Tur Da il y T e x a n Vol. 85, No. 183 The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Wednesday, July 23, 1986 25c Bullock lays off employees Move to trim $11.2 million in expenses By SEAN S. PRICE Daily Texan Staff State Com ptroller Bob B u llo c k a n ­ nounced Tu esd ay that his office is lay­ ing off 65 Austin em­ ployees and an addi­ tional 69 statewide in response to calls by Gov. Mark W hite and the Legislature for agencies to trim operating expenses. Bullock, who is expected to announce a $3 billion state deficit by the end of July, said 15 field offices w ill be closed or merged and the 134 employees w ill be laid off on a seniority basis at a savings of $11,2 m illion to the state. G ary Hughes, executive director of the Texas State Em ployees Association, said the layoffs are the first wave of what is expected to be massive state em­ ployee layoffs. " I hope his cutback doesn't effect tax collections, but I know it w ill reduce some taxpayer services and conveni­ ences," Bullock said, Bullock s announcement coincided with the Texas Em ploym ent Com m is­ sion's announcement of June unem ploy­ ment figures showing the state with an 11 1 percent lobless rate, up 1.8 percent­ age points from Mayr's rate. Cities in Central Texas along the Inter­ state 35 corridor and in the Panhandle tended to have lower unemployment rates than other parts of the state. Austin had the lowest rate of any city with a 6.9 percent rate (up from 5.8 per­ cent in M ay), followed by Dallas with 7 percent (5.9 percent in M ay), Am arillo with 7.9 percent (6.9 percent in M ay), Fort W orth with 8.2 percent (7 percent in M ay) and Lubbock w ith 8.8 percent (7.3 percent in M ay). However, cities in the Rio Grande Val­ ley, West Texas and along the G ulf Coast were particularly hard hit. M cAllen had the highest unemploy­ ment rate of any urban area with 21 per­ cent (17.7 percent in M ay), followed by Laredo with 19.9 percent (16,3 percent in M ay), Odessa with 19.6 percent (16.1 percent m M ay) and Brow nsville with 19.1 percent (16.2 percent in M ay). In the G ulf Coast region, Beaumont- Port Arthur registered an 18.5 percent rate (16.3 percent in M ay), Galveston had 13.8 percent (12.3 percent in M ay) and Houston 12.6 percent (10.7 percent in M ay). Declining oil prices have been blamed for the state's soaring unemployment rate and worsening economy. Last N o­ vember, oil sold for $30 per 42-gallon barrel. Recently, oil pnces for W est Tex­ as Interm ediate crude have hovered in the $10 to S P range. The price declines have also eroded the state's tax base, and prompted Bul­ lock to announce in February that the state would receive $1.3 billion less than the Legislature planned for this two-year budget cycle. Bullock revised the $1.3 billion esti­ mate in June to $2.3 billion and is expect­ ed to increase the figure again to $3 bil­ lion or more by Aug. 1. State Treasurer Ann Richards told a special meeting of the House in M ay that the deficit is creating a cash-flow shortage for the state and may force her office to issue "hot-w arrants" or hot checks to meet state obligations. Last week. W hite called an Aug. 6 special session to deal with the cash­ flow and deficit problems. However, W hite, Lt. G ov Bill Hobby and House Speaker G ib Lew is still disa­ gree on how the problems should be handled. W hite and Lew is say the Legislature should rely prim arily on budget cuts w hile Hobby has indicated he favors a mixture of cuts and tax increases. M onday, Rep. Jim Rudd, chairman of the House Appropnations committee, said the state may have to end the 1986- 87 budget with a deficit, despite a consti­ tutional amendment forbidding it. House panel: Raising revenues necessary B y M ARTY H O BR A T SC H K Daily Texan Staff House \pproprta- tio n s C o m m itte e members said Tues­ day budget tuts are not the only an sw e r to the state's budget crisis Budget cuts vs 111 give legislators httie time to come up with new ways to finance state govern­ ment, committee members said In fact, unless the I egiaiature addresses the is­ sue v>! raising revenues, Texas may tx‘ bound bv the deficit tor m ain years "if w e don't p an ide a »dsh flow there is giimg to he a point where the state is writing hot checks ' sa*d committee member Tom Uher I>Bav C ity. But it does not resolve the problem .* Rep Rene O liveira D-Brownsville said budget cuts arc the key to providing spending monev to the state. I don t think we have a choice — at this time we have to make some cuts,* i. Miveira said But that spending money w ill onl\ l a s t a short time O liveira said the le g isla ­ ture wiU have to think of the future. " I think we have to look at reven ue- raismg measures too he s a i d I egislators have ottered three propos­ a ls a broad-based tax increase, a state lottery and the legalization of pan-mutu- el betting on races O f these three op­ tions, the lottery and pan-mutuel bett­ ing have attracted the most attention. But committee members were quick to p o i n t out that these t w o options would not solve short-term problems "N either of those two items w ill b r i n g in sufficient funds to meet t h e current problem ," Uher said. "In each case it would be four or five years before we could realize tho revenues we would gam from them ." O liveira said he supports a lottery and pari-mutuel betting, but said they w ill not be enough. "1 still believe that even w ith looking at all those inevitably t h i n g v we re going to be looking at some kind of tax increase.** he said, " I think a broad-based tax is the best " s a i e > tax should be T h e U h e r s a i d broadened to include services." But before lawmakers can consider revenue-raising measures, the\ w ill have to make the budget cuts — some­ thing com mi tee members said w ill not be easy The Legislative Budget Board has pre­ sented a report on how much money can be cut from each agency's budget. The report indicates three levels of cuts Level one refers to the 13 percent vol­ untary budget cuts G ov. Mark W hite re­ quested earlier this year. Level two is made up of recommendations by the budget board for cutting prim arily ad­ m inistrative costs to trim the budget by $1.3 billion At level three, the state would save $2 3 billion, but agency ser­ vices would suffer. Level four calls for a 34 percent cut in each agency's budget. At this level, agency services would be severeiv restricted. The Appropriations Committee must agree on specific budget cuts before the Legislature can act. Committee members said that voting on the cute would be complicated. Rep Paul Colbert, D-Houston, said applying one level of cute across the board w ill be impossible. "In terms of the target goal of the money we need to be heading for, the level two amount is rig h t," Colbert said. But in terms of agency by agency, w hat we re going to have to decide is which cuts are lustified and which are not." Oliveira said some agencies would be hurt by cuts even at level two. " I think we're going to have some cute, but the level two program as laid out right now is not totally acceptable," O liveira said. "You may save pennies today, but you're going to spend a lot dollars to­ morrow, because of failing to treat or care for problems now as compared to w hen to m o rro w ," O liveira said. it s m ag nified Rep Mike Toomey R-Houston, said he wants to scrutinize adm inistrative funding, T think that we re looking at the cuts that take money from the levels of bu­ reaucracy and give it to the levels of ser­ vice," Toomev said Hassan meets Peres amid outcry Associated Press R A BA T, Morocco — fong Hassan 11 met with Israel's prime minister Tuesday be­ hind a heavy guard at his forest-fringed summer palace M ilitant Arabs accused him of treason and Svria broke relations with Morocco. The controlled news media kept silent on the visit bv Shim on Peres, the first by a serving Israeli prime minister to any Arab nation other than Egypt, with which Isra­ el signed a peace treaty in 1979 Troops and police nnged the pro-VVest- em monarch's m ountain palace at llrane, 125 miles east of Rabat, and access was barred to outsiders. Talks spark Mideast peace talks, page 2 . Israeli reporters w ho arrived with Peres on the surprise trip to t h i s North African nation on Monday night were apparently unable to communicate with the outside world. Moroccan officials acknowledged pn- vatelv that the talks were in progress, for the first time since the Israeli leader came here to discus*» M iddle East issues with Hassan The meeting was carefully prepared, with "fnendlv leaders" informed in ad­ vance, including President Reagan and King Fahd of Saudi Arabia. Arab militants raised an outcrv, accus­ ing Hassan of "a betrayal of the Arab cause." President Hafez Assad of Syria said he was breaking relations w ith Morocco. Moammar Gadhafi of Libya, whose country' is linked to Hassan's by a 2-year- old treaty’, said receiving Peres was a "grave violation" of that agreement but stopped short of breaking formal ties. Iraq said the meeting was a deviafion- íst and strange" move by Hassan that would "further weaken and rip apart the fragmented Arab w o rld ." In n er visions Thomas Braxton a member of No Compromise, concentrates on playing his synthesizer dunng a performance on the the free speech patio next to Pease Fountain Tuesday afternoon. The band was playing to “spread the word about Jesus and play some good music,’ according to band member Karl Gore. Carlos Moreno Daily Texan Staff Reagan rejects sanctions; Tutu: ‘W est can go to hell’ Associated Press W A SH IN G T O N — Pres­ ident Reagan, in a speech criticized by some of his strongest supporters on foreign policy, implored Congress and Am erica's al­ I uesdav to resist the l ie s for "em otional clam or" sanctions against South Africa and urged the w’hite-ruled government there to fix a timeta­ ble for abolishing its svstem of segregation. "W e and our allies cannot dictate to the gov­ ernment of a sov ereign nation, nor should we try," Reagan said, rejecting demands from Democrats and many Republicans in Congress for a tougher policy toward South Africa. Disagreeing with the president. Sen. Rich­ ard Lugar, R-lnd., chairman of the Foreign Re­ lations Committee, criticized Reagan for a "lack of leadership" and said, " I think the president needs to do more. Bitter reaction came from Bishop Desmond Tutu. " I am so angrv after listening to that speech that I'm not quite sure that I wanted to talk to vou. I found it quite nauseating," he said in an interview from South Africa broad­ cast in London. " I think the W est, for my part, can go to hell. " in an interview with A P Network New s Tutu said: "Y o u r president is the pits as far as blacks are concerned. .. He sits there And like the great, big w hite chief of o ld ." Western nations should not cut off econom­ ic ties with South Africa but should become more deeply involved in its business commu­ nity so they can serve "as agents of change and progess and g row th," the president said. "A s one African leader remarked recently, Southern Africa is like a zebra," Reagan cau­ tioned. " If the w hite parts are iniured, the black parts w ill die too." "Those who tell us the moral thing to do today is embargo the South African economy and w nte off South Africa should tell us exact­ ly what they believe w ill rise in its p lace," the president said. "W h a t foreign power would fill the vacuum it ties w ith the West are bro­ ken?" And he denounced South Africa's system of ngid racial segregation as "m orally wrong and politically unacceptable" but praised the gov­ ernment of President P.YV Botha for his "re ­ form s." O n Capitol H ill, backers of economic sanc­ tions against South Africa said Tuesday they have strong bipartisan support to adopt them over Reagan's ob|ections. In a televised response to Reagan on behalf of congressional Democrats, Rep. W illiam G ray "Today, President Reagan declared the United States and Great Britain co-guarantors of apartheid." III, D-Pa.# said, Satellite dish seller confesses to ‘Captain Midnight’ crimes Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — A man who sells back­ yard satellite television dishes admitted in federal court Tuesday that he is the "Captain M idnight” who aimed a TV signal at H B O 's satellite last A pril and blew it off the air for 4V ; minutes. His transmission protested the scrambling of some of the most popular satellite TV sig­ nals, a system that make the pictures unwatchable without a descrambler. Scram ­ bling caused customers to stop buying dish­ es. Federal Com munications Commission in­ vestigators said they used a process of elim i­ nation to pinpoint John MacDougall of Oca­ la, Fla., as the one who interrupted a movie on the H BO channel on April 27. MacDougall entered into a plea bargaining agreement in U.S. District Court in Jackson­ ville, Fla. U .S. Attorney Larry Gentile said the deal calls for the government to recommend a $5,000 fine and one year's probation. The maximum penalty for illegal transmission of a satellite signal is $10,000 and a year in jail. MacDougall's sentencing is set for Aug 26 and he can retract his plea if the judge w ill not accept the arrangement. MacDougall released on $5,OCX) bond, refused to speak to reporters on the steps of the courthouse. His attorney, John Green, Jr., had no comment when asked about the reason for the pirate transmissions. Evidence presented in court show-ed Mac­ Dougall was the only one working at a satel­ lite transmission center that had exactly the kind of equipment used to send the message that disrupted the H BO signal. O f 580 satellite facilities w ith a transmitting dish large enough to overpower the H BO signal, less than a dozen had sufficient pow ­ er and the right kind of electronic typewriter to write the protest message Captain M id­ night transmitted, investigators said. O nly Central Florida Teleport, where Mac­ Dougall worked occasionally, was available for use at the time of the interference and an earlier instance when a test pattern was transmitted briefly onto H BO 's satellite. The investigation focused on Ocala after a tipster vacationing in Florida reported to the FCC an overheard telephone call about Cap­ tain Midnight. The tipster, who requested anonym ity, provided the caller's description and license plate number. SPO RTS Astros buéd lead Ok, s o the C’ ue disgusting stupid, re a y. realty dumb New York Yankees slaughtered the hapiess but vauant Texas Rangers 9-1 and Texas sost its s xt' consecutive game That's not good tor Texas baseball tans But what is good is that me wonderful glorious, «ncrecüb'e infallible Houston Astros, who eaa the National . cague West, beat th e to ,- Montreai Expos t-0 on a 10th-inning home run Gtenn Davis while the ev.1 grue­ some. vite San Francisco Giants >n second place behind those Astros ’ hat p u ts the Astros alone in first p la c e b y a whole two games Ha h a S e e p a g e 7 to r m o re iost at St l o u i s 1 0 -7 W E A T H E R Wedding weather • The weather in Austin Wednesday w be hot and mostly cloudy The high will be m the mtd-90s the >ow m the mid-70s and the winds wü be from the south at 10 mph ft will have nothing _ repeat nothing — to do with the fbyal wedding besides the fact that the heat w o u ld probabtv make Fergie sweat a ot G've it up And iook at page 13 for more local and national weather I mean it I N D E X Around Campus Classifieds Comics Editorials Entertainment Sports State and Local University Weather World and Nation 13 9 13 4 8 7 6 5 13 2 x I John Captain Midnight MacDougak left and hts attorney, John Green. Associated Press P age 2ÍThe Daily Texan W e d n es d ay , July 23, 1986 GNP growth slow est since last recession Peace hopes rise in talks at Morocco Better Arab-Jewish relations foreseen By NICOLAS TATRO Associated Press TEL AVIV, Israel — Prime Minis­ ter Shimon Peres' talks with Moroc­ co's King Hassan II could ease the way for im proving Israel's relations involving King with Egypt and H ussein of Jordan in the stalled Middle East peace process. But even if there is no immediate payoff, Israeli leaders say they will be satisfied with a lifting of the cur­ tain of silence that has kept most Arabs and Jews from talking to each other. "It is the absence of contact which lies at the heart of the conflict," said Abba Eban, Israel's former foreign minister. "We have been so starved for m eetings that this becomes im­ portant." The only Arab leader besides Hassan to talk openly with an Israeli prime minister w as Anwar Sadat, the Egyptian president w ho signed a peace treaty with Menachem Be­ gin in 1979. Sadat was assassinated tw o years later. just how openly Hassan w as will­ ing to make his contacts with Peres remained uncertain. Neither has appeared in public together so far, and failure to do so could seriouslv lessen the impact the summit has on future efforts to start a new peace initiative. The blackout was so tight that even Israeli reporters w ho traveled with Peres remained sealed inside the royal palace at Ifrane. President Hafez Assad of Syria immediately broke relations with Morocco to protest the Peres trip, but no other Arab state followed suit, despite the expected condem ­ nation from radical states and ex­ tremist Palestinians. Simcha Dinitz, an Israeli legisla­ indicated "an tor, said the visit emerging coalition of Israel, Jordan, Egypt and Morocco, with the ac­ quiescence of Saudi Arabia." Associated Press WASHINGTON — The U.S. econom y grew last spnn g at the slow est pace since the end of the last recession, the governm ent said Tuesday in a report that cast doubt on administration predictions that a substantial pickup is just ahead. The Commerce Department said the gross national product, the broadest m easure of econom ic health, expanded at an annual rate of 1.1 percent from April through June, less than one-third the 3.8 percent growth rate turned in dur­ ing the first three m onths of the year. The president's chief econom ist said the w eakness in the second quarter reflected temporary' adjust­ m ents rather than a signal that the 44-month old recovery’ is about to end. H ow ever, private econ om ists were not as confident, expressing concern that near-recession condi­ tions in manufacturing, oil drilling and fanning could spread to the rest of the econom v. "We believe that the trouble spots in the econom y are contaminating the strong spots," said Donald Straszheim, chief econom ist at the N ew York investm ent firm of Mer­ rill Lynch. He said Merrill I vnch is now fore­ casting 1 percent growth in the cur­ rent Julv-September quarter and an actual decline in the GNP ot 1 per­ cent trom October through D ecem ­ ber. While tw o consecutive quarters of falling GNP would quality as a re­ cession, Straszheim said Merrill Lvnch was not vet forecasting a re- r ~ - l Gross ■ ■ National I 1 1 Product Preliminary Figures Real GNP $3.67 Trillion 2nd Quarter Source Com merce Dept. Associated Press E conom ic grow th slu m p ed to a p o st-r e c e s sio n low of 1.1 p ercen t from April through J u n e. ‘We believe that the trouble spots in the economy are contami­ nating the strong spots.’ — Donald Straszheim, Merrill Lynch economist cession. Bervl Spnnkel, the president's chief econom ist, •'■ud the weakness in the A pnl-june quarter came from sharp cutbacks in oil and cas pro­ duction beca us, ot tailing energy pnces and a big lump in the trade Awaiting the royal wedding Associated Press Spectators relax outside of London’s Westminster Abbey Tuesday in prepa­ ration for Wednesday's royal wedding. Thousands are expected to line the route of Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson s ceremony. Eastern mansion robbed of $1 million Associated Press PROVIDENCE, R.I. — A gunm an barged into a mansion on N ew port's "Millionaires' Row” early Tuesday, tied up eight people, raped one of them and made off with more than SI million in cash and lewelrv, police said. The gunm an fled the Summer Wind Estate in the posh seaside resort by taxi, and a N ew York man was arrested a few hours later in a Provi­ dence hotel room, w here jewelrv w as piled on a table, said N ew port police Lt. Edward Sullivan. Police refused to identify the people in the mansion, or to sav whether they lived or worked there. Two of them , the rape victim and Dexter Coffin, 64, were treated at N ewport Hospital and released, police said, Sullivan said one of the eight people got free and called police after the gunm an fled Police learned som eone had taken a cab from the mansion to Providence, 40 miles aw ay, and train stations, searched dow ntow n bus and Providence Detective Maj. Milton Wilson said. Police later recovered most of the cash and jewelry w hen they arrested Calvin Walker Jr., 29, of Q ueens N .\ at the Biltmore Plaza hotel, Wilson said "The officers w ere told at the front desk that a man matching the suspect s description had checked in, they went up to his room and w hen the door was opened thev were greeted with an impressive displav <>t jewelrx sitting in full view on a table,” Wilson said. On the table were several gold and-diam ond broaches, a triple chain ot pearls, watches, neik laces and rings. as well as a stack of money with a $100 bill on top Scientist urges search for old Martian oil slick Clue to origin of life on Earth sought Associated Press BERKELEY, Calif. — Prospecting to learn if a yard-deep oil slick once covered Mars might help settle de­ bate about what kind of atmosphere could have spaw ned life on Earth, a NASA scientist says. If a visiting spacecraft found rem­ nants of such a slick in Martian rocks, clay or underground water, it would bolster the theorv that the skies of Mars and Earth were rich in methane gas when the solar system formed 4,/2 billion years ago, said at­ mospheric photochemist Joel Lev­ ine. That, in turn, would support the traditional theory — now under at­ tack by Levine and others — that an atmosphere rich in hydrogen, m eth­ ane and ammonia produced the or­ ganic chemicals that spawned life in Earth's oceans. Levine doubts evidence of an an­ cient Martian oil slick would be found. He believes life originated in an atmosphere that was mostly car­ bon dioxide and nitrogen, although it would be more difficult for the or­ ganic chemical building blocks of life to form under such conditions. But a future space mission should search for evidence of any primordi­ al Martian oil slick because it "may tell us about the early history of the the Earth," Levine said during Eighth International Conference on the Origin of Life. In 1971, scientists first proposed that ultraviolet radiation from the sun and certain chemical reactions might have converted atm ospheric m ethane into gases called alkanes, which w ould con d en se into oil drops to form a huge oil slick on Earth. By 1978, other researchers calculated the sam e process could have created a 3*/2-foot-deep oil slick over the entire surface of Mars. Earth's surface is so active geo lo g ­ ically that its oldest know n rocks are 3.8 billion years old, so there w ould be no trace of any oil slick left on Earth earlier by a methane-rich at­ mosphere. Mars has a far more stable sur­ face, so remnants of any primordial oil slick might be found there, said Levine, a senior researcher at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. Levine said his latest study cor­ rects som e faulty assum ptions in the earlier research on a possible Martian oil slick, but still concludes oil might have covered Mars if its in earliest atm osphere w as rich methane, "Maybe there is evidence for this on the surface of Mars," he said. news in brie From Texan news services ing Associated Press A soldier at Fort Jackson. S.C., is hosed down to beat the 100-degree heat Monday while others wart their turn. Rain brings little relief to South Associated Press C loudy skies and scattered ram brought temporary relief Tuesday from the Southeast's heat wave but did little for its drought, and while more farmers with withered crops told a federal task force they need help, the head of the panel said, "I can't make any promis­ e s .” ''We've been severely hit. It's the worst I've ever se e n ,” 75-\ ear- old Harold Arant told the task force on his son's tarm near Bow­ man, S.C. "This is a terrible situation. It's almost unbelieveable to see the crops in this destroyed position," said Assistant U.S. Agriculture Secretary George Dunlop, head of the task force which earlier visited Georgia and Alabama. The death toll trom the heat reached 38 Tuesday Increased cloud cover kept tem ­ peratures in the upper 80s and mid 90s instead of 100 Tuesday across much of the Carolinas and Georgia. H owever, the cooler weather won't last, the National Weather Serv ice in Columbia, S C , said House votes 406-0 to im peach jailed Nevada judge C laiborne WASHINGTON — The House Tuesday unanim ous­ ly impeached Nevada Judge Harry Claiborne, the first federal official impeached in 50 years. The 406-to-0 vote — in effect an indictment — opens the way for a Senate tnal of the 69-year-old judge. He is serving a two-year sentence for tax evasion but h a s refused to resign and continues to collect his $78,(XX) salary at an Alabama jail. Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole of K a n s a s said the trial probably w ould not begin until the tall Study: S tar w ars may cost $770 billion WASHINGTON — The cost of building a defense against nuclear m issiles and operating it for 10 years could range from $160 billion to $770 billion, according to a study by tw o analysts of military affairs and spend­ The study said that, based on these estim ates, the United States "clearly could afford” to deploy som e form of the anti-missile defense — com m only called star wars — that is being studied in the Reagan adm in­ istration. However, the authors warned that such expendi­ tures might degrade other forms of mihtarv strength or require significant reductions in spending on dom estic programs. 1 dead in Spanish, Soviet ship a tta c k s MADRID, Spain — Attackers in small boats tired on a Spanish trawler and a Soviet fish-factorv ship off the Western Sahara coast Tuesday, killing a Spanish sailor and w ounding another, maritime radio said. N o group claimed responsibility, but the Polisano Liberation Front has attacked fishing vessels in that zone in the past. The guerrilla group is fighting for control of the former Spanish territory, now claimed by Morocco. Over the past tw o years, 22 fishermen, most of them Spanish, have been killed in similar attacks in the sar­ dine-rich waters of the Atlantic Ocean. H aw aiian s a w a it h u rricane’s approach HILO, Hawaii — Residents taped w indow s and se­ cured boats Tuesday, and surfers waited for big waves from Fiurricane Estelle, churning in the Pacific south­ east of the island of Hawaii. The hurricane, packing 95 mph w inds with gusts up to 120 m ph, was forecast to pass within 120 miles of the island, bringing gale force w inds and high surf. Tuesday m orning, Estelle's center was at latitude 17.0 north, longitude 151.0 w est, or 320 m iles southeast of Hilo. It was m oving to the west at 17 mph. A hurricane watch and high surf advisory w ere in effect for the island. Gas explosion in M ississippi hurts 14 PETAL, Miss. — Explosions blasted a deep crater at a liquefied petroleum storage facility Tuesday, injuring at least 14 people and sparking tires that shot hundreds of feet into the air and threatened tanks holding thou­ sands of gallons of propane. The explosions occurred about 9:45 a m. at En­ terprise Gas Products on U.S. 11 near Petal and possi­ bly involved an underground pipeline, said Jim Dar- rah, area Civil D efense Director. He said the blast dug a crater up to 40 feet deep and 200 yards wide. Liberia, Russia resum e diplom atic ties MONROVIA, Libena — Liberia said Tuesday it has resumed diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union, one year after the West African nation accused Moscow of m eddling in Liberia's internal affairs and severed ties. A governm ent statem ent said Liberia acted "to en ­ sure consistency with Liberia's declared policy of main­ taining peaceful coexistence, friendship and coopera­ tion with all the countnes of the w orld.” 1 I ! deficit caused hv importers rushing to take advantage of lower world­ wide oil prices. said He called both factors "temporary adjustments" and growth would be substantially higher in the final six m onths of the year. The ad­ ministration will release its revised growth estimate for the year next month. Budget Director lames Miller III called the second-quarter GNP fig­ ure "bad new s” for the econom y. Miller, speaking at a U.S. Cham­ ber of Commerce luncheon, said the growth administration's projection will be dow n for all of 1986, but said he still expects that growth to December from July could top 4 percent. revised Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, K-Kan., said the weak GNP figure showed a ' need t o be concerned ' and called on the Federal Reserve Board, which cut its bank loan rate trom 6 5 percent t o 6 percent earlier this month, to approve another one- half percentage point reduction to spur the economy The Commerce Department said in the the 1.1 percent growth rat» Apnl-June quarter was the slowest since a 0 s percent GNP advance in the three m onths of 1982, w hen the 1981-82 recession was »om ing to an end tmal The new s on inflation remained positive in the latest quarter, the governm ent said A price index tied to the GNP rose at an annual rate ot 2.1 percent in the April-June period It was the slowest advance since 1%7 and the dramatic plunge in energy pnces so far this v ear reflected Drug panel urges help from Mexico Associated Press WASHINGTON - t ongress will consider wavs to force Mexico to stem the flow of drugs across its border unless the State Department gets tough in its effort to M-cure Mexican cooperation, the chairman of a H ouse narcotics panel said Tuesday. "What this Congress is prepared to sav to the governm ent of Mexico is ... of the laws (in which) w e have given them preferential treatment ... we are prepared to take another look and 1 assure you that we know how to create an atm osphere that engenders more cooperation/' warned k harles Rangel, D \ >. He recalled President Richard Nixon's d o sin g of the Mexican bor­ der in the early 1970s, adding, "Nix­ on obviously knew how to get the attention of tin- Mexican go\»-rn- ment.** and Rangel Rep. Joseph DioGuardi. R-N.Y., added. "The State Department has to take a much heavier hand in u s­ ing econom ic muscle." other committee members sharply anticiz.ed the State Department after hearing Mark Dion, deputy assistant secretary of state for international narcotics mat­ ters describe the problem on the Mexican border as "the highest pri- ority in our w hole worldwide nar­ cotics agenda " "If this is the highest priority, God knows what we «.an expect to be coming a c r o s s the Mexican bor­ der," said Rangel, chairman of the H ouse Select C om m ittee on Narcot­ ics Abuse and Control, which trav­ eled to the Southwest in January to hear local officials describe the bor­ der problems Dion told the com m ittee that that Mexico's faltering econom y and the subsequent m ove bv Mexican farm­ ers to plant lucrative opium and marijuana crops contributed to the nsing tide of narcotics from Mexico. The amount of drug crops eradi­ cated has steadied or risen slight)’, he said, but production is soaring. Guru’s former aide given prison terms Associated Press PO R T LA N D , Ore. — Eight months after In d i­ an guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh's commune dissolved, his former secretary pleaded guilty to attempted murder, electronic eavesdropping, immigration fraud and engineering a salmonella outbreak that sickened more than 750 people. Ma Anand Sheela, 36, was given concurrent 4‘/2-year federal prison terms and a suspended five-year sentence after admitting her guilt be­ fore U .S. District Judge Edward Leavy. Sheela admitted creating an electronic eaves­ dropping system at Ra)neeshpuram, the sect's commune-city, and conspiring to spread sal­ monella bactena on food in 10 restaurants in The Dalles. The five-year immigration fraud sentence, for helping to arrange more than 400 sham m arriag­ es among the guru's disciples, was suspended on condition that she leave the United States af­ ter completing her prison time. “ For the rest of your life, it would be improb­ able that you would ever be able to return" to the United States, Leavy told her. Sheela, wearing a gray pantsuit, smiled at Leavy as he sentenced her on the federal charges. The restaurant poisonings were aimed at sick­ ening Wasco County voters as part of an attempt by the sect to gain political control over the coun­ ty, federal investigators said. She also pleaded guilty to state charges of plotting a poison-syringe attack on the guru's physician, giving poisoned drinking water to two Wasco County officials and setting a fire that damaged the county planning office. Sheela, a native of Baroda, India, ruled the commune from the time it opened in 1981 until she and a dozen of her top aides fled to Europe last September. Rajneesh, “ rich man's the self-described guru,” presided over a commune population of perhaps 4,000 at Rajneeshpuram 's height. Until about a year ago the guru was publicly silent, however, giving Sheela near-dictatorial power over the commune's business dealings. Red-garbed disciples came from all over the world to be near Rajneesh and study his teach­ ings that meditation is a means to enlighten­ ment. Rajneeshees' relationships w ith their neigh­ bors deteriorated, however, after sect members gained political control of the nearby town of Antelope and renamed it C ity of Rajneesh. The commune collapsed last November after Rajneesh was deported, and the town has be­ come Antelope again since the Rajneeshees left Oregon. Philly strikers reach tentative contract Associated Press P H IL A D E L P H IA — Philadelphia and the union representing blue- collar workers reached tentative agreement on a contract Tuesday, one day after the 12,000 workers ended their 20-day strike State mediator Edward Feehan the accord after six announced hours of negotiations, but said no details would be released pending a union ratification vote. The union had no immediate plan for a ratifica­ tion meeting I'm ven happy," said city M an­ aging Director James W hite. “ There is a blackout on the details, but we're happy there's a settlem ent." Officials from District Council 33 of the Am encan Federation of State, County and Municipal Em ployees did not make themselves available for comment the an­ nouncement of the agreement. following O ver the weekend, the tw o sides said the\ had come to terms on ail issues except wages. M ayor W ilson Goode said Sun­ day the citv had presented its best and final offer — a 10 percent in­ cre a s e over two years. District Council 47, the 2,000-member white collar union, accepted that proposal Juh 12. But Earl Stout District Council 33 president, denounced that contract as “ stinking and said he would COPIES TM never accept it. On M onday, an arbitration panel aw arded a 12 percent pay raise over two years to the city's police offi­ cers, and the blue-collar employees said the award showed the union was right to reject the 10 percent of­ fer. The average salary for members of District Council 47 is $25,000, and their contract would give them an additional $1,025 over two years. District Council 33 members earn an average of $16,000. the The strike began to collapse last week when Common Pleas Court Judge Edward Blake found the un­ ion in contempt of his order that 2,480 trash haulers return to work to head off a possible health hazard caused by 40,000 tons of uncollected garbage. Faced with fines and threatened with dismissal by the mavor, the garbage workers on Saturday began clearing the trash the city's 1.7 mil­ lion residents accumulated during the walkout. Best Campus Location and Lifestyle Now Preleasing For Fall Controlled Access Security Entrance Daylong negotiations Saturday produced ageement on several key issues — including the city's de­ mand for an independent audit of the union's health and welfare fund. The union also agreed to drop a demand for $48 m illion it said the city owed the fund. Goode said the city also retained the right to use outside contractors. 7s > a u s l i f i m o n f e s M i r i M 'h o o l Accredited by A.M.I. 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PLEASE ENTIRE STOCK NOT INCLUDED Final Examination Schedule, Summer Session, 1986 Nine-Week Courses Wednesday, July 30, and Thursday, July 31 IN D E X T O E X A M IN A T IO N P E R IO D S W e d n e sd ay ( lass m eeting tim e F in a l exam ination tim e: M T W T h F 7-8 30 M T W T h F 8 30-10 M T W T h F 10-11 30 M T W T h F 11 30-1 M T W T h F 1-230 M T W T h F 2 30—1 la t e afternoon and even in g classes W ed n esd ay, Ju ly 30 Th u rsd ay, Ju ly 31 W e d n e sd ay, Ju ly 30 T h u rsd ay. Ju ly 31 W ednesday, Ju ly 30 T h u rsd ay, Ju ly 31 9 a m .-12 noon 7 p .m .-10 p .m . 7 p .m .-10 p.m . 2 p .m .-5 p.m . 2 p .m .-5 p m 9 a. in .-12 noon W e d n e sd ay, Ju ly 30 9 a,m -12 noon F in a l exam inations for classes m eeting at tim es w h ich are not listed in this index art- scheduled w ith exams for classes m eetin g at the tim e most nearly corresp o n d in g to the unm dexed class tim e F o r exam ple, the i-xam for a class m eetin g W F 1—3 30 p m w ill be at the sam e tim e as exams for classes m eeting M T W T h f 1-2 30 p .m . Q u estion s about exam ination sch ed uling for specific i lasses should be d irecte d to O fficia l Pu b licatio n s G R A D E R E P O R T IN G S C H E D U L E f ur exam inations on W ed n esd ay. Ju ly 30 Thursday Ju ly 31 G ra d e sheets are due in the d ep artm en tal office by 9:00 a rn on M onday , August 4 T u esd ay. August 5 G ra d e sheets for classes w ith sched uled m eetin g tim es w h ich requested “ no exam ination are due at the same tim e th e y w o u ld have been due had exam inations been scheduled G ra d e sheets for classes w ith no sch ed uled m eeting tim e are due in the d ep artm en tal office In 9 0 0 a m , M o n d ay, A ugust 4 B E N B U R C P E E C J F N S ETC C E A P A R P H R R L M U T C B e n e d ict H a ll B u rd in e H a ll C h em ical and Petro leu m E n g in e e rin g B u ild in g E rn e st C o ckreU . Jr . H all E n g in e e rin g Scien ce B u ild in g En g in e e rin g T each in g C e n te r M a rv E G ea rin g H all Parltn H a ll Ph arm acy B u ild in g R o b ert L e e M oore H all U n iv e rs ity T each in g C e n te r Ju ly 30. 9 a .in .- 12 noon C lasses m eetin g M T W T h F 7-8:30 a .m ., late aftern oo n and even in g T h u rsd as Ju ly 31, 9 a .m .-12 noon C lasses m eetin g M T W T h F 2:30-4 p .m . G ra d e repo rts fo r these classes are due in the d ep a rtm en ta l o ffice by 9:00 due in the d ep artm en tal o ffice by 9:00 a .m ., T u esd as, August 5. G ra d e rep o rts fo r these classes a re a .m ., M o n d ay. August 4. \ 172 N378 90715 C S C P E 2.204 90725 C s C P E 2.214 77985 E F N370k E C J 1.214 92115 \l \ J93C C P E 2 210 93860 S VS PH R 2.116 \630B 93880 s w \ JS1L BU R 220 93900 s w N385M G E A 127 W cdnesdaY Ju ly 30, 2 p m .—5 p.m . C lasses m eeting M T W T h F 1-2:30 p.m . G ra d e rep o rts fo r these classes are due in the d ep artm en tal o ffice by 9:00 a .m ., M o n d ay, A ugust 4. 77945 E E \3 6 0 N E N S 431 78000 E E \ 180k 85290 FH N391 k 78620 M F N381K E C J BFN E T C 1 204 130 7 106 A 92545 P H Y N383K H I M 6.104 W e d n e sd ay Ju lv 30, 7 p .m .-10 p.m . ( lasses m eeting M T W T h F 10-11:30 a.m . due in the d ep a rtm en ta l o ffice bx 9:00 . A ugust 4. 90660 C S 71915 D P A N315 N333K 71925 D P A N373 78615 M E N380Q G P E C P E 2 214 2 206 £ 206 ( P E ET C 7 148 78630 M E N 184Q E C J 1.214 78665 M E N 197 E T C 5.138 91490 M R N390 C E A 114 9252») P H Y N301 R L M 5.104 92610 P M i \ >52 k R L M 6 104 77295 A R E N385 E C J 9 236 84600 E N 3 9 2 L P A R 305 76805 E M N397 E N S 402 78610 M E N 380Q E T C 2.136 93885 S W N 381M P H R 2 114 T h u rsd as Ju ly 31, 2 p .m .-5 p.m C lasses m eetin g M T W T h F 11:30 a .m .—1 p .m . G ra d e rep o rts fo r these classes a re due in the d ep artm en tal o ffice by 9:00 a .m ., T u esd ay, A ugust 5. 90727 C S N378 R L M 6 104 71920 D P A Y334 U T C 3 134 84610 E N 395M P A R 302 92550 P H Y N 3 0 3 L C P E 2 206 92595 P H Y N 317K R L M 5 118 93895 S W N 6 8 4 L B P H R 2 116 T h u rsd ay Ju ly 31, 7 p .m .-10 p.m . C lasses m eeting M T W T h F 8:30-10 a.m . G ra d e repo rts fo r these classes a re due in the d ep artm en tal o ffice by 9:00 71905 D P A N333 77950 E E \3 6 2 k 92025 M 92030 M N665A \3 7 3 k C P E 2 206 E T C 2 106 R L M 5.104 R L M 6.104 75165 P E D N324K B E L 204 93890 S W N 6 S4 LA C P E 93940 S W N386M C P E 2.206 2 216 ( L A S S R O O M B U IL D IN G S G ra d e rep o rts fo r these classes are a .m ., T u esd ay, August 5. APTER MEETING WITH ■TRIBAL LEADERS,■ PRESIDENT &0THA SAVS HE'S READV TO U C ' C O C A Í N T SHARE POWER,,, (\ * ? G O * ' J I t Í Page 4/The Daily Texan/Wednesday. July 23, 1986 O p in io n s expressed r The Daily Texan are those of the editor or -r'e w r ter of the ahic e and are not necessarily those of the Umvers ty adm^ístration the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Missing the point Human rights a low policy priority 1am tired of the debate over which side has the best human rights record in Nicaragua. I am not just tired of hearing the same facts and figures, and seeing the same photos over and over. I am tired of people arguing that the United States is — or isn't — supporting the group that has the moral high ground. The reason I am tired of the eternal argument over which side has killed the fewest people recently is that human rights is not the reason the United States is involved in Nicaragua in the first place. We are involved in Nicaragua for the same reason we are involved in Angola and the same reason we were involved in Chile. As Jeanne Kirkpatrick, former ambassador to the United Nations, has freely ad­ mitted, the United States tries to influence other countries' affairs pri­ marily to advance our own business and national security interests. Of course, human rights is always tossed out by whatever adminis­ tration is doing the interfering as a justification for our involvement. Even in blatant examples such as Chile — where we obviously were involved solely to protect U.S. business interests— the administration claimed the "covert" U.S. aid was being used to further human rights. The situation in Nicaragua is similar. President Reagan tells the world we are helping the human rights respecting "freedom fighters" overcome a repressive, human rights-violating government. Bull. We are helping the contras because we don't want a communist, or even left-leaning, government in Central America. Human rights don't have a thing to do with the reasons we are sending millions of dollars to the revolutionaries. The same principle holds true in South Africa. Human rights are given a lower priority than our economic health. This is where those opposing American intervention in the affairs of other countries get bogged down. The human rights issue is obviously a diversion thrown out by the government to keep people from realiz­ ing that we are mostly interested in advancing our own interests. Un­ fortunately, the groups fighting U.S. foreign policy are quick to rise to the bait. These groups love to yell and scream and write about the human rights violations of whatever group or side the administration is sup­ porting. And, for the most part, they are right. We do support a lot of groups that have an abysmal human rights record. But these arguments are misdirected The United States already ac­ tively pursues a foreign policy that lists human rights well below the priorities of anti-communism and a healthy business environment. Convincing the administration that it is supporting a group that does not respect human rights will accomplish little. The administration already operates from the premise that other factors override the human rights issue. To argue whether we are supporting human rights violators is to argue a question that has already been answered. The real argument should focus elsewhere — should we have a foreign policy that does not list human rights as its top priority? — Todd Pratt /MRSUIIES U nited F e a tu r e S y n d icate Poverty linked to student drug habits R onald Reagan calls it "a ounce), crank, coke, and an as­ sortment of other drugs as they become available Traditionally hypocrisy here. Every one w a n t s to help the poor, but will we give up our pot, acid and cocaine? permanent poverty culture of a second and sep arate A m e ric a ." N icholis Lemann, in an insightful article in the Atlantic, called it a "culture of dependance." At no time since Johnson's war on poverty has so much been said about the condi­ tion of the urban poor. Somewhere in between the rhe­ toric on this issue lies another truth about urban poverty: its rela­ tionship to crime and i ndi vidual morality. Of course, no direct cau­ sal link between poverty and crime exists beyond the circular logic that poor people are more likely to steal because they are poor. But the poor's exposure to crime certainly exceeds the norm. Does poverty breed crime? Per­ haps it would be more accurate to say crime thrives in an atmos­ phere where that would discourage it does not ex­ ist. Much that anaerobic bacteria thrive in her­ metically sealed containers. the same way the morality Somewhere, too, in that culture of dependence lie the economics of poverty. The economics that make it easier and more profitable to sell drugs than to work PATRICK p h MURRAY * ^ f * " > 4 . EDITORIAL FEATURES EDITOR But the hypocrisies of the mid­ dle class provide the demand for the crimes of the underclass. And the wholesale pot dealers and co­ caine labs of East Austin wouldn't have nearly as much of a market for their goods if it were not for the drug habits of students at this University. So let's talk a little about you and me and East Aus­ tin. No, it s not easy tv see how all t h i s applies at the personal level; to a singlo joint or gram of coke. But the defects in society can be traced back to the defects in the individual, and student drug hab­ i t s prime the economy of crime in the ghetto While I can't show vou here, I can tell you where to go. Take a trip to Webberville Road and Coronado Street, just off Seventh in East Austin. Here, Street, passers-by can buy pot ($2 for a joint, Sit) for an eighth of an the ghetto has been the place where people have gone to obtain those illicit plea­ sures forbidden them bv the rest of sixiet\ the hvpocrisv of todav being only a little more subtle than that of 40 years ago. Nonetheless, it still exists most noticeably in those double standards that make drugs less repugnant the further they get from their prime source. While most students may not di­ rectly go there — more than likely the passage their drugs make through t h r o u g h a friend or a triend of a friend. Drugs aren't "sate" in the ghetto, rhey seem safer if they come to you b\ way of Flavio, down th« street, who's got a q u a r t e r pound If we really want to solve the problems of today's ghettos, wel­ reform alone won't help. fare America's middle class, particular lv America's college s t ud e n t s must stop financing the under­ class dynamics of cnm e and pov- ertv such as the cottage drug in­ d u stry at W eb b e rv ille and Coronado. t he ghetto, There is no uncertain element of So what follows from all of this? Harder crackdowns on drug deal­ e r s and u s e r s , or legalizing drugs altogether? Perhaps onlv that we expect no more of our society than we our selves see tit to put into it That we not ask for morality in the un­ der», lass if onlv hypocrisy hides If we middle class give up drugs because thev're ille­ gal or personally harmful, why not because they contribute to poverty? Because feed the u n dergro und culture* that th n v es in the ghetto, a culture as stifling as that hermetically sealed jar immorality they It the ethic ot individual action can be combined with effective weltare reform maybe w*.* can start to disohe the underclass and assimilate it into the middle class These are big its " And 1 won't pretend what 1 ve set forth doesn't come dangerously close to ideal­ ism But it we want to extend mo­ rality and prosperity to the ghetto, we mus? begin in o u r own neigh­ borhood. Murrav is a journalism junior The King and I Why monarchy remains so popular jT A T e just never seem to get tired of royally. No matter how m A m / hard the world tries to be indifferent to the royals, somehow w w we turn our heads whenever they arrive. This, of course, happened when Prince Charles and Diana came to the United States last fall. American socialites scratched for places next to the royal pair. Unusual behavior indeed for the descendants of those who fought against a hereditary kingship. Now it's happening again. On Wednesday morning, Prince An­ drew, fourth in line to the British throne, will marry Sarah Ferguson. The extravaganza is expected to draw massive London crowds and a predicted w'orldwide television audience of 300 million. What all this attention reveals is that the royal family is damn popu­ lar in England The monarchy reminds England of former glory and acts as a unifying force in the United Kingdom. Dismissing the monar­ chy on principle seems to be missing the point that the commoners and the royals have switched roles: ordinary British citizens now rule their royal family. The royals spend their days cutting ribbons and losing polo matches. Hardly the activities of God's chosen rulers. So a lot of the criticism of the royals by Americans smacks of insecu­ rity. Because we don't have a royal family, then we don't need or want one. But we do want a royal family. Remember the excitement caused by Caroline Kennedy's wedding? But all this criticism is really only academic. The monarchy is an institution that Britons agree on. It spotlights their glorious past and kindly blinds them to their humbling present. Each country has its own peculiar quirks, and the royal family is an anachronism that works for England — Matthew Matejowsky Do we really want more vigilante groups? C itizens who have lost faith in the abili­ ty of law enforcement agencies to stem the tide of illegal aliens and drug smugglers flooding across the Mexican border The group s activities in Arizona received publicity over the July 4 weekend when MA members detained 16 illegal aliens until border patrol agents arrived. Reports th.it the group held the aliens at gunpoint are denied bv kt nt CINDY NOBLITT TEXAN COLUMNIST can now take heart. Civilian Materiel Assist­ ance, an anti-communist paramilitary organiza­ tion, is imposing its services on Texas to stop drugs they claim support communists in Cen­ tral America. The group plans to patrol the bor­ der Texas shares w'ith Mexico, as it has recently done in Arizona. Civilian Materiel Assistance, originally Civil­ ian Military Assistance, was founded in 1983 by veteran Tom Posey to support anti-communist forces in Central America with funds, supplies and training. Members have traveled to Central America to aid contras in their tight to over­ throw the Sandinista government. What is the connection between the organi­ zation's stated purpose and its plan to docu­ ment aliens and drug smugglers crossing the U.S.-Mexican border? Well, to spokesman Jim Kent, evidence points to San­ dinista involvement in drug smuggling. according Nicaragua is not a major drug producing country, but it could conceivably buy drugs from those that are, and ship them to the Unit­ ed States for a tidy profit. CMA wants to re­ strict this undoubtedly crucial source of income to the Nicaraguan government This purpose seems slightly tenuous. Most drugs are flown to points inside the United States, and there is little chance that i MA pa­ trols will make a dent in the drugs that come across on foot The plans of CMA members to take the law into their o w n hands have been criticized b\ law inforcement officials, Hispanic leaders, civil rights spokesmen, border ranchers and politi­ cians, including Attorney General Jim Mattox The audacious group reportedly feels no need to inform authorities of its activities. Kent said in The Dallas Morning News, that "The state of Texas will be well informed of what we are doing after we do it." El Paso Senator Tati Santiesteban has asked Gov. Mark White to tell CMA that its assistance is unwanted, and disputes CMA's claim that people crossing the border on foot are responsi­ ble for significant amounts of crime or drugs Steve Peters, Santiesteban's executive assist­ ant, said, "The very idea of having a bunch of armed men running up and down the border is appalling." He is concerned that the men are not trained in police procedures and are not responsible to anyone. Kent said this was the tirst such operation conducted, that running into the aliens was "entirely accidental " and that CMA h a s sus pended all border actions until at least after the national convention this weekend He emphasized the operation is based on do­ cumentation, observation and reporting. CMA "has no desire or intent to violate any laws or the rights of anyone," he said, and wants to "avoid contact at any and all costs." Kent said members carry guns, and, ideally, no one would ever know where or when pa­ trols were conducted. CMA intends only to for­ ward information to the appropriate law en­ forcement agents, In* said, This all sounds innocent, but the Arizona in­ cident demonstrates that unforeseen situations can arise, and the next time may not be re­ solved so “peaceably." The danger that peo­ ple's rights will be violated is real. Now is the tune to decide whether we want self-appointed vigilantes fulfilling the duties of trained law-enforcement agencies, or if every’ paramilitary extremist group will be allowed to operate at will in our society. Nobiitt is a Latin American studies senior Pot rebuttal misguided Both Chris Shelton ("What about rigs?," Texan, July 16) and Dane Chetkovich ("Pots advantages touted," Texan, Thurs­ day) miss the point in criticizing my previ­ ous letter on the hazards of marijuana (Marijuana — a public hazard," Texan, July 14). In drawing a distinction between mari­ juana's legitimate use as a palliative and its as yet non-existent curative powers, 1 was trying only to counter the impression given by Lisa Brown's original feature on the subject. But manjuana has mynad proven harms and is not yet proven useful as a prophylaxis against the onset of any disease. While I claim no economic credentials, Chetkovich betrays his ignorance of the subject by suggesting an excise tax on le­ galized marijuana would "erase the U.S. national debt." High excise taxes on alcohol and tobacco have not erased the national debt. Indeed much of the tax on tobacco is unfortunate­ ly plowed back into the industry in the form of crop subsidies to tobacco farmers. He also neglects to note that the price of marijuana would plummet if legalized. iMH04 r m m 19 On the question of individual rights, le­ gal marijuana advocates are essentially ex­ pressing the view that it is every individu­ al's right to be left alone. I concur and go further — I believe it is the most fundamental of rights. But when their so-called "righ t" to use marijuana infringes on the right of non­ users not to be forced to pay higher health care costs, then their hazardous activity is infringing on the rights of others. John Wkkson History I i Core group here to stay Pickle's trips unsuitable Earlier this summer 1 challenged sum­ mer students to pav close attention to po­ litical campaigns in the Austin area. Richard Munisten refers ("Rally cele­ brates Sandinista revolution," Texan, Monday) to "that same core group" that will "show up for anything no matter what the cause is." should have sparked curiosity. The Texan reported information that 1 would like to point out that Munisteri who was not at the rally, is correct when ' same core he says this There is that group" that shows up all the time. That "sam e core group" forms the foundation for a much greater number of people who gather to protest apartheid in South Afri­ ca, aid to the contras and the nuclear arms race. That same old core group reappears again and again proving that the conserva­ tive ideological hegemony is not complete, that there are dissenting voices to the rnili- tanstic, imperialistic policies of the United States. It's always that same old bombing of El Salvador, those same old suffering blacks in South Africa, that same old nu­ clear arms race. People are really getting tired of the whole lot, aren't they? Of course, Munisteri and his Young Conservatives support a cause that never bores anybody: the almighty dollar. Carla Feldpausch Economics On the 14th it reported that congress­ men spend $4.7 million on foreign travel. In a follow-up article the Texan reported on travel abroad by six congressmen from Texas. J.J. "Jak e" Pickle led the pack in the number of t n p s made overseas. His trips were nearly twice the average of those re­ ported. What was the purpose of Jake's 11 tnps? Was his transportation provided by the Department of Defense, which the Texan reports to be more expensive than com­ mercial flights? Did his wife go with him? What sites did Jake see or was the trip strictly business, for the benefit of those of us here at home? We need answers. Tuition went up, the price of oil dropped and Pickle visited 11 countries overseas. Ann Cill La iv Drama clinic helps youths learn skills By RENE CRAFT Daily Texan Staff A Department of Drama chil­ dren's theater program that helps young students develop communi­ cation skills and provides graduate students with career experience has begun its 22nd year at the Universi­ ty. Pizazzz, for Austin students in grades 2-12, was started in 1964 by Coleman Jennings, now chairman of the department, to prepare col­ lege students in the Creative Drama and Children's Theater sequence. ‘A book can t show you how children will react. The more children you are exposed to the more ready you are to teach. ‘A book can t giggle at you.’ —Sue Dickes, fine arts graduate student "It is a wav to give opportunities to children and give college stu­ dents expenence in the learning process,” Jennings said Program Director Tina Sabuco said Pizazzz' goal is to develop stu­ dents' ability to get along with oth­ ers while producing a plav "The high school students put on a play but more important are the communication skills developed and the feeling good about them­ selves through drama,” Sabuco said S he said the program focuses on "creative drama” and the instruc­ tors are concerned with developing students' creativity through acting routines and exerases Instructor John le h o n a fine a r t s graduate student, said the program is geared toward the individual not the audience It - process over product " The Daily Texan/Wednesday, July 23, 1986/Page 5 Marshall declines UT invitation By AMY BOARDMAN Daily Texan Staff U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thur- good Marshall will not attend the Heman Sweatt civil rights symposi­ um honoring the first black UT law student, a University official said Tuesday. Edwin Sharpe, vice president for administration, said Marshall "does not leave Washington except for very rare occasions related to legal matters. "H e is not traveling very much. He was very sorry that he could not make it," Sharpe said. Marshall declined the invitation in a letter to UT President William Cunningham. The justice wrote: "I appreciate the invitation and regret that I must decline. I have retired from the speaking business and for several years have not made any speeches other judicial groups.” than to Sweatt sued the University in 1950 to gain admission to the UT School of Law. Marshall argued Sweatt's case for the National Asso­ ciation for the Advancement of Col­ ored People. In 1967, Marshall became the first black on the high court. George Wright, chairman of the Heman Sweatt Steering Committee, said the group will meet Tuesday to choose another speaker and set a tentative date for the 1987 confer­ ence. Wright said he was disappointed Marshall could not attend the sym­ posium, but said "w e are very opti­ mistic that we can still put together a good program." Wright said other prospective speakers include black scholar John Hope Franklin; Howard University law professor Mary Francis Berry, who serves on the U.S. Civil Rights Commission; and A. Leon Higgin­ botham, author of In the Matter of Color, Race and the American Legal Process and a federal appeals judge in Pennsylvania. The symposium will examine seg­ regation and the civil rights move­ ment. The guest list includes activ­ ists, politicians, scholars and others who played a key role in the m id- century' civil rights movement. Interest in honoring Sweatt reju­ venated after his death in 1983. Last spnng, Cunningham rejected a pro­ posal to rename the Little Campus Admissions Building after him. Heman Marion Sweatt applied to the all-white UT law school in 1946 UT President T.S. Painter denied the application after consulting with state Attorney General Grover Sellers. Instead of admitting Sweatt to the law school, the university set up the Texas State University for Negroes in the basement of an Austin build­ ing. In 1950, with the help of Marshall and the NAACP, Sweatt appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. The court ruled in favor of Sweatt after determining that the Universi­ ty's "separate but equal” facility was inferior and not comparable to the white law school. The decision in Sweatt's favor opened all law schools to blacks. Galveston physicians protest UT medical school expansion By LORRAINE CADEMARTORI Daily Texan Staff Private physicians in Galveston are protesting what they say is a UT Medical Branch plan to become the main source of primary health care for area residents. Dr. Bernard Milstein, an ophthalmologist, said UTMB expansion in the Galveston area may constitute socialized medicine. More than 50 private practitioners on the island oppose the university's plan. UTMB has begun to acquire more office space and is providing more primary care services during the past year. "In the past, UTMB's role was to provide tertiary and secondary' care, rather than primary' care,” Milstein said. "Since UTMB is funded by the state, for them to provide primary care is a form of socialized medicine." Milstein said it is possible UTMB's plan would not be so troublesome if a large metropolitan area were in­ volved, but "when we're talking about a community of 60,000 people, then it drives the private practitioners away and limits the public's choice of services," Mil­ stein said. Meanwhile, UTMB officials claim the move is finan­ cially and educationally necessary, especially in light of the recent state budget cuts in higher education fund­ ing. "We're a teaching institution, and we have to fulfill a balance," said Vicki Saito, UTMB director of public af­ fairs. "You can't provide a full education with just terti­ ary care. We need to provide the full spectrum of ser­ vices. "The portion of our budget decided by the Legisla­ ture is slightly less than half, so the university has to make it up through research funds and grants, and through primary care. "It's basically a dollar and cents issue," Saito said. Milstein said while no physicians have been harmed financially by the plan, they are concerned about the future. Milstein compared the situation to the UT School of Law suddenly going into private practice. "If the law school suddenly set up an office and paid professors to work there, then I think the attorneys of this state might get a little upset," Milstein said. Carlos Moreno Daily Texan Staff Amy Cates piays charades in the F. Loren Win ship Drama Budding Tuesday. Holden Hansen, another gradu­ ate student and Pt/azzz assistant in­ structor, -aid the aim is to improve communication, concentration and axjp eration skills "W e re not just playing games I here is a definite goal in mind," Hansen said she said Pizazzz also givi s gradu­ ate students a forum to apply theo- retual knowledge to the classroom Jennings said graduate s t ud e n t s are responsible for publicizing the program, creating brochures, visit­ ing schools composing the lesson plans and teaching the classes. Instructor Sue Dickes, fine arts graduate student, said the program is an important supplement to her L T classes "A book can't show you how children will react,” she said "The more children you are ex­ posed to, the more ready vou are” to teach, she said "A book can't giggle at you " TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5 2 4 4 • • • M acintosh Upgrade 128 t o 512K $135 (M ac) (M ac) SO FTW ARE SPECIALS Futlpalnt Jazz Mac Lightning (Mac) Microsoft Quick Baalc (IBM) Mlcroaoft Turbo Pascal (IBM) Mlcroaoft Windows (IBM) Eaay Draw (Atari ST) Tha Pawn (Atari ST) PAPER & DISKETTES Papar • 2500 ahaat/20lb LASER PERF Maxalt 3.5 SS/DD dlakattas Maxall 3.5 DS/DD dlakattaa Maxall 5.25 DS/DD dlakattaa Maxall 5.25 High Danalty dlakattaa Sony 3.5 SS/DD dlakattaa Sony 3.5 DS/DD dlakattaa Sug. R afail 100. 495. 100. 99. 7a 99. 150. 45. SALE PEiCJL 6 5 . 0 0 9 9 . 0 0 6 5 . 0 0 6 9 . 0 0 4 9 . 0 0 6 9 . 0 0 1 0 5 . 0 0 f2. CC SALE Sug. RttlJLL P R IC E 1 9 .7 3 1 5 . 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Free parking at raar antrancal Softwara for aA compi/tarsl BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471 -524 4 Everynight Ladies Night $1 Margaritas For The Ladies After 7 P .M . in the Cantina (seven flavors) Fiesta Hours — $ 1 .2 5 Margaritas Sun-Thurs 9 PM-Close Fri-Sat 10 PM-Close (Cantina Only) 6134 Hwy 290E (Next door to the Marriott Hotel on IH 35) Ph: 459-1278 BOUNTY o f BOOKS S A L E The Co-op’s G eneral Book D epartm ent has p u rch ased a “Volume Load of B ou nty.” Com e In, and See the variety of good books at ch eap p rices; T h at’s the Bounty! o e r O H 0 2 RÜSm W Sale Ends Ju ly 26 1st Floor Main Concourse U N I J E R S I T Y C a j P M A JO R IN G IN S E E V IC E SIN C E 1 8 » « 2246 G uadalupe Phone 476-7211 F ree P ark in g 23rd & San Antonio w $3 P u rch a>e M ostofC ard fo r th e fa ll e d it io n o f t h e f a s h io n m a g a z i n e E c lé c tic o s . T e x a n 4 1 2 2 o f this W e d n e s ­ A p p l y in d a y o r T h u r s d a y r o o m th e T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b li­ c a t io n s B u ild in g , 2 5 th a n d W h itis . 1 - 3 p m . P o r tfo lio p r e f e r r e d . Page 6/The Daily TexanAA/ednesday, July 23, 1986 Large electricity users offer rate compromise By FEUCtA ARAMENDIA Daity Texan Staff An im passe betw een industrial custom ers and the city about A ustin's electric rate struc­ ture may be settled soon if the City Council agrees to proposals presented Tuesday to the Select Committee on Electric Rates. A Public Utility Com m ission order to the city to refund fuel overcharges was chal­ lenged in court by the city on jurisdictional grounds. The city has refused to refund any m oney to custom ers before a final settlem ent in the case, which is before the 3rd Court of Appeals. Both the city and FAIR — a group of indus­ trial utility users which intervened in the rate case — have said they will appeal the m atter to the Texas Suprem e Court. Bill Oakey, electric utility commissioner and spokesm an for a coalition of consum er groups, said Tuesday he met with FAIR rep­ resentatives Friday and believes m uch of the dispute can be settled by out-of-court negotia­ tions. “It would bring both sides to the bargain­ ing table so we can see some relief this fall," Oakey said. “O therw ise, it could go on indef­ initely." Oakey and William Avera, FAIR'S financial consultant, m ade presentations to the com­ mittee. Avera is a form er UT professor of finance. Avera recom m ended the city adopt a strate­ gy to become more competitive by returning fuel overcollections to ratepayers at the begin­ ning of the next rate year, which begins Nov. 1. He also recom m ended adopting “ flexible" criteria to determ ine the am ount of cash nec­ essary to satisfy debt obligations, and paying all or part of debt service from the South Tex­ as Nuclear Project from a fund started with the $17 million settlem ent the city received from Brown & Root. Avera included a recom m endation to res­ tructure rates so that relative rate of return differentials between custom er classes would gradually be reduced. Large industrial cus­ tom ers pav a higher rate than residential cus­ tomers. In addition to the Brown & Root funds, Av­ era said bonds should be issued to pay for indebtedness caused by A ustin's participa­ tion in the STNP. The city currently includes all debt service in electric rates. "The debt will not go aw ay," he told the committee. “The cost will be greater but, hopefully, it will be spread around to a wider base w hen STNP comes on line." Avera said the current policy puts Austin at a disadvan­ tage com pared to other utilities, which either are not partners in STNP or are deferring all rate increases until the plant comes on line. “What we have here is the Lone Ranger effect," he said. "In the future, this would lessen the impact when STNP comes on line. O ther communities will have a large, sudden rate increase." "O ur approach is consistent with Mr. Oa- key's proposal," Avera said. Oakey said he and FAIR agree on the fol­ lowing actions "in concept": ■ An interim agreem ent on fuel over­ charges that will authorize custom er refunds in the form of fuel adjustm ents on utility bills beginning in the fall. ■ Using some of the city's SI7 million set­ tlement with Brown & Root to lower electric rates. ■ Putting utility revenues more than the am ount required to secure debts back into the utility, thereby indirectly reducing electric rates. The city currently transfers revenues from the utility into its prim ary operating account, which is the general fund, and the Capital Im provement Program for the utility. The Select Com mittee on Electric Rates is scheduled to make a report to the City C oun­ cil by Aug. 1. Line of d e p o s it o r s Tom Ram es of Odessa and his two daughters pass time reading in their lawn chairs brought from home while waiting for Permian Bank in O d e ssa to open. The bank was closed Friday after being declared insolvent, folding under the weight of four years of ener­ gy-related loans Depositors are insured for up to $100,000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Associated Press Reagan to endorse Clements in Dallas By L O R R A IN E C A D E M A R T O R I Daily Texan Staff President Reagan will endorse Texas gubernatorial candidate Bill Clem ents W ednesday at a GOP rally in Dallas. “ His appearance should really enthuse a lot of people, especially the campaign people. It's extremely im portant in ener­ gizing volunteers and lifting the cam­ paign. It builds a lot of enthusiasm ," said rally spokeswom an Karen Parfitt-Hughes. Parfitt-Hughes said she does not know' the topic of Reagan's speech, but said. “Typically he talks about tax reforms and the economy, so I imagine he'll key on that." Anne Jones, assistant to Clem ents cam­ paign spokesm an Reggie Bashur, said Clem ents expects Reagan to make at least "one or two m ore" campaign stops in Texas before the November election. Clements, who in 1978 became the state s first Republican governor since Re­ construction, is attem pting to win back the office he lost in 1982 to his Democratic opponent, Mark White. More than 5,000 supporters are expect­ ed to attend a free 11:30 a m rally at Dal­ las' Apparel Mart Former Dallas Cowboy quarterback Roger Staubach will serve as m aster of ceremonies, and Dallas County Judge Dave Fox will introduce other Re­ publican candidates and officeholders Reagan will am ve from W ashington at the Dallas Naval Air Station in Grand Praine and will address the rally for ap ­ proximately 15 m inutes shortly after noon. Pari-mutuel betting and lottery sought for special session By S E A N S. P R IC E Daily Texan Staff Eight including legislators — Austin state Sen. Gonzalo Barrien­ tos — asked Gov. Mark W hite Tues­ day to expand his special session call to include debate on pari-m utu­ el betting and a state lottery. “I like to think we Texans have a hell of a lot of com m on sense," Bar­ rientos, a Democrat, said. “A nd if we just put these two items to the people to vote on, I think Texans would show their common sense." However, W hite said last week that legislators will have their hands full considering budget cuts without adding complicated issues like a Lit­ tery and pari-mutuel betting to the session agenda. W hite's press secretary, Ann Ar­ nold, said Tuesday the governor has not changed his position. O ne of the bill's sponsors, Rep. Lloyd Criss, D-LaMarque, said pari­ mutuel betting on horse and dog races would create 34,000 new j o b s for the state and that the taxe^ gen­ erated would be “ painless " "People would be placing when they paid the taxes," C r is s s a id “They would be enjoving them ­ selves. And those w ho do not want to plav pay nothing." Criss said Texas is losing money to surrounding states and Mexico, all of which have pan-m utuel tracks, "Financial resources, jobs and po­ tential tax revenue are exported to Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahom a, New Mexico and Mexico at a time when we can least afford it, when our state faces a heavy defiat and 111 percent unem ploym ent," Criss s a id Sen. O H. “ Ike" H arm , R-Dallas, the bill's Senate sponsor, said al­ though pan-m utuel betting will not bnng in money to deal with the im­ m ediate deficit problem, it will meet long-run needs. "The sooner we act, the sooner this m oney can help us solve the state's problem s," H am s said Sen. Hector Uribe, D-Browns- ville, said a lottery will b nng in $1.2 billion over the next two years and there that is no "em ptncal evi­ dence" to prove that a lottery is a tax on the poor He said lottery participants are predom inantly middle-class males who have had at least two years of college, A lottery would require a voter- approved am endm ent to the consti­ tution Two-thirds of the House and Senate would have to approve such an am endm ent. EVERY WOMAN’S CONCERN C o n f id e n t ia l. 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A stros pitching, Davis’ hom e run lead Houston to win The Daily Texan/Wednesday, July 23, 1986/Page 7 Howser brain tumor malignant Kansas City manager in serious but stable condition Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Doctors removed parts of a malignant brain tum or during a four-hour operation Tuesday on Dick Howser, manager of the Kansas City Royals. Dr. Paul Meyer, the Royals' team physician, said the tum or was only partially removed for fear of dam ag­ ing the brain. Dr. Charles Clough, the neuro­ surgeon who perform ed the opera­ tion, said the tum or was found in the left frontal lobe of Bowser's brain and that it "appeared to be a type of tum or called a glioma.” A glioma tum or, also called a pri­ mary tumor, is commonly treated with radiation therapy. Dt. Robert Morantz, a Kansas City neurologist, told The Kansas C ity Star last week that primary tum ors are the most deadly and the most difficult to re­ move. “ It was partially rem oved,” Clough said. “ A portion was sent to pathology for their diagnosis. The frozen section analysis confirmed our dim e diagnosis, that it is a glio­ m a." Clough said a com plete report would be available in two or three days. “O ur therapy as to where we go from here will depend on that pathology report.” Clough said that Howseris wife, Nancy, was in the recovery room with the 50-year-old m anager, who was said to be awake and alert and able to move his limbs. "H e was very alert and he knew Nancy," Joe Burke, president of the American League club, said. The operation started at 11:30 a.m . CDT Dave Witty, a Royals spokesm an, said Howser was out of surgery four hours later. Howser, who guided the Royals to victory over the St. Louis Cardi­ nals in the 1985 World Series, was adm itted to St. Luke's Thursday night. Just 48 hours earlier he had managed the American League to a 3-2 victory over the National League in the All-Star Game at Houston. for He had com plained two weeks of a stiff, sore neck and asso­ ciates said he had begun showing signs of mental confusion. Dunng the All-Star game itself, said Mike Ferraro, one of his coaches, Howser "w as totally out of it ... n o t ... with it at all.” The tum or was discovered bv a CAT scan Friday morning. The Royals, in Baltimore for a se­ ries with the news during a m eeting with Gener­ al Manager John Schuerholz. the Orioles, heard "A few of the heads hung down, probably in disbelief," said Mike Ferraro, the Kansas City third base coach who was nam ed interim m an­ ager after Howser was hospitalized. "I can't say anything. It's been enough trying to control myself for five days," Ferraro said. "I was in shock for five or six days because 1 was in that situation." Ferraro lost a kidney to cancer in 1983. "1 felt very close to Dick," said Lee May, the Royals' batting coach. "Everything was normal and then in the next day or two there was som ething desperately wrong. It's tough to take and have to come out and try to function like nothing has happened.” First baseman Steve Balboni, who became a star w hen Howser res­ cued him from the Yankee farm sys­ tem, said, "No one sounded too positive before but you always hope. You don't think the worst u n ­ til it happens.” Associated Press HOUSTON — Glenn Davis hit a lOth-inning home run after H ous­ ton s Nolan Ryan had struck out 14 Montreal hitters and held the Expos to one hit over 9% innings in a 1-0 victory bv the Astros. Davis' homer off Floyd Youmans, 10-6, was his 21st of the season, tying him with Mike Schmidt for the National League lead. The 14 stnkouts bv Rvan the all- time major league strikeout leader, was the highest total in the NL this season. The only hit off Rvan was a htth-inm ng double bv Mike Fitzger­ ald. It was the 159th time Ryan had struck out 10 or more batter" in a game. He walked four. Dave Smith, 3-6, was the w inner after relieving Ryan with one out and runners on first and second in the 10th ■ Mets 6, Reds 3 — In Cincinnati. Howard Johnson's three-run homer in the top of the 14th inning sent New York to a m arathon victors over the Reds in a game that fea­ tured a bench clearing brawl, six ejections, protests by both teams and a crucial tw o-run error bv Reds nght fielder Dave Parker. Parker dropped a fly ball for the potential final out in the ninth, let­ ting in two runs to tie the game 3-3. The Mets rallied in the 14th off Carl Willis, 1-1, who gave up a dou- ble to Ed Hearn and a walk to pitch­ er Jesse Orosco, in the game as a nght fielder. Johnson hit a 2-2 pitch off reliever Ted Power, the sixth Reds' pitcher to m ake a w in n er of Roger McDowell, 8-4, w ho alternated with Orosco over the final four innings ■ Phillies 5, Braves 4 — In Atlan­ ta, Tom Foley's pinch-hit single with two out in the 11th mnmg gave Philadelphia a victors over Atlanta, despite three home runs by Ken Gnffev The victors went to reliever Steve Bedro"ian, 7-3. Tom Hum e gained his fourth save by working the final inning. ■ Cardinals 10, G iants 7 — In St. Louis, Andv Van Slvke tripled and hom ered to start and finish an eight-run fifth inning that powered the Cardinals to a victory over San Francisco in a contest m arred by a brawl in the seventh m nm g. Umpire John McSherry ejected San Francisco M anager Roger Craig and two Giants players following the five-minute brawl, which erupt­ ed w hen St. Louis outfielder Vince C oleman wa" struck bv a Frank Wil­ liams pitch. ■ Dodgers 4, Pirates 3 — In Pittsbugh. Reggie Williams hit a two-run homer as Los Angeles ral­ three runth-m nm g runs lied against reliever Cecilio G uante to for beat the Pirates. Dennis Powell, 1-3, worked two the victory scoreless with Ken Howell pitching the ninth for his eighth save. innings for ■ Cubs 6, Padres 4 — In Chicago, Ed Lynch allowed just three hits while blanking San Diego for the first seven innings, as the Cubs w ent on to hand the Padres their fifth consecutive defeat. Lvnch, 2-1, was relieved in the eighth after the Padres struck for tour runs in the inning. Frank DiPi- no closed out the inning for the Cubs, making his first appearance since being traded from the Hous­ ton Astros. Lee Smith pitched the ninth for his 16th save. ■ Yankees 9, Rangers 1 — In New York, Dave Winfield and Don Matt­ ingly led a Yankee power surge that boosted Dennis Rasmussen to his seventh consecutive victory to help pull New York within four games of the Amencan League East-leading Boston Red Sox with a win over Texas. Rasmussen, 12-2, allowed just three hits in 63^ innings, leaving af­ ter he was hit in the left elbow by Tobv H arrah's line dnve. Ed Correa, 6-8, managed only IVí innings, giving up six runs on seven hits and three walks. ■ A's 4, Red Sox 2 — In Oakland, Howard Decker Student athletes’ graduation rate isn’t a problem W hy? Just why are so many people concerned about the “ problem ” of student athletes' educations? In the first place, there is no problem if you compare the gradu­ ation rates of student athletes and plain students. A recent L'SA To­ day story said the graduation rate for all students was 55 percent and 50 percent for athletes. And a cou­ ple of weeks ago, som eone quoted figures just about opposite to that on ABC's Nightline. W hen you consider that many athletes spend as much as eight hours a dav practicing their sports, and when you consider that dur­ ing an athlete's season he or she may be out of town once or twice a week for 10 of 16 weeks, it's a wonder any of them graduate at all At li*xa" student athletes are required to take at least 12 credit hours a semester Anyone who ha" v\orked full time while taking a full course load knows how diffi­ cult it is. In the second place, w hether or not an athlete gets an education while attending college is his or her ow n choice, just as it is for non-student athletes. So what it some erf them get paid bv universities7' Many stu­ dents get paid to go to school I, fortunately, got paid by my par­ ents — Cod bless them . It would have been easv to take mv parents' m onev, spend it all on pizza and beer and thum b my nose at the very thought of school. I didn't and 1 graduated in tour vears. just like many of the athletes I have watched through mv vears at the University. The onl\ difference between me and the student-athlete on schol­ arship, besides the fact that I can't slam dunk a basketball, is that their m one\ comes from the Uni­ versity and is funded in part by taxpayers. Few ever voice concern when a non-student athlete fails his or her class*" But because some student athletes are on scholarship, critics m ust rant and rave every time a Len Hui" or any other athlete is found to have failed some or all of his classes S ee Education, p ag e 13 Where The Up And Coming Come Home. Priced From The 30's! ♦ 9 5 '0 financing available ♦ Individua, unit and area controlled access security ♦ On the UT shuttle route ♦ Poo, Spa Clubhouse ♦ Appliances include washer dryer and microwave ♦ Payments same as comparable rent It s all yours at C O N D O M I N I U M S 448-2608 1840 Burton Drive TWi* Rtvwstde south to Burton. Office open every day 1 0 1 m 7 p m A WaKat Carrington Company TONIGHT The Cannon P o etry R ea d in g no cover T h u r s d a y Special Solo Performance Butch Hancock F r id a y Welcome Back to Austin Shawn Phillips S a t u r d a y The Return of the Incredible Lounge Lizards JO BS! JO BS! JO BS! In Texan Classifieds DOUBLE DEAL ROSES only *100 each w/coupon bmrt o n e d o z e n Cosh and Corry 20% OFF any plants you buy w/coupon DOBIEMALL Low er le v * ! 21st & Guodaiupe 474-7719 Mon So* tO-9 Exf»rm Aug IS t986 KLBJ Sight! A ll seats l/i pnce! Catch Cary Grant & Grace Kelly in a Hitchcock classic! Plus Audrey Hepburn in her Oscar - winning role! T H f 4 T R i *11 ( a n | n * < • 4 ' I M i l .--HfPBUW RO M A N HOLIDAY Tt> Catch A T h ie f 6 10 *46 • J r t «, sponsors The A u s t i n ( h r o r m l c and K L B I - 4 M & f W Slice and Soda $ 1 .7 5 The best m u n ch and guzzle in tow n. Get a slice and a soda for just $1.75 w ith this c o u p o n any w eek day from 1 la m -2 p m . C h i c a g o S t y l e d D e e p P a n offer expires August 31,1986 Associated Press You can call me Ray New York third baseman Ray Knight draws back his fist to hit Cincinnati baserunner Eric Davis as umpire Eric Gregg restrains Davis in Cincinnati. A bench-clearing brawl followed this punch with Knight, Davis, the Reds Mario Soto and the Mets Kevin Mitchell being ejected from the game. New York finally won the game 6-3. in 14 innings Tuesday night. Dave Kingman lined a two-run sin­ gle in the first inning and Cam ev Lansford followed with an RBI dou­ ble, and three A s pitchers com­ bined to beat Tom Seaver and Bos­ ton, Oakland starter Joaquin Andujar, 6-2, yielded six hits, to win his sec­ ond consecutive game since coming off the disabled list last week. Seaver, 4-8, allowed six hits in 63s innings. He is 2-2 since being traded to Boston bv the Chicago White Sox on June 29. ■ O rioles 5, Royals 4 — In Balti­ more, Cal Ripken Jr.'s solo hom er with two outs in the eighth inning — the Orioles' fourth hom er of the game — gave Baltimore a victory over Kansas City. Ripken's 15th hom er of the sea­ son came off reliever Bud Black, 4-5, starter Bret Sa- w ho relieved berhagen at the start of the sixth in­ ning The w inner was Don Aase, 4- 3, the third Baltimore pitcher. ■ Indians 8, W hite Sox 4 — In Cleveland, Chris Bando's tw o-run double capped a six-run first m ning and Tonv Bernazard had tw o of the Indians' eight hits in the outburst as Cleveland defeated Chicago. Tom Candiotti, 9-7, pitched his ninth complete-game victory, allow­ ing eight hits and three walks. The right-handed knuckleballer has won six of his last seven decisions. ■ Tigers 3, Tw ins 0 — In Detroit, John Grubb hom ered twice and drove in three runs and Walt Terrell pitched one-hit ball for eight inn­ ings before needing relief help as the Tigers beat M innesota. Terrell, 9-8, held M innesota hit- less until the sixth m nm g, w hen Kent Hrbek doubled with two outs. PARTTIME ADVERTISING SALES Minimum of ten hours weekly in sales activity in behalf of ITMOST magazine Previ­ ous advertising sales helpful, but not required as we will tram. Applicant must be UT student. Commission rate is 25^. Here is your opportunity to gain valuable, “hands-on” experience few other students of the University are privileged to obtain At the same time you can provide a valuable service in supportof UTs nationally acclaimed, a ward- winning. student magazine' Apply at TSP Building Room 3.210 from 9 am to 4 pm Monday through Friday. The University of Texas at Austin is an affirmative action equal opportunity employer U t m o s t CLASSES B EG IN N IN G NOW DAY OR N IG HT SESSIONS AVAILABLE INTENSIVE ENGLISH % & ü « i ANGLAIS INTENSIF INGLES INTENSIVO • N I N E LEVEL COMPREHENSI VE COURSE • SMALL CLASSES, I N D I V I D U A L A TT EN T IO N • NEW LEVEL EVERY 4 WEEKS • A U T H O R I Z E D UNDER FEDERAL LAW TO ENROLL N O N - I M M I G R A N T ALIEN STUDENTS (1-20 FORM) D U RH A M -N IXO N-C LAY COLLEGE 119 W. 8th at Colorado 478-1602 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY SURVEY RANKS BAR/BRI BEST PROGRAM #1OVER KAPLAN LSAT CALL 1-800-392-5441 FOR FREE CASSETTE ON "HOW TO GET INTO THE LAW SCHOOL OF YOUR CHOICE" (Interviews with admissions directors from major universities in the Southwest.) TO NIG H T r/i N ew M usic N igh t M ixed d rin k s $2.25 Thursday C a m ! f J | f l a t Dom estic Pitchers $3.25 Friday opening: Nefli Cafe no cover S atu rd ay ggd Muttra Goose open ing: It’s an Austin invasion! Local bands play NYC Page 8/The Daily Texan/Wednesday, July 23, 1986 Meanwhile, a hypertrendv $4-a- beer dance establishment called the Cat Club hosted the Austin, Texas, Ball. Not being able to be in two places at once, 1 lent my Daily Tex­ an press card to Mike and Jeff, who would have otherwise had to pay $15 each. Mike and Jeff weren't impressed by either Bad Mutha Goose or Zeit­ geist. (To put things in perspective, Jeff swears Kiss is the greatest musi­ cal ensemble in human history.) But headliners Dino Lee & the White Trash Revue played to an enthusias­ tic crowd. Jeff would later proudly releasing a heavy metal recall scream into Dino's microphone, catching Dino's bra and grabbing the butt of one of the Jam & Jelly Girls. At a club regularly featuring dancers from Billy Idol and Michael Jackson videos, the King of White Trash was appropriately a big hit. TUESDAY — Wall Street reeled from the news that the White Trash Revue may be coming to an end. A group member disclosed that Dino is bored with the New Las Vegan concept and is ready for the next logical progression beyond White Trash. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 24.75 points, and the next day's N ew York Times quoted Kidder-Peabody analyst An­ thony Woodruff as saying: "I'm in my bunker, and I have my steel pot on. The Street is hurt." At least one new Dino Lee fan was upset by news of the change. "W hite Trash rules," protested Jeff. Editor's N ote: Robert Bruce, Tex­ an staffer an d generally all-around irascible guy, is currently stationed in N ew York City, a privilege h e doesn 't fully appreciate. The follow ­ ing is the first o f two parts o f his report on last w eek's N ew Music Seminar. By ROBERT BRUCE Daily Texan Staff NEW YORK CITY, MONDAY, JULY 7 — Eleven years ago the Fab­ ulous Thunderbirds were satisfied with splitting $10 for a night's per­ formance. Monday, it cost $18.50 to see them at the Felt Forum, an audi- tonum-type venue in Madison Square Garden. Three bands shared the bill with the T-Birds: Guadalca­ nal Diary, The Golden Palominos and headliner Dave Edmunds. It seemed like a questionable mix, but at the weeklong New Music Semi­ nar, bands jumped into any club that would have them. As a result, R.E.M./Palominos vocalist Michael Stipe received probably the first boos he'd heard in at least a few years: bringing the Palominos out for an encore before an impatient T- Birds/Edmunds crowd was not a good idea. To everyone's surprise, Edmunds followed the Palominos, slaying the audience with a blistering nine-song set and leaving without an encore. The beginning of the T-Birds' set was tight, booming, and fun, but less intense than Edmunds'. The Thunderbirds' commercial break­ through earlier this year, however, had brought enough fans out to for­ give that, and the crowd ecstatically responded to the set-closing FM hits Wrap It Up and Tuff Enuff. By ROBERT J. PELTON Daily Texan Staff Everyone, at some point or anoth­ er when they thought no one was looking, has given into temptation and engaged in a blatantly "kiddie" activity. Walt Disney movies are a favorite diversion of this type, and for good reason. The Disney studios have a knack for producing animated movies that appeal to adults as well as children because they are not simply low- budget quickies aimed at the kin- dergarden crowd, but solid, well- thought-out productions which mm, CiNfMA’WlsT — < 1 (0 S Longress • opr” 1 1 a m . 4 4 ? 5 1 SEX DRIVE 1 (X) P L U S (X) i WILDEST DREAM 1 ADULTS ONLY (X) i j | I I VHS Sales & Rental snmnmmnmmiiiiiiinuiuiiiiMMiiimiiiimE CAR IN SHOP? WEEKEND RENDEZVOUS ? NEED A TRUCK/VAN TO MOVE? rent/ ^ jreck NEW AND N O T SO NEW CARS/TRUCKS STUDENT DISCOUNTS N O RTH SOUTH 4 5 4 - 8 6 2 1 4 4 1 - 9 6 0 9 ‘I knew this man o n ce’ Paris, Texas is an incredibly great movie. If you’ve never seen it, you need to. If you have, you need to see it again. Here are five reasons that will convince you of this fact: No. 1. The cast is superb. Nastassja Kinski and Harry Dean Stanton rule Hunter Carson, as their son, actually acts— he’s not just a cute kid. No. 2. The direction. German director Wtm Wenders masterfully orches­ trates all elements of the film, eliciting powerful emotion without resorting to sap. No. 3. Cinematographer Robby Müller captures the beauty underneath the dry west Texas landscape, from the desolation of the desert to the neon motel signs of Fort Stockton. No. 4. The scnpt. Pans. Texas is the best screenwritmg Sam Shepard has done to date; Shepard and Robert Altman s Fool for Love especially pales in comparison. No. 5. The venue Videocassettes simply do not do this t m ¡ust re Wednesday and Thursday evenings, Texas Union Films will show Pans, Texas on the full-size screen of Hogg Auditonum It s an experience not to be missed i Disney’s ‘Mouse Detective’ continues delightful animated tradition reflect all the talent, experience and resources of the company which has brought us some of the greatest ani­ mated classics of all time. The newest offering from Disney, The Great M ouse Detective, is an­ other success of this type, with much more to offer than the average G-rated, shopping center kiddie- flick. The first thing that one will notice is the magical artwork that marks Disney animation. No one else produces animation like this any more, and it is sorely missed. Disney's newest film is based on the Basil o f Baker Street children's books, which are in turn based loosely on Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories. Disney's interpretation owes much to the Holmes movies of the '30s and '40s featuring Basil Rathbone as the great sleuth, and Rathbone himself even provides the voice of his ro­ in The Great dent counterpart M ouse Detective. The film wavers between parody - ing and paying tribute to Rath- bone's tntense and commanding air — physical humor abounds, but it is subtle enough to avoid buffoonery, while still eliciting joyful shrieks from the younger viewers. True to Disney tradition, M ouse is not without some rather unset­ tling scenes. Even those who have permanently renounced their child­ hood will feel at least a little dis­ traught at some of the plights that befall the characters, and there are several images which are sure to fig- ure prominently in hundreds of youngster's nightmares across the country. Professor Rattigan (voice bv Vin­ cent Price) is downright evil, and a couple of the scares are worked well enough to get a jump out of even the adults in the audience. Three characters meet their maker in the including a course ot the action, comic relief gangster who pratfalls his way into the children's hearts shortly before being executed for a mere slip of the tongue. This is not My Little Pony M eets Rainbow Brite. Perhaps the most satisfying fea­ ture of this movie is a plot which, DOLL HOUSE 3615 S. CONGRESS W e d . — A m a t e u r N i g h t F r i . & S a t . — F r e e B u f f e t S u n . — P o o ! T o u r n a m e n t WE RENT, SERVICE, SELL: • TYPEWRITERS • PERSONAL COMPUTERS • SUPPLIES 450-1925 AL’S TYPEWRITERS ASK ABOUT OUt SUMMM BATIS IMMIGRATION H, vs. PRACTICAL TRAINING Know the Difference before Filing V A X S I T Y 2*02 G u a u a lo í-'E 47 4 - 4 3 5 1 I MUST ÍN D SOON MY BEAUTIFUL LAÜNDRETTE TO D A Y : (515 $2.75)7:15,0 15 VAMP T O D A Y : (5:30 $2 7 5 )7 :3 0 ,9 30 e s M m s 24th & San Antonio Opan Every Night Until 1:30 Open 11:00am Mon-Sat Open Sun 3:00pm Happy Hour M on-Fri 5-7 M edical H a ir Center p rov id e> K Total H air Restoration Í Ac* Seen on "20 20" while perfectly understandable to pre-schoolers, does not stoop to simplicity’ or predictability. The en­ tire movie moves such that any child can grasp |ust enough to fol­ low the story and enjoy the simpler elements of humor and excitement, while providing a wealth ot subtler elements for older viewers, such as rapid fire dialogue and a sense o\ self-parody that passes well over the heads of the 4-foot-6-and-under crowd Suspense is sprinkled liberally throughout, and more than one plot twist keeps interest up. Basil and his adversary take tum s out-witting 3 i C o m p u te rT im e ™ Z ] Rent a M acintosh System LaserWriter, Hard Disks, Drives, Printers, Etc. 4 7 2 -5 8 3 3 (D a y , W eek, o r M on th) WITH TERRY (¿ALLOW AY ANO USA WESSELY each o t h e r , and even w h e n Ratti gan s plot has been toiled, the ac turn continues to build, climaxing with hand-to-hand combat atop and inside London's Big Ben, in a d m - mg thunderstorm ! h ¡ s is Disney at it s b e s t funnv exciting and above all, visually en ­ tertaining A mu-a tor I V n v fans Sherlock Holmes fans, Basil Rath­ bone fans admirers of quality am mation and children of all ag es The Great M ouse Detect ii e, star­ ring lots of cartoon rodents, at the V illage, 2700 Anderson Lane, and the Lakehills, 2428 Ben White Blvd. m A |M I AM NOT RELATED TO ANT AGGIE BUMPER STICKER DISCLAIMER 3 for S5, 8 for $10, 20 for S20 UNITIX, Bo* 7464, Yidono, TX 77905 m f t n n ^ Ltzoo B A R G A I N P R I C l \ M », w “It s being held over for all you peo­ ple who think you can lead a happy and fulfilled life without seeing Out All Sight You can’t — go see it ” — DAILY T E X A N 8:30 pm Ju ly 2 4 -Aug 9th Thurs. F ri, Sat CAPITOL CITY PLAYHOUSE 214 W 4th St 472-2966 $6.00 T o p G u n $ 12 24 2 45 5:15 7 50 9:45 K i r a t r K id I I h 12*0 2:20 5-40 7 30 IS 00 J ! (T a b P a r a d iy c w 12 15 2 30 4.45 7:00 9 :!S WIDNESMrSTIMESk PAIL PARSONS A ttorn ey a t Law P.C. $2W rwi UTE SHOWS A MATINEES EVERYDAY BOARD CERTIFIED IMMIGRATION » NATIONALITY LAW TEXAS BOARD OF LEGAL SPECIALIZATION ALL SHOWS BEFORE 8 PM 704 Rio Grande 477-7887 A M E R I C A N A 22M HANCOCK ON r TOP G U N (PG -13) (12:30-3 00-5 30 *2 3O)-7:4$-10:15 1 J M O R T H C R O S S 6 u T s w N0NTHCA088 NALL ANOCMON A M M T T FERRIS BUELLER'S DAY OFF (p o -i 3) (1 2 1 5 - 2 3 0 - 3 .0 © $ 2 - 5 0 ) - 7 :2 0 - 9 - .5 5 BACK TO SCHOOL (PG-13) * 2 3 0 ) - 7 - .3 0 - » .- 4 Í 1 2 :4 5 3 0 0 - 3 : 1 3 ABOUT LAST NIGHT r ( 1 2 : 1 5 - 2 : 4 5 - 3 : l STio(ium arm cMureiii IÍZS-2 4LS06 7 25 SI A L IE N S « 1:45-4:30-7:15-10.10 1930 E RIVE RSI DC 991-5689 TH£ GOOr MU5T Be T ) s j j * T 2 00-4:30-7 00-9:30 ’ 2 30 4 45 7 15 9 30 21ST & GUADAL UPE 9 77-1329 S n A f i i 1 4 :0 0 -4 :4 5 -9 :2 0 TRIP | "* T O ------------- OXINTIFUtr -9:30 J, A C A R N A L K N O W L E D G E J L JL G H L- IHVADEIS FBOM I MAftS 11:45________ I ________ 1200 A nd Replacements Park St. David Prof. Bldg. 800 E. 30th at Red River 472-6777 suit* 2!» 0 e care ■ H e can help \ y R U TH LE S S PEOPLE FERRIS BUELLER // VsS I I Y/XS N / X X X A B O U T L A S T NIGHT ^ oo íxxpv roo FERRIS BUELLER (» « > < H « rL X \ EU&kS R U TH LE S S P E O P L É H — [ f t 11 40 40 » •. 4 4 8 -8 1C ’ O ' » u o o o t o » t S X t M X k \ N R O O M W ITH A V IE W B A C K T O S C H O O L A B O U T L A S T N IG H T H 13 20-? 30-5 K T 8 0 G 1 0 30 o o d o l a y A d « 4 '» ► t'l Sets "¡a, b e p u rc h a s e d 4! 411» t im , d u rin g th e bustn*>M d a . at th e A rb O f Fou< a n d i. in c o ln 3 A l ilts $5 00 Children $2 75 R e d u c e d P rtc o - $2 ’ 5 R e d u ce d p n ce s *or features start.ng ai or b e fo re 6 0 0 p m « re e kd a y s a n d the first feature on ly on w eekends a' art P residio th e a tre s E i c e p l T O P G U N e n d A L IE N S S HO W TIM ES ARE FOR TO D A Y O N LY NO PASSES accepted for ‘ ALIENS' or ’TO P GUN' MASH Tonight ot 1 1:25pm 2.50 U.T. Union Thoatro 3.00 Non U.T. Tonight of 7:00pm Mogg Aud 2.50 U.T. 3.00 Non U.T. R U TH LESS PEOPLE L E G A L E A G L E S V is a / M a s te r c a r d A cce p te d F o r W o rd a d s call 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 / Fo r D is p la y a d s call 471 -1 86 5/8 a .m .-4:30 p.m . M o n d a y - F r id a y / T S P B u ild in g 3.200/2500 W hitis A v e . V is a / M a s t e r c a r d A c c e p te d The Daily Texan/Wednesday, July 23, 1986/Page 9 T R A N S P O R T A T I O N T R A N S P O R T A T I O N R EA L ESTATE S A L E S R EA L ESTATE S A L E S M E R C H A N D IS E 70 — M o to rc y c le s 80 — B icy cle s 130 — C o n d o s - 130 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e s T o w n h o u s e s HYDE PARK C O N D O $2,900 Equity, non-qualify­ ing assumable loan, $8,000 below appraisal, 700 sq. feet, one bedroom. (817) 766-0293, days, (817) 691- 3563, nights. PRICES SLASH ED ! O w n e r soys s e l W e say look for yourseff an d m oke us an oft#' on this spacious tow nhom e 3 4 3 - 6 22 0, Henry S Mt#er Realtors 8-11 G REAT FO R student or p ro fe s io n a l, freshly painted, furnished O w n er says -«# now! 3 4 3 6 6 2 0 , M arti, 3 4 3 -6 5 9 5 . 8-11______________________________________ E N H E tD AREA, 3-2 W ash e r/drye r M i­ crow ave fiv e minutes to U T/dow ntow n Two biocks to shuttle $ 9 9 ,0 0 0 , ow ner (713 )6 2 6 5051 To see. 4 7 9 0 7 7 9 8 -2 7 7 -2 8 Downtown City Views Foreclosure— 5 minutes lo compos Viewpoint Condominiums located of 7 0 0 South 1st Street O P E N DAILY. N e w 2 Bdrm/2 BA. pnces starting at $ 7 9 ,9 5 0 . 1-1 pneed at $ 54 ,5 0 0 . Is» yea r interest rate 6»/5%. 5% down. Pool, jocuzzi, & C LASS. CaR Linda In­ gram & Com pany Office 476-8111 o r M E R C H A N D IS E 190 — A p p lia n c e s CARPET R E M N A N T S av a ila b le V a n o m colors an d sizes Prices vary from $ 6 - $10 per yord B org ers Carpet, 3701 G u o d o lu p e 4 7 7 7 8 5 7 7 - 2 8 0 _________ 8-29 W A S H E R A N D dryer Excellent co n d i­ tion $ 2 9 5 for the set! Wi# dekver 2 5 8 5214 8-27E EXCELLENT C O N D O BUYS sizes— best s e r v ic e barg ains. A ll P e r s o n a l f r o m k n o w le d g e a b le agent. C a ll P ro v e n Properties, 4 7 4 - 58 91 . __________________________________ 1-1 SMALL com plex (ocuzzi 1st float w asher dryer w a ft to campus 3-2-1 Buy­ ja n e Gam e) office 3 4 5 -2 1 0 0 d o w n hom e 3 4 5 -0 6 5 0 7-3Q_________________ N E W 2 d t / 2 BA condo, on 2 100 Son G a b rie l d o s e to campus, fireplace, ced mg fan. all appiionces $ 8 0 0 / month 329-0011 7 -2 4 H ______________________ po ol N O R T H W E S T HILLS, spacious 3-2, stxX- tte $ 6 1 9 0 0 Betty 3 4 5 8 0 3 0 , 3 4 5 -3 0 0 3 JA . G o o d w m 8-8 condition, fireplace top P R t c f S LA S H E D 1 O w n er says se# W e soy look for yourself and m ake us an offe r on this ipocious tow nhom e 3 4 3 - 6 6 2 0 . H enry S Maker Realtors 7-25 VERY SPECIAL 2 BR/2 BA condo, view of T - w e ' Captfol on shuttie. $ 12 4,50 0 must se# Botxe Bremond, 4 58 -1 0 5 6 , C oped Properties 7 -2 5 ________________ BtA UT1FUL 1-11% condo 3 blocks to shut­ tle all appitarvces. only $ 6 5 9 0 0 G lenn, 440-1191 J B G o o d w in Reofiors 8-1 , BY O W N E R - luxury 2-1 tow nhom e at The Chom bord fireplace ap plian ces W / D, pool, (ocuzzi. security gate, $ 6 9 ,9 9 5 4 4 8 « 9 7 7 4 5 3 3 79 0, evemngs 8 -2 6 200 — F u rn itu re - H o u s e h o ld L A R G E W O O D E N m icrow ave cabinet with 3 shelves $125, w o o d Sdrow er dresser, $ 6 5 . B row n p la id swivel choir. $ 3 5 4 5 2 -8 7 5 0 7 2 3E ________________ LAR G E DRESSER $60; couch $ 25 ; gloss storec cobine* $ 5 0 coffee table $5 portable TV $ 3 0 matching table lomps, $10 e ach 4 5 2 5 9 4 3 7 -2 3 360 — F u rn . A p ts . L!JL¿JLx!JL!JC^ Alpine F o r e s t S u m m e r R e n t F u r n is h e d or L’ n fu rn i> h e d • L a r u e R e m o d e le d E f f ic ie n c y w it h la r g e c lo s e t e New Carpet & Curtain e A C ft K ichen Appliances • Shuttle to UT Campui- e lwiundr> Room • Lots of Parking 4 5 5 8 A v e . A 4 5 4 8 8 0 3 4 5 9 0 7 8 0 360 — Furn. Apts * 1 * 1 1 1 * i i 1 1 1 * I * I CLOSEST TO CAM PU S RIO NUECES • Tired oi ar viog to doss7 Aai* • O n e t x x k *rom c a m p u s • 2 Shuffle S lops • Fre e P a in in g erfh Perm it • A jnf*sc ufflisned • Security S e rv ice • Batco^ v t r ' i S lo ro g e • Specc 5>oupRate<. 1-B e dro om Sum m er Rates VILLA SOLANO APTS. L e a s in g F o r S u m m e r & F a ll 8 6 • 1 B R F u m $ 3 3 0 • 2 B R Furn. $425 • Shuttle at C orn er • Intramural Fields a cross Street ' S x e e r t K a t e * 6 0 0 W 5 1 s t S 3 1 5 474 0971 474-1004 4 5 1 - 6 6 8 2 200 — F u m ltu r® - H o u s e b o k l Moving, must sail one loveseot sofa, fold out to twin bed, $120, contemporary style sofa, $200, oho 2 year old sewing mochtne, great condition, bos muih-sfretcH stitches, $175. CaH Ktm, 452- 0 6 8 8 or Kelley, 443-5414, leave message. 7 -2 9 O U T D O O R R A T T A N chaws (PhJspm ev lorgx e gg shaped with stools and cushions $ 5 0 / set Al*o im m o r a b a b y cnb/mattress osh co lo re d 4 4 1 -8 0 0 3 7- 2 4 C __________________________________ O J E E N SLEEPER sofa arm chaw $150 form al (set), pet corner, $ 70, 7 8 whrte go w n 4 7 4 -0 73 1, evem ngs o r weekends $ 3 0 -25 M O V I N G M U S T se# couch $ 3 0 dwwtw set $ 4 0 do ub le bed $ 40 , co lo r TV $100, stereo $ 30, c o l 4 7 3 -8 2 5 8 Leave messoge 7 -2 8 _________________________ Q U E E N SIZE m o tio n le s s m attress woterbed 10 months old. five yeex w ar rooty Heater, frame, finer an d directions included $ 2 7 5 « 5 2 9 8 2 5 7 -2 8 BEAUTIFUL PINE des* with brass horxfie W orth $ 4 0 0 W Ü se# fo r $ 15 0 o r trade for onhqoe secretory m g o o d condition 3 8 9 3103 after 6 pm 7 -2 6 ___ FO R B ABY an d toddler, com plete nur sery, used with love, must see $ 2 9 5 4 5 9 0081 7 -2 9 _______________________ to o u t b e d . M O V I N G , must se# one loveseot sofa f o ld $ 1 2 0 tw in contem porary style sofa, $ 2 0 0 ; a b c 2 year o ld te w in g monefwne g reat co n d i­ tion, has multi-stretch peches, $175 Co# kim, 4 5 2 -0 6 8 8 or k e t e y 4 4 3 -5 4 1 4 , leave m essage 7 -2 9 2 10 — S t e r e o - T V 13' B LA C K an d white TV, $ 3 5 Excellent condition 2 8 2 -8 4 9 3 , after 5 pm 7 24 DBX 3 B X expander, $ 4 5 0 ; Techniques SH 8 0 5 5 E Q w / pwtk nowe $ 2 0 f' Y am oho cossette deck, K -3 00 , $ 1 5 0 Brod 4 7 6 -2 8 6 5 7 -2 4 360 — F u rn . A p ts . F l y d e P a r k Apts. L easin g F o r Su m m er & Fall ’86 • Eff. Fum. $270 • 1 BR Furn. $285 • 2 BR Fum. $370 e City Tennis Courts & Pool • Shuttle at F ront Door 4 4 1 3 S p e e d w a y MOVE IN TODAY 458-2096 • S u m r a r r R a t e s VILLA ARCOS NOW LEASING • w'^et Community • ildnns • Shuttle Front Dooi • Paüc Pool CeilmgFans • Lcnmdry Room 476 1619 3 3 0 1 S p e e d w a y C o m e By T o d a y 1 GARDEN GATE APARTM ENTS CO ED NOW PRE-LEASING FOR SI MMER & FALL 1986 • • ■* • ° e V 4 0 0 o r b e d dSe. 7 2 5 1 9 7 8 B L A C K S A y h o w t, b lo c k , *i g e e * iio n d e a in , ru n s g o o d $ 1 8 0 0 mk f o r K e r e n o - t s o m 4 4 G I 9 6 0 7 74 7 6 R O N T U C Sun b vd 2 -doo. ou*o *5 nxtabw $ 5 0 0 OI b e d c * e 4 5 9 8 3 4 2 cad á m e m e 7 9 2 0 0 m d e « T -2 9 197 2 F O R O M o i e n c t W e i m ara tc w e new p a rts A M / F M n e e g re a t M a n y . w h M u d « e é C a í Tony 4 8 , ¡>605 SaúCJ-24 8 0 F O R O Favw scxv saw N e w b e n s w x io" A t» m g $ ’ 5 0 0 n e g C e B 4 ’ 2 i 2 5 « 9 3 c a R v 5p m 1 9 8 4 M A Z D A R X -7 , c re a m 5 sp e e d . A C i a m stereo odors lee new. low miisi, 5 9 1 0 0 4 4 1 - 1 3 7 0 7 2 5 __________________ 1 9 8 4 3 0 0 2 X 2 3 0 0 0 mde» 5 s p d T to p s g re a t 4 8 0 9 4 ’ 4 w e d 4 7 4 - 9 9 4 5 h o m e . 7 - 2 3 , o n d x s o r $ '€ 4 0 C 1 9 7 4 . ' A se e s $ 9 8 0 3 4 5 - 4 0 1 8 1 31 v n g re a t A M . F M o s F O R S A L E 1 9 7 5 V W R a b t v G o o d c o n d * o " $ 8 0 0 n e g 3 4 3 7 3 7 0 le a v e m e s ­ s a g e d n e ce s sa ry ' 2 4 8 3 GT1 sever wet- sunnoo* must s e l turn h e r C a l Stew* 9 2 6 2 8 0 0 e x i 5 3 4 ’ 3 4 6 - 7 6 0 3 a fte r 8 p m 7 - 2 5 > 970 V O L K S W A G E N B u g I "’ 0 0 g race lo o k s g o o d ven. o n g o s S4ev e 4 7 B - 7 2 9 9 7 2 5 0 ru ns -e e o b i* g r e a t '6 3 B U G w ho* w # i "US* tnm . «Out» e n y w ru n t g re a t $ 7 5 0 « 7 3 2 2 3 8 J * ' 9 7 ‘ v o iv o . 4 ‘j D l w e n g v w '300 w ie s a u to A M / F M . A C 7 9 K m ie s e x $ 1 9 5 0 O t n s 4 7e ce é e m can d e* .» ' J O 7 8 6 5 _______ _____ '9 8 3 C U S T O M S V ix d n G i C $ 2 8 0 0 2 M 4 8 2 3 d riv e 6 II A C h o o t - 4 d o o r e n g in e W e rs S 3 0 0 C 4 7 2 6 « 6 4 7 9 C A M A R O B erfin e tte w cxu* p o n » l o b e g u s p p e d 2 y e a r o k f 3 5 0 V f re - b e d e n g in e W e * m a m to m le d , g o o d e o n dxson 1 9 7 2 M E t C F D f S 7 5 0 re b u dt e r y n e m, A T 3 ? 7 7 7 9 0 j g n e 7 - 2 9 ra d io , cen se n e > 4 5 0 0 A M / F m 7 2 9 19 ' 9 H O N D A A c c o r d h o « 6 7 . 0 0 0 m ie s n e w « res » O d y -te a " « te n e r , e e d s p a m t C o l 4 4 0 8 5 6 2 7 - 2 9 F O R S A t E 1 9 7 8 V W B e a d s c o m e tv fa ie •"«xmsjogne e d w s" to p a n d m e n o r 5 5 . 0 0 0 m des 4 - s p e e d A M F M C » s te r e o mtdto $ 4 9 5 0 . 8 7 0 3 0 9 5 d a y s 1 - 2 9 5 - 3 7 6 4 e v e r- n g s 7 - 2 9 » d w h e e 30 — T r u c k s - V a n s 1 9 7 8 V W won ’ p a ra e n g e r A C C M ‘ V ccssett» uertw 4 7 8 ¿ 0 4 2 4 ■ 4 b e 7 2 8 $ 2 6 0 0 C a H S b a r m y " 1 9 7 9 C H E W lu s >« s .x. se w e n g m e A M * M c a ssette s t e t x 1 5 3 f 4 5 4 5 5*6 7 2 3 $ 1 3 0 0 < ’ 8- C A R A L A R M , N o n e O n g m c d b $ 5 0 0 « s e l s e l $ 2 7 5 o r b a st o ffe r 4 4 2 - 6 7 0 0 7 2J ít _ ______ _ _ 70 — M o to rc y c le s 8 3 RED Hondc Pastport grec- conch « o n S 3 ’ 5 c o l t o u r e " 70 2 0 4 4 5 9 4 5 ' 2 3 34C 198. H O N D A V45 M o g n c scjh saddle two helmets included Only bogs $1500 at * -« 2 6 6 6 7 23 1980 SUZU» O N 400, $650 neg dw iw ieogx, g re ai b o dy g r e a t d r a p e Fa d one *ur 4 7 2 9108 7 24 NEW 1966 wtvte Honda f lee 80 less • to r 400 mee s, wets bos»#* $900 neg 472 2974 ahtr 6pm 7-28 ’ 98. —• N . iA . DC mg condkOA law nvieoge $ 500 O N C .c d b x x - O» D o ra 4 7B 5 2 9 6 o r 4 5 4 9733 7-29 -s».; u -»;' - » ____________ - A M A h a 2 5 0 E i c * e spoH bAe. cuWsm pom* low "d e p o t i-e.:- vncxv bargoi" Dowd 4 7 9 9488 7 29 R E N T A L 360 — Fu rn . A p ts . M / I e c i i LEASING FOM SUMMEM & FAL1 • 1 BR Furn $300 • 2 B R F u r n $400 • Walk to Campal • Nice Pool & Patio 2 2 0 7 L e o n 478-1781 ’Smmmt e r #•*•* >q m e e e e e e e e e e e e e e t ÍHE 305 APTS. P r e - L e a * i n g F o r S u m m e r & F a ll 8 6 i • t a r e - t " r - H • «- ; • s - I I 0 Small Faencl H ( o m p i e x I ; • S f d f s ' u T f t om ei M d i f * tn l o d j t ' 459-4977 I I ) j \ 5 A Ass O i i j t t ^ *V a mmmr t K r i r b MARK XX L e a s in g N o w F o r S u m m e r & Fa ll 1986 O n e B e d r o o m Apartments 1 Bedroom From $ 3 0 0 2 Bedroom From $ 3 7 0 I 3815 G uadalupe ;459-1664 '$ s H m M r B a te s f C i r c l e V illa Apts. Lcitin; For Suaiaer & Fall 86 MOVE IN TODAY! • 2 Bdrm 2 BA • 1 B d rm 1 B A FURNISHED! 2323 To»n Lake Circle 442-1991 *• * * 0 0 0 0 » ♦ ♦ * » ♦ + * *■ * 0- 0- 0 ♦ A spenw ood A p artm en ts SUPER SUMMER RATES • 1 BR FAurushed $300 • 2 BR Furnished $400 • W a te r A Gas Paid M O V E IN T O D A Y Shuttle Bus At Front Door» Intramural Fields Across Street Professionally M a n a g e d By Davis a n d A ssoc PRE LEASING FOR FALL 4 5 3 9 G u a d a lu p e 4 5 2 - 4 4 4 7 C o n t i n e n t a l L i v i n g C o n t i n e n t a l A p t s . 910 E 40th Near 40th ft Red River The Continental Apartments are Close to Cam pus. Convenient to Employ­ ment Shopping an d Transportation • Large Furnished 2 Bedrooms • Pool • Celling Fans Move In Today 452-4639 « T H E A P A R T M E N 2124 Burton Dttve • Eihciency Fiom$300* • 1 BRFum From $310* e 2 BR Fum From $400* • Large Pool an d Patio • Ceiling Fans h Microwaves Available • 2 Shuttle Routes N O W P R E L E A S I N G F O R F A L L •Current M o v e In Rates 4 4 4 - 7 8 8 0 Davis and Assoc M anagem ent Co Leasing For Summer & Fall 1986 1 Bdrm . f ur n S295-S340 2 Bdrm Furn. $4 iO-$48(l •Summer Rates Gas & W ater PAIL3 S h uttle Bus At Front D o o r Froi M snégedB vDé\is A 1403 Norwalk Ln. 472-9614 D o s R i o s W alk T o C am pu s • Fully Furnished • Microwave • Ceiling Fans • Built in desk • Individual Washer Dryer • Private Balcony • Covered Parking • D e c o r a t i v e W a l l p a p e r 478-4271 2818 Guadalupe r r WEST CAMPUS I & 2 Bdrm Fur­ n ish ed , P riv a te Parking. Fireplaces. S u n d e cks. and Im undry Room , Prices Start At $350 Month Call Carroll Marcus at 45I-H412 '8 4 H O N D A A#ro 125. groat condition candy a p p le rx d Coll C m * 440-1947, $800 after 5pm 7-25 1981 H O N D A 70- g o o d brake » excel­ lent condition. G re a t first bike $ 3 5 0 . Caü weekdays 2 8 0 3 0 2 8 7 -2 9 C ____ 8 0 — B icy cle s : - 1 : * LOWEST PRICES ON QUALITY * * MOUNTAIN BIKES, CRUISERS 1 * 10-SPEEDS i BMX ^ M o n g o o s e • Dtom ondbock ^ Centunon • Panasonic H E L R f U l F R IE N D L Y S E R V IC E ^ U7 DISCOUNTS ^ * South Austin Bicydes + i - 2210 South 1st ^ 2 btocks N o rth o f O B o r f * 444-0805 * q * M * * $ 4 4 4 4 4 1 75 BIKES-S25.00 UP! N — 5«#1 6 Airport S— te n IMui* at S Congrea (N f Comed EVERY SATURDAY 9 00-6 00 PM Austin Bicycle Salvage 928 4900 7-18 12 SPEED B-’dgeuone txke ijpef condi- tx>n $135 neg .ourer. 4 '4 -5 9 4 5 346- 7 02 0 - 23____ M E N S 10-ipeed, g o o d condition. $ 45 , 8 3 7 0456 "ve-.ngi tjoYi 440-5634 7- 25________________________________ 10 SPEf D 1 'eecp'"’ b-lr green n-nmpo- tabor $5C neg 469 0469 7 28 360 — Furn. A p ts. G IT A N E C H A M P IO N 63cm . m icro odiust post, quick chonge front an d bo ck Soil do cronk set pius accessories Boreiy nd den $ 2 5 0 CoH 4 8 0 9 4 0 9 ask betw een 12-ópm 7 -2 9 fo r Bob, 2 0 " R ED U N E P1. 24. S 2 0 C 9 2 6 9 4 C 7 > 79_________________________________ RED H O N D A Passport $ 40 0, g o o d con ditxyn, 4 6 7 1973 4 6 3 -5 8 7 6 7 29 120 — H o u s e s R O C K O F G ibrab orf This is o we# buih 100% bnck home on lovely street This on e needs a famity 3 4 3 -6 6 2 0 , H enry S. MiNer, Realtors 7 -2 5 R O C K O F G itx a lta fi The is a we# buih 100% bnck home on lovely street This one needs a fam ily 3 4 3 -6 6 2 0 H enry $. MiHer Realtors 8-11 130 — C o n d o s - O N E LEFT Th« lowest 1*1 for sale in the Croix. Also a 2-2 priced below all others in the Centennial. Call Terry: 451-5200 The Elliot System 451-8178 7 -2 8 D MINUTES FROM SHUTTLE North Austin 3/216 Town- home available in low 70's. FHA 321 financing avail­ able. Call Scott for details. 255-7893. 8-1 T A R R Y T O W N 2 5 0 8 E n title w o story, tw o bedroom , on e a n d tw o holf baths, ioundry. m icrow ave ceding fans, C A /C H , con­ imrxbt ndk. covered parking, p o ol v e n ie n t s h u ttle $99 30C Owner 261-6930 7-31D g o lf, d o w n to w n TIMB£RW00D¿ 360-Furn. Apts. APARTMENTS 1 0 0 0 W . 2 6 f t i PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1986 M A R K E M B E R S A P T S • - - je E ‘ * $290 • F n e s t L o c a t i o n m UT A r e a • j t t i e o r W a l k to C a m p u s • ; - e p i a c e MOVE IN T00AY 4 9 9 -8 7 1 2 • N ow L e a s in g • 2 P o o ls • O n IF Shuttle e (ju :e t T re e s e Microwaves e Ceiling Fans 3 1 s t & Speedway Svbuh»' B«es 4 7 7 - 2 0 0 4 % fafmtSU ROCA • Nice Pool • Walk To Campus • Across the Street from Tennis Courts Office Open Daily 4 7 7 -3 6 1 9 1302 W. 24th (24th and Lamar) 'ZOcCiotu CxeeFí 'ífaMó. LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1986 Unfurnished and Furnished Large Apartments 1 Bedroom From $ 3 1 0 2 Bedroom 1 B A From $ 3 5 0 2 Bedroom 2 B A From $ 3 7 0 1 9 1 1 W i l l o w c r e e k Davis & Assoc. Management Co 444-0010 444-0014 f y l " 1 T T T T " i T i ~T 1 T M ’ T-»-T r“p GREAT SUMMER RATES M O V E I N T O D A Y ! Pre-Leasing For Fall El Campo LaPaz El Dorado Furnished i Bdrm 1 Ba 2 Bdrm 1 Ba 3 Bdrm 2 Ba U nfurnished Uni $ 26t $270 - E Furr, $280 $29C Unt $355 - E F um $370 ♦ E $425 - E - E 472-4893 & 452-8537 i h X k X n T X T X Y r T T T r r n T tT 7 i7 T T r ? i7 x ¡ x J Tanglewood Westside • S u m m e r K e l t s • 2 Pools • Balconies • View Apts. • Shuttle Stop A p a r t m e n t s • Microwaves & Ceiling Fans Available \ Page 10/The Daily Texan/Wednesday, July 23, 1986 MERCHANDISE MERCHANDISE MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RIO — Stereo-TV 250 — Musical 340 — Misc. 350 — Rental Services 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. EIECTR08RAND STEREO,~M m oble 8 track. AM/FM, $75 CoH 385-2838 7- 28C STEREO EQUIPMENT for sote unused Pi­ oneer SX50 receiver 60 won Technics S lQ 300 turntable- M ly automatic Marantz speakers $275 Call Steve 346-7603 ofte. 8pm 7 25 MUST SEU home stereo components '.NAD 30/20 ampi.be- $125 and 40- tuner $125 JVC KD-D35 cassette • 20A frontstand also deck. $125. glass available, $45 price neg 442 670 0 7- 28M___________________ 220 — Computers- Equipment Spechum Tyrbo ST 100 IBM compatible, 6 4 0 K ram, AT key­ board, color graphic printer control board, two floppy driver with control board, Hitachi RZB color monitor, 2 0 MB harddriver with lots of software, $1,550. 441-5182 after 6 p.m. HP 41C calculator, pnnte- card reader, modules time, extended functions, ex tended memory, math, mom memory, re chargeable battenes and more $300 346-7260 7-23 ___ DOS 2.1 $45 WordPerfect 4 1 $299 brand new sealed versions 4 7 8 -7 5 N 7- ,23__________ TWO 400K external drives for M acin­ tosh computer, $100 each 480 8480 7- 25____________________ IBM-PC two Soppy dnves, fixed discs 266 K-bytes RAM, monitor, IQ printer, cables, software documentation, boxes Complete $2600 46 7 6101 or 450- 0044 7-25 IBM-XT compatible $499 50, flight simu­ lation $29; crosstalk $99 wordperfect, $249, 25-40O/o off on all IBM softwares compoconn. 2200 Guadalupe Ste 217, 474-1991 7-25____________________ 240 — Boats SAILBOARD. ALPHA Fascination with Neil Pryde 6 0m? sail, sliding mast, re­ tractable centerboard Good beginner/ intermediate board $500 Evenings 458-4570 7-28____________________ 16' HOBIE Cat with Cat Hauler trailer. Fully ngged Used 15 times $2000 Karen at 452-8550 7-30 '85 MISTRAL Diamond head 9'6 slalom board $450. 7-29___________________ 250 — Musical Instruments GUITAR: SIX stnng Fender acoustic New with soft lined case, plus strap and aces sones $175 453-3101 or 472-4924 (leave message) 7-25 SPANISH GUITAR, $50; weight set in­ cluding bench, $ 45 .445 -62 25 7-25 Instruments ANTIQUE PIANO for sole $300 or best offer English upright beautiful cabinet, ivory keys, will need some minor re p o n 926 4169 7-29 280 — Sporting- Camping Equip. 2 HIFLY windsurfers for sole Great for beginner or intermediate 1985 model excellent condition $450 per, Co* Carter at 499 8514 7-25 ________________ _ WINDSURFER, 14', great for beginners with new soil bog, $350, call Roger at • 472-8743 7-23______________ SAILBOARD GUI FWING fiberglass short board Neil Pride 4 5 Ultranova soil. 56 sq.ft. Fathead sail $150 o r best offers 452-5943. 7-23 ___________ WANT TO go down? Complete Scu- bapro diving equipment, perfect condi­ tion, 10 hrs use, $1400 new, asking $650 must sell 926 3488 7-23_______ EXERCISEfi 7ROWER for «.¡7 Body shop 360 Excellent condition $65 Call Cm- dy 467-8950, or leave MSG. 7 29 7-29 WILSON PROSTAFF $120. Head Graph ite $90; Prwiee graphite senes 110 - $120. Contact Xavier 474-1991. 7-29 340 — Misc. ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER Daisywheel memory erase portable $175 TV color console, 24” $100 Dishes, serves 8, $75 477 5701 leave msg, 7-23E___________ COFFEE MAKER (Coffee/filters included! $7 00 Wilson racquet cover lenms $1000, men s Speedo swimsuit (30); $5, matching desks/dressers $25 each/ $45 00 pair 472 4924 7-23 RENTAL 350 — Rental Services Free Locating Service Condos • A partm ent* Houma • Duplex** It's h jungle out there Leave the h u n tin g to us! 482-8651 503 W 30th bcirifi’MK i f i [ & u i f DRIES PROPERTIES C O N D O S CAMPUS AREA NORTHWEST HILLS BARTON HILLS 467-2771 360 — Furn. Apts. ALL BILLS PAID Summer Rates jJMIIMIIIItlllllllll lllllllllllt I tllllltltlltliv = H o m e Q u e s t § lo c a to r s erv ic e i = FREE 480-9443 C a r o l e D a v i l a Immediate (h cupancK & E ■» ~ E Pre-i easing far Summer rnitiimiMiitiiiitiiiiMiiitiHiiHiiiiiiiiir Efficiency $270 One Bedroom $360 Sm. Two Bedroom $380 Lrg. Three Bedroom $750 C A /C H , W a lk o r Shuttle to UT 2212 San Gabriel Office Hours 12 30-5.30 Also pre-leasing for Foil EFF.and ONE BDRM $ 2 9 5 to $ 3 2 5 plus electnc. Nice quiet location across the street from park close to Lake Austin. N o pets. 7 0 0 Hearn Central Properties Inc. 476-4370, 451-6533 ONE BEDROOM $355 in Hyde Park. Quiet complex Perfect for graduate student. Convenient to shuttle and city busline. Built-in bookcase. Large bedroom with walk-in closet 4 3 0 7 Avenue A 459-1571, 451-6533. Central Properties Inc. 9-2D EFF., 1 and 2 BDRM. $ 3 2 0 to $ 4 7 0 plus electnc o r $ 33 5 to $ 3 9 5 all bills potd. Large well m aintained apartments in Hyde Park. Panelled, plenty o f cabinets, walk in closets, bar. M ost apartments over­ lo ok courtyard o r pool. 4200 Avenue 451 -69 66, 451-6533. Central A Properties Inc. 9-2D EFFICIENCY $315 Small, quiet complex within walking distance to U.T. Large Bedroom with queensize bed and walk-in doset. 20 2 East 32nd St. 9 20 C entral Properties Inc. 477-5515, 451-6533 9-20 302 W. 38th Fall leasing. Efficiency, 1 BR, 2 BR Conveniently located. Fur­ nished/unfurnished. All appli­ ances, pool, half a block to shut tie. Gas/water paid. 453-4002 8-11 32ND AT IH-35 SUMMER RATES EFFICIENCY-S295 1 BEDROOM $ 3 2 5 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH -$ 4 4 5 Extra nice large woft-m closets, caihog faro. Quiet Homey complex On «te laundry 476 -9 1 9 9 8-6 D 1011 W. 25th One Block From Shuttle Efficiency, Duplex, Partially Furnished Gas and W ater Paid Agent 451-8271 Best Apts Price In West Campus N ow Preieasmg 1 SC 1.185 2 SC SS8! 3 It S78S -JtecenAy Remodeled —•Five Entrance» - fteoytiM Pool w*F Fountnn la rg e Tanning Ground» I'M 9-20 8-1 ONE BEDROOM $ 3 2 5 plus electnc o r $ 3 7 5 oil bills paid Q u ie t com plex in park-like set­ ting N icely furnished, carpeted ond draped 6 0 9 East 45th St Central Properties Inc. 4 5 2 -0 5 8 0 451-6533 9 2D ALL BILLS PAID Efficiency $ 3 3 5 in Hyde Park, dose to shuttle and city busline. Nicely furnished, well main­ tained. 4 0 0 0 Avenue A. Central Properties Inc. 458-4511, 451-6533 7-25 NEAR UT taw School on RR shufle Fur nished room rent CA/CH share boi^s $195 ABP 3310 Rec R vet 476 363 4.7-23 tor —Laundry Room 3 *2 Storks From Campa» —Fu#y E Quipped K.*cfa*r> —Hew furniture ~ 6eP Student Manager o no " ® AftP except electricity 1802 W e* Avenue 478 7519 RENTAL 3 7 0 — U nf. Apts. [ Austin Locating Service, • • Transportation Provided Apartments, Duplexes Condos & Houses • • • j I FREE SERVICE I I Open Seven Days • CALL 459-0228 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I R E L A X ! L e t uk fin d you an a p a rtm e n t, d u p le x o r tow nh ouse F A S T & F R E E Action Apartment Locators 452-9316 TIREDOF LO O K IN G ? F R E E RENTAL HELP SUMMER RATES FALL PRE-LEASES 4 5 2 - 5 7 8 5 U t*M w SELECTORS WARWICK APTS. 2907 WEST AVE. 2 Bedroom-2 Bath, 1 Bedroom & Efficiency apartments for rent, each apartment has dishwasher, arbage disposal, ceiling fan in Il> iving room & bedroom and are fully furnished W e also have a swimming pool with a waterfall, four bar-b-que pits, sundecks, laundrymat, grounds are garden landscaped. Covered parking is available. Walking distance from West Campus. 4 7 4 -7 4 2 6 WEST CAMPUS Furnished efficiencies leas­ ing now for fall/spring 86- 87. $300/mo. $125 deposit. 910 W. 26th Barranca Square. On W/C Shuttle Call 478-1350. 8-15 WEST UT campus Reduced summer rotas on efficiencies Available now. CA/CH, dish wen her, disposer boilt-ms Also Hyde Park efficiencies available Howell Prop­ erties 477-9925 7-30 T E X A S L O N G H O R N A F G H A N 4 2 x 6 0 Easy To Make All Single Crochet $5.00 For Each Pattern Send To: FUN STITCHES P.O. Box 12049 Longview, Tex. 75607 Print: Name, Address, Zip, Pattern Code 11 1st MONTH S s 1 0 0 \ REF! ~ RAI FEI TO YOU A; LEASf S AN Af " •• V - N ‘ Ai i I h YOU HAVE LAI! < A ! Y Ft " ifT • REDUCED SUMMER RATES • EVERY APT COMPLETELY REMODELED IN THE LA : YEAR • POOL SAUNA. AND EXERCISE ROOM • RR IF 5HLTI. : • BEAUTIFU! A N • EFF ,1.2 BEDROOMS AND TOWNHOUSE UNIT^ A, Ml AMIGO NOW PRE LEASIN G FOR SUM M ER AND FALL 2 weeks off on a 9 month lease 3 weeks off on a 12 month lease 10%OFF FOR SUMMER • l,2 ,3 .5 le 4 ro e m • 2bgMedTenr»Court» f k JftL C . ( * C tj * ^ XW nl w í • Securfly Service • OtylramportBton ePuÁngGnmn • {M m A r-C ontM need Laundry • Cekng Fans In I kWje P n M — ■ Aihd 8 —I ** - — — — - UVwiy lOOWu Cr*C ofutyOfli» • Emscm loon» • Car Waémg Area • Cable TVHook Up • Two Swimming Pooh e t o M b a U V o M a l • Outdoor J e a a T • &or-6-Quet L Acme Focikkes for Each BuUng Newly added features include: Courts • Itolian Ceromsc Tile in Kitchen and Bath • Free use of our two tanning beds • Therapeutic M anage Also Being Completed For Fall: RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. J U S T C O M P L E T E D !! CLOSE TO CAMPUS/SHUTTLE BUS MOVE-IN SPECIALS r a n h in t t il b id o f n a s r m o n t h • Semester Leoses • 20% Summer Discount • 10% Preleose Specials • Starting at $360/mo. • 562 to 906 Sq. Feet • Large Wolk-ln Closet • Loundry Room • Jacuzzi, Spa • Security Patrolled SANDSTONE APTS. I All 2408 M a n o r Rd. & 2501 M an o r Rd. 4 78 -0 9 5 5 *»c, EFF. & 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 B D R M A P A R T M E N T S S tartinq A t S310 ALL BILLS PAID FurVUrf Shuttle Bus 5 Min. To Downtown Modem Microwaves Lofts W/Fans Spacious R iv e r s i d e N r • n n A ------- 1 c * V Z FT SOUTH JK V * J O H o r f 4 4 4 - 7 5 3 6 POINT SOUTH-BMDGEHOLLOW R e n ta l O ffice: 19 10 W illo w c re e k 20b S I M M E R D IS C O U N T S NOW P R E L K A S IN G FOR F A L L S A G E B R U S H ONE BEDROOMS START AT $285 LARGE POOL AN D S l ’NDEí K S P A G I o r S APARTM ENTS ( LOSE TOGC SHUTTLE ( LEAN LAUNDRY ROOMS 4 7 8 - 0 9 9 2 Ix l 7 0 5 S q . F t. I a ** - - * F R E E R E N T FOR ONE MONTH F R O M S 2 9 5 Efficiencies and 1-Vs available offering: • Large, roomy floorplan • Lots of storage • Gas and hot water paid • Close to UT and IF shuttle • Private • Wrought iron gates • Ceiling fans r J 4 4 0 0 Avenue A 458-1985 Griffith Property M a n a g e m e n t T W O F R E E W E E K S IX I 5 (» f) S ( | F t. y u i . - T i h • I / * < i v f ■ y < h i t ( . it < i t h o n i < ' I u s t > p o n i h < * s h i i n k • b u s ' a j j r t < i t l < m u i i o n J u s t ( v i s t o f t f i < ‘ i . i M a n s i o n I l o t o l ! • l( it 1 i l l o r t a n i | >i i s | >r< ) l t - s s i t > n a l s o n d m . M i u t ■ s i t i< !< i i t s • St < h i t it < 1 1 x i r k l i k f o t l i t i j - ’, \ t 1 1 It >s< i t > s i k )} >| n r d i n i n g , « >n< i i i it < i t r t a s . • ( ) n c a n t 1 1 \ \ < > i M*< i r f x > m . i | l a r t m * n t s ¡ > l u s o a r <\< i t i t i j 4 < a l i t r > r n i a s t y l o o n e t x ‘ f i r c x > r n l o f t . • I i $ > h t c f I t e n n i s < ( n u t s a n d s f x i r k l i n v t | x >r >t Ü i X W M W N H W W W I I t H i r » t # t f l l f i l t » * - H M M f * « m i i i i T h é V / í l l a s Lw0( jQ s t a ( 4 5 4 - 5 6 3 8 1016 C a m in o L a C o s ta OFFICE HOURS: Mon. - Fri. 9-6 Sat. 10-6 Sun. 1-6 2H04 M ANOR ROAD 4 5 0 5 DUVAL 4 5 4 -4 7 9 9 B J M x B a lc o r P ro p e r ty M a n a g e m e n t ri Amere*- Kxptata IN m m M »f Se Había Español Wir Spree Hen DeutvcH Nakokainttndi ng PiÜptno 2101 BURTON DR. M-F 8-6, SAT 9-5 SUN 12-5 Casbah Apartments 2200 San Gabriel Condo living at Apt pnces, luxu­ ry, space, convenience (walk or shuttle). Spacious 2-2 with ceil­ ing fans, microwave, intercom, BBQ pits and 2 separate entnes. NOW LEASING 2ND SESSION $500 Preleasing for Fall $ 6 2 5 + E. 4 7 3 -8 5 5 3 4 4 4 -2 7 5 0 8-290 3 4 th and G u a d a lu p e 1 BR, 1 BA, furnished apart­ ment available August 1. CA/CH, large kitchen, excel­ lent condition. $395. Call Carl, 459-9592. 7-31 FREE RENT~ 12th M onth Free wrth one year lease signed now $27Q /m onth oN bills paid Furnished efficiencies 2 blocks from UT wrth AC, coble hookup, taun- d ry contracts available p a rk in g b oa rding 2 5 0 2 Nueces 4 7 4 -2 3 6 5 pr 4 76 -19 57 ■ 8 290 One Bedroom Apts. For Rent $350 + E. 2 2 0 0 Nueces. 2 Blocks from UT 8 6C Swimming pool, cable hookup, laundry, parking. 474-2024 or 476-1957 ___________________________ 8 -2 9 0 CASADE SALADO APTS. ! BR furnished, got & water po>d no pets, swimming pool, west of campus, near shuttle Summer rates available lease required, opptv m person 2610 and 2612 Salado St, resident mono ger opt. # 1 1 2 ,4 7 7 -2 5 3 4 . 4 BLOCKS WEST UT A tra c trv e 1 M effi ciency, paneled irvmg room Separata bichen Wofc-m closers G ot hea* and coobng $ 2 5 0 -2 ?0 Wotat o n d qas fu rn is h e d N o p e*s f n a u tre Red O ak Apt» 2K>4 San G abnei 4 7 6 -7 9 1 6 8 1 loundry RENTAL 370 — U n f. Apts. HYDE PARK 2 BDRM $360 Summw ral» $ 4 6 0 lo * («tartmgl O pen, ip o - la rg e r o o m Smol, aou> flo o r pton wrtti tn e n d h com plex w*h H yde Pork chorm D o s t to neighborhood s h o p p in g pooi, porks, go*, dty and UT ftxXlte. post o ffice & m ore Bwll m bookihelve*, d m la to u r d c e e ti C o* U i now 4 5 8 9 8 0 9 o r 451 2 2 4 2 West Campus Savings $ 7 5 off of first month's rent when you prelease for foil by Aug 15 Spocious 1-1, $ 4 6 5 -$ 4 9 5 ; 2-1V4, $ 6 6 0 -$ 7 0 0 , fresh point and carpet, microwave, pool and lots o f parking Ebert Leasing 3 2 7 7 5 6 0 7-25 9-4D 108 Place Leasing For Fall/Spring Furnished Efficiencies and One Bedroom Apartment dishwashers/ disposals swimming p o o l patio/k>unge/ B6Q gnll individual storage bookshelves ’6 block to If shuttle loundry facilities resident m anager From 295 + E 452 1419. if no answer 453-2771 108 W 45th St 8-27D $ 2 9 5 $100 Deposit Summer Rates Fountain Terrxxe Apartments Large one bedroom apartments walk in closets, corpetad drapes, disposal, ceding tans, large potto ond pool W ater/gos poid 610 West 30fh M o n o g e n apartm ent #1 3 4 Wcdk dis­ tance to UT. 4 7 7 -8 8 5 8 8-150 $295-$315 + E. W e are looking for quiet, consci­ entious non-smokmg students in­ terested m o large efficiency or 1 bedroom Two locations Hyde P ark/near campus. C A /C H , loundry, deod bolt, no pets 458-2488 8-27 AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY Clean, one bedroom -wo' U -vw nity 4007 Avenue C 453 8^ 38 451 5096 8 ’ 20 SUMMER RATES w o k to campus, aty and shuld* bus targe efficiency ahc renting to r to t Mou-v; So. Apis 4 7 2 . 4 - 7 18 SANDPIPER APTS 2810 Rio Grande W h y P ay C o n d o Pnces F o r C o n d o Living? 2 Bdrm /2 BA FuB Fum. Microwaves Ceiling Fans Intercom System BBQ Pits, Pool, Sundedt Covered Parking Only 3 Blocks From Campus Office Hrs: 3 pm- 5 pm M-F 2 pm -5 pm Sot & Sun CoH 4 7 4 6 6 8 3 ,4 7 7 -4 6 2 2 , or 4 4 4 -2 7 5 0 7-25 $230 + E. Summer Rate W e ore looking for quiet con toen hout, nonsmoking students interested in o large efficiency Two locations Hyde Prk or near compos CA/CH, loundry. deodboft, no pets 458-2488 7-W ONE BEDROOM $375 Sm al complex m Hyde Park and on shuttta Large w a l-m closets ceding fans, bar extra large windows over looking courtyard ond pool 4 2 0 9 Speedway 4 5 2 -0 4 7 5 .4 5 1 -6 5 3 3 Control Properties Inc 9-2 0 ONE BLOCK to caetpui Great tocahor e n a l quw i very pr-vata complex H * mihed corper drapes ceding fans, trash pomt $285 * E 2721 Hemph,* flan Yes-tem manager apt E 473 2442 7- 25___________________ ____________ BARGAIN WES' campus 1 88 sm ai q u w compfa* . 2 5 0 8 Son G abn ei pool taundry Summer $ 2 6 0 fa* $315 • bdh Co* Set 4 ” 8 3518 8 29_____________ 370 *— U nf. A pts. CIRCLE OAK X APARTMENTS Cm tral Location Convcnicti to Highland Mail and Major Thuroiairrs . «nptrs • vnviL • 2 f-.«4s • l rding f *m • V «dire ( nttmj* V Fxegiacn a 1 Ii 2 Bdmsv SUMtag At $330 It $425 6408 Boms 459 1995 ATTIC A PT S. Elf. — 2 Bdrms STARTING AT $ 2 9 0 M O . tas\ Walk To Shixtie Gow To Highland Mail Small C o m p ie s S w im m in g P ool 7033 Hi 290 Leet 926-6664 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 4 4 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ I VILLA ORLEANS 2 0 6 W 38tts A EL CIO ÜPTS 3704 Speedw ay Pre-Lemming For Fmll • Great Location on U.T Shuttle • CeAngFew • le o u n M Poo< i Courtyard • Some Unts Al Bill Pod Ca*Oy*tf«343M TAKE NOTE. A v a ila b le F o r T h e F all S e m e s te r • 2 Bedroom apartments available for fall semester • Designer carpet & tile_________________________ • Levelor mini blinds_____________________________ • Color coordinated kitchens & baths____________ • Large swimimng pool with deck________________ • Hot tubs and redwood decks • Access security system Barbeque area Covered parking • Walk-in closets • Built-in bookshelves The Heart of H Park DUVAL VILLA APARTMENTS 4305 Duval St. Austin. TX 78751 451-2343 Racquet Club/Creekhaus Apartments on Town Lake 2 m onths FREE RENT with a one year lease. 1 y. m o n th s FREE RENT with a 9 m o n th lease. 1 m onth FREE RENT with a 6 m onth lease. 3 m onth lease on specified units Preleasing specified units for fall Reduced sum m er rates for June. July, and August 1720 S. Lakeshore Blvd. Austin, Texas 78741 (512) 444-2882 SUMMER RATES FREE RENT SPECIALS OPEN SAT AND SUN________________ J RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360 — Furr». Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 3 9 0 —* Unf. Duplexes 3 9 0 — Unf. Duplexes 400 ^ S A L A D O APTS. 2 7 0 4 Salado O nly 1 left, fully furnished, 2-2 with fireplace, microwave, ceil­ ing fan, security intercom system. 3 blocks from UT campus 4 7 7 -4 6 2 2 , 4 4 4-2 750 , 4 7 4 -6 6 3 8 7 25 ovo 'a b le tor imm*dt THE DIPLOMAT o f * m ov* m 1 BR a p a rtm e n t S m all c o m p l* * Q u i* t a n d p n v a te W a lk lo campus G ood pnce $ 3 0 0 C o l Richard, 4 7 6 -7 3 9 9 7 - 2 9 ___ _____ CO NTINENTALS 2/I. poiio, pool, loon d r y ceiling faro and m o re H a n c o c k C e n te r (910 E. 4 0 th S t ) spec o i d is co u n t to engmeenng O' pharmacy students C o m e b y o r c o l, 4 5 2 - 4 6 3 9 7 - 2 9 VILLA ARCOS - 1 BRs, smotl complex, on shuttle. (33rd and Speedwayl Laundry, ceihng fa r N o w until 7/31 special dn count tor law or engmeetmg students Come by or call 4 7ft ¡619 7 -29 the HIDEAWAY WEST campus, 1-1, smok c ampie* trees very pnvate in summer icrtes $ 3 2 5 Bee rent special 1106 W 22nd, 4 7 6 1936 4 7 8 -7 9 3 2 P,,m# P'operhes 7-30 GREAT O A K - O n e block lav. school la rg e clean 2 2 Ceiling tans CA/CH pool toundry 2 9 0 0 Swisher 4 7 7 -3 3 8 8 3 4 5 -8 8 7 4 8 15 _____ DESIGNER. N E W tumnhed aportments ceding security g a t* p o o l Btscrowove fo r H ancock S hopp ing Ctr G o R course 4 52 6518 7 2 4 ____________ ______ CLOSE IN north of U ' Effc * m , $ 2 2 5 to $ 2 9 5 1 BK $ 7 6 0 $ 3 6 5 4 5 3 8817 8 4 $ 3 2 0 2 BR - $ 4 5 0 . 4 52 4516 477 2214 WALK TO cfasft 188 BA water gat p a d , new carpet new apphanc*. cove rod parking King* closets. 408 pool, la Cos to Apts 2900 Cole 4 87 9154 8 29 LARGE EFFICIENCY g e t and water paid separate ¡rang and bedroom, fa i teas ng $310 4 6 9 -0 0 7 ! 7 ?9 to campus. got jiv 4 ’ ’ 4 0 0 ‘s ioh*f 5 30 EFFICIENCY, CLOSE Seating cooking centra am $ 2 60/m o * f S. W W or ’iieekenet», 8 -6 V .a .« TO UT 2 1 * Sor Gabnet o n * b e d 'O o m As »:•. ond water pom) $ 3 2 5 app<«s''< »• month 2 8 8 5 4 5 ' C A CH o p o < '" - fn i ’ 2 4 0 U N E X R E C T IC V A C A N C Y O n * b lo c k UT V**> iorge BS . x g e tr e * b a d * * rO N o p e n 4 7 4 1212 8 -1 1 ___ sec .O '9 » WT 5T AUSTIN N e v . P W p ** po-m w ta $ 2 7$, g o t ond w ater paid N*©r thuttle N c pen 1115 W 10 4 16 7145 4 80 9 7 4 6 • 25C . * * n q ***x r ton* , I I I WALK. *©«>*»* w i 1, 7 and 3 two room - « n *m«.xl*i*<3 me fam atied AftF CfapoiiOM Apn 3 ’ H k e : River 4 4 1 902 6 2 9 7 709 MAN< -• Rood V i r A v - v . C- -V» ei t o n o h knvehed )p«toon< *s ix», rotad no pen $ 2 2 5 4 8 0 0 * 6 3 4 « 2 7 1 8 1 5 0 M C E. Q U tfT cam pée* $ 7 8 6 3 K N e « 3 6 8 large 18t apta m «mal f a t m N , ! o n d u n tu n -sh e -: flfegtaond M a « 4 5 3 ____ ______ lA R G t 1 BR IC C ... - to ta auto «voto p**a $ * , n « A i* s 3 J r d 4 - * . 7 28 • T am O r - v 511 8HLEVUE iarge etbemnry ve ta o s . . t o m a n y burn me $ 2 9 5 me. 9 2 6 7 24 3 I H ta rg e e ffa m m ■** p a a f •kdrv g « - '• • pa>d k * * « n o w ’ he E*abb*vnam 452- -■» i > » r-fY O l PARK, * Fqi 3 5 9 0 8 12 A A.* 'O campus fat' iaoaeta arga e** < -v- - i . - ji-iv-.jm.shed XAcSc, tumtotad -*x».> 4 0 5 I 3 1 * 473 . 4 6 15 '3 DENTS • * * * m y x i - t o i O) UT tp o c io u a a id - ■ - h a rrtw tons Atop ro o m s fa r « v ta o v seam ew. 6 5 2 4 9 7 JC 2 2 0 2 - 2 2 0 4 Enhetd Road Two bed­ room, one bath. $ 4 3 0 far yeai lease $ 4 4 5 far nine month lease plus electrici­ ty Pool, laundry and quiet on ER sh jttie Colt O w ner 477-1303 2 58 5 0 6 5 8 6D EFFICIENCY $ 2 9 5 West of campus W a ­ ter paid 1009 West 2 5 b St 4 51 -6 53 3 . Central Properties Inc. 9 -2 0 ENFIELD ROAD, very large 1 BR studio, front of ER shuttle, five closets aM oppli ancas, trees, no pets. 4 7 8 -9 7 6 7 $ 3 7 5 . 8 15___________ MATURE PERSON, large deon quiet efti ciency on shuttle, $ 3 0 0 + E Popofo Vil­ la g e A p h 111 W 38th, 4 5 2 - 8 0 0 7 7 - 2 3 1 bedroom, HYDE PARK. On shuttle route, walk to comput room, krtchen, ftrepioce, ceiling fans, won t find O tv*ire' single to, me monev $ 350 fail o n ly 4 7 7 - 4 0 4 8 8 -5 __________ living TARRYTOWN EFFICIENCY "close to shut tie no pets, oil b ill potd, $ 29 5, 4 7 8 - 7116, evenings 8-1 G O IN G O N vocation! Rent my apart mentí $125, no utilities Aug 1 thru 25. Convenient, shuttle 443-0681 7 -2 5 370 — Unf. Apts. R R C H U i f l V RPTS. N ic e E W c le n c l e i C lo s e T o C o m p c n $ 8 5 0 M o -h «. C o ll: 47 8 3688 “ WALK TO CAMPUS > lB d r-$315 * E ffioencim — $ 2 7 0 $ 4 9 deposit Nfce, mad* for m o** -** CalW oyr^ 462 9 5 U l AM a # PLAZA COURT APTS, new romietved a p a rt le i i iM i g a te p o o l m i c to w o rv e » c * u i n g ta n a H a n c o c k » 9 i _ g D e u g n e i g menta g g •.b o p p in g C ental g o U c c u ia e ♦ __ 452-6518 First Two W eeks Free B e o u tr h r new complex off shut­ tle Ceiling fan, min»-blmds vootted cemngs, pool, ocun Morgan Properties 445-0592 B 2 ?D THE WATERFORD C O N D O M IN IU M S 2401 LEON ST. SALE OR LEASE YOU SELECT THE DECOR FOR FALL OCCUPANCY EXO IK TtOPKAL PLANTS fEOW OOO DECKS AND SPA LARGE 7 BEDROOM. 2 &ATHS 2 BEDftL ■ v . BATHS W IT H sOFT A N 0 3 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS O P f ia OPEN DAILY 3 PM-6 PM 2401 LEON ST. 477-3143 OR 473-8318 ‘ _38 Q*6m w*e& If t i o o d l e w .................... W f $1 | | f V i m © cavnd * W apar+ m m *k. S3$0-$4bC ««8 *T T « f m f 30 :jáá*mk H o w l ISnope»" UT WAUC ** $,t Í 9 06 a 9 7 0s 4 1 2 1 7 2 5 * Com anche Apts. * Leasing for Fall-Spnng semester one bedrooms (u 300-310 Water and gas paid Call Frank (a 4 7 9 - 0 9 2 8 8-15 ONE MONTH FREE Two minutes from Zilker park, rte w ty renovated 1 Br Studios from $295. Come b y Barton Ridge Apts., 1501 Kinney Ave., o r call 4 4 7 -7 5 2 5 . 8-13 Directly across from UT: 4 apartm ents a v a ila b le h a rd w o o d floors, A C , parking a n d exterm ination include afl p rovid ed Aportm ents V I , kitchen, $ 3 5 0 , 1/1 trvmg room, spocious kitch­ en, $ 4 2 5 , 2 /1 kitchen, Kvmg room , $ 4 7 5 ; 1/1 kitchen, Irving room , $ 3 7 5 . Please cot) 3 2 7 - 7 9 2 9 . If no answer, lea v e nam e a nd num ber on m achine 7-25 ONE BEDROOM $ 3 5 5 Large Studio Apartm ent, pnvate boi cony, lV i bath, covered parking 701 W N o rth Loop. Central Properties Inc. 451-4018, 451-6533 9 2D EXCEPTIONAL EFFICIENCIES FOR FALL ? torg* efbcteneros quet Hyde Park. c loy* to UT, p o o f g o t ond w ater potd Sunny m e* g o o d study environm ent 4 3 1 0 Ave B 4 5 8 8 8 9 3 7-31 ONE BEDROOM $335 location larg e opart Central "te n ts w ith w d k - m c lo s e ts c a r ­ peted, draped, appliances ter & gas p a d 2201 Muroc C en tral Properties Inc. 452-9019 451-6533 9 7 0 Town Lake V^oge Apts, 1201 Tmntn Fond, 444 3411 Beat the bode to school rush. Preieose now and choose your color scheme. Come see our models. All r>ew ater or 2*1. 3-1 j, and 2-1 j flats ond T.Ha. Storting at $415 * Eiednoty Large pool, shuttle stop dose to shopping and security gate Open Sun­ days, 1-5 One Bedroom Enfield Area On shuttle, 2nd Floor, q u ie t su rro u n d in g s, $365. Elliott System 4 5 1 -8 9 6 4 2 » m 1? ? 0 $ 4 -pía» UT W A LK ham w o o d &O Q *\ 2 2 $4 ^ s 4 7 2 2 1 2 3 9 2 * a An W RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. a a ♦ a a ♦ ♦ a * a • a a a a a -a a • a a a a ♦ a ♦ a * a ♦ ^ C n ^ l i s l j A i r e A P A R T M E i ~ — i - F 3 ! ^ • * * . r i J B £ i e L mm k mm F - 2-1V2 Townhome mmmmm • B B Q G f i l i s W e O tte r: • On Site Management • 24 Hour Maintenance • U n f u m i s H e c ! a n a F u m t s n e a A p t s . • Ltgfifed Tennts Court • 24 Hour RocQuettxjii Court • 2 Swimming Pools • Fully E q u ip p e d Krtcnen • 2 Laundry Rooms • If f t c ie n c y : $ 2 8 5 $ 1 7 5 * • 2 -2 : * 4 4 0 $ 3 1 0 * • 1 -1 : $ 3 2 5 $ 2 0 0 * • 2 - 1 ’ i T o w n h o m e $ 4 4 0 $ 3 5 0 * 8 3 0 5 Mon.-Frl. 9 - 5 S a t. 1 -5 Sun. ‘ J u n e , J u ly , A u g u st R a te s Efficiency 4 4 4 - 1 8 4 6 1 9 1 9 B u r t o n D r . RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apt*. I T ■9 a * * * * ♦ • a a • • a a -a * * -a -a a * «a a * -a a -a * ♦ -a -a * ♦ -a -a The Daily Texan/Wednesday, July 23, 1986/Page 11 HYDE PARK prestigious street, UT shut­ tle beautifully remodeled, large 1-1, go •age, appliances, ACs, fans hardwood floors $ 5 2 5 4 / 9 6?53_8-15___________ REMODELED HYDE Park. 3 -2 , near 45th. Guadalupe Quiet location, lots of win­ dows $ 6 7 5 4 80-9191 7 25C__________ PRE LEASING far fall G reat plan far •oommates 2 2 '9 Shuttle route near Ryon Investments 3 2 7 -8 7 9 9 7-28C BRAND N E W 6 plex O ne bedroom , $ 3 9 5 W a s h e rs /d ry e rs included Beautiful place Available August 15 5 6 0 6 Jim Hogg 452 1188 327 3 4 0 0 _________________ 8 ¡4 TARRYTOWN LUXURY 2-2 "ptaTltad^ (or third bedroom; Large deck, ceiling tans microwave fenced yard $1000 $ " 0 0 O r ER sht'ttie (N ear lake Au*(in| 371 Meredith 480-9191 / 25 HYDE PARK duplex, 3-2 and 3 1 beouti fully remodeied AM appliances W /D connections, CA/CH, 4 7 9 -6 5 1 0 7 -2 5 floors washer/ 1 BEDRO O M wood dishwasher, gos/ dryer, microwave heat window air, 708 W 31*, $ 4 9 5 / mo Coll Jack 3 45 3 /1 ? 7-25__________ KIRKW O OD STREET Short walk to shut­ tle Hancock Center W ood floors, mony windows 1 94 0 Ventage, 2 BR, living, din­ ing rooms Yard maintained $ 4 5 0 Jack iennmgs, 4 7 4 -6 8 9 7 , Consolidated Real­ ty 8-4 UPPERS/GRADS 2 0 6 0 0 5 -A Cameron Ho* stove, refrigerator, drapes, patio, *oroge, W /D connections, garoge Re decorated UT bus $ 4 0 0 And $ 2 0 0 aeposit 4 5 9 -0 7 2 3 8 4 2-1, excellent condition hardwoods, a p­ pliances, mimblinds, AC, carport big yard, shuttle. $ 4 7 5 , Debra, 4 7 4 -2 8 5 7 evenings 7 24 HYDE PARK - UT shuttle - prestigious street - large, beautifully remodeled 2-1, appliances hardwood floors, garoge, $ 6 9 5 4 79-6153 6-15 ____________ O N SR shuttle 2-1, carport, CA/CH, fir e p la c e , W /D fe n c e d connections !/? month free, $415, 8 9 2 - 3 0 £ £ 2 6 ___________________________ y a r d , RENTAL Condos- Townhouses R EN TIN G OS IfO VD N S ? L F S U P Q t * D O THE WORK n o i spec ializin g In lo c a tin g KPhSTUEHTS HOUSES it CONDOS * DUPLEXES ¡N THE UNTVEBSITT ASEA i i i t t ie th (In Trt Towers) a t e s s i W l - W M C O N D O S F O R L E A S E • Great S*i©ction • 5 7 4 T Bedroorw CONDO CONNECTION 3 0 7 w MLK 4 7 9 - 6 6 1 8 L E A S I N G A N D S A L E S M A D E S I M P L E 24S4 B I O G R A N D E C e l Oto Agents 4 7 6 * 8 1 1 1 Trees and Sun Quiet Travis Heights tn 1, 2, 3 b e d ro o m condorrereums pork-ltke com m unity All have m crowaves, new carpet, pahos o r b a l­ conies, tiled b athroom s F ir * stop o r shuttle, p o o l CaM n o w to see 451 2 2 4 2 or 4 4 1 -5 5 0 0 RE/MAX Capitol 7 -2 5 1 2 0 7 LO R R A IN E (o ff E n fie td i L a rg e 2-1 upstairs, h a r d w o o d flo o rs S50C K iri- sey Levy R ea ltors 4 5 1 -0 0 7 2 8 -8 4 5 0 0 Ave. G . Extra Iorge 3 /2 , Victorian charm, neor shuttte Dishwa sher $ 7 7 5 , 4 79 -6 30 1 8 -2 6 tennis W /D UT - c h e e rfu lly CENTRAL L O C A T IO N r e m o d e le d p o t io 2 -1 , A C , appliances garage $ 4 9 5 4 79 6153 8 15 fa n s CALL 471-5244 T O P L A C E A C L A S S IF IE D A D RENTAL 430 — Room-Board T H R EE D O R M S I N C . N e a r W estgate M all Cute one bedroom in quiet fourplex. N ew carpet, off- street parking, water/gas paid. $2 8 5 move-in special. Elliott System 451-8964 8 -5 0 A re You W orth Your W eight? At Norwood Apartment Homes you or© l©a$© on© of our aportments and your first month's r©nt » ©qua) to your wwght If you ¡•os© within 24 hr$ of your first mit you wifi got on addihonol $100 off your hn$t month s r©nt Coi 451-1917 or come by 5606 N Lomar for mor© information 7 2 5 0 Lease Eze Houses, Apartments, Duplexes Campus and Elsewhere 4 4 0 -7 7 4 9 832-1976 NORTH CENTRAL near 5 1 * Street. 1BR IBA trvmg, dining, kitchen combination with AC and heat Alt appliances 5010 B Evans $ 3 3 5 * E Co# 2 5 8 -2 8 3 8 or af­ ter 5 00pm 2 5 8 8199 7-30 WALK TO camp»» O ne bedroom apart­ laundry room w ater/goi ment Pool, poto Summer 'fife $ ? 9 5 B L G Prop­ erties 4 5 9 -0156 7 18 __________ LARGE EFFICIENCY builtm krtcheñ, walk tn closets dose to IF shuttle, call Debbie ond ask her about her move-in special 4 5 3 5 7 3 7 8 11 1-1 BETWEEN Speedway and Duval 1950s, gas ond water paid, covered parking Iorge boy window avail 8-1- 86 $ 3 5 0 , Judy, 2 6 6 1427 7-31________ REDUCED RENT and deposit, specio1 effi oenr.es $245; 1-ls, $ 2 7 9 , 2 Is, $ 3 5 9 Onty $100 deposit First stop off shuttle M organ Properties 4 4 5 -0 5 9 2 8-12D $ 2 0 0 M O V E -IN off Town Lake and UT shuttle, large 1-1, $ 2 7 9 large 2-1, $ 3 5 7 , M organ Properties 4 4 5 -0 5 9 2 8-12D NEAR UT and downtown, large efficien­ cies, view of Peace Park, pool, sundeck Viewpoint, 2518 Leon, $ 2 9 5 PMF Inc 4 5 8 -4 1 5 5 or manoger 4 7 6 -8 5 9 0 . 7- 2 9 M _________________________________ 7 2 9 0 BARGAIN WEST campus 1 BR small, quiet complex, 2 5 0 8 Sor. Gabriel, pool laundry Summer $ 26 0, tall $315 -t bills Col! S>d 4 78 3518 8 29 O N E BEDROOM opts Clean, attractive, quiet, swimming pool, loundry $ 3 5 0 E, $ 2 0 0 deposit 2001 S 0 5 5 ! £ £ _ _ IH 35, 445 - _________ BRAND NEW 2-story 3-3 on Speed­ way. Available Sept. 1, all amenities. One block to park and pool. On UT shuttle. Call 4 7 2 -7 3 6 2 or 452-3031. 7 25 LAW SCHOOL DUPLEX 2914 Beanna 2/1, 1 930's charm , w o o d floors, a p p l anees, mock fireplace, trees, $ 6 0 0 Ef­ ficiency 1/1, appliances, $ 3 0 0 Avoil a b le n o w 3 2 8 -6 1 3 8 , Cindy 8 13 3431 NORTH H,Hs Dr., pretty 3-2, fire­ place 1250 pool $64 5 $ 6 9 0 utilities paid Shuttle Bob Black 451-5711. 8-1 ENFIELD A R M 2 1. 1303 Exposition trees, quiet, no pets, ER shuttle $ 4 6 0 4 M 8 9 8 7 7 23 3 2. hrepiai e dishwasher garbage dis posal, new carpet new point water paid prompt maintenance $550. 4 4 7 - ’•589 7 £ 1 _ ____ OARAGE APARTMENT O ne block to compus Carpet/hardwoods Some btHs pod 4 72 4 2 0 5 Dan 7 25D LOFT 2 -2 , fireplace deck, trees, W /D connections covered parking split level, $ 5 5 0 David 4 58 8410 7-31 FREE RENT special $ 2 0 0 m ov* in. Small, quiet complex on CR shuttle N ear IH 35. 5!st Capita1 Plaza Excellent mointe nance Reasonable 'ates 14 — $315: 2- 1- $ 3 6 5 4 8 0 9191 7 -2 5 _ 2 BR/1 Ba apartment m duplex, down stairs, walking distance of campus near sHufhe $ 40 0. mo • utilities 1007 A W 2 2 rut 4 5 3 353 7 8 SUPER CLEAN UNIVERSITY AREA 4 0 4 FR ANKLIN A UNIT -3 1 CACH W /D connections, new ipcitnmces including dishwosA#’ < overed patio aoct pr.irk,nq tile oath, mce m aintained yard available now $ 5 9 5 B UNIT - 3 2 CACH W 'D connections ad new unit huge walk in daset w rge -nosie- b e d r'ia m suite witt pnvate bath & eiling ta r fireplace iorge pat*o ond barnyard, covered parking A vailable iu iy 1 $6 75 Pieter m om ed couples o r graduate students 1 year lease NO PE'S 454-3250 _7 2 5 2 8R/1 B A * lo ft, s tu d y o r th ir d b e d r o o m P riv a c y fe n c e d b o c k y a rd O n e c a r g o ro g e m o F ree M o n th 's iock Erom UT $ 4 0 0 / me G and E 4 1662 8 - 1 ___ - $ 3 0 0 «ER month 14, almost oH txtb paid 10 mm walk from campus 3 clocks from shuttle 711 W £ 4 53-4991 S _4 ^ CLEAN, QUIET efficiencies compus S"7 5 mo N o deposit Coll 4 '8 7114 eave message 8-4 block boat 1 " < F a ^ O . Lane Walk to UT shuttle Extra ktrge 2 2. ahnoB new $ 4 0 0 , 9 28 -2 58 1 8 -4 M RENTS REDUCED 7 -2 1 educed-TOiO to * t - f t reduced/715 tq * Were 4 4 54 - • $ : * / . ' w*«e $370. now $286* l . meea to 20 unto fOtoar x » « t o reOi*cerf; CowrPetta I fc ■ 1200 Rre e dmoor * 4 2537 4 /4 253 * J.,1 UT MUromura CMock away 4 05 - I t * - $ 2 9 5 452-118® 32 7 340C 8 291 ‘ «ta 4 6 0 8 BENNETT w a ll to UT shutll* 1-1, high 4 5 3 -2 5 0 0 8 -4 M .«flings, qutot community $310. *«hn flewtt j B qxoodwir at 8 37 7 8 8 0 8 fl 7-31 '9 30 s uAR A 2 ’ r« -jr Law Schoo- floors treet ceAng fans md AC ►toms $ 6 . 5 472 2 j2 3 « ,9_ _ -:* 501 1 BR oportnwnt o c r o * from Communico- »on Cantor Avo«tab*e * one*. $ 3 2 0 E. o o c Col jo* 4 7 2 -9 7 0 9 7 L8M S K A N S O N APIS 4 2 0 5 Speeawa, 11. mn - m m fans UT shuttle 453- route 4 7 8 4 8 . 6 for more -n fa . caH Steve teWng 3 8 0 — Furn. Duplexes *c Vf»=- C O N T I S ; v ’W e s t ■ S U M M E R RATE SPECIAL! Coso De B o 't e t o n c A iX f-tm e riH { t o n ws 1, 2 & 3 b e d ro o m s UT irmttle M inute* bom &Al 6 C o rv e n e r r 'c s h o p p in g C o m m u n ity p o o i cfab •oom. io u n p r. On sito monogm mem 2 2 0 1 B m o rttD m to 4 4 4 2 4 í 8 _____________________________ a ’% ONE MO. FREE with 7 mo. lease O N SHUTTLE P r»-faa*e for f a i, ju t o roo» r e co m m u n ity xkeai fa r students .-ox water p o d Spanish 4 5 2 - 6 0 4 7 12T2 W esthe>m er AuW n.. Ap*s x ? 8 7 5 2 8-15 . 4 . SPECIAL great 2-1 w S PEC AC ■Iyer Park carpet poo, laundry only $ 3 5 0 far tunwnet CaM Retnck and Beo - t a .m e r e s h 328 4041 or manoger ___________________ 45b 1634 8 8 UT W A .s $ 3 5 0 90c a 2 2 ta 4 -2-2122 8 £ FfF -*nt - in 7s 4 pie*. WES’ AUSTIN « - oo,m $ 2 9 5 g o v —ota' pota pen 1115 W 7145 7 25 large ctear efRt * m ■ ,arpe* one ceakng fans eo ihulMe no 476 - ' i > 48C -'546 _______________________ irea 1950 Pooi and 'art *VES? 26 St Cnsp oomey *fh< ency d o w r > • her toun- jry 8 6 * rack, knvtad auto parking, eot $ 2 5 5 ond $ 2 6 5 Depoto $ 2 5 0 «re­ '• 10% dtscoun' on 9 nortai lease ease lease 15% discount an 12 montt- Jack j* gs 4 ' 4 o 8 9 ’ Consoidatad Reato 8 15 RENTAL 4 0 0 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e s CONDO HUNTING? U flV C IT TO US — Property Management of Texas — Offering a conveniently located office near Campus and over five years of condo experience LEASE FRO^ THE LARGEST INVENTORY ON CAMPUS * TetoKOto* • Octoa '» ** 0 H I ” toPMto * t * UF TIUS é «-***« ^ le .ir U to ex 7tr ** a ite m 704 m 2 4 » 47to2*T3 Furnished Duplex O ff Otlorf, 2 -V t, garoge, tw o- story, fenced yard, atl appli- onces, on shuttle, yard mam- tam ed lease Im m ediate m ove-m special • 1 yr. $ 4 2 2 Elliott System 4 5 1 -8 9 6 4 8 -5 0 secluded •tiu' HYDE r A ix ju o e * tie :vc«otve m m edotah O ne bed­ room furnished or vnh>m¡sh*c a! seme 'em $40x2 mo 4 3 0 2 A l** G Lynn ¿45 3 73 2 - , 9 ___________ 390 — Unf. Duplexes SPACIOUS CLEAN oJde* 2-1 Dminq w 0 connection ACs On MS ihuflte '8 0 4 W am o* Mopoc $ 60 0, 9 26 -1 99 9 7 -2 8 1 9 4 0 1 2-1 or quiet uree' yara oak floors arge —n<3c-«'i $46C 307 Kirk wood 4 72 -2 12 3 8 -4 ______ LARGE 1-1 garoge aponment. beoutdui. restored 2 btocki tram UT la w School e a fc g tom W /D $40C wc 4 5 4 -6 7 4 4 home 327 - otoce 329 4 20 3 othce 5 7 6 7 *7’ 8___________________________ WALK TO compus. iorge quiet efficiency tr smol complex, hor dwood floors, ap- pbancto. qas « ate. pod $2 75. Visto Properties 4 7 2 -3 4 5 3 8 1 NORTHWEST HKLS •romliiul 3-2. 7 -* o - ry N * 0 ' Mu'chison TnomcxfI* $ 89 5 4 52 -1 9 3 8 8 -2 6 0 '.replace 6911 A - _(,h Nueces, three blocks irorn cam pus and on a shuttle bus stop. N ineteen d elicio us meals per w eek, maid ser- v u e parking, sw im m ing p oo l, lounges m am ex­ tras. t oed u houses and shopping, parking on prem ises, maid service, n in etee n meals per w eek, p o o l, sundecks and lounges, kite henettes in suite. All w om en . 476- 4i>4,-> u N u e c e s , o n t h e s h u t t k * b u s rou te . Small and q u ie t, no trills ) ( , u ''£ —4 4 7 f (aftL. housing. Meals served at the Contessa, m aid service and parking inclu de d. All private room s. C oed, up- perclass 472-785U. S P A C E A V A IL A B L E F O R S U M M E R & FALL S E M E S T E R S C A L L O R W R I T E F O R A D D I T I O N A L I N F O R M A T I O N O R S T O P B Y F O R A T O U R T H R f i I X I K M . I V . . ' - i r K IO C K l \ ! ) l • VI - T IN IE X A S - 8 - l l ' , . 11 4 7 . - 4 . 4 8 T H E H E R I T A G E C O N D O M I N I U M S Luxury 2 Bedrooms 2 Baths 3 Blocks to Campus Designer Inter»ors • Microwave Jenn-Aire • Washer Dryer • J0CUZ7 • Security Fireploce Buiit-ln Desk Summer — $600 ( 1/2 Mo. Free) Fall — $850 — 9 Mo. Lease $800 — 12 Mo. Lease 3111 Tom G reen 4 7 9 -8 1 7 4 or 4 5 1 -8 9 6 4 RENTAL 400 — Condos-Townhouses * * * ♦ * ♦ * S p e c ia l R a te s for Summer— Preleasing for Fall T a k e your pick from on e of th e s e fine c o n d o m in iu m s. 2000 Whitis Place • 1 ? block from campus • microwave • individual washer dryer • ceiling fans • private balcony • covered parking • fully furnished 4 5 4 -4 6 2 1 Salado Condominiums • microwave • individual washer dryer • ceiling fans • private balcony • fully furnished • private parking • near shuttle 4 5 4 -4 6 2 1 3000 Guadalupe Place • ceiling fans • private balcony • near cam pus • fully furnished • laundry room • private parking 4 5 4 -4 6 2 1 * * ★ * * 9c 9c 9c 9c 9c 9c 9c 9c 9c .9» The Wildwood ‘ Be as special to y o u rs e lf as y o u are to u s ” Furnished or unfurnished luxury 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments from $325-550 *No application fees Washer /dryer connections Walking jogging trail Security patrol/professional on site m anagem ent Fireplaces Swimming poot/jacuzzi Clubhouse/Laundry Room Convenient to shuttle and shopping TAA Member We have various floor plans, with one especially for you.., 4 5 9 - 6 5 5 7 7610 Cameron Rd. JOHNSON CHVElOaftKNTt L e a s i n g F o r F a l l pn M , J m ! _________ _ 1 1 TTTk r m iTTTTk 9 • Furnished • Great Location • Walk to Campus • All Kitchen Appliances • Microwave • Built-in desks • Washer & Dryer • Covered Parking Cornerstone Place 24th & Rio Grande Call 480-0065 Ltl Padgett, Co. MARSH & BOX CONDOS AVAILABLE: The Croix (2-2) □range Tree (2-2) Centennial (2-2) (3-2) Enfield Condo (2-2) Nueces Corner (2-1) Quadrangle (2-2) W estplace (2-2) Gazebo(2-1) Norwalk Sq. (2-1 V2) Georgian (2-2) Sum merset (2-2) Valleyside (3-2) 31 s t St. Condo (1 -1) (2-2) M A N Y OTHERS NOT LISTED FALL LEASES 328-2140 Page 12/The Daily Texan/Wednesday. July 23, 1986 REN TAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL SE R V IC E S SERVICES 400 — Condos ~ 400 — Condos- 425 — Rooms 440 — Roomm ates 750 — T y p in g 750 — T y p in g Townhouses Townhouses Pro-loosing for Foil, luxurious 2-2'fl Enfield Rd. Condo wrtfi ceiling fans, microwove, deck, complex amenities, include Hot tub, sauna, pool, weight room, secured underground parking and teievtdeo entry system On shut­ tle, $900, others available for $700 Investor's Realty, 472-36Ü6 or 450- 1014 8-4 WEST CAMPUS CONDOS Close-in, amenity pocked condos available for lease and prelease for fall, call and let us help you through the maze. Rob Hutton, 345-8749. Decmie Owens, Better Homes and Gardens R O O M Y I -1 cond o, ground floor, bike to now, UT, on shuttle route, a v a ila b le $350, M ike H undley 4 5 4 9 2 5 3 , 343- 6 6 2 0 summer rate flexible 7 -25 furnished efficiency B E A U T IF U L N E W with balco n y, clubhouse tennis courts, tw o pools, close to U T shuttle Pad d ock C o nd os $ 3 4 0 otter ópm. 7-25 Jorvet, 331-6590 low nh o m e 2-2*2 E N F lE l D $ 7 3 0 Se cu re d p arking All appliances, locuzzi souno Contact Alice, 8 3 5 4769, ext 3 8 8 479-0221, afte r 5 pm 7-25 for lease. 2 7 0 6 S A L A D O . W e s t P la c e C o nd os W a lk to UT beouttfui 2-2. p o o l an d security, $ 9 5 0 ,4 5 3 - 2 5 0 0 8 4 M O R A N G E TREE fa) mshed efficiency, fire place, vau lted ceiimg, skylight, wosher/ d rye r m icrow ave, security parking. 327- 4 2 3 1 ,3 2 7 - 2 0 5 8 7 25____________________ 7-23 L U X U R IO U S 3-3-1. Barton Springs at Lam ar $1050, p o o l spa, aproxtm ately 1560 S g Ft 328-5 1 7 ? agent. 7-25 410 — Furn. H ouses 106 E. 30th, Windridge Condos, 2 BR/2 BA with fireplace, washer/dryer, all appliances, security system, swimming pool, $800. Available August 15, Hope Properties, 453-6673. 7 29 SUMMER RENT-FREE Move-m now Rent free til August 15 wrth 1 yr. lease starting Aug. 15. Benchmark has it oil, security, ga- noges, f.p., c. fans, w/d, !g. piool & (ocuzzi. Elegant 2-2's, 1100 + sq. ft, $1200/mo Call Condo Connection 479-6618. 12th and Windsor 2/2, Tri-level, Fireplace, W / D connections, garage, ceil­ ing fans. Must see! Available 9-1. $765. Elliott System 451-8964 2 and 3 Bedroom Condos From $600 Convenient to UT and shuttle. For all your rental needs call; Finders Keypers Apt. Locator Service 4 4 7 - 9 9 5 5 Large 2-story 5 BR, 2 BA West Cam­ pus house with two 1 BR apis, in rear, large trees and yard, separate living quarters upstairs and downstairs in house. W ill lease all or portion of property on 1 year lease to individuals or group. Available Aug. 1, rental terms based upon portion of premises leased Coll 479-6665 or 443-3157 and ask for J.D. __________________ 7-25 N E A R L A W , E n gin eerin g M usic schools, 2 bedro om s ca rp e l w in d o w units din­ ing, la rg e kitchen $ 5 7 5 9 2 6 -7 2 4 3 8 - 5 7 23 420 — U nf. H ouses HYDE PARK/ ENFIELD S e v e r a l h o u s es , d u p le x e s a n d c o n d o s a v a ila b l e f o r le a s e in th e s e h ig h ly de- si r e a b le a r e a s o f A u stin. L e t us h e lp y o u find e x a c t ly w h a t y o u 'r e lo o k in g fo r C a ll T i- e ie s o R e c a 1 3 4 5 - 8 7 4 9 , 8-5D 4 7 2 - 8 0 5 9 Dounie Owens, Heft*' Homes ond Gardens 7 2 3 2 BEDR00M-2 BATH 3 BEDR00M-2 BATH HYDE PARK/WEST CAMPUS H o u s e s , d u p le x e s o n d c o n d o s a v a il ­ a b le fo r le a s e a n d p r e le a s e fo r fall T h ese a r e g o in g fast, so h u rry ! C a ll 7 - 2 9 0 R o b H u tto n , 3 4 5 - 8 7 4 9 . Dearne Owens, &e«er Homes und Gardem S IN G L E , P R IV A T E room s fo r University wom en/m en Furnished, carpeted , A B P , hom e style baths, kitchen; d o s e campus, C H / C A 4 7 2 4 9 2 4 8-14 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D ! Tw o girls seeking flurd room m ate fo r 3 BR apt o ff Far W est N o deposits n eed ed $217/mo. C all 3 4 5 - 5 3 6 5 a fter 5pm. 7-29 iuge G R A D N O N S M O K E R Your o w n h, room. C o m f o r t a b le h o u s e la h t housem ates High ceilings. Big w in d o w s 2 block north/UT Sum m er $180-230/ month 4 7 2 5 6 4 6 ,4 7 4 2 0 0 2 8-15 E ig 430 — Room -B oard N e w A p t.— r o o m / b o a r d + small salary for couple in e x ­ ch an g e for domestic household m g m t duties, groundskeeptng including pool, etc. in country setting. Send name, address, along with brief description of yourself to: J. Me. P.O. Box 4249, Austin, TX 78765. 7-25 G R A D N O N - S M O K E R Y ou r o w n Huge E ig h t r o o m . C o m f o r t a b le h o u s e housem ates. High ceilings Big w in d ow s 1 block north/UT. Sum m er $18Q-$230/ month. 472-5646, 474 2002 8-5 435 — Co-ops u i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i h i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i h l : 5 T H E A R K I S D IF F E R E N T = S vy® are our own tandkxd* Ar earv «• - going mtemcfflono! self governing com 2 Z munity 4 btocfcs from campus Pool sun 5 toOKs 24-h» 5 • deck - Z IBM PC pool SnacJdng ce*ing fan*, A C ABP C o rn s 8y Fot A Touri FALL Z $385/mo Sing*© $29£mo Doubie S (19 moot©**) Co* 499-8904 C# 476-5678 2000 *oart 9 Z S 3 2 D U P L E X n e e d e d to shore $ 2 2 0 + V3 bills, im m ediate m ove m, shuttle route, Isa b e l 462-0671 7-29____________________ N E E D F E M A L E to share targe 1-1 condo, Fall/Spring. Ib lk from UT, famished, mi­ c ro w a v e , ceiling fan, swim ming pool, hot porking fab, g re a t security, co vered 300/m o. t- dep. A B P lo u rie 4 8 2 -9 4 9 3 7-25_____________________________ I H A V E a house to r girls in Torrytown O n e mile west o f cam pus $ 2 0 0 469- 9 5 0 3 .7 25 460 Business Rentals Tomorrow you could move in with us and conduct your business one block from the UT compus. Perfect for pro­ fessors or students' business needs Furnished or unfurnished suites from $400. Two offices available for daily business rental. AH cmenifies provid­ ed. Professional Associates, 3200 Red River, Suite 401, 478-6433. 7-29 W E S T UT excellent front office for p ro­ fessional tenant $ 3 8 0 A B P Apartm ent offices also a v a ila b le H o w ell Pro p erties 4 7 7-9 9 2 5 8 4D 4 0 0 S Q U A R E feet o n G u a d a lu p e N e w carpel, ceiling $ 4 0 0 / month, 4 6 7 -7 6 4 4 4 9 5 -9 0 4 4 8- 5D fans G r e a t location A N N O U N C E M E N T S ¡ J l i l t l l l l l H l l l t l l l l l l H H I I I I I I t l i i l t t l l l l l l l i : * 560 — Public Notice I O PSIS CO-OP § ¡ APARTM EN TS = 2 Bdrm/2 Both Wtti AC. Futl Kitchen, = s Ftrmhed 4 blocks to UT Non-Smok 5 : mg. Resident owned and operated z z ~ 4 Community, Not Just a Complex = 1 Higher Education _osts Soaring The Solution... W© will iocoM from 5-25 financial otó ioutc- M for your h*gh©f education or your imcvic© f©© wiR b© n©K»nd©d Tor application* coA Unrvenuty Scholarship Commd»*® erf 389- 0767. le a ve name time, address and phon© number 1906 Pe arl 476-5678 or 474-5199 r illlttllllllllllllllllll HUH lllll tlllllllllin § TAOS CO-OP e a set governing, muM-poMcal. mum- raciol ntemallonai co-ed comminey SecuMv aundeck. IV roam. 19 home ooked m eak computer room, AC. ttee ice and much m ore Tours ova* able anytime at 2612 GuodakJpe k * e v o s Of 470-*67* Single $429 (ta«| CtauNe S2CB(ta*) Summer Voomj SM AmHa&o 7-2 9 0 ED U CA TIO N A L 590 — Tutoring 7-23 G R A D N O N - S M O K E R Y o u r o w n i o c m C o m f o r t a b le h o u s e housemate*. High ceilings Big window *. 5 block north/UT Su m m er $180-$230/ E ig month 4 7 2 -5 6 4 6, 4 7 4 - 2 0 C ? 8-5 Z I V L E Y ’S THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE PRINTING. BINDING 2707 HEMPHILL PARK At 27th & Guadalupe Plenty of Parking 472-3210 472-7677 • DISSERTATIONS • PAPERS w i n ú kiby110vtby7 / " V i a # * t t / A Á irin lrtk é \ jp 9 fi in / w a n tg n r nmmi 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 W fNeverStopI Most Subjects AH Levels Large Tutor Selection • EXA M PREP GRE, LSAT, MCAT, GMAT GUARANTEED 440 — Room m ates ROOMMATE WANTED O n e year old 2 BR/2 Vi BA town- home, washer/dryer, refrigerator, dishwasher, ceiling fans, pool a n d jocuzzi. N e a r hike a n d bike trails. $285. Call 837-1662 or (803) 279- 6 0 8 0 collect. Both after 6 p.m. GRADS who are particular, sane, & want to live off compus in nice homes shared with the homeowner, call: 345-8002 for screening 7-25 T N B hr tutoring w/5 other sessions within 30 days. M B A ^T* :e d yard, a v a ila b le im m ediotef* 5104 Filers Call ' 4 7 9 7-25_____________ 4 5 2 3 6 3 9 ,3 4 5 3 BR/2 "2 BA, la rg e living room , tw o-car g a ra g e , pool, n e a r shuttle A fter 6 pm, 3 2 7 4 8 5 3 7-24 N E A R C A M P U S , 2-2 o r 2 1, W / D mi cro w a v e . ceiling fans, spa, W C shuttle, furnished, Littlefield House C o n d o s 451 3 2 2 0 7-24_________________ __ L U X U R f C O N D O M I N I U M S N E A R H A N C O C K C E N T E R Effic.enc.es, 1 o n d 2 b edro om s Appliances, h re p la ce ceiling fans, from $ 3 4 5 A R C H Prop erties 4 6 7 2 3 9 0 8 -8 __________________ ___ C O N D O F O R sole, b e lo w market, d o s e to campus, 1 BR,'I BA. excellent con d i­ tion cheap* ¡4 0 9 ) 2 7 3 -2 7 5 7 , (4 0 9 ) 756- 8191 8 -8____________________________________ Z ILK E R P A R K 3-1, C A /C H , appliances, fen ced y a rd W ' D connections, $ 5 7 5 ' mo + den- • 18T8 D y w e r 4 4 4 0 3 7 9 7-24 _ _ _ _ _ _ (2-1, h a rd w o o d 2 7 0 8 F R E N C H P lace floors, 3 0 0 2 B re e z e ’ errar.» ¡2 2, C A / C H , fiieo i-xe app lian ces! $ 5 9 5 neg 4 7 6 -0 6 8 2 / 28 _____________ P R E L E A S IN G for Se p tem b er 1st Rem od eled 2 BR/T B A d o s e to IF snurite Call M i a a t 4 77-6131 5 I S P A C IO U S ■ BR . BA, UT Shume' fif in g tons h o rd w o o d floors, screened porch, w okher/dryei fen ced van :, $1095 Avail- a b le August 15. 3413 C e d a r St 458 8601 7 28 B R A N D N E W 3-2 co n d o off S p e e d w a y Beautiful con d o, luscious location lo o d - ed, firep lace C A / C H $ 7 9 5 4 5 2 - 4 ’ 89 8 -TE N O R T H C E N T R A L location, la rg e 2-1, CA /CH . < eiiiog fans, a p p lia n ces $ 4 9 5 Mifce Sa lom o n 4 5 8 1959 W< rk 329- 5 0 0 ? 7 - 2 8 _______ _ ________ W E S T C A M P U S l-l With lofl a cco m m o ­ dates 708 u n H o m P'o ce $ 6 5 0 , 2 5 5 -6 3 9 5 A v a .io b le n o w 7-28 ? W / D B E ST L O C A T IO N S 1 an d 2 b e d r o o m furnished a n d unfurnished $395-1100 C o l P ro v e n Properties 474-5891 7-28 V IS IT IN G FA C U LT Y- west Austin Escorial Cond om in iu m 2-2, oil a pp lian ces, mor b le firep lace, custom cobm etry. private potto, cen tral cou rtyard (OCuzzi M id A u g through M a y $1000/mo Co# S h a rm yn 4 7 8 - 6 0 4 2 , 4 73-4186 7-28 pool L A R G E M O D E R N to w n h o m e Firep lace, IH 3 5 a n d W m pool, souno N e a r C a n n o n $ 5 4 5 3 4 6 4 3 9 2 8-12 2 - l’/2 - $ 4 4 5 3-2 W E D O E W O O D 2-1 furnished, W / D , ceil­ ing fon, c o v e re d parking, m icro w a v e hot tab, p o o l Je ff 4 7 2 - 5 7 6 5 7 29 N IC E LAR IE 3 2. C R shuttle A C /H , op~ ptiance* fenr ed yord, 6215 H on ey Dt $ 5 6 0 251 4 6 9 0 7 28 ______ H ' M JSf y A N D / o r duple» neat low school, 2 on d 4 b edro om s ovoitable August ls> N o pets 472 9012 7 25 A L T E R N A T IV E T O restored 3 2, C o m fortab le $ 1 500 4 7 4 5 8 6 7 8 i N C O S Beautifully tur- o f century hom e for 4-6. 4 4 0 0 A v e C 3-2 H O U S E with h a rd w o o d oround 45fh an d Bull Creek, fireplace, m irra w a v e efrigeratof, Properties A •: •or-ie S e o ’. 1, $ '. >5. 4 5 3 6 6 / 3 7 29 y a rd H o p e floors, 3-2, co n v e n ie n t to M o p o c on d F a r W est, p o o l, meu-blinds, a ll bills p a id $ 6 0 0 , m o O n e m onth free rent Tricia, 4 7 4 4 5 2 1 ,3 2 7 3212 7 24___________________ H Y D E PA R K , 3 -1, ceiling tans, w o o d floors mnt-bfind*. go ro g e shuttle A c rep t pets $800i tub- o n e m onth free rent, $ 5 75/m o I n o o . 4 7 4 6521 3 2 7 3212 7 -24 __________ T W O B t D R O O M / t w o b ath condom m , urn m The Crossing, w a s h o r/d ry er m icro w o v e swim m ing pool, (CKurai u%i North o f 7 7lh a» Guodohip© 472-3210472-7677 V E R A T E E ’S W ord Pn*< PUhllt V «6 3D Year* ijt¡tai t tpencm.e • l erm Papers • L a w B r i c l s • I ht se s • D issertations • c o v e r ! otters • Resumes 5 I 2 ' A I VS '2 S t K l t t l l w 4 5 4 1 5 3 2 © J . * . . - . PC STATIO N T e r m P a p e r 's • R e p o r v * T h e s e * • R u s h S e r v i c e W O R D P R O C E S S I N G R e s u m e s o n l y $ 1 0 L a s e r i e t P r in t in g 4 6 9 - 5 6 3 2 23 D O B IE M A L L T Y P I N G WORD PROCESSING Southwest Services 4 5 3 - 0 3 2 3 4 3 1 > A v e n u e f m m f7 :k up- D e l i v e r y D o n r v a 't T y p in g t, | ( k k o r d P r s K C M i i t g 1 Rush Service 7 D®v$ * W r e k 5 U ^ a f # p # r § » maá r thru ' !* •* t fee (iia in m d i and Vprllm ji < tw* 74b B W . StAssnev L n . 462 1111 kAon T hgrs fl-f fn %* M - T h M. • a t . •un. 7 a m - 1 2 m M 7cmv5pm 1 0 a m - 3 p m f pm-12 mW 472-6666 §13 W. 24th II. Tri-Towers » T w M r U t R i n y “Be One en One M A T H T U T O R 5 0 4 VV 2 4 t h S t . 477-700**1 A j m H FNG4N - M WM ¿«Ü T ' tr M «JhS Í.MÜ4 f M:$i§ I f 3*§ f f * 11 fef3iB • r irr TO i k*»r# tit prt» i,r r i i r r helping kluif»- rit« mmkr U i t «.JLA iii M r uggli a • Friii. i r s lH *m «^*•1»" < Mil mp (MMmitwnt Ma t h m k .ii ííí? M3U3F M4 Tft ■ Sf AJKjN M I •AlOftf» M40 MBD6A H MNftí A H C m;t ' w* M4. m, i M i' ’ PHYSCS COMP SCB NCI «• ’TRM S CS304P f C S?06 CS4Í0 CS4*0 ( :S32B CS34Í m u t e s s d a t a p « o a c c 31 n v O ^ A JiU 4CC30S-3S7 CHEMISTRY CNGLISH H v f ffi* ‘. 1m f'R£**CH O I RMAM SPANISH f C03?4 Oon ! put fhB* oft unltf ffte rught Mrtor* t r • tLSrr> ft • loo MM© fn©r- * t 8kM* to U7 •frss Pwtkrtg * Y#ry '©«©«jriMeMM « u n o* p— ncw -in © l#r>pu©p© you cmr> unósrmtmná ■mtm* Am*.' rwgh bcOooi courwsa »n thm atoo+m ana SAT é GRt h © * b N ttxt d o o t ti M a d D tx i B e a n s X I $10 HR $85/10 HR BLOCK ! « ■ ■ ■ arnpus I ■ • 1 I § ■ lZ2J* TUTORING SERVICE M A T H T U T O R IN G Aflotter* d e g re e with 8 e x p e r ie n c e l e a c h i n g R e a s o n a b le ra te s Cat 452 -7 4 0 4. 8 -15 y e a r s S E R V IC E S 630 — Com puter Services C O M P L E T E C O M P U T E R t o iM e s tor rent b y the h ou r including softw are, assist once, H P iet ond d aisy w h eel printers 4 6 9 - 5 6 3 2 P C Stohon, # 2 3 Oo- bie M aK T-?4 laser 650 — M o v in g - H au lin g Roommate wanted, recent M BA grad (female) now working in Austin, seeks roommate to share 2/1 7 condo m Northwest Hills/ Cat Mountain area. $300/mo. + Vi bills Available Sept. 1st. Call M ary 452-5869 after 6 p.m 7-25 N E E D A fem a le r.-tammate to share luxu- r- cond o, 3 BR. 2 ? BA. $ "5 < m o * Vs bills M o ry 4 4 5 - 2 3 4 0 7 2 4 ______ M A L E R O O M M A T E S w a n te d for summer and fall. 2-2 condo, 5 blocks from UT W /D , m icro w o ve starting at $ 2 5 0 /m o plus depos-- Cal evenings 4 8 0 8 8 '4 8 - 5 _________________________________________ N O N S M O K I N G fem ales to share fu r­ nished Riverside cond o. 2-2 T, p o o l se cunty system ceiling fans, m icrow ave, W / D $ 2 2 5 - 4 utilities N e a r shuttle C a ll W e n d y 385-4391 or 4 5 4 3 8 9 8 8-6 S n A R f H Y D E Pt»rk ro u s e with la w stu dent 2-1 7 C A / C H , W / D , firep lac e SO" vaulted ceding, m an y skytightv'windows, $325/nt 4 6 8 6 6 6 8 7-28 C O O P S E E K S s.xth 2 4 + M / f veggie no m o most w e lco m e W o o d floors, fans tre e s, shuttle bus, 4 7 4 - 2 8 2 8 , eves. 7-25 R E S P O N S IB L E S T U D E N T / p ro fe is to n o l fem ale w a n te d to shore 3 BR/ 2 B A Tar- rytow n h o m e near Enfield shuttle, C A / C H , h o rd w o o d float*, y a rd , g a rag e , nu r o w o v e ava tlob le 8 - 3 1 8 6 $300/’mo. ■7 deposit_& bdb C o l 4 7 6 - 4 3 3 7 8 8 N E E D A i o o m m ate ? Coll R oom m ate B r o ­ kers Inc 4 / 8 5 0 9 6 1307 W e s t A v e , room 13 8 29 N O N S M O K I N G F E M A L E g ra d w a n te d fo r 2-1 house $ 2 2 5 -t 5 b «b Pet* O K •vea. IF shuttte 4 5 9 7517 7-25 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D A u g 1 to s Ñ i™ 3 2-2 h o m e off O fio rf on d Burleson $ 2 5 5 /m o v 150 d eposit a n d V0 of btK* It intererted contact Arlfsur a t 4 4 3 - 2 7 2 3 ;rte 3pm 7-23 T W O N O N - s m o k in g fem ales fo r targe n ew con d o o n shuttte W / D , m icro w av e p ool. $ 2 0 0 month if m ature, open-m ind­ ed M a n . 3 8 9 165/ 7 25 THE R O O M M A T E E X C H A N G E - n e w to Austin D o n 't p a y until w e m atch yo u up C a ll 441 1259 7 -2 5 ______________ H Y D E P A R K - fem ale rootnm atas b eau ♦ifu* n ew ly rem o d eled home, C A / C H , ceiling $ 2 8 5 / m o - 4 7 6 -5 0 4 7. 7-24 '7 bids, 4 5 9 -4 0 4 6 , Failh, fans, h a rd w o o d floor*, 3 - lV i, R O O M A V A IL A B L E Estobfished. mature non sm oking c o e d h o u seh o ld C R shuttle 4óth/R ed River $ 2 7 5 /m o. + V4 bills 4 7 4 -8 5 6 4, e v e rm g s 8-8 S H A R E L A R G f o ld er house n ea r W h o le Fo ods M a tu re nonsm okers Rent + 94 büs. A v a d o ble A u g 15 4 7 4 - 9 7 2 0 7-24 H Y D E P A R K n eed room m ate n o w big kwo b ed ro o m close UT, 2 4 0 0 0 + bids 4 7 8 3 2 5 7 451-52 4 5 M o r , 7-25 R E S P O N S IB L E F E M A L E n eed ed to share exception al dupiex. A S A P Furnished $ 2 9 0 A B P 7 0 7 A R a m b le 443-8319 3 2 8 0T09 7 25 ____________________ P R IV A T E R O O M - p riva te bath n eed M /F b y Au g 1, targe, m icro w a v e $198/mo v 0 Eiectncrty * ^ telep ho n e N on- smoker 4 5 8 5 9 3 5 . 7-23 R O O M M A T E S N E E D E D nonsmoking, d e a n , responsible for 3 B R 2B A hom e, S Austin $ 2 2 5 A B P , B ra d 8 2 6 3019 J 3 0 ___________________________________________ A V A IL A B L E 2 2 t o w n house $ 2 2 5 VjC N e a r UT B a lc o n y with pootstoe view from b ed ro o m Responsible person on ly B J 4 4 3 3 3 5 8 7 2 8 M t M A L E R O O M M A T E n eed ed to share b ed ro o m $ 2 5 6 + V j jtiktiet, west ad amenities, a va tk ta le A u g. T. c a tiu v s __________________ 4 H 2 3 4 6 / 23 M A L E / F E M A L E n eed ed to share 2 '■7 c o n ­ fire d o on Rrverstde O n UT shuttle, tons fe n c e d b ack ya rd , ceding ploce. w asher d rye r $ 3 5 0 + 7 bills A v a il a b le 358 2 3 2 6 -ollect. 7 2 8 im m ediately C o ll 3 6 9 - 0 6 6 6 or ______________ R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to shore forge fam ished 2 BR// B A 4 3 r d R ed River, fe n ce d yard, pets O K. student* $ 3 0 Q /m on d i,!7 utilities G r a d _ _ _ _ p referred, 4 53-1763 7 2 8 C A / C H , near _ _ N O N SMOKING fe m a le architecture student seeks som eo ne in n eed o f room- m a le to sh are a p t /house/ co n d o withm w alk in g d stance to cam pus CaM 443- 5176. 7 2> G R A D N O N - s m o k e r Y our o w n huge E ig h t C o m f o r t a b le h o u s e r o a m house m ates. H igh ceflmgs Bnj w indows '7 block .orth/UT Sum m er $180 $ 2 3 0 / month 4 7 2 5 6 4 6 4 7 4 - 2 0 0 2 6-8T W E N E E D a room m a te te r o 3 B R house in central Austin. N ic e quiet neig h b or fio o d $167 . 4 bflts 451-9571 even mgs 7 31 flro fem onol iO M A S T R A T E S rypmg C o rre cta b le IB M S e le cto r 4 4 7 -2 7 4 4 an ytim e P h o n e a a n sw e re d "T exa s M u s k A ssociation ' 8-15 A B L E - B O D IE D M o v e r* simply Austin's finest m o v er with r e t o enees to p ro ve it Restdenhol, c o m m e m o i antique*, pionos Free estim ates 441-2 6 2 2 8-8 7 5 0 — -Typing 720 Stereo-TV Repair WALKMAN REPAIR specialist, cor and hom e topededu Precise quolity service Free estimates Sensory Electronic* 467- 9531 7 25 NEED YOUR RESUME FAST? Call us for an appointment and we ll # type it while you wait. _ 4fs7.88w 5417 N orth Lam ar dinnys ZJ * CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD THESES, DISSERTATIONS & P.R. S W e guarantee our typing will meet graduate school r€>qui remen tv ah/mm 5417 N orth Lam ar ninnvs y 11 11 rftp A tA a ,/4?uv 'já s tfiy Sure, we type FRESHMAN THEMES Why Not Start Out With Good Grades? 472-3210472-7677 3701 S p e e d w a y SPEED W A Y T Y P IN G O 'N ig h t /S u p e r R u sh IF S h u t t le P a r k in g 472-4039 Summer Hours: 8am-8pm T Y P IN G / W O R D processing $15 0 /pg Rushes w elco m e Anytim e C o n d a ce 451 4 8 8 5 7 29 T Y P IN G O F resumes research or legal papers, theses, etc C o l C ynthia a t 445- 6 9 3 7 rushes a cce p te d 8-4 p r o f f T s i o Ñ i A r Q u a l i t y w o rd p ro cessmg. N e o r Theses 4 7 8 - 5 4 8 5 B-8 IB M PC Letter quolity printer com pus Resumes Term p aper* _______________ T Y P IN G S E R V IC E S g u a ran teed fast far noround an d profetsional w ork o f a ll kinds c o l P am 2 5 8 -9 3 0 7 8- 151 a ccu rate PAT T Y'S W O R D P R O C E S S t N G themes, resumes thesis dtssertations, lo w bnels, PRs Rush work, pickup avo flob le 345- 4 2 6 9 8-15______________________ T Y P IN G B Y English honor* student, fast, accu rate a n d v e ry c h e a p ! 4 4 5 -2 2 8 4 7- 29 760 — Misc. Services PH O T O S for PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS M O N - F R I 9 - 6 S A T 1 0 - 2 4 7 7 - 5 5 5 5 N E E D E N E R G Y ? “ A l « g h to r** or* eaxy vntri new product Natural Drug-Free C o l Cotriy 3 2 8 -6616 7-25_______________ PMS VICTIMS trier* t rehet t o bofii « al and emotional symptom* guaranteed 0» rat ommended at seen on TV. C a i CaRty 328-6616. 7-25 E M P L O Y M E N T 790 — P a rt Time low firm seeks runner Downtown M u s t work M -F 8 30-1 30 PM. now and in trie fai. Mutt riave rekabfa tronsportorior $ 4 2 5 / h o u r pfas 20c/ mile Apply m person to SAEGCRT and L Y N C H at 1145 Wet) 5#i Si, Sude 2 0 0 (Two blocks wed of Lamar) T Th July 22 -2 4 from 2-5 30 P M 7 24 M AGIC TIME MACHINE RESTAURANT n o w a c c e p tin g o p p k e a fio n * f o r tatch •n h elp , f o o d s e r v e rs assistant fo o d s e r v e r* b e v e r a g e s e rv e r* s e a te r* tft p e rs o n , 6 0 0 E R n reri*d e D r , 1-5pm, w e e k d o y * 7 23 AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHERS P h o fa fa c h h a s o p e n in g * fo r 15 p h o to g r a p h e r t — p art-tim e, e v e n m g s o n d w e e k e n d * M u s t b a , * 3 5 m m S L R . d e ­ p e n d a b le c o r. a n d b e n e a t o n d p e r ­ s o n a b le M u s t b e a b le to start A u gust 2 7 th C o l 1 0 a m - 4 p m 4 7 4 - 4 8 9 7 u s BURGER KING Dobte M all now occephng applications for new store opening Apply m person on the low er level any day between 2-6 pm 7-23 $ 5 0 0 0 *, m y associates m ake the and m ore Pori em « oppcKfanm et a vad ab le to* octore molivotec; nckviduab. C e l 4 7 3 3 6 2 0 , M on d a y 1 nd a y B am * 5pm fo r a p p c ntmenl 7-23 A N A T IO N A L electo col d eta b u to r locat­ fata e d m northw est Austin n looking to retponsible p ort Dm* p erso n n el to w ork w a re h o u s e muda sotes C o l M -f 8-5 fo r app r Ask for i n k 8 3 7 - 7 4 4 0 7-23 M A IL CLER K /ru nne i hours afternoon*. M f S o m e K ecr.i Irttmg $4 hourly Campus location SRH 2.306 Col 471-1525 tor opt» 7-23__________________________________ p ó r te m e . or necessary four W O R K Y O U R O W N M C X JR S o w n txass C o » Jim 214 3 4 3 -0 7 9 3 7-23 fie vour IM M E D IA T E P A R T -eme, M -f 1 30 5 30 4 b a b y - o op A u g onhr. could b e per m onent Non-sm oker R eferen ces O w n transportation W e 5 7 6 Í o r 3 2 8 1879 ofie» 6 pm 7-25 W A R E H O U S E S T O C K IN G ond d e o r w v . approx 30 hours 5 d a y w e ek, incfodmg Sa t s cafl L ee o r M o rth a tar op p t 454- 2 5 4 4 7-25_________________________________ C H IU 'S R E S T A U R A N T n o w farmg port fane wort persons A p p ly m person 7310 Burnet Rd 8-5 W O R D S T A R TYPtST, 12 one block fla m compus on shuttle route $4/hour 3 2 0 0 R ed River #401 4 78 6 4 3 3 7 29 P R O M O T I O N S H E L P E R n eed ed Part fane p erfect tor students H elp with spe­ cial events deploys, d ecor, some h e a vy lifting O cc a s io n a l w e e te n d s N o rth cross M a il 451-7466 7 2 5 800 G eneral Help Wanted BUDGET RENT-A-CAR is now hiring for service ogents. full-time and part-time positions available, mornings and even­ ings Apply m person, M onday Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. only. 3330 M anor Rd 478 6437 7-25 CALL 471*5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD Taxicabs fare well in crime prevention By DON D. BROWN Daily Texan Staff Crim inals may learn to fear taxi­ cabs as much as they do police cars if the American Cab Com pany has its way. The company, with the help of the Austin Police Department and Republic Bank, is the sponsor of Cabs O n Patrol — a program which has saved lives and taken several criminals off the streets, said Harold Hoffmeister, senior crime preven­ tion officer for the Police Depart­ ment. The program encourages cab drivers to watch for suspicious, dangerous or life-threatening situa­ tions. "Basically, if a driver sees something going on, he notifies the company dispatcher, who then calls the local 911 emergency num ber," said Ricky Kamins, executive vice president and general manager of the company. As an incentive, the company of­ fers m onthly rewards of $100 to the dnver it deems has made the most important emergency call of the month. Kamins said he and Hoff­ meister make the choice. Republic Bank awards $500 quar­ terly to one of the three previous winners. One driver, though, said money was not the only m otivation. A man who identified him self only as "Sn ak e " said " I would do it if there w asn't any money involved. "D rivers shouldn't need an incen­ tive to do their public d u ty," he said. "But it's good that they have the rew ard." Snake was designated Dnver of the M onth for Ju ly after he rescued two children and their father who were trapped in a car that had run off the road. "T h e car missed a curve and ran off into a ravine. The people were trapped in there," he said. Snake said he opened the jammed door after he heard the children screaming. The children and their father were unharmed. Kam ins said the program has pro­ duced 600 calls since the company opened for business in April 1985. "W e've had several murderers apprehended as a result of the pro­ gram ," said Hoffmeister A sim ilar program — Taxis On Patrol — with a different cab com­ pany was discontinued shortly be­ fore the C O P program began. Both Hofmeister and Kamins called the C O P program "ve ry suc­ cessful/' Senator says commission refuses to enforce rules By S E A N S. P R IC E Daily Texan Staff A state senator from the Panhan­ dle said Tuesday the Texas Railroad Commission's refusal to enforce one of its own rules in a North Texas oil field is costing the state m illions of dollars in lost taxes. Sen. Bill Sarpahus, D-Canyon, said he has asked Attorney General Jim Mattox for an opinion on the commission's refusal to require liq­ uid separator uruts on Panhandle gas wells. The units are used to separate liq­ uids from the gas produced Both the gas and the liquids are taxed at a 7.5 percent rate. Sarpahus said the commission has refused to use the separators be­ cause it considers the gas in the Panhandle Field — a large north Texas oil and gas field — "d rv ," without natural gas liquids It is difficult for tax collectors to know the exact amount and compo­ sition of natural gas liquids without using separator uruts, Sarpahus said "It's ndiculous for TRC to say there are no liquids in the Panhan­ dle Field when geological tests and legal cases have consistently proven there are," Sarpahus said. Sarpahus said independent oil­ men have told him the loss to the state could be as high as $500 mil­ lion. Sarpahus also requested an opin­ ion from Mattox on the legality of a TRC action that shut down "w hite o il" production tn the Panhandle Field The controversy surrounds the refngeration process bv which natu­ ral gas is cooled to a liquid state which is then reported to the com­ mission as crude oil. Sarpahus said a M ay 13, 1985, let­ ter From a commission official put ting an end to white oil production was tantamount to rulemaking and thus a violation of Texas law He said the commissioners were acting on a request bv Phillips Pe­ troleum Co A commission spokeswoman said officials have not seen Sarpahus' re­ quests and had no immediate com­ ment "The law states clearly that the state agencies must conduct a hear ing before changing any adm inistra­ tive ru le," Sarpahus said "W hen the commissioners conducted hear­ ings on F*hillips' proposal, thev determined a rule change was not necessary." EM PLOYM ENT EM PLOYM ENT EM PLOYM ENT BOO G e n e r a l H e l p W a n t e d 810 - O ffke- C l e r i c a l 890 — Clubs- Restaurants EASY MAX handfcng work, ncefar- po» no expenen, • equvrac cai 48 ) SC ’9 ’ 31 COCKTAA W AJTFftSON won*».' fane 5 'Opm * le Aatapa 6640 to # 2 9 0 4 5 9 i '2 9 ’ JQ C COLLECTORS N o l re tu rn in g to ic h o o ! in fo il d u e to lo ck o f fu n d s? N o tio n a l o g e n c y Has futt- hm e p o sitio n s fo r te le p h o n e c o lle c to rs . CoM M r. Bo ss, 451-5717. GO VERN M EN T JO BS $’ 6 04 o ' $59 230/yr Now *w m g C o * 805 687 I 9413 tor currant totoral to 6000 «xi >-2» . IMMEDIATE ORfNtNG lor noi toeto» c a n to d o xculpfarad r a b . mamcwrak an d pwficura» Ex enfant um raxor 448 3888 7 23___ . RESIDENT APARTMENT «onagra > to a d tor tmal UT arao contato* tapb 9 0 5342 Auto., 78763 7-30 VERSATILE KEVtQAROST -w«*o to rock b o n d money, mofang Contact Lynn, 444 8 I8 Í 7 24 cou n try REAlESTATE “ MARKETING MAJORS Lon,: (tovalopra rwedt o weekend cm# anl to a n on-toe «ato oIfice Mu# riora a d v a n c e d c o u n e w o rk in rata etozte a n d experience worimo wtoi pubfit Col 343-6371 to appr 7-2v SECURITY OFFICERS Fui and pon iera Motora dependable, peopke-oneneed officer» needed Undora# fam#ried Ex cafare opporton#y to nude*** Col 7IMCO SECURITY CONSULTANTS M-F 1 5pra 434 7210 8 15_______________ FULL TIME mcentonance penor to work on condo* r Utvrorvty area pool and *p0 experience helpful 832-0226 7 24 ¡AYOUT/COPlYVRfTER a r t o fal or 'part rime Fqeteon experience raquead Coi Ton Davenport or Leon Sowed! 472 9012 7 25_________________________________ 810 — Office- Clerical NEAR CAMRUS FUU/part tone flex tale hour», AAA PM wenmg TY91ST 65 i W PM PRINTER *to lead type hot (tamp, tome mechonee at aptitude wil! tram RUNNER mo# have cor BOOKKEEPER experience and/or accounting hours. Abo fight carpentry protects Apply 9am 4pm 712-A East 26th A ART n w -ra ep e o rto B-12 M # C e l t o g r a to 3 7 8 - 0 8 7> 7 25 §4 0 — Sale s 7-23 URGENT' AVON . Neee crece ’ 8703 78704 7*715 7 * 7 4 4 7 * 7 4 6 7 8 74 * 7 8 7 4 9 and 7*617 Sean -rjrfang raw.6nub Cei Debtee 3S5-S5T9 * 241 BEST PHONE JO B IN TOWN Ticket sales, part-time, 5;30-9:30pm, $6/8 per hour guar. Paid cash weekly Call 474-5759. ' 7 2 2 Full-time or Part-time l# a KX>\ GmaroMeed faniakitawra'i New louc* Uto Now A rattan For The «nitor Mortar come Arectri Is etaart « y n n t e a wre» ALA 12433 Aurtaui Am Sotar- laugs LA 70*16 C to lnor crfac*! $04. 293-9710 ______________________ ,-}4D D A ILY T EXA N A D V E R T ISIN G S A L E S This is the highest paying port rime ^ob on cam pus But you will w ork for trie m oney In Souse fawning fo r one month A ppfy m person at TSP 3 210 m trie TSR Butfdmg - «tain»# i Axken. IO r ©29 TELEAAARKETERS NEEDED--evenmgi 6 Xfant Aoy 15 7 per hour depenk# my 3 rea r otó da u ro ra G o o d A fa r n o a n s an d • tfurfv \ f e iu b b h ours M U S T hove Norv-onokra 441 0542 b etw een 9 a m a n d 9 pm 7 24 B U SIN E SS 930 — B u sin e ss O p p ortu n itie s S T U O E N T S E A Jt N mane* worfang at home send S X S l to detota 5 04 W 24 #134 Atota». T» 7 * 7 0 5 7-29 Ease Y our H o u sin g Search with Texan C lassifie ds PARTTIME ADVERTISING SALES M inim um of ten hours w eekly in sales a ctivity in behalf of U T ­ M O ST magazine. FVevious advertising sales helpful, but not re­ quired as we w ill train Applicant must be U T student. Commission rate is 25%. Here is your opportunity to gain valuable, “ hands-on” experience few other students of the U n ive rsity are privileged to obtain. A t the same tim e you can provide a valuable service in support of U T s n atio nally acclaim ed, award-winning, student mag­ azine! Apply at T S P Bu ild in g Room 3.210 from 9 am to 4 pm Mon­ day through Fn d ay. The U n ive rsity of Texas at A ustin is an affirm ­ ative action/equal opportunity employer. A lL A N O A l i n o r t h 3-2-1. 1 e p b e e 0 W disposal ra n g e C A C H N e w carpo rt fe n c e d yord 2 0 0 6 Pom p tor $ 7 2 5 , 9 2 6 9 9 9 8-26 refrigerato r F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n ee d e d to share 2-1 co n d o at O fio rf o n shuttle $ 3 0 0 * 7 bids C a ll Jen n ifer, 4 7 6 - 0 5 2 6 01 2 5 8 3 6 3 2 7 26 Education C o n tin u e d fro m p a g e 7 They say som ething must be wrong with a university that al­ lows student athletes to fail when the very same university pays for their education. But what these cntics fail to real­ ize is that student athletes are not given scholarships to go to school. They get scholarships because a university believes that a person can contribute to the success of a sports team and eventually help it make money — enough money to absorb any losses incurred in the doling out of m oney to athletes. You see, the term "scholarship" the athletic sense generally in means scholarly activity on the field, not in the classroom. That is not to say that there aren't student athletes who excel in the classroom, because there are. The simple fact is that many a th ­ letes are given educational oppor­ tunities they might never have been exposed to w ithout their ath ­ letic skills. In addition to receiving a cost- free or at least low-cost college ed ­ ucation, athletes are frequently provided with free tutors to help them if they have trouble with a class. They also have academic ad ­ visors to help them plan their schedules. There is no doubt that many athletes receive privileges far be­ yond v\ hat the average student re­ ceives. And w hen there are privi­ leges someone will be there to abuse them Hut does that mean student athletes should perform better in the classroom than their fellow students who are not ath­ letes? No way Some do and some don't What manv need to realize is that higher education for athletes is no more of a problem than it is for anv other college student around campus Around Campus is t daily column listing University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and registered student in Around organizations To appear Campus, organizations must be regis­ tered with the Office of Student Activi­ ties. Announcements must be submit­ ted on the correct form, available in The D*il\ T etsn office, by 11 a.m. the day before publication The D u ly Te\*n reserves the right to edit submissions to conform fo style rules, although no sig­ nificant changes w ill be made. Wednesday Christians on Campus will meet for C hir-tian teUowship iron noon ti' 1 p rr. Wednesday in Tt*xz> Union Build mg 4.224 The Student Health Center will pres­ ent a Methods of Contraception cia>s tor men and w om en from h p m to 7 30 p m Wednesday in Student tU-alth Cen ter 448 Call 471-4956, ext 242, to regjs- te r UT Roadrunners will run throughout the summer at 6 p.m. Wednesdays, leaving from the steps ot I Theo Bell mont Hal! Ail runners arc welcome The International Association of Stu­ dents in E conom ics and B usiness will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Texas Union Building Sinclair Suite The Department of Astronomy will present the tiims Ptoneers and Modern Rockets and Sunspot Mystery at 8 p m Wednesday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 4.102 There will be a demonstration of small telescopes after the him*. UT Students few the Exploration and Development of Space wiH hold Astron­ omy Night from sundown to 11 p.m. Wednesday at the Painter Hall Observa­ tory (on the roof) police report From 3 p.m. M onday until 5 p.m. uesday the University Police De­ trim e n t reported these incidents: Assistance to an outside agency: i man was reported harassing peo- >le at the Texas Union Building at t;15 p.m. Monday and was found to lave an outstanding warrant from he Travis C ounty Sheriff s Depart- nent. He was arrested and released 0 sheriff *> deputies. A man was pulled over for dnv- ng through a stop sign in the 100 ilock of East 21st Street at 12:55 1 m Tuesday. He was found to be inving with a suspended license ind was nervous and anxious to eave, police said A warrant check evealed he was w anted by both the Austin Police Departm ent and the Fravis County Sheriff's D epart­ ment. He was taken to the county iail. A man was seen loitering on the second floor of the I exas U nion Building at 7:30 a.m. M onday and was found to have two outstanding criminal w arrants with the Austin Police Departm ent. He was released to Austin police. Theft: An officer saw two juven­ iles loading two bicycles onto a truck at 2:30 a m Tuesday in the 2000 block of San Jacinto Boulevard. A search of the truck revealed three juveniles and an adult w'ith a set of bolt cutters. The bikes were taken from a bike rack on 21st Street but the owners have not been located. The four were released until charges are tiled. Antitrust trial approaches end Associated Press NEW YORK — Put end to end, all the docum ents in the USFL-NFL an­ titrust trial would cover more than half a football field. Stacked on top of each other, they would be higher than the goal posts. Sifting through this pile of evi­ dence — physically, mentally or both — is the assignm ent of five women and one man whose delib­ the erations are likely to decide shape of professional football for the rest of the 1980s. By com parison, it might be easier for a running back to crash through a goal-line defense. Though hardly unusual for an an­ titrust case, the num bers produced by this trial in U.S. District Court are imposing. The USFL, unable to succeed in spring and sum m er and hoping to compete in the fall, is seeking $1.69 billion in dam ages for w hat it con­ tends were antitrust violations by the established NFL. Even before W ednesday's closing argum ents, the trial transcript runs 6,551 pages, six times more than the hardcover edition of Gone With the Wind, better than five times more than the Bible. Over 43 days, there has been tes­ timony by 43 witnesses, 24 called by the USFL, 19 by the NFL. That in­ cludes depositions read into the record, one posthum ously for for­ mer USFL club ow ner john Bassett. O th e r p re tria l d e p o s itio n s , num bering in the thousands of pag­ es, are piled high atop attorneys' desks. O n each binding is a name — Pete Rozelle or Howard Cosell, for instance — followed by a bold they were Roman num eral, as it scripts for a Rocky V' movie That does not count the exhibits, 166 in all, 114 put into evidence bv the NFL 52 by the USFL Yet all the paper handed from lawver to law ver and judge to juror Testimony ends with deposition Associated Press NEW YORK — Testim ony final­ ly came to an end in the trial of ÚSFL-NFL antitrust case Tuesday with a four-sentence deposition from Los Angeles Raiders ow ner Al Davis. Summ ations In it, Davis said h e had been in­ formed that a USFL ow ner had been told "th a t he would be an ow ner in the NFL." the USFL's in SI.69 billion suit, which began May 12, take place W ednesday and the case will go to the five- wom an, one-m an jury on T hurs­ day The only testim ony the jury heard Tuesday was the statem ent from Davis, which was entered to testim ony he had of continue fered as a w itness for the USFL. In the statem ent, w hich had been ruled inadm issable during Davis' earlier testim ony, he said that he had been told by Ralph Wilson, ow ner of the NFL Buffalo Bills of dealings Wilson and Com ­ missioner Pete Rozelle had with USFL ow ner A. Alfred Taubm an. However, during its case last week, the NFL introduced a depo sitton from Taubman w ho said his only m eeting with Rozelle took place at a social event w here foot ball w asn't discussed- still doesn ; cover everyone or ev­ erything. When New )o rk Jets ow ner Leon Hess testified, he was asked if he ever took or kept memo­ randum s. "N ope " Hess answ ered. "It lU'-t gets you into trouble." That brought npples of laughter from courtroom spectators. Each side, of course, had its own economist. The USFL's expert calcu­ lated dam ages inflicted by the NFL am ounting to $565 million, which is trebled in antitrust cases. The NFL expert said it didn’t owe a cent The economists had some big num bers of their own, each billing more than $100,000 for their ser­ vices — $210 an hour for the NFL, $160 an hour for the USFL. On and on the case has gone, spanning 11 weeks since iury selec­ tion started May 12, the dullness of docum ents broken by the court­ room theatrics of USFL attorney Harvey Myerson and by witnesses calling each other liars. It has not suffered for attention, since the verdict could well decide w hether America has one pro foot­ ball league or two. Al Davis, m anaging general part­ ner of the Los Angeles Raiders, had his own counsel present throughout the testimony, even though he was the only NFL ow ner not nam ed as a defendant. USFL Com missioner Harry Usher and his general coun­ sel, Jane Ellison, were daily specta­ tors. NFL Com missioner Rozelle was in court much of the time and represented by aides all the time. The media contingent ranged from six reporters to 20. And, of course, there were the jurors, w ho through 43 listened days of testim ony, two days of jury selection and, by W ednesday, two days of opening and closing argu­ m ents. They will be paid $30 for each of the first 30 day's, $35 for each day beyond that —■ $1,495 apiece or a total of $8,970 before starting delib­ erations Thursday. This does not count the two alternates who also staved start to finish. th a t m eans the jurors will receive roughlv $1 each for every $782,000 in dam ages thev could award the USFL. The Daily Texan/Wednesday, July 23 1986/Page 13 FERG/B LOOKS ABSO­ LUTELY ACES, ÍNOULPNT YOU SAY, LORDSHIP? j (JH DO VISCOUNT ST AUSTEU. t I ajsw FORGOTTEN, HAVE YOU7 k D iAJE CROSSED OARS AT HENLEY UJHATA PITY MY PATE IS LATE < 'PATE*? EXCUSE ME, BUT P IP I UNDER- 5TANP YOU TO SAY YOU BROUGHT A J PATEy I 1HATS RJ6HT. ££K/ A n. aw C O M * * * * ' Ü =3 < LU o D CC p > cc ac < o > CD D Oo £ c* LU X C/5 z > LU > CD z c c r Wtaai c y* X y j J H H Salt for a ot m ore tn a n t s re s p o n s ib le it can s e a s o n in g your food a ls o c o n trib u te to h ig h b lo o d p re s s u re a ris k fa cto r tor stro k e and h e a rt atta ck h a b it you can t a ffo rd not to s h a k e It s a A m e r i c a n H e a r t A s s o c i a t i o n WEW FI* »HTIM® FOR vt xjf? I I f r PEANUTS OKAY, CAPTAIN TUTOR jühERE DO UJE STARr ? BLOOM COUNTY HX/RE GOtos K SEE THAI LOLA bPHNCIF H0MPH AbAiN WNfoRT ASA HER TO. UR. TV-EX * \ srrr to ut ' GO ON TM NOT AERA IP TV / ye fa m . HE* V MARRY Vfli MARRYf , m m ' ^ H j t f i Hey, cheer up, pal. After all, there are other fish in the sea. BY CHARLES SCHULZ don't call me CAPTAIN TUTOR..MY NAME IS MAYNARD.. UÜHEREPOUJE START? UJMAT DO YOU THINK Y0URUJ0 R5T SUBJECT IS? by Berke Breathed AÑP YOU 'RE SUAE AN OPUS MARRIAGE CAN m INTO m e g eneral óchem e o f m e cosm os * ELTON jo h n s p ip p ip u r r r r A T J^ E F A iRjMl a V u w r ' a ' c v * B.C. fiEMTukp p z c N s a o r 722DA/ATA uOCAL* C X K P CCK J^SB A ^A Q& ZÚLXOF A eoM e. o p t a b BY J O H N N Y HART Ñ O C H A S ^ * l& ze R ueP H dM /E vfee AFTeR TH £ M A N A ^ e A eXBBJP TO OPEN TAB O F NOON AT 7 AaA INSTEAD High 1 0 0 T e m p e ra tu re s \ r 9 0 v - Assooated Press NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST UNTIL 7 A M THURSDAY Austin weather will be hot and mostly sunny Wednesday, with a high m the tow 90s Winds wiH be from the south at 10 mph, and the tow temperature Wednesday night will be in the tower 70s. The National Weather Service forecasts showers Wednesday for parts of CaMorrua Nevada. Idaho. W y­ oming. Colorado, Utah. Arizona and New Mexico Showers are also ex­ pected m a band from Minnesota and Wisconsin south to Louisiana, then northeast to Maryland and Delaware T O D A Y S CROSSW ORD PUZZLE ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 1 Racecourse 6 Lofty 10 Slave 14 Fractured 15 Pisa s river 16 Outogger 17 Salesman 16 Direction 20 Spoil 21 Jacket type 23 Ms. Dmsmore 24 LOrete* 26 Rear 28 Put a value on 30 Code man 31 Was furious 32 Pierce 36 Legendary Celt 37 Hayworth and Gam 38 Plunder 39 Early 42 Right-hand page 44 Garment part 45 Female bird 46 Curled 49 Box 50 Income Fr 51 Implement 52 Kids game 55 Divert 58 Rustic poem 60 Caribou s kin 61 Climax 62 Color 63 Night birds 64 Gatherings 65 Tire surface DOWN 1 Potation i 3 4 1 14 1? 20 ■21 . S . ‘ HA 2 Latvian port 3 Omission 4 Humanity 5 Signed up 6 Wears 7 Pig - 8 Wildebeest 9 Recently stolen 10 School book 11 Raze 12 Treat a vioim bow 13 Doomed 19 Theft 22 Spread hay 25 Hockey playing surface 26 Of pitch 27 War deity 28 Stuffy 29 Pro — 30 Lead or zinc 32 Mourned 33 Original model 34 Burden 35 Black poet 37 Ready for harvesting 40 Overcoats 41 Dimmish 42 Practical one 43 Nibble 45 Paid player 46 Belief 47 Refresh 46 Satellite prefix 49 Pine fruit 51 Cadence 53 Inter — 54 Pleased 56 Check 57 Tennis serve 59 The German 3•o & e 3 ®UL © SQUIB BY MILES MATHIS Page 14/The Daily Texan/Wednesday, July 23,1986 Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE A IThn ea COT Eaet Divtsfcxi Boston New York Cleveland Toronto Baltimore Detroit Milwaukee California Texas Kansas City Chicago Seattle Minnesota Oakland West D M skxi W L 57 54 50 51 50 48 43 36 41 41 44 43 45 48 Pet. OB 613 — 568 549 537 538 516 473 13 49 47 43 47 43 42 42 39 39 51 50 53 55 57 533 — 3 50 7 457 7 457 442 8 VS 415 11 406 12 Monday 's Games Tuesday t Games New York 8 Texas 4 Minnesota 1 Detroit 0 Cleveland 5. Chicago 2 Kansas City 6. Baltimore 1 Milwaukee 5. California 3 Toronto 8, Seattle 3 Oakland 5, Boston 2 Oakland 4 Boston 2 New York 9, Texas 1 Detroit 3 Minnesota 0 Cleveland 8, Chicago 4 Baltimore 5. Kansas City 4 Toronto at Seattle, (n) Milwaukee at California, (n) W ednesday's Games Texas (Hough 9-4) at New York (J Niekro 8-6) Boston (Nipper 4-6) at Oakland (Stewart 2-0) Toronto (Clancy 10-5) at Seattle (Moore 9-6) Minnesota (Heaton 3-9) at Detroit (Moms 10-6). (n) Chicago (Bannister 5-6) at Cleveland (Schrom 10-2), (n) Kansas City Leibrandt 9-6) at Baltimore McGregor 6-9). (n) Milwaukee (Darwin 5-5) at California (McCaskill 10-6). (n) Thursday s Games Kansas City at Detroit, (n) Chicago at Baltimore, (n) Cleveland at Texas, (n) Only games scheduled New York Montreal Philadelphia Chicago Si Louis Pittsburgh Houston San F rancisco San Diego Cincinnati Atlanta Los Angeles NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L 62 48 45 40 40 38 28 41 46 50 52 52 Pet G 8 689 — 539 495 .444 435 422 13VS 17 VS 22 23 24 42 44 48 47 50 50 553 — 2 532 6 489 7 478 8VS 462 8 Vi 462 . . . Wear O vtaion . 52 50 46 43 43 43 Tuesday ’s Games Chicago 6, San Diego 4 Los Angeles 4 Pittsburgh 3 New York 6, Cincinnati 3.14 innings Philadelphia 5, Atlanta 4. 11 innings St Louis 10. San Francisco 7 Houston 1, Montreal 0 ,1 0 innings W ednesday s Games San Diego (Hawkins 6-7) ai Chicago (Sanderson 5-6). 1 ;20 p m Montreal (B Smith 7-5) at Houston (Knepper 12-7), 3 35 New York (Darling 9 3 ) at Cincinnati (Browning 8-7). 6 35 Los Angeles (Hershiser 8-7) at Pittsburgh (Reuschei 5- 11), 6 3 5 p m Philadelphia (Ruffm 2-1) at Atlanta (Alexander 1-1), 6 40 San Francisco (LaCoss 9-4) at St Louis (Cox 3-8), 7 35 Montreal at Cincinnati completion of susp game, 5 05 Thursday s Games pm p rri pm p.m p m Montreal a! Cincinnati scheduled game. 35 p m. Houston at Philadelphia. 6 35 p m Los Angeles at Pittsburgh 6 35 p m Only games scheduled Boxscores Astros 1, Expos 0 MONTREAL Raines if Webster cf Dawson rt Wallach 3b Kmchc fb Titzgerldc Gon/als ss Law 2b Newinn 2b Youmns p rotate M ontraal f-oust on HOUSTON ab r h bt 4 0 0 0 Doran 2b 3 0 0 0 Hatcher cf 4 0 0 0 DSrmth p 3 0 0 0 Walling 3b 4 0 0 0 GDavis 1b 3 0 1 0 Bass rt 3 0 0 0 Cruz If 1 0 0 0 Ashbyc 3 0 0 0 CRenids ss 3 0 0 0 Ryan p Gainey cf 31 0 f 0 Totate ab r h bi 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 1 1 1 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 31 1 3 1 000 000 000 000 000 5 - 0 000 1— 1 No outs when winning run scored Game Winning RB i - GDavis(10) E—Newman Ashby LOB— Montreal 5. Houston 3 2B—- Fitzgerald HR—GDavis (21) SB— Webster (25), Hatcher (24) M ontreal Youmans L.10-6 Houston Ryan DSmrth W.3-6 *> H R ER BB SO 9 3 1 1 0 8 9 1-3 1 0 0 4 2-3 0 0 0 0 14 1 Youmans pitched to 1 batter m the 10th Umpires- Home. C Williams First. Wendelstedt, Second Bonin. Third, Crawford T—? 43 A— 19.271 Yankees 9, Rangers 1 ab r h bt 5 3 3 ' 5 1 2 2 5 2 3 1 3 2 1 0 4 0 1 1 4 1 3 3 3 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 NEWYORK ab r h bt 3 0 1 0 RHndsn cf 1 0 0 0 CWashtn If 3 0 1 0 Mtngly 1b • 0 1 G Easier dh 4 0 0 0 Hasseyc 3 0 0 0 Winfield rl 1 0 1 0 Pglruio 3b 3 0 0 0 Rndlph 2b 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Berra ss 30 1 5 1 Totals TEXAS Fietchrss Wilkrsn ss Ward cf McDwel cf OBnen 1b incvgfiarl Sierra rl LAPrshdh Siaughtc Mercado c Paciorktt Harrah 2b Buechte 3b Petralii 3b Touts Texas New York 001 000 000— 1 420 002 01 x— 9 Game Winning RBI — None E Correa DP -Texas 3 New York 2 LOB—Texas 5, New York 9 2B— Matimgty, Winfield. Randolph, CWashmg- ton HR Mattingly (17). Winfield (14) Paciorek (3). RHend erson (17), CWasnmgton (4) SB «Henderson ¡55), Ward (8 ) Taxaa Cor-ea L 6-8 Russei Mohorcic Hams New York Rasmusn W.12-2 Fisher IP H R E R BB SO 1 2 3 3 2 3 2 3 2 6 2-3 2 ’ 3 7 4 1 3 3 2 6 2 0 i 1 0 6 2 0 1 1 0 3 1 0 2 3 0 2 3 0 2 6 2 Umpires— Home. Reed First, Koec Second Garcia Third. Ford T—2 48 A 26 099 Mets 6, Reds 3 NEWYORK CINCINNATI Venable cl ab r h bi 7 1 1 1 3 0 0 0 Bell 3b 3 1 1 0 Parker rl 5 0 3 0 BOtazc 6 0 0 0 Franco p 2 0 0 0 Rose ph 2 0 0 0 EDavis pr 2 1 1 0 Brwnng pr . 3 0 1 0 Willis p 0 0 0 0 Power p 0 0 0 0 Esasky If 1 1 0 0 Milner cf 5 0 2 0 Rowdon ss 2 0 0 0 Perez i d 'Jester 2b 2 0 1 0 Terry p 4 1 1 3 2 1 0 0 Daniels ph 1 0 0 0 RMrphy p 0 0 0 0 StHwil ph 0 0 0 0 RFtobnsnp 3 0 1 0 Buterac 53 6 12 4 Totate M> r h bi 5 0 1 0 5 ‘ 3 1 5 1 2 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 ’ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 5 0 1 0 5 0 2 0 6 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 51 3 14 3 900 010 002 000 03—6 002 010 000 000 0 0 - 3 Game Winning Fffii HJohnson (2) E - Rowdon Parker OP New York 1, Cincinnati 4 LOB- New York 16, Cincinnati 11 2B KHernandez 2 Teu te- Hearr 3B Oykstra HR Parker (20) Bet' (6). HJohn son (6) SB Strawberry (21) Rowdon (2) EDavts 2 (47) -Venable Oesfer r H R B i BB SO 5 1 1-3 2 3 2 2 3 5 2 1 2 - 3 1 1-3 3 1 6 2 1 1 3 1 5 0 2 1 3 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 2 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 3 2 1 2 3 0 4 0 o 0 3 o 2 1 ! 3 2 1 Dyfcstracf Bckmn 2b Teufel 2b KHmdz 1b Carter c Strwbry rt Mitcheii rt Hearn c HeepH Sisk p Aguifer ph Orosco p Knight 3b McDwll p Santana ss rfJohsn ss Ojedap Foster ph RAndesn p Myers p MWiison H Totate New York OncrmsB New York Oteda RAndeson Myers Sts* Orosco M cO w ii W 8-4 Ondnnaa Terry RMurphy RFtobtnsor Franco VW hSL.1-1 Power t i Myers pitched to i baner m the 8th WMks pitched » 2 barters m t » 14th WP Franco PB BO«az Umpires Home, Davm r-'st Harvay Second OeMut' Third. Gregg T 5 00 A 23 707 THIS WEEK AT ECKE AMERICAS FAMILY DRUG STORE 1.39 1.59 1.99 Coca-Cola products Try Classic Coke. Diet Coke, Sprite, Orange Minute Maid and more 2-liter Limit 3 Coca-Cola products 6 pack 12 OZ cans Stock up on your favorites now for your summer picnics. Limit 3 Flex shampoo or conditioner 15 07 mouss< 5-OZ or Flex Net hair spray 8-OZ Entire Stock Haircraft hair accessories 25% OFF M&M's chocolate c a n d ­ or peanut Keep this fav< hand ill summer long 16 07 ; : • Eckerd Sends America Sack to School 5 1 Budweiser, Bud Light 12 p a c k $529 1.69 4.44 Mead “Wrapper” notebook. Five-star pad folder or note­ book paper pad 125-sheets Mead Flex 3 notebook or Data Center or Organizer binders and more 8 ’ i x 11 college notebook 100-sheets ideal for every elms looseleaf zipper pouch Stock up for back to school Reg 29 ea t Entire Stock fashion wire- bound notebooks Selection may vary. Regs to 129 Scripto automatic pencil 5mm or 7mm or Bic super saver pens 10-pack. 1.09 School Supplies 12 wood rule 3 *5 or 4 x 6 " memo books empire pencil cap erasers 5-pack or 6M protractor Reg 35c to 55 Paper M ate meta, roller hrgh lighter pen or marks-a tot marker Reg 89 to 99 K&M >how Oft O * binder ( reate a ci cover Reg 299 to vmy S L _ E SAVE MONEY D O N ’T SACRIFICE QUALITY. We have 400 Eckerd Brand Equiv­ alen t prescription drugs that carry the P A Q seal a n d c a n save you up to 50%. To an Eckerd P harm acist, n o th in g ’s m o re im p o rta n t th an your health. Save over 8.00 Galaxy 16 pedestal fan Keep your home cool Reg 44 99 Save over 10 00 Aurora printer calculator # 9PD.Tape or display mode Reg 3999 16.99 ! 5.00 [ 11.99 zj Turbo-Wash. Includes the wash unit three tips and liquid detergent Reg 19 99 TRUE BLUE, greens, yellows and reds Yours with Eckerd Photo Processing and the Kodak Colorwatch System i t w v * * * * * 29.97 L2J E C K E IJ D y E C K E f J D j J J W * . I B enodryl 1 24 tablets or 4-OZ. elixir I Without coupon 2 3 9 . Good thru 7 i- I Coupon must I occompany purchase hm mm mm mm ■ H g B p B H P p 2 W .. w H Q I M ' jPF < 1 - ^ ‘ ^ ^ 2 . 2 9 j rvyi ■ P epto Bismol 8 OZ ■ I Protective coating action * relieves upset stomach I Without coupon 2.49 ?. Good thru 7 26 86 I Coupon must _Jpi| accompany ■ purchase ParvtTY. O f S f iK N c S a T S _________________ _________________ W W 2-02 I Mttchum spray I 4-02 J or roll-on 15-OZ . «► | . Good thi I Coupon must I accompany B purchase \Mthout coupon 2.29WH11 t.'ff ■ E S S k Z 2 ~ ■ I P opcorn Choose I I f cheese ° f caram el flavors I Without coupon 1.77 « S S ® ® * ■ “1 Thru 7 2686 1 1 Coupon must <3 M » accompany purchase Z 7 , z m w r v ta v * . 'Sí ‘ J L * . « a l P | ■ HP1 ¡2.69 I Kodak color ■ film CA135 of ■ CL110 24-exposure." ■ Without coupon 2.89 • Good thru 7 26 86 I Coupon must I occompany purchase J fo - j S E Í L * ! . M B f l 1.09 ^ H M R t f ~ J Q L W m -* .f f i l w S S f | ««hou! OOUpOh 1 M H I G ood ftlfU ? f& M 6 I Coupon must | occompcmy a s h in g ' ' Sun L,9 hl J hqu!d 2' OZ lemon scent Without coupon 129 Good thru 7-26 86 ■ Coupon must | accompany ■ purchase ' ^ S B b o a flF o c i» 6 0 -p t- ,3, H V W W 2 6 -g t!& m v k Without coupon 2.49 * * * Good thru 7/26'86 r ^ M M Coupon must \ & accompany ________________________________ 1 » *p t . J p ■ purchase 1 ■mrnwupM'm PBl ■ * ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ¡■ ■ ■ ■ I ! ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ « M l ■ ■ mm mm~wdfmm M a m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m r n m m I (■■■i®* M . . a m A t- S a i 0 D r i c e s QOOCi t n r u S O f . , J u l y 2 o t n . vn* ! ..................... »he Yellow Pages tor the fckerd nearest you We reserve the r'9ht to limit quantities. All manufacturers’ rebates are limited ..... .. .....__lg_ogg_BgL-gj^tonwi_______________________________ 9 purchase ^ 1 8 — — S D r ^ u / c ■ I M O M F Y SELL E iliO R D E R S m * H ■ ■ ■ 2237 E Rtverslde Dr. — Rlversrde P laza............................ 447 7272 6071. wiWam Cannon — Century Square Shopping Center44?-5775 327 1843 3225 E Bee Caves Rd 7015 Manchoca 6 WMWam Cannon 443 3734 2927 Ouodaiup# 474-2323 1101 N IH-35.......................... ...................... .. .............. 476-2681 714 N Congress 477-5725 ................................ 701 Newman ft lake Austin Blvd................................................ 477-1261 454 6808 5619 Airport Bivd 452 9471 5335 Burnet Rd ....................................................... .346-2570 3569 Far Weft Blvd ft 150 Research Bivd Bale one* Woods Shopping Center346 5577 2005 Wheiess Ln..................................... 24 Hour Store 2301-A South Congress 928 1705 . . . 444-3671 f ft