íT V \~ - snsL xx ‘svn^a I 9CtySV xo9 Oá ouj ‘ jisausQ m-[TJC I D TW |^g§|f Da iiy T exan * Voi 8 0 , No. 176 (USPS 146-440) S t u de nt N e w s p a p e r a t The Un i ve rs i t y of Texas a t Aust in Monday July 6 . 1981 1 wcnty Cents i. in»" ", m Student fee committee members to be elected By CARMEN HILL Daily Texan Stafl Although a bill m andating d irect election of stu­ dent representatives to the Student Services Fee C om m ittee failed in the legislative session, the U niversity will still hold an election to select the five student m em bers of the fee com m ittee, Vice President for Student Affairs Ronald Brown said Friday. Brown said a previously overlooked provision in the law m ade the election necessary and that Dean of Student Activities Rich H eller would an­ nounce specific election procedures Monday The election could possibly take place in November, Brown said. The provision for the election is a 1979 am end­ m ent to section 54.503 of V ernon's Civil Statutes which states th at “ a m ajority of the com m ittee's m em bers shall be students enrolled in the institu­ tion and appointed by the student governing body of the institution or elected by a m ajority of stu­ dents enrolled in the institution voting in an elec­ tion held for that purpose.” Brown said for the last two years, the Universi­ ty was not in com pliance with that provision. Four of the five student representatives on the fee com m ittee — which also includes four ad­ m inistrators — w ere appointed by the Senior Cab­ inet and one was appointed by P resident P eter Flawn through the dean of students office. H eller said ‘‘no com parison w as m ade between the procedure used when the am endm ent was adopted and the stipulation in the law ” and that the distinction between the two was not brought to the attention of the U niversity. The selection procedure approved in 1977 pro­ vided that the presidents of the Students’ Associa­ tion and the Senior Cabinet would autom atically sit on the com m ittee, while the other three stu­ dent representatives would be appointed by the Students’ Association. When student governm ent was abolished in 1978, the Senior Cabinet — composed of chairm en of the 14 University councils, some of whom are popularly elected, while others are appointed by the respective deans — then took responsibility for appointing the three students. The president of the Senior Cabinet continued to autom atically serve on the fee com m ittee, while the University president appointed the posi­ tion vacated by the Students Association presi­ dent. Senior Cabinet Chairm an Julie Tindall said the Senior Cabinet appointed student m em bers to the fee com m ittee because the adm inistration asked it to do so when student governm ent was abol­ ished. “ We functioned in that capacity because there was a void,” Tindall said Friday. David E scam illa, a m em ber of the Red Ryder P reservation Society said he thinks having a di­ rect election for representatives on the fee com ­ m ittee is the best solution E scam illa, a second-year law student, said the fact that the selection process was not in line with the 1979 am endm ent was probably an “ over­ sight.” because the am endm ent was adopted a year afte r the Senior Cabinet took over appoint­ m ent of the student representatives The selection procedure “ was a possible con­ flict of interest because the fee com m ittee allo­ cates funds to the Senior C abinet,” E scam illa said. The com m ittee also allocates funds for the Stu­ dent Health Center, the students’ attorney, shut­ tle bus service, the Student Activities Office, the ombudsman, the Division of R ecreational Sports, T he Daily T e x a n and the E lection Commission. Tindall said she thought a direct election would mean a “ whole different type of student' would apply for the com m ittee. "Some students a re turned off by politics but like to take p art in the process,” Tindall said. “ Now there will be m ore people with a certain constituency who a re in it for the name. Tindall also said the Senior Cabinet had a stake in the Student Services Fee C om m ittee that might be lost. “ The Senior Cabinet gets some of its money from the Student Services F ee C om m ittee," she said ‘ 1 would teel bad if any program s were cut ” She said, though, that the election was a move needed to be in com pliance with the law Escam illa said. Now recom m endations from elected students will bt m ore representative in terms ot what students want for student services and facilities Executions continue; Bani-Sadr lambasts fundamentalist regime ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) — Revolutionary Guards killed three leftists and arrested 15 others Sunday in a sweep through Tehran as part of a crackdown on opposition to the Iranian regime fol­ lowing the bombing last week that killed 74 fundamentalist lead­ ers. Firing squads also executed 16 more people, including four from the group blamed for the blast, raising to nearly 120 the number of executions since former President Abolhassan Bani- Sadr was dismissed June 21. The new arrests and executions followed the appearance of an interview with Bani-Sadr, who from his hideout in Kurdistan urged his supporters to fight the Islamic regime, which he accused of having “stabbed me in the back. Bani-Sadr, in an interview appearing in the London magazine Ei ght Days, also criticized Iranian ruler Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini of being ignorant of what was happening in Iran. It was the first word from Bani-Sadr since he went into hiding June 10 to escape arrest and likely death at the hands of his fundamentalist foes. His whereabouts remained a mystery until June 26, when a Kurdish exile leader disclosed in an interview with UPI that the former president was under the protection of autonomy-seeking Kurds in Iran’s northwestern province of Kurdistan. “I appeal to Iranians, the 80 percent who expressed their con­ fidence in me with their votes, not to surrender,” Bani-Sadr said. “I p a if • larly ask in> sisters, the women of Iran, and the youth to resist in every way and at all times ... They (the funda­ mentalists) have betrayed me. They have stabbed me in the ... back.” Of Khomeini, Bani-Sadr said he ‘‘has no direct contact with the real life of the country. Others inform him about the coursditor lm »#n Editor A «aviste Images Editor G eneral R eporter» Ron Sey^oW Vicky Thom»» » i r r w Sper tor Meliaaa HMk Ed Alien C arm en Hill. C hart** U m an Amy Maahtoerf Gary FUup lo n a b W laenberg A**i*l»m New* Editor \>-w «»riten Editorial A «al slant Assistant Sport* M itor TomMullm* Eri< William* Melinda Machado Steve !>avi« <»eor|f<- Vondrarr* Ok* I’edlgo Sport* A**iat»nt ISS1 E STAKE Reynold» Make-up Editor Cushman Wire Editor Copy Editors ArtuU Photographer Harry Potter Maureen Pasfcin Melanie Hecht Robyn Lind beck Sam Hurt Mike Fry Susan Allen < amp Tt XAN ADVERTISING STAkF Emily Auld. Kathy Hckala Calise Hun hell Joel < arter (Uudia Craves Marianne Newton Sam Torrey Jim Well» The Gaily Te*an a student newspaper at The I niversity of Texa* at Austin is published by Tesa» Student Publication* Drawer I) t ntveriity Station Austin TX 7(T7i2 The Duly Texan is published Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday and Pri day except holiday aod e*am periods Second - lass postage paid at Austin TX 7Í710 New, contribution* will be accepted by telephone '471 4MI at the editorial office (Tesa* Student PuWk -lions Building 2 1221 or at the news laboratory tCommumr atom Building A 4 I Mi Inquine* concerning delivery and classified advrrtmng should re­ made in TSP Building 3 2«J • 471 S244 ■ and display advertising in T SP Building J 210 <471 I MO The national advertising representative of The Daily Tesan is f ommunicattons and Advertising S e r v i c e * to Student* 1*33 West ( entral Street Evanston Illmots «0201 plucne **i 323 4044 toll free The Dally Te«an subscribe* to United Pres* International and New York Times New' Service The- Tesan IS a member of the Asva nited Collegiate Pres* the the- Tesa* Daily Newspaper Assoc .ation and Southwest Journalism Congress American Ne»*paper Publi'hei* Association Copyright 1MI Tesa* Student Public ations THE DAILY TEXAN Si HM RIPTION RATES One Semester (Fall or springi I wo Semester* 'F a ll ancl Springi Summer Session One Year i Fall Spring and Summer 120 00 40 00 1200 MOO send ord ers and ad dress c h a n g e * to Tesa* Student Public ation* P O Ho* D Austin 1X7*712 or to TSP Huildmg < 3 200 ,M B N0 146440 A GAMEROOM ARCADE IN TRI-TOWERS 819 W. 24th OPEN 10am to 12 midnit» FREE GAME 25< VALUE gam at • pinball • pool Lim it o n » p * fto n o n p »r v W f «IdM r I >13.00 CASH— >13 DOLLARS CASHI Ym cm mw • IK* by W- tnf • blmJ pWurn émm. It t«k*i miy 1H bmr», m i ym con imm H m»ry 72 bmn. Ym will r»<*iv» M OO Í4HT ym r first Jom ti»n wmI $10.00 f»r • *»cm4 «Uiw f tion in ifw m im wm k. M ym briftf tbit »J hi with ym, ym wiN r*c#hr« • $5.00 bmw »ft»r ymr first i »mtim I AUSTIN B100D COMPONENTS, INC. I Phone 477-3735 | J 510 West 29th Nmrs: *•*. A TWrv I •.«.4 p.*.; !*•*■ A W. • SLAPS! All sty les available for both " m en & w om en Change alms at greater communication between delegates, constituents By AMY MASHBERQ Daily T e x a n Staff Thp Council of Graduate Students will discontinue act­ ing on issues too hastily by placing some items on an agenda instead of bringing them up as urgent matters, a COGS officer said The change in agenda poli­ cy will, it is hoped, give COGS delegates an opportunity to gain a more representative voice from their constituents Eliza Willis, president, of COGS, said recently Willis said that last year a number of controversies were brought up under “ urgent matters a format people instead of objected placed on the agenda before­ hand, she said to Issues brought up under ur­ gent matters include support for the teaching assistants’ sick-out at the University of Houston and monetary sup- port for former assistant in­ structor Kathleen Kelleher, Willis said Willis, a graduate student in government, said much dis­ cussion concerned whether these were urgent matters Were these urgent or could they have been anticipated and not brought up (under ur­ gent matters),' Willis said Anne Nelson, secretary of COGS and soon to be an as­ sistant instructor in general business, said, lot of things had been brought up under urgent matters that by any kind of strict definition of the term could not be consid­ ered urgent “ A The problem with this type of format, Willis said, was that representatives did not have a chance to bring the is­ sue before their constituents One of the things we hope to do is create a better network of communication between representatives and their con­ stituent graduate students. Willis said Nelson said that when mat­ ters are brought up under ur­ gent business, delegates do not have the time to examine the facts, or determine their department’s position on the matters, she said. Matters should be consid­ ered urgent, she said, if they arise the day before the meet­ ing and need to be resolved the day after Otherwise, the facts should be brought up in committee meetings, the data accurately set forth, so that an effective argument can be made, Nelson said. “ In terms of effectiveness, you do not persuade someone of your position very effec­ tively with a hastily thrown together, mostly emotional appeal,” she said. Both Nelson and Willis said natural sciences and engi­ neering departments have in­ creased their number of dele­ gates. is something new,” Nelson said, “ we've gotten more of a response from natural sciences “ This With this wider representa­ tion. Nelson and Willis hope the organization can have more of a policy-forming role, rather than simply having a supportive role toward other groups. ___ “ I believe there is a possi­ bility of building a consensus” within COGS, Willis said. COGS has taken several steps to further its policy- forming role. Those steps in­ clude the holding of full meet­ frequently, ings more probably twice a month, with committee meetings held the other weeks. Nelson said cur­ rently only three meetings a semester are required. In addition to forming poli­ cy, COGS should, as a gradu­ ate student organization, set up a forum where different graduate student interests are aired In order to further open the channels of exchange and communicati >n, Nelson said COGS is promoting seminar sessions in which students from the various departments present papers on topics of in­ terest to them Campus News In Brief THE DEADLINE FOR SUBMITTING ITEMS TO CAMPUS NEWS IN BRIEF IS 1 P.M THE DAY BEFORE PUBLICA­ TION. NO EXCEPTIONS WILL BE MADE. ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICES FOR HANDICAPPED STUDENTS needs readers for the blind throughout the summer, working from 8 a.m. to 5 p m If interested, go by Student Services Building 2.116. MEETINGS UNIVERSITY AA-ALANON GROUP is continuing to meet dur­ ing the summer, at noon Monday through Friday in a new location, Business-Economics Building 260. This is an open meeting, and the public is welcome. UT JUDO CLUB will hold practice 5:30 to 7 p.m. Monday in BellmontHall 966. Beginners are welcome. FANTASY WARGAMERS SOCIETY will meet in Education Building 278 at 6 p.m. Monday. Typing a key problem for you? OF THE PAY FOR THE HIGHEST PRICED PAIR SECOND PAIR ONLY ONE CENT BRING A FRIEND AND SHARE THE BONANZA, REDUCE YOUR POCKETBOOK SHORTAGES AND BUY QUALITY BRANDS* SUCH AS: KIMEL • JOAN ft DAVID • FAN­ FARES • S.R.O. • NICKELS • CHEROKEE and more . . . ALL SALES FINAL. PLEASE *( Not all stock included) baking Check the Texan Classifieds for typing services! Call 471-5244 to place a Classified Ad in The Daily Texan - “ v ~ v FLOPS! Shoe Shop ^ . , W . m a k . and SHEEPSKIN C Q W & C A l F repair boots baits ★ SADDLES ★ ENGLISH WESTERN WS4* Capitol Saddlery — • 478-9309 1614 lo v a ia ______ Autltn, T ,x a l TEXAS UNION COPY CENTER * black and white copying * color copying * offset printing * t-shirt transfers * custom buttons * posters HOURS: M-F 8am-5pm THONGS! AS LOW AS $4.95! 7 r* r 1 > 7 r 1 r* r f f r * f j 7 r 1 THE UNBELIEVABLE DIAMOND SALE! CARAT WEIGHT SHAPE round round round ro u n d .05 .10 .20 .25 .30 .32 .47 .49 .52 ,64 .70 1.00 1.38 2.04 o v a l round pear round round round round round pear round QUALITY SI1 SI1 VS2 SI1 & SI2 SI1 S11 &SI2 VS1 VVS1 VS1 VS2 VS2 VS1 VS2 SI2 REG. PRICE $63.00 $125.00 $345.00 $450.00 $620.00 $650.00 $2,250.00 $2,400.00 $1,924.00 $2,600.00 $4,025.00 $4,200.00 $6,950.00 $11,220.00 SALE PRICE $ 4 0 . 0 0 $ 7 8 . 0 0 $ 2 2 4 . 0 0 $ 2 7 0 . 0 0 $ 3 8 4 . 0 0 $ 3 9 6 . 0 0 $ 1 , 4 6 0 . 0 0 $ 1 , 6 0 0 . 0 0 $ 1 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 $ 1 , 6 2 0 . 0 0 $ 2 , 5 7 6 . 0 0 $ 3 , 1 0 0 . 0 0 $ 4 , 6 0 0 . 0 0 $ 6 , 6 3 0 . 0 0 NO. OF STONES ten ten four fourteen one nine one one one one one one one one 30 Day layaway • 3% Discount for Cash V isa M asterC h arg e A m erican Express ganddijfe) F I N E J E W E L R Y - T 1 M E P I E C E S - G 1 F T S 2021 Guadalupe • #35 Dobie Mall • 474-8383 TWO HOURS FREE PARKING IN DOBIE GARAGE WHILE YOU SHOP F O O T G E A R ¡4 Geared to c o m fo rt a n d q u a lity v \ - 2200 GUADALUPE AUSTIN, TEXAS 472-9433 > World & National PLO reportedly tied to administration LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Despite the fact that U.S. policy forbids it, the Reagan administration has quietly continued the low level contacts that three previous adminsitrations have had with the Pales­ tine Liberation Organization, the Los A ngeles T im e s said Sunday. Talks, under four presidents from Richard Nixon to Ronald Reagan, have ranged from the safety of American diplomats to the chances of peace in the Middle East, the T im e s said in its front page story. U.S. policy prohibits dealings with PLO until it officially recognizes Israel’s right to exist, and a State Department spokesman refused to comment on the T im e s report. The newspaper said the true pattern of U.S. intel­ ligence operations has been quite different from pub­ lic policy, noting that contacts with the PLO began in 1974 when Henry Kissinger was secretary of state. The Carter administration made two concerted ef­ forts to bring the PLO into peace talks with Israel and carried on extensive negotiations with PLO lead­ er Yasser Arafat, the T im e s said The Reagan administration, despite the presi­ dent’s condemnation of the PLO, has quietly contin­ ued talks with the organization both through the Central Intelligence Agency and the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, the newspaper said. low level Some of the talks have gone through a secret “ black channel’’, a line of communication between the CIA and the PLO’s intelligence group, the Jihaz al Rasd, or Surveillance Department. A “ front chan­ nel,” also exists, the newspaper said. In fact, the U.S. Embassy in Beirut has been in direct contact with the PLO over the past several years for conversations related to the security of the embassy in West Beirut - a fact that became known and reported during the 1975-76 Lebanese civil war. In 1976, when then President Gerald Ford ordered to evacuate American citizens from the Navy Beirut, the PLO provided ground security and Kiss­ inger later thanked the group in a letter made public at the time. Many American diplomats maintain privately that no peace is possible in the Middle East without the participation of Arafat and his group “ It is not possible to get support for a settlement on the West Bank without the PLO,’’ former assist­ ant Secretary of State Harold Saunders said recent­ ly, the T im e s noted. Arafat has boasted that the PLO already has the de facto recognition of most of the world, but wants the United States to recognize the organization open­ ly to strengthen its place in negotiations. Israel op­ poses any such rmignition for the same reason. Kissinger began the talks informally but never met with PLO officials himself, the newspaper said, and in 1975 the Israelis demanded and received Kiss­ inger's promise he would not negotiate with the PLO but Kissinger did not interpret his pledge as meaning that all contacts between U S officials and the PLO would end The newspaper’s sources said the CIA link was used for wider purposes including informal ex­ changes of information They said the CIA's key PLO contact was Arafat’s chief of intelligence, Ali Hassan Salameh, the man accused by Israel of hav­ ing planned the PLO kidnapping of 11 members of the Iraeli Olympic team in Munich in 1972. Salameh was killed by a bomb in Beirut in 1979. World in Brief From Texan news services Peace proposed MOSCOW - Insisting that he had a ' sporting chance,” British For­ eign Secretary Lord Carrington ar­ rived in Moscow Sunday with a West European peace proposal for die withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan. The Soviet news agency Tass said it would be reject­ ed. The plan Carrington carried to Moscow on behalf of European Common Market countries proposes a two-stage conference to entice the Soviets out of Afghanistan with a internationally backed set of guarantees safeguarding Afghan neutrality. Franc* Mils arms PARIS — Foreign Minister Claude Cheysson said Saturday France’s new Socialist government will continue to sell arms abroad but not to dictatorships that could use them for repression. In another development, Cheysson met Satur­ day with Farouk Kaddoumi, head of the die political committee of Palestine Liberation Organization. It was the first meeting between a PLO official and France’s new So­ cialist government. Tension eased BEIRUT, Lebanon - The special Arab League peacemaking commit­ tee adjourned its efforts Sunday with a brief statement expressing "relief” at what it described as the "easing of tension in Beirut and Zahle.” But the committee, which scheduled another round of meet- [ ings here July 25, appeared to be still at an impasse over its demands that the Lebanese Christian Phalan- gists issue a statement renouncing any ties with. Israel as a precondi­ tion to any political settlement to the six years of off-and-on fighting. Gromyko leaves Poland WARSAW, Poland - Soviet For­ eign Minister Andrei Gromyko flew home to Moscow Sunday after two days of talks that ended with a com­ munique apparently designed to al­ lay western fears about Soviet mili­ tary intervention in Poland. But as in the past, the Kremlin appeared to send out mixed signals on the Polish crisis. While the communique is­ sued simultaneously in Warsaw and Moscow said that speculation about Soviet intervention in Poland was exaggerated — western “ballyhoo” — reports from Moscow on Satur­ day spoke of a possible mobilization pf Russian troops near Poland’s S Rldw attack* busing ■ WASHINGTON - The American m |Bar Association and Sen. Lowell Hi Weicker R-Conn.. argue that an Ji I anti-busing rider the Senate will I confront Wednesday involves a far j| bigger issue than busing for integra- ll tiun of schools. The combination || proposal of Sens. Jesse Helms, R- Hi N.C., and J. Bennett Johnston, D- Ji La., is the most sweeping anti-bus- Hi ing rider of all time, It also is a V sample of what may follow. Helms 1 I would forbid the Justice Depart- 1 Iment to seek busing orders through 1 ¡the courts. Johnson not only would m ¡forbid federal courts to order long I ¡bus rides for students but would i ¡void all such busing orders now in 1 effect ¡Brady emerges I | WASHINGTON - Ninety-six days § S— and three life-saving operations H | - after he left the White House on a | ¡short trip to a Washington hotel for I ¡a speech by President Reagan, i ¡press secretary James Brady came I | back. The presidential spokesman I I ventured from George Washington B ¡University Hospital Saturday fori ¡ the first time since he was shot and I | critically wounded March 30 in the 1 I same attack that wounded Reagan I I and two others. The occasion fori ¡¡Bnidy’s limited emergence from I (the hospital was the Fourth of July. I lUcene* considered | I WASHINGTON - The Reagan ad- j (ministration is considering revoking I (a license granted in the final weeks I ¡¡of the Carter administration to Cat- I lerpillar Tractor for pipe-laying I ¡¡equipment for the projected 3,000-1 (mile Yamal pipeline from Siberia to j (western Europe. The National Sc 1 Hcurity Council, the Cabinet and the 1 I president himself are about to take 1 ( up the issue as part of the broader j review of new East-West trade | 1 guidelines that the adrainistrattoo 1 ( has promised to come « it with later | (this month. j ¡Ang* mourned I NEW YORK — About 200 Guardi-1 1 an Angels from six citsea will bold a I I funeral procession for a former An-1 |&ei who was shot to death last week I Ifrymg to atop the robbery of trot ¡¡¡Lumen, Angele preside* Gw*0 j « id SMtoay. kMooim K of Brooklyn, was A rt to d m * Blast wedt on a Brooklyn e r o * whml ■be stro flM with throe men w in ; FDA, EPA tests possibly false 1 1981 The Washington Star WASHINGTON — The safety test for hundreds of drugs, food additives and pesticides have been called into question following the recent indictment of officials at a major research laboratory for allegedly falsifying research results on some of those prod- ucts. The Environmental Protection Agency and the Food and Drug Adminsitration have been reviewing the safety of several hun­ dred products that were tested for their potential to cause can­ cer, birth defects and toxic effects by Industrial Biotest Labora­ tories, until recently the nation’s largest testing lab EPA has examined most of the laboratory’s tests on nearly 200 pesticides and »herbicides that are used on a wide variety of foods, said David Gettman, an official of the agency’s pesticide program. He said that three-quarters of the tests examined were found to have so many deficiencies that the agency now considers them unreliable. Gettman said EPA recently asked several of the manufacturers to conduct new studies, but he acknowledged that it will take several years to test all pesticides again and that the products will remain on the market in the meantime. At the Food and Drug Administration, spokesman Wayne Pines said the agency has finished reviewing several hundred drugs and food additives that were tested by Industrial Biotest Laboratories and has found no need to take any of the products off the market. In most cases there is ample backup data to support the safety of the products, he said. The reviews were prompted by an investigation that culminat­ ed in the recent indictment of Dr. Joseph Calandra, the former president of Industrial Biotest in Northrop, Illinois, and three of his former subordinates. Each of the defendants, including Calandra, has pleaded not guilty. The indictment, some critics say, underscores the govern­ ment’s vulnerability in relying primarily on industry data to demonstrate the safety of new products. From 1970 to 1977, the indictment says, Industrial Biotest allegedly falsified the results from four seperate animal tests. In testing TCC, an anti-bacterial agent used in many deo­ dorants, soaps, the indictment says the lab substituted rats that had not been treated with TCC for animals that actually died in the study. The lab also failed to report that TCC had an effect on the animals’ testes, the indictment says. In another test, on Naprosyn, a drug used to treat arthritis, the indictment charges that the lab did not perform required urine tests on the animals and fabricated the results. And in submit­ ting 18-month studies on two pesticides, Fencor and Nemacur, the indictment says the lab did the tests for only 14 months and fabricated the results for the remaining periods. Fencor is used on asparagus, barley, corn, peas, sugar, tomatoes and wheat, while Nemacur is used on peanuts, cotton, soybeans, brussel sprouts, cabbage and bananas. Despite these alleged problems with the safety tests, Gettman said the burden of truth is on EPA to remove a pesticide from the market. Begin coalition edges ahead • 1981 The New York Time* TEL AVIV, Israel — Prime Minister Menachem Begin s Likud bloc took a one-seat lead over the Labor Alignment Sunday as the tally of votes in the June 30 parliamentary election neared completion. Only a small number of ballots remained to be counted and mathematically they could not effect the outcome, according to a source in the Central Elections Committee. President Yitzhak Navon is now expected to call on Begin to try to form a new government. Likud and the religious parties, which formed the outgoing government coalition, secured a total of only 58 of the 120 seats in the new Parliament and would have to win additional support to secure a vote of confidence in a new government. The Likud lead was cemented this weekend when the ballots of members of the armed services were counted. The returns from the armed forces are secret but the defense forces radio station reported that Likud scored nine percentage points better among soldiers than in the civilian population while the Labor Alignment scored three percentage points worse. This raised the Likud lead in the overall tally of popular votes to 10,000. Official results are to be published Wednesday but a member of the Central Elections Committee said privately that the 120 seats were distributed as follows: Likud. 48; Labor Alignment, 47; National Religious Party, 6; Agudath Israel, 4; Communists, 4; Tehiya. 3; Tami, 3; Telem, 2; SHnui, 2; Civil Rights Move­ ment, 1. New elections may be necessary if Begin fails to get a majori­ ty for a new government. Labor’s hopes of winning the religious parties away from Begin and forming an alternative government appear slim and a national coalition including Likud and Labor, as advocated by the National Religious Party, is also considered unlikely. There are three potential candidates for Begin s enlarged coa­ lition: Tami, a group representing North African Jews, Tehiya, a party formed by defectors from the Likud led by Geula Cohen, who opposed the terms of the Camp David peace agreement; and Telem, a new party led by Moshe Dayan, who quit the outgoing government complaining about what he said was its failure to put into effect the provisions of the Camp David agreement that would give autonomy to the residents of Gaza and the West Bank. Barricades of cars and trucks line a street In Toxteth, a suburb between approximately 40 black youths hurling gasoline of Liverpool, Sunday following a late night-early morning battle bombs and stones and 200 police. Riots in England UPI Telephoto Impact of budget cuts lost In haste ® 1981 The New York Times WASHINGTON — It takes a long view of Washington to put the big Reagan victory on budget cuts into perspective. The way the presi­ dent’s men in the last days of June were log­ rolling for votes, pushing through hastily pre­ pared legislation and thriving on the confusion reminded the speaker of the House of a Demo­ cratic president he had known. “It was the old Lyndon Johnson style,” Thomas P. O’Neill Jr. said in a moment of reflection last week. The comparison, in fact, could be taken fur­ ther than O’Neill intended. Both presidents in their moments of triumph were not just drasti­ cally changing budgets and priorities, they were making deep and precipitous changes in the ba­ sic concept of government, without, many crit­ ics said, much investigation into the long range of effects. Johnson, supported by the extraordinarily lib­ eral Congress elected in his 1964 landslide, com­ pleted the unfinished work of the New Deal by engaging the federal government in social and policy areas where it had never trod before. Beginning with some aspects of civil rights and federal aid to secondary and elementary ed­ ucation, at first, the policy was to help those who could not help themselves and in only areas where a clear national interest was involved. But as legislation rolled through extending aid to a widening spectrum of the nation’s interest groups, some reflective liberals such as former Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield warned that new structures of government were being created too hastily to know what the eventual consequences would be. By that time, however, committing the feder­ al government to new areas had become rou­ tine. Subsequent Congresses not only authorized specific amounts for hundreds of programs, but underwrote entitlements such as workers com­ pensation, food stamps and black lung assist­ ance without any realistic estimates of costs. By the end of the 1970s, many liberals were agreeing with conservatives that in some re­ spects, the federal government had built a house of cards in which representative government had no place, because the public could seldom know which level to hold responsible for what. In slicing back federal programs as a way to re-invigorate the economy, Reagan at first went after what seemed easiest, specific, or “con­ trollable.” items in the budget such as vocation­ al rehabilitation or urban community develop­ ment funds. Little attention was given to the more diffi­ cult entitlement programs, such as Social Se­ curity, with its cost-of-living escalator or Medi­ caid, where medical assistance costs for the inflated. The president s poor were highly promise to return authority to the states by giv­ ing them more leeway in deciding how revenues would be spent was assigned a low priority. But Reagan has ended up effecting sweeping changes, as well as $38 billion in budget cuts, by wrapping almost everything into a take-it-or- leave-it package that slashes frontally into enti­ tlements and consolidates many other programs into a handful of block grants that would allow the states to set spending priorities. True, the president did not get all he wanted. The biggest education programs were not put under state control And out of fear of losing the entire House bill, the Republicans withdrew their proposal to set a 5 percent limit on Medic­ aid spending increases and to put a number of health programs under three block grants. That last-minute maneuver did not become generally known until two days after the last frantic day of debate, when the bill was printed in the Con- gressional Record. Because the Senate bill does give the presi­ dent most of what he wanted, it will be up to a House-Senate conference committee to recon­ cile the differences. Last week, O’Neill was planning some rearguard maneuvers in the hope of making some alterations before the bill be­ comes final. But the core of the legislation seems certain. It would cut about $32 billion from projected growth in the entitlement programs, thus abro­ gating guarantees of certain levels of assistance made over the years to citizens who meet cer­ tain eligibility standards. In the event of a re­ cession, for example, the person thrown out of work can no longer know that he would be enti­ tled to food stamps. The clear political question this raises can be answered only in future elections. It is. Do Americans really want to dispense with such guarantees, obtained from a succession of ad­ m in istration s of both parties over the vears. Morale sagging PEKING (UPI) — Army Chief of Staff Yang Dezhi Sun­ day appealed to China’s disgruntled armed forces to remain loyal to the new Communist Party’s “absolute” leadership. Gen Yang’s reminder to the 4 million soldiers and offi­ cers of the People's Liberation Army that “the party com­ mands the gun” appeared in an article published in the P e o ­ ple's Daily as new party Chairman Hu Yaobang was still settling into his job Segments of the military staunchly loyal to Mao were known to have reservations about the change, though diplo­ matic analysts believe they pose no immediate threat to the new leadership Yang, currently traveling in western Europe, said in his article that the armed forces have no choice but to back the party “The people’s army cannot survive for even one day if it departs from the absolute leadership of the Chinese Communist Party,’’ he said. , Yang is generally regarded as close to Vice Chairman Deng Xiaoping, the political strongman who brought the re­ cent changes in leadership. China s armed forces were cultivated by Mao as the ad­ vance guard of the revolution But in the years since Mao's death the military has suffered from sagging morale, de­ clining political influence and a tightening of purse strings. Wild horses in danger (UPI) PHILADELPHIA - Six thousand wild horses and burros that roam public lands will be killed as a Reagan administration cost-saving measure, a published report said Sunday. The new policy of Interior Secre­ tary James Watt, outlined in a re­ cent memo, requires 11,000 of the es­ timated 70,000 mustangs and burros running free to be herded by helicop­ ter and penned, the P hiladelphia Bulletin said in a copyright story The memo said about 5,000 of the penned animals will be put up for adoption through the Bureau of Land Management's l-year-oid “Adopt a- Horse” program The n e t ere to be destroyed between now and June SO, im the amropnper *wd Robert Burford, director uf the B reen of Lend Management and a wealthy Colorado rancher instituted the plan to save money, the newspa­ per reported Burford claims the federal gov­ ernment spent $4.4 million to subsi­ dize the adoption program last year, The Bulletin said. Under the new plan, the adoption fee has risen from $25 to $200 for a wild horse and $75 for a burro, which the newspaper said could discourage adoption. Burford said the fee increase was necessary to make the adoption pro­ gram pay for itself, e stipulation mandated by the House Committee an Interior and Insular Affairs and the Office of Management and Budg­ et. the newspaper said. Last year, 0,500 of the 10,000 mus» tangs and burros collected adopted Opuuora e*pre»ed m The Daily Texan u t tl>o*e of tl* editor or the writer rf tb* »rücle I“* * * necessarily tboae oí the University sdmimstrstioo the Board d Repeats or the Texas S uden oí Operating Trustees _____ m m Page 4 Editorials THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, July 6, 1981 The American hot dog myth w © T f t W H H □ By RUSSELL BAKER The Moral Majority and the Fourth of July remind me of hot dogs The Fourth of July reminds me of hot dogs because for years I have felt an obligation to eat hot dogs on this holiday I could blame this on the Chevrolet people For two or three years now they have been broadcasting a radio spiel suggesting that hot dogs, apple pie and Chevrolet represent the apex of patriot­ ism To be frank about it, hot dogs aren t really any good, but the problem goes beyond that. I have a terrible suspicion that hot dogs w eren't ever any good This is what makes me think of the Moral Majority The Moral Majority seems to be com­ posed of people under the impression that the modem age has destroyed something that was good in the past They are determined to restore those old excellences I am in agreement as regards apple pie, the Brooklyn Dodgers and lemonade, and might even join up if they could persuade Ronald Reagan to bring back these splendors It is the hot dog that is troubling — or the myth of the hot dog. to be more ex act Suppose, as I suspect, the hot dog really never was much good I remember the hot dog back in the macarom-and-cheese age when it seemed the dandiest thing you could sink your teeth in, but that may have been because almost any comestible would have produced yelps of delight af­ ter long engagement with macaroni- and-cheese The memory, however, suggests that there was a golden age of the hot dog and that it is now gone to dust The 1981 hot dog is certainly very in­ ferior eating, whether concocted of chicken remnants or more traditional stuff, whether cheap or fancy Varia­ tions in quality make no real difference In my opinion, the hot dog is inferior eating because the hot dog is a very in­ ferior idea, whose dullness has man­ aged to escape public attention under camouflage of pickles, onion and mus­ tard. Why this should be the quintessence of patriotic eating when such glories as the crab cake, fried sausage and liver pudding wrapped in pancake are avail­ able, I cannot guess Maybe we are suckers for salesm en’s myths Maybe simple gullibility ac­ counts for our faith in golden ages, which leads us to yearn for pasts that never existed There is a touch of this in the Moral M ajority’s passion for restor­ ing a golden age of sexual behavior when everyone was a virgin unto the m arriage bed, except for wretched sinners who paid for their derelictions in suffering and shame Did such an age ever really exist? Real lemonade and Mom s apple pie did I remember them distinctly On the other hand, the anecdotes told by men 30 and 40 years ago, if believed, strong­ ly suggested that virgins even then were almost as rare as the dodo bird This does not mean that the golden age of sexual behavior did not exist at some earlier time Not in the 1920s, of course They weren't called ‘‘Roaring for nothing Perhaps back in the 19th century, but Americans then had a dif­ ferent view of morality Half of them thought slavery was swell My guess is that the golden sexual past has a lot in common with the golden age of the hot dog © 1981 The New York Time* John McEnroe: it’s not how you play the game, but if you win it By MAXWELL GLEN and CODY SHEARER WASHINGTON Sportswriters on both sides of the Atlantic have again castigated tennis star John McEnroe for abusing officials as well as his racquet at the Wimbledon tennis championships “ John McEnroe made a fool of himself and insulted others ... " read a front-page story in the staid T tm e s o f London on the second day of the tournament. “ John McEnroe ... was back yesterday in his more familiar role: The Villain of Tennis, wrote the London Daily Mail. Even The N ew Y o rk T im es' soft-spoken Red Smith wrote that, at Wimbledon, “ ... a spoiled brat like McEnroe can demonstrate just how ugly an ugly American can get .... The responsibility of making an ass of himself devolves on McEn­ roe. He is equal to the assignment.’’ Is John McEnroe as detestable as sportswriters would have him? Is he all that different from millions of other promising young athletes in America? Twenty-two-year-old John McEnroe is every bit the all-American kid. He’s what we love and fear most about ourselves And he hasn’t changed much since we played infield with him on the grade-school baseball team. It's easy to remember the day our coach brought up the scrappy, 9-year-old Irish-Ameri- can to play with the older boys. He was tempestu­ ous and competitive even then. His hitting was lousy and the bat seemed big­ ger than he. But the southpaw could throw better than many of his older teammates. McEnroe went on to become the sidearm- throwing quarterback of the football team and a passionate basketball player. (No one then knew him for his tennis.) From what we recall, McEnroe always had a bad temper He was bumped from the football team after an argument with his coach — an in­ credibly unusual event for the private school we attended. Off the field, McEnroe cultivated an enduring reputation as a bright student. Most teachers re­ member him fondly: •John always thought he was something,” re­ called one teacher who also knew his family well. “ But he set very high ideals for himself There was intense family pressure to excel. John would get very frustrated if he couldn’t perform 100 per­ cent.” One classm ate remembered this incident when dads visited the school on F ather’s Day: “ We were sitting in a sixth-grade math class. John went up to the board to do a problem. But he miscalculated and got the wrong answer. His fa­ ther really let him have it. Then John started yelling back. You can imagine it was pretty tense.” Many who’ve known both McEnroe and his law­ yer father, John Sr., contend the apple hasn t fall­ en far from the tree. “ I always felt John was a brash, snotty-nose kid,” said one long-time neigh­ bor in Douglastown, N.Y. “ But his dad was a tough, hard-nosed guy as well.” It’s not that John Jr. isn’t responsible for his bratty behavior. But what other performance would you expect from a kid who’s grown up with parents screaming from the sidelines? Indeed, many of us shied away from athletic competition involving McEnroe-type characters because we weren’t always sure if our opponent or his parents were playing against us. But it’s all too common for parents on the jun­ ior tennis circuit to applaud when their kid’s op­ ponent makes a double fault. Consequently, many young American athletes grow up not knowing how to accept defeat be­ cause their parents can’t bear them lose. They learn early that games are meant to be won. Unfortunately, such attitudes give sports­ manship secondary importance. If you don’t be­ lieve us, just check out a little league game this summer. You’ll meet the McEnroes of the future. to see McEnroe says he wouldn’t throw his racquet or swear at officials if his game were better. That’s a lousy excuse; we all get upset when we double . fault. But what’s tragic about McEnroe’s behavior is that too many young Americans assume that the quest for perfection is an excuse for the profane. . “ Along with being a world-class athlete goes responsibility,” said Sterling P . Miller, one of his former coaches and teachers. John has to be above reproach. Kids are looking up to him as a role model ... but going to see him play can be like going to a car race expecting a crash ” Of course, everyone can’t be as mild-mannered on the court as Bjorn Borg. And we doubt that young American athletes will ever be anything but feisty. But before sports pundits call for McEnroe s banishment from the pro circuit, they should note that he’s a natural byproduct of this country’s emphasis on winning. © 1981 Field Enterprises Inc. That response is, if women are excluded from a draft, then they miss a chance to “ earn” their rights as citizens. This notion that a person should have to earn his or her rights by enslaving him/herself to the government for a period of time is one of the most evil doctrines to come down the pike in a long time. According to the natural rights theorists who influenced the founding fathers, a person owns his rights unconditionally. Whether they are granted by a “creator” or accrue to a person due to his basic nature as a human being, the source of human rights is the individual human, not the government. , „ Governments are created at least ideally to defend these natural rights, not to be a source of them. The danger of the idea put forth by Puffer and others becomes apparent when you realize that if the government has the power to grant rights, wondered if other faculty members saw in the movie what I did — a true, though overdramatized, portrayal of the perils of the academic calling. Here we have this college professor, dogged­ ly pursuing his research — in this case the finding of the Lost Ark - risking himself repeatedly, overcoming incredible natu­ ral and human barriers, outdistanced at every turn by ruthless competitors, his sacrifices appreciated only by a few close friends and colleagues. And when he succeeds, his attainment is boxed up by bureaucrats and filed away in some archive, its final entombment no less obscure than its original. I saw but two faults: the classroom full of alert and doting faces, and the girl with “ Love you” painted on her eyelids. My student evaluations never came out this good. And we are led to believe in the end our hero was appropriately rewarded for his efforts. Well, we all know about the faculty salary situation. Firing Line On open minds This is addressed to Mr. No More Tears For Iran (Firing Line, July 3). Your ignorance and lack of compassion are amazing but depressingly typical of this society. Why don’t you open your mind and allow yourself to experience the world outside your own personal sphere of existence? Talk to those people you profess to detest so adamantly. Ask them what is going on and how they feel - even about the “hostage crisis ” You may be surprised If you have the guts, use the mind and listening ability you were bom with and allow yourself to objec­ tively form your own ideas through examination and reflection, instead of letting societal biases - however reasonable - determine how you think, live and react. And when you find something wrong socially, politically or economically on the hum an level, dare to speak out against it, regardless of those social biases L A deGraffenned Austin Goosestepping capitalism So, Hank Phillips thinks Hitler was a socialist As a socialist — and not a thin-skinned one, I might add — I find that state­ ment to be OBSCENE! It would appear that Mr. Phillips not only doesn’t know how to define socialism, but is equally in the dark about fascism. Phillips’ assertion is not only disturbing, it’s downright dangerous. Perhaps I can elucidate. Fascism is the other extrem e within capitalism Its polar opposite is libertarianism, whose more glaring contradictions were adequately critiqued by the Socialist Party s Steve Ros- signol in his response to Lisa Beyer’s editorial. I will not fur­ ther burden the reader with more discourse of that subject, but I would like to say a few things about fascism. Basically, fascism (and any decent dictionary will partially back this up) is the last-ditch attem pt on the part of the capital­ ist ruling class to save itself from total economic collapse and socialist revolution by the workers. At this extrem e stage of the game, the capitalist elite can no longer afford the luxury of such bourgeois institutions as parliam entary democracy and free speech More importantly, the capitalists must completely disarm the workers by smashing their political parties and trade unions In order to accomplish this repression, the ruling class (in Germany this was represented in the I.G. Farben and Krupp combines) must enlist the assistance of the fascist gangs, led by people like Hitler and Mussolini, who can act as a mailed fist against the workers and their organizations. So, Mr Phillips, Hitler was not a socialist but was in reality the best friend of German monopoly capitalism Mike Rose Young Socialist Alliance then it naturally follows that the government has the legitimate power to revoke them whenever expedient. The only duty or obligation involved in the citizen-govem- ment relationship is the g o v e r n m e n t’s duty to defend individ­ ual rights Individuals have no obligation other than to respect the rights of other citizens Yes. the Supreme Court ruling is a blow for women s liber­ ation. but not because they have been denied equal slavery. The problem is that as long as the government assumes it has a right to inflict involuntary servitude on anyone, the rights of everyone, including women, are jeopardized. Scott Bxeser Austin Fellow Indiana Joneses, back to work! My writing, and yom reading, of this letter is yet another obstacle to be overcome on the road to obscurity. At least George Lucas understands. J R. Cogdell Associate professor, electrical engineering Kelleher case represents victory Kathleen Kelleher, as a student of government and of politi­ cal theory, must surely have been exposed to the writings of H.L. Mencken, and she may recognize the following quote from his “ Prejudices” : “ The danger is that the hopeless voter, forever victimized by his false assumptions about politicians, may in the end gather such ferocious indignation that he will abolish them teetotally and at one insane swoop, and so cause government by the peo­ ple, for the people and with the people to perish from this earth All of those unfamiliar with the work will, I hope, seek her . Chills and drafts As bad as the recent Supreme Court decision supporting the male-only draft is. I find the reaction of some liberals — in­ cluding Texan editor Don Puffer — downright chilling The perils of academia - Last night I took the kids to see “Raiders of the Lost Ark “ Ark W ars.” as 1 dubbed it. Excellent entertainment, not a dull moment from the beginning to end, but as I drove them home I DOONESBURY MR SPEA& ., p ip THF QUFSTDN OF MR RFASAtfS S&tSfTJY/Ty TOMAROS THE POOR COME UPPURJNSW . meetnb turm him* / by Garry Trudeau DOONESBURY VfrHFOr$CUSSFPrr*£F- LY m it VF STROUFV THROUGH h t *825000OF HÉM ñJNSHMGS PMP POR . DONATIONS FROM HIS MRUONAfE HUBCS TAX-OEPVCWU f tetM$0NH6HAY0UT ire POOR BUT t€P*CM KV & P V H K FURTHER ABOUT H&s&&TTvm PRoeuM AS SOON AS HE 60T BACK k / HE HAP TV T A tfA M E R j * S It *125,000 TRIP HOME 70 CHOP . A/OOP || / “ * / I MSN YOU COUP HAVB BE9¡ THERE, . HONEY! IY E MEYER I SEEN MOM LOOK ARETTERf SHE 1 JUST 6ÍÚU/EP1 m u .. mjhatp i ib#*, rrs so n s TD8EA YOU SET 60CPMAROA& THEM FOR RJOCSCOMEA AMEPPN& LONS ¡MAT p r e s e t — ;> A * 1 ^ 3 f u 2J& rrs JUST ON, JUST AU3JPER PRETTY MAS- ¡m a TTHEY N A TIVE U N 7 N EEO EP' aid in finding it and read it carefully, with an open mind ami with a generous dose of introspection. For while the essay will salve none of the wounds in the Kelleher case, it may help to make obvious that the only decision University President Peter Flawn could have made that would have any chance of ever procuring academic freedom at this university was, in fact, that which he handed down. And it will hopefully show as well that it was only through deliberate, and perhaps even painful reserve that Flawn avoided dissolving the independence of the various departments and colleges of this university and averted the destruction of free speech. * Now I realize liberals approach with a great deal of indigna­ tion the idea of voluntary restraint, especially in the areas of birth control, federal spending and governmental power. But when they view the implications of Flawn’s decision, even the liberals will have to concede a small bit of gratitude to him for not thoughtlessly extending his administrative power in the Kelleher affair. Any more definitive action on any side of the issue would have assured that academic freedom would perish from this university. To see this, consider the outward meaning — the lowest level of interpretation — of Flawn’s statem ent about Cnudde’s ac­ tion. As stated in the T e x a n , it neither condemns or condones the action; it merely affirms that it was within the power of the department head to have taken that action. Obviously, h$d Flawn outwardly supported what happened to Kelleher, a p re ­ cedent would have been set for the suppression of all ideas * - discordant with those of the administration. But let us not be too hasty in deciding that the president’s abstention from censuring Cnudde or from reversing any U Cnudde’s decisions is equivalent to supporting those acts. For had Flawn attempted any sort of redress for what he felt was an injustice done to Kathleen Kelleher, he would have com­ pletely undermined the authority of the departm ent head, not just of the government department but of every academic de­ partment. Department heads would have been made puppets to the will of the Faculty Senate and the president, and subservi­ ence of the departments to the whims of the president is a far greater blow to academic freedom than is suppression of ideas by one department head. It is for this reason that I consider the final decision in the Kelleher case to be a victory for academic freedom, although perhaps a remote victory, and one evident only to those who can look ahead and beyond their own prejudices and selfish desires It is a victory because it exposes the nature of the administrative institution. And as Mencken prefaced the re­ mark quoted earlier, “ If the truth were only easier to ascer­ tain, the remedy for them would consist simply of ascertaining it and accepting it.” Charles Fehrenbach Austin by Garry Trudeau Economic solutions presented UT graduate discusses Chamber of Commerce By C.D. LUNAN Daily Texan Staff Despite the industrial recruitment successes of Austin’s Chamber of Commerce, pockets of unemployment in E ast Aus­ tin underline the growing need for cooperation between the public and private sectors in the area of ecomonic develop­ ment, a University graduate told the City Council Thursday. Robert Harvey Allen, who received his M.A. in May from the Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs, presented rec­ ommendations on industrial recruitment to the council at its weekly meeting Thursday. Throughout his presentation, Allen referred to a “ profession­ al report” he prepared to fulfill part of the réquirements for the school’s master of public affairs degree. The paper discusses how increased cooperation between the public and private sectors could result in better coordination between the chamber’s industrial recruitment and the city’s job training programs, and contribute toward a higher employ­ ment rate in the economically depressed regions of the city. According to the figures collected by Allen, unemployment in the city ranged between 2.3 and 4.8 percent in the last decade, a full 5 percent below the present national rate. Despite the 25,000 jobs which the chamber has brought to Austin since 1966, structural unemployment creates “ pockets of poverty” throughout the black and Hispanic communities of East Austin, Allen said. Allen defines structural unemployment as “ unemployment caused primarily by a mismatch of skills possessed by the unemployed and those demanded in the labor market or by barriers to employment, such as discrimination.’ Although “ the Chamber of Commerce has done a fantastic job” in recruiting industry to Austin, Allen said it has also become very reluctant to forego the autonomy which it has enjoyed in the recruitment process and coordinate its opera­ tions with the priorities of the council and city staff. “ Because they have not seen results, the chamber does not have much confidence in the public sector,’ he said. “ Industrial development has never been viewed as a proper function of local government” in Austin, but the controversy recently generated over Motorola’s decision to locate a 150- acre, semi-conductor plant in the environmentally sensitive Edwards Aquifer demonstrates the need for a formal govern­ ment structure, he said. The report reads, “ In a general sense, the public and private sectors have not cooperated well, industrial development and employment training policies are not particularly focused or coordinated, and often participating groups’ access to policy decision making is limited by fragmentation.” Allen said the chamber is skeptical of public sector efforts to train the jobless for work in the private sector. The chamber believes many of Austin’s publicly funded or­ ganizations — such as the minority ecomomic development corporations and projects funded by the Comprehensive Em ­ ployment and Training Act — have failed, Allen said. CETA authorizes the use of federal funds for the training of the low-income and minority unemployed for private sector jobs but has been accused of training applicants for jobs which rarely exist outside its own programs. Because the chamber also fears city involvement in its re­ cruiting efforts would jeopardize the confidentiality required in negotiations with companies interested in locating in Austin, Allen said cooperation between the two has been limited. Thursday, Allen told the council how an economic develop­ ment department might promote cooperation by replacing the city’s present piecemeal, patchwork approach to the “ complex task” of aligning occupational training with the demand for jobs in the private sector. He said the success of the new department, which could be administered under the existing assistant city manager’s Off­ ice for Community and Intergovernmental Services, would hinge on the performance of the industrial development coordi­ nator. “ The primary responsibility for attracting industry to Austin should remain with the Chamber of Commerce,” Allen’s report states. But “ the coordinator would become the central source of contact between the city and all groups involved in industrial development or employment training outside of city hall.” Court finds state law unconstitutional By ED ALLEN Daily Texan Staff Police arrests of persons not commit­ ting a crime could be overturned if a recent district court case is indicative of future cases, Austin legal authorities said Thursday. The U.S. District Court for the South­ ern District of Texas ruled June 25 that a Lufkin attorney, Gilbert M. Spring, had his constitutional rights infringed upon when his arrest on Nov. 13, 1975, resulted in a municipal court conviction based on a state law requiring that a person must identify himself to police. The Lufkin attorney was on his way to his car after work when he was ar­ rested following what police claimed was a conversation with a prostitute and, upon a police officer’s request, Spring refused to identify himself. Spring later appealed to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals which af­ firmed the ruling of a county court up- holding the state law’s constitutionali­ ty- U.S. District Judge Woodrow Seals ruled that Spring’s conviction was un­ constitutional. Maj. Mike Belvin, administrator in the Support Service Bureau of the Aus­ tin Police Department, said the depart­ ment is working on the implications of the June ruling. The ruling that Statute 38.02 of the Texas Penal Code is unconstitutional will not be a problem because, if it is necessary, training officers will be in­ structed to tell trainees it is now illegal to arrest someone for not providing identification, unless suspected of a crime, Belvin said. Belvin said police officers seldom use thatTection of the penal code to arrest an individual who does not provide iden­ tification, unless he is committing a crime. Belvin said police can legally ar­ rest a person for giving false identifica­ tion to a police officer. The court further stated: “ The Texas law under which petitioner (Springs) was arrested and convicted, makes a substantive crime out of conduct pro­ tected by the Constitution and also cir­ cumvents the probable cause stan­ dard.” Bradey Coleman, Austin attorney, said to arrest someone simply because he does not identify himself is “ silly and unconstitutional.” _ Best said that if the police chief finds that a new court ruling is interfering with police policy, as dictated through the penal code, then he will change po­ lice procedure on requesting identifica­ tion from individuals. Lt. Biíl Best, the UT Police Depart­ ment’s public information officer, said although UT police are authorized to ar­ rest only by what is written in the penal code, and are authorized to detain per­ sons who fail to identify themselves, “ We are more sensitive to University students in general. For better grades, spend less time studying. Well show you how...free. W Would you like to: □ Raise your grade average without long hours over texts. □ End all-night cramming sessions. □ Breeze through all your studying in as little as 1/3 the time. □ Have more free time to enjoy yourself. □ Read 3 to 10 times faster, with better con­ centration, understanding, and recall. 1___ 117__J 1 mill ir» nannlp Evelyn Wood works — over 1 million people, including students, executives, senators, and even presidents have proven it. A free 1 hour demon­ stration will show you how to save hundreds of hours of drudgery this year (as well as how to increase your speed immediately with some simple new reading techniques). It only takes an hour, and it’s free. Don’t miss it. SCHEDULE OF FREE SPEED READING -LESSONS You’ll increase your reading speed up to 1QQ% on the spot?_______ TODAY 7 :3 0 p.m . Reading Dynamics Cambridge Tower M.LK. Blvd. at Lavaca (across from Ü.T. campus) FINAL SUMMER CLASS EVBjm WOOD READING DYNAMCS c EVELYN WOCX) TC A O tN G D Y N A M ICS A L * S C O M P Q Monday. July 6, 1981 □ THE D AILY TEXAN □ Page 5 BUY. SELL. TRADE OA A ENT THROUGH THE I C L A S S I F I E D » A D S .C A L L T H E HOT L I N E 471-5244 W&W-. "'111 < mmm- sale Starts Monday, My 6th! ou r these in m cnswear value, n: Price alone never d eterm in ed the value o f any produ ct. It takes quality at an acceptable price. R-P offers this kin d o f value to their custom ers year roun d Now , SEMI-ANNUAL d u rin g S A L E , we offer regular values at 10 % to Vl off - an ________________ even better value! Read carefully the follow ing dcfiniU- o n s o f value d u rin g R-P’s Sem i-A n n u al Sale But hurry! For best selection, you need to com e in early. activewear, n. pi: C asu al clothes d esigned for energetic action. 1 SW IM W E A R T O PS, orig. to 39 SO, TRUNKS, orig. to 23.00; N O W Vz O F F 2. W A R M -U P SUITS in terry cloth, orig 7 0 0 0 , N O W Vz O F F (lim it­ ed q uan tities.) dress shirts, n pi: a m an's white or colored shirt especially for wear with dress suit 1 Long-slcevc 100% cotton an d D acron '/c o tto n shirts in straight and bu tton -dow n collars in W hites, colors and fancies O rig 23.00-40.00, N O W 2 0 % to Vz O F F 2. Special grou p short-sleeve dress shirts in Broadcloth , E n d -on -E n d and O x fo rd C lo th . W hites, assorted colors and s t r i p e s Straight and bu tton -d ow n collars O rig. 2 3.00-25 00, N O W 18.85. giftS, n pi: S o m e th in g given-, varied assortm en t ot sunglasses, n ovelties, sm all leather go o d s an d jewelry, or.g up to 40.00, N O W Vz O F F . hats, n pi: A co v e rin g for a m an ’s head with sh ap ed crow n and brim 1. E ntire stock o f casual su m ­ mer hats and straw sum m er hats are reduced in price u p to 2 5 % . pi: Mens hosiery, n stockings. O rion Crew S ock , 6 for 10.85. N ylon Mid- C alf, 6 for 12.85 N ylon Q vcr-the-U alf, 6 for 13.85. All socks com e in Black, Brow n and N avy only knit shirts, n pi: k m tred sp orts shirts with short sleeves, 100% co tto n , 100% p olyester an d cotton 18 00-45.00 blends. Solids, stripes and N O W 2 5 % to Vz O F F . neckties, n pi: A narrow length o f m atena! worn abou t the neck an d tied in fron t Classic .md fashion all-silk ties in assorted stripes, solids and p at­ terns O rig 11.00-35 00, N O W Vi to Vz O F F . A lso, special g ro u p o f all-silk ties fo r 8.99. outlook dept, sport coats, n pi: clas­ sic, you n g m en ’s sp rin g coars for casual wear O u r regular fam ous-m aker C o r b in and Í Outlook in pop lin , silk and silk blen ds O r ig , 135.00-185 00 N O W 2 0 % to Vi O F F . outlook dept, suits, n pi: A n outer garm ent with or w ithout vest C u rre n t, sprm g-w ctght suits o f D a c ro n ‘ /w ool b len d s Featuring our quality C o rb in and O u tlook labels O r ig , 1*5 00-255.00 N O W 1 5% to Vi O F F . fancies, orig labels pajam as, n pi: a loose, usually two-piece light suit design ed for sleep in g or lou n gin g L ong-slcevcs and long legs in D acron ‘ /co tto n fancies O rig 2i 50, N O W Vi O F F . of quality shoes, n pi: A n outer coverin g for a m an ’s fo o t made leather. 1. S pecial g ro u p of Haig and Kent shoes (Black 6 m Brown Brogue W ing T ip and Plain Toe D ress Shoes). N O W 49.90. 2 A -*• lc-cr g ro u p of Joh n sto n 6* M urphy sh o e s- orig 120.00, N O W 79.90. 3 Entire Mock o f Freem an shoes, orig /OtX1 4* 71.00, N O W 49.90. sp rin g co lo rs and fabric s stock o f fam ous m akers. 1 sport coats, n pi: Sport coats and d u o s in lor men From our curren t regular I ouis R oth, o r ig 3 35 00-525.00, N O W 1 0% to 4 0 % O F F . 2 D onald B rooks, or.g 215.00-235.00. N O W 2 0 % to Vi O F F . 3 R enw ood, orig 140.00-210.00, N O W 2 0 % to Vi O F F . ( haps, o n g 175 00-255 00, N O W 2 0 % to Vi O F F . 4 5 H F re e m a n ,o rig . 335 00, N O W 1 0 % O F F . 6 H aipcl, orig 10000-115 00, N O W 2 0 % to Vi O F F . sport shirts, n pi: Soft s h im for « ¡.« w U .- a r with o p e n neck 1 S h o ft-S lce v c 100% cotton and cotton blend sport shirts with singlc-nccdlc tailoring in a s s o r t ed colors, dots a n d plaids O rig 25.00- 32 50, N O W 2 5% to Vz O F F . 2 L o n g sleeve 100% cotton and cotton blend sport sh irts with sin g le n ee d le tailoring O rig 27 50-45 00. N O W 2 5 % to Vz O F F . suits, n pi: Q uality two and three-piece garm ents made o f spring weight tropical wool, p o ly /co fto n and wool blend fabrics in assorted colors and patterns The follow ing f a m o u s - m aker suits from ou r regular stock arc reduced 10% - U O FF I 1 cu ts R oth orig 465 00 5500 0 l0% -4O % O F F . 2 H ollywood, orig 2 OCX N O W 15% O F F . 3 D on ald Brooks, orig 375 00 N O W to V) O F F . 4 Renw ood 215 00 38 5 00, N O W 15% orig 245 00-285 00. N O W 1 0 % to 15% O F F . 5 ( haps ,r.g 225 O0-33O0O, N O W 15% to Vi O F F . 6 H Dec m an, orig t o « / » O F F . 315.00-375.00. N O W 15% 7 Hasps ! or.g 125.00-15500, N O W 2 0 % to Vi OFF. trOUSCn», n pi: A n outer garm ent exten d in g from the waist to the .inkle 1 Dress trousers m ade of p o ly linen, wool and D acron ‘ /w ool tropicals w ,th Ibelt loops or rah O r.g to 150.00. N O W 2 0 % to Vi O F F . 2 S p o rt trousers in D a c r o n ‘ /cotton khakis and denim , or.g to 27 50, N O W 2 5 % to Vz O F F . In addition, eve »IK r -jv -ia l gi uping- I drcs and vU'ual k i t s , tcnkrr.eN rok-s. -Inert- and underw ear in carlv k*r k - t at reduced p rn c - Be -ure to conn -election at R e v melds-Pen land TE R M S O f SA L E C ASH . VISA M A ST ER C A R D A N D R I ’ C H . ^ a Í m T K M ^ I T I * OFF S O M IN A I Í S B S P k S M Í L S f t S S I l A R E I IM ITEl> S O T A M M Y . « — ^ ™ ' a v a i l a b l e a t A LL S T O R T S Page 6 Sports THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, July 6, 1981 Wimbledon not over McEnroe’s outbursts could result in fines (U PI) WIMBLEDON, England - Volatile New Yorker John McEnroe, whose explosive tongue took him within an ace of being thrown out of the tour­ nament, let his tennis do the talking Saturday and celebrated American In­ dependence Day by liberating the Wim­ bledon m en’s singles crown from Bjorn Borg's five-year stranglehold The U S Open champion did it in style, outgunnmg the ice-cool Swede, 4- 6, 7-6, 7-6, 6-4, in a reversal of last year’s final, to end Borg’s record run of 41 Wimbledon victim s and foil his bid to match Willie Renshaw ’s 95-year record of six consecutive titles But while M cE nroe’s eloquent strokes took him to the title, the 22- year-old southpaw flew home on Sunday facing the prospect of losing nearly a third of his $52,200 Wimbledon winnings on fines, and with the th reat of a 21-day suspension from the Men’s Internation­ al Professional Tennis Council hanging over him Within one hour of his Wimbledon tr i­ umph, McEnroe was told by the cham ­ pionship com m ittee it had m ade a re c ­ ommendation calling on the MIPTC to fine the angry outbursts during Thurs­ day’s semifinal against Australian Rod Frawley The Wimbleon code of conduct report that after previous warnings, said McEnroe had been guilty of “ consistent querying of line decisions, bad language and verbal abuse of the referee, um pire and linesmen ” This was in addition to the com m it­ tee’s own fine of $2,250 for previous of­ fenses during the 12-day tournam ent and an earlier recom m endation to the MIPTC to levy a $2,500 fine for “ag gra­ vated behavior.” McEnroe, who won $43,200 for his sin­ gles victory and a half share of $18,000 for team ing with P e te r Fleming in the m en's doubles championship, intends to appeal against the recom m endations, which will be decided on during the M IlT C ’s next m eeting in New York in September during the U.S. Open Cham ­ pionships If the proposed fines are upheld by the council, M cEnroe will have lost a total of $14,750 from his Wimbledon jackpot and will be autom atically sus­ pended from m ajor three weeks. tournam ents for tem per Despite his prevous tan ­ trum s, McEnroe was on his best behav­ ior throughout S aturday’s pulsating three-hour-and-26-minute final, where some of the 14,000 capacity Center Court crowd had paid $1,200 to ticket scalpers for $22 seats The key to Borg’s first Wimbledon loss to defeat since his quarterfinal American Arthur Ashe in 1975 was M cEnroe’s superior service. Although M cEnroe served 10 double faults to the Swede’s four, the A m erican got in 62 percent of his first serves, while Borg managed only 53 This proved crucial in the two tie- breaking gam es, w here M cEnroe’s ex­ press deliveries tipped the scales deci­ sively in his favor, helping him to win them 7-1 and 7-4 Even when Borg led 4-1 on the back of a service break in the third set, M cEn­ roe fought back to draw even at 4-4 and then save four set points The Swede, who cam e back from los­ ing the first two sets against Jim m y Connors in the sem ifinal, found McEn­ roe a tougher nut to crack and his long reign ended in the 10th gam e of the fourth set when M cEnroe punched home a forehand winner “ When I got ahead, I was tougher than last year I let him off the hook last tim e,” McEnroe said. ‘‘I kept say­ ing to myself in the end, ‘Close the door on him, don’t the m atch ’ I wanted to show that Borg is not the only guy who can com e back and win let him back in “ On the first m atch point my legs were shaking so much I could hardly reach the b all,” M cEnroe said of the final moments of the m atch “ When I reached it again, I told myself, This tim e I must play the point my w ay.’ I was definitely a little nervous on that volley. Once I saw that he w asn’t there and it was going to go in, I knew it was over.” Referring to Borg’s 41-match winning streak, the newly crowned champion com m ented: ‘i ’m glad I was the one that broke it. He is one of the g reatest players the world has ever seen.” M cEnroe acknowledged his serving had been a decisive factor “ It was eas­ ily the best I served in the tournam ent. I picked the right m atch to serve well I was determ ined to stay in front ” Borg also thought M cEnroe’s serving m ade the difference “It was im portant for m e to win the third set when I had three set points But John got the im portant points when he needed them by hitting in his first serves The difference was in the tie­ breakers He hit his first serve in and he woujd get m ore confident,” Borg said “ I thought I was not serving so well today. John’s gam e depends on first services. It was a good final, but I think the quality was b etter last y e a r.” Borg was m ore than a little philo­ sophical about the end of his five-year winning streak "T here is no way you can continue to win all the tim e But if I had won one of those break points in the third set I would have been two sets to one. John’s serving gave him g reater confidence. Borg said although he had wanted to keep his Wimbledon crown, his m ajor target this year was to capture the U.S. Open, the only m ajor title to have elud­ ed him "My big goal was to win the U.S. Open That was my m ain am bition this year ” M cEnroe’s victory in the singles and the m en's doubles highlighted a sweep of four titles for the A m ericans at these championships in which holders of four titles lost finals Chris E vert Lloyd, champion in 1974 and 1976 and runner-up for the past three years, outclassed a nervous Hana Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia to cap­ ture the wom en’s singles title in the ab­ sence of A ustralia’s 1980 champion Evonne Goclagong Cawley. in M cEnroe and Flem ing then grabbed the second title for the United S tates by defeating defending cham pions P eter M cNam ara and Paul M cNamee of Aus­ tralia the m en’s doubles. After M cEnroe’s victory in the m en ’s singles, M artina N avratilova and P am Shriver combined to take the w om en’s doubles crown away from Kathy Jordan and Anne Smith, but the U.S. failed in its bid for the first clean sweep since 1939 in the last event of the tournam ent, the mixed doubles, w here the brother-and- sister team of John and T racy Austin lost their title to Frew McMillan of South Africa and Holland’s Betty Stove. John McEnroe clutches his Wimbledon singles trophy after dethroning Bjorn Borg. Remember When?______ AMERICAN LEAGUE By United Pre*» International Eaat NATIONAL LEAGUE By United Preee International New York Baltimore Milw rtukee Detroit Boston Cleveland Toronto O a k la n d Texas Chicago California Kansas City Seattle M m nt-s, M W L Ret. 607 34 22 574 31 23 554 .11 25 544 31 26 536 30 26 26 24 520 276 42 16 West 37 23 33 22 31 22 31 29 20 30 16 21 17 39 617 600 58.5 517 400 368 304 OB 2 3 3Vt 4 5 19 r * 21» 6 12 14 } 18 Philadelphia St lours Montreal Pittsburgh New York Chicago W L 34 21 30 20 30 25 25 23 17 34 ts 37 Pet 618 600 545 521 333 288 0 8 11» 4 51» 15 17W Los A n g o lés Cincinnati Houston Atlanta San 1 lancinen San Diego Weet 36 21 35 21 28 29 25 29 27 32 23 33 832 825 491 463 458 411 1» 6 91» 10 121» Outlook dim for rest of baseball season NEW YORK (U PI) - With the 24-day base­ ball strike gaining m om entum like a runaw ay steam roller, spokesmen for owners and play­ ers said Sunday they doubted the All-Star gam e could be saved for July 14 and w arned the strike jeopardized the balance of the sea­ son. “ I really wish I could be optim istic, but we re on two different plan ets,” said Rusty Staub, player rep resentative of the New York Mets. ‘‘If it doesn't end soon, there won’t be an All-Star gam e,” added New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner N egotiations to end the dispute broke off on the Fourth of July when the players rejected w hat the owners called a ‘‘m ajor m ove” on issue. F ederal m ediator the com pensation Kenneth M offett said the sides had “philosoph­ ical differences” and he planned no new b ar­ gaining sessions until he saw som e hope. Steinbrenner, interview ed on CBS’ ‘‘F ace The N ation,” said he thought the strike m ight be settled if few er persons w ere handling the negotiations. But the outspoken ow ner has criticized the pace of the talks but said he still supports the efforts of Ray G rebey, the own­ e r s ’ m ain negotiator. ‘You’ve got too m any people in th ere (the negotiating room ) who don’t know w hat they’re doing,” said Steinbrenner, referrin g to the players who have particip ated in the talks. ‘‘As I read it, th e re ’s a g rea t deal of anim osity and hate, I ’m afraid, being built up in th e re .” Staub, also on F ace The Nation, defended the p la y ers’ right to negotiate for them selves, saying they would be m ost affected by the com pensation issue. Asked by w hat date the season m ight be in danger of cancellation, Staub said: ‘‘We’re gaining on it right now.” the deadline Steinbrenner said the resum ption of the season “m ay com e som e­ tim e in S eptem ber.” The strike already has wiped out 304 gam es, and the ow ners’ $50 m il­ lion in strike insurance does not run out until the first week in August. for The issue that has forced the strike contin­ ues to be the type of com pensation given to a team losing a quality fre e agent. The owners w ant the com pensation to com e directly from the m ajor league ro ster of the team signing the free agent (the signing te a m ’s 16th best player), while the players say that would penalize a team for dealing in the free agent m arket. The players have proposed a plan in which every team drafting free agents would be re­ quired to place four players (after 36 have been protected) into a com pensation pool. But the owners contend th at this pool concept un­ fairly would hurt the team th at drafts a free agent but is unable to sign him. The next move in the im passe m ay com e Monday when the N ational Labor Relations Board conducts a hearing into the p lay ers’ charge that the ow ners have bargained in bad faith by refusing to open their books to the players. The P layers Association executive board, which consists of the 26 player representatives and executive director M arvin Miller, will convene Tuesday to discuss the negotiations. Western Open won by Texan Football win soggy, but sweet By ROY HESS Daily Texan Staff It took half the season to do it, but the Austin Texans and the adjective w tnless no longer deserve to be mentioned in the sam e breath On a soggy football field in D allas Saturday night, the Texans captured their first American Football Association victory of the season by defeating the Texas W ranglers 20-7. The Texans defense, which had been bolstered by the recent addition of linemen L.C Cole and Will W ithers and linebacker John Hopson, held the W ranglers scoreless until late in the contest and set up Austin's first two scores by intercepting a pair of Wrangler quarterback Welby Ina’s passes. Even with the victory, the Texans, 1-5, are still at the bottom of the AFA W estern Division standings The W ranglers a re just one notch away at 2-4 The San Antonio Charros, a team that has beaten the Texans twice, leads the division with a 4-2 record After a scoreless first quarter, the Texans went out in front 6-0 at the 2 39 m ark of the second period when quarterback Mike Washington ran two yards for a touchdown Washington’s score cam e two plays after Texans com erback Lonnie Davis picked off an Ina pass at his own goal line and sprinted 98 yards down the sideline before he was tackled from behind at the W ranglers two The extra point attem p t by Billy Schott w as blocked and the Texans went to the locker room a t halftim e nursing a 6-0 lead. Although the Texans w ere ham pered by poor field position in the first half — they sta rted three of their offensive possessions from their own one, seven and eight yard lines — the defense m anaged to hold the W ranglers in check while the offense capi­ talized on a key turnover. In the third qu arter, Ina was intercepted again and Austin drove 34 yards for its second touchdown which cam e on another two-yard run by Washington Washington connected w ith wide receiver B ruce Dickey on a pass play for the two point conversion which helped the Texans extend their lead to 14-0 Austin put together a 13-play, 76-yard touchdown drive in the fourth period that culm inated with fullback Ken Sessions’ one- yard plunge with 9:49 rem aining in the gam e. The Texans w ere stopped short of the goal line on a rush for the two-point con­ version, leaving the score 20-0. The W ranglers got on the scoreboard a t the 6:20 m ark of the period when fullback Jim Goodwin plunged over the goal line from one yard out Art Stringer added the e x tra point. Sessions was the leading rusher in the gam e with 83 yards on 20 ca rrie s Washington com pleted eight of 22 passes for 108 yards and was intercepted once Texans* wide receiver Way- land Gay had three receptions for 42 yards Texans able to dominate on wet turf By ROGER CAMPBELL P erhaps it was their ability to adjust rain -soaked SuperTurf of to M esquite M em orial Stadium the Or, m aybe it was because they had caught the the Texas W ranglers of A m erican Football Association at a tim e when they w ere both slumping and trying to shake off the effects of the re­ cent firing of head coach W alter John­ son and his assistan t P ercy Howard W hatever the reason, Austin Texans quarterback Mike W ashington pin­ pointed his own reason tor his team s 20-7 upset win over the Dallas-based team Saturday night “ It was definitely a total defensive e ffo rt.” Washington said, referrin g to his team s once-m aligned defense "Ini- titially, we couldn’t put points on the board, but at the sam e tim e our defense was able to hold them They tried to stop m e from rolling out, and 1 couldn't run anyway because of a three-week-old m uscle pull plus the field was real w et." he added We had excellent running from (Ken) Sessions and (Kim) W atts ” W ashington's perform ance was none too shabby either The form er Texas Lutheran All-America, who passed for 108 yards and directed the Texans to 244 yards total offense, ran for two touch­ downs that cam e following two inter­ ceptions by the Texans' defense Playing as if they w ere not the sam e m istake-prone team that had lost its first five AFA gam es, both the T exans’ offense and defense dom inated the W ranglers, who dropped to 2-4 afte r winning their first two gam es of the season The Austin defense yielded only 153 yards tm ost of that cam e in the last period), while the offense displayed poise that has been u n characteristic of the Texans up to this point in the season by turning the ball over only tw ice Sessions, who led all rushers with 83 yards on 20 carries, scored his te a m ’s final touchdown on a one-yard run in the final period to cap an im pressive upset victory — one the previously unsuccess­ ful Texans sorelv needed OAK BROOK, 111.(UPI) - E d Fiori said he has adopted a “ lig h ter” attitude tow ard his gam e and th at change m ay have resulted in his handling the pres­ sure of leading a golf tournam ent over the final holes. The stocky 29-year-old F iori battled the tough Butler N ational Golf Course and captured the $300,000 W estern Open Sunday by four strokes w ith a record- setting tournam ent total of 11-under-par 277. The previous course record was 281 It w as F io ri’s second PGA win — the first com ing a t the 1979 Southern Open. But since that trium ph, he has had trou­ ble even getting in contention. “ I just decided to s ta rt taking a light­ er attitude, a lot like Fuzzy Zoeller,” explained Fiori, who earned a $54,000 paycheck and an autom atic trip to the World Series of Golf. Fiori, from Sugarland, began the day two strokes behind third round leader Bill Rogers But got off to a strong sta rt, posting three birdies on the open­ ing six holes to take the lead for good He shot a 33 on the front nine and 34 on the back nine “I didn't know I had it won until I landed my ball on the 18th,” Fiori said “ I guess that last putt to m ake par was between 80 and 100 feet Rogers, who double bogeyed the 10th and bogeyed the 11th. slipped to a 2- over-par 74, winding up five strokes back Once Fiori turned the front nine, there w ere no Jim Simons suffered back-to-back bogeys on the final two holes and fell out of con­ tention with a tourney total of 281, fin­ ishing second tied with G reg Pow ers and Jim Colbert. challengers serious Jack Nicklaus Strange. Tom Kite and first leader Don Pooiey at 286 tied with C urtis round Ed Florl beams after victory In Western Open. UPI Telephoto Jordan’s success extends beyond pro football career Monday, July 6, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 best, you’re going to be suc­ cessful. The idea is to have a m ajority of people working for a common cause ” im plem ented Jordan has taken the con­ from team effort cept of sports and it into his business projects The m an who coached Jordan at Alabama had no sm all p art in teaching the form er lineback­ er the m erits of team play. “ He’s a great m otivator, Jordan, referring said to “ B ear” B ryant’s knack for in­ spiring his Crimson Tide play­ ers. “ He gets you excited and keeps you excited. He m ade you play better than you could He told us if we worked as a team we’d be national cham pions.” By contrast, Jo rdan's coach at Dallas — Tom Landry — is an unemotional man, who is let his players content to m otivate them selves l^andry is the epitom e of the modern, com puterized football coach The Cowboys' coach dem ands flawless execution from his players. “ He (Landry) knows how to organize and take advantage of the opposition,” Jordan said “ Motivation w asn’t his strong suit. Landry’s greatest asset was to stick to a system and a concept. He indoctrinat­ ed his people to work for a common goal.” To trac e Jord an ’s life and football career, one must s ta rt in Excel, Ala., a small town of about 300, w here Jo r­ dan was born on April 27, 1941. Jordan was raised on a farm there. His family grew cotton, corn, peanuts and any­ thing else they could to make a living. Jordan’s parents still live on the farm . F a r m c h o r e s w e re dispersed among four boys and three girls The Jordans suffered two tragedies when Lee Roy was growing up His sister died of leukemia as a baby and his brother suffocat­ ed in a chlorine gas explosion Those tragedies are one of the reasons Jordan does what he can for charities. He also is active on behalf of the Spe­ cial Olympics, the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, the American H eart Association, the P alm er Drug Abuse P ro­ gram in Austin and a local slow-pitch softball team . is “ My favorite (charity) leukem ia,” Jordan said. “ I answ er m ost anyone who calls me. I t’s hard for m e to say no They’re all g rea t caus­ es but you can ju st be in­ volved in so m an y .” letter In addition to his work on the farm , Jordan found tim e to play football and earned his first the eighth in grade He played a range of positions on offense including guard, tight end and running back, but defense was his love. a “ Being s m a ll fro m school, I w asn't sought after m uch,” Jordan said of his re ­ cruitm ent out of high school “ 1 thought I could play at Ala­ bama because B ear’ was us­ ing sm all, quick guvs At our first m eeting, most of us w ere in awe. He’s a big man — 6-4, 250.” As turned out, Jordan earned a spot in B ryant’s line­ up and becam e a leader on the field it said. Jordan “ I was m ore of a stabilizing “ I factor,” worked continuously to im ­ prove my gam e and discov­ ered what I could do to help our team win championships My strength was to talk to other guys to see if I could get them to do their jobs b etter . ” Following his outstanding career at Alabama and his subsequent years at Dallas, it cam e tim e to quit the game. Jordan’s professional ca­ reer ended a t a tim e when athletes w ere beginning to make dem ands upon owners for lucrative contracts and six-digit salaries. Thanks to players’ unions and agents, professional athletes are be­ coming m ore aw are of advan­ tages in and outside of foot­ ball However, Jordan finds it hard to understand how some professional athletes, particu larly baseball players, < in earn such big salaries. “ Football owners are m than baseball p« o sensible pie,” Jordan said. “ They’re ridiculous. 1 don't understai 1 how they can pay those sal ries. It’s detrim ental to the sport, “ In baseball, a guy goes out in the field and he may catch a ball or he may not,” he add­ ed. “ Then, he com es in and takes a couple of swings In football, we get banged around in practice all week only to get banged by differ­ ent people on Sunday.” SHOP HERE FOR REINFORCEMENTS I I XAS I NIO N G eneral Store * School supplic* * gift* SUMMER HOURS: M -f I ■.m.-S p.m. There are twelve green recycle boxes on Find one and put this newspaper in it. spinach crepes A u s t i n s f i r s t u n i t ’ bu r Cheeseboards fin e wines b y lh t* ^lass 1200 W«st Lynn 4 7 2 -3 7 9 0 L es \ ni is ( , a f c 1 I t l i A >,a i i By STEVE LEE Daily Texan Staff instilling g run g iest In an era when football’s g rim m e st, and most belligerent players lined up in the middle linebacker the slot, hearts of running backs, receivers and any other unfor­ tunate soul who dared lay his hands on the football, one man stood out from the rest of the bruising pack fear in Lee Roy Jordan was not just another of the massive, bruising middle linebackers who played in the National Football League during the 1960s and early 70s. Jordan, at 6-1 and 215 pounds, lacked the imposing stature of his ad­ versaries and was one of the sm allest men to have ever played the position. Yet, he w as a winner. He was an All-America at Ala­ bam a in 1962 and an All-Pro with the D allas Cowboys in 1973. Having played on two of the winningest college and professional football team s in the country, Jordan has not had to know w hat it m eans to be a loser. Jordan retired from foot­ ball in 1976 afte r 14 profes­ sional seasons, all with D al­ las, and has transferred his successful attitude the business world. to The 40-year-old business­ man owns the Lee Roy Jordan Redwood Lum ber Company in Austin, a F ord trac to r d ealer­ ship and breeds B eefm aster cattle in Mobile, Ala. He has plans to open another lum ber company in Dallas. Unlike m any athletes who suffer w ithdraw al pains once they’ve hung up their cleats or others who tarnish prodi­ gious ca re e rs by em b arra ss­ ing them selves because they didn’t know when to quit, J o r­ dan relished the opportunity to a lte r his lifestyle a t 35. The intense pounding and continuous exertion of playing in the NFL had taken a toll on Jordan. “ Any tim e you stop doing something you enjoy, it's a real change,” Jordan said. “ I had played all I w anted and it was tim e for m e to re tire .’ Jordan had no reg rets about his decision to quit football. He had played for an NCAA champion a t Alabama and a Super Bowl champion at Dal­ las. When Alabama defeated I Oklahoma to claim the nation­ al title in 1962, Jordan earned the praise of Crimson Tide coach P a il “ B ear” Bryant. to Jordan ’s “ If he (the ball ca rrie r) stays in bounds, Lee Roy will get him .” Bryant said, re fe r­ ring relentless pursuit and fierce tackling. However, Jordan had to m ake some assessm ents of his abilities before he could become a player of All-Amer­ ica stature. “ I had to accept the fact that I’m not a Dick Butkus, M ike C u rtis o r T om m y Nobis,” he said. “ I had to be quicker than the other guy. I ’d study film s for hours look­ ing for tips or certain p at­ terns a player m ight have. I still believe in the theory of leverage. If a guy 6-4 and 265 com es at me and I get under him, I ’ll elim inate p a rt of his progress.” Jordan was a first-round draft choice in 1963 for the Cowboys, who w ere then an inept expansion team . He be­ cam e an instant standout on defense and helped D allas to its first winning season. in He played five NFL championship gam es and cap­ tained the Cowboys in 1972 when they defeated the Miami Dolphins in Super Bowl VI. Jordan also participated in five P ro Bowls and was nam ed to the All-Pro squad of the 1970s by the NFL Hall of Fam e. r e c o g n itio n “ We m ade the playoffs twelve eleven of my last y ea rs,” Jordan said. “ It was not a bad career. All the indi­ v id u a l th e y (Butkus, Curtis and Nobis) got didn’t com pare to w hat I got because I was there play­ ing in the (Super Bowl) game. “ I ’m not a m ean play er,” he added. ‘‘I like to think I ’m aggressive. If I take a fair shot a t a m an it reflects my dedication. I try to hit him as hard as I can because he would do the sam e to me. T hat’s w hat the gam e is all about — hitting. said . is “ A good, clean tackle what the gam e is all about,” “ In te n s ity , J o rd a n which m akes m e work in any profession be it football or business, shows dedication. Hitting is still the nam e of the gam e.” The sandy-haired business­ m an dabbled in real estate during the off-season for four years before he retired but eventually decided th at “ c e r­ tain p arts (of the business) didn’t fit into my personality — always selling and com bin­ ing business with pleasure. I ’m a loner. I just didn’t feel Ex-Dallas linebacker Lee Roy Jordan helped bring respectabllty to the Cowboys like it was for m e.” Jordan spent nine months considering the right business to get into after his retire­ ment. “ I knew I wanted some­ thing of my own,” he said. “My banker recommended (form er Kenneth Moore owner of Jordan’s lumber company), and we hit it off real w ell.” Jordan purchased the com ­ pany in D ecem ber 1977. At first, the business required his constant attention. “ We w ent through som e pretty tough tim es,” Jordan said. “ There w ere som e p er­ sonnel it tu rn o v ers, worked out good. Six months a fte r I bought the business, but tim e dictated I be here four to five days week. Now, I ’m here tw ice a m onth.” (in Austin) Jordan, whose home is in Richardson, has m ore tim e now to devote to his tracto r equipm ent dealership and his cattle breeding business. “ Basically, I’m a very hon­ est, fair person,” he said. “ My biggest asset is I know how to work with people. I ’m not a tough, dem anding indi­ vidual. I try to cre ate an a t­ m osphere w here people w ant to do good I t’s not me, but we. We’re all in business to­ gether. “ Sports is a great deal like business,” he added. “ If ev­ eryone is contributing their Stephenson captures Jackson Classic POINTE-des-CASCADES, Quebec (UPI) — A ustralian Jan Stephenson sank a 10-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole Sunday to win the $200,000 P e­ ter Jackson Classic by one stroke over hard-charging Nancey Lopez- Melton and defending champion P at Bradley. Stephenson, who started the day tied with Bradley a t 11-under and five shots up on Lopez, carded a cautious 1-over 73 for a 72-hole total of 10-under 278 in claim ing her first victory of the season and the fifth in her career. She earned $30,000. But she had to put down a stirring stretch run by Lopez, who had picked up six strokes to claim the lead and would have alm ost certain ­ ly have had the championship had she not m issed a 12-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole. Bradley, capping a day in which all the leaders seemed to fight the jitters, missed a 12-foot eagle putt that would also have given her vic­ tory at 18. She settled for a birdie that left her tied for second-place money with Lopez. Stephenson, who raised the eye­ brows of some tour veterans by pos­ ing in lingerie for a golf magazine earlier this year, reached the 18th green with a brilliant second shot, then methodically drilled a 10-footer for the victory. It was the third week in succes­ sion that Stephenson, Bradley and Lopez finished in the top three. Stephenson had to struggle for her first major LPGA victory. “ It was the greatest feeling I have ever had,” she said. ‘‘To win a major with my father caddying and my mother watching is kind of a dream com e true.” i I •____ • I______i - Of her dramatic birdie on 18 she said: “ As soon as I struck it I knew I had struck it the way I wanted to.” Stephenson carded 69-66-70-73— 278 for the four days and had been the co-leader with Bradley since the second round. Bradley, who complained of missed birdie opportunites, particu­ larly on the front nine, said she had “ the whole ballgame in my hands” after hitting her second shot 12 feet from the hole on the 18th. “Coming up 18 after hitting that 3-wood was all that I could have asked for all day long,” said Brad­ ley, who completed the tourney at 69-66-70-74—279. “ I didn’t feel I had to make the eagle but I wanted to make it because it meant either a n l o t r n f f ..fit* n r O win or a playoff. But, the putt slipped by and I tapped in for a bird­ ie and that was it.” f K o nil Q n t Lopez, en route to her 3-under 69, birdied three of the first four holes to pull into contention early. But she said she did not set out to e ra se the leader’s five-shot advantage. “ I just wanted to do the best that I could,” said the LPGA’s leading money winner, who carded 70-72-68- 69—279. “ Even when I saw that ev­ erybody else was not playing as well I still had to play my own gam e. I could not worry about th em .” round P atty Hayes, who started the day four shots off the pace, played an even par three strokes behind Stephenson a t 281 for the event. Sandra Haynie shot a 1- under 71 to finish four strokes be­ hind a t 282. finish to Snorts Shorts U.S. baseball team defeats Japan TOKYO (U PI) — Franklin Stubbs’ tie-breaking homer into the right field seats powered the United States to a 3-2 victory over Japan in the final game Sunday of the best-of- seven U.S.-Japan Collegiate baseball championship series. The victory gave the U.S. squad, which has Texas base­ ball players Spike Owen and Burk Goldthom on its roster, its third triumph against four losses in the annual cham­ pionship. With the score tied at 2-2, first baseman Stubbs, a Vir­ ginia Tech sophomore, cracked his first home run of the series off right-hander Kaoru Nimura of Tokyo’s Waseda University in the top of the sixth inning. Akira Onoue, a senior at Tokyo s Chuo University, belt­ ed a two-run homer, his second of the current champion­ ship, off University of Arizona southpaw Ed Vosberg in the fifth. Kush gets 1st CFL win WINNIPEG, Manitoba (UPI) - Tom Clements tossed a 6-yard scoring strike to wide receiver Keith Baker with 1 04 remaining Sunday to cap a brilliant comeback and give the Hamilton Tiger Cats a 33-23 victory over the Win­ nipeg Blue Bombers in the CFL season-opener for both clubs. The triumph made former Arizona State coach Frank Kush’s debut in the CFL a success Trailing 23-12 with less than seven minutes left to play, Clements rifled a 10-yard touchdown pass to tight end Rocky DiPietro just inside the end zone to bring the Tiger Cats within striking distance. Clements, making his first regular-season start since returning from the NFL’s Kansas City Chiefs, then direct­ ed Hamilton on a 71-yard march, which was climaxed by Baker's 6-yard TD reception. Ferragamo’s debut stymied VANCOUVER (UPI) exorbitantly - The Montreal expensive offense Alouettes’ bought them about as much trouble as can be had for a million dollars. The Alouettes’ NFL-style offense, acquired with much fanfare and even more money dur­ ing the off season, suffered a humiliating 48-8 drubbing at the hands of the B.C. Lions Satur­ day night in the CFL opener for both teams. Joe Paopao, the Lions’ “throwin’ Samoan” quarterback, had the kind of outing that Vince Ferragamo was expected to have. The fourth- year pro completed 16 of 25 passes for 300 yards and two touchdowns, while running back I .a try Key ran for three touchdowns as B.C. decimated the Montreal defense Alouettes’ new owner Nelson Skalbania, who invested $400,000 per year in his new quarter­ back, $170,000 in wide receiver Billy “ White Shoes” Johnson (formerly of the Houston Oilers), and an undisclosed amount in Miami Dolphins No. 1 draft pick David Overstreet might well wonder how much one must spend to win a football gam e in the CFL. The Alouettes reacted to the mauling with understandable curtness. “ B.C. kicked our butts," said Montreal head coach Joe Scannella. “It’s as simple as that.” Ferragamo completed but 12 of 30 passes for 155 yards and two interceptions He refused to excuse his performance by citing differences between the CFL and NFL, but did admit he would just as soon forget his first game north of the border “They (the Lions) had to play with three downs just like we did,” said the former Loe Angeles Ram. “We hoped to show much bet­ ter, obviously, but the uppermost thought in our minds right now is to forget about to­ night’s game and thmk about the next one.” Scannella, who is under pressure to produce not only a winner, but a G rey Cup champion, would not elaborate on F e rra g a m o ’s perform ­ ance. “I don’t w ant to discuss his gam e just as I individual’s to discuss any wouldn’t w ant game after a gam e like th a t,” he said. The A louettes’ biggest w orry, however, re­ sided at the spaces w here Skalbania did not spend heavily — the defensive line and second­ ary. The Lions, who w ere also helped by two Alouette fumbles, rolled up 430 yards in net offense to 276 for M ontreal and built a 23-2 halftime lead. Lions’ head coach Vic Rapp downplayed the significance of the outcom e for both team s “ We a re n ’t getting too excited about th is,” he said “ What I’m trying to im press on the team is to keep the gam e in perspective. I t’s only one gam e of a 16-game schedule. “I think Montreal is a m uch b etter team than they showed tonight. They have some very good players and I know they’ll jell as a team before the season is out “ But I was pleased with the play of every­ one on our side tonight ” Paopao set up Key’s five-yard scoring run with up an 84-yard pass to A1 Charuk in the first quarter and hit John Pankratz with an 18- yard TD pass He found tight end Rick Ellis with a 63-yard touchdown pass in the third quarter, giving the Lions a 40-2 lead. Key scored his third touchdown of the night at the 2:25 mark of the last quarter on a six- yard run. Overstreet, who led all rushers with 73 yards on 12 carries, redeemed an earlier fum­ ble by running four yards for a touchdown. FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ROOMMATES TYPING Unfurnished (H., 1,2,3 Bdrm. Big and Spacious Vaultod Ceilings £ • 2 Pools, Clubroem A largo Closots Gas, Wafer, Cabio paid Z x Noar UT Shuttle/lu$ I $150 OFF iMTfORPPDlCE 4 4 2 - 2 3 1 6 1 8 1 7 E . O l t o r f | fI i /\ A \ DO ALL THESE AD S DRIVE YOU apartments duplexes, 4 hom es all over BANANAS? WE RENT AUSTIN, FREE! SOUTH 4 4 3 -2 2 1 2 N O R T H 4 5 8 -6 1 1 1 N ORTHW EST 3 4 5 -8 3 5 0 PAUL S. M EISLE R PR O PER TIES A V A I L A B L E 9 J u ly E f f i c ie n c y ju st off G u a d a l u p e C o m fo r t a b le a n d r e a s o n ­ a b le C a n J im 471-5351 A B P Sm all 2BR, 1 B A $230 Efficie n cy $179 C A /C H , w alk or shuttle to U T 2211 Leon (su m m e r rates) A B P N e w ly remodeled large I B R $240-$260 dishw asher, disposal, w alk or shuttle to UT. 2212 S a n G a b r i e l (su m m e r rates) S O U T H E R N E S E APTS. 1007 W e st 26th St. F u rn ish e d one bedroom, pool, lau nd ry room, near cam pus. 5190-S210 plus E M a n a g e r No. 207 477-2696 Paoe 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, July 6, 1981 In s p e i ted M a y . r u n s g o o d 4/6 5875, 477 3125, 458 9042 c l a s m f i e d * b v f p m m s C o n s e c u t iv e D a y R a te s 15 w o rd m in im u m S 17 E a c h w o rd I t im * 5 5 37 E a c h w o rd J tim e» 1 46 E a c h w o rd 5 tim e» » 7*> E a c h w o rd 10 tim e» 15 17 1 col * 1 m e h 1 tim e 14 V. I col » 1 in c h 2 9 tim e» 54 41 1 coi x I inch 10 or m o re time» F ir » * i t 00 Ch a rge to C h a n g e copy two w o rd » m a y be all r a pita l letter» 25 tor ear h a d d it io n a l w o rd in apitat letter» J S T U O F N T t AC UL ! Y 5T A t I ( P r i v a t e P a r t y A d» O n l y ) Stud e nt» 'a c u it y a n d »’att of the U n i v e r i i t y m a r p u r c h a s e C la s s if i e d a d v e r t i » m g a t o n e h a lt th e a(i p ro p ria te r a te in d ira te d a b o ve Act» m u»t be p ia r e d m p e r s o n a* the t S P b u tm r» » O ffice , T5 P B u ild in g 3 700 betw een D a m a n d 4 10 p m M o n d a y th ro u g h Id e n tific ation a n d i d v a n r e p a y m e n t a re re q u ire d SO1 c h a r g e to c h a n g e c o p y I r»t two w ord» m a y be alt c a p ita l letter» 7‘ lo r e a c h a d d it io n a l w o rd m r a p ita i letter» A d » m u l l be n on ( o m m e r c ia ' f r id a y U 3 D fA O tiN i s c n e o u t f M e n r f a y T e . o n T u e u J « y t e n o n W * d n . . d o y t e x a n i T h u r s d a y T e x o n I f n d a y t . i o n fcKfoy 7 p m M o n d a y H o r n T v a w t o y H a m W e d n e x d o y H a m T h u r s d a y t l a r n .— —--------- I In t h a a v a n t a t e rro rs m o d * in a n o d v a r ! h s a m o n l i m m o d i o r # n a tK O m u s t h o f t v o n | a s r h a p u b l i s h a r s a r o r o s p a n s ib lo lo r o n ly ; O N I m r o r r o r I m s o r li o n AM I 111, m i lo r o d | lustmontt s h o u ld b o m o d o n o t lo t o i t h a n JO | Hoyt o f i f t publication AUTOS FOR SALE V W Í N G I N F 5 reb u ilt, 5549 in sta lle d , e x c h a n g e G e n e r a l V W re p a ir, re a » o n a b le 457 .1*71 W e b u y b r o k e n V W » L A M E N T I R P R I S Í S rate » 1976 A U D I F o x , g o u d c o n d itio n , A M f M AC , i t i r k shift, 53700 454 0787 1977 T R A N S A M 30,000 m il#» , o r ig in a l o w n er, 6 6 liter, b ro w n , A C , p ow er w in d o w i a n d lo c k » A M ' F M < a sse tte t r la x lal sp e a k e r» , ex< p llo n t t o n d ltlo n »48S0 4/8 7/48 68 C H E V Y C a r r y a l l G r e a t t r u c k 5900 4S8 6165 1977 F O R D G r a n T o r in o , v e r y g o o d < on ditton »/9S AC P B . A T , P S 8 16 4370 a* ter 6 () m 1978 C H E V E T T E 4 speed, 33,000 m ile s, v e ry g o o d c o n d it io n »3, 100 478 6586, a sk tor D u n n e 73 SUPER B E E T L f C o n v e r t ib le Y e l low b la r k to p Z e ro m ile s on n e w t n g in e l o c a l 6 m o s /6.000 m ile g u a r a n t e e » 1500 477 4473, 17 n o o n 6 p m M l H C U R Y M O Ñ T E G O , *73, A C . MS, A M / f M t n s s e ft e »S50 V e r y g o o d c o n d l (ton C a ll afte r 6 p m 451 6 8 1 1 67 C O U G A R »595 454 7109 1974 V W 417 W a g o n , g r e a t t ar, ro o m , r a d ia ls, ra< k. A M / t M M u s t sell 51850 473 7545 ro o t Moforcycle-For S a l* P U C H M O P E D S , lo w m ile a g e d e m o s t r o m 5500, q u a lit y s e r v ic e a n d p a r t s for P u r h , B a t a v a s , H e r c u le s . S a c h s a n d P e u g e o t 103, T h e C o o p M o p e d Shop , 4101 G u a d a lu p e , 451 6734 M O P E D F O R sa le P e u g e o t, 1700 m ile s, g o o d c o n d it io n 5750 479 0770 C a ll a lte r Í 0 0 p m K A W A S A K I M A C H 5550 L a w r e n c e 476 5671 I I I 500 cc, 1974 Bicycle-For S a l* lo r c a m p u s 1 0 - S P E E D b ik e t ra n s p o rt a tio n , g o o d c o n d it io n A » k fo r B a r r y . 478 8463 or 477 6417 555 00 p e rfe c t 10 S P E E D 7M w h ite P e u g e o t P R 105 A l lo y c r a n k s e t , a llo y w h e e l» q u i r k re lea»e. 531 R e y n o ld » t r a m e C a ll G a b r ie l la 477 8865 Stereo-For S a l* C I R C L E S T E R E O , p ro m p t, r e a s o n a b le a u d io v id e o s e r v ic e U s e d e q u ip m e n t b o u g h t a n d so ld M a r t s a n d e c C M t O H e i 1711 R e d R iv e r 476 0947 Muticol-For S a l* W E B U Y A N D S E L L U S E D R E C O R D S H ig h e s t p r ic e s p a id D i s c o v e r y R e c o r d s 7100 G u a d a l u p e 474-7487 PHoto*raphy-For Sal# V I V I T A R 7/3 fla s h N ik k o n F T p h o t o m Ic w stra p , N ik k o n 35 m m , P C le n s w c a»e V iv i t a r 70-710, l o o m - m a t r o fo c u s in g w p o l a r is in g filter E x c e lle n t c o n d i tion 5850 l l r m 478 7734 6 10 p m C A N O N A-1 S Y S T E M C a n o n A I b o d y . C a n o n 2 8 m m ? 8. 5 0 m m I 8 80 ?0 0 m m 4 0 Z o o m le n se s c a s e s , filte rs, bag, fla s h B e s t otter C a ll 4 77 1 725 Pet»-For Said B E A U T I F U L P L A Y F U L sp a y e d , v a c o n ated fe m a le c a t F r e e H o u se t r a in e d but c a n liv e o u t s id e 474 609a A M E R I C A N P I T B u ll T e ir ie r s L it tle R a s. a is a n d R C A d o g lo o k a lik e s I n tel I • uent lo v a b le w a tcb u .» gs 5125 00 452 Í2 I8 e v e n in g s j L a b r a d o r , c ie n c y d o w n t o w n , s h u tt le b us, q u m i p a r k in g 5177 M a n a g e r 474-1 107 fu ll K itc h e n , la u n d r y L A R G E O N E b e d r o o m W a lk in d o s e t c a b le pool, o n I F sh u t t le c o v e r e d p a r k s u m m e r 5275 p lu s E m g 5225 p lu s E ta il A n o t h e r W o r ld A p t s 415 W 39th 45.3-8148 345 2375 W t S T 4 5 T H la r g e f u r n is h e d e f fic ie n c y i a b le A C n e a r U T sh u tt le 5179 p lu s E 4S8 V9J9 N E A R C A M P U S o n e b e d r o o m fu r m sh e d . n e w p aint, n ew c a rp e t, n e w a n c o n d it io n in g new v e n d ía n b lin d w a te r g a s * a b le T V p a id 5235 p lu s e le c t r ic lt y 4/8 6148 .’B R A B P n e w 'y r e m o d e le d s u m m e r I a te s W o r k 476 7211 e x t 210 H o m e a fte r 6 p m 477 9325 A s k tor R a lp h i A P A L O M A 1108 W 22nd L a r g e 2 B R in fo u r p le x o n ly fiv e bloc k s * r o m c a m ­ p u s W a lk o r sh u t t le Q u ie t 5400 p lu s e le c t r ic it y N o p e ts A v a i l a b le J u n e 1 k e n M c W i l l i a m s 327 5000 A lt e r 6 p m 478 2410 ______________ 1009 W E S T 2 5 T H L a r g e 2 B R 5250 p lu s e le c t r ic it y 472 1617 F t r IC I f N C Y N E A R U T Q u ie t g r a d s ’ u d e n t N o p e *s C A C H 2 o r 14 m o n t h e a s e 474 1212 U N I V E R S I T Y N E I G H B O R H O O D m id s u m m e r v a c a n c ie s I B R a n d 2 B R a p a r t m e n !» C H C A p a r k in g 5325 p lu s E 472 2273 s h a g c a r p e t o f* stre e t , a b le 1010 W 23 rd S245 a n d U N I V E R S I T Y a r e a a ll b in s p a t d N o p e 's a d u lt s o n ly I B R S780 3011 W h d i s 47? 1734 5 BLKS. W E S T OF C A M P U S r.ng r m m e r >k A p i e s c a r p e t e d , g a s )¡e inclu d ed ! p a n e ie o 5185 5195 R e d h S a n G a b r - e in c lo s e * 477 $$14 FOR SALE FOR SALE STUDENTCONDO V S RENTING u lu s w in L a tut* T u w r, H n a u '. f u ; . . i* 5 m in u 'w x l u i "1 ^|i,i h (w t,* *w i , , -• , • a i b n d r t x i m v f r n t r $ t ' h u t '1, $ 4 5 -ex. . p a r e n t * w u i a p p m « v .*ni-Inte -. ' * ' ’ s !h a ' < ar, x a »e $ 1 i> ik X ’ , W-i ' , , , , s ’ • ^ w • > *" ,, , , J'h ' •* ' '** ’ s • i , . * ii .iur !,ev* f u ru ix h d x l m «!>- - The t iiio tl S y s t e m 5 1 7 ,4 5 1 4 *1 7 8 I 512 (4 44-6286 evenin g» ¡LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL! SUMMER RATES | k lJ U H J B 2 3 3 i. 1, 2, 3, 5 Bedroom» U L • lighted Tennis Courts • Shuttle Bus Stop • Security Service • Free Coble TV Village B urton Dr. & 2 1 0 1 • Exercise Rooms/Sounes • Putting preen • 2 Peels - 1 large, 1 huge • Walk-in Closets • Ice Maker 447-4130 “ IT’S H E R E !” SATELLITE TV including 24-hour Movie Channel and Superstation Carriage House 2304 Pleasant Valley 442-1298 Barry Gillingwater Management Company Sign a lease u ith us and WE WILL PA Y YOUR SUMMER TUITION ( l i m i t p e r h o u r ) 1. THE ARBOR 15(H ) R o y a l C r e s t 4 4 4 - 7 5 1 6 2. THE CASCADES 1 2 2 1 A l g a r i t a 4 4 1 - 4 4 8 5 3. CARRIAGE HOUSE 2 3 0 4 P l e a s a n t V a l l e y 4 4 2 - 1 2 0 8 O P E N 7 D A Y S A W E E K Barry Gillingwater Mgmt. Co. 476-2633 M I A JvllG O 4505 Duval 454-4799 ' NOW PRE-LEASING • Special Summer Rates • All Bids Paid • Exercise Room & Saunas • Pool & Clubhouse • Efficiencies, 1 & 2 Bedroom « r Call or Coma By TodayI P rofessionally M a n a g ed by M a rtina Propartiee, ¡me. > i A 11 A 1 1 ^ , " < l T W O R O O M M A T E S to s h a r e p e n se s C lo se I M sh u ttle. 452-0836 'A e x ­ re n t 51 14 /m o n th . D e p o s it 5125. F U R N I S H E D R O O M in d u p le x d u r in g 2nd s u m m e r s e s s io n 5160 m o n th , A B P W a lk in g d is t a n c e U T . 478-7022, (713 ) 869- ___________________ __________________ 1420 H O U S E M A T E T O s h a r e 3 B R h o u s e w ith w o r k in g st u d e n t c o u p le 5125 p lu s '/» u t il­ _______________________ itie s 452-4017 S U P E R B H O U S E S A u s t in nee d r o o m m a te p r e fe r g r a d u a t e st u d e n t 5220 p lu s b ills. 447 1331 (h ), 443-3138 ( w ) P a t. W A L K U T - g r a d st u d e n t tor 3 B R h o u se A / C 5 1 40 /m o n th p lu s 458-1131 ( w o r k ) , 478-7418 C r a i g S h e p a r d W A L K U T N e e d f e m a le r o o m m a t e u ntil A u g 15 G r e a t a p a r t m e n t P o o l. 478- 7 4 1 8 ______________ __________ ______________ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E to s h a r e 2 B R 1 B A h o u se in C l a r k s v i l l e a re a 5200 p lu s 1 j b ills. J o a n n e 477-1150. n o r t h H O U S E M A T E c e n t r a l to F E M A L E s h a r e N on - s m o k e r , n o d o g s. V? re n t 5175 p lu s b ills M o v e in b y J u ly 15. C a ll 452-7451 a fte r 6 00 _______________________ lo c a t io n n ee d e d R O O M M A T E W A N T E D fo r 2 B R d u p le x in N E A u s t in F e n c e d y a r d 5115. R o b ­ e rt 926-1793 f u r n is h e d h o u s e s H O U S I N G F O R P E O P L E NOT P R O F I T ! T h e I n t e r - C o o p e r a t i v e C o u n c i l h a s o p e n in g s fo r w o m e n a n d m e n in s ix c o-o p h o u s e s P r iv a t e a n d s h a r e d f u r n is h e d r o o m s in la r g e o ld e r h o u s e s In th e w e st c a m p u s n e i g h b o r h o o d . F a m i l y a t ­ m o s p h e r e M e m b e r c o n t r o l l e d N o la n d lo rd s . P le n t y of c o m p a n y , p le n t y of p r i v a c y . P r i v a t e r o o m s 5 1 7 0 -5 22 0, d o u b le s 5150-5200, in c lu d e s food, u tilitie s, telep h on e, la u n d r y fa c ilitie s , s w im m i n g pool. C a ll o r c o m e b y the I C C o ffice, 510 W . 23 rd St., 476-1957 M o n d a y s 1-5, T u e s ­ d a y t h r o u g h F r i d a y 9 a m . -l p .m . C O U P L E P R E F E R R E D L o o k i n g fo r tw o c o - o p e r a t iv e p e r s o n s to s h a r e r o o m in la r g e b e a u t ifu l 3 B R h o u se n e a r c a m ­ p us. C A / C H , p r iv a t e b ath , lu x u r io u s a c ­ c o m m o d a t io n s at b a r g a in p r ic e C a ll A n n e , M a r k , K im , o r R o la n d n ow : 472- 2292 ROOMS C O - E D D O R M n e x t to c a m p u s . R e m o d ­ eled, n e w f u r n is h in g s , r e c r e a t io n are a, s u n d e c k W id e s c r e e n T V , r e f r ig e r a t o r s . 24 h o u r s e c u r it y N o m e a ls . T a o s , 2612 G u a d a lu p e , 474-6905. N O R T H W E S T H I L L S - lo v e ly f u r n is h e d b e d r o o m s in b e a u t ifu l p r iv a t e h o m e (2 s in g le s, 1 d o u b le ). P r iv a t e b ath, k ltc h e n / y a r d p r iv i le g e s P e r st u d e n t: 5200 m o n th , u t ilitie s Dald, p lu s d e p o sit. L e a s e s e m e s t e r / a n n u a l. U N I Q U E P R O P E R ­ T I E S 3 4 6 - 2 1 3 8 ^ ___ T W O S I N G L E r o o m s u p s t a i r s In r o o m ­ in g l o u s e w ith s h a r e d b a th 5125/m o n th 1909 S a n G a b r ie l C a ll B r u h l- B lo o d R e a l­ to rs. 345-5442 o r 451-6174. R O O M S F O R re n t O n e b lo c k t r o m U T A B P 5115-5125. C a ll B il l 478-3964 PERSONAL P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F r e e p r e g ­ n a n c y t e s tin g a n d r e f e r r a ls . 474-9930. F E L I C I A ' in M E w h o lik e d m y h a t at E e y o r e 's : p le a s e c a ll D a v id / le a v e m e s ­ sa ge . 442-9656. ROOM AND BOARD C H A M B R E S A lo u e r c h e z L a M a i s o n F r a n c a is e , 710 W e s t 21st Stre e t, tel. 478- 6586. ________ _________ V A C A N C I E S F O R w o m e n fo r the fa ll se ­ m e st e r in e d u c a t io n a l a n d c o o p e r a t iv e e n v ir o n m e n t L a u r e l H o u s e C o-op , 1905 N u e c e s . 478-0470. T H E I N T E R - C O O P E R A T I V E C o u n c il o ffic e h a s n e w s u m m e r h o u r s . F o r in f o r ­ m a t io n a b o u t c o -o p h o u s in g in A u st in , c a ll u s a t 476-1957, o r c o m e b y 510 W 23rd ( in s i d e N e w G u ild C o -o p ) M o n d a y s 1-5 p.m ., T u e s d a y - F r i d a y 9 a .m . - l p.m . S T O N E H E N G E D I S C O V E R C o - o p : F i v e w o m e n a n d f iv e m e n s h a r in g b e a u ­ tifu l p o s t - V ic t o r ia n h o m e at 611 W . 22nd S in g le r o o m n o w a v a ila b le . 52 05 /m o n th . D r o p b y o r c a ll 474-9029. A T T R A C T I V E , S M A L L h o u se lo o k in g fo r m a tu r e , c o o p e r a t iv e in d iv i d u a ls for s u m m e r a n d fall. R o o m a n d / o r b o a r d 472-22?2 UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES N O R T H E A S T L A R G E 2-2 C A / C H , f ir e ­ fe n c e d p la ce , c a rp e t, a ll a p p lia n c e s , y a r d , 5350 477-37)1 J oe . 451-4813. C A / C H , P R I V A T E 3-2 f ir e ­ p la ce , a p p lia n c e s , p atio, c a r p o r t . 5395. 7205 G r a n d C a n y o n . 476-3636. T i m 452- 8622 sh u ttle , C E N T R A L - U T , 2-1. H a r d w o o d flo o rs, stove, r e f r i g e r a t o r D e c k , g a r a g e , e x c e l­ lent c o n d it io n N o p e ts 5385. 459-0964. UNFURNISHED HOUSES 3-2, 5-6 s t u d e n t s to s h a r e M I N I - D O R M H O M E S p a c io u s n e a r s h a d y U T / c lt y sh u ttle, fo u r s h o p c e n t e r s K n o t ­ ty p in e w a lls, h a r d w o o d flo o rs, r u g s , a p p lia n c e s , b u ilt-in s, la r g e s t o r a g e , 3 p a tio p o r c h e s, p r e t ty fe n c e d y a r d s e c lu s io n P E R S T U D E N T 5200 M O N T H U T I L I T I E S P A I D L e a s e S e m e s t e r / A n n u a ' U N I Q U E P R O P E R T I E S 346-2138 A V A I L A B L E N O W ! T w o a n d th r e e b e d ­ r o o m o ld e r h o m e s, a p a r t m e n t s C a ll n o w fo r 24 h o u r In fo r m a t io n . 452-5979 1604 B R I A R C L I F F - l a r g e 3 B R , 2 B A c a r ­ p eted li v in g r o o m a n d h a ll. K it c h e n a p ­ p lia n c e s D o u b le c a r p o r t , fe n c e d b a c k ­ y a r d . 5425/m o n th . L e a s e 926-7243. T A R R T T O W N 3-2 n e a r sh u ttle , 2100 N e w fie id 5550 p e r m o n t h R e f e r e n c e s 479-0008 d a y s , 327-3606 n ig h t s a n d w e e k ­ e n d s TYPING 1 ?\ü n cÁ c í f ijin , Í l y U ü * M B A /J T YPIN G PRINTING, B IN D IN G The Complete Professional FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 H E M P H IL L PK P le n t y o l P a r k in g econotype e^onocopy # Typing, C opying, e • Binding, Printing • l l B M C o rr e c tin g S e le c t ric j e Rental A Supplies • t 5C copies • North M-F 8:30-5:30 Sat. 10-4:00 : * • 37th & Guadalupe 453-5452 * South M-F 8:30-5:00 Sat. 10-1.00 E. Riverside & Lakeshore 443-4498 Melissas Typing I S m é $ w w | p G » « I I Ui [ j j W j J I ) $ 0 W N 511 Rhr+niAi Dr. E S S typing, reports 4 resumes I S O (. S h r e n i d t S u it * S O I : • • e e e e e e e e • C A L L D e A n n e a t 474-1563 8-5 M - F o r 459- 1620 w e e k e n d s a n d e v e n in g s . N o r m a l l y l- d a y s e r v ic e W O O D S T Y P I N G S e r v ic e - w h e n y o u w a n t it d o n e r ig h t 472-6302, 2200 G u a ­ d a lu p e , s id e e n t r a n c e . __________ T Y P I N G " - - C O R R E C T I N G S e le c t r ic , o v e r n ig h t s e r v ic e . P ic k - u p a v a i la b l e till 2 p .m E x p e r ie n c e d , p r o f e s s io n a l. P a t t y , 345-4269 till m id n ig h t . N A T A L I E ' S T Y P I N G S e r v ic e . T h e s e s a n d d is s e r t a t io n s , p a p e rs , m a n u s c r ip t s , r e p o r ts , etc. I B M c o r r e c ­ t iv e s e le c t r ic E x p e r ie n c e d p r o f e s s io n a l s e r v ic e R e a s o n a b l e r a t e s 255-3143.___ t e c h n ic a l N E E D A fa s t a c c u r a t e t y p is t ? I h a v e a In E n g l is h , a c o r r e c t in g S e le c t r ic B A a n d 12 y e a r s s e c r e t a r ia l e x p e r ie n c e . C a ll A n n at 447-5069, 8-6. F A S T A N D a c c u r a t e t y p in g . 836-07?) A N D L E G A L K a t h e 's Q u i c k - T y p e ence. I B M 111.443-6488 d a y s / e v e n i n g s t y p in g . 15 y e a r s e x p e r i ­ p r o f e s s io n a l sure we DO type FRESHMAN THEMES net start e»rt w H h |eed fr e d e * ^ 2 7 0 7 H e m p h i l l Ju»t N o rth of 2 7 th at G v o 4 a lv p o 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 t y p in g I N T E L L I G E N T , A C C U R A T E R e p o r t s, r e s u m e s . H i g h lit e r a c y ; C u s ­ to m e r m i s s p e l l in g s c o r r e c t e d R u s h s e r ­ v ic e a v a i la b l e A ls o p r o o fin g , t u t o r in g C r e a t iv e S e r v ic e s , 2420 G u a d a lu p e , 478- 3633 A c c u r a t e P R O F E S S I O N A L T h e s e s , se r v ic e , d is s e r t a t io n s , p r o f e s s io n a l re p o r ts , etc. B a r b a r a T u ilo s , 453-5124. T Y P I S T a ro u n d . t u r n fa s t Q U A L I T Y T Y P I N G S e le c t r ic . T h e s e s , t e r m p a p e rs , etc P ic a - 51.00/ page, E li t e - 51 .2 5 / p a ge N e a r c a m p u s . C a ll 477-7164. I B M T Y P I N G - 8 5 " p a g e b a r a D a v is , 451-3251. I B M S e le c t r ic . B a r ­ _____ T Y P I N G D O N E in m y h o m e R e a s o n ­ a b le ra t e s. C a ll S a n d r a 476-5081 T Y P I N G D O N E a t m y h om e . R e a s o n ­ a b le r a t e s C o n n ie 441-6398, e v e n in g s T Y P I N G - F A S T r a t e s C a ll G r e t c h e n 928-1751, 451-2332. s e r v ic e , r e a s o n a b l e P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I N G in m y h o m e . A n y s t y le R e a s o n a b l e r a t e s 835-0266 _ Í Y P Í Ñ G D O N E . P ic k u p a n d d e l iv e r y s e r v ic e a v a i la b l e F e e : 5 1 -S2/ pa ge . 259- 2208 a fte r 5 p m . M B A / ) 4 RESUMES w it h or w it h o u t p ictu re s 2 D a y Service 2 7 0 7 H e m p h ill Park Ju st N o r t h of 2 7 t h ot C - u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 AT MASTER TYPIST, YOU GET TYPING FOR THAT A+-PAPER WE DO RUSH W ORK SA M E DAY OR O N E DAY SERVICE FRESH M AN THEMES, PAPERS, REPORTS, TABLES, O N E DAY SERVICE FOR RESUMES PRO FESSIO N AL REPORTS THESES A N D D ISSER TATIO N S - $ 35 PAGE FOR R O U G H DRAFT WITH FINAL A N D THIS AD DEPOSIT REQUIRED FOR FINAL 202 1 G u a d a l u p e St D ob te M a l l N o . 3 6 Free P a r k in c 4 7 2 - 0 2 9 * ROOM S ■ ROOMS Taos 1*12 gutommo H V M e * T*7« BAREFOOT RATES $195-$235 S U M M E R R A T E S I B R fu r n is h e d a p a r tm e n t , fu lly L a r g e c a r p e t e d , w a lk - in c lo s e t s , d is p o s a l , f u r n is h e d c a b le T V , w a t e r a n d g a s L a r g e p o o l a n d p a t i o F u l l - t i m e m a in t e n a n c e a n d m a n a g e r W a lk in g d is ­ ta n c e U T N o pets, n o c h ild r e n F ountain T errace Apts. 610 W 30th M g r A p t. 134 477-8858 SÜ A L1 ISUMMER PRIVATE ROOM Now leasing tor summer and fall Free parking and pool Tri-Towers Enjoy a unique lifestyle all su m m e r fo r as little a s S330.00. Close to cam p us w ith sw im m in g pool and security. 801 W. 24th _________ 476-7634_________ BARCELONA SpocKH/s p H k im n c t f, I A 2 be droom a port man ft avalla bio from $20 5 pfi/t f. Furntnh+d or onfurnttbmd Pat toe poof, clubroom A cabin TV Locatnd on thutth. Child ran octaptad. 444-2468 2201 Elmont ARRANGEMENT tw o E ff ic ie n t le i, one A bedroom unit» available on shuttle. Featuring swimming pool and club room. 4 4 4 - 7 8 8 0 2125 Burton Dr. 2 5 % OFF f i n t m o n th » rant w ith this c o u p o n 453-4002 302 W. 38th E tf, 1 8 . 2 B d r m s , f u r n - u n fu r n , a ll a p p lia n c e s , g a s 8. w a t e r p aid , s h u t ­ tle, p oo l 8. frie n d s , s t a r t in g at $169. 910 W . 2 6 t h 4 7 7 - 2 1 6 0 I H sto rtin g f 17 9 fu r n -u n fu r n , g o t A w o tor p a id MARK XX - Sum m er Special - • 1 BR Furn. $225 • 2 BR Furn. $270 • Shuttle 2 Blks. • Nice Pool - Patio • Fall Leasing Too 3815 Guadalupe 451-2621 i ESTRADA three Studio*, one, two bedroom apartments available from $220. Shuttle, cable TV, 3 pools, lakevlews. 442-6668 1801 So. Lakashore Special Summer Rate$ ( l i t s c /<> ( a n t f u i s IB R Furn $200-215 Plus E Smaller Complexes Pools Shuttle Laundry Pattos El Cid 3704 Speedw ay la Par 401 W 34th El D orado 3S01 Spe edw ay 477-4193 4 S I 42SS 459-0267 El Cam po 30S W 39th 457 1537 A coed dorm. 472-0100 2505 Longview P r o fe s s io n a lly m a n a g e d t>y Barry GtMmgwater Managem ent Com pany ROOMMATES ROOMMATE INC W han you naad a room m ate in a hurry call A u stin 's largest room m ate locatars. R O O M M A T E INC. 452-0420 ROOMMATE NETWORK Look first to Austin's oldest reputable service far the largest selection of QUALITY applicants. Now m our 2nd successful year. 1 6 1 1 We«t 6th 4 7 3 - 2 8 0 0 h o u s i n g f o r P E O P L E NOT P R O F I T ! I n t e r - C o o p e r a t i v e C o u n c i l b a s T h e o p e n in g s fo r w o m e n a n d m e n in s ix c o-o p h o u s e s P r iv a t e a n d s h a r e d f u r n is h e d r o o m s In la r g e o ld e r h o u s e s in the w e st F a m i l y a t ­ c a m p u s n e i g h b o r h o o d m o s p h e r e M e m b e r c o n t r o l l e d N o la n d lo r d s P le n t y of c o m p a n y , p le n ty of r o o m s 51 70 -5 22 0, p r i v a c y . P r i v a t e d o u b le s 5150-5200, in c lu d e s food, u tilitie s, telep h on e, la u n d r y fa c ilitie s , s w im m i n g pool C a ll o r c o m e b y the I C C o ffice, 510 W 2 3 rd St., 476-1957 M o n d a y s 1-5, T u e s ­ d a y t h r o u g h F r i d a y 9 a .m .-l p .m . F E M A L E T O s h a r e 3 B R h o u se 15 m i n ­ u te s f r o m U T . 5125 p lu s '/3 b ills. 926-7440 N E A T , S T U D I O U S , h e te ro fe m a le to s h a r e 2 B R 1 B A c u te h o u se s t a r t in g A u g 1 N e a r “ S u n d o w n e r " , S t a c y P a r k , a n d sh u tt le stop. 5125 m o. p lu s W C a ll 442- 5703 S E C O N D - S U M M E R s e s s io n 7/10-8/15 N e w a p a r t m e n t w ith pool. 5 b lo c k s w e st c a m p u s 5260.00 m o n t h ly , Vj b ills 478- 7418. F e m a le . ___ M A T U R E N O N S M O K I N G so b e r CO-ed w it h C h r i s t ia n c o n v ic t io n s w a n t s s a m e to s h a r e 2 B R h o u s e in g o o d a r e a n o r t h of t o w n C a ll M a r t h a a t (713) 785-5946. N O N S M O K I N G V E G E T A R I A N m a le , s e r io u s stu d e n t s e e k s r o o m / h o u s e n e a r c a m p u s , m e a l s h a r in g M i k e 478-0880 N O D E P O S I T , n o le ase . W a te r b e d , p r i ­ v a te stu d y . 5150 p lu s VS b ills. S t e v e o r M a t t 478-6810 a n y t im e . H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D fo r n ic e 3-1 fo r J u ly , A u g u s t 5167, VS b ills, sh u ttle R e ­ sp o n s ib le in d e p e n d e n t, r o c k n roll. 474- 6349 R O O M M A T E F O R f u r n is h e d 3-1 on C R O w n ro o m , a ir - c o n d it io n in g , w a s h e r d r y e r 5150 L a m a r o r D e b b ie 459-7234 595 A m o n t h ! R o o m m a t e n e e d e d fo r N o r t h A u s t in d u p le x N e a r C R sh u ttle. 550 d e p o s it a n d V» b ills L e a v e m e s s a g e at 926-9357 R E S P O N S I B L E g r a d u a t e st u d e n t - s h a r e p le a s a n t o ld e r h o u se on p a r k sh u tt le E n f i e l d a r e a 5140 473- 8 5 5 4 . _____________ ______________________ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E F O R d u p le x n e a r Z ilk e r 5130 p e r m o n t h A v a i l a b le Im m e d ia t e ly . 479-0021, R o g e r o r R o s e S U M M E R R O O M M A T E ( * e m a le n on - s m o k e r ) n e e d e d to s h a r e f u r n is h e d 2 B R 2 B A c o n d o m i n i u m W C ro u te P o e 478- 3394. m o r n l n o s a n d a fte r 6 p .m . FURNISHED APARTMENTS PRIVATE PROPERTIES 'M M I > ! V ! A Í Manor Rd. at IH 35-On EC Shuttlo Everyone Needs That Private Place FREE Apartment Locating 472-2477 til SIZOS. prices tnd locations NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL PRIVATE ROOM-*427M FOR BOTH SUMMER SESSIONS • C o -e d d o r m « c r o s s the stre e t t r o m c a m p u s a t 27th • T a s t e fu l, e ffic ie n t f u r n i s h in g s • R e c r e a t io n a re a . su n d e c k , w id e s c r e e n T V . • N o m e e * p ie n . r e f r i g e r a t o r s m e v e r y r o o m • F r e e p e r k m g a v a i la b l e fo r the s u m m e r FREE - apt. referral sorvtce FEE PAID BY APT O W N E R ^ £ 474-6357 3507 N IN T ER R EG IO N A L 0 8 8 Northwest Hills 451-2223 Riverside 441-2277 Monday, July 6. 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 I Professor slams budget cuts By ERIC WILLIAMS D aily Texan Staff The Reagan administration is usurping the legislative functions of Congress and creating a virtu­ al “ executive oligirchy,” said a UT professor who once served as secretary of the Department of Health Education and Welfare. Wilbur Cohen, secretary of HEW in 1968 during the presiden­ cy of Lyndon Johnson and profes­ sor at the L.BJ School of Public Affairs, was speaking in an inter­ view for the television program “ Capital Eye,” which aired Sun­ day morning. Cohen said, “ This is the first time in my 47 years of working with Congress that a president of the United States has said, ‘You’ve gotta take it a hundred percent the way I want it or I won’t play with you.’ ” Cohen said he respects the presidency but believes the House of Representatives should be given will. a chance to work its He said when the Reagan budget was presented to them, “ They had to either swallow it whole or, in effect, be considered traitors to the government. “ I feel it was a black Thursday in the history of our country to force congressmen to vote up or down a whole package without giving them any kind of choice on individual matters.’’ Cohen said policy by the Reagan administration is being formulated by David Stockman through the Office of Manage­ ment and Budget and by the White House staff. He said peo­ ple involved in the normal opera­ tional aspects of government, like Cabinet officers, have very little say. “ Stockman is a brilliant young man,” Cohen said, “ But there’s ice water in his veins. He has no compassion and no understand­ ing of the elements of human dig­ nity Cohen, who did a major por­ tion of the research that led to the creation of the Social Securi­ ty System during the presidency of Franklin Roosevelt, said Reagan’s proposed budget cuts are causing the elderly to fear that their Social Security bene­ fits will be cut. “ They are in a state of anxiety such as I have never seen before in this country, in which they are upset that the government is going to break the promises that had been made to them after some of them have contributed to Social Security over 40 years,” Cohen said. Cohen described the present Social Security system as a com­ pact between generations. He said the Reagan administration cuts could lead to a breakup of this compact, a breakup which he says would be a “ disaster and a tragedy.” “ Social Security is not ban­ krupt today, it won’t be bankrupt tomorrow, and I don’t think it will ever be bankrupt,” said Cohen. He added there are cash flow problems in the system and sug­ gested these could be solved if the Social Security system is al­ lowed to borrow money from the general funds. The system could gain long- range fiscal security by having Congress pay half of the ex­ penses incurred by the Medicare program from general revenues, Cohen said. If Congress allowed the differ­ ent funds within the Social Secur­ ity system to borrow money from each other, short-term cash flow problems could partially be resolved, he said. The “ Capital Eye " interview was broadcast on KTVV, Chan­ nel 36. Winston Bode, who con­ ducted the interview, said a re­ peat of the program will be broadcast on ACTV cable access Channel 10 at 9:30 p.m. Monday. ‘K id 1 vs. com puter Charlie Brown, 14, known as ‘The Kid,’ played record. Charlie scored 16 million points Friday the video game ‘Asteroids' for 36 hours and 56 night at Muther’s Fun and Qames at 2532 Gua- mlnutes on one quarter, setting a new world dalupe St. American companies recruit foreigners for industrial positions * 1981 The New York Times N EW YO RK — When Vir Dhaka was growing up on a farm in Punjab, India, his father, seeing his son was not content to follow in his footsteps, encouraged him to go to college. He did, and later decided to pursue his graduate degree in America. That was 20 years ago. He has since risen through the ranks of the U.S. electronics industry to become vice president of Xerox’s microelectronics research center in E l Segundo, Calif. Dhaka’s story is one that is being told with greater frequency these days as more American-educated foreign nationals are snatched up by industry in the United States. American companies are recruiting people like Dhaka from the Middle East, Asia and South America to stem a shortage of technical professionals that became apparent in the mid-1970s and continues through today. Fewer American students, according to the National Science Foundation, are seeking advanced degrees in technical fields — opting to take high-paying jobs after graduation instead — and their places in the classroom and later in highly trained spots in industry are being filled by foreigners. Nowhere is the trend more apparent than in the high-technol­ ogy computer and electronics industry. The Xerox Corp. says resident aliens account for 15 percent of its 2,000-person domes­ tic research staff. Michael J. Jeffries, a research and develop­ ment manager at General Electric’s research facility in Sche­ nectady, N.Y., said that non-citizens account for 25 percent of his 350-person staff. The trend toward recruiting more foreign professionals ap­ pears to be even stronger at companies that lack the clout, money or prestige of a multinational that allow the giants to draw from the cream of the American crop. Intel, a manufacturer of computer memory circuits and other electronic components, is a shining example of the new­ found prominence foreigners are finding in California’s Silicon Valley Based in Santa Clara, Calif., the company’s 500-person research staff is 40 percent foreign. “ We have one computer design group,” said Gerry Parker, Intel’s vice president of technology, “ where eight of the 10 members are Chinese na­ tionals from Taiwan.” Parker added that foreigners account for 75 percent of the roughly 100 Ph.D.s on his staff. In the petrochemical and chemical industries, personnel managers have also found the need to draw on foreign talent. Eugene Greskovich, chief of corporate research for Air Prod­ ucts and Chemicals, based in Allentown, Pa., says foreigners account for 30 to 50 percent of the 150-person staff he oversees. Although the ratio is lower on Dow Chemical’s 4,000-person domestic staff — about 10 percent — the research and develop­ ment chief, David R. Sheetz, is quick to point out that the number “ is twice what it was a decade ago." While Du Pont declined to give a breakdown of its technical staff, a spokesman there said that 20 percent of the roughly 400 research-oriented Ph.D.'s it hired over the last two years were foreigners. And David A Small, president of Scientific Placement, a Houston-based executive search firm that places middle- and upper-level technical personnel, maintains that most corporate estimates are conservative “ Most don’t include the number of aliens that have since gone on to become U.S. citizens," he says “If you want to count them, you can add another 5 to 10 percent to their total. " HELP WANTED ■ HELP WANTED fu ll tim e , u rg e n tly needed W o rk at your own speed at hom e or in our o ffic e Send q u a lific a tio n s to T ra n s la to rs , P.O. Box 7552, A u stin, T X 78712. E A R N E X T R A m oney. P a r t /f u ll tim e. N e o-Life C o m pany, e stablished 1958, needs lo cal re p re s e n ta tiv e s . V ita m in s and m in e ra ls . Buy yo u r own wholesale H ighest c o m m iss io n s paid. C a ll G w yn 458-4651, evenings. F U L L T IM E p o sitio n open. M u st be 18 o r older. A p p ly in person, C a p ito l Coin Co. 3004 G uadalupe, 472-1676. T H E S E T T L E M E N T C L U B Home, a re s id e n tia l tre a tm e n t ce n te r, has an im ­ m e d ia te opening fo r a B a ch e lo r's level ca se w o rke r a t 30 h o u r/w e e k a t *675/ m onth. In a d d itio n to s k ills a p p lica n t M U S T have s u b s ta n tia l d ire c t c h ild care w o rk expe rie n ce w ith tro u b le d adoles­ cents. C all A rle n e M a rk s at 836-2150 be­ tween 10 a m .-2 a .m ., M o n .-F ri. S E T T L E M E N T C L U B H O M E , a re s i­ d e n tia l tre a tm e n t ce n te r fo r adolescent boys and g irls is in te rv ie w in g c h ild care w o rk e rs fo r w e e k n ig h t s h ift (4 p .m .-12 m id n ig h t S u n.-T hurs ), and weekend s h ift (4 p .m .-12 m id n ig h t F r i., 8 a .m .-12 m id n ig h t Sat. and 8 a .m .-4 p.m . Sun.). H o u rly wages c o m m e n s u ra te w ith expe­ rience. C a ll M rs Logan between 10 a .m -2 p.m . M o n .-F ri. on ly, a t 836-2150. fo r evening IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G b a rte n d e r F rid a y , S a tu rd a y and Sunday evenings fro m 4 p .m .-12 p m . A p p ly in person R a m ad a Inn C a p ito l, 300 E. 11th St. between 3-5 p.m . B A B Y S IT T E R ON occasional weekends fo r re ­ tw o young g irls . R eferences q u ire d . 472-9205. ____________ fo r ch il- W A N T E D : C O U N SE LO R S F u ll- d re n 's day ca m p , W e stla ke H ills , tim e fo r sports a c tiv itie s , a rts and c ra fts , etc. Now th ro u g h A u g­ ust 21st. C a ll 327-0369 fo r d e ta ils. in s tru c to rs I W A N T A P E R S O N w ho is a student of lik e s co u n try m usic, p la ys the piano, m usic, can put ch ords on m usic, and plans to sta y a ro u n d A u stin . Interested? W rite : S.G.H., Box 14441, A u stin, 78761 w ith d e ta ils . E x c itin g tim e s ahead^ E A R N E X T R A m oney. P a r t /f u ll tim e . N e o-Lite C o m pa ny, established 1958, needs lo cal re p re s e n ta tiv e s . V ita m in s and m in e ra ls . Buy yo u r own wholesale. Highest c o m m issio n s paid. C a ll G w yn 458-4651, evenings. _______________ P H L E B O T O M IS T N E E D E D im m e d i­ a te ly P a rt-tim e and fu ll-tim e positions a v a ila b le Six m o n th s' ph le b o to m y expe­ rience la rg e c lin ic o r h o sp ital re­ q u ire d . S a la ry dependent upon e x p e ri­ ence. Please c a ll 476-7111 ex t. 450 fo r a p p o in tm e n t fo r a p p lic a tio n ___________ in N E E D E D : G R A D U A T E student to live- in w ith e ld e rly la d y, re n t fre e On D uval bus line. 453-0095. _____ F U L L A N D p a rt tim e w a ltp e rso n need­ ed. A p p ly In person at 2912 G uadalupe. Chez F re d L IK E TO ta lk on the phone? G et paid fo r it. S3.50-*5.50 an ho u r. No se llin g . N o rth area. M o n d a y -T h u rs d a y , 5-9. C a ll Renee a t 837-0045. R E C E P T IO N IS T N E E D E D -e x p e rle n c e p re fe rre d . A p p ly in person a t K O K E , 3108 N. L a m a r. No c a lls . E .O .E . A D V E R T IS IN G SALES-broadcasting or sales experience preferred A p p ly in person o r send resum e. No c a lls. Con­ ta c t K O K E , 3108 N. L a m a r, P.O. Box 1208, A u stin , T X 78767. E . O . E _________ P O S ITIO N P A R T - T IM E /F U L L - T IM E ------ as O F F IC E M A N A G E R . C o m m u n ica ­ im p o rta n t. tion s k ills and p e rs o n a lity ty p in g re ­ E ffic ie n t o ffic e s k ills and qu ire d . S ta rtin g s a la ry * 4 .50/hour. In ­ q u ire C.A B a ke r, 472-8085 MOTEL NIGHT CLERK ro w o rk 9 pm -7 a m fiv e n ights w e ekly or ¡very oth e r n ig h t. S a la ry negotiable, d e v io u s business e xp e rie n c e p re fe rre d lAust be sober personable, dependable, íonest, in good h e a lth A p p ly in person. WEST WINDS MOTEL A irp o rt B lv d a n d lH 3 5 B a k e r y P o s itio n is L o c a l w h o le g r a in b a k e ry ta k in g a p p lic a tio n s fo r b a k e r's assistan t and package asse m b le r A p p lic a n ts m ust be tra n s p o ra tio n and non-sm okers, ow n h a v e a good w o rk in g kn o w le d g e of a rith m e tic and n a tu ra l foods O btain a p p lic a tio n at S u nbelt B a k in g Co 7617 H M e tro D riv e (S outheast A u s tin ) between 1-4 p m AA onday-Thursday only. O nly serious w o rk e rs need ap p ly Adm issions Im m e d ia te opening fo r A dm issions C le rk s P a rt-tim e and fu ll-tim e E x c e lle n t ben efits St D a v id 's C o m m u n ity H o spital 919 E 32nd St 476-7111 e xt 313 An E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r T E L E P H O N E S A L E S ►4.50/hour. M ond ay-Friday, > 30-9 30 p.m. 815 Brazos Suite Mo. 201. Call 472-1708. TYPIST 50 wpm , some filing. $4.00/hour. Call 472* 1708. A L L YO U F O LK S who need e x tra m o n ­ ey can sell flo w e rs w ith The O rig in a l F lo w e r People. Paid d a ily . 288-1102. P A R T T IM E and fu ll tim e te ch n ica l e d i­ to rs needed M u st have stron g b a c k ­ ground in c h e m is try , physics, e le c tric a l e ng ineering, or che m ica l e n g ineering. P rio r e d itin g e xpe rience p re fe rre d P a rt-tim e e d itin g to be done a t hom e. Good pay and e xce lle n t e xpe rience Send q u a lific a tio n s to T ra n s la to rs , P.O. Box 7552, A u stin , TX 78712. SERVICES PHOTOS for PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 m inute service M O N.-SAT. 10-6 4 7 7 -5 5 5 5 THE THIRD EYE 2 5 3 0 GUADALUPE ORAL SURGERY PATIENTS Students in need o f heving third molars ( Wisdom teeth) remov­ ed and who would be willing to participate in an analgesic drug study at reduced fees, please call: Donald R. Mohlisch, M.D., D.D.S. 451-0254 Surgery can be arranged to be done at the University of Texas if S tu d e n t H e a lth S e rv ic a desired. DON'T LEAVE TOWN! F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T S A N D R E F E R R A L S TO A U S T IN R E S O U R C E S Wom en's Referral Center 603 W. 13th No. 210 476-6878 MS S huttle PROBLEM PREGNANCY C O U N S EL IN G , R E F E R R A L S & F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T IN G T exas P ro b le m P re g n a n cy 507 P ow ell St. M -F , 7:30-5:30 474-9930 J E N N IN G S ' M O V IN G and H a u lin g De­ pendable persona l se rvice , la rg e or s m a ll jobs 7 d a ys/w e e k. 442-6181. A R T 'S M O V IN G and H a u lin g : any area 24 hours, 7 days. 447-9384, 442-019i G R E P R E P classes fo r sum m e r e xam s b e g inning June 9th. E x c e lle n t in s tru c ­ to r/m a te r ia ls . C all now. 443-9354. T Y P IC A L W ES T cam pus ta cke y L a rg e tw o ro o m a p a rtm e n t fo r m ale or v e ry c a m p a tib le room ies. 5250 A B P C onsid­ e ra tio n fo r p a r tia l re n t possible. J e re m i­ ah at 477-720? LOST & FOUND LOST H IP P IE H o llo w : D a rk blue purse w ith tw o rin g s , g re a t se n tim e n ta l value. R e w ard 442-9746 WANTED F AST C A S H : We buy or loan on gold and S il v e r in any fo rm 454-0459, 5134 B u rn e t Road c u rre n c y , CLASS R IN G S , gold le w e lry , old pocket w atches, stam p s wanted H ig h p n c e s paid P ionee r Coin C o m p a ­ ny, 5555 N o rth L a m a r, B ldg. C-113 in C o m m e rce P a rk , 451-3607. P A /S O U N D R e in fo rc e m e n t System , six or e ig h t channel, p re fe r pow er m ix e r E v e re tt M ille r , 3311 Red R iv e r W A N T E D TW O B a ry s h n ik o v p e r fo rm ­ ance tic k e ts C a ll 474-2754 a fte r 5 p m N E W L Y A P P O IN T E D assistan t p ro fe s ­ sor seeks house s ittin g p osition fo r 1981* 82 C ali 471-3211 ONE M O N T H fre e O ffice warehouse space a v a ila b le 1,000-17.500 sq ft a v a il­ able at 5214 Burleson Rd R e a lto rs w e l­ com e C a ll leasing age nt a t 441-4044 MUSICAL INSTRUCTION E X P E R I E N C E D P IA N O G U I T A R teacher B eginn ers-advan ced U T de­ gree A fte r 1 p m 459-4082. 451-0053 P R IV A T E V O IC E , and piano instruc­ i « z . pop, country, tion, rhythm and M u tt. 327 5904 classical, TRAVEL In te rn a tio n a lly L E A R N SP A N IS H m ancient Veracruz, recognized M exico school Call or w rite for tree brochure 447-2514 or 441 22H 1731 Ttm berwood D rive, Austin, Texas 71741 NEED RIDE to Oan var an ytim e afte r 4th W ilt share gas. etc Scott 474-1234 Cowboys, Indians gang up to save American West from rapid growth * iWBi ine New York Times no shortage of villains. KETCHUM , Idaho — Vine Deloria a member of the Standing Rock Jr Sioux Tribe who is now a political sci­ ence professor at the University of Ari­ zona, was talking about the growing threat of rapid development to the American West. “ The cowboys and the Indians are both going be on the same side in this next fight,” observed Deloria. “ Neither one of them wants to end up as busboys at some new Ramada Inn Deloria was among several dozen academics, authors, business leaders and western political figures who gath­ ered in nearby Sun Valley last week in an effort to define what many of them regard as the growing threat to the western way of life that is posed by the kinds of rapid growth now overtaking the region, including exploitation of the area’s vast reserves of oil, gas, coal and other energy resources. It was no easy task, and though the conference was entitled “ The American West: Colonies in Revolt,” not every­ one agreed on just what it is the West is rebelling against. But there was clearly Some focused on the new administra­ tion in Washington, which was broadly characterized by Deloria as a “ bunch of crazies who are going to reach into the federal government and tear out a lot of wires.” Others aimed their wrath at the big energy companies, describing them as colonizers and absentee landlords who can use their vast wealth and influence to nakedly manipulate the political pro­ cess. And Sen. James A. McClure, R-Ida- ho, complained that too many fisher­ men were crowding his favorite trout stream these days. Many of those fishermen, McClure suggested, are non-Idahoans and outsid­ ers who “ want to impose on us the bur­ den of being their playground.” It is such people, the senator said, who are denying Idaho domininon over its own future by encouraging restrictive man­ agement of federal lands in the state. But amid the frequent efforts to com­ pare the fate of the West to that of the original 13 colonies rebelling against the tyranny of King George III, one broader conclusion of the conferees was that a big part of the problem facing the West today are Westerners themselves. “ We cannot leave ourselves out of the blame,” said Guy Martin, an assistant secretary of the interior in the Carter administration. “ Western communities which have not been able to keep out trailer parks aren’t going to have much success in blocking open-pit mines. Deloria, the author of the novel, “ Custer Died for Our Sins,” said that because of a lack of community respon­ sibility and common cultural percep­ tions, Westerners had been unable to decide who they were and what they wanted. Unless the West figures out some way to act in concert, he said, “ the big corporations are going to get the gold mine and we re going to get the shaft.” He suggested that Westerners work to increase the strength of local govern­ ments by involving more people in the political process. Some of the panelists argued that part of the problem is an endemic un­ certainty within the West about its own future. College of business stiffens requirements By MELINDA MACHADO D aily Texan Staff The College of Business Administration is mailing fresh­ men notice of the revised requirements for admission to upper-division programs in the college, said Allen Bizzell, dean for undergraduate student matters in that college. Beginning in the fall, entering freshmen who plan to pursue a degree in the CBA will be classified as pre-busi­ ness students — major code 2002000 — instead of having an academic major code, he said. “ It doesn’t immediately affect them, they still take the same set of courses," Bizzell said. The students will be advised by counselors in the under­ graduate dean’s office in the college. Because of the large enrollment in the college, a plan to curtail enrollment was approved in April, when President Peter Flawn signed an interim plan to effect such limita­ tion. During fall 1980, of the 46,148 students enrolled at the University, 10,325 students were listed in the CBA. To be eligible for admission into an upper-division pro­ gram, the applicant must complete at least 27 hours from an approved list of lower-division courses, including Eng­ lish, economics, mathematics and accounting. In addition to the core courses, classes in the major area of study will be taken into account when their application is reviewed. “ Students ought to start out doing the best they can, so they can go from pre-business into business,” Bizzell said. PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE NATION AL W EATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 7 - 6 - 8 1 SEATTLE 1 / I 1 T r I P A y f f i : 5TON W YORK UP! WEATHER FOTOCAST <6 Austin aktei will be cloudy Monday with a high In tha middle •Os. Thunderstorms Mid heavy rains are likely. There will be a 50 percent chance of rain Monday with a 80 percent chance Monday night Easterly winds will be 5 to 10 mph, gusty and variable. Elsewhere weather is fair in general, with skies ranging from sunny to partly cloudy. 'VE FEP YOU SO OFTEN I CAN 90 IT WITH MY EYES SHUT... by joh n n y hart t h e v J o r i d p iv y o u P U L L A r i A irt MATH ? I FClMP TRAT AM APPLE A DAY Oft*APP óOK iMTfo A y tBACAee I0o TiM\E5 A VEAK PARfAeK FOR RENT «LOOM COUNTY by Berfce B reathed FOR CRYING OUT LOUP... LFMMEE see you to n m t, three eo aai. cho n, c m m m . in GROVE UNO FIRST: COOK ME A MEAL- secoNp: pep/ c m tour UFE TO CHAR/TY. TH/RP: GET A PARTIAL L o e o m m . Miff? YOU HERRP M e. COOK - A a M£M? UN-HUH ACROSS 1 Turncoat 4 Moistens 9 Chair pari 14 “ --------- Were a Rich Man" Island 49 Air hero 50 In addition 51 Gull 52 Contend with 54 Followers 58 DDE 60 Spanish title 15 Motionless 16 Moslem relig­ 61 Martinique ious college volcano 17 Bowling alley 62 Kind of thread 64 Unsettled 66 Interrogator 67 Colonist's greeting 68 Cauldron 69 Bothersome 70 Cogwheels 71 Hit sign DOWN machine 19 Of the AM 20 Standing 21 A Gardner 22 LA time 23 Neighboring 24 Killed 26 Leave out 29 Displeasure 31 — — nut­ shell 32 Wall pier 33 Semitic language 36 Authorizes 38 Secured 39 Young flower 41 Easily led 43 Destroy the interior 44 Toboggan 46 Poured down 47 Great Barrier 1 Develop 2 Blazing 3 Ringworm 4 Regime 5 Soldier insect 6 Refined ore 7 Triumph 8 Forced 9 Mine pit 10 Blood part 11 Allowing entry: 2 words FRIDAY’S PUZZLE SOLVED 3393 33303 3E3ÜQ 3333 333319 3933 2J3ÜI J J U J J 03Q3 J J J J J U 33Q3 C3U 33033 aaUUHUd 33333333 333 333 33033 BOBBE 3333 H333U BQQH 33333 33339 Q3Q 333 aBBBCaBBB 3 333333 330(33 333 19333 33393Q 3093 33333 □ □ □ □ 0339 33333 30013 3333 33333 3333 12 “Where — 13 Brownish 18 Reporter 24 Not clerical 25 Lifelike 27 Fur wrap 28 Glutted 30 Bones 33 Dialect 34 Course 35 Star-shaped figures 37 Thumb over 40 Opting 42 Nattier 45 Ardent fan 48 Spat 53 Santa — 55 Strikes 56 Purport 57 Quarrel: 2 words 59 Weird: Var. 61 — up: Livens 62 Circuit 63 Honshu city 65 Neither s companion 1 2 ' 14 1 i 20 2¿ H I M I I I L M 3 I T i r «8 w w 7T Page 10 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, July 6, 1981 —_ — ifle lu u i n r i u A iiii ip A /iii i-j ...w.— j, Economic panel’s study says MX system unneeded moinf oinc that thp mi © © ® © ® BATMAN AND THE SUPER 7 O © ®THE VICTORY GRADEN ffl ® EXTENSION'81 © 1® ffl (DRJCHIE RICH / 8COOBY DOO © 33 CARAS E GESTOS O 33 O ® © ® POPEYE O © XSNEAK PREVIEWS © ® 50PLU8 © 33 MAS O MENOS © 5 0 ® © ® d a f f y d u c k o © f THIS OLD HOUSE © ® YOUNG WORLD MAGAZINE © 5® © GDt h u n d a r r t h e ba r bar ian © 33 BUR8UJA8 10D0 © 32) © ® © ® t h e j e t s o n s O 33) O CD © ® t a r z a n / l o n e r a n g e s O © rDROMAQNOU'8 TABLE (R) © ® LAKE COUNTRY FI8HING H ost G e n e Coffelt © 3® © (JlHEATHCUFF AND DINGBAT 10:30 O 32) © ® © ® HONQ KONG PHOOEY O © ®JULIA CHILD AND COMPANY © ® WHAT ABOUT PEOPLE Host Je rry Thom as © 3® © Í2JPLA8TICMAN / BABY PLAS © 33 LA VIDA EN CRI8T0 11:00 11:15 11:30 © 33 O ® © ® JONNY d d e s t © 3$ Q ® FAT ALBERT Q © XHERE-8 TO YOUR HEALTH Q © ® THE BASEBALL BUNCH Host Jo h n n y B ench © ® L08 T1EMP08 © 3® © ®WEEKEND SPECIAL ‘S o u p For P re sid en t S o u p and his p olitical rival Ja n ic e plot to ruin each o th e r's bid for s ch o o l president. (R) © 33 EL CRISTO VIVIENTE © ® TIME OUT WITH SCOTT O 32) © ® THE FL1NT8TONES 0 3 3 0 ® DRAK PACK O © ®THE VICTORY GARDEN © ® MINORITY FORUM © ® PARENTS IN ACTION © 5® © QDAMERICAN BANDSTAND © ® KIDSWORLD © 32) MOVIE ' Tacu ara Y C h am orro , P ich o n e s De H o m b re " R o d o lfo P D iN u c- ci. G a b rie l D avalos AFTERNOON 12:00 © 32) SPORT8 ARELD © 33 O ® JASON OF 8TAR COMMAND © ® NEW8WATCH PRESENTS O © ? BIG BLUE MARBLE © ® WE8TERN OUTDOORSMAN © ® SIGN OF THE TIMES CD ® SOUL TRAIN 12:30 Q 32) BATTLE OF THE PLANETS © 33 MOVIE * +'/* "The Three S to o g e s In O rb it" (1962) Th ree S to o g e s, C a ro l C h riste n se n Three m en beco m e in volved with an invention dev elo p ed by M a r­ tian sp ie s © ® PERSPECTIVE o ® 30 MINUTES O © ® UP AND COMING L ove s L e sso n L e a rn e d ” F ran cin e runs into tro u ­ ble when she gets a title role in "Rom eo and Ju lie t" and her boyfrien d doesn t © ® 8 PORTS AFIELD © ® POINT OF VIEW © 3®. MOVIE A A Vi "T h e L a n d That Tim e Forgot (1975) Doug M c C lu re , S u sa n P e n h a lig o n . S u rv iv o rs from an A llied s u b m arin e and their G e rm a n c a p ­ to rs land o n a n is la n d ruled by p re h isto ric anim als © ® MOVIE A A “Ju stic e O f The W e s t" (1956) C lay to n M o o re Jay S il- verheels The Lon e R anger and T o n to in vestig ate two s ep arate g o ld ro b b e rie s and clash with an outlaw gang w ho gun n ed dow n an e ld erly m arshal 0 3 2 ) 0 ® © ® © ® b a s e b a l l t o d a y O ® THE BASEBALL BUNCH H ost Joh n n y Bench. O © ®MI8TER ROGERS (R) © ® FIESTA MEXICANA 1:00 1:30 SATURDAY TELEVISION P e rcy K ilb n d e The K e ttle s becom e entangled with sp ies when they visit m -iaws in Parts o X MARY TYLER MOORE O © X8YÜNE © ® NEWTON / WEAVER HOUR © X MO VIE A A ’ 2 A m bush Bay (1966) Hugh O 'B riar. M ick e y Rooney M a rin e s in the P h ilip p in es search for a spy with know tedge of M a c A rth u r s plan n ed invasion © 32 TUUO LOZA 2:15 © 1® MOVIE A A The P e o p le That Tim e F o rg o t" (1977) P a trick W ayne Doug M c C lu re A n early 20th-century polar ex p ed itio n d isc o v e rs a m ysteriou s island inh ab ited by prim itive people and pre h isto ric anim als 2:30 6 MOVIE A C h allen ge For Robm H o o d ” (1967) B arrie Ingnam The legendary hero of S h erw oo d F orest and his m erry m en outwit the evil S h eriff of N o ttin g ­ ham to rob from the rich and give to the poor G O X 8UPER MEMORIES OF THE SUPER BOWLS O © ® A WORD ON WORDS © 33 FUTBOL INTERNACIONAL 3 DO © © ®8TU0I0 SEE Eagle Set saii with the first co -e d crew of the C o a st G u ard cutter Eagle; e xplore the secrets of E S P . visit the zo o (R) © T MOVIE A A V i S h ort W alk To D ayligh t" (1972) Ja m e s B rolin . Don M itch ­ ell a " sm all group of peo ple are trap ped in a subw ay after an earth q u ake d estro ys New York City. 3:30 © 32! MOVIE A A Vi "T h e G re at A m erican Beauty C o n test (1973) E lean or Parker, B o b C u m m in g s A beauty pageant is d isrup ted by ugly ru m o rs c o n c e rn ­ ing one of the finalists, a judge and a past winner © 33 I LOVE LUCY g rjy SPORTS SATURDAY W om en s International Diving M eet (from R L a u d ­ erdale, Fla.); W o rld 's G re atest Po o l P layers (from L a ke Tahoe, Nev.). Q © XRAINBOW'S END 4:00 © 3 3 WILD, WILD WEST The dem en ted leader of a fan atical arm y p lan s to overthrow the U .S. A rm y d iv isio n s station ed in the S ou th w est © ® 5 MINUTES TO UVE O © XSESAME STREET (R) g © ® © $ 5 © ®WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS The D ream Mile, featuring the w o rld 's top m ilers (from O slo, Norway); U .S . / U .S .S R Track and Field M eet (from Leningrad. U S S R ), ffl ® LONE STAR SPORTSMAN © ® JIM THOMAS OUTDOORS 6 THE BEST OF CONSUMER REPORTS Highlights of past s p e cia ls present valu able buying inform ation on food, m edicine, h ou seh old p ro d u cts and safety devices © ® WILD KINGDOM E x p ed itio n G e ro m m o " © 33 ESTA SEMANA EN BEISBOL O 32) © 33 NEWS © ® THE MUPPETS G u est M arty Feldm an 6 MOVIE "T h e D u ch ess An d The D irtw ater F o x " (1976) G e o rg e Segal, G o ld ie Hawn A d an ce-h all girl w ho w ants respect an d a co n m an w ho la ck s fin esse em b a rk on a perilou s journey from S an F ra n cisco to S a lt L a ke C ity. PG o ® A FRIEND IN DEED Pau l S o rv ln o sta rs in th is story of tw o teen -agers w hose lives s ud den ly b ecom e intertw ined when one of them is d isab led O © ®8NEAK PREVIEWS Roger E b ert and G en e S is k e l review "Superm an II," “ C a n n o n b a ll R u n ” and “ S trip e s " (R) © ® KUNG FU C a in e co n fro n ts a killer from Ch in a, a dying p h otog rap h e r and an Indian youth threatened by the death of his spirit, ffl ® A LOOK AT AUSTIN © 53 LUCHA UBRE 4:30 5D0 5:30 © 32) CD ® NBC NEWS © 33 O ® © ® CBS NEW8 Q ® WILD KINGDOM "W ildfire (Part 1) O © ®VIKINGSI "Ham m er O f The N o rth ” The m yths and realities of the legen dary V iking cu ltu re are ex p lo red ( R ) Q © 3$ WESTERN OUTDOORSMAN f f l ®POP1 GOES THE COUNTRY G u ests: Rex A llen Jr., Jean m e Pruett EVENING 8:00 © 52) DANCE FEVER C e le b rity judges: M ary C ro sb y , R ich ard K line, G lo ria Loring . G uest: A b b e Lane © 33 CD ® HEE HAW Guests: B ill A n d erso n , M ary G o rd o n M urray, W ayne M assey, C u rly Putnam , B u ddy A lan © ® LAWRENCE WELK "H it Tu n es O f B an d L e a d e rs" © ® © ®NEW8 Q © ®ONCE UPON A CLASSIC "R e b e c c a O f Su n n y b ro o k Farm A voung girl leaves her im p ove rish ed fam ily and g o e s to live in town with her two s p in ­ ster aunts. (Part 1) (R) g © ® HEE HAW f f l ® © 3® SOLID GOLD Host: D ionne W arw ick. C oh ost: Jo s e Felician o. G u e s ts A ir S u pply, S te v ie N ick s, Tom Petty & The H ea rtb reak ers, the G re g K ihn B an d. H ank W illiam s Jr., Leo S ayer, R ick S prin gfield , f f l 3 3 ESTELARES DEL SABADO "E m m a n u e l" 6:30 © 32) WILD KINGDOM " W hy C o n s e rv a tio n ? ” o ® COMEDY SHOP O © ®THE TOM COTTLE SHOW "Ben An d R o b in ” Tw o young adu lts d is ­ cu s s learning to c o p e with being h om osexual, f f l ®THE MUPPETS G u est M e lissa M an ch ester. 7:00 © 32) © ® CD ® BARBARA MANDRELL AND THE MANDRELL SISTERS G u ests: G len C a m p b e ll, A la b a m a (R) O 33 O ® MOVIE -AAA "The Fou r M u s k e te e rs ” (1975) O liver Reed, R aquel W elch. Fou r d ash in g h eroes attem pt to protect their sove reig n K ing L o u is XIII and his queen from the sch em es of C a rd in a l Richelieu. (R) 6 GEORGE JONES: WITH A LITTLE HELP FROM HIS FRIENDS The co un try m u sic star is joined by his d au g hter G e o rg e tte Jo n e s, Je s si C olter, E lvis C o s te l­ lo. Em m ylou H arris, W aylo n Jen n in g s, Tanya T u ck er and Tam m y W yn ette for a tun e-filled show at the C o u n try C lu b in L o s A n g e le s Q © ®NOVA “ The M a la d y O f Health C a re " A n ex am in atio n of how G re at B ritain and the U.S. have org an ize d health ca re delivery for their p eo ple and how these system s are fin anced is presen ted. ( R ) g © ® © 3® © ®EK3HT IS ENOUGH N an cy lo se s one job when she a cc e p ts an oth er job m odelin g in a sem i-nu d e television co m m ercial. (R) Q © ® POPI GOES THE COUNTRY Guests: B re n d a Lee, B ig A l D ow ning © ® © 13 f f l X'-OVE BOAT G o p h e r b eco m es em otion ally involved with an a dversary and a dom in eerin g m other tries to break up her son s o m anee © ® NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD G u est G a il D avies ffl 32 ANTOLOGIA DE LA ZARZUELA 8*30 6 MOVIE American, G ig o lo ' (1980) R ich a rd Gere, Lauren H utton A Beverly H ills g igolo b eco m es the prim e su sp e ct in a m urder in vestigation © ® BACKSTAGE AT THE GRANO OLE OPRY MO a 15 O T f f l x GAMES PEOPLE PLAY Featured ath letic co m p etition betw een m m ates and staff at a federal prison: a la b o r union tug of w ar men s arm wrestling; w om en s bull ridin g (R) O TT Q T C 8 8 REPORTS W hat S h a ll W e D o A b o u t M o th er M arlen e S a n d e rs e x am in es the p ro b le m s of both the aging and th ose w ho are faced with selectin g a m ethod of ca re for them (R) „ O © ®NATK)NAL GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL E to sh a P la ce O f Dry W afer Ex tra o rd in a ry anim al behavior is o b serv ed in this film reco rd in g the w ildlife ot Eto sh a, a p reserve surrou n din g a huge dry lake in the southw est A frica n c o u n ­ try of N am ib ia. (R) © ® © 3® © ®FANTA8Y ISLAND A w riter lives the ute^if one of her ch a ra cte rs, and a k arate expert se e k s the ultim ate ch allen g e (R) g f f l ® WRESTLING © 33 BOXEO DESOE MEXICO 1(h00 10:30 0 5 0 3 3 © ® © ® © ® © ! ® © 3 ) © ® n e w s O © ®AUST1N CITY LIMITS Pure P rairie Leagu e / B o b b y Bare © 5 © ® © ® SATURDAY NIGHT UVE H ost G a ry B u sey (R) © 3 3 MOVIE -k + '/t S h e rlo ck H olm e s A n d The H ou se O f Fear (1945) Basu R ath bon e, Nigel B ru ce B ased on "T h e Five P ip s by A rth u r C o n a n D oyle The B ritish sup ersleu th in vestig ates the m u rders of m em b ers of a gentlem en s club 6 MOVIE “ Ju st Y ou A n d M e K id ” (1979) G e o rg e Burns, B ro o k e S h ie ld s A 70- year-old m an takes in a 14-year-old juvenile delin q uen t, d e s p ite the pro te sts of his m edd lin g relatives. P G ' Q ® MOVIE “ Father G o o s e ” (1965) C a ry G rant. L eslie C aron . A W orld W ar II drifter is a ssign ed to set up a watch statio n in the S o u th Seas, w here he is in vaded by a perky Fren ch s ch o o lte a ch e r and her seven lively your.g fem ale students. © ® © 3® MISS TEXAS PAGEANT Ten fin alists ch o se n from sixty-n in e beautiful w om en th roughout the state will c o m p e te for the M is s T exas title, live from Fort W orth. n n ■ vmt. j © ® MISS TEXAS PAGEANT Ten fin alists ch o se n from sixty-n in e b e a u titu w om en throughout the state will co m p e te for the M iss T exas title Live from . Fort W orth, f f l ® MO VIE During his 53 years of im p rison m en t, R o b ert S tro u d b e co m e s a w orld authority "Birdm an O f A lc a tra z ' (1962) B u rl Lan caster, K a rl M alden __ on birds. © 33 JOHNNY CANALES 11:00 12:00 , , _ © 32) WRESTLING © 3 3 MOVIE ★★ " S k y D ra g o n " (1949) R o lan d W inters, K eye Luke. Fam ed C h in e s e d etective C h a rlie C h an in vestig ates a m urder ab o ard an airp lan e © ® GRAPEVINE OPRY © ® SOUD GOLD Host: D ion n e W arw ick. Coh ost: Jo s e F e licia n o G u e s ts A ir S u p p ly, S te v ie N icks, Tom Petty & The H e a rtb reak ers, the G re g K ihn Band, Hank W illiam s Jr., Leo S ayer, R ick S p rin g field © 3® MOVIE ★ "G u n g a D in ” (1939) C a ry G ran t. D o ug las F a irb a n k s Jr B a se d on the story by R u d yard K iplin g. A n Indian w aterboy b e c o m e s involved with B ritish m ilitary action in the m ou n tain s of north ern India ffl ® AMERICA’S TOP TEN © © EMBAJADORES DE LA MUSICA COLOMBIANA 12:05 6 GEORGE JONES: WITH A LITTLE HELP FROM HIS FRIENDS The coun try m u sic star is join ed by his dau g hter G e o rg e tte Jon es, Je s s i C o lter. E lvis C o s te l­ lo, Em m ylou H arris, W aylon Jen n in g s, Tanya T u ck e r and Tam m y W ynette for a tu n e-filied show at the C o u n try C lu b in L o s A n g eles © ® © ® WRESTLING © ® GRAPEVINE OPRY 1:00 © 32) MOVIE t f r i t ' A “ The L e tte r" (1940) B ette Davis, G a le S o n d e rg a a rd A m arried w om an accu se d of her lo v e r's m urder attem p ts to regain p o s s e ss io n ot an in crim inatin g letter © ® WAYNE AND SHUSTER R o b in H o o d R o a st" O ® NEWS 1:20 6 ON LOCATION: BILLY CRYSTAL The stan d -u p c o m ic p ortrays a m uch older B illy C ry sta l “ re m e m b e rin g ” a live p erfo rm an ce at the M ayfair M u s ic H all in S a n ta M o n ica, C a lifo rn ia ffl ®ABC NEWS © 33) © ® NEWS ffl ® BACKSTAGE AT THE GRAND OLE OPRY ffl ® NEWS __________ ____________ ___________ _ SATURDAY’S SPORTS © ® THE BASEBALL BUNCH Host: Jo h n n y B en ch © 32) SPORTS AFIELD © ® WESTERN OUTDOORSMAN © ® SPORTS ARELD 0 @ © ® © ® f f l ® BASEBALL TODAY © ® THE BASEBALL BUNCH Host: Jo h n n y Bench. 1:15 0 5 0 ® © ® © ® NBC SPORTS SUMMER SEASON B elg iu m G ran e P rix m o to rcy cle race; F ron tie r D ays Rodeo; 1981 Tou r de F ra n ce report; th or­ o u gh b red h orse racing. o ® SUPER MEMORIES OF THE SUPER BOWLS ffl 33 FUTBOL INTERNACIONAL 3:30 O ® SPORTS SATURDAY W o m e n ’s International D iving M e et (from Ft Lau derd ale, Fla ); W o rld 's G re ate st P o o l P la ye rs (from L a k e Tahoe, Nev.). 4.-00 © ® © 3® ffl ®WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS The D ream M ile, featuring the w o rld 's top m ilers (from O slo, Norway); U.S. / U .S .S R. T rack and F ield M eet (from Len in grad, U.S.S.R.). ffl ® LONE STAR SPORTSMAN © ® JIM THOMA8 OUTDOORS © 33 ESTA SEMANA EN BEISBOL 4:30 12:30 12:40 1:10 1:30 2:00 11:00 12:00 12:30 1:00 2:30 1:15 0 3 2 ) 0 ® © ® © ® N B C S P O R T S S U M M E R S E A S O N Belg iu m G ra n d P rix m o to rcy cle race; Frontier D ays R o deo, 1981 Tour de F ra n ce report, th or­ ou gh b red h orse racing © ® NASHVILLE MUSIC Guest: B o b b y B are 10 AUSTIN CITY COUNCIL 7:30 O ® ITS YOUR BUSINESS O © 33ELECTRIC COMPANY (R) © ® VARIEDADES MUSICALES ©32) Y AHORA.. QUE? 2 DO © 33 MOVIE A A " M a A n d P a K e ttle O n V a c a tio n ” (1953) M a rjo rie M ain, 8:00 © 32) O ® CD ® BJ AND THE BEAR B J learn s that a stunt w om an and her stunt m an father are being sta lk e d by a killer (R) O © ®JAMES MICHENER'S WORLD "S p o rts In A m erica: The B la c k A th ­ le te ” Interviews with M u h am m ad Ali, A rth u r A she, O.J. S im p s o n and other noted ath letes highlight this e x p lo ra tio n of the ch an g in g role of b la ck p a rtic ip a ­ tion in A m e rica n sports. (R) y . Wednesday 10 p.m. g r AMATEUR COMEDY NIGHT A guaranteed night of insults and disrespect. outrageous Call for Auditions. Thursday 10 p.m. Friday 9 p.m. FREESTYIE EXHIBITION by National F ris b e e C ham p io n DON RHODES 2 for 1 Happy Hour Monday thru Friday 2 p.m.-9 p.m. A DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVE 3500 Guadalupe 453-9831 _______ U S E T E X A N C L A S S IF IE D S 'D ad 7: coming to terms with old age byRayYdoyaga "D a d ”; by William Wharton; Alfred A. Knopf; $12.96; 449 pages. G ro w in g old in A m e ric a is not ea sy. W e 'v e n e ve r really u n d e rsto o d h o w to fit the elderly into a so cie ty w h ich re ve res health a n d vigor, an attitude s u m m e d u p in Neil Y o u n g s d evastating p ro ve rb — "... better to b u rn out than to rust. O u r culture p e rsists in b u y in g the M a d is o n A v e n u e h y p e o eternal youth while the 1 9 8 0 c e n s u s a s s u r e s o u r ge neration the bleak future of the largest, p e r h a p s the p o o re st a n d m ost unhealthy, elderly pop u lation in m o d e rn times. T h o u g h m a n y of ou r b est writers are o c to g e n a ria n s, the p o p u la r novel in A m e ric a h a s re m a in e d true to a youthful m arket a n d h a s rarely ventured b e y o n d treatm ents of a d o le s ­ c e n c e a n d m id d le age. W illiam W h a rto n ’s s e c o n d novel, “D a d ,’’ is a m o v in g portrait of a m a n trying to m a k e the m ost of his last years. W h a rto n c a n b e c o m m e n d e d for his c o u ra g e in tackling the p ro b le m s of the a ge d , but the b o o k ultimately fails in its sentim ental jo u rn e y d o w n m e m o ry lane. W h arton w o n the A m e ric a n B o o k A w a rd in 1 9 7 9 for his first book, "B ir d y ,” a s u p e rb a n d no ve l story of y ou th c o m in g of age. in " D a d , " W h a rto n shifts a g e g r o u p s but retains h is inter­ est in c h a n g e of life periods. " D a d " takes p la ce in terribly la id -b a c k S a n t a M o n ic a , where, a m idst the eternal, s m o g - s h r o u d e d su n sh in e , three g e n e ra tio n s of the T re m o n t fam ily fac e death, joy a n d a h e a d - on collision with mortality. T h e b o o k h a s three narrators; J o h n Trem ont, a 5 2 -y e a r-o ld A m e ric a n artist living in F ra n c e w h o is called b a c k to C alifornia to c a re for h is c a rd ia c -stric k e n mother; Billy Trem ont, J o h n ’s so n , a 1 9 -y e a r-o ld co lle g e d ro p -o u t w h o joins h is father in taking c a re of h is g r a n d ­ parents; J o h n Trem on t Sr., the D a d of the title, a retired a ir­ plane m e c h a n ic w h o se s u d d e n se p a ra tio n from his wife d u r­ ing her illness c a u s e s a p ro fo u n d identity crisis. Th e narrative fram e is a c r o s s co u n try jou rn ey u n derta ke n by Billy a n d J o h n o n their w a y b a c k to F ra n c e at the c o n c lu ­ sio n of the T rem on t sa g a . T h ro u g h f la s h b a c k s w e learn of the elderly T rem on t’s two lives: o n e in S a n ta M o n ic a w h ere T re ­ m ont S r .’s hateful, o v e rb e a rin g wife k e e p s him in n e a r-c a p tiv- ity, a n d the other, h is im a g in e d life a s a farm er in N e w Jerse y. H is battle with s c h iz o p h re n ia a n d retreat from reality are both to u ch in g a n d pathetic, a n d p ro vid e the best e p is o d e s in the book, alth ough they c o m e d a n g e ro u sly c lo se to the em otional strin g-p u llin g of television s e rie s like "T h e W a lt o n s " a n d "A ll in the Fa m ily .” . l j ^ In an attempt to s a v e h is d a d from w ithdraw ing from the world, J o h n attem pts a re sc u e b y in tro d u cin g him to the h ip ­ p y h a u n ts of V e n ice , Calif. — the h a u n ts of J o h n Jr. s ow n youth. D a d ge ts in the s w in g of things, ridin g a m otorcycle, w a lking barefoot o n the b e a ch , s m o k in g d o p e a n d h a n g in g out at V e n ic e ’s in fa m o u s bar, T h e O a r H o u s e , b efore retreat­ ing b a c k into a co m a. W e are a s k e d to believe that D a d c a n c h a n g e from a se d a te A rc h ie B u n k e r-ty p e into a k a r m a - s e e k ­ ing T im o th y L e a ry a n d then b a c k a gain , without the creative, or at least clear, tran sition s re q uired for credibility. " D a d ” c a n b e a c c u s e d of trying to d o too m u c h in too few p a g e s. T h e re are lo n g tirade s o n ra cism , capitalist P '9 - d ° 9 p h y sic ia n s, art, p s y c h o lo g y , a u to m o b ile a ccid e n ts. B o b D y la n a n d a h o st of other a s id e s that are neither m e ta p h o rica nor esse n tia l to the story. D e sp ite this, W h a rto n ’s no ve l is still w orth re a d in g for its vivid, albeit sentim ental, a c c o u n t of J o h n ’s c o m in g to te rm s with h is father’s, a n d h is o w n fo rse e - able, old age. “D a d ” is a relatively lightw eight g r a b - b a g of ra m b lm g s that still m a n a g e s to b e w orthw hile s u m m e r re ad in g. T h e b o o k s m ixture of style s — it r e se m b le s a c r o s s betw een M y M o th e r M y s e lf” a n d ‘Z e n a n d the Art of M o to rc y c le M a in te n a n c e — offers e n o u g h im portant id e a s to b e p ro vo c a tive a n d a stro n g sig n a l for u s to w atch W h a rto n ’s future e n d e a v o rs. 3 T 8 » v y o s^ ü u » p « J i pow w ow « # *o jem«o oo mfiu BIZ iv io i s.oanr 19 - s x o v y 0 [ T j 0 °®euao' 1 SW W 981-&LI 3UOOS HVd 0 0 0 0 1 9 - fr>IO VH 51. - e x o v u H = ZM O V B 0 0 0 0 0 0 l 9 - i x o v « 0 0 0 0 0 0 3U| M*3fpu6 Guadalupe 603 W INth T h e f t s of p e r s o n a l p r o p e r t y o c c u r d a i l y a t a t h le t ic f a c i l it i e s a c r o s s c a m p u s . D o n 't le a v e v a l u a b l e s l y ­ in g a r o u n d u n a t t e n d e d w h i l e y o u w o r k o u t — lo c k t h e m u p N o t i f y U . T P o l i c e i m m e d i a t e l y in c a s e of th e ft a t 471-4441. H airaty lin g fo r M en & W om en Braiding Conditioning Precision Cuts Perms Frostings Hennas $12 and up 2004 Guadalupe (N e x t to St. A u *N n « ) 474-0022 2819 San Jacinto (Next To Towor Ro»taurcnt) 472-2709 s A V c 50% ON YOUR TEXAN WANT ADS! If you are a student or a memper o# the faculty or staff ot the University, you can save one-halt on your Texan Classified ads Dy coming in person to •ne T S P Business O f'ce. T S P Building 3 200 and placing your ad You must have University ID, and the spec a is pood oruy on ads pa>d in advance The flavor ot every Conans Chicago-style deep dish pizza could be no fresher than if its ] ingredients were delivered this morning. Which they were. Firm, whole mush­ rooms and tomatoes, fresh cheeses (never processed) and only premium beef, sausage and pepperoni. Naturally, we mix and age our own hearty sauces, and religiously prepare our famous pizza dough. b \ th, ,1k v It * thv iikv. M W M C M A fU m 1 m o a a y t u i o j t, ( « u n , V J c v f x I t N h : * ¡ i HUG. kinitl hw ht£h-»pivJ fwau ; Í knvrv Kaxiu it* PcoAs '—ken • . ¡ k x j i n ! I n^ht pruv. i k w S ’ *' ! : V ' ilMIK bu* toUlS tfv d i n it tfv the, u *i p o « i dm»k It ' tfv. n * . SU ., V i i b b k troll- II j . to 2. v ..x k tiiV ' b o i hh»h+! >*k1 fitm l* t<«*« ! k iv l it th. how pnce t H v r , \ - ¡ i , , v ! , ith * p n , A u fl .D U p N itn ii it 3N It11 .o ktiki[x . ", i w l 181J K tv c rm k k » FRIDAY TELEVISION 17 JULY 10. 1661 DAYTIME CHILDREN'S SHOW 1040 O © ® 8TUDIO SEE "A q u a r iu m '’ R id e in a hot air balloon; visit a basem en t aquarium ; m eet v id e o ta p e d pen pals. (R) Á M O V IE " A lie n ” (1979) Tom S k e rritt, Y ap h e t K otto . The crew of a s p a ce g o in g . m y ste rio u s signet to s .u p p o M d ly Oeed plan et sod . a f t - lan d in g, d isco v e r that the m essag e w as a w arning to_stay away R n m (TTTHE T E N E M E N T O rig in ally b ro a d ca s t in F eb ru a ry 1967 Ja y m c m u i S ' S ® 5 2 J 5 J ¡ r K S S r ¿ n n £ a b lack fam ilies living in the O a k la n d se ctio n of © ® M O V IE Aa*e,A '''T h e 'R e d P o n y ” (1973) H en ry Fon da, M au reen O 'H a ra A 12:00 6 R E M E M B E R W H E N : W H E E L S , W IN G S A N O W H I8 T L E 8 D ick C a v e tt traces the h isto ry of A m e rica n tra n sp o rta tio n fro m the c o ve re d w ago n of the O ld W est to the newly de v e lo p e d sp a ce shuttle © 5® A B C N E W S N IG H T U N E 12:10 © fD M O V I E + +’4 "Im p a s se ” (1969) B u rt R e yn o ld s, A n n e F ra n c is A n Am eri- can and h.s four-m an team se a rch for $3 m illio n in g o ld su p p o se d ly h id d en on DAYTIME MOVIES © 5® © S m O v Se ★ A r V o b i ^ n ^ T a n ' ’ (1976) S e a n C onnery. A u drey S R o b in H ood return s to S h erw oo d F o rest £ " * * * £ ro m a n ce with M a id M a ria n and face a final ch allen g e from the S h eriff a S o S ^ M a lin ta H ill Q © J IM B A K K E R © 5 $ FRIOAYS G u e s ts The S plit E n z (R) 1:00 12:30 © 55) M O V IE * p air of desp e ra te e sca p e d co n v icts k id n a p tw o beau tifu l y ou n g w om an to use " C r y T e rro r!” (1975) S u sa n H am p sh ire. B o b H o s k in s as h o stag es in their bid for freedom O ® t J ® f f l ® N E W S 6 M O V IE "G o in g In S ty le ” (1979) G e o rg e B u rn s, A rt C a rn e y B arely a b le to m ake e n d s m eet on their m eager S o c ia l S e cu rity a llo w an ces, th ree eld e rly g en ­ „ „ . . tlem en c arefu lly p lan a ban k heist P G 8 5 3 N E W 8 ® C O M M U N IT Y C A L E N D A R © ® N E W S 130 1:36 CD S 3 24 HORAS ©©•ooffl©®®®®®®®®®*!* ennHiilii 6 MOVIE "T h e E le ctric H o rs e m a n " (1979) R o b e rt R e d ford . Ja n e ^on da V e g a s co w b o y s te a ls a $12 m illio n th o ro u g h b re d h o rse to save him fro m his an d S u gar, L e e Ritenour f ia S O L IO G O L D H ost D ion n e W arw ick C o h o s t Bilty P re sto n G u e s ts £ c ? N ^ l £ T ¡ k . . r , A T M OI H o ~ y . R E O S p - d - a p o n . 0 — R r» ~ > VM n 1:00 f f l ® * * » "T h e H ard ys R id e H ig h ” (1938) M ick e y R ooney, Lew is S to n e The bills pile u p as a fam ily tries to p rove its claim to an inheritance. ingham . Q 6 " R io B ra v o " (1959) Jo h n W ayne, Dean M artin. A n o ld crip p le . d eo u tv-tu rn ed -d ru n k a young q u ick d ra w g u n sling er and a girl help a sheriff to ran ch e r w fio « a n ta to gat his k ille r bro th e r re leased tronr CD 53 COLORINA prison. EVENING 6:00 0 ( 1 2 ) 0 5 3 © ® O ® © ® ® ® © ® NEWS Ó © E 8TUDIO SEE “ A q u a riu m " R id e in a hot a ir balloon , v isit a basem en aquarium ; m eet vid e o ta p e d pen pals. (R) _ ffl ® WELCOME BACK, KOTTER G a b e su g g e sts that the S w e a th o g s stag e a “ s it-in " to p rotest the fo o d in the cafeteria. © (T® FAMILY FEUD CD 5$ e l HOGAR QUE YO ROBE _ . . O 52 O ® f f l ® 110 TAC DOUGH 6:30 P M- MAGAZINE A b u s in e s sm a n 's bout with near-fatal stress O reaction s; the International B a rb e rsh o p Q u artet C on ven tion . Q © EMACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT m r j ) HAPPY 0AY8 AGAIN R ich ie fig h ts his fears over atten d in g a H aiiow ee party at a h au n ted h ou se w h ere he b elie ves he saw a h e a d le ss ghost. 0 (jg p m MAGAZINE M e et a T e x a s tow er clim ber; the International B a rb e r­ s h o p Q u artet C o n v e n tio n . f f l ®HAPPY DAY8 AGAIN R ich ie, P o ts ie and R alph sne ak out of their hote roo m to s a m p le the nigh tlife in C h ica g o . CD 5 3 ROSA... DE LEJOS 10 AUSTIN CITY COUNCIL . .. . . 7:00 O 53) O ® © ® HARPER VALLEY PTA S te lla ch a in s herself to the H arp er V alle y tre e to protest the co n v e rsio n of the tow n park in to a p arkin g io ( ) 0 5 1 ) 0 ® THE INCREDIBLE HULK David p ic k s up a ca r to d rive c r o s s ­ e d ntry. u naw are it h as been use d to hid e a fortu n e in sto len m o b m oney (R) 6 REMEMBER WHEN: WHEELS, WINGS AND WHISTLES D ^ ^ a v ^ tra c e s the h istory of A m e rica n tra n s p o rta tio n from the co ve re d w ago n of the O ld W est to the n ew ly d e v e lo p e d s p a ce shuttle. O © ®W A8HINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW © ® © 5® © (DBENSON T h e g o v e rn o r a s sig n s B e n so n to be a su b stitu te fath er for a m ichievou s 1 0-year-old boy. (R) (D ® QUN8MOKE D o c A d a m s co n s id e rs it a threat to both him and ms p atien ts w hen a w om an d o c to r arriv e s to b e c o m e his rep lacem e n t. __ 7:30 O © O ® © ® SANFORD Fred is a s sig n e d to w atch over a juvenile h o u se b re a k e r . . O © ®W ALL STREET WEEK "T h e M e d ic a l T e ch n o lo g y B o o m G u e s t Jo h n C a n n o n , presiden t. M e d ic a l T ech n o lo g y Fund, Inc. © ® © 5 $ © (D » 'M A BIG Giro. NOW D ian a te lls B e ck y and N eal the story of B e c k y 's birth, w hich took p la ce in a C h in e s e restau ran t (R) CD 5 3 EDUARDO MANZANO 8:00 O 52) Q ® © ® MOVIE * + '* “ M rs R 's D a u g h te r" (1979) C io n s L each - m an. S e a s o n H ubiey. The m other of a rap e victim e m b a rk s on a trau m atic and fru stratin g battle to brin g her d au g hter s rap ist to trial (R) O (ED O ® © ® THE DUKES OF HAZZARD B o and L u k e are a cc u se d of stealin g a m illio n d o lla rs from an a rm ore d tru ck. (R) 8:30 0:30 KfcOO 10:20 fHX) O 51) O ® © ® DALLAS J .R div e rts his atten tion aw ay from M itc h 's sister t t o n g e n i g h to co m e up w ith a sch em e to m ake B o b b y lo ok b a d in front of “ (PFPFC TO CH008E "Created E q u a l” Dr. M ilto n F ried m an visits India, a co o n tn ^ th at d o e s not p ra ctic e free m arket ca p ita lism , when he q u e stio n s w hat is fair and what is equal. (R) Q CD 5 3 NOCHE A NOCHE Host: T a lin a F e rn an d ez e x p lo ita tive o w n e rs . 'P G ' © ® ^THfToDC^COUPLE O sc a r tells M y rn a the story of why Felix h as been ban n ed from M id to w n M e m o ria l H o sp ital CD 5 3 REPORTER 41 10:30 © 53 O ® © ® ™ E B E 8 T ** CARSON G u e s ts R o b e rt B lak e, C a ro l © T d ' M O V Ie"**** 'D u el A t D ia b lo " (1966) Ja m e s G a rn e r. S id n e y Pottier A ® o u ^ o M n d ia n - h a te rs are determ in ed to tra n sp o rt a lo ad of a m m un itio n through A p a c h e territo ry at any co st © ® ALL IN THE FAMILY A rc h ie is a s k e d to try out w hen th ere is an o pe n in g on the C a n n o n b a lle rs bow lin g team . Q © ®CAPTK>NED ABC NEW8 © ® © ® ABC NEW8 NIGHTUNE © ® BOB NEWHART B o b is fa c e d with the p o s s ib ility that h is y o u n g er sister m av m ove in w ith H ow ard. © 5® M*A*8*H Haw k eye an d T ra p p e r a rran g e for an u n au th orized but m uch- Q _(_ n e e d e d n o se jo b for an en liste d m an CD 5 3 MOVIE "U n a V e z U n H o m b re " E n riq u e R am b al, H elen a R o jo . . . . u . 11:00 a ® MOVIE * * V fc " M id a s R u n " (1969) R ich a rd C re n n a . Fred A s ta ire A B ritish se cre t agent is rich ly rew arded w hen he so lv e s the m ystery of a g o h eist w h ich he m aste rm in d ed Q © ODUVE FROM RICHMOND © ® MOVIE ★♦★'A "D uel" (1971) D e n n is W eaver. Tim H e rb ert A vengeful tru ck d river is intent on fo rcin g a highw ay m o to rist off the road © ® MARY TYLER MOORE L o u 's p ro m o tio n p o s e s p ro b le m s for the new s- ^ BT ARSKY AND HUTCH S ta r sky and H u tch h elp their frien d H u gg y B ear S d h is s id e k ic k get started in the p rivate eye b u sin e ss by referrin g a rou tin e m issin g h u sb an d c a s e to them. © GDFRIOAY8 G u e s ts The S p lit En z (R) 11:30 O 52) © ® ffl ® 8CTV NETWORK 90 m to MOVIE A * "D e a d m a n 's C u rv e " (1978) R ich a rd H atch B ru ce D avison Tw o C a lifo rn ia teen -agers, Ja n B erry and Dean T orren ce, b e co m e singing s e n ­ „ s a tio n s d urin g the 1950s and 1960s O K M O L ( N B C ) S a n A n t o n i o © K E N S ( C B S ) S a n A n t o n i o O K C E N ( N B C ) T e m p l e O K T B C ( C B S ) A u s t i n O K L R N ( P B S ) A u s t i n - S a n A n t o n i o © K W T X ( C B S ) W a c o C a b l e 52 C a b l e 53 C a b l e ® C a b l e ® C a b l e ® C a b l e ® f f l K T V T ( I N D . ) F o r t W o r t h C a b l e * © K S A T ( A B C ) S a n A n t o n i o f w i t h A C T V ) C a b l e © K V U E ( A B C ) A u s t i n f f l K T V V ( N B C ) A u s t i n C a b l e 5 C a b l e * 6 H B O ( s u b s c r i b e r s o n l y ) to A C T V ( c o m m u n i t y T V ) C a b l e * ( w i t h 12) C a b l e 1» YOUR HOST JOE POWERS PRESENTS His Traditional SUNDAY BUFFET 11 a.m. tii 2:00 p.m. Grand t — p anin f- Com plim e n tary Cham pagne Son. J u ly I fth at I t » « * « Joe Says: “Help yourself to” • Our DELICIOUS Soup and Array of Salads from our Bountiful Soup and Salad Bar • A VARIETY OF "E N TR EES” Including our regular Standing Round of Beef,” featured every Sunday' • H o m e m a d e d e s se rts fro m our own bake shop including Old Fashioned Fruit Cobbler. Mocha Angel Food Cake, 7 Layer Cake • A Medley of Vegetables • Coffee or Tea $5 95 Senior Citizens $4 95 Children 12 and Under $3 25 Beverage and Hom em ade Dessert Included IB**1* 0 1 47*4171 / yjúia 135 at MANOR ROAD <§> 2304 Lake A ustin B lvd. 478-8645 O m elette» E xtraordinaire G ingerbread, W hole W heat and B u tte rm ilk P ancakes Soups, Salads. Sandw iches and Desserts Classic A m erican B reakfasts G reat C offee '-yj j and — N o th in g on th e m en u is m ore than $3.60 — , ( 5 ^ 5 ^ J O p e n M o n 7 a m 3 p .m . Tues S u n 7 a.m. 9 p m. Cloris Leachman playt Mr* R-, who fight* to bring the it»a n who raped her daeghter, Ellie, (Season Hubiey) to trial, in “Mrs R.’* Daughter,” to air Friday, July II on NBC. (SutMXN rw ert* tk* right to make IwrtrruiwU ckaa«M ) TBS BRANDING IKON FrL A S a t. n igh t from 6 p .m . on BEEF & BEACH BUFFET Prime Rib A your favorite Seafood* ALL YOU CAN EA’ 12.95 uen Frog Loga Baked Potatoes’ Shrimp L m ic Salad Bar Alaskan King Crab, Stuffed Shrimp Boiled Shrimp Fried Shrimp Stuffed Crab Prime Rib Baked Fish Scallops Catfish N O W ~ S E R V I N G C O C K T A I L S ! * j f'/t miles poet Oak HOI On Hwy. 71 Weet 263-2827 J j j * | DAYTIME 8PEOALS Just You And Me Kid" (1979) George Burns. Brooke Shields A 6 man takes in a 14-year-old (uven.le delinquent, despite the protests of his med­ dling relatives PG 540 EVENING 8 4 0 O ® © ¡S o ® O ® © ® ® ® © ® NEW8„ Q © iDSTUOK) 8EE "B ikes” Travei through Nova Scotia on a bicycle meet aprom tsing ballerina, investigate the world of the loggerhead turtle R) t n Ti UtfFi COME BACK. K OTTER When H or shack is promoted to a higher _ f f l © 24 HORAS 16 VIDEO SHORTS JULY 9. 1991 12 40 o S3 ® N AT10NAL GEOGRAPHIC 8PECAAL "Etosha Place Of Dr y Water Extraordinary animal behavior is observed m this film recording the wildlife o» Etosha. a preserve surrounding a huge dry lake in the southwest African coun­ try of Namibia. (R) 440 6 OR. SNUGGLES: THE UNBELIEVABLE WORM MOBILE A D VEN TU W A ni- mated Dr Snuggles (voice by Peter Ustinov) heads fo rth e center o fth e earth to learn the reason that every creature in Brazil has turned into a butterfly 0 4 0 6 DR. SNUGGLES: THE REMARKABLE FIOGETY RIVER Animated Dr Snug­ gles (voice by Peter Ustinov) travels to outer space to find out who has been stealing the oceans from Earth DAYTIME CHILDREN'S 8HOW 8 1040 n on i ¡STUOIO SEE "B ikes" Travel through Nova Scotia on a bicycle, meet the world of the loggerhead turtle. (R) 440 . n p OMUQQIE». THE UNBELIEVABLE WORMMOBILE ADVENTURE Ani­ mated Dr Snuggles'(voice by Peter Ustinov) heads fo rth e earth to learn th e T w ^ n T h a t every creature m Brazil has turned into a butterfly ♦ OR. « H U M U S : THE R E M A K A B U « X H m gles (voice by Peter Ustinov) travels to outer space to find out who has been stealing the oceans from Earth * S n £ - 5 4 0 DAYTIME MOVIES 14 0 f f l ® * A "Tarzan And The Lost Safari" (1957) G ordonScott. Yoiande Don- 55 Tarzan becom e, mvoived with a group of wealthy people who were strand­ ed when th e ir plane crashed in the jungle 940 f f l © O (2D KNOTS LANDING Gary Ewing is put in a touchy situation_ by the alcoholic he is sponsoring, and Richard makes brazen passes at y °6 ^MOVIE^ Smokey And The Bandit II" (1980) Burt Reynolds. Jackie G le a s o n Sheriff Buford T. Justice calls in his two lawman brothers to stop a retired bootlegger, the Bandit, from transporting a baby elephant ‘PG O f f l ® A U 8T W CITY LIMITS "Pure Prairie League / Bobby Bare f f l ® © ® ® ® » / » f f l O NOCHE A NOCHE Host Talina Fernandez 9:30 1040 1040 o ® e © o ® o ® © ® © ® ® ®© * NEWS O f f l D O tC K CAVETT f f l ® THE OOO COUPLE Feiix plans a surprise birthday party for Oscar, wno loathes birthday parties f f l ® REPORTER 41 1040 q 5 2 ¡ Q ® f f l ® THE BEST OF C A R 80N Guests: James G am er. Larry G atlin Lesley Ann W arren, B uster Crabbe (R) (1965) John Wayne, Dear Q 53) MOVIE AAAVfc "The Sons Of Katie Elder M artin Four brothers avenge the deaths of their parents and the loss o< their 0 3 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY Edith find s old lo tte ry ticke ts she has to ta lly fo rg o t­ ten about. Q © D C A PD O N E D ABC NEWS f f l ® f f l ® A B C NEWS NIGHTUNE f f l ® BOB NEWHART EmHy refuses to skip one of her students ahead tw o grades despite the prodding o f her principal. f f l ® M *A *8 *H Hawk eye is w illing to wheel and deal w ith anyone fo r a needed new pa ir of boots. f f l O MOVIE "A rge ntinisim a” Docum ental. __ 10:45 a MOVIE “ The S hining” (1980) Jack N icholson, Shelley Duvall. D irected by Stanley K ubrick. A form er schoolteacher hired as a w inter caretaker fo r a rem ote, and apparently haunted. C olorado hotel, is snowbound there w ith his w ife and clairvoyant young son. ‘R’ 1140 f l 3 ) MOVIE A A A "Jane Eyre” (1971) George C. S cott, Susannah YorK Based on C harlotte B ronte's novel. A young English governess falls in love w it a man whose w ife is mad. . ^ f f l f f l ® VN G N G 8I “ Hammer Of The N orth” The m yths and re alities of the ieoendary V iking cultu re are explored (R) g f f l ® f f l (XCHARUE’S ANGELS K elly Is accidentally shot by a child m ishan- f f l ^ i MARY TYLER MOORE M ary accepts a date after being interview ed by a newspaper colum nist. .. f f l ® 3TAR8KY A M ) HUTCH S tarsky is kidnapped and threatened w ith death unless a drug cult leader and m urderer is released. _ . 1140 O (3 ) O ® © ® TOMORROW The rock group The A ssociation; "V ietnam : A m erica’s Broken P rom ises." pa rt four; actress Adrienne B a rb e a u ^ Q gn (DSOUTHBOUND "S pend It A ll" Cajun m usic greats Dewey Balfa and M arc Savoy are viewed at w ork and play In an exam ination o f the m usic of southern Louisiana. f f l ® MOVIE A A Vi “ M irro r Of D eception” (1975) Kim Darby, James Maxwell. A young woman looks in to the disappearance of her tw o room m ates, who never returned after answering the same em ploym ent ad. _ . . . , f f l ® ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE 12:10 f f l GDALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS “ Fog C losing In” A woman is te rrifie d of staying in her house all alone. f f l 5® CHARLIE*3 ANGELS Kelly is accidentally shot by a child mishandling a gun. (R) 1240 12:30 140 1:30 1:35 0 ® 0 ® © ® N E W S ffl( Q ) NEWS f f l ® COMMUNITY CALENDAR f f l ® NEWS * " * * > - « •"< • i * - » « • » -» ■ (B ® FAMILY FEUO Q) iT$ EL HOGAR QUE YO ROBE O O O ® €0 CD TIC TAC DOUGH 6 4 0 MAGAZINE An interview with C o sm o p o litan pub lisher Helen O GD Gurley Brown; a 32-m ile race for hum an-powered vehicles ffl flit TlMACNEll / LEHRER REPORT fli) (D P M. MAGAZINE An interview w ith C osm opolitan publisher Helen Gurley Brown; a 32-m ile race for hum an-powered vehicles; C indy A llgood takes a tnp „ f f l ® H A P ^ 'd AYSAG AIN Richie is faced w ith a dilem m a when he is selected ®bGDHAPFTlDAY8 AGAIN Fonzle takes up the bongos to play w ith Richie s band at an im portant country club dance ffl O R08A... DE LEJ06 16 HERE M AUSTIN 7 4 0 0 1 2 ) O ® © ® NBC MAGAZINE WITH DA VIO BRINKLEY G arnck Utley « a m fo e T th e lin d u stria l town of Anderson. Indiana, which is typical of a com mu­ nity hard hit by the economy; Douglas Kiker profiles a real life private eye, Betsy Aaron looks at the firs t legal surrogate m other and the organization S urrogate P arenthood"; Jack Perkins proflies Sophia Loren. ® ^ ^ ^ T ^ x l c f ^ ^ A ^ T h e D trtw ater F ox" (1976) George Segal, G oldie Hawn, A dance-hall g irl who w ants respect and a con man who lacks finesse em bark on a perilous journey from San Francisco to S alt Lake C ity PG Q 3 ) THE W ALT0N 8 C indy and Ban make a painful trip to W ashington to attend her fa th e r's funeral. (R) 0 8 3 (TTTEXA8 WEEKLY Host: Dave McNeety. f f l ® © ® f f l (D M O R K AND IffN D Y M indy eats one of M ork s gourm et delights and turns in to a w acky O rkan (R) m ( f \ QUN8MOKE The son o f a w ealthy rancher escapes from prison and captured by a bounty hunter who attem pts to blackm ail the youth’s fam ily 10 ACC GOVERNMENT _ . ^ 7 4 0 Q f f l (DOVER EASY Guest: C arol Lawrence. (R) Q f f l ® f f l ® ® GD0O8OM BUOOtES K ip invites Sonny to move in w ith him and Henry after her room m ate throw s her out . (R) ffl Q) CASA DE HUESPEDE8 16 ACC BU8MES8 8 4 0 o ^uranuN ir^atwrs wnittn tin mt twsmtwawh mstctn on etern capwt t ~ w *o m u m r v o m o m i t ksw-iaa. not mow ran wm -H irm . REDU C ED ADULT A D M IS S IO N ALL FEATURES IN (BRACKETS)— CAPACITY ONLY The Hitch-Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. EPISODE THREE Our hero, Arthur Dent, improbably rescued from doom by the Vogens, experiences a mysterious missile attack from which there is no escape. M ONDAYS AT 7:00 PM ¡Q J T 9 0 .7 fm THI SOUNDS OF THEATRE FROM NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO ■ i o A A MON THRU FRI ALL SHOWINGS BEFORE 6 PM l HOLIDAYS UWATINÜ SHOW ONLY J ■ $ 2 . 0 0 S n 1 HIGHLAND 451-7326 HIGHLAND MALL BLVD. _ 00 FOR YOUR KYKS ONLY (p«) 12 00-2:30-5:00- 7:35-10:10 DRAOON fLAYIR (PG) 12:30-2:45-5 00 7:15-9:30 CAPITAL PLAZA C¥SW A 4 5 2 -7 6 4 6 1-35 a t CAMERON RD. B urt R c jT M ld i • Bower M oore ‘T H E C A N N O N B A L L R U N *’ ( r c i SCREEN 1— 12 30-2 30-4 30-6:30- 8 30-10 30 SCREEN II — 1 30-3 30-5 30-7 30-9 30 OUTLAND («) I 5 0 -3 5 5 -6 0 0 - 8 0 5 - 1 0 10 “A SEQUEL THAT READILY SURPASSES THE ORIGINAL” « C H A R D SHICKE: TH*f M t G t / W f Suoerm an II m oves taster than a speeding bullet BRUCE W it LlAMSON PtyftBOr HAGAZtNf A n e t t e d b le n d in g erf h u m o r a n d h e r o ic s RONA BA RR E TT NBC TV 12:00-2:30-5:00- 7:30-10:00 V IL L A G E A 2 7 0 0 A N D E R S O N • 4 5 1 -8 3 5 2 11.30-2.00-4:30- 7 . 0 0 - 9 : 3 0 - m id n ig h t CSNIM.A 'WesT ^ ^ o n g r e ss • Open 11 a.m. • 442-5719| TUP U lOlt «ORI THAU msi TOUR 0X 11 ctw - USE TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS All-you-can-oat catfish, hushpuppies & cola slaw Fish Fry, July 10, Friday Texas Union Patio, 5:30-7 p.m. $ 2 .9 ? » S X M S K f * S N G « S t S I N ' S f í ñ r V * * this maid does everythinQ and makes the iob look easy ONE LAST SCORE mm . k N E S S E X R E L E A S E / R a te d X l tm 1 E A R L Y B IR D S P E C IA L ALL SEATS $3.00 FROM 6:00 TO 7:30 PM ONLY G O O D Ail WEEK AT TEXAS THEATRE 1 2 2 2 4 G u a d a l u p e • 4 7 7 O P E N 1 1 A M M a tin e e s D a ily N o O n e U n d e r 18 A d m itte d Late S how s Friday & S aturday S und ays Open N oon P icase B nng I D s R e q .vd le s s Ot Age B Í ¡t Lsu m r m % " \ i ' ' £ .-2 $ A 'J O l y JU LY S. 1061 cle " " M a n d y " and "L o o k s Like W e M ade It © © ABC NEWS NiQHTUNE 12:10 © GDALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTO Toby A m an is o verjo yed to learn th a t his lo n g -fo rsa ke n love has searched him out to m a rry him © © JIM BARKER 0 55) LOVE BOAT "N e ve r Say G oodbye Jill W helan A New W om en Gale S to rm ; "T ria l R om a n ce " Vic Tayback, Joann Pflug (R) 12:30 12:45 100 1:30 1 35 o ® NEWS O ® f f l ® NEWS © © N E W S f f l ® COMMUNITY CALENOAR © ® NEWS WEDNESDAY'S SPECIALS JULY 8, 1981 AFTERNOON 4:30 6 ISLAND OF NEVAWUZ A n im a le d An airplane crash strands a greedy man on an island which he eventually trie s to exploit tor hr* own profit 5:30 6 THE BEST OF CONSUMER REPORTO H ig h lig h ts of past specials present valuable buying in fo rm a tio n on fo o d , m edicine hou se h old p ro d u c ts and sa fe ly EVEN IN G 8:00 o © (®NATK>NAL GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL Etosha Placa Of Dry W ater E xtra o rd in a ry anim al behavior .s observed in this film re co rd in g th e w ild life of Etosha a preserve su rro u n d in g a huge dry lake in th e so uth w e st A frica n c o u n ­ .. try ot N am ibia (R) n 12:00 , d a DRY M AN ILO W One of the fo re m ost nam es in the e nte rta in m e n t w orld appears it s A M ira- c te ," "M a n d y " and "Looks Like W e M ade It in a co n ce rt p e rfo rm a n ce of his g rea test hits, in clu d in g 9:30 9:45 10:00 10:20 DAYTIME SPECIALS 4:30 6 ISLAND OF NEVAWUZ A n im a te d . An airp la n e crash stra n d s a gree d y m an on an island w hich he eventually trie s to e x p lo it fo r hts ow n p ro fit 5*30 6 THE BEST OF CONSUMER REPORTS H ighlights of past specials present valuable buying in fo rm a tio n on fo o d , m edicine, household p ro d u c ts and safe y devices DAYTIME CHILDREN S SHOWS 10:00 O © (ESTUDIO SEE P o n ie s" A tte n d a w ild pon y ro un d u p; m eet three teen co o kie tyco o n s; a violin p rod igy. (R) 4:30 6 ISLAND OF NEVAWUZ A n im a te d An airplane crash s tra n d s a gree d y m an on an island w hich he eventually trie s to e x p lo it fo r his ow n p ro fit tn his Russian co u n te rp a rts in the KGB. R ,, o © ® NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL "E to s h a Place O f Dry W ater E xtra o rd in a ry anim al behavior is o bse rve d in this film re co rd in g the w ild life of Etosha, a preserve su rro u n d in g a huge d ry lake in the so uth w e st A frican co un - © ° ® a© b ® © ® M O VIE * ★ * "W h ite Line F e ve r" (1975) Jan-M ichael V in c e n t, K a y L e n z . A young tru c k e r figh ts the cro o ke d co n g lo m e ra te w hich c o n tro ls the A rizo n a fre ig h t business (R) f H (T j MOVIE * * ' / » "D a y O f The Evil G u n ” (1968) G lenn Ford. A rth u r Kenne-^ dy A m an enlists the aid of a c o h o rt to hunt d ow n the A paches w ho a bd u cte d his w ife and fam ily 10 n e w s d a y l e g is l a t iv e r e p o r t 8*30 O (12 O ® f f l ® ™ E FACTS OF LIFE T o o tie and N atalie go to B u ffa lo to visit T o o tie 's aunt and w hile they are th e re a d o m e stic crisis arises (R) © © COLORINA 9:00 O 5 2 O ® © ® QUINCY Q uincy and a team of e xp e rts e xam ine a ske le to n and shroud believed to be th o se o f a 17th -cen tu ry saint (R) O in fffm iLL MOYERS’ JOURNAL a V isit W ith Dam e R ebecca B ritish w rit­ er R ebecca W est discusses her w ork and her views on p o litics, lite ra tu re and philosophy. © (0) NOCHE A NOCHE H ost Talm a Fernandez 10 BOTTOM UNE m m * "D r. K ild a re 's C ris is " (1940) Lew Ayres, Laraine Day. Dr K ild are is faced w ith the task o f b re a king the news to a young nurse th a t her b ro th e r is a * p o ssib le victim o f epilepsy © © 2 4 HORAS 10 QUILTIN' BEA © gyro be a n n o u n c e d DAYTIME MOVIE 1:00 EVENING 0 ( 1 2 © © 0 ® Q ® © ® © ® © ® NEWS 6 MOVIE "C a n d le s h o e ” (1977) Jo die Foster, David N iven A stre e t-w ise to m ­ boy fro m Los Angeles suddenly fin d s h erself the heiress to a ta tte re d English O © ®STUOK) SEE "P onies" A tte n d a w ild pony ro u n d u p ; m eet th re e teen co o kie tyco o n s; a violin p ro d ig y (R) . CD ® WELCOME BACK. KOTTER A ll the Sw eathogs w an t the a tte n tio n o f a new s tu d e n t at Buchanan, b u t she o nly has eyes fo r G abe f f i © FAMILY FEUD CD © EL HOGAR QUE YO ROBE 6:30 O (3) O ® f f i GD t o ta c d o u g h © 5® JOKER'S WILD O ® P.M. MAGAZINE The A nnual S tu d e b a ke r D river s M eet in G e ttysbu rg , Pennsylvania; a re tire d p ilo t w ho helps p eople co nq u e r th e ir fear of flying O © QDMACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT © ® © © P-M. MAGAZINE A re tire d p ilo t w ho helps peo p le co nq u e r their fear of flying; a w om an w ho e ats grass, b ark and flow ers CD ® HAPPY DAYS AGAIN R ichie is selected to b ecom e a co n te s ta n t on a p op u la r gam e show w ith a chance to w in $3,200 f f i (E H A P P Y D A Y 8 A G AIN Fonzie asks Richie to keep an eye on his g irlfrie n d , — „ , . w hile he is o u t of to w n fo r a week CD © R08A... DE LEJOS 10 ALTERNATIVE VIEWS "A C on ve rsa tio n W ith Dave D ellinger _ 7:00 O © O ® f f l ® WEAL PEOPLE Featured a g a th e rin g of Laurel and H ardy fans a w om an w ho can read and w rite b a ckw a rd and fo rw a rd , han d ica p p ed skiers; a m an w ho claim s he can c o n tro l the w eather . (R) O © O ® MOVIE * * ’* "T h e P ira te " (1978) Franco Nero, Anne A rch er An Israeli raised by an influ en tial A ra b e xperiences a co n flict of loya ltie s when he is e n tru ste d w ith the m anagem ent of his c o u n try s o il fo rtu n e s (R) O © ® A R T BEAT H ost K ate Feiner © ® © © © QDCHARUE’S ANGELS K ris b ecom es the b ait to tra p a con m an at his own gam e (R) CD ® GUNSMOKE A young d rifte r kid n a p s K itty and holds her ca p tive in a ghost tow n to lure Doc A dam s. Festus and M a tt to the area 7:30 O © (DOVER EASY G uests: a cto r G eorge O 'B rien , n u tritio n is t Dr M a rio n N estle, Chef Narsai David (R)C? CD © LOCO VALDEZ 10 MOCK NEWS I 8:00 Q (3 ) O ® © ® D4FFRENT STROKES M r D rum m o n d seeks A rn old s advice after being tu rn e d dow n fo r a d ate by a business e x ecu tive (R) C¡3 6 MOVIE "T h e H um an F a c to r" (1980) Nicol W illiam son, John G ielgud An agent o f th e B ritish S ecret Service is co erce d in to qiving to p -se cre t in fo rm a tio n O ( T 2 © © 0 ® 0 ® © ® © ® © ® © ® NEWS 6 MOVIE "T h e Is la n d " (1980) M ichael Caine, David W arner W hile in v e s tig a r ing a rash o f ship disap pe a ran ce s in th e B e rm ud a Triangle, a jo u rn a list stu m ­ bles a cross an isolated, 4 00 -ye a r-old co lo n y o f p ira te s R O © (BOICK CAVETT © ® THE OOO COUPLE Felix tu rn s to O scar fo r help a fte r co m pla in in g can no longer "co m m u n ica te " w ith his d a u g h te r . © © R E P O R T E R 41 10:30 O © O ® 03 ® THE BEST OF CARSON G uests L iberace, A ndrea M cA r- devices Q © k iW V IE 3* * 1* R>U lzana's R a id " (1972) B urt Lancaster Bruce Davison The A pache Indians are on the w a rp a th again and the ca valry und e r an idealis­ tic lieu ten a nt trie s to o ve rta ke them Q @ ALL IN THE FAMILY Edith s a n tiq u e lo cke t is m issing Q © ©CAPTIONED ABC NEWS O * lo r a M o w p sycho log ist. Bob disco ve rs ¡ B f f l X i L E™ ' l o a v . in T o a ,o . B o o r, b « o o M M t t u W d M l . a S ® , ^ h ‘" C “ l fr Mma .'.hn iiaT“ Brazos ‘ A h ,o o » A g e la .. O M a M oo- tesco 11:00 a (T) MOVIE * * * * * "D e a d End " (1937) Sytvia Sidney, Joel M cC rea Young ste rs in an East River slum fig h t to o verco m e their env,r™ T « " ' !r>ctu 2) DAYTIME CHILDREN'S SHOWS 1040 o ffij 8 jSTUOtO 8EE K odiak D iscover A la sk a s bush country, find out how lu d s m Hew York plant c t y garden s learn how to m ake a graveston e ru bb in g 440 6 FLIGHT OF THE WHITE 8 T A LU O N 8 R o bert Taytor and LiiH Palm e r star in the true story of the W orld W ar II rescu e of V ien n a s prized white h orses a 140 ® ® * ★ "T a rz a n s S avage Fury' (1952) Lex B arker Patrie K no w les A relative of Tarzan s s earch es for him in the jungle 540 6 “ A C h allen g e For Ro bin H o o d " (1967) B arrie Ingham The legendary hero of S h erw oo d Forest and his m erry m en outwit the e vil Sheriff of Nottingham to rob from the rich and give to the poor G EVENING 040 lo d s in New York plant city g ard en s learn how to m ake a graveston e ru bb in g country; „ n 0 out n o . ( B ® W ELCO M E BACK, KOTTER G a b e co n v in ce s B arb arm o to get a tutor after report ca rd day © ms FAMILY FEUO CP 1} EL HOGAR QU E YO ROBE o ® © ® © ® 1* ; ™ 0 D O U O H 640 q ^ p j ^ M A Q A Z N F Visit a lo cal h istory-m akin g ae ro b a tic pilot, diving for g old in a dead lv Yu catan co ra l reef n a rc o tic s bust 10 A C C BUSINESS TUESDAY TELEVISION O © ( D M A C N E I L / L E H R E R R E P O R T CD GD © ® P M MAGAZINE a h orse m idw ife s night s work d iv in g for gold in a dead ly Y u catan co ral reef (D ® HAPPY DAY8 AGAIN Rich ie has a proble m when everyone ex pec = him ___ to get them free tickets for a rock co n cert , ____ u . iiA u a a r c t) T HAPPY DAYS AGAIN R ich ie fights his fears over attending a Hal ow ee party at a haunted house w here he believes he saw a h eadless ghost ® 11 R08A... DE LEJOS 10 M O CK NEWS I 7 4 ° O ® O ® © ® P e rkin s is pu rsu ed by a show girl w ho believes his hat co n tain s the secret to a huge bank rip-off (R) C U T f l T l W ALTER CRO NKlTE'S UNIVERSE ^ M O W E ^ G o tn g In S ty le " (1979) G e o rg e Burns. A rt C arn ey B arely able to m a k ^ T d s n t h e , / m e a g e r S o cia l S ecu rity allow ances, three elderly gen ­ tlem en carefully plan a bank heist PG n o n © V O C E S Host O sc a r G a rza S ® © (iffi « (© H A P P Y D A Y S The C u n n in g h am s planned fam ily C h ristm a s ® nton is ¡eopard/zed when a snow storm stra n d s and sca tte rs the fam ily g j ^ q J n S M O K E W hen a ren eg ade Indian k ills M att s friend. M att pu rsu es 10 MAKING THE NEWS ® NEWf . o, o ® © a® o ® ©3) ® ® O © T O C K C A V E T T G u est author M ary B an croft ¡p a r t 2 o 2) § x O s c .r I n r i to n.oe h,s d iv o z c . ir o n his ..sitin g m other by m oving Felix out and his ex-w ife in 1040 10:20 CD ( S REPORTER 41 . 1040 o ® © ® © ® t h e BEST OF CARSON G u e sts M ich ael Lan don , Dinah Q ° S (2 o V 1E * * * "T w o M u les For S iste r S a ra (1970) Sh.riey M acLain e. S n lE a s t w o o d An A m erican m ercenary in 19th-century M e x ic o helps a wh.s- key-sw illin g "n u n ” to cro ss ‘ he desert safely o ( X A LL IN THE FAMILY O n the S tiv ics seco n d anniversary, the fam ily recalls how the w edding alm ost d id n ’t take p lace (Part 2) o © (©CAPTIONED A B C NEWS (D X K 3 8 NEW HAB?J e ^ h r^ C a to l «tier, her new love interest interferes f f f f f í K l f Hdwk8v8 and T ra p p w S3v© his son s iif© CD 3 5 M O V IE "El Rio De L as A n im a s " Jo a q u in C o rd e ro , A lm a Delia Fuentes .h e 4077th r i f t an O flie e rs C f t b alter í M S S 7 4 0 1 3 (TT O ® F L O F lo takes an im aginary trip back in tim e to the O ld W est i R) O (D (©OVER EASY G u ests C ra ig S teven s pod iatrist Dr Tim othy Shea, jazz 10:45 6 M O V IE "A m e rica n G ig o lo ” (1980) R ich ard G ere, Lauren H utton. A B everly H ills g igolo b e co m e s the prim e su sp e ct in a m urder in vestig ation R © G D © ® ^ ® I A V É R N E & 8HIRLEY L á ve m e falls in iove with S o n n y and tries to c o n v in ce him to ch an g e his m ind abou t their future together ( ) Q CD (3) !R*8 CHACON 10 A C C GOVERNM ENT 8 4 0 O (B) O ® © ® HILL 8TREET BLU ES C a p ta in Furillo co n tin u e s h.s peace ® “ a t t o n r J K rival gangs, and Jo h n n y La R u e is trick e d in to accept.n g a "S o m e K in d O f M ir a c ie ' ,1979) David Dukes, A n d r o M a rco v ic ci A young co u p le abou t to be m a rre d u n dergo a test of their love when one of them is paralyzed in a surfin g a ccid e n t ( ) 0 © (© N O V A The M alad y O f H ealth C a re A n ex am in atio n of how G re at S r it S n a m d th e U S have org an ized health ca re delivery for their peo p le and how these system s are fin anced is presen ted (R) cp , K„« © ® © ® © (© TH I^ E'S CO M PANY Jan et tells her visiting paren ts that . she and Ja c k are new lyw eds (R) Q _______________________________ ____ 0 1 ® M O V IE N ew m an 's L a w ” (1974) G e o rg e Pep p ard , R o ger R o b in ­ son A n honest co p w ages a battle with the syn d ica te after he is fram ed in a 1140 O CD M O V IE +*'A "D in n e r At The R itz” (1937) An n abeila, David N iv e n T h e dau g hter of a m u rdered F ren ch b an k er p la ce s blin d trust in the help offered by her fin an cier fian ce in lo catin g the kilter Q © (©THE D U CHESS OF DUKE STR EET " F o r Love O r M o n ey The su m ­ m er of 1904 sees the B en tin ck full of visitors, but L o u isa is co n ce rn e d when she fin d s out that three p arties are b ecom in g in volved with each other in a way that ._____ _ b o rd e rs on the crim in al. (Part 6) (R) © (51 © (©MOVIE *V4 "M a n F rid a y ” (1975) Peter O Toole. R ich ard R o u n d ­ tree B ased on a novel by D aniel D efoe The s h ip w reck ed R o b in so n C ru s o e tries to teach "c iv iliz e d " behavior to a native b la ck man. (R) © ® MARY TYLER M O O RE Mary tries to keep an in com peten t p o litician from lo o k in g foo lish on a new s show. © CT® ST ARSKY AND HUTCH S ta rs k y and H utch see a p o lic e cap tain with a extra o rd in a ry crim e-fig htin g re co rd a cc e p t an e n velo p e from a racke teer ............. . ZUri 11:30 0 3 5 ) 0 ® © ® TOMORROW R o bert Preston; sin ger N an cy W ilson; V ie t­ nam A m e ric a ’s B roken P ro m ise s ," part two. with author and veteran Ro bert K lein lab o r n ego tiator K en n eth M offett. m (T l TH E BASTARD Phillipe, w ho h as fled to the C o lo n ie s and ch an g ed his m im e to P h ilip Kent, join s a band of rev o lu tio n aries W h ile ^ t i n g t h e j C r o w n forces, he has a brutal co n fron tation with his half-broth er, co m m a n d e r o E n g lish regim ent in Boston. (Part 2 of 2) 8*30 © (© © m © ® T O O C L O S E FOR CO M FO RT J a c k ie en lists the aid of two frien d s to help her and S a ra co n v in ce Henry that they need their own apa m ent (R) © ® COLORINA 10 LAVADA DURST: DR. HEP C AT 9 4 0 © ® A B C NEWS NK3HTUNE © (Q) JIM BAKKER o ® O ® © ® N E R O W O L F E N er0 d lsc o v e rs ,h e m issm 9 he,r he has been search in g for is the prim e su sp e ct in a brutal m urder. (R) a MOVIE "ffolkes" (1980) Ro ger M oore, Ja m e s M aso n A dap per, w om an- h alin g frogm an is called in to thwart the plans of e x to rtio n ists w ho have h ijacked a sup ply ship and are threatening to destro y two N orth S ea oil rigs. *PG’ £ 1 i n (T /M Y S T E R Y R e b e c c a " A s m istress of M an d erley, the secon d M rs de “ S ' s co n h d en ce ,s co nstan tly shaken by M rs D an vers (Anna M assey). Rebecca's d evoted housekeeper. (Part 2) ( R ) g © (T) © ® © ® H A R T TO HART A gang of foreign agen ts attem pt to retrieve a present Jon ath an gave to Jen n ifer which th reaten s their e n tire o p e ra ­ ^ tion ( R ) Q CD ® NOCHE A NO CH E Host: Talina Fernandez 10 W.L. HORNSBY: SCR AP P Y ARTIST © ® NEWS CD (S) 24 HORAS 9:10 9:30 © ® © ® NEWS G 23) NEWS f f i ® COMMUNITY CALENDAR 1240 12:30 1:00 1:30 1:35 © ® NM O V !E "M a n F rid a y " (1975) Peter O 'T oo le. R ich ard R o u n d tre e B a se d on a novel by D aniel Defoe. The ship w re ck e d R o b in so n C ru s o e tries to teach " c iv iliz e d ” behavior to a native b lack m an (R) 12:45 6 M O V IE "G o in g In S ty le ” (1979) G e o rg e Burns, Art C arn ey B arely a b le .to m ake en d s meet on their m eager S o c ia l S e cu rity allow an ces, three e d e y g tlem en carefu lly plan a bank heist. P G ’ The University of Texas Summer Cabaret Theatre B IA M O H B A rousing bluegrass musical July 10-19 at 8pm Except Saturdays at 6 & 9pm Cabaret Theatre, 23rd & Sari Jacinto Drink and snack service Tickets $5 general admission , $4 students Performing Arts Center box office or Frank Erwin Center 4 7 1 - 1 4 4 4 K L B J - AM Preview Night Thursday , J u ly 9 All seats $1 94 Available at P A C only T h e t H t 7 Hot "just an yb od y" I p / w to te your THESIS, i l S O P T IO N . °r PR. j?r. t/.« . Austin’s Finest Country & Western Nightclub 9102 BURNET ROAD TUES -STUDENT NIGHT Free a d m is sio n w / c u rre n t stu d e n t ID BENNY EVANS Wed. Dollar Night Beer Pitchers, Mixed Drinks all $1. $2.00 cover with Special Door Prize Drawings BUBBA COX and EASY GOIN THURS.-NICKLE BEER NIGHT COORS BEER 5* A CUP-50* PITCHERS A ll NIGHT COVER CHARGE $3.00 MEN-S2.00 LADIES TEXAS FEVER FRIDAY BENNY MACARTHUB ^ and r a i n b o w Coming Attraction& $3.00 Cover Advance tickets a vailable for Eddy Raven af Business Office 9200 Burnet A Longhorn General Sfore D O O R S O P E N 8 P.M . E A C H N IG H T SILVER DOLLAR INFORMATION UNE 837-1624 L 1 S S S SATURD AY EDDY RAVEN DANCE and SHOW $3 00 Cover 8 3 7 - 5 9 2 4 | VfSA’t THEATRES r i m S shown row r< I f ■ rm -U T t «MOW* UMTW TO MMTMW. ««Micro M«cfs rom iTuonn * mmom cm— w rr* wc c*M ■ ■ _ A M E R I C A N A <^453-0641 tlNMKKiMni ■ H IS T O R Y O F T H I W O U L D P a r i 1 I (fclS/SUMtlS-lfclS M . B L A C K S T A L U O N a r A Q U A R I U S 4 ^444-3222 isms heumtmuetm Í a n n o m s a u k u n H FOUR SEASON5 l^Kk1S/|1JS74S.ieiS | P | m UKVM/SlJSVZJMdS SeOeBe CLASH ¿TITAN S L N O R T H C R O S S 6 ^454-5147 « x s r a * ■ | STRIPES SURE E l MBR Straw 1: IM5-ilS-(5c45/Sl JSFfclS-WeJI Straw h 14MeJS-74M»4S | SeOeBe X muS S l™ □ . o i two sans ■ n ig h t T H I LIGHTS W IifT OUT IN GIOGGIA D E i , l:lS-U»-(fc4S/$1J9*N-tft1S J s u e n w i J BACK ROADS 1 I ■ 1j N m i/ s ijs m h j.i«(ij L s o u t h w o o d 2 ^4 4 2 -2 3 3 3 i t t i t W «H KM B$HUTCH Stsrsky and Hutch go undercover to ferret out s blackmail operation that has resulted in two deaths 11:30 0 52) O ® © ® TOMORROW Syndicated columnist Jack Anderson. SLJfngS. t r i . * M a a ln . B W . Promises." part one, with veteran Cart C wlucci modal m ® THE BASTARD Upon hearing that the father of her illegitimate son s DAYTIME CHILDREN’S SHOWS 10:00 q . 0 a n ~ « P . 1 * encounters an old adversary (Part 3) (R) stranoe-actina 0 CD O ® LOU GRANT Charlie Hume rents his house to a s.range-aci g ® ® . ^ g e t s worried when the ne.ghbors report mysterious happenings . « . © (D NEWS © ® © ® NEWS © ® NOCHE A NOCHE Host: Talina Fernandez 16 BOTTOM UNE 9:30 6 MOVIE "Som e Cam e Running" (1959) Frank Sinatra. Shirley M acLaine Based on a novel by James Jones A disillusioned young man falls in with a ® ® N E W 8 © 0 ) NEW8 o ® NEWSWATCH PRESENT8 © f t ] COMMUNITY CALENDAR 1240 12:30 12:40 140 1:30 1:36 DAYTIME MOVIES 1:00 „ Lake Com^ © ® ★ ★ “ Blondie's Lucky Day" (1946) Penny Singleton, A^ plications develop when Dagwood, fired again, goes into com petition with his boss 5:30 6 "Just You And M e Kid" (1979) George Burns. Brooke Shields. A 70-year-old man takes in a 14-year-old juvenile delinquent, despite the protests of his m ed­ dling relatives. 'PG' EVENING 6.-00 O ® 0 ( D ) © ® Q ® © ® © ® f f l ® N E W S Q m ISTUO fO SEE "Last Show" A behind-the-scenes look at how TV planned, produced and broadcast; highlights of two seasons of S tu d » S e e (R| I D ® WELCOME BACK, KOTTER Gabe is suspended by Mr Woodm an and has to go before the Teachers' Review Board for formal charges (B ® FAMILY FEUO © 5 3 ) EL HOGAR QUE YO ROBE TV i . O ® © ® ID ® TIC TAC DOUGH a /tt\ J O K E R ’S WILD O ® ® ® P.M. MAGAZINE The b a cksta ge w o rld o f a Las Vegas sh ow girl, co lle ctin g valu a b le seasheils on an island o ff Flo rid a s co ast O IE) (TlMACNOL / LEHRER REPORT © fif) P.M. MAGAZINE M eet te n -ye a r-o ld R im iyeo Peno w ho was sw ept into d rain a ge cu lve rt; c o lle ctin g valu a b le seasheils on an island o ff F lorida s coas CD ® HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Before R ichie can raalize w hat s happening, an oia g irlfrie n d d ecid e s th a t they are going steady ««uv-ted f f i (DHAPPY DAYS AGAIN R ichie is faced w ith a d ile m m a when he is seieciea to be a squad leader fo r ROTC. © 53) ROSA... DE LEJOS to QUILTIN’ BEA . 6:30 7:00 * * * * ° H ™ E PRA,R,E A,b^ ' s 14- year o*d O O O ® © ® g irlfrie n d is sexually assaulted by an u n id e n tifie d m an. (Part 1) (R) g O (TT) O ® WKRP IN CINCINNATI The S ecret Service refuses to issue press cre de n tia ls to Les so th a t he can a tte n d a P re sid e n tial press co nfe ren ce (R) ^ e t t t r a ^ 6 REMEMBER WHEN: WHEELS, WINGS AND WHISTLES ^ the h is to ry of A m erican tra n s p o rta tio n fro m the co vered w agon o f the Old West to the newly developed space shuttle O © ® TH E MONDAY REPORT San A n to n io M ayor H enry C isneros m eets w ith m e m be rs of th e press to d iscuss issues fa cing the city co un cil © ® B 1$ © ©BREAKING AWAY © ® GUNSMOKE A vengeful e x-co n vict seeks re prisa l against a c r e p n e r-in -c rim e w ho ran out on a tra in h old u p ___ _ . group of seedy characters © Q ) 24 HORA8 16 CAPITAL EYE Host: Winston Bode 0 ® 0 ( I 3 ) 0 ® 0 ® © ® © ® f f l ® © ® N E W 8 in I iOiCK CAVETT Guest author Mary Bancroft (Part 1 of 2 ) ® nreO O O C W JPtE When O s c a r', M , M g « « M in g up. 8 dac.daa an ocean voyage will do them both good © 53) REPORTER 41 1040 1040 10:30 o S3 O ® © ® ™ E BE8T ° * Guests 0015 Hope Manette Pn¡t « f Harrv Hartley. Luciano Pavarotti. Sydney Goldsmith (R) (1972) Sidney Poitier. Harry n (fp m o v ie A A A "Buck And The Preacher S a fo n te A trait guide for former slaves and a con man disguised as a preach­ er team up to fight ruthless bounty hunters Q G£) ALL IN THE FAMILY On the Stivics’ second anniversary, the family recalls how the wedding almost didn't take place (Part 1) o © ®CAPTIONED ABC NEW8 . . 0 ® S » N P W H A R ? H o w a r d falls head-over-heeis in love with Bob's sister ® ° í 1$ ^ j k % ^ H r^ n 0 H o T ü p s d e c.d e s that M e is passing her by. she dumps Frank and requests a transfer © 53) MOVIE Asi Es Buenos Aires Hugo Marcel, Soledad SHveyra 11:00 11 rn MOVIE A A "In Old California ' ( 1942) John Wayne. B.nme Barnes When a young Boston pharmacist attem pts to open a shop in CaHfOTnia durinq t Goid Rush he encounters some big headaches from the town s lawless leader 704 W. 29th■ H U M © BEVERAGES 474-9SSS C O O r S 16 gol. Kag 2 9 “ Miller & Lite 16 gol. Keg Lite 12 Pack 12 oz. Cans Coors 6 Pack 12 ox. Cans Lone Star 6 Pack 12 ox. Cans 4r Specials Good Mon Thurs J H Don’t hide Beautiful eyes | SPECIAL SOFT LENSES FOR EXTENDED WEAR] (SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER)\ j i g , , , i^gees « re le fce rviweoed N -i» w A 4 > le 6« r lw e a e . _____ _______ I SOFT CONTACTS NOW *79 Special U.T. Students Alto toft lentes for the correction of antittigmatiam Price does not include professional services and an e x a m in a tio n . with U.T. ID Contact Lens Promrriatione . X m L i Accurately Filled ALL TENNIS CLOTHES Vi OFF WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY PAIR OF TENNIS SHOE AT REGULAR PRICE. LI MI T T W O PIECE PER CUSTOMER. 2021 GUADALUPE 472 8610 DOBIE MALL MOflNM G f f l ® LA8 VEGAS GAMBIT ffl © MUCHACHA ITALIANA VIENE A CASAR8E 5:45 too 5:15 5:30 «If 5:45 5-JO 5:56 7:00 7:16 7:25 7:30 8:00 8:25 8:30 940 f f l © JIM BAKKER ffl © CARTOON TIME (MON-WED) Q © BATTLE OF THE PLANETS (THU, FRI) 153) © GD MORNING WITH CHARLES KURALT f f l ® LITTLE RASCALS (FW) ffl ® WOOOY WOOOPECKEF ffl ® GOOO MORNING 8AN ANTONIO O © ffl © R IC H A R D 8IMMONS Q ® POPI GOES THE COUNTRY (MON) Q ® PORTER W AGONER (TUE, THU) o ® NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD (WED) ffl ® NASHVILLE MU8IC (FRI) o QD TOWN AND COUNTRY « ® NEW8 if f l ® PEOPLE, PLACES ANO THING8 O © © JA ZZ: AN AM O SCAN CLAS8IC (TUE, THU) ffl ® COMMUNfTY CALENDAR f fl ® AGRICULTURE TODAY ffl ® 8 E N K )R FORUM ffl © O ® ffl ® t o d a y a U ) CAPTAIN KANGAROO f fl ® MORNING WITH CHARLES KURALT ¿V? ID f f l ® ffl (DGOOO MORNING AMERICA ffl ® 8LAM BANG THEATRE ffl © TV O NO TV f f l ffl ® A J4. WEATHER f fl ® O GD NEW8 f fl ® BULLETIN BOARD f fl © NEWSWATCH f f l ® PAUL HARVEY 8© Q ® ffl ® TOOAY GD MORNING WITH CHARLES KURALT f f l f fl (D 8ESAM E 8TREET (R) g f fl © GOOO MORNING AMERICA ffl © EL CHAPULIN COLORADO f f l © HOUR MAGAZINE ^ f f l ® CAPTAIN KANGAROO 8® COMEDY CAPERS © E L CHAVO f f l ® G GD MEWS ffl © NEW8WATCH f f l ® TAKE FIVE f fl © Q ® ffl ® TODAY f fl ffl ÍTJVH-LA ALEGRE (R) f fl ® GIGGLE8NORT HOTEL f fl © GOOO MORNING AMERICA ffl © CONCUR80 DE LA TV (MON) ffl © CARA8 Y GESTOS (TUE, THU) f fl © COM PLICADISIM O (WED) f fl © M AS O MEN08 (FRI) O © O GD DONAHUE I © ffl ® O ffi THE JEFFER80NS (R) ffl ffl ® M I8 T E R ROGER8 (R) ffl ® RICHARD 8IMMON8 8® MIKE DOUGLA8 ffiGO O O MORNING AUSTIN f fl © O ® © ® ALICE (R) o ffl ® ELEC T R IC COMPANY (R) ffl ® STANLEY SIEGEL ffl® D O N A H U E f f l ® BLOCKBUSTER8 ffl © f fl ® © ® WHEEL OF FORTUNE ffl © ffl ® THE PRICE 18 RIGHT Q © © ST U D IO SEE © ® f fl © THREE’8 COMPANY (R) f f l ® BEWITCHED O © O ® PASSW ORD PLU8 O © © Q U E PASA, U.8.A.? © X ffl © THREE'S COMPANY (R) ffl ® MY THREE SONS ffl © T O TELL THE TRUTH ffl ® DAYS OF OUR LIVES ffl © HOY M ISM O •40 1040 1040 11:00 11:30 ffl © O ® CARD SHARKS d i (TT NEWS ffl ® 11 WITH BARBARA MILLER AND CACTUS PRYOR O © (DO VER EASY © ® © © FA M ILY FEUD ffl ® I DREAM O f JEANNIE © © ALL MY CHILDREN f f l ® I D ® NEW8 f fl © O ® THE YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS o ® MIOOAY ffl © (D O C K CAVETT (MON, TU E THU, FRI) © ® TEN a c r e s ffl (DRYAN '8 HOPE f f l ® THE DOCTORS AFTERNOON 1240 O © O ® DAYS OF OUR LIVES O © © 8PO LETO *81 (MON) O © ® U V E FROM RICHMOND (TUE) O © © G R E A T PERFORMANCES (WED) O © © NATIO NAL GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL (THU) O © © A M ER IC A N PERSPECTIVE ANOTHER VIEW (FRI) © ® © (DALL MY CHILDREN ffl © NEWSWATCH AT NOON f f l ® NEW8 ffl ® MUNDO LATINO 12:30 O © O ® AS THE WORLD TURNS o © ® T H E ORIGINALS: THE W RITER IN AMERICA (MON) O © ® P R E SEN T E (FRI) ffl ® $50.000 PYRAMID ffl ® RYAN’S HOPE f f l ® JOYCE AND MEL 140 O © O GD © ® ANOTHER WORLD O © D H ID O E N PLACES: WHERE HISTORY LIVES (MON) O © (©AUSTIN CITY LIMITS (TUE) O © (©FREE TO CHOOSE (THU) O © (©NOVA (FRI) © ® f f l ® © (© O N E LIFE TO UVE f f l ® MOVIE ffl © EN SAN ANTONIO 1:30 O © O ® SEARCH FOR TOMORROW o © © T H R EE PORTRAITS (MON) f f l © PIEL DE ZAPA 240 O © O ® © ® TEXAS B © O ® GUIDING LIGHT O © (©EVENING AT SYMPHONY (R) (MONI O © (©GREAT PERFORMANCES (R)(TUE) ffl © (© EVBBN G AT POP8 (R) (WED) O © {©FIRING UNE (R) (THU) Q © © A O M A G N O U ’S TABLE (R) (FRI) © ® ffl © 8) (©g e n e r a l h o sp ita l ffl © PECADO CAPITAL Q Q3 (©JAZZ: AN AMERICAN CLA SSIC (FRI) ffl © THE WORLD OF PEOPLE ffl © SANFORD ANO SON O ® THEDOCTOR8 f f l ® MERV GRIFFIN O © (©QUE PA8A, U .8 X ? © ® ffl ® © ® E D G E OF NIGHT ffl ® WACKY RACER8 f f l ® CARTOONB f f l ® BW U A f fl © HAPPY 0AY8 AGAIN Q © BUGS BUNNY AND FRIENDS O ® JOKER’S WILD O © © V ILLA ALEGRE (R) © ® ffl ® TOM ANO JERRY f f l ® BANANA8PUTS ffl © G E T SMART 240 340 340 440 © © JOHN DAVIDSON f f l © B O N A N Z A O ® ffl ® GILUGAN’S ISLAND 6 FLIGHT OF THE WHITE 8TALLJONS (TUE) O © © M IS T E R ROGERS (R) © ® BEVERLY HILLBILLIES ffl ® BUGS BUNNY AND FRIENDS ffl ® W ELCOME BACK, KOTTER ffl © S T A R TREK ffl © HOGAR. DULCE HOGAR (MON) ffl © Ml SECRETARIA (TUE) ffl © LA MATRACA (WED) ffl © LA CARABINA DE AMBROSIO (THU) ffl © LUIS DE ALBA (FRI) Q ® SANFORD AN,3 SON 6 FLIGHT OF THE WHITE STALLIONS (MON) 4:30 6 MOVIE (FRI) O ® CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS O © © ELEC T R IC COMPANY (R) © ® ANDY GRIFFITH ffl ® LEAVE IT TO BEAVER f f l ® M*A*S*H ffl ® JOHN DAVIDSON ffl © QUIEREME SIEM PRE 6 D ^ S N l^ L E S ^ E ^ ^ B B J E V A B L E W O R M M O BILE AD VENTU RE (THU) ffl © HOGAN’S HEROES ffl © ffl ® © © NEWS P ® m * a * s * h 6 D r'sN U Q G LE S: THE REMARKABLE FIDGETY RIVER (THU) Q © © S E S A M E STREET (R) g © © ffl ® A B C NEW S ffl ® I LOVE LUCY f f l ® REPORTER41 540 5:30 f fl © O ffi ffl ® NBC NEWS O © O ® © ® CB8 NEW S 6 MOVIE (MON, THU) 6 THE BEST OF CONSUMER R E P O R T S (WED) f f l ® DICK VAN DYKE f f l ® ABCNEW 8 f fl ® M * A * S * H ffl © NOTICIERO NACIONAL SIN CONTEST RULES THE DAILY TEXAN TREASURE HUNT Effective July 1,1981 1. All students, faculty and staff of The U n ive rsity of T e xas are eligible to claim the treasure except those persons em ployed by T e x a s Student Publications during the current calendar year, persons who have served on the staffs of any T S P publications during the current calendar year, em ployees of contest sponsors and the im m ediate fam ilies of any of these ineligible persons. 2. The treasure certificate is hidden in an easily accessible public place and is not on private or U n ive rsity property. It is not necessary to climb, dig or m ove any heavy object to find the treasure. The treasure is not hidden in a place w hich will require the seeker to be exposed to any special danger or safety hazard while looking. 3. The tre a su re certificate, w hen found, w ill im ­ m ediately reveal itself to the finder as the "T e x a n T re a su re Certificate", and is clearly m arked with the em bossed seal of T e xas Student Publications. A facim ile copy of the treasure certificate is locked in a secure vault, and will be availab le for public view ing after August 28, 1981. * . w » 4. The finder of the treasure certificate should present the certificate in person at the Business Office, Room C3.200, Texas Student Publications Building between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., M ond ay through Friday. (The T S P building is located at 25th and W hltis on the aw- U n ive rsity of T exas cam pus.) The finder m ust show a current T exas D r iv e r 's License and U n ive rsity identification, or other proof of U n ive rsity a sso cia ­ tion, when presenting the certificate. T S P will then ascertain that the finder is, under the rules of the con­ test, eligible to receive the prize, in w hich case the prize will be aw arded not m ore than 30 w orkin g d ays after the certificate is presented by the finder. 5. If the finder is found to be ineligible under the contest rules, or if the treasure certificate is not found and presented at the T S P office by or before 4:30 p.m., Friday, A u gu st 28, 1981, the T re a su re Hunt will be declared terminated, and The D a ily Texan will hold a contest during the month of Septem ber, 1981, to aw ard all prize money. 6. When the treasure is found, the fact will be prominently announced in the next regular issue of the Texan. No prior announcement will be made, nor will the information be released to anyone prior to publication in the Texan. 7. Any local, state or federal taxes due on the contest prize will be the responsibility of the finder. 8. Texas Student Publications, acting in good faith, has hidden the prize certificate, and certifies that the prize money is available and will be awarded during this, or a subsequent contest T S P cannot be respon­ s ib le fo r the m y s t e r io u s or in e x p lic a b le d is ­ appearance of the prize certificate, and will present reasonable proof as to the hiding place of the treasure certificate to interested parties after A u gu st 28, 1981. 9. Contest clues provide, to the greatest extent possible, honest and accurate data as to the approxim ate or specific location of the treasure, with no intent to deceive treasure hunters. T S P assu m e s no liability, however, for any erroneous inform ation w hich m ight be im plicit in the clues. 10. T rea su re hunters are seeking the treasure on their own initiative and T S P assu m e s no liability for any loss or casualty occuring to anyone while in the process of searching for the treasure. 11. T h e a d v e r t i s in g d ir e c t o r of T e x a s S tu d e n t Publications will act as sole judge in ascertaining the eligibility, under the rules, of any p erson(s) presen­ ting the treasure certificate for redemption, and as such his decision will be final. 12. In undertaking the search for the prize, and/or presenting the prize certificate for redemption, the treasure hunter, by such action, acknowledges hav­ ing read and understood all contest rules, and agrees ...... ............. ... to abide by them............ .... THEATER/DANCE Baryshnikov performs brilliantly...as expected rSs 9 by Harvey Neville Mikhail Baryshnikov and Cynthia Harvay with the Austin Civic Ballet and the Austin Symphony Or­ chestra conducted by Akira Endo; Friday, July 3 at 8 p.m. in the UT Performing Arts Center. There he was — the incomparable Baryshni­ kov — sprawled across the stage floor at the ballerina's feet. Had the perfectly executed grand pirouettes, the toumes en airs or the grandes lates. caused the taut, well-trained muscles to give out on this 33-year-old paragon of ballet form? Had the Austin heat and humidity, which permeated the 3,000-seat concert hall like a pressure cooker, been too much for the Riga- born, Leningrad-bred dancer? Had Baryshni­ kov been vanquished like some obeisant pirate by the purity of the ballerina’s form and her intoxicating beauty? Or none of the above? The answer to this exam question on “culture in Austin” (or "where were you Friday night?”) is, of course, “none of the above.” Mikhail Baryshnikov wasn’t vanquished, lying there at ballerina Cynthia Harvey’s feet; his cor­ sair was, however. Baryshnikov carries every­ thing he does — whether it be movement or characterization — to the fullest. The key to un­ derstanding the achievement in such a per- I formance is the realization that the movements and the characterization are inseparable. He executes each gesture, turn, change in posture, ’ leap or fall as though nothing com es next; each moment is a pinnacle. The pas de deux from Marius Petipa’s minor tewel, “ Le Corsaire,” is one of those ballets wherein the dance doesn’t support the drama. ; The male role is a star vehicle, calling as it does ! for a series of visually breathtaking and intricate combinations of movement. The ballerina’s part also has its share of intricacies, though they are more subtle and understated. The pas de deux concludes, after two solo variations for each principal, with the corsair throwing himself to the ground to prove his eternal devotion to the purity and beauty of the ballerina. After Barysh­ nikov’s performance in "Corsaire,’’ it was sur­ prising not to see Harvey fall at his feet, instead. Harvey, a soloist with the American Ballet The­ atre, of which Baryshnikov is now director, proved to be an able partner, but not a chal­ lenging one. Whereas the Petipa allows Baryshnikov to display his mastery of pure classical technique, the Balanchine piece, adapted as it is from the commedla dell’arte mime form, calls forth the clown. The wondrous thing about this playful Misha is how the obvious humor masks his fan­ tastic technique — the clown chasing after and being teased by the doll-like ballerina. It was not the turned-in thighs, the smooth flexing of the spine from the pelvis through to the neck and those beautiful one-legged spins complicated by a tiny jump from the knee on the pivoting leg, which the vocal members of the audience appreciated, however. They cheered the base effects and not the technique. Some reacted to what they saw on stage as they would at a rodeo, with an embarrassing display of whistling, hooting and gasps of awe and delight. LEWIS & THE LEGENDS Coming This Week MON TUE WID THU FRI SAT SUN ANGELA STREHLI BRAVE COMBO CALL CLUB HOT SHOTS PRICE PARAFIN W.C. CLARK a Never A Cover ^ Monday Special 0 A A V # U v A f W (perper**) All the Salad You Can Eat From Our 18 ft. Salad £ 0/. NEW Sandwiches, + P L U S+ (over 100 possible combinations) priced to fit your BUDGET W ItTnllm’ Mikhail Baryshnikov T H E ^ ^ ^ H CONTINENTAL1 C L U B H ^ W SS3>»u* o»**§ tu« ^ 1 lev»** | yi-c it* Ml* THU ***** M s oo t v * and .00 1 442-9904) 1 3 1 5 S . Congress w t JOHN REID AND THE OCT AVI DOCTORS WED s N THU ALVIN CROW YOUR MOVE ^TENNESSEE HAT BAND COMMOTION FRI a SAT SUN S' Open Mon-Fri, 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m. 476-9187 (All ordera to go!) 17th & San Jacinto Caddy Corner from Scholz’ Garten ) 1201 S. Congress 443-1597 ü % X2ZZZZZZ222ZZSZ2ZZZZZZZZZZZm WEEKLY SPECIALS Tunsdoy NO C O V E R FOR A L L H A P P Y H O U R TIL 11 P M Wwdnmtday Ladies Free 12 oz. Draft Beer 2 5 e til 11 p.m. Thurtday Ladies free Unescorted Ladies 2 Free Drinks til 11 p m TUESDAY SNEAKERS WEDNESDAY-SATURDAY RABBIT Coming S u n d a y - M O R R I S C O D i KILLER H O U R S 3 for 1 S A k L^ 12-7 M -F MON JESS REMAINS rue STEVE FROMHOLZ W.C. CLARK WED THU PAPA MOON FRI A SAT STEVE FROMHOLZ Hondo's Soloon 2915 Guadalupe 477-9114 10 ^ FINE ART V 'Local No. 5' showcases artistic harmony Clothing designs by Ann Elam were modeled the night of the opening. Elam is a native Texan who sees the need for clothing designed with both the “ Texas Woman" and Texas weather in mind. Her clothing is delicate, feminine and exqui­ sitely crafted from natural fibers, yet it is boldly designed and very durable Elam’s work is characterized by attention to form, craftsmanship and harmony. Her colors are rich, ele­ gant and romantic whether embellishing summer shorts or evening wear. Katherine V. Keating, a native New Yorker, is the ohotogra- pher in “Austin Local No. 5." Laguna Gloria has awarded her five scholarships. She works primarily in black and white and is adept at capturing brief, elusive moments with her camera. A child spoons runny porridge into his mouth; a pregnant woman gazes at children by a shallow stream; a fly lights on the toe of a small, chubby foot. All of Keating’s images are not as warm, however. There is a startling picture of a long-dead cat, frozen in its death screech, its leathery skin stretched tightly over grey bones. Landscapes or carcasses, children or insects, Keating’s work is always charged with sensitivity. "Austin Local No. 5" can be seen at the California Hotel, designed by Lou Rigler to be a showcase facility for creative endeavors. He had planned to open it in the fall, but demand for such a display space was immediate, and if the opening night crowd was any indication, Austin is ready for the con­ cept of the California Hotel. by Norma Jackson “Austin Local No.5"; variad creations by Quy Juke, Doris Blck- iey, Hills Snyder, Ann Elam and Katherine V. Keating; through July 31 at the California Hotel, 407 E. Seventh St. Guy Juke. Doris Bickley, Hills Snyder, Ann Elam and Katherine V. Keating have created the union called “Austin Local No. 5." Their works complement one another so well that a sixth entity emerges, making the show itself a well balanced point-counterpoint. For every sharp, angled figure, there’s a soft fluid shape; every image of terror is balanced by a picture of sweetness or humor; flat, bright colors are offset by rich, textured earth tones. The show as a whole represents a healthy union yet each of the elements stands firmly on its own. Paintings by Guy Juke, known as De White to friends, dominates the exhibition. A Southwest desert landscape is simplified to an arrangment of perfectly balanced geometric shapes Colors and shapes are in precise harmony in a Jamaican village laundry scene, as well as in a series of abstract paintings in three colors. Then, in a dramatic change of style, three canvases depict fantasy scenes painted, paradoxically, in a realistic manner. Birds, bats and people fly around as snow falls or storm clouds build. Whatever the style, Guy Juke shows an acute understanding of design and color. Doris Bickley presents a different series of paintings. She, like Juke, comes from an arts background. “ It’s the only thing I always wanted to do," she said She was trained at the Kansas City Art Institute, but her current series reflects a step away from art school habits. The paintings in the show look as if geometric pieces of colored paper have been put togeth­ er to form a complex quilt And like a quilt, the pieces always come together into larger patterns. In “Valentine Sea" and in “See Sea," dozens of geometric shapes create an overall uew of teeming underwater life. Bickley’s designs are beautifully balanced by her use of col­ or. Hills Snyder created the sculpture in “ Austin Local No 5." Snyder began as a painter but reached a point where he wanted “a floating aspect on canvas, an iflusionistic depth." The pieces in the show grew out of that need. Snyder now works in wood, fabric, paper, plexiglás and any type of pig­ ment that will create the desired effect. In “Antechamber (Torn Free's Box of Chaos), his largest piece in the show, many techniques and materials come to­ gether. A delicately tendriied wooden shape is jammed down into a long rectangular box. Paint applied in subtle layers, brings out the gram of the wood. Snyder often works in har­ mony with the nature of his materials The best art offense is a good Art Defense ‘303-9-81” by Katherine V. Keating by Judith Walker "Austin Local No. 5" is the narre of the art exhibit, but the group behind it is Ad Defense Five Austin artists, working with the advice of many others, have created this organization to strengthen the connections between Austin art­ ists and to begin ambitious promotion of loca art. People often think original artwork is unaf­ fordable, but Art Defense plans to show Aus­ tin’s art lovers that dealing directly with artists allows for reasonable prices and persona1 at­ tention Art Defense developed as an artist's or­ ganization, a vehicle to allow local adists to ex­ hibit and sell their work without the price mark­ up necessary when promoters show work ¡n galleries on a consignment basis. Guy Juke, Doris Bickley, Hills Snyder. Ann Elam and Katherine V. Keating talked to numer­ ous business people, art promoters and artsts to discover how receptive the Austin community would be to an exhibition presented entirely by local artists. They received a favorable re­ sponse Setf-orgamzed shows can make the task of exhibiting art much easier on the artist. Bickley explains that without Art Defense, get­ ting a show is like applying for a ,ob — you need the job for experience, but without the ex­ perience. you can’t get the job. Although galleries in town do show local art on occasion, they subsist on sales, and pro­ moters operate on the premise that only artists with a following, or “ name," bring »n potential buyers. Local artists realize their futures rest on showing their work and becoming recognized, and self-organized shows will offer that oppor­ tunity Ann E;am, a fashion designer in this first show, nas had great success reaching people all over Texas and out of state with her attention to the needs of individuals who buy originals. Tne whole organization is based on her premise that cheating pieces for individua tastes s slow-going at first but pays off with the establishment of a rapport between artist and buyer. Her attitude has gained her a word-of- mouth reputation that has begun a snowball ef­ fect for ner ‘ashion business as more people recognize me benefits of such persona1 atten­ tion Guy Juke, one of the five original Art De’ense members, s well-known ¡ocaily for the concert posters he created for shows at the Armadillo World Headquarters His posters for Raul’s have become collector’s ¡terns, and his a lb u m cover art for Joe Ely is seen all over the country . But he also laments that Austinites are virtually unaware of the arge number of talented artists living and working in Austin. Juse notes that artists often feei the only way to become known is to show work in the larger Texas cities or New York, He says that one of the aims of Art Defense s to convince artists mat Austin is an untapped source which needs exploration. Austm Local No. 5" is the first move of Art Defense into the Austin gallery circuit. The show, m the California Hotel at 407 E. Seventh St opened Friday night with an all-star music, artwork, food and fashion design cast. Music filled tne back courtyard as the Butch Hancock Band and Jimmy Giiimore provided rousing West Texas rockabilly. Hancock’s and De “Guy familiar Juke" White's guitars accelerated the pace late into the evening when Joe Ely walked on stage as a surprise singer. Hancock and Ely blazed out tunes as people danced and clapped. About the time Ely left and the music settled back nto comfortabe ballads, a new Austin nighbght, Lucinda, came on and got the crowd moving again. One break in the music came with the run­ way presentation of Elam's fashions Tall wom­ en strode onto stage, some in colorful cotton dresses, others in flashy running shorts. Elam’s collection was announced by Michael Pnest, ex-Armad io emcee and fine artist, ins'de the gallery, recorded music was provided by Doug Hegadom. The artists themselves moved sn and out of the crowd greeting friends and making ntroductions explaining that all of the Austin celebrities’ helping out are good friends as well M u c h of Austin's art community is al­ ready a tightly meshed group in many ways," Bickley said. “Art Defense is a way for artists to Support each other’s work and infuse the com­ munity with the quai'ty of the art." All members of Art Defense are dedicated to the idea of promoting Austin's own talent Keat- rng and Bickley nave been fireballs m the effort to puli this first snow together for the group. Each oamter, sculptor, photographer or other artist who wishes to be part of Art Defense must oe wi ling to throw himseif headlong ¡nto putting the snow together. Finding gallery space, mak­ ing mquines and distnbuting publicity is lots of work And for many artists, it is lots of work on top of holding down a job to pay the rent, and working on their art as well. The ability to organize all the elements of a show in a professional manner is one of the I most important parts of successful presenta- ; tion. Snyder, whose sculpture is displayed in this first show, is a calming element of Art De­ fense, as well as the provider of technical know-how. His direction of the lighting and : hanging of the artwork provides that crucial professionalism which can make or break a show. A number of artists have already expressed interest in future shows, with the next one scheduled for some time in late August. Be­ yond exposing the mdividuai works of the art- I ists. the group expects a greater communica­ tion within the artistic community to emerge from mis unified effort to promote all kinds of j local artwork. Getting the word out about Aus- j tin's art to the rest of Texas, and other states, is ; also a goal of Art Defense “ People have been I long aware of Austin's tremendous musical tal­ ent," Juke said. "It is time we began letting them know how much artistic taient we have as well." As Art Defense grows, more and more of the community will be captured by the idea of bold promotion of local talent. The reception of | “ Austin Local No. 5" and future shows will ex­ tend tne support of ¡ocal artists, enabling Austin to appreciate the delights of really good work nght here at home. For further information about Art Defense write: Art Defense, 307 W. 10th S t. Austin, Texes 70701. MUSIC Fireworks fly at Grateful Dead July 4th concert Jerry Garcia (left) and Bob Weir (below) jamming on a Saturday night Photos by Joni Barnoff, Dalty Texan Staff by Jay Trachtenberg If there were any doubts as to where I was, they were immediately dispelled when the wiry young man with the crazed glaze came up to me with a plateful of bright red fruit and asked if I’d like an electric stawberry. Where else couid I be but at a Grateful Dead concert? A Grateful Dead show is a cultural and spirit­ ual as well as a musical event — a gathering of the tribes if you will, an invitation to craziness the straight without fear of retribution world. Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia put it most eloquently when he suggested that the government should sponsor the Dead to go around the country playing for free and getting people high. from That’s the whole idea — allowing oneself to let loose and surrender to the music. The Dead have always advocated and successfully en­ gaged in this form of benign anarchy both in their music and in their audiences’ response to the music. When musicians and fans take chances and let go like this, a certain bond is created, and from this, an unparalleled ex­ change of energy is generated between the two. After all, it was this cosmic exchange that lay at the heart of the infamous acid tests of the mid-1960s. These LSD-imbued events played a most important part in the Dead’s musical de­ velopment — both stylistically and philosophi­ cally. The role of LSD cannot be overem­ p h a s iz e d c o m p le te g a rn e rin g understanding of the Dead. in a As the house band at these often chaotic acid tests, the Dead were only a small com po­ nent of a total happening. The audience was as, or more, important than the band in the total experience. It is this philosophy that continues with the Grateful Dead to this day. Of course, nowadays they stand most directly in the spot­ light, but their role in this whoie strange scheme of things, and I’m sure they would be the first to agree, is that of facilitator in guiding those will­ ing souls to a higher plane of consciousness. Again, Garcia was most succinct when he said “the Grateful Dead is not for cranking out rock ‘n’ roll; it’s for getting people high.” And in turn what this band does is serve up a com ­ pletely different show each night they play — different songs, different jams, different vibes. The individual is given as much freedom as possible in finding his or her own cerebral niche within the music. Those heads willing to get “ on the bus" seldom have any regrets. Some nights are extraordinary from start to finish; most nights have their ups and downs, but on every night, in some way, the Dead are able to weave their own totally unique brand of magic — one no other musical entity has ever come close to duplicating. It is this magic that loyal and makes Deadheads so ever-ready to travel unheard of distances for another dose. fanatically This makes a Grateful Dead “ concert” an ex­ perience that is ultimately personal and difficult to review in any general sense. Suffice it to say that much of this show prob­ ably separated the hard-core Deadheads from the also-rans. For the true loyalist, every Dead performance is a cosmic experience with moments of phenomenal intensity and gran­ deur and this particular evening was no excep- tion. Most folks, no doubt, had some difficulty ■ ! along the way. Always a band most sensitive to their envi­ ronment, the Dead must have picked up on Austin’s renowned laid-back mood and the gentle roll of the countryside around Manor Downs, because they served up a musical con­ coction that was, at least in the first set, very slow indeed. There was little energy for the crowd to latch onto and consequently both the band and the fans had a tough time exchanging any kind of sustained flow. In fact, this was the most sluggish I’ve ever seen the Dead begin a ! performance. Part of the problem was their conservative choice of material this particular night. Relying mostly on decade-old material, the band seemed to have trouble injecting any life into these songs. This same set heard in 1971 would have been dynamite, but 10 years later it sounded tired. Besides, pacing a set with three long, slow songs to every short, fast one is no way to hook an outdoor throng all too easily distracted by fireworks and beer. The band opened with "Jack Straw" (con­ taining the prophetic line “ leaving Texas 4th day of July.” ) and then groped its way through “ Finario," “ Me And My Uncle — Big River," “ Loser" and "Tennessee Jed." The Howlin' Wolf classic, "Little Red Rooster," generated some excitement with Bob Weir's stinging slide solo. The Dead finally loosened up at the close of the set when they pulled the not-often-heard favorite “ China Cat Sunflower" and its always interesting segue into "I Know You Rider.” Through all the tedium of the first set one must acknowledge the titanic bass of Phil Lesh Laying down a colossal bottom of thunderous proportions for the rest of the band to build upon, Lesh is an often overlooked but totally irreplaceable component of the Grateful Dead’s sound. their Tne Dead’s forte always has been, and al­ ways will be, improvisations! prowess. Once they leave the structured confines of a given song and enter their own cosmos they weave immensely colorful and intricate tapes­ tries of sound - sometimes dense, sometimes delicate, sometimes dissonant but always d if­ ferent from night to mght. It is during these pas­ sages of flowing auditory opulence that the band completely transcends normal musical boundaries It was m the second set that the Dead magic eventually unfolded. Opening again with slow- tempoed tunes, Weir’s "Feel Like A Stranger" and Garcia’s “ Bird Song," they finally started to open jp "Playing In The Band" evolved into a Bob Weir/Phil Lesh guitar-bass duo in which Weir did a masterful job of raismg the energy level for drummers Bill Kreutzmann and Mickey H art who then proceeded to work out exten­ sively on a vast assortment of exotic percus­ sion. Things then began to get stranger and more spaced-out as Jerry Garcia noodled and doo­ dled on a level only a true Deadhead coukl possibly have appreciated This excursion gradually segued into an intense, mesmerizing Not Fade Away.” Garcia's "Wharf Rat" fol­ lowed, with its towering crescendos. This in turn melted into a power-packed rendition of the old warhorse, "Sugar Magnolia." The band en­ cored with the appropriately altered “ One More 4tn Of July Saturday Night," Throughout, it was the brillance of Jerry Garcia's maiestic. shimmering, crystalline guitar lines that flowed through it a bouyant, ethereal quality the Dead's sound and gave The Grateful Dead experience is ultimately a particularly personal and individual one that cannot be adequately described or captured by written words Through it all, what may be the most amazing aspect of the Dead phenomenon is the fact that we are midway through 1981 and can still experience the free-spirited joy that only the Grateful Dead communicate The Grateful Dead