is Shaun Jor­ dan's leg? Bring it on." “That would be fine with me. John Moore/Daily Texan Staff Shaun Jordan used to skip practice, now he’s the SWC’s top swimmer. ed to win an SWC championship. I wanted to be on the SWC team my freshman year. I remember talking to Ed about it. I walked into his of­ fice, it was like a goal-setting meet­ ing in my first year and he said, 'W hat's your goal?' I said I wanted to be on the conference team. He kind of looked up at me funny and said to redshirt this guy, what's he think­ ing?' I was oblivious to him thinking I couldn't do it." [to himself] 'I'm going That struggle to reach expecta­ tions remains a friendly battle Reese uses to push Jordan to new heights. “Last year I told him I was going to be under 20 [seconds in the 50 freestyle]," "H e Jordan laughed at that. I remember touch­ ing the wall in [the SWC Champion­ ship] prelims when I went 19.99. I looked over at him and he was just laughing." said. After a 12-month period that in­ cluded a conference and national championship and a trip to the Olympics, Jordan's life had obvi­ ously changed. To his credit, he didn't let his success go to his head. 66 Mom says the house just isn’t the same without me, even though itfc a fot cleaner.^ By JAIME ARON Daily Texan Staff Working out versus skipping out. Three years ago, it would not have been a question for Shaun Jordan. “Do you mind if I work out first?" Jordan asked when approached for his interview. The fact that his time in the pool now tops his priority list is an exam­ ple of the maturity and dedication that have changed Jordan's life. That reversal of direction has turned him into an Olympic gold-medalist and the 1989 SWC Championship Most Outstanding Swimmer in only his sophomore season. “There were better things for me to do [in high school]. I'd rather go out with my friends. It was easier to do that than it was to seriously train. I'm glad that's the way my high school was because I had fun and now I'm not burned out about swimming." When faced with the decision of abandoning or seriously pursuing long swimming, Jordan and hard. But in the end, he could not desert his natural ability. thought “It came to a point where you ei­ ther get out of the sport and you do something else or you get serious and do the best you can. I came to that line," Jordan said. "I gained some success my senior year and I had to decide if I was going to swim in college or not and I was fortunate enough to get recruited by Texas." Judging by the way things have Women prep for Trinity; men top Rice By PAUL HAMMONS Daily Texan Staff The Texas women's tennis team will travel to San Antonio Tuesday to take on Trinity in the first part of a home-and-home series. The Longhorns, 9-5 and 5-0 in conference play, are coming off an 8-1 pounding of Rice Saturday in Houston. Although Trinity is not in the SWC, the two teams have been at the top of the Southwest region for the last few years and the meet has evolved into a big rivalry. "They're a little bit down this year in the ranking," Texas Coach Jeff Moore said. "They're very well coached, they execute well and they're always tough for us to beat because it is a rivalry." Texas junior Diana Merrett said Trinity's vocal home crowd has made it difficult in the past for the Longhorns to come away with a win. “I think it's really important [to winj because since I've been in school, we haven't had much suc­ cess down there," Merrett said. ■ ■ ■ In m en's action, Texas defeated Rice 8-1 Tuesday to remain unbeat­ en in SWC play. Texas swept the singles matches with Steve Bryan, Patrick Flynn, Mitch Michulka, Aaron Gross, Mi­ chael Emmett and Ronney Eddin all winning. In doubles, the teams of Michul- ka-Hubert Karrasch and Gross-Ger- ry Martinez also won for Texas. Compiled by Marissa Silvera New coaches, system debut for ’89 season By SCHUYLER DIXON Daily Texan Staff The name tags are gone for the revamped Texas L o n g h o r n s staff, coaching long the but road of imple­ menting a new system began Monday with the first spring practice. Texas Coach David McWilliams has new coordinators on both of­ fense (Lynn Amedee) and defense (Leon Fuller), a third new member of the coaching staff (tight end/spe­ cial teams coach Bob Boyd) and only three coaches are back at the same position they coached last year. There have been introductions all around in the UT football offices the past week. McWilliams didn't hire Amedee until March 9, but he fig­ ures the (earning process for the new staff members is on schedule. “We just have to make sure the coaches are on the same page when they get out here on the field," said McWilliams, who enters his third spring as UTs head coach. "I don't thiAk we're behind, but you can't be ahead with a new group." Just because your Mom is far away, doesn’t mean you can’t be close. You can still share the love and laughter on AT&T Lc mg Distance Service. It costs less than you think to hear that she likes the peace and quiet, but she misses you. So go ahead, give your Mom a call. You can clean your room later. Reach out and touch someone® ATCT The right choice. Page 10/THE DAILY TEXAN/Tuesday, March 28, 1989 A dvertisem ent RK SPORTS review Representing the Division of Recreational Sports Dance away with the Clubs and lacrosse talents. Call Jerome Crowder, 478-4806. 'mmmWMmmDmSf i f Intramural events kicking into high gear with new entries This week's TRIVIA QUESTION 1. Your body reacts the same way to the same intake of alcohol each time? True or False 2. Any time you take an alcoholic drink, it kills brain cells? True or False Open Recreation accepting applications include Applications are now being ac­ cepted in Gregory Gym 36 for Summer/Fall Semester positions with the Open Recreation Pro­ gram, within the Division of Rec­ reational Sports. Available posi­ tions field supervisors, activity supervisors, tennis court supervisors and spe­ cial area supervisors (i.e. weight room, gymnastics, etc.). All appli­ cants must schedule an interview upon submitting their application. The interview deadline is Monday April 3. lifeguards, Summer applicants must have CPR certification before June 1, 1989. Lifeguards must also have current lifeguard training certifi­ cation. Fall applicants will need the above certifications by August 31,1989. All employees are scheduled for an average of 10-12 hours per week. Related experience is pre­ ferred for all positions. Weekend and noon hour availability is also preferred. Payrates range from $3.62 per hour for activity, tennis, and field supervisors to $3.88 per hour for special areas, and $4.13 per hour for lifeguards. For additional inform ation, come to Gregory Gym 36, or call 471-5234. CSARDAS Prepare for the great waltz. That’s right Csardas will have not 1, not 2, but 3 nights of waltz and polka for just a small $5.00 fee. The scheduled nights for enter­ tainment are Tuesday March 28, Tuesday April 4, and Thursday April 7 at AGH 136 from 7:30 to 9:45 p.m. If you need more infor­ mation call Henri at 476-3015 or John at 454-0175. UT DANCE TEAM The UT Dance Team is holding this year’s Spring Show April 2, 1989. The matinee show will begin at 2:00 p.m. followed by the eve­ ning show at 8:00 p.m. in UT’s Op­ era Lab Theatre. The price of the tickets will be $5.00 in advance, which can be obtained by calling Mele Perluns at 398-1960, and $6.00 at the door. This perform­ ance is sure to be a hit and one you won’t want to miss, so come on out and watch the UT Dance Team do some serious slammin’! TEXAS LACROSSE The Texas Lacrosse Team will be traveling to Dallas to take on the Mustangs of SMU on Saturday April 1. On Thursday, April 6 at 7:00 p.m. at Whitaker Fields, UT & Southwestern will vie for the #1 spot in the SWLA (Southwest La­ crosse Association). If the Long­ horns win this game they will gain a berth in the championships to be held in Austin on April 22 and 23. In recent action UT soundly de­ feated LSU 16-6 but in the process lost ace attackman John Mireur with a broken collarbone. The team wishes John a speedy recov­ ery and wants to find another player with Mireur’s experience IM SOFTBALL HIGHLIGHTS In coed action the GEESE messed all over KAPPA DELTA 5- 1. Also in coed action PRIME TIME disposed of THE SUPREME TEAM 11-5, while MAD DOG II chewed BILL’S KIDS 11-6. The INTERNATIONALS did not allow the OIHRNAL SWINGERS to swing as they downed them 12-1 and DUDE MAN HEY swanked on the HELL-RAISERS 9-2. PHI CHI THETA grounded the FLY­ ING SPOT SCANNERS 9-1, and finally the BEARS gnawed on the MISS-HITS OF SCIENCE 20-1. In the Independent division IEEE shocked ASME 13-3, while n H ousing the PRATHER MIGHTY HEROES w hipped CONTESSA HASH MONGERS 17-5. To rap it up in the club divi­ sion PHI CHI THETA stumped the TEXAS WRANGLERS 8-4. IM RIFLE If you have a Rambo inside of you then we have the sport for you. The Intramural rifle tourna­ ment is scheduled Saturday, April 8, at 10 a.m. in the Steindham Hall rifle range. The tournament consists of target shoot, presuma­ bly with Old Yellars face on it, standing, kneeling, and sitting. The division of play consists of men and women and the tourna­ ment is open to students, faculty and staff members of the nonstu­ dent program of the Division of Recreational Sports. This is a nov­ ice only tournament, no experi­ ence is required, therefore UT Rifle Club members are not eligi­ ble. Entries are open in Gregory Gym 33, so come on down and sign up. EIGHT BALL TOURNEY tourney Entries have opened for the eight-ball in Gregory Gym 33. The tournament will be April 6 in the Texas Union Rec Center and will be from 8 p.m. to midnight. The tournament will be double elimination, the best two out of three games. All matches will be 45 minutes or whoever leads after an hour will be deemed the winner. If there are at least eight entries, competition will be held in women’s and men’s A and B divi­ sions. All UT students and faculty/ staff members of the non-student program are eligible to compete. There is a minimal $2 entry fee for the competition. IM MINIATURE GOLF TEAM Teams consist of two males and two females in what is refered to as one of the most competitive IM sports. The winner will be deter­ mined by the lowest combined to­ tal score after 36 holes of play by each team. Entries opened up yesterday and competition will be on April 6, begining at 6:30 p.m. at the Putt Putt course, 6700 Burnet Road. The entry fee is a small $3.50 per person for 36 holes, to be paid upon check in. Equipment will be provided by P utt Putt. Any male or female student or eligible member of the Non-stu­ dent program can participate. ID must be presented on site. ULTIMATE FRISBEE Have you ever played Ultimate Frisbee? If you haven’t then this is one sport you have to play. U lti­ mate Frisbee is a fast action game that requires eye/hand coordina­ tion and a good heart but its fun, fun, fun. If you now desire to play then you’re in luck because Rec Sports has a Ultimate Frisbee Tourney. The tourney will be on Satur­ day, April 15 at 10:00 a.m. at Whi­ taker Field. Check in by 9:30 a.m. because they will not accept late teams. This is a round robin event, so all teams can expect to play at least two games. No cheating is al­ lowed. You can have no more than two Frisbee Club members per team. There is no entry fee and any UT student is eligible to play. If you need rules on Ultimate Fris­ bee they are available in Gregory Gym 33. HAND BALL DOUBLES Grad your gal Hal, hop on the bus Gus, Come to the gym Jim, en­ ter the Coed Handball Doubles, and set yourself free. Yes guys please your girls heart by entering her and yourself into the Coed Handball Doubles Tournament. Sign ups are taking place at this very moment, the draw will be April 7, and play starts on Mon­ day, April 10. It will be single elimination, best two out of three, and there is no skill divisions. All students with valid UT ID’s are eligible. Come down to GRE Gym 33 and sign up now. ^ T l I in the world and there are count­ less some mon- teaching children to play, ■Rec Sports will be hosting a Morning Youth Soccer Camp dur­ ing the weeks of dune 5-9 and 12- 16. So if this sounds good to you, 31 for more information. You can also pick up an application form at this very same location. Salary HOUSING FRATA FRATB INDA INDB OPEN CLUB 6 & UNDER LAW/GRAD COED WOMEN 1989 BASKETBALL CHAMPIONS BRACKMEN PIKE THETA CHI FULL FORMCE KAPPA ALPHA UNKNOWNERS TEXAS WRANGLERS 37 KUSA TRI LAMBDA SUPREME COURT THUMPERS SHOOTING STARS 38 43 CELLDWELLAS 61 BETA THETA PI 40 28 SAMMY BOOT MASTERS 20 46 SKYLINE 42 37 38 THRUSTERS III 52 CITY ROCKERS 48 34 43 37 35 26 50 UNMENTIONABLES 40 NERDS FROM HELL 38 OFF & RUNNING 35 THUMPERS Bike, hike, climb, and canoe w ith the Outdoor Program today High kick your way to Gregory Gym and sign up for the ultimate frisbee tourney. in wheel-building. The started class is small so individual atten­ tion is assured and workstands are provided. Participants will need to bring a bicycle and a spoke wrench (truing ring). The fee is $10 ($12 non-UT). Registration opened yes­ terday. Canoe Evening Wednesday, April 12, is the time to start canoeing with an early evening canoe clinic on Town Lake. Get away from campus and eqjoy a relaxing three hour boat ride. Learn how to enter and exit a canoe plus some basic canoeing strokes. The $5 ($8 non-UT) fee in­ cludes canoes, transporation and instruction. 23 at Enchanted Rock State Park. The $18 ($25 non-UT) fee includes equipment, instruction and trans­ portation. Registration for the clinic opens tomorrow and the all day climb opens April 10. Hike Pedernales Falls Off to the west of Austin, the Pedernales River cuts through rocks deposited over 200 million years ago and forms an unusual arrangement of rapids and impres­ sionistic rocks. Hike along April 9 and visit this picturesque area of spring-fed streams and sheltered canyons as well as the falls area. The $7 ($14 non-UT) cost includes transporation and a guide. Rockclimb Clinic Rockclimbere not yet out of the closet should plan to attend the rockclimbing clinic Wednesday, April 5. The clinic is $5 ($8 non- UT) and is designed for beginners. Safety and techniques will be stressed. More experienced climb­ ers should plan to attend the all­ day rockclimbing workshop April R iver Canoe Spend Saturday, April 8, in a canoe and eiyoy nature’s beauty. IX sending on water levels and other factors, this one-day trip will be held either on the San Marros River (Thompson’s Island to Sroll’s Crossing) or on the Guadalupe River near Canyon Dam. The $15 ($22 non-UT) fee rovers transpor­ tation, equipment and guides. Upcoming Events A ctivity Rafting the Guadalupe * Adv. Bike Repair Clinic * Rockclimb Clinic * River Canoe * Morning Horseback * Hike Pedernales Falls * Canoe Evening * Further details follow D ate 4/1 & 4/9 4/1 4/5 4/8 4/8 4/9 4/12 R egistration O pen(ed) 3/20 & 3/27 3/20 3/22 3/27 3/27 3/27 3/29 Morning H orseback Ride Aspiring horseback riders can gallop across the trails of Hill Country Stables on Saturday, April 8. Gentle and spirited horses are available for Western style riding with the $20 ($23 non-UT) covering transportation and stable costs. For more information, call 471- 1093 or come by GRE 31 to regis­ ter. Catch the thrill of a morning horseback ride with the Outdoor Program. Bike Repair Clinic Join Recreational Sports on April 1 for this hands-on clinic. You will become familiar with the tools and procedures needed to (straighten) the wheels, true overhaul the bottom bracket as­ sembly, and change the gearing of your bicycle. You will also be in­ troduced to the tools and tech­ niques that you will need to get T h e Da il y T ex a n James Brown Stays Clean (We Think): Day 12 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Tuesday, March 28,1989 ‘Gone’ but not forgotten, the classic 1939 film returns Page 11 By BOBBY RUGGIERO Daily Texan Staff televi­ M a n y v iew ers sion might consider Joan Collins the be-all and end- all of power- hungry sirens and bitches. Lit­ tle do they know that dear Alexis stole more than just a page from The Book of Scarlett. In the days before Dallas and Dy­ nasty (50 years before, to be exact) a certain wide-screen epic soap opera proved to be one of the most im­ portant and widely known celluloid works of an era: Gone with the Wind. Considered by many critics to be the greatest film in the history of Hollywood, David O. Selznick's the Wind undoubtedly Gone with reigns as a masterpiece. The film has been lovingly restored and is currently back limited wide­ in screen release in honor of its 50th anniversary. Now's the chance to fi­ nally see the movie that you've heard so much about in the only manner fitting. Media magnate Ted Turner, usu­ ally the nemesis of film buffs, can honestly take a bow for his efforts on Gone with the Wind. He has com­ puter-enhanced and restored the fading color from the film's original print. Though the same idea has ru­ ined "colorized" versions of Casa­ blanca and other films, the new pro­ cess used here leads to honest and breathtaking results. if that w eren 't enough, Turner has included som e never-be­ fore-seen material from the reels and reels of film not used in the original print. Even the m ost die­ hard fan will find som ething new in this release. And, Gone with the Wind, which was the most expensive film ever made at the time, tells the story of, in melo­ dramatic terms, the rise, fall and re­ construction of the Old South. A time when, as the onscreen narra­ tion points out, "gallantry took its final bow ." It's the saga of Scarlett O'Hara (Vivien Leigh), a primpy, manipula­ tive and greedy Southern belle whose fortunes nonetheless follow the path of the region of the country and the land to which she is so identified. Scarlett spends her carefree days toying with male admirers and wor­ rying about her appearance. She loves the weak-kneed Ashley Wilkes (Leslie Howard), but Wilkes same for these people again. They finally realize that their way of life has com e to an end. And through it all, the roads of Scarlett and Rhett always seem to intertw ine, largely due to the fact that their goals in life and m ethods to get them are similar — alm ost too similar. the The stature of w hich this GW TW has obtained has n ot gone un­ deserved. Released in 1939 to much publicity, film w alked away with an unprecedented nine Acade­ my Awards including best picture, for Victor Flem ing, best director best actress for Leigh and best sup­ porting actress for D e Havilland. Standing alone, GW TW rem ains the single greatest achievem ent of the old Hollywood factory system . The script, w hich is based upon M argaret M itchell's classic novel, is pure poetry, and has produced nu­ m erou s m em o rab le and scenes. The cinem atography is also im peccable, and greatly benefits from Tu rner's painstaking recon­ struction efforts. lin es From the fiery orange of the burn­ ing of Atlanta to the long, slow pull­ back shot of Scarlett am ong thou­ sands of w ounded and dying Confederate soldiers, im ages and lush colors of this movie stand the above even today's more expensive and technologically advanced m o­ viemaking. But the heart of Gone with the Wind lies with the perform ances. Vi­ vien Leigh's portrayal of Scarlett has becom e legendary not only for the wide range of em otions and talent she put into the role, but also as the blueprint for most schem ing w om ­ en characters that have com e after her. L eigh's pow er in the role, co u ­ pled with her drop-dead looks, have made hers one of the finest perform ances captured on film. Just as entertaining, if not more so, than it was 50 years ago GW TW finds its way back to the m ovie the­ ater, the way it was m eant to be seen — just not at the Village, w here the screen is too small and the sound system inadequate (lack­ ing the by-now requisite THX sys­ tem). O f course, ticket-taker decked out in antebellum attire and the rest of the m oviegoing audience probably w on't give a damn. the GONE WITH THE WIND Starring: Vivien Leigh, Clark Gable Director: Victor Fleming Playing at: The Village 4, 2700 Anderson Lane Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ (out of four) The Oscar-winning Gone with the Wind has been restored and revitalized. has agreed to marry his cousin, M elanie (Olivia De Havilland). But, as if on cue, a stranger enters the scen e determ ined to make Scarlett his ow n, the dashing and m is­ chievous Rhett Butler (Clark Gable, the "K in g of H ollyw ood"). T he four-hour long film is sw eep­ ing in its depiction of Civil War tim es, and more im portantly, the last gasp of an entire way of life and civilization. W hen all is crum bling around the people and practices of the antebellum South, there's a feel­ ing of hopelessness, but a know l­ edge that things will never be the Production refuses to get down and dirty with Williams’ ‘Iguana’ ByKERTHYFIX Special to the Texan S om e time around the turn of the century D. H. Lawrence met the ghost of John Calvin, the protestant reformer, in a sleazy bar in St. Louis. They proceeded to have a violent philo­ sophical quarrel. Out of the dust and smoke of their words, a nebulous shape took form. By some strange mystery of nature, they had borne a child out of the pregnant ferment of their clashing theologies. They named this child Thomas. Both Calvin and Lawrence were shocked at the fruit of their fury and immediately placed the boy in a suitable home. Calvin found the daughter of a Mississippi rector to protect the moral upbringing of the child and Lawrence matched her with an itiner­ ant shoe salesman who was long on ma­ chismo and short on stability. (He would later reassure himself of his masculinity by m o n n r sloo ALL DAY " a l l s e a t s - a l l s h o w s V DIRTY ROTTEN SCOUNDRELS 4:4S 7:15*45 E gI John Candy In WHO’S HARRY CRUMB? 00 7:S0 10:00 E gTsI LAND BEFORE TIME 4:417:00*10 G| - < ( TIMES PUBLISHED ARE FOR TQOAY ONLY ) C A L L 471 -5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD G e n e r a l C i n e m a AAIM BAIN MATINKBS EVERY DAY ■ A l l SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM HIGHLAND 10 M IP P ii nSKVIlU BOAP 454-9562 SAME DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES it TROOP BEVERLY HILLS wuTHX 1 *4 3 3:00 5:107:50 * 5 0 ★ LE V IA T H A N r 1:003:133:307:00 IQiOO ★ LEAN ON ME M13 12:00 2:30 SKW 7:30 10:00 ★ CHANCES AREm 12:002:30 3.-00 7:30 10:00 THX THX ★ BILL I TED’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE fq 12:00 2:00 4:00 0:00 OHIO 10:00 ★ BURBSpo 12:302:303:107:130:30 ★ WORKING GIRL ii 12:002:303:007:30 10:00 ★ I’M GONNA GIT YOU SUCKA o 12:43 2:33 3:03 7:23 0:33 ★ SKIN DEEPn 12:00 2:00 4:00 4:00 0*0 10:00 ★ RESCUERS• 12:00 1:433:303:13 7:00 ★ POLICE ACADEMY N il 0:13 Only HIGHLAND MALL HIGHLAND MAIL DLVP. 451-7326 ★ DEAD BANG o 1:10*205:307:4310*0 ★ F L E T C H L I V E S * i B A R T O N CREEK mo p p c * l o o p s SAME DAY ADVANCE TKKST SALES DEAD BANG o t h x Ife M M S M IK IS fc * ■ 4 DANQKMUS LIAISONS • 12J02 *0 5i>0 7 ^ 0 * 3 ★ NEW YORK STORIES m 15*1 ldS4d> 7:13 9*8 ★ LEAN ON ME m i» liMAH AMMO (M l calling young Thomas "Miss N ancy.") this Thomas survived schizophrenic upbringing by writing. As a young man, his oft-hysterical mother committed his sis­ ter Rose to an insane asylum where a pre- frontal lobotomy was performed to cure her of mental illness. Thomas salvaged his sani­ ty by making these familial tragedies the source of his inspiration — one of his best plays would be based on this period in his life. Frustrated by the dependence of his mother and sister, young Tom left his past behind to answer the call of the road. Soon after, he changed his name to Tennessee. As Tennessee Williams, he became one of America's most important playwrights. Along with Arthur Miller, Williams created a body of work that is truly American in spirit and style. His lifelong battle with drugs and alcohol informed his sort with a particularly seedy quality and made the dy­ namic between the naturalness of sex and moral flagellation his raison d'etre. The Night o f the Iguana, first produced in 1961, was the last in a series of Broadway successes that included The Glass M enagerie, Streetcar Named Desire and Summer and Smoke. W illiams descended into depression in the early '60s, after his lover of 15 years died. T h e w orkings of The N ight o f the Iguana and W illiams' ingestion o f unbelievable com binations of am phetam ines and barbi- tuates is no accident. The play is loose and often unfocused, its first act alm ost com ­ pletely useless except for expository pur­ poses. A s performed at Capitol City Playhouse, The Night o f the Iguana gains little direction in the way of focus. Though several scenes in the second act are genuinely riveting, as w hen H annah describes an Australian lin­ gerie salesm an asking for a piece of her clothing so that he might m asturbate with it, for the m ost part W illiam s' violent psy­ cho-sexual im agery is not pursued. T h e p rod uction is extrem ely well- researched due in part to the accessibility of W illiam s' papers at the University and visu­ ally we are given a few crum bs. Yet this surface attack sm acks of superficiality. W il­ liam s requires a m eaty approach. O n e must get on e's hands dirty to deal with him, yet THE NIGHT OF THE IGUANA Author: Tennessee Williams Starring: Travis Dean, Jackie Bromstedt Director: Jessica Kubzansky Where: Capitol City Playhouse, 214 W. Fourth St. When: Through April 22, with shows Wed.- Sat. at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 3 p.m. we are not given this. The Night o f the Iguana is a weird little tale set in M exico. It follows the breakdow n of Reverend T. Law rence Shannon, w ho has been defrocked for his preference for virgi­ nal-young girls, and the virginal though not young H annah Jelkes. Their grow ing bond illustrates a typical W illiams them e: Life for the individual is bleak but lightened by the transitory connection with other hum ans, usually through the life-affirm ing qualities of sex. Williams deviates from this Laurentian romanticism in his belief that sex is not only uplifting but a m eans to pow er. The neces­ sity of dom inance m akes sex inextricably to violence and d esperation. To bound avoid little these psychologically m essy them es is a crucial m istake, one w hich this production of Iguana does. Though it does have m om ents of genuine theatricality, the play's direction has not succeeded in reining in the loose Christian imagery. Nor has it been successful in de­ fining the tone of hum or. W illiams is often bitingly funny, but it is black hum or, not slapstick. In one of the climactic scenes of the play, Shannon is tied into a ham m ock because of a hysterical fit. Visually, this should play like the cross scene from The Last Temptation o f Christ in w hich the drama of the moment is reinforced by the host of metaphorical images it holds for us. But Shann on's cruci­ fixion is played as farce. As a result, we fail to care w hether he chooses H annah or her sexually avaricious rival, M axine. This proves to be the production's dow n­ fall. It does not reach into our heads and groins and yank out a bloody handful of hum an em otion. Rather it leaves us w on­ dering if the play is over. W e're only sure w hen the lights com e up. r N orth China 1 i Now Delivers!!! ! | ANYWHERE IN THE UT AREA I s (Minimum order of $7.50) | ■ CALL: 476-4819 i USE THIS COUPON FOR 10%• OFF ANY IN HOUSE DINING > I I I 1 I I DELIVERY DRIVERS NEEDED: I 1 — Must have own car 2910 Guadalupe (expires 5-31-89) * W omen On The Verge % OfA Nervous Breakdown A F I L M BY ALMODOVAR 4:45-7:20-9:35 Torch song Trilogy 1MM 7:10 JIM I HENDRIX LIVE ■ 5 : 0 0 - 9 : 4 0 - 1 2 : 0 0 ■ 11:45 D C C I E 21 St and Guadalupe 477-1324 PRESENTS THE MARK BROTHERS CLASSIC Duck Soup AND 9:00 pm THE DARK CORNER with Lucille Ball Jester Auditorium 2.50 UT/3.00 7 pm C IN E M A R K T H E A T R E S MOVIES 12 l-3 5 N @ F .M . 1825 251-7773 Tues. All Shows $2.50 THE RESCUERS ® 1:153:155:30 7:15 BILL 4 TED’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE Eg] 12:452:454:45 7:009:00 LEVIATHAN d thx 12:453:005:157:45 10:00 FLETCH UVES m thx 12:303:005:157:309:45 CHANCES ARE m 12:002:304:457:159:30 RAIN MAN a 1:304:157*09:45 COUSINS EdDD 12:152:45 5:157:4510:00 POLICE ACADEMY 6 m 12:152:154:457:009:00 ROOFTOPS 9:15 SKIN DEEP si 12:003:405:007:309:45 THE BURBS m 1:003:155:307:4510:00 TROOP BEVERLY HILLS m 12:302:453:007:159:30 DEAD BANG ® 12*0 2:30 5:00 7:3010:00 S 2 5 0 A l l s h o w s b e f o r e 6 p m Bridge Creek 8 Behind Chilis Restaurant HWY183 at 1-35 467-9772 Student Prices $3 Mon.-Thurs. With ID Same Day Tickets on Sale When Box Office Opens TRUE BELIEVERS 11 ________1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15-9:15________ RAIN MAN 1 _______ 11:30-2:05-4:40-7:10-9:45_______ TAP E ta ________1:00-3:00-5:00-7:Q0-9:00________ K IN JITE K ________ 1:00-3:10-5:20-7:30-9:40________ FAREWELL TO THE KING a ________ 1:10-3:20-5:30-7:40-9:50________ CRIME ZONE IS ________ 1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15-9:15________ M ISSISSIPPI BURNING 1 ________1:00-3:15-5:30-7:40-9:55 _______ GLEEMING THE CUBE B 1:10-3:15-5:30-7:30-9:30 PR ESID IO THEATRES mu SKINDEEP ( 2 : 3 5 - 3 : 0 0 ) - 7 : 3 5 - 9 : 4 3 nop a s s c s i M i»m a q u is ( 2 : 3 0 - 3 : 1 3 ) - 7 : 3 3 - 9 : 5 5 D a n g e r o u s L i a i s o n s t j I H X ( 2 : 2 5 - 4 : 5 5 ) H - 7 : 2 5 - 9 : 3 3 I H X . , , ( 2 : 4 5 - 5 : 1 0 ) F. AD D A N G - 7 : 4 0 - 1 0 : 0 0 no p a s s e s R . I H X . ( 2: 5 0 - S : 2 0 ) l J i R - 7 : 5 0 - 1 0 : 1 0 L E V I A T H A N D C O U S I N S " ” Í “ Í5S:’ 01 NO PASSES Gone with t h e W i n d (1 1 : 3 0 - 4 : 0 0 ) - 8 : 3 0 ( 1 2 0 0 1 - 8 : 4 R e s c u e r s NO PASSES»: (1 1 : 4 5 - 1 : 3 0 - 3 : 1 5 - 3 : 0 0 ) - 7 : 0 0 M l V l O R k S I O K U s ( 2 : 0 5 - 4 : 4 5 ) I D x - 7 : 3 5 - 1 0 : 1 5 n o p a s s l s I N ; The J d . m i u r i ! of ( 1 : 3 0 - 4 : 3 0 ) H ; | H X B a r o n M u n c < a u s e n - 7 : 2 0 - 1 0 : 0 5 n o p a s s e s Dangerous T H X Liaiso ns ( 2 : 1 5 - 4 : 5 5 ) - 7 : 4 5 - 1 0 : 2 0 L E V I A T H A N <3j ° * - 5 : * 0 ) - 7 : 4 0 - 3 : 5 5 > (XI ■ HW1 ( 2 : 5 0 - 5 : 0 5 ) - 7 : 5 0 - 1 0 : 1 0 C ( 3 : 0 5 - 5 : 2 5 ) H A N C E S A R E - 7 : 4 5 - 1 0 : 0 5 . • Rescuers *#o raises u j (1 :3 3 -4 :3 5h"4:10 -7 :5 5 ¡ b^ 9;4 5 :5 5 -5 :2 0 ) -7 :4 3 -1 0 :0 0 fciiJ T > ( 3 : 2 0 - 3 : 4 0 1 w o p a s s e s EA D ] : A N G . 3-00-10:10 I N X F l e t c h L i v e s I 7.30- 9 V5 I F i K , P A R rN T H C S rS INDICATT DtSCOUNTCD SHOWS SHO W TIMCS ARC FOR TODAY O N LY — 2 1 0 2 ^ T IC K E T S : WEDNESDAYS Texas Union Films The Seventh Seal Swedish w/subtMles Tonight at 7:00 pm Union Theatre E Slaajjhterhouse- Five Tonight at 9:00 pm Union Theatre Siddhartha Tonight at 7:00 pm Hogg Auditorium Notorious Tonight at 9:00 pm Hogg Auditorium EsiRl BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... WANT ADS...471-5244 Instant Eurail Passes! B l k i • - 4 6 ? - 5 í > 5 6 Bon Voyage Travel is the assumed name of Austin Bon Voyage Travel, Inc. GET RID OF THAT TICKET “Steve made a boring DDC class most enjoyable!” «DARBY’S $ 1 2 NO Pre-reg. — 4000 Medical Pkwy. Wed & Thurs-6 pm or Sal 8 am - 453-8280 AUSTIN 6 aT e™ ° 5 2 1 T H O M P S O N O FF 1 8 3 1 M IL E S O . o f M O N T O P O L IS Phone 3 8 5 -5 3 2 8 V : U P tN 2 4 HOURS THE S Q U I R T BACK T O CLASS 2 ( XXX) ( X XX ) 2 FOR 1 TAPE RENTAL MON. WED. 5 F ill. $ 1 4 . 9 5 T I T L E S d e v il in m is s j o n e s DEEP THROAT DEBBIE DOES DALLAS O T H E R T I T L E S IN S T O C K THE BEST MOVIE PRICE IN TOWN ¿ m e THERE IS A DIFFERENCE $2.75 4:30 - 6 PM EVERY DAY ( ) $3.75 MATINEES & STUDENTS DAILY TODAY £1 TIMES ONLY! WESTGATE 8 WESTGATE MALL S. LAMAR & BEN WHITE 892-2696 TROOP BEVERLY HILLS m 2:1 0 (8:15 (5 S2.75)-7:30-9:4S RESCUERS El ).500.30(5:05 (a $2.75)-7:004:00___ SKINDEEP 1! 2 : >0-(5:35 (a $2.75>-7:40-9:55 RAIN MAN E 1:50(5:15 (a $2.75)-8:00 BILL & TED S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE Eg] 2CH5:25 (a $2 75)-7:20-9:25_______ COUSINS ISO ] ______ 2 :ttH 5:25 (a 52.75I-7 40-9:55________ WORK MG GIRL ® 2:1 14:55 m <2.75)-7:10-9:35________ POLICE ACADEMY 6 m 2:20-7:20________________ ” ROOFTOPS B (5:05 (a $2.75)-9:25 RIVERSIDE 8 RIVERSIDE & PLEASANT VALLEY RD 448 0008 TROOP BEVERLY HILLS E 2. f(H5:35 fa $2.75)-7:40-9:55 FLETCH LIVES m 2:12.75^4:15-10:15 POLICE ACADEMY 6 Lpg1 2:00(5:15 'a $2 751-7 40-9 25 NORTHCROSS MALL ANDERSON & BURNET 454 5 147 TROOP BEVERLY HILLS m 2:00(5:00 fa 32.75)-7:20-9:30 FLETCH LIVES m 2 :1 0 (5 :3 0 (a 5 2 .7 ^ 7 :3 5 4 :4 0 RAIN MAN ® 1.40(4:30 (a 32.7S>-7:10-9:50 CHANCES ARE Ee] 2.-00(4:45 4 %lect%U KcU ci/ • Water/Gas Paid • Shuttle at Front Door • Intramural Fields Across the Street Prelease Now For Spring-Summer-Fall 452-4447 4539 Guadalupe SPECIAL RATES Furnished Efficiencies 1-1's & 2-2's • 3 Pools • 3 Laundry Room s • G a s and W ater Paid • Shuttle at Front D o o r Ideal for Student» Beat the High Electric Rate» Tanglewood Westside Apartments Release Now For Spring-Summer-Fall 1403 Norwalk Ln. 472-9614 DIPLO M AT APARTMENTS BARGAIN RATES Pre lease New Per Sprin g- Sum m er-Fall t W o A h C m e m t 478-2250 M anager Apt. #205 D a v is & Assoc. 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Houses 425 — Rooms 430 — Room-Board 435 — Co-ops 440 — Roommates 450 — Mobile Homes-Lots 460 — Business Rentals 470— Resorts 480 — Storage Space 490 — Wanted to Rent-Lease 500 — Misc. A N N O U N C E M E N T S 5 1 0 — Entertainment-Tickets 520 — P erson als 530 — Travel - T ransportation 540 — Lost & Found 550 — Licensed Child Care 5 6 0 - P u b l i c Notice 570 — M u sic-M u sician s EDUCATIONAL 580 — M u sical Instruction 590 — Tutoring 600 — Instruction W anted 610 — Misc. Instruction SERVICES 620 — Legal Services 630 — Com puter Services 640 — Exterm inators 650 — M o v in g -H a u lin g 660 — S to ra ge 670 — Pain tin g SERVICES 680 — Office 690 — Rental Equipm ent 7 0 0 — Furniture Rep air 710 — A ppliance Repair 720 — Stereo-TV R epair 730 — H o m e Repair 740 — Bicycle Rep air 750 — T yp in g 760 — Misc. Services EMPLOYMENT 7 7 0 — Em ploym ent A gen cies 780 — Em ploym ent Services 790 — Part time 800 — G e n e ra l Help W anted 810 — Office-Clerical 620 — Accounting- B o o k k e e p in g 830 — A dm inistrative- M an ge m en t 840 — Sales 850 — Retail 860 — E n gin eerin g- Technical 870 — M edical 880 — P ro fessio n al 890 — Clu b s-R e stau ra n ts 9 0 0 — Dom estic-H o useho ld 910 — Po sition s W anted 920 — W o rk W anted B U SIN E S S 9 3 0 — B u sin e ss O pportunities 940 — O pportunities Wanted TSP Building, Room 3 .2 0 0 2 5 0 0 Whitis M o n d a y through Friday 8 0 0 a m -5 :0 0 p m TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 210 — Stereo-TV 10 — Misc. Autos 20 —■ Sports-Foreign 70 — Motorcycles 1973 C A D IL L A C L O A D E D Leather inte­ rior N e w tires. Battery altemater $ 9 5 9 4 6 9 - 0 8 2 8 Leave message to Michael. __________________ 12-19 7 3 C A D IL L A C Loaded leather intenor, new tires, battery, altemater, $ 9 5 9 4 5 9 1979 Leave m essaqe to M ichael 1 2 -1 9 __________________________________ 1977 D O D G E M o n o co , dependable $ 5 0 0 firm 3 2 0 - 8 6 2 6 5 -9 ______________ 19 67 M U S T A N G convertible, blue sharp, 10ÓK. $ 4 ,0 0 0 firm. PS/PB, AT 28 9c id 5-9_______________________ 4 9 5 - 2 8 3 3 1986 C O U G A R LS 1 owner, excellent condition, pow er windows, white w/ laundou roof red intenor, nice 2 5 1 -4 4 5 4 after 6 5-9 1979 B U IC K 4 - D O O R . V e ry safe, very comfortable, very reliable, looks good, runs well $ 1 2 0 0 4 7 8 - 8 9 0 0 5-9 1981 R E G A L LTD A/C, A M /C a ss, electric windows, locks. N e w brakes, tires, d e a n 8 8 .0 0 0 $ 2 , 5 0 0 4 7 8 - 6 8 6 0 . 1 -2 0 -7 3 N C G O V E R N M E N T SE IZ ED Vehicles from $100 Chevys Surplus Buyers G u id e (1) 8 0 5 - 6 8 7 - 6 0 0 0 EXT. S-94 13 .3 -2 -18 P _________ M ercedes. Corvettes Fords 1985 T U R B O S U N B IR D Red, A/C, great stereo, 21K miles, excellent condi- rion $ 4 9 0 0 4 7 2-10 37 . 3 - 2 -1 5 N C 8 6 P O N T IA C FIERO, V-6, black, sunroof, PW, A M / F M cassette, $ 7 2 0 0 , Cheray, 49 5-36 12 . 2 - 2 3 - 4 9 N C _________________ 8 5 SP O R T Y R E D C ou ga r, A C , PS, PB, cruise control, stereo tape deck, V-8, 3 8 8-21 42 , 8 3 6 -1 5 5 5 . 3 - 3 -1 5 N C locks, pow er 81 N E W Y O R K E R Pioneer stereo, AC, PS, auto seats, windows, brakes, alloy wheels, $ 9 7 5 . 4 5 8 - 3 3 5 2 . 3 -3 -1 5 N C ______________________________ 1985 L A SE R -T U R B O G re a t condition. N e w tires A M - F M cassette. A /C $ 4 0 0 0 O B O 3 6 9 - 2 6 6 7 , 2 8 0 - 2 5 5 1 . 2 - 2 7 - 4 7 N C Autos 19 8 4 N I S S A N 20 0 SX . AC , 2 -d o o r h atchback,loaded. 5-speed, A M / F M cassette, Lomor 458-3151 clean $ 4 4 5 0 TK 34 21 N 5 -9_________________ C L A S S IC I 9 6 0 M E R C E D E S 2 3 0 S L Ro ad - star Serious inquines only $ 1 2 ,0 0 0 CPI book a verag e $14,500. 264-1616. 5 -9 1983 D A T S U N 2 8 0 Z X 5-speed, T-tops, A/C, A M / F M , low mileage, Alpine Alarm system. $ 6 4 0 0 4 5 3 - 1 3 5 9 12 19 19 7 8 M G B BEAU TIFU L blue b od y M a n y new parts, runs and looks like new, 4 2 .0 0 0 mi , $ 3 4 5 0 4 4 1 - 0 7 3 5 5 -9 1979 M E R C U R Y C A P R I C lean car, V-6, $ 1 2 9 0 Ro b m ,3 43 - A M / F M , 4-speed 0 5 5 7 . 12-19___________________________ 1978 FIAT SP ID E R convertible. D e e p bur- ga n d y N e w paint job, top, Pirelli fires Leather intenar. A M M cassette stereo Air conditioning. Rebuilt engine $ 2 9 5 0 4 4 4 - 7 2 9 6 5 -9 ____________________ '7 8 FIAT SP ID E R red convertible, 5- speed, A M / F M cassette, like new, $ 2 7 9 5 . 2 5 9 - 5 5 5 9 . 2 - 3 - 6 3 N C __________ '8 7 Y U G O 5-speed A M / F M radio, 3 0 . 0 0 0 miles, runs great, extra clean. $ 2 ,350 . 2 5 9 - 5 5 5 9 . 2 - 3 - 6 3 N C _________ 1 9 84 F IE R O SE Red, loaded, 4-speed, one owner, 3 9 , 0 0 0 miles, $ 4 3 0 0 . 4 7 7 - 68 6 5 . 3 -2 -1 5 N C _______________________ 1984 R E D N I S S A N Pulsar: 5-speed, p e r­ fect condition inside and out, original owner, never wrecked, 7 0 , 0 0 0 miles. $ 3 8 0 0 , 4 4 2 -5 3 3 1 leave m essage 2 -2 4 - 4 8 N C __________________________________ 1972 M G M IG IT convertible. Excellent condition, $ 1 9 5 0 3 3 9 - 2 0 9 6 after 3pm 3 -7 -1 5 N C ______________________________ 1981 B M W 3201 Silver. 8 6 , 0 0 0 miles. M int condition. $ 6 2 0 0 M ust see to ap precióte. 3-9- 1 5 N C __________________________________ 4 7 7 - 8 9 8 0 / 4 9 5 - 6 0 5 9 8 4 F O R D ESC O RT, 4 9 , 0 0 0 mi., wtute with light blue interior, excellent condi- fion, $ 2 5 0 0 O B O , call 4 4 8 - 3 5 6 2 . 3-1- 4 5 N C __________________________________ 7 3 P O R S C H E 914 Excellent condition, AC, alloy wheels, Pirelli's, 1 0 0 % stock, g a ra g e kept $ 2 9 9 5 . 2 8 0 - 3 0 8 5 3-2- 4 4 N C 1984 G R E Y M E R C U R Y Topaz. 2-door, standard, options, runs well, g o o d c o n ­ dition Call 4 7 3 - 8 7 3 4 . Leave message. 3 -8 -1 5 N C ______________________________ low 19 86 P L Y M O U T H R E L IA N T A/C, mileage, four new tires, $ 5 0 0 0 3 5 5 - 29 10 or 3 5 5 - 2 8 5 4 late evening. 3-21- 1 5 N C __________________________________ 19 5 6 P L Y M O U T H S A V O Y 4 -d o o r S e d a n runs excellent Press button transmission, & drives anyw here. N e w battery, brakes, tires just inspected $ 1 8 0 0 O B O . 4 7 7 - 1363 mornings. 3-2 1 -1 5 N C N e e d transportation? H e re 's your chance to buy a gre at car for u nd e r 2 ,0 00 d o l­ lars, severol very clean, o n e ow ner cars to choose from FIRST T E X A S H O N ­ 3- DA, THE FIRST C H O IC E . 458-2511 2 7 -1 5 N C -F _____________________________ 1986 C H E V Y SP EC TRU M , built by Isuzu, 5 speed stereo, looks like new, need wheels?? Call us! FIRST T E X A S H O N ­ DA, THE FIRST C H O IC E . 458-2511. 3- 2 7 - 1 5 N C - F_____________________________ 1981 D O D G E K - 2 door, standard, |ust inspected, $1200, negotiable 4 5 3 - 8 0 8 4 3 -2 7 -1 5 N C ______________________ LeSabre, 4dr, '7 6 C RU ISER !! Buick 5 7 .0 0 0 ongin al miles, aw esom e car! O n e ow ner FIRST T E X A S H O N D A THE FIRST C H O IC E 458-2511. 3 -2 7 -1 5 N C - F PULL Y O U R boat this summer in style with this '7 7 M e rc u ry C o u g a r Silver with sil­ ver msides, all pow er tilt cruise a n d air, 4 door, 5 7 , 0 0 0 nght miles, near perfect at . FIRST T E X A S H O N D A THE FIRST C H O IC E 4 5 8-25 11 3 - 2 7 -1 5 N C -F 1987 M A X IM A A e ro p ackage, 13K, su n ­ roof, twin cam, tinted, 5 spd., pow er seat beft, warranty, odjustobie shock. 4 7 2 - 5 3 2 7 3 -2 7-15 N C ______________________ 19 77 B U IC K SPECIAL. N e w tires, brakes, battery, low mileage, $ 8 0 0 negotiable Scott 48 0 -0 1 2 1 3 - 2 2 - 3 5 N C ____________ 19 64 M E R C U R Y C O M E T sky blue, 6 0 K onginal miles, looks, runs great. A real gem. 3 2 0 - 0 1 6 8 3 -2 7 -5 B _______________ 1962 C H E V Y IM P A L A 4-dr, in one fomtly for 2 0 y e a n , excellent city transporta­ tion, $ 1 4 0 0 4 5 2 - 2 7 9 0 . 3 - 2 8 - 3 1 N C '81 C IT A T IO N A M / F M cassette. AC. 4- speed, 6 8 K $ 1 2 5 0 4 8 0 - 0 6 0 2 M ik e 3- 2 8 -5 B 1 9 88 S U Z U K I S A M U R A I white, 13,000 miles. 1 9 8 8 S U Z U K I S A M U R A I black, 1 6 .000 miles. 4 4 2 - 3 7 4 7 3-1 0 -1 5 N C 1 9 82 V O L K S W A G E N Quantum . 5- speed, p ow e r windows, excellent condi- tion. 4 4 2 - 3 7 4 7 . 3-1 0 -1 5 N C _____________ 8 4 S T A N Z A H B G o o d interior, standard, A M / F M cassette stereo, new brakes, fires, clutch, sunroof. 444-7181. 3-9 - 1 5 N C __________________________________ 19 86 T O Y O T A M R 2 , red, sunroof, A M / F M cassette, loaded. $ 8 9 0 0 . H: 2 5 5 - 4191, W 9 2 8 - 7 5 1 5 3 -2 7 - 1 5 N C 8 6 N I S S A N 2 0 0 S X loaded, auto, cruise, alarm system, only 3 2 , 0 0 0 mi., $ 7 3 0 0 O B O . Coll 8 3 7 -3 9 1 5 . 3 - 2 0 -1 5 -N C 1 9 6 4 V W BEETLE - rebuilt engine & front end, n ew tires, breaks, recently repaint- ed, $1200. Call 442-7191. 3 - 2 2 - 1 5 N C P O R S C H E 9 2 4 - A/C, 4-speed, A M / F M cassette, sunroof, $ 1 0 0 0 d ow n a n d $ 5 0 per week, o w n er finance. 467-9711. 3- 2 5 -1 5 N C _______________________________ 1981 H O N D A C IVIC , Low miles, e co n o m ­ ical, dependable, Hurry this o n e w on't stay long! O thers to c hoose from FIRST T E X A S H O N D A , C H O IC E . 4 5 8-25 11 3 -2 7 -1 5 N C -F THE FIRST 1978 P O R S C H E 9 2 8 - 4 1 ,000 miles, ex ceMent condition, o n e owner. $11,000 or offer Leave m essoge for Richard 4 4 8 - 1 9 5 7 .3 - 2 3 - 5 B __________________________ 1981 D A T S U N 2 0 0 S X , 5sp, loaded, new tires, dependable, econom ical- 3 0 mpg, $ 1 6 5 0 negotiable 4 4 7 -1 0 6 3 . 3 -2 3 - 15 N C SU P ER SP ID E R I 1981 Fiat Spider 2 0 0 0 beauty. convertible. Red Pininsonna N e w ra g top, carpet, Pirelli fires. Alpine sound system, low mileage. S o o n to be classic. C o m e see for yourself. Call Ray 835-4411. 3 - 2 3 - 3 4 N C _________________ 19 73 2 4 0 Z Excellent condition inside and out V ery dean. M u st see. $ 4 0 0 0 . 4 4 2 - 5 7 8 5 , leave message. 3 -2 4 -5 B -F '7 6 S A A B E M S, black, cassette, stick, with strong engine, A C , 8 8 , 0 0 0 original miles, $ 2200/offer. 4 5 1 - 8 0 8 0 3 - 2 7 - 5 B '8 8 B M W PEFECT C O N D I T I O N must sell,6 ,0 0 0 miles, block with sunroof $ 5 ,5 0 0 4 7 4 - 0 8 1 4 3 -2 8 - 5 B JEEP W R A N G L ER 1987 Automotic 4X4 Rag-top loaded 23,000 mi. $11,000 C o S 4 7 6 - 2 0 6 Z ^ e e n r « r a ie s s o g « ^ -2 S d S B 20 — Sports-Foreign 30 — Trucks-Vans Autos 1982 S A A B 9 0 0 turbo, 4 door block, sunroof, oc, new tires, $4975, 4 9 9 8535 messoge. 3-27-15N C __________ 1979 PO RSCH E 924 G o o d condtion $45 0 0 Call David 1-754-0868 3-22-5B 1984 Bronco II. Low mileoge, 4-speed w/ OD, 4X4, AM/FM, AC. Excellent condi- tton. $ 6 6 5 0 836-2110 5-9____________ 1985 S10 BLAZER - V6. Loaded, excellent condition. N ew brakes. $6,000 Coll evenings and weekends 1-559-2246. 3- 6-15NC KINTAL 340— fum . Apts. Yes, we h a v e special rates o n fu rn ish e d & u n fu rn ish e d apts. C e n t u r y S q u a re 340^ Red River 478-9775 42ioRedRrver 452-4366 Century Plaza G ra n a d a :uo í 40tnst 453-8652 Park Plaza & Fiaza Court V iP 9ist 4w 452-6518 1 oi e 3j'd st 476-0363 B e st Apartm ents. B e s t P ric e s B e s t Locations H O N D A . Come ride with us 4 5 9 - 3 3 1 1 Full Selection of Motorcycles & Scooters WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6509 N. LAMAR T J ’ s C y c l e Sales & Service Everyday low prices on parts & accessories Service by Registered Technicians U P G R A D E D IB M PC Junior, software, $ 7 50 , Brother pnnter, $ 2 0 0 ; Lockheed modem, $125; all $ 9 5 0 / O B O Greg, 4 7 2 - 6 7 3 2 3 -2 3 -5 B M A C IN T O S H 512K $ 7 7 5 . 9 2 9 - 3 3 3 8 . 3- 2 7 -5 B __________________________________ J 10% d isco unt! I ON T U N E -U P S | * ad I " ^ 230 — Photo- Cameras 453-6255 £ w 6215 N. LAMAR ^ 19 87 H O N D A SPREE, Like-new, 19 00 FUJI C A M E R A AX, automatic, with flash, and accessones used 5 times. $ 2 5 0 or best offer. 4 6 9 - 5 7 2 6 . 3 -2 2 -5 B __________ C A N N O N A l. B od y only. Clean/no scratches. $ 2 0 0 . Call 3 4 3 - 0 7 6 6 . 3 -2 2 - 5B 1981 Y A M A H A V I R A G O 7 5 0 12,000 miles, real clean $ 1 0 0 0 negotiable 240 — Boats 38 9-14 13 Please leave m essage 3 -2 4 - 5B 1985 H O N D A N IG H T H A W K 4 5 0 - runs great, excellent condition, dean, $ 7 9 0 Call 4 5 2 - 3 3 1 3 3 -2 4 -5 B 19 8 4 H O N D A X R 2 0 0 R Enduro, like new with trailer, helmet, low miles. 4 7 8 - 1302. 3 -2 7 - 5 B 1 9 8 6 R E D H o n d a Elite 150 Deluxe Scooter, $ 1 0 0 0 Coll G a rm o n d at 4 7 3 - 8 8 8 5 . 3 -2 7 -5 B 80 — - Bicycles S P R IN G SA L E I M oun tain bikes, cruisers, 12-speeds, freestyle Diom ondbock, GT, Centurión, Cycle-Pro, KHS. Q uality bikes, low prices, friendly service. South Austin Bicycles, 2 2 1 0 South 1st. 4 4 4 - 0 8 0 5 3- 2 0 -10P 16 '/2 foot ski boat. IB, 170 HP, M ercruiser and trailer Estate sale M ust see to a p ­ preciate 4 9 5 - 9 2 9 3 . 3 - 2 7 - 5 B 340 — Misc. TYP EW RITER/ SE A RS communicatot II e x­ cellent condition. $ 1 7 0 O B O , 4 6 9 - 5 7 2 6 3 - 2 2 - 5 B S E IK O W A T C H sundial military time, dote - d ay excellent condition, Retail $3 00 . Selling for $110 O B O , 4 6 9 - 5 7 2 6 . 3 -2 2 - 5B RENTAL 350 — Rental Services T E A M FUJI 12 speed touring bike, sun- tour, sprint, components, A r a y a wheels, extras, mint condition, few hours, $ 4 7 5 O B O 4 7 2 - 2 7 5 8 . 3 -2 2 5B C O M P R E H E N S IV E C O M P U T E R IZ E D Availabilities; All Types - All Prices - All Sizes. Fast Free Servicel H abiat Hunters, 4 8 2 -8 6 5 1 . 2 -1 5 -2 8 P RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. E N JO Y A RELAXING SUMMER AT THE FOREST! Trees everywhere ... fresh air and friendly at­ mosphere. Our apartment community features: • Jr. Olympic size pool • Tennis courts • W eight room • Free aerobics • Free cable, HB0 & Cinemax • Spacious Apt. Homes • Clubhouse • Hot & cold water pd. THE FOREST APTS. 444-3161 W A L N U T F U N Come by for a tour today and see for yourself the quiet, comfortable and pleasant environment that Walnut Run has for you. Our amenities include: • Hot Tub • Sauna • Microwaves • Balconies • Washer & Dryers in each unit. • On IF shuttle route • On-site management • Fireplaces 3 2 0 3 S p e e d w a y 251-6329 478-9054 A tropical paradise exists at Villa Vallarta! Here you’ll find the condominium quality and design de- M tails that you demand. Enjoy romantic sunsets over flB nearby Shoal Creek, or gather with friends in the B security of our private courtyard. Relax at poolside | to the splashing sounds of our waterfall and soothe J P away the tensions of hectic academics. Organized social events make IM U I/aUv u a a place to make friends that you can keep for a lifetime. • Swimming Pool • Hot Tub • Sports Court • Controlled Entry • Microwaves/lcemakers • Private Parking 2505 Longview 322-9887 A ffo r d a b le L u x u ry D e s ig n e d fo r S tu d e n t L iv in g Beautiful 1 and 2 Bedroom Plans from $275 Furnished or Unfurnished. Just off IH South, Oakwood Apartments offer options for every liv­ ing situation. Set amidst towering oak trees and lush landscaping, Oakwood features a complete range of amenities, including magnifí- cent swimming pools. Six, nine and twelve month leases as well as month-to-month accom­ modations. Complete Home Services packages (including dishes, linens, T.V. and more). Maid Service is also available. Office open daily 9 to 6. Sorry, no pets. On tht UT Shuttle Lint A p a rtm e n ts Pre leasing now for Summer and Fall Guarantee today s prices n o w 1 Tour t h e p r o p e r t y a n d r e t e i v e t ! ' " k e .m il < He o / i r W A R W IC K APTS. Garden setting, pool w/waterfall, B B Q pits, large fully furnished 2- 2's, 1-1's and efficiencies. Located on 29th and West Ave. (behind Breeds Hardware). 29 07 W EST A V EN U E . L E A S IN G FOR S U M ­ M E R A N D FALL. BEST RENTAL DEALS. 4 7 4-74 26/34 6-27 70. 3-10-20B-D SPECIAL! H Y D E P A R K Spacious, quiet, clean, shuttle, cov­ ered parking, 2BR/2BA, $325. Ceiling fans, mini-blinds, built-in desks, all gas paid and more! PLEASE LEAVE M ESSA G E. 451-5825,4306 Ave. A. 3 - 2 3 - 2 0 B - D RENTAL 370— Unf. Apts. SPRING BREAK SPECIAL! $991st mo. rent • Large efficiencies on UT Shuttle • Newly redecorated • Door to door trash service • Executive suites available Now Leasing! S t o n e w o o d V i l l a g e A p t s . 4 5 5 8 A w . A 4 5 4 - 8 9 0 3 Ú J f l ■* f ' y l y J|| - J f C V ' C L O S E TO S H U T T L E STAFFORD iio r s i; 2 - 1 s s t a r t in g at $300 1 1 s s t a r t in q at ■. $ 2 0 0 4" « 4 j. I p -0 xP" .. S A N D S T O N E m i : M M ? h i